John Creasey - Meet The Baron
- Название:Meet The Baron
- Автор:
- Жанр:
- Издательство:неизвестно
- Год:неизвестен
- ISBN:нет данных
- Рейтинг:
- Избранное:Добавить в избранное
-
Отзывы:
-
Ваша оценка:
John Creasey - Meet The Baron краткое содержание
Meet The Baron - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию (весь текст целиком)
Интервал:
Закладка:
“I’m awfully sorry,” she said. “I really should have been more careful. No — I’ll pick it up. . . .”
But Bristow was alert now.
“Get up!” he snapped, and his voice was harder than Mannering had ever heard it before.
Lorna stood up, holding the cup and saucer, neither of which had broken; her expression was icy as she eyed the detective. Many a man would have been deceived by her words and her tone.
“I don’t quite understand,” she said.
Bristow grunted, and his eyes were like agate.
“I understand you now,” he said. “This isn’t going to be quite the picnic you seem to think, young lady. Where’s that bullet?”
“Bullet?” Lorna’s tone, the question in her voice, the expression on her face, and the apparent mystification in her eyes were perfect. She stared at Bristow, waiting for him to answer.
The detective swore beneath his breath, nonplussed for a moment.
Mannering was feeling an absurd relief. The reaction tended to make him feel light-headed, but he realised his weakness, and knew that he must do something to support Lorna without spoiling her ruse. He looked towards the floor at the pool of tea, and then into Bristow’s eyes.
“Did you mention a bullet?” he asked, and his voice sounded unnatural, even to himself. “I . . .”
Bristow snapped his fingers with a gesture of more than annoyance. He was bristling with anger, but beneath the anger was common sense and a knowledge of the strength of the powers behind him. He had been outwitted, but only temporarily. The bullet was still in the room, almost certainly in Lorna Fauntley’s slim hand.
“Don’t try to be funny,” he snapped, and his eyes flamed as he looked at Mannering. “There are some things which are out of bounds, Mannering, and that’s one of them.”
Mannering flushed, but laughed.
“You’re beside yourself,” he said easily. “You’ve come here excited, and you don’t know what you’re saying — or doing.”
“Excited!” Bristow blared the word. “Do you mean to tell me that there wasn’t a bullet?”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” said Mannering. The gleam in his eyes belied the words, but his lips were steady and serious. “Do you, Lorna ?”
The girl shook her head; her eyes were inscrutable.
“He’s being abominably rude,” she said. “If he’s a specimen of the Yard policemen I’m inclined to agree with Lady Kenton.”
Mannering kept a straight face with difficulty. He knew, Bristow knew, and Lorna knew that unless that bullet were produced Bristow had no kind of a charge against him. The bullet was in Lorna’s hand. Bristow daren’t try to use force, and he would have to wait until a woman came from the Yard. That would give them half an hour or more to get rid of the bullet effectively. God, what a situation!
Bristow’s eyes hardened. He realised that he was being baited in the hope that he would do something foolish. But he was too seasoned an officer to take chances. His voice was harsh.
“So that’s how you’d like to make it, is it?” he snapped. “Well, you can’t get away with it, Mannering. You’re the Baron. That bullet will prove it. Now — where’s your telephone ?”
Mannering indicated a stand in the corner of the room. There was no object in trying to evade Bristow on that point, but the detective needn’t reach the instrument.
A moment later Mannering felt a quick revulsion of feeling, and again the situation swung round.
Bristow dipped his hand into his pocket, and pulled out a gun. There was a grim smile on his face, tinged with triumph.
“Yes, I know it’s against regulations,” he said, “but it pays to take a chance at times. I took this in case I bumped into the Baron — into you — last night. It’ll serve its purpose now. Get into the corner — both of you !”
Mannering hesitated. Lorna’s eyes widened, and fear tugged at her heart. This was a development neither of them had anticipated.
“I shouldn’t take any chances,” grunted Bristow. He was hard and implacable, and he seemed to have changed into granite. “If this goes off it’ll be because you were resisting me in the execution of my duty. I’ve nothing to worry about, and you stand to risk another bullet.”
There was a tense silence as he stopped. Then Mannering uttered a short, high-pitched laugh.
“Let’s humour him,” he said to Lorna, and he hardly knew how to keep his voice level, for his heart was thumping fast.
Bristow’s eyes glinted. He watched the couple move towards the corner, and the glint changed from one of annoyance to satisfaction at Mannering’s words. Keeping his gun trained on his prisoners, he reached for the telephone. It was one of the new type, and he had no difficulty in talking and keeping his captives under his eyes. They were caught. Mannering might have moved and taken a chance, but he would not risk Lorna.
“Scotland Yard,” Bristow grunted. There was a pause. Then: “Sergeant Tring? Oh, Tring, come along to Mannering’s flat, in Brook Street, with two plain-clothes men and a woman. Yes, a woman. That’s all. Don’t lose any time.”
He replaced the receiver with a flourish.
That just about finished you,” he said evenly, and he smiled, more like the old Bill Bristow well known and liked in the East End. “I’ll admit you gave me a shock, Mannering, and I’ll admit it was luck that I found you, but — we always get our man.”
Mannering shrugged his shoulders. He contrived to smile, but he felt no humour. The end was coming, quickly, undramatically. His recent burglaries and his successes seemed to lose a great deal of their glitter.
