The spokesman nodded.
“I can meet you in the lobby,” I suggested.
“We’ll wait outside the door, sir.”
“Up to you.” I shrugged, but it was obvious something serious was afoot.
My police escorts rode in front and I had the backseat to myself as we traveled a West Bay Street slick with rain, sandy with mud. Gutters were clogged with palm leaves. The sky was overcast, making midmorning more like dusk, and the winds were humid and high, blowing an occasional branch across the police car’s path.
I leaned forward. “Come on, fellas-what’s this all about?”
They didn’t seem to hear me.
I repeated my question and the one who hadn’t spoken yet still didn’t, just glanced at me and shook his head no. They might be native Bahamians, but these two had as much stiff-upper-lip reserve as any British bobbie.
The Westbourne gate was closed, but a white-helmeted black copper was there to open it for us. The crescent-shaped driveway was choked with cars, most of them black with police in gold letters on the doors-like the one I was in.
“Come with us, Mr. Heller,” the spokesman said, opening the car door for me politely, and I followed him up the steps onto the porch and inside, where I was greeted by an acrid, scorched smell that seemed to permeate the place. Had there been a fire?
Glancing about, I noticed the carpeting and wood on the stairway to the second floor were scorched; the banisters, too. But intermittently, as if a flaming man had casually walked up or down these stairs, marking his path….
“Mr. Heller?” This was a crisp, male, no-nonsense voice I’d not heard before. British.
I turned away from studying the stairs to see a military-looking figure approach, white, dimple-jawed, jug-eared, fiftyish, wearing a khaki uniform cut by the black leather strap of a gun belt, and a pith helmet with a royal insignia where a badge should be.
He looked like a very efficient, and expensive, safari guide.
“I’m Colonel Erskine Lindop, Superintendent of Police,” he said, extending a hand which I took, and shook.
“What crime has been committed here, that would bring brass like you around, Colonel?”
His hound-dog face twitched a smile, and he responded with a question. “I understand you’re a private investigator-from Chicago?”
“That’s right.”
He cocked his head back so he could look down at me, even though I had a couple inches on him. “Might I ask you to detail your business meeting with Sir Harry Oakes yesterday afternoon?”
“Not without my client’s permission.”
Lifting his eyebrows in a facial shrug, Lindop strode toward the stairs, saying, “Best come with me, then, Mr. Heller.”
He paused to curl a finger as if summoning a child.
And I followed him, like a good little boy.
“How did these stairs get scorched?” I asked.
“That’s one of the things I’m here to try to determine.”
There was mud and some sand on the steps, as well. I said, “If this is a crime scene, we’re walking right over somebody’s footprints, you know.”
He just kept climbing; our footsteps were echoing. “Unfortunately, these stairs were already well traversed by the time I got here.” He smiled back at me politely. “But your conscientiousness is appreciated.”
Was that sarcasm? With British “blokes,” I can never tell.
At the top of the stairs, there was a closed door to the right, a window straight ahead, and a short hallway to the left. The lower walls were scorched here and there. Smoke tainted the air, even more pungent than below. Lindop glanced back, nodding at me to follow him into a room down the hall. Right before you entered, fairly low on the white-painted plaster walls, were more sooty smudges. The inside of the open door had its lower white surface burn-blotched as well, and the carpet just inside the door was baked black, a welcome mat to hell.
Once inside, a six-foot, six-paneled cream-color dressing screen with an elaborate, hand-painted oriental design blocked us from seeing the rest of the large room. The Chinese screen had a large scorched area on the lower right, like a dragon’s shadow; a wardrobe next to the screen, at left, was similarly scorched. So was the plush carpeting, but oddly-circular blobs of black, some large, some small, as if black paint had been slopped there.
In here, the smell of smoke was stronger; but another odor overpowered it: the sickly-sweet smell of cooked human flesh.
It made me double over, and I fell into the soft armchair where wind was rustling lacy curtains nearby; a writing table next to me had a phone and a phone book on it-both had reddish smears.
