The Assassin by Clive Cussler (epub ebook reader .txt) ๐
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- Author: Clive Cussler
Read book online ยซThe Assassin by Clive Cussler (epub ebook reader .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Clive Cussler
42
Hey, you!โ
Nellie Matters closed her hand around the derringer in her pocket. She had almost made it home free to The Hook saloon.
โYou! Stop right there!โ
I belong here, she reminded herself. In the persona of her disguise, she had every right to be hurrying along this street that paralleled the chain-link refinery fence. But the man who shouted at her was sweating in the heavy blue, brass-buttoned uniform of a Constable Hook cop. She pitched her alto voice down to a range between a raspy tenor and a thin baritone.
โWhatโs up?โ
The cop cast a sharp eye on her workmanโs duds. Her wig, the finest money could buy, was a thick mop of curly brown hair barely contained by a flat cap. A narrow horsehide tool bag hung from her shoulder strap. A pair of nickel-plated side-cutting pliers protruding from an end pocket was supposed to be the finishing varnish coat on a portrait of a journeyman electrician. No one in the refinery city had challenged it until now.
โHow old are you?โ
I belong here! โHow old am I?โ she shot back. โTwenty-four next month. How old are you?โ
The cop looked confused. She let go of the gun in her pocket and drew his attention to her tool bag by shifting it from her left shoulder to her right.
โJeez. From behind, youse looked like a kid cutting school.โ
โThatโs a good one,โ Nellie laughed. โI ainโt played hooky since they kicked me out of eighth grade.โ
The cop laughed, too. โSorry, bud. They stuck me on truant patrol.โ
โTell you what, pal. If your sergeant set a quota, Iโm short enough to go in with you. But I canโt stay long. Gotta go to work.โ
The cop laughed again. โYouโre O.K.โ
โI surely am,โ she said to herself as the cop wandered off and she hurried to The Hook saloon. โI am O.K. as O.K. can be . . . And how are you, Isaac?โ
โ
Isaac Bell sealed off the Constable Hook oil refinery with armed Protective Services operators commanded by Van Dorn detectives. He put white-haired Kansas City Eddie Edwards in charge because Edwards specialized in locking out the slum gang train robbers who plagued many a cityโs railroad yards. The company cops, whom the Van Dorns regarded as strikebreaking thugs in dirty uniforms, resented the invasion and resisted mightily until word from the Eleventh Floor of 26 Broadway reverberated across the harbor like a naval broadside.
โMr. Rockefeller expects every refinery police officer to do his duty by assisting the Van Dorn Detective Agency to protect Standard Oil property.โ
Even before Rockefeller knocked the refinery cops in line, Eddie Edwards was glad-handing the chiefs of the Constable Hook Police Department, the refineryโs private fire department, and the cityโs volunteer fire department. These savvy, by-the-book moves bore immediate fruit. Cops were assigned to guard every high point in the city where a sniper might set up shop. Standard Oil transferred battalions of extra firemen from other refineries. The ranks of the Constable Hook volunteers were swelled by volunteers from every town in New Jersey. Standard Oil tugboats from its Brooklyn and Long Island City yards arrived equipped with fire nozzles and were soon joined by Pennsylvania Railroad and New Jersey Central Railroad tugs and the Baltimore & Ohio Railroadโs fleet from St. George. Then a beat cop assigned to the high school truant squad reported encountering a short, slight, youthful electrician who fit one of the Van Dorn Agency descriptions of how the assassin might look disguised as a man.
โIn the city,โ Eddie Edwards told Isaac Bell. โSo short and skinny, the cop thought he was a kid. Near the fence. Not inside.โ
โYet,โ said Bell.
Bell questioned the cop personally and came away fairly certain he had seen Nellie. Her breakdown 99 would fit easily in the electricianโs horsehide tool bag the cop described. He wondered for the twentieth time whether she had gotten her hands on any of Beitelโs exploding bullets. A few well-placed shots would set six hundred acres ablaze. Her presence confirmed exactly what she had told him. She was out to avenge her father by destroying what Rockefeller loved most. More than life, more than money, the magnate loved what he had built, and the Constable Hook refinery was the biggest thing he had ever built.
โIsaac!โ It was Wally Kisley, out of breath. โFound a duck.โ
The cops exchanged baffled looks.
Bell and Wally headed into the refinery on the run. The Van Dorns blanketing the place under explosives expert Wallyโs guidance had discovered the shooting gallery target on a twenty-thousand-gallon naphtha tank.
โSheโs here,โ said Isaac Bell. โThis nails it.โ
โWith her sense of humor intact,โ said Wally.
The duck was high up on the huge tank, near the top. This one was painted red and stuck to the metal wall with a magnet. Electrical wire attached to its rail bracket ran down the tank. Nellie had concealed the wire artfully by snugging it against the heavy copper cable that grounded the tankโs lightning rod.
โCan you disarm it without blowing us up?โ
โIโll answer that after I find what she hooked to the other end of this wire.โ
The two detectives traced it down the side of the tank to its concrete footing. Wally said, โNice job hiding the wire. Doubt our guys would have noticed if the duck werenโt bright red.โ
โSheโs showing off.โ
The wire snaked halfway around the bottom of the tank, hugging its edges, and still paralleling the lightning rod ground wire until it veered across the oil-soaked ground and disappeared down a storm drain. Bell snapped his fingers. A husky Van Dorn Protective Services operative lumbered over with a toolbox.
โLift the grate. Donโt disturb the wire.โ
The P.S. man inserted a crowbar in a drain slot and pried the cast-iron grate out of its seat. It was very heavy. Bell gave him a hand tipping it out of the way while Wally held the wire.
Bell wrinkled his nose. โWhatโs that smell?โ he asked.
โOil fumes.โ The
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