The Hidden Enemy - T.C. Bridges - ebook

The Hidden Enemy ebook

T.C. Bridges

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Peter slowly rose to the top. He was in a blue twill suit, his brown shoes were old but well polished, and his soft gray hat looked like a hundred others. If someone tried to watch him, they would take him for a city clerk, enjoying a quiet walk to get that little fresh air that moved on this sinister hot night.

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Contents

CHAPTER I. A CRY FOR HELP

CHAPTER II. BLACKMAIL

CHAPTER III. BURGLARY

CHAPTER IV. PETER TAKES A JOB

CHAPTER V. THE QUARRY

CHAPTER VI. SAUCE FOR THE GOOSESAUCE FOR THE GOOSE

CHAPTER VII. A SHOT FROM THE DARK

CHAPTER VIII. NEWS FROM THE NORTH

CHAPTER IX. THUNDER OF WATERS

CHAPTER X. LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT

CHAPTER XI. MAROONED

CHAPTER XII. NIGHT ON THE ISLAND

CHAPTER XIII. JUDITH IS JEALOUS

CHAPTER XIV. THE HOUSE IN THE LAURELS

CHAPTER XV. BILL GETS BUSY

CHAPTER XVI. CHRISTINE TAKES CHANCES

CHAPTER XVII. MURDER

CHAPTER XVIII. CHRISTINE TAKES CHARGE

CHAPTER XIX. POLICE

CHAPTER XX. "WAIT AND SEE"

CHAPTER XXI. ANNE BARNEY'S STORY

CHAPTER XXII. INTRODUCING GUY SCRAFFORD

CHAPTER XXIII. DIRK WARDEN WALKS

CHAPTER XXIV. LONELY ROADS

CHAPTER XXV. THE RIVALS MEET

CHAPTER XXVI. PRISONERS

CHAPTER XXVII. THE TIDE SWEEPS IN

CHAPTER I. A CRY FOR HELP

OUTSIDE Hampstead Tube Station Peter Hastings stood a moment looking up at the sky. Just as he had expected, the clouds hung heavy over the Heath and, as he watched, a flicker of sheet lightning contended with the electric lights which were beginning to gleam out below. It was past nine o’clock on a sultry July evening.

Peter walked slowly up the hill. He wore a blue serge suit, his brown shoes were old but well-polished and his soft grey-felt hat was just like a hundred others. If anyone had taken the trouble to watch him they would have taken him for a city clerk enjoying a quiet stroll to get what little fresh air was moving on this wickedly hot night.

Peter turned to the right and came presently into a region of big houses, each standing in its own walled garden. These roads were not so well lighted as the street he had left and the lightning which flickered along the ragged edges of the storm clouds overhead showed plainer than before. Peter reached a tall wall built of mellow, old bricks. The drive gates stood open and in the dim light he saw the drive bordered by thick rhododendrons, and behind them two rows of clipped yews. His clean-cut face hardened, and after one glance round to make sure that no one was in sight he stepped through the gate and instantly vanished into the shrubbery. As he stood, hidden beneath the thick shadow of the yews he found that his knees were trembling slightly.

“Natural, I suppose,” he said grimly. “I’ve heard of burglars dying of heart failure. I don’t know that I blame ’em.”

For long minutes he stood watching the house. The tall, straight Georgian front was in darkness. Not a light showed from any of the high, many-paned windows. In this yew-shadowed garden all was quiet. The only sound was a faint rumble of traffic from distant streets. Peter took a pair of old gloves from his pocket and drew them on, then went softly towards the house. The front was open, with a broad flower-bed between the wall and the gravel sweep, but to the right the solemn yews grew close to the house to which they gave their name. Yew Court it was called and the name suited the dim old place.

Not a sound came from the house as Peter approached a window, but that was as he had expected. Judith Vidal, the owner, was leaving for Cranham, her place in Herefordshire, next day, and had sent most of the servants on ahead. According to Peter’s information, there should be no one in the house but Mrs. Forrest, the deaf old housekeeper. Daisy Newton, Judith’s maid, had, he knew, gone out to keep tryst with her young man.

