Bony - 16 - Venom House Read online

Page 13


  “Your room is near the kitchen, I think you said. Is the back door locked at night?”

  Mrs Leeper smiled grimly.

  “How they can be nervous of burglars, I don’t know, Inspector. With all the water round the place, and the only boat chained to a stump on the other side, no one could come across the causeway. No one knows the path over it excepting these women and the men’s cook. But every night before going to bed, those two see to it that all the windows are fastened and the doors locked. I … No, that isn’t possible.”

  “What isn’t possible, Mrs Leeper?”

  “I’ve seen Morris with flex like that I had on my trunk. He uses it to lower a magnet from his window to catch metal things. Just for the moment, I had a bad idea about him.”

  Janet came back pushing a supper wagon, and Bony warned Mrs Leeper he might have further questions later on. He walked to the front door and out upon the porch to stand on the step. The hall lamp cast a broad ribbon across the porch and down the step, to end at a distance on the sward. The step followed the line of the house front, and was immediately below the large stained-glass window.

  Sitting on the step, he rolled a cigarette and lit it before placing himself in the position of Mary Answerth when pulled to the ground. She said she had been strangled from behind, and that indicated that the man must have stood to one side of the door as she came from the house. Having slipped the noose over her head, he found he was unable to complete the deed, and so hauled on the cord and thus brought the heavy woman down upon her back.

  It did seem that his only way of escape without being seen and possibly recognized was into the house, because to have broken into the open he would have had practically to leap over his victim.

  According to medical theory, the body of Mrs Answerth had been hauled through shallow water by the cord about her neck.

  The Three Sisters were well down to the westward and told Bony it wanted at least three hours to daybreak. He had been right to refrain from instituting a search of the ground about the house, for the tramp of men in the dark might have ruined vital tracks. And if the attacker had taken Blaze’s boat, well, he would have to reach the shore somewhere, and from that place could be tracked no matter what he did to evade pursuit.

  Dr Lofty came out to tell him that the coffee tasted good, and was invited to sit on the cold step.

  “I’ll not keep you longer than a minute,” Bony said. “Can you tell me how that woman saved herself?”

  “Luck and brute strength saved her, I think,” replied Lofty. “Plus animal instinct to counter attack. When the cord fell about her head, she must have felt it touch her hair and was in time to thrust a hand upward between it and her neck. The cord cut the back of her right hand, such was the pressure exerted, and where the right hand would be held against the neck there is no mark of the cord.

  “The neck ligaments are badly wrenched, and her back could have been broken on this step. She’ll be up and about again in a week. You or I would have been in hospital for a couple of months … if we had managed to get clear of the noose.”

  “You will visit her again tomorrow?”

  “In the afternoon, if there are no complications. Fortunately, this Leeper woman has had hospital training.”

  “She’ll be out to your dope for the rest of the night?”

  “And well into the day. Must keep her quiet. What about that coffee?”

  “I need three cups.”

  They passed inside and Bony relocked the door. Janet Answerth was seated. Mrs Leeper stood by the wagon and poured. Blaze offered the sandwiches.

  With a coffee cup in one hand and a sandwich in the other, Bony stood close to the golden banisters to admire the sheen of the exquisitely carved wood. He heard Blaze offer the sandwiches to Dr Lofty, then froze because he heard movement at the top of the stairs. There was a soft padding of feet.

  The doctor was complimenting Janet Answerth on the coffee. The soft padding was now on the stairs. The hall light cast the edge of its shadow midway up, and from the shadow into the light came a slippered foot. The companion foot followed, and then a pyjama-clad leg. Bony stood back. He didn’t see, but felt Mawson beside him.

  Down the stairs slowly came Morris Answerth. His eyes winked in the light. On his face was a smile. He waved to them all, and then particularly to Bony, and at the bottom of the stairs he said:

  “I’m out again.”

  Chapter Fifteen

  The Lamp and the Rope

  THERE WAS NOTHING sinister in the voice, no wild emotion on the bearded face, no cunning triumph blazing in the dark eyes. He had but stated a fact, the importance of which was burned from his mind by the suspended lamp swung low above the foot of the stairs. The people to whom he had waved were forgotten. He stood with his hand pressed against his side, head back, gazing at the lamp.

  “What a beauty!” he exclaimed.

