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Authors: Leslie Charteris

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BOOK: Saint and the Fiction Makers
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‘Pleased to make your acquaintance,’ Frug said deferentially.

‘And who is this?’ Simon asked. ‘As if I didn’t know.’

He was inspecting the last member of the quartet, a moderately tall man of almost albino colouration. His hair was white, he seemed to have no eyebrows, and his eyes themselves were the palest of milky grey. He seemed to have more difficulty looking either cordial or respectful than any of the others.

‘Nero Jones,’ he said.

The Saint turned back to Warlock.

‘At least I can’t find fault with the casting,’ he remarked.

‘I am so pleased you think so,’ Warlock replied. ‘I do think our group here is much more true to life—’ he laughed and interrupted himself ‘—I should say, true to fiction, to your books, than the cast in the motion pictures. I want you to understand that from the very beginning I’ve tried to depend on your books entirely and to ignore the films, so as to be as faithful as possible to your own ideas. I can’t deny being influenced by the films, but I’ve tried not to be unduly influenced. It was your ideas I was interested in, and a lot of other writers messing about with them could easily spoil the whole thing.’

‘What whole thing?’ Simon asked impatiently.

‘I don’t blame you for being puzzled,’ Warlock answered. ‘Here. Please. Sit down at the head of the table, the place of honour, the place of the leader. I’ll explain everything.’

He ushered Simon to the high-backed chair. Galaxy remained decoratively in the doorway.

‘You may go now, Galaxy,’ Warlock said. ‘Mr. Klein won’t need you for a while, will you, Mr. Klein?’

‘Not for the next minute or so, anyway,’ Simon said fondly.

‘Good,’ Warlock continued. ‘Galaxy, go see that Mr. Klein’s, er, acquaintance is being well taken care of.’

Galaxy left, closing the double doors behind her, and Warlock looked at Simon.

‘The lady is your …’ He paused, questioningly.

‘Associate,’ Simon said, with a vagueness he thought should cover any story Amity Little might have come up with.

Warlock produced the knowing smile of a man who did not really know much about such things but wanted the world to think he did.

‘Understood, Mr. Klein, understood. And now, let’s get down to business, shall we?’

‘Fine,’ the Saint said bluntly. ‘I’m a prisoner, is that the idea?’

Warlock looked mildly pained.

‘Only in the most technical sense of the word,’ he said. ‘You were brought here involuntarily, true, but I’m sure that when you hear my plan you’ll be very happy that you came. Remember, Mr. Klein, you are the leader. You are the father. We are your brain children.’

The Saint sat back in his chair and surveyed the other men—Warlock facing him from the other end of the table, the others seated along either side.

‘And what do I do? Play cops and robbers with you children in this gigantic dollhouse? I feel as if it and all of us were cut off the back of a box of breakfast cereal.’

For the first time the man who called himself Warlock lost his composure. It was only a momentary loss, but it showed the ugly strength which lay behind the jovial surface. Veins bulged and pulsed at his temples, and his black eyes seemed distended in their sockets. But self-control was re-established in a few seconds. His face recovered its normal flaccid pallor as his blood subsided.

‘Mr. Klein,’ he said softly, ‘this is no child’s game. It is not a joke. All this has been done for a practical purpose—a most eminently practical purpose: the purpose of making money. What I have done here is build a business organization and a headquarters for that business. The business is called S.W.O.R.D. and it was conceived by you as well as christened by you. I have made it a reality for the simple reason that it works.’

Simon looked soberly at Warlock.

‘You mean you’ve planned to put an organization like S.W.O.R.D. into actual operation?’

Warlock leaned forward.

‘S.W.O.R.D. is in operation,’ he said. ‘It was quite efficient in bringing you here. The Secret World Organization for Retribution and Destruction is no longer just a fiction. It exists.’

‘And Warlock has come to life to be its boss,’ Simon said.

Warlock sat back in his chair, looking pleased with himself once more.

‘Oh, no, Mr. Klein. I’m not the boss. You are. The ingredient that makes S.W.O.R.D. unique is the unique brain of a creative genius—your own remarkable brain. Without that, S.W.O.R.D. would be only a body without life, a machine without fuel, a … a weapon without a finger to pull the trigger.’

