Read The Bombay Boomerang Online

Authors: Franklin W. Dixon

The Bombay Boomerang (11 page)

“No load, either,” Joe added. “The mercury flasks are gone!”
“The crooks probably carted them off by hand,” Frank went on. “If they transferred them to another truck, they wouldn't have called the service station to fix the blowout. Joe, the flasks might be stashed away not far from here!”
“The cemetery! We'd better give it a search!”
Captain Stein agreed. “Let's separate. You two go together, and if you see anything, give a yell!”
“And don't let the spooks get you,” one policeman said with a grin.
“It's spooky all right,” Frank muttered as they set out.
In the moonlit graveyard leaves rustled in the wind. Tombstones cast eerie shadows. Off in the distance a dog howled.
Frank and Joe began working down from the northwest corner where the Poe monument stood, stepping carefully around the graves as they searched.
A cloud scudded across the face of the moon, leaving the cemetery in darkness. The boys waited for the brightness to return. To while away the time, Frank asked in an undertone, “Which of Poe's characters does this situation remind you of?”
“The black cat.” Joe grimaced.
The cloud swept past. They resumed their search under the light of the moon. “What's that?” Frank pointed to an object, shaped like a milk bottle, near a large mausoleum.
“A mercury flask!”
They hastened around behind the mausoleum and found a pile of containers, heaped up as if they had been thrown there in a hurry.
Frank picked one up. “Hey, Joe! This sure doesn't weigh a hundred and thirty-five pounds. In fact, it's empty!”
Joe examined a number of others and whistled softly. “So are they all. The mercury is gone!”
CHAPTER XIII
Aboard the Indian Freighter
 
 
 
