Authors: Ngaio Marsh
âOf course it will. Very big indeed. There's one question I'd like to ask. What about “prematures” by attraction to the gun itself, or explosion in transit?'
âThere's a safety device incorporated in the doings, and it sees to it that the fuse won't do its stuff until the shell starts to rotate and after it leaves the gun barrel. The result, in effect, is an aerial magnetic mine. I'll show you the blueprints on presentation of your official card,' Fabian ended, with a grin.
âI should be enormously interested. But not tonight, if you don't mind. I've still a job of work to do.'
âIn that case, I'll escort you back to your room, first making sure that no adventuresses lurk under the benches. Shall we go?'
Back in Alleyn's room, Fabian lit a cigarette at a candle, and gave his guest one of his sidelong glances. âAny good,' he asked, âor rotten?'
âThe discussion?'
âYes. Post-mortem. Inquest. Was it hopelessly stupid to do it?'
âI don't think so.'
âTomorrow, I suppose, you'll talk to the Johns family and the men and so on.'
âIf I may.'
âWe're crutching. You'll be able to see the set-up. It's pretty much the same. All exceptâ'
âYes?' asked Alleyn, as he paused.
âThe press is new. I couldn't stomach that. It's the same kind, though.'
âI'll just turn up there if I may.'
âYes. OK. I don't know if you're going to keep our unearthly hours. Please don't, if you'd rather not. Breakfast at a quarter to six.'
âOf course.'
âThen I'll take you over to the shed. You'll ask me for anything you want?'
âI just want a free hand to fossick. I'd be grateful if I could be disregarded.'
âNot very easy, I'm afraid. But of course you'll have a free hand. I've told the men and Ducky and everybody that you'll be talking to them.'
âHow did they like that?'
âQuite keen. It's given a fillip to the ever-popular murder story. Damned ghouls! There'll be one or two snags, though. Wilson, the wool-sorter, and Jack Merrywether, the presser, are not at all keen. Your friend Sub-Inspector Jackson got badly offside with both of them. And there's Tommy Johns.'
âThe boy's father?'
âYes. He's a difficult chap, Tommy. I get on with him all right. He thinks for himself, does Tommy, and what's more,' said Fabian, with a grin, âhe thinks much like me politically, so I consider him a grand guy. But he's difficult. He resented Flossie's handling of young Cliff and small blame to him. And what he thinks of police methods! You won't find him precisely come-to-ish.'
âAnd the boy himself?'
âHe's all right, really. He's a likely lad, and he thinks for himself, too. We're good friends, young Cliff and I. I lend him the
New Statesman
and he rebuilds the government, social customs and moral standards of mankind on a strictly noneconomic basis two or three times a week. His music is really good, I believe, though I'm afraid it's not getting much of a run these days. I've tried to induce him to practise on the Bechstein over here, but he's an obstinate young dog and won't.'
âWhy?'
âIt was Flossie's.'
âSo the quarrel went deep?'
âYes. It's lucky for young Cliff that he spent the crucial time screwing Bach out of that haggard old mass of wreckage in the outhouse. Everybody knew about the row and his bolt down-country afterwards. Your boyfriend, the Sub-Inspector, fastened on it like a limpet, but fortunately we could all swear to the continuous piano playing. Cliff's all right.'
âWhat's the explanation of the whisky incident?'
âI've not the slightest idea, but I'm perfectly certain he wasn't pinching it. I've tried to get the story out of him, but he won't come clean, blast him.'
âDoes he get on well with the other men?'
âNot too badly. They were inclined at one time to look upon him as a freak. His schooling and tastes aroused their deepest suspicions, of course. In this country, young men are judged almost entirely on their ability to play games and do manual labour. However, Cliff set about his holiday jobs on the station with such energy that they overlooked his other unfortunate interests and even grew to encourage him in playing the piano in the evening. When he came home a good whole-hog Leftist, they were delighted, of course. They're a good lotâmost of them.'
