Bony - 09 - Death of a Swagman

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Bony - 09 - Death of a Swagman Page 20

by Arthur W. Upfield


  “No, I haven’t raised Sydney yet,” Lovell told him. “Very sorry, but there seems to be trouble somewhere along the line. There is a heavy official envelope, registered, just in. Addressed to Sergeant Marshall. Posted at Sydney.”

  Chapter Twenty-two

  The Windmill at Work

  WHEN BONY and Sergeant Marshall left Merino in the latter’s car for Sandy Flat it was not possible to see the Walls of China, nor even to locate the cemetery halfway down the long slope. The wind was blowing strongly from a little north of west, sweeping over the world of scrub-tree and shrub in pro­longed gusts reaching a velocity up to forty miles an hour. It raised the sandy dust high so that the sun’s orb was the colour of an unwashed dinner plate.

  “I contacted your district headquarters and spoke to your senior officer,” Bony told Marshall. “He’s sending two con­stable by car.”

  “Say anything about … Florence?”

  “Yes. And I asked him to be kind enough to let me finish the job. Said he would be only too pleased.”

  “Haven’t found him particularly nice. Always expects too much too soon.”

  “They all do, Marshall,” Bony stated emphatically.

  Neither spoke again for a minute, then Marshall urged pleadingly:

  “Break it out, Bony. Did you expect to find my girl at Sandy Flat?”

  “Yes, I did. You know last night when I was awakened by the mill in action, I crawled on hands and knees to the door of the meat house and then faced the hut. For a little while I stopped still, staring at the place. I saw that the door was shut, and I wondered for a moment if I had closed that door or not. The importance of the question was submerged by the greater question whether the mill had broken loose or had been deliberately released to draw me outside so that I could be shot.

  “Then, when the postmaster was with me in the office and he was about to leave, he mentioned that he would lock the door of the exchange room when I was speaking to Sydney. That remark stuck in my mind after he had left and produced the association of ideas, sending my mind back to the period when I wondered if I had or had not shut the hut door. Then I remembered quite clearly that I had not done so when I left it for the meat house.

  “That being so, the man who wore hessian on his feet and a hood over his head must have done so. He must have done so whilst I slept. And why had he gone into the hut … if not to leave Rose Marie inside? Acting on that supposition, I chose to requisition Mrs Sutherland and her car in preference to calling on you to take me down there.”

  “I still don’t understand why the swine took her there. Do you?” asked Marshall.

  “Not yet. I have a glimmering of an idea, though.”

  “Have you got any idea where windmills come into the picture?”

  “Only a glimmering of one.”

  “Well, what are the glimmerings?”

  Marshall spoke sharply, still suffering from strain.

  “There are several nebulous theories floating around inside my cranium, Marshall. They are all so silly that I am unable to voice them. How did you get on with young Jason?”

  “Oh! When I arrived at the garage young Jason was shut­ting up. On seeing me, he rushed to me and poured out a flood of questions concerning Florence’s disappearance. When was she first missed? How long had she been out of the house? Did I think she walked out or did I think she was carried out? He was properly upset.

  “I asked him where the old man was, and he said he was still at the house. Hadn’t made an appearance. Expected he was washing up the breakfast things, as he always did. He himself was shutting up the place so that he could join in the search for my girl.”

  “Did you see him when we left the doctor’s house?”

  “No.”

  They came to the gate left open by Bony on the previous trip, and this time Bony alighted and closed it before they proceeded now on station property.

  “What did you do with young Jason after you saw me clear out with Mrs Sutherland?” he asked when again beside Mar­shall.

  “Well, I had told him that, having been friendly with Florence and all the other kids, he might be able to help us, and we were on the way to the office when we saw you getting off with Mrs Sutherland. That stonkered me somewhat, so I told him we’d both join in the search till you came back.”

  “You told him, then, that I am a police officer?”

