The Saint in London (The Saint Series)

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The Saint in London (The Saint Series) Page 20

by Leslie Charteris


  “Fetch me a towel from the bathroom, Hoppy,” he ordered. “And for Heaven’s sake put that blasted cannon away. How many more times have I got to tell you that this is the close season for policemen?”

  While he was waiting, he handcuffed the two detectives with their own bracelets, and when the towel arrived he tore it into two strips and gagged them.

  “Get your hat,” he said, when the job was finished. “We’re going to travel.”

  Mr Uniatz followed him obediently. It may be true, as we have acknowledged, that the higher flights of philosophy and metaphysics were for ever beyond the range of Mr Uniatz’s bovine intellect, but he had an incomparable grip on the fundamentals of self-preservation. Experience had taught him that after an active encounter with the police the advantages of expeditious travelling could be taken for granted—a fact which relieved his brain of much potentially painful exertion.

  As they turned into Berkeley Square, he followed a little more hesitantly, and eventually he plucked at the Saint’s sleeve.

  “Where ya goin’, boss?” he asked. “Dis ain’t de way to de garage.”

  “It’s the way to the garage we’re going to,” answered the Saint.

  He had automatically ruled out the Hirondel as a conveyance for that getaway—the great red and cream speedster was far too conspicuous and far too well known, and it was the car whose description would be immediately broadcast by Mr Teal as soon as that hapless sleuth had worked the gag out of his mouth and reached the telephone. Simon had another and more commonplace car in reserve, in another garage and another name, which he had laid up some weeks ago with a far-sighted eye to just such a complication as this, and he was inclined to flatter himself on his forethought without undertaking the herculean labour of hammering the idea into Hoppy’s armour-plated skull.

  Whether any net was actually spread out for him in time to cross his path, he never knew; certainly he slipped through London without incident, making excellent time over the almost deserted roads in spite of several detours at strategic points where he might have been stopped. He abandoned the car outside the entrance of Vickers’ factory on the Byfleet road, where there would soon be a score of other cars parked around it, and one more modest saloon might easily pass unnoticed for days, and walked through the woods to his house as the dawn was breaking. There was no hope that Teal would fail to draw that covert as soon as he had reorganised his forces, but it was a temporary haven, and the Saint had a few items of personal equipment there which he wanted to pick up.

  There were sounds of movement in the kitchen when he let himself in at the front door, and in another moment the belligerent walrus-moustached visage of Orace appeared on the opposite side of the hall. Simon threw his hat at him and smiled.

  “What’s our chance of breakfast, Orace?” he asked.

  “Narf a minnit,” said Orace expressionlessly, and vanished again.

  Over the bacon and eggs, golden brown toast, and steaming coffee which Orace produced necromantically in very little more than the time he had promised, the Saint’s brain was working overtime. For the time being, Teal had been dealt with, but that past tense had no more permanent stability than the haven in which Simon Templar was eating his breakfast. Ahead of those transient satisfactions lay the alternatives of penal servitude or a completed getaway, and he had no spontaneous leaning towards either. He turned them over in his mind like small beetles discovered under a log, and decided that he liked them even less. But there was a third solution which took him longer to think over—which, in fact, kept him wrapped in silent concentration until his plate was pushed away and he was smoking a cigarette over a second cup of coffee, and Mr Uniatz intruded his bashful personality again.

  Hoppy’s brain had not been working overtime, because the hours between one breakfast and the following bedtime were rarely long enough to let it do much more than catch up with where it had left off the previous night. Nevertheless, the wheels, immersed in the species of thick soup in which nature had asked them to whizz round, had been doggedly trying to revolve.

  “Boss,” said Hoppy Uniatz, articulating with some indistinctness through a slice of toast, two ounces of butter, a rasher of bacon, and half an egg, “de cops knows you got dis house.”

  Simon harked back over some leagues of his own cerebrations, and recognised the landmark which Hoppy had contrived to reach.

  “That’s perfectly true,” he remarked admiringly. “Now don’t go doing any more of that high-pressure thinking—give your brain a minute to cool off, because I want you to listen to me.”

