171385.fb2
Putting itOver
THE prints on the soft cinder path came from and returned to the hole in Miss Pinkney’s back fence.
Bony completed the manufacture of his cigarette, applied a match to it with casual deliberation, and then became interested in Mr Pickwick, who was lying full-length along a branch overhead. Having called Mr Pickwick, and been acknowledged by a soft “mirrill”, he rose from his chair and strolled to the fence. He looked through an opening between the palings into the neighbouring garden.
There was no man to be seen there. On the rear veranda of the house were three women. They were seated at afternoon tea. Mrs Blake was entertaining Ella Montrose and Nancy Chesterfield. Between the house and the fence the sunlight was a glare upon the lawn, and Bony felt sure that were he to raise himself to look over the fence and along it he would not be observed by those on the veranda.
The man who had visited Miss Pinkney’s garden within the last several minutes could hardly have passed out of Mrs Blake’s garden without being seen by one of the ladies on the veranda, and he might well be crouched just beyond the fence or be concealed on the far side of the writing-room.
Bony hauled himself up by the tree branch on which Mr Pickwick was lying, and swung himself slightly forward so that he brought his feet to the fence and then could look right along it within the deep shade cast by the trees. There was no one there.
Only Mr Pickwick had seen the man, and Mr Pickwick was not at all happy about it. When Bony dropped back again to Miss Pinkney’s garden, the cat still declined to come down.
“Another stupid killer,” murmured Bony. “It’s enough to make the sun go out.”
Picking up the tray, he started off for the house and was almost at the kitchen entrance when Constable Simes came running round the side garden.
“The super’s on the phone,” he cried.
“Ah! Good! I’ll come along at once,” Bony said. “Here, take this jug of milk and the sugar basin. I’ll bring the pot of tea. The tray and cakes will be all right on the step. Come along! And don’t spill that milk or the sugar out of the basin.”
Two men, a truck driver, and several women were astonished to see Constable Simes and a slim, dark man running down the road and holding to their fronts a teapot, a milk-jug, and a sugar basin. Before Constable Simes realized the incongruity, he was being ordered to take extreme care not to upset the milk-jug and the sugar basin over his office desk, and from them and the teapot he looked up to see Bony slump into his chair and seize the telephone.
“Yes, Bony here, super. Good! Oh! So that is who I. R. Watts is, eh! No, I am not greatly surprised. Oh, yes! Yes! Ah, but then, you see, one adds a chance word or two to another chance word or two, and it makes sense. Yes, life is moving along nicely. I shall begin my report on the investigation this evening. I may begin it this afternoon. Thanks, super.”
Having replaced the instrument, Bony rose from the chair and regarded Constable Simes with eyes that positively shone from a face, otherwise devoid of expression.
“Take the phone, Simes. Ring up Fleetwood. Ask him to come here at once.”
He stood in the doorway whilst Simes rang the doctor. Beyond the doorway ran the length of the veranda fronting the house and in turn fronted by the little garden of flowers. Simes could see Bony’s fingers slowly clenching and unclenching. The back was straight and the shoulders set square. He could not see the dark face-the lips lifted slightly, the nostrils gently quivering, as though they smelled blood or the scent of the hunted.
“The doctor says he will come directly he has completed his examination of a patient,” Simes announced.
He thought Bony had not heard him, and he was about to speak again, when Bony turned and came swiftly back to the desk. He drew the visitor’s chair to it and sat down.
“Get your paper and pencils,” he said. “We’ll begin the report.”
Simes took to his chair and from a drawer pulled out foolscap and set it on the blotter, picked up a pencil and waited with the pencil poised.
“Date it today,” Bony said, the sharpness gone out of his voice. “Head it the usual way-to Superintendent Bolt from Inspector Napoleon Bonaparte. Sir, Reference, death of Mervyn Blake on night of 9th November and other matters. Having on 3rd January, approximately two months after Mervyn Blake died, accepted from you the commission to investigate the circumstances of Blake’s death, I studied your departmental official file and the summary of the case prepared by Inspector Snook. On the following day I conferred with Senior Constable Robert Simes, stationed at Yarrabo, bringing into discussion all-underline “all”-the circumstances under which Mervyn Blake was found on the morning of 10th November.
“Mervyn Blake was discovered dead on the floor just inside the closed door of his writing-room. The expression on the features of the dead man, the position in which he lay, and the fact that the door was closed, indicated that he was suddenly seized with mortal illness and had attempted to leave the writing-room for help. The state of his fingers, plus the marks of finger-nails on the door, indicated that the last paroxysm prevented him from opening the door.
“When the body was examined, firstly by Dr Fleetwood and secondly by Constable Simes, it was seen that the rain of the previous night had slanted in through the open doorway and wetted the floor covering about the head and shoulders of the body as well as the dead man’s hair and clothes.
“It was assumed by Constable Simes and Dr Fleetwood that after Mervyn Blake died someone entered the room, left the door open, remained in the room for probably a minute or two minutes whilst it was raining, and then departed after closing the door. This theory was countered by another put forward by the investigating officer. The opposing theory was that Blake managed to unlatch the door and thrust it open in his last physical effort, and that subsequently the wind blew it shut. Strength was given this opposing theory by, one, the negative report of the analyst, and, two, by the meteorological report stating that the wind velocity that night was twenty miles an hour and gusty.
“That a weather report of conditions in Melbourne, situated on a plain, should be relied upon to indicate the weather conditions at Yarrabo, forty odd miles distant, and partially surrounded by mountains, seems at variance with the practice of crime investigation. On checking up on the weather conditions at Yarrabo, I found that the wind that night was exceedingly light, and at no time could the wind be described as gusty. Therefore the theory put forward by Constable Simes being supported by fact urged me to prosecute my inquiries and to discard the official theory because unsupported by fact.”
