Sport For The Baron Read online

Page 5


  “I think I could help you to forget him,” she said.

  Mannering smiled. “I have an idea you could, too.”

  “Do you want to forget?”

  His thoughts were distracted by a mental image of Nathaniel Brutus’s blazing eyes, and the way the Australian had behaved at the airport. He did want to forget both the man and everything that had followed since his first meeting with him.

  “Yes,” he said.

  The woman’s eyes were triumphant.

  “For five minutes, an hour, a day, or a night?”

  Mannering did not know why, but suddenly he was wary. He studied her more closely, and tried to concentrate. It was lack of concentration that had landed him in this situation.

  “What difference does it make?”

  “Five minutes, and the car would do. An hour, and we ought to find a secluded nook. For a night . . .” She broke off.

  He had no doubt at all that she was laughing at him-as Brutus had laughed-putting on a very good act; she might or might not mean all she was implying, but apparently she had good reason for wanting to make him believe she did. What reason could she have? Who was she? Was it coincidence that she had passed him? From those questions it was a short step to wondering whether she had followed him from the airport, and once the suspicion was in his mind it became almost a certainty. Should he challenge her? Or should he play along for a while, and see how far she would go? Although the doubts were so clear in his mind, he enjoyed looking at her, enjoyed her feminine provocation.

  “And where would you suggest for a night?” he asked.

  “Must I think of everything?”

  “I thought you might have a little nest nearby.”

  “I haven’t,” she said. “Isn’t that a pity?” She slid slowly backwards in her seat, and opened the jacket of the suit. She had a fine bosom, and wanted him to know this. It was true that a high neckline could be more alluring than a deep plunge. She rested her hand on the back of her seat in such a way that she had to look at him sideways, and there was a seductive hint of languor in her manner.

  “You must get tired of hearing it,” she said, “but you’re a remarkably handsome man.”

  “And you are a most intriguing woman.”

  “Why don’t you come down and sit with me?”

  “My legs are too long.”

  She shifted her position slightly, and sat up. Mannering opened his door and got out of the car, so that as she came from hers, their bodies touched. She meant them to touch; and with a shock of realization he knew that it was what he wanted. She turned her face upwards towards him, invitingly. With half of his mind he thought: She’s a Delilah. She followed me. And with the other half of his mind he thought: She’s lovely, she’s desirable. With a twinge of conscience he thought of Lorna-not Lorna at her best but staring at him censoriously, suspiciously.

  His car door was open, and so was that of the M.G., making a kind of trap or compartment, so that the woman and he were forced to stand close together. She held her head back; and for a moment he glimpsed a long, slender white throat. Then he lowered his head and brushed her cheek with his lips, sliding his arm round her. He could feel the pressure of her demanding body.

  “You’re very beautiful,” he whispered.

  “You’re very handsome.”

  “What newspaper do you represent?” he asked in the same whispering voice, so that at first it must have sounded like another endearment, another stage in this strange seduction. He knew that at first she did not understand, but suddenly her body stiffened.

  Slowly, she said: “How did you know?”

  “I don’t believe you’re what you’re pretending to be.”

  “A whore?”

  “You used the word,” said Mannering. “Which newspaper?”

  “The Talebearer,” she answered. That was a kind of Private Eye which had won big sales and popularity because of its debunking of idols and its glorification of sex.

  “Were you at Catesby’s today?”

  “Wouldn’t you have recognized me?”

  “I wasn’t myself at Catesby’s,” Mannering said. “When did you begin to follow me?”

  “When you left Quinn’s.”

  “Your Editor was quick off the mark.”

  “The man who wrote that piece about you in the Globe telephoned him.”

  “And the Editor was sure you could write one even more malicious.”

  “Better,” she said. “Much better. I had a special reason.”

  “May I know what it is?”

  “I’m Australian,” she said. “And I’m in London on a visit. Anything that happens to an Australian is big news down under.”

  “So I’m told,” Mannering said. “Is there an Australian edition of the Talebearer?”

  “I freelance,” she told him.

  He was still holding her. He didn’t let her go because he thought that if he stayed as he was she might talk more freely. There was a kind of intimacy, and now her body had relaxed again, soft yet firm. He moved his head so that he could look into her eyes.

  “And you were prepared to face the fate worse than death to get your story.”

  “John,” she said, “even you can’t be as old-fashioned as that.”

  “Old-fashioned!”

