
1st - 5th September 1933, Arrival in New York,
At last, September arrived and
the investigators reported to the expeditions headquarters, the Amherst Hotel in
Manhattan. On arrival, they were allocated quarters in the hotel and received a
note each, requesting their attendance at the berth of the expedition ship, the
SS Gabrielle. They hailed cabs and made their way to the docks, to be met by a
scene of chaotic activity. The dockside, warehouse and ship were full of crates
and barrels, with stevedores piling more on all the time. In the middle of the
mess hall stood Moore, who greeted the investigators, asked them to attend a
briefing at eight the following morning and sent them to see Sykes, one of the
expeditions polar experts. The rest of the day was spent being measured,
outfitted and medically examined.
The following morning, they gathered
with the rest of the crew in the Rose Room, where they were enthusiastically
greeted by Starkweather. He explained that the expedition would sail on the 14th
September, heading through the Panama canal to Melbourne and then on to the Ross
ice shelf, aiming to arrive on 1st November, ice permitting. The expedition will
use planes to set up three camps: one will act as a base camp on the Ross sea
shore, one will be erected near the site of Percival Lake's last discoveries and
the third on the high plateau. Once Starkweather had finished, Professor Moore
handed out duties to each crew member. Each investigator was handed part of the
cargo manifest for the expedition and requested to check that it had been
delivered accurately, and that it was correctly stowed on the ship.
As the meeting broke up, Moore took Sorrell aside and requested that he
undertake a private mission for him. He explained that Commander Douglas, the
master of the Arkham from the earlier Miskatonic University expedition, was to
join the expedition on the sixth and asked that Sorrell make himself available
to the Commander at the Westbury Hotel and to help him as required. Sorrell
readily agreed.
The next few days were a whirlwind of frenetic activity,
as the investigators checked cargo manifests against invoices and receipts, and
checked the physical presence of the items on the ship. Some items were missing,
most seriously the lumber for the base camp, some were misplaced (sour cream in
an unrefrigerated area, and so forth) and some had never been ordered. Professor
Caine went to Trenton to check that the planes were being correctly prepared and
Zacariah became a licensed explosive handler in order to collect the expeditions
explosives and two important discoveries were made: it appeared that the fuses
for the explosive had been stolen (as Steve the security guard remembered them
being delivered, yet they were nowhere to be seen) and two harmonicas had also
been taken (much to the quartermasters delight, as a music lover).
Meanwhile, press attention to the expedition intensified. On the third, reports
linking Douglas to the expedition surfaced, much to Moore's delight. On the
fourth, reports in the press were focused on a new expedition, announced by
Alicia Lexington, with a plan to fly to the south pole. Later that day,
Professor Caine overheard a heated exchange between Starkweather and Moore, with
Starkweather furious at Lexington's behaviour. He appeared to see her
announcement as a deliberate attempt to sabotage him and was incandescent with
fury. The last words Caine overheard from Starkweather were a simple instruction
to Moore - "Get me a woman". More worryingly, Starkweather, in his fury, also
decided to leave New York earlier than expected, on the ninth. Later on the same
day, it was reported in the press that Miss Charlene Whitston, a botanist, was
to join the expedition. The day of the fifth passed in relative peace, although
Professor Caine was concerned by a strange letter, hand delivered, warning the
expedition not to go south. He offered the delivery man a sizable sum of money
to find the man who asked him to deliver it.
6th September 1933, The Death of a Sea Captain
The morning of the sixth dawned, with news of a terrible
tragedy - Commander Douglas was dead, drowned and with his head bludgeoned in.
As the investigators made their way to the wharf and then the hotel, they
swiftly realized that this had triggered a press feeding frenzy, with
Starkweather and Moore besieged in their rooms. As they watched the pack of
pressmen, Professor Caine and Jack Sorrell were approached by Detective J.J.
Hansen, who asked them if they knew were Douglas had been staying. Sorrell told
him of the Westbury and Hansen thanked him gratefully.
The work at the docks paused as the news sank in. The investigators spent the
rest of the day investigating, with Zacariah heading to Miskatonic to interview
survivors of the MU expedition and collect a copy of the summary report of the
findings. Meanwhile, Professor Caine and Ivanoff headed to Douglas last known
address, where the professor distracted the police guard on the room while
Ivanoff got slightly drunk with the hotel porter/owner and bribed him for a look
at the room. With the help of Professor Caine's ability to read English, they
soon found that the Commanders journals for the MU trip were missing and that he
had been to a seaman's bar, the Purple Cup. Ivanoff investigated the second
lead, while the others tried to find a way of retrieving the journals. That
evening, Malcolm found another note, warning them off the expedition, this time
far more threatening. The rest of the evening passed peacefully, with a visit to
the Purple Cup and Caine commencing the task of reading the summary report,
which dry, dusty and meticulous approach suited him.
The morning of the
sixth dawned, with news of a terrible tragedy The next couple of days passed in
frenzied activity and some investigation. Malcolm tried to get hold of Alicia
Lexington to no avail and the investigators attended Douglas funeral on the
morning of the 8th. At the funeral, they met Douglas brother, Philip, who was
able to tell them who told them that the MU trip had left his brother with
severe mental scars and that he had no idea where the missing journals
were.
9th-11th September 1933, Departure
The evening of departure dawned (only
in reverse) and the investigators headed to the docks to finish final
reparations. As they did so, there was a call of fire and they looked around
(or, in Malcolm's case, ambled up on deck and in Caine's case, carried on
reading the report in the hotel). As Malcolm manned the pumps to douse the fuel
oil stored on deck, Sorrell and Ivanoff ventured into the blaze to rescue a
dockhand and noticed a furtive figure with a jerry can and a big banner saying
arsonist at the far end of the warehouse. They moved round to him and were able
to apprehend him after a brief struggle, by the simple expedient of Ivanoff
sitting on him while Sorrell bludgeoned him unconscious. The criminal was turned
over to the police.
Once the fire was out, the Gabrielle was towed to a
new birth and the damage assessed. Fortunately, only minimal damage had been
done and the departure date was not affected. Sorrell and Ivanoff found that
they had acquired many friends among the crew for their swift and dangerous
actions in the rescue - they also found that they had becvome media heroes as a
result of the arsonists capture, a small time criminal by the name of Jerry
Polk. Malcolm meanwhile, had acquired the dubious friendship of Starkweather.
Finally, two days late, the ship was ready to sail.
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