The Saint and Mr. Teal: Formerly Called "Once More the Saint"

The Saint and Mr. Teal: Formerly Called "Once More the Saint" by Leslie Charteris Page B

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Authors: Leslie Charteris
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should act. He could give very little time now to arguments and discussions-escape from that house had become one of the paramount considerations of his life, a thing more vitally important than he had ever thought it could be.
    His hand went back to his pocket, his thumb feeling around for the safety catch of his automatic and pressing it gently out of engagement. Under straight dark brows the blue Saintly eyes centred on Quell like spear points.
    “Of course not, Professor. But about the notes of your process —”
    He was so intent on the scientist that the movement of the door behind him missed his ears. The crack of an automatic fired at close quarters battered and stung his eardrums, and the bullet plucked at his coat. Somehow he was untouched-it is much easier to miss with an automatic than any inexperienced person would believe, and perhaps Mr. Jones’s haste made him snatch at the pull-off. The Saint spun round and fired from his pocket; his nerves were steadier, and he scored where he meant to score-on the gun in the big man’s hand. The weapon dropped to the floor, and Simon stepped closer.
    “Keep still.”
    The big man’s face was twisted with fury. Behind him, Simon heard Quell’s shrill whine.
    “What does this mean, sir? Eh? Dammit —”
    The Saint smiled.
    “I’m afraid you’ve been taken in, Professor. Our friend no more belongs to the Secret Service —”
    “Than you do!” the big man’s voice snarled in viciously. His fists were clenched and his eyes murderous-only the Saint’s gun held him where he stood. “This is one of the men I warned you about, Professor -he’s trying to steal your secret, that’s what it means! The damned traitor!-if I could only get my hands on him… . For God’s sake, why don’t you do something? He’s probably one of the gang that killed your brother —”
    “Stop that!”
    The Saint’s voice cracked through the room like a blade of lightning; but he saw where the big man’s desperate clatter of words was leading to a fraction of a second too late. Quell leapt at him suddenly with a kind of sob, before Simon had time to turn. The professor’s skinny hand wrestled with his gun wrist, and late-crazed talons clawed at his throat. Simon stumbled sideways under the berserk fury of the scientist’s onslaught, and his aim on the man called Jones was hopelessly lost. They swayed together in the corner. Quell’s hysterical breathing hissed and moaned horribly in the Saint’s ears; and over the demented man’s shoulder he saw Jones stooping with his left hand for the fallen gun.
    The Saint saw certain and relentless death blazing across his path like an express train. With a savage gathering of all his muscles he shook the professor off and sent him reeling back like a rag doll. Quell’s dreadful shriek rang in his ears as Simon leapt across the dividing space and kicked away the automatic that the big man’s fingers were within an inch of touching. The gun clanged heavily into a piece of metal on the far side of the room, and Simon caught the big man by one lapel of his coat and spun him round. The Saint’s gun rammed into the big man’s ribs with brutal forcefulness that made the other wince. “Don’t try that again.”
    Simon’s whisper floated into the other’s ears with an arctic gentleness that could not have been driven deeper home by a hundred megaphones. It carried a rasping huskiness of meaning that only a fool could have mistaken. And Mr. Jones was no fool. He stood frozen into stone; but the sweat stood out in glistening beads on his forehead.
    The Saint flashed one glance sideways, and saw what Mr. Jones had seen first.
    Sylvester Quell was sitting on the floor with his back to the shining dome-like contrivance that Simon had seen in action. One hand still rested on the dome, as if by some kind of spasmic attraction, exactly as it had involuntarily gone out to save himself when the Saint’s frantic struggle sent him stumbling back

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