“So anyway, we now have a well-staged scene in the old torture chamber, where you trick me into revealing where I have hidden all these priceless documents. You’re doing a great show, Olga. If I could get my hands together I would applaud. You must be a full-fledged member of this lodge of Aryan cut-throats.”
“Think what you please,” she said indifferently. “It makes no difference.”
She could always make him feel wrong. Like now, when she was not angry, but wounded in everything but dignity. Because that devastating ingenuousness of hers was real; because the bridges she walked on were firm and tried, and she had built them herself, and she was as sure of them and her way as he was sure of his own. There could be no facile puncturing of a foundation like that, with a skilled flick of the wrist.
She said, without any emotion, “You think of me as a mercenary adventuress. I don’t deny it. I have worked for Maris—and other men—only for money. But that was before the Nazis invaded Russia. You will not believe that a greedy adventuress could have a heart, or a conscience. But it made all the difference to me…I pretended that it didn’t. I went on working for them—taking their money, doing what they told me, trying to keep their trust. But I was only waiting and working for the time when I could send all of them to the hell where they belong…Yet, I had my own sins to redeem. I had done wrong things, too. That’s why I thought that if I could bring something with me, something big enough to prove that all my heart had changed—then perhaps your FBI would understand and forgive me, and let me begin again here…I could swear all this to you, but what is swearing without faith?”
The Saint’s head was much clearer now. He saw her again through the ruthless screen of his disbelief. And still she wasn’t trying to sell him from behind the counter of any phoney job of tying-up. Her wrists were lashed as cruelly tight as his own. He could see the livid ridges in her skin where the ropes cut. Her face was damp like his from strain and pain.
“Damn it, tovarich,” he said musingly, “you could act anyone in Hollywood off the screen. You’ve almost convinced me that you’re on the level. You couldn’t possibly be, but you sound just like it.”
Her eyes were unwavering against his, and they looked very old. But that was from the patience of a great sadness.
“I only wish you could have believed me before the end. It would have been nicer. But it will not be long now. Siegfried Maris is one of the most important men that Hitler has in this country. He won’t take any chances with us.”
“At least,” said the Saint, “we should feel flattered about getting the personal attention of the big shot himself.”
He had crossed his left leg over his right now, but it was not with the idea of striking an elegant and insouciant pose. He was pressing the outsides of his legs together, feeling for something. He had been searched and disarmed, he knew, but there was his own special armoury which the ungodly didn’t always…
“If we could have caught Maris,” Olga was saying, out of that passionless and regretful resignation, “it would have meant as much as winning a battle at the front. I would have liked to do that very much. Then we could have been quite happy about this.”
It was too good to be true, but it was true. He could feel the solid flat hardness of the haft and blade between the movements of his legs. And with that, he had a fantastic inspiration that might grow into a fantastic escape. But he had seen fantasy come real too often to discard it for nothing but its name.
The glint in his eyes was like sunlight on cut sapphires.
“Maybe we can still be happy, Olga,” he said, and there was a lilt of exultant vitality in his voice. “We’ll try to repeat a significant scrap of United Nations history. You, like some other Russians, were petting the wrong dog. Until you saw the error of your ways. And it bit you. Now I shall try to come through with the lend-lease material.”
12
Olga Ivanovitch stared at him as though she was certain now that he was out of his mind.
“No, darling, I’m not,” he said, before she could put her own words to it. “I was just remembering a movie serial that I saw as a boy, which starred the greatest of all escape artists—Harry Houdini.”
“How interesting,” she said blankly.
It was lucky, he thought, that he liked his shoes loose and comfortable. Otherwise, getting them off might have been quite a problem. As it was, he was able to tread on one heel with the opposite instep and force one shoe off with only a moderate amount of violence. The other shoe presented a little more difficulty, without a hard welt to scrape against, but he went on working at it.
“Now don’t go all Russian on me and relapse into brooding despair,” he pleaded. “You ought to be interested in the late Mr Houdini. He was a real maestro at getting out of situations like this. I was thinking of one instalment in which he was tied to some sort of Oriental torture wheel, in very much the same way as we’re tied up now. He managed to worry his shoes and socks off, and neatly unfastened the knots on his wrists with his toes.”
He had the other shoe off at last. The socks were easier. He only had to tread on a bit of slack at each toe in turn and pull his feet out.
“So what?” Olga said sceptically. “Can you even reach your wrists with your toes?”
“Now you’re coming to life,” Simon approved. “I used to be a fairly agile guy before I started drinking myself to death, and I think I can manage mat.” He twisted his body and balanced himself on one foot, and swung his other leg lithely up to kick his hand. “There, I always knew all those years I spent in the Follies chorus would come in handy some day,” he said contentedly.
“But the knots,” she said in the same tone as before, yet it was already being contradicted by the curiosity kindling in her eyes.
“I’m afraid I’m not quite that good,” he confessed. “However, I have an alternative solution for them which Harry might not have considered entirely ethical.”
