Bony - 05 - Winds of Evil

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Bony - 05 - Winds of Evil Page 9

by Arthur W. Upfield


  The keen city detective goes to science for assistance as well as for establishing proof. The camera, the microscope, acids and reagents, all are allies of the city detective. With­out these scientific allies, in addition to innumerable human contacts, the city-trained detective is lost when in­vestigating a really well-planned crime in the wild bush. Actually, Sergeant Simone was judged harshly for his failures at Carie, for here in the bush he was without his customary allies.

  Bony had allies of an entirely different kind, but many of whom were to him as valuable as scientific apparatus is to his city colleagues. For assistance, he called on the birds and the ants, vegetable growths and natural processes. Phenom­enal eyesight and the gift of calm patience contributed largely to his successes. Of all his many assistants, he re­garded Time as the most important. It was his firm belief that the passage of Time never buried a crime. It was invariably the criminal who strove to bury his crime, and Time which removed the earth and exposed it.

  The day following his meeting with Dr. Mulray, Stella Borradale and Sergeant Simone, Bony began an exhaustive examination of the trees along Nogga Creek, beginning with those meeting over the Broken Hill road and that climbed by Donald Dreyton. The wind, having that pres­sure designated by seamen as a breeze, constantly agitated the foliage. For this he was thankful, as he did not want sharp eyes glued to the business ends of binoculars to observe his movements through the unnatural movement of tree-branches. Even as it was, he was obliged to work carefully in order to conceal his activities from the curious Mrs. Nelson.

  High in the tree climbed by the fence-rider, he found a living branch sucker snapped close to the parent branch and hanging by a strip of its smooth bark. The resilience of the sucker was of such strength as to defeat the strongest wind to break it. A mischievous galah or cockatoo had not done the damage, because the break was too broad, and Bony decided that it had been done by a man climbing into the tree.

  Himself wedged between a branch and the tree-trunk, the detective closely examined the broken ends of the sucker and the strip of bark holding them together. The bark still retained its soft green colouring, but it was the degree of remaining sap which led Bony to the conviction that at least ten days had passed since this sucker was damaged. That meant it had been broken by a man’s body or boot days before Dreyton had climbed the tree and several days before the attack on Mabel Storrie.

  Why the fence-rider had climbed the tree was a question now nagging for an answer. Had Dreyton seen something among its branches, causing him to climb the tree? Had the party of quarrelling crows flown to the leopardwood-tree from this tree at Dreyton’s approach, and thus had led him to the object over which they quarrelled? Any strange object in a tree would ultimately be discovered by the crows, who would announce the discovery by their cawings. That the crows had not returned to the box-tree after Drey­ton had left it might indicate that the object of their in­satiable curiosity had been removed by him.

  However, all this was conjecture of less moment than the fact that someone had climbed into the tree before Mabel Storrie was nearly murdered. Allied to this fact was the evidence that someone had climbed into the trees overhang­ing the Broken Hill road and, almost certainly, had dropped from a branch when she was passing beneath them.

  Which of the many people living in and around Carie would climb trees? Boys and many girls, too, are great tree-climbers, and of boys and girls Carie had its normal share. But these trees were a full mile from the township. Never­theless, a mile, or even more, is nothing for healthy youngsters to walk after birds’ eggs and bees’ honey. There were no children at Wirragatta or at Storrie’s Selection, but there were two youths employed on Wirragatta who were capable of climbing trees after young galahs.

  Then Bony’s next step was to ascertain if the galahs’ nests had been robbed, and to do this he did not propose to make inquiries of the townspeople or those at the station.

  From introspection his brain again took charge of his eyes. They probed the green-clothed branches of the tree in which he was perched and those of neighbouring trees that were almost interlocked. His gaze moved with deliber­ate system, moving along each successive branch from trunk to extremity. Thus it was eventually that his gaze became applied to a particular section of a particular branch of the tree next his. Without difficulty, or danger of falling, he passed from tree to tree, and thus was able to bring his gleaming eyes to a point twelve inches from the section of branch which had caught his attention.

