The Barrakee Mystery b-1 Read online

Page 7


  Dear Mr Thornton,

  The case of the recent murder near your house presents a problem, now no nearer solution. Murders of, or by, aboriginals generally are difficult to investigate, for as you well know the mind of the aboriginal baffles the intelligence of the white.

  The baptismal names of the bearer are Napoleon Bonaparte, but he may be persuaded to adopt a nom de plume. In any case, he is entitled to admiration for his powers of observation and deduction, as proved by many past successes in the solving of mysteries concerning aboriginals. In short, he is the finest bush detective in the Commonwealth.

  HQ have loaned his services from Queensland, and I have been instructed to ask the favour of your assistance, which is necessary. He himself suggests that you give him employment about the homestead, such as painting your two boats, which I observed required paint. Although he stands much higher in the Force than I do, he will want to dine and live with your hands.

  The letter was signed by Sergeant Knowles, and was marked “Strictly Confidential”. Thornton glanced up and regarded his visitor with interest.

  “Sit down, Mr Bonaparte,” he said, indicating the chair on the far side of his desk.

  The man smiled, revealing gleaming teeth. Hisblue eyes-the only other indication of the white in him-were twinkling when he said:

  “My name, Mr Thornton, is Bony, without any ‘Mister’. Everyone calls me Bony, from my chief to my wife and children in Brisbane.”

  “Then I, too, will call you Bony,” agreed the station-owner pleasantly. “How did you come by your startling name?”

  “I can assure you it was no wish of mine to insult the illustrious Emperor,” explained the stranger. He accepted a cigarette with grace, and lighting it, went on, “I was discovered at the tender age of two weeks with my dead mother under a sandalwood tree in the far north of Queensland, and I was taken to the nearest mission station. There, a little later, the necessity for a name arose; and, whilst various names occupied the mind of the respected matron, she observed me trying to eat a copy of Abbott’sLife of Napoleon Bonaparte. I have concluded since that the matron was a humorous soul.”

  “Sergeant Knowles says here that you have obtained not a little renown in the detection of crime. I don’t think I’ve ever heard of you.”

  “I am glad to hear that, Mr Thornton.” Bony blew a series of perfect smoke-rings. Then, calmly giving expression to an astounding vanity, he added: “If everyone had heard of me there would be no murders. My occupation would be gone, and I would be a most unhappy man.”

  “The sergeant says you want me to give you a job here,” Thornton said.

  “Yes. I thought I might allay suspicion by painting your boats. That occupation will give me opportunity to examine the scene of the murder. I will live with the men. Is Clair still here?”

  “Yes. But I am thinking of sending him out to the back of the run. Will you want him?”

  “Not just now. Are the blacks-Pontius Pilate’s crowd-still camped up the river?”

  “They are.”

  “Good! I may want them. Treat them with all kindness, Mr Thornton, for, as I said, I may want them. Should they suddenly decide to go for a walkabout, I might ask you to give them rations to keep them.”

  “Yes, all right. Have you formed any theories regarding the murder?”

  “Plenty. However, it’s certain that the crime was the conclusion of a feud lasting many years. Did you know King Henry? Did he ever work here, as Pontius Pilate stated?”

  “Although at the time I did not remember him, I found on looking up my business diaries that he was employed here some twenty years ago for a period of ten weeks.”

  “Ah! And Clair?”

  “Clair has never worked here before.”

  For a little while they stared at each other. Then:

  “Clair’s past is a mystery,” Bony said thoughtfully. “However, I do not suspect Clair above others. D’youknow if Clair can throw a boomerang?”

  “As far as I am aware, he cannot. Why?”

  Bony ignored the question.

  “Have you seen at any time any of Pontius Pilate’s crowd throwing a boomerang?” he asked.

  “No. Why these questions?”

  “If you answer my next question in the affirmative I will tell you. Sergeant Knowles informs me that there are several gum-trees about the place where King Henry was found dead. At the time of the murder, or since, you have not by any chance observed a wound on the trunk of one of them, such as would be made by being sharply struck by a sharp-edged piece of iron?”