  Janet Answerth slipped past Bony and took his arm in her two hands. Her voice was gentle, her words urgent. Submerged in voice and words was steel.

  “Morris! You oughtn’t to have come down in pyjamas and dressing-gown. Can’t you see we have guests? This will never do. Come along at once. Back to your rooms, please.”

  She pushed him almost off balance before he was aware of her. He saw Mrs Leeper stepping forward, and he frowned. Janet shook her head, and Mrs Leeper stopped.

  “Come, Morris, at once, please.”

  Her arm imprisoned his against her side. She whispered some­thing they could not hear, and he said:

  “You will, Janet? Oh, thank you.”

  Together they went up the stairs, and it seemed that the shadows came down to take them into their darkness. Nothing was said. Dr Lofty frowned into his coffee cup. Mawson stood rigidly, regarding Bony, waiting. Blaze struck a match and lit his pipe, and Mrs Leeper sat down. Presently Janet came down the stairs.

  “I don’t understand it, Inspector,” she said. “I am certain I snapped the padlock to his door-bolt and put the key on the nail.”

  “When was that?” he questioned, and, regarding him with wide eyes, she replied:

  “Shortly after ten o’clock this evening. I’d been up with his supper tray and made sure he was comfy in bed for the night. I remember quite clearly bringing out his tray and the lamp and placing both on the passage floor so that I could bolt his door. Then I hung the key on the nail, and took up the tray and the lamp and came downstairs.”

  “Where is the key now?”

  “On its nail.”

  “Where was it when you took Morris up?”

  “In the padlock. Someone. … I don’t know. I’m positive I locked his door.”

  “Then we must be doubly sure there is no stranger in the house. Please go to your sister and remain by her bedside. Mrs Leeper, be good enough to remain seated until we return. If you, Doctor, would mount guard at the front door. … Withdraw the key and keep it in your pocket. Shout if a stranger appears. Mawson, come with me. Blaze, bring that hurricane lamp and follow me.”

  Arrived at the head of the staircase, Bony asked Blaze if the two wing passages joined at the rear of the house, and Blaze said that the left passage ended at a bedroom door. The right passage ended at the top of the back stairs, at the bottom of which was the door which he had locked and passed the key to Mawson.

  With the exception of the rooms occupied by Morris Answerth, they searched the top floor, and returning to the ground floor searched there, even to the two cellars. They found nothing of interest save the several rooms which had not been occupied for … in Mawson’s opinion … a hundred years. Bony then called on Mrs Leeper to conduct him to the room occupied by Mary Answerth.

  Again passing up the stairs, Bony was taken to the left wing and to the first room on the left. There was no light other than that cast by his torch. He went in first, and the torch beam swept the room for the second time that night, stopping to reveal the ordinary oil-lamp on the bedside table.

  “Please light that lamp, Mrs Leep
er. Matches?”

  The lamp banished the silhouettes, created shadows to hide behind the furniture. The heavy four-poster with its canopy of heavy material was congruent with a massive wardrobe and an equally massive tallboy. The dressing-table could have come from the boudoir of an empress. Upon it, a modern brass petrol-lamp was an affront.

  The bed had been slept in. The clothes were thrown back as though the sleeper had left it without haste. On a chair was feminine underwear, a pair of men’s tweed trousers, and by the chair was a pair of men’s golf shoes.

  The window was open. It was of the leaded, diamond-pattern casement type. A ratchet catch kept the window open, and into the room entered cold air to tease languidly the heavy curtains.

  Leaning out over the sill, Bony directed his torch beam down­ward, and within the circle the dewy grass glistened as though covered with diamonds. The light circle moved left to stop at the wide step bordering the porch. Outward from the step moved the light, to follow the tracks on the diamond-littered ground made by the police party from boat to front door. Then back it came to the ground beneath the window where the glistening dew was unmarked.

  No one had stood immediately below the window, to arouse Mary Answerth and then to persuade her to go down, but Bony had to accept the possibility that the man could have been stand­ing below the step of the porch, when his tracks would have been blotted out by those of the police party.

  “Do you believe it?” Mrs Leeper asked as he was refastening the window.

  “Believe what?”

  “The yarn about a man throwing stones or something against the window and asking her to go down?”

  “I have as yet no reason to disbelieve Miss Mary,” he objected. “Have you?”

