Bony - 06 - The Bone is Pointed

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Bony - 06 - The Bone is Pointed Page 14

by Arthur W. Upfield


  “Cut his throat and bleed him on to the bark,” instructed the chief in the Kalchut language.

  This the second fellow did, using a curved sheet of bark already fouled with congealed blood. He and his companion were entirely naked save for their feet that were encased with feathers. Obeying another order given by Nero, the man who had replenished the fire brought a striped linen mattress case still containing a large quantity of feathers.

  By now both Wandin and Nero had removed their trousers and had taken a dust bath. They sat on the ground, and, when the bark carrying the fresh blood was brought to them, each in turn plunged his feet into the blood. Then they sat together with their feet buried among the feathers in the mattress. Tea was made and given them in jam tins instead of pannikins, and, in order that their “insides” might be strong to project magic, they ate strips of kangaroo flesh, raw and bloody. Said Nero:

  “Where that Bony feller camped to-night?”

  “He’s camped on the veranda of Green Swamp hut. He always camps on the veranda, never inside the hut.”

  “You pick up any more cigarette ends?”

  “Not for many days. Bony feller knows we picked them up. He’s a cunning feller. So he puts his cigarette ends in his pocket and burns them when he makes a fire.”

  “What Bony feller do all day?” continued Nero.

  “He track about sandhills and then all along both sides of boundary fence crossing the Channels.”

  Wandin chuckled, saying:

  “Bony feller won’t track much longer. Before the moon grows round again he’ll be dead. The mauia bark said so when I burned it.”

  The eyes of the two camped here flashed whitely in the firelight.

  “What you do—bone him?” one asked, his voice fearful.

  Nero nodded, replying:

  “Bony feller come to know too much. Presently he get to know more. That’s no good to the Kalchut. When me and Wandin gone, you two will lie down and sleep and forget us, eh?”

  It was an order, and the campers nodded understandingly. Then Nero and Wandin withdrew their feet from the mattress and detached from the masses about them all those feathers not securely glued. Great care was exercised in this; and then, satisfied that none would become detached from those remain­ing, they arose and walked into the moonlit night, Wandin following his chief.

  Eventually the pair arrived at one of the depressions or channels on which no herbage or scrub grew, and they ad­vanced boldly along this depression until the netted barrier was reached. They were most careful in climbing the barrier, both pausing to be sure that no feather had been detached by the wire barbs. And so, presently, they arrived at the western extremity of the high ground on which were the Green Swamp hut and well.

  Now the moon’s light fell strongly upon the front of the hut, glinted in bars on the iron roof, fell upon the motion­less figure lying on the veranda floor covered with a blanket. Nero and Wandin crouched on the warm moonlit ground less than two hundred yards from the sleeping Bony. With his hands Nero pushed the sand before him into a long ridge to serve as a protection to him and his companion, and to prevent their victim from dreaming of the ancestral camps in which lived their respective mothers, for such a dream would tell him who the bone pointers were.

  On their side of the sand ridge Wandin buried the six bones and the eagle’s claws of the boning apparatus. Nero from his dilly-bag took a ball of porcupine-grass gum and proceeded to knead it into the form of a plate. Having done this he took from his dilly-bag a full twenty of Bony’s dis­carded cigarette ends, placed these on the gum plate and then turned up the circular edge to enclose them into a completed ball. With the ball of gum, containing matter that had once been one with the victim, on the ground between them, the two men crouched over it and began to “sing” it with their magic.

  “Bony feller may you die,” muttered Nero.

  “Bony feller may you die sure and slow like the bark said,” muttered Wandin.

  “May you groan like a bull-frog.”

  “May your liver bleed and be drowned in its blood.”

  “May your bones become like sand.”

  “May you sick when you eat.”

  “May you be hungry and still sick when you eat.”

  “May you howl like a dingo.”

  “May you groan like a bull-frog.”

  “May you sit down and roll on the ground.”

  “May you die thirsty.”

  “May you die with blood in your mouth.”