  For some time he studied this section of living wood, brows knit, brain working to establish the cause of a certain phenomenon. For a distance of eighteen inches the bark of the section was of a different tint. He gripped the same branch with both hands a little beyond the tinted section and began to rasp it. The action produced exactly the same tint—soft rust on the background of grey-green.

  The result of the experiment pleased him.

  At no little risk of accident, the detective climbed and swung himself from branch to branch, on which he was able to see the same discoloration, for some sixty yards, when he reached a point in the line of trees where there was a break. Down the last tree he slowly descended, and on the trunk he found unmistakable evidence it had often been climbed.

  The evidence provided by the trees went to prove that a party of boys had often played follow-my-leader by swing­ing themselves along the branches of at least twenty trees. Either the boys, or one man, had made a kind of tree-trail over a long period of time, on each occasion making much the same jumps and using the same hand and footholds.

  Along the dry bed of the creek Bony walked to the Broken Hill road, knowing himself safe from observation, his eyes glittering when the sunlight shafts fell on them. For two hours he climbed trees, and at places trod a blazed trail among their branches, a trail blazed for such as he to see and reason upon.

  At odd hours throughout the whole of the next week, Bony climbed trees, finding in them many things of pro­found interest which had no possible bearing on his investi­gation. He came to know Nogga Creek from Junction Waterhole to Catfish Hole and up along Thunder Creek almost to Storrie’s house. His work resulted in astonishing knowledge having a direct bearing on his investigation—knowledge given him chiefly by the galahs and their habits.

  These rose-breasted, grey-backed parrots favour box-trees in which to nest, those along the two creeks joining to be­come Wirragatta River having been especially favoured for countless years. And this was the story told by the galahs. …

  During the late summer, autumn and winter these birds congregate in large flocks, when they feed together on the distant flats and roost together in adjacent trees. Towards the end of July the units comprising the flocks become im­bued with the nuptial madness. Their harsh cries become more harsh and louder still. Their feats of wing become more daring and brilliant, it appearing to the observer that they determinedly “show off” like the male lyre-bird and the male peacock. Then, within the space of a week, the flocks break up into pairs, and during the courting period the old nesting-holes in the trees are cleaned out and pre­pared for the eggs and the young birds.

  Countless generations of birds use the same nest-holes every spring. The holes, of course, have their genesis in the work of the borer and the bardee*. The rain continues the rotting of the wood, which is pulled out by the birds back to the living walls of wood. To the bottom of these nest-holes is sometimes the length of a man’s arm.

  *A beetle larva of Australia, Bardistus cibarius, that bores into plants and is used as food by Aborigines.

  The only enemies of the young birds were formerly the wild cats, and now the domesticated cats run wild, and the defensive measures taken by the parent birds to defeat the cats will be attributed to instinct or reason according to the views of the reader. Like all close observers, Bony voted for reason.

  When a nest-hole is first prepared, the birds tear away the bark from about the entrance, and, if the hole is at the junction of a branch with the tr
unk, they clean off the bark about the branch for several feet. With distended combs and much vociferous screeching, they beat and beat their wings against the exposed wood until it is polished to the glass-like surface of a dance floor. No cat, therefore, can possibly find foothold to reach the nest-hole and then claw out the squabs. Every year thereafter the bark-cleared spaces are repolished in this manner.

  As previously stated, Bony found many galahs’ nests in the trees along Nogga and Thunder Creeks. At this time the nesting-season was well past, and the young birds, hav­ing learned to fly, had with their parents joined into flocks.

  Along Thunder Creek and along Nogga Creek, eastward of Catfish Hole, the nests provided the detective with in­dubitable evidence that they had housed young birds this last season, but in those nests in the trees from Junction Waterhole to Catfish Hole there was found no such evi­dence. Instead, the wisps of grass and feathers deep in these particular holes were old and brittle. Not only the last nest­ing-season, but at least the season before that, the birds had not used the nest-holes along this section of creek.

