“The idea of burying a body deep in a haystack is good, but to conceal a body effectually he should have burrowed down through the foundations of the stack and dug a grave in the earth. With the stack above the grave the blowflies would not have been attracted, and the stack eventually could have been sold or cut into chaff. All that was lacking, John, was calmness at a critical moment, and, fortunately for humanity, the necessary calmness of mind is, usually, impossible in a murderer.
“Landon having broken down and confessed everything, we know that he and his paramour were in George Loftus’s bed when the returning farmer knocked at the door. According to Landon, he only desired the woman for her sex attraction, but she was madly infatuated with him. A few minutes before Loftus knocked, the restless dogs had awakened them, and during those minutes when they sleepily debated why the dogs barked they did not hear a car pass along the main road. Therefore, when Loftus did demand admittance, they could have inferred that he walked home, that he had not driven his own car or had been brought home in any other.
“It does appear, and, having studied Mrs Loftus, it is more than credible, that what followed was a re-enactment of Macbeth. The woman urged; the man resisted the suggestion. But the woman’s personality was the stronger, and the man obeyed her will. When she had lit the lamp in the kitchen Landon took a position where he would be behind the door when Mrs Loftus opened it. George Loftus stepped inside and Landon shot him through the head.
“They stripped the body. Landon dealt with it, and Mrs Loftus dealt with the clothes and articles they contained, cutting off the buttons, and, with the cigar case, silver match-box, watch and chain, buried them under the hearth in the japanned box. The collar pin, found among the notes in the woman’s mattress, and which Wallace swears Loftus was wearing when they returned from Perth, is, perhaps, the most damning evidence against them after the proof that the bullet found in the dead man’s skull was fired by the revolver I picked up near the road crossing the old York Road, and which Landon admits is his.
“And now, John, for your last question. Mr Jelly’s part in the mystery concerning the disappearance of George Loftus is easily explained. He thought, as many people did, that the police had given up or deferred their inquiries. Believing that Loftus had not voluntarily disappeared, being suspicious that Mrs Loftus and Landon were lovers, he determined to do a little investigating himself. The first time he visited the homestead he was shot, and had, himself, to disappear till the slight wound he had received had healed sufficiently to enable him to conceal it. The second time he went to the farm he arrived after his daughter and myself, taking advantage of the farmers’ meeting as I did; and, not being satisfied with feeding the dogs and thrashing one, he regrettably poisoned them. I do not agree with that act. The poor dogs were only loyal to their master. That is all, John. Even had Landon not confessed, you would have had more than enough evidence with which to hang him.”
“Jelly must be an amateur detective,” Muir said in his rapid manner.“Strange bird, Jelly! Did you know- But when are you going back to Brisbane? Old Spender will be almost a lunatic by this time.”
“Colonel Spender is a man of quick temper. He will not live as long as I will. The burning of life is hastened by violent emotion. I shall return to Queensland when I have finished a little private work totally unconnected with the police.” Bony rose to his feet, and then added, when they began thetownward walk: “This case should help you, John. Take all the credit you can. Never fail to blow your own trumpet, for worldly success depends upon one’s ability to do that. Think of our alleged statesman: how they gab, gab, gab aboutthemselves . Great fellows! Blue blood in them, John. Copy them, and you willrise high. Fail to do so, and you will remain hidden as are the scientific researchers-as I am.”
John Muir gripped Bony affectionately by the arm, saying:
“Bony, old man, thanks very much! You’re a damned decent sort.”
With well-controlled gravity Bony said, in order to hide how much he was touched by the other’s act and words:
“When you are Commissioner you will give me far less worry regarding your career than you now do as a detective. The quicker I push you into the gilded chair, the sooner my worry will be removed.”
Several days passed before Bony received the long-expected summons from the Merredin postmaster. In that official’s office he was shown a telegram addressed to “Jelly-South Burracoppin.” The message read: “Come Adelaide.” On the reverse side of the form were written in a scrawl the words: “Sunflower Jelly-South Burracoppin.”
“The clerk who received this telegram this morning remembered your previous inquiry and took special note of the sender,” the official explained. “I am, therefore, able to tell you that the sender is a Mrs Chandler, who lives at 18 Mark Street, of this town.
“I am very much obliged to you,” Bony said earnestly. “Do you know anything about this Mrs Chandler?”
“Next to nothing. She is, however, Mrs Westbury’s sister.”
“Indeed! Well, I’ll go along and interview her. Again, I thank you very much. Good-bye!”
The woman who answered his knock on the door of 18 Mark Street was matronly and pleasant.
“Madam, you dispatched this morning a telegram to a Mr Jelly, of South Burracoppin,” Bony stated sternly.
At once Mrs Chandler froze.
“I don’t know what you mean,” she said. “Who are you?”
“I am a detective employed by the Telegraph Department,” he lied. “I am looking into the matter of a false declaration made on the back of a telegraph form. The counter clerk-”
“I can say nothing about it,” the woman cut in. “You had better see my brother-in-law, Sergeant Westbury, at the police station.”
