Read Death in the Andamans Online
Authors: M. M. Kaye
Once off the road, their quarry had become hidden from anyone above it by the steepness of the slope, but from the shelter of the palm trunks they could see her again, almost directly below them. She was making for the huge, piled rocks that formed a natural breakwater at one end of the little beach upon which the sea had given up Ferrers Shilto the previous evening. And since there was no cover below the road, and she could now no longer move out of their range of vision â unless of course Copper's dark suspicion proved correct! â they flattened themselves against the smooth wet boles of the palm trees by the road's edge and watched her slither down the last few feet of grass and clamber on to the rocks.
The tide was out, and only a breath of wind blew in from the south, stirring but not dispersing the ghostly veils of mist. But the piled rocks were wet and glistening with spray from the huge, smooth-backed rollers that swung in from the misty sea, and Copper shivered as she watched. There seemed to her more menace in the endless, towering advance of that gigantic swell, than in all the shrieking savagery of the gale-hounded seas on the previous evening, but it did not appear to disconcert the shadowy figure on the rocks below.
Mrs Stock, stumbling and slipping on the wet, treacherous surfaces, was making her way to where the sea engulfed them, and Valerie said suddenly: âI â I think we'd better shout.' She opened her mouth to do so, but Copper's fingers clenched about her arm and checked her, for below them Ruby had stopped
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She stood upon a flat-topped rock, silhouetted dimly against the grey seas and the flung spray, and appeared to fumble at her breast. Then of a sudden they saw her arm come up and back, and then quickly forward as she flung some unseen object far out into the boiling waters beyond the rocks.
A moment later she had turned, and was retracing her steps.
âThis is where we move, I think,' muttered Valerie, and they turned together and fled back up the steep path to the shelter of the trees beyond the tennis-courts, where they waited, panting, until some minutes later Mrs Stock hurried past them to pause behind the orchid trees, and seizing a favourable opportunity, slip across the gap between the trees and the house and vanish up the back staircase that led to the tiny landing off which both her bathroom and Valerie's opened.
The amateur detectives, following her example, reached their own rooms, damp and breathless but unobserved, some five minutes later. In which they were luckier than they knew, for while they had been making lists of suspects and shadowing Mrs Stock, the entire population of Ross had been roused to hunt for the missing body of Ferrers Shilto, and search-parties had been scouring the island. This at Nick's suggestion; though the majority of the searchers were convinced that it was a waste of time.
âSheer idiocy!' had been John Shilto's verdict. âSurely it's obvious that whoever wanted to get rid of the body would simply have dumped it into the sea? It's probably miles down the coast by now!'
âI disagree,' snapped Nick. âThe sea handed it back once. And quite apart from that, there's something else that you haven't taken into consideration. At what point in this island, with a sea like this running, could a body have been dumped into deep water? The answer is:
None!
'
Here he had been unexpectedly backed up by Leonard Stock. âYou see, sir,' Mr Stock explained apologetically to the Chief Commissioner, âthe jetty has been completely destroyed, and so has the pier.'
âNo, I am afraid I don't see,' said the Chief Commissioner shortly. âPerhaps you would be good enough to explain.'
âLook here,' cut in Nick brusquely, âyou saw the sort of sea that was running last night â and for that matter is still running? Well, add to that the fact that the tide is now out, which means that it turned about seven this morning. Q.E.D., it must have been coming in about the time the killer would have been trying to get rid of the body, since it stands to reason he wouldn't wait until daylight. Well, what's going to happen to anything that you chuck into that sort of sea from anywhere on this damned island? It's going to get thrown back at you inside five seconds! And if you want to prove the truth of that, all you've got to do is to take a walk round Ross and see for yourself â¦
âHad the pier or the jetty been standing, there might have been a chance of weighting the body and pushing it off from the furthest point of either in the hope â not very reliable even then â of the current swinging it clear of the island. But as Stock has just pointed out, there is now no jetty. Therefore the body is still somewhere on this island, and I've a strong hunch that when we find it we'll also find the answer to one or two rather pressing questions!'