  It had already become obvious that along this section of trees—from Junction Waterhole up to Catfish Hole—in which the galahs had refused to nest, a party of boys played follow-my-leader and had blazed an easily followed trail among the branches. Either boys, or one man, had made and subsequently used this trail.

  The age of the trail was established for Bony by the galahs. About the edges of the wing-polished spaces the bark had grown and overlapped them. With his knife, the detective conducted countless experiments on this over­lapping bark until he proved to his entire satisfaction that the birds had not nested along this section of Nogga Creek for four years. The boys, or the single man, by climbing from tree to tree repeatedly, had frightened them from doing so. The trail, therefore, was at least four years old—from two years before Alice Tindall was murdered.

  Bony never seriously considered the trail to have been made by a party of boys playing follow-my-leader. He had become convinced that it had been made by a man, and, too, the man who had killed Alice Tindall and attacked Mabel Storrie.

  Why did this man climb these trees and swing himself along from branch to branch? Why had he not done his tree-climbing along other sections of the creeks? What, in­deed, could be his object? No man would be likely to ex­perience pleasure by doing this. There were no bees’ nests to rob of honey, and for years there had been no young galahs to take from the birds’ nests. His object could not be to leave on the ground no tracks at those times he killed, for did he not always select a night when the next day was certain to be wildly stormy?

  And so the galah’s story presented Bony with a singular problem. Why, for at least four years, had a man used the trees along a section of Nogga Creek as another would use a garden path? Try as he might whilst he worked, cleaning the boundary-fence of buckbush, Bony could not solve it. The only man he could imagine doing this “tree walking” was the Wirragatta cook, Hang-dog Jack, and Hang-dog Jack, besides being a human travesty, was also a terrific contradiction.

  Bony’s mind was still gnawing at this bone late one after­noon as he walked down along the creek road to the home­stead after a day’s labour, when there overtook him young Harry West astride a fearsome brute of a horse all a-lather with sweat and still sprung with viciousness despite a gruel­ling gallop.

  “Good day-ee, Joe,” shouted Harry, even as he slid to earth to jerk the reins over the beast’s head and fall into step beside the detective.

  Harry West was young and tall and graceful as Adonis, if not so handsome. He was reputed to be the best horse­man in the district, and the discerning Bony had quickly noted Harry’s natural ability to do well those things he liked doing. With a small-bore rifle Harry could bring down crows on the wing. With a stockwhip he could flick away pins stuck into a table without disturbing the flour scattered about them. But, although he had attended school until the official leaving age, he was unable to compose a simple letter. He was remarkably proficient in counting hundreds of sheep passing through a gateway, but was beaten by a simple problem sum. In his opinion, any work not able to be done from the back of a horse was exceedingly degrading. Bony was considering the removal of West, Henry, from his list.

  “She’s come, Joe,” Harry said, the blood mounting into his tanned face even as his hard elbow prodded Bony’s ribs. The smart felt hat was pushed back and there was to be seen a greased “quiff”, which, however, was a poor sort of thing compared with that so carefully and expertly trained by James Spinks, Mrs. Nelson’s barman.

  “Who has arrived, Harry?” Bony asked mildly.

  “Who? Why, you know. The ring! She came by this morning’s mail.”

  “Ah!” murmured the enlightened detective.

  One of his first tasks at Wirragatta had been to advise Harry West about an engagement ring, and with a jewel­ler’s catalogue to aid him he had chosen a platinum ring set with a square-cut diamond.

  “She’s a humdinger,” Harry announced with tremendous enthusiasm. When recalling the price paid, Bony thought the ring should certainly be that, and more. Harry ran on: “If they had sent a ring with a round diamond, I’d have sent it back with my opinion on ’em. That was a natty idea of yours, thinking of a square diamond. Can’t say I ever seen one before.”

  “It is because they are not common that I urged you to purchase a ring set with one. That you simply had to buy a platinum setting was against my advice. A hundred guineas is a great deal of money to spend on a ring.”