  Each man spat upon the gum ball. Nero dug from the ground the buried boning apparatus—five sharply pointed little bones attached to one end of a long length of human hair string, and one small pointed bone and two eagle’s claws fastened to the other end of the string. And while Wandin repeated all the curses they had sung into the gum ball, Nero forced the point of each bone and the tip of the claws into the ball, so that claws and bones might take from the “sung” gum ball the curses to be transmitted to the victim. Thus was the evil magic sung into the cigarette stubs, that once had been in contact with the victim, to be sent through the bones and the claws into the body opened to receive it by the mauia stone dust.

  Nero passed the eagle’s claws to Wandin, himself retaining the five pointed bones. He knelt facing the sleeping Bony, and Wandin took a similar position behind him. With the human hair string connecting the five bones and the single bone and the claws, as well as connecting the two men, they pointed bones and claws at Bony and solemnly repeated all their curses. So from the tips of bones and claws their magic sped through the air to enter the body of the man asleep.

  For a full quarter-hour they repeated their curses, after which Nero placed the boning apparatus in his dilly-bag and then gravely handed to Wandin the ball of gum in which were embedded the cigarette ends.

  Wandin rose to his feet to walk away in a wide circular course that took him to the rear of the hut. A soundless black shadow casting on the ground a shadow as black, he cautiously moved round the hut wall, reached the end of the veranda, edged close and closer to the sleeping Bony, and deposited the gum ball on the ground a few inches from his head.

  As it had come to the hut, so the shadow departed to re­join the chief of the Kalchut tribe.

  Chapter Fourteen

  The Bomb

  IT was the third Friday in the month, a day when Old Lacy sat on the bench in the small courthouse at Opal Town, and this particular day in early summer was windless and heavy with heat. The birds inhabiting the vicinity of the Karwir homestead drowsed in the bloodwoods lining the creek, their calls and their chatterings stilled by the necessity of keeping wide their beaks. All the morning the musical ring of hammer on iron and anvil had issued from the blacksmith’s shop, but this, too, ceased when the cook beat upon his iron triangle calling the hands to lunch. The ensuing silence was disturbed only by an occasional blowfly beyond the fly-netting of the long veranda where Diana Lacy sat in a lounge chair pretend­ing to read.

  The luncheon table had been prepared on this same ver­anda—for two. Already the house gong had sounded, and the girl’s slim fingers beat an impatient tattoo on the arm of her chair. Except for this nervous betrayal she appeared calm and, as usual, mistress of herself. Yet she was feeling slight excitement as she awaited the person who was to lunch with her.

  When the door at the far end of the veranda was opened, the drumming of her fingers instantly ceased, memory still vivid of that occasion when she had first met Mr Napoleon Bonaparte at the horse yards. Her blue eyes with the violet irises continued to stare at the printed page, and did not glance upward to meet the eyes of the Karwir guest until he came to stand before her.

  “I hope I have not delayed lunch over long, Miss Lacy,” Bony said, gravely. “It was a little difficult to take the first step from under the shower.”

  Almost impersonally she studied him: his suit of tussore silk, his white canvas shoes, the entire polished grooming of him. It was as though her mind was still commanded by what she
had been reading. Before rising, she said:

  “You have caused no inconvenience, Mr Bonaparte. The weather dictates a cold lunch. My father and brother have gone to Opal Town to-day, so you will have to put up with my demands to be amused. Will you take that chair?”

  “Thank you.”

  Bony assisted the girl to be seated at the table, before he took his place opposite her and then moved the vase of flowers lightly to one side.

  “I met Mr Lacy and your brother on the road this morn­ing,” he told her. “Evidently your father prefers a car to an aeroplane. He takes a great interest in court work, I under­stand.”

  “Yes. He likes to feel he’s a dictator. I have often sat in court and watched him. He fines all culprits two pounds and costs, and, should one attempt to argue, he shouts him down. I suppose you are accustomed to being a dictator all the time.”

