The Bradmoor Murder Read online

Page 9


  Barclay replied in a rather strange voice.

  “Public clamor didn’t drive Sir Henry Marquis. It was a sense of duty, a tremendous compelling sense of duty … nothing less would have sent Sir Henry on that awful journey into the heart of Africa.”

  “Call it what you like,” I said, “Marquis had no notion of going out of England, until after he went to see old Brexford in Hants. That stirred up the hornets. The penny press said the uncle would smooth him down. Marquis had to go after that.”

  “But the uncle was the hottest hornet in the swarm. It was war to the death with him.”

  “He did die, didn’t he?” I said. “I saw some notice of it in the ship’s bulletin on the way south.”

  “Yes,” replied Barclay, “he took to his bed the day after Sir Henry Marquis visited him in Hants, and he never got up.”

  “Like an old man,” I said, “adamant against an offending member of his family until it comes to the jail door, and then he goes soft.”

  Barclay looked again at me, with that strange expression. But he did not speak. He moved the maps about on the table, until he found the one outlining Marquis’s expedition. It had been enlarged and traced from Sir Henry Marquis’s notes. It was not a printed map. Sir Henry had not made a published report of the expedition, because the Government had not borne the cost of it. I suppose Marquis financed it, he was rich, and his reputation was at stake. It was his boast that Scotland Yard, while he was at the head of its Criminal Investigation Department, would not tire out on the track of any man.

  Barclay gathered up all the other maps on the table, folded them carefully, tied them with thin pieces of tape and laid them neatly to one side, then he spread the long tracing out over the whole length of the table. He went about it slowly like a man in some deep reflection. Then he put the query that I had been turning in my mind.

  “Do you know who put up the money for this expedition?”

  I told him what I have written here, Marquis, of course.

  “No,” he said, “Sir Henry did not put up the money.”

  “Then who did?”

  “The uncle,” he replied, “old Brexford put it up.”

  I was astonished.

  “Then he didn’t go soft … he wanted young Winton brought out!”

  Barclay replied in the same even voice.

  “No,” he said, “Brexford didn’t want him brought out.”

  He was smoothing the tracing with his hands, stooping over the table. He did not seem to notice my surprise. He would put the tip of his big finger on a crease of the map and slowly extend it.

  “We went in too far north,” he said, as in a vague comment. “We should have started in on the East Coast farther down about Mombasa. But the report Sir Henry had, indicated Winton somewhere south of Omdurman, and we went in through Egypt. But he wasn’t in Omdurman. The rumor always put him on south … you know about desert rumors; strangely accurate as a rule, and traveling over an immense distance, one can’t understand how. But the rumor was correct, he was on south; he had followed the White Nile, along Baker Pasha’s route, a little to the west. Sir Henry always hoped to pick him up somewhere along the White Nile. But Sir Henry was going on a wrong hypothesis, he was thinking about the movements of a man who must consider how he will get back, and Winton did not intend to get back.”

  He paused—a sort of hesitation in the narrative.

  “We didn’t realize that for a long time … then we had to go on or give up … Sir Henry, went on.”

  That, of course, abridged Marquis’s whole character.

  Barclay sat down close against the table where he could still stoop over the map. He went on.

  “It was an awful march south. Winton was always just a little ahead. The desert rumors were pretty clear about him until we passed the big bend of the White Nile—you know it goes off west nearly at a right angle about four hundred miles south of Khartum—then the rumors began to get confused, sometimes they put Winton on in our front and sometimes, inexplicably to the rear of us … we couldn’t understand it!”

  He drummed a moment, with his thick square fingers, on the table.

  I sat down. Anything this man had to say about an expedition was of interest to me. He didn’t talk much. He went on.

  “We thought at first that Winton had doubled back; or that we had passed him. But there was his trail going on ahead! We were profoundly puzzled. It was like a mirage of the mind. We were all feeling the sun … damned queer about the sun! We wore spine pads and helmets with an inch of cork, and the accursed desert bedouins marched nearly naked and with their heads shaven.

