Simon closed in with two long strides that took him to within six inches of the man’s back. He leaned forward and spoke softly in his ear.
“Avez-vous la plume de ma tante?”
The cop started to turn, but the Saint’s fingers closed around his neck, digging into the somniferic pressure points on each side. The other’s elbow rammed at Simon’s stomach, but the Saint held his grip and the struggle was over in seconds. Simon dragged him behind the prowl car and removed his uniform jacket with the dexterity of a professional quick-change artist. He bundled the unconscious man into the back of the car and pulled on the coat. Fortunately the motard was built on the lines of a healthy barrel, and what the jacket lacked in length, for the Saint’s long, lean frame, it could make up from excess circumference. The eventual compromise was not too grotesque.
He did not bother with the boots and uniform breeches, which would almost certainly have been less adaptable anyhow. He had to trust that the light blue slacks he was already wearing would blend in well enough to get past any but the most hypercritical eye. The standard crash helmet and its visor covered enough of his face, and with that in place he mounted the motorcycle and rode up the ramp out of the garage.
He headed directly for the Croisette and back towards the Hotel Bellevue, confident that that was the last place where the frantic search parties would be looking for him. The situation offered endless opportunities for sport, and lie had to fight back the temptation to indulge them, contenting himself with snapping a smart salute to a senior officer addressing a squad of men opposite the Palais des Festivals as he rode past.
At the hotel, an assistant manager hurried over as he approached the concierge’s desk.
“What are you doing here? The inspector said he would give strict instructions to his men to use the staff entrance.”
Simon raised the visor of his crash helmet slightly, which allowed his hand to partly cover his face.
“I was sent to collect some things from Templar’s room. I need the key.”
“The inspector took it.”
“Well, he never gave it to me. You’d better let me have a master key.”
The man dithered, seemed about to quote the rules, and then noticed the looks his guests were giving the Saint. He gave a sign to the concierge, who produced a key with a massive brass tag and put it on the counter.
“And remember to leave by the staff entrance. We do not want the police in the public rooms.”
The Saint shrugged.
“If you don’t want us here, you shouldn’t have people like Templar here either.”
He turned away towards the elevators, aware that the eyes of everyone in the lobby followed him and breathed a long sigh of relief when the doors closed behind him.
There was no guard on the door to his room, and no one in the corridor to see him enter it. He peeled off the uniform jacket while he turned on the shower in the bathroom. All things considered it had not been the most satisfactory twenty-four hours of his life, he reflected as he impudently indulged in the luxury of the water.
His mind roamed back over the events of the previous night: the startled look on Samantha’s face when Emma had announced her father’s disappearance, the slickness of the decoy operation and the fact that the police were waiting for him when he returned empty-handed, the look in Curdon’s eyes during their talk at the police station. The wild theory that had nagged him the night before no longer seemed insane; but there was still one angle that had to be tried, and the Saint realised just how little time he had in which to test it.
The shower washed away the aches of his body as well as the staleness of the police station cell, and the crispness of a complete change to fresh clothes seemed to pump fresh vitality into his body.
The room showed signs of having been subjected to a thorough search, but only his passport and personal papers had been removed. The Saint slid his hand along the back of the drawer in the bedside table and carefully freed the knife that he had left taped there.
He smiled as he strapped the supple leather sheath to his left forearm. Simon Templar disliked guns in principle, considering them crude and noisy. It is relatively easy to kill a man when you cannot see his eyes, almost as simple as sitting behind a desk and ordering the murder of thousands. It is more difficult to throw a knife with the speed and sureness of a bullet, or to use it when so close that you can hear the beat of the other man’s heart. The Saint could perform tricks with that slender blade that would make a circus knife thrower blanch. They had been together for a long time, and in times of peril the Saint felt naked without the reassuring pressure of the leather nestling against his skin.
He took the assistant manager’s advice and went down to the ground floor in the service elevator, slipping out of the hotel through a side door and cautiously making his way around to the car park.
Gaby’s taxi stood at the end of the rank, and Simon opened the rear door to slip in, crouching low between the seats.
Gaby glanced up from his paper but did not look around, simply adjusting the mirror until the Saint came into focus.
He held the paper so that Simon could see it.
“I thought you were a guest of our celebrated Inspector Lebeau.”
The Saint smiled and shook his head.
“I didn’t like the accommodation, so I decided to leave.”
Gaby laughed and switched on the engine.
“Whereto?”
“The Port Canto. Quick as you can.”
Already Gaby was heading his Buick towards the Boulevard.
“You are always in a hurry, n’est-ce pas?”
“Life is short, and I always have so much to do,” Simon apologised.
He risked a quick look out of the side windows. There seemed to be police on every corner and he hurriedly sank down again out of sight, pulling a travelling rug over himself.
The taxi driver intrigued him. The man always seemed to be available, it was almost as if he lived in his cab.
“Tell me — don’t you ever go home?”
“I have to make my living.”
“I hope it will not be endangered because of me.”
Gaby laughed again.
“For certain clients,” he said, “it is a pleasure to bend the rules.”
Gaby drove through the private parking entrance with a familiar wave to the guard, and followed the Saint’s directions to the place where Samantha’s cabin cruiser had been.
Simon studied the scene with dismay. The quay where Protégé had been berthed before was empty. If it was Protégé that the launch carrying Maclett had rendezvoused with between the islands, as the Saint had now concluded, the fast cruiser had not returned to port. Was it still out there? Or, much more likely, where was it speeding now?
The Saint swore, and Gaby turned his head.
“You want another boat?”
Simon grinned ruefully.
“Not unless it has wings.”
Gaby thought for a moment.
“I don’t know of any boats with wings, but I have a friend who has them. You would like to meet him?”
Mystified, the Saint could only say: “I’d be delighted.”
Gaby explained as he turned the car and drove back along the Croisette.
“My friend is a helicopter pilot for the sea rescue service.”
“Will he help us?” The Saint did not try to keep the excitement out of his voice.
“I do not know, but he owes me a favour, several of them.”
Gaby followed the coast road from the old port towards La Napoule but turned off at La Bocca, taking the inland route towards Mandelieu, where the Saint remembered that there was a small airfield.