  “A dictator! Why, Miss Lacy, I am the victim of several dictators. Colonel Spendor, my wife and my children are to be numbered among them.”

  “But what of your victims? Don’t they regard you as a kind of dictator?”

  Bony smiled. “Their nemesis, perhaps,” he corrected, adding as an afterthought: “And then only when they’ve been appre­hended. Before being apprehended they think they are the dictators, issuing orders for me to follow. Then they reveal astonishment when they are informed that, as the old song puts it, their day’s work is done.”

  For a little while they gave attention to the food, and then Diana, setting down her knife and fork, said, slightly frown­ing:

  “You know, you puzzle me. I’ve heard you say that you never fail to unravel a mystery. Is that really so, or were you boasting?”

  “Since I became a member of the Criminal Investigation Branch I must have conducted at least a hundred investiga­tions,” Bony replied. “Some were quite trivial; several were very involved. No, I have not yet failed to complete satisfac­torily any case I have taken up.”

  “Do you really think you will succeed in completing this one?”

  “I can see no reason why I should not.”

  Again Diana gave attention to her plate. She did not look at Bony when she put her next question.

  “May I assume from that that you are—what shall I say?—well forward in your investigation?”

  “Er—hardly. As a matter of fact, I have made very little progress. This disappearance case, taken up so long after it actually began, is proving to be most difficult. Even so, I see no reason why I should not succeed in finding out what hap­pened to Jeffery Anderson. Success depends only on the factor of time.”

  “And luck?”

  Bony considered, Diana regarding him with her eyes turned slightly upward as her face was turned down to her plate. She was very much mistress of herself and inclined to under­estimate the man she could not bowl out socially.

  “And luck,” Bony repeated. “Yes, I suppose a little depends on luck, if coincidence may be regarded as providing an in­vestigator with luck. I think luck plays only a small part, cer­tainly a much smaller part than the mistakes committed by the criminal. Even in my present investigation, I have been favoured by one bad mistake made by someone.”

  “One bad mistake!” the girl echoed. “What was that?”

  “As I have said, time is the only practical factor on the side of the investigator, Miss Lacy,” Bony went on, gently ignoring her inquiry. “Given unlimited time, no investigator need fail.”

  Perhaps Diana suspected a trap, or perhaps she feared rebuff if she pressed her question concerning the mistake he mentioned.

  “The sole basis of my reputation for uninterrupted successes is my inability to leave an investigation once I have begun it,” Bony said. “I suppose I have conducted at least a hundred investigations as I think I mentioned. The majority of them were completed within a week or two. Some, however, occu­pied my attention for many months, eleven months being spent on one. I hope you will not become bored with me should I have to spend eleven months on this Anderson case.”

  She raised her head and actually smiled at him. It was as though strain had relaxed. She said:

  “Eleven months is a long time, Mr Bonaparte. Wouldn’t your wife and children come to miss you?”

  “Alas! I fear that my unfortunate wife, and my no less unfortunate children, have formed the habit of missing me. Still, were I a sailor they would be even more unfortunate. Then, of course, there is another side to these prolonged absences from home. We are an affectionate family, owing probably to the effect of absence on the human heart.”

  “Now you are being cynical.”

  “They say that the cynic is one who never sees a good quality in a man, and who never fails to see a bad one,” said Bony, smiling. “That being so, I am no cynic.”

  Diana appeared to think the conversation was drifting, for she said:

  “From what you tell me you seem to have a free hand with regard to the time taken in your investigations.”

  “Yes. Oh yes! I see to that. Punctually at the end of the first fortnight that I am away from home my wife writes imploring me to return, and my immediate superior demands to know what I am doing. Then, after the first month, Colonel Spendor writes to announce that he has given me the sack, the word ‘sack’ being his. Having received the sack, I then have to interview the Commissioner and have myself reinstated without loss of pay. Colonel Spendor is the kind of man who likes to sack me, and then likes to feel the glow of generosity when reinstating me.”

