The Barrakee Mystery

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The Barrakee Mystery Page 10

by Arthur W. Upfield


  John Thornton was reading The Pastoral Gazette; his wife was sewing; Ralph, laying down a history of Alexander the Great, began to speak.

  “Dad, Kate and I had two adventures this afternoon,” he said. The girl, hearing him, played still more softly.

  “Oh! And what were they?”

  “We found a wild dog eating a sheep it had killed in the North Paddock.” And the young man graphically described the chase, ending by: “I think, when you see the scalp, that you’ll be pleased to divide between Kate and me your cheque for thirty pounds. It was the ‘Killer’.”

  “The ‘Killer’!” echoed the squatter.

  “Yes. Fawn red coat, with almost black feet. Prick-eared and full curling red tail.”

  “That’s the beast,” John Thornton agreed. “Well! I’m mighty glad you got him, Ralph. Certainly, tomorrow I’ll write you cheques for fifteen pounds apiece, and be very glad to do it. How will you spend yours?”

  “With your permission, I should like to buy an engagement ring.”

  “An engagement ring!” the squatter echoed the second time.

  Mrs Thornton ceased sewing and Kate stopped playing. Leaving the piano, the girl came into the circle and seated herself between the old and the young man. The latter was regarded by the Little Lady with startled eyes; by her husband with the suspicion of a frown.

  “Have you become engaged, dear?” Mrs Thornton asked.

  “Not yet, Mother. We agreed to wait until we received your permission,” the young man replied quietly.

  “Who, Ralph, is the girl?”

  “Why, Mother, Katie, of course!”

  The strained expression of the woman’s face relaxed and gave place to a dawning smile, accompanied by a low chuckle from her husband. It was Kate who broke the silence by saying:

  “I hope you are both pleased.”

  “Pleased! Oh, Kate! I have dreamed of your marriage to Ralph for years.”

  “Then, Mother, your dream shall come true.” Ralph rose and stood behind Kate’s chair, allowing his hands gently to caress her hair. He said: “Katie and I have decided that we love each other, that our marriage will cement the family more closely. We felt sure that you and Dad would be pleased.”

  “We are, my boy,” said John Thornton. “Indeed, we are. You and Katie have made your mother and me proud and happy. But don’t hurry things; you are both of you very young yet. Suppose we say five years, at least, for the betrothal?”

  “Don’t be so hard, John,” entreated his wife. “Two years will be plenty.”

  “As you will, my dear. Do you want to be formally engaged?”

  “We want to please Auntie and you, Uncle,” Kate said softly. The squatter was on the verge of saying something when Mrs Thornton spoke decisively:

  “Of course they do, John. They say they are in love with each other, and want some day soon to marry. What I should like would be to give a betrothal party. Let it be the evening of Saturday week, the day the Land Board sits at Wilcannia. Mr and Mrs Watts will be here that day, as well as Mr and Mrs Hemmings and the Stirlings. Let us call it a ‘Surprise Party’ on the invitations, and then towards the end you, John, can announce the engagement; and you, Ralph, can place the ring on Kate’s finger. You must wire to Sydney tomorrow. Now, don’t you think that’s a good plan?”

  “And who, my dear Ann, is going to pay for this party?” inquired the station-owner, with stern face but twinkling eyes.

  “You, of course, dear. The bills will come in about the end of June, and you can pay them the same day you pay your income tax. Are you young people agreeable to the party?”

  “Yes, Auntie,” came Kate’s eager response.

  “Rather!” confirmed Ralph.

  So the date of the party was fixed, and a few days later the elite of the Upper Darling received appropriately-worded invitations, invitations promptly accepted by all, whilst not a few implored information regarding the “surprise”.

  The day before the Saturday when the Great Land Lottery was to be held in Wilcannia was one of the two weekly mail days. Ralph received from a jeweller in Sydney, a diamond ring worth considerably more than his portion of the dog-scalp cheque. And, if he was pleased and not a little elated by the receipt of the ring, there was one other highly satisfied by the contents of his mail, and that was Bony.

