In the darkness, too, it was more than likely that he would pass the snags on his search upstream. Slowly and with great care he led the fidgeting Devil along the bank almost awash with the swirling, hissing torrent, and had proceeded a quarter of a mile before he heard Smith call within a dozen yards distance. Although the voice was so near, Dugdale could not see the owner of it; but he did see where the water was lashed with foam among the branches and snags of the fallen tree. And where the water was whitened, there was Smith.
“If you’re not drowned, you ought to be,” Dugdale shouted at him.
“What was good enough for you was good enough for me,”came the voice. “I suppose you’ll lend a hand to help me out?”
“What! For you to arrest me?” Dugdale inquired.
“You bet!”came the prompt reply. “But I’ve lost my gun and my horse; so you should not find it difficult to avoid arrest, should you?”
“I shall certainly object to your trying to arrest me till I’ve done a little job I promised I would do. Can’t you work your way to me along those snags?”
“No. Between you and me there is a three foot gap. If I let go I’ll be swept away-and I can’t swim.”
“You idiot! Do you mean to say you put your horse into the creek and can’t swim? Smithy! you’re game, but you’re mentally deficient. Hang on awhile.”
Dugdale fastened the reins of his horse to a tree trunk. Taking off his coat, he made sure of Sinclair’s wallet and the sodden letter in one of its pockets, and placed it at the foot of the tree to which The Devil was secured. Returning then to that point on the bank opposite the mass of snags, he examined the water very carefully. The tree that now formed the mass had been growing at the edge of the creek before a storm had uprooted it. Its roots were still high and dry, the trunk slanting downward into the foaming tide. Dugdale removed his boots.
“What are you doing, Dug?”
“I am coming in after you, Smithy,” the policeman was informed. “I am a fool to give you a chance to collar me, and you are a bigger fool to have taken that header.”
Dugdale worked his way along the tree trunk into the water, and when the tree disappeared he slipped down into it and, reaching for a footing of some sort, found none. His legs were swept up and outward by the strength of the rushing water, and only with his hand could he hold on and work farther out from the bank till he came to a branch lying about a foot above the surface and stretching horizontally.
At that time some dozen feet separated the two men.
“How are you enjoying yourself, Smithy?” Dugdale asked caustically.
“Goodo! Water’s a bit wet, though,”came the quiet but grim response.
“Ah, well! Let’s be thankful for small mercies. A man won’t die of thirst. Sure you can get no nearer to me?”
“Quite sure.”
Halfway along the branch Dugdale found another with his swinging body below the surface. It helped to steady him; helped him, too, to edge a further yard outward. A jagged point of wood jarred his kneecap, causing his teeth to clench with the numbing pain. The temperature of the water was equally numbing. Both men began to feel thatall the world’s wealth would be well spent on a fire.
After much manoeuvring, Dugdale decreased the distance between them to three feet, having come to that space where there were no supporting branches.
“Can you get your belt off?” asked Dugdale.
“I don’t know. I’ll try.”
“Well, don’t try so much as to let go of that branch.” Dugdale saw the dark head and shoulders of the policeman twist and turn, rise and sink, accompanying much hard breathing and chattering of teeth.
“Got it. What now?”
“Throw the buckle end over to me. Right! Now your only chance is to take a good hold of your end, and when you leave go the branch you are hanging to the force of the stream will sweep you down below me and over to my side, where there is a good snag sticking up out of the water. Perhaps you can see it?”
“Yes, I can.”
“Right. Well, let go and hang on.”
Trooper Smith let go. Unable to swim, he was facing the ordeal with extraordinary courage. To them both was need of coolness and calculating judgement, for a blow from one of the hideous unseen snags, or a failure of strength at a critical moment, meant certain death for Smith at least. The weight of the trooper’s body on the belt was terrific, and had not the strain been over quickly it would have been impossible for Dugdale to have maintained his one handed hold. Smith, as Dugdale foresaw, was swept down and against theupflung branch, to which he clung desperately. Their hands were blue and numbed with cold, and their bodies were reaching the state in which pain is not felt.
