The Black Baroness

The Black Baroness by Dennis Wheatley Page A

Book: The Black Baroness by Dennis Wheatley Read Free Book Online
Authors: Dennis Wheatley
Ads: Link
need my help if they happen to be armed.’
    ‘Right. Are you taking your own car or will you come in mine?’
    ‘If I leave mine here somebody may pinch it, so I think I’ll go under my own steam. I’ll be close behind you.’
    With a nod von Ziegler let in the clutch and his car streaked away. Gregory jumped into his and ran smoothly along behind him, knowing that with the roads now so choked with refugees the adventurous airman would not get very far at the pace at which he had set off. For ten minutes they wound in and out of the slow-moving traffic until they reached the Oslo Police Headquarters, outside which von Ziegler pulled up.
    ‘What now?’ thought Gregory. ‘Surely the Nazi organisation can’t have managed to get the Norwegian police force under its thumb.’ But he was mistaken. After he had waited outside in his car for nearly forty minutes von Ziegler came out again and hurried up to him. His blue eyes were shining and a satisfied smile curved his strong mouth.
    ‘We’re on to them,’ he said. ‘Oslo is such a little place that everyone here knows the King and the Crown Prince by sight. I felt certain they’d be recognised by scores of people before they had gone ten miles. We had to wait until we could get reports of them from well outside the town so as to make certain in which direction they were heading. They’ve taken the road to Eidsvold, a small town about forty-five miles north from here.’
    Two minutes later they had joined the stream of traffic heading north and Gregory settled down to what he knew would be a dreary chase. Had he been von Ziegler he would almost have wept with frustration at the impossibility of getting every ounce out of his car, but, as it was, he was quite content to loiter. In fact, he knew that the longer they were held up by the refugees the more chance the King would have of getting away, for even crowds who had been panicked from their homes would make way at the sight of their King, whereas they would certainly not give way to anyone who had the appearance of an ordinary civilian; but in this he had counted without von Ziegler.
    Directly they were outside the town and the traffic was a little less congested the German pulled up at the roadside and took two large squares of paper out of his pocket, one of which he proceeded to paste on his own windscreen and the other on Gregory’s. Both bore large printed inscriptions in Norwegian,which Gregory could not understand, but the airman said Swiftly: ‘No good putting them on before we were out of that crush, but they’ll help us a lot now. These notices say: “POLICE—URGENT!” and the small lettering underneath means ‘Offence to obstruct”.’
    ‘Grand!’ said Gregory. ‘You think of everything; I couldn’t have tackled the job better myself.’ And as they went on again he noticed with dismay how the law-abiding Norwegians paid due deference to the placards. Each time that von Ziegler sounded his Klaxon they turned to stare and immediately gave him room to pass.
    Even with these aids-to-travel their going was miserably slow, as the way curved and twisted through the mountains, where it was much too dangerous to shoot ahead for any distance with one solid line of traffic blocking half the road, and Gregory reckoned that they could not be making much more than fifteen miles an hour. But the King could not be doing any better, so he had no more than his original lead, which, allowing for their long wait at the police-station, was just about an hour.
    Now that spring had come, southern Norway was gradually divesting herself of her winter robe of snow. All the mountains were still white-capped but the thaw was climbing out of the deep valleys day after day and every stream and river was in spate. The road lay well below the snowline, but it was very chilly and Gregory thanked his stars that he was warmly clad. He pitied the poor wretches they were passing as he felt certain that many of them would not be

Similar Books

Wind Rider

Connie Mason

TheTrainingOfTanya2

Bruce McLachlan

The Detour

S. A. Bodeen

Shield and Crocus

Michael R. Underwood