He was already working up his right trouser leg with his naked left foot. Under the amazed eyes of the girl, the upper end of the sheath and the haft of his knife came into view. He grasped the haft with his toes and drew the blade gently out of the scabbard and laid it on the floor.
“When I was swinging through the trees in my last incarnation,” he said, “this would have been duck soup for me. But I’m a bit out of practice these days.”
He was concentrating singly on the knife, manoeuvring it between his two feet, getting the firmest possible grip on the handle between his big toe and the one next to it, adjusting and testing it before he made a decisive move. There was no sound in the room but the faint scuff of his efforts. His wrists hurt like hell, but he had forgotten about them. The sweat was standing out on his forehead by the time he was satisfied.
“Now we get to the really fancy part of the trick,” he said. “Like the man on the flying trapeze without a net, I won’t be able to go back and start over if I muff it.”
He poised himself in the same way as he had done for his preliminary experiment, but much more carefully, gauged his distances, and drew a deep breath and held it.
Then he swung his leg, aiming the razor edge of the blade at the link of rope between his left wrist and the pipe.
Once, twice, three times he repeated the same pendulum movement, trying to strike the same spot on the rope each time, feeling the keen blade bite the fibres at every stroke.
Then the knife twisted between his toes, but he managed to keep a precarious hold on it. He brought it gingerly down to the floor and adjusted it again, with the aid of his left foot, in an intolerable hush of intense patience and concentration.
He swung his leg again.
Once more.
Twice more.
The knife span out of his hold and clattered to the floor.
It was beyond his reach, and beyond hers.
He heard the girl’s pent-up breath break out of her lungs in a long throaty sob, and saw tears swimming in her eyes.
He saw t
hen, at last, without thinking about it any more, that she had told him the truth. He had been unsure. He had taken a chance on it, because he was forced to, but wondering all the time if this would end up as the supreme sadism of tantalisation—if after he had revealed his secret weapon, and freed himself, if he could free himself, she would only call out, and Maris would walk in with a gun, and all the hope and struggle would have been for nothing. Now he knew. She couldn’t have gasped and wept like that, otherwise; wouldn’t have needed to, no matter how well she was playing a part.
It was worth something to be sure of that.
The Saint smiled grimly as he inspected the section of rope that he had been working on. He had done a good job, in spite of everything. It wasn’t anything like the rope it had been before.
“I forgot to mention,” he murmured, “that when I was in the circus I also used to break chains and tow tanks around with one hand.”
Then with an abrupt and feral outburst of titanic effort he threw all his weight and strength together against the partly severed cords, dropping his weight on them with a plunging jerk, and simultaneously thrusting himself away from the wall with his feet and contracting his arms together with all the power of his torso. The veins swelled in his back, and the muscles rippled over his body in quivering waves. For an instant it felt as if his wrists were being bitten off—
And then, with a suddenness that was physically sickening, the frayed and slashed portion of rope parted with a snap that flung him whirling outward and around.
He heard the girl sob again, but this time it was with a note of almost hysterical laughter.
He regained his balance without a waste motion, and fell to attacking the knots that bound his right hand.
“I must be slipping,” he said. “I used to do things like that just to warm up.”
The knots weren’t so easy. His hands were numb, and he had to drive deliberate commands through for every movement of his fingers. He worked as fast as he could through that nightmarish impediment.
At last he was free. His wrists were chafed and bleeding a little. But that was nothing. The sense of freedom, of triumph, was like an intoxicating wind blowing through the reviving spaces of his soul.
He scooped up his knife, a little awkwardly because of the cramp in his hands, and cut Olga loose. She almost fell against him, and he had to hold her up for a moment. Until her clinging grew up from the weakness of reaction into something else.
Then he steadied her on her feet and left her standing while he went back to put on his shoes and socks. The return of circulation was filling his hands with pins and needles, but gradually, with the relentless exertion, his fingers began to feel less like swollen frozen sausages.
“There is a way out of here without going through the house,” she was saying breathlessly. “We can slip out without them ever knowing that we’ve gone.”
“Slip out?” He glanced up at her. “Darling, that would be a hell of an anti-climax. I’m going upstairs now and get Matson’s notes and Vaschetti’s diary away from dear old Joe!”
“But how can you?” she cried. “He’ll shoot you like a dog. They took your gun. I saw them. We can call the police—”
Simon straightened up, and looked down in silent reckless laughter at her desperate imploring face.
“I’ve got my knife,” he said, “but I haven’t got any guarantee that the police would get here in time. And meanwhile Maris and Co. might find out that we’d got away, and decide to take the brakes off themselves. We don’t want to risk that now. And besides, we’ve got to deliver you as a certified heroine. Remember?” Her soft scarlet lips were only a few inches away, turned up to him below the liquid pool of her eyes, and once again he was aware of their distracting provocation. He said, “Thanks just the same for being so concerned about me. It ought to be worth at least…”
Then she was in his arms, her breath warm against his cheek, and all of her asking for him, and then he was bruising her moist mouth with his own, and it would never be like that again, but there was no time for that now and perhaps there never had been. It was like so many things in his life: they were always too late, and there was never any time.
