The Saint in London: Originally Entitled the Misfortunes of Mr. Teal

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Authors: Leslie Charteris
only have Patricia Holm to deal with, but your little pal Snowdrop was the bloke who tried it on this morning and wrecked a perfectly good hat with his rotten shooting. I shall have to add a fiver onto your account for that, brother; but the other part of your brilliant idea isn’t so easily dealt with.”
    Farwill’s face was turning from green to grey.
    “I seem to have made a mistake,” he said flabbily.
    “A pardonable error,” said the Saint generously. “After all, Hoppy Uniatz didn’t exactly give you an even break. But you didn’t make half such a big mistake as Comrade Iveldown over there––”
    Out of the corner of his eye he saw Nassen make a slight movement, and his hand had flashed to his pocket before he remembered that he had set out to enjoy his joke with so much confidence that he had not even gone heeled. But even if there had been a gun there, he would have reached it too late. Nassen had a hand in his coat pocket already; and there was a protuberance under the cloth whose shape Simon knew only too well.
    He looked round and saw the reason for it. The ponderous thought processes of Hoppy Uniatz had at last reduced the situation to terms which he could understand. In his slow but methodical way, Mr. Uniatz had sifted through the dialogue and action and arrived at the conclusion that something had gone amiss. Instinct had made him go for his gun; but the armchair in which he was ensconced had impeded his agility on the draw, and Nassen had forestalled him. He sat with his right hand still tangled in his pocket, glaring at the lanky stillness of Iveldown’s private defective with self-disgust written all over his face.
    “I’m sorry, boss,” he growled plaintively. “De guy beat me to it.”
    “Never mind,” said the Saint. “It’s my fault.” Iveldown came forward, with his mouth twitching.
    “The mistake could have been worse,” he said. “At least we have the Saint. Where is Yorkland?”
    Farwill chewed his lower lip.
    “I believe he could be intercepted. When he first arrived, he told me that he had meant to call on Lady Bredon at Camberley on his way down, but he had not had time. He intimated that he would do so on his way back––”
    “Telephone there,” snapped Iveldown.
    He strode about the room, rubbing his hands together under his coattails, while Farwill made the call. He looked at the Saint frequently, but not once did he meet Simon’s eyes. Simon Templar never made the mistake of attributing that avoidance of his gaze to fear; at that moment, Iveldown had less to fear than he had ever had before. Watching him with inscrutable blue eyes, the Saint knew that he was looking at a weak pompous egotistical man whom fear had turned into jackal at bay.
    “What message shall I leave?” asked Farwill, with his hand over the transmitter.
    “Tell them to tell him—we’ve caught our man,” said Iveldown.
    The Saint blew a smoke ring.
    “You seem very sure about that, brother,” he remarked. “But Snowdrop doesn’t look too happy about that gun. He looks as if he were afraid it might go off—and do you realize, Snowdrop, that if it did go off it’d burn a hole in your beautiful Sunday suit, and Daddy would have to smack you?”
    Nassen looked at him whitely.
    “Leave him to me,” he said. “I’ll make him talk.”
    Simon laughed shortly.
    “You might do it if you’re a ventriloquist,” he said contemptuously. “Otherwise you’d be doing good business if you took a tin cent for your chance. Get wise to yourself, Snowdrop. You’ve lost your place in the campaign. You aren’t dealing with a girl yet. You’re talking to a man—if you’ve any idea what that means.”
    Lord Iveldown stood aside, with his head bowed in thought, as if he scarcely heard what was going on. And then suddenly he raised his eyes and looked at the Saint again for the first time in a long while; and, meeting his gaze, Simon Templar read there the confirmation of his thoughts. His fate

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