No footprints in the bush b-8 Read online

Page 13


  “Meanwhile, Rex, knowing his father had gone outback in the car, and having failed to see any surrender signal, swiftly planned a counter move. With five of his bucks he travelled to the station road where it is crossed by the telephone line. The McPherson came along in his car, saw the break, and stopped to repair it, the wire having been cut, of course, by Rex.

  “We know that Rex wants his father to retire from the station and hand the property over to him, and it seems probable that he saw the opportunity of personally persuading his father to accept the transfer. Markyou, I say it is probable, not certain. Rex had with him a portable telephone, and he might have had the intention of compelling his father to call up the homestead office and ask either Miss McPherson or myself to go out to him as his car had broken down.

  “Anyway, whatever it was Rex wanted his father to do The McPherson refused to do it. I have the evidence to prove how determined is this young man. He obtained stalks of cane-grass and made fine splinters which he thrust under his father’s fingernails.”

  “Oh!” exclaimed Flora, her face white and anguished.

  “This method of torture is never practised by the aborigines,” Bony went on. “In fact, the aborigines are not given to torture of any kind. Rex, however, is allied to the white race which, with other races, has indulged with energy in the art of inflicting pain. We know how long it takes to breed vice out of animals, even to breed out physical defects, so that the strange personality called Rex McPherson cannot be attributed to his mother or his mother’s people.

  “His objective when forcing The McPherson to use the portable telephone was to get me into his power or, which seems more likely, to get Miss McPherson into his power when he could use her as a powerful lever for his blackmail.”

  “But-” interrupted Flora.

  “One moment, please. The McPherson refused to accede to his son’s demands and so submitted to torture. Blood drops on the ground and the cane-grass splinters illustrate the method of torture. Failing to achieve his desire, Rex and his blacks returned to their country.

  “The McPherson revealed wonderful stoicism when he managed to mend the cut telephone wire, and then drove his car back to Watson’s Bore, for there are blood stains on the wire and on the steering wheel of his car.

  “At Watson’s Bore the aborigines concocted a medicament for his wounded fingers by pulverizing gum leaves on a nardoo stone and mixing the paste with beef fat. Then, with his hands bandaged, The McPherson instructed each of them to take a quantity of flour in a calico bag, those of them best able to use a rifle were given a weapon and cartridges, and the expedition set out whilst we were examining the scene where the telephone wire was cut.

  “The McPherson, to my way of reasoning, has gone off on a fruitless errand. He and the aborigines with him saw those Illprinka smoke signals and accepted their intelligence that a corroboree was to be held at Duck Lake and all Illprinka men were going back to Duck Lake. He probably has the idea of destroying Rex’s headquarters which he believes are situated at Duck Lake, to destroy the aeroplane and then if Rex escapes to hunt him down and destroy him. I think that those smoke signals form a part of Rex McPherson’s newest plan to obtain the station, and therefore should be disregarded. We must not forget that Duck Lake is far away and that the surrounding country does not offer the wonderful camouflage that that great area of cane-grass does at the western end of the plain.

  “The McPherson may succeed. I doubt it. He sees no farther than visible smoke signals: I try to see into the mind of-”

  Bony was stopped by the sharp ringing of the telephone bell. He rose without comment and placed the receiver to his ear. The others sat quite still, waiting, listening, trying to ascertain from Bony’s replies who was calling. Whilst speaking he kept his back to them. Then he replaced the receiver and turned to them, eyes sparkling andface smiling.

  “That was Constable Price,” he said. “Doctor Whyte has just passed over the township. He dropped a message asking them to tell us to have the landing ground here illuminated for his landing. He’ll be here in twenty minutes or half an hour. Burning Water! Race to the camp and bring all your people.”

  Chapter Fourteen

  A Happy Landing

  WHEN Henry Whyte emerged from protected adolescence to face the wide and very wicked world he was arrayed in the uniform of an officer of the Royal Air Force, and he was sent up into the blue to battle with his country’s enemies. Fortunately for him, that was in the summer of 1918 when German air power was paralysed, and thus he received a sporting chance of survival.