“Oh! Thank you. I will call on the sergeant,” Bony said less frigidly, and, after raising his hat politely, walked off to the police station, hoping against hope that his long-growing suspicions about Mr Jelly were not proved truth and fact by the genial sergeant.
“Good day, sir!” exclaimed Sergeant Westbury, heaving himself to his feet when Bony entered the station office. The Burracoppin case being finalized, Westbury could find no further excuse for not paying due respect to his superior in rank. “Sit down, sir. Glad to see you-glad to see you, sir.”
“Can you tell me, sergeant,” Bony began when he was making a cigarette, “can you tell me why your sister-in-law sent a telegram to Mr Jelly, of South Burracoppin, this morning, in which she said: ‘Come Adelaide’?”
“Eh! Well, yes, I can-I can.” Sergeant Westbury became red of face and neck. “Mr Muir could have told you.”
“Not wishing to put such a question to Muir, I refrained. I would not have put it to you, only I am pressed for time and must take the shortest cut, via yourself.”
Sergeant Westbury came round his desk, drew close to Bony, stooped, and whispered into his ear.
“So that’s it,” Bony said softly. “I have been afraid it was. If I hadn’t been so overruled by vanity when detailing my investigations to Muir, I would have sought his assistance. What you tell me explains Mr Jelly’s morbid interest in criminology, and the roundabout way arranged for those telegrams to be sent him, and the success with which his extraordinary business was kept secret.” Standing up, he held out his hand, adding: “I shall be leaving for Brisbane bytonight’s express. Good-bye, sergeant! I have been much pleased with your valuable collaboration, and I have remembered you in my report.”
“The pleasure is mine, sir-mine, sir-mine, sir,” stuttered the delighted Westbury.
Slowly Bony sauntered to the Merredin Hospital.
Eric Hurley had given his blood to his sweetheart and now was recuperating in the Merredin Hotel as the guest of Mr Jelly. This afternoon Bony found Lucy much brighter and stronger in her bed in an isolated corner of a veranda ward of the hospital. When he had taken the chair at the head of the bed he looked down to find her regarding him shyly.
“I am afraid that being kind to me
has delayed you returning to your home,” she said. “Sunflower was here this morning, and she brought the table centre I wished to give to your wife. It was fortunate that I finished it before-before-”
When she hesitated to refer to that night of terror Bony said swiftly:
“You are kindness itself. I shall never forget you or Sunflower. Sunflower promises to write to me sometimes. She is coming with your father and Eric at five o’clock. They are bringing afternoon tea, and I have induced the sister to lend us her teapot and permit us to boil water. We will have a kind of family tea, because I leave for Brisbane tonight on the express. As your father has business in Adelaide, we will travel together as far as that city.”
“Has-has he had another telegram?”
“Yes, but you need not worry about it,” he assured her with much earnestness. “As I promised you, I have found out what is his business, and it is really nothing of which he might be ashamed, although its nature is highly secretive. I am going to ask you to refrain from asking me questions about it, to be satisfied with what I tell you, and to believe me when I repeat that Mr Jelly is doing nothing of which he might be ashamed. Excepting the State of Queensland, your father’s extensive knowledge of criminology is constantly in demand by the law officers of the Australian States; if Mr Jelly ever had to come to Queensland on his particular business, I should have known what I know about him today.”
“You make me so happy,” she cried softly. “I have been so afraid. I shall not now mind his going away. If he had only told me, it would not have been so bad.”
“Well, as he promised me, he is going to give it up. When he returns from Adelaide he will be called to Perth, and after that he will go away no more. He has given me his word: he will keep it.” Bony broke off to laugh. “You know,” he continued, “you know, it is always wise to counter an attack with an attack. Your father sternly demanded what I meant by taking you to the Loftus homestead. Instead of expressing my real and honestly heartfelt regret, I counter-attacked by pointing out to him that he was not following his duty as a father by sneaking off now and then without telling you why he went away and where he went to. I reminded him of his promise to me; I told him that his goings on were disgraceful, and finally I told him that if he did not give you and Sunflower more attention that he would hear further from me.”
Lucy sighed. Her eyes were very bright.
“I am glad there is no need to worry any more,” she murmured.
“There is none whatever. I solved another little mystery this morning. I found out that your father and Eric have just paid the deposit on that vacant farm south of your own home. Eric must be leaving the Rabbit Department. I remember the farm they have bought. There is a very nice little house on it, isn’t there?”
“Oh, Bony! True?” sheasked, the fingers of one hand now at her lips.
He nodded. “And I’ve another piece of information,” he said.
“What is that?”
“Sunflower says that she will never marry anyone because she cannot marry me,” Bony explained gravely, and then laughed in his low, attractive manner. The expected visitors appeared at the farther end of the ward. Quickly Bony leaned over the patient. He said:
“Don’t tell them that we know about that farm deal, will you?”
Again Lucy sighed, her soul strangely at peace.
