“Excellent point. And I would suggest holding on to them has yet another benefit. .”
And I shared a particularly nasty, crafty thought with Anderson, who grinned.
“Excellent thinking,” he said. “When you question these rotters, be sure to drop that little bomb on them.”
“Oh, I intend to.”
The brig was next to the separate hospital rooms for males and females. The chamber was about twice the size of my cabin, and the entry area of the white-walled glorified cubicle included a desk and chair (the confiscated camera was on the desktop), with a wall of bars with a jail door separating the rest off into a cell. Two bunks were on either side, with an exposed toilet and a little sink giving them running water but no privacy, or for that matter dignity-not that they deserved either.
Still in their stolen stewards’ whites, the three stowaways were not taking advantage of the bunks-two of them milled about, the tall skinny one and the fellow of average build, both tossing the occasional wary glance at their apparent leader, the burly blonde one, who stood staring at us sullenly.
“This is Mr. Van Dine,” Anderson said to them curtly. “He speaks your damn language, so there will be no excuses now.”
Anderson told me he would leave me to them-he wanted to see how Miss Vance was coming along with her investigating-and he departed. Williams sat at the desk, swivelled toward the prisoners in their cell, the revolver in his hand-a melodramatic touch, it seemed to me, with our spies under lock and key, but a certain point was made.
Positioning myself a foot or so from the wall of bars, I spoke to them in German. “Who are you, and what is your purpose?”
The blonde leader shook his head when the other two seemed eager to reply to the comforting sound of their own language.
“I don’t mean you any harm,” I said. “I’m not a member of the crew-I am merely a journalist who speaks your mother tongue.”
The burly blonde perked at this, and said, “We are impoverished tourists.”
“Tourists?” I asked.
“Yes-college boys who came to America looking for a good time.”
They seemed a little old for that and I said so.
The blonde said, “We were foolish. We spent all our money on girls and whiskey. Now to get back to Europe, we have to sneak aboard. And we were caught.”
“Wearing stewards uniforms.”
He shrugged. “We found them and put them on. We hoped to blend in.”
“Speaking nothing but German?”
Another shrug. “We are foolish boys out on a lark. We made a mistake. You have heard the expression, ‘reckless youth’?”
I smiled. “Do you really think this story will hold up under British interrogation?”
The blonde said nothing, but his two cell mates stared at him with anxiety oozing from their pores.
“You see, Staff Captain Anderson has to quickly decide,” I said, “whether to bundle you boys back to the U.S.-for the next few minutes that remains an option-or to deliver you into the hands of the British secret service.”
The blonde shrugged. “You imply we would prefer to return to America. But we boarded to go to Europe. We will explain ourselves when we arrive. We’re not spies.”
“No, no, you’re college boys. . and I’m just a journalist who doesn’t even know how Britain executes saboteurs. Do you happen to know-for my story? Is it the rope, or firing squad?”
The skinny one turned pale; he staggered over and sat on the lower bunk and put his face in his hands.
“We are foolish college boys who stowed away,” the blonde leader said. “We have nothing else to say.”
“Fellows,” I said amiably, “I told you I’m a journalist. What you don’t know is that I work for a pro-German publisher. I was sent here to ascertain whether there are guns and munitions aboard this ship.”
That got the blonde’s attention; the other two, as well, the skinny one lifting his face from his hands.
“If you have discovered that information,” I said, “I will report it to my editor. . and if you are frank with me about your identity, I will do my best to convince Captain Anderson that you should be sent back to America.”
The skinny one was on his feet, moving toward his leader. “Listen to him, Klaus!”
Klaus, the blonde, shot his skinny comrade a look that froze the man.
Then the blonde said, “If we were spies, we would not have had time to find out such things.”
“I see. What about explosives?”
This startled even the blonde, though he showed it less than the other two.
“Have you had time to deploy an explosive device?” I amplified.
The average fellow said, “Klaus, he’s friendly. . he is on our side.”
“Shut up,” Klaus said. Then to me: “We are college boys. We are not who you assume us to be.”
I shrugged, and dropped my bomb, as promised. “All right. But this is what my recommendation will be to Staff Captain Anderson: Keep these three imprisoned; if they have set an explosive device, with a timer, they may decide to talk, after all. . as the clock ticks away.”
The blonde sneered at this, but the other two were clearly upset, each going to a bunk at either side of the cell and flinging themselves there, turning their faces to the wall. They might have been sobbing.
“We are not fools,” Klaus said.
I glanced first at the skinny fellow, then at the average one, and said, “Well, you aren’t, anyway.”
I turned and told the master-at-arms that I was going to join Captain Anderson at the pantry, and Williams said he would keep an eye on the prisoners. I quietly told him he might want to put the revolver away now; embarrassed, he agreed, and set the weapon on the desk, next to the confiscated camera.
As I exited, Steward Leach was coming my way down the corridor. “What have you learned? Are they spies?”
I paused and looked into the eager, concerned eyes of the pasty young steward. “They are Germans with a camera and a bad cover story. Short of having ‘spy’ written in ink on their foreheads, I’d say the evidence is conclusive. . Shouldn’t you be tending to the kiddies?”
He grinned, baring his yellowish crooked teeth. “Luncheon is over. The brig is part of my watch-I need to check in with the master-at-arms, and see what he requires of me. . Eventually those bastards will need food and water.”
“Might I suggest the crusts the cooks cut off your sandwiches,” I said. “As for the water, throwing them overboard might suffice.”
When I reached the pantry, Anderson and Miss Vance were in the corridor outside the little room. Anderson turned eagerly to me for a report, and I told him that the blonde leader-Klaus-claimed they were college boys who’d run out of money and were stowing away home.
“Tourists!” Anderson said disgustedly.
“Well,” I said, “they did have a camera.”
Miss Vance said to me, “Speaking of which, I found a bundle of photographic plates hidden at the rear of a lower shelf.”
“What else did you discover?”
“No weapons. . no explosives. The only other items were three stacks of clothing, hidden behind some boxes-their street clothes, dock worker attire.”
“That might indicate they had just changed into the stewards’ uniforms,” I said thoughtfully, “when we caught them. . Does that also mean they hadn’t yet committed any acts of sabotage?”
Anderson shook his head. “They had plenty of time to hide a small pipe bomb.”
I frowned. “What sort of bomb?”
Miss Vance completed Anderson’s information. “A piece of pipe no larger than a healthy cigar that could ignite any ordinary substance, coal or wood, and not leave a trace.”*
“We’ll search the ship,” Anderson said. “Discreetly but thoroughly.”
“What a wonderful idea,” I said with dry sarcasm.
But Anderson and Miss Vance had made it obvious how easy it would be to miss a tiny but deadly bomb.
To brighten the mood, I told Anderson of the threat I’d left the stowaways to ponder.