I leaned toward the open window and gulped fresh air; muggy though it was, it helped.
“Are you all right, Mr. Heller?”
Lindop looked genuinely concerned.
I stood. Thank God I hadn’t eaten any breakfast.
“Sorry,” I said. “It’s just that I know what that smell is. I recognize it from overseas.”
Charred grinning Jap corpses by a wrecked tank on the Matanikau, a foul sweet wind blowing through the kunai grass.…
“Where did you serve?”
I told him.
“I see,” he said.
“Colonel, I’m an ex-Chicago cop-I’m not squeamish about much of anything. But…being back in the tropics is proving a real stroll down memory lane.”
He nodded toward the doorway. “We can leave.”
“No.” I swallowed thickly. “Show me what’s beyond the Chinese screen….”
Colonel Lindop nodded curtly and stepped around it, following the scorched path, leading me to my final audience with Sir Harry Oakes, who was not at all his usual lively self this morning.
He was on the twin bed nearer the dressing screen, which apparently had been positioned to protect the sleeper from the open window’s Bahamas breeze, though it had not protected him otherwise.
His squat, heavyset body lay face up, one arm dangling over the bedside, his skin blackened from flame, interrupted by occasional raw red wounds, head and neck caked with dried blood. He was naked, but shreds of blue-striped pajamas indicated his nightwear had been burned off him. His eyes and groin seemed to have taken extra heat; those areas were blistered and charred.
Over the bed was an umbrellalike wooden framework that had held mosquito netting, most of which was burned away. Strangely, this side of the nearby dressing screen was unblemished by smoke or fire. The most bizarre touch in this ghastly tableau was the feathers from a pillow which had been scattered over the blackened corpse, where they clung to the burned blistery flesh.
“Jesus,” I said. It was almost a prayer.
“His friend Harold Christie found him, this morning,” Lindop said. “About seven.”
“Poor old bastard.” I shook my head and said it again. I tried to breathe only through my mouth, so the smell wouldn’t get to me.
Then I said, “Cantankerous old rich guy like him couldn’t have been short on enemies.”
“Apparently not.”
It was one messy murder scene. Red palm prints, like a child’s finger-painting, stood out on the wall by the window across from the other, unslept-in twin bed; somebody with wet hands had looked out. I didn’t imagine they’d been wet with catsup. More red prints were visible on the wall kitty-corner from the bed.
All of these prints looked damp-the humidity had kept them from drying.
Blood glistened on both knobs of the open, connecting door between this and another, smaller bedroom, opposite the unoccupied bed. I peeked in-that bedroom, which looked unused, was about sixteen feet across. Sir Harry’s was twice that, and the other way ran the full width of the house, looking out on porches on both the south and north sides.
“Well,” I said, “there’s not exactly a shortage of clues. The trail of fire…bloody fingerprints…”
He pointed. “That fan by the foot of his bed seems to be what blew the feathers all over him.”
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p; “What do you make of the feathers, Colonel? Some sort of voodoo ritual?”
“Obeah,” the Colonel said.
“Pardon?”
“That’s what the practice of native magic is called here: obeah.”
“And the feathers could mean that-or anyway, somebody wanted it to seem to mean that…”
“Indeed.” Lindop’s features tightened in thought; hands locked behind him. “After all, Sir Harry was quite popular with the native population, here.”
There was a spray gun on the floor near the door to the adjacent bedroom. “Bug spray?”
Lindop nodded. “Insecticide. Highly flammable….”
“Was he doused with that?” I laughed glumly. “Quick, Sir Harry, the Flit.”
I was looking out the ajar door to the northside porch-which gave access to an outside stairwell-when Lindop commented, “That door was unlocked.”
“So was the front door yesterday, when I showed up. Security here was pretty damn loose. Have you talked to the night watchmen?”
“I wasn’t aware there were any.”
“There are two. One’s named Samuel. Sir Harry’s household head, Marjorie Bristol, can fill you in.”
He nodded again, eyes on the corpse. “She’s downstairs. Taking it hard, I’m afraid. Haven’t been able to properly question her.”
I went over to have a better look at Sir Harry. I was well past the nausea; cop instincts had long since kicked in. I leaned close. Something behind Sir Harry’s left ear explained a lot.
“I didn’t figure he was burned to death,” I said. “Not with all this blood around.
Lindop said nothing.
Four small wounds, fingertip-size, roundish but slightly triangular, were punched in the man’s head, closely grouped; if you were to connect the dots, you’d have a square.
“Bullet wounds?” I asked. I wasn’t sure: there were no powder burns.
“That’s the doctor’s initial opinion. And Christie called it in that way, too. I would tend to agree.”
“The body was moved,” I said. “At the very least, turned over.” I indicated lines of dried blood running from the ear wounds across the bridge of Sir Harry’s nose. “Gravity only works one way, you know.”
Lindop grunted noncommittally.
A nightstand between the beds had a lamp whose celluloid shade was unblistered by heat, thermos jug, drinking glass, set of false teeth and a pair of reading glasses-undisturbed, as if nothing out of the ordinary had occurred in this bedchamber the night before.
“It’s wet under his hips,” I said, pointing. “Bladder released on death, probably. Has your photographer been here yet? There’s a newspaper Sir Harry’s lying on you might want to note.”
“We have no departmental photographer. I sent for two RAF photographers, who are developing their photos now, and a draftsman, who drew a floor plan.”
“Jolly good.” I moved away from the bed, gestured around us. “But you’d better seal off this crime scene before you compromise all this evidence.”
Lindop moved his mouth as if tasting something-something unpleasant. “Mr. Heller-much as I might appreciate your insights…I did not ask you to Westbourne as a police consultant.”
“What, then? A suspect? I hardly knew the guy!”
He cocked his head back again. “You were one of the last persons to see Sir Harry alive. I wish to know the nature of your business with him.”
I glanced over at my employer; he was staring at the ceiling with his eyes burned out. He seemed to have no objection.
“His business with me was to have me shadow his son-in-law, which I did yesterday afternoon and evening.”
That perked up the Colonel; he took a step forward. “For what reason?”
I shrugged. “Suspected marital infidelity on the part of the Count. Sir Harry wasn’t fond of him, you know.”
“Damnit, man-give me the details!”
I gave him the details. From picking up the Count’s tail at the Yacht Club, to driving the RAF wives home after the party.
“Hubbard’s Cottages,” Lindop said, narrowing his eyes. “That’s near here….”
“Almost next door.”
“Then de Marigny drove right past Westbourne!”
“So did I. Around one, one-thirty.”
Now his eyes widened. “You didn’t follow him back home to his house on Victoria Street?”
“No. I figured he wasn’t getting laid, so my night was over.”
Lindop heaved a disgusted sigh. “Perhaps it would have been better for all concerned if you’d kept Count de Marigny in your sights a while longer.”
I shrugged again. “Yeah, and I should’ve bought U.S. Steel at a nickel a share.”
A voice from the entry area called, “Sir!”
A black face was peeking around the Chinese screen.
“The Governor is on the phone for you, sir.”
We went back down-except for Harry-with Lindop requesting I stay on for a few more minutes. I said sure, and stood idly near the foot of the stairs with several of the Bahamian bobbies; I glanced around, hoping to catch sight of Marjorie Bristol.
Instead, I saw a dazed-looking Harold Christie, in the hallway nearby, pacing bleakly, like a father in a maternity waiting room expecting twins from Mars.
“Mr. Christie,” I said, approaching him. “I’m sorry about your loss.”
Christie, who was dressed in the same rumpled manner as the day before, seemed not to recognize me at first, but maybe he was just distracted. “Uh…thank you, Mr. Heller.”
“I understand you found Sir Harry. Have you been here all that time?”
He frowned in confusion. “What do you mean?”