He seemed to picture the crowded court, the judge and jury, the droning voice of the prosecutor. It would be child’s play for the Crown. There was hardly a possible line of defence. Even Toby Plender wouldn’t be able to do anything, clever though he was.
Mannering felt physically sick.
Bristow seemed to realise it, and naturally felt a malicious pleasure. It rankled deeply that he had been made such a complete fool, and even now he was wondering what Lynch’s comment would be.
“It’ll be in your favour,” he said, “that you didn’t try force, Mannering. And it’s luck for you that you don’t carry firearms.”
Mannering shrugged his shoulders again, and Lorna’s eyes were very wide. She was gripping Mannering’s sound arm, and he could feel her fingers trembling. Neither of them spoke.
“I suppose you wouldn’t like to tell me where I’ll find the stuff?” suggested Bristow, fingering his moustache. “It would save a lot of time.”
Mannering made a big effort.
“What stuff?” he asked. His voice was remarkably steady, and he surprised even himself.
There was a gleam of admiration in Bristow’s eyes.
“You’re game,” he said grudgingly.
Lorna broke out as the words left the Inspector’s lips. Her poise had gone now, and her breast was heaving.
“John — don’t let it happen! Take a chance. You can get away; you must, you must! You mustn’t let them get you. John . . .”
Mannering gripped her arm soothingly; her outburst gave him new strength.
“Steady,” he said. “There’s no sense in losing your head, my dear. Bristow’s got an idea that I’m the Baron, and he won’t be satisfied until it’s been proved to the contrary. So . . .”
Lorna swallowed hard. She looked up at the man at her side, and saw his face set in a strange smile. He would fight to the last, of course.
There was a fleeting expression of doubt in Bristow’s eyes, but it was gone in a flash. He laughed rather harshly, and moved his gun.
“That’ll cut no ice when we’ve found the stuff you took from Ramon’s,” he said. “ And the bullet.”
“No?” Mannering was very cool. His mind was working at top speed, on one thing and one thing only. The bullet.
How could he get round that substantial piece of evidence? Was there a way out, other than losing the bullet? Must this be the end ?
“No,” snapped Bristow.
Mannering bent his head suddenly, until his lips were very close to Lorna’s ear. Bristow’s gun moved a fraction of an inch threateningly.
“No tricks,” he warned.
“Try and slip it in my pocket,” whispered Mannering. Don’t answer.” He straightened up, and grinned at Bristow. “Couldn’t we sit down now ?” he demanded.
The detective was bristling with suspicion.
“I’ve warned you,” he said, “and if you try any tricks, Mannering, you’ll make acquaintance with another bullet. I’ve had more than enough of the Baron — a lot more.”
“I find him a little too universal myself,” smiled Mannering.
As he spoke he moved, and Lorna slipped the bullet from her hand into his pocket. Or almost into it. At the critical moment he moved again, and the little lump of lead dropped to the floor. The plop came as Lorna gasped out in consternation. Bristow’s eyes glittered, and he made his first mistake.
He darted towards the bullet. Mannering saw him, loosed his left arm, and swung it at the detective with every ounce of strength in his body. Bristow realised the ruse a fraction of a second too late. He saw the clenched fist loom in front of his eyes, and then there came the sickening thud of fist on bone and flesh. Bristow went sprawling, his eyes rolling as he fell.
Lorna seemed petrified; the thing had happened so swiftly. Mannering swung towards the telephone while Bristow was still dropping to the floor. He had dialled his number before Bristow’s head dropped back, but he need not have worried, for his man was unconscious.
Mannering was almost frenzied with excitement, and his eyes were gleaming. The wait for the response to his call seemed never-ending. But a voice came at last, a rather sleepy and irritable voice.
“Hallo, there! Yes, yes?”
The Colonel, thought Mannering. And: “Let me speak to Gerry,” he said, keeping his voice steady with a great effort. “Yes, Gerry Long; quickly, please.”
“A minute,” grunted Colonel Belton at the other end of the wire.
The minute seemed age-long.
Bristow was still stretched out, unconscious. Lorna seemed to break through the stupefaction which had gripped her when she had seen the policeman go down, and her eyes brightened.
“What shall we do with it?” she demanded.
“Lose it, with luck,” snapped Mannering, “If this man keeps me waiting much longer I’ll . . .”
“But why can’t I take it?” Lorna almost cried the words. “I could get to the river, drop it down a drain . . .”
“And have the police pestering you, questioning you and your lather, your mother and . . .”
“But it doesn’t matter. You’ll be all right.”
Mannering’s eyes were very warm.
“You’re very dear,” he said. “But I think we can get away with it. . . . Ah! Gerry . . .” He swung round to the telephone, and Gerry Long, cheerful again now, answered quickly.
“H’m-h’m. Want me, Mannering?”
“Come to my flat,” snapped Mannering, “the back way. You came once before — remember?”
“Yes.” Long seemed to realise the urgency in the other’s tone. There was crispness in his voice at the other end of the wire.
“Stand in the courtyard,” snapped Mannering, “and catch the thing I’m going to throw out of the window. Then lose it. A drain, or the river, somewhere. And for God’s sake be here inside five minutes — less if you can make it.”
“Right,” said Long, and Mannering heard the click of the receiver.
Читать дальшеИнтервал:
Закладка: