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The Devil's Steps Page 4


  “Poison,” answered the surgeon.

  “Cyanide?”

  “Almost sure. A guess?”

  Bony hesitated.

  “Yes,” he replied. To those assembled, he said: “Find the man who wears a size twelve in boots. He is not a workman. The heels and soles are of rubber, the diamond-shaped trademark is stamped on the soles, and the soles are partly worn, very much so along the inner edge toward the toe, indicating that the wearer is a horseman.”

  “Thanks, Bony,” purred Superintendent Bolt. “Mason, examine Miss Jade and the staff and ascertain who called here last evening after eight o’clock—you know—the man with twelve in boots.”

  When Mason had left the office, Bolt said to Bony:

  “Any other point of interest?”

  “Yes. A maid was sent to enquire after Grumman when he did not appear punctually at breakfast as was his custom. She first knocked on his door, and receiving no answer, she tried the door and found it unlocked. She opened the door a little way and called Grumman’s name. Again receiving no answer, she opened the door wide and looked in. The curtains were drawn before the french windows, but there was sufficient light to enable her to see that he was not in bed and was not in the room. Subsequently, when I went in, I found that all of Mr. Grumman’s luggage had been taken away.”

  “You can’t tell us how or by whom it was removed?” asked the Superintendent.

  “No. I possess nothing on which to direct suspicion towards anyone. Personally, I find it most annoying,” Bony went on, blandly. “I want to go through the late Mr. Grumman’s effects.”

  “You don’t want to more than we do,” snapped Snook, and Bolt began to chuckle.

  Chapter Four

  A Pleasant Afternoon

  DURING THE remainder of that morning, Bony occupied his cane chair at the distant end of the veranda. Plain-clothes policemen seemed to be everywhere; they walked about the lawn and up and down the paths; in and out of the room lately occupied by Grumman, the french windows of which were immediately behind the reclining Bonaparte; and about the veranda interviewing guests who already had been examined in the lounge as to their identity and occupation and holiday plans. Two of them photographed the house, the lawns, the windows of Grumman’s room, and the interior of that room and of the reception hall. The fingerprint-section did their work in Grumman’s room, while members of the traffic branch roared their cycle outfits up the drive to report to Superintendent Bolt, and roared down it to slip away again. An ambulance came to collect the bodies. Two men measured the lawns and the bottom road bank, and made a rough plan from which would be made a minutely accurate one.

  Lunch was served to the guests at one o’clock. The efficient George waited with the assistance of two maids, his movements smooth and his demeanour courteous. The guests were informed by Inspector Snook that they were released from restriction, and when they drifted from the dining room they found the secretary at their service and the now-composed Miss Jade on duty as hostess.

  By three o’clock all but six of the guests had departed, and all but two of the policemen had left. The room occupied by Grumman had been sealed. Three kookaburras in a driveway gum tree decided to chorus their pent-up feelings in sardonic mirth. At half-past three Bony was the only guest occupying the veranda, and to him George brought afternoon tea on a service trolley.

  “It’s been quite an exciting day, George,” observed the little half-caste when helping himself to two of Mrs. Parkes’s cakes.

  “Yes, sir, it has that,” George agreed. “The next stir-up will be from the press, I expect.”

  “Ah, yes. Those boys will make an appearance at any moment. In fact, they are a little late, but then, I suppose the detectives wouldn’t release the news till after they returned to the city. It appears that you will be less busy from now on.”

  George smiled.

  “Oh, the place will soon fill up again. Lots of people will come out of curiosity. Another cup of tea, sir?”

  “Thank you. How long have you been employed here?”

  Again George smiled.

  “Three months, one week and four days,” he replied. “I had to work it all out for the d.s. Well, I must get along. Thank you, sir.”

  As he trundled his trolley away Bony glanced at his feet, noted that he was wearing tennis shoes size seven, that he was slightly knock-kneed and walked on his toes.

