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Authors: Arthur W. Upfield

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Chapter Twenty-three

Half-Way Inn

THEY stood silent, four men and a woman numbed by fatigue, and Bony justly proud of having brought them thus far. They watched Lucy leaping like a goat down to the floor of Bumblefoot Hole, and run like a hare to meet the camels, who greeted her with lofty, albeit warm, affection.

“Well, there it is,” Bony said, cheerfully. “We'll have to go round the rim to take the only path down. This place may not appear to you as such, but to me it looks and feels like home.”

Millie regarded them with assumed unconcern, but Curley spread his rear legs and closed his fore-legs in the unmistakable gesture of impatience. On arriving at the old fireplace, they flung their packs and the water drum from weary bodies, and slumped to the ground.

It was Bony who made the fire and set a billy of water against it.

These four men who had withstood jail routine, and as successfully resisted the utter boredom of confinement in Nature's dungeons, were now rapidly deteriorating. The woman was still driven by iron determination to survive that she might enjoy rewards she had certainly not earned, and she had been least affected by the Plain. True, Bony had saved her as much as possible, which she had taken for granted, causing him to ponder on the ruthless urge to batten on everyone for her own advantage.

She was sitting now with her eyes closed, still fighting the effects of the odds against her from both the Plain and Bony's leadership. Jenks merely stared about. Mark Brennan sighed with relief from an ordeal having nothing to do with
weariness, and Maddoch had sprawled forward to bury his face in his arms.

Under the circumstances, they had done remarkably well these last few days, when the ground covered had been nearer twenty than fifteen miles per day.

Bony was pouring tea when Lucy came to tell him that both she and the camels were thirsty. He gave her water in the crown of his old felt hat, but foresaw that watering the camels would be difficult. On explaining the difficulty to Riddell, that gentleman said the camels could rot, and this released a violent tirade from Myra, explosively betraying the state of her nerves.

Lucy having failed to aid them, Millie led Curley forward to make known their protest. Now without fettering hobbles, she stalked silently to the camp and stuck her muzzle into the empty billycan. The interested Curley romped through the group, scattering them wildly, and nuzzled the packs as though he could smell bread crusts. And then he stretched his long neck in appeal to Bony, his twitching split upper lip so dry and hot and needing water, his large black eyes pleading.

Bony again called for assistance, and surlily they gave it. It meant keeping the animals at bay with sticks while Bony dipped, with a half-gallon can, about eight gallons of water from the rock-hole to a rock-basin.

The sun had gone to bed and dusk was shrouding Bumblefoot Hole when they had eaten. Bony suggested a cave apiece and sleep, and neither Riddell nor Jenks needed further prompting. Maddoch was almost unconscious, and Brennan dragged him off to another cave, where he rolled him into his blanket and settled into his own.

Then all was quiet and darkening. The camels were down and Bony was weighing in his hands the bag containing the remainder of the flour.

“Off to bed for you too,” he told Myra firmly. “There's a cave over there just right for you.”

“What are you going to do?”

“Bake bread when the fire burns down. How are your feet?”

“Still sore. They need a wash. I need a wash all over. Could I put water into the rock-basin and really wallow?”

“Yes, water's plentiful. I'll bale some out of the hole for you.”

“Would I be safe, d'you think?”

“Of course. The camels won't hurt you.”

“I wasn't thinking of the camels, Inspector.”

“Well, the men are all tucked up.”

“All except one,” she said, faintly pert.

Anger slowly welled to flush his dark forehead, and his eyes blazed. Saying nothing, he took the can to the water-hole and baled. The girl crouched beside the fire until he came and snatched up a blanket, taking it to the hole and fashioning a rough screen.

She was away for half an hour. She was refreshed of body, and Bony hoped also of mind. He said:

“Stay awhile. I want to talk to you. You need not waste your time on sex innuendo. It's a language I do not understand.” He stirred the loaf baking in the ashes and decided it required further time. “When Mitski was killed, where were you?”

“I told you, Inspector. In the kitchen.”

She was perfectly composed.

“I recall that is what you told me, but where were you?”

“Well, I can only...”

“I want the truth, Myra. Why are you opposed to admitting that you were with Mark Brennan in the passage to the blow-hole?”

“Because I don't want to admit I was alone with any one of those murderers, that's why. I suppose Brennan crowed about it.”

“No. I knew you must have been there, because the draught trapped your scarf and it led me to the outlet above.

