The Secret Adversary Agatha Christie (books to read to get smarter TXT) đ
- Author: Agatha Christie
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âYou wouldnât dareâ ââ
âOh, yes, I would, son!â
Kramenin must have recognized something in the voice that carried conviction, for he said sullenly:
âWell? Granted I do know who you meanâ âwhat of it?â
âYou will tell me nowâ âright hereâ âwhere she is to be found.â
Kramenin shook his head.
âI darenât.â
âWhy not?â
âI darenât. You ask an impossibility.â
âAfraid, eh? Of whom? Mr. Brown? Ah, that tickles you up! There is such a person, then? I doubted it. And the mere mention of him scares you stiff!â
âI have seen him,â said the Russian slowly. âSpoken to him face to face. I did not know it until afterwards. He was one of a crowd. I should not know him again. Who is he really? I do not know. But I know thisâ âhe is a man to fear.â
âHeâll never know,â said Julius.
âHe knows everythingâ âand his vengeance is swift. Even Iâ âKramenin!â âwould not be exempt!â
âThen you wonât do as I ask you?â
âYou ask an impossibility.â
âSure thatâs a pity for you,â said Julius cheerfully. âBut the world in general will benefit.â He raised the revolver.
âStop,â shrieked the Russian. âYou cannot mean to shoot me?â
âOf course I do. Iâve always heard you Revolutionists held life cheap, but it seems thereâs a difference when itâs your own life in question. I gave you just one chance of saving your dirty skin, and that you wouldnât take!â
âThey would kill me!â
âWell,â said Julius pleasantly, âitâs up to you. But Iâll just say this. Little Willie here is a dead cert, and if I was you Iâd take a sporting chance with Mr. Brown!â
âYou will hang if you shoot me,â muttered the Russian irresolutely.
âNo, stranger, thatâs where youâre wrong. You forget the dollars. A big crowd of solicitors will get busy, and theyâll get some highbrow doctors on the job, and the end of it all will be that theyâll say my brain was unhinged. I shall spend a few months in a quiet sanatorium, my mental health will improve, the doctors will declare me sane again, and all will end happily for little Julius. I guess I can bear a few monthsâ retirement in order to rid the world of you, but donât you kid yourself Iâll hang for it!â
The Russian believed him. Corrupt himself, he believed implicitly in the power of money. He had read of American murder trials running much on the lines indicated by Julius. He had bought and sold justice himself. This virile young American, with the significant drawling voice, had the whip hand of him.
âIâm going to count five,â continued Julius, âand I guess, if you let me get past four, you neednât worry any about Mr. Brown. Maybe heâll send some flowers to the funeral, but you wonât smell them! Are you ready? Iâll begin. Oneâ âtwoâ âthreeâ âfourâ ââ
The Russian interrupted with a shriek:
âDo not shoot. I will do all you wish.â
Julius lowered the revolver.
âI thought youâd hear sense. Where is the girl?â
âAt Gatehouse, in Kent. Astley Priors, the place is called.â
âIs she a prisoner there?â
âSheâs not allowed to leave the houseâ âthough itâs safe enough really. The little fool has lost her memory, curse her!â
âThatâs been annoying for you and your friends, I reckon. What about the other girl, the one you decoyed away over a week ago?â
âSheâs there too,â said the Russian sullenly.
âThatâs good,â said Julius. âIsnât it all panning out beautifully? And a lovely night for the run!â
âWhat run?â demanded Kramenin, with a stare.
âDown to Gatehouse, sure. I hope youâre fond of motoring?â
âWhat do you mean? I refuse to go.â
âNow donât get mad. You must see Iâm not such a kid as to leave you here. Youâd ring up your friends on that telephone first thing! Ah!â He observed the fall on the otherâs face. âYou see, youâd got it all fixed. No, sir, youâre coming along with me. This your bedroom next door here? Walk right in. Little Willie and I will come behind. Put on a thick coat, thatâs right. Fur lined? And you a Socialist! Now weâre ready. We walk downstairs and out through the hall to where my carâs waiting. And donât you forget Iâve got you covered every inch of the way. I can shoot just as well through my coat pocket. One word, or a glance even, at one of those liveried menials, and thereâll sure be a strange face in the Sulphur and Brimstone Works!â
Together they descended the stairs, and passed out to the waiting car. The Russian was shaking with rage. The hotel servants surrounded them. A cry hovered on his lips, but at the last minute his nerve failed him. The American was a man of his word.
When they reached the car, Julius breathed a sigh of relief. The danger-zone was passed. Fear had successfully hypnotized the man by his side.
âGet in,â he ordered. Then as he caught the otherâs sidelong glance, âNo, the chauffeur wonât help you any. Naval man. Was on a submarine in Russia when the Revolution broke out. A brother of his was murdered by your people. George!â
âYes, sir?â The chauffeur turned his head.
âThis gentleman is a Russian Bolshevik. We donât want to shoot him, but it may be necessary. You understand?â
âPerfectly, sir.â
âI want to go to Gatehouse in Kent. Know the road at all?â
âYes, sir, it will be about an hour and a halfâs run.â
âMake it an hour. Iâm in a hurry.â
âIâll do my best, sir.â The car shot forward through the traffic.
Julius ensconced himself comfortably by the side of his victim. He kept his hand in the pocket of his coat, but his manner was urbane to the last degree.
âThere was a man I shot once in Arizonaâ ââ he began cheerfully.
At the end of the hourâs run the unfortunate Kramenin was more dead than alive. In succession to the anecdote of the Arizona man, there had been a tough from âFrisco, and an episode in the Rockies. Juliusâs narrative style, if not strictly accurate, was picturesque!
Slowing down, the chauffeur called over his shoulder that they were just coming into Gatehouse. Julius bade the Russian direct them. His plan was
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