  “I disbelieve her on principle,” declared Mrs Leeper. “Believe nothing these people tell you … nothing. She said she went down to see a man about stolen cattle. Didn’t she say that?”

  “She did.”

  “Why come here to talk about stolen cattle in the middle of the night? What’s the matter with the day-time? They won’t have visitors here, but they’re not that hostile that they’d shoot a rare one on sight.”

  “H’m! How often does the rare visitor call?”

  “About once every third blue moon. Mr Harston mostly, and now and then Bert Blaze or the old man who comes across to do the chores.”

  “Are Blaze and the old man regarded as visitors?”

  “Why not? They come that seldom. But I didn’t mean that they come into the house by the front door. The lawyers came twice this year, and they came in by the front door. And five or six weeks ago that butcher came to see Miss Janet.”

  “You refer to Edward Carlow?”

  “The same,” replied Mrs Leeper. “Came to get Miss Janet to fill in his income tax forms, so she said. The parson came about twelve months ago … the Methodist parson. They took him in and gave him afternoon tea, the pair of them, and after he had gone back in the boat they ordered Blaze to return, and they dressed him down for bringing the parson over without their orders. Told him he was never to bring anyone to the house unless told to.”

  “And you don’t believe Miss Mary was attacked outside the house?”

  “No, I don’t. She must have let him in. She let him in because she knew him, and she told the tale because she’s made up her mind to deal with him herself. I think it was Morris. Miss Janet forgot to bolt his door, remember. The last thing Miss Mary would admit is that Morris tried to strangle her.”

  “There may be something in what you say,” Bony conceded, and noted the gleam of satisfaction in her eyes.

  They returned to the hall, and Bony instructed Blaze to sit by the front door. He drew Dr Lofty aside.

  “I want you to accompany me on a visit to Morris as I’d like to have your professional opinion. We’ll take Mawson in case ad­ditional physical weight is needed. Agreed?”

  “Yes, of course … you’re welcome to my opinion … with reservations.”

  Mawson was asked to bring the petrol-lamp from Mary’s bed­room, and when arrived at the padlocked door Bony knocked. At once, Morris Answerth said, his voice coming from under the door:

  “Do you want to come in?”

  “Yes. Have you a light in there?”

  “Janet always takes the light back when she goes off to bed. But I can see.” They heard soft laughter. “I play games in the dark when Janet has gone to bed. She’s not out there with you, I know that. There are three of you. Yes, you may come in.”

  The padlock was removed from the bolt. They entered, Bony holding aloft the lamp. Morris was seen with his back to the table and, as Bony advanced, he blinked at the fierce light, his face white, his hair and beard black by contrast. As Bony passed him to set the lamp on the table beside the toy railway, Morris turned to watch the light and the brass reflecting it. He was so interested in the lamp that Bony and the doctor, and Mawson who remained just inside the door he had closed, were seemingly forgotten.

  “Good light, eh?” Lofty said, cheerfully.

  “I …” Morris stood back, rubbing his hands as though con­trolled by ecstatic wonder. “Is it yours? Will you give it to me?”

  “Have to ask Miss Mary first,” Bony told him. “Anyway, would you like Doctor Lofty to tell you how it works?”

  “Oh, I would.” Morris maintained concentration on the lamp. Bony felt himself completely ignored, and was delighted. He nodded encouragingly to Lofty, and the doctor began a lecture with the incidence of petroleum. Quietly, Bony went to work aided by his torch.

  The room off this large one was the young man’s bedroom. It was clean and neat. The three-quarter bed had been occupied, and Bony tried to estimate the period since Morris had left it. By touch, he decided that the bed had not been occupied for several hours.

  There was but one window to this room, and no other door save that leading to a small bathroom and lavatory. The walls were calcimined blue, and there were pictures cut from books, framed but minus glass. The one window opened to the end of the house, and this received careful attention.

  Like those in the larger room, it was of the casement type, with small diamond panes. It opened as far as the outside steel lattice permitted, a bare eight inches, and Bony proceeded to test the lattice. It was firmly fixed to the outside of the wall, and by touch he found one of the studs having a squared head to take the spanner to screw it in.

  He was able to move the stud with finger and thumb. He took it out. As easily, he removed other studs so that he was able to push the lattice away from the window and further open the window wide enough for a man to pass out. As easily, he replaced the studs and closed the window. He spent five minutes searching the bedroom and the bathroom for a rope, and found nothing which would enable Morris Answerth to reach the ground and return.