  He rang the bell and smoked quietly until Orace answered. Mr Uniatz, happily absolved from further brain work, engulfed the rest of the food within his reach and cast longing eyes at a decanter of whisky on the sideboard.

  “Orace,” said the Saint, “I’m afraid Claud Eustace is after us again.”

  “Yessir,” said Orace phlegmatically.

  “You might sound more sympathetic about it,” Simon complained. “One of the charges is wilful murder.”

  “Well, it’s yer own thunderin’ fault, ain’t it?” retorted Orace, unmoved.

  The Saint sighed.

  “I suppose you’re right,” he admitted. “Anyway, Hoppy’s idea is that we ought to pull the pin.”

  “Dat means to take it on de lam,” explained Hoppy, clarifying the point.

  Orace’s faded eyes lost none of their ferocity, but his overhanging moustache twitched.

  “If yer can wite ’arf a minnit, sir,” he said, “I’ll go wiv yer.”

  The Saint laughed softly, and stood up. His hand fell on Orace’s shoulder.

  “Thanks a lot, you old humbug, but it isn’t necessary. You see, Hoppy’s wrong. And you ought to know it, after all the years you’ve been around with me.” He leaned back against the mantelpiece, one hand in his pocket, and looked at the two men with eyes that were beginning to twinkle again. “Hoppy reminds me that Teal knows all about this house, but he’s forgotten that Teal also knows I know it. Hoppy thinks we ought to pack our keisters and take it on the lam, but he’s forgotten that that’s the very thing Teal is expecting us to do. After all, Claud Eustace has seen me hang it on the limb before…Are you there, Hoppy?”

  “Yes, boss,” said Mr Uniatz, after glancing around to reassure himself of the fact.

  “It’s quite true that you’ll probably see some cops skating up the drive before long, but somehow I don’t think Claud Eustace will be with them. It’ll be almost a formality. They may browse around looking for incriminating relics, but they won’t be seriously looking for me—or Hoppy. And that’s why none of ’em will ever be great detectives, because this is exactly where Hoppy is going to be—lying snug and low in the secret room off the study, which is one of the things they still don’t know about this house.”

  “Cheese!” said Mr Uniatz, in pardonable awe. “Dijja t’ink of all dat while ya was eatin’ breakfast?”

  The Saint smiled.

  “That, and some more, but I guess that’s enough for your head to hold at one time.” He looked at his watch. “You’d better move into your new quarters, now—Orace will bring you food and drink from time to time, and I’ll know where to find you when I want you.”

  He steered Hoppy across the hall and into the study, slid back the bookcase beside the desk, and pushed him through the gap in the wall behind it. Framed in the narrow opening, Mr Uniatz blinked out at him pleadingly.

  “Boss,” he said, “it’s going to be toisty waitin’.”

  “Hoppy,” said the Saint, “if I think you’re going to have to wait long, I’ll tell Orace to have a pipeline laid from a distillery right into the room. Then you can just lie down under the tap and keep your mouth open—and it’ll be cheaper than buying it in bottles.”

  He slammed the bookcase into place again, and turned round on the last puff of his cigarette as Orace came in.

  “You’ve got to be an Orphan of the Storm, and draw the fire,” he said. “But it shouldn’
t be very dangerous. They’ve nothing against you. The one thing you must do is get in touch with Miss Holm—let her know all the latest news, and tell her to keep in contact. There may be fun and games for all before this party’s over.”

  “Addencha better ’ide in there yerseif, sir?” asked Orace threateningly. “I can look after everythink for yer.”

  The Saint shook his head.

  “You can’t look after what I’m going to look after,” he said gently. “But I can tell you some more. It won’t mean much to you, but you can pass it on to Miss Holm in case she’s curious, and remember it yourself in case anything goes wrong.”

  He caught Orace by the shoulders and swung him round. The mocking blue eyes were reckless and wicked; the Saintly smile was as blithe and tranquil as if he had been setting out on a picnic—which, according to his own scapegrace philosophy, he was.

