Thieves of the Black Sea. Joe O'Neill
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Название: Thieves of the Black Sea

Автор: Joe O'Neill

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Учебная литература

Серия: Red Hand Adventures

isbn: 9780990546986

isbn:

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      Foster stood at the Bremen train station, trying to decipher the train schedule. There weren’t a tremendous number of trains departing each day, perhaps a dozen, and most were spread throughout the day. Wu Chiang probably would have departed in the early afternoon, a few hours after the embassy bombing.

      Only two trains left the station in the afternoon on the day of the bombing: a train to Paris, France and a train to Florence, Italy. Foster asked around among the many railway station workers, but none of them could remember seeing an Asian man on the platforms or in the waiting area.

      Foster took out a coin from his pocket.

      Well, he thought, we’ll just have to do this the old-fashioned way.

      Flipping the coin high in the air, it rotated half a dozen times before coming to rest in his palm.

      The side of the coin with the bearded head of Prince Luitpold stared back at him.

      I guess it will have to be Italy.

      He put his hands together and said a quick prayer that this was the right decision.

      “What are you looking for, mister?”

      The voice was that of a boy. Foster looked down and saw a street boy looking up at him. He was about fourteen and wore a brown flat cap with a dirty tan wool coat, brown trousers with a hole in one knee, and leather loafers that were at least three sizes too big for his feet.

      “Eh, nothing, just trying to make a decision,” Foster replied.

      “A decision about what?” the boy asked.

      “A decision about a person,” Foster answered somewhat agitated.

      “A person? I know just about everything that happens in this train station. What person are you looking for?”

      “He would have been a passenger and only here for a few moments. You wouldn’t know him.”

      The boy took a step forward.

      “A mark if I can tell you about your passenger,” the boy replied.

      “I can’t imagine you could assist me.”

      “Try me.”

      Foster was exasperated with the conversation.

      “Fine, he would have been an Asian man carrying a large trunk leaving perhaps two days ago.”

      “I know exactly who you’re talking about,” the boy answered in earnest seriousness.

      “How could you possibly know?”

      The boy lifted his sleeve. On his right forearm was a burn about the size of a cigarette burn.

      “Because the man you’re looking for gave me this.”

      Foster stared at the burn. It was deep and red and already oozing with pus.

      “How on earth…?”

      “He was having a bit of trouble with his trunk and I offered to help him—for a price of course! At first, he ignored me. When I tried to take the trunk handle from him, he took my arm and dug his cigarette into my skin.”

      Foster immediately felt sorry for the boy.

      “Do you remember what train he was getting on?”

      “The train to Paris.”

      Foster stared at the boy and flipped him not one, but two silver coins. The boy’s face immediately lit up.

      “Thanks, mister!” he said and ran down the railway station.

      Foster purchased a ticket on the train heading to Paris, which was scheduled to leave in twenty minutes. He placed his leather bag in the compartment above his bed, and looked out the window as the train began to rumble and move away from the station. Onlookers cried and waved to their departing loved ones, all smartly dressed for a trip to the station, and Foster felt a slight longing for the circus and his friends. He noticed a mother with her young children waving—a boy about ten and a little girl about six. The little girl was sobbing. Foster guessed that their father was on the train. Foster smiled at the crying girl, who was dressed in a pink velvet bonnet and a black wool coat.

      He settled into his compartment for the journey. Leaning back into a pillow, he closed his eyes and calmed himself. After a few moments, visions began to fill his mind.

      Images that were neither memories nor dreams.

      Two armies colliding, thousands of dead soldiers fallen in the mud and cold. Three young boys of some kind of ethnicity. A black panther. A sea captain. An ancient city. A Red Hand disintegrating and falling into the sand.

      The Red Hand was reaching out to him, and he became immediately certain that time was of the essence.

      If he didn’t stop Wu Chiang soon, the world would be plunged into chaos.

      CHAPTER

      — 8

      THE TUTELAGE OF FOSTER CROWE

       1872—THE HIMALAYAS

      Young Foster Crowe was just ten years old when his father called him to his study one afternoon. While lighting his pipe, which was filled with stringy brown tobacco, Foster’s father gave his son some surprising news—he was to accompany his father on a hunting expedition to Nepal.

      Foster would spend a semester away from his boarding school in Belgium, which he had attended since the age of six. This was the first time that Foster’s father had invited him anywhere other than the occasional deer hunt in the woods surrounding their small castle—an estate that had been in their family for over twelve generations.

      His father, being a military man, was a very strict disciplinarian, and most of Foster’s summers were spent ironing his own clothes, polishing shoes, cleaning horse stables, and continuing his studies. Each morning, at precisely seven o’clock, his father gave him—and his room—a full inspection, and any grievances were given a black mark. Five black marks, and he would have to bend over his father’s knee and have his backside whipped with a riding crop.

      Foster was an only child, and his mother had died giving birth to him. His father, uninterested in rearing a child by himself, had Foster sent away to a school in Belgium. His actual name was Viscount Frederick von Crowe. His nanny since birth, an Algerian woman, couldn’t pronounce the name “Frederick,” so she called him “Foster.”

      The name stuck.

      Six weeks later, Foster found himself on the deck of a clipper ship sailing through the Suez Canal. His father had insisted he work to earn his board, so most of the time Foster could be found scrubbing the decks, coiling the lines, washing dishes or laundry, and on occasion, helping the crew hoist and tighten the many sails.

      The Suez Canal, completed СКАЧАТЬ