To Smith the five minutes which followed were a prolonged nightmare, full of noise, full of water demons clutching his limbs to destroy him. The tree branches tore his hands, and pointed sticks prodded his body and his face in a thousand places. Above the noise he heard Dugdale’s commands and forced himself to obey them with mechanical promptness. The noise, the demons, the reaching snags, came to be enemies attacking his body, which appeared to have been detached from his tired brain; so that the last half dozen yards were accomplished in a semi-conscious state, and the final struggle to the bank was a matter of unreality.
“What is it going to be? Peace or war?” he heard Dugdale ask.
“Peace for five minutes at least,” he managed to gasp.“God! I’m frozen.”
“Maybe. But you’re alive, which is something,” Dugdale pointed out. “Luckily, I’ve a watertight box of wax matches, so we’ll get a fire going. There’s a quart pot on my saddle, so we’ll get a drink of hot water, which, my dear Smithy, is a great luxury compared with cold.”
Five minutes later, two half naked men stood close to a roaring pillar of fire, taking turns in sipping from the quart pot. The heat stung their flesh, and from their clothesrose clouds of steam, and eventually, when Smith’s tobacco and papers were dried, they smoked cigarettes and talked about the future.
“Tell me-during the armistice-what your idea was to pinch Clair’s wallet,” inquired the policeman, breaking a long silence. “Duty andall that aside, Dugdale, you’re getting yourself into a dickens of a mess over it.”
Dugdale related the coming of Sinclair to his hut and the events leading up to and following his death. “You see,” he pointed out, “Clair particularly asked me to take and deliver his wallet to a certain person. In fact, he got my promise to do it, and, having promised to deliver the wallet, deliver it I must. Now, I am scared by the flood and the attitude of Knowles and you fellows towards me, and damned sorry I did promise. But all that can’t be helped now.”
“But did Clair, or Sinclair, say why the unnamed person has to have his wallet?” Smith pressed.
“No, he did not. Aside from that, I consider that he had a perfect right to dispose of his wallet as he liked, and I had no justification for refusing to take and do with it as he directed.”
“Humph! In one way you are right. You are wrong, however, legally, because Sinclair was a man wanted for murder. He was killed in escaping the law, and what property he possessed, as Sergeant Knowles said, belongs to the State till his assigns are established. Anyway, it’s a knotty point; too difficult for me. I’m only a policeman. I’ve got to obey orders, which are to arrest you and convey you to Wilcannia.”
“And you will, I suppose, carry out your orders?” asked Dugdale with his quiet smile.
“I shall.”
“You will, I should say, find it a little difficult, especially as you cannot swim.”
“I shall hold you here till they come with a boat or something.”
“And where do you suppose they are going to get the boat?”
“Oh, I don’t know. It’s up to them.”
“Of course-if they know we’re here. But by the time they find out we shall be fairly hungry.”
“That, of course, cannot be helped.”
“In fact, we shall become so
hungry that we shall never want any food again-unless, of course, we are fed in the next world.”
The two men looked keenly at each other. Suddenly Smith grinned and burst into a guffaw of laughter. Dugdale laughed at, and with him. He looked so absurd in his underclothes, and he himself felt he must appear no less absurd. The Devil pawed the ground impatiently and attracted their attention.
“I am going to put on my clothes, as it is useless drying them,” Dugdale explained with the placidity of determination. “You see, I have to swim The Devil across two more creeks before I can get clear of the Washaways and send help to you.”
“But what about my orders?”
“You were not ordered to starve me todeath, or yourself either,” Dugdale observed whilst dressing. “When I pulled you out of the water you were unconscious, and when you came to you found yourself against a nice warm fire, with a quart pot of hot water beside you and no sign, absolutely no sign, of Frank Dugdale. Now isn’t that right?”
Trooper Smith, of the New South Wales Mounted Police, closed one eye.
