The Cutthroat Clive Cussler (summer books txt) đ
- Author: Clive Cussler
Book online «The Cutthroat Clive Cussler (summer books txt) đ». Author Clive Cussler
âBless you, Quinn.â
The twitch in Youngâs cheek that the regular stagehands said always jumped like a frog on closing days and opening daysâwhen every stick of scenery and every stitch of costume had to be loaded onto the train the second the curtain came downâwas barely pulsing.
They lit up. Warren said, âI overheard the boys saying you stand in for Barrett and Buchanan.â
âWho said that?â
âCouple of sceneshifters . . . Do you?â
âOn occasion.â
âYou must be one slick fencer to survive that Dream Duel.â
âSo far, at least.â
âAnd a heck of an actor to make Mr. Hyde as evil as they do.â
Young smiled at the compliment. âThank you, Quinn. Itâs harder than dueling, Iâll tell you that.â
âDo folks in the audience ever complain?â
âNo, bless them. Theyâve been kind. I actually receive ovations. Often more sustained than Barrettâs or Buchananâs.â
âDo the stars mind?â
âGreen-eyed with jealousy?â asked Young, with another smile.
âFor all your extra applause.â
âTheyâre too grateful for the chance to pull a disappearing act. And of course theyâre not in the theater when I receive my applause. At least not the one Iâm standing in for that night.â
âWhere do they go on their disappearing acts?â
Henry Young shrugged. âWho knows. Mr. Barrett is probably off writing. He constantly tinkers with scripts.â
âBuchanan a writer, too?â
âNot that Iâm aware ofâ Whatâs the time? I must go. Thanks for the smoke.â
âAnytime, Mr. Young. Say, whatâs the news? Are we closing?â
âI honestly donât know.â
Harry Warren reported to Isaac Bell in the privacy of a windblown platform between two cars. They were into Colorado now, and Bell could feel the engine begin to strain on the light but constant grade that presaged the Rocky Mountains.
âMy gut said donât push him any further. What do you think?â
âYou nailed his leverage. Barrett and Buchanan are willing to overlook Youngâs past because they can count on him to stand in for their âdisappearing acts.â How long do they disappear?â
âThe news backstage is, Mr. Young fills in for one or two nights in a row.â
âHow often?â
âNot often. Couple of times a month.â
âMr. Buchanan probably disappears with his rich girlfriends. Where do you suppose Barrett goes to write?â
âIâll ask around. Somebodyâll know.â
âWhat do you think about Mr. Young?â Bell asked.
âI donât see how the stage manager would ever find the time to kill anybody.â
âArchie says the same. So does Helen.â
âHow about you, Isaac?â
âIâm not so sure.â
The rumor that the Jekyll & Hyde Special would not stop for their scheduled performances in Denver was about to meet its test. The stage manager announced a full company meeting. Actors, musicians, sceneshifters, riggers, carpenters, wardrobe ladies, ticket sellers, and callboys crowded into the dining car and waited anxiously while stopped outside the city center in the 36th Street yard. Their locomotive took on water and their tenderâs coal, and they waited some more when grocery trucks and butchersâ wagons parked beside the dining car. When the train was replenished, would it be shunted toward Union Station or onto the main line west across the Rockies?
John Buchanan looked relaxed and in charge.
Jackson Barrett, too, looked like he hadnât a worry in the world.
Maybe the worst rumors werenât true?
Are you kidding? Mr. Barrett and Mr. Buchanan are actors. Who knows what theyâre thinking or how they feel?
âO.K.,â said Buchanan. âIs everyone here? We have our cast. We have our backstage people and our out-front people. We have our train crew. We have our stewards and cooks. We have our guestsâthe angelic Mr. Bell, the journalistic Mr. Smith, and the âfilmalisticâ Mrs. Marion Morgan Bellâmore about her in a moment. We even have the pilot of our Jekyll and Hyde billboard in the sky, and if Mrs. Bradford looks too young to fly a biplane, look again, for she is a married woman and the mother of two little girls almost as pretty as she is.â
âGet on with it,â Jackson Barrett muttered through an opaque smile.
âHazel Bradford,â Bell whispered to Marion, âset speed and altitude records last year.â
Buchanan stepped back, and said, âYour turn.â
Jackson Barrett said, âThe rumors youâve heard are NOT true. Our tour is NOT over.â
Eighty people smiled.
âSo donât worry. Our play lives on. And will continue to live on as no Broadway play ever has before.â
Everyone leaned forward to hear what the devil that was supposed to mean.
âAfter Denver and San Francisco, we will immediately steam down to Hollywood, which is just outside Los Angeles, where Marion Morgan Bell will transform our play into a movie. Yes, you heard right. A movie.â
Buchanan said, âOur final performances will play to Marion Morgan Bellâs cameras rather than on the stage. We will continue salaries at their current rate. Anyone who absolutely must get back to New York, we understand, and will replace you.â
âBut,â said Barrett, âwe hope that everyone will make the time to be watched by movie audiences forever.â
Bell whispered to Marion, âCongratulations. Youâve got your four-reeler.â
âYour investment syndicate doesnât exist. How am I going to pay for it?â
âIâve already spoken with Uncle Andy that youâre coming straight from San Francisco to Los Angeles to set up a four-reeler of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.â
The formidable Andrew Rubenoff, a onetime banking colleague of Bellâs father and a friend of Bellâs, had shifted his assets from steel, coal, and railroads to autos, airplanes, and movies and moved to California.
Bell grinned. âHeâs deeply impressed that you snagged Isabella. You have your syndicate, Rubenoff and Bell.â
With that, the tall detective strolled casually from the dining car, accepting congratulations from well-wishers. He kept smiling until he was alone in his private car at the back of the train, where he laid his long fingers on his telegraph key and pondered what to send.
He was running out of time. The show would be in and out of San Francisco and on the way to Los Angeles before he knew it. If he didnât arrest the Cutthroat before Marion finished the movie, the murderer would have his
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