  The size of his mail was limited to three letters, and the first that he opened was from his wife, Laura, in which she gave him news of their three children, and evidence of her undying devotion, in a firm round hand, and quite passable grammar.

  The second letter was contained in a plain foolscap envelope and was from Sydney. The message, however, was given in concise official prose:

  Detective-Inspector Bonaparte. The plaster casts received recently, and numbered 1 to 4, have been examined. It has been established definitely that the print No.3 is identical with that of the original stated by you to have been removed from the ground at Barrakee. If you decide upon an arrest, first communicate with the Senior Police Officer at Wilcannia, who has orders to carry out your instructions.

  The letter was signed by the Chief Commissioner of Police at Sydney, and was read by Bony with a quiet smile.

  “If I decide to make an arrest!” he said softly to a curious kookaburra perched on a branch over the second boat he was painting. “You seem to think, Mr Commissioner, that I am a policeman, whereas I am a crime investigator. And now for Mr Edward Sawyer’s letter.”

  From its cheap envelope Bony took the following, written on cheap ruled paper:

  Altunga Creek,

  Vie Camooweal,

  Queensland.

  Dear Old Bony,

  I quite thought you had been planted years ago. It was only the other day that me and Tommy Ching-Lung was talking about the little bit of tracking you done up here in nineteen-twenty. And now you resurrects and writes to a bloke.

  Dear old Bony, when are you coming up here again? You’ll find all the kids you used to talk to about the stars and things all growed up and thinking more of cattle, alligators and hard cash than of stars and all them elements you had in your head.

  And now, Bony, about the gent you wants traced. You asked me if I remember ever seeing a tall, gaunt, cadaverous gent name of William Clair. Tall and gaunt were words I appeared to get the hang of, but cadaverous bluffed me at the post. I rode over to Blake’ s place and the next day went down to Moreno to try and dig up a dictionary, but we don’t seem to be strong on dictionaries in these parts.

  Anyway, two motor car explorers pulled up here last night, being afraid to sleep in the open on account of the alligators, and one of them told me the meaning of your foreign word.

  That helped me to fix Mister Will Clair, but I reckon you’ve made a mistake in the gent’s name. In nineteen-ten a tall, cadaverous, gaunt bloke with walrus whiskers hit the creek carrying a swag. I remember him because it’s darned few what carry swags up here. This gent’s name was Bill Sinclair, and for nine months he went black and lived with Wombra’s push out at Smokey Lagoon.

  I just got back from a trip to Wombra, who was looking younger than ever, though a bit worried on account of the police not liking the way he waddies his second best gin. Old Wombra remembers Sinclair. He says Sinclair was made second chief of the push because he happened to find Wombra up a tree, guarded by a particularly nasty bull buffalo.

  Sinclair, it appears, was after a bloke called King Henry, a New South Wales abo who rated as Super Grand Master of the blacks’ masonic craft. Wombra didn’t tell me plain about the craft part of it, but putting two and two together that, I think, shows which way the steer bolted and explains, too, the reason of this King Henry gent being able to move about among Queensland blacks. By ordinary race rules a strange black gets a spear mighty quick.

  But getting back to Sinclair, Bony old lad. This Sinclair palled in thick with Wombra and learned a heap of black’ s tricks. I asked old Wombra particular about boomerang chucking, and the old pirate told me that when Sin
clair pulled out he could heave a war kirras as good as any of the bucks. In fact he won a kind of tournament the day before he left, and Wombra gave him his best boomerang as a sort of prize.

  So that’s that. W. Sinclair hasn’t been up here since to my knowledge. What has he done? Run amuck or killed a money-wasting politician? If this last, let him go, Bony. He deserves a medal.

  Well, so long old chip. Hop along this way when you go for your next walkabout. The wife and kids will be glad to see you. I got one wife and seven kids and gets two tax papers every year. Hooroo.

