Point Blanc Read Online Free Page A

Point Blanc
Book: Point Blanc Read Online Free
Author: Anthony Horowitz
Tags: Fiction, General, Fiction - General, People & Places, Family, Juvenile Fiction, England, Orphans, France, Europe, School & Education, Cloning, Mysteries & Detective Stories, Schools, spies, Science & Technology, Orphans & Foster Homes, Mysteries; Espionage; & Detective Stories, Mysteries (Young Adult), Alps; French (France), People & Places - Europe, Rider; Alex (Fictitious character), Spanish: Young Adult (Gr. 10-12)
Pages:
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tired, in a hurry to be away. That was probably why none of them tried to
stop Alex as he slipped in among them, walking purposefully as if he knew where
he was going, as if he had every right to be there.
    But the shift wasn't completely finished yet. Other
workers were still carrying tools, stowing away machinery, packing up for the
night. They all wore protective headgear, and seeing a pile of plastic helmets,
Alex snatched one up and put it on. The great sweep of the block of apartments
that was being built loomed up ahead of him. To pass through it, he was forced
into a narrow corridor between two scaffolding towers. Suddenly a heavy-set man
in white overalls stepped in front of him, blocking his way.
    "Where are you going?" he demanded.
    "My dad..." Alex gestured vaguely in
the direction of another worker and kept walking. The trick worked. The man
didn't challenge him again.
    He headed toward the crane. It stood in the open, the
high priest of construction. Alex hadn't realized how very tall it was
until he had reached it. The supporting tower was bolted into a massive block
of concrete. It was very narrow--once he squeezed through the iron
girders, he could reach out and touch all four sides. A ladder ran straight up
the center. Without stopping to think, Alex began to climb.
    It's only a ladder, he told himself. You've
climbed ladders before. You've got nothing to worry about. But this was a
ladder with three hundred rungs. If Alex let go or slipped, there would be
nothing to stop him from falling to his death. There were rest platforms at
intervals, but Alex didn't dare stop to catch his breath. Somebody might
look up and see him. And there was always a chance that the barge, loose from
its moorings, might begin to drift. Alex knew he had to hurry.
    After two hundred and fifty rungs, the tower narrowed.
Alex could see the crane's control cabin directly above him. He looked
back down. The men on the building site were suddenly very small and far away. He
climbed the last ladder. There was a trapdoor over his head, leading into the
cabin. But the trapdoor was locked.
    Fortunately, Alex was ready for this. When MI6 had
sent him on his first mission, they had given him a number of gadgets--he
couldn't exactly call them weapons--to help him out of a tight spot.
One of these was a tube marked ZIT-CLEAN, FOR HEALTHIER SKIN. But the cream
inside the tube did much more than clean up pimples.
    Although Alex had used most of it, he had managed to
hold on to the last remnants and often carried the tube with him as a sort of
souvenir. He had it in his pocket now. Holding on to the ladder with one hand,
he took the tube out with the other. There was very little of the cream left,
but Alex knew that a little was all he needed. He opened the tube, squeezed
some of the cream onto the lock, and waited. There was a moment's pause,
then a hiss and a wisp of smoke. The cream was eating into the metal. The lock sprang
open. Alex pushed back the trapdoor and climbed the last few rungs. He was in.
    He had to close the trapdoor again to create enough
floor space to stand on. He found himself in a square, metal box, about the
same size as a sit-in arcade game. There was a pilot's chair with two
joysticks--one on each arm--and instead of a screen, a
floor-to-ceiling window with a spectacular view of the building site, the
river, and the whole of West London. A small computer monitor had been built
into one corner, and at knee level, there was a radio transmitter.
    The joysticks beside the arms were surprisingly
uncomplicated. Each had just six buttons--two green, two black, and two
red. There were even helpful diagrams to show what they did. The right hand
lifted the hook up and down. The left hand moved it along the jib, closer or
farther from the cabin. The left hand also controlled the whole top of the
crane, rotating it three hundred and sixty degrees. It couldn't have been
much simpler. Even the START button was clearly labeled. A big
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