  Instantly Mr Thornton was taken back to the day following the crime. Again he saw the two policemen quartering the ground looking for clues, and the trunk of the giant gum bearing just such a wound as Bony described.

  “Yes,” he said, and gave the details.

  “Good!” Bony announced with satisfaction. “We now know that if King Henry was not actually murdered by a boomerang one was thrown at him. How do we know? In his statement Frank Dugdale said that he heard a sound like the whirring of ducks, followed by a sharp report similar to a paling being struck by a stick. That was the flight of a boomerang and its impact against a tree. You see how sensible were the officials of New South Wales to loan from Queensland poor old Bony.”

  Chapter Twelve

  Bony on Boomerangs

  “AH!” BONY and the squatter were standing before the great gum-tree bearing the strange wound. The clean-cut fresh injury was now distorted by gummy exudations, light amber in colour and crystal clear. After a minute inspection at a distance of two yards, the half-caste placed the packing-case he had brought against the tree and, stepping on it, proceeded to remove the gum crystals with a clasp-knife.

  It was the morning following his appearance at Barrakee. Bony had been with the men at nine o’clock when they gathered outside the office to receive their orders and, taking care that he was heard, he had asked the squatter for work.

  Thornton had appeared to cogitate, and then stated that the applicant could start right away and paint the two boats.

  One of the boats had been hauled up on the riverbank, and lay there bottom-up on low trestles. A blow-lamp to remove the old paint and several triangular scrapers were in evidence.

  No one recognized Bony, or guessed his profession, but one man. The instant he saw him, Clair’s eyes narrowed; for, while the half-caste never remembered having seen the gaunt man before, Clair remembered the black trackers who had at one time left Longreach with the police to hunt down a madman. And when, from behind the pumping-engine, Clair saw the two by the gum-tree, he was sure that the newcomer was there to investigate. He wondered what Bony was doing to the bark of the tree.

  It had been urgently impressed on Thornton that the ultimate success of Bony’s activities depended on everyone on the station, including the women, being kept in ignorance of his profession. The squatter had given his word to remain silent on that point.

  At the end of ten minutes the strange detective stepped down from the case and shut his knife.

  “The examination and study of boomerangs, Mr Thornton, is of absorbing interest,” he remarked.

  “It must be,” the other agreed, inwardly agreeing also that the study of this educated and refined half-caste, a foundling picked up from the shade of a sandalwood tree in Northern Queensland, was also of absorbing interest.

  “Having always been interested in lethal weapons, my knowledge of the boomerang is unsurpassed,” Bony stated, with unconscious but superb conceit. “There are three kinds of boomerang,” he went on. “The Wongium, which returns in its flight to the thrower; the Kirras, which does not return; and the very heavy Murrawirrie. The Yarra blacks, now unhappily wiped out by you gentle white people, used only the first two-the Wongium for killing birds, and the Kirras as a war weapon.

  “The Central Australians employ the last two-the Kirras for throwing and the Murrawirrie for use as a sword. You see, therefore, that the Kirras is, or was, in general use all over Aust
ralia; but there is a sharp difference in the carving. The eastern blacks always flattened one side; the Central Australia blacks never flattened either side, but kept the weapon round.

  “Now, a Kirras made that wound. The boomerang was round, indicating that it came from Central Australia. It was thrown at a range of about thirty yards. Had it struck King Henry’s head fair and square, it would have smashed it to pulp; had it reached him from a distance of a hundred and fifty yards, it would have killed him by cutting his head open. Having a description of King Henry’swound, I am inclined to reason that it was not the boomerang in flight that killed him.”

  “Well?” The squatter was astonished, and showed it.