  Perhaps it was that he happened to be the seventh son of a seventh son, or it might have been that he was born in a year divisible by seven, but from the day of his first solo flight in training the history of his life was red-lettered with luck. At least this was said by his friends to account for his escapes from The Reaper.

  In his somewhat unordinary character was a streak of cautiousness which really ought to erase many of the red letters, for many of his escapes from death were directly due to forethought and thoroughness in planning for the future. He was one of many sons of the rich who burn with ambition to do something.

  After demobilization, Major Henry Whyte settled down to win his medical degree, and, having accomplished this, he was looking about for a practice when he happened to read an article describing the work of the first Flying Parson in Australia, whose head-quarters were at Wilcannia, N.S. W., and whose parish was half the size of England. The corollary of the Flying Parson, of course, was the Flying Doctor.

  Thus it was that Doctor Whyte came to Australia in 1927, then obtaining his transfer to the Australian register and taking a refresher course in aerial navigation. Ample means enabled him to begin his newly found career with means sufficient to stand the drain of two machines every year. They did not wear out, like motor cars.

  Selecting Birdsville for his headquarters, Doctor Whyte never hesitated to fly anywhere in all weathers to succour men and women, even to transport them to the town hospital, to search for lost explorers, and to enhance the well being of a meagre population inhabiting a vast area of country.

  He received Bony’s telegram, dispatched by Constable Price and purporting to be sent by McPherson, when he arrived home at four o’clock in the afternoon from a long trip. Glancing through his case-book and finding himself comparatively free, he left Birdsville at six on the 400-mile journey to McPherson’s Station where he had gazed into shy blue eyes and had felt tender red lips clinging to his own.

  He ought to have arrived at the McPherson homestead when Flora and her small party were stopped at the break in the station telephone line, but then he was still engaged on the slight repairs to his engine the failure of which had caused a forced landing on a gibber plain one hundred miles south of Shaw’s Lagoon. He got off the ground just before night took possession of it.

  He ought then to have returned to Birdsville where his own landing ground would have been illuminated to receive him. What he did was to set off to locate a tiny outpost blanketed by night, unmarked by street lamps, an infinitesimal dot no larger than a pea on a football ground, trusting to his navigational skill to locate Shaw’s Lagoon and so be able to reset the course to McPherson’s Station.

  He made an error of a sixty-ninth of a degree in his calculations worked out when his machine was high above the shrouded world and flying in the twilight of the sky. The error was small, but it might well have ended in a disastrous night landing. He passed Shaw’s Lagoon fourteen miles to the west of the township, but quickly discovered his error and turned in an effort to find it-the pea lying on the football ground at night.

  Quite a famous character at Shaw’s Lagoon was one known to all and sundry as Beery Bill, an elderly alcoholic in monthly receipt of money from a trust fund sufficient to hire him a hut and to supply him with an almost unlimited number of schooners.

  Beery Bill had been away all day with Constable Price and others on the dreadful business of the burned car i
n the gully bed. During the journey, of course, the supply of schooners of beer was non-existent, and it can be easily imagined with what avidity Beery Bill carried on when the supply was renewed. It soon became evident that the enforced abstention had put Beery Bill out of his stride, as it were, because he became unwell for the first time during his sojourn at Shaw’s Lagoon and, to the amazement of the twenty inhabitants, he left the hotel to sit with his back against a pepper-tree in the street.

  It was quite dark. The oil lamps in the few houses and the hotel sent only sickly gleams through the open windows. Beery Bill sat and wondered what on earth had gone wrong with him, and was thus dismally engaged with introspection when he heard the far distant hum of the aeroplane engine.

  He was the only person in Shaw’s Lagoon who did hear it, and knowing that his eyes could show him things unseen by ordinary mortals, he also knew that his ears could not play him such tricks. Ah! Here was a chance to entrench himself on the best side of Constable Price, and off he trotted-he was beyond walking-to the police-station with the news.

