Cargo of Coffins (4 page)

Read Cargo of Coffins Online

Authors: L. Ron Hubbard

Tags: #Education & Reference, #Words; Language & Grammar, #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #Sea Adventures, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Hard-Boiled, #Thrillers, #Men's Adventure, #Thriller, #sea adventure

But now that he was here, he was taking it quietly, as he had taken everything else Fate had doled out to him. His life had been a checkerboard of odd occurrence.

His father had died in the
Grand Banks
fleet, leaving a nine-year-old boy to look out for his mother and two sisters. Lars had looked out for them as handsomely as a New England fishing town and the pay of a sailor
before the mast
would allow.

At the age of fifteen, he had begun to pound out a reputation for himself with his sledgehammer fists. He had risen to a mate of a
coasting
steamer. He had sent three quarters of his pay home and had invested the remaining pittance in extension courses. He rose from mere trig to theory of equations. He slugged a course in maritime law until it flattened out into a diploma. He read until his arctic-blue eyes ached, burning the daylight with labor and the darkness with study.

At eighteen, Lars Marlin had his master’s papers. At twenty-one he had his first command—a wallowing old tub running on a thin profit margin with sighing boilers and weary
screw
. With insight and left hooks he had made that
hooker
pay and men began to know that Lars Marlin was carving a place for himself in the watery world.

One determined characteristic carried him through, gave him a name. Once he made a decision he never changed it. Vacillation to Lars was the worst crime on earth. He drove straight ahead making his own destiny, afraid of nothing. He had a retaining mind, an observing eye and knowledge which came from the entire ladder of knowledge—from the wharves to the universities.

At twenty-four he had been given a Mediterranean command, and from the bridge of the
Moroccan Queen,
men hoped he would graduate to a swift transatlantic liner.

At twenty-five he had taken on one Paco Corvino as chief steward because the man was recommended so handsomely. And three months later the officials of Casablanca had discovered contraband on the
Queen.
Lars had pointed the finger at Paco and Paco, in retaliation, had pointed back to the bridge.

And now at thirty-one, with six years of hell behind him, he found himself lying in a third-rate hotel wondering about the best and quickest way to commit a murder.

It was dusk when Paco came back. He slid through the half-opened door and closed it as silently as he had opened it. He stood listening for an instant, breathing hard. Then he turned and sat down on the other bed.

He grinned at Lars. “Anybody call when I was gone?”

“No.”

Paco’s smile widened and his white teeth flashed. He was very relieved at this news. He got up and walked to the wash stand and began to wipe the grime from his hands. The water turned a faint pink color.

“You’re sure nobody, not even a chamber boy, called?” he asked without turning.

“I’m sure. What have you been doing?”

“Fixing things up. Simpson was turning yellow. I can read men, Lars. You won’t deny that. I had pushed him as far as I could make him go. He was about to go mewling to Miss Norton. You saw it.”

“What kind of contraband?” said Lars, lying on his side. He could feel the hard ridges of the .38 under him and his eyes were examining the possible target.

“Heroin,” said Paco promptly. “They’re death on it in the States. Can’t even get it through a doctor. Never take it myself but I hear it’s good for the nerves—or bad for them. Prices are rocketing up north. But heroin is small stuff. Listen, Lars, would it surprise you to know that I have a way of making four million francs all in a lump? Within a month and with hardly any risk.”

“I’m not interested in your plans,” said Lars.

Paco laughed aloud.

“What’s so funny?” demanded Lars.

Paco shrugged. He had evidently forgotten that he had already washed his hands, as he again approached the stand and repeated the process.

“This Miss Norton owns the
Valiant
?” said Lars.

“No. Her father does. He’s Tom Norton, president of the Equatorial Trading Company. He can sign his name to a ten-million-dollar check and still stay on easy street. The
Valiant
is a good little ship. Eighteen hundred tons, Diesel-engined. Pretty swank.”

“Is Norton aboard?”

“No. He turned it over to his daughter and her friends and told them to go have a good time. He probably wanted to get rid of Miss Norton—Terry, everybody calls her. She’s hotheaded and boy, can she get mad.”

“So you’re operating against a girl. That’s worthy of you, Paco.”

“Of course it is,” cried Paco. “What use have I got for these people with money and position? I hate them! And what a fine time I have laughing at them. They think I’m something pretty special because I’ve got better manners than they have, because I can wear my clothes better than their men can. They wonder about it just as though they were God’s chosen children, the only graceful people on earth. They order me around now but one of these days . . .”

Paco was not smiling. He was bitter and the black jungle cat in him was plainly visible in his displayed fangs and hot black eyes. But he passed it over with a shrug and began to smile again. He was rubbing his hands very thoroughly with a towel as though to rid them of something.

Finally he nervously perched himself on the edge of the bunk and began to manicure his nails with a little silver set he carried. He was very particular about his hands, more particular than ever on this day. They were the hands of an artist, and Paco, in his way,
was
an artist.

“I suppose the police will be here soon enough,” said Lars quietly.