“Now you recall it, Dugdale, I think it is about correct,” he said, adding, with sudden gravity: “But you are not going to attempt those two creeks, are you?”
“Of course. There is no other way of getting to the Darling, but across them, and the water won’t go down for a month.”
“Well, even at school you were an ass,” Smith reminded his prisoner.
“Better a live ass than a starved corpse. However, I would prefer not going till day comes. What about promising not to relieve me of the wallet, so that we could get a good warm and enjoy a sleep?”
“My dear chap, there is no wallet!” Smith rejoined cheerfully. “As a personality you don’t exist. I neither know nor see you. You have vanished, and I regain consciousness alone between these creeks. Let us camp. Let us heat more water and talk of the last dinner we had in the city.”
“Yes, let’s,” agreed Dugdale.
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Bony Takes Command
NAPOLEON BONAPARTE, Australia’s brilliant but little-known bush detective, was walking down the river. His walk would have been more direct had the volume of water in the great channel been normal. Now the channel was marked only by the bordering gum-trees, for on both sides the river overflowed its banks in places many miles out over the flats. Water was sent out into the meanderingcreeks, it crossed the established tracks and cut off direct communication with the towns of Bourke and Wilcannia.
To walk down the river meant, therefore, wide detours round billabongs, gutters, and creeks. Where Bony walked was about four miles west of the Darling proper, and had he wanted to cross the flooded river he would have been obliged to swim some eight or nine miles.
So great was the volume of water that the station of Barrakee, standing on high ground, was surrounded by water, except for a ramp or causeway, sufficiently wide to allow a car to drive along it, which connected the island with the dry land. It proved to be the second great flood which the Western Division of New South Wales had experienced and on the crest of the flood there appeared myriads of wild fowl, water-hens, ducks, geese, and members of the vast crane family.
It was the birds rather than the volume of water which fascinated the detective, but even the fascination of the birds paled before the events of that morning in mid-August. On the disappearance of Ralph Thornton from Barrakee and Nellie Wanting from Three Corner Station, the river from Barrakee downward had been carefully watched at more than one point.
A peculiar feature of the disappearance became intelligible to Bony when it was known that the girl left her employment three days before the departure of the young man. On the face of itit appeared that Ralph had hidden a boat a mile below Barrakee, and had gone down river to Three Corner Station to pick up the gin. On account of the wide detours made by the river it would take him all of three days to get to Three Corner Station, precisely as long as it would take a person to walk the same distance by the track which ran from bend to bend.
These distances and times Bony had quickly learned from two old pensioners camped on the side of the river, who were now sheltering, on account of the flood, in the Barrakee woolshed. It appeared, therefore, that the girl had walked up river to Ralph and his boat; and, since it was not likely that she would do that only to go down river again in the boat, it became obvious that the pair had gone up river past Barrakee.
For two days the half-caste had been searching for indications of the missing couple. The first day he drew a blank, but on the afternoon of the second he saw drifting down a small creek the empty shell of a duck’s egg, and on securing this, found that it had been recently cooked. Even whilst examining the shell the faint report of a shotgun came floating to theboxtrees, and thirty minutes later Bony found a native humpy constructed of green boughs and leaves, half way up a sand ridge at the foot of which lapped the flood-water. Precisely six seconds were spent in discovering that the inhabitants were away, and a further three in reading their tracks. Positive proof lay over the ground that dainty Nellie Wanting and slim, small-footed Ralph were the occupants.
A second report of the gun told that they were away hunting ducks for food, and in retiring Bony threw sand over his own tracks to obliterate them, knowing full well that otherwise the girl would see them, whereupon they would fly in terror of discovery and pursuit. And it was Bony’s wish that they should remain where he could find them for a further forty eight hours at least.
At the homestead end of the causeway one of the men told him that he was urgently wanted at the office; and, arriving there, he was informed by Mortimore that the police at Wilcannia had been ringing for him that morning, as well as the preceding day. He got Sergeant Knowles.
