Bernard Knight - Dead in the Dog

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He pulled some Telex sheets from a large buff envelope and unfolded them. ‘Police Headquarters in KL has been in touch with their Aussie counterparts in Queensland, who checked up on Arnold. It seems that he did time in the slammer some years ago.’

There was some lifting of eyebrows as Blackwell elaborated.

‘In 1940, he was convicted in Cairns of causing grievous bodily harm to a guy. Got five years jail, but was let out to join the Army when the war started. Went into some tough Special Forces outfit, spent a couple of years fighting in New Guinea.’

Enderby gave a quiet whistle of surprise. ‘Does it say what the GBH was all about?’

‘Some trouble over a woman, it seems. The other guy assaulted him and he went after him. If there hadn’t been a plea of provocation, it seems he might have been done for attempted murder.’

‘Did he beat him up that badly, then?’ asked the sergeant.

Steven Blackwell shook his head. ‘No, he shot him — with a rifle!’

On the short drive back to the hospital, the revelation about the Australian planter was the main topic of conversation between Alf Morris and the pathologist.

‘Just because he shot some chap in the shoulder fourteen years ago, doesn’t make him the culprit now,’ warned the major, anxious as ever never to prejudge any issue.

‘No, but it can’t help putting him near the top of the shortlist, especially when there are no other reasonable contenders,’ answered Tom. He was secretly glad that his brother officers, as he had already begun to think of them, were by implication, off the hook.

‘Mustn’t say a word about all this in the Mess, of course,’ warned Alf, quite unnecessarily as far as Tom was concerned. He was still uneasy at having been made privy to the personal information that Steven Blackwell had produced that morning. After revealing the news about Les Arnold, the policeman had gone on to describe the background of Douglas Mackay and his wife Rosa, though there seemed little there to suggest either as suspects.

‘No advantage in the manager shooting his boss,’ said Tom ruminatively, as they were passing the derelict tin-dredge. ‘If the plantation folds up or is sold, he may lose his job.’

‘I don’t envy Steven Blackwell’s part in this,’ said Alf. ‘It must be very awkward having to interrogate and possibly suspect people you have to live with in a small place like this.’

‘Yes, it would have been much easier if the Commies had shot him,’ answered Tom, with unwitting cynicism. ‘At least we’d not all be looking at each other as if we were afraid that one of us did it.’

As the old Hillman slowed down to turn into the gate of BMH, Alf Morris gave a sigh. ‘I suppose I’d better report all this to the Old Man straight after lunch. He’ll want to know what happened, word for word. Fair enough, I suppose. The chap did die in his hospital, as he calls it — and several of those in the frame are his officers.’

They passed the Blanco-belted private on guard duty, Tom sheepishly returning his salute and as they drove around the double bend on to the perimeter road to the Mess, he returned to their recent meeting.

‘Talking of the colonel, I notice that his file wasn’t discussed!’

Alf grinned under his moustache. ‘The colonel is pretty pally with the Brigadier, they’re in a bridge set over at the Garrison Mess. I can’t see the OC letting the police having O’Neill’s particulars in a hurry.’

As they drew up outside the Mess, the Admin Officer added a final word. ‘And another person that wasn’t mentioned was dear Diane herself!’

TEN

Superintendent Blackwell had not forgotten about Diane Robertson — nor had he written off Lieutenant Colonel Desmond O’Neill from his list of people to interview. He sat alone at his desk in his large, bare office, letting the air from the slowly revolving fan waft down on to his pink scalp. Even after all these years in the Far East, he still thought nostalgically of the cold, damp rain of the Manchester streets — though he knew that if transported back there tomorrow, he would be fed up with it inside a week.

He pulled his mind back to the present and with no leads whatsoever to follow on the local bank robbery, he concentrated on this morning’s earlier meeting about James Robertson. The Telex from Australia was interesting, but Steven knew that some old conviction for a brawl over a woman was little use apart from suggesting a violent temper and willingness to use violence. The fact that it involved a rifle was food for thought, but since coming to Malaya, Les Arnold had not fallen foul of the law in any way, though he had been ushered out of The Dog several times for becoming too stroppy after having too much to drink.

The phrase ‘brawl over a woman’ stuck in Steven’s mind and he wondered if history might have repeated itself, as the Australian planter had made little secret of his lustful admiration for his next-door neighbour, Diane Robertson. Yet the very openness of his libidinous admission rather defused its significance.

With a sigh, he drew a pad of lined paper towards him and began to write, cursing under his breath as the sweat from the edge of his hand dampened the lower part of the page and made the ink run when he reached it. He persevered for a quarter of an hour, then sat back and read through the notes he had made, before reaching across his desk and pinging the small brass bell that sat there. A moment later, his middle-aged Tamil clerk came in from the room next door.

‘Santhanam, will you ask Inspector Tan to come up, please? And get us a couple of cold drinks from the fridge.’

His impassive assistant appeared within a few moments and sat on the other side of the desk, gratefully accepting one of the icy grapefruit sodas. Steven pushed across the notes he had made.

‘I’ve been trying to make some sense of all this business, Tan. Let’s go through each of the names and you tell me what you think.’

The inspector gravely read through what his boss had written, sucking intermittently on the straw in his bottle of ‘GFS’. Eventually, he looked up and put the pad back on the desk.

‘Diane Robertson, she is not a favoured candidate.’ He made it a statement, rather than a question.

Blackwell shook his head. ‘No, I can’t see it, really. We know they had problems with their marriage, and both seem to have been routinely unfaithful, according to all the gossip. But why should she kill him?’

‘Jealousy and anger at his constant affairs, perhaps,’ ventured Tan. ‘But separation or divorce would seem an easier solution.’

Steven mopped his neck with a handkerchief. ‘Technically, she could have done it.’

‘Certainly she would have been someone he knew and would have stopped for, which was what we assumed must have happened,’ agreed the inspector.

Blackwell shrugged. ‘Yes, but I still don’t fancy her as the killer, somehow. What about Leslie Arnold?’

‘He has this unfortunate past history of violence,’ answered Tan. ‘Though I suppose it shouldn’t be held against him. He admitted to you that he had lustful feelings towards Mister Robertson’s wife,’ he added primly.

Steven tapped his desk with the end of his fountain pen.

‘There’s been a rumour for some time that Arnold would have liked to buy Gunong Besar if it came up for sale. It seems he’s made a success of his own place and would like to expand. But I hardly think he would kill the owner just to get his hands on the property.’

Tan gave one of his rare smiles. ‘Perhaps he thought he might get James’s property and his wife with the one shot!’

The superintendent sighed again. ‘He has no alibi for the time of the shooting — and he does live next door to the dead man, up a long and lonely road. But we’ve got not a shred of evidence against him.’

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