  “Down at Betfield, near Folkestone,” he said, “there’s a place called March House, where a guy called Sir Hugo Renway lives. The night before last, this guy murdered a Spanish airman named Manuel Enrique, on the Brighton Road—and left my mark on him. Last night, this same guy pinched an aeroplane out of the Hawker factory over the road—and left my mark on the night watchman. And in the small hours of this morning, an aeroplane which may or may not have been the one that was pinched landed in the grounds of March House. I was there, and I saw it. A few hours back, Claud Eustace Teal tried to run me in for both those efforts.

  “I wasn’t responsible for either of ’em, but Teal doesn’t believe it. Taking things by and large, you can’t exactly blame him. But I know better, even if he doesn’t, and I’m just naturally curious. I want to know what all this jolly carnival is about that Renway’s trying to tack onto me. And there’s one thing you’ll notice, Orace, with that greased-lightning brain of yours, which ties all these exciting goings-on together. What is it, Orace?”

  The warlike moustache of his manservant bristled.

  “Hairyplanes,” said Orace brilliantly, and Simon smote him on the back.

  “You said it, Horatio. With that sizzling brain of yours, you biff the ailnay on the okobay. Hairyplanes it is. We’ve got to get to the bottom of this, as the bishop said to the actress, and it strikes me that if I were to fetch out the old Gilette and go hairyplaning—if I blundered into March House as a blooming aviator waiting to be pruned—”

  The peremptory zing of the front door-bell interrupted him, and he looked up with mischief hardening on his lips. Then he chuckled again.

  “I expect this is the deputation. Give them my love, Orace—and some of those exploding cigarettes. I’ll be seein’ ya!”

  He reached the window in a couple of strides, and swung himself nimbly through. Orace watched him disappear into the dell of bracken at the other end of the lawn, and strutted off, glowering, to answer the front door.

  6

  There is believed to exist a happy band of half-wits whose fondest faith it is that the life of a government official, the superman to whom they entrust their national destiny, is one long treadmill of selfless toil from dawn to dusk. They picture the devoted genius labouring endlessly over reports and figures, the massive brain steaming, the massive stomach scarcely daring even to call a halt for food. They picture him returning home at the close of the long day, his shoulders still bowed beneath the cares of state, to fret and moil over their problems through the night watches. They are, we began by explaining, a happy band of half-wits.

  The life of a government official is very far from that; particularly if he is of the species known as “Permanent,” which means that he is relieved even of the sordid obligation of being heckled from time to time by audiences of weary electors. His job is safe. Only death, the Great Harvester, can remove him, and even when he dies, the event may pass unnoticed until the body begins to fall apart. Until then, his programme is roughly as follows:

  10:30 a.m. Arrive at office in Whitehall. Read newspaper. Discuss night before with fellow officials. Talk to secretary. Pick up correspondence tray. Put down again.

  11:30 a.m. Go out for refreshment.

  12:30 p.m. Return to office. Practise short putts on HM carpet.

  1:00 p.m. Go out to lunch.

  3:00 p.m. Back from lunch. Pick up correspondence tray. Refer to other department.

  3:30 p.m. Sleep in armchair.

  4:00 p.m. Tea.

  4:30 p.m. Adjourn to club. Go home.

  As a matter of fact, Sir Hugo Renway was not thinking of his office at all at half-past-nine that morning. He was discussing the ravages of the incorrigible green-fly with his gardener, but he was not really thinking of that, either.

  He was a biggish thin-lipped man, with glossily brushed grey hair and a slight squint. The squint did not make him look sinister: it made him look smug. He was physically handicapped against looking anyone squarely in the face, but the impression he managed to convey was not that he couldn’t, but that he didn’t think it worthwhile. He was looking at the gardener in just that way while they talked, but his air of well-fed smugness was illusory. He was well fed, but he was troubled. Under that smooth supercilious exterior, his nerves were on edge, and the swelling drone of an aeroplane coming up from the Channel harmonised curiously well with the rasp of his thoughts.

