Лесли Чартерис - The Saint and the Templar Treasure

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Simon Templar is driving leisurely through the French countryside on his way from Avignon to the Riviera. He picks up to hitch-hikers, students who are going to work at Château Ingare, a small vineyard on the site of a former stronghold of the Knights Templar, a society of medieval adventurers who began by protecting pilgrims to the Holy Land and were later believed to have become corrupt and immensely wealthy in the process, although their reputed treasure has never been found.
The coincidence of this association with his own name intrigues Simon enough for him to take his passengers all the way to the château. They arrive on the estate to find a fire in the barn, apparently the work of arsonists. Simon’s hand is slightly injured, and Mimette, the attractive young daughter of the owner, insist on taking him to the château to have it dressed.
He learns that the burning of the barn is only the latest of many misfortunes that have afflicted the vineyard since a cryptic ancient tombstone was discovered on the property: These have revived all the old legends about the curse of the Templars and their treasure.
When Simon attempts to leave, another apparent accident obliges Mimette and her father to invite him to stay a few days as their guest. It is not long before a real and indisputable murder proves that he has involved himself in something very sinister but certainly not supernatural.

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“Just what I’ve heard since I’ve been here,” the Saint answered adroitly, and before the point could be pressed he nodded towards the table and added: “I take it you were asking for a little help from heaven or the other place.”

“I gather that you do not believe in such things,” said Norbert.

“Frankly, my tastes are more spiritueux than spiritistes.”

“I would have expected someone with your experience of the world to have a more open mind about such matters.”

The Saint heard the words but was no longer listening to them. He was looking past the three men towards the shadows beneath the far wall, and as he did so a strange chill rippled through him, as if his veins had turned into tiny rivers of ice.

From the gloom, a white-shrouded figure was watching them.

“We have a visitor,” Simon mentioned diffidently.

The professor had still been rambling on about poltergeists, faith healing, and clairvoyance, as absorbed in propounding his own knowledge as only a man whose best friends are books can be. He was completely unaware that he had lost the attention of his audience until the Saint spoke. The others swung around. Henri gave a passable impression of someone trying to jump out of his skin, and almost tripped in his haste to place himself behind the table. Philippe was much calmer, or perhaps too befuddled to react sharply. He looked blearily from the Saint to the figure and waited on events. Norbert, taken completely aback, gawped at it with bulging eyes.

The Saint’s own imperturbability was being put to a severe test. In the course of his eventful travels he had seen too much to be a total unbeliever, but for one quiet evening in Provence the spooky phenomena seemed to be coming somewhat thick and fast.

The figure began to move towards them. Slowly it emerged from the shade of the wall into one of the patches of moonlight that chequered the floor. The hazy white-shrouded outline became focused into a flowing cotton cloak, and the apparition raised one hand and pulled back the cowl as it drew nearer. As they all saw the face, their relief might have seemed only a different kind of shock.

“A really spectacular entrance, mademoiselle,” Simon congratulated her, with a slightly ironic bow.

The girl gave him a withering glance but appeared more concerned with the others. Her face was pale with rage and the knuckles of her clenched fists showed white. She stopped at the table and stood there with her hands on her hips inspecting each of them in turn like a head mistress might have surveyed a group of truants.

Philippe was the first to recover.

“What do you mean by creeping up on us like that?” he blustered, stepping out to confront his niece. “What are you doing here?”

Mimette rounded on him like a tigress.

“What am I doing here? This is my home! How dare you question me?”

“I hope we were not doing any harm,” Norbert put in placatingly. “But you gave us all a start.”

“You deserved it,” Mimette retorted. “I am surprised at you all. I thought you would have been above such childishness, Professor.”

“Our intention was far from childish, mademoiselle,” Norbert countered. “One should not make the mistake of thinking that because children do things they are necessarily childish.”

Mimette picked up a handful of the cards and threw them contemptuously back on to the table.

“Calling up the spirit of the glass? Most children forget such games before they are allowed to stay up so late.”

“A primitive method, I’ll agree,” said Henri, as if conceding a minor point in a legal debate. “But as we have no medium among us it had to serve our purpose.”

“Henri, I am disappointed in you,” Mimette replied. “I would have thought you at least would have had more sense than to dabble in such rubbish.”

The young man avoided her eyes and seemed genuinely abashed.

“I’m sorry, Mimette. It was my silly idea. Just a little fun.”

The Saint rested his shoulders against the pillar completely at ease.

“I’m sorry if I broke any of the house rules,” he said. “I couldn’t get to sleep, and I was just wandering around—”

“You were not a party to it. I saw what happened. It was seeing you in the garden that brought me here.”

“Well, I am dreadfully sorry to have given offence, Mademoiselle Mimette,” Philippe declared aggressively, with as much dignity as he could muster.

With a parting scowl at his niece, he shouldered his way past Henri and Norbert and strode unsteadily out into the garden. Henri looked apologetically at Mimette.

“I think I’d better go and make sure he is all right,” he said, and hurried after him.

“Seeing that our experiment has been disrupted, I think I too shall retire,” the professor said pompously. As he passed Mimette he stopped and pointed to the crucifix hanging on a golden chain around her neck. “Childish foolishness?” he sneered. “I hope your talisman protects you.”

Grinning impishly, he ambled after the others.

“Alone again, at last,” Simon remarked when the professor had disappeared from view.

The girl was still quivering with suppressed rage, and for a moment he thought she was going to run after the professor and physically assault him. He moved over and put a restraining hand on her shoulder.

“It wouldn’t be worth it,” he said, reading her mind.

Slowly she relaxed and he felt the tenseness drain away from her. She looked up at him with wide wondering eyes and seemed for a moment as vulnerable as a lost child.

“As if we didn’t have enough to worry about,” she said at last rand there was a deep tiredness in her voice that revealed all the uncertainty behind her bold front of almost arrogant assurance.

“This place gives me the creeps — how about a nightcap?” he suggested, and she nodded.

He reached up and unhooked the oil lamp, turning out the light as he placed it on the table. He kept his arm around her as they left the tower and strolled across the lawn to the dining-room.

She leant her head against his shoulder and whispered: “Sometimes I wonder whether there really is a curse on us.”

He stroked her hair lightly.

“If you’re cursed, I can think of millions of women who would be only too eager to line up at the witch’s door.”

She met his eyes and smiled wickedly.

“Flattery will get you everywhere.”

“Flattery is only flattery when it isn’t the truth,” he said.

In the drawing-room, while Mimette sank gratefully into the comfort of the sofa, he poured them both a long measure of Armagnac. He handed Mimette her glass and sat beside her.

“The professor keeps prattling on about this treasure. Do you believe in it?” he asked.

“It’s a legend that must have some historic basis, I suppose. This was one of the last Templar strongholds to fall. All the supposed wealth of the Templars was never fully accounted for. Perhaps it was exaggerated, but when the King’s army finally broke in here they could find no trace of it. Those knights who were not killed escaped and were never captured.” Mimette laughed. “It is said that the devil took them down to hell.”

“But left the treasure up here-is that it?”

“Yes. People have searched for it for centuries but not even a single coin has been found. Even the Germans had a look for it. They were typically thorough and did a lot of damage but found nothing. How would you search a place as big as this, without a clue where to begin?”

“So why the sudden interest now?”

“Professor Norbert believes that the stone may. be a clue to something, a sort of symbol map to where a treasure might be hidden.”

“Obviously he hasn’t broken the code yet, or there would have been no need for the séance,” Simon observed.

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