  “You can’t believe that I would believe anything we did together was worse than death.”

  Slowly he answered: “I suppose not.”

  “In fact,” she said, “I think it would be wonderful.”

  “Yes,” Mannering agreed. “I’m sure it would be. What did the Talebearer Editor tell you to do?”

  “To dig and dig and dig.”

  “So as to find the real dirt?”

  “The real truth,” she corrected.

  “What did he expect you to find?”

  She gave a little laugh.

  “A man of unusual honour. In fact. . .” she moved to free herself and Mannering did not stop her “-he wagered me two to one that I couldn’t make you compromise yourself with me.”

  “So,” said Mannering.

  “You sound almost disappointed.”

  “I didn’t expect the Editor of the Talebearer to be a man of such discernment.”

  She laughed and got back into the M.G.

  “John.”

  “Yes?”

  “Why did you betray my little fellow-countryman? To cut him down to size?”

  In a way that was what Lorna had said, and Mannering didn’t answer.

  “Or are you really in Sorenson’s pocket?” this woman asked.

  “What does your Editor think?”

  “He thinks you had some high-sounding motive, but he couldn’t imagine what it would be.”

  Mannering laughed again. “No motive,” he declared.

  “You don’t really expect me to believe that.”

  “Believed or not, it’s true.”

  She began to frown. “Can it be?”

  “The explanation is very simple,” Mannering said.

  “It will have to be convincing.”

  “I didn’t hear him,” said Mannering. He did not relish lying, but with a newspaper such as the Talebearer he felt he had no possible alternative. “He had given me a limit of six hundred thousand. He kept muttering something, but a man near me was shuffling, and my right ear isn’t too good. When it was too late, I realized he was saying I could go up to seven hundred thousand.” Mannering leaned back against the door of the Allard, and gave a smile which was part-rueful, part-amused. He could tell from the woman’s expression that she was already half-convinced.

  “You really mean that?”

  “I mean it.”

  “Good God!”

  “Will your Editor believe it?”

  “He’ll laugh his head off,” she said. “And I will have to buy him the best dinner in London.”

  “One of these days I’ll buy you a better one,” Mannering promised, smiling with genuine amusement at her almost comical expression. It
was a minute or two before she recovered; even then it wasn’t a full recovery.

  “Do you know who wrote that article in the Globe?” Mannering asked.

  “No.”

  Mannering was not sure that he believed her, but he let it pass.

  “Do you know why it was so vindictive?”

  “I don’t think it was vindictive at all,” she said. “It was just a piece of smart journalism, a semi-smear story that will hit most of the gossip columns. The reporter had an anti-establishment mind, if you want to look at it that way. The Man Brutus was a story in himself, everyone was interested in him, but he wouldn’t say a word, so he hardly got a mention. You were the next choice. It might have happened to anyone, except that. . .” she paused.

  “Don’t spare my feelings,” Mannering said.

  “Except that you didn’t make the bid,” she went on. “You’ve convinced me and you may convince anyone you talk to about it, but no one would believe it if they read it in cold print. You’re stuck with the Globe’s version.” She sat up straight, then switched on the engine. Above its beat, she finished: “I rather wish you weren’t.”

  7: “STUCK WITH IT”

  “Legally, of course, you can’t do much without taking a big risk,” said Toby Plender. He was a man with a Punchlike chin and the most Machiavellian mind in the legal profession. He and Mannering had been close friends for over thirty years. “The innuendo that you had an ulterior motive for not bidding may be there, but proving it’s there will be very difficult. You will get an apology, of course, but if you sue and the paper defends-as it certainly would-you’ll have grave difficulty, unless . . .”

  Lorna and Alice Plender, who had been talking about Jean Patou’s visit to London, stopped immediately. Mannering was acutely aware of Lorna’s expression, and the lack of animation in her eyes as she drew her brows together.

  “-unless you can persuade this Australian to say that he didn’t authorize you to go to seven hundred thousand.”

  “Of course,” said Plender’s wife, “it’s criminal.”

  “What do you mean?” asked Lorna sharply.

  Alice Plender’s face dropped, and Mannering and Plender chuckled.

  “I didn’t mean John had been criminal, I meant that it’s criminal that anyone can spend that kind of money on a few trinkets. Do you know. . .” her voice rose almost to a squeak . . .”that’s nearly three-quarters of a million pounds.”

  “Trinkets,” echoed Mannering. “That’s a mixture of sacrilege and heresy.”

