The Saint in Pursuit
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THE ADVENTURES OF THE SAINT
Enter the Saint (1930), The Saint Closes the Case (1930), The Avenging Saint (1930), Featuring the Saint (1931), Alias the Saint (1931), The Saint Meets His Match (1931), The Saint Versus Scotland Yard (1932), The Saint’s Getaway (1932), The Saint and Mr Teal (1933), The Brighter Buccaneer (1933), The Saint in London (1934), The Saint Intervenes (1934), The Saint Goes On (1934), The Saint in New York (1935), Saint Overboard (1936), The Saint in Action (1937), The Saint Bids Diamonds (1937), The Saint Plays with Fire (1938), Follow the Saint (1938), The Happy Highwayman (1939), The Saint in Miami (1940), The Saint Goes West (1942), The Saint Steps In (1943), The Saint on Guard (1944), The Saint Sees It Through (1946), Call for the Saint (1948), Saint Errant (1948), The Saint in Europe (1953), The Saint on the Spanish Main (1955), The Saint Around the World (1956), Thanks to the Saint (1957), Señor Saint (1958), Saint to the Rescue (1959), Trust the Saint (1962), The Saint in the Sun (1963), Vendetta for the Saint (1964), The Saint on TV (1968), The Saint Returns (1968), The Saint and the Fiction Makers (1968), The Saint Abroad (1969), The Saint in Pursuit (1970), The Saint and the People Importers (1971), Catch the Saint (1975), The Saint and the Hapsburg Necklace (1976), Send for the Saint (1977), The Saint in Trouble (1978), The Saint and the Templar Treasure (1978), Count On the Saint (1980), Salvage for the Saint (1983)
The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.
Text copyright © 2014 Interfund (London) Ltd.
Foreword © 2014 Dan Bodenheimer
Publication History and Author Biography © 2014 Ian Dickerson
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.
Published by Thomas & Mercer, Seattle
www.apub.com
ISBN-13: 9781477843017
ISBN-10: 1477843019
Cover design by David Drummond, www.salamanderhill.com
CONTENTS
PUBLISHER’S NOTE
FOREWORD TO THE NEW EDITION
EXPLANATORY NOTE
CHAPTER ONE HOW SIMON TEMPLAR ANSWERED A SUMMONS, AND VICKY KINIAN WAS OBSERVED
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2
3
4
CHAPTER TWO HOW FREDA OLIVEIROS SHARED A TAXI, AND CURT JAEGER’S APPETITE WAS STRAINED
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2
3
4
CHAPTER THREE HOW THE SAINT CONTINUED THE PURSUIT AND WAS OBSERVED IN HIS TURN
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2
3
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CHAPTER FOUR HOW CURT JAEGER FAILED TO LEVITATE AND MISCHA’S EFFORTS WERE REWARDED
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2
3
4
CHAPTER FIVE HOW VICKY’S INHERITANCE WAS REVEALED AND BORIS UZDANOV IDENTIFIED HIMSELF
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3
4
CHAPTER SIX HOW SIMON TEMPLAR CONTINUED TO BE HELPFUL
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PUBLICATION HISTORY
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
WATCH FOR THE SIGN OF THE SAINT!
THE SAINT CLUB
PUBLISHER’S NOTE
The text of this book has been preserved from the original edition and includes vocabulary, grammar, style, and punctuation that might differ from modern publishing practices. Every care has been taken to preserve the author’s tone and meaning, allowing only minimal changes to punctuation and wording to ensure a fluent experience for modern readers.