  “It ain’t too much to spend on a ring for my Tilly. A thousand-quid one wouldn’t be good enough for her. Any’ow, if we fall hard on bad times, this ring will pawn for a goodish bit.”

  “I admire your forethought, but not your pessimism, Harry. Having had the pleasure of meeting and speaking to your young lady, I concur that a cheap ring would be an insult.”

  “Thanks, Joe,” Harry said as another man might when accepting a knighthood. Hazel eyes regarded Bony with bashful intensity. “Cripes!” he burst out. “I wished I could talk like you.”

  “Practise, my dear Harry.”

  “I ain’t got no time.”

  “Then let us talk about Tilly. Do you intend to marry her one day?”

  “Too flamin’ right I do,” came the prompt reply. “I heard only yesterday that old Alec, the boss stockman, was pulling out, and aimed to retire to the Hill. He’s occupying one of the married cottages, you know.”

  “The married cottages! Oh, you mean one of the cot­tages occupied by married people on the far side of the river. So you think you may obtain the occupancy of one?”

  “I ain’t sure, Joe. I sorta hinted to the boss this morning that I’d like to get married and settle down on Wirragatta. I’m a bit young yet, I suppose, but if old Alec leaves, I’m as good as the next for his place. Like to see the ring?”

  “Yes, I would.”

  With approval, Bony noted Harry’s firm chin and the straight nose. For two minutes, whilst the horse whistled and stamped and tugged at the reins looped from Harry’s arm, they stood to admire the expensive ring. The price paid was enormous for a station-hand.

  “Think she’s good enough?” asked Harry with swift doubt.

  For an instant Bony thought he referred to Tilly, the maid-guardian to Mrs. Nelson. Then:

  “Why, yes,” he replied. “It is a truly beautiful ring. So you really want to marry her and settle down for life?”

  “Too right—with Tilly. She’ll do me, Joe.”

  “Then, married to Tilly, if you always play the game of life as it should be played, you will never regret it.”

  For a space, they walked in silence. Then Harry said earnestly:

  “What d’you think of my girl, Joe?”

  “When she smiles, she is lovely,” Bony told him, remem­bering Tilly’s plainness of features and beauty of eyes. “It will be your life-long vocation to keep her smiling. How old were you when you first came to Wirragatta?”


  “Seventeen. I bin here a bit over five years.”

  Bony plunged.

  “I suppose that you, like most boys and young men, have often climbed these creek trees for galahs’ eggs?”

  “Can’t say as I ever had the time,” replied Harry. “I was more keen on horses and things.”

  For a little while they walked in silence, and then for a little while they again discussed Tilly. Eventually Bony suggested:

  “When the blacks, who used to camp hereabouts, sud­denly left, you must have noticed the quietness at Wirra­gatta. I understand that the tribe was quite a large one.”

  “Too right! There musta been half a hundred all told when mustered: After poor Alice Tindall was murdered they all cleared off. I don’t blame ’em. Old Billy Snowdrop, the head man, tipped something like that would happen. He was a funny bloke, all right. He uster reckon his tribe was cursed by a special banshee or ghost wot lived in the trees, and after they all cleared off and went outback I seen him one day, and he asked me if I ever seen or heard the banshee after he got Alice. The banshee, I mean, not Billy Snowdrop. Get me?”

  “Yes, I think I do. That is all very interesting,” Bony remarked softly.

  Chapter Eleven

  A Strange Fellow

  HANG-DOG JACK WAS beating his triangle, calling the hands to dinner, when Martin Borradale stepped into the office to find Donald Dreyton at work on his books.

  “Hullo! Time to knock off, isn’t it?”

  Dreyton, looking up, smiled.

  “I was beginning to think so,” he said, and reached for his pipe and tobacco plug. “Have the Storries got away for Adelaide?”

  “Yes. Stella and I have just got back from seeing them away. They made Mabel very comfortable on the truck, and her mother and Dr. Mulray were able to sit with her. Mulray is going down as far as Broken Hill. Mabel seemed bright, but the terrible shock she received is still painfully evident. Mrs. Nelson has been very generous to her.”

 

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