  “No jewels could possibly be worth it.”

  “Some collections would fetch a lot more,” said Mannering. “So that’s the only way, Toby.”

  “Yes.”

  “It’s impossible,” Lorna said. “John can’t ask Brutus to deny that he authorized a bid up to seven hundred thousand pounds.”

  “In any case he’s a long way away,” Plender put in quickly. “Once you have an apology it will die down, John. Unless -” again he left a sentence hanging in the air.

  “Unless what?” demanded Lorna.

  “Forget it,” said Plender.

  “Toby, don’t you try to be evasive, too.”

  There was a sudden tensing in the atmosphere. For the first time the Plenders appeared to sense that all was not well between the Mannerings-which was as rare as it was remarkable. Toby hesitated, then laughed, and said: “What have you been keeping back, John?” Before there was any opportunity to answer, Plender went on: “I was going to say that there is a possibility that the Alda Estate might think they have a case against you for restricting the bidding. I don’t know what such a case would look like in court.”

  Mannering didn’t answer.

  Lorna said: “If only you’d made that bid!”

  “Yes,” Mannering said wryly. “If only.”

  “Why didn’t you?” asked Toby.

  “That’s the question we can’t really answer,” Lorna said.

  “Lorna,” said Mannering.

  She was in the bedroom, slipping out of her dress. She had a fine, near-statuesque figure, and for the evening had worn a support bra, not a fully-formed one. She was sideways to him, and reflected in a long mirror, her body was quite beautiful.

  He hadn’t said: “Lorna,” in that way for a long, long time.

  “Yes?” her voice was flat.

  “What’s really got into you?”

  “You know very well.”

  “I don’t know.”

  “Don’t try to make more of it than there is.”

  “Surely there’s plenty,” Mannering said.

  “That’s what I mean.” Lorna stretched out for her nightdress, slid the bra off, then pulled the nightdress over her head. She had done this a thousand times, and as often as not he would slip across and put his arms round her. Now, he simply stood on his side of the room, jacket off, collar and tie undone.

  “Lorna,” he tried again, “there must be something else.”

  “There isn’t.”

  “I tell you-”

  She turned to face him.

  “There’s no point in talking, John. We aren’t getting anywhere.”

  “There’s a lot of point in trying to. What has made you feel like this?”

  After a long pause, she said: “You don’t really believe that you shocked me this morning, do you?”

  “I know I upset you, but. . .”

  “No,” said Lorna sharply. “It was much more than upset. You shocked me. I thought there were some things as-as natural to you as breathing, some standards which were inviolable. In the old days, even in the days when you were the Baron, when you would open a safe-and steal a man’s fortune, you had these standards.”

  “Lorna,” Mannering said, “I sometimes stole a man’s jewels, but never a pound from a man who needed it. You know that.”

  “That’s what I’ve just said. There were inviolable standards.”

  “I haven’t done Brutus an iota of harm.”

  “That’s what’s wrong,” Lorna said. “That’s what I can’t understand. You honestly don’t think you have. If you’d seen his face . . .”

  “Oh, nonsense!”

  Very slowly, Lorna turned round, pulled an angora wool wrap round her shoulders, and picked up a pot of cold cream.

  “You really believe it is nonsense,” she said. “You don’t begin to accept the possibility that you destroyed something in Nathaniel Brutus.”

  “No, I don’t,” admitted Mannering. “It doesn’t make any sense to me. What on earth could I have destroyed?”

  “His faith in you for one thing.”

  “Darling, I really don’t know what’s got into you,” Mannering said. “How could he. . .”

  “You won’t even listen!” Lorna cried, and when Mannering stood very still, silenced and dismayed by the obvious depth of her feeling, she went on: “He trusted you. He wanted those jewels, and didn’t know what to do at Catesby’s, he knew he would be like a fish out of water. You set him the nearly impossible task of bringing you that credit by half-past ten; you didn’t really expect him to have the money or to get it in the time, did you? But he met all your conditions, he trusted a man whom he hardly knew, who must have seemed absolutely trustworthy, and-he was badly let down.”

  Mannering didn’t speak.

  “A bloody pommie let him down,” Lorna said carefully. “That’s what he’ll say, that’s how he’ll look at it. You are supposed to represent everything that’s best in British life, and -”

  “Lorna . . .” interrupted Mannering. “Darling. You’re building this up too high. You hardly knew the man. If he were to hear you talking like this he’d wonder what it was all about.”