  “I got uneasy. Sir Henry made no comment, but I knew what he thought; our scouts were beginning to see double—the sun will do anything to you! … But they weren’t seeing double; we were being followed … The explanation that occurred to us was that Winton had divided his force and put a part of it in behind us. But the native trackers were positive that the size of the force on in front had not diminished by a man. And they were right. They pointed out a hundred evidences, in Winton’s trail, to show that the same number of persons were on ahead.”

  Barclay paused, and sat a moment looking down at the map.

  “We were being followed.… I myself heard, faintly, shots in the rear; and the desert rumors began to get definite. There was a white man and a small native force behind and a little to the west of us, paralleling our route.… There seemed to be some strange report about this man, current in our camp, that we could not find out. Finally, it seeped through to us … the man had no face!”

  Barclay passed his hand over his big square jaw.

  “I suppose one could have a mirage of the mind. And mystery always breeds wonders.… Anyhow that rumor went right on. The leader of the force that dogged our rear had no face … he was white, he was English, his very size and characteristics were given. It was clearly not Winton from these details.… Winton’s tall and broad shouldered.

  “Then a strange thing happened. We stopped and the expedition behind us also stopped. We turned back on our route for a day’s march, and it also turned back for a day’s march. The thing was like a shadow.… That settled it. We were being followed! Sir Henry said nothing and we went on. Winton ahead had gained a little. He didn’t stop. There seemed to be no relation between this mysterious expedition and Winton.… It wasn’t after Winton. It was after us!

  “Sir Henry went on. And the man without a face followed. He didn’t have an easy time of it any more than we had. He had the sun and he had to beat off the desert marauders.

  “There’s no law at the head of the White Nile. We heard the firing. We could tell the very arm he used, a high-power magazine rifle made by Jermyn in Pall Mall—he was an Englishman all right. That was the one thing that quieted our concern about him. His mysterious movements might be inexplicable, but he was English and therefore no enemy.… We had something to learn about that!”

  Barclay made a vague gesture, like one who omits a mass of detail.

  “We overtook Winton on the grass plateau beyond Lake Victoria Nyanza, just where the old elephant trail comes out of the immense continent of forest to the south.’

  “We sighted his camp at dark and we stopped. He couldn’t get away now and there was no hurry. We took our time. The sun had us pretty well crumpled. I could hardly walk and Sir Henry was jerky. But we lost possession of Winton’s camp by just the measure of that night. There was a cordon of sentinels around it in the morning and another tent up.… No Face had passed round us in the night.… We were beaten to our man!

  “I cursed under my breath. So the mysterious Englishman was an ally of the man we were after. It was all clear now. He had followed us in with the deliberate purpose of joining Winton against us. But why did he not attack us on the way in. If he were in fact hostile to us—if he didn’t want us to find Winton? Of course I was only guessing half right as one always guesses. He did want us to find Winton!

  “We were halted by two sho
ts that flecked up the earth on either side of us when we started for his camp that morning and we had to stop. We sent a native on ahead with something white. And he came back to say that Sir Henry and I were to come forward alone to a scrub bush about a hundred yards from the cordon around Winton’s camp. It was like a parley in a little hill war!

  “I lay down at the bush, but Sir Henry stood. I was keen to know what would happen. We were at last come up with this mysterious Englishman who had hung on our flank all the way down the White Nile.

  “It was some moments before we saw him. And then I sat up. He came out from behind a tent, and at the distance, true to the persistent rumor, the figure had no face; the space under the visor of his helmet was blank. I saw Sir Henry start, slightly, and unsling his field glasses and I got mine out.

  “Then the mystery disappeared. The man had extended the apron of his helmet—which one wears in the desert to protect the back of the neck—entirely around the headband, to protect the carotid arteries, the sponge bones of the face, and the throat; this apron was fastened down securely from the head band of the helmet to the collar of his tunic.”

