"Never mind about what you should have done. The story, man!"
"Well, we came up to her, sir. She'd mud on her face and her coat was torn. I said—"
"Ever seen her before?"
"No, sir."
"Would you recognise her again?"
He hesitated. "I doubt it, sir. Her face was in a fair old mess."
"She spoke to you?"
"Yes, sir. She said—"
"Recognise her voice? Any of you recognise her voice? Can you be quite sure of that?"
Three solemn shakes of their heads. They hadn't recognised her voice.
"All right," Hardanger said wearily. "She pitched me tale of the damsel in distress. At the psychological moment someone conveniently betrayed his presence and started running. You all took off after him. Catch a glimpse of him?"
"A glimpse, only, sir. Just a blur in the darkness. Could have been anyone."
"He took off in a car, I understand. Just another blur, I take it?"
"Yes, sir. Not a car, sir. A closed van type, sir. A Bedford."
"I see." Hardanger stopped and stared at him. "A Bedford! How the devil do you know? It was dark, you said."
"It was a Bedford," Muirfleld insisted. "I'd know the engine anywhere. And I'm a garage mechanic in civvy street."
"He's right, Superintendent," I put in. "A Bedford does have a very distinctive engine note."
"I'll be back." Hardanger was on his feet and it didn't need any clairvoyance to see him heading for the nearest telephone. He glanced at me, nodded at the seated soldiers and left.
I said, pleasantly enough, "Who was the dog-handler in number one last night?" The circuit between the two barbed-wire fences were divided into four sections by wooden hurdles: number one was the section in which the break-in occurred. "You, Ferguson?"
A dark stocky private in his middle twenties had risen to his feet. Ferguson was regular Army, a born soldier, tough, aggressive and not very bright.
"Me," he said. There was truculence in his voice, not very much, but more waiting there if I wanted it.
"Where were you at eleven fifteen last night?"
"In number one. With Rollo. That's my alsatian."
"You saw the incident that Corporal Muirfield here has described?"
" 'Course I saw it."
"Lie number one, Ferguson. Lie number two and you'll be returned to your regiment before the day is out."
"I'm not lying." His face was suddenly ugly. "And you can't talk to me like that, Mister Cavell. You can't threaten me any more. Don't think we don't all know you were sacked from here!"
I turned to the orderly. "Ask Colonel Weybridge to come here. At once, please."
The orderly turned to go, but a big sergeant rose to his feet and stopped him.
"It's not necessary, sir. Ferguson's a fool. It's bound to come out. He was at the switchboard having a smoke and a cup of cocoa with the gatehouse communications number. I was in charge. Never saw him there, but I knew about it and didn't worry about it. Ferguson always left Rollo in number one — and that dog's a killer, sir. It was safe enough."
"It wasn't, but thanks. You've been in the habit of doing this for some time, haven't you, Ferguson?"
"I haven't." He was scowling, sullen. "Last night was the first—"
"If there was a rank lower than private," I interrupted wearily, "you'd stay in it till the end of your days. Use what little sense you have. Do you think whoever arranged this decoy move and was standing by with his pliers ready to break in did it unless he knew for certain you wouldn't be on patrol at that particular time? Probably after Mr. Clandon finished his 11 p.m. rounds visit to the main gate every night you went straight into the gatehouse for your smoke and cocoa. Isn't that it?"
He stood staring down at the floor in stubborn silence until the sergeant said sharply, "For God's sake, Fergie, use your loaf. Everybody else here can see it. So can you."
Again silence, but this time a sullen nod of defeat.
"We're getting someplace. When you came here you left your dog — Rollo — behind?"
"Yes, sir." Ferguson's days of truculent defiance were over.
"What's he like?"
"He'd tear the throat out of any man alive, from the general downwards," Ferguson said with satisfaction. "Except me, of course."
"He didn't tear out any throats last night," I pointed out. "I wonder why?"
"He must have been got at," Ferguson said defensively.
"What do you mean 'got at'? Did you have a look at him before you turned him into his compound last night?"
"Look at him? 'Course not. Why should I? When we saw the cut outer fence we thought whoever done it must have caught sight of Rollo and run for his life. That's what I would have bloody well done. If—"
"Fetch the dog here," I said. "But for God's sake muzzle him first." He left and while he was away Hardanger returned. I told him what I'd learned, and that I'd sent for the dog.
Hardanger asked, "What do you expect to find? Nothing, I think. A chloroform pad or something like that would leave no mark. Same if some sort of dart or sharply tipped weapon with one of those funny poisons had been chucked at him. Just a pinprick, that's all there would be."
"From what I hear of our canine pal," I said, "I wouldn't try to hold a chloroform pad against his head if you gave me the crown jewels. As for those funny poisons, as you call them, I don't suppose one person in a hundred thousand could lay hands on one of them or know how to use them even if they did. Besides, throwing or firing any sharp-tipped weapon against a fast-moving, thick-coated target in the dark would be a very dicey proposition indeed. Our friend of last night doesn't go in for dicey propositions, only for certainties."
Ferguson was back in ten minutes, fighting to restrain a wolf-like animal that lunged out madly at anyone who came near him. Rollo had a muzzle on but even that didn't make me feel too confident. I didn't need any persuasion to accept the sergeant's word that the dog was a killer.
"Does that hound always act like this?" I demanded.
"Not usually." Ferguson was puzzled. "In fact, never. Usually perfectly behaved until I let him off the leash — then he'll go for the nearest person no matter who he is. But he even had a go at me this afternoon — half-hearted, like, but nasty."
It didn't take long to discover the source of Rollo's irritation. Rollo was suffering from what must have been a very severe headache indeed. The skin on the forehead, just above eye-level, had a swollen pulpy feeling to it and it took four men all their time to hold the dog down when I touched this area with the tips of my forefingers. We turned him over, and I parted the thick fur on the throat till I found what I was looking for — two triangular jagged tears, deep and very unpleasant looking, about three inches apart.
"You'd better give your pal here a couple of days off," 1 said to Ferguson, "and some disinfectant for those gashes on his neck. I wish you luck when you're putting it on. You can take him away."
"No chloroform, no fancy poisons," Hardanger admitted when we were alone. "Those gashes — barbed wire, hey?"
"What else? Just the right distance apart. Somebody pads his forearm, sticks it between a couple of strands of barbed wire and Rollo grabs it. He wouldn't bark — those dogs are trained never to bark. As soon as he grabs he's pulled through and down onto the barbed wire and can't pull himself free unless he tears his throat out. And then someone clouts him at his leisure with something heavy and hard. Simple, old-fashioned, direct and very very effective. Whoever the character we're after, he's no fool."
"He's smarter than Rollo, anyway," Hardanger conceded heavily.
CHAPTER THREE