Saint on Guard

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Book: Read Saint on Guard for Free Online
Authors: Leslie Charteris
Tags: Fiction, General, Mystery & Detective, Political
said, and his voice had the slow burn of molten lava. “I can’t blame you for trying, but this is the last time you’re going to treat me like a moron.”
    “But Henry, I give you my word–-“
    “You can give your word to a judge, and see what he thinks of it,” snarled the detective. “I’m through. I’m going to take you down to Headquarters and lock you up right now, and you can save the rest of it for your lawyer!”
    “And I thought you were a real professional, Henry. If you’d only stationed a man at the back door, as I was sure you would have, instead of getting so excited–-“
    “Are you coming along?” Fernack asked glowingly. “Or am I going to have to use this?”
    Simon glanced down regretfully at the revolver which had appeared in the other’s fist.
    He might conceivably have been able to take it away. And apparently there was no one to stop him outside the back door. But he was reluctant to hurt Fernack seriously; and he knew that even if he succeeded the call would be out for him within a space of minutes, and that would be a handicap which might easily be crippling.
    And just the same, nothing could have been much more manifest than that the last chance of talking the situation away had departed for the night. There is such a thing as an immutably petrified audience, and Simon Templar was realistic enough to recognise one when he saw it.
    He shrugged.
    “Okay,” he said resignedly. “If you can’t help being a moron, I’ll pretend I don’t notice. But if you’ll take any advice from me at all, please don’t be in too much of a hurry to call in the reporters and boast about your performance. I don’t want you to make a public spectacle of yourself. Because I’ll bet you fifty dollars to a nickel you won’t even hold me until midnight.”
    He lost his bet by a comfortable margin, for Hamilton was away from Washington that night; and the far-reaching results of that delay were interesting to contemplate long afterwards.
    A little after ten the next morning, a rather rotund and unobtrusive gentleman with the equally unobtrusive name of Harry Eldon presented Fernack with his credentials from the Department of Justice and said: “I’m sorry, but we’ve got to exercise our priority and take Templar out of your hands. “We want him rather badly ourselves.”
    Somewhat to his own mystification, the detective found that he didn’t know whether to feel frustrated or relieved or worried.
    He took refuge in an air of gruff unconcern.
    “If you can keep him where he belongs, it’ll be a load off my mind,” he said.
    “You haven’t made any statement about his arrest yet?”
    “Not yet.”
    Fernack could never have admitted that he had been sufficiently impressed by the Saint’s warning, combined with the saddening recollection of previous tragic disappointments, to have forced himself to take a cautious breathing spell before issuing the defiant proclamation that was simmering in his insides.
    “That’s a good thing. You’d better just forget this as well,” Eldon said enigmatically. “Those are my orders.”
    He took Simon Templar out with him, holding him firmly by the arm; and they rode uptown in a taxi.
    The Saint filled his cigarette-case from a fresh pack, and lighted the last one left over, and said: “Thanks.”
    “I had a message to give you,” Eldon said laconically. “It says that this had better be good. Or somebody else’s neck will be under the axe.”
    “It will be good,” said the Saint.
    “Where do you want to be let off?”
    “Any drug store will do. I want to look in a phone book.”
    It was just a chance that Barbara Sinclair’s apartment would be listed under her name; but it was. It lay just off Fifth Avenue, across from the park.
    When Simon arrived there, he found that it was one of those highly convenient buildings with a self-service elevator and no complications in the way of inquisitive doormen, which are such a helpful accessory to the

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