Bull-Dog Drummond The Adventures of a Demobilized Officer Who Found Peace Dull § by CYRIL McNEILE b “SAPPER” | SC ILLUSTRATIONS BY IRWIN MYERS Copyright by Gee. H. Doraa Co. (Continued from last week.) SYNOPSIS. men PROLOGUE.—In December, 1918, four men gathered in a hotel in Berne and heard one of the quartet outline a plan to paralyze Great Britain and at the same time seize world power. The other three, Hocking, American, and Steineman and Von Gratz, Germans, all millionaires, agree to the scheme, providing another man, Hiram Potts, an American, is taken in. The instigator of the plot gives his pame as Comte de Guy, but when he leaves for England with his daughter he decides to use the name Carl Peterson. CHAPTER I. — Capt. Hugh (Bulldog) ‘Drummond, a retired officer, advertises for work that will give him excitement, signing “X10.” As a result he meets Phyllis Benton, a young woman who an- swered his ad. She tells him of strange gourders and robberies of which she sus- ts a band headed by Carl Peterson and nly Lakington of being the leaders. CHAPTER IL—Drummond decides to go to The Larches, Miss Benton's home. An attempt is made on the road to wreck his machine when another, occupied by Peterson, Lakington and a strange man, blocks the road. While dining with Phyl- lis Benton and her father Drummond hears a terrible shriek at The Elms. Dur- the night Drummond leaves The Larches and explores The Elms. He dis- covers Lakington and Peterson using a thumbscrew on an American who signs @ paper. Drummond rescues the Ameri- cen after a struggle and takes him to fis home. The man is Hiram C. Potts. CHAPTER IIL—Peterson visits Drum- mond the next day, departing with a threat to return later and recover Potts and also a torn paper which Drummond seized the night of the fight. With the aid of Peter Darrel, an old army friend, Drummond arranges to hide Potts, and gubstitute in his place one Mullings, a de- mobilized soldier, who is seized by Peter- son and his gang and taken to The Elms, along with Drummond. CHAPTER 1V.— When Peterson dis- covers the hoax Drummond Is escorted by Irma to a room where he is to stay for the night. During the night Drum- mond is exploring the house when he gets in a strange room in which is a cobra. Fe escapes, but on the stairs has a fight in the dark. CHAPTER V.—Drummond enlists the ald of Algy Longworth, Toby Sinclair, Ted Jerningham and Jerry Seymour, the latter an aviator. Drummond, after an encounter with the pseudo Potts, meets Irma - talking to the marquis of Laidley ‘and suspects the gang is plotting for the Laidley jewels. Drummond and his friends are gassed as they sit in his apartment. Lakington carries off Potts. CHAPTER VI—When Drummond and his friends recover they plan to again res- cue Potts. Drummond goes to see Phyl- lis and besides learning Potts has been taken to The Elms also becomes engaged to her. Drummond is captured by the gang in the attempted rescue. Slowly Lakington sank back in his chair, a hard, merciless smile on his | lips; and for a moment or two there | was silence in the room. It was broken by the unkempt man on the sofa, who, without warning, exploded unexpected- | 1y. | ws tae to ail this fooling” be | burst forth in a deep rumble; “I con- fess 1 do not understand it. Are we ! assembled here tonight, ceenrades, to i listen to private quarrels and stupid : talk?” ' A murmur of approval came from the others, and the speaker stood up waving his arms. ! “] know not what this young man | has done: I care less. In Russia such trifies matter not. He has the appear- ance of a bourgeois, therefore he must dle. Did we not kill thousands—aye, ! tens of thousands of his kidney, before we obtained the great freedom? Are | we not going to do the same in this | accursed country? Kill him now— | #Kill Him Now—Throw Him in a Cor ner and Let Us Proceed.” throw him in a corner and let us pro- reed.” | He sat down, amidst a murmur of approval, in which Hugh joined heart- ily. “Splendid,” he murmured. “A mag- pificent peroration. Am I right, sir, in assuming that you are what is vul- garly known as a Bolshevist?” The man turned his sunken eyes, glowing with ¢he burning fires of fanat- jcism, on Drummond. «I am one of those who are fighting for the freedom of the world,” he cried harshly, “for the right to live of the proletariat.” He flung out his arms wildly. “It is freedom; it is the dawn of the new age.” Hugh looked at him with genuine curiosity; it was the first time he had actually met one of these wild vision- aries in the flesh. And then the curi- osity was succeeded by a very definite amazement : what had Peterson to do with such as he? For the moment his own deadly risk was forgotten: a growing excitement filled his mind. Could it be possible that here, at last, was the real object of the gang; could it be possible that Peterson was organizing a deliberate plot to try and Bolshevize England? He looked up to find Petiizon regard- ing him with a faint smile. «It is a little difficult to understand, isn’t it, Captain Drummond?” be said, carefully flicking the ash off his cigar “1 told you you'd find yourself in deep | water.” Then he resumed the contem- plation of the papers in front of him. Hugh half closed his eyes, while a general buzz of conversation broke out round the table. Fragments of conversation struck his ears from time to time. The intimi- dated rabbit, with the light of battle in his watery eye, was declaiming on the glories of workmen's councils} a | bullet-headed man was shouting an In- spiring battle cry about no starvation wages and work for all. “Can it be possible,” thought Hugh, ! grimly, “that such as these have the power to control big destinies?’ And tlien, because he had some experience of what one unbalanced brain, whose owner could talk, was capable of achieving ; because he knew something sbout mob psychology, his half con- temptuous amusement changed to a bitter foreboding. “You fool!” he cried suddenly to the Russian; and everyone ceased t2lk- ing. “You poor d—d boob! You—and your new earth! In Petrograd today bread is two pounds four shillings a pound ; tea, fifteen pounds a pound. Io you call that freedom?” He gave u contemptuous laugh. Too surprised to speak, the Rus- sian sat staring at him; and it was Peterson who broke the silence with his suave voice. “Your distress, 1 am glad to say, is not likely to be one of long dura- tion,” he remarked. “In fact, the time has come for you tio retire for the night, my young friend.” He stood up smiling; then he walked over to the bell behind Hugh and rang it. “Dead or mad—I1 wonder which.” He threw the end of his cigar into the grate as Hugh rose. “While we | He Opened the Door and Stood There Smiling. deliberate down here on various mat- ters of importance we shall be think- ing of you upstairs—that is to say, if you get there. I see that Lakington fs even now beginning fo gloat in pleasant anticipation.” Not a muscle on the soldier’s face twitched; not by the hint of a look did he show the keenly watching au- | dience that he realized his danger. Lakington’s face was merciless, with its fiendish look of anticipation, and Hugh stared at him with level eyes for a while before he turned toward the door. “Then I will say ‘Good night,’” he remarked casually. “Is it the same room that I had last time?” “No,” said Peterson. “A different one—specially prepared for you. If vou get to the top of the stairs a man will show you where it is.” He opened the door and stood there smiling. And at that moment all the lights went out. TWO. The darkness could be felt, as real darkness inside a house always can #3 felt. Not the faintest glimmer even of greyness showed anywhere, and Hugh remained motionless, won- dering what the next meve was going to be. had commenced, all his nerve had re- Now that the night's ordeal turned to him. He felt ice-cold; and as his powerful hands clenched and faintly to himself. Then very cau- tiously ke commenced to feel his way toward the door. At that moment someone brushed past him. Like a flash Hugh's hand shot out and gripped him by the arm. The man wriggled and twisted, but he was powerless as a child, and with another short laugh Hugh found his throat with his other Land. And again silence settled on the room . .. Still holding the unknown man in front of him, he reached the foot of the stairs, and there he paused. He had suddenly remembered the mys terious thing which had whizzed past his head that other night, and then clanged suddenly into the wall beside him. He had gone up five stairs when it had happened, and now with his foot on the first, he started to do some rapid thinking. If, as Peterson had kindly assured him, they proposed to try and send him mad, it was unlikely that they would kill him on the stairs. At the same time it was cbviously an imple 1=ent capable of accurate adjustment. rnd therefore it was more than likel i that they would Lim. - And if they Cic—if they did... | The unknown man wriggled feebly in his hands, and a sudden unholy look came on to Hugh's face. “It’s the only pessible =hance,” said to himself, “and if i's you | me, laddie, I guess it’s git to vou.” With a quick heave he jerked the {man off his feet, and lifted him up | till his head was above the level of {his own. Then clutching him eight. ' he commenced to climb. His own head was bent down, somewhere in the region of the man's back, and he took no notice of the feebly Kick- Ing legs. Then at last he reached the fourth step, and gave a final adjustment to his semi-conscious burden. He pressed his head even lower in the man’s heck, and lifted him up another threo inches. “How awfully jolly!” he murmured. “1 hepe the result will please you.” *1'd stand quite still if 1 were you,” said Peterson suavely. ‘Just listen.” As Hugh had gambled on, the per- formance was designed to frighten. lostead of that, something hit the neck of the man he was holding with such force that it wrenched him clean out of his arms. Then came the clang beside him, and with a series of ominous thuds a body rolled down the stairs into the hall below. “You fool.” He heard Lakington’s voice, shrill with anger. “You've killed him. Switch on the light . .."” But before the order could be car- ried out Hugh had disappeared, like a great cat, into the darkness of the pussage above. As luck would have it the first