FOREWORD TO THE NEW EDITION
As Leslie Charteris’s bibliographer, a mystery convention panelist, noted hagiographer, and the author of the first website about the Saint—www.saint.org—I have a grave confession to make. Not only was The Saint in Pursuit the very last of the English titles I needed to complete my collection many years ago, but until I was asked to write this introduction, I had never actually read it! My excuse and the story I’ve been happy to put forth on occasion is that since Leslie Charteris isn’t writing any more books, and when I discovered the Saint I was only eighteen and planned to live a great number of years, I’d saved a few treasures for those special rainy days in life when I would need a “new” Saint book to take me away on an amazing adventure to another time and place. My fascination with the Saint has been a steady, lifelong endeavor, and it seemed unfair to have my young self greedily tear through all the books and be done with them by age nineteen or twenty.
The Saint in Pursuit is one of the first of Charteris’s collaborations with other authors, and as such, he didn’t give full credit and account to Fleming Lee on this title, as he did with the books that followed. Many years ago, Burl Barer and I sat together in a special collections reading room at Boston University’s Mugar Library and read through the many drafts of this book and its unpublished sister book, Bet on the Saint, which was written at the same time using plots from the newspaper comic strips that Charteris authored in the 1950s. The drafts were remarkable, as Leslie Charteris’s handwritten rewrites, penned over Fleming Lee’s typed draft, kept the spark of the Saint alight and alive. Due to this, Charteris’s classic voice, phrasing, and style come through in this book, and it’s a great read.
The plot of the story itself is one of my favorite themes, lost treasure of the Nazis. With great villains, and a cold case that only the Saint can solve, adventure abounds!
One last thought: Now that I’m in my forties, my memory is clearly not what it used to be. I’ve started rereading this beautiful series of new editions, and they are as new to me as they were when I first read them over twenty years ago!
—Dan Bodenheimer
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Readers who have an uneasy feeling that they have “read” this new book before can relax again. They haven’t. But they may be recalling the plot of the original comic strip on which it is based, which was syndicated by the New York Herald Tribune between July 17, 1959, and January 7, 1960. Of course, I wrote that, too.
—Leslie Charteris (1970)
CHAPTER ONE
HOW SIMON TEMPLAR ANSWERED A SUMMONS, AND VICKY KINIAN WAS OBSERVED
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It is a philosophical observation so profound as to be platitudinous, that a man’s past is never finally past until he is buried; that any encounter, any incident in his life, though he may long since have filed it away as ancient history and for all everyday purposes forgotten it, may only be waiting with the infinite patience of a time-bomb to make violent re-entry into the peacefully lulled passage of his days.
This fact has been discovered with grave discomfiture by such diverse divisions of mankind as professional puritans, retired embezzlers, complacent bigamists, signers of petitions, devisers of unsolvable murders, and ambitious politicians who go into public life without first making sure that certain smouldering letters have been permanently extinguished.
In this episode of the chronicles of Simon Templar with which we are about to be concerned, the bomb had been planted during a war which ended a quarter of a century before the fuse ran out of its length. And if he could accept such a delayed resurrection with his equanimity ruffled by little more than a raised eyebrow, it was because he was within certain limits a resigned fatalist. If he had ever in his adventurous life been subject to wild waves of hope or unnerving attacks of apprehensiveness, he would never have survived to enjoy the fame and more importantly the fabulous fortune th
at his sallies as a twentieth-century Robin Hood had earned him. But ever since he had made it his vocation to prey on the world’s bullies, crooks, and pompous bloatpurses, he had accepted it as an inexplicable but incontrovertible destiny that trouble would always come to him even when he wasn’t looking for trouble, and that the only intelligent response was, in the words of the classic parable, to relax and enjoy it. Considering the antipathy he had aroused among both the Ungodly and their tax-supported official foes, most people in his place would have figured themselves stupendously successful to have stayed alive at all. Simon Templar, called the Saint, had not only survived but prospered in the greatest good humour with a Zarathustrian confidence in his ordained eventual victory over everything that the Ungodly could throw at him.
The first spark out of the past this time was a telephone call that traced him somehow to a hotel in Tokyo, and a dry voice that he had only ever known by the code name of Hamilton and an unlisted number in Washington.
