Saint on Guard

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Authors: Leslie Charteris
Tags: Fiction, General, Mystery & Detective, Political
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    “Just give me a chance,” she begged. “If I can only make it right with myself … Can’t you give me just a little time?”
    He was sure now, and his decision was made. It was no part of him to look back.
    “Not here,” he said decisively. “We don’t know who the next caller may be, and in any case we don’t want Humpty and Dumpty waking up and hearing you. If any of the ungodly got the idea that you were talking to me at all, they might find a whole new interest in your health. And I’d rather not have to hold my next interview with you in a morgue.”
    Her eyes widened as she looked at him.
    “You mean you think somebody might try to harm me?”
    “There have been instances,” said the Saint, with considerable patience, “where persons who knew too much, in this life of sin, have been harmed—some of them quite permanently.”
    “But he—I mean, this man wouldn’t hurt me. You see, he’s in love with me.”
    “I don’t altogether blame him,” said the Saint agreeably. “And I’m sure he would weep bitterly while he cut your throat.”
    He closed the valise quickly, hefted it again, and took her arm with his other hand.
    “Let’s go,” he said.
    She raised herself slowly from the bed.
    “Where?”
    “Some place with room service, where you don’t have to be seen and where it would take weeks to locate you.”
    He herded her briskly out of the apartment, and stabbed at the button of the self-service elevator. The car was still on that floor, and he followed her in as the door rolled back.
    “And there, my love,” he continued, as the antique apparatus began its glubbering descent, “you will sit in your ivory tower with the night chain on the door, refusing all phone calls and| unbarring the portals only to admit slaves bearing food which you are damn sure you ordered, or when you hear my rich and resonant voice announcing that I have a COD package for you from Saks Fifth Avenue. All characters who demand entrance with telegrams, special deliveries, flowers, plumbing tools, or dancing hears will be ignored. In that way I hope I shall save the expense of having to pay for cleaning a lot of your red corpuscles off the carpet,”
    Then he kissed her, because she was still very beautiful looking at him, and other things that were rooted in neither of them as people had forced him into a part that he would never have chosen, and he knew it even while it would never shake the lucid distances of his mind.
    It was like kissing an orchid; and the seismic grounding of the elevator was only just in time to save him from the disturbance of discovering what it might mean to kiss an orchid that became alive.
    He glanced up and down the street as he followed her to the cab which was fortunately waiting at the stand outside. There was nobody he recognised among the few people within range, but nowhere in Simon Templar’s professional habits was there an acceptance of even temporary immunity without precautions.
    “Penn Station,” he told the driver. The girl looked at him questioningly, but before she could speak he said quickly: “We’ll just catch the twelve-thirty, and that’ll get us to Washington in plenty of time.”
    He chattered blithely on about non-existent matters, giving her no chance to make any mistakes, and glancing back from time to time through the rear window. But the traffic was thick enough all the way to make it almost impossible to be certain of identifying any following vehicle. He could only be secure by taking no chances.
    He had the fare and tip ready in his hand as the taxi swooped down the ramp and wedged itself into the jam at the unloading platform. Without waiting for the cab to creep any closer, he hauled out the heavy bag, shook his head at a hopeful redcap, grasped Barbara Sinclair by the elbow, and propelled her dextrously and without a pause through the crowded rotunda of the station to the escalators with a nimbleness of dodging and threading that would

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