âNot all?'
âThe shearers' cook is not much use. He only comes at shearing time. Mrs Johns looks after the regular hands at other times. Lots of the shearers wait until they've knocked up a good fat cheque and then go down-country and blue it all at the pub. That's the usual routine and you won't change it until you change the social condition of the shearer. But this expert keeps the stuff in his cookhouse and if we get through the shearing season without a bout of DTs we're lucky. He's a nasty affair is Cookie but he's unavoidable. They don't dislike him, oddly enough. The rouseabout, Albie Black, is rather thick with him. He used to be quite matey with young Cliff, too, but they had a break of some sort. Fortunately, I consider. Albie's a hopeless sort of specimen. Now, if it'd been Albie who pinched the whisky, I shouldn't have been the least surprised. Or Perce. The cook's name is Percy Gould, commonly called Perce. All Christian names are abbreviated in this country.'
âHow did Mrs Rubrick get on with the men?'
âShe thought she was a riotous success with them. She adopted a pose of easy jocularity that set my teeth on edge. They took it, with a private grin, I fancy. She imagined she had converted them to a sort of antipodean feudal system. She couldn't have been more mistaken, of course. I heard the wool-sorter, a perfectly splendid old boy he is, giving a very spirited imitation of her one evening. I'm glad the men were fifteen miles away from the wool-shed that night. The Sub-Inspector is a very class-conscious man. His suspicions would have gravitated naturally to the lower orders.'
âNonsense,' said Alleyn cheerfully.
âIt's not. He brightened up no end when Douglas started off on his Markins legend. Markins, being a servant, might so much more easily be a murderer than any of us gentry. God, it makes you sick!'
âTell me,' said Alleyn, âhave you any suspicions?'
âNone! I think it's odds on a swagger had strayed up to the wool-shed and decided to doss down for the night. Flossie may have surprised him and had a row with him. In the heat of the argument, he may have lost his temper and gone for her. Then when he found what he'd done, he put on Tommy Johns' overalls, disposed of his mistake in the first place that suggested itself to him, and made off down-country. She hated swaggers. Most stations give them their tucker and a doss-down for the night in exchange for a job of work, but not Flossie. That's my idea. It's the only explanation that seems reasonable. The only type that fits.'
âOne of the lower orders, in fact?'
âYes,' said Fabian, after a pause. âYou got me there, didn't you?'
âIt was a cheap score, I'm afraid. Your theory is reasonable enough, but no wandering tramp was seen about the district that day. I understand they stick to the road, and usually make themselves known at the homesteads.'
âNot at Mount Moon with Flossie at home.'
âPerhaps not. Still your swagger remains a figure that as far as the police investigations go, and they seem to have been painstaking and thorough, was seen by nobody, either before or after the night of the disappearance.'
âI've no other contribution to offer, I'm afraid, and I'm keeping you up. Goodnight, sir. I'm still glad you came.'
âI hope you'll continue of that mind,' said Alleyn. âBefore you go, would you tell me how many of you played tennis on the night Mrs Rubrick disappeared?'
âNow, this,' said Fabian, with an air of gratification, âis the real stuff. Why should you want to know that, I wonder? Only Douglas and I played tennis.'
âYou wore rubber-soled shoes during the search, then?'
âCertainly.'
âAnd the others? Can you remember?'
âPin heels. They always did in the evenings.'
âWhen, actually, did Mrs Rubrick first say she was going to the wool-shed?'
âSoon after we sat down. Might have been before. She was all arch about it. “What do you suppose your funny old Floosie's going to do presently?” That kind of thing. Then she developed her theme: the party and whatnot.'
âI see. Thank you very much. Goodnight.'
