The Headmaster (short story): Difference between revisions

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'''The Headmaster''' is a short story by the British mystery and thriller writer [[Michael Gilbert]] about the counterspies [[Mr. Calder and Mr. Behrens]].  First published in the United Kingdom in the June, 1962, issue of ''Argosy'', it was later published in the United States in ''Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine'' and then collected in book form along with other stories about the same two protagonists as the sixth of eleven stories in ''Game without Rules''. It is set in a contemporary, but undated London, and, unlike most of the other stories in this series, has Mr. Calder as the main character, with only brief appearances by Mr. Behrens and Rasselas, the Persian deerhound. It is written in Gilbert's usual spare, chaste style, but with even fewer overtones and descriptions than are found in most of his works.
'''The Headmaster''' is a short story by the British mystery and thriller writer [[Michael Gilbert]] about the counterspies [[Mr. Calder and Mr. Behrens]].  First published in the United Kingdom in the June, 1962, issue of ''Argosy'', it was later published in the United States in ''Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine'' and then collected in book form along with other stories about the same two protagonists as the sixth of eleven stories in ''Game without Rules''. It is set in a contemporary, but undated London, and, unlike most of the other stories in this series, has Mr. Calder as the main character, with only brief appearances by Mr. Behrens and Rasselas, the Persian deerhound. It is written in Gilbert's usual spare, chaste style, but with even fewer overtones and descriptions than are found in most of his works.


The story begins with a simple statement that there were now only two master spies at work in the country: "The Science Master was still at his shadowy work in the Midlands, and the Headmaster was in the London area." Mr. Calder is initially instructed by Mr. Fortescue, the director of JSSIC(E),the shadowy counter-espionage agency for which he has worked since 1958,to locate a missing fellow-agent and longtime friend of Calder's, a prominent barrister named John Craven. Unlike the other Calder-Behrens stories, Mr. Fortesque is not shown within his usual abominably paneled office at the Westminster branch of the London and Home Counties Bank, of which he is the manager, nor is Calder or Behrens presented to the reader with any of the details that Gilbert generally provides.  
The story begins with a simple statement that there were now only two master spies at work in the country: "The Science Master was still at his shadowy work in the Midlands, and the Headmaster was in the London area." Mr. Calder is initially instructed by Mr. Fortescue, the director of JSSIC(E),the shadowy counter-espionage agency for which he has worked since 1958, to locate a missing fellow-agent and longtime friend of Calder's, a prominent barrister named John Craven. Unlike the other Calder-Behrens stories, Mr. Fortesque is not shown within his usual abominably paneled office at the Westminster branch of the London and Home Counties Bank, of which he is the manager, nor is Fortesque, Calder, or Behrens presented to the reader with any of the telling details that Gilbert generally provides.  





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The Headmaster is a short story by the British mystery and thriller writer Michael Gilbert about the counterspies Mr. Calder and Mr. Behrens. First published in the United Kingdom in the June, 1962, issue of Argosy, it was later published in the United States in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine and then collected in book form along with other stories about the same two protagonists as the sixth of eleven stories in Game without Rules. It is set in a contemporary, but undated London, and, unlike most of the other stories in this series, has Mr. Calder as the main character, with only brief appearances by Mr. Behrens and Rasselas, the Persian deerhound. It is written in Gilbert's usual spare, chaste style, but with even fewer overtones and descriptions than are found in most of his works.

The story begins with a simple statement that there were now only two master spies at work in the country: "The Science Master was still at his shadowy work in the Midlands, and the Headmaster was in the London area." Mr. Calder is initially instructed by Mr. Fortescue, the director of JSSIC(E),the shadowy counter-espionage agency for which he has worked since 1958, to locate a missing fellow-agent and longtime friend of Calder's, a prominent barrister named John Craven. Unlike the other Calder-Behrens stories, Mr. Fortesque is not shown within his usual abominably paneled office at the Westminster branch of the London and Home Counties Bank, of which he is the manager, nor is Fortesque, Calder, or Behrens presented to the reader with any of the telling details that Gilbert generally provides.