âThe most pressing being why anyone should have taken the trouble to switch the corpses,' said Charles thoughtfully. âIf you have to dispose of one body by chucking it into the sea, why not chuck in the chap you have just murdered, instead of going in for all this elaborate substitution business?'
âI imagine a small matter of weight was the main reason,' said Nick: âDan can't have been more than four or five inches taller than the original corpse, but he was considerably heftier. Whoever killed him would trust to luck that Dutt and his helpers, lifting that bundle of tarpaulin from the table, would not notice that fact. But the extra two or three stone of dead weight would have made a hell of a lot of difference to anyone hauling the body single-handed down to the shore. And there's another thing
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âOnce Dan was safely buried as Ferrers, if Ferrers's body had ever happened to turn up again, it would almost certainly be unrecognizable and would be written off as the corpse of some unknown chap off a passing ship. Whereas if Dan's body had turned up, however much damage the fishes had done it might still have been obvious to an expert that far from having been accidentally drowned, he had been deliberately and nastily murdered! I can clearly see why the bodies were exchanged. And I am also prepared to bet that the original corpse is still somewhere on this island!'
The Chief Commissioner had been forced to admit the common sense of these statements, and fifteen minutes later the hunt had been organized and was in full cry.
Copper and Valerie, returning from shadowing Mrs Stock, had missed running into a section of the search-party by a narrow margin.
The two girls had lunched alone, for the Commissioner had sent word that he, Nick, Stock and John Shilto would be having something to eat at the Mess.
Mrs Stock had had a tray sent in to her room, and shortly after half past one Sir Lionel had returned to the house, where he had held an informal inquiry into the morning's proceedings. Copper and Valerie had not been required to attend, and they had sat in uneasy silence in the verandah above, listening anxiously to the murmur of voices while the slow minutes crawled past and the fog pressed against the window-panes and crept into the quiet house.
At long last the office door had opened, and they heard Leonard Stock's voice in the hall below, anxious and protesting: âI feel sure there must be some mistake. Perhaps when Dr Vicarjee is back his verdict will be â will be differentâ¦'
âThere is
no
difference, I am telling you!' â Dutt's voice, shrill and indignant
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âAll the facts they are plain. As plain as pikestaffs! It is murder! Miss Gidney, she is agreeing too. You will ask her, please. If it is as you say, that the man he is drowned, then there will be water in his lungs. But there is not water. None. It is murder!'
Valerie got up suddenly and ran to call down over the banisters: âLeonard â what
is
all this? Who are you all talking about? What's happened?'
âOh ⦠er ⦠ah
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' The question appeared to have taken Mr Stock by surprise. âI did not realize that you were there. Perhaps I should not have said â that is
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' Dr Dutt's agitated voice cut hurriedly across Leonard's stammered incoherencies: âYou will excuse, please. I go now. There is much work.' The front door banged behind him, and after a moment or two there was a sound of reluctant footsteps ascending the staircase, and Leonard Stock came into view.
He smiled nervously at Copper, and having directed a hunted look at Valerie, observed hopefully that it was still very foggy and that he had never known such unseasonable weather: âAlmost chilly, is it not? In all my years in the Islands, and I think I can safely say that I am the oldest inhabitant ⦠well, hardly
inhabitant,
I suppose; after all, there must be people here who ⦠what I mean is I really do not think that I can recall such freakish weather ⦠there is no other word for it. I
____
'
Here Valerie, who had no intention of being sidetracked on to a discussion of the weather, cut through Mr Stock's nervous spate of words as unceremoniously as Dr Dutt had done: âWho were you talking about just now, Leonard? Who wasn't drowned?'
âWell ⦠er ⦠um ⦠Ferrers,' said Leonard unhappily, and cleared his throat with a small embarrassed cough.
âFerrers!'
Valerie's white face seemed to turn whiter. âBut that's nonsense! Of course he was drowned. Why we all saw him, and â
Leonard!
 ⦠Have they found him?'
