pier with gunfire. Bullets banged on corrugated-iron doors and shattered glass. Citizens nearby flattened themselves on the asphalt, and Bell saw the way suddenly clear as if a swaying field of wheat had been mowed by a giant McCormick reaper. He saw Blinky Armstrong and two of his Gophers sprint toward the West Street portal, trampling cowering citizens and knocking down those too terrified to move.
Isaac Bell tore after them.
Halfway to West Street, they ducked into a stairwell.
Bell followed, pounding down steel steps that led to the baggage deck below. The Gophers were racing alongside the
Instead of trying to escape directly toward West Street, where they could melt into the neighborhoods, they turned back toward the water to get rid of their weapons. Revolvers, pocket pistols, and sleeve guns clanged against
Isaac Bell cut the corner of the dogleg the gangsters had turned to the slip and caught up with them. He was close enough to see the seams in Armstrong’s coat and was just about to launch a diving tackle at the big man’s ankles when he passed the
Oblivious to the tumult on the pier — or capitalizing on the distraction of fleeing gangsters and pursuing cops — two bill posters steered a little steam launch under the flare of
THE ELECTRIC THEATER
323 West 14th Street
Finest
MOVING PICTURE PALACE
in
New York City
“NEW SHOWS DAILY”
Twenty more cops stormed in the West Street doors.
The Gophers jinked abruptly to the right.
Isaac Bell veered after them.
The Gopher ahead of Armstrong leaped from the pier toward the landward edge of the slip, missed his footing, and fell into the water. Armstrong jumped next, made it, and ran past
15
Isaac Bell skidded to a stop, hardly believing his eyes. Coal chutes gaped open along the middle of the hull, fifteen feet above the barges. Beneath each hung staging, wooden platforms suspended by ropes for the trimmers to stand on. On the farthest stage, halfway back along the
Bell looked for the fastest route out there. It would take too long to go back through the ship. He had to get across the water. He spotted the enterprising bill posters slathering the
“Bill posters! You men, there! Bill posters!”
They heard him, he saw by the way they ducked their heads, but their only response was to glue faster. Accustomed to being chased off private property, they were trying to slap on as many ads as they could until they had to run from shipowners and pier officials. Before Isaac Bell could get their attention, the man that Professor Beiderbecke had dubbed the
The Acrobat, Bell realized, had timed his drop to coincide with the barge’s removal. Dispensing fat bribes to the boatmen, he would ride the empty barge ashore in the guise of an American trimmer and step onto dry land in a distant coal yard, neatly dodging the customs agents and immigration officials guarding the
Bell cupped his hands.
The bill posters’ eyes swiveled at him like searchlights.
Bell yanked his wallet from his coat and waved the money.
A poster that proclaimed
DREAMLAND THEATER
9 West 9th Street
NEW “MOVIES” EVERY DAY
was abandoned in a flash.
One man used his brush like a barge pole to shove off the
“Gimme the dough!” cried the man with the brush.
Bell smacked it into his hand.
“On the jump!”
The steam engine chugged. The propeller spun, and the sharp-bowed little boat turned around and gathered way alongside the
Bell heard a sharp two-finger whistle, an urgent warning.
The Acrobat was signaling someone on the ship.
Bell turned to see who his accomplice was.
He saw a blur of movement in one of the chutes and glimpsed a chunk of coal with sharp, gleaming facets fly at his head. He ducked, turning his face, but it came too fast — no man could throw so hard, it had to have been hurled from a sling. Turning saved his face, but nothing could stop the jagged shard from smashing his hat into the water and slicing his skull.
Isaac Bell heard a hollow explosion like a firecracker dropped in a barrel. A sharp pain shot down his spine. He felt his knees buckle, and he sensed that he was tumbling. He heard the bill poster who was steering the launch shout, “Catch him!” He saw the brush extended for him to grab hold. But the hand he reached with was too heavy to lift.
Bell gathered all his strength for a massive last-ditch effort. He raised his leaden hand higher. He felt the