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Authors: John Creasey

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BOOK: The Touch of Death
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Chapter 24

 

Banister walked slowly towards his flat in Wickham Mews, past the spot where Monk-Gilbert had died; and where he had first come in contact with the attempt to dominate the world. It was a month since he had returned to London, but nothing was really clear, he could not think as he had once been able to. He would walk along a crowded London street or sit in a taxi or go rumbling through the Underground; and he would see and hear the collapse of ice-capped mountains.

It would be warm sunshine, and he would feel the icy touch of snow.

A soft, warm wind would blow, and brush his cheeks with a blast so cold that he would shiver.

But the moments were getting less frequent; there were more times, when he could think and behave normally – even when he could talk about what had happened rationally, without suddenly breaking down; or trembling, or collapsing. Those who had asked the questions had been very gentle – and even more gentle with Rita, who was only now beginning to recover. At times Banister wondered if she would ever be sane again.

She was in a nursing home, and he had just been to see her. He did not yet know how she had come to serve Anak, or just when she had rebelled.

It was daylight, but it seemed dark – as it had been on that night when he had left his flat and noticed that a lamp was out, and then kicked against a dead body, heard a scream and seen a blinding light.

There was a light at the window of his flat. That didn't surprise him, because Palfrey had a key – so had Andromovitch. They had developed a habit of gathering there instead of at Brierly Place, where there were always crowds and where the telephone was never silent.

Doggett was staying here, too.

The others who had escaped, including the young American, were back in the homes which they had left before they had gone to the Higher World.

Palfrey, Andromovitch, Bruton and Banister, with help from Doggett and a little from Rita, had been preparing a summary of the history of High Peak and the Higher World. They now knew, beyond any doubt, that the other mountain cities had also been destroyed. Among the men of the Resistance had been one who had been able to turn the beam on all of the citadels; and although he had not expected to escape, he had acted – a moment before Anak, in his wild fury, had been ready to crumble half the world.

Banister walked up the little flight of stone steps, and let himself in.

He heard Palfrey's voice, and Andromovitch's; then the unmistakable voice of Bruton. He didn't go straight into the front room. This was one of his bad moments, and he wanted to get over it. So he went into the bedroom and sat on the side of the bed.

Apart from the two aircraft, Project 97, which Mick had completed just before his death, they had salvaged very little. Doggett had brought away certain documents and formulae, which would help them to trace the source of
fatalis,
and perhaps in some unforeseeable day in the future create radio beams as powerful as
pulveris.
There were supplies of
fatalis
hidden somewhere “down here”, but no prospect of finding them. It could not be stored indefinitely; in a few months stocks would lose their deadliness.

The men had also brought away all the bearings needed to place the other mountain cities – seven in all, as well as nine stations, inhabited by a few dozen people, and used for relaying beams, sending messages and refuelling transport aircraft.

All the aircraft had flown considerably above the highest level known to normal aeronautical research workers.

There were several hundred agents in the world, some of them known by name, some unknown. As far as Doggett and Rita knew, none of these had had any great scientific knowledge, and they were not likely to constitute any threat in the future. Some might have a supply of
fatalis,
and might be dangerous for a while; but on their own they were more likely to hide, hoping to escape discovery.

Banister stood up slowly, lit a cigarette and went across to the other room.

He tapped, and Bruton opened the door.

The three Z.5 men and Doggett were together, the room was a blue haze of smoke, and there was a smell of beer. Several bottles, most of them open, stood on a small table. The large table was a mass of diagrams. Palfrey sat at it, his silky hair ruffled, a cigarette drooping from the corner of his lips, a vacant expression in his eyes.

Andromovitch, quite large enough to make two of them, sprawled on a couch beneath the window. Doggett and Bruton took upright chairs, leaving the one armchair for Banister to drop into.

Andromovitch stretched out his long arms, picked up a bottle of beer, opened it and handed it with a glass to Banister.

Already, Banister felt better. There was a remarkable normality about these men. Whatever they did, they were human beings. They had the gift, Banister realised, of restoring one's faith; he wasn't sure what the faith was in.

“Hallo, Neil,” Palfrey said. “How is Rita?”

“I think she's better.”

“Splendid. We've just been saying again that without her, we shouldn't have had a chance. If it comes to that, you—”

Banister said: “Forget it, can't you?”

Palfrey began to play with a few strands of hair.

“That's the trouble,” he said. “People will. Remind them that they were within an ace of being pulverised, and people look blank or they suggest that it was an exaggeration.
Fatalis?
Yes,
strange
, wasn't it – that affair at Wentworth Stadium especially. There are times,” went on Palfrey with gentle emphasis, “when I despair of my fellow humans.”