“When we reach a civilised point, we shall be surrounded by police and Security men—the latter because it is thought your disappearance was deliberate, and for the purpose of spying into secrets of the rocket range. I can clear you with a word, or I can, and will, have you held for weeks on suspicion—of murder.”

She was stilled, and the flickering firelight danced in her fathomless eyes.

“I want the murderer of Igor Mitski,” he went on. “It's up to you to clear yourself. From whom, or from what, did you evolve the theory that Mitski's murderer planned to kill all rivals, so as to be the only lion in the den?”

“It was Havant's idea. He predicted it would happen, and when we were all looking at Mitski and knew he'd been murdered, he said, ‘Who's next?'”

“Did you kill Mitski?”

“Of course not. He was quite harmless, like you.”

“Do you know who did?”

“Why? Should I?”

“Answer me. Including Mitski, there were six men with you. Who, assuming he was the only one left with you, would you fear most of those six?”

“Riddell.”

“Who, under those circumstances, would you choose to be left with, again assuming you intended to preserve your chastity?”

“So modestly put,” she mocked. “I could name Maddoch, but ... some spiders bite and some don't.”

“Then you think it possible that Maddoch killed Mitski?”

“Yes. Riddell accused Maddoch, but then Riddell's just an animal. I'll tell you this, dear Inspector. Any one of them would have attacked me if they hadn't been afraid of being killed in the rush. I like it that way.”

“You include Doctor Havant?”

“I wouldn't agree to stay behind with him, would I?”

Bony raked the loaf from the ashes, and rebuilt the fire for another loaf. She watched him warily.

“What d'you hope to do when you're free of the Plain ... and of me?” he asked.

“The Press boys will be around, and plenty. I've got it all plotted, provided you don't spoil the show. The men will say their little pieces, never fear. But I'll work on the angle of the hen among the roosters. They can't say they seduced me. I'll tell how I out-witted their persistent efforts. That
will
be news. I could mention how I had to resist you, but I won't, because there's a lot about you that my grandmother would admire. I know a man in Melbourne who's the king of publicity agents. I'll script the lot for U.S.A Radio, and go over there to appear on T.V., and he won't hesitate to back a brave girl. Australia can go hopping. It can buy my leavings from America, same as it buys the leavings of all American and English top-liners. The art is to withhold to create demand. I have the art, plus.”

Bony could easily believe her about mastery of the art of withholding. He spoke ironically:

“It seems we shall not be treading on each other's toes.”

“Is that all you have to say? Good-night, Inspector. I hope you trust me now.”

“On all counts excepting the killing of Mitski.”

“Ye Gods! You remind me of Nemesis.”

“Others before you have been so reminded. Good-night, Myra.”

He continued to squat on his heels, damping the fire to conserve the precious supply of wood, and he watched the little holes appear in the fine ash atop the baking loaf, and the tiny spurts of steam erupting from them. The fine ash covering the graveyard of his mind broke open, and a voice from the past said: “She's a tough item.”

Myra Thomas was a tough item. Her trial for murder hadn't softened her. Her trials in the caverns hadn't reduced
the toughness. It must have been there at birth, and no Pygmalion could have done anything about it.

Well, he would give these people a day's spell, for the Plain would tax them and wear them down even more. He foresaw explosive situations which would tax all his acumen, and the condition of these people when those situations arose would be that of utter exhaustion. It was, of course, impossible to place any trust in Myra Thomas. She would continue to use them all when it suited her, and so additional physical hardship for her wouldn't be amiss.

Lucy came to him and stood gazing hopefully. She had fed well, and could have wanted for nothing. Shortly afterwards, movement behind him made him swivel about, and there stood the two camels, heads low, the upper lip of each lifting like the nostrils of hungry men smelling a delicious dinner. They had been good companions. They might still be. He pondered on whether they could carry the girl and Maddoch without the riding saddles, and concluded it might be managed but would be fraught with difficulties which would cause dangerous delay, so decided against it.

On digging the loaf from the ashes, he set it end up against the billy-can to steam dry, and broke off pieces from the first loaf for the dog to carry to the waiting Millie and Curley.

Having placed the bread where the camels could not get at it, he baled water for himself and bathed. Later, he took his blanket to the shelter of a distant boulder, and there tied the dog to an ankle, and slept the clock round. The sun was friendly when he woke to see the others about the camp fire, and to find the camels missing.

He was greeted almost cheerfully. Later in the morning when they were still disposed to loll about, he advised them to bathe and wash their clothes, as they would have to move on next morning.

