Read The Mystery of the Venus Island Fetish Online
Authors: Dido Butterworth,Tim Flannery
âWhat do you mean?' Beatrice shifted so that she could look
Archie in the eye.
âI didn't switch the fish and labels. But someone else might have. Somebody who knew
that Sopwith was drinking preserving alcohol, somebody who wanted him out of the
way.'
âWhy would anyone want to kill Eric? He was a harmless old soul who was loved by
one and all.'
âJust after I returned, Sopwith told me that there was something suspicious about
Polkinghorne's death. And he said that Griffon was selling off the collection.'
âDo you think it's possible that Sopwith's mind had become clouded with drink, Archie?'
âThere is one more thing. A few days ago I went down to Bumstocks' office. It was
late. The office was gloomy, and I thought the place was empty. When I entered the
workroom I knocked a bone off a shelf. There was an awful bang and Bumstocks emerged
with a great knife in his hand. He was roaring, Beatrice. I feel sure he'd have killed
me if he'd caught me.'
Beatrice wondered why Archie had gone to the taxidermy department. Was he trying
to retrieve his foreskin from Mordant? She felt that to ask would risk inflaming
Archie further. He was already in quite a state.
Archie tossed his crusts to a duckling swimming behind its mother in the shallows.
A dark shadow lay in the water underneath the birdsâperhaps a piece of pond weed,
he mused.
Beatrice was turned away from the water, concentrating on Archie's face. Suddenly
she felt immensely tired. âThe real world just isn't like that, Archie,' she said.
The dark shadow revealed itself to be an enormous eel. In
a single gulp, both the
duckling and the crusts vanished. The mother duck turned, gave a single sharp peep,
and started swimming in circles, looking for her chick.
Archie couldn't speak. Beatrice took his silence as a sign that quite enough stressful
thoughts had been aired that day. âDearest Archie, I'm sure that there's an innocent
explanation,' she said in the kindest, most sympathetic voice she could muster. âYou
are home now. And I stillâ¦like you,' she trailed off.
But Archie wasn't reassured by Beatrice's words. They walked in silence back to the
museum. Beatrice understood that in all this mystery there was one thing she could
do for Archie. She could get his foreskin back. Perhaps that would ease his mind.
Giles Mordant couldn't hide his pleasure. âCome in, sweetie! Come in. What can I
do you for?' he said in the dulcet, mocking tone he adopted with Beatrice.
Beatrice did her best to hide her distaste as she seated herself at his desk. She
would have to go carefully, she told herself, if she were to succeed in her mission.
âWhat's that, Giles?' she said, by way of making conversation, pointing to a sponge-like
growth in a jar of brownish liquid.
âOh, that. It's the skin from the hand of a bloated corpse,' he said provocatively.
âA fisherman saw the body floating in the harbour and tried to pull it into his dingy.
But it was so rotted that the skin of the hand came away and the corpse sank to the
bottom. The police brought it to me to tan. They're hoping
that fingerprints can
be taken. It's their only chance of an identification.'
Beatrice told herself that she should not feel so revolted. After all, the collection
she cared for included some gruesome objects. She thought of the dried pudenda war
trophy from the Gulf of Papua that she had registered a few weeks earlier and the
pile of chewed human bones from Fiji. But, despite herself, there was something about
the object that filled her with revulsion.
âWe do quite a bit of work for the police here,' Mordant went on. âCleaning bones,
tanning skin. That sort of thing. Sergeant O'Toole's a close friend nowadays. A favour
doneâ¦you know the saying. So if you're ever in trouble, Beatrice, you know who to
turn to.'
âGiles,
I am
in trouble, which is why I'm here,' she replied. âThat love token you
stole from the collection. It must be returned. At once.'
âOh, you mean Archie-boy's foreskin? I'm having far too much fun with that to give
it back just yet!' he said with a leer. âBesides, I've got plans for it.'
âWhere is it, Giles?' Beatrice demanded sternly.
âIt's in my wallet, in that drawer,' Mordant said, gesturing teasingly towards a
drawer in his desk. âIt's mine now. But I suppose we
could
trade for it.'
âTrade what?'
âOh, I don't know. How about meeting me in Faucett Lane? At afternoon tea. So we
can discuss it.'
âWhen?'
âHow about today?'
Beatrice rose and turned to go. âVery well, Giles. But you
better be serious.'
Beatrice was a little worried about the place Giles suggested for their rendezvous.
She'd heard that the area was thick with women of the night and their thuggish boyfriends.
Just being seen there could stain her reputation. But for Archie's sake she'd go.
She was surprised to find the air of Woolloomooloo filled with the smell of freshly
baked bread. An old horse pulled the baker's cart, plodding along unguided, as the
baker ran from door to door crying out, âBa-kerrr!' with his unmistakable upwards
inflection. If no one emerged from the house he was delivering to, he just put the
loaf down on the doorstep. âCould do with a bit of paper around it,' Beatrice thought,
as she glanced at the decidedly unhygienic stoops.
Another delivery was being made. A strong man, his muscles bulging under his blue
singlet, was accompanied by a gangly youth. They stepped from an idling motor van
that chugged up the hill, went to the back of it, and used a pick to cut up a great
block of ice.
âQuarter of a hundredweight, Kenny. For Mrs O'Riordan,' said the man.
As he broke up the slab, splinters of ice sprayed into the street, drawing children
who scrambled for the pieces and sucked them ecstatically. When the block finally
split, the man put an old gunny sack on his shoulders and lifted a piece of ice onto
it.
âStray dogs hang around Mrs O'Riordan's place like flies at a barbecue,' he said,
gesturing to the dog poo littering the footpath. âYou'll have to learn to do the
Scottish sword-dance before you can deliver ice here,' he added with a laugh as he
skipped between the turds, imitating the actions of a highland dancer.
