Read The Saint Meets the Tiger Online
Authors: Leslie Charteris
Tags: #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Fiction
It was not till then that he saw someone sitting quietly on the bunk.
“Oh, how d’you do, Auntie?” said the Saint, who was always polite, and Agatha Girton’s lips curved ironically.
“You’re really rather a wonderful man, Mr. Templar,” she remarked.
Chapter XVII
PIRACY
Coming from the opposite side of the tor to that of the Saint’s take-off, Patricia and her two lieutenants had no need to make a detour. They approached the Tiger’s ship on the sheltered side. The hull of it cast a deep and spacious shadow over the moonlit waters, and all the attention of the crew would be concentrated toward the island and away from the swimmers, so that the only precautions the raiders had to observe were those of slipping through the quiet sea without noise.
When the sides of the ship loomed above them, Patricia forged ahead and led the way up under the bows. There they rested for a moment, clinging with cramped fingers to the edges of the plates, while their leader reconnoitred.
She swam back a little way to get a clear view of the anchor chain, and saw the same disadvantages in that line of attack as the Saint himself had envisaged. Then, being the freshest of the trio after the swim, she moved along the side to prospect for an alternative route. Thus she discovered the rope ladder which the Saint had used, and returned to inform the others of their good fortune. They followed her back—Orace was plugging doggedly on, but Algy was in great distress, and had held them back considerably in the last quarter mile—and the girl caught the lower rungs and pulled herself out of the water.
“Half a lap more, and then we can rest,” she encouraged in a whisper, leaning down and pressing Algy’s hand. “Try to raise just an ounce more— we’ve got to move fast till we find some place to hide.”
She scaled the ladder with a nimbleness that no old salt could have bettered, and the straining of the ropes in her hands told her that the others were trailing her as actively as they could. Looking before she leaped, she saw that the only men visible were intent upon steering an instalment of their precious cargo down into the hold aft, and in a trice she had flashed over the rail and was standing in the shadow of the deckhouse. In a moment Algy’s head topped the rail, and she beckoned him to hurry. Somehow he clambered over and got across the deck to join her, though he was dazed and swaying with cold and fatigue. Orace came hard on his heels.
“How are we all?” asked Pat.
Orace was trying to rub some of the wet off his arms and legs.
“Orl right, miss—me ole woon’s painin’ a bit, but nuffin’ ta speak uv.”
“Algy?”
“F-f-frightfully sorry to b-be such a n-n-nuisance, old th-thing!” Algy’s teeth were chattering like castanets. “But I’ll b-b-be all right in a b-bally jiffy. I wish we could f-f-fmd the Tiger’s whisky!”
The girl turned to Orace.
“Will you take charge for a minute?” she said. “I don’t know enough about ships. Take us some place where we’ll be fairly safe from being spotted.
“‘Um,” said Orace, and scratched his chin thoughtfully. “‘Tain’t sa thunderin’ easy, onner tub this size… .I’ll goan seef they’ve gotta fo’c’sle-‘atch, f’ya don’ min’ settin’ among the ‘awsers.”
She nodded.
“Carry on—and be quick.”
She waited, supporting Algy with one arm. She kept a sharp lookout, and her disengaged hand held Bloem’s automatic, for they could not fail to be seen if anyone passed along that side of the deck. In which case the adventure was likely to terminate without further parley… , But luck was with them, and no one came, though they could hear the low voices of the men working aft, the thrum and groan of ropes and blocks and derricks, and the hum and clatter of the small winch. In a very brief space of time she saw Orace slinking back in the shadows.
“What luck?” she demanded softly.
“Didden think they’d ‘ave wun,” he replied— “but they yav! This wy—”
He led them swiftly to the bows, keeping; well down in the lee of the rail. In a short distance they were able to crouch under the bulwarks at the fo’c’sle head.
Orace turned back the tarpaulin and raised the hatch. He shone his torch down to show them the tiny compartment almost filled with coils of hawser.
” ‘Tain’t much,” said Orace apologetically, “but it’s syfe fra bit.”
They got Algy down, arid Patricia followed. Orace squeezed in last, and pulled the tarpaulin over again as he lowered the hatch, so that at a casual glance it would not appear to have been tampered with.
“Cosy enough ‘ere,” said Orace, switching on his lamp for a moment. “Ain’t much air, though, an’ if ennyone spots the ‘atchis undid an’ battens it dahn we shall sufficate in an owrer two,” he added cheerfully. “We mighter done wuss, on the ‘ole. But wot’s nex’ on the mean-you, Miss Patricia?”