“Ah! I’ve beenwanting you badly, Bony,” the sergeant said rapidly. “I found Clair on Dugdale’s block, and, like a raw recruit, allowed Clair to best me. Anyway, I winged him, and came on him again in Dugdale’s hut just as he died. He left a confession.”
“Ah! Read it.”
The sergeant did so, adding: “You will note that Clair calls himself Sinclair.”
“Exactly. That is his name.”
“You know that?”
“I’ve known it for some little time. Anything else?”
“Yes. I found Dugdale, later, with Clair-Sinclair’s pocket-book in his hands, and when I demanded it in the name of the State he refused to hand it over, saying that Sinclair had made him promise to deliver it to some person, whose name he wouldn’t tell me. We had a tussle, and for the second time I was bested. I’m getting old, Bony, and if I’m not dismissed the service I shall retire.”
“Go on! What more?” asked Bony.
“Dugdale left the hut at daybreak yesterday morning. From his tracks I saw that he was making for Thurlow Lake; and, as I was a sick man, I rode to a hut onYamdan Run and telephoned to our fellows at Thurlow Lake to apprehend Dugdale and relieve him of that wallet. I am sure, Bony, that in that wallet is something of great importance in connexion with the case. Anyway, Blair and his mate happened to be at Thurlow Lake, and they, with Dugdale-chiefly Blair on his own-bested three of our fellows. Dugdale escaped and the senior trooper there phoned to Smith, stationed at One Tree Hut, six miles west of the Washaways. This morning the boundary rider there says that Smith did not arrest Dugdale, who arrived at sundown. Somehow Dugdale discovered Smith there, and bolted towards the Washaways, pursued by Smith.
“This morning the rider tracked them to the first creek of the Washaways, where he saw both men had simply ridden straight into the creek that was running a banker. And on the farther side of the creek, on a sort of island, was Smith, horseless and marooned, because he cannot swim. The creek being too wide for the rider to do anything, he returned to his hut for a wire well rope to get across to Smith with a lighter hemp rope.
“But, before he got back, Dugdale himself rang up Thurlow Lake from Cattle Tank Hut, ten miles this side of the Washaways, having, of course, swum his horse o
ver the remaining creeks, to tell them of Smith’s situation and urge immediate relief. It seems obvious, Bony, that Dugdale is bringing Sinclair’s wallet to someone on the river-it might be someone at Barrakee; and, as all our fellows are west of the Washaways and it is impossible for me to reach Barrakee in time, you’ll have to arrest him when he reaches Barrakee and secure that wallet.”
Bony was silent for a little while. Then:
“I don’t think it will be necessary to arrest Dugdale yet,” he said. “You see, Sergeant Knowles, he is bringing that wallet to me. I expected Sinclair would send it if anything happened to him.”
“Oh! Well, anyhow, Dugdale will have to be arrested for assaulting me, a police-sergeant, and resisting arrest at Thurlow Lake. Blair and McIntosh are under arrest now.”
“Pardon my mentioning the matter, Sergeant,” Bony cut in silkily, “but I must point out that I am the officer in charge of this case. The recent circumstances are peculiar, I know, but I do not advise, and probably shall not advise, Dugdale’s arrest. And, for one or two reasons, which I shall explain later, I think it expedient that Blair and his offsider be released for the time being.”
“Very well,” snapped the sergeant.
“Now, please don’t get angry,” Bony exhorted. “Anger up-settethjudgement. The Emperor knew that, which was why he seldom indulged in the delightful emotion. I can assure you that, as far as the law is concerned, the case ends with the death of Sinclair. His confession rounds it off. Let those extraneous happenings drop; for to do so lets you out from the misfortune which has dogged you, and will save the force from the slight discredit it has incurred. You will agree, I think, that that will be the best way.”
“All right, Bony. Perhaps it will,” Knowles agreed, with less rancour. “Still, if the fool Dugdale had told me to whom Sinclair was sending his wallet, all this hullabaloo would not havehappened, and I wouldn’t be here with a splitting headache.”
“Take some aspirin,” Bony advised.
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