The Bulldog Drummond MEGAPACK ®. Sapper

The Bulldog Drummond MEGAPACK ® - Sapper


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Barely had he got into the drawing-room, when the door opened and the girl rushed in.

      “Get him away at once,” she cried. “In your car… Don’t waste a second. I’ve started her up.”

      “Good girl,” he cried enthusiastically. “But what about you?”

      She stamped her foot impatiently. “I’m all right—absolutely all right. Get him away—that’s all that matters.”

      Drummond grinned. “The humorous thing is that I haven’t an idea who the bird is—except that—” He paused, with his eyes fixed on the man’s left thumb. The top joint was crushed into a red, shapeless pulp, and suddenly the meaning of the instrument Lakington had produced from his pocket became clear. Also the reason of that dreadful cry at dinner…

      “By God!” whispered Drummond, half to himself, while his jaws set like a steel vice. “A thumbscrew. The devils…the bloody swine…”

      “Oh! quick, quick,” the girl urged in an agony. “They may be here at any moment.” She dragged him to the door, and together they forced the man into the car.

      “Lakington won’t,” said Hugh, with a grin. “And if you see him tomorrow—don’t ask after his jaw… Good night, Phyllis.”

      With a quick movement he raised her hand to his lips; then he slipped in the clutch and the car disappeared down the drive…

      He felt a sense of elation and of triumph at having won the first round, and as the car whirled back to London through the cool night air his heart was singing with the joy of action. And it was perhaps as well for his peace of mind that he did not witness the scene in the room at The Elms.

      Lakington still lay motionless on the floor; Peterson’s cigar still glowed steadily in the darkness. It was hard to believe that he had ever moved from the table; only the bullet imbedded in a tree proved that somebody must have got busy. Of course, it might have been the girl, who was just lighting another cigarette from the stump of the old one.

      At length Peterson spoke. “A young man of dash and temperament,” he said genially. “It will be a pity to lose him.”

      “Why not keep him and lose the girl?” yawned Irma. “I think he might amuse me—”

      “We have always our dear Henry to consider,” answered Peterson. “Apparently the girl appeals to him. I’m afraid, Irma, he’ll have to go…and at once…”

      The speaker was tapping his left knee softly with his hand; save for that slight movement he sat as if nothing had happened. And yet ten minutes before a carefully planned coup had failed at the instant of success. Even his most fearless accomplices had been known to confess that Peterson’s inhuman calmness sent cold shivers down their backs.

      CHAPTER III

      In Which Things Happen in Half Moon Street

      I

      Hugh Drummond folded up the piece of paper he was studying and rose to his feet as the doctor came into the room. He then pushed a silver box of cigarettes across the table and waited.

      “Your friend,” said the doctor, “is in a very peculiar condition, Captain Drummond—very peculiar.” He sat down and, putting the tips of his fingers together, gazed at Drummond in his most professional manner. He paused for a moment, as if expecting an awed agreement with this profound utterance, but the soldier was calmly lighting a cigarette. “Can you,” resumed the doctor, “enlighten me at all as to what he has been doing during the last few days?”

      Drummond shook his head. “Haven’t an earthly, doctor.”

      “There is, for instance, that very unpleasant wound in his thumb,” pursued the other. “The top joint is crushed to a pulp.”

      “I noticed that last night,” answered Hugh non-committally. “Looks as if it had been mixed up between a hammer and an anvil, don’t it?”

      “But you have no idea how it occurred?”

      “I’m full of ideas,” said the soldier. “In fact, if it’s any help to you in your diagnosis, that wound was caused by the application of an unpleasant medieval instrument known as a thumbscrew.”

      The worthy doctor looked at him in amazement. “A thumbscrew! You must be joking, Captain Drummond.”

      “Very far from it,” answered Hugh briefly. “If you want to know, it was touch and go whether the other thumb didn’t share the same fate.” He blew out a cloud of smoke, and smiled inwardly as he noticed the look of scandalised horror on his companion’s face. “It isn’t his thumb that concerns me,” he continued; “it’s his general condition. What’s the matter with him?”

      The doctor pursed his lips and looked wise, while Drummond wondered that no one had ever passed a law allowing men of his type to be murdered on sight.

      “His heart seems sound,” he answered after a weighty pause, “and I found nothing wrong with him constitutionally. In fact, I may say, Captain Drummond, he is in every respect a most healthy man. Except—er—except for this peculiar condition.”

      Drummond exploded. “Damnation take it, and what on earth do you suppose I asked you to come round for? It’s of no interest to me to hear that his liver is working properly.” Then he controlled himself. “I beg your pardon, doctor: I had rather a trying evening last night. Can you give me any idea as to what has caused this peculiar condition?”

      His companion accepted the apology with an acid bow. “Some form of drug,” he answered.

      Drummond heaved a sigh of relief. “Now we’re getting on,” he cried. “Have you any idea what drug?”

      “It is, at the moment, hard to say,” returned the other. “It seems to have produced a dazed condition mentally, without having affected him physically. In a day or two, perhaps, I might be able to—er—arrive at some conclusion…”

      “Which, at present, you have not. Right! Now we know where we are.” A pained expression flitted over the doctor’s face: this young man was very direct. “To continue,” Hugh went on, “as you don’t know what the drug is, presumably you don’t know either how long it will take for the effect to wear off.”

      “That—er—is, within limits, correct,” conceded the doctor. “Right! Once again we know where we are. What about diet?”

      “Oh! light… Not too much meat… No alcohol…” He rose to his feet as Hugh opened the door; really the war seemed to have produced a distressing effect on people’s manners. Diet was the one question on which he always let himself go…

      “Not much meat—no alcohol. Right! Good morning, doctor. Down the stairs and straight on. Good morning.” The door closed behind him, and he descended to his waiting car with cold disapproval on his face. The whole affair struck him as most suspicious—thumbscrews, strange drugs… Possibly it was his duty to communicate with the police…

      “Excuse me, sir.” The doctor paused and eyed a well-dressed man who had spoken to him uncompromisingly.

      “What can I do for you, sir?” he said.

      “Am I right in assuming that you are a doctor?”

      “You are perfectly correct, sir, in your assumption.”

      The man smiled: obviously a gentleman, thought the practitioner, with his hand on the door of his car.

      “It’s about a great pal of mine, Captain Drummond, who lives in here,” went on the other. “I hope you won’t think it unprofessional, but I thought I’d ask you privately how you find him.”

      The doctor looked surprised. “I wasn’t aware that he was ill,” he answered.

      “But I heard he’d had a bad accident,” said the man, amazed.

      The doctor smiled. “Reassure yourself, my dear sir,” he


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