Fabian had gone and Alleyn was alone in the silent room. He stood motionless, a tall thin shape, dark in the candlelight. Presently he moved to the desk and opened one of the locked cases. From this he took a small tuft of cotton-wool and dropped it on the carpet. Even by candlelight it was conspicuous, unavoidable, a white accent on a dark green ground. So must the tuft of wool have looked when Ursula, on the morning after Florence disappeared, caught it up in the carpet sweeper. Yet she hadn't noticed it. Or had she merely forgotten it? They were all agreed that Flossie would never have suffered it to lie there. She had been up to her room after dinner and before the walk through the garden. Presumably, there had been no wool on her carpet then. Alleyn heard again Ursula Harme's voice: âI don't care what anybody says. Somebody was about on the landing at five minutes to three that morning.'
Alleyn pulled out his pipe, sat down at the desk, and unlocked his dispatch case. Here were the police files. With a sigh he opened them out on the desk. The room grew hazy with tobacco smoke, the pages turned at intervals and the grandfather clock on the landing tolled twelve, half-past twelve and one o'clock.
ââ¦on February 19th 1942 at 2.45 p.m. I received instructions to proceed to the wool store of Riven Brothers at 68 Jernighan Avenue. I arrived there in company with PC Wetherbridge at 2.50 p.m. and was met by the storeman, Alfred Clark, and by Mr Samuel Joseph, buyer for Riven Brothers. I was shown a certain wool-pack and noted a strong odour resembling decomposition. I was shown a bale hook which was stained brownish-red. I noted that twisted about the hook there was a hank of hair, reddish-gold in colour. I noted that the pack in question had been partly slit. I instructed PC Wetherbridge to extend the slit and open up the pack. This was done in my presence and that of Alfred Clark. Samuel Joseph was not present, having taken sick for the time being, and retired to the outer premises. In the pack we located a body in an advanced state of decomposition. It was secured, in a sitting position, with the legs doubled up and fastened to the trunk with nineteen turns of cord subsequently identified as twine used for wool bales. The arms were doubled up and secured to the body by twenty-five turns of binder-twine passing round the arms and legs. The chin rested on the knees. The body rested upon a layer of fleece, hard packed and six inches in depth. The body was packed round with wool. Above the body the bale was packed hard with fleece up to the top. The bale measured 28 inches in width both ways, and four feet in height. The body was that of a woman of very slight build. I judged it to be about five feet and three inches in height. I left it as it was and proceeded toâ¦'
The pages turned slowly.
ââ¦the injury to the back of the head. According to medical evidence it might have been caused by a downward blow from the rear made by a blunt instrument. Three medical men agreed that the injury was consistent with such a blow from the branding iron found in the shearing-shed. A microscopic examination of this iron revealed stains subsequently proved by analysis to be human bloodstains. Post-mortem examination revealed that death had been caused by suffocation. The mouth and nostrils contained quantities of sheep's wool. The injury to the skull would almost certainly have brought about unconsciousness. It is possible that the assailant, after striking the blow, suffocated the deceased while she was unconscious. The medical experts are agreed that death cannot be attributed to accidental causes or to self-inflicted injuries.'
Here followed a detailed report from the police surgeon. Alleyn read on steadily. ââ¦a triangular tear near the hem of the dress, corresponding in position to the outside left ankle bone, the apex of the tear being uppermostâ¦subsequent investigationâ¦nail in wall of wool-shed beside pressâ¦thread of material attachedâ¦lack of evidence after so long an interval.'
âDon't I know it,' Alleyn sighed and turned a page.
ââ¦John Merrywether, wool-presser, deposed that on the evening of January 29th at knocking-off time, the press was full in both halves. It had been tramped but not pressed. He left it in this condition. The following morning it appeared to be in the same state. The two halves were ready for pressing as he had left them, the top in position on the bottom half. He pressed the wool, using the ratchet mechanism in the ordinary way. He noticed nothing that was unusual. The wool in the top half was compressed until it was packed down level with the top of the bottom half. The bale was then sewn up and branded. It was stacked alongside the other bales, and the same afternoon was removed with them and trucked down-countryâ¦