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.
Algy, looking grim and more than a little pale,
knocked impatiently on the door to Thompson’s office. When there was no answer,
he knocked again, frowning. Again there was no answer, and Algy half-heartedly
tried the door handle. Not surprising, it was locked.
“Are you looking for someone?” inquired a cool
voice behind him.
Algy turned and said, to the pleasant looking man
in uniform standing behind him, “Actually, I was looking for Thompson. This is
his office, isn’t it?”
“Yes, that’s his office, but you won’t find him
in there. He’s taken a spot of leave for the next couple of days.”
A cold hand seemed to wrap itself around Algy’s
heart. “Did he say why?”
“I don’t know the details, I’m afraid.”
The man began to walk away, but Algy called him
back. “Just a minute. A colleague of mine came to the office last night with
Thompson and I haven’t heard back from him. I was wondering if you might have
seen him?”
“Colleague?” said the man thoughtfully. “What’s
his name?”
“Bigglesworth.”
At this, the man fell back against the wall and
went pale, holding up his hands as if to ward off an attack. “I…I haven’t heard
anything,” he stammered. “I’m…I have to go.” And with that, he scurried down
the hall without a backward glance.
Algy, taken aback by the sudden departure of the man,
did the only thing he could think of, which was to run down the corridor after
the man as fast as he could, shouting as he went. The obvious effect this had
on the man in question, was, of course, to make him run even faster.
Where it would have ended it is impossible to say, but just as the two of them rounded a corner, the last person Algy expected to see appeared at the end of the corridor.
Erich von Stalhein.
Where it would have ended it is impossible to say, but just as the two of them rounded a corner, the last person Algy expected to see appeared at the end of the corridor.
Erich von Stalhein.
&&&
Having duly disposed of the squib, both Bertie and
Ginger were more than a little shaken, to say the least. They went back to
their room to talk the problem over, and on the way there ran into Thompson.
Bertie eyed him. "I say, old boy, what are you doing here?"
Thompson affected an expression of surprise. "What do you mean?"
"Well, where's Biggles?"
Thompson looked, if anything, even more astonished. "Bigglesworth? Isn't he back yet? I haven't seen him since last night."
Bertie and Ginger exchanged worried glances. Ginger said, "I don't suppose you ran into Lacey on the way here?"
"No. Why?"
"He was on his way to see you. He was worried when we didn't get news from Biggles."
Thompson shook his head. "No, I haven't seen him. We must have just missed each other. I had to come here to work on the paperwork for the shooting incident last night, so I haven't been in my office all day."
Bertie looked at his watch. Algy had been gone for more than two hours already. At most, it would have taken him half an hour or so to get to Thompson's office, discover that he wasn't there, and then come back. And if he had found Biggles, surely he would have called. Uneasiness crept into his mind, and he exchanged another look with Ginger.
Biggles had been missing for almost twenty-four hours, and it looked like Algy was fast following in his footsteps.
Bertie eyed him. "I say, old boy, what are you doing here?"
Thompson affected an expression of surprise. "What do you mean?"
"Well, where's Biggles?"
Thompson looked, if anything, even more astonished. "Bigglesworth? Isn't he back yet? I haven't seen him since last night."
Bertie and Ginger exchanged worried glances. Ginger said, "I don't suppose you ran into Lacey on the way here?"
"No. Why?"
"He was on his way to see you. He was worried when we didn't get news from Biggles."
Thompson shook his head. "No, I haven't seen him. We must have just missed each other. I had to come here to work on the paperwork for the shooting incident last night, so I haven't been in my office all day."
Bertie looked at his watch. Algy had been gone for more than two hours already. At most, it would have taken him half an hour or so to get to Thompson's office, discover that he wasn't there, and then come back. And if he had found Biggles, surely he would have called. Uneasiness crept into his mind, and he exchanged another look with Ginger.
Biggles had been missing for almost twenty-four hours, and it looked like Algy was fast following in his footsteps.
&&&
Algy and von Stalhein stared at each other for what
must have been a full minute of shocked silence.
Eventually, it was the German who recovered first, for
having already met Biggles the previous night, he was of course not nearly so
surprised to see Algy as Algy was to see him.
But if Algy recovered his wits a tenth of a second
later than von Stalhein, it did not impair his ability to act. For one
stupefied half-millisecond before realization dawned, Algy said blankly, more
to himself than to the German, “You’ve got Biggles.”
“I do,” replied von Stalhein, with grim satisfaction,
and those two simple words seemed to break the spell.
Algy turned and began hurtling down the corridor the
way he had come, horribly aware of von Stalhein close on his heels, shouting
shrilly as he went. It could only be a matter of time before he, or one of the
people working for him, managed to get a hold of Algy.
Grimly, Algy kept the lead, one hand pressed to his
now unbearably painful side. Snatching a quick look down, he was horrified to
see red seeping through his shirt.