“How’s Algy?”
Orace focussed the light. Where Mr.Lomas-Coper was not ashen pale he was blue, but apparently his wound had closed up in the salt water, for the bandage round his head was clean. He grinned feebly.
“I’m rather weak, but I’ll be lots better when I’ve warmed up. I’m afraid I’m not much use as a pirate. Pat—it’s this blinkin’ whang on the nut that’s done me in.”
The girl curled up against the bulkhead to give him as much room as possible to stretch out and rest.
“Orace and I will have to go out scouting in relays till you’re better,” she said. “We’ve got to find out where all the Tiger Cubs are before we move— I don’t suppose there’ll be many aboard, but we’ve got to locate them all and arrange to deal with them in batches so that the rest won’t know what’s happening. Then there are those men you saw on the quay. Bloem and Bittle will be here, and the Tiger—they’re the most important and the most dangerous, and we can’t afford to make any mistake about them.”
“I’m fer tykin’ the single ones as we meet ‘em,” said Orace. “I’ll go fust—startin’ naow. An’ when I git me ‘ands on ennyer them blankety-blanks they’ll wish they’d never bin horned. I gotta nac-count ter settle wiv this bunch o’ fatherless scum.”
“I’ve also got an account to settle,” remarked Patricia quietly. “So I think I’ll go first.”
Orace was not a man to waste time on argument; he was also something of a strategist.
“We’ll go tergether,” he compromised. “I won’t innerfere, but I’ll be a pairer vize in the backa yer ‘ed. Mr. Lomas-Coper won’t ‘urt ‘ere alonely, will yer, sir?”
“Don’t mind me, old sprout,” urged Algy. “I’ll tool along an’ chip in as soon as I can—an’ I hope you’ll have left the bounder who pipped me for me to clean up.”
There was really no reason for anyone staying with him, and Patricia agreed to Orace’s suggestion.
They crawled out and replaced the hatch and tarpaulin cover as they had found it. Then, as they hesitated under cover of the bulwarks, Orace said:
“Mr. Templar ‘ud be right—they’ll be thunderin’ short’anded. Seemster me, there won’t be no more thanna nengineer below, an’ p’r’aps a cook in the galley. These motor ships is that luck-shurious yer don’ ‘avta be offended by more’n a nanful o’ vulgar seamen. Assoomin’ that, jer fmkyer c’u’d 1’y aht the pertaterstoor wile I dots the metchanic one? I wouldn’t letcha go alone, ‘cept I knows be ixperience that pertaterstoors ain’t like ord’n’ry men.”
“I’ll manage all right,” Patricia assured him. “Hurry up about it, and I’ll meet you under that awning in front of the saloon. Then we can arrange to tackle the men who’re loading the gold.”
“Righ-char, miss…. Remember that companion opposyte where we come over the side? Go dahn—yer mos’ likely ter find the galley aft.”
Orace accompanied her as far as the top of the companion, and there they separated. He had unostentatiously bagged the most ticklish job in the programme for himself; for he had already located the engine-room companion aft of the hatch where the Tiger Cubs were working, and to reach it unobserved he would have to travel most of the way hanging over the side of the ship by his fingers, returning by the same method. But this fact he did not consider it his duty to disclose.
As soon as the girl had disappeared, he climbed over the rail and let himself down out of sight. In his younger days, Orace had been able to awe recruits with displays of gymnastic prowess, and he had not yet lost the knack. He worked swiftly and smoothly along the side, and did not halt until his ears told him that he was level with the after hatch. There he paused and edged himself up till he could peep over the coaming. He saw a crate go rattling down into the hold, and then someone unseen said something, and one of the men went to the starboard rail.
“Wot’s ‘e sy?” queried the man at the winch.
The man at the rail passed on the inquiry, and presently was able to answer it.
“Ses three more journeys’ll finish it.”
“Tell ‘im ter ‘urry ‘em all along. The Old Man’s frettin’ ter get orf.”
The command was duly relayed, and the man at the winch spat on his hand and sent the cable swishing down for a second load.
Orace let himself down to arm’s length again and went on. The Tiger Cubs were working quicker than they had anticipated, and three more journeys, with at least two, if not three, of the ship’s boats on the job, wouldn’t take such a long time. It was not an occasion for dawdling.
