Disclaimer: I do not own, or claim to own, any of the Biggles series characters used in this work. This fan fiction was written for entertainment purposes only and should not be considered part of the official storyline.
Warning: Non canon type fan fiction works may contain severe time mix-ups and character deviations.
It took Algy the better part of an hour to
make his way to the main road on foot, and then another five minutes or so to
find a phone. He dialed the number for the Mount Street flat and wondered idly
why there were so many police cars driving to and fro, sirens blaring. He did
not dream that he was the cause of them, or he would have perhaps acted
differently.
The ringing seemed to go on for a long time
before the call was answered. “Hullo?” snapped Biggles’ voice, on the other end
of the line.
“Biggles!” Algy sagged in relief. “So you
got home all right. Why—”
Biggles cut him off curtly. “I don’t ever
want to see or hear from you again, you traitorous rat!”
“What?” Algy was astonished, to say the
least. Had Biggles mistaken him for someone else? “Look, what’s—” He was
talking to himself; Biggles had already hung up the phone. “What on earth?”
Algy dialed the number again, but though he let it ring for more than five
minutes, no one answered. “What the dickens am I supposed to have done?” he
wondered aloud. “Oh, well.”
He stepped onto the main street and hailed
a taxi to take him to air police headquarters. Biggles was obviously in a bad
mood for some reason, and Algy did not feel up to tackling the matter at
present.
The office was dark and empty when he
reached it, and he realized with some disappointment that Ginger and Bertie
must have already gone home; he had hoped to run into them and ask their
advice. He racked his brains trying to remember where they were staying, but
either they had forgotten to tell him, or he had simply not been listening when
they had.
Letting himself into the office with his
key, he headed straight for his desk and snatched up the package containing all
the information pertaining to the aviation conference. Biggles was bound to be
there either way, if only to keep up a pretense of setting off Smith’s bomb. Unable
to think of anything else to do, Algy left the office to find a place to stay
for the night. The thought of a warm bed and hot bath were very appealing compared
to spending another night sleeping on his desk.
Having bought some food and essentials, he
was strolling around looking for a place to stay when he caught sight of his
own face staring at him from the front window of a newsagent’s.
“My gosh!” he realized. “I’m on the front
page of the evening paper!”
With shaking hands he bought as many papers
as he could carry, and then hurried back to the office to read them. What he
saw horrified him. He was informed that he was wanted for charges of murder, attempted
murder, kidnapping, car theft, shooting a policeman, and reckless driving—apart
from the driving, all crimes that he had not committed.
He was further informed that he was armed
and dangerous, and that members of the public were advised not to approach him
or provoke him in any way. Rather, they were encouraged to call “the number
printed at the bottom of this page” and report when and where they had seen
him.
Algy’s heart seemed to stop, and he was
conscious of a feeling of acute helplessness. Not only were the police after
him, but, after tomorrow, so would half of England. Not to mention the fact
that Biggles seemed to be upset with him as well.
A horrible thought struck him. “He called
me a traitorous rat. Surely he doesn’t think I had anything to do with his wife’s kidnapping?” Apart from Jane,
he couldn’t for the life of him think who it was that he had somehow kidnapped,
tried to murder, and then murdered.
The world seemed to be taking on the
quality of a nightmare.
He tried to organize his thoughts into some
sort of order. Obviously the main question rested on Biggles. Would he or would
he not set off the bomb? If he had already decided not to set off the bomb,
then there wasn’t anything to worry about. If he was going to set off the bomb, clearly there was only one of two
things to be done. Either he, Algy, could somehow try to rescue Jane—something
easier said than done, seeing as how he had no idea where she was—or he could
go to the conference and stop Biggles setting off the bomb.
“Well,” he said aloud to the empty office. “It’s
simpler than I thought.”
His next move was to collect as many
weapons as he could from all around the office and stuff them into an old
suitcase of his. “Things can hardly get worse,” he mused. “If real kidnapping
and murder are what it takes to stop this, I might as well be hung for a sheep
as for a lamb.”
Sounds like the real Algy is back!
ReplyDeleteWell, part of him anyway. The crazy Algy. As for Biggles, well, I hope he finds out just what Ginger has done. Traitorous rat, indeed!
ReplyDeleteSopwith wrote that Algy said:
ReplyDelete"...I might as well be hung for a sheep as for a lamb.”
'Hung' is a horribly relevant word, if the policeman Algy shot dies... Algy seems to have forgotten that he shot a policeman...
FB you are right - it's all Ginger's fault the police got involved.
How is Algy to be saved from all this? If Biggles understood the truth, I expect he'd save Algy somehow, but at present he's probably knocking back whatever whisky Ginger didn't drink and trying to decide whether to kill off loads of important people or Jane. When in his proper mind, he wouldn't hesitate of course...
It's a bad place to find out you're wanted by the entire police force of G.B. - sitting in an office in the middle of Scotland Yard!
ReplyDeleteThe next installment should be good - sounds like Algy is about to go on the rampage....!
I don't know - it might be the last place they'd think of looking!
ReplyDeleteI find it rather ironic that Biggles is the one calling ALGY the traitorous rat....!
ReplyDeleteAlgy's getting annoyed now--better watch out, world!
ReplyDeletesoppy wrote "His next move was to collect as many weapons as he could from all around the office and stuff them into an old suitcase of his." - lovely!
ReplyDeleteThe only weapons I had in MY office was a stapler, scissors and the coffee! Mind you, that might have been enough to kill everyone at the conference on it's own!
I'm sure Algy's weapons are more of the blowing things up variety...
ReplyDeleteThat's what I was getting at. The idea that the Air Police kept explosives in the office I found hilariously funny!
ReplyDeleteWell, they have to keep the bombs somewhere. Why not in the office where they can get at them as needed? :)
ReplyDeleteHealth and Safety regs. :-))
ReplyDeleteBiggles was a stickler for regulations - Algy says so in 'Fails to Return'.
That obviously means nothing, now, does it, SA? Biggles WAS also honourable, fair-dealing, strong-willed, a real life-long friend of Algy's etc. Need I go on?
ReplyDeleteWell, where do you want them to keep the bombs? In a bank safe? In the Austers?
ReplyDeleteWell, in normal life I would say the police armoury, but since this is your yarn, Soppy, the answer is, wherever you want them to keep them!!
ReplyDeleteWell, wherever they were before, they're now in Algy's pockets!
ReplyDeletePerhaps it's as well. I can just imagine, with him being a wanted man, trying to draw explosives out of the armoury. "Ten grenades and five sticks of dynamite, Sgt Lacey? five detonators, too? ok. here they are. And by the way, did you know you're on the fornt of all the nationals?" But it doesn't matter. In his pockets is fine if he's going to blow up Jane.
ReplyDeleteI don't like the way you sound gleeful at the idea of Algy walking around London like a big human bomb, ready to go off at any moment...
ReplyDelete