  Yours till the alligators grow wings,

  Edward Sawyer

  Bony carefully re-read this boisterous letter from the far North-West of Queensland, and smiled with genuine pleasure; then, folding it, replaced it within the cheap envelope.

  The writer was one of the many friends Bony’s personality attracted to him. In those far-distant places the half-caste had devoted hours to the teaching of white folk’s children—children who otherwise, on account of remoteness from a school, would have grown up unable to read or write.

  The parents of these children owed Bony a debt of gratitude, the children themselves a much greater debt. There were dozens of white men scattered over the north of Australia who would have provided Bony and his family with accommodation and tucker for the rest of their lives.

  And from several of these Bony’s mind gradually reverted to William Clair. In Clair’s bootprint No.3, as well as the history of Clair’s or Sinclair’s sojourn with Wombra and his tribe, Bony had gathered sufficient evidence to justify the gaunt man’s arrest.

  He had not, of course, any direct proof that Clair killed the black at Barrakee. That Clair did kill King Henry he had no doubt, but what Clair’s motive was still remained baffling. And until he, Bony, had laid bare the reason for that deadly pursuit of King Henry, which had been carried on patiently and relentlessly for nearly two decades before opportunity came for its terrible culmination, the half-caste felt that his work at Barrakee would not be complete.

  That night he wrote a letter which he took to Thornton to address, and to dispatch by Frank Dugdale the following day. The letter set the law in motion against the unsuspecing Clair, then living in solitude at the Basin.

  Chapter Seventeen

  The Great Land Lottery

  BREAKFAST AT Barrakee the following morning was taken very early, because the Land Board, sitting at half past ten at Wilcannia, seventy-five miles down the river, wasted little time. An excited group gathered outside the double garden gates, where three cars were waiting.

  Dugdale was driving the Barrakee car, and would have with him Kate and Ralph, who were going to Wilcannia for the trip and to shop, and Edwin Black, who with Dugdale was an applicant for land. Mr Watts was driving his own car and was accompanied by two boundary-riders and Blair, the bullock-driver, all applicants. The third car was owned by Mr Hemming, a station-manager, and with him were one of his jackeroos and two of his riders.

  Mrs Watts and her family had come to the homestead and would remain there the day, helping with the preparations for the surprise party. Everyone was talking at once, all were keyed to a racecourse pitch of excitement. There is nothing that would more quickly damn any government of New South Wales than for it to take away the people’s Land Lottery.

  Frank Dugdale had just given a final glance to oil-gauge and radiator when John Thornton drew him aside.

  “I wish you luck, Dug,” he said earnestly. “Here is a letter addressed to the Board, in which I have stated that if your application is considered favourably, I am prepared to stock your block on very extended terms. Say nothing to the Board which is not absolutely to the point.”

  Dugdale accepted the proffered letter, and, looking straight into his employer’s eyes, thanked him with his usual sincerity. From Dugdale the squatter turned to Blair.

  Blair was dressed in a black suit that fitted him like a pair of tights, but with by no means the comfortable freedom of action that tights give. A black velour hat was set at a rakish angle on his greying head; new brown elastic-sided riding-boots adorned his feet. At a right-angle from his chin his beard, carefully trimmed, stuck out pugnaciously.

  “Look here, Blair,” Thornton said when he had drawn the little bullock-driver aside: “I want you to remember that it is most important that Tilly’s Tank be cleaned out before the rain comes. If you get drunk, don’t create a riot and get yourself locked up whatever else you do, for I’m relying on you to finish that tank-cleaning job.”

  “If Knowles and his demons wants their blasted jail whitewashed, then they are going to shoot me in, drunk or sober, if I come out of a church or out of a pub,” Blair said with conviction. “I might have just one snifter. But I am going to Wilcannia to gamble with the blooming Land Board, and not a publican.”

  “I am glad to hear that. The best of luck to you, Blair. You have now worked for me for more than fifteen years. Tell the Board that, and say also that if they grant you a block I’ll buy you a house. Now, don’t forget—only one snifter.”

  The little man, his short feet set at twenty minutes to four, looked up at the squatter with suddenly shining eyes.

