by Todd Downing
Vultures in the Sky
A Hugh Rennert Mystery
Todd Downing
Contents
Part One
1 The Pass of the Dead
2 Watchers in the Sky
3 The Mountains of Mexico
4 Carnations Against a Wall
5 Quantity X
6 Heliophobia
7 The Sweetness of the Mango
8 Wires Are Down!
9 Sunset
10 The Eyes of Texas
Part Two
11 Wings in the Darkness
12 Death Leaves Yellow Flowers
13 Alibi
14 Search
15 The Needle and the Knife
16 Guadalupe, Virgin Mother, Shield from Harm!
17 The Albatross
18 Ties upon the Track
19 Matches Flare Briefly
20 Blood in the Night
21 Rider of a White Steed
22 With Drawn Blinds
23 Five Poplar Trees
24 The Rim of the Valley
25 Albino
26 Memories of Tomorrow
Part One
Time-Table of National Rail Ways of Mexico
*Non-agency, flag station.
1
The Pass of the Dead (9:25 AM.)
“Blast the train?”
“Yes, that’s what he threatened to do. I thought I ought to warn somebody.”
Worry edged the querulous voice of Jackson Saul King as he stood upon the observation platform and wiped Mexican dust from his forehead. He passed the handkerchief over his thin iron-gray hair and struck a few ineffectual blows upon the sleeves and trousers of his gray suit. He returned the cloth to his pocket and stared backward over the rails.
His companion, a somewhat elderly man with homely but not undistinguished features, was regarding him thoughtfully.
“You say your wife overheard this conversation last night?”
“Yes,” King cleared his throat. “She was worried over these rumors of a railroad strike on the Mexican line and sat up until we got to the border. I went to bed. It was when she was getting off at Laredo that she told me about what she had heard. She didn’t want me to come on.”
“She remained in Laredo?”
“Yes. She has a sister living there and decided to stay with her rather than come on into Mexico.” King blinked weak myopic eyes in the sunlight as he removed his gold pince-nez and began to polish them with a piece of chamois skin. “Mrs. King,” he said carefully, “is rather nervous about traveling. She has never been outside of the United States.” He paused. “So you can understand, Mr. Rennert, how she would be alarmed over all these reports about a strike,” he left the sentence halfway between a statement and an interrogation.
“Yes,” the other’s clear brown eyes were on the dust that whipped the rails. “Suppose you repeat exactly what your wife told you.”
King nervously adjusted the pince-nez upon his nose. He carefully folded the chamois skin and put it into the breastpocket of his coat.
“It was sometime after midnight,” he said in a low voice that had a slight nasal resonance. “She was sitting in one of the berths that hadn’t been made up. She heard two people talking somewhere behind her. One of them mentioned the station at San Antonio. Then he said: ‘I’ll get off with you at Monterrey and you can get the money. If you don’t, I’ll blast the train on this trip.’ She says the man who was talking got up then and started to walk away, so that she didn’t hear his last words very plainly. She thought, though, that he said something about earrings and cuffs and ‘don’t forget the extra edition.’”
He met Rennert’s stare and smiled weakly.
“I know it sounds rather senseless but my wife insisted that that’s what it sounded like. Earrings and cuffs and ‘don’t forget the extra edition.’ I didn’t pay much attention to it at the time because I was sleepy and I knew she was rather wrought-up, but I got to thinking about it this morning and decided I’d tell you and see what you thought I ought to do. Of course,” the smile lingered a moment and vanished, “there’s probably nothing to it.”
Behind them Monterrey was lost behind the folds of the gray-brown mountains whose serrated peaks were shattered battlements jutting against the sky. A haze of heat was beginning to cloak the barren desert that stretched away on each side of the track, fusing cactus and mesquite and slate-gray dust into a wavering mirage.
“Did your wife hear the voice of the second person?” Rennert asked.
King hesitated. “No,” he said after a moment, “I don’t think she did. At least, she didn’t say anything about his words. She did mention something about the voice of the person who was talking, though.”
“Yes?”
“She said it was rather soft and she thought the English had a slight foreign accent.”
Rennert considered this a moment. He knew the readiness of sedentary people to attribute a foreign accent to any strange voice.
“About this reference to the station at San Antonio,” he asked. “Did that mean anything to you?”
“What?” King held a hand cupped behind one ear.
Rennert repeated his question, raising his voice.
“No,” the other shook his head, “I can’t say that it did.”
King clutched desperately at the railing as the train swerved around the spur of a mountain that had been sliced as with a gigantic knife. Jagged brown rocks shot up on both sides of them and dust was choking in the confined space.
“Suppose we go back into the car,” Rennert suggested, holding open the door.
King passed through and paused in the narrow passage. He coughed and asked: “What do you think I ought to do?”
“Forget it, at least for the present,” Rennert tried to make his smile reassuring. “As you say, there’s probably nothing to it.”
King’s fingers toyed with a lodge emblem upon his watchchain. “You don’t think that we’re in any danger, then? I had thought of getting off at Saltillo and waiting for the next train.”