  “Yes. You had yourself been broadcasting the fact, and so I told him that you were in charge of the investigation, and he had no need to be hostile to you because of Redman’s deal­ing with him. I wanted to keep him easy, you see.”

  “Ah, well! We can collect him when we get back. And after we’ve had a yarn with him we’ll invite the Rev. Llewellyn James to call on us.”

  “Can I be present?”

  “If you promise to behave yourself.”

  “Rats!”

  “Pardon my levity at such a time, Marshall,” Bony said quietly. “But we have to treat James with velvet gloves on our hands, as it were, with perhaps a horseshoe inside them. Pull up outside the hut door. We’ll have a look inside for a start.”

  On getting out of the car, Bony peered through the now white sand mist. He could see the dim shapes of the reservoir tank and the mill head but not the mill stand. The Walls of China were completely dissolved in the whirling flurry. The very ground seemed to be a moving white fog.

  Inside the hut the wind tore through the lifted drop window and out through the open door. Bony was thankful to observe that the mark of blood beneath the bunk was obliterated by the white sand brought inside by the wind. There was nothing to find, nothing to help. He closed the window, shutting out the wind, and said:

  “I’d like to know why the killer brought Rose Marie to this place. Why here, instead of dumping her anywhere in the scrub? He thought he had killed her when he dropped her on the bunk, otherwise he would have come back to the hut after climbing from the tank stand. And why climb up to that tank stand? I’ll go up there and try to work it out.”

  They left the hut, Marshall fastening the door. Bony walked across to the meat house, glanced inside to see his swag and tucker box as he had left them. The wind assisted them over to the tank stand.

  “Look out that you’re not blown off,” advised the sergeant.

  “The sand’s soft if I am. Phew! What a place to be on such a day!”

  Bony climbed the iron ladder and, when standing on the edge of the flooring, was just able to reach up and grasp the edge of the open tank, precisely as he had observed the hooded man do. Foot by foot he went around the tank, now and then glancing back to note the position of the hut and meat house. Eventually meat house and hut were blocked from his view by the curving bulge of the tank. He proceeded another two yards and then stopped.

  There was nothing amiss with the tank itself. There was here no easier access to the top of the tank, presuming that the hooded man had reached this side of it to put something into it. There was nothing out of place with the flooring of the stand. Why should he have come here? Why should he have stayed here for at least forty minutes—the period that Bony had watched from the shadow of the meat house?

  With both hands gripping the top edge of the tank, Bony hauled himself up so that he was able to peer over at its edge. There was nothing additional to what he expected to see—the wind-disturbed surface of clear water. Despite the wind’s action on the surface, he could see down to the bottom of the tank. There was nothing inside the tank save the water.

  Having lowered himself again to the flooring, he turned his body so that he came to stand with his back to the tank. All that he could see then was the mill, the head of it a little higher than himself. The three lines of troughing extended outward into the white murk.

  Marshall came and stood looking up at him.

  “Release the mill!” Bony shouted down.

  The mill sprang into action immediately the draw pin was removed from the lever bar, and so vigorous was its action that Marshall had to ad
just the bar to prevent the vanes from meeting the wind full-faced. Water began to pour into the tank at Bony’s back.

  The direction of the wind had not altered since the previous night, and although Marshall had partially braked the mill, the angle of the vane wheel to Bony was not markedly differ­ent from what it had been when the hooded man stood in that place. For several minutes Bony watched the working mill. He was oblivious to the wind and the discomfort of the flying sand mist. He could hear above the howl of the wind about the tank the “clang … clang … clang” of the labour­ing mill.

  Was that harsh, monotonous sound of pulling iron music in the ears of the hooded man? Were the swiftly moving vanes, even then gleaming dully in an almost solid disk, the reason why the hooded man had stood so long where he was stand­ing? There was no sand mist last night to obscure the moon’s silvery light. Did that revolving wheel have an hypnotic influ­ence? If so, what had that to do with the killing of Kendall, and what with the attempted murder of little Rose Marie?