room he darted into was empty, and he flung up the window and peered out. A faint, watery moon showed him a twenty-foot drop onto the grass, -nd without hesitation he flung his legs over the sill. And at that mo- ment something prompted him to look upward. It was a dormer window, and to an active man access to the roof was easy. Without an instant’s hesitation be abandoned all thoughts of retreat; and when two excited men rushed in- to the room he was firmly ensconced, with his legs astride of the ridge of the window, not a yard from their heads. Securely hidden in the shadow, he watched the subsequent proceedings with genial toleration. A raucous bel- low from the two men announced that they had discovered his line of escape; garden was full of hurrying. figures, One, calm and impassive, his identity betrayed only by the Inevitable cigar, stood by.the garden door, apparently taking no part in the game; Laking- ton, blind with fury, was running round in small circles, cursing every- one impartially. “The car is still there.” A man came up to Peterson, and Hugh heszd the words distinctly. “Then he's probably over at Ben- ton’s house. I will go and see.” Hugh watched the thick-set, mas- sive figure stroll down toward the wicket gate, and he laughed gently to himself. Then he grew serious again, and with a slight frown he pulled out his watch and peered at it. Half-past one . . . two more hours before dawn. And in those two hours he wanted to explore the house from on top; especially he wanted to have a look at the mysterious central room of which Phyllis had spoken to him— the room where Lakington kept his treasures. But until the excited throng below went indoors, it was unsafe to move. Once out of the shadow, any one would be able to see him crawling over the roof in the moonlight. At times the thought of the help- less man for whose death he had in cne way been responsible recurred to him, but he shook his head angrily. It had been necessary, he realized: you can carry Someone upstairs in a normal house without him having his neck broken—but still . . . And then he wondered who he was. It had been one of the men who sat round the table—of that he was toler- ably certain. But which ... ? Was it the frightened bunny, er the Rus- sian, or the gentleman with the blood- ghot eye? The only comfort was that whoever it had been, the world would not be appreciably the poorer for his sudden decease. The only regret was that it hadn't been dear Henry. . . . He had a distate for Henry which far exceeded his dislike of Peterson. “He's not over there” Peterson's voice came to him from below, “And | i | he or Le unclenched by his sides, he grinned . se it to frighten . and, in half a minute the .| house. | | we've wasted time enough as it is.” The men had gathered together in a.group, just below where Hugh was sitting, evidently awaiting further or- ders. “Do you mean to say we've lost the voung swine again?” said Lakington angr:ly. “Not lost—merely mislaid,” mur- mured Peterson. “The more I see of him the more do I admire his initia- tive.” Lakington snorted. “It was that d-—d fool Ivolsky’'s own fault,” he snarled; “why didn’t he keep still as he was told to do?” “Why, indeed,” returned Peterson, his clgar glowing red. “And I'm afraid we shall never know. He Is very dead.® He turned toward the “That concludes the enter- tainment, gentlemen, for tonight. 1 think you can all go to bed.” Ha cisappeared into the house, and the others followed :lowly. For the time being Hugh was sare, and with a sigh of relief he stretched his crumped limbs and lay back against the sloping roef. If only he had dared to light a cigaretie, THREE. 1t was half ar Lour before Drum- mond Cecided that it was safe to start | exploring. First Le took off kis shoes, und tying the laces together, he slung them around his rezk. Then, as si- l:ntly as he could, he commenced to scramble upward. It was not an easy operation; one siip and nothing could have stopped Lim sliding down and finally crash- ing into the garden below, with a Lroken leg, at the very least, for his pains. In addition. there was the risk or dislodging a siate, an unwise sroceeding in a honse where most of ‘he occupants slept with ¢ne eye open. lsut at last he got his hands over the 1.dge of the roof, and in anotker mo- rent he was siting across ie. A sudden rattle close to him made aim start violently; only to curse him- self for a nervous uss the next mo- nent. and lean forwerd eagerly. One of the blinds bad beev released from nside the room. and a- pale, diffused light came filtering out into the night from the side of the glass roof. He was still craning backward and for- ward to try and find some chink through which he could see, when, with a kind of uncanny deliberation, one of the panes of glass slowly opened. It was worked on a ratchet from inside, and Hugh bowed his thanks to the unseen operator below. Then he leant forward cautiously, and peered in. . . . The whole room was visible to him, and his jaw tightened as he took in the scene. In an armchair, smoking as unconcernedly as ever, sat Peter- son. He was reading a letter, and occasionally underlining some point with a