Captain McEachern refused to go any closer to the massive ship and instead made for the piers at Cherbourg. Once docked, McEachern pointed to an enormous tender that had obviously been busy boarding goods and more passengers. “We’ll get you aboard the tender, and from there you’re on your own, Constable, and this voucher you gave me—” he waved the IOU overhead—“better be good in Belfast! Else I’ll send some men around to find you, sir.”
“I assure you—Chief Constable Reahall will honor your bill for services rendered, Captain.”
It took but little time for the gangplank from the schooner to make connection with the pier, and even here at the docks with
“How will we gain access to the tender, much less
“I pray the French authorities will respect the badge!” he held up his Belfast shield, asking people to move aside as the three pounded their way to the tender which amounted to a large, floating pier stacked high with goods from French companies—some labeled for New York from Paris.
A large contingent of ticket-holders also filled the spaces of what appeared a hundred yard square platform about to ferry everyone and everything out to
“Follow me, boys,” Ransom said to the young interns.
He pushed his way through the final crowd and flashed his badge at the gatekeeper and ticket man. “It is imperative I have a few minutes with your Captain Smith aboard
“Murderer indeed, sir?”
“Aye—killed many a man this villain has. Will you help us to end his career? He could end the life of anyone here you are now boarding.” Ransom swept a hand in the direction of the men, women, and children in line. “Think of the loss of humanity should a bomb be placed aboard that monster ship of yours.”
The two men at the gate exchanged a look at one another, eyes wide, exaggerating their response moments before they both broke out laughing at Ransom. One commented on the youth of his deputies and the other the lengths to which people will go to get aboard
In the end, they were barred from the tender when the gatekeepers began calling for an armed guard who was nearby.
“All right… all right,” Ransom said, hands held high. “When murder occurs aboard that ship, sirs, it is on your head then. Come along, men!” Ransom led Declan and Thomas off.
“We might’ve shown them the pictures!” Declan said, slapping his leather bag beneath his armpit.
“Those two weren’t going to be moved,” replied Ransom, “but I think others will be. Come along.”
Ransom led them to where the goods were being loaded, and there he found the man in charge, and as it turned out, it was a fellow in uniform—an officer from the
“Sir, a word with you, sir.”
“Can you not see, I am hard at it, sir, and time is of the essence?”
Alastair Ransom introduced himself, again flashing his badge in the sun, its reflection blinding the officer, “And I must speak face-to-face with Captain Edward Smith to impart facts of a highly confidential nature.”
“What is your concern, Constable?”
“Surely, your captain has gotten Marconi messages to the effect that death itself is aboard your ship, messages from the Belfast authorities.”
“Messages of death aboard?” asked the officer. “I am Second Officer Charles Lightoller, Constable, and it is unlikely Captain Smith would share such wireless messages with me, but if such were so, rumors most surely would’ve reached me.”
“And surely there must be rumors among the crew? The officers perhaps? The men receiving the messages from my boss to yours? Any whispers of sabotage… anarchists, for instance?”
“Anarchists? Aboard
“It is a possibility. Surely your wireless operator put our message into Smith’s hands.”
Lightoller, a man with the features of a boy, took off his officer’s cap and ran his fingers gingerly through his thinning hair. “The Marconi Company men are extremely professional, sir, and not given to loose tongues; they value their jobs, after all.”
Lightoller looked to be a bright young officer with a future ahead of him, Ransom thought, if he’d only listen. “Mr. Lightoller, please, just have a look at our evidence you have a killer aboard
Declan snatched out the photos they’d brought with them for Charles Lightoller’s perusal. Lightoller gasped at the images of the bodies—before and after dissection—and he hardly knew what he was looking at.
“This killer,” Ransom said in his ear, “works fast and he spreads a horrible disease wherever he goes, Mr. Lightoller—a plague, and if that plague gets underway as
“Yes sir… sounds bloody serious; something… something…”
“Something your captain needs to take seriously, Charles.”
Lightoller swallowed hard. “All right, come on aboard; I’ll see to it you have an audience with Captain Smith.”
“Good… good.” Ransom and his young associates stepped aboard and found comfortable places to sit about the crates. Lightoller hurried the loading and soon all passengers had been welcomed aboard.
The huge floating tender began now making its way toward
The images in the photos did look like men who’d been incinerated; there was no way to capture the true appearance of a victim of this thing—certainly not on a grainy, two-dimensional, black and white photograph. Still the photos had had the desired result, to get them aboard
They would then set up a proper method of determining how to hunt this thing down, trap it, and destroy it… destroy the carrier. Fear also ran high that at some point—left to flourish, this thing would accomplish its single- minded purpose to reproduce and would replenish its kind.
Declan, Thomas, and Ransom went to the other side of the tender and creeping up before them was the huge open hatchway at sea level where all passengers, trunks, bags and crates were to be loaded onboard. For Thomas and Declan, it recalled the night Pinkerton Agent Tuttle shouted down at them to stay off the ship, that Tuttle didn’t know where Anton Fiore might be. For Alastair it recalled standing before this gaping wall of blackness with Reahall at his back telling him he knew his darkest secrets. The same night those two interns knocked at his door and had dragged him into this crazy, madcap chase after an unknown killer none of them knew enough about —a killer toward which they’d run. Reahall had been smart enough to run in the opposite direction.
Then Ransom had someone, a young woman of obvious breeding and some wealth, carrying an umbrella over her head, speaking in his ear, saying, “I was to’ve traveled on the seventh, you know, on the George Washington for New York, but when I heard of this fantastic wonderful new boat was leaving on the 10th, three days