171550.fb2 Battling Prophet - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 12

Battling Prophet - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 12

REGISTERED IN THE NAME OFKLAVICH. STOP. CHIEF CLERK TO HUNGARIAN

CONSUL ADELAIDE. WHAT YOU DOING AT COWDRY? REGARDS. TILLET.

After several cups of tea, Bony strolled along the river-bank as far as the bridge spanning the highway. For some time he leaned against the stone parapet watching the fish jumping for flies, and the larger fish chasing others. He noted with interest the peculiarity of this river, the banks of which were not of earth and shelving, but of precipitous limestone going straight down to the depths. Scrub and tall trees grew right to the edge of these faces of the great cleft which had admitted the sea.

From the bridge he walked to the highway almost to the line of pine trees providing the wind-break for Mount Mario, and then turned off the road to bisect the grazing paddocks where there was no grazing and no stock. He came to a path barely discernible which appeared to come from opposite the gates to Mount Marlo, and which he followed to the back fence of Mr. Luton’s garden, and he wondered if that was the path made by the late Ben Wickham.

After dinner, when they sat smoking over coffee, he said:

“The telegram Mrs. Maltby brought was from the Traffic Branch in Adelaide. They say that the car used by those foreigners to call on Wickham is owned by a staff member of the Hungarian Consulate. Are you still sure that Wickham never mentioned them to you?”

“I am,” replied Luton, calmly. “Nor did he say anything to me about why he called at the bank after hours. Mind you, that was like Ben, not to say anything to me. Exceptin ’ to moan now and then about his sister and theMaltbys, he never talked of his private business, and he had to be pretty full before he’d talk about his work. He did talk about the flaming stars, but not often about his weather-forecastin’.”

“So that when you did meet, you discussed the river, the fishing, and the past?”

“That’s so. You see, Ben was a gentleman. He never deliberately talked over my head, as the saying goes. He’d arrive here, unload his moans about what happened up at the house, and after a bit we’d both go back over the years and talk about old times.”

“I suppose that when he became sufficiently sober to return to his house, he was feeling despondent?”

“No. He used to tell me we’d had a hell of a fine time and that he felt he’d had a brain wash and was ready to get on with his job.”

“Did he express an opinion of Dr. Linke?”

“Seemed to like him. Said he was first-rate and keen. Never said anything against him, excepting…”

“Excepting?”

“Excepting that Linke sometimesjawed him for coming here for a bender.”

“He was bitter about the Government persistently refusing to take his work seriously, wasn’t he?”

“Too true he was.” Mr. Luton’s eyes widened and blazed. “While our people are jeering at him, and our weather men are calling him an outsider, the Russians step in. They did, didn’t they? The Hungarians are Russians, aren’t they?”

As Mr. Luton demanded agreement, Bony conceded the thought. Other thoughts he did not express. He said, instead:

“Have you ever seen a man die in delirium tremens?”

“No. But I’ve seen a man who died of the hoo-jahs.”

“Tell me about it.”

“It was a terrible long time back. I mustof been about twenty or so, and I was working up in Queensland, droving cattle. Open country, you understand. The year was bad, and my job was to ride ahead and scout for water for the cattle.

“The Government had just sunk a bore called Number Eight, and I met a couple of prospectors who told me it was gushinggood and that the water was drinkable. They said an old bloke was in charge of the plant which hadn’t been moved on, and they reckoned by this time he’d have gone bush as he’d been on the booze and was raging around when they left.

“Anyway, I went on to take a look at this bore, and see what feed there was for the cattle. I found it all right. Anda bit of a shed near the dismantled gear. I knew what had happened before I went inside. The old feller was dead in a corner, and I’m game to bet there was fifty empty Pink-Eye brandy bottles. He hadn’t been dead long. The day before, I reckoned. Looked bloody awful.”

“Describe him, please.”

“Hell! What for? He was dead of the hoo-jahs. Lying on the floor, and the place stinking of Pink-Eye. Part of a bottle still in his hand. Had it by the neck and back a bit like he was fighting the demons off.”

“Do you remember the expression on the dead man’s face?”persisted Bony.

“I won’t ever forget it, Inspector. Never madeno difference to me, though. Still, I sort of knew when to stop. He didn’t.”

“Describe the expression on the dead man’s face,” Bony continued to persist.

“His mouth was open like he was yelling when he perished. Blood had poured from it. He’d been chased round and round the shed, for you could see his tracks what made a road all round. And he’d run inside towards the end, to escape the things that were chasing him, and they caught up with him in the corner. He was looking at them, seeing them when he died.”

“When you found Ben Wickham dead, did he remind you of that man at the bore?”

“He certainly did not. The feller at the bore died when he was awake. Ben died in his sleep.”

“Died in his sleep!” echoed Bony.

“Yes. He was lying peaceful, like he slept, when I found him.”

“His eyes were closed?”

“Partly so. I kept ’emclosed proper, with a florin apiece. That’s why I say he died of something given to him; not from the hoo-jahs.”

“Were the coins on the eyes when the doctor came?”

Mr. Luton was triumphant.

“Course not. I took ’emoff when I heard the car.”