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Authors: Leslie Charteris,David Case

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BOOK: Alias the Saint
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Miles Hallin bothered the Saint through the whole of that week-end.

Simon Templar, as he was always explaining, and usually explaining in such a way that his audience felt very sorry for him, had a sensitivity for anything the least bit out of the ordinary that was as tender as a gouty toe. The lightest touch, a touch that no one else would have felt, made him jump a yard. And when he boasted of his subtle discriminations, though he boasted flippantly, he spoke no less than the truth. That gift and nothing else had led him to fully half his adventures—that uncanny power of drawing a faultless line between the things that were merely eccentric and the things that were definitely wrong. And Miles Hallin struck him, in a way that he could not explain by any ordinary argument, as a thing that was definitely wrong.

Yet it so chanced, this time, that the Saint came to his story by a pure fluke—another and a wilder fluke than the one that had merely introduced him to a man whose brother had been a friend of Hallin’s. But for that fluke, the Saint might to this day have been scowling at the name of Miles Hallin in the same hopeless puzzlement. And yet the Saint felt no surprise about the fluke. He had come to accept these accidents as a natural part of his life, in the same way that any other man accepts the accident of finding a newspaper on his breakfast table, with a sense (if he meditated it at all) that he was only seeing the inevitable outcome of a complicated organization of whose workings he knew nothing, but whose naturally continued existence he had never thought to question. These things were ordained.

In fact, there was an unexpected guest at a house party at which the Saint spent his week-end.

Simon Templar had met Teddy Everest in Kuala Lumpur, and again, years later, at Corfu. Teddy Everest was the unexpected guest at the house party; but it must be admitted that he was unexpected only by the Saint.

“This is my lucky day,” murmured Simon, as he viewed the apparition. “I’ve been looking for you all over the world. You owe me ten cents. If you remember, when you had to be carried home after that farewell festival in K.L., I was left to pay for your rickshaw. You hadn’t a bean. I know that, because I looked in all your pockets. Ten cents plus five percent compound interest for six years—”

“Comes to a lot less than you borrowed off me in Corfu,” said Everest cheerfully. “How the hell are you?”

“My halo,” said the Saint, “is clearly visible if you get a strong light behind me. , . . Well, damn your eyes!” The Saint was smiling as he crushed the other’s hand in a long grip. “This is a great event, Teddy. Let’s get drunk.”

The party went with a swing from that moment.

Teddy Everest was a mining engineer, and the Saint could also tell a good story; between them, they kept the ball rolling as they pleased. And on Tuesday, since Everest had to go London on business, he naturally travelled in the Saint’s car.

They lunched at Basingstoke; but it was before lunch that the incident happened which turned Teddy Everest’s inexhaustible fund of reminiscence into a channel that was to make all the difference in the world to the Saint—and others.

Patricia and Simon had settled themselves in the lounge of the hotel where they pulled up, and Everest had proceeded alone into the bar to supervise the production of cocktails—Teddy Everest was something of a connoisseur in these matters. And in the bar he met a man.

“It’s extraordinary how people crop up,” he remarked, when he returned. “I’ve just seen a bloke who reminded me of a real O. Henry yarn.”

And later, over the table, he told the yarn.

“I don’t think I bored you with the details of my last job,” he said. “As a matter of fact, this is the only interesting thing about it. There’s a gold mine somewhere in South Africa that was keeping me pretty busy last year—it was going down steadily, and I was sent out to try and find a spark more life in it. Now, it happened that I’d come across that very mine the year before, and heard all about it, and I was rather bored with the job. Everyone on the spot knew that the mine was a dud, and it seemed to me that I was just going to waste my time. Still, the pay was good, and I couldn’t afford to turn my nose up at it. I’d got into jolly low water over my last holiday, to tell you the truth, and I wasn’t sorry to have something to do—even if it was boring. It was on the train to Marseilles, where I caught my boat, that I met this guy—he on his way to a luxurious week at Antibes, rot him! We got talking, and it turned out that he knew a bit about the game. I remember telling him about my dud mine, and asking him if he held any shares, because I said a rag-and-bone man might give him a price for them. He hadn’t any shares, which rather spoils the story.”

“Because the mine wasn’t a dud,” murmured Simon; and Everest nodded.

