Biggles Fails to Return Read online
Algy did not smile. ‘Stop fooling. Either come in or push off,’ he said curtly.
Bertie threw a glance at Ginger and came in.
‘I wasn’t going to mention this to you, Bertie, but as you’re here you might as well listen to what I have to say,’ resumed Algy.
‘Go ahead,’ said Ginger impatiently. ‘What’s on your mind?’
‘I’m very much afraid that something serious has happened to Biggles.’
There was silence while the clock on the mantlepiece ticked out ten seconds and threw them into the past.
‘Is this – official?’asked Ginger.
‘No’
‘Then what put the idea into your head?’
‘This,’ answered Algy, picking up a flimsy, buff-coloured slip of paper that lay on his desk. ‘I’m promoted to Squadron Leader with effect from to-day, and . . . I am now in command of this squadron.’
About the Author
Captain W. E. Johns was born in Hertfordshire in 1893. He flew with the Royal Flying Corps in the First World War and made a daring escape from a German prison camp in 1918. Between the wars he edited Flying and Popular Flying and became a writer for the Ministry of Defence. The first Biggles story, Biggles the Camels are Coming was published in 1932, and W. E. Johns went on to write a staggering 102 Biggles titles before his death in 1968.
www.kidsatrandomhouse.co.uk
BIGGLES BOOKS
PUBLISHED IN THIS EDITION
FIRST WORLD WAR:
Biggles Learns to Fly
Biggles Flies East
Biggles the Camels are Coming
Biggles of the Fighter Squadron
SECOND WORLD WAR:
Biggles Defies the Swastika
Biggles Delivers the Goods
Biggles Defends the Desert
Biggles Fails to Return
BIGGLES FAILS TO RETURN
Captain W.E. Johns
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Epub ISBN: 9781409098461
Version 1.0
www.randomhouse.co.uk
Red Fox would like to express their grateful thanks for help given in the preparation of these editions to Jennifer Schofield, author of By Jove, Biggles, Linda Shaughnessy of A. P. Watt Ltd and especially to the late John Trendler.
BIGGLES FAILS TO RETURN
A RED FOX BOOK 0 09 993850 2
First published in Great Britain by Hodder and Stoughton 1943
This Red Fox edition published 2003
3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
Copyright © WE Johns (Publications) Ltd, 1943
The right of W E Johns to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
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Contents
1 Where is Biggles?
2 The Reasonable Plan
3 The Road to Monte Carlo
4 The Writing on the Wall
5 Bertie Meets a Friend
6 Strange Encounters
7 Good Samaritans
8 Jock’s Bar
9 The Girl in the Blue Shawl
10 Shattering News
11 The Cats of Castillon
12 Bertie Picks a Lemon
13 Pilgrimage to Peille
14 Au Bon Cuisine
15 Conference at Castillon
16 Biggles Takes Over
17 Plan for Escape
18 How the Rendezvous Was Kept
19 Farewell to France
Chapter 1
Where is Biggles?
Flight Lieutenant Algy Lacey, D.F.C., looked up as Flying Officer ‘Ginger’ Hebblethwaite entered the squadron office and saluted.
‘Hello, Ginger—sit down,’ invited Algy in a dull voice.
Ginger groped for a chair—groped because his eyes were on Algy’s face. It was pale, and wore such an expression as he had never before seen on it.
‘What’s happened?’ he asked wonderingly.
Before Algy could answer there was an interruption from the door. It was opened, and the effeminate face of Flight Lieutenant Lord ‘Bertie’ Lissie grinned a greeting into the room.
‘What cheer, how goes it, and all that?’ he murmured.
Algy did not smile. ‘Stop fooling. Either come in or push off,’ he said curtly.
Bertie threw a glance at Ginger and came in.
‘I wasn’t going to mention this to you, Bertie, but as you’re here you might as well listen to what I have to say,’ resumed Algy.
‘Go ahead,’ said Ginger impatiently. ‘What’s on your mind?’
‘I’m very much afraid that something serious has happened to Biggles.’
There was silence while the clock on the mantelpiece ticked out ten seconds and threw them into the past.
‘Is this—official?’ asked Ginger.
‘No.’
‘Then what put the idea into your head?’
‘This,’ answered Algy, picking up a flimsy, buff-coloured slip of paper that lay on his desk. ‘I’m promoted to Squadron Leader with effect from to-day, and . . . I am now in command of this squadron.’
‘Which can only mean that Biggles isn’t coming back?’ breathed Ginger.
‘That’s how I figure it.’
‘And you had no suspicion, before this order came in, that—’
‘Yes and no,’ broke in Algy. ‘That is to say, I was not consciously alarmed, but as soon as I read that chit I knew that I had been uneasy in my mind for some days. Now, looking back, I can remember several things which make me wonder why I wasn’t suspicious before.’
‘But here, I say, you know, I thought Biggles was on leave?’ put in Bertie, polishing his eyeglass briskly.