  The sun was westering, and already the house shadow reached far down beyond the highway. The valley lay bathed in colour, and the far mountains had changed their colour from dove-grey to warm brown. Not a cloud broke the blue dome of the sky, not a leaf moved, so still was the air. It was almost as warm as a summer’s evening.

  George came again to Napoleon Bonaparte.

  “Inspector Snook sends his compliments, sir, and will you kindly see him in the office?”

  Bony frowned.

  “What, again!” he exclaimed. “Hang it, I suppose we’ll all be pestered by these detectives for some time.”

  “They can be very irritating, sir,” George said, sympathetically.

  “They can be!” echoed Bony. “They are.”

  He found the office door closed, knocked on it and entered when a loud voice bade him. He re-closed the door and crossed to sit at the table at which Inspector Snook was seated.

  “Thought you’d like to hear results to date before we leave,” Snook said. “And there are one or two points that want clearing up.”

  “Go ahead,” Bony urged.

  “To begin with, our fellows haven’t located Marcus,” Snook said, his voice containing a trace of anger. “Within ten minutes of Bisker’s call this morning all roads leading down from this mountain were blocked, and all cars travelling from here were stopped and examined.

  “Careful questioning of Bisker has given us a reasonable estimate of the time which elapsed between the minute Marcus left the house and the minute that Bisker spoke to Headquarters on the telephone as five minutes, so that the roads were blocked fifteen minutes after Marcus left in that car. The nearest road-block was at Manton, nine miles down the highway, Manton being a small township with a railway station.

  “It’s possible that Marcus got beyond Manton in those fifteen minutes. And it’s possible, too, that he took a side road off the highway and two places between here and Manton. Anyway, he hasn’t been trapped.”

  “Tell me about him,” Bony requested. Snook leaned back in his chair, placed the tips of his fingers together and pursed his lips before replying. Then he said:

  “Marcus is our Number One Gangster. Marcus is our own pet name for Alexander Croft, alias Mick Slater, alias Edward B. Martyn.”

  “Oh!” breathed Bony. “Ho! Ho! Edward B. Martyn! No wonder the constable didn’t have a chance.”

  “No, Rice had no chance. Rice was a plain-clothes man for six years, and a good man, too. He was shot up pretty badly last year, and when he was able to return to duty he was offered the station up here for a period for health reasons. He knew Marcus—unfortunately for him when he was unarmed.”

  “I’ve heard of this Marcus under the name of Martyn,” Bony averred. “He never came into my class of investigations. Bad man, eh?”

  “The baddest, Bony. He’s cold and efficient, and the list of his crimes is as long as your arm.”

  “What does he specialise in?”

  “Dope. He’s an international trader in dope. You interested in dope?”

  “No.” Bony gazed up at the ceiling. “No. It wasn’t dope which brought me here. I’ll tell you in confidence. My present interest is in secret war weapons and explosives, and such like. Now how does dope fit in with that? In other words, what interest had your bird Marcus in my bird Grumman?”

  “Search me,” exploded Snook. “I don’t get this affair at all—yet. By the way, when you went into Grumman’s room, was the door unlocked?”

  “Yes—with the key on the outside,” answered Bony. “I had with me a key to fit the lock of that door, and I
was astonished to find the door key in the lock. Then I learned that the maid had been sent to see what detained Grumman from breakfast, and she had found the key in the lock.”

  “So that, actually, all Grumman’s luggage had been taken away when the maid looked in.”

  “Oh, yes. I am sure that Grumman’s luggage was not taken out of the room after the maid reported to Miss Jade and before I went in.”

  “What d’you make of it?”

  “Nothing so far. I don’t understand it.”

  “Nor me,” admitted Snook. “There is this Grumman who gets the drinks steward to bring him a drink at ten thirty-five last night, and then goes off to bed. He gave no intimation of leaving. You say that he didn’t fall into the ditch, and wasn’t dropped into it. You say that his body was laid in it. Now where was he poisoned? If in his room, then his body must have been carried down to that ditch. Why carry the body to conceal it in the ditch, and why then pinch all his belongings?”