“Especially me,” murmured Andromovitch.

“Especially those I know well,” agreed Palfrey, still playing with his hair. “Look at the number of times we've been on the verge of disaster and have escaped by the skin of our teeth. It'll never happen again, the statesmen cry, and in a few years, it does happen again. At first, Anak simply discovered a way to add oxygen to the rarefied air of great mountains. People could live quite normally at very low temperatures. In fact, the people need ‘conditioning' – you felt bad when you first reached High Peak, but soon got used to it, didn't you?”

Banister said: “Yes.”

“You see what I mean,” said Palfrey plaintively. “It didn't even occur to him to marvel at the fact that people could ski and generally have fun in the Antarctic. He just took it for granted when it was happening!”

“I apologise,” said Banister, humbly. His eyes sparkled, he felt much better than when he had come in.

“Once Anak was able to do that, much was fairly easy,” Palfrey went on. “He got his men away – and soon took women to them, even a would-be Dictator of the world knows that you can't keep ‘em apart for long! Then with modern methods adapted to a far greater degree than we've seen before, he built the cities within the mountains, grew food, did everything necessary. From America he got the latest designs in ventilation and artificial daylight. Then he had machine parts and machines shipped to small islands and transported by larger aircraft up to High Peak and the other strongholds, before having his own factories built and made ready. It took him many years. The one bitter lesson I've learned is that he did it successfully. No one knew, no one guessed. Promising young scientists and research workers, chemists and doctors, all left one country or another ostensibly to take up residence in another; they disappeared. It was all very cleverly done, but it shouldn't have been possible.”

Palfrey paused.

They were all sitting up now, waiting on his words.

“After a while, he found that he could manufacture everything he wanted there, but he had problems of labour, materials and research workers. We know that he recruited his slave labour from people who couldn't or wouldn't go on working for him. He found a lot of raw materials in the mountains, but he bought more on world markets – grim evidence that sellers of the raw materials of death still don't care who they sell to, provided they get the money.”

No one interrupted.

The tone of Palfrey's voice changed; became almost savage.

“One day perhaps the idiots who control our destinies will realise that there
must
be international control of scientific discoveries – that we can't let nations or groups of nations or of people exploit them by themselves. Now it's all over, what's happening? Fake Peace Conferences. Lie upon lie upon lie tossed about. It's beginning all over again. Just for a few weeks, under the danger, we all forgot our differences. Now there's no more danger, so we can afford to cut each other's throats. Well, we've got it all here. How it started, where it went to, who was affected, who Anak was—”

Banister stirred.

“Who was he?”

“The natural son of a Finnish woman and an Englishman,” he said. “His father did a lot of work in the north of Finland, and made this discovery of how to live normally in conditions of extreme cold. It began from that. Anak's father discovered gold in places not yet properly surveyed. After the father's death, Anak unloaded his fortune slowly on to the world market – and the market let him. Then he proved to have financial genius, and followed that by finding precious metals in various places. That's how he came across
fatalis
in certain low-content uranium ore, not worth working for the usual reasons. He developed it with the help of brilliant scientists who shared his ideas. That's how it all built up.

“Klim and the other leaders were with him from the beginning. The odd, the frightening thing,” went on Palfrey, “is that they appear to have started out as genuine idealists, wanting to see one world run on democratic lines. Gradually the power bug got into their systems; they let it corrupt them. Once that happened—” He shrugged, and tapped the report in front of him. “This is for Goverments to study, then for special committees, and the United Nations – then for the archives – then for the limbo of forgotten things. Like all the rest.”

He smiled at Banister.

“That too cynical for you, Neil?”

“No,” said Banister, slowly. “No, not really. I can imagine how you feel. There's one thing you may not think amounts to much, but—”

Palfrey smiled.

“Rita, yes—Monk-Gilbert's niece. She was first approached because her uncle was a uranium man. She joined the Anak gang. Monk-Gilbert didn't know she was spying on him. Officially she worked for a mysterious – non-existent – Mr. Menzies, so that she could say she was going with him whenever she was out of the country.

“It's now known that Monk-Gilbert discovered she had stolen some of his secrets. He wanted to see her, to challenge her. She wasn't home. He thought she was still engaged to you, and was going to see you. Anak and Klim were told. They didn't know what we'd discovered, and didn't want Monk-Gilbert to give any details away, so he was attacked.

