'Answer or I'll kill you.'
They worked in teams; his offices handled sale and shipping of dynamite as well. Couldn't remember; he would have to check his ledgers—that would take time—would this man let him live long enough to do it?
'SF, P and P.'
'What is that?'
'Santa Fe, Prescott and Phoenix Railroad. One team.'
'When?'
'Six months ago.'
'Where exactly did you send them?'
'Arizona Territory. Working the line west from Tucson. From Stockton, they come from Stockton, California. I don't remember anything else; I don't know their names but I could find out for you. Four men ...'
The man's hand palmed Little Pete's head and rammed the soft center of his temple against the table edge. Little Pete slumped into a pile on the floor, unconscious.
Kanazuchi walked to the balcony, rapidly scaled a trellis up to the roof, and faded away. No one had seen him enter; no one saw him leave.
By the time Little Pete came to his senses and the uproar over the murders in his town house spread through Tangrenbu like a grass fire—the feet of one of his bodyguards had been severed and served as Little Pete's lunch
Eerie silence belowdecks: The ship's engines had died along with the lights. The
Doyle shushed him. They stood and strained to listen....
Someone was moving down the passageway toward the bay forty feet below the water line where the five men stood beside the empty coffins.
Doyle took the crowbar from Captain Hoffner, grabbed the lantern from Innes, and closed its shutters, plunging them into darkness.
'Stand against the walls. Away from the door,' he whispered to the others. 'Not a word from anyone.'
They waited and watched. A small flame flickered to life fifty feet down the passage; a match igniting. It bobbed toward them, died out, then another took its place and continued forward. Doyle tracked the progress of the shuffling footsteps, and as the advancing figure reached the hatch to the hold he stepped out and uncovered the lantern right in the face of the man, blinding him. The man cried out, dropped the match, and shielded his eyes.
'For crying out loud, what'd you have to go and do that for?'
'What are you doing here, Pinkus?' said Doyle.
Ira Pinkus bent over, trying to rub the dancing spots away from his field of vision, too disoriented to organize a lie.
'I was following you,' said Pinkus.
'You've picked a very inopportune time—stand away from the door, Pinkus; someone might shoot you,' said Doyle, maneuvering the little man against a bulkhead and closing the hatch behind him.
'I was halfway down a flight of stairs when everything went black....'
'And keep your voice down.'
'Okay,' whispered Pinkus. 'Jesus, I can't see a thing: Everybody looks like a light bulb—so anyway, what gives with the skull and crossbones stuff, Mr. Conan Doyle—oh, hello, Innes, nice to see you again.'
'Hello.'
'What's your name, friend?'
'Lionel Stern.'
'How are ya? Ira Pinkus. And this must be Captain Hoffner; very pleased to meet you, sir, been looking forward to it; very fine ship you have here—Ira Pinkus,
'Why is this man following you?' asked Hoffner of Doyle.
'I'm writing a series of articles about transatlantic steamship travel, Captain, and I would greatly appreciate an opportunity to interview you....'
'Pinkus,' said Doyle ominously.
'Yeah?'
'Be quiet or I'll be compelled to throttle you.'
'Oh. Sure, okay.'
The silence that followed was broken by a series of kicks and shuddering metallic groans from somewhere aft and above them in the ship.
'Emergency generator,' said the engineer.
'Trying to restart the screws,' said Doyle.
Hoffner nodded. They listened.
'But it's not working,' said Innes.
'That generator was inspected and fully operational before we left Southampton,' said Captain Hoffner.
'But then, I assume, so were the engines,' said Doyle.
Hoffner stared at him. 'You are not suggesting ...'
'Sabotage?' piped in Pinkus, somewhat gleefully.
The word hung in the air. Pinkus looked back and forth from Doyle to Hoffner like a man watching table tennis.
'What is your standard procedure in such a situation?'
'The crew will distribute lamps and escort all passengers who are abovedecks back to quarters.'
'How long will that take?'
'Twenty minutes, maybe half an hour.'
'And all passengers are then expected to remain in their cabins.'
'Yes, until power is restored.'
'Captain ... does anyone else know we're down here?' asked Doyle.
'My first officer,' said Hoffner. 'Whoever else is on the bridge.'
'Are they after me?' asked Lionel Stern glumly.
On the verge of answering, from the corner of his eye Doyle caught Pinkus's puppy-dog eager expression. 'Mr. Pinkus, would you please be good enough to go over there and stand in the corner for a while?'
'Really? What for?'
'This is a private conversation,' said Doyle, lighting the way for him with the torch.
Pinkus shrugged congenially and followed Doyle's beam to the far corner, with an uneasy glance at the vacant coffins.
'You want me to face the wall?'
'If you would be so kind.'
'Hey, no problem at all,' said Pinkus. He gave a friendly, overfamiliar wave and turned away.
Doyle gestured for the others to form a tight ring around him; he held the torch under his jacket and the five faces pushed into the faint glow.
'These men have every intention of killing you, Mr. Stern,' said Doyle, his voice a barely audible whisper. 'If doing so will bring the Book of Zohar into their possession.'
'Why don't we just give it to them?' said Hoffner.
'But we have no idea where it is....'
'It is in my cabin,' said Doyle.
Astonished exclamations.
'Gentlemen, please,' pleaded Doyle, shining the light over to Pinkus just as he whipped his head back around to face the wall. 'There will be time for explanations when we are in different company, unless you'd prefer to read