Von Stalhein was close now, very close. Algy had a
vague mental image of the German breathing down his neck as he dashed through
an office and upended a chair into von Stalhein’s path. He heard the German
curse as he tripped over the piece of furniture, but there was no time to look
back and assess the damage done.
Algy dashed out of the office into another corridor
that looked exactly the same as all the other ones he had just run through. He
knew that he was lost, but the shrill shouts behind him made him realize that
he was in no position to stop and work out the way to the exits through a
logical intellectual process.
He took a rasping breath, and the jolt of pain this
simple action caused his ribs almost made his knees buckle. His eyes watered,
and it was all he could do to keep from passing out.
&&&
After a fruitless conversation with von Stalhein,
Biggles had been taken into a windowless room containing a desk and a pair of
wooden chairs. His escorts had then locked the door from the outside, and apart
from a brief visit to provide him with water and a tray of food, he had seen no
more of them, although the slow steady tramp of footsteps outside his prison
warned him that escape was not as easy as it seemed.
He had left his watch at the hotel, so he had no idea
of how much time passed as he paced the room, seeking to find a means of
escape. The furniture was flimsy and might be broken to make weapons, which
cheered him somewhat when he remembered that the guards were bound to be back to
bring him more food or collect the empty tray.
He attempted to pick the lock, but what tools he had
were worse than useless for the task at hand, and he soon gave it up.
At one point during this long period of solitude he
must have fallen asleep, for the next thing he knew, he had jerked awake and
was staring confusedly at the door, wondering why there was such a commotion
outside.
&&&
Algy felt his blood dripping through his fingers from
the wound in his side, but he dared not waste the time to check the damage or
stop the bleeding. Throwing the chair at von Stalhein had gained him a few
minutes’ advantage, but he did not think he would be able to hold the lead for
long in his condition.
He was just about to dash out of the room he was
standing in, when a large cupboard in one corner caught his eye, and a sudden
brainwave came to him. Crossing to the other door of the room, he flung it open
as if someone had hurriedly passed through, and then quickly returned to the
cupboard and folded himself inside it, leaving the smallest of cracks to
breathe and see through.
All this took less than five seconds, and he was well
hidden by the time von Stalhein burst into the room, still shouting. Algy held
his breath, wondering if his plan had succeeded.
For a moment von Stalhein paused and glanced over at
the cupboard, and Algy’s heart sank, thinking that he had been discovered. But
then the German’s gaze moved to the door Algy had hastily flung open and he
rushed out through it.
In the cupboard, Algy allowed himself a weak gasp of
relief. And then he turned his attention to the blood on his shirt and he felt
a wave of dizziness come over him.
How long he huddled in the cupboard, he did not know.
Later, he could only remember his nerves stretched to breaking point as he
strained his ears to hear what was happening outside the door. He dared not
move for fear von Stalhein would come back.
Finally, after what seemed to be an eternity, he
shakily pushed his way out of the cupboard and made his way to the door von
Stalhein had left through.
A quick glance around showed no one in sight, and it
was with considerable relief that Algy began to make his painstaking way down
the corridor.
Walking seemed to take more effort than usual, and he
stopped halfway down the long corridor, leaning against a door while he fought
to catch his breath.
There was a key in the lock of the door, and for no
reason that he could think of, he idly turned it.
The door was wrenched open from the inside, and Algy
abruptly found himself pitching forward onto the ground.
&&&
All Biggles could hear through the door was muffled
shouting and someone speaking angrily in what appeared to be German. Once,
something heavy thudded into his door, making him jump.
He retreated to the other end of the room, then, armed
with the empty tray, he once again took up his post by the door. “If anyone
comes through that door, I’m going to let him have it,” he promised himself. If
it came down to him and von Stalhein, well, better to kill the German than be
killed himself.
More shouting. Biggles thought he heard von Stalhein’s
voice, but he couldn’t be certain. He took a tighter grip on the edges of the
tray, his hands shaking with the strain of waiting.
Minutes passed, and he realized that the shouting had
stopped. Either that, or the shouters had moved on to another part of the
building.
A thought struck him. “By gosh, I hope it isn’t a
fire,” he muttered anxiously. He glanced around his prison for something to
break the door down with, but nothing struck him as solid enough to do so.
“Well, there’s no smoke anyway,” he comforted himself, cautiously testing the
door for signs of heat.
Abruptly, the key rattled in the lock. Someone had
unlocked the door! Biggles wrenched the door open and was prepared to strike
with the tray he still held, when the man on the other side of the door
collapsed on top of him.
The two of them crashed to the floor, and Biggles
frantically struggled out from under the unknown assailant. He had lost his
hold on the tray, but his questing hand closed over the leg of the nearest
chair, and he was about to send it toppling over the newcomer, when he took a
closer look and realized who it was.
“Algy!”
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