A constable had already been sent round to waken the owner of the biggest local garage and commandeer the fastest car in stock, and at that moment a huge Bentley roared up and stopped outside the station. Simon took the wheel, and Dun-carry settled in beside him.
They were well on their way before the American voiced his opinion of the whole affair.
"This is a great day for a couple of outlaws," he remarked; and the Saint, remembering the almost grovelling farewell of the Gloucester police station personnel, could not find it in him to disagree.
11
Passengers on the Megantic who were up early for breakfast that morning were interested to see the low lean shape of a destroyer speeding towards them. As the destroyer came nearer, a string of flags broke out from the mast, and then the passengers were amazed and fluttered, for the Megantic suddenly began to slow up.
The destroyer also hove to, and a boat put out from its side and rowed towards the Megantic.
Betty Tregarth was one of the early risers who crowded to the side to watch the two men from the destroyer's boat climbing up the rope ladder which had been lowered for them. She saw the first man who clambered over the rail quite clearly, and the colour left her face suddenly, for it was the man whom she knew as Rameses Smith.
The Megantic had got under way again, and the destroyer was rapidly dropping astern, when she received the expected summons to the captain's cabin.
Besides the captain, Rameses Smith was there, and another man with an official bearing whose face seemed vaguely familiar. Marring was also there, an unsavoury and dishevelled sight in his dressing gown, and she saw that there were handcuffs on his wrists.
"This is the other one," said the Saint. "Miss Tregarth, I don't think I need to put you in irons, but I must ask you to consider yourself under arrest."
She nodded dumbly.
Simon Templar turned to his companion.
"Dun, you can take Marring below. Don't let him out of your sight. I'll arrange for you to be relieved later." Then he turned to the captain. "Captain Davis, may I ask you to allow me a few words alone with Miss Tregarth?"
"Certainly, Mr. Templar."
The captain followed Duncarry and Marring out of the room, and Simon Templar closed the door behind them, and faced the girl. She had never imagined that he could look so stern.
"Sit down," he said, and she obeyed.
Simon took a chair on the other side of the table.
"Betty," he said, "I'm giving you your last chance. Spill all the beans you know, and you mayn't do so badly. Stay in with the rest of 'em, and you're booked for a certain ten years. Which is it going to be?"
"I'll tell you everything I know," she said. "It doesn't matter much now, anyway."
She told him the story from the beginning, and he listened with rapt attention. She expected incredulity, but he showed none. At the end of the recital he was actually smiling.
"That's fine!" said the Saint, almost with a sigh --"that's the best thing I've heard for a long time!"
"What do you mean?" she asked dazedly.
"Only this," answered the Saint. "I guessed you were framed, but the police never knew anything about it. Raxel never bothered to try and deceive them. He just wanted to make sure of you. I don't know every single idea that waddles through the so-called brains of the police, but if you're wanted for murdering Inspector Henley you may call me Tiglath-Pileser for short."
She stared.
"But you're a detective youself---your name isn't Smith, of course, but--"
Simon smiled cherubically.
"The captain called me by my right name," he said. "I am Simon Templar."
She stared.
"Not--the Saint?"
"None other," said Simon; and it is the chronicler's painful duty to record that he said it as if he were very pleased about it. Which he was.
"Then--is all this--"
Simon shook his head.
"I'm afraid it isn't," he said, almost lugubriously. "This enterprise is catastrophically respectable. You may take it that the full power and majesty of the Law is concentrated in these lily-white hands. Is there anyone else you'd like arrested?"
"Do you mean that I'm free?" she asked, with a wild hope springing up in her voice.
"Well, that's a matter for Claud Eustace Teal. You're too deeply involved to be set free without a considerable flourishing of red tape; but within a week or so, say--Here, have a handkerchief."
The Saint pushed a gaudy square yard or two of silk into her hands, and went in search of Duncarry.
"Betty Tregarth is drenching the skipper's carpet," he said. "Would you like to go and lend a shoulder?"
The destroyer returned some hours later from the task of rounding up and capturing the cooperating vessel that was Crantor's charge; and it was Duncarry who escorted the girl on board and supervised the transshipment of Gregory Marring and the two expert safe smashers who were discovered among the passengers. The Saint himself seemed to have lost interest, and his interview with Professor Raxel was very brief. ''