The Thief Clive Cussler (freenovel24 TXT) đ
- Author: Clive Cussler
Book online «The Thief Clive Cussler (freenovel24 TXT) đ». Author Clive Cussler
âI couldnât put it better myself,â said Bell. âSomething is amiss at Imperial.â
âBut I canât believe that Irina would be part of anything that would hurt me. Besides, you donât know that Imperial isnât on the up-and-up.â
âImperialâs finances are deeply suspect.â
âEveryoneâs business finances in moving pictures are deeply suspect. Itâs a brand-new business. Nobody knows whatâs really going on. Weâre all making it up as we go along. Thatâs why the bankers lend money for only one picture at a time.â
âAre you sure youâve noticed nothing unusual while taking pictures for The Iron Horse? Nothing out of the ordinary? Nothing different than youâd expect or have seen on other jobs?â
Marion pondered his question. âOnly one thing. Thereâs a film-stock shortage. Everyone in Los Angeles is talking about it. For a month or so, filmâs become hard to get and very expensive. Yesterday, Billy and Dave came to me with long faces. Their stock was old. It smelled awful, and they said the pictures would be terribly overexposed. I telephoned Irina. In less than one hour a truck raced up with more than we could use of the most pristine stock you could ask for. It was precisely perforated and smelled fresh as a meadow. You should have seen Billy and Dave rubbing their hands like Silas Marner counting his gold.â
âWhere did it come from?â
âIt was Eastman Kodak stock, straight from the factory.â
âBut Imperial is independent. Eastman made a deal with the Edison Trust: they wonât sell to independents.â
âWhere they got it, I donât know. But for Imperial, at least, there is no shortage.â Anyway, if youâll limp into the dining room, Iâll bring dinner.â
âWhat is our first married home-cooked meal?â
âThe same as our first-ever home-cooked meal. Do you remember what I made you?â
âI remember you invited me to dinner and cooked pot roast and vegetables. It was splendid, though I have a vague memory that we got sidetracked before dessertâ Marion, Iâll bet youâve some cowboys in The Iron Horse.â
âBunkhousesful.â
âGot room for one more?â
âTexas Walt?â
Bell nodded. âJust to be on the safe side.â
âIf that will make you feel better, of course.â
âI would feel much better knowing my good friend the deadly gunfighter was looking out for you.â
Marion smiled. âWalt may not be a deadly gunfighter much longer. Movie people are all talking about âthe tall Texanâ playing cowboy parts. Some people think he could be a star.â
âPlease donât turn his head until weâre sure youâre safe and sound.â
PAULINE GRANDZAU HAD BEEN MEMORIZING the St. Germain section of her Baedeker on the train when suddenly she had to run from a gendarme who demanded her papers at a station stop. The last few miles of what should have been a twelve-hour train ride stretched to another full day clinging to the underside of a slow-moving coal car that finally dumped her near an open-air market in Paris in the rain. Thanks to the tourist guidebook and the foldout map, she found the Rue du Bac as night fell, climbed a steep flight of stairs, and staggered into the Van Dorn Detective Agencyâs Paris field office, exhausted, wet, and hungry.
An enormous man seated next to a bright light asked, âWhat do you want here, miss?â
At least thatâs what it sounded like. He spoke French. She did not. But she saw in his eyes what he assumed: a street urchin with dirty hands and face and stringy braids and a snuffling nose had sneaked into the building either begging for money or running from the police.
He asked her again. The light was so bright it was blinding her. He stood up, and the entire room, which had a linoleum floor and a desk and a chair and an interior door that led somewhere, started spinning.
âIs this the Van Dorn Detective Agency Paris field office?â she asked.
He looked surprised she spoke English.
âYes, it is,â he replied with an accent like Detective Curtisâs. âWhat can I do for you, little lady?â
âAre you Detective Horace Bronson?â
âIâm Bronson. Who are you?â
Pauline Grandzau pulled herself up to her full five feet two inches. âApprentice Van Dorn detective Pauline Grandzau reporting from Berlin.â
She tried to salute, but her arm was heavy, and her legs were rubbery. She saw the linoleum rushing at her face. Bronson moved with surprising speed and caught her.
âCABLE FROM THE PARIS FIELD office, Mr. Bell.â
It was from Bronson.
It was long and detailed.
Isaac Bell read it twice.
A hunterâs gleam began burning in his eyes. A smile of grim satisfaction lighted his stern face like the sun glancing off a frozen river, and he vowed to Fritz Wunderlich, to Krieg RĂŒstungswerk, to Kaiser Wilhelm II, and especially to Imperial Army General Major Christian Semmler that Van Dorn Detective Arthur Curtis had not died in vain.
âTELEGRAPHER! ON the jump!â ISAAC BELL summoned the man who sent and received Morse code on the field officeâs private telegraph.
âWire Mr. Joseph Van Dorn: âInquire U.S. Army and State Department German General Major Christian Semmler. Show them Wunderlich sketch.â
âWire Research Chief Grady Forrer, New York: âWho is German General Major Christian Semmler? Obtain photograph or newspaper sketch.â
âCable Horace Bronson, Paris Office: âWho is German General Major Christian Semmler? Obtain photograph or newspaper sketch.â
âWire Detective Archie Abbott, New York: âAsk Lord Strone about German General Major Christian Semmler. Show Wunderlich sketch.â
âSend them. On the jump!â
OF THE RESPONSES THAT FLOODED in over the next twenty-four hours, the one that intrigued Bell most came from the boss. Joe Van Dorn had discovered that General Major Semmler was married to Sophie Roth Semmler, the sole heiress of the Krieg RĂŒstungswerk fortune. Such wealth and power explained the lone operatorâs ability to operate far more independently than a typical German Army officer.
But Joseph Van Dornâs informants in the Army and diplomatic corps knew almost nothing else about Semmler. The general major did not seek the limelight. A U.S.
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