  Out came Price to listen and to hear. Having expected to receive a telegram from the Flying Doctor it needed no inductive reasoning to arrive at the belief that he was hearing Doctor Whyte’s machine, and that Doctor Whyte had missed Shaw’s Lagoon and was returning in an effort to pick it out from the void beneath him.

  Thus it was that shortly after Doctor Whyte realized his mistake in his calculations and turned his machine he saw far down ahead a pin-prick of red light magically grow to become a leaping fire. Down he went until his altimeter registered a thousand feet and he was passing above the fire to see people standing about it and gazing upward at his navigation lights, to see the firelight painting the sides of small houses and the hotel, for the bonfire had been lit in the centre of the one and only street.

  Well, well! He’d always been lucky!

  On his pad he wrote the instructions to be telephoned to McPherson’s homestead. He wrote whilst the machine was climbing towards the lazy stars. He wrapped the paper about his pipe and tied it with fusing wire. Then he sent his ship down to within five hundred feet and dropped his message. Whilst circling the township, he saw a boy pick it up and race with it to Constable Price who had changed into uniform.

  Now having his position, with only a hundred miles still to fly he reset his course and flew away into the unreal world of void and dimstarshine, depending on his instruments for height and speed and wind slip. The bonfire at Shaw’s Lagoon slid away beyond the tail, slid away to vanish beyond the rim of featureless void established only by the stars themselves. He sent the machine up four thousand feet and he had ample room to pass over the hill range whereon was that grove of six cabbage-trees.

  Probably he was somewhere over those cabbage-trees when he saw a pin-prick of light on the invisible horizon ahead of the propeller. It was a white light and his guess was correct that it was made by a petrol lamp on the homestead veranda. Six minutes later he was flying over the homestead, looking down on the light which had been moved on to the lawn, seeing the dim star light reflected by the water in the reservoir.

  He had arrived but not landed. He circled twice, and then saw the red spark born westward of the homestead, saw it grow into a scarlet flame, watched it swiftly become a towering beacon, and sending the machine towards it, he saw about the beacon a crowd of naked aborigines, a man dressed and a woman arrayed in white.

  Down he went in a giant spiral, noting the wind direction by the beacon’s smoke. A hundred feet outward from it the ground was invisible to him. Ah! Outward from the beacon in opposite directions flowed a necklace of rubies, jewels which shone the brighter the farther they got away from the fire. He sent his ship up now whilst watching the ruby necklace begin to curve to the west, extend westward like the distant lights of a street, become stilled like jewelled arms extended to invite protection and safety.

  Up and away towards the stars he climbed far to the west. Then he glided earthward with the engine just ticking over and the whine of the wind in the struts a new sound. He still could not see the ground, but down he went till the nose of the ship was directed to the open end of the avenue of torches, which excited aborigines whirled above their heads to keep them alight and burning fiercely. He felt the wheels touch ground, felt them touch again and then move over the slightly uneven surface. On went the brakes, gently at first, then harder to stop the ship from charging into the bonfire at the end of the fiery avenue.

  The ruby necklaces broke into two fragments when the torch bearers raced with shouts and screams towards him. He could see and hear Burning Water bawling at them to keep back, but on they came, giving the impression that his ship was about to be engulfed by a sea of fire and flying sparks.

  He watched impersonally the grey-haired chief and Bony race to the machine to keep back the excited aborigines, heard the chief’s mighty voice threatening, commanding. The fiery tide halted, here and there ebbed, became stilled. He saw the woman in white running to the ship, behind her a line of fire, and he never was able to recall how he reached ground. Now he was holding her in his arms and feeling the press of warm lips on his own.

  Chapter Fifteen

  A Spoke in Bony’s Wheel

  BREATHLESSLY, unwonted colour in her face, her blue eyes sparkling in the ruddy glare, Flora McPherson slipped from her lover’s arms and turned to present the visitor to the patiently waiting Bonaparte and the Chief of the Wantella Tribe.

