The Saint Goes On

The Saint Goes On by Leslie Charteris Read Free Book Online

Book: The Saint Goes On by Leslie Charteris Read Free Book Online
Authors: Leslie Charteris
Tags: Fiction, General, Mystery & Detective
Chance had given him one infinitesimal spark of knowledge that he should not have possessed, normal psychology had tempted him to use it in the purchase of his freedom when Chief Inspector Teal had called; but he had not thought of the retribution. Of what had happened since that brain-dulling bullet graze across his head he preferred not to think; but he had a foggy idea that whichever way he turned in that perilous tangle would lead him into new dangers. He had had one warning that day. To be killed for squealing, to be tortured and perhaps killed for not squealing-he saw nothing but trouble in every prospect that was offered to him. except the one primitive remedy of frantic flight. He stumbled into the King’s Road with his chest heaving, and hesitated on the corner in a moment’s ghastly indecision. … A motor-cycle with a particularly noisy exhaust had started up behind him, but he did not think to look round. It seemed to back-fire twice in quick succession; and a tearing shattering agony beside which Hoppy Uniatz’s third degree was a fleabite crashed into his back and sent him sprawling blindly forward into the gutter… .
    Simon Templar stood in the half-open doorway and saw the motor-cycle whip round the corner and vanish with its engine roaring. He was aware that Hoppy Uniatz was breathing heavily down his neck, making strange grunting noises in an ecstasy of impatience to get past him.
    “Lemme go after him an’ give him de woiks, boss,” he was pleading. “I’ll get him, sure.”
    The Saint’s fingers were still curled over the butt of his own gun, which he had not had time to draw.
    “You’re too late, Hoppy,” he said quietly. “He’s got the works.”
    He stepped back into the hall and moved aside to let Mr. Uniatz look out. A small crowd was gathering round the spread-eagled shape on the corner, and the wail of a police whistle drifted faintly over the rumble of untroubled traffic. Simon closed the door again.
    “So ya had him on de spot,” said Mr. Uniatz, with proper admiration. “Chees, boss, you got it all on de top storey. Howja know he was gonna take a powder?”
    “I didn’t,” said the Saint evenly, and went back up the stairs to Patricia.
    He knew of nobody who would mourn the passing of Sunny Jim for long, and his own regret for the untimely accident was as sincere as anyone’s.
    “We’ll be moving, kid,” he said. “Sunny Jim has clocked out.”
    “Did you shoot him?”
    He shook his head.
    “That was the mistake Hoppy made. But I hadn’t any reason to. There was a bloke waiting outside on a motor-bike, and he got him-it may have been the High Fence himself. I thought this address was our own secret, but somebody else seems to have got on to it. So we’ll move on.” He lighted another cigarette and trickled an airy feather of smoke through his lips, while Hoppy came plodding up to join them; and she saw that his blue eyes were as bright and cold as steel. “We’ve lost our insurance policy, old dear. But there may be something better than an insurance policy at the Kosy Korner; and I’m going to find out what it is if I eat there till I’m poisoned!”
    V
Of the millions of people who read of the vanishing and double murder of Sunny Jim Fasson at their breakfast-tables the next morning-the ingredients of the case were sensational enough to give it a place on the front page of every newspaper that had a front page-a certain Mr. Clive Enderby was not the least perturbed.
    Nobody who saw him going to his office that morning would have thought it. Nobody who looked at him with a cynical eye would have suspected him of ever being perturbed about anything. Nobody would have suspected him of thinking about anything. Pottering down the steps of his old-fashioned apartment in Ladbroke Grove, he looked like a typical middle-aged British business man.
    He was rather thin and long-faced, a little stooped about the shoulders, a little flat about the feet, a little

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