The Paris Betrayal James Hannibal (free ereaders TXT) đ
- Author: James Hannibal
Book online «The Paris Betrayal James Hannibal (free ereaders TXT) đ». Author James Hannibal
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Ben didnât follow the bosân at first. The containers towering aboveâthe rhythmic pound of loading and unloadingâheld him transfixed. What deadly items might be hidden among the glass baubles and frozen fish in that vast Aladdinâs Cave? Maybe none. Maybe thousands.
âYa cominâ, Agent Porter?â
âRight behind you.â
Ben turned to find Mallory only a step away, eyeing him.
âSee much action in yer line oâ work, Agent?â
âIâm not sure I get your meaning.â
Mallory held up his fists, and it took all of Benâs control not to flinch. The bosân grinned and touched his cheek below his eye, indicating Benâs shiner from the fight with Hagen.
Ben had almost forgotten about it. âOh that. I wish I could say, âYou should see the other guy,â but this black eye came from a shower door. When the hotel provides you with a no-slip mat, make sure to use it.â
âRight. Shower door.â
Two decks down, Mallory cranked open a steel hatch and waved Ben through. âTake a look.â
Ducking to avoid the bulkhead, Ben stepped into a huge space, like a dystopian underworld. âSpeaking of Aladdinâs Cave,â he muttered.
âPardon?â
âNothing.â The two stood on a platform overlooking an Olympic-size pool. Four vertical support beams rose from the water to the ceiling three stories above. The place looked like an upscale health club dropped into a prison yard, with a tennis court, two racquetball courts, and a half basketball court.
âYouâve no idea oâ the challenges oâ tennis at sea,â Mallory said, clapping him on the back. The bosân thrust his chin at three stories of rooms at the far end. âShowers, Ping-Pong, billiards. The top floor is the crew bar. The one man universally loved on the Princess ainât the capân. Itâs Francisco the bartender.â
âImpressive. Truly. But why are you showing me all this?â
Mallory looked at him as if he had asked why it snows in winter. âDonât ya see? Evâry cargo hugger-mugger from here ta Singapore wants ta sail for Sea Titan. Bigger ships. Better facilities. Better life. Iâm afraid yer bomberâs fixation with Sea Titan is a dead end.â
A dead end. Sensen had told him the same about the entire Rotterdam angle. Who was Ben to personally bring down Leviathan, anyway? A Company team could sweep through the containers at night with microwave scanners, searching for weapons-grade material or infiltrate Sea Titan to get at the truth. What could a severed spy do?
âYou may be right.â Ben fought to maintain his smile. Heâd take one last long shot, then call it a day, dump the Peugeot, and regroup. âI appreciate the tour. Could I trouble you to show me the bridge while Iâm here?â He finished by pressing a psychological button. âYou do have access to the bridge, right?â
ââCourse Iâve got access. Whodaya think yer talkinâ to?â Mallory directed him out through the hatch again and shoved it closed. âHope yer in good shape, Mr. Interpol. Weâve a half kilometer oâ passages and stairs ahead with a grand total sixty-meter vertical climb, more than the Leaninâ Tower of Pisa.â
Lefts. Rights. Stairs. Ladders. Down one story. Up two.
Mallory never wavered in his path, where Ben felt utterly disoriented. If the bosân worked for Leviathan, playing the fool to set a trap, he had Ben at his mercy.
âHow far now?â Ben found the question difficult, his breathing coming harder than expected. He sucked at the air, seeking oxygen, legitimately embarrassed. âWhy is this . . . so hard? Feels like . . . a mountaintop.â
âStale air.â The bosân glanced down from the top of a canted ladder. âWe rest the diesels in port, meaninâ the air pumps gotta shut down. Thatâs why the crew has ta use the dock barracks. Itâll be better up here. Câmon.â
Ben emerged into fresh, cold air, but Mallory gave him no time to breathe. He went straight across the deck to the first ladder of the shipâs upper superstructure, interlocking levels reminiscent of a Jenga tower. Fresh air or not, by the time they reached the flying bridge, he was spent.
At the door to the bridge, the bosân had a word with the watch officer, but heâd left Ben too far behind to hear. Whatever passed between them, the watch officer didnât give Ben so much as a passing glance when he caught up.
The tour began with the radar tower and emergency equipment. Ben could not have cared less. He left Mallory and headed for a bank of computer screens. âAnd what are these?â
âEr, thatâs navcon, our navigation controls. These are the radar screens, fed by yer tower out there. And thisân . . .â He gestured to a map screen filled with moving targets, voice fading. Ben had clearly pushed past the limits of his knowledge.
âAh.â Ben read the acronym on the placard beneath the screen, having no idea what it meant. âThe ECLRT.â As he spoke, a digital ship passed beneath the active cursor, and a box of data appeared. Location. Stats. Nice. He walked closer.
Mallory followed. âRight. The ECLRT. The long-range tracker.â He gave a tentative nod. âYouâve seen one before?â
âOh, Iâm a bit of a sea tech nut. May I?â
Before Mallory could answer, Ben took control of the mouse. A click on any Sea Titan vessel, highlighted in green, gave him the shipâs six-month port history. He moved from one to the next, down the European coastline. âWow. You have quite a fleet. I assume the Princess is the flagship.â
âNot quite.â Mallory held out a hand to stop the advancing watch officer. âThatâd be the Behemoth, our largestâcurrently the largest on earth. She makes runs out oâ the main facility in Valencia, on the Spanish Mediterranean.â
âThe Med, huh?â A quick shift of the mouse set the cursor on the target. The history came up. A tingle passed through Benâs chest. His long shot
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