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Grand Babylon Hotel, The
CHAPTER 25 - THE STEAM LAUNCH
Arnold Bennett
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       _ MR TOM JACKSON's notion of making good his escape from the
       hotel by means of a steam launch was an excellent one, so far as it
       went, but Theodore Racksole, for his part, did not consider that it
       went quite far enough.
       Theodore Racksole opined, with peculiar glee, that he now had a
       tangible and definite clue for the catching of the Grand Babylon's
       ex-waiter. He knew nothing of the Port of London, but he
       happened to know a good deal of the far more complicated, though
       somewhat smaller, Port of New York, and he sure there ought to
       be no extraordinary difficulty in getting hold of Jules'
       steam launch. To those who are not thoroughly familiar with it the
       River Thames and its docks, from London Bridge to Gravesend,
       seems a vast and uncharted wilderness of craft - a wilderness in
       which it would be perfectly easy to hide even a three-master
       successfully. To such people the idea of looking for a steam launch
       on the river would be about equivalent to the idea of looking for a
       needle in a bundle of hay. But the fact is, there are hundreds of
       men between St Katherine's Wharf and Blackwall who literally
       know the Thames as the suburban householder knows his
       back-garden - who can recognize thousands of ships and put a
       name to them at a distance of half a mile, who are informed as to
       every movement of vessels on the great stream, who know all the
       captains, all the engineers, all the lightermen, all the pilots, all the
       licensed watermen, and all the unlicensed scoundrels from the
       Tower to Gravesend, and a lot further. By these experts of the
       Thames the slightest unusual event on the water is noticed and
       discussed - a wherry cannot change hands but they will guess
       shrewdly upon the price paid and the intentions of the new owner
       with regard to it. They have a habit of watching the river for the
       mere interest of the sight, and they talk about everything like
       housewives gathered of an evening round the cottage door. If the
       first mate of a Castle Liner gets the sack they will be able to tell
       you what he said to the captain, what the old man said to him, and
       what both said to the Board, and having finished off that affair
       they will cheerfully turn to discussing whether Bill Stevens sank
       his barge outside the West Indian No.2 by accident or on purpose.
       Theodore Racksole had no satisfactory means of identifying the
       steam launch which carried away Mr Tom Jackson. The sky had
       clouded over soon after midnight, and there was also a slight mist,
       and he had only been able to make out that it was a low craft,
       about sixty feet long, probably painted black. He had personally
       kept a watch all through the night on vessels going upstream, and
       during the next morning he had a man to take his place who
       warned him whenever a steam launch went towards Westminster.
       At noon, after his conversation with Prince Aribert, he went down
       the river in a hired row-boat as far as the Custom House, and
       poked about everywhere, in search of any vessel which could by
       any possibility be the one he was in search of.
       But he found nothing. He was, therefore, tolerably sure that the
       mysterious launch lay somewhere below the Custom House. At the
       Custom House stairs, he landed, and asked for a very high official
       - an official inferior only to a Commissioner - whom he had
       entertained once in New York, and who had met him in London on
       business at Lloyd's. In the large but dingy office of this great man a
       long conversation took place - a conversation in which Racksole
       had to exercise a certain amount of persuasive power, and which
       ultimately ended in the high official ringing his bell.
       'Desire Mr Hazell - room No. 332 - to speak to me,' said the
       official to the boy who answered the summons, and then, turning
       to Racksole: 'I need hardly repeat, my dear Mr Racksole, that this
       is strictly unofficial.'
       'Agreed, of course,' said Racksole.
       Mr Hazell entered. He was a young man of about thirty, dressed in
       blue serge, with a pale, keen face, a brown moustache and a rather
       handsome brown beard.
       'Mr Hazell,' said the high official, 'let me introduce you to Mr
       Theodore Racksole - you will doubtless be familiar with his name.
       Mr Hazell,' he went on to Racksole, 'is one of our outdoor staff -
       what we call an examining officer. Just now he is doing night duty.
       He has a boat on the river and a couple of men, and the right to
       board and examine any craft whatever. What Mr Hazell and his
       crew don't know about the Thames between here and Gravesend
       isn't knowledge.'
       'Glad to meet you, sir,' said Racksole simply, and they shook
       hands.
       Racksole observed with satisfaction that Mr Hazell was entirely at
       his ease.
       'Now, Hazell,' the high official continued, 'Mr Racksole wants you
       to help in a little private expedition on the river to-night. I will
       give you a night's leave. I sent for you partly because I thought you
       would enjoy the affair and partly because I think I can rely on you
       to regard it as entirely unofficial and not to talk about it. You
       understand? I dare say you will have no cause to regret having
       obliged Mr Racksole.'