  “From what you, say, Colonel Spendor must be more or less like my father.”

  “More, Miss Lacy, much more. Pardon me for seeming familiarity, but you and I have something in common. We both know how to manage human lions for their own good.”

  Bony’s effort to warm the girl towards him failed. The barrier she had erected between them refused to give to his assault. For a second or two he gave attention to his food, while his mind worked at this problem of the immovable barrier.

  That his reading of this charming Australian girl was at fault he declined to admit. She was a little white aristocrat; he an Australian half-caste. It was not, he felt sure, a sense or knowledge of racial superiority that formed the unbreakable barrier, else she would not have been here sitting at table with him. He had never seen her smile with real warmth, nor de­tected warmth in her voice. And yet she was warm, a chip off the old block. No, it was not racial superiority that had built the barrier. There was an entirely different explanation, pos­sibly knowledge of secret events, or a suspicion of them, which affected her or those to whom she was loyal.

  Loyalty! That was it. This vivid young woman was oppos­ing him because of loyalty to someone his presence at Karwir might ultimately affect. There was no hint of admiration in his eyes when he raised them and spoke to his hostess.

  “I like lions, human lions,” he told her. “When one has removed a lion’s skin one finds a new-shorn lamb. My chief blasts and damns me, his face scarlet, his eyes globes of ice. He shouts. Yes, he likes to shout. He shouts at me, telling me to get out of his sight. He loves to tell me I’m no policeman. He tells me I am a rebel who ought to be shot for insubordin­ation. But, Miss Lacy, he has never said I was a fool. Tell me, please, whom it was you met at the bloodwood-tree on the boundary fence that day I arrived here.”

  “Whom did I—I beg your pardon?”

  Bony’s voice remained mildly conversational when he re­peated the question. He had timed his bomb to explode at the close of luncheon, and now he leaned forward over the table and offered her a cigarette from his open case. Her gaze centred on his guileless eyes, her hand gropingly extracted a cigarette and then a match flared and was held in service. She accepted the service before rising indignation took her to her feet to stare at him, as he, too, stood up.

  “I consider you to be impertinent,” she cried. “You ask a question smacking of innuendo.”

  “Indeed no, Miss Lacy. I asked a quite straightforward question. I’m sorry, but I must press for the answer.�
��

  “I refuse to give it, Mr Bonaparte.”

  “After that meeting between you and someone who came from Meena, the blacks most thoroughly wiped away all traces of it,” Bony said, well satisfied with the effects of his bomb. There was less anger than mortification in her eyes. “The action of the blacks indicates, or appears to indicate, that either you or the person you met desired that I should not know of the meeting. Apparently the object of the meeting was a secret to be kept at all costs. Were I sure that the meet­ing was a quite harmless one between, let us say, two lovers, I should certainly not even have mentioned it. Since I am not sure, I must continue to press you for the answer to my question.”

  Now anger held full sway in the blue eyes, and furiously the girl cried:

  “I still refuse to answer your question. It does not concern you.”

  After this declaration they stood on either side of the table, Diana with her head thrown back, her breast quickly rising and falling, her eyes blazing; Bony passive, his eyes lakes of blue ice. He wished ardently to break her, to smash down the barrier she had erected between them, to know her true self.

  “Might it be that your answer would implicate the person you met in the disappearance of Jeffery Anderson?” he said in an effort to obtain an admission of the name of the person she had met. “Recent events point to the fact that the people who wiped away traces of the meeting have come to fear me for what I will discover concerning Anderson’s fate.”

  “You are quite wrong. I will not answer a question that concerns my private life only. Whom I meet is my affair, not yours.”

  Bony sighed in mock defeat and, bowing stiffly, turned and walked away to the far veranda door. Having placed his hand on the brass knob, he left the door and returned to the girl’s side. She stared up at him, her breath held, her lips parted. She heard him say, his voice still provokingly calm:

  “The next time you use the telephone at Pine Hut, remem­ber to refrain from making in the dust on the note shelf many little crosses.”

 

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