The Race (Isaac Bell 4)
Page 107
NOT PLATOV.
AUSTRALIAN SOLD ENGINE AND WENT HOME.
CURRENTLY INCOMMUNICADO OUTBACK.
THERMO ENGINE BUYER UNKNOWN.
??? POSSIBLY PLATOV???
Isaac Bell went looking for Dmitri Platov.
He found James Dashwood, whom he had assigned to watch the Russian, staring at the back of Steve Stevens’s support train. A perplexed expression clouded his face, and he ducked his head in embarrassment when he saw the chief investigator striding purposefully straight at him.
“I surmise,” Isaac Bell said sternly, “that you lost Platov.”
“Not only Platov. His entire shop car disappeared.”
It had been the last car on Stevens’s special. Now it was gone.
“It didn’t steam off on its own.”
“No, sir. The boys told me when they woke up this morning, it was uncoupled and gone.”
Bell surveyed the siding on which the Stevens special sat. The rails pitched slightly downhill. Uncoupled, Platov’s car would have rolled away. “Can’t have gotten far.”
But a switch was open at the back end of the yard, connecting the support train siding to a feeder line that disappeared among a cluster of factories and warehouses along the river.
“Go get a handcar, James.”
Dashwood returned, pumping a lightweight track inspector’s handcar. Bell jumped on, and they started down the factory siding. Bell lent this strength to the slim Dashwood’s effort, and they were soon rolling at nearly twenty miles per hour. Rounding a bend, they saw smoke ahead, the source hidden by clapboard-sided warehouses. Around the next twist in the rail, they saw oily smoke rising into the clear blue sky.
“Faster!”
They raced between a leatherworks and an odoriferous slaughterhouse, and saw that the smoke was billowing from Platov’s shop car, which had stopped against the bumper that blocked the end of the rails. Flames were spouting from its windows, doors, and roof hatch. In the seconds it took Bell and Dashwood to reach it, the entire car was completely engulfed.
“Poor Mr. Platov,” Dashwood cried. “All his tools. . God, I hope he’s not inside.”
“Poor Mr. Platov,” Bell repeated grimly. A shop car filled with tanks of oil and gasoline burned hot and fast.
“Lucky the car wasn’t coupled to Mr. Stevens’s special,” said Dashwood.
“Very lucky,” Bell agreed.
“What is that smell?”
“Some poor devil roasting, I’m afraid.”
“Mr. Platov?”
“Who else?” asked Bell.
Horse-drawn fire engines came bouncing over the tracks. The firemen unrolled hoses to the river and engaged their steam pump. Powerful streams of water bored into the flames but to little effect. The fire quickly consumed the wooden sides and roof and floor of the rail car until there was nothing left but a mound of ash heaped between the steel trucks and iron wheels. When it was out, the fireman found the shriveled remains of a human body, its boots and clothes burned to a crisp.
Bell poked among the wet ashes.
Something gleaming caught his eye. He picked up a one-inch square of glass framed with brass. It was still warm. He turned it over his fingers. The brass had grooves on two edges. He showed it to Dashwood. “Faber-Castell engineering slide rule. . or what’s left of it.”
“Here comes Steve Stevens.”