  Barclay paused.

  “I afterwards examined it closely,” he continued. “It was made of asbestos cloth to keep out the sun and it was fitted with big, thick colored lenses, to protect the eye from the heat rays. It was stitched into the headband of the helmet and buttoned down closely to the tunic collar.… Strange no one of us had ever thought about the heat rays on the face, on the carotid arteries and the throat; of course the value of a colored lens for the eye was known; but not the value of a thick colored lens.… No Face taught the world something about the sun … and the result was that he had come out of the desert fit, and we were groggy.

  “You could see the man was fit by the swing of his body as he walked down from the tents. He was thin, naturally from what he’d gone through, and he wasn’t very big … it isn’t bulk. I had the bulk and I was down.

  “He came out to the cordon of his sentinels about a hundred yards away, as I have said, and stopped; he carried a magazine rifle—we were right, one of Jermyn’s in Pall Mall—in the hollow of his arm. There was a native with him. It was the native who addressed us. He spoke a precise English, like a phonograph.

  “‘The Master says, the first thing to arrange, Sir Henry,’ he called, ‘is a truce; Lord Winton has a touch of the sun, and your man’s down.’

  “He indicated me with a gesture. His voice was high; nervous tension usually puts the voice up.

  “Marquis did not reply immediately to the point.

  “ ‘So your Master knows me,’ he said.

  “But the stranger was not to be diverted. He spoke to the native.

  “ ‘Oh, surely,’ the native called back, ‘but the truce, Sir Henry; shall you rest up a bit or have it out now?’

  “ ‘Have what out?’ There wasn’t much inquiry in Marquis’s voice.

  “‘Why pretend, Sir Henry?’ The native seemed to call out precisely the words spoken to him.

  “ ‘You came in to take Lord Winton out and the Master to prevent you,’

  “Marquis still avoided the point.

  “ ‘Then why didn’t your Master attack me on the White Nile—he could have rushed our camp before we knew about him.’

  “‘The Master will answer that,’ the native called back, ‘and then will you come to the point? The Master had to use you to find Lord Winton. He didn’t know where he was … now, shall it be a gentleman’s agreement; twenty-four hours notice and the camps to remain where they are?’

  “Again Sir Henry did not reply to the point.

  “ ‘How ill is Winton?’ he said.

  “ ‘Lord Winton is delirious,’ the man replied. ‘But it’s the heat; only, a day or two in the cool air of this plateau will put him on his feet.’

  “Sir Henry made what seemed a casual gesture.

  “ ‘Very well,’ he said, ‘when Winton’s able we’ll start back.’

  “There was a strange shift in the bearing of the white man over beyond Sir Henry Marquis when he replied to that. I can’t precisely describe it. He did not seem to change his position, but his posture got somehow a deadly menace in it. He seemed to speak sharply to the native, and that ebony herald repeated it to us.

  “ ‘You have your choice, Sir Henry,’ he called.

  “The inference did not need to be set out in words. It had been stated in the opening of this strange parley. I thought Marquis’s reply was pure bravado.

  “ ‘Oh, there’s no choice!’

  “And he turned about and walked past me down the long green slope to our camp.”

  Barclay sat back from the table and put the fingers of his big hands together. He went on in a reflective comment.

  “To tell the truth, I thought Marquis was acting a bit of a fool. It was clear to anybody that this mysterious ally that had joined Winton’s camp was not a person to be either baffled or frightened. It was sheer nonsense to go ahead on that notion. There was in fact no choice, as Sir Henry said, but not as he evidently intended our enemy to believe. Winton would not go back to a criminal trial in an English court. We could not fight the two forces now combined; Sir Henry’s front was sheer moonshine. I told him what I thought about it when we were back in our camp. The forces now joined against us were double the strength of our own. Lord Winton would be a desperate man, and the one with him had fought seventeen pitched battles in the last month’s march, by actual count of the firing in our rear … it was all accursed fooling to imagine that we could take Lord Winton back without a fight for it.