  Shoes in the wardrobe were dry. The linoleum-covered floor under the window was dry. The clothes in the wardrobe were clean and unscarred. There were five Eton jackets of several sizes, and several pairs of hard-wearing grey trousers. The chest of drawers contained nothing of interest, save that the bottom drawer was crammed with toys. There was nothing under the bath, and the floorboards were as firm as cement.

  Standing again beside Morris when Dr Lofty’s lecture was withering for the want of inspirational rain, Bony rolled a cigarette and dropped his matches. He knelt to retrieve them, and lightly touched Morris’s slippers, to find them dry. Then at last he was rewarded.

  Beneath the table ribbons of cloth had been tacked to form a web, and this web supported firmly against the table-top a rope of plaited blanket, a pair of trousers and a pair of canvas shoes. There were other oddments which Bony at once found of no inter­est. The old canvas tennis shoes were distinctly damp. For a moment he was held by memory of Morris Answerth supporting the table on head and hands when rising from a kneeling position, and he blamed himself for not having noted the hiding-place when the table must have been higher than the level of his eyes. He heard Morris say with s
tartlingly simple conviction:

  “I want the lamp.”

  “By the way, Morris,” Bony said, rising like Phoenix. “Show Dr Lofty how you throw a lasso. I’ve been telling him how wonderful you are with it.”

  “Then will you give me the lamp? It’s a beautiful lamp, and I want to keep it. I’ve never been allowed to keep a lamp, and I’m tired of playing in the dark all the time.”

  “We’ll have to ask Miss Janet about it,” Bony told him.

  “When I tell Janet that you gave me the lamp, she will let me keep it. I’m sure she will.”

  “But the lamp belongs to Miss Mary, Morris. She mightn’t like it if we left it with you. Whatever would she say if we told her what we had done with her lamp?”

  “Mary won’t ever know.” Morris Answerth stiffened. The scowl of frustration gave place to a smile. The smile vanished. He moved so quickly that neither man could offer a counter. With his left hand, he swept up the hissing lamp and held it high. He was Ajax … if Ajax had red hair and a red beard and blue eyes which shone with rage. “If you come to take the lamp, I’ll strike you with it.”

  Slowly and sadly shaking his head, Bony held out his hands.

  “We’ll do something about it later on, Morris. You must always trust your friends. Please let me have the lamp.”

  The anger faded. The lips trembled. The eyes filled with tears. Bony accepted the lamp and placed it back on the table.

  Chapter Sixteen

  Morris Mustn’t Tell

  “WE HAVEN’T SAID you cannot have the lamp,” Bony pointed out. “Be a good fellow now, and talk about other things like you did when I came to see you last time. The lamp belongs to Miss Mary, not to us. We cannot give you what doesn’t belong to us, can we?”

  “No, you cannot do that. I am very sorry for behaving so badly. Will you overlook it this time?”

 