pencil. Beside him on a table was a big ledger, and every now and then he would turn over a few pages and make an entry. But it was not Peterson on whom the watcher above was concentrating his attention; it was Lakington, taking a red velvet box out of a drawer in the desk. He opened it lovingly, and Hugh saw the flash of diamonds. Lakington let the stones run through his hands, glitter- ing with a thousand flames, while Pe- terson watched him contemptuously. “Baubles,” he said, scornfully. “Pretty baubles. What will you get for them?” “Ten, perhaps fifteen thousand,” re- turned the other. “But it’s not the money I care about; it’s the delight in having them, and the skill required to get them.” > Peterson shrugged his shoulders. “Skill which would give you hun- dreds of thousands if you turned it into proper channels.” Lakington replaced the stones, and threw the end of his cigarette into the grate. ‘ “Possibly, Carl, quite possibly. But it boils. down to this, my friend, nat yon like the big canvas with broad effects; I llke the miniature and the well-drawn etching.” “Which makes us a very happy com- bination,” said Peterson. “The pearls, don't forget, are your job. The big thing”—he turned to the other, and a trace of excitement came into his voice—“the big thing is mine.” The sound of the door opening made both men swing round instantly; then Peterson stepped forward with a smile as Irma entered. “Back, my dear. I hardly expected you so soon.” In a few words he told the girl what had happened, and she clapped her hands together delightedly. “Assuredly I shall have to marry that man,” she cried. “He is quite the least boring individual I have met in this atrocious country.” She sat down and lit a cigarette. “I saw Wal- ter tonight. He came over especially to see you. They want you there for a meeting, at the Ritz.” Peterson frowned. “It's most inconvenient,” he re- marked with a shade of annoyance in his voice. “Did he say why?” “Among other things I think they're uneasy about the American,” she an- swered. “My dear man, you can easi- ly slip over for a day.” “Of course I can,” said Peterson frritably; “but that doesn’t alter the fact that it’s inconvenient. Things will be shortly coming to a head here, and I want to be on the spot. How- ever—"” He started to walk up and down the room, frowning thoughtfully. “Your fish is hooked, mon ami,” cantinued the girl to Lakington. “He zas already proposed three times; and he has introduced me to a dread- ful-looking woman of extreme virtue, who has adopted me as her niece for the great occasion.” “What great occasion?” asked Lak- ington. A straddlew:se | What was the best thing to " time something of the nature of the “Why, his coming of age,” cried the girl. “I am to go to Laidley Towers as an honored guest of the duchess of Lampshire.” She threw back her head and laughed. “What «o you sBecauce Dear Freddie Has Told Me So,” Answered the Girl. think of that, my friend? The old lady will be wearing pearls and all complete, in honor of the great day, and I shall be one of the admiring house party.” “How Go you know she'll have them in the house?” said Lakington. “Because dear FredcCie has told me to,” answered the girl. She blew two smoke rings and then laughed. “Freddie is really rather a dear at- times. { dop't think I've ever me any one who is so pearly an idiot without being one. Stiil,” she re- peated thoughtfully, “he’s. rather a dear.” “What,” Lakington asked curiously, “does he think you are?” “A charming young girl,” answered Irma demurely, ‘whose father lost his life in the war, and who at present ekes out a precarious existence in a government office. At least, that's what he told Lady ¥rumpley—she’s the woman of unassailable virtue. She was profoundly sentimental and scents a romance, in addition to being a snob and scenting a future duke, to say nothing of a future duchess. By the mercy of Allah she’s on a com- mittee with his mother for distribut- ing brown paper underclothes to des- titute Belgians, and so Freddie wan- gled an invite for her. Voila tout.” “Splendid,” said Lakington slowly. “Splendid. Young Laidley comes of age in about a week, doesn’t he?” “Monday, to be exact; and so I go down with my dear aunt on Satur- day.” Lakington nodded his head as it satisfied, and then glanced at his watch. ; “What about bed?” he remarked. “Not yet,” said Peterson, halting suddenly in his walk. “I must see the Yank before I go to Paris. We'll have him down here now. Give him an injection, Henry—and, by God, we'll make the fool sign. Then I can actually take it over to the meeting back again, plucking feebly with his hands at his dressing gown, «Better, Mr. Potts?” said Peterson, suavely. “]—]—" stammered “Where am I?” “At The Elms, Godalming, if you wish to know.” “I thought—I thought——" He rose swaying. “What do you want with me? D—n youl!” “Tush, tush,” murmured Peterson. where is a lady present, Mr. Potts. And our wants are so simple. Just your signature to a little agreement, by which in return for certain services you promise to join us in our—er— labors in the near future.” «I remember,” cried the millionaire. “Now I remember. You swine—you filthy