He disengaged himself very gently.
“Now,” he said, “we will have the last word with Joe.”
The door on the other side of the cellar was not locked. Simon went up the crude wooden stairs, very quietly, and was conscious of Olga Ivanovitch following him. But he didn’t look back. He came out through another unlatched door into the hall of the house. There was no guard there either. Obviously, Maris and his crew had great faith in the durability of manila hemp and the efficacy of their trussing system.
Which was reasonable enough; just as the Saint’s faith in his knife was reasonable. He knew what it could do, and what he could do with it. He knew how it could transform itself into a streak of living quick-silver, swift as the flash of light from its polished blade, true as a rifle, deadly as any bullet that was ever launched by erupting chemicals.
He held it delicately in his re-sensitised fingers, frail and strong as a bird, only waiting for him to release it into life.
He was outside another door then, listening, when the voice came firmly through it to his ears. Just a voice: the voice of Siegfried Maris, generally known as Joe. But coming with a clear suddenness that was like travelling back in time and never having heard a talking picture, and suddenly hearing a screen speak.
It said, “Keep your hands well up, Lieutenant. Please don’t try anything stupid. It wouldn’t do you any good.”
And then Kinglake’s savage growl: “You son of a gun—how did you get out of the Blue Goose?”
The Saint’s mouth opened and closed again in a noiseless gasp, and a ripple of irresistible laughter rose up through him like a stream of bubbles to break soundlessly at his lips. Even at a moment like that he had to enjoy the perfection of that finishing touch.
“We have our own way out,” Maris replied calmly. “It’s very useful, as you see. But if you didn’t know about it, how did you follow us here?”
“I didn’t. When I didn’t find Templar at the Blue Goose, I thought he might have come here with Ivanovitch.”
“An excellent deduction, Lieutenant. And quite correct. He did come here with Ivanovitch. But that wasn’t his choice…It’s very fortunate that you’re a detective and not a burglar, isn’t it? If you’d been a burglar you wouldn’t have made such a clumsy entrance, and it mightn’t have been half so easy to catch you.”
Simon settled his fingers on the door knob as if it had been a wafer-shelled egg. He began to turn it with micrometric gentleness.
“You bums,” Kinglake said. “What have you done with them?”
“You’ll see for yourself, when you join them in just a few minutes.”
“So you’re Maris, are you? I should have known it.”
“A pardonable oversight, Lieutenant. But you may still call me Joe, if it will make you feel more comfortable.”
Simon waited through an infinitesimal pause, with the door handle fully turned.
Kinglake said, “I guess you can have oversights, too. You aren’t getting away with anything, Joe. I’ve got men outside—”
The low hard chuckle of Maris came through the door.
“An old bluff, Lieutenant, but always worth trying. I know that you came alone. Fritzie was watching you outside, and we made sure of that before we let you break in. Now if you’ll be very careful about holding your arms while Blatt takes your gun—”
That was the pleasantly dramatic moment when it seemed right to the Saint to throw the door wide open.
It was a nice composition that framed itself through the opening, a perfect instant of arrested motion, artistic and satisfactory. There was Lieutenant Kinglake standing with his hands up and his jaw tensed and a stubborn snarl around his eyes, with Johan Blatt advancing towards him. Fritzie Weinbach stood a little off to the right, with a big snub-nosed automatic levelled at the de
tective’s sternum. Simon could identify them both without ever having seen them before—the tall blond man and the fat red man with the cold bleached eyes.
He saw Siegfried Maris, too, for the first time as the man he was instead of the forgotten bartender called Joe. It was amazing what a difference there was. He sat behind a desk, without the disguise of the white coat and the quick obsequious serving movements, wearing an ordinary dark business suit, and obviously the dominant personality of the group. For ultimate proof, he even had a flat light tan case and a shabby pocket memorandum book among some papers on the blotter in front of him. Simon knew even from where he stood that they must be the notes of Henry Stephen Matson and the diary of Nick Vaschetti, it was all there.
And Maris was there, with his square powerful face that hadn’t a natural smile in any line of it, and he was turning towards the interruption with his eyes widening and one of his strong swift hands already starting to move, and the Saint knew without any further study, without a second’s hesitation, that this was the one man he had to get and be sure of, no matter what else happened afterwards.
The knife sped from his hand like a glitter of leaping silver, flying like a splinter of living light straight for the newly retired bartender’s throat.
Then Lieutenant Kinglake had taken advantage of the diversion to make a grab for his gun, and the room was full of thunder and the dry stinging tang of cordite.
13
Simon Templar didn’t carve notches in the handle of his knife, because they would eventually have affected the balance, and he was used to it and he hoped it would last for a long time. He did worry about rust and the way it could dull a blade. He wiped the blade very carefully on Maris’s shirt before he put the knife back in its sheath.
“Let’s face it,” he said, “he did pour some of the lousiest drinks I ever paid for.”
Kinglake was reloading his Police Positive with the unconscious detachment of prehistorically rooted habit.
The Saint on Guard (The Saint Series) Page 23