    Bony - 29 - The Lake Frome Monster Read onlineBony - 29 - The Lake Frome MonsterBony - 11 - An Author Bites the Dust Read onlineBony - 11 - An Author Bites the DustBushranger of the Skies Read onlineBushranger of the SkiesBony - 25 - Bony and The Kelly Gang Read onlineBony - 25 - Bony and The Kelly GangBony - 18 - Death of a Lake Read onlineBony - 18 - Death of a LakeBony - 14 - Batchelors of Broken Hill Read onlineBony - 14 - Batchelors of Broken HillVenom House b-16 Read onlineVenom House b-16Winds of Evil Read onlineWinds of EvilBony - 16 - Venom House Read onlineBony - 16 - Venom HouseBony - 03 - Wings above the Diamantina Read onlineBony - 03 - Wings above the DiamantinaBony and the White Savage Read onlineBony and the White SavageMan of Two Tribes Read onlineMan of Two TribesBony - 08 - Bushranger of the Skies Read onlineBony - 08 - Bushranger of the SkiesThe Bone is Pointed b-6 Read onlineThe Bone is Pointed b-6Battling Prophet b-20 Read onlineBattling Prophet b-20Death of a Swagman Read onlineDeath of a SwagmanBony - 27 - The Will of the Tribe Read onlineBony - 27 - The Will of the TribeThe Beach of Atonement Read onlineThe Beach of AtonementMurder down under b-4 Read onlineMurder down under b-4The Widows of broome b-13 Read onlineThe Widows of broome b-13Murder Must Wait b-17 Read onlineMurder Must Wait b-17The Mountains Have a Secret Read onlineThe Mountains Have a SecretGripped By Drought Read onlineGripped By DroughtBony - 26 - Bony and the White Savage Read onlineBony - 26 - Bony and the White SavageThe Mystery of Swordfish Reef Read onlineThe Mystery of Swordfish ReefBony Buys a Woman Read onlineBony Buys a WomanThe Mountains have a Secret b-12 Read onlineThe Mountains have a Secret b-12The New Shoe b-15 Read onlineThe New Shoe b-15Bony - 09 - Death of a Swagman Read onlineBony - 09 - Death of a SwagmanThe House Of Cain Read onlineThe House Of CainBony - 19 - Cake in a Hat Box Read onlineBony - 19 - Cake in a Hat BoxBony - 22 - Bony Buys a Woman Read onlineBony - 22 - Bony Buys a WomanThe Barrakee Mystery b-1 Read onlineThe Barrakee Mystery b-1The Sands of Windee Read onlineThe Sands of WindeeVenom House Read onlineVenom HouseBony - 01 - The Barrakee Mystery Read onlineBony - 01 - The Barrakee MysteryBony - 13 - The Widows of broome Read onlineBony - 13 - The Widows of broomeThe Battling Prophet Read onlineThe Battling ProphetNo footprints in the bush b-8 Read onlineNo footprints in the bush b-8Bony - 05 - Winds of Evil Read onlineBony - 05 - Winds of EvilThe Mystery of Swordfish Reef b-7 Read onlineThe Mystery of Swordfish Reef b-7Bony - 02 - Sands of Windee Read onlineBony - 02 - Sands of WindeeAn Author Bites the Dust b-11 Read onlineAn Author Bites the Dust b-11An Author Bites the Dust Read onlineAn Author Bites the DustThe Devil's Steps Read onlineThe Devil's StepsBony - 21 - Man of Two Tribes Read onlineBony - 21 - Man of Two TribesBony - 10 - The Devil’s Steps Read onlineBony - 10 - The Devil’s StepsWinds of Evil b-5 Read onlineWinds of Evil b-5The Widows of Broome Read onlineThe Widows of BroomeDeath of a Lake Read onlineDeath of a LakeThe Great Melbourne Cup Mystery Read onlineThe Great Melbourne Cup MysteryWings above the Diamantina b-3 Read onlineWings above the Diamantina b-3Bony - 12 - The Mountains have a Secret Read onlineBony - 12 - The Mountains have a SecretBony - 06 - The Bone is Pointed Read onlineBony - 06 - The Bone is PointedDeath of a Lake b-18 Read onlineDeath of a Lake b-18Death of a Swagman b-9 Read onlineDeath of a Swagman b-9The bushman who came back b-22 Read onlineThe bushman who came back b-22The Bone is Pointed Read onlineThe Bone is PointedSinister Stones b-19 Read onlineSinister Stones b-19The Devil_s Steps b-10 Read onlineThe Devil_s Steps b-10Bony - 07 - The Mystery of Swordfish Reef Read onlineBony - 07 - The Mystery of Swordfish ReefThe Murchison Murders Read onlineThe Murchison MurdersThe New Shoe Read onlineThe New ShoeWings Above the Diamantina Read onlineWings Above the DiamantinaThe Will of the Tribe Read onlineThe Will of the TribeBatchelors of Broken Hill b-14 Read onlineBatchelors of Broken Hill b-14Bony - 20 - The Battling Prophet Read onlineBony - 20 - The Battling ProphetMr Jelly’s Business Read onlineMr Jelly’s BusinessMan of Two Tribes b-21 Read onlineMan of Two Tribes b-21Bony and the Kelly Gang Read onlineBony and the Kelly GangBony and the Black Virgin Read onlineBony and the Black VirginBony and the Mouse Read onlineBony and the MouseThe Barrakee Mystery Read onlineThe Barrakee MysteryBony - 28 - Madman's Bend Read onlineBony - 28 - Madman's BendBreakaway House Read onlineBreakaway House