The Thief Clive Cussler (freenovel24 TXT) đ
- Author: Clive Cussler
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âI appreciate your candor, Mr. Bell. I am sure that you will agree that as soon as the surgeon has done his work it will be best if we all turn in for the night and let sleeping dogs lie.â
âKRIEG RĂŒSTUNGSWERK GMBH?â echoed Archie Abbott, who had traveled regularly back and forth to Europe his whole life. Most recently, in the course of an extended honeymoon, he had laid the groundwork for overseas Van Dorn field offices. âTheyâre a private munitions outfit with strong Army connections. As youâd expect of a cannon manufacturer gearing up for a European war.â
Isaac Bell had joined him in the dining saloon moments after the breakfast bugle had blown. The Mauretania was steaming past Malin Head on the northern tip of Ireland, and as she left the Irish Sea in her wake, the liner had begun lifting her bow into unusually tall Atlantic swells, churning rumors in the elevators and vestibules of rough weather ahead.
âWhy do you ask?â
âDo you recall the motorboat you could not hear last night?â
âIf I couldnât hear it, how could I recall it?â
Bell told him what had happened. Archie was crestfallen. âOf all the darned times to go to bed early. All three overboard?â
âThe one who tried to stab me, the one who got tossed by his boss. And the boss under his own steam.â
âYou have all the fun, Isaac.â
âWhat sort of lunatic drowns himself?â
Archie smiled. âIs it possible he was afraid of a fellow who had already floored two of his gang and was suddenly waving a gun?â
Bell shook his head. âA man afraid would not have taken the time to throw his accomplice overboard. No, he made sure there was no one left to confess. Not even himself. Lunacy.â
âAre you sure he didnât jump into a lifeboat?â
âPositive. I went back and looked later. He was along that open stretch in the middle where there arenât any boats. Ten yards at least from the nearest one.â
Archie forked down several bites of kippered herring. âIâd say less lunatic than fanatic. Krieg RĂŒstungswerk operates hand in glove with the Imperial German Army. So if Krieg RĂŒstungswerk wants the Professorâs âsecret inventionâ it must be some sort of war machine, right?â
âUndoubtedly a war machine.â
âThen Krieg might well recruit German Army officers to snatch it. Theyâre fanatical on the subject of âDer Tagâââthe Dayââto kick off Kaiser Wilhelmâs âWill to deeds.â And we all know what âWill to deedsâ means.â
âShorthand for âStart a war,ââ said Bell. âThough I keep hoping that the European war talk is just talk.â
âSo do I,â said Archie. âBut Great Britain is paranoid about German dreadnoughts, and Imperial Germany is ambitious. The kaiser loves his Army, and the Army rules societyâjust like in old Prussia. Everyoneâs drafted for three years, and the bourgeoisie are so nuts for uniforms they take reserve commissions just so they can dress up like soldiers.â
âSoldiers didnât build German industry. Civilians did.â
âNo doubt millions of hardworking Germans would rather get rich and send their kids to school than fight a war. The question is, can the kaiser stampede them into battleâ But enough small talk about war and secret weapons! Dare I askâhas Marion said yes again?â
âHavenât braced her yet.â
âToo busy tossing miscreants overboard? Hey, where are you going? You havenât finished your breakfast.â
âI am marconigraphing the Berlin office before we steam out of range. Get Art Curtis cracking on Lynds, Beiderbecke, and Krieg RĂŒstungswerk.â
âGood luck. Artâs only a one-man office, and he just got there.â
âArt Curtis is quicker than a mongoose and smart as a whipâplus he speaks fluent German. Why do you think Mr. Van Dorn gave him Berlin?â
âIâll meet you in the smoking room. We have to talk about you taking your beautiful bull by her hornsâ Say, Isaac? What happened to the rope he threw at you?â
âThe rope was gone when I went back to look.â
âA crewman must have scooped it up.â
âOr an accomplice.â
BELL PICKED UP A BLANK from the purserâs desk and filled out his message. Rather than pass it before inquiring eyes, he carried the form directly to the Marconi house on the top deck of the ship between Funnels 2 and 3.
A window curtain, gray with coal smoke, flapped in the wind as Bell walked into the radio room extending a British pound sterling noteâfive dollars, two daysâ payâto derail ahead of time any suggestion that he send his message through the purser. Nor did the operator, who was not a member of the Mauretaniaâs crew but employed by the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company, remark that Bellâs message looked like gibberish, as it was written out in cipher.
Bell stood by as the operator dispatched his message by Morse code to a shore station at Malin Head. From there it would be relayed overland by telegraph and under the Irish Sea and English Channel by cable and back onto telegraph wires across the continent to the Van Dorn field office in Berlin. Depending how far at sea the Mauretania had preceded, Arthur Curtisâs reply would be transmitted from Ireland or relayed by other ships.
âJUST IN TIME FOR THE BLOVIATING,â Archie greeted Isaac Bell when the tall detective joined him in the smoking saloon. Midmorning, the male haven was crowded with gents smoking cigars, pipes, and cigarettes, playing chess and solitaire, and reading the shipâs newspaper. Thin northern daylight, filtered through stained glass and tobacco smoke, shone upon settees, tables, and armchairs grouped on a pale green carpet. Two ruddy-faced middle-aged men were arguing in raised voices. Bell cocked an ear. In smokers and club cars, even the judicious sank to braggadocio, spilling priceless information by the boatload.
âWhoâs the large gent in
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