  “Perhaps to give his effects a thorough, even a minute, examination, an examination which would require more time than that between the killing of Grumman and daylight.”

  “Yes, there’s that to it,” agreed Snook thoughtfully. “But why try to conceal the body, and if to conceal the body why leave it there in the ditch? Why not take the body with them to the place where they took the effects, or at least to a much better place than that ditch? Up here there are millions of places where a body could have been concealed.”

  “I don’t know why. Something may have gone wrong in their planning. If the body had remained concealed, even for twenty-four hours, then during that period the people here would have thought that Grumman had done a moonlight flit to evade paying his account. That might have been the plan, but it just went wrong when the man Fred happened to catch sight of the body in the ditch.”

  “Probably it was something like that,” agreed Snook.

  “Did you people get onto the man wearing the number twelves?”

  Snook shook his head. Then:

  “I’ll post a couple of men up here to look around for that gentleman,” he said.

  Bony lit a cigarette and blew smoke towards the suspended electric-light shade.

  “Do me a favour, Snook. Leave the gent with the big feet to me. I shall be staying up here for some time to come.”

  “You will! Why?”

  “Because I like the scenery.”

  “Nuts!” snapped Snook. He glared at Bony and asked: “Any special reason why you are working for the Army—outside of Queensland?”

  Over Bony’s brown face flashed that smile which appeared to transfigure him. He had much earlier this day assessed the other’s character, and he was aware that Snook’s mind was akin to that of the Civil Servant, a mind governed by rules and regulations and precedents and what not. By such is a democracy ruled, and not by such are great criminals brought to the bar of justice. Placidly, he said:

  “The Army employs me, I think, because no person in whom the Army might be interested would suspect that an unfortunate half-caste was a policeman. I am staying on here until I am assured that the person wearing the number-twelve boots is not a local resident, and also, until I am sure that the persons responsible for Grumman’s death and the theft of his possessions have left the district. That is why I think you can leave this end of the two cases to me.”

  The Melbourne man rose to his feet.

  “All right, Bonaparte. We’ll do that. You will keep us au fait with any developments up here?”

  “Certainly. I may go down to the city tomorrow, and then I’ll call in at Headquarters and have a look at your pictures of Marcus.”

  “Yes, do. We’ll help all we can. And don’t you take Marcus at all cheaply. He’s Satan walking the earth. Now I’ll get along. I’ll leave the news lads to you and Miss Jade and Bisker. Bit of a character—Bisker. He told the Super that he was entitled to civility as he paid income tax. The old man looked as though Bisker was a talking mosquito.”

  On leaving the office, Snook left the house and was driven away by a plain-clothes man, while Bony sauntered into the lounge and rang for George. George was away getting a drink for him when Miss Jade appeared.

  She was now quite composed and dressed in an afternoon frock. She wore clothes like a Frenchwoman. Bony rose to his feet and gave her a slight bow and his brightest smile.

  “I’ve just asked George to bring me a drink,” he said lightly. “Might he bring you one, too?”

  “Thank you, Mr. Bonaparte.” Miss Jade smiled with her mouth and not with her eyes. George entered with Bony’s drink, and she ordered a cocktail.

  “I am glad that you are not running away, too, Mr. Bonaparte,” she told him.

  “Run away! Certainly not! I’d not leave for ten murders,” Bony said gaily. “I want a holiday. I like this house, and the air outside and the views. And now that the wretched police have left, I expect to be able to enjoy my holiday in peace.”

  They touched glasses. She accepted a cigarette from his case, and she looked into his eyes over the flame of the match he struck for her. He was rolling a cigarette for himself when she asked:

  “What was your impression of Mr. Grumman?”

  “Quite good, Miss Jade. He bothered me a little with his accent. Did you know his nationality?”

  “American, I understood. German-American, I think. Plenty of money. My books show a credit for him of some eighteen pounds. He paid well in advance from the day he came.”