‘So did we all,’ returned Algy quietly. ‘That, of course, is what we were intended to think.’
Bertie thrust his hands into his pockets. ‘Biggles isn’t the sort of chap to push off to another unit without letting us know what was in the wind,’ he declared.
‘Let us,’ suggested Algy, ‘consider the facts—as Biggles would say. Here they are, as I
remember them, starting from the beginning. Last Thursday week Biggles had a phone call from the Air Ministry. There was nothing strange about that. I was in the office at the time and I thought nothing of it. When Biggles hung up he said to me—I remember his words distinctly—“Take care of things till I get back.” I said “Okay.” Of course, that has happened so many times before that I supposed it was just routine. Biggles didn’t get back that night till after dinner. He seemed sort of preoccupied, and I said to him, “Is everything all right?” He said, “Of course—why not?” ‘ Algy paused to light a cigarette with fingers that were trembling slightly.
‘The next morning—that is, on the Friday—he surprised me by saying that he was taking the week-end off. I was surprised because, as you know, he rarely goes away. He has nowhere particular to go, and he has more than once told me that he would as soon be on the station as anywhere.’
‘And you think this business starts from that time?’ remarked Ginger.
‘I’m sure of it. Biggles can be a pretty good actor when he likes, and there was nothing in his manner to suggest that anything serious was afoot. He tidied up his desk, and said he hoped to be back on Monday—that is, last Monday as ever was. We need have no doubt that when he said that he meant it. He hoped to be back. In other words, he would have been back last Monday if the thing—whatever it was—had gone off all right. When he went away he looked at me with that funny little smile of his and said, “Take care of things, old boy.” Being rather slow in the uptake, I saw nothing significant about that at the time, but now I can see that it implied he was not sure that he was coming back.’
Ginger nodded. ‘That fits in with how he behaved with me. Normally, he’s a most undemonstrative bloke, but he shook hands with me and gave me a spot of fatherly advice. I wondered a bit at the time, but, like you, I didn’t attach any particular importance to it.’
‘It wasn’t until after he’d gone,’ continued Algy, ‘that I discovered that he’d left the station without leaving an address or telephone number. Knowing what a stickler he is for regulations, it isn’t like him to break them himself by going off without leaving word where he could be found in case of emergency. That was the last we’ve seen of him. I didn’t think anything of it until Wednesday, when I had to ring up Forty Squadron. It was their guest night, and Biggles was to be guest of honour. He had accepted the invitation. Biggles doesn’t accept invitations and then not turn up. When he accepted that one you can bet your life he intended to be there; and the fact that he didn’t turn up, or even ring up, means that he couldn’t make it. It must have been something serious to stop him. I began to wonder what he could be up to. Yesterday I was definitely worried, but when this Group order came in this morning, posting me to the command of the squadron, it hit me like a ton of bricks. To sum up, I suspect the Ministry asked Biggles to do a job, a job from which there was a good chance he wouldn’t come back. He went. Whatever the job was, it came unstuck. He didn’t get back. It takes a bit of swallowing, but there it is. It’s no use blinking at facts, but the shock has rather knocked me off my pins. I thought you’d better know, but don’t say anything to the others—yet.’
Ginger spoke. ‘If the Air Ministry has given you the squadron they must know he isn’t coming back.’
Algy nodded. ‘I’m afraid you’re right.’
Bertie stepped into the conversation. ‘But that doesn’t make sense—if you see what I mean? If the Ministry knows that something has happened to Biggles his name would be in the current casualty list—killed, missing, prisoner, or something.’
‘That depends on what sort of job it was,’ argued Algy. ‘The Ministry might know the truth, but it might suit them to say nothing.’
‘But that isn’t good enough,’ protested Ginger hotly. ‘We can’t let Biggles fade out . . . just like that.’ He snapped his fingers.
‘What can we do about it?’
‘There’s one man who’ll know the facts.’
‘You mean—Air Commodore Raymond, of Intelligence?’
‘Yes.’
‘He won’t tell us anything.’
‘Won’t he, by thunder!’ snorted Ginger. ‘After all the sticky shows we’ve done for him, and the risks we’ve taken for his department, he can’t treat us like this.’
‘Are you going to tell him that?’ asked Algy sarcastically.
‘I certainly am.’
‘But it’s against orders to go direct to the Air Ministry—you know that.’
‘Orders or no orders, I’m going to the Air House,’ declared Ginger. ‘They’re glad enough to see us when they’re stuck with something they can’t untangle; they can’t shut the door when they don’t want to see us. Oh, no, they can’t get away with that. I’m going to see the Air Commodore if I have to tear the place down brick by brick until I get to him. Is he a man or is he a skunk? I say, if he’s a man he’ll see us, and come clean.’
‘You go on like this and we shall all finish under close arrest.’