Brennan and Riddell objected.

“It would be wise for all of you to stay here until I can obtain transport,” he urged, and was instantly opposed. “Well,
it's up to you, individually. Before sun-rise tomorrow I shall be leaving.”

Riddell continued to grumble, but Brennan surrendered with good heart, as did Jenks. Maddoch was silent, and would still need supervision.

During the afternoon he offered his worn riding boots to Myra, who found she could wear them when her feet were protected with strips of blanket. He did what he could to mend the footwear of the others, who now knew what the saltbush could do to naked feet.

When the sun rose the next morning, Bumblefoot Hole was a full mile behind them.

Chapter Twenty-four

The Plain's Last Assault

ONE? Two? How many days ago was it when we rested for hours and hours at that dump the Inspector had called Bumblefoot Hole? What the Hell! He wouldn't look at the ruddy Plain. That was no use. Nothing to see, nothing but that precipice at the end, and the feeling of being pushed over it. There wasn't even any clouds to look at, and looking at Joe and Ted and moody old Clifford was like looking at himself.

Mark Brennan tramped. He was tired of whispering to himself ‘left, right, left'. But he could still hear it and it wasn't his voice shouting. He recalled the voice, the man and the place. The place was a road bordered by green paddocks. There were roadside gums, and in the distance were green hills. The man was a sergeant marching beside a squad of fellers like himself. He had ribbons, too, the sarge had, medals from War One.

A good mob that was. Lot of 'em got killed, and some perished as prisoners of war. Pity he hadn't gone off with 'em. Pity he'd lost his block over that wench. The bitch! Him doing his duty by the country, and her rushing to marry that schemer who had no intention of fighting, going to stay on the farm and make lots of dough out of black markets and things.

He had stopped 'em all right. They thought themselves lookin' good when they came out of that church. Still, addin' it all up, it was a bloody silly thing to do. Not worth being kept in the jug when the mob was overseas bein' kind to the girls and fightin' the enemy in their spare time. Not worth a lot of other things too. He could have let 'em alone, and in time that bitch would have given the husband hell without any assistance from Private Mark Brennan.

Not worth breakin' up the old man like it did, either. Decent old bloke, too. The old lady had taken it bad, but she'd stuck it out, and carried on the farm and was waiting for him to go back and help her out. Would have done it, too, if he hadn't been shanghai'd into those caverns. Still, better late than never. Now he was on his way to the farm and the old lady, perhaps. On his way? What way? Go on, keep your feet up. Pick 'em up, there! Pick 'em up! All right, Sarge! All right!

Good bloke that sergeant, what's his name? Decent warders, too. Some of 'em crook, but not many. Most of 'em would give a bloke a fair go. The Governor, too. Wished him luck. Would have got home if he hadn't fell for that skirt drivin' the car, and took her on when she offered him a lift. If he met her again, he'd choke her. Offerin' him a nip of coffee royal and doping him well and truly. Choke her to death! Hey, wait, Mister Mark Brennan. None of that. You've had all that. You got to lay flowers on the old man's grave and look after the old woman from here on.

Left, right! Ease up, Sarge! I'm goin' through. Don't worry. Goin' through this damn bloody Plain with Inspector Bonaparte. Inspector Bonaparte! He's all right. Once on a feller's tracks, just like the Tasmanian tiger cat, never leaves 'em. Good feller, too. Bloody good feller. Would have been sunk if it wasn't for him. Tire him out! What a hope! Did you ever see eyes like that, Mark, you rotten swine? Did you? “What's that, Clifford? What did you say?”

“Nothing, Mark. Nothing at all.” What is there to say? I have to be careful with my feet. I have to think where to put them, and that makes lifting them up even more of an effort. Don't interrupt, Mark, please. Not now. If you do you might make me forget to lift up my feet and put them down, and then I'll never walk again. How could I? What book was that in? Never mind the tide. The writer said that everyone was destined to walk this earth, and was given a number of the steps he would take before he laid himself down with
exquisite relief and died. Do you know what? I think that very soon I shall reach the allotted number of my steps, years before my time.

Zombie! Freda called me a zombie. I certainly felt like one when she kept on and on screaming into my mind. I wouldn't have been so desperate if only she hadn't screamed. And to say all those things in my own office, with Kendal and Mace listening. To repeat them over and over that night we left the Urban Committee Meeting. What the men thought I could see in their faces.