“Since you stopped by this morning, around seven, wasn’t it?”
Now his confusion was gone, and his expression seemed almost one of embarrassment. “I was here, last night.”
“What?”
He flipped a dismissive hand. “I frequently stay over with Sir Harry. He had a small dinner party that went on fairly late, and we had an appointment first thing this morning regarding his sheep.”
“Sheep?”
Irritation began to edge around his eyes and mouth. “Sir Harry bought some fifteen hundred sheep from Cuba. For food production purposes? The meat shortage, you understand. He’s been letting them graze on the country club greens.”
That sounded like Sir Harry, all right.
“Now, Mr. Heller, if you’ll excuse…”
“You weren’t in the bedroom next door, were you? That looked unslept-in to me.”
He sighed. “You’re right. I was in the room just beyond that.”
“Well, still, that’s only sixteen feet. Did you hear anything? See anything?”
Christie shook his head no. “I’m a sound sleeper, Mr. Heller, and that storm last night must have drowned out any commotion…”
“You didn’t smell smoke? You didn’t hear a struggle?”
“No, Mr. Heller,” Christie said, insistently, openly irritated now. “Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have a phone call to make.”
“Phone call?”
Very irritated. “Yes. I’d just been trying to compose myself when you seized upon the moment for conversation. You see, no one as yet has called Lady Oakes.”
Behind him, the front door flew open and Alfred de Marigny stormed in.
Dark hair falling over his forehead like a comma, his eyes wide and almost wild, the bearded Count said, “What’s going on here? Who’s in charge?”
None of the black cops answered, so I told him.
“Colonel Lindop,” I said. I wasn’t tailing him anymore. No need to keep a low profile….
“Harold,” de Marigny blurted at Christie, “what the hell is this dirty business? John Anderson stopped me outside his bank and said Sir Harry’s been killed!”
Christie nodded numbly, then pointed to the living room and said, “I have a long-distance call to make.”
Then he walked into the l
iving room, with de Marigny-casually dressed, blue shirt, tan slacks, no socks-tagging along.
I moved to the doorway, to eavesdrop on Christie’s side of the phone conversation with Lady Oakes, but couldn’t hear much. There was too much chatter in the hallway-not from the cops, but from a group of well-to-do-looking whites who were gathered down near the kitchen. Probably a mix of government officials and Oakes’ business associates.
Far too many people on hand for a crime scene. This was as bad as the fucking Lindbergh case, everybody and his damn dog tramping through the place.
I watched the silent movie of Christie speaking on the phone to Lady Oakes, de Marigny standing nearby, somewhat impatiently. Finally the Count tapped Christie on the shoulder, like a dancer cutting in.
De Marigny took the receiver.
Christie watched with obvious distaste as de Marigny spoke to his mother-in-law; he spoke louder than Christie, but his thick accent kept me from catching much of it. Obviously he was paying his condolences and asking what he could do to help.
And at least three times he asked her (and this I could hear-he was insistent) to have his wife, Nancy, get in touch with him as soon as possible.
De Marigny hung up the phone and looked at Christie, who turned his back on the Count and headed toward the hallway, and me.
“Why wasn’t I called, Harold? Why did I have to hear about this on the street?”
Christie mumbled something, brushing past me. De Marigny was on his heels.
“Count de Marigny,” Lindop said.
The Colonel was positioned in front of them like a traffic cop, as if to make them stop.
They stopped.
“I regret to inform you that Sir Harry Oakes is dead. Foul play is indicated.”
“When exactly was the body found?” de Marigny asked.
“At seven this morning.”
He scowled. “My God, man! It’s almost eleven o’clock-this is my father-in-law who’s been murdered! Why wasn’t I contacted?”
“No slight was intended. We’ve been busy. A crime has been committed.”
De Marigny’s wide lips pressed together sullenly. Then he said, “I demand to view the body!”
“No,” Lindop said, softly but flatly. “I would suggest you go home, Count. And make yourself available, should we have any questions.”
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