  “To proceed,” Bony went on. “The weapon which made that mark I have proved came from Central Australia. From tip to tip it measured about thirty-three inches, and it probably weighed about two pounds. Without seeing the weapon, I can go farther. I can tell you the precise district in Central Australia from which it came, and the name of the tribe that made it. It is not a sharply-curved boomerang. On the outer edge, at equal distance from the centre, are two deep incisions cut diagonally; and those marks-which show in reverse on the tree there-were cut as a mark of respect to an ancient chief who, hugging two enemy warriors in the sameembrace, crushed them to death.”

  For a little while Mr Thornton regarded Bony with undisguised admiration. “What else does that wound tell you?” he asked.

  “That the thrower of the boomerang was not skilled in its use,” replied Bony promptly. “A practised hand would never have missed at thirty yards, even in the dark. But enough of boomerangs for a while. Have you the list of names I asked for?”

  “Yes. Here it is.”

  Bony glanced down the names written on foolscap, the occupation of each person being also given.

  “Are all these people still about the homestead?” he asked.

  “All but Blair and McIntosh, who are out on the run cleaning out a dam, and my son, now at ThurlowLake. ”

  The half-caste’s expression was inscrutable; his blue eyes veiled. From a pocket in his dungarees he produced a silver pencil-holder and, kneeling beside the packing-case, used it as a desk. He added another name to the list, saying:

  “John Thornton.”

  “Surely I am not suspect?” inquired the station-owner dryly.

  Bony looked up. “I am looking for a sting-ray,” he said. “I examine all the fish that come into my net to make sure if the sting-ray is there. There is a Mrs Thornton, is there not?”

  The squatter laughed heartily.

  “There is,” he admitted.

  Down went Mrs Thornton’s name, and then yet another was added.

  “And a Miss Kate Flinders, I believe,” Bony murmured. Once more on his feet, he said: “I have here the name of every person at Barrakee homestead the night King Henry was murdered. I also have a list of the blacks up along the river. Our friend, the sergeant, definitely ascertained that there was not a single traveller on either side of the river for a distance of twelve miles up and twelve miles down on that precise night. Therefore, one of the names on my list is the name of King Henry’s murderer.

  “The case is one of exceptional simplicity,” Bony went on, with astounding assurance. “I have to find the killer among only twenty-four people. My confreres in the city have to find a wrongdoer among hundreds of thousands, which is why they often fail and I never do.

  “Adopting my original and exclusive methods of detection, I shall proceed to take a name and prove the innocence of the owner by inductive reasoning. With this process of elimination there will in the end remain one name-the name of King Henry’s murderer.”

  “You make me nervous, my friend,” Thornton said. “I shall have no peace of mind till you tell me you have erased my name.”

  “Then I will tell you when I do.”

  “Thank you! Here is my wife, curious to know why we are conspiring here.”

  Mrs Thornton and her niece were walking across the billabong. Bony regarded them with keen eyes. To him they were fish in his net, and either might be the sting-ray. When near, the Little Lady looked at him kindly; Kate with interest. The squatter smiled, and said:

  “I am having the boats painted, dear. Not, I am afraid, before it was needed.”

  “You are right, John. They need it very much. Kate and I were walking in the garden, and your long conversation has made us curious.”

  “My dear, you should not be curious,” admonished her husband. Turning to the half-caste, he said: “This is a new hand, with the exceptional name of Napoleon Bonaparte.”

  “Napoleon Bonaparte!”Mrs Thornton echoed.

  “Madam, it is my regret that I am not the illustrious Corsican,” Bony said gallantly. “It is my regret that his name has been taken in vain by those who gave it me. Alas! no man can be responsible for his parents: I certainly was, however, responsible for my name, though I was but six months of age.”

  Bony described his christening, following the mutilation of Abbott’s famous history.

  “I hope you have read that history,” the Little Lady said, looking at the dark face, the blue eyes, and the sharp features of the new hand.

  “If I had read the Bible through as often as I have read that history, Madam, I should today be a Doctor of Theology.”

  Two tiny vertical lines appeared between Mrs Thornton’s eyes. Before her stood a gentleman in dungarees, an Australian half-caste with the manner and accent of a university man. Bony was something entirely new to her.