‘Before you drown us with metaphors, Mr. X, let me be sure I understand the facts; you’ve kidnapped me so that I can be the badly needed brain behind this organization. Together, I take it, we’re going to become multi-billionaires, put the Mafia out of business by beating it at its own game, and even manipulate governments from behind the scenes—small governments at first, and then work our way up to the really big ones until we control the world.’

Warlock’s eyes glowed like cinders under a bellows.

‘You do understand, Mr. Klein! I knew you would. Nero! The attache case.’

The near-albino rose from his chair and went to fetch the case from a table behind him.

‘This will help convince you of our sincerity,’ Warlock continued. ‘Once you come to trust me, I’m sure you’ll agree that a life of real action, a life in which one lives his art rather than merely dreaming it—I’m sure you’ll agree that such a life and its rewards are far preferable to fiction and fantasies.’

‘But not necessarily more profitable,’ Simon said.

‘This should convince you even more. Nero, if you please.’

Nero set the attache case on the table in front of the Saint and unlocked it. Simon opened it himself. Inside were tightly bound stacks of ten-pound notes.

‘That’s certainly quite an argument,’ the Saint admitted.

He had decided that his best tactic was to play along, for the moment, until he found out just how far Warlock’s well-heeled madness would go. He tried to look like an author who, even though rich from his writing, was not above being impressed by such quantities of money.

‘And that’s only half,’ Warlock told him. ‘Fifty thousand pounds. Remember my offer in the post? Fifty thousand now and another fifty thousand after two months, at the successful conclusion of our first major project.’

Simon Templar tried to look as flattered, intrigued, and seriously tempted as an imaginary Amos Klein might have looked.

‘What might that be?’ he asked. ‘This major project.’

‘We are going …’ Warlock began, and then he paused for effect as he put his hand on the table and took a deep breath. ‘We are going to rob the largest storehouse of treasure on this side of the Atlantic. We are going to empty it of gold, platinum, and diamonds worth more millions of pounds than I can ever estimate.’

‘We are?’ Simon asked solemnly, building up his part.

‘We are,’ Warlock said. ‘And your brain is going to tell us how it can be done.’

‘Do you think I could? Even if I …’

‘I know you can,’ Warlock said flatly. T know you will.’

‘All right,’ said the Saint. ‘Where is this king-size piggy bank?’

CHAPTER THREE

HOW WARLOCK MADE HIS PITCH, AND SIMON TEMPLAR TOOK A WALK

1

‘It’s called Hermetico,’ Warlock said. ‘Have you heard of it?’

‘No,’ Simon lied.

He knew of the existence of the place, but until now he had taken no special interest in it. He relaxed in his chair as Warlock took charge of a small table draped with purple velvet which had been rolled over next to the long conference table. Out of the corner of his eye Simon noted the strained, attentive faces of the other men. Their tension made for interesting speculation. Had Warlock, who apparently had money in large supply, not only gained their loyalty by paying them plenty, but possibly by recruiting them from prisons whose wardens had viewed the men’s departure with surprise and alarm rather than that warm satisfaction which comes of seeing the regenerate and rehabilitated outlaw leave for a better life at the end of a fully served term? If that were the case, then well-justified fear, if not gratitude, would considerably enhance their devotion to S.W.O.R.D. and its leader.

‘This is a model of Hermetico,’ Warlock said.

Frug, the more skimpy but most intelligent-looking of Warlock’s minions, lifted the purple covering from the table, revealing a monolithic white building surrounded by fences.

‘There’s not much to it, is there?’ Simon remarked nonchalantly.

‘It’s like an iceberg,’ Warlock answered. ‘Only the least important part shows above the surface. Hermetico was formerly the Templedown Colliery in North Wales, and now …’

‘You’ve had it moved down to your property for a fish pond,’ the Saint interrupted pleasantly.

Warlock darted him a look which did not say much for Warlock’s sense of humour. Simon looked repentant.

‘I just meant,’ he explained, ‘that you seem to be able to work miracles, so I wouldn’t be surprised at anything you’ve done now.’

Warlock was somewhat appeased, though still suspicious.

‘The Templedown Colliery,’ he continued, ‘was bought by a private company who have converted it into an underground depository for hyper-valuables.’

‘Hyper-valuables?’ Simon asked innocently. ‘What are hyper-valuables?’

Warlock turned impatiently from his model.