       'I think I grasp the situation,' said Hazell, with a slight smile.
       'And, by the way,' added the high official, 'although the business is
       unofficial, it might be well if you wore your official overcoat.
       See?'
       'Decidedly,' said Hazell; 'I should have done so in any case.'
       'And now, Mr Hazell,' said Racksole, 'will you do me the pleasure
       of lunching with me? If you agree, I should like to lunch at the
       place you usually frequent.'
       So it came to pass that Theodore Racksole and George Hazell,
       outdoor clerk in the Customs, lunched together at 'Thomas's
       Chop-House', in the city of London, upon mutton-chops and
       coffee. The millionaire soon discovered that he had got hold of a
       keen-witted man and a person of much insight.
       'Tell me,' said Hazell, when they had reached the cigarette stage,
       'are the magazine writers anything like correct?'
       'What do you mean?' asked Racksole, mystified.
       'Well, you're a millionaire - "one of the best", I believe. One often
       sees articles on and interviews with millionaires, which describe
       their private railroad cars, their steam yachts on the Hudson, their
       marble stables, and so on, and so on. Do you happen to have those
       things?'
       'I have a private car on the New York Central, and I have a two
       thousand ton schooner-yacht - though it isn't on the Hudson. It
       happens just now to be on East River. And I am bound to admit
       that the stables of my uptown place are fitted with marble.'
       Racksole laughed.
       'Ah!' said Hazell. 'Now I can believe that I am lunching with a
       millionaire.
       It's strange how facts like those - unimportant in themselves -
       appeal to the imagination. You seem to me a real millionaire now.
       You've given me some personal information; I'll give you some in
       return. I earn three hundred a year, and perhaps sixty pounds a year
       extra for overtime. I live by myself in two rooms in Muscovy
       Court. I've as much money as I need, and I always do exactly what
       I like outside office. As regards the office, I do as little work as I
       can, on principle - it's a fight between us and the Commissioners
       who shall get the best. They try to do us down, and we try to do
       them down - it's pretty even on the whole. All's fair in war, you
       know, and there ain't no ten commandments in a Government
       office.'
       Racksole laughed. 'Can you get off this afternoon?' he asked.
       'Certainly,' said Hazell; 'I'll get one of my pals to sign on for me,
       and then I shall be free.'
       'Well,' said Racksole, 'I should like you to come down with me to
       the Grand Babylon. Then we can talk over my little affair at
       length. And may we go on your boat? I want to meet your crew.'
       'That will be all right,' Hazell remarked. 'My two men are the
       idlest, most soul-less chaps you ever saw. They eat too much, and
       they have an enormous appetite for beer; but they know the river,
       and they know their business, and they will do anything within the
       fair game if they are paid for it, and aren't asked to hurry.'
       That night, just after dark, Theodore Racksole embarked with his
       new friend George Hazell in one of the black-painted Customs
       wherries, manned by a crew of two men - both the later freemen of
       the river, a distinction which carries with it certain privileges
       unfamiliar to the mere landsman. It was a cloudy and oppressive
       evening, not a star showing to illumine the slow tide, now just past
       its flood. The vast forms of steamers at anchor - chiefly those of
       the General Steam Navigation and the Aberdeen Line - heaved
       themselves high out of the water, straining sluggishly at their
       mooring buoys. On either side the naked walls of warehouses rose
       like grey precipices from the stream, holding forth quaint arms of
       steam-cranes. To the west the Tower Bridge spanned the river with
       its formidable arch, and above that its suspended footpath - a
       hundred and fifty feet from earth.
       Down towards the east and the Pool of London a forest of funnels
       and masts was dimly outlined against the sinister sky. Huge barges,
       each steered by a single man at the end of a pair of giant oars,
       lumbered and swirled down-stream at all angles. Occasionally a
       tug snorted busily past, flashing its red and green signals and
       dragging an unwieldy tail of barges in its wake. Then a Margate
       passenger steamer, its electric lights gleaming from every porthole,
       swerved round to anchor, with its load of two thousand fatigued
       excursionists. Over everything brooded an air of mystery - a spirit
       and feeling of strangeness, remoteness, and the inexplicable. As
       the broad flat little boat bobbed its way under the shadow of
       enormous hulks, beneath stretched hawsers, and past buoys
       covered with green slime, Racksole could scarcely believe that he
       was in the very heart of London - the most prosaic city in the
       world. He had a queer idea that almost anything might happen in
       this seeming waste of waters at this weird hour of ten o'clock. It
       appeared incredible to him that only a mile or two away people
       were sitting in theatres applauding farces, and that at Cannon
       Street Station, a few yards off, other people were calmly taking the
       train to various highly respectable suburbs whose names he was
       gradually learning. He had the uplifting sensation of being in
       another world which comes to us sometimes amid surroundings
       violently different from our usual surroundings. The most ordinary
       noises - of men calling, of a chain running through a slot, of a
       distant siren - translated themselves to his ears into terrible and
       haunting sounds, full of portentous significance. He looked over
       the side of the boat into the brown water, and asked himself what
       frightful secrets lay hidden in its depth. Then he put his hand into
       his hip-pocket and touched the stock of his Colt revolver - that
       familiar substance comforted him.