  “Would he?” she asked. “Do you really think that?”

  “I’m sure it’s true.”

  “If you really believe it’s true, then there’s something different in you,” Lorna said. “A change I don’t much like.”

  What was she saying? What was she trying to do?<
br />
  When they were in bed, Mannering thought of the way they had behaved only that morning. He tried to think back, to see whether he could recall any new attitude, any change in her, before today. Once again he came up against the inescapable fact that since they had returned from Hong Kong, nearly a year before, each had become more and more involved in his or her own work? Why? Had they deliberately shut out some aspect in their lives which they did not want to acknowledge. He remembered that in Hong Kong, and on the way back to England, they had been as ecstatically in love as ever in their lives, a rebirth of passion caused by the fact that each had come very near death.

  Now - He had changed? Nonsense! She had changed.

  Or they had.

  It was a period when they had no living-in maid at their Chelsea flat, and in such a circumstance Mannering usually got up first, brought in the morning tea, the newspapers, and the post. They would sit and glance at letters and head-lines, and chat. Mannering woke a little after half-past seven, and glanced across-to an empty bed. He lay still for a few minutes, the near-quarrel of the previous night flooding his mind. Then Lorna looked in at the door.

  “Hallo,” she said. “Like some tea in bed?”

  “It sounds wonderful.”

  “I’ll bring it in five minutes.” She went off, and he wondered whether her mood had changed since last night; he had only caught a glimpse of her face, and thought she looked tired. He heard her bustling about, heard the click of the newspapers being taken out of the letter-box. When she came in, he could see that she was pale and her eyes were red-rimmed and glassy. She sat on the side of the bed, and handed him several letters from the tray. Business post usually went to the shop, but friends round the world were liable to write to him at Chelsea.

  There were two notes from dealers telling him they would soon be in London. He opened a third letter which had a London postmark, and read:

  Dear Sir,

  We have been requested by our clients, the Executors of the late Duke of Alda, to ask you to undertake to make good the difference between the sum obtained at today’s auction at Catesby’s and the amount of seven hundred thousand pounds, which figure we understand you were authorized to bid for Catalogue Item No. 27 at the auction.

 

