Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    The Striker


    Prev Next



      DIRK PITT® ADVENTURES BY CLIVE CUSSLER

      Poseidon’s Arrow

      (WITH DIRK CUSSLER)

      Crescent Dawn

      (WITH DIRK CUSSLER)

      Arctic Drift

      (WITH DIRK CUSSLER)

      Treasure of Khan

      (WITH DIRK CUSSLER)

      Black Wind

      (WITH DIRK CUSSLER)

      Trojan Odyssey

      Valhalla Rising

      Atlantis Found

      Flood Tide

      Shock Wave

      Inca Gold

      Sahara

      Dragon

      Treasure

      Cyclops

      Deep Six

      Pacific Vortex!

      Night Probe!

      Vixen 03

      Shock Wave

      Raise the Titanic!

      Iceberg

      The Mediterranean Caper

      FARGO ADVENTURES BY CLIVE CUSSLER

      WITH THOMAS PERRY

      The Tombs

      WITH GRANT BLACKWOOD

      The Kingdom

      Lost Empire

      Spartan Gold

      ISAAC BELL NOVELS BY CLIVE CUSSLER

      The Thief

      (WITH JUSTIN SCOTT)

      The Race

      (WITH JUSTIN SCOTT)

      The Spy

      (WITH JUSTIN SCOTT)

      The Wrecker

      (WITH JUSTIN SCOTT)

      The Chase

      KURT AUSTIN ADVENTURES BY CLIVE CUSSLER

      WITH GRAHAM BROWN

      The Storm

      Devil’s Gate

      WITH PAUL KEMPRECOS

      Medusa

      White Death

      The Navigator

      Fire Ice

      Polar Shift

      Blue Gold

      Lost City

      Serpent

      OREGON FILES ADVENTURES BY CLIVE CUSSLER

      WITH JACK DU BRUL

      The Jungle

      The Silent Sea

      Corsair

      Plague Ship

      Skeleton Coast

      Dark Watch

      WITH CRAIG DIRGO

      Golden Buddha

      Sacred Stone

      NONFICTION BY CLIVE CUSSLER

      Built for Adventure: The Classic Automobiles of Clive Cussler and Dirk Pitt®

      WITH CRAIG DIRGO

      The Sea Hunters

      The Sea Hunters II

      Clive Cussler and Dirk Pitt Revealed

      G. P. PUTNAM’S SONS

      Publishers Since 1838

      Published by the Penguin Group

      Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street,

      New York, New York 10014, USA

      USA • Canada • UK • Ireland • Australia

      New Zealand • India • South Africa • China

      Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England

      For more information about the Penguin Group visit penguin.com

      Copyright © 2013 by Sandecker, RLLLP

      All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights. Purchase only authorized editions.

      Published simultaneously in Canada

      ISBN 978-1-101-59266-3

      ENDPAPER AND INTERIOR ILLUSTRATIONS BY ROLAND DAHLQUIST

      This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

      Contents

      Also by Clive Cussler

      Title Page

      Copyright

      Map

      PROLOGUE

      BOOK ONE: COAL

      Chapter 1

      Chapter 2

      Chapter 3

      Chapter 4

      Chapter 5

      Chapter 6

      Chapter 7

      Chapter 8

      Chapter 9

      Chapter 10

      Chapter 11

      Chapter 12

      Chapter 13

      Chapter 14

      Chapter 15

      Chapter 16

      Chapter 17

      BOOK TWO: FIRE

      Chapter 18

      Chapter 19

      Chapter 20

      Chapter 21

      Chapter 22

      Chapter 23

      Chapter 24

      Chapter 25

      Chapter 26

      Chapter 27

      Chapter 28

      Chapter 29

      Chapter 30

      Chapter 31

      BOOK THREE: STEAM

      Chapter 32

      Chapter 33

      Chapter 34

      Chapter 35

      Chapter 36

      Chapter 37

      Chapter 38

      Chapter 39

      Chapter 40

      Chapter 41

      Chapter 42

      Chapter 43

      Chapter 44

      Chapter 45

      Chapter 46

      Chapter 47

      Chapter 48

      Chapter 49

      Chapter 50

      EPILOGUE

      PROLOGUE

      A Smoke-filled Room

      1912

      THE MARMON 32 SPEEDSTER PARKED ON WALL STREET IN A shadow between two lampposts.