“In fact, he'd discovered
fatalis
, but hated the idea of passing on all knowledge about it. He wanted to keep it secret, wouldn't give me or anyone else full details. But he would have, if he'd been sure that Rita had passed it on to anyone else. So, he had to be killed. His murderers smashed his skull, hoping to hide the fact that he'd died from
fatalis
. You know what happened then.” Palfrey paused, then added slowly: “Whatever Rita did, she made up for it.”

Banister felt a sense of deep humility.

“She'll be perfectly all right, too,” Palfrey told him. “I've the word of the best doctors in Europe. You'll both be all right. You're the only two people in the world who are entitled to forget, and there are moments when I think you'll be the only two who'll remember.” He paused. “Neil, Anak had an almost hypnotic control of Rita. He often exerted it. She knew that. The fact that she resisted at all is one of the miracles. Now, she needs all the help you can give her.”

“She'll get it,” Banister said.

The day came when the pallor faded from Rita's lips, when her eyes were calm and free from fear, and when, with Banister, she could walk and talk and be natural.

“I forget most of the time,” she said one day as they walked from the flat. “The worst things were—”

“Don't harass yourself,” Banister said quickly.

“It's better to talk,” Rita said. “Finding that you were right and fooling Klim and Anak. I even betrayed Mick! Neil, I had to, because the guards knew what had happened. I knew they would report automatically, and Klim and Anak would have wondered why I kept silent. Once I'd decided, I
had
to keep up the pretence. Sometimes—I doubted if I were right, whether I could help to destroy all they had built up. I was right, Neil, wasn't I? Tell me I was right.”

Banister said gruffly: “Of course you were.”

They walked on, quietly.

 

Endnote

[
1
] See The Children of Hate.

 

Series Information

Published or to be published by

House of Stratus

 

Dates given are those of first publication

Alternative titles in brackets

 

'The Baron' (47 titles) (writing as Anthony Morton)

'Department 'Z'' (28 titles)

'Dr. Palfrey Novels' (34 titles)

'Gideon of Scotland Yard' (22 titles)

'Inspector West' (43 titles)

'Sexton Blake' (5 titles)

'The Toff' (59 titles)

 

along with:

 

The Masters of Bow Street

 

This epic novel embraces the story of the Bow Street Runners and the Marine Police, forerunners of the modern police force, who were founded by novelist Henry Fielding in 1748. They were the earliest detective force operating from the courts to enforce the decisions of magistrates. John Creasey's account also gives a fascinating insight into family life of the time and the struggle between crime and justice, and ends with the establishment of the Metropolitan Police after the passing of Peel's Act in 1829.

 

'The Baron' Series

These Titles can be read as a series, or randomly as standalone novels

 

  1. Meet the Baron 
    (The Man in the Blue Mask)
     
    (1937)
  2. The Baron Returns 
    (The Return of the Blue Mask)
     
    (1937)
  3. The Baron Again 
    (Salute Blue Mask)
     
    (1938)
  4. The Baron at Bay 
    (Blue Mask at Bay)
     
    (1938)
  5. Alias the Baron 
    (Alias Blue Mask)
     
    (1939)
  6. The Baron at Large 
    (Challenge Blue Mask!)
     
    (1939)
  7. Versus the Baron 
    (Blue Mask Strikes Again)
     
    (1940)
  8. Call for the Baron 
    (Blue Mask Victorious)
     
    (1940)
  9. The Baron Comes Back 
    (1943)
  10. A Case for the Baron 
    (1945)
  11. Reward for the Baron 
    (1945)
  12. Career for the Baron 
    (1946)
  13. Blood Diamond 
    (The Baron and the Beggar) (1947)
  14. Blame the Baron 
    (1948)
  15. A Rope for the Baron 
    (1948)
  16. Books for the Baron 
    (1949)
  17. Cry for the Baron 
    (1950)
  18. Trap the Baron 
    (1950)
  19. Attack the Baron 
    (1951)
  20. Shadow the Baron 
    (1951)
  21. Warn the Baron 
    (1952)
  22. The Baron Goes East 
    (1953)
  23. The Baron in France 
    (1953)
  24. Danger for the Baron 
    (1953)
  25. The Baron Goes Fast 
    (1954)
  26. Nest-Egg for the Baron 
    (Deaf, Dumb and Blonde)
     
    (1954)
  27. Help from the Baron 
    (1955)
  28. Hide the Baron 
    (1956)
  29. The Double Frame 
    (Frame the Baron)
     
    (1957)
  30. Blood Red 
    (Red Eye for the Baron)
     