    Feathers for the Toff Read onlineFeathers for the ToffThe Unfinished Portrait Read onlineThe Unfinished PortraitThe Case of the Innocent Victims Read onlineThe Case of the Innocent VictimsLove for the Baron Read onlineLove for the BaronDeath of a Postman Read onlineDeath of a PostmanThe Department of Death Read onlineThe Department of DeathA Note From the Accused? Read onlineA Note From the Accused?If Anything Happens to Hester Read onlineIf Anything Happens to HesterThe Stolen Legacy Read onlineThe Stolen LegacyThe Doorway to Death Read onlineThe Doorway to DeathInto the Trap Read onlineInto the TrapLook Three Ways At Murder Read onlineLook Three Ways At MurderA Part for a Policeman Read onlineA Part for a PolicemanThe Terror Trap Read onlineThe Terror TrapA Good Read Read onlineA Good ReadThe Legion of the Lost Read onlineThe Legion of the LostSport For Inspector West Read onlineSport For Inspector WestDouble for the Toff Read onlineDouble for the ToffNest-Egg for the Baron Read onlineNest-Egg for the BaronThe League of Dark Men Read onlineThe League of Dark MenThe Executioners Read onlineThe ExecutionersBlood Red Read onlineBlood RedLast Laugh for the Baron Read onlineLast Laugh for the BaronThe Toff and the Runaway Bride Read onlineThe Toff and the Runaway BrideModel for the Toff Read onlineModel for the ToffThe Warning Read onlineThe WarningTraitor's Doom Read onlineTraitor's DoomThe Arrogant Artist Read onlineThe Arrogant ArtistThe Chinese Puzzle Read onlineThe Chinese PuzzleDarkness and Confusion Read onlineDarkness and ConfusionSabotage Read onlineSabotageThe Toff Breaks In Read onlineThe Toff Breaks InHunt the Toff Read onlineHunt the ToffThunder in Europe (Department Z Book 6) Read onlineThunder in Europe (Department Z Book 6)The Extortioners Read onlineThe ExtortionersMurder, London--Miami Read onlineMurder, London--MiamiThe Scene of the Crime Read onlineThe Scene of the CrimeSport For The Baron Read onlineSport For The BaronDeath in Cold Print Read onlineDeath in Cold PrintInspector West At Home iw-3 Read onlineInspector West At Home iw-3Murder, London--Australia Read onlineMurder, London--AustraliaThe Toff and The Lady t-15 Read onlineThe Toff and The Lady t-15Give a Man a Gun Read onlineGive a Man a GunHeld At Bay Read onlineHeld At BayThe Man Who Stayed Alive Read onlineThe Man Who Stayed AliveInspector West Takes Charge Read onlineInspector West Takes ChargeThe Toff and the Fallen Angels Read onlineThe Toff and the Fallen AngelsRedhead (Department Z Book 2) Read onlineRedhead (Department Z Book 2)Help From The Baron Read onlineHelp From The BaronAlibi iw-39 Read onlineAlibi iw-39Go Away to Murder Read onlineGo Away to MurderAttack and Defence Read onlineAttack and DefenceThe Baron Goes East Read onlineThe Baron Goes EastInspector West Regrets Read onlineInspector West RegretsGideon's Art Read onlineGideon's ArtSeven Days to Death Read onlineSeven Days to DeathHammer the Toff Read onlineHammer the ToffGood and Justice Read onlineGood and JusticeTaking the Blame Read onlineTaking the BlameThe Island of Peril (Department Z) Read onlineThe Island of Peril (Department Z)The Toff and the Terrified Taxman Read onlineThe Toff and the Terrified TaxmanStars For The Toff Read onlineStars For The ToffThe Toff and the Deep Blue Sea Read onlineThe Toff and the Deep Blue SeaThe Blood Diamond Read onlineThe Blood DiamondGo Away Death Read onlineGo Away DeathThe Touch of Death Read onlineThe Touch of DeathSport, Heat, & Scotland Yard Read onlineSport, Heat, & Scotland YardGideon's Fire Read onlineGideon's FireJohn Creasey Box Set 1: First Came a Murder, Death Round the Corner, The Mark of the Crescent (Department Z) Read onlineJohn Creasey Box Set 1: First Came a Murder, Death Round the Corner, The Mark of the Crescent (Department Z)Send Superintendent West Read onlineSend Superintendent WestThe Unbegotten Read onlineThe UnbegottenThe Baron Returns Read onlineThe Baron ReturnsThe Figure in the Dusk Read onlineThe Figure in the DuskTriumph For Inspector West iw-7 Read onlineTriumph For Inspector West iw-7The Toff on The Farm t-39 Read onlineThe Toff on The Farm t-39The Plague of Silence Read onlineThe Plague of SilenceA Rope For the Baron Read onlineA Rope For the BaronStars For The Toff t-51 Read onlineStars For The Toff t-51So Young, So Cold, So Fair Read onlineSo Young, So Cold, So FairTriumph For Inspector West Read onlineTriumph For Inspector WestMenace (Department Z) Read onlineMenace (Department Z)Inspector West At Home Read onlineInspector West At HomeThe Toff In Town Read onlineThe Toff In TownMurder: One, Two, Three Read onlineMurder: One, Two, ThreeMurder Must Wait (Department Z) Read onlineMurder Must Wait (Department Z)The Toff In New York Read onlineThe Toff In New YorkThe Case Against Paul Raeburn