  To Bony the light of day appeared to increase. He glanced up to the sun, only to observe that its pastiness was the same. He began the journey back to the ladder. He might easily have slipped and broken a leg, for his mind was not on the job of getting to the ground.

  “Well, what d’you know?” inquired Marshall.

  “I cannot find anything up there,” replied Bony. “Better shut off the mill, and then we’ll get back to town.”

  Before reaching the station gate on the main road they met a car. Both vehicles came to a standstill, as the passing was in a difficult place. The driver of the other car backed for several yards and again stopped. Marshall was now able to steer off the track to pass the other car, and when opposite, he and Bony saw that the driver was Mr Watson, and his passengers were the two pressmen.

  “Nice day for an outing,” shouted the sergeant.

  On again, then to the station gate and the main road. Mar­shall tried several times to start the conversation but Bony relapsed into a silence from which he could not be roused. All the way up the incline to the town he sat slumped into his seat, gazing with unseeing eyes through the windscreen.

  “You might like to stop at the doctor’s place and ask about Rose Marie,” he suggested when they had passed the church. “I’ll walk on from there. If your wife is with the child, tell her not to worry about us. We can make ourselves some tea and get our own lunch. Better arrange with Gleeson, too, to relieve him while he has his lunch.”

  “Thanks. I’d like to know how she is.”

  “Of course. Don’t hurry.”

  He entered the police station by the back door, which had been left unlocked, and in the kitchen noted that the time was twenty minutes to one. The fire was out, and he set it going to boil water. That done, he passed along to the office and lifted the telephone. The postmaster replied.

  “You still on duty?” asked Bony.

  “Yes. I thought I might be more useful here. Quite unofficial, you understand, and all that kind of thing, but a long press message was handed in about an hour ago. A lot concerns you. If you care to come over, you could see the original.”

  “Thanks! I will. Get me now Wattle Creek Station, please.”

  The book-keeper answered and Bony asked for Mr Leylan. A minute later he heard the squatter’s voice, and announced himself.

  “Between ourselves, I have quite a lot of work to do here in town,” he explained. “I left Sandy Flat per boot, in a hurry, and I am wondering how the horse will get on for water in the night paddock.”

  “You will not be going back there tonight?”

  “I may. I have been thinking of asking you to send some­one out there to give the animal water, and then put him back into the night paddock in case I should want him before tomorrow night.”

  “Oh yes. I can do that. How’s the investigation going?”

  “Slowly. A fresh development occurred last night,” replied Bony, and then described what had happened to Rose Marie. He heard Leylan exclaim whilst he related the story, out of which he left his own adventure with the hooded man.

  “That place seems to be cursed,” asserted the squatter. “What’s the attraction there for a man to commit his murders?”

  “I wish I knew,” answered Bony. “Tell me now, have you ever found on visiting the place that the water in the reser­voir tank has been overflowing?”

  “Well, yes. It’s peculiar that you asked me that,” Leylan said. “Several times over the last couple of years, when I’ve gone there, I noticed a good deal of water soaked into the ground beneath the tank. Once I made a careful survey of the tank itself to see if it was leaking.”

  “You didn’t attach any significance to it?” pressed Bony.

  “No. You see, when there isn’t a man living there I send a rider out just to see that the tank is full, and to brake the mill to fill it slowly if it isn’t. The fact of the water overflow­ing I put down to bad judgment on the part of the man sent out.”

  “Hum! Thank you. Quite an interesting little point. Well, well. Miss Leylan home today? … She is! Say we’ll ring her a little later to tell her how the child is progressing. Yes, Scott has hopes. Good-bye.”

  Bony had made tea and set the table for lunch when Mar­shall came in.

  “No change,” he said. “Still unconscious. The wife’s watch­ing her. Mrs Sutherland has gone home for some clothes and to take her sister.”

  “Did you see Scott?”

  “No. He had to go out.”

