Murder on the Tropic

Home > Science > Murder on the Tropic > Page 1
Murder on the Tropic Page 1

by Todd Downing




  Murder on the Tropic

  A Hugh Rennert Mystery

  Todd Downing

  Contents

  1 Forecast of Murder

  2 Encounter in the Sun

  3 A Blow

  4 Damp Earth

  5 Yellow Flowers

  6 Moist Fingers on Glass

  7 Unguessed Depths

  8 A Lighted Candle

  9 Petals Tipped with Blood

  10 “In Danger’s Hour”

  11 Sick Room

  12 Static

  13 Death’s Instruments

  14 White Poison

  15 A Box of Caramels

  16 The Path of Storm

  17 An Empty Holster

  18 Hibiscus

  19 Plastic Wax

  20 Miss Fahn is Frightened

  21 A Flower in Silhouette

  22 A Shot in the Night

  23 One is Unperturbed

  24 One is Perturbed

  25 Valkyries Ride North

  26 The Presence of Murder

  27 Challenge

  28 Lull

  29 The Stir of a Leaf

  30 Ordeal by Wind

  31 Aftermath

  1

  Forecast of Murder

  “This weather probably accounts for it. It’s got my nerves on edge.” Edward Solier frowned at an inkwell of Mexican onyx on the top of his desk. His thin wiry body, far back in a leather-cushioned swivel chair, had a false appearance of ease, for his small tanned hands were clasping and unclasping nervously over his abdomen.

  He glanced at a tiny calendar to the left of the ink well and said crisply: “June twentieth. A cool spring and now the beginning of what looks like an unusually hot summer. Damned peculiar weather for this part of Texas, Mr. Rennert.”

  The man across from him sat quietly with folded arms. His pleasant middle-aged features expressed only polite attention but his clear brown eyes, gray-flecked, studied the other thoughtfully.

  “Yes,” he agreed. He was considerably puzzled by this summons to Solier’s office in one of San Antonio’s newest and most pretentious buildings, by the uneasy tension of the gray little man’s manner, by his irritating delay in coming to the point.

  Solier opened a drawer and pushed forward a box of cigars. Rennert took one and Solier held out a lighter. He kept it in the air for a moment afterwards, uncertainly. With the other hand he took a cigar and thrust it into his mouth, biting off the end with a click of his teeth.

  There was a brief interval of silence as the two thin spirals of smoke rose into the hot still air. Far below the afternoon traffic of San Antonio was a subdued though insistent murmur.

  Solier’s features seemed to relax under the influence of the tobacco. One side of his mouth moved in a smile.

  “I understand that early spring freeze ruined a lot of citrus fruit down in the Lower Rio Grande Valley,” he remarked.

  Rennert’s eyes were on the smoke.

  “Yes,” he nodded. “It did a great deal of damage.”

  “Hit your hundred and twenty acres rather hard, I suppose?”

  So that’s it! Rennert said to himself. He had heard of such tactics before. Promoters would sell land at high prices (as Solier had sold to him) then would buy it back at the first moment of discouragement on the part of the purchaser—for a much lower price. An offer, Rennert reflected, would have found him an eager listener, had it come in March, after that unexpected, almost unprecedented cold wave. Now, after the expense of replantin.…

  “I’ve been wondering,” Solier went on without waiting for a reply, “if you’d like to make up for the damage the cold did by undertaking a little mission for me.”

  Rennert paused in the act of tapping his cigar against the side of an ashtray of the same milky-gray onyx as composed the rest of the desk-set. His eyes met Solier’s.

  “What kind of a mission?” he asked, the wariness instilled by his profession asserting itself.

  “I own an interest in an hacienda down in Mexico, about one hundred and twenty-five miles southeast of Monterrey. We’re in a bit of difficulty there. I know enough about you to feel that you’re the man to handle it—if you’ll undertake it.”

  “Thanks,” Rennert said, “but go on. Why?”