  “I didn’t say I’d have only one snifter,” he said slowly. “I said I might have just one, meaning more than one or none at all. Thank you for the offer of that house, though.”

  A chorus of “goodbyes” and “good lucks” floated through the still morning air, when the three cars moved off from the homestead. Dugdale, in the leading car, asked Ralph, who, with Black, was sitting in the rear, the exact time.

  “Half past eight, Dug, old boy. Plenty of time, isn’t there?”

  “For us, yes. But Watts will have to push his light car. Hemming will have to step on it fairly constant. Keep a look out, will you? We must not get too far ahead.”

  “Why, Dug?” asked Kate. “They will be all right, won’t they?”

  “Other things being equal, they will,” the sub-overseer told her, in an even tone of voice which required effort to maintain. “But we have no time to spare, and, the occasion being all-important to most of us, the occupants of any car that breaks down will have to be distributed between the remaining two cars. We couldn’t leave one car-load behind to miss the Board.”

  “You’re right, Dug. That would be too bad.”

  They had been travelling about an hour when one of the tyres blew out. The following cars drew up behind and many hands whipped off the tyre and replaced it with the spare. The change was made in a little less than two minutes. And then, later, Mr Hemming had tyre trouble which took longer to remedy, since he had punctured the spare the day before and had omitted to repair it.

  Yet another delay occurred when thirty miles above Wilcannia, at a small station homestead, the owner and his wife would not permit them to go on till everyone had had a cup of tea and a slice of brownie. So that it was a quarter to eleven before they braked up before the Court House of what once was known as the Queen City of the West.

  In the precincts of the commodious Court House were dozens of travel-stained cars, dozens of trucks, motor-cycles, and many buggies, buckboards and gigs.

  In common with every applicant arriving at the Court House, the party from Barrakee made their way through a knot of men about the entrance, near which was a board bearing a typewritten list of names in alphabetical order.

  The list comprised eighty names, those of the applicants to be interviewed by the Board during the third consecutive day of its sitting in Wilcannia. For weeks past the same gentlemen had travelled from township to township, and had examined hundreds of applicants: some further weeks would be occupied in travelling to many other townships to examine hundreds more. There were fourteen blocks of land thrown open for public selection, and probably there were eighteen to twenty hundred applicants hoping to obtain one of them.

  The Barrakee overseer withdrew from the waiting knot of men, together with several others of the party whose names would not be called unti
l the afternoon. Almost immediately on their arrival Edwin Black was called.

  Dugdale gave him a reassuring nod and a bystander called “Good luck”, when the jackeroo entered the room where sat the Board. He was within perhaps ten minutes, and emerged with a facial expression giving no indication of even hope. Then Blair was called.

  Before starting for the door the little man re-set his black hat, and thrust out his chin as though to relieve the strain of the unfamiliar collar.

  “Good old Fred,” somebody sang out. There was a general laugh containing a hint of expectancy. “Don’t forget to lay down the law, Fred,” another voice said.

  At the portals of the room stood Sergeant Knowles. Before him Blair paused, the light of battle suddenly dying in his eyes.

  “Now, you ain’t going to try to arrest me before I’ve had me say, are you, Sarge?” he said with genuine surprise.

  “No, Blair. I have no intention of doing that,” replied the policeman.

  Reassured, Blair again re-set his headgear and worked his Adam’s apple clear of the choking collar. Then, with a determined swagger, and his beard slightly raised in its angle, he entered the presence of the Land Board.

  Before him he saw three men seated at three sides of a table covered with official papers. He was invited to be seated at the vacant side, and, having settled himself, sat with one leg negligently crossed over the knee of the other, the hat now pushed back low over his neck.

  “Frederick Blair?” said the gentleman facing him.

  “That’s me,” replied Blair.

  The Chairman of the Board looked up from a paper and smiled. He and his confreres knew Frederick Blair. He pushed across the table a soiled Bible, and took from the secretary-member Blair’s application form. The usual oath administered, he said:

 

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