       The oarsmen had instructions to drop slowly down to the Pool, as
       the wide reach below the Tower is called. These two men had not
       been previously informed of the precise object of the expedition,
       but now that they were safely afloat Hazell judged it expedient to
       give them some notion of it. 'We expect to come across a rather
       suspicious steam launch,' he said. 'My friend here is very anxious
       to get a sight of her, and until he has seen her nothing definite can
       be done.'
       'What sort of a craft is she, sir?' asked the stroke oar, a fat-faced
       man who seemed absolutely incapable of any serious exertion.
       'I don't know,' Racksole replied; 'but as near as I can judge, she's
       about sixty feet in length, and painted black. I fancy I shall
       recognize her when I see her.'
       'Not much to go by, that,' exclaimed the other man curtly. But he
       said no more. He, as well as his mate, had received from Theodore
       Racksole one English sovereign as a kind of preliminary fee, and
       an English sovereign will do a lot towards silencing the natural
       sarcastic tendencies and free speech of a Thames waterman.
       'There's one thing I noticed,' said Racksole suddenly, 'and I forgot
       to tell you of it, Mr Hazell. Her screw seemed to move with a
       rather irregular, lame sort of beat.'
       Both watermen burst into a laugh.
       'Oh,' said the fat rower, 'I know what you're after, sir - it's Jack
       Everett's launch, commonly called "Squirm". She's got a
       four-bladed propeller, and one blade is broken off short.'
       'Ay, that's it, sure enough,' agreed the man in the bows. 'And if it's
       her you want, I seed her lying up against Cherry Gardens Pier this
       very morning.'
       'Let us go to Cherry Gardens Pier by all means, as soon as
       possible,'
       Racksole said, and the boat swung across stream and then began to
       creep down by the right bank, feeling its way past wharves, many
       of which, even at that hour, were still busy with their cranes, that
       descended empty into the bellies of ships and came up full. As the
       two watermen gingerly manoeuvred the boat on the ebbing tide,
       Hazell explained to the millionaire that the 'Squirm' was one of the
       most notorious craft on the river. It appeared that when anyone had
       a nefarious or underhand scheme afoot which necessitated river
       work Everett's launch was always available for a suitable monetary
       consideration. The 'Squirm' had got itself into a thousand scrapes,
       and out of those scrapes again with safety, if not precisely with
       honour. The river police kept a watchful eye on it, and the chief
       marvel about the whole thing was that old Everett, the owner, had
       never yet been seriously compromised in any illegal escapade. Not
       once had the officer of the law been able to prove anything definite
       against the proprietor of the 'Squirm', though several of its
       quondam hirers were at that very moment in various of Her
       Majesty's prisons throughout the country. Latterly, however, the
       launch, with its damaged propeller, which Everett consistently
       refused to have repaired, had acquired an evil reputation, even
       among evil-doers, and this fraternity had gradually come to
       abandon it for less easily recognizable craft.
       'Your friend, Mr Tom Jackson,' said Hazell to Racksole,
       'committed an error of discretion when he hired the "Squirm". A
       scoundrel of his experience and calibre ought certainly to have
       known better than that. You cannot fail to get a clue now.'
       By this time the boat was approaching Cherry Gardens Pier, but
       unfortunately a thin night-fog had swept over the river, and objects
       could not be discerned with any clearness beyond a distance of
       thirty yards. As the Customs boat scraped down past the pier all its
       occupants strained eyes for a glimpse of the mysterious launch, but
       nothing could be seen of it. The boat continued to float idly
       down-stream, the men resting on their oars.
       Then they narrowly escaped bumping a large Norwegian sailing
       vessel at anchor with her stem pointing down-stream. This ship
       they passed on the port side. Just as they got clear of her bowsprit
       the fat man cried out excitedly, 'There's her nose!' and he put the
       boat about and began to pull back against the tide. And surely the
       missing 'Squirm' was comfortably anchored on the starboard
       quarter of the Norwegian ship, hidden neatly between the ship and
       the shore. The men pulled very quietly alongside. _