Orace got well round to the stern and put a large ventilating cowl between himself and the men at the hatch before he ventured to return to the deck. Then he made a quick dash for the engine-room companion, and reached it unnoticed.
It is difficult to move silently over iron gratings, but Orace’s bare feet enabled him to go down unobserved until there was only a short ladder to descend before he reached the level of the motors. There was only one man below, and he was bending over, tinkering with a bearing. Orace had got that far before the man straightened up to look for a spanner, and in so doing discovered his peril. The engineer let out a shout which reverberated deafeningly in the confined space, but which would have been hardly audible outside, and rushed.
As he came on he wrestled with his pocket, where his gun must have got stuck. That fluke gave Orace all the respite he needed, and saved him having to shoot. He jumped, and his feet struck the engineer full in the chest. The two went down together, but the engineer’s body broke Grace’s fall, and the head which in a few seconds was pounded into insensibility against a cylinder block was not Orace’s….
Orace was about to leave—was, in fact, already climbing—when he had an inspiration, and returned. The stunned mechanic was of Orace’s own build. Orace commandeered the man’s cap and blue jeans, and, finding a convenient locker, pushed the engineer into it and turned the key. Thus equipped. Orace felt that he had a decided advantage—he would be able to move more freely about the ship, and, if he encountered any Tiger Cubs, he would be safe from challenge in the darkness until he had got close enough to make his distaste for their society effectively evident. Once more he began to make his way to the deck.
He was halfway there when he heard the tramp of heavy feet coming toward him. Grace turned and scuttled back. He kept his head averted and bent low over the nearest motor. The feet grated on the companion above him, and halted.
“All right down there, Joseph?”
“Aye, aye, sir,” replied Orace in a muffled voice, without looking up.
“We’ll be off in less than an hour. You needn’t bother about running on the electric motors going out–we want to get off as quickly as we can.”
“Aye, aye, sir.”
“I’ll ring down as soon as the last load’s being taken in, and you can start up then and keep running till we go.”
The footsteps retired along the deck overhead, and Orace breathed again.
He had noticed the iron door behind him, but had assumed that it led only to the fuel tanks. As a matter of fact, it did, but there was also a narrow alley running between the tanks and continuing forward till it reached the foot of an emergency companion. He heard the slight click of the door opening, and quickly bowed his head over the engines again.
This man did not speak; but Orace, apparently intent on inspecting a spark plug, could hear the stealthy slither of feet over the greasy metal, and the hairs in the scruff of his neck prickled. There was something sinister about that wary approach —the man behind him moved so silently that Orace would never have noticed the sound if he had not been expecting it. The door itself had been unlatched so cautiously that that noise also would probably have escaped him if he had not been listening for the retreat of the man who had spoken to him.
The stealthy feet drew nearer, step by step, while Orace kept his back turned and went on poring over the plug terminals. They were nearer now— only a couple of yards behind him, as far as he could judge. Another yard, and Orace gathered himself for a sudden movement. He had ceased to wonder whether the intruder regarded him as an innocent party. For some reason which he could not immediately divine Orace was suspect.
Some premonition, the prompting of a sixth sense, made him swing aside in the nick of time, and the smashing blow that had been aimed at his head whizzed past his ear and clanged on the engine casing. Orace whirled and leaped, but his feet slipped on the oily grating, and he sprawled headlong. His blunderbuss was underneath the borrowed overalls, and he had no time to fumble for it before his opponent had pounced on him and caught his throat in a deadly grip.
Except the thrill of a sporting burglary—such as a raid upon the home of a famous detective with the said detective in residence and, for preference, entertaining a select party of his fellow sleuths— there is no thrill to be compared to the thrill of a refined form of piracy.
So Patricia realized as she stole down the dimly lighted alleyway aft in search of the galley. There she was, on the Tiger’s ship, with only two assistants, one of whom was temporarily hors de combat, and the odds against them were five to one, at a conservative estimate. The very forlornness of the adventure took away half its terrors, for with everything to lose—and as good as lost at the first slip—there was nothing to gain by footling and fiddling over the job. The only earthly chance of success was to blind recklessly ahead and chance the consequences. To funk the bold game would be fatal. The bold game was the only one which offered .the vaguest possibility of success—a plan such as they had set themselves to carry out could only hope to succeed if it were executed in the same spirit of consummate cheek and hell-for-leather daring as that in which it had been conceived. And that was what Patricia Holm intended to do, starting in at that very instant.