The activity reassured Beatrice as she turned into Faucett Lane. The place was claustrophobically
narrow and choked with rubbish. Giles Mordant was in his work clothes, leaning against
a lamppost. He beckoned her to follow him into an alcove. Beatrice's self-confidence
evaporated.
âHello, girlie,' said Giles, who seemed to feed off her fear. âHow about a bit of
trade. Lots of it going on round here.'
Before Beatrice could reply he grabbed her and kissed her. Beatrice was too shocked
to react. She'd expected Giles to demand somethingâmoney, perhapsâbut she'd never
imagined this. She was too scared to move. But when Giles thrust into her groin the
terror released her. She screamed. Her attacker grabbed her mouth and muffled her
cries.
He was lifting her dress, when he suddenly fell back. Someone had him by the shoulder
and was pulling him away. Then a fist landed with a thud. Beatrice looked up to see
that Giles had turned around and was punching Archie, whose right eye was bloodied.
She was sure that Archie was badly hurt, but he barely recoiled before throwing a
fist at the taxidermist's nose. Mordant was not expecting pugilism from a scientist.
Shocked, he grasped his injured organ. Then Archie struck againâwith a blow to the
jaw. Beatrice heard the crack of breaking teeth. Giles was writhing on the ground.
Archie lowered his fists. His battered eye was already closed. Beatrice took his
hand. His knuckles were so bloodied it looked like he'd been gutting a chook. âAre
you hurt?' she pleaded. Archie didn't reply. He had astonished himself. All he felt
was a
primitive elation at seeing Giles lying on the cobbles.
Giles hauled himself onto his knees, and sat propped against the lamppost. The blood
from his nose formed a long, foamy drip, which reached all the way to his blue-and-white
work shirt.
âYou'll pay for this, Meek,' he said in a low voice. âI have friends who could get
you sacked. Or see you at the bottom of the harbour.'
Archie remembered Giles' confidence when Vere Griffon interviewed him about Sopwith's
death. A chill ran down his spine. He reached towards Beatrice and led her back across
William Street.
Outside the museum, Beatrice hugged Archie. She didn't care who saw.
âHow did you know where I was?' she asked.
âI saw you crossing into the loo, and thought I'd follow. Just to make sure you were
safe, really. Did you go there to meet Mordant?'
âHe told me that if I met him he'd give me back the foreskin.'
Archie slumped, the tension draining from his body. âOh, Beatrice. You never should
have done that. You could have been very badly hurt.'
Beatrice said nothing. But she was more determined than ever to get the foreskin
back. There was only one way to do it. Somebody would have to lure Bumstocks away
from his workplace for long enough for her to sneak in and take it from the drawer
where Mordant kept it. And it must be done today, before Mordant's return to work.
There was only one person she could think of to help, and that was Courtenay Dithers.
He was Archie's best friend, and she felt sure he could keep a secret. She
ordered
Archie to the doctor's, and then made for the museum.
Beatrice ran into Dithers in the foyer. He was engaged in an animated conversation
with a red-faced woman who was wrapped in a large fur coat, which she kept clasped
to her sides.
The curator was wearing a long white lab coat over his flannel suit and tie. He felt
that it gave him an air of authority when taking public inquiries. And today he certainly
needed it, for he suspected that before him stood that terror of all museum staffâa
member of the public who believed she has a firmer grasp of a curator's area of expertise
than the expert himself.
âBut they're in there,' the woman wailed. âWith the snakes. And I know they're up
to no good!'
âMadam, the Australian Microchiropteraâor insect-eating batsâare entirely harmless.'
âI can assure you that the bats in my roof cavity are doing the devil's work, young
man. Them and the snakes.'
âWhat, precisely, madam, do you think they
are
doing?'
âBrewing concoctions!' the woman crowed triumphantly. âLittle puffs of smoke keep
coming out of the cracks in the walls and the floor. They're mixing a witches' brew,
no doubt about it! Now, sir, will you remove the evil creatures? You are the curator
of mammals, and they are your responsibility. I can't stand it a moment longer.'
âGood heavens, madam. How could they be doing anything? Snakes have no hands, and
bats only wings!'
âI don't know. But they are doing it. Constantly. And if you won't help me I'll go
to the police!
And
I'll speak to your director about your lackadaisical attitude!'
âMadam, I'm afraid that snakes and misbehaving bats are
beyond my purview. I can
only encourage you to enlist the assistance of our constabulary. Or if you wish,
our director.' Dithers turned on his heels and fled.
In the corridor he collapsed against Beatrice. The pair of them bit their lips to
contain their laughter.
âI'm sorry, Beatrice,' Dithers managed to blurt out, âbut sometimes inquiries from
the public passeth all understanding!'
She accompanied Courtenay to his office holding his arm, giggling.
On the way, Dithers said, âDon't worry about Schmetterling staying with your uncle
at present. He's got a bit of a nervous problem, and has decided to lodge at the
Maori's Head until he's over it. A good chap overall, I think. He's helping me clean
up the office, as a sort of penance for letting his centipedes loose. Spends several
hours a day at it.'
The encounter with the woman seemed to relieve Beatrice's tension. She explained
about Archie's proposal of marriage, and all that had happened in Faucett Laneâomitting
only the fine detail of Giles' transgressionâwithout breaking into tears. She explained
too, that she wished to take the foreskin from Giles.
âBy Jove, poor you! And poor Archie.' Dithers exclaimed. âNo wonder he's been so
on edge. That cad Mordant deserves to be boiled in a vat of his own lye! Don't worry,
Beatrice. I think I can help you get access to the taxidermy rooms. I have a little
job for Bumstocks. The zoo's warthog has died, and I'd like its bones. Transforming
that mass of corruption into a clean, white skeleton will take some time.'