I tried to be merciful. I wouldn't have given her strychnine had I known its terrible effects. I could have given her cyanide instead. Now, Clifford Maddoch! Don't forget to raise your feet and put them down—this one, that one, this one, that one. That's it, Clifford. Inspector Bonaparte is doing this. He doesn't forget. He doesn't forget anything.

How stupid I was to crush that little kangaroo mouse. I could have kept it in a pocket, then sent it to a taxidermist in Sydney and had it stuffed, and no one could ever say I hadn't been in the real Australia, could they? Pity Mitski died. Funny that his voice was so like my wife's. Mitski would have composed a tune to that little kangaroo mouse. Now he's down somewhere in Fiddler's Leap. Fiddler's Leap! Bumblefoot Hole! Big Claypan! Curley's Hate! What curious names.

I'll make twelve more steps before I look up to see if there's anything to see. One, two, three ... ten, eleven, twelve. Nothing. Nothing at all except the saltbush, and the sky. Two things. I'll try that again. I'll make it twenty-four before I look up. “Sorry, Riddell. I wasn't laughing at you.”

Ruddy squirt. Always hated the cocky jumped-up. Bashed old Mitski, he did. Saw him doing it. Like a cock sparrer the way he's moving. If he'd been a man like me, Joe Riddell, he wouldn't have fed poison to his missus; he'd have picked her up by the feet and cracked the backyard cement with her head. Could always say she fell outer the upstairs winder. Oughta had more brains meself, come to sum it up. Shootin'
that cocky for moanin' about the cow was a bit raw. Nothin' to be proud of. I shoulda pushed him up into the fork of a tree and left him with his neck in the fork. Could've explained how he went climbin' trees lookin' for bees' nests.

Gord! How much more of this? Week after week walk-in' to nothin', that's what we're doin'. Shoulda stayed behind with old Havant. Woulda, too, if that slut had stayed. I'd have found out what she was made of.

Crikey! That land over there looks different to what it was yestiday. Must be movin' along it. There's a rabbit. Ain't seen a rabbit after that one what done a bunk from them sticks and things Mark stirred up. Eat! I'd eat him fur an' all. When I get off this ruddy Plain I'll get the lend of a hundred quid off Maddoch—have to talk cobber-like—and I'll buy a hundred loaves of bread, half a side of beef, two sides of bacon, ten dozen eggs, and I'll hole up somewhere. No more farmers for me. No more livin' with cows. Wimmen! To hell with wimmen. Grub ... tucker ... food ... that'll be all I'll ever want. I'll eat, and eat, and eat.

The sun rises in the east, sets in the west ... ran the mind of Edward Jenks. Can't bluff me. Makin' south, all right. Getting closer to that land all the time. The d. knows his onions, give him his due. More sting in him than all the rest in the bag. Caw! Joe's all in, the big slob. Mark's wobblin' like a drunk, and Clifford couldn't run a yard if his missus turned up.

That leaves me. Tough Ed, they called me. Well, I ain't done so bad at that. Lotta life in the old dog, as I'll show 'em—an' that trollop, when I get me chance. No woman puts it over me like Cliff's missus did. Come to think it all out, that leaves this ruddy cop what calls himself a Detective-Inspector. Got a reputation they say. So has Mister Edward Jenks, Esquire, A.B. Different method, that's what. Another day, maybe two, an' we arrives some place. Then we all start again on scratch, and if ever I happen to meet that Myra Thomas on
a dark street, well, well, what do we say, Mister Jenks and Missus Thomas?

The nights now were mere interludes. The rest periods ordered by Bony were without reality. Myra Thomas existed on her dreams of power and glory. Jenks looked up now and then, not at the Plain which was battering them into themselves, but at the lurching figure of the female shape in male attire. None of them even noticed the crows that came to meet them from the ‘coast', as though they were doves leading them to the land and trees where they roosted o' nights, safe from wild dogs and foxes.

The following day was to be the last day of this trek, and during the afternoon they skirted the coast, travelling from one promontory to the next. Bony watched the sun, maintained a check of time, and camped that night in the shelter of a small ‘island' on which grew a few mulgas. They had one tin of meat and two of fish, and that was the end of the food supply.

Argument arose because three tins could not serve as plates for six people.

“Caw! What am I goin' to eat out of?” snarled Jenks, and the girl said, contemptuously:

“Be your natural self. Eat off the ground, of course.”