âEr â yes. I'm afraid so. I mean
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Well, Dutt and Miss Gidney have performed some sort of an â er â an autopsy, and Dutt has advanced the theory that Ferrers too â was er â was in fact â er â um
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' Leonard's thin bony hands sketched a fluttering futile gesture and Copper caught her breath and said huskily: âMurdered!'
Leonard turned towards her with an expression of relief: âYes. Yes, that is what it amounts to. But Dutt must have made a mistake. He is â um â not a very efficient young man as â er â yet. Perhaps when he has had more experience ⦠But I feel sure that once the sea has gone down and the jetty has been repaired and â and Dr Vicarjee has been able to return, we shall find that it is all a â um â a mare's nest. It has to be. Anything else is unthinkable. After all, who would want to murder Ferrers?'
âJohn!' said Copper before she could stop herself. And was instantly appalled at what she had said.
Leonard Stock appeared equally horrified. His nervous, over-bright eyes widened in dismay and he threw a quick, frightened glance over his shoulder in the direction of the staircase and the hall below. â
Ssh!
He might hear you! No, no
really,
Miss Randal, you should not â what I mean is
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' Leonard became entangled once more in a maze of half-sentences, and Copper said ruefully: âI'm sorry. It was a beastly thing to say and I didn't really mean it. But I couldn't help remembering that scene at the Mount Harriet picnic.'
âOh, I know; I quite see. And you will have heard, of course, that they did not get on at all well â the Shiltos, I mean. But
fratricide!
Or â or what amounts to it. Oh no!⦠unthinkable. You may be quite sure, as I am, that poor Dutt has made a mistake. When Dr Vicarjee returns we shall discover that Ferrers was drowned after all, and then everything will be all right.'
âAll
right?
' repeated Valerie, looking at him with a mixture of amazement and contempt. âHow can it be all right when Dan
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Oh, it's all awful and horrible and unbelievable! It doesn't seem
possible
that any of it can really have happened.'
âYes, yes,' agreed Mr Stock earnestly. âTerrible. Quite terrible! I do feel for you. Such a very unpleasant shock. I shall not enjoy having to break it to poor Ruby. I have not yet dared â er â I mean, I did not like
____
Well, the truth is that poor Ruby is particularly sensitive to â er â shock. Her nerves, you know. But I suppose she will have to know sometime. There is no point in putting it off. And yet I must own
____
'
Valerie said quickly: âYou don't have to worry, Leonard. She knows. I told her myself.'
Some of the nervous tension seemed to leave Leonard's meagre body and he relaxed visibly. âOh. Then I need not â um ⦠I do hope she was not too upset?'
âI'm afraid she was, rather.'
âOh. Oh dear. Then I suppose I had better go and see how she is. She will have been expecting me, but I really could not get away before. There were so many things ⦠and then your fatherâ¦' His voice trailed away and stopped, and Valerie said encouragingly: âNo, of course you couldn't get away. Ruby will realize that. It's been a horrible day for everybody.'
Leonard smiled wanly, and bracing his thin shoulders, turned and went away across the dim expanse of the ballroom, his shoes squeaking dolefully on the polished boards, and presently they heard him tapping nervously on his wife's door. It opened and closed again, and Valerie said: âPoor Leonard! I'm afraid he's in for a bad half-hour. And what'll you bet that before dear Ruby is through with him she'll have managed to make out that it's all his fault and that he is personally responsible for the whole thing, and Leonard, poor toadstool, will be apologizing for it. I can't think how he stands it.'
But Copper was not interested in Leonard Stock's matrimonial troubles, and she had not been thinking of him. Only of what he had said. She spoke in a half-whisper, as though she were addressing herself rather than Valerie: â
Murder
____
!
He said that Ferrers was murdered too. Then that was why! Dan must have knownâ¦' She shivered suddenly and violently; and once again a door banged in the hall below and there was a sound of footsteps on the stairs. But this time it was Charles and Nick: Charles for once grave and unsmiling, and Nick looking drawn and grim and exhausted.