Bony’s twinkling eyes beamed upon Mr Jelly advancing towards them. The cigar-shaped figure and the halo of grey hair above the farmer’s ears made of him a picture of benevolence. Hurley smiled and nodded at Bony before falling on his knees beside the bed. Little Sunflower drew close to Bony, took one of his brown hands, and squeezed it.
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Landon AnswersThe Riddle
MICK LANDON had not slept well. He awoke when the last day was full come. He lay with his eyes open for a long time whilst his mind struggled to dispel the terrible nightmare during which he had tried to flee from the monster, unseen and beyond the power of his imagination to create.
Presently his eyes became focused on a blot of discoloration in the centre of the whitewashed ceiling above him, and this mark, no larger than a crown piece, first puzzled him and then brought, with ever-increasing swiftness, realization of his situation. Now the familiar mental lethargy swept over his brain once again. It was a struggle against physical lassitude to rise from his bed. Dully he stared at the uniformed Recording Angel seated beyond the door grille of his cell.
There was a table there, and a warder had sat at it day and night for nearly three weeks, writing down every word spoken by him and to him and describing every action. Three warders took up the duty in timed shifts, and these Landon now knew to the individual wrinkles on their stern faces. Landon opened his mouth to speak, knew that the man on duty there would not answer him, refrained, and dressed slowly.
The chaplain came. The grille was unlocked to admit him and immediately relocked. He spoke of “Our Lord” and “Christ”, and of the “salvation of souls”. He suggested prayer, and, like an automaton, Landon sank on his knees beside the minister. He heard not a word of the plea to Christ to intercede with the Father for mercy on his soul. Without knowing what he said, he muttered the words of the Lord’s Prayer.
It was strange how he felt that he was sleepwalking while being fully conscious of it, as though his mind was living one life and his body living another, the two lives running parallel, inseparable. His mental entity thought how strange it was that the minister’s face was so haggard, whilst his bodily entity pointed out that the chaplain wanted badly a long holiday. When the minister reached the grille, and the warder was about to open it, Landon touched him on the shoulder. He said with effort: “Is it-is it today?”
Shocked by the knowledge that his spiritual charge had failed to understand the purport of his recent prayers, the minister could only nod his head in a helpless gesture before quickly making his escape.
A few minutes later a warder appeared with a tray and was admitted. He set the tray on the small clamped table.
“Your breakfast, Landon,” he said kindly when Landon looked at him almost stupidly. “Come and sit down to it. We managed to wangle some nice crisp bacon and an egg. And a pot of strong coffee.”
Before he sat down on the stool clamped to the floor like the table the wretched man leaned over the table and touched the warder on the coat sleeve. He said: “Is it-is it today?”
As the minister had done, the warder nodded. Then Landon sat down and mechanically ate his last breakfast. He ate slowly. He had utterly lost the sense of taste. Even the coffee was tasteless. The warder produced a carton of cigarettes, offered them to him, struck a match. Landon found, too, that he had lost his sense of smell. He saw the smoke which was expelled from his lungs but could not smell it. The warder withdrew, and Landon began to pace the cell.
His back was towards the grille when the doctor arrived. Hearing the lock click back, Landon swung round with suddenly flashing eyes, which quickly became lacklustre when he saw whowas this visitor. “Well, Landon? How do you feel?” the medico inquired briskly.
“All right, doctor. Is it-is it today?”
With the ball of his index finger on Landon’s pulse, the doctor nodded as the minister had done, as the warder had done. “You’ll want a bracer,” he said less briskly. “I’ve brought you one. It will make things easier.”
When Landon had drunk the draught in the aluminium tumbler he said:
“What is the time, sir?” To which the doctor replied:
“Don’t know. My watch has gone bung. Don’t worry.”
When the doctor had gone Landon leaned against the grille, his fingers clenched round the bars. The recording warder looked stolidly at his book-or appeared to be so doing. “What’s the time, warder?” Landon asked.
The warder made no reply. He was writing in his book.
Presently to Landon came the sound of quick steps of several men in the passage beyond his line of vision. The many footsteps were tim
ed like those of a squad of soldiers. The warder stood up. The man’s eyes appeared as though fixed, even though the lids almost obscured them. He did not look at the prisoner.
Beyond the grille two men appeared dressed in civilian clothes. Things they carried gleamed like polished steel. Behind them stood several warders, the chaplain wearing his surplice, the doctor, the governor.
Whilst the two civilians passed into the cell Landon’s gaze was fixed on theweatherbeaten face of the taller, who walked forward towards him. With the coming of this man, whose face he remembered so well, every weight hanging to his muscles was lifted. He became buoyant with life. The lethargy vanished. He wondered why the tall man regarded him with frozen features. The other man slipped behind him. The tall man gripped Landon’s wrists. He said: “It is a time for courage.”
Then Mick Landon knew. He was not a friend, this tall, powerful man with the halo of grey hair resting on his ears. He was-! He was-! Landon screamed.
“Mr Jelly! Mr Jelly! I won’t go! I tell you, I won’t go, Mr Jelly!”
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Murder down under b-4 Page 24