a hand over his waistcoat, and gasped.
“I’ve lost my watch,” he said.
“Damn your watch,” said Mr. Julian Lamantia callously. “Have you got those shares?”
“My pocket must have been picked,” said the bereaved man plaintively. “Yes, I got the shares. Here they are. It was a wonderful watch, too. And don’t you forget I’m on to half of everything we make.”
Mr. Lamantia spread out the certificates in front of him, and the man in the brown bowler who was perched on a corner of the desk leaned over to look.
It was the latter who spoke first.
“Are these the shares you bought, Meyer?” he asked in a hushed whisper.
Wilmer-Steck nodded vigorously.
“They’re going to make a fortune for us. Gushers blowing oil two hundred yards in the air-that’s the news you’ll see in the papers tomorrow. I’ve never worked so hard and fast in my life, getting Tombs to —”
“Who?” asked the brown bowler huskily.
“Captain Tombs-the mug I was working. But it’s brain that does it, as I’m always saying … What’s the matter with you, Fred-are you feeling ill?”
Mr. Julian Lamantia swivelled round in his chair.
“Do you know anything about these shares, Jorman?” he demanded.
The brown bowler swallowed.
“I ought to,” he said. “I was doing a big trade in them three or four years ago. And that damned fool has paid five hundred pounds of our money for ‘em-to the same man that swindled me of thirty pounds only last week! There never was a British Honduras Mineral Development Trust till I invented it and printed the shares myself. And that-that —”
Meyer leaned feebly on the desk.
“But listen, Fred,” he pleaded. “Isn’t there some mistake? You can’t mean-After all the imagination and brain work I put into getting those shares —”
“Brain work!” snarled Happy Fred.
The Export Trade
IT is a notable fact, which might be made the subject of a profound philosophical discourse by anyone with time to spare for these recreations, that the characteristics which go to make a successful buccaneer are almost the same as those required by the detective whose job it is to catch him.
That he must be a man of infinite wit and resource goes without saying; but there are other and more uncommon essentials. He must have an unlimited memory not only for faces and names, but also for every odd and out-of-the-way fact that comes to his knowledge. Out of a molehill of coincidence he must be able to build up a mountain of inductive speculation that would make Sherlock Holmes feel dizzy. He must be a man of infinite human sympathy, with an unstinted gift for forming weird and wonderful friendships. He must, in fact, be equally like the talented historian whose job it is to chronicle his exploits-with the outstanding difference that instead of being free to ponder the problems which arise in the course of his vocation for sixty hours, his decisions will probably have to be formed in sixty seconds.
Simon Templar fulfilled at least one of these qualifications to the nth degree. He had queer friends dotted about in every outlandish corner of the globe, and if many of them lived in unromantic-sounding parts of London, it was not his fault. Strangely enough, there were not many of them who knew that the debonair young man with the lean tanned face and gay blue eyes who drifted in and out of their lives at irregular intervals was the notorious law-breaker known to everyone as the Saint. Certainly old Charlie Milton did not know.
The Saint, being in the region of the Tottenham Court Road one afternoon with half an hour to dispose of, dropped into Charlie’s attic work-room and listened to a new angle in the changing times.
“There’s not much doing in my line these days,” said Charlie, wiping his steel-rimmed spectacles. “When nobody’s going in for real expensive jewellery, because the costume stuff is so good, it stands to reason they don’t need any dummies. Look at this thing-the first
Christopher Knight, Alan Butler