Read onlineThe Case Against Paul RaeburnAn Uncivilised Election Read onlineAn Uncivilised ElectionThe Missing Old Masters Read onlineThe Missing Old MastersTraitor's Doom (Dr. Palfrey) Read onlineTraitor's Doom (Dr. Palfrey)The Toff on Fire Read onlineThe Toff on FireThe Toff And The Stolen Tresses Read onlineThe Toff And The Stolen TressesMeet The Baron tbs-1 Read onlineMeet The Baron tbs-1Gideon’s Sport g-1 Read onlineGideon’s Sport g-1Shadow of Doom Read onlineShadow of DoomAccuse the Toff Read onlineAccuse the ToffThe Terror Trap (Department Z Book 7) Read onlineThe Terror Trap (Department Z Book 7)Gideon's Day Read onlineGideon's DayDead or Alive (Department Z) Read onlineDead or Alive (Department Z)Death Stands By (Department Z) Read onlineDeath Stands By (Department Z)Death by Night Read onlineDeath by NightGideon's River Read onlineGideon's RiverCall for the Baron Read onlineCall for the BaronThe Toff And The Stolen Tresses t-38 Read onlineThe Toff And The Stolen Tresses t-38A Sharp Rise in Crime Read onlineA Sharp Rise in CrimeMurder, London--South Africa Read onlineMurder, London--South AfricaDeath by Night (Department Z) Read onlineDeath by Night (Department Z)Prepare for Action Read onlinePrepare for ActionStrike for Death Read onlineStrike for DeathPoison For the Toff Read onlinePoison For the ToffThe Toff on The Farm Read onlineThe Toff on The FarmThe Toff and The Sleepy Cowboy Read onlineThe Toff and The Sleepy CowboyShadow of Doom (Dr. Palfrey) Read onlineShadow of Doom (Dr. Palfrey)Thugs and Economies (Gideon of Scotland Yard) Read onlineThugs and Economies (Gideon of Scotland Yard)The House Of The Bears Read onlineThe House Of The BearsCriminal Imports Read onlineCriminal ImportsHang The Little Man Read onlineHang The Little ManThe Toff And The Curate Read onlineThe Toff And The CurateAn Affair For the Baron Read onlineAn Affair For the BaronGideon's Night Read onlineGideon's NightA Sword For the Baron Read onlineA Sword For the BaronMeet The Baron Read onlineMeet The BaronKill The Toff Read onlineKill The ToffPanic! (Department Z) Read onlinePanic! (Department Z)Inspector West Alone Read onlineInspector West AloneFrom Murder To A Cathedral Read onlineFrom Murder To A CathedralShadow The Baron Read onlineShadow The BaronThe Toff and the Deadly Priest Read onlineThe Toff and the Deadly PriestIntroducing The Toff Read onlineIntroducing The ToffThe Day of Disaster Read onlineThe Day of DisasterThe Baron Again Read onlineThe Baron AgainThe Theft of Magna Carta Read onlineThe Theft of Magna CartaThe Toff and the Fallen Angels t-53 Read onlineThe Toff and the Fallen Angels t-53Salute the Toff Read onlineSalute the ToffMurder, London-New York Read onlineMurder, London-New YorkVigilantes & Biscuits Read onlineVigilantes & BiscuitsInspector West Alone iw-9 Read onlineInspector West Alone iw-9The Toff and the Great Illusion Read onlineThe Toff and the Great IllusionBattle for Inspector West Read onlineBattle for Inspector WestImpartiality Against the Mob Read onlineImpartiality Against the MobA Mask for the Toff Read onlineA Mask for the ToffCry For the Baron Read onlineCry For the BaronThe Depths Read onlineThe DepthsA Case for the Baron Read onlineA Case for the BaronThe Toff at Camp Read onlineThe Toff at CampGideon Combats Influence Read onlineGideon Combats InfluenceThe Toff and The Sleepy Cowboy t-57 Read onlineThe Toff and The Sleepy Cowboy t-57Carriers of Death (Department Z) Read onlineCarriers of Death (Department Z)Kill The Toff t-23 Read onlineKill The Toff t-23A Backwards Jump Read onlineA Backwards JumpReward For the Baron Read onlineReward For the BaronThe Smog Read onlineThe SmogFamine Read onlineFamineSend Superintendent West iw-7 Read onlineSend Superintendent West iw-7The Toff And The Curate t-12 Read onlineThe Toff And The Curate t-12Hide the Baron Read onlineHide the BaronThe Masters of Bow Street Read onlineThe Masters of Bow StreetAn Apostle of Gloom Read onlineAn Apostle of GloomThe Death Miser (Department Z Book 1) Read onlineThe Death Miser (Department Z Book 1)The Insulators Read onlineThe InsulatorsNot Hidden by the Fog Read onlineNot Hidden by the FogNo Relaxation At Scotland Yard Read onlineNo Relaxation At Scotland YardA Conference For Assassins Read onlineA Conference For AssassinsGideon’s Sport Read onlineGideon’s SportThe Flood Read onlineThe FloodThe Black Spiders Read onlineThe Black SpidersThe Baron at Large Read onlineThe Baron at LargeThe Mask of Sumi Read onlineThe Mask of SumiThe Riviera Connection Read onlineThe Riviera ConnectionThe Toff and The Lady Read onlineThe Toff and The LadyHere Comes the Toff Read onlineHere Comes the ToffThe Toff and the Kidnapped Child Read onlineThe Toff and the Kidnapped ChildAlibi for Inspector West Read onlineAlibi for Inspector West