  Bony poured the tea, and the sergeant carved from a leg of mutton. They ate in silence for some time. Then:

  “I have glanced through the contents of that registered envelope you received this morning from Sydney,” Bony said. “The reports give an amount of information on the Jasons, Gleeson, Dr Scott, and Way, dealing with their lives and repu­tations before they came to Merino. Nothing was known at date concerning the other people included in my list. I haven’t got much out of the information sent, for which I am truly thankful.”

  “Oh! Why?”

  “Because I want to finalize this case off my own bat, and if headquarters had supplied a missing link or two of my chain, you and I would receive less credit than is properly ours. Way did time in 1931 for sheep stealing … and that’s about all.”

  Having eaten, Marshall went off to relieve Gleeson for lunch, and Bony walked out to the post office, where in the little room devoted to the telephone exchange he read through the original press message from one of Mr Watson’s col­leagues. Much had been made of the fact that Detective Inspector Napoleon Bonaparte was in charge of the investiga­tion into two murders and the attempted murder of the daughter of Merino’s senior police officer.

  “The sender knows quite a lot about me, doesn’t he?” Bony observed to Mr Lovell. “The padre gets a good notice too. Just too bad. Honestly, I hate publicity. Have you ever heard your children recite a rhyme running: ‘Annabella Miller, what are you doing with that caterpillar?’ ”

  “Yes, often.”

  “Little Rose Marie spoke it quite distinctly when we were bringing her to town, and when she was lying unconscious in Mrs Sutherland’s arms. I was merely wondering if there was any significance in it. How long have you been in Merino?”

  “Too damn long. Eight years,” replied Lovell.

  Bony smiled.

  “If you want a change, write a thousand-word letter to the postmaster-general and tell him what you think about his rotten politics and his rotten post offices, and his rotten radio voice. You’ll be shifted quickly enough. Sound advice … if you want a transfer to a better town. I must be going. Thanks ever so much for your co-operation. Receipt of that registered envelope saved a lot of bother.”

  On leaving the post office, Bony walked slowly back to the police station. He was about to turn in at the gate, when he saw young Jason standing outside the garage doorway. He beckoned to him, and when the young man arrived at the gate he found Bony waiting for him at the open front door.
r />   Chapter Twenty-three

  Two Particular Fish

  “SIT DOWN, Mr. Jason,” Bony said, waving to the chair set opposite the official chair at the table desk. He pushed tobacco pouch and papers across the desk towards young Jason, who nodded and began the task of making a cigarette without removing his gaze from the man he had learned today was a detective inspector.

  “If you think I did it, have another think,” he said, his voice low and menacing. “I could have done in Kendall, but I could not have done in Rose Marie.”

  “Oh! Why?”

  Bony gazed into dark eyes now regarding him with a fixed stare. The greasy cap had been dropped on the floor beside him, and the almost black hair, parted low on the left side, was well brushed. But the eyes were not level and the mouth was not straight, and the left shoulder was lower than the right. The hands manufacturing the cigarette were large and strong. They were capable hands, very capable.

  “You wouldn’t understand if I told you, so I’m not telling you … why.”

  Bony lit a cigarette. Then he said briskly:

  “All right. Now listen to me. There is someone here in Merino who took Rose Marie from her bed last night, carried her away, then hit her on the back of her head with a blunt instrument, took her to Sandy Flat, and dropped her uncon­scious body on the bunk inside the hut. You say that you didn’t do it, and I have not even hinted that you did, and so may I presume that you will assist me to find out who did that foul deed?”

  “It depends,” came the surly answer.

  “Depends! Depends on what?”

  “Nothing.”

  There was no expression in Bony’s eyes as for a half a minute he regarded this unfortunate young man.

  “When Mrs Sutherland and I were bringing Rose Marie back to town she became semi-conscious and she said several times: ‘Annabella Miller, what are you doing with that cater­pillar?’ Did you teach her that little line?”

  The surliness fled from the dark eyes and was replaced by an expression of wistfulness.

 

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