” It was anything but. Certainly the old borings were worked out, but I struck a new vein all on my own, and those shares are going up to the sky when my report’s been passed. I gave Hallin the tip just now—I felt he deserved it.”

The Saint sat still.

It was Patricia Holm who put the question.

“Did you say ‘Hallin’?” she asked.

“That’s right.” Everest was scraping at his pipe with a penknife. “Miles Hallin—the racing chappie.

Patricia looked across at the Saint, but the overflow she was expecting did not take place.

“Dear me!” said the Saint, quite mildly.

They were sitting over coffee in the lounge when Hallin passed through. Simon recognized him at once—before he waved to Everest, s - -

“One of the world’s lucky men, I believe,” Everest said, as the clamour of Hallin’s car died away outside,—

“So I hear,” said the Saint.

And once again Patricia looked at him, remembering his discourse of a few days before. It was a characteristic of the Saint that no idea ever slipped out of his mind, once it had arrived there: any riddle that occurred to him tormented him until he had solved it. Anything that was as wrong as Miles Hallin, to his peculiar mind, was a perpetual irritation to him, much as a note out of tune on a piano would be a perpetual irritation to a musician; he had to look round it and into it and scratch it and finger it and jigger about with it until he’d got it into line with the rest of the scheme of things, and it gave him no peace until it was settled.

Yet he said nothing more about Miles Hallin that day.

Still he knew nothing. Afterwards …

But those are the bare facts of the beginning of the story.

They are told as the Saint liimself would tell them, simply put forward for what they are worth. Afterwards, in the light of the knowledge to which he came he could have fitted them together much more coherently, much more comprehensively; but that would not have been his way. He would have told the story as it happened.

“And the longer I live,” he would have said, “the more I’m convinced that there’s no end to anything in my life. Or in anyone else’s, probably. If you trace the most ordinary things back to their source, you find they have the queerest beginnings. It’s just one huge fantastic game of consequences. You decide to walk home instead of taking a taxi, one night, and ten years later a man commits suicide. And if you had taken the taxi, perhaps ten years later the same man might have been a millionaire. Your father stayed at one hotel instead of another, in the same town, and at the age of fifty you become Prime Minister. If he had stayed at the other hotel you would probably have ended your life in prison… . Take this very story. If we hadn’t lunched at Basingstoke that day, or if we’d never gone to that house party, or if I hadn’t once gone out without a handkerchief, or even if I’d never gone to Kuala Lumpur … Leave out the same flukes in the lives of the other people involved. Well, I’ve given up trying to decide exactly in what year, ‘way back in the dim and distant past, it was decided that two men would have to die to make this story.”

This is exactly the point at which Simon Templar would have paused to make his philosophical reflection.

And then he would have told how, on the following Saturday evening, the posters of the Daily Record caught his eye, and something made him buy a copy of the paper; and he went home to tell Patricia that Miles Hallin had crashed again at Brooklands, and Miles Hallin had escaped again with hardly a scratch, but his passenger, Teddy Everest, had been burned to death before the whole crowd.

3

You see,” Nigel Perry explained simply, “Moyna’s people are frightfully poor.”

“Yeah,” said the Saint

“And Miles is such a damned good chap.”

“Yeah,” said the Saint.

“It makes it awfully difficult.”

“Yeah,” said the Saint.

They lay stretched out in armchairs, masked by clouds of cigarette smoke, in the bed-sitting-room which was Nigel Perry’s only home. And Perry, bronzed and clear-eyed from ten days’ tramping in Spain, was unburdening himself of his problem.

“You haven’t seen Moyna yet, have you?” said the Saint.

“Well, hang it, I’ve only been back a few hours! But she’ll be in later—she’s got to have dinner with an aunt, or something, and she’ll get away as soon as she can.”

“What d’you think of your chances?”

Perry ran brown fingers through his hair.

“I’m blowed if I know, Templar,” he said ruefully. “I—I’ve tried to keep clear of the subject lately. There’s such a lot to think about. If only I’d got some real money—”

“D’you think a girl like Moyna cares a hoot about that?”

“Oh, I know! But that’s all very fine. Any sensible girl is going to care about money sooner or later. She’s got every right to. And if she’s nice enough to think money doesn’t matter—well, a chap can’t take advantage of that, … You know, that’s where Miles has been so white. That money he paid over to me as my brother’s share in the mine—he’s really done his best to help me to make it grow. ‘If it’s a matter of Ł s. d.,’ he said, ‘I’d like you to start all square.’ “

“Did he?” said the Saint.