  “Harry!” she cried, “this is Detective-Inspector Bonaparte.”

  Bony stepped forward and put out a hand. The doctor removed his gloves, ripped open the front of his flying suit, and fingered a monocle suspended by black cord. The monocle appeared to leap upward from the doctor’s forefinger and thumb. It reflected the firelight. Then it was perfectly poised in the right eye.

  “Howd’youdo, Inspector,” he said, and there was neither drawl nor affectation in his voice.“Bony for short, eh?”

  “All my friends call me Bony.”

  They shook hands.

  “To use anAustralianism: too right,” the doctor agreed heartily. He was no fool, this young-old man who began life as a destroyer and now was a mender. “Bony it is, comrade. And a smack on the jaw if you call me anything but Harry. And there’s Chief Burning Water. How are you?”

  Dr Whyte took three steps forward to meet the chief of an aboriginal tribe, and Burning Water shook hands delightedly.

  “I am well, Harry,” he said, compelled to gaze slightly downward because of his height. “I have thought of you, and I have looked forward to your next visit. I hope you will stay long.”

  “Leave it to me,” and Dr Whyte brazenly winked. “How’s the infant? D’you still let her build chook houses on your tummy?”

  “I haven’t yet been able to blow them down,” Burning Water replied, laughing, and his people standing behind him joined in the chorus. The flying doctor stepped out of his suit, saying:

  “You would be a marvel if you did. Wellwell! I’m damned glad to see you all. What a landing!”

  “It was nice, wasn’t it?” Flora agreed. “Now you must be tired and hungry. So late to arrive, too. What about your cases?”

  “I’ll get them out. Where are those trees we used to anchor the crate to, Burning Water?”

  “They areback a little way, Harry. You could leave the aeroplane in my charge.”

  “Right oh! I’ll get the cases first, though.”

  Willing hands took the two suitcases from him, and Burning Water began to call names and to shout orders. Almost as though they were professional groundsmen, the aborigines turned the machine and proceeded to trundle it towards the foot of the higher land. Flora slipped an arm through the doctor’s and called to Bony to accompany them. And then when he was walking beside her she slipped her other arm through his. In step like soldiers, they walked towards the homestead, preceded by the suitcase carriers, escorted and followed by torch bearers. For Bony, too, it was a happy landing.

&nb
sp; “Why ever did you take the risks of flying in the dark?” Flora asked Whyte. “You might easily have got lost.”

  “I intended coming in daylight, but I had to land miles south of Shaw’s Lagoon and repair a broken oil pipe,” he said in defence. “Time I’deffected the repairs it was almost dark. Just as easy to come on as to go back. The people at the township lighted a bonfire in the street to give me my position. I dropped my message there. You must have got it.”

  “Oh yes, it was telephoned through. We got quite a thrill preparing the fire and torches. We had no time to spare.

  “I saw the light on the veranda from way back over thehills, I suppose old Jack took it out on to the lawn.”

  “AndThe McPherson?”

  “He is out on the run,” Bony cut in.

  “Great man,” asserted the flying doctor. “I’m glad he’s not as tough as he looks, and that he doesn’t look as tough as those birds in the dining-room. Byhokey! He and his father have done a wonderful job of work out here, don’t you think, Bony?”

  “It requires time to get it all into proper perspective.”

  “It took me quite a time to realize that the place is almost in the middle of Australia,” Flora confessed. “Uncle says it would not have been possible on the other side of the border in Queensland on account of the heavy taxation and uncertainty of tenure.”

  “I wonder what the devil they do with all the tax money they get,” remarked the doctor. “You wouldn’t think the politicians could spend it all, would you?”

  “They give me some of it,” Bony said, laughing.

  He left Flora to take her guest into the house andhimself went on to the office where he belatedly rang Nevin and told him the facts concerning McPherson. Now and then the overseer grunted his annoyance and impatience.

 

    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