swine, I refuse . . absolute- ly.” “The trouble is, my friend, that you are altogether too big an employer of labor to be allowed to refuse, as I pointed out to you before. You must be in with us, otherwise you might wreck the scheme. Therefore 1 re- quire your signature.” «And when you've got it,” cried the American, “what good will it be to you. 1 shall repudiate it.” “Oh! no, Mr. Potts,” said Peterson with a thoughtful smile; “I can assure you, you won't. The distressing mal- ady from which you have recently been suffering will again have you in its grip. It renders you quite unfit for business.” For a while there was silence, and the millionaire stared round the room like a trapped animal. «I refuse!” he cried at last. “It's an outrage against humanity. You can do what you like.’ “Then we'll start with a little more thumbscrew,” remarked Peterson, strolling over to the desk and opening a drawer. “An astonishingly effective implement, as you can see if you look at your thumb.” He stood ip front of the quivering nan, balancing the instrument in Lis hands. “It was un der its influence yeu gave us the first signature, which we so regrettably lost, I think we'll try it again. aa The American gave a st:@zgled or) of terror, and then the unexpected * ap- pened. There was a crash as a pane of glass splintered and fell to the floor close beside Lakington; and with an oath he sprang aside and looked up. “Peep-lw,” came a well-known voice from the skylight. “Clip him one over the jaw, Potts, my boy; but don’t you sign.” the other. CHAPTER VIIL In Which He Goes tc Paris for a Night, ONE. Drummond had acted on the spur of the moment. It would have been man- ifestly impossible for any man, cer- tainly one of his caliber, to have watched the American being tortured without doing something to try to help him, At the same time the last thing he had wanted to do was to give away his presence on the roof. The informa- tion he had obtained that night was of such vital importance that it was absolutely essential for him to get away with it somehow ; and, at the mo- ment, his chances of so doing did not appear particularly bright. It looked as if it was only a question of time before they must get him. He watched Lakingten dart from the room, followed more slowly by Peter- son, and then occurred one of those strokes of luck on which the incor- rigible soldier always depended. The girl left the room as well. She kissed her hand toward him, and then she smiled. with me.” He strode to the door, followed by | Lakingten; and the girl in the chair | stood up and stretched her arms above ! her head. For a moment or two Hugh watched her; then he, too, stood up- | right and eased his cramped limbs. «Make the fool sign.” The words echoed through his brain, and he stared thoughtfully at the grey light | which showed the approach of dawn. | do? “Make” with Peterson generally im- plied torture, if other means failed, and Hugh had no intention of watch- ing any man tortured. At the same diabolical plot conceived by Peterson was beginning to take a definite shape in his mind, though many of the most important links were still missing. And with this knowledge had come the realization that he was no longer a free agent. The thing had ceased to be a mere sporting gamble with himself and a few other chosen spir- its matched against a gang of crim- inals; it had become—if his surmise was correct—a national affair. Eng- land herself—her very existence—was threatened by one of the vilest plots ever dreamed of in the brain of man. And then, with a sudden rage at his own impotence, he realized that even now he had nothing definite to go on. He must know more; somehow or other he must get to Paris; he must attend that meeting at the Ritz. Then a sound from the room below brought him back to his vantage point. The American was sitting in a chair, and Lakington, with a hypodermic syringe in his hand, was holding his arm. He made the injection, and Hugh watched the millionaire, He was still undecided as to how to act, but for the moment, at any rate, there was nothing to be done. And he was very curious to hear what Peterson had to aay to the wretched man, who, up to date, had figured so largely In every round. After a while the American ceased staring vacantly in front of him, and passed his hand dazedly over his fore- head. Then he half rose from his chair and stared at the two men sit- ting facing him. His eyes came round “You intrigue me, ugly one,” she re- marked, looking up, “intrigue me vast- ly. I am now going out to get a really good view of the Kill” And the next moment Potts was alone. He was staring up at the sky- light, apparently bewildered by the NH Nb Hj GHAR Un) Eee ng WB mn i) i Hi (Hi ill “| Am Now Going Over to Get a Really Good View of the Kill.” sudden turn of events, and then he board the voice of the man above speaking clearly and insistently. “Go out of the room. Turn to the right. Open the front door. You'll see a house, through some trees. Go to it. When you get there, stand on the lawn and call ‘Phyllis’ Do you get me?” (To he Continued..) ——— A ——————— to the girl, and with & groan he sank —Buy your own paper and read it.