Perry nodded.

“I believe he worked like a Trojan. Pestered all his friends to try and find me a cast-iron investment paying about two hundred percent. And he found one, too—at least, we thought so. Funnily enough, it was another gold mine—only this time it was in South Africa—”

“Hell!” said the Saint.

“What d’you mean?”

“Hell,” said the Saint. “When was this—last week?”

The youngster looked at him puzzledly.

“Oh, no. That was over a year ago… . But the shares didn’t jump as they were supposed to. They’ve just gone slowly down. Not very much, but they’ve gone down. I held on, though. Miles was absolutely certain his information couldn’t be wrong. And now he’s just heard that it was wrong–there was a letter waiting for me—”

“He’s offered to buy the shares off you, and make up your loss.”

Perry stared.

“How did you know?”

“I know everything,” said the Saint.

He sprang to his feet suddenly. There was an ecstatic expression on his face that made Perry wonder if perhaps the beer …

Perry rose slowly; and the Saint’s hand fell on his shoulder.

“Moyna’s coming to-night, isn’t she?”

“I told you—”

“I’ll tell you more. You’re going to propose, my lad.”

“What?”

“Propose,” drawled the Saint. “If you’ve never done it before, I’ll give you a rapid lesson now. You take her little hand in yours, and you say, huskily, you say: ‘Moyna, d’you think we could do it?’ ‘Do what?’ she says. ‘Get fixed,’ says you. ‘Fixed?’ she says. “How?’ ‘Keep the party clean,’ says you. ‘Moyna,’ you say, crrrushing her to your booosom— that’s a shade north of your cummerbund— ‘Moyna, I laaaaaaave you!’ … That will be two guineas. You can post me a check in the morning— as the actress used to say. She was a perfect lady. … So long!”

And the Saint snatched up his hat. He was halfway to the door when Perry caught him.

“What’s the idea. Templar?”

Simon turned, smiling.

“Well, you don’t want me on the scene while you shoot your speech, do you?”

“You don’t have to go yet.”

“Oh, yes, I do.”

“Where?” .

“I’m going to find Miles!”

“But you’ve never met him.”

“I haven’t. But I’m going tot”

Perry blocked the doorway,

“Look here. Templar,” he said, “you can’t get away with this. There’s a lot of things I want to know first. Hang it—if I didn’t know you pretty well, I’d say you’d gone clean off your rocker.”

“Would you?” said the Saint gently.

He had been looking at Perry all the time, and he had been smiling all the time, but all at once the younger man saw something leap into the Saint’s gaze that had not been there before—something like a flash of naked steel.

“Then,” said the Saint very gently, “what would you say if I told you I was going to kill Miles Hallin?”

Perry fell back a pace.

“You’re crazy!” he whispered.

“Sure,” said the Saint. “But not so crazy as Miles Hallin must have been when he killed a friend of ‘, mine the other day.”

“Miles killed a friend of yours? What in God’s name d’you mean?”

“Oh, for the love of Pete!’

With a shrug, the Saint turned back into the ‘ room. He sat on the edge of a table; but his poise was as restless as his perch. The last thing that anyone could have imagined was that he meant to stay sitting there.

“Listen, and I’ll tell you a joke,” he said. “I’m full of jokes these days… . Once upon a time there was a man who could not die. Joke.”

“I wish to heaven you’d say what you meant”

“If I did, you wouldn’t believe me.”

“Not if it was about Miles.”

“Quite! And it is about Miles. So we’d have a first-class row—and what good would that do? As it is, we’re getting damn near it. So why not let it go?”

“You’ve made suggestions—”

“Of course I have,” agreed the Saint wearily. “And now I’m going to make some more. Lose your temper if you must, Nigel, old dear; but promise me two things first: promise you’ll hang on to those shares, and propose to Moyna to-night. She’ll accept—I guarantee it. With lots of love and kisses, yours faithfully.”

The youngster’s jaw tightened.

“I think you’re raving,” he said, “But we’re going to have this out. What have you got to say about Miles?”

BOOK: Alias the Saint
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