“I’ll talk to the train officials and find out what the situation is. Then you can decide what you want to do.”
“I’ll appreciate it if you will. I don’t speak Spanish, you see.”
Rennert watched King’s narrow stooped shoulders disappear around the bend in the passage, then followed him into the Pullman. He sat down in the rear seat and stared thoughtfully out the window.
Despite his assurances to King, a doubt kept nagging at him. They had been delayed the night before at San Antonio by rumors of a strike of Pullman employees on the Mexican National Railways and when they had crossed the border early that morning there had been but one Pullman available—the last, they had been told, that would be allowed to run until the strike was settled. Conferences between the workers and officials of the Railway were being held in Mexico City. It had all been of little concern to Rennert—no club car, of course, and limited dining facilities—but he had looked forward to no real discomforts on the trip southward. And now this worried little man, presuming upon a brief acquaintance in the smoker, had come to him with the incoherent words which his wife had overheard, or thought she had overheard, during the night.
Rennert knew from long experience how readily the eternally tautened atmosphere of Mexico responds to the most nebulous touch of rumor and he was mildly surprised at himself for letting these vibrations disturb him. He had the curious feeling (and told himself that he was a fool to admit it) that the masses of contorted stone were closing in imperceptibly upon the train. Perhaps, he reflected, it was due to the fact that the morning was unusually warm and that there was a peculiar breathlessness about the air impounded by the stark Gothic cliffs of El Paso de los M
uertos.
Electric fans droned discreetly and the car was very still.
Rennert stared at earrings and told himself sharply: Don’t be a damn fool!
She sat in the seat in front of him—a thin angular woman of slightly more than medium height. She was dressed in black taffeta whose severeness was emphasized, rather than relieved, by a white, stiffly starched collar. Faint streaks of gray showed in her light brown hair. The earrings were small old-fashioned pendants of twisted gold wire to which were attached oval black cameos.
She sat stiffly erect, holding in her left hand a thin paper-bound volume, the pages of which she cut at regularly spaced intervals with a long bronze knife. About the wrists of the hand which held the book and of that which manipulated the knife were wide cuffs of the same starched whiteness as the collar.
She had been sitting, Rennert remembered now, in exactly the same position when he had gotten on the train in San Antonio the night before. He had retired soon to the smoker and had seen no more of her until breakfast, an hour or so before they reached Monterrey. She had been at a table by herself then, orange juice and dry toast lying untouched before her (strange, Rennert reflected, how these details came back to him now) as she stared at the mountains with eyes that forgot the other breakfasters.
Two seats beyond, on the other side of the car, sat a tall man whose narrow head was plastered with glossy dark-brown hair. As Rennert watched, he turned large dark-colored glasses toward the window and half rose in his seat to pull down the blind. His body seemed to uncoil, slender and ungainly in gray shirt and corduroy trousers but giving the impression of a vast amount of concealed wiry strength. He sank back onto the seat and threw one long leg over the other.
Rennert got up and walked slowly down the aisle in the direction of the smoker. There had been, he believed, seven passengers besides himself in the Pullman when the train had left San Antonio….
To his right, in the center of the car, sat an elderly man with gray hair cut en brosse. He wore an ill-fitting suit of black serge and his hands, bleached-looking and delicate, rested upon his knees as he stared fixedly at a point above the doorway.
In front of him was a middle-aged, narrow-shouldered individual whose jet-black hair, sallow olive complexion and prominent cheek bones denoted a strong mixture of Mexican blood. With the thumb and forefinger of one hand he was caressing the end of a thin drooping mustache. As Rennert passed, he glanced up quickly, searched his face for an instant with obsidian-black eyes and as quickly lowered his gaze. His face remained impassive but there had been, Rennert was positive, a certain furtiveness deep in his eyes.
King sat across from him. He was bending forward, rummaging among the contents of a black gladstone.
Rennert walked on, past the door of a compartment, to the smoker.
Two men sat upon the leather seat. One of them looked up and greeted him with a friendly nod. He was a tall fellow, probably in his middle thirties, with a well-proportioned athletic figure. He had a long clean-shaven face, slate-blue eyes beneath sparse lashes and corn-colored hair combed back from a wide forehead.
“How’re you this morning?” he asked, taking a cigarette from the corner of his mouth and flipping the ashes to the floor.
“Very well,” Rennert drew a package of cigarettes from his pocket and selected one.
“I don’t believe I remember your name,” the other said, “but I met you in here last night, as we were leaving San Antonio. Mine’s Spahr.” His voice had a soft pleasant drawl.
“Rennert is my name,” as he held cupped hands over a match
“Oh, yes. This is Mr. Radcott, Mr. Rennert.”
Radcott looked up at Rennert over the top of a newspaper. He was a heavy-set man with a round pleasant face upon which stood beads of perspiration. His blond, carefully brushed hair did not conceal incipient baldness. He wore no coat and his shirt clung damply to his torso.
“Hot, isn’t it?” he remarked in a perfunctory tone as Rennert sat down beside him.