 
JoE held one of the flasks upside down and waited to see if any last drops of mercury would drip out. None did. He tried the same experiment on several more containers with the same negative results.
“If it had been a quick-change operation and the thieves had poured the mercury into their own containers, we'd be almost certain to find a trace in each flask. Yet these are all bone-dry.”
“Of course they are. They were empty to begin with,” Frank said, “which helps us to fit together two pieces of this jigsaw puzzle. First, we heard one of the gang mention ‘heisting the empties.' That makes sense now. And second, the footprints at the Precious Metals loading yard were too shallow for men carrying one-hundred-and-thirty-five-pound flasks. Now we know why. There was no mercury in them.”
“It must have been stolen earlier,” Joe agreed. “Probably on the dock where the cargo was landed, or maybe aboard ship. The empty flasks might have been taken to throw us off the track.”
“So,” Frank said, “it's just as well we have an appointment with an Indian freighter. Right now we'd better tell Captain Stein of our discovery. And we'll call Dad early tomorrow morning.”
The police investigated the place where the flasks had been discarded. After that, they drove Frank and Joe to a hotel, where the boys took a room for the night. Next morning they telephoned their father through a Bayport neighbor, since they were afraid their own phone was still being tapped. Mr. Hardy was puzzled by the empty mercury flasks. He said he would query other companies that handled mercury and call back.
An hour later the boys were still batting the mystery back and forth when the phone rang. Their father said that several companies reported finding empty mercury flasks. “They're baffled about the method used by this gang. You could be right in suspecting thievery on the dock or the ships. See what you can find out aboard the
Nanda Kailash
and keep your eyes open for any connection between the disappearing mercury and the Bombay Boomerang, Frank!”
“Okay, Dad. We'll go to the ship right away.”
Frank and Joe took a taxi to the harbor. They drove along a narrow street lined by large warehouses and heavy trucks to an open area dominated by the Indian freighter tied up at the dock. She was painted black, with a white band high above the waterline amidships. Derricks, slings, and lifts rose over the hold from which the cargo was being unloaded. The stern, riding high out of the water as it became lighter, bore the name
Nanda Kailash,
and underneath her home port, Bombay.
The taxi stopped at a gate where the guard told the boys they would have to proceed on foot. They saw mobile cranes handling massive bales of jute. Piles of debris covered much of the dock—broken crates, empty barrels, lumber, and other fallout of unloading activity. A big red barge, rocking at the dockside behind the freighter, was receiving part of the cargo for transportation across the harbor.
“Plenty of action around here,” Joe observed.
Dark-skinned workmen from the
Nanda Kailash,
wearing navy-blue sweaters, bustled between the deck and the dock. Frank asked one how to get aboard. The man, giving them a suspicious stare, pointed to a steep metal stairway extending up the side of the ship.
“Climb we must,” Frank quipped. He took hold of the white rope railings on either side and started up the steps, feeling them sway under his weight. Joe followed close behind.
They were halfway up the stairs, with a steep drop to the dock beneath them, when Frank suddenly jerked to one side and yelled, “Duck, Joe!”
His brother swung out on one railing in a reflex action. A huge bale of jute came hurtling down, barely missing them and landing on the dock with a heavy thud.
Joe took a deep breath. “Wow! Was that, or was it not accidental?”
“Your guess is as good as mine,” Frank said. “Anyway, let's get up on deck before we're treated to an encore.”
The long deck extended toward the bow on the right, to the stern on the left. The boys had paused to inspect a bulletin board where the names of the ship's officers were posted when a steward asked what business they had on board. After listening to their explanation, he led them down a narrow corridor to a large cabin.
“This is the chief officer's quarters,” he said in a soft Indian accent. “Please sit down. I will inform him of your arrival. Would you prefer tea or coffee? ... Coffee? ... A few moments, please.”
Frank and Joe glanced around the room. They were surprised at the degree of comfort it reflected. The paneled walls and furniture seemed to be mahogany. A couch, three chairs, and a table were covered in a gay multicolored print. One cabinet held a radio and record player.
On the opposite side of the cabin was a built-in bunk with a drawer in its base, flanked by a desk on which lay a volume entitled
Rough Logbook.
Nautical pictures hung on the wall opposite the porthole.
“Nice pad,” Joe murmured. “Life at sea must have its compensations.”
The door opened. A dark, good-looking man came in. Shaking hands with the boys, he introduced himself in excellent English as Chief Officer Jal Agopal, substituting for the captain, who was ashore.
The steward appeared holding a tray with a white coffeepot, three cups, milk and sugar. Deftly setting a cup and napkin at three places on the table, he withdrew.
Jal Agopal took a sip of coffee, then inquired what he could do for his visitors. “Naturally I am anxious to aid Admiral Rodgers in every possible way,” he said.
“Perhaps the first thing I should mention,” Frank replied, “is an incident that happened when we were coming aboard.” He described the bale of jute that nearly knocked them off the ladder.
The chief officer expressed his apologies, adding that he was as mystified as they were. “You must have noted that the cranes swing cargo over that part of the ship. But I've never known that kind of thing to happen before. I will make an investigation.”
“Duck, Joe!” Frank yelled
Joe asked about the crew.
“We carry fourteen officers and thirty-six men,” Agopal replied. “I'm not familiar with the personal background of each one of them. All I can say is that every man is skillful at his particular job on the freighter. If there is anything wrong, it hasn't come to my attention.”
“Perhaps the cargo might give us a clue,” Frank put in. “What are you carrying this trip?”
“The usual things. Tea, curios, jute, burlap, carpets—”
“Mercury, too?”
“Yes, also mercury. We loaded the flasks at the Spanish port of Cadiz.”
“Where do you keep them during the voyage from Spain to the United States?”
“In the hold with the rest of the cargo. Come. I'll show you how it's done.”
Jal Agopal led the Hardys out of the cabin, along the narrow corridor, and back on deck. As they walked toward the hold, Joe nudged Frank and nodded toward a sailor slinking along on the opposite side of the deck.
He was a rough-looking character in a plaid work shirt, who ducked behind a pile of crates when he realized that he had been spotted. When the boys pretended to have lost interest in him, he promptly reappeared.
“Our bodyguard,” Joe whispered to his brother. “Services rendered free of charge.”
They reached the hold, a yawning cavern that looked to be two or three stories deep. The men working at the bottom were shifting carpets onto hooks attached to cables that carried them in swinging arcs up to the deck and across the side onto the dock.
“Quite a lot of activity,” Frank said to the chief officer.
“We have only a limited time to unload, load, turn around and meet our timetable for the trip back to India,” he replied. “To you it must seem very confused. Actually, every step is precisely planned.”
“I don't see any mercury flasks,” Joe said.
“You will. They come aboard on trays, fifty at a time. You undoubtedly know that they are heavy, and are fastened with screw-type steel caps. As a sling lowers a tray into the hold, members of the crew lift the flasks off one by one and store them together in the hold space provided for them.
“Because of their weight, they need special attention when they reach the hold. We shore them up with wood to prevent slipping. And we do not pile any other type of cargo on top of them.”
“How safe are the flasks in the hold?” Frank asked. “I mean, can the crew get at them either during the voyage or in port?”
“Oh, yes. The hold itself is open. These particular flasks have not been unloaded yet. But there is no rule that prevents the members of the crew from going down into the hold and inspecting them, as long as no one gets in the way of the men working on the docks.”
The boys leaned over the edge for a better look. Men called back and forth in their native tongue. Those below signaled to the men above when to haul away. Winches, tackle, and cables strained under the weight of their burdens.
Joe stepped onto a pile of rope, paying little attention to the events on deck. Suddenly the rope tightened with a tremendous jerk as someone yanked the other end. Joe tumbled head over heels into the hold, hurtling down toward the bottom far below!
CHAPTER XIV
Down the Hatch
 
 
 
 
HORRIFIED, Frank saw his brother topple head over heels into the hold. The chief officer gasped. Crewmen shouted excitedly in Hindustani and English. But no one could do a thing to help!
Flailing his arms wildly, Joe fell like a stone. Then, in mid-air, his toe hit something. Throwing out a hand, he grabbed hold of a cable and swung himself onto a rolled carpet that was being hoisted up onto the deck of the
Nanda Kailash.
Joe stood up shakily when the carpet hit the deck. “This kind of trip I could have done without,” he muttered, managing a weak smile.
Frank was ghastly pale. “I thought we'd be picking you up in little pieces at the bottom!”
“Someone on this ship doesn't like us,” Joe said, his face grim. He looked straight at the chief officer.
Jal Agopal plucked a handkerchief from his breast pocket and wiped the perspiration from his forehead. “Thank God we were unloading carpets when you fell,” he said with a sigh.
Then his gaze traveled beyond the boys to the crew. “This is an outrage!” he declared, and there were both anger and fear in his voice. “I intend to find out at once who pulled the rope that tripped this boy! If it was deliberate, he is a murderer! I want him identified!”
He ordered the entire crew to be mustered on deck. The men lined up along the railing towering over the dock. Agopal addressed them.
“Most of you must know by now of the near-fatal accident that just occurred. For those of you who haven't heard, I will simply say that one of our American guests fell into the hold because someone pulled a rope from under his feet. He managed to seize one of the cables, which is the only reason he is alive to tell the tale. If any of you have any information on this, speak up!”

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