“Yes, sir.” Sloan spared some sympathy for the dead man lying in the shed. But he carefully kept his judgement suspended. Horace Boiler might have been lured to his doom by the murderer in all innocence but Sloan did not think so. There was a certain lack of innocence in Boiler both as reported by Constable Ridgeford and observed by Sloan himself that augured the other thing.
“I could wish my niece hadn’t found him too,” murmured Mundill. “She’s had a lot to put up with lately, poor girl. What with one thing and another I’ll be glad when her mother and father get here.”
Sloan nodded sympathetically. The scientists said that a cabbage cried out when its neighbour in the field was cut down so it was only right and proper that one human being should feel for another. The unfeeling and the too-feeling both ran into trouble but that was something quite separate,
“I hope Dr. Tebot’s got her to go and lie down,” said Mundill.
“I hope,” said Sloan vigorously, “that he’s done no such thing.” Salvation lay in keeping busy and he said so, doctor or no.
“All right,” said Frank Mundill pacifically, “I’ll tell her what you said.”
“And tell her,” said Sloan, “that we’ll be wanting a statement from her too…”
As Mundill went indoors Sloan advanced once more on the shed.
Both policemen peered down at the body.
“I’ll bet he never knew what hit him,” averred Crosby.
“No,” agreed Sloan soberly.
Horace Boiler did not necessarily have to have been blackmailing anyone. He might simply have learned something to his advantage that the murderer didn’t want him to know about.
And so, in the event, to his ultimate disadvantage.
Something that a killer couldn’t afford for him to know. That alone might be enough for a man who had killed once. Appetite for murder grew—that was something else too primitive for words. Having offended against society by one killing it seemed as if the next death was less important, and the one after that not important at all. By then the murderer was outside the tribe and beyond salvation too.
“We’d better get him identified properly,” said Sloan mundanely.
“Yes, sir.”
“What, Crosby,” he asked, “can he have known that we don’t know?” That was the puzzle.
Crosby brought his eyebrows together in a prolonged frown. “He could have seen that the boathouse had been broken into.”
“And put two and two together after he found the body? Yes, that would follow…”
Blackmail, to be true blackmail, had to be the accusing or the threatening to accuse any person of a real crime with intent to extort or gain any property or valuable thing from any person.
Murder was a real crime.
“But he can’t have known that the body in the water had been murdered, can he, sir?” objected Crosby. “I mean we didn’t know ourselves until Dr. Dabbe said so. And we haven’t told anyone.”
“A good point, that.” Sloan regarded the figure on the shed floor and said absently, “So he must have known something else as well…”
“Something we don’t know?” asked Crosby helpfully.
“Or something that we do,” mused Sloan. “He might have spotted that sand-hopper thing too.”
“He knew about the sparling,” said Crosby, “didn’t he?”
Sloan squared his shoulders. “What we want is a chat with Mr. Basil Jensen.”
Constable Brian Ridgeford was panting slightly. The cliff path—like life—had led uphill all the way and it hadn’t been an easy one either. He’d left his bicycle down in the village. Now he was nearly at the top of the headland. He turned his gaze out to sea but it told him nothing. There was just an unbroken expanse of water below him. Far out to sea there was a smudge on the horizon that might just have been a container ship. Otherwise the sea was empty.
He settled himself down, conscious that he wasn’t the first man to keep watch on the headland. Men had waited here for Napoleon to come—and Hitler. They’d lit armada beacons up here on the Cat’s Back too as well as wrecking ones. From here the inhabitants of Marby might have seen the Danish invasion on its way.
“Keeping observation” was what Ridgeford would put in the book to describe his morning.
Watch and ward it used to be called in the old days.
It was much more windy up here than down in Marby village. He made himself as comfortable as he could in the long grass and turned his attention to Lea Farm. It was like a map come to life, farm and farmhouse printed on the landscape. He narrowed his gaze on the sheep-fold. Far away as he was he could see that the sheep-dipping tank was still full.
Ridgeford spared a thought for old Miss Finch. Difficult and dogmatic she might be but she hadn’t been so silly after all. She probably had seen something happening on the headland. The theory of an accurate report book suddenly came to life. Write it down, they’d taught him… let someone else decide if what you’d written was valuable or not.
He swung his glance back in the direction of the sea. This time there was something to see. Round the coast from Marby harbour was coming a small trawler. Ridgeford got to his feet and walked farther up the headland to get a better view of it. As he did so he nearly tripped over a figure lying half hidden in the grass. It was a man. He was using a pair of binoculars and was looking out to sea so intently that he hadn’t seen the approach of the policeman.
“Hullo, hullo,” said Ridgeford.
The man lowered his binoculars. “Morning, officer.”
“Looking for something, sir?”
“In a manner of speaking,” he said, scrambling to his feet.
The trawler was forging ahead. Ridgeford noticed that it was keeping close inshore and that the other man could not keep his eyes off it. Ridgeford asked him his name.
“My name?” said the man. “It’s Jensen. Basil Jensen. Why do you want to know?”
The general practitioner, Dr. Gregory Tebot, came out of Collerton House and joined Detective Inspector Sloan outside the shed while the various technicians of murder were bringing their expertise to bear upon the body inside it.
“She’ll be able to talk to you now, Inspector,” Dr. Tebot said. He was an old man and he looked both tired and sad.
“Thank you, Doctor,” said Sloan.
“Shocking business,” he said, pointing in the direction of the shed. “Are you going to tell the widow or am I?”
Death, remembered Sloan, was part of the doctor’s daily business too. What he had forgotten was that Dr. Tebot would know the Boilers. “Tell me about him,” he said.
“Horace? Not a lot to tell,” said the doctor. “Didn’t trouble me much.”
“A healthy type then,” said Sloan. Blackmail—if that was what he had been up to—was unhealthy in a different way.
“Spent his life messing about in boats,” Dr. Tebot said. “Out of doors most of the time.”
“Make much of a living?”
“I shouldn’t think so. Picked up a little here and a little there, I should say. Mostly at weekends but you’d never know, not with Horace.”
“Didn’t give anything away then,” said Sloan.
“He was the sort of man, Inspector,” said the old doctor drily, “who wouldn’t even tell his own mother how old he was.” He nodded towards Collerton House. “Go easy with the girl if you can. She’s had a packet lately, what with the aunt dying and everything.”
“The aunt,” said Sloan. A packet was an old army punishment. The “everything” was presumably a young man who had gone away.
“Hopeless case by the time I saw her,” said Dr. Tebot. “The other doctor said so and he was right.”
“What other doctor?”
“The one over in Calleford. I forget his name now. Mrs. Mundill was staying over there when she was first taken ill.”