  Solier unclasped his hands and moved the cigar to the other side of his mouth.

  “I remember with a great deal of pleasure that trip we took down into the Valley, when you decided to buy that land. Then, too, I’ve heard a lot about you from Mr.—.” (He named a grizzled superior of Rennert’s in the Treasury Department at Washington.) “I feel sure that a leave of absence could be arranged, if you say so. You see,” a forefinger toyed with an onyx-backed blotting-pad, “I have political connections. As to your fee,” he paused for a fraction of a second, “I can promise you that it will be decidedly worth your while.”

  Rennert’s eyes went to the window, followed a frothy white cloud that was floating lazily across the sky.

  The sky and the cloud fitted, somehow, the mood that had come upon him with increasing frequency of late. It was the recurrence of this mood (combined with the mirror’s reflection of gray hairs creeping remorselessly up from his temples) that had led him to the purchase of the citrus farm in the Valley. It had been a gamble, of course, but it offered a chance for a steady income, retirement from an arduous occupation, and unhurried indulgence in many long-fondled desires.

  “Suppose,” he said, “that you be a little more explicit, Mr. Solier. You haven’t yet told me the nature of this mission.”

  Solier shifted his position in the chair and threw one leg across the other.

  “The idea,” he spoke through clamped teeth, “was to build a big hotel a day’s drive south of Monterrey on the new Pan-American Highway to Mexico City. We had what we thought was definite information that the road would go through a certain tract of land. The family that owned it was living in Mexico City and doing nothing with it. Three of us—George Stahl, Tilghman Falter, and I—formed a company to buy it and build the hotel. We sold shares.” He paused and looked inquiringly at Rennert. “I believe you were approached on the subject?”

  Rennert nodded but said nothing.

  “Well,” Solier went on, “the route of the highway was changed to the eastward, to go through Linares and Victoria, and we were left with this isolated property on our hands.”

  “I was sure that would happen,” Rennert said. “I made a few inquiries in Monterrey and learned that it was practically certain the road would not go through the country you had in mind.”

  Solier’s eyes fastened themselves on his face. His teeth sank a bit deeper into the cigar.

  “If we’d had the benefit of your information we’d have saved a lot of money,” he shrugged. “As it is we’ve got the hacienda—Flores, it’s called—and don’t know what to do with it. With irrigation it could be made into profitable farm land, I suppose, but none of us want to undertake that. We have bought back most of the shares for what we could afford to pay, so that we could get rid of it. It wasn’t much, because the purchase of the land and the legal entanglements took most of our capital. Falter has stayed down there until things are settled. Two weeks ago Stahl and I went down to look the place over and make some decision. We’d succeeded in buying up all the shares except one block.” He tapped the end of his cigar gently against the tray and didn’t look up as he said: “Stahl died while we were there.”

  The flat toneless way he said it made Rennert glance at him sharply.

  Solier was continuing: “His interest went to his stepson, Mark Arnhardt, who had accompanied us on the trip.” He looked at Rennert again. “I want you to persuade the person who owns the last block of shares to sell. Even if you have to pay the full p
urchase price, do so. I’m getting tired of the whole deal, and am willing to take a loss in order to get out of it. As I told you at the beginning, this sultry weather probably accounts for my feeling. I want a vacation—without any worries.”

  “Who is this person who owns the last block of shares?”

  “A Miss Fahn, Bertha Fahn. She’s an old maid from Austin. She invested a small sum of money and now won’t sell. Just why I don’t know. She has been staying at the hacienda, making some kind of a study of plants and flowers. It’s a god-forsaken place to live but she hasn’t budged since she bought the shares.”

  Rennert’s thoughts were busy. He wondered just what was behind Solier’s proposal. Surely, if it was merely a question of persuading a maiden lady to sell her interest…

  “Since Mr. Falter is at the hacienda, why can’t he buy the shares from her?” he asked.