Peter slipped a long, flexible blade between the sashes and worked away. At last came a click. In the intense silence the small noise sounded loud as a pistol shot and with a quick breath Peter drew back into the shadow. Nothing happened, no dangerous light sprang into being and presently Peter came forward again, pushed open the window and clambered in over the sill.

Curtains hung across the window, and as he stood behind them he was still breathing faster than usual and was unpleasantly conscious that his forehead was damp with sweat. He shook his head angrily. The job was fool-proof. Then pushing aside the curtains he stepped out into the room.

It was dark but that did not matter. This had been his father’s study in those happy days which now seemed so long ago, and he knew every foot of it. Even the faint, musty scent from the old oak panelled walls was familiar. He took from his pocket a tiny electric torch, no bigger than a fountain pen, and switched it on. The thin pencil of light fell upon an unfamiliar carpet and on furniture he had never before seen, yet the room itself was the same. How well he remembered that queer beast, half bird, half dragon, carved on the marble mantel opposite! For a moment he stood quite still, memories crowding on him, then with an impatient movement of the head he shook himself free of the spell, and crossed softly to the door.

Switching off his torch, he cautiously turned the handle. The door opened quietly enough, but a board groaned beneath him as he stepped into the dark hall, and again he felt a nasty quiver run through him. It did not last. Those stones–he had to have them, and it was easy now. They were in the smoking-room to the right, and next moment he had opened that door, passed through and closed it behind him.

Again he switched on the torch and a thin, white beam circled the tall, handsome room. Yes, there was the book case on the north wall, just as it hat always been, the same tarnished gilt on the covers of the old volumes. Only they were not real books but just camouflage and the small keyhole of the safe was between Pohlman on Chess and Hawker’s Instructions to Sportsmen.

Peter drew the key from his pocket. Curious that he should have kept it all these years, but it was just the fact that he had done so which made his burglary possible. In fact, it was this which had made him first think of the way of getting even with those who had robbed him.

A tight-lipped smile crossed his face Judith Vidal’s emeralds would do something to set him on his feet again, though he felt that no amount of money could make up for the miseries he had endure during the past six months.

The key was actually in the lock, he was on the point of turning it when the silence of the old house was cracked by a scream. The scream of a woman in deadly pain or terror.

CHAPTER II. BLACKMAIL

QUEER how all the best in a man reacts to the cry of a woman in trouble! The next thing Peter knew he was out of the library and racing up t stairs. The scream had come from t drawing- room on the first floor. He burst into the big room to see a girl struggling in the arms of a man.

The girl was Judith Vidal. The tall slim figure, the marvellous hair black with just a tinge of red bronze, the exquisite, creamy complexion, and the long, rather narrow eyes with beautifully arched brows and long lashes–though Peter had never spoken to her, there was no mistaking the woman who had already been painted by three of the most famous artists of the day, and whose photograph had appeared in a hundred different papers.

The man, Peter had never seen before, but in his way he was almost as striking as the girl. Taller than Peter–and he was five foot ten–the stranger’s narrow waist and broad shoulders spoke of great physical strength, while his long face with its arched nose, high cheek-bones and dark, piercing eyes only needed a pointed beard to make him exactly like one of those Spanish grandees whose portraits hang in the National Gallery.

As the door crashed open the man released the girl and turned to meet the intruder.

“Who are you? What are you doing here?” he demanded harshly. His very dark eyes glowed with anger and a muscle in his forehead twitched dangerously. All Peter’s nervousness had left him. He was of the type that are coolest in a tight place.

“Question’s a bit superfluous, isn’t it?” he remarked with a glance at Judith, and as he looked at her he became aware that she was gazing at him with a most extraordinary expression in her wonderful eyes. She might almost, he thought, have been looking at a ghost. The tall men came straight at him.

“Get out!” he ordered savagely.

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