“I’ve got a little job for you,” it said, “that should give you much more of a lift than those geishas.”
“I packed up my cloak and dagger in mothballs years ago,” said the Saint. “And I thought you’d have retired before you got senile.”
“This is unfinished business,” Hamilton said. “I’m having a plane ticket to Lisbon delivered to you. If you can bear to get out of your kimono, ask for Colonel Wade at our embassy there. He’ll brief you.”
“Just be sure it’s a first-class ticket,” said the Saint. “My days of patriotic economizing are over.”
It would never have seriously occurred to him to refuse, and he knew that Hamilton knew it—just as he knew that Hamilton would never have called him out of that distant past without some irresistible reason. And that was all he needed to tell him that life had made a new move in the very special game it played with him, and there was a challenge that any true buccaneer must accept.
So it was that less than two days and half a world away from that brief conversation he sat relaxed—black-haired, lean, immaculately tailored, piratically handsome—in the Lisbon Embassy, confronting a much less relaxed military attache who was obviously inclined to fidget about incursions of civilians into his territory.
“I can’t say this is a sentimental journey, exactly,” Simon Templar said, “even if I do get a lump in my throat when I think of the American taxpayers footing my expenses. But it does take me back.”
His quizzical blue eyes glanced over the panelled room, which was protected from the glaring heat beyond its wide windows by the best imported Yankee air-conditioning, and across the spacious mahogany desk at the officer’s neat uniform. The officer fidgeted. He was a middle-aged man with reddish hair and a baritone voice whose low pitch seemed self-consciously cultivated.
“Were you here in Lisbon with the OSS during the war?” he asked with forced cordiality. “I…er…I haven’t been filled in completely on your background.”
“Nobody has,” the Saint said simply. “We were all very busy in those days, weren’t we, Colonel?”
He realized as he said it, with a certain shock, how inexorably it dated him. Time slips by with such astounding smoothness that we are seldom aware of the space it has covered until we count back. But a few of the Saint’s activities during that war have been inescapably recorded in other volumes of this Saga, so that some milestones cannot be hidden from any student with a mastery of elementary arithmetic.
“Yes, we were,” was all Colonel Wade could think of to reply. He produced a salesman’s sudden depressing smile. “Well, wherever you were exactly in the forties, Washington seems to think you’re the man for this job now, and my orders aren’t to question you at all, of course…”
Most of the officer’s sentences never seemed to come to a full period, leaving the impression that he was about to say “but—” He cleared his throat and unnecessarily straightened some papers on the desk in front of him. Simon Templar waited, secure and cool in his own un-uniformed independence.
“This…er…matter involves one of our intelligence officers, a Major Robert Kinian, who disappeared here in Lisbon in 1944. He’d been to school in Germany for years, spoke the language perfectly, and he’d been undercover there during the first part of the war. Then in February of ’44 he came here and…” Wade flicked one of his hands. “…disappeared…”
“A lot of people disappeared in 1944,” the Saint said impassively. “But I’d have thought that by this time you’d have closed the file on an agent who disappeared on a risky mission in wartime.”
The colonel pressed his hands together in front of him, steeple-like, carefully matching the tip of each finger precisely with its opposite.
“If it was an assignment like Kinian’s—never,” he said. “There was too much involved, and there are questions we want answered because the answers could still mean a lot today. We don’t give up easily. If you see what I mean.”
The officer showed quiet pride in American intelligence’s bulldoggery. Simon let him enjoy himself for a moment before deflating him as gently as possible.
“And just what have you found out about him in these last twenty-five years?”
The Saint refrained from bearing down on the number for the sake of good civilian-military relations. Colonel Wade nevertheless betrayed embarrassment. His homemade steeple crumpled and he smoothed his already smooth papers with nervous hands.
“We…er…we haven’t found out anything, yet,” he admitted.
“No clues at all?” Simon asked.
“No,” said the colonel. “I can give you the whole story very quickly.”