Rennert agreed and glanced at the front page of the newspapery which Radcott held in his short pudgy fingers. He felt a faint twinge of surprise.
Exclamatory red letters proclaimed it an extra edition of the San Antonio Express.
They smoked for several moments in silence. The whir of the diminutive electric fan set in the wall mingled with the steady rhythm of the rails to give the room a soporific effect.
Rennert found his thoughts refusing stubbornly to respond to the stimuli that had awakened them before. It all seemed so silly now. A frightened woman leaving a train in the small hours of the morning and translating a sleepy conversation into incoherent phrases. Earrings and cuffs … and don’t forget the extra edition….
Looking back upon it—this brief interval of comfortable afterbreakfast relaxation in inviolable masculine surroundings—Rennert was to think of it as a definite period punctuating the uneventfulness of that strangely prolonged journey, during which those words would assume unexpected proportions.
“Going to Mexico City, Rennert?” Spahr broke the silence.
“Yes. I suppose you are, too?”
“Yeah. I’m with the San Antonio Express. Going down to do some stories on the new President.” He took a last draw upon his cigarette and flipped it into the cuspidor. “What do you think this strike is liable to amount to? They say there’s a streetcar and bus strike in Mexico City and that the Pullmans are tied up all over the country.”
Rennert smiled. “Strikes are about the same in Mexico as in the United States, I’ve observed. Maybe a little more fanfare and oratory, but nothing to worry about.”
With a barely suppressed yawn Radcott got to his feet and dabbed at his pink face with a wadded handkerchief. “Thanks,” he folded the newspaper and tossed it to the seat beside Spahr. “I think I’ll walk back and get some air. I’m about to suffocate in here.”
They watched his broad moist back disappear through the green curtains.
“It is hot, isn’t it?” Spahr said. “What about a cold bottle of beer?”
“Thanks,” Rennert said, “a little too soon after breakfast for me.”
The diminutive Mexican porter entered and walked quickly across to the windows.
“What’s the matter?” Spahr asked as he watched him lowering them. “It’s hot enough in here as it is.”
“Tunnel, sir,” the Mexican replied in careful inflectionless English as he recrossed the room.
Spahr glanced out the window at the wall of brown rocks that seemed to be thrusting their knife-edge sides in on the train.
“I think I’ll get that beer,” he said, rising. “You won’t change your mind?”
“No, thank you. This your paper?”
“Huh? Oh, yes, but go ahead and read it if you want to. I’m through with it.” Spahr stuck a hand into the pocket of his loose-fitting seersucker trousers and lounged from the room. He was whistling a low tune as the curtains fell to behind him.
“The eyes of Texas are upon you …”
Rennert sat, gazing upward at the smoke of his cigarette as it rose in slow spirals that were suddenly caught, twisted and whirled into invisibility by the current from the fan.
These were the seven passengers. King, Spahr, Radcott, the furtive-eyed Mexican, the gray-haired man, the tall fellow who looked like a ranchman, and the lady in black taffeta who wore earrings and cuffs.
Rennert picked up the newspaper.
PILOT AND PASSENGER DIE IN AIR CRASH was the headline that was spread across the front page. Rennert glanced down the column. An airplane had crashed to the ground outside San Antonio about sundown the day before, carrying with it two men….
A low, heavy rumble from ahead came to his ears and he became aware that the room was growing dark. He glanced out the window and saw the wall of rock close in upon the train.
They were in the tunnel.
There was something about the abrupt departure from hot blinding sunlight into rock-incased blackness that alwa
ys gave Rennert a queer other-dimensional feeling. Sitting there with his cigarette a pinpoint of light in the darkness, he remembered with a smile how, as a small boy taking his first long train trip, he had held his breath and clutched the seat in an agony of heart-stopping apprehension as he had passed through a tunnel in the Alleghenies. The sensation, he imagined, must be something like that which an inexperienced diver feels when he opens his eyes to another element….
He opened his eyes now, as it were, to the increasing light ahead and blinked as the train emerged from the rocks, like a plated serpent drawing its ungainly length from a crevice.
He resumed his perusal of the newspaper. Baseball results, a speech by a political candidate, the weather report…
“Do you know,” King asked from between the curtains, “where the conductor is?”
Rennert looked up. “No, I don’t.” He saw King’s gray-white face. “What’s the matter?”
“It’s a man back in the Pullman. He’s fainted, I think.”
Rennert got up and thrust the newspaper into his pocket. “Let’s see.”
King stood aside and allowed Rennert to precede him back down the passage.
“He’s across the aisle from me.”
Rennert stepped inside the door and looked down at the Mexican. His body was slumped now against the frame of the window. His hands dangled from the edge of the seat and swayed helplessly to and fro with the increasing motion of the train. His head had fallen slightly forward so that he seemed to be staring at the floor.
Rennert leaned over and caught hold of his shoulder. He must have grasped it with more force than he thought, for the body became dislodged from its position and fell forward. Rennert pushed it back against the rear of the seat. For an instant, as he felt for the pulse and looked at the still wax-like face, he had the feeling that the eyes of glazed obsidian were staring purposefully into his.