American library books ยป Other ยป The Wrecker by Clive Cussler (book club reads .TXT) ๐Ÿ“•

Read book online ยซThe Wrecker by Clive Cussler (book club reads .TXT) ๐Ÿ“•ยป.   Author   -   Clive Cussler



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rain. Her heart was pounding with joy and excitement. She had not seen New York City since her father had taken her on a trip back East when she was a little girl. Now dozens of skyscrapers with lighted windows soared just across the river. And somewhere on that fabled island was her beloved Isaac Bell.

She had debated whether to wire ahead or surprise him. She had settled on surprise. Her trip had been on again and off again and on again as Preston Whiteway juggled his busy schedule. He had decided at the last minute to stay in California and send her to meet with his bankers in New York to present his proposal for financing the Picture World moving picture newsreels. The brash young newspaper publisher must have been impressed enough by her banking experience to give her such an important assignment. But the real reason he would send a woman, she suspected, was that he hoped to woo her and thought that the way to her heart was to respect her independence. She had invented a phrase to emphasize to the persistent Whiteway her commitment to Isaac.

My heart is spoken for.

She had already had to use it twice. But it said it all, and she would use it ten times if she had to.

The rain was thinning and the city lights were bright. As soon as she got to her hotel, she would telephone Isaac at the Yale Club. Respectable hotels like the Astor frowned upon unmarried women receiving gentleman visitors. But there wasnโ€™t a house dick in the country who would not turn a blind eye to a Van Dorn operative. Professional courtesy, Isaac would smile.

The ferry tooted its whistle. She felt the propellers shudder beneath her feet. As they pulled away from the New Jersey shore, she saw the sails of an old-fashioned schooner silhouetted by a brightly lighted pier.

IT HAD TAKEN FOUR men a full ten minutes to lift the heavy automatic machine gun atop the boxcar. And as Isaac Bell had predicted, the railroad police manning the water-cooled, tripod-mounted, belt-fed Vickers on top of the dynamite train stayed wide awake. But Eddie Edwards, the forty-year-old Van Dorn investigator with a startling shock of prematurely white hair, kept climbing up the boxcarโ€™s ladder to check on them anyway.

Their weapon was equally reliable, adapted from the Maxim gun which had proved itself mowing down African armies. One of the rail bulls was a transplanted Englishman who told tales of slaughtering โ€œnativesโ€ with a Maxim in the previous decadeโ€™s colonial wars. Edwards had instructed him to leave the natives of Jersey City alone. Unless they tried something. The old gangs there werenโ€™t as tough as they had been when Edwards had led the Van Dorn fight to clear the rail yards, but they were still ornery.

Standing on top of the railcar, turning slowly on his heel and surveying the machine gunโ€™s field of fire, which now encompassed a full circle, Edwards was reminded of the old days guarding bullion shipments. Of course the Lava Bed Gangโ€™s weapons in those days were mostly lead pipes, brass knuckles, and the occasional sawed-off shotgun. He watched a brightly lit ferry leaving Communipaw Terminal. He turned back toward the gate, blocked by three coal tenders and manned by cinder dicks with rifles, and saw that the freight yards looked as calm as a freight yard ever looked. Switch engines were scuttling about making up trains. But in each cab rode an armed detective. He looked back at the river. The rain was lifting. He could see the lights of New York City clearly now.

โ€œIs that schooner going to run into that steam lighter?โ€

โ€œNo. They were close, but theyโ€™re moving apart. See? Heโ€™s sailing off, and the lighterโ€™s turning this way.โ€

โ€œI see,โ€ said Edwards, his jaw tightening. โ€œWhere the hell is he going?โ€

โ€œComing our way.โ€

Edwards watched, liking the situation less and less.

โ€œHow far is that red buoy?โ€ he asked.

โ€œThe red light? Iโ€™d say a quarter mile.โ€

โ€œIf he passes that buoy, give him four rounds ahead of his bow.โ€

โ€œYou mean that?โ€ the rail cop asked dubiously.

โ€œDammit, yes, I mean it. Get set to fire.โ€

โ€œHeโ€™s passing it, Mr. Edwards.โ€

โ€œShoot! Now!โ€

The water-cooled Vickers made an oddly muffled pop-pop-pop-pop noise. Where the bullets hit was too far off in the dark to see. The steam lighter kept coming straight at the powder pier.

โ€œGive him ten rounds across the roof of his wheelhouse.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™ll be a wake-up call,โ€ said the Englishman. โ€œThose slugs sound like thunder overhead.โ€

โ€œJust make sure youโ€™re clear behind him. I donโ€™t want to rake some poor tugboat.โ€

โ€œClear.โ€

โ€œFire! Now! Donโ€™t wait!โ€

The canvas cartridge belt twitched. Ten rounds spit from the barrel. A wisp of steam rose from the water cooler.

The boat kept coming.

Eddie Edwards wet his lips. God knew who was on it. A drunk? A frightened boy at the helm while his captain slept? A terrified old man who had no clue where the shooting was coming from?

โ€œGet up there in the light. Wave them off... Not you! You stay on the gun.โ€

The belt feeder and the water bearer jumped up and down on the roof of the boxcar, frantically waving their arms. The boat kept coming.

โ€œGet out of the way!โ€ Edwards told them. โ€œShoot the wheelhouse.โ€ He grabbed the belt and began feeding as the gun opened up in a continuous roar.

Two hundred rounds spewed from its barrel, crossed a quarter mile of water, and tore through the steam lighterโ€™s wheelhouse, scattering wood and glass. Two rounds smashed the top spoke of the helm. Another cut the rope looped around the helm and it was suddenly free to turn. But water passing over the rudder held it steady on course to the powder pier. Then the frame of the wheelhouse collapsed. The roof fell on the helm, pushing the spokes down, turning the wheel and the rudder to which it was attached.

THE SECOND ACT OF the Follies started off big and got bigger. The โ€œJu-Jitsu Waltz,โ€ featuring Prince Tokio

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