      Roundsman O’Riordan took notice. It was the dead of night. Orders said let no one bother the bigwig politicians and officeholders who were horse-trading upstairs in the Congdon Building. And the auto had a clear shot at the limousines waiting for them at the curb.

      Its side curtains were fogged by the damp rolling off the harbor. O’Riordan had to get close to see inside. The driver was a pleasant surprise, a beautiful lady with straw-blond hair, and the cop relaxed a little. But all he could see of the gent beside her were steely contours. Still, you couldn’t rap your stick on a Marmon 32 and tell the swells to move along like they were bums on the sidewalk, so with his right hand by his pistol, he tapped the side curtain lightly, like touching his glass to the mahogany to signal the bartender of a classy joint he was ready for another but didn’t mean to be rushing him.

      A big hand with long, nimble fingers slid the curtain open. O’Riordan glimpsed a snow-white cuff, diamond links, and the black sleeve of a dress coat. The hand seized his in a strong grip.

      “Paddy O’Riordan. Fancy meeting you here.”

      Raked by searching blue eyes, the roundsman recognized the gold mane, the thick flaxen mustache, and the no-nonsense expression that could only belong to Isaac Bell—chief investigator of the Van Dorn Detective Agency.

      He touched his stick to his helmet. “Good evening, Mr. Bell. I didn’t recognize you in the shadows.”

      “What are you doing out so late?” Bell asked.

      O’Riordan started to answer before Bell’s grin told him it was a joke. Policemen were supposed to be out late.

      The detective nodded at the limousines. “Big doings.”

      “Judge Congdon’s got a special waiting at Grand Central. Tracks cleared to Chicago. And I’m sorry to tell you I have me orders to clear the street. Straight from the captain.”

      Bell did not seem to hear. “Paddy, I want you to meet my wife— Marion, may I present Roundsman O’Riordan, former scourge of Staten Island pirates back when he was in the Harbor Squad. There wasn’t a wharf rat in New York who didn’t buy drinks for the house the night Paddy came ashore.”

      She reached across her husband with an ungloved hand that seemed to glow like ivory. O’Riordan took it carefully in his enormous fist and bowed low.

      “A privilege to meet you, marm. I’ve known your good husband many years in the line of duty. And may I s
    ay, marm, that Mrs. O’Riordan and I have greatly enjoyed your moving picture shows.”

      She thanked him in a musical voice that would sing in his mind for days.

      Chief Inspector Bell said, “Well, we better not keep you from your rounds.”

      O’Riordan touched his stick to his helmet again. If a crack private detective chose to canoodle with his own wife in a dark auto on Wall Street in the middle of the night—orders be damned.

      “I’ll tell the boys not to disturb you.”

      But Bell motioned him closer and whispered, “I wouldn’t mind if they kept an eye out if I have to leave her alone a moment.”

      “They’ll be drawin’ straws for the privilege.”

      • • •

      BACKSLAPPING POLITICIANS burst from the building and converged on the smaller of the limousines, a seven-passenger Rambler Knickerbocker.

      Isaac Bell opened the curtain to hear them.

      “Driver! Straight to Grand Central.”

      “Don’t love handing the vice presidency to a louse like Congdon, but that’s politics.”

      “Money talks.”

      The Rambler Knickerbocker drove off. Senior men emerged next. Moving more slowly, they climbed into the second limousine, an enormous Cunningham Model J, hand-built at great expense to Judge James Congdon’s own design. To Bell’s ear they sounded less reconciled than resigned.

      “Congdon has most of the delegates he needs, and those he doesn’t, he’ll buy.”

      “If only our candidate hadn’t died.”

      “Always the wrong man.”

