Dennis Wheatley - 60 Days to Live.rtf

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Dennis Wheatley

 

60 Days to Live

 

 

 

 

Contents

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter 1 

An Offer Of Marriage

9

 

Chapter 2   

An Incredible Announcement

14

 

Chapter 3

Even worlds Sometimes Die

22

 

Chapter 4 

A Strange Premonition

30

 

Chapter 5 

The Unscrupulous ex-Minister

37

 

Chapter 6 

A Plot To Save The Nation

47

 

Chapter 7  

Inside information

61

 

Chapter 8

Rumours And A Refuge

70

 

Chapter 9 

The Last Days Of London

84

 

Chapter 10

A Terrifying Experience

96

 

Chapter 11

Eat, Drink And Be Merry

106

 

Chapter 12

Derek Does His Damnedest

115

 

Chapter 13

Hell in Hyde Park

123

 

Chapter 14

Hemmingway Goes Into Action

135

 

Chapter 15

The Great Evacuation

153

 

Chapter 16  

Lavina Shoots To Kill

171

 

Chapter 17

Crazy Day

186

 

Chapter 18  

The Last Dawn

199

 

Chapter 19 

Prepare For Death

209

 

Chapter 20

The Comet Strikes

220

 

Chapter 21    

The Great Waters

232

 

Chapter 22   

Adrift

243

 

Chapter 23   

The Maniac

255

 

Chapter 24   

Domestic upheaval

266

 

Chapter 25  

Calamity

276

 

Chapter 26   

The Frozen World

287

 

Chapter 27  

Life Must Go On

299

 

Chapter 28 

The Dover Road

314

 

Chapter 29

Into the Blizzard

327

 

Chapter 30  

One Must Die

344

 

 

Chapter 1

An Offer of Marriage

 

    Lavina Leigh paused for a second in the entrance of the Savoy Grill. The maitre d'hotel smiled, bowed and moved forward, upon which she made her entrance.

    Lavina was good at making entrances. She was slim, very fair and, although she was not tall, her film work had taught her to make the best of her inches and she carried herself like a Princess.

    Even in that sophisticated suppertime crowd, heads turned as she swept forward. Ace director Alfred Hitchcock, perched like Humpty Dumpty on the edge of a chair, gave her a little wave of greeting from one table; and B.B.C. chief Val Gielgud, looking very Russian with his little pointed beard, smiled at her from another.

    The man who followed Lavina was in his late forties. He had a square face with a bulldog chin, but his features were redeemed from coarseness by pleasant brown eyes, a fine forehead and a touch of grey in his dark, smooth hair, over either temple.

    Sir Samuel Curry was used to appearing in public with good looking women. He was very rich and decidedly a connoisseur, but even so, on this night towards the end of April he was conscious of a little glow of pride in his glamorous companion as he followed her to their table and they settled themselves at it.

    He did not ask her what she would have to eat but ordered for her, as they had been friends for some months and he knew all her favourite dishes. In less than a minute the waiter had departed to execute Sir Samuel's clear, decisive orders.

    'You know,' he said, 'I never come here except with you. I much prefer the Restaurant.'

    She shrugged. 'Don't be difficult, Sam dear. I know you millionaires always congregate there but the Grill's so much more interesting. Look, there's Gilbert Frankau and his pretty wife, with Leon M. Lion; and at that other table Doris Zinkeisen and her husband, Grahame Johnstone. You saw "Hitch", too, as we came in. The big man with him is Henry Sherek and the little woman is "Hitch's" clever wife who vets most of his scripts for him. Besides, all the big boys on the Press come here and that's immensely useful.'

    Sam Curry smiled a little ruefully. 'Yes, I suppose it's part of your job to keep in touch with all these people, but I wish to goodness you'd be sensible and chuck it. You'll never make a film star.'

    Her small, beautifully shaped mouth opened on an exclamation of protest, but she suppressed it and lit a cigarette before she replied with calm aloofness: 'I am one already.'

    'Oh, no, you're not,' he mocked her. 'You're only a starlet. No one's a real star until they've been given a Hollywood contract.'

    Lavina lifted her heavy eyelids lazily. 'That doesn't apply any more, Sam.'

    But in spite of her denial she knew that he was right. In three years she had done very well and, as she was only twenty-three, she still had a good film life before her. But, at times, she was subject to horrid doubts as to whether she would get much further.

    Her acting was sound; she had a personality that attracted every man with whom she came in contact and, physically, she was about as nearly perfect as any woman could be, but, all the same, she knew quite well that her beauty was not of a kind best suited for motion pictures.

    It was of that fine, aristocratic type which is based on bone formation and ensures for every woman who has it the certainty of still being lovely in old age. Her small, perfectly chiselled Roman nose and narrow, oval face gave her great distinction; but her nose had proved an appalling handicap in her Work, as in all but the most carefully selected angles it threw a tiresome shadow when she was being filmed under the glare of the arc lamps. That one factor had already robbed her of several good parts and might well prevent her from ever achieving real stardom, unless she was willing to have her nose broken and remodelled which she was not prepared to do.

    While they ate their bligny and the stuffed quails which followed they talked of the people round about them. One waiter refilled their glasses with Roederer '28. Another brought them fresh peaches. After he had peeled them and moved away, Sam Curry said:

    'When are you going to present me to your people, Lavina?'

    Little wrinkles at the corners of her eyes, which came from frequent laughter, creased up as she parried: 'Why this sudden question?'

    'Because I'm old fashioned enough to want to observe the custom of meeting your relations before I marry you.'

    Her blackened eyelashes lifted, showing the surprise in her bluegrey eyes. 'Surely you don't mean that you would walk right out of my life if they disapproved of you?'

    'Of course not. It's just a courtesy.'

    'But I haven't said that I will marry you, yet.'

    'You're going to, as sure as my name's Sam Curry.'

    She shook her golden head in silent mockery.

    'Listen, Lavina,' he went on. 'Even if you could become a real film star, it's a dog's life, and you know it. On the set at eight o'clock or earlier most mornings; often working the whole night through; and what little leisure you do get’ is wasted in acting a part all the time: opening bazaars, posing for photographers, endless fittings at dressmakers', showing yourself off in places like this because it's vital to get continuous publicity if you're to keep in the swim at all.'

    'I like it,' she shrugged.

    'Maybe. But in ten years, at the outside, you'll be worn out, finished, and no good to anyone. Already you're losing your eye for makeup and, if you go on this way, you'll become a hag before you're thirty. Get some of that paint off your face and look twice as beautiful. Cut out this film business and enjoy yourself, my dear, while you're still young and healthy.'

    'I should be bored to tears doing nothing all day.'

    'But you wouldn't be doing nothing,' he persisted. 'I've made enough to take things easy now, and we could travel. You'd like that, wouldn't you? There's the house in London. And we'd have another in the country; a big place where we could entertain. Think what fun it would be for you, with your artistic flair, to furnish and decorate it. Besides, you could do an immense amount of good with my money. I've been too busy to think of other people while I've been making it, but you must have lots of pet schemes you'd like to foster; and if running a coup...

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