The Spy (Isaac Bell 3)
Page 11
“The moon shone square in his face.”
“How near were you to him?”
Eddison held up his large, wrinkled hand. “Any closer, I’d have wrapped these fingers around his throat.”
“What was there about him that seemed Japanese?”
“His eyes, his mouth, his nose, his lips, his hair,” the old man fired back.
Again, Bell framed his skepticism cautiously. “Some people say they have trouble telling the two races apart.”
“Some people ain’t been to Japan.”
“And you have?”
Eddison straightened up in his chair. “I sailed into Uraga Harbor with Commodore Matthew Perry when he opened Japan to American trade.”
“That’s sixty years ago!” If this wasn’t an ancient mariner’s tall tale, Eddison was even older than he looked.
“’Fifty-seven. I was a main topman on Perry’s steam frigate Susquehanna. And I pulled an oar in the commodore’s launch. Rowed the Old Man into Yokosuka. We had Japs coming out of our ears.”
Bell smiled. “It does sound as if you are qualified to distinguish Japanese from Chinese.”
“As I said.”
“Could you tell me where you caught the prowler?”
“Almost caught him.”
“Do you recall how far that was from the Gun Factory?”
Eddison shrugged. “Thousand yards.”
“Half a mile,” Bell mused.
“Half a sea mile,” Eddison corrected.
“Even farther.”
“Sonny, I’ll bet you’re speculating if the Jap had something to do with the explosion in Mr. Langner’s design loft.”
“Do you think he did?”
“No way of knowing. Like I say, the Jap I saw was a full thousand yards from the Gun Factory.”
“How big is the navy yard?” Bell asked.
The old sailor stroked his chin and looked into the middle distance. “I’d imagine that between the walls and river, the yard must take up a hundred acres.”
“One hundred acres.” Nearly as big as a northeastern dairy farm.
“Chockful of mills, foundries, parade grounds. Plus,” he added with a meaningful look, “mansions and gardens-where I intercepted him prowling.”
“What do think he was doing there?’
John Eddison smiled. “I don’t think. I know.”
“What do you know he was doing there?”