      Isaac Bell waited for the Cunningham to turn the corner. A police motorcycle escort stationed on Broadway clattered after it. “If James Congdon captures vice president,” Bell said, “the president’s life won’t be worth a plugged nickel.”

      He kissed Marion’s lips. “Thank you for making me look harmless to the cops. Are you sure you won’t go home?”

      “Not this time,” she said firmly, and Bell knew there was no dissuading her. This time was different.

      Although he was dressed for the theater, he left his silk topper on the backseat and donned a broad-brimmed hat with a low crown instead.

      Marion straightened his tie.

      Bell said, “I’ve always wondered why you never ask me to be careful.”

      “I wouldn’t want to slow you down.”

      Bell winked. “Not likely.”

      He left his wife with a smile. But as he crossed Wall Street, his expression hardened, and the warmth seeped from his eyes.

      Joseph Van Dorn, the large, bearded founder of the agency, was waiting, deep in shadow and still as ice. He stood watch as Bell picked open the lock on the outside door, and followed him in, where Bell picked another lock on a steel door marked Mechanical Room. Inside it was warm and damp. An orderly maze of thick pipes passed through rows of steam-conditioning valves. Van Dorn compared the control wheels to an engineer’s sketch he unfolded from his inside pocket.

      Isaac Bell climbed back up to the street and went around to the front of the building. His evening clothes elicited a respectful nod from the doorman. As the politicians said, Money talked.

      “Top floor,” he told the yawning elevator runner.

      “I thought they were all done up there.”

      “Not quite.”

      BOOK ONE

      COAL

      Gleason Mine No. 1, Gleasonburg, West Virginia

      1902

      1

      HE WAS A FRESH-FACED YOUTH WITH GOLDEN HAIR. BUT something about him looked suspicious. A coal cop watching the miners troop down the rails into the mouth of Gleason Mine No. 1 pointed him out to his boss, a Pinkerton detective.

      The young miner towered over the foreigners the company imported from Italy and Slovenia, and was even taller than the homegrown West Virginia boys. But it was not his height that looked out of place. Nor was his whipcord frame unusual. The work was hard, and it cost plenty to ship food to remote coalfields. There was no free lunch in the saloons that lined the muddy Main Street.

      A miner clomping along on a wooden peg tripped on a crosstie and stumbled into another miner on crutches. The golden-haired youth glided to steady both, moving so effortlessly he seemed to float. Many were maimed digging coal. He stood straight on both legs and still possessed all his fingers.

      “Don’t look like no poor worker to me,” the coal cop ventured with a contemptuous smirk.

      “Watching like a cat, anything that moves,” said the Pinkerton, who wore a bowler hat, a six-gun in his coat, and a blackjack strapped to his wrist.

      “You reckon he’s a striker?”

      “He’ll wish he ain’t.”

      “Gangway!”

      An electric winch jerked the slack out of a wire between the rails. Miners, laborers, and doorboys jumped aside. The wire dragged a train of coal cars out of the mine and up a steep slope to the tipple, where the coal was sorted and dumped into river barges that towboats pushed down the Monongahela to Pittsburgh.

      The tall young miner exchanged greetings with the derailer-switch operator. If the wire, which was shackled to a chain bridle on the front car, broke, Jim Higgins was supposed to throw the switch to make the train jump the tracks before the hundred-ton runaway plummeted back down into the works.

      “The cops are watching you,” Higgins warned.

      “I’m no striker.”

      “All we’re asking,” Higgins answered mildly, “is to live like human beings, feed our families, and send our kids to school.”

      “They’ll fire you.”

      “They can’t fire us all. The coal business is booming and labor is scarce.”

      Higgins was a brave man. He had to be to ignore the fact that the mineowners would stop at nothing to keep the union out of West Virginia. Men fired for talking up the union—much less calling a strike—saw their wives and children kicked out of the shanties they rented from the Gleason Consolidated Coal & Coke Company. And when Gleason smoked out labor organizers, the Pinkertons rousted them back to Pennsylvania, beaten bloody.