Bony ceased speaking and lit a cigarette. Simes looked up from his note-taking. His large white teeth were faintly revealed by the hard smile about the mouth.
Bony said, pleasantly, “Off the record, how do you think Mr Snook is going to react to that?”
“It tickles my imagination,” replied Simes.
“Well, let’s proceed. Ready? Having studied the two theories concerning the rain’s slanting in through the open door, and finding that I must adopt the one and discard the other, I proceeded to step forward on the hypothesis that someone entered the writing-room after Blake had died and had withdrawn without giving any alarm or reporting the fact that Blake was dead. The natural question was-why? I found that I could invent several assumptions, if I could delete from mind the analyst’s negative report.
“Assuming that someone poisoned Mervyn Blake, then someone entered the writing-room after the poison had done its work in order to remove incriminating evidence. It is feasible that someone entered the writing-room to remove the remainder or the residue of the poison, and that that was contained in the bottle of brandy and the glass upon the writing desk.
“There is in the garage a small cupboard in which was kept battery acid and cleaning materials. No mention is made in the official file of a bottle of brandy and a glass that were in the cupboard at seven thirty on the night of 9th November. The maid, Ethel Lacy, states that at seven thirty that night she saw Blaketake a bottle of spirits and a glass from the cupboard, and pour himself a drink. The gardener, S. Walsh, also asserted that Blake kept spirits in that cupboard, and gave him a drink there on several occasions. The gardener was never questioned by the investigating officer. The maid was made hostile by the manner of the officer taking her statement, and either because of nervousness or because of resentment, withheld that particular item of information.
“Having reached that point in my investigation, I had reasonable grounds on which to base the assumption that Mervyn Blake had been poisoned, that the poison had been introduced into his brandy within the writing-room, that after he was dead the murderer entered the writing-room and removed the poisoned bottle and glass and set in their place the bottle and glass taken from the garage. The poisoned bottle and glass removed from the writing-room were buried near the front gate, and subsequently were discovered by the gardener, S. Walsh.
“In view of the negative report of the analyst, it became essential to discover, one, the poison employed, two, the person who employed the poison, and, three, the motive for the act of poisoning. Being convinced that the data in the official file was incomplete and that the summary of the case was based on erroneous deductions from the available evidence, I found it necessary to proceed cautiously. It was-”
The report was interrupted by the telephone. Simes answered the call, and announced that the post office had received a long telegram from Sydney addressed to Patience, care of the Police Station.
“There’sno delivery, and no one about the P.O. who could bring the telegram,” Simes said. “Shall I slip down and get it?”
“Do. Meanwhile I’ll think up a few more telling phrases.”
When Simes returned, he was accompanied by the doctor. The telegram was dropped on the desk by Bony, who had received it from the constable, and who said, “Doctor, I regret having to ask you to come here, but things to come are taking shape, and a recent event will hurry them forward. I want you to make an examination of the tea in that pot and the milk in the jug, to ascertain if there is or is not some foreign substance in both or either of the liquids.”
The sparse grey browsrose a fraction.
“Get me two glasses, Bob,” he requested, and then said when Simes had gone out, “What do you suspect?”
“Coffin dust,” replied Bony.
“Ye gods! Where do these things come from?”
“They belong to Miss Pinkney. They contain the liquid part of my afternoon tea. Now, now! Don’t think what you are thinking. Miss Pinkney is fully exonerated by her own shoe tracks.”
Dr Fleetwood accepted the glasses from the constable. Putting one down on the desk, he filled the other from the tea-pot and held it to the light coming strongly through the window. Within the amber liquid floated a cloud of whitish particles. The doctor’s grey eyes gazed steadily into the inquiring blue eyes. Then, taking up the milk-jug, he poured a little of the milk into the second glass, wafted it about the inside of the tumbler and then peered at the film of milk upon the glass.
“There doesn’t seem to be anything wrong with the milk,” he said, slowly. “The tea is full of-a foreign substance of light specific gravity. It is certainly a substance resembling the powder which Professor Ericson and I examined. The tea was made by Miss Pinkney?”
“Yes. It would be made in her kitchen at Rose Cottage.”
“Then that foreign substance would not have been contained in the water from her tap. At least, I cannot think so. Do you wish me to make an analytical examination?”
“If you would be so kind.”
“Very well. Get me a cloth, Bob, so that I can disguise these utensils from a curious public.” When Simes had departed for the second time, the doctor asked another question.
“This is a filthy thing,” he said. “Have you any idea who is doing it?”
“I have sure knowledge who murdered Mervyn Blake, who murdered Walsh, who tried to murder me,” Bony replied. “I’ll telephone you early this evening, and you may be present to hear my report being dictated to Constable Simes. Meanwhile, aurevoir, and thank you. Perhaps you will be in a position to be definite when we meet again this evening.”
“I hope so. Thank you for letting me in on this. I am a nervous wreck through the powerful stimulant of curiosity.”
Having camouflaged the teapot and jug with the teacloth Simes had brought, Dr Fleetwood departed, and Simes said, “What do we do next?”
“First we shall pay a visit to the Rialto Hotel,” replied Bony. “Immediately following that visit we shall make another. Bring your handcuffs. It’s just possible you may need them. Ah, the telegram! Permit me.” Bony quickly scanned the eight or nine sheets recording the message from the Colombian Police at Bogota. Then he said, “Yes, we mayproceed, Simes, to finalize this Mervyn Blake Murder Case.”