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1936: A madman calling himself the Master of the Air threatens to let death and destruction rain down upon New York City. No one take him seriously, until an airship taxi suddenly explodes the very next day. But was it an accident or sabotage?
Police Captain Justin O’Grady and the masked vigilante known as the Silencer both investigate the case. But it’s a race against time, because the Master of the Air has already set his sights on a new target: The Zeppelin Imperator, the largest airship ever built…
This is a novelette of 8600 words.
Das E-Book können Sie in Legimi-Apps oder einer beliebigen App lesen, die das folgende Format unterstützen:
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2015
Flying Bombs
by Cora Buhlert
Bremen, Germany
Copyright © 2011 by Cora Buhlert
All rights reserved.
Cover image: © James Steidl, Dreamstime.com
Pegasus Pulp Publications
Mittelstraße 12
28816 Stuhr
Germany
www.pegasus-pulp.com
Flying Bombs
The steady clatter of typewriters echoed through the editorial offices of the New York Star. The sound was all too familiar to Richard Blakemore, yet he paid little heed to the men and women toiling away at the desks. For at the far end of the room, staring out of a window at the mist enshrouded spires of the city, he spotted the very man he had been looking for. Randall J. Whitman, publisher of the Star.
“You wanted to see me, Randall?”
Whitman turned around, startled by the visitor he himself had invited. However, the jolt lasted only a second, then he regained his composure and held out his hand to Blakemore. “Glad you could come, Richard. We need to talk.”
Richard Blakemore shook Whitman’s hand. “What’s the matter, Randall?”
Whitman’s voice dropped to a whisper. “Not here.”
Once the door of the publisher’s office had closed behind them, Whitman immediately pulled down the blinds, hiding the interior of the glass-walled cubicle from the prying eyes of his own employees. Richard sat down, while Whitman proceeded to pace the tiny office, stopping only occasionally to gaze out of the window. Something was clearly troubling him. And by virtue of his profession, Randall J. Whitman was not easily troubled.
“I wouldn’t have asked your help if I didn’t know that you had some experience in these things.”
Richard Blakemore smiled. “What things?”
“Weird things. Criminal things.”
“You do me too much honour,” Richard replied, “I’m just a simple scribbler.”
Randall Whitman momentarily turned away from the window. “Come on, Richard, we both know that you are far more than that.”
For the briefest of instants, Richard Blakemore’s smile slipped. For he was indeed far more than a simple scribbler. When night descended over the city and the criminals stirred in their lairs, Richard Blakemore donned the steel mask of the infamous vigilante known only as the Silencer, a man whom the world at large believed to be nothing but a character in a cheap pulp magazine.
“You couldn’t have earned that fortune of yours pounding out half a cent a word novels about that Silencer fellow for Jake Levonsky’s pulp empire. And then there’s your penchant for crimes. Unusual crimes.”
“I trust that you have just such a crime at your hands…” Richard said in an attempt to steer the conversation back on course, “…and that you want me to look into it.”
“It’s not exactly a crime,” Whitman said, “Not yet.” He handed Richard a typewritten letter. “This arrived Tuesday.”
Richard scanned the letter. Someone calling himself the Master of the Air threatened to let “death and destruction rain down upon the city” by February 9, 1935, if the president did not agree to his demand of one hundred thousand dollars. He also threatened dire consequences, if Whitman did not print his letter on the front page of the New York Star.
“I ignored it at first. We get dozens of letters by obvious crackpots every week. All those Silencer sightings alone…”
“So what made you change your mind?”
“This.” Whitman handed Richard a second letter. The paper and type were identical to the first. “It arrived yesterday. Same guff about raining death and destruction down upon the city. With one addition.”
“As it seems that you do not take my message seriously…” Richard read out.
“Can’t blame me for that.”
“…you shall receive a token of my power, should you not print my demands on the front page of the Friday edition of your paper. Look out of your office window when the clock strikes nine on Friday morning and gaze upon my might. It is but a small foretaste of what is to follow.”
Richard picked up a copy of today’s Star from Whitman’s desk. The headline read, “Zeppelin Imperator set to arrive tomorrow.”
“You obviously did not print the letter,” he remarked.
“Of course not. I can’t run a newspaper according to the whims of a madman.”
“Did you call the police?” Richard asked.