  “He had been here some time?”

  “Yes—five weeks last Tuesday.” Miss Jade most daintily blew a smoke ring, expertly lanced it and turned again to Bony. “I can’t understand how his luggage was carried away without someone hearing it being taken.”

  “Out through the french windows of his room, across the veranda, down over the lawn and so to the road where, no doubt, a car was waiting.”

  Miss Jade nodded her superbly coiffured head in silent agreement.

  “Do you understand it at all?” she asked.

  “I’m afraid I don’t understand it a little bit,” Bony admitted. “I never could even guess the ending to a mystery thriller. Raising sheep is my long suit. I fear you must have been badly frightened when that man shot the local policeman.”

  Miss Jade clasped her bejewelled hands together. Her eyes were big when she exclaimed:

  “Oh, I was, indeed. It was that man’s eyes which frightened me most. They reminded me of the eyes of a jay which Bisker wounded. The birds would come here and take all the berries from my trees, so I got Bisker to shoot some of them. One fell at my feet, and it looked up at me and tried to fly at my legs, and its eyes shone with a red light. That man’s eyes were red, shining red, when he backed to the door and pointed his dreadful pistol at us. Red eyes in a paper-white face. I’ll never forget them.”

  Abruptly, Miss Jade became pensive. Bony was about to speak when she motioned with her right hand for him to remain silent. Then she said: “Somehow or other, that man’s face reminded me of someone I’ve met, and you mentioning just now about mystery thrillers brings to mind who that someone is. That man is not unlike a resident here, a writer of mystery stories, a man named Clarence B. Bagshott. Well, now, that’s remarkable.”

  “How so, Miss Jade?”

  “Mr. Bagshott’s face is very white, and he has dark eyes which at moments when he’s talking take on a reddish gleam. He’s a mystery, too. I never liked the man. I wonder! I wonder if the man who came here and killed Mr. Rice is a relative of Mr. Bagshott! He might be. But then that’s absurd, Mr. Bonaparte, isn’t it?”

  “Possibly, Miss Jade, but not necessarily.”

  “Still, as someone once told me, authors of mystery stories are criminally minded. Instead of actually committing crimes, they give vent to their criminal instincts by writing about crime.”

  Miss Jade gazed straight into Bony’s eyes. Then slowly her face, including her eyes, broke into a smile and she laughed.

  “How silly of me, M
r. Bonaparte. And I am laying myself wide open to a slander action. Mr. Bagshott is very clever in his way, and, I suppose, like most clever people, is a little neurotic. Now what?”

  George entered from the passage connecting the lounge with the reception hall.

  “There’s a party of reporters come, marm. They are asking for you.”

  “Bother!” Miss Jade softly exclaimed. Then to Bony: “Do I look all right—if they want to photograph me?”

  She had risen, and Bony was standing when he replied in his grand manner:

  “Madam,” he cried, “you are the loveliest woman I’ve been privileged to meet for many a long year. A little publicity, I am sure, will not spoil you. Au revoir! I’ll take a little walk before dinner.”

  Chapter Five

  Treasure Trove

  THE GIANT shadow of Mount Chalmers was extending its thick finger across the wide valley towards the great mountain range, the tree-lined escarpments of which now stood in brilliant relief. Not a leaf moved on the stately mountain-ash gums growing beside the road along which Bony strolled. Early for the season, a whip-bird deep down in a gully gave its warbling note which is followed by a sound like that of a whip being cracked, whilst in the grassy banks of either side of the road the red-capped robins and the blue finches were busy nesting.

  To the man of the open spaces of the semi-arid interior, this scene of soft greens and chocolate earth, of silvered tree trunks and trailing vines, gave pure delight. The air was so clear, cool but not cold, and its freshness was like wine in the nostrils.

  What a day it had been! The weather had been sublime, the scene one of innocent rustic charm. Yet no previous day had provided Bony with such a crop of questions demanding answers.