  “I don’t think none of them new-fangled washes is any good, zir, if you aarsk me,” the man was reiterating in his grumbling brogue, and Renway nodded, and noticed that the steady drone had suddenly broken up into an erratic popping noise.

  The man went on grumbling, and Renway went on pretending to listen, in his bored way. Inwardly he was cursing—cursing the stupidity of a man who was dead, whose death had transformed the steady drone of his own determination into the erratic popping which was going through his nerves.

  The aeroplane swept suddenly over the house. It was rather low, wobbling indecisively, and his convergent stare hardened on it with an awakening of professional interest. The popping of the engine had slackened away to nothing. Then, as if the pilot had seen sanctuary at that moment, the machine seemed to pull itself together. Its nose dipped, and it rushed downwards in a long glide, with no other accompaniment of sound than the whining thrum of the propeller running free. Instinctively Renway ducked, but the plane sideslipped thirty feet over his head and fishtailed down to a perfect three-point landing in the flat open field beyond the rose garden.

  Renway turned round and watched it come to a standstill. He knew at once that the helmeted figure in the cockpit had nothing left to learn about the mastery of an aeroplane. That field was a devil to get into, he had learned from experience, but the unknown pilot had dumped his ship in it with a dead stick as neatly as if he had had a whole prairie to choose from. Enrique had been the same—a swarthy daredevil who could land on a playing-card and make an aeroplane do anything short of balancing billiard balls on its tail, whose nerveless brilliance had been so maddeningly beyond the class of all Renway’s own taut-strung efforts…Renway’s hands tensed involuntarily at his sides for a moment while he went on thinking, and then he turned away and began minutely examining some buds of rose-crimson Papa Gontiers as the pilot walked under a rustic arch and came towards him.

  “I’m terribly sorry,” said the aviator, “but I’m afraid I’ve had a forced landing in your grounds.”

  Renway looked at him for a moment. He had a dangerous devil-may-care sort of mouth, which showed very white teeth when he smiled. Enrique had had a smile very much like that.

  “So I see,” said Renway, and returned to his study of rose-buds.

  His voice was an epitome of all that mincing rudeness which the English lower classes have been so successfully trained to regard as a symbol of superiority. The Saint would have liked to hit him with a spanner, but he restrained himself.

  “I’m terribly sorry,” he repeated. “My oil pressure started to drop rather quickly, and I had to come down where I could. I don’t think I’ve done any damage. If you can direct me to the village, I’ll arrange t
o get the machine moved as quickly as possible.”

  “One of the servants will show you the way.”

  Renway looked up with his complacent squint, and glanced at the gardener, who put away his pruning-knife and dusted his hands.

  “It’s very good of you,” said the Saint, and then an unfortunate accident happened.

  He was carrying a valise in one hand, which he had taken out of the machine and brought with him. It could not have been very securely fastened, for at that moment it fell open.

  A cascade of shirts, socks, pyjamas, shaving tackle, and similar impedimenta might not have distracted Renway for more than a couple of seconds from his horticultural absorption, but nothing of the kind fell out. Instead, the valise emptied itself of a heavy load of small square tins such as cough lozenges are sold in. The tins did, in fact, carry printed labels proclaiming their contents to be cough lozenges, but one of them burst open in its fall and scattered a small snowfall of white powder over the path.

  Simon dropped on his knees and shovelled the tins back with rather unsteady hands, forcing them into the attaché-case with more haste than efficiency. He scraped the white powder clumsily back into the one which had burst open, and when Renway touched him on the shoulder he jumped.

  “Pardon my curiosity,” said Renway, with unexpected suaveness, “but you have the most unusual luggage.”

  Simon laughed somewhat shortly.

  “Yes, I suppose it is. I’m the Continental traveller for…er…some patent-medicine manufacturers…”

  “I see.”

  Renway looked back at the aeroplane again, and again his hands tensed involuntarily at his sides. And then, once more, he looked at the Saint. Simon forced the last tin into his case, crammed the locks together, and straightened up.

 

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