登陆注册
15465800000067

第67章 Chapter Twenty-Five(3)

Down towards the east and the Pool of London a forest of funnels and masts was dimly outlined against the sinister sky. Huge barges, each steered by a single man at the end of a pair of giant oars, lumbered and swirled down-stream at all angles. Occasionally a tug snorted busily past, flashing its red and green signals and dragging an unwieldy tail of barges in its wake. Then a Margate passenger steamer, its electric lights gleaming from every porthole, swerved round to anchor, with its load of two thousand fatigued excursionists. Over everything brooded an air of mystery - a spirit and feeling of strangeness, remoteness, and the inexplicable. As the broad flat little boat bobbed its way under the shadow of enormous hulks, beneath stretched hawsers, and past buoys covered with green slime, Racksole could scarcely believe that he was in the very heart of London - the most prosaic city in the world. He had a queer idea that almost anything might happen in this seeming waste of waters at this weird hour of ten o'clock. It appeared incredible to him that only a mile or two away people were sitting in theatres applauding farces, and that at Cannon Street Station, a few yards off, other people were calmly taking the train to various highly respectable suburbs whose names he was gradually learning. He had the uplifting sensation of being in another world which comes to us sometimes amid surroundings violently different from our usual surroundings. The most ordinary noises - of men calling, of a chain running through a slot, of a distant siren - translated themselves to his ears into terrible and haunting sounds, full of portentous significance. He looked over the side of the boat into the brown water, and asked himself what frightful secrets lay hidden in its depth. Then he put his hand into his hip-pocket and touched the stock of his Colt revolver - that familiar substance comforted him.

The oarsmen had instructions to drop slowly down to the Pool, as the wide reach below the Tower is called. These two men had not been previously informed of the precise object of the expedition, but now that they were safely afloat Hazell judged it expedient to give them some notion of it. 'We expect to come across a rather suspicious steam launch,' he said. 'My friend here is very anxious to get a sight of her, and until he has seen her nothing definite can be done.'

'What sort of a craft is she, sir?' asked the stroke oar, a fat-faced man who seemed absolutely incapable of any serious exertion.

'I don't know,' Racksole replied; 'but as near as I can judge, she's about sixty feet in length, and painted black. I fancy I shall recognize her when I see her.'

'Not much to go by, that,' exclaimed the other man curtly. But he said no more. He, as well as his mate, had received from Theodore Racksole one English sovereign as a kind of preliminary fee, and an English sovereign will do a lot towards silencing the natural sarcastic tendencies and free speech of a Thames waterman.

'There's one thing I noticed,' said Racksole suddenly, 'and I forgot to tell you of it, Mr Hazell. Her screw seemed to move with a rather irregular, lame sort of beat.'

Both watermen burst into a laugh.

'Oh,' said the fat rower, 'I know what you're after, sir - it's Jack Everett's launch, commonly called "Squirm". She's got a four-bladed propeller, and one blade is broken off short.'

'Ay, that's it, sure enough,' agreed the man in the bows. 'And if it's her you want, I seed her lying up against Cherry Gardens Pier this very morning.'

'Let us go to Cherry Gardens Pier by all means, as soon as possible,'

Racksole said, and the boat swung across stream and then began to creep down by the right bank, feeling its way past wharves, many of which, even at that hour, were still busy with their cranes, that descended empty into the bellies of ships and came up full. As the two watermen gingerly manoeuvred the boat on the ebbing tide, Hazell explained to the millionaire that the 'Squirm' was one of the most notorious craft on the river. It appeared that when anyone had a nefarious or underhand scheme afoot which necessitated river work Everett's launch was always available for a suitable monetary consideration. The 'Squirm' had got itself into a thousand scrapes, and out of those scrapes again with safety, if not precisely with honour. The river police kept a watchful eye on it, and the chief marvel about the whole thing was that old Everett, the owner, had never yet been seriously compromised in any illegal escapade. Not once had the officer of the law been able to prove anything definite against the proprietor of the 'Squirm', though several of its quondam hirers were at that very moment in various of Her Majesty's prisons throughout the country. Latterly, however, the launch, with its damaged propeller, which Everett consistently refused to have repaired, had acquired an evil reputation, even among evil-doers, and this fraternity had gradually come to abandon it for less easily recognizable craft.

'Your friend, Mr Tom Jackson,' said Hazell to Racksole, 'committed an error of discretion when he hired the "Squirm". Ascoundrel of his experience and calibre ought certainly to have known better than that. You cannot fail to get a clue now.'

By this time the boat was approaching Cherry Gardens Pier, but unfortunately a thin night-fog had swept over the river, and objects could not be discerned with any clearness beyond a distance of thirty yards. As the Customs boat scraped down past the pier all its occupants strained eyes for a glimpse of the mysterious launch, but nothing could be seen of it. The boat continued to float idly down-stream, the men resting on their oars.