Jenks glanced at Riddell as though expecting support. Bony quickly suggested a pannikin in lieu of a golden platter, and emptied half a tin of herrings in tomato sauce into a pannikin for himself, and presented the other half in its tin to Myra, saying:

“At our last camp we still had plates and forks, you will remember. Someone has left them behind. Now we have only our fingers.”

“Which will serve Ted for the rest of his life,” sneered the girl.

“Ain't we gettin' snooty, Myra? Next week we'll be seein' Mrs. Myra Thomas, the famous ex-murderess, a-strollin' down Pitt Street. And no one will be thinkin' that the lovely
on the prance lived with a lot of men on a Plain where there's never no bush nor a tree to hide it. Will you be tellin' your dear public about
all
the terrors you went through?”

“I'll tell my public all about you, Jenks. About how you eat like the guzzling pig that you are.”

“And how you was the hen with all the roosters, I suppose. How you fought off the roosters and saved it? And how you bumped off your husband because he found out you're sexless, like Doc Havant said. I could've fixed that. Woman! Caw! You ain't a woman. You're all blah and bilk. Why, them ten-bob-a-timers in the back alleys off the water-front is more a woman than you. You wasn't even born a female. Wait till I have my little say on the wireless.”

“You won't. They're particular about keeping the air clear of microbes.”

“What about calling it a day?” complained Maddoch. “No one enjoys listening to your polite conversation.”

“Don't you butt in, Clifford. You know how this cow played us all against each other. You know how she worked us up so that someone bashed poor old Mitski. She could've done him in only she was being raped by Mark at the time, wasn't she, Mark?”

“Don't drag me into it,” pleaded Brennan. “I'm too legweary even to think about it. Give us peace ... peace ... and more peace. Why the hell were women invented?”

“Lovely liars,” drooled Jenks. “Smooth legs 'n soft beds. I just itch to see 'em again, not havin' seen a woman for years. I...”

“It will be even more years before any of you again see women, lovely or otherwise, if you forget to obey me when we reach this homestead,” Bony interrupted. “There are white men and white women, and we shall be dependent on them for food, clothes and transport to the railway. You may even recognise someone who was instrumental in your kidnapping, and should you lose your temper and do anyone an injury,
then you will surely find yourselves back again in jail to serve the rest of your sentences—plus a little extra.”

“Ah! So you thinks we might meet up with someone we'd like to argue with, do you, Inspector?” Jenks pressed, his voice hard.

“I do. You have never troubled to conceal your hope for revenge, Jenks. To prevent you doing something which would result in Mark and Joe and Clifford being returned to jail, I have half a mind to arrest you now.”

“Don't you worry, Inspector,” snarled Riddell.

“No, just leave that to me,” added Brennan. “Anyone makes a break stopping me getting back will get a guts full of bash.”

“So be it; d'you see that star?”

“That red star?” asked Myra. “Low down?”

“That's the one, Myra. It happens to be a light in a house window. That is the homestead called Mount Singular. Do you think you could walk there, now?”

“Now! I'll have a damn good try.” She rose to her feet without sign of fatigue, and the others were as agile.

“How far d'you reckon?” asked Brennan.

“About four miles. Hard miles, too, and a hard cliff at the end. I'd like to get there before midnight when most radio stations will be off the air. We'll walk single file. Mark, you take the rear. No talking. No striking matches.”

Maddoch said, excitement shrilling his voice:

“We won't have to carry anything, will we?”

“Nothing,” Riddell growled. “Only our ruddy selves.”

Excitement sustained them over the first mile. Then Brennan fell, cursed wildly and lurched to his feet. The girl tripped and had to be assisted, and actually requested a halt and the flare of a match, that she could use her small mirror. The promontory on which Mount Singular was built eventually rose before them like a wall against the starry sky, and the ‘star' which had beckoned them set like the moon behind a cloud.

As on that night in the long ago when they left the caverns, so now did they follow-my-leader, who had eyes with which to see, and a nose with which to scent. He led them in and out among the boulders and over the shallow gutters to the northern base of the promontory, and then, when bringing the bulk of land against the sky to determine the least difficult ascent, he stopped.

“Can you people smell what I smell?” he asked.

“Kerosene,” replied the girl.

“Petrol,” Brennan decided.

“A garage,” voted Maddoch.

They appeared to be standing on a clear space, and Bony led them forward till stopped by an obstruction. They could just see his raised arms. They saw him stoop, and then heard him knock with a stone, on wood.

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