  “I talked to him yesterday.” Solier must have caught the questioning look on Rennert’s face for he hastened to explain: “We have a short-wave radio set at the hacienda so that we can be in constant communication. He’s been in bad health lately, something wrong with his stomach, and probably hasn’t been very diplomatic. He says that she flatly refuses to consider any offer that he makes. I gather that he has rather antagonized her.”

  “And that is the extent of my duties—to persuade her to sell these shares?”

  Solier cleared his throat.

  “Well, there’s another matter, too. Probably doesn’t amount to anything, but it has Falter worried. It’s about the water.”

  “The water?”

  “Yes, the drinking water. There are some springs up in the mountains above the hacienda that we depend on for our supply. The rainy season has been so long in starting, however, that the springs are beginning to dry up. Falter has been having the drinking water brought up from Victoria in bottles. Someone on the hacienda, it seems, has been emptying these bottles.”

  “After they are brought to the hacienda?”

  “Yes. Every night a bottle or two is emptied. Falter thinks someone is trying to force the occupants of the place to move. I’d like to have you look into this matter, too, if you will.” Solier’s eyes fixed themselves on Rennert’s face with a steady appraising directness. “You see the situation,” he said. “It’s impossible for me to get away at present. Will you go?”

  Rennert clasped his hands behind his head and stared thoughtfully out the window.

  Solier watched him for a moment then opened a checkbook. He tore out a check, already made out, and passed it across to him. “For expenses,” he said.

  Rennert glanced at the check, was mildly surprised at the amount. He made no motion to take it.

  He was practical enough to know that this represented an opportunity to repair the damages to his citrus fruit along the Rio Grande, even to build a modest house there. He was also practical enough to realize that he was going into the affair, if he went, almost blindfolded. For he was certain that Solier was holding something back. No one was going to pay the price that Solier was offering for anything as trivial as his services promised to be. At the same time a whisper at the back of his mind told him that this very element of uncertainty appealed to him, that there was lurking there an unacknowledged hope that the humdrum routine of existence might be broken again.

  “There are a few questions I’d like to ask,” he said.

  “Sure, anything you want to know.” By the way Solier said it Rennert knew that his consideration of the offer had betrayed his interest.

  “First, how many people are staying at the hacienda?”

  “Eight.”

  “Would you mind running over the list?”

  “Not at all. There’s Falter, and Miss Fahn, and Mark Arnhardt, Stahl’s stepson, whom I’ve mentioned. Then there are the Tolmans, husband and wife. He’s a young architect whom we engaged to draw the plans for the hotel when it was first projected. He’s suffering from tuberculosis and has stayed on at the hacienda in the hope that the climate would help him. Esteban Flores is still there, I think. He’s a young Mexican whose airplane crashed near the hacienda about two weeks ago. He has been trying to get parts to repair it from Mexico City but doesn’t seem to be having much luck.”

  “I understood you to say,” Rennert interposed, “that the hacienda was named Flores. Any connection?”

  “Yes, it used to belong to his family. We bought it from his father.”

  “And how long has this group been there?”

  “The Tolmans about two months, Miss Fahn about a month, Flores two weeks. Arnhardt went down with Stahl and myself, came back with Stahl’s body, then returned.”

  “You mentioned eight people. Who are the other two?”

  “Oh, old Miguel Montemayor and his wife. They’re fixtures at the place, act as sort of caretakers.”

  Rennert thought a moment.

  “All of them were present at the time of Stahl’s death, then?”

  Solier frowned.

  “What makes you ask that?” His eyes were fixed on Rennert’s face.

  “I was merely wondering about Stahl’s death. You didn’t say much about it.”

  “There isn’t much to tell.” Solier shrugged again. “He died from a sunstroke. As I said, Mark Arnhardt brought his body back to Amarillo.”

  “His interest in the place, you say, passed to Arnhardt?”

  “Yes.”

  Rennert watched the smoke rise from his cigar.