Then they narrowly escaped bumping a large Norwegian sailing vessel at anchor with her stem pointing down-stream. This ship they passed on the port side. Just as they got clear of her bowsprit the fat man cried out excitedly, 'There's her nose!' and he put the boat about and began to pull back against the tide. And surely the missing 'Squirm' was comfortably anchored on the starboard quarter of the Norwegian ship, hidden neatly between the ship and the shore. The men pulled very quietly alongside.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 归梦媱

    归梦媱

    慕洛凝:生在慕府,是生命的一场华丽的错误。只因我是一只自由的鸟。落寞的荒凉也罢,凄惨的孤寂也好,高高的城墙却把我禁锢在繁华的荒芜。看看庭院中繁茂的花丛,究竟哪里是我的落根之地,可以让我自由生长。即便是我爱你,我也不要在皇宫的囚牢里生存,那不过是更华丽的鸟笼,将我的心永远封寂。即便是我爱你,我也不要在后宫的勾心斗角下屈辱。我爱你,多希望只是一厢情愿。可是你爱我。。。我不愿看你落入深深的忧伤。你叫允寂,但我却不允许你寂寞。
  • 墓中局

    墓中局

    墓中局,局中墓——“精绝奇巧六异墓,千年百年风水局”...城固死龙坑、亭水阴阳墓、天台山妖棺、邱山活穷奇、京城锁龙井、阴阳仙人府......六处古迹,七头阴间异兽,跨越千百年大商遗歌,国之重器破土重现......九菊一流再现神州,龙脉诡异移位,轮回千年的迷局有谁能破?
  • 倾城狂妃太逍遥

    倾城狂妃太逍遥

    杏林世家继承者沐云澜,在与别人比武时,莫名穿越至傻女沐云澜身上。当她睁开眼时,一片鲜红;反映过来时,已嫁为人妇。他,邪魅倾城,惊才绝艳,虽在朝中无权,却名满天下,引得皇帝心生不满,意欲羞辱。一纸赐婚,他娶了那个天下皆知的傻子,也碎了一地少女芳心。可是,他乐的守护这份天真痴傻,哪怕他早已看出她是装的。而她也乐的享受这份保护,哪怕她知道,他早已知道她并非痴傻。只是,当他为护她而中毒昏迷时,她怒了。老娘装疯卖傻,可不代表真傻。伤了她沐云澜的人,那就等待着接受她的怒火吧!护她者,她便护其一生一世;伤他者,她定叫他生不如死!从此,世间多了个倾城狂妃;从此,世间出现名逍遥神医。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 大道君主

    大道君主

    大劫来临,天发杀机,移星易宿;地发杀机,龙蛇起陆;人发杀机,天地反覆,妖魔乱世,众神争锋。
  • 吾乃武圣关守也

    吾乃武圣关守也

    夜空,一阵青光突显顿时风卷云涌突然空中一赤脸青衣之人骑一浑身如火赤红宝马大喝一身从空而落。一男子见空中异像顿时附拜在地:“我关家之祖选定吾儿,助我蜀国再次崛起!”“啊!啊!”男子面前一间木屋中传来一女人歇斯底里的惨叫。顿时,青光冲向木屋。。。“呜哇~呜哇”一阵婴儿啼哭的声音从木屋传来。
  • 袜子

    袜子

    有些婚姻,就像袜子,起初是崭新的,漂亮的,合乎心意的,可是时间越久,袜子就越发褶皱、破旧,甚至带着嗖味儿,让人恶心。陈欣然一直在纠结她的那双袜子,是该扔掉?还是该继续穿着!
  • 人道乐土

    人道乐土

    “好好的世道,竟人人争当妖魔?”林越在万年之后的世界醒来,顿时怒不可遏!方今之世,人类竟成了妖魔的餐点,神仙的奴隶。在这吃人的世道,若想不被吃,就只有成妖成魔,争夺吃人的权利!人乃万灵之长,岂能为奴为婢?这个世界需要一片人道乐土,而他正因此而来!
  • 唐僧的告白

    唐僧的告白

    出门在外处处不易,古往今来不外如是。且把衷肠述
  • 四大武才:虐妃贤丶美男虐

    四大武才:虐妃贤丶美男虐

    倾城,倾贵人,跑路到宫外,却无厘头进入皇上重用的京城四大美男的府内做了丫鬟,三天之后,当倾城与府中的姐妹偷溜外面逛街,大群士兵追两人跑,在危难之情,姐妹化作狐妖,为倾城挡着,倾城知道这件事再也瞒不下去,向四人坦白了一切,并说明自己的不愿,四人决定帮助她,但在保护的时间内,皇上发现,五人必斩.............
  • 白色眷恋

    白色眷恋

    因为不满皇马6比2的比分,中国青年律师沈星怒砸啤酒瓶,结果电光火石间,他穿越成了佛罗伦蒂诺的儿子,且看来自09年的小伙子如何玩转03年的欧洲足坛