Paco jumped and again the smile was gone. “How did you know?”

“I suppose you thought I’d miss the case of nerves you brought back. I hope they swing you for it.”

“For what?” demanded Paco.

“For the murder of Captain Simpson.”

Paco was up, shaking with fear and anger, glaring down at Lars who remained casually sprawled on the bed.

“I’m not pleased,” said Lars. “Watching you hang would have its points, but I would find it unsatisfactory. You plan very carefully, Paco, but this time you missed a trick.”

Paco did not move.

“You went out of here and down the hall to the rear of the building,” said Lars. “Nobody saw you leave this hotel. You came back and nobody saw you enter.”

“You spied on me!”

“No. I’m guessing. But I know that you intend to use me for a perfect alibi. Perhaps you even wanted to hang this extra millstone on my neck. I don’t know about that. You have committed a crime which is perfect from the angle of the police. But you forget that I am badly wanted in French Guiana. If they send me back, I’m taking you with me. You felt too secure to remember that you are also badly wanted.”

“You’re a fool,” said Paco, sitting down again. “As big a fool as always. We understand each other, Lars. You can’t kill me. I would be foolish to kill you—at the moment. You came opportunely. I was tired of masking facts to Simpson. But you . . . You won’t ever talk out of turn. Soon as you do, blowie, you’re on your way back to French Guiana. Simpson is dead. Captains—American captains—are scarce in Rio. You are about to become the captain of the yacht
Valiant.

Lars smiled slightly. “What will I do for papers?”

Paco was not in the least perturbed. Looking his contempt for Lars, he reached into his spotless coat and pulled out a sheaf of papers.

“You think I would forget a detail like that? You can buy all the forged papers you want in Rio. I could get records making you anything from a French private to a Balkan king. In this case I got papers and records which show you are Lars Lowenskold. You were wrecked on the
Tatoosh,
a lumber
schooner
, which went down off Cape Frio ten days ago.”

“Was there such a wreck?”

“There was. Give me credit, Lars. I’m smart. The
Tatoosh
went down with all hands including three unknown passengers. You are one of those passengers, on your way to take over the command of another vessel. Here are your papers.”

“You think Miss Norton would swallow that?”

“She’ll swallow anything I tell her,” grinned Paco.

“And when the police come charging in here . . .”

“Unless you want to go back to French Guiana, you’ll tell them I’ve been here all afternoon, sleeping.”

Lars raised himself on his elbow. “Get me straight on this, Paco. I only want one thing. A chance to kill you and get away. It’s fair to warn you. I’ll take this job because I think I can
queer
your rotten scheme, whatever it is, and do the thing I’ve waited to do for so long. I don’t want to see you swing. Your life is
mine.

Paco grinned broadly. He got up and lit a cigarette and stood looking down at the muddy patio. At last he turned to Lars. “That’s fair enough. If I thought for one minute you had the brains to best me, I’d die of shame. You won’t talk. You don’t want to rot in the Colony. And you won’t kill me as long as you know that my death will cause those papers to be opened. I need you to captain the
Valiant.
You’ll captain it and follow my orders.”

Lars lay back and looked up at the lizards on the ceiling. “We’ll know more about it later on, Paco.”

CHAPTER THREE

Alias Captain Lowenskold

T
HE
yacht
Valiant
plowed diamonds out of the turquoise channel, sweeping swiftly and gracefully past Fort Lage, so low the waves broke over it in bad weather, into the outer channel.

The yacht
Valiant
plowed diamonds out of the turquoise channel, sweeping swiftly and gracefully . . .

The flippant little ship, picking up
knots
, slapped the waves of its wake against the frowning walls of Fort Santa Cruz on one side and Fort São João on the other. It refused to be dwarfed by the heights to port and starboard, sailing impertinently out to sea with the
Sugar Loaf
rearing to the west and the
Pico
soaring all green and tan to the east.

Ahead lay the broad immensities of the South Atlantic, lined with long green swells and washed by a hot, damp wind. The starboard almost touched the
Tropic of Capricorn
and then the spinning wheel pointed the
clipper
bow northeast.

Captain Lars Marlin stood solidly on the bridge, the stirred wind cool against his shaven cheeks. The excellent
drill
of his white uniform felt like silk as it was pushed against him.

Outward bound, in command of a beautiful vessel, he reverently watched the wide-ranged pattern of clouds and waves. He knew he did not deserve this but, for the moment, the thought was submerged. He felt strong, able to contend with anything.

“Northeast by east,” said Lars.

“Northeast by east. Aye, aye, sir.”

The helmsman brought the wheel down a spoke and steadied it there. He was a good sailor and he had already given his respect to this tall, strong gentleman who had boarded the
Valiant
under such strange circumstances.

Lars turned and looked back toward Rio. It was all gone now except for the heights of the
Carioca Range
, growing dim and blue with distance. He could see the
Hunchback
and high, flat-topped
Gávea
—named because of its resemblance to a Portuguese square sail—and the outline of the
“sleeping giant”
as made by the entire range.

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