  “In that case,” she said, “you will always experience poignant sympathy with the Eagle of France chained to the Dreadful Rock.”

  “Madam,” he said in return, “it was an unspeakable tragedy. My ancestors on my mother’s side knew not Christ, but they were better Christians than the Emperor’s jailers.” For a moment the squatter’s wife and the half-caste gazed steadily at each other. Then Bony bowed with instinctive grace, waited for the ladies, escorted by the squatter, to move away, and finally sat down on the upturned boat and lit a cigarette.

  For several minutes he remained in deep thought, smoking pensively. Suddenly he produced a small diary and, opening it at the page marked with that date, he wrote: “Mrs Thornton, capable of strong emotion.”

  Chapter Thirteen

  Mrs Thornton’s Ambition

  A WEEK PASSED with accustomed quietude at Barrakee. The river had almost ceased to run, and the long shallow stretches between the holes at every sharp bend were dry, with the exception of a meandering runnel. The days were brilliant and deliriously cool after the fierce heat of summer; and the nights, clear and invigorating, were lightened by the winking lamps of Heaven, so bright and big as seemingly to be affixed to the topmost branches of the gums.

  Bony fell naturally into his place among the men, and with them quickly became a favourite. If at first his correct and somewhat magniloquent speech aroused comment, this single peculiarity was quickly dimmed by familiarity. His supply of stories was unfailing, and his wonderful accomplishment of eliciting haunting strains from a single gum-leaf was an inexhaustible source of pleasure.

  A few days after Bony’s arrival Sergeant Knowles called in for afternoon tea on his way from the little township of Louth. Ranking much higher in the social scale of the bush people than do his peers in the British police force, the sergeant was always welcomed by the Women of Barrakee.

  The reason for this difference in status is no mystery. Australia’s mounted police are recruited frombushmen. Whilst not attracting gentlemen adventurers, as similar organizations in other dominions may do, the force does attract sound men from a community that contains ninety-nine per cent natural gentlemen.

  A farmer often lives all his life on his little farm; the city-dweller all his life in one suburb. Beyond the suburb and the farm the world is a myth. With the majority ofbushmen, however, the restless nomadic habits of the blacks they have displaced have eaten into their vitals. Even the semi-civilized blacks must go
on a walkabout when the call is heard; and it is the same call which urges a bushman suddenly to leave his job, break for the nearest hotel to spend his cheque, and then take his walkabout before settling again for a little while in a new job.

  The walkabouts cover in many cases hundreds ofmiles, and in a few years make the man familiar with all the States. His mind is broadened by travel and fresh human intercourse. His philosophy is one of simple happiness. The amount of his reading isprodigious, the range of it is wide.

  Such, then, is the material that goes to make an inland policeman. The class and the police-court mould the recruit’s speech as the riding-master weans him from his easy seat on a horse to military stiffness. The force finishes his education, so well begun by the walkabouts.

  Thornton and the sergeant were standing beside the latter’s car after tea. The sergeant was in plain clothes, but there was no mistaking the soldier-policeman in his upright figure and keen face.

  “What do you think of Bony?” he asked, with a smile.

  “I think him the most extraordinary man I have ever met,” Thornton replied. “He knows as much about the Emperor Napoleon as he does about boomerangs and playing on a gum leaf.”

  The sergeant chuckled.

  “He asked me once who I considered the greatest man who ever lived, and when I named Jesus Christ he said solemnly: ‘Jesus is the Son of God; but the first Emperor Napoleon was the God of the French nation’.”

  “I fully believe it,” the squatter said thoughtfully. “He was giving me a lecture on boomerangs the morning after he came here and, my wife happening to join us, I introduced him to her, wholly, I think, on account of his name. She, too, is a great admirer of the Little Corporal. Yes, he’s an astonishing person.”

  “I had a letter two days ago from a brother-in-law who is an inspector at Charleville, Queensland,” said the sergeant. “He said he had heard that Bony was being sent here on this case, and gave me rather a good history of him.

 

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