‘Hyper-valuables are … very valuable things. I got the word from one of your books.’

‘Oh,’ Simon said, embarrassed. ‘Well, even Homer nods.’

‘For example, two of the Middle East countries store their gold reserves there.’

‘One of them keeps its crown jewels there,’ Frug volunteered.

Warlock nodded.

‘And three of De Beer’s subsidiaries keep diamond stocks there,’ he said.

‘And Oppenheimer’s, too,’ said Frug.

By now everybody in the room was looking at the white model building as if it itself were made of diamonds. Warlock reverently touched its domed roof.

‘So you can see, Mr. Klein, that it’s a worthy target for your talents.’

Simon stood with his hands clasped behind him and looked down at the model treasure-house.

‘There’s just one thing wrong for a start,’ he said.

‘What’s that?’ Warlock asked.

‘Where does Charles Lake come in? He’s my hero, remember? He’s supposed to keep people from doing things like this, not cheer them on while they steal some poor potentate’s family jewels.’

Warlock was not taken aback.

‘I could not create Charles Lake even if I wanted to. One cannot create an individual, but one can create an organization. And having created this organization, and all the resources and equipment with which your imagination endowed it on paper, I can only be glad that there is no such person as a Charles Lake in the real world.’ Warlock’s small mouth smiled faintly, a dark crevasse in the snowy hills of his face. ‘S.W.O.R.D. actually exists. Charles Lake does not. And there’s your answer, Mr. Klein. If you’re worried about the moral considerations, let’s discuss those later.’

‘All right,’ said Simon. He nodded towards the model. ‘Go ahead, please. I’m interested in the problem of cracking this place … just in theory, of course.’

Warlock gave him a delighted glance and put his hand once more on the white dome of the little building.

‘The surface structure is bomb-proof. Conventional bombs, I mean. Only the subterranean levels are proof against atomic bombs, and it’s at those levels, far below the ground, that the valuables are stored.’ Warlock’s stubby finger touched the fence which surrounded the building. ‘Twelve feet high, barbed, and every strand wired to the alarm system. Between the fence and the narrow walkway surrounding the building there’s an area crisscrossed with electromagnetic beams. If one of the beams is interrupted an alarm goes off and a buried mine explodes at the point at which the beam was broken.’

The Saint bent over the model.

‘Sounds formidable enough,’ he commented.

‘The place is supposed to be absolutely theft-proof,’ Warlock said proudly.

‘Maybe we could start with something easy,’ the Saint said. ‘Like the Bank of England.’

‘I’m glad you’ve learned to say “we” so quickly,’ Warlock responded. ‘I can see that you find the project interesting.’

Simon had used the ‘we’ as an ocean fisherman uses bits of chopped fish to attract and put his prey off guard before he drops his hook. Having decided that his best strategy was to pretend to be tempted by Warlock’s proposition, he might as well stay on that tack. For the moment there was nothing to be gained by resisting, and there might be a great deal to be learned by ostensibly co-operating.

‘It’s interesting,’ he said. ‘And challenging.’

Warlock turned the table around, showing that the underground sections of Hermetico had also been incorporated into the model, extending below tabletop level. He removed half of the surface model, so that now a complete cross-section view of the Hermetico complex was visible—the low building at ground level, the narrow vertical shaft, and the spreading chambers, like the roots of a tree, at the bottom.

‘In the surface building,’ Warlock said, ‘are business offices, switchboard, and controls for the surface security complex.’ His fingers followed the long shaft downwards. ‘Here, an elevator, of course, and near the lower mouth of the shaft, the central control room. There are grilles of steel bars at intervals throughout the storage area, each with a different locking system and automatic sealing device. In the event of an alarm, the whole storage area can be flooded. The whole thing is automated.’

Bishop, the constable of the night before, had been standing respectfully by.

‘Not the friendliest place in the world,’ he volunteered chattily.

Warlock gave him a chilling glance as Simon straightened up after a close inspection of the lower chambers.

‘Automated?’ he asked. ‘You mean there aren’t any guards?’

‘Oh, I’m afraid there are, but not nearly as many as you might expect. They serve a caretaking purpose, primarily. The management of Hermetico apparently feel that their automatic mechanical devices are more than adequate to discourage any attempt at theft.’

BOOK: Saint and the Fiction Makers
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