      “Higgins!” shouted a foreman. “I told you to oil that winch.”

      “I’m supposed to watch the derailer when the cars are coming up.”

      “Do like I tell you. Oil that winch every hour.”

      “Who’s going to stop a runaway if the wire breaks?”

      “Get up there and oil that winch, damn you!”

      Jim Higgins abandoned his post and ran two hundred yards up the steep incline to the winch engine, past the cars of coal climbing heavily to the tipple.

      The tall young miner ducked his head to enter the mouth of the mine—a timber-braced portal in the side of the mountain—and descended down a sloping tunnel. He had boned up on mine engineering to prepare for the job. Strictly speaking, this tracked haulageway was not a tunnel, which by definition had to pass completely through a mountain, but an adit. Aditus, he recalled from his boarding school Latin, meant “access.” Once in, there was no way out but to turn around and go back.

      Where he entered a gallery that intersected and split off from the haulageway, he hailed the small boy, who opened a wooden door to channel the air from the ventilators.

      “Hey, Sammy. Feller from the telegraph office told me your Pirates beat Brooklyn yesterday. Eight-to-five.”

      “Wow! Thanks for telling me, mister.”

      Sammy had never been near a major-league ballpark—never been farther than ten miles from this hollow where the Gleason Company struck a rich bed of the Pittsburgh Seam that underlay Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Ohio. But his father had been a brakeman on the B & O, until he died in a wreck, and used to bring home stories of big-city games that he would illustrate with cigarette baseball cards of famous players.

      The young man slipped Sammy a colorful chromolithograph of Rochester first baseman Harry O’Hagan. In August, O’Hagan had accomplished a miracle, still on the lips of every man and boy in America—a one-man triple play.

      “Bet New York’s kicking themselves for trading Harry
    ,” he said, then asked in a lower voice, “Have you seen Roscoe?”

      Roscoe was a Gleason spy disguised as a laborer.

      The boy nodded in the same direction the young man was headed.

      He followed the gallery, which sloped deeper into the mountain for hundreds of yards, until it stopped at the face of the seam. There he went to work as a helper, shoveling the chunks of coal picked, drilled, and dynamited from the seam by the skilled miners. He was paid forty cents for every five-ton car he loaded during twelve-hour shifts six days a week.

      The air was thick with coal dust. Swirling black clouds of it dimmed the light cast by electric bulbs. The low ceiling was timbered by props and crosspieces every few feet to support the mountain of rock and soil that pressed down on the coal. The seam creaked ominously, squeezed above and below by pressure from roof and floor.

      Here in the side tunnel, off the main rail track, the coal cars were pulled by mules that wore leather bonnets to protect their heads. One of the mules, a mare with the small feet and long ears that the miners believed indicated a stronger animal, suddenly stopped. Eustace McCoy, a big West Virginian who had been groaning about his red-eye hangover, cursed her and jerked her bridle. But she planted her legs and refused to budge, ears flickering at the creaking sound.

      Eustace whipped off his belt and swung it to beat her with the buckle end.

      The tall blond youth caught it before it traveled six inches.

      “Sonny, get out of my way!” Eustace warned him.

      “I’ll get her moving. It’s just something spooked her.”

      Eustace, who was nearly as tall and considerably broader, balled his fist and threw a haymaker at the young man’s face.

      The blow was blocked before it could connect. Eustace cursed and swung again. Two punches sprang back at him. They landed in elegant combination, too quick to follow with the eye and packed with concentrated power. Eustace fell down on the rails, the fight and anger knocked out of him.

      The miners exchanged astonished glances.

      “Did you see that?”

      “Nope.”

      “Neither did Eustace McCoy.”

      The young man spoke gently to the mule and she pulled the car away. Then he helped the fallen laborer to his feet and offered his hand when Eustace acknowledged with a lopsided grin, “Ain’t been hit that hard since I borrowed my old man’s bottle. Whar’d you larn to throw that one-two?”

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2025