He pushed back his chair, stood up, and paced the room like a university lecturer as he talked.
“We know this: Major Kinian had been underground in Germany for six months in the second half of 1943. As I said, he knew the country thoroughly and spoke German like a native. He got out to Switzerland in February of ’44, but he didn’t make any report there. He came on to Portugal a few days later—about the middle of February—and made a telephone call to report his arrival in Lisbon and the hotel he was staying at.”
“Where was the call made from?” the Saint asked.
“From his hotel, presumably. The Avenida Palace. Of course we checked every possibility of tracing him through the hotel personnel years ago. His stay there was perfectly normal, it seems. Until after a couple of days he just didn’t come back, and he’s never been seen again.”
“And that one telephone call was his only contact with the OSS?”
Wade nodded.
“It was his only contact with anybody on his own team. Since he was on an underground mission he never came here or met the fellow who had my job at the time. After he telephoned, Washington waited two days for the report he was supposed to send to the embassy here. Then an agent was sent to contact him.” The colonel made an empty-handed gesture. “No dice. Nobody knows what happened to him.”
His story finished, the officer dropped back into his red-leather swivel chair and stretched his legs.
“With so much to go on I should have the riddle unravelled in half a day,” Simon said caustically. “You left out just one minor detail. What was this mission Major Kinian had been on?”
“He was trying to get a line on the escape plans of the Nazi bigwigs if they lost the war,” the colonel answered. “With Roosevelt pushing for unconditional surrender, there obviously wasn’t going to be much future for secondhand SS officers, or Nazi politicians, in Germany. It was common knowledge that the top boys were getting escape hatches ready for themselves and salting away plenty of funds to keep them comfortable in their retirement.”
The Saint tilted back his own chair and folded his arms.
“I’m afraid, Colonel, that if Kinian was working inside Germany on something as big as that, your predecessors should’ve expected him to disappear. Apparently he was on such a hot trail that he didn’t dare take his nose off it—even after he got into neutral territory.”
“Right. That’s the way we figure it.”
“But the game got his scent about the time he got here—and turned around and removed him.”
“I’m afraid that’s the most obvious possibility, Templar,” said the officer soberly.
Simon stood up to his full six-foot-two and walked over to the window. Somehow the spacious peace of the embassy’s grounds, the summer sunlight in the foliage of the trees, made the cruel deaths of the Second World War seem almost as remote as the battles of the Iliad.
“And that was the end of the trail,” he said quietly.
“The end of one trail,” Wade replied, and went on with fresh enthusiasm: “We kept an eye on other possibilities—and his daughter was one of them.”
“She must have been all of ten years old at the time,” the Saint said, turning to face the man in the uniform. “An obvious Mata Hari.”
The colonel allowed himself a disciplined smile.
“She was only one year old at the time, as a matter of fact,” he said. “But being as she’s the only member of Major Kinian’s immediate family who’s still alive—his wife died five years ago—we thought there might be a chance she’d give us a lead someday. And I think she has.”
The Saint’s interest had clearly picked up. He was following the colonel’s words intently.
“Without wanting to impugn the honour of the secret services,” he said, “I assume you’re thinking that Major Kinian may have taken the back door to the rich life by joining up with the lads he was supposed to be undoing.”
“It’s a possibility,” Wade said in his radio-announcer’s baritone. “Very remote, perhaps. But we had to consider that and a lot of other chances to be sure we were covering the field. And now, just recently, on her twenty-fifth birthday, Kinian’s daughter was given a sealed envelope by an attorney that’s bringing her straight to Lisbon.”
“From America?”
“Right. From Iowa. It wasn’t her father’s regular attorney who gave her the letter, or we probably would’ve known about it before. We checked him long ago. But we know the letter is from the girl’s father, and that it was given to her on her birthday by a lawyer we didn’t know he’d had any dealings with. A few days later, she quit her job and booked a passage to Lisbon—where he vanished.”