  “ ‘There’ll be no fight!’ was all Sir Henry replied to me.

  “ ‘Then you won’t take him?’ I said.

  “ ‘Oh, yes,’ he answered, ‘we shall take Lord Winton back with us!’

  “I got up and went out. The grass plateau in the afternoon sun was a heavenly spot be-side what we’d come through. It looked like a county in England, green, well watered; with the distant trees; Winton’s camp was like a white cloth laid down on it. The place was a Garden of Eden after the march along the White Nile.… Well, it was the last spot any one of us was very likely to see. There would be a rumor creep out in a year or two; the ivory raiders would carry it; or the slave gangs. There would be a brief official entry in the records of the Criminal Investigation Department at Scotland Yard; and a lot of bleached skeletons to remain vaguely white here.”

  Barclay suddenly got up. He put his big hands on the table and leaned over toward me.

  “I guessed what would happen,” he said, with a slow deliberate intonation of the words, “an’ I guessed wrong!

  “Sir Henry Marquis went over into Winton’s camp that night, unarmed and with his hands up … and ten days later we started for the Albert Nyanza on the return march … Marquis brought Winton out!”

  He thrust his head a little farther across the table toward me.

  “It’s no use to guess, Sir James; one always guesses wrong!”

  I misunderstood the innuendo as my answer indicates.

  “How did Marquis manage it?” I said. “I’m not going to guess!”

  And I too leaned forward in my consuming interest; the thrill of the mystery held me.

  Barclay seemed to relax a bit. He stood up, put his hands into the pockets of his coat and began to walk about the room.

  “You see,” he said, “old Brexford told the grand jury in Hants that he was sitting in his drawing-room reading beside a table. It was Sunday night, his servants had all gone to some frolic in the neighborhood and he was alone. He didn’t know Winton was about. They had quarreled bitterly about the marriage with this American girl; Brexford was rich and unmarried and Winton was his heir. There had been a desperate quarrel on Saturday, the day before, a perfect devil of a row, the servants all heard it, and at the end of it old Brexford notified Winton that he would go up to London on Monday and cut him out of his will. It was one of those deadly, bitter, final quarrels in a family th
at never can be adjusted and Winton left the house.”

  Barclay walked over to the window then he turned back. He went on.

  “Brexford told Sir Henry Marquis what he had told the grand jury. He was sitting alone in his drawing-room reading when a shot fired from the darkness outside crashed through the window; it happened just as Brexford leaned forward to get a cigarette from a box on the table. That accident of chance saved Brexford’s life, for the bullet passed by his shoulder instead of cutting its way through his chest. An instinct of safety caused the man to fall forward onto the floor and lie there as though he were dead; that saved his life again, for the man outside came up to the window and looked in, and Brexford out of the tail of his eyes, saw that it was young Winton.… Winton thought he had killed Brexford and got out of the county.”

  “So that was it!” I said. “That was the reason Winton was willing to come out, Marquis brought him the assurance that his shot had missed!”

  Barclay made a gesture of rejection with his big fingers extended.

  “It’s no use to guess, Sir James … you guessed on that girl a while ago!”

  “Dash the girl,” I said.

  Barclay’s face darkened for an instant, then he went on as though there had been no interruption.

  “The first thing Sir Henry Marquis said to Brexford after he had looked over the drawing-room, was:

  “ ‘Are you sure the shot was not fired from the other side of this drawing-room?’

  “This was impossible and Brexford pointed out at once that it was impossible. True, the casement window directly opposite on that side was open, for it was through this open window that the bullet directed at Brexford passed out of the drawing-room; but the country on that side fell away from the house sharply in a deep hollow, there was no tree or elevation; one to have fired such a shot from this side of the house through the drawing-room at Brexford in his chair would have required an elevation of at least fifty feet, and, as I have said there wasn’t even a tree on that side of the house.