    (1958)
  31. If Anything Happens to Hester 
    (Black for the Baron)
     
    (1959)
  32. Salute for the Baron 
    (1960)
  33. The Baron Branches Out 
    (A Branch for the Baron)
     
    (1961)
  34. The Baron and the Stolen Legacy 
    (Bad for the Baron)
     
    (1962)
  35. A Sword for the Baron 
    (The Baron and the Mogul Swords)
     
    (1963)
  36. The Baron on Board 
    (The Mask of Sumi) (1964)
  37. The Baron and the Chinese Puzzle 
    (1964)
  38. Sport for the Baron 
    (1966)
  39. Affair for the Baron 
    (1967)
  40. The Baron and the Missing Old Masters 
    (1968)
  41. The Baron and the Unfinished Portrait 
    (1969)
  42. Last Laugh for the Baron 
    (1970)
  43. The Baron Goes A-Buying 
    (1971)
  44. The Baron and the Arrogant Artist 
    (1972)
  45. Burgle the Baron 
    (1973)
  46. The Baron - King Maker 
    (1975)
  47. Love for the Baron 
    (1979)

 

'Department Z' Novels

These Titles can be read as a series, or randomly as standalone novels

 

  1. The Death Miser 
    (1932)
  2. Redhead 
    (1934)
  3. First Came a Murder 
    (1934)
  4. Death Round the Corner 
    (1935)
  5. The Mark of the Crescent 
    (1935)
  6. Thunder in Europe 
    (1936)
  7. The Terror Trap 
    (1936)
  8. Carriers of Death 
    (1937)
  9. Days of Danger 
    (1937)
  10. Death Stands By 
    (1938)
  11. Menace! 
    (1938)
  12. Murder Must Wait 
    (1939)
  13. Panic! 
    (1939)
  14. Death by Night 
    (1940)
  15. The Island of Peril 
    (1940)
  16. Sabotage 
    (1941)
  17. Go Away Death 
    (1941)
  18. The Day of Disaster 
    (1942)
  19. Prepare for Action 
    (1942)
  20. No Darker Crime 
    (1943)
  21. Dark Peril 
    (1944)
  22. The Peril Ahead 
    (1946)
  23. The League of Dark Men 
    (1947)
  24. The Department of Death 
    (1949)
  25. The Enemy Within 
    (1950)
  26. Dead or Alive 
    (1951)
  27. A Kind of Prisoner 
    (1954)
  28. The Black Spiders 
    (1957)

 

Doctor Palfrey Novels

These Titles can be read as a series, or randomly as standalone novels

 

  1. Traitor's Doom 
    (1942)
  2. The Legion of the Lost 
    (1943)
  3. The Valley of Fear 
    (The Perilous Country)
     
    (1943)
  4. Dangerous Quest 
    (1944)
  5. Death in the Rising Sun 
    (1945)
  6. The Hounds of Vengeance 
    (1945)
  7. Shadow of Doom 
    (1946)
  8. The House of the Bears 
    (1946)
  9. Dark Harvest 
    (1947)
  10. The Wings of Peace 
    (1948)
  11. The Sons of Satan 
    (1948)
  12. The Dawn of Darkness 
    (1949)
  13. The League of Light 
    (1949)
  14. The Man Who Shook the World 
    (1950)
  15. The Prophet of Fire 
    (1951)
  16. The Children of Hate 
    (The Killers of Innocence; The Children of Despair)
     
    (1952)
  17. The Touch of Death 
    (1954)
  18. The Mists of Fear 
    (1955)
  19. The Flood 
    (1956)
  20. The Plague of Silence 
    (1958)
  21. Dry Spell 
    (The Drought)
     
    (1959)
  22. The Terror 
    (1962)
  23. The Depths 
    (1963)
  24. The Sleep 
    (1964)
  25. The Inferno 
    (1965)
  26. The Famine 
    (1967)
  27. The Blight 
    (1968)
  28. The Oasis 
    (1970)
  29. The Smog 
    (1970)
  30. The Unbegotten 
    (1971)
  31. The Insulators 
    (1972)
  32. The Voiceless Ones 
    (1973)
  33. The Thunder-Maker 
    (1976)
  34. The Whirlwind 
    (1979)

 

Gideon Series

(Writing as JJ Marric)

 

These Titles can be read as a series, or randomly as standalone novels

 

  1. Gideon's Day 
    (Gideon of Scotland Yard)
     
    (1955)
  2. Seven Days to Death 
    (Gideon's Week)
     