  “I used to be an addict of western yarns,” he said with a faint smile. “If I remember right, there was always a band of rival cattle-men trying to get control of the ranch that the hero worked for. Is it possible that this is true in this case?”

  “You’re thinking about the difficulty with the water?”

  “Yes.”

  Solier laughed drily.

  “Not a chance. Wait until you see the country and you’ll agree with me. There’s not another building, except an occasional adobe Indian hut, for fifty miles. If anybody was fool enough to want to get a ranch in that section of the country there’s all the land he wants, almost for the asking.”

  “But you said your company had to pay the Flores family a big price for their land?”

  Solier hesitated.

  “Yes, that’s true, but it was a good location and they got wind of the reason we wanted it and held us up. I admit that to you, privately.”

  “No mineral deposits?”

  “None that I know of. The land’s useless without irrigation. You might as well save your energies as far as that angle is concerned.” Solier’s eyes fell, rested for an instant on the check, then rose again. “Will you take the job, Rennert?”

  Rennert took a last contemplative draw upon his cigar.

  “Yes,” he said.

  “Good!” Solier sat up in his chair. His nervousness seemed to vanish, to be replaced by brisk efficiency. “When can you start?”

  “As soon as the matter is arranged at Washington.”

  Solier waved this aside.

  “I’ll wire Senator Jenkins at once. He’ll fix it up. You ought to be able to leave tomorrow.”

  “Very well.”

  “Now as to details,” he tapped the little finger of his left hand against the edge of the desk. “Some minor matters first. There are a few things I want to send down with you and then there are Miss Fahn’s postcards that we mustn’t forget.”

  His eyes met Rennert’s. He smiled.

  “You see, you’re beginning to run into the old girl’s peculiarities already. Falter says she wants some postcards. I wish you’d get them for her. One hundred and twenty-six.”

  “One hundred and twenty-six? She specified the exact number?”

  “Yes.”

  “But what kind of cards?”

  “Oh, any kind, just so they’re postcards. Get her some pictures of the Alamo and the Missions and that sort of stuff. Then—”

  “But just a minute,” Rennert interrupted. “She didn’t specify any
particular views?”

  “No, she just wants postcards. Going to send them to all the folks back in Austin, I suppose. Now, as to communication. I told you there was a short-wave radio set at the hacienda. I have another at my home.” He took a pencil from his pocket and drew a memorandum pad toward him. “My station is W10XAKI,” he traced the name carefully upon the paper, “10.22 megacycles. The station at the hacienda—it’s licensed by the Mexican Government, of course—is XADY. Hours on the air from 6 to 7 A.M. and P.M. You might arrange to stand by your set during those hours. I’ll do the same or arrange to have any messages of yours telephoned to me in case I’m at the office. Satisfactory?”

  Solier tore the slip from the pad and handed it to Rennert.

  “That’s number three. Now,” his index finger was beating a tattoo against the wood, “as to the location of the hacienda. You have a car?”

  Rennert nodded.

  “You’ll drive down, I suppose?”

  “Yes, I’d prefer to drive myself.”

  “Good!” Solier got to his feet and walked across the room to the wall on the left, where hung a large map of the Mexican republic.

  Rennert followed him.

  Solier ran a finger southward from San Antonio, across the Rio Grande at Laredo.

  “You follow the Pan-American Highway through Monterrey to Hidalgo. Turn off to the right there in the direction of Aramberri.…”

  2

  Encounter in the Sun

  The sun had dislodged itself from the zenith, where it had stuck motionless and staring for seemingly interminable hours, and was moving at last toward the west. Its rays shot in under the projecting eaves of the roof and limned Ann Tolman’s loose mass of hair in bright copper.

  She leaned wearily against one of the square wooden posts that supported the roof and let her hands rest against her thighs. The heavy odors of the sun-baked earth of the patio and of the flowers with which it was filled were almost stifling. She stared upward, over the flowers and the dry fountain and the red-tiled roof, into the vastness of the gray-brown Mountains and hot blue sky.

 

‹ Prev