‘Who cares?’ flaunted Ginger. ‘I want to know the truth. If Biggles has been killed—well, that’s that. What I can’t stand is this uncertainty, this knowing nothing. Dash it, it isn’t fair on us.’
‘I am inclined to agree with you,’ said Algy grimly. ‘Ours has been no ordinary combination, and Raymond knows that as well as anybody. Let’s go and tackle the Air Commodore. He can only throw us out.’
‘Here, I say, what about me?’ inquired Bertie plaintively. ‘Don’t I get a look in?’
‘Come with us, and we’ll make a deputation of it,’ decided Algy.
An hour later an Air Ministry messenger was showing them into an office through a door on which was painted in white letters the words, Air Commodore R. B. Raymond, D.S.O. Air Intelligence. The Air Commodore, who knew Algy and Ginger well, and had met Bertie, shook hands and invited them to be seated.
‘You know, of course, that you had no business to come here on a personal matter without an invitation?’ he chided gently, raising his eyebrows.
‘This is more than a personal matter, sir,’ answered Algy. ‘It’s a matter that concerns the morale of a squadron. You’ve probably guessed what it is?’
The Air Commodore nodded. ‘I know. I was wondering how long you would be putting two and two together. Well, I’m very sorry, gentlemen, but there is little I can tell you.’
‘Do you mean you can’t or you won’t, sir?’ demanded Ginger bluntly.
‘What exactly is it you want to know?’
Algy answered: ‘Our question is, sir, where is Biggles?’
‘I wish I knew,’ returned the Air Commodore slowly, and with obvious sincerity.
‘But you know where he went?’
‘Yes.’
‘Will you tell us that?’
‘What useful purpose would it serve?’
‘We might be able to do something about it.’
‘I’m afraid that’s quite out of the question.’
‘Do you mean—he’s been killed?’
‘He may be. In fact, what evidence we have all points to that. But we have no official notification of it.’
There was a brief and rather embarrassing silence. The Air Commodore gazed through the window at the blue sky, drumming on his desk with his fingers.
‘Knowing what we have been to each other in the past, sir, don’t you think we are entitled to some explanation?’ pressed Algy.
‘The matter is secret.’
‘So were a good many other things you’ve told us about in the past, sir, when you needed Biggles to straighten them out.’
The Air Commodore appeared to reach a decision. He looked round. ‘Very well,’ said he. ‘Your argument is reasonable, and I won’t attempt to deny it. I’ll tell you what I know—in the strictest confidence, of course.’
‘We’ve never let you down yet, sir,’ reminded Algy.
‘All right. Don’t rub it in.’ The Air Commodore smiled faintly, then became serious. ‘Here are the facts. About ten da
ys ago we received information that a very important person whom I need not name, but who I will call Princess X, had escaped from Italy. This lady is an Italian, or, rather, a Sicilian, one of those who hate Mussolini*1 and all his works. Her father, well known before the war for his anti-Fascist views, was killed in what was alleged to be an accident. Actually he was murdered. Princess X knew that, and she plotted against the regime. Mussolini’s police found out, and when Italy entered the war she was arrested. Friends—members of a secret society—inside Italy helped her to escape. She was to make for Marseilles, where we had made arrangements to pick her up. Unfortunately, she was pursued, and in the hope of eluding her pursuers she struck off at a tangent and eventually reached the Principality of Monaco, in the south-east corner of France, where she knew someone, a wealthy Italian business man, a banker, whom she had befriended in the past. She thought he would give her shelter. She reached his villa safely, and got word through to us by one of our agents who was in touch with her, giving us the address, and imploring us to rescue her. By this time the hue and cry was up, and it would have been suicidal for her to attempt to reach Marseilles, or a neutral country – Spain, for instance – alone. We were most anxious to have her here, and we realized that if anything was to be done there was no time to lose. We decided to attempt to rescue her by air. We sent for Bigglesworth, who has had a lot of experience at this sort of thing, and asked his opinion. He offered to do the job.’
‘You mean, go to Monaco, pick up the princess and bring her here?’
‘Yes. But the job was not as easy as it sounds—not that it sounds easy. The difficulty did not lie so much in getting Biggles there, because he could be dropped by parachute; but to pick him up was a different matter. That meant landing an aircraft. There is no landing ground in Monaco itself, which is nearly all rock, and mostly built over as well. For that matter there are very few landing grounds in the Alpes Maritimes—the department of France in which Monaco is situated. It was obviously impossible for Biggles to fly the aircraft himself, because during the period while he would be fetching the princess—perhaps a matter of two or three days—the machine would be discovered. So we called in a man who knows every inch of the country, a man who was born there, a Monégasque*2 who is now serving with the Fighting French*3. It was decided to drop Biggles by parachute and pick him up twenty-four hours later at a place suggested by this lad, whose name, by the way, is Henri Ducoste. Ducoste suggested a level area of beach just west of Nice, about twenty miles from Monaco, a spot that in pre-war days was used for joy-riding.’