    (1956)
  3. Gideon's Night 
    (1957)
  4. A Backwards Jump
     (Gideon's Month) (1958)
  5. Thugs and Economies 
    (Gideon's Staff) (1959)
  6. Gideon Combats Influence 
    (Gideon's Risk) (1960)
  7. Gideon's Fire 
    (1961)
  8. A Conference for Assassins 
    (Gideon's March)
     
    (1962)
  9. Travelling Crimes 
    (Gideon's Ride)
     
    (1963)
  10. An Uncivilised Election 
    (Gideon's Vote)
     
    (1964)
  11. Criminal Imports 
    (Gideon's Lot)
     
    (1965)
  12. To Nail a Serial Killer 
    (Gideon's Badge) (1966)
  13. From Murder to a Cathedral 
    (Gideon's Wrath)
     
    (1967)
  14. Gideon's River 
    (1968)
  15. Darkness and Confusion 
    (Gideon's Power) (1969)
  16. Sport, Heat & Scotland Yard 
    (Gideon's Sport)
     
    (1970)
  17. Gideon's Art 
    (1971)
  18. No Relaxation at Scotland Yard 
    (Gideon's Men) (1972)
  19. Impartiality Against the Mob 
    (Gideon's Press) (1973)
  20. Not Hidden by the Fog 
    (Gideon's Fog) (1975)
  21. Good and Justice 
    (Gideon's Drive) (1976)
  22. Vigilantes & Biscuits 
    (Gideon's Force)
     
    (1978)

 

Inspector West Series

These Titles can be read as a series, or randomly as standalone novels

 

  1. Inspector West Takes Charge 
    (1942)
  2. Go Away to Murder 
    (Inspector West Leaves Town)
     
    (1943)
  3. An Apostle of Gloom 
    (Inspector West At Home)
     
    (1944)
  4. Inspector West Regrets 
    (1945)
  5. Holiday for Inspector West 
    (1946)
  6. Battle for Inspector West 
    (1948)
  7. The Case Against Paul Raeburn 
    (Triumph for Inspector West)
     
    (1948)
  8. Inspector West Kicks Off 
    (Sport for Inspector West)
     
    (1949)
  9. Inspector West Alone 
    (1950)
  10. Inspector West Cries Wolf 
    (The Creepers)
     
    (1950)
  11. The Figure in the Dusk 
    (A Case for Inspector West)
     
    (1951)
  12. The Dissemblers 
    (Puzzle for Inspector West)
     
    (1951)
  13. The Case of the Acid Throwers 
    (The Blind Spot; Inspector West at Bay)
     
    (1952)
  14. Give a Man a Gun 
    (A Gun for Inspector West)
     
    (1953)
  15. Send Inspector West 
    (1953)
  16. So Young, So Cold, So Fair 
    (A Beauty for Inspector West; The Beauty Queen Killer)
     
    (1954)
  17. Murder Makes Haste 
    (Inspector West Makes Haste; The Gelignite Gang; Night of the Watchman)
     
    (1955)
  18. Murder: One, Two, Three 
    (Two for Inspector West)
     
    (1955)
  19. Death of a Postman 
    (Parcels for Inspector West)
     
    (1956)
  20. Death of an Assassin 
    (A Prince for Inspector West)
     
    (1956)
  21. Hit and Run 
    (Accident for Inspector West)
     
    (1957)
  22. The Trouble at Saxby's 
    (Find Inspector West; Doorway to Death)
     
    (1957)
  23. Murder, London - New York 
    (1958)
  24. Strike for Death 
    (The Killing Strike)
     
    (1958)
  25. Death of a Racehorse 
    (1959)
  26. The Case of the Innocent Victims 
    (1959)
  27. Murder on the Line 
    (1960)
  28. Death in Cold Print 
    (1961)
  29. The Scene of the Crime 
    (1961)
  30. Policeman's Dread 
    (1962)
  31. Hang the Little Man 
    (1963)
  32. Look Three Ways at Murder 
    (1964)
  33. Murder, London - Australia 
    (1965)
  34. Murder, London - South Africa 
    (1966)
  35. The Executioners 
    (1967)
  36. So Young to Burn 
    (1968)
  37. Murder, London - Miami 
    (1969)
  38. A Part for a Policeman 
    (1970)
  39. Alibi for Inspector West 
    (1971)
  40. A Splinter of Glass 
    (1972)
  41. The Theft of Magna Carta 
    (1973)
  42. The Extortioners 
    (1974)
  43. A Sharp Rise in Crime 
    (1978)
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