The Mystery at Stowe. Vernon Loder
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‘That is of no moment. The darts themselves, unless received in the eyes, say, would not do much harm. The savage relies on the deadly poison with which the dart is tipped.’
‘So that a mere scratch would be fatal?’
‘If fresh poison was used in the case of curare.’
‘Then curare was not used on the darts in your possession?’
‘No.’
‘Have you any idea what it was?’
‘No, it was one of the poisons I could not analyse.’
‘So that it might be dangerous even when not quite fresh?’
‘I thing so. I have heard that is so. I remember a boy, a native servant of mine, from that tribe, killed pacas with them, three months after we had left his tribe, though he had no means of getting a fresh supply of poison.’
‘You think it possible from your experience that a man could shoot, say from the lawn outside, and kill a lady in the house?’
‘Granting three things: a man who could use the blow-pipe, who saw Mrs Tollard at the window, and had a dart tipped with this particular venom.’
‘Thank you, Miss Gurdon. That is a help to us. The window was open. You might go out, Warren, and investigate that point. And you might give out a general warning that no one in the house, servants or guests, should cross the lawn, or walk on the path under that window.’
The detective-inspector got up. ‘Very well, sir.’
‘Leave your notes with me.’
Warren handed over the note-book, and went out.
Fisher turned again to Elaine. ‘I suppose it is rare to find an English person who can use a blow-pipe?’
‘Yes. Some explorers can. Many don’t trouble to learn, or find it too difficult.’
‘Can you use one?’
‘Yes. I was showing them here lately how it was used. Of course I used harmless darts.’
‘Did anyone of your audience try a hand at it?’
Elaine bit her lip. ‘One or two,’ she said. ‘Mr Haine tried, and Mr Tollard.’
‘Is that the dead lady’s husband?’
‘He went to town before this occurred,’ interrupted Mr Barley anxiously.
Fisher frowned. ‘So he was not in the house last night?’
‘No. He went to town.’
‘Well, we shall see him later. But to return to this demonstration, Miss Gurdon, did Mr Haine or the other gentleman show any—er—proficiency?’
Elaine reddened slightly. ‘Mr Haine couldn’t get it out at all. Mr Tollard sent the dart a fair distance, but without any certainty of aim.’
‘At least he could fire it?’
‘Yes, to that extent.’
Fisher coughed.
Mr Barley looked annoyed. ‘I have told you, superintendent, that Mr Tollard left for town.’
‘I understood you to say so, sir,’ replied the other blandly. ‘Well, Miss Gurdon, I have no further questions to ask you now. You have helped us considerably. Thank you.’
‘Who do you wish to see next?’ asked Mr Barley, as Elaine bowed silently, and went out.
‘I wish to ask you a few questions,’ said Fisher. ‘In the first place, have you any reason to believe that any of your guests had reason to dislike Mrs Tollard?’
‘No,’ said Mr Barley, setting his square jaw. ‘None.’
‘She was popular then?’
‘Not perhaps exactly popular. She was a very quiet woman, retiring in a way, or dignified, one or the other. She had artistic tastes, and was perhaps too languid by temperament to mix much with my other guests.’
Fisher nodded. ‘Her face is of that type, sir. I quite see what you mean. Now, how about her husband. Had they been married long?’
‘Three years, I fancy.’
‘They got on well together? I mean to say they were, in your opinion, an average married couple?’
‘Granting a slight difference in temperament, they were. He is of a more sporting type.’
Fisher thought for a few moments. ‘With a good many others in Elterham, sir, I attended Miss Gurdon’s lecture. I had read about her in the paper before, and I think there was, the other day, some reference to a gentleman who was backing her financially in her next expedition.’
‘Mr Tollard promised to make up any deficit, but that was pure good will on his part. I proposed to do the same thing myself, but had been forestalled.’
‘They are old friends?’
‘Yes.’
Mr Barley was disturbed. He saw where this line of examination would eventually lead. He felt with Netta Gailey that it was not for him to magnify marital differences of a trifling kind, in a case where they might take on an exaggerated importance. But he was saved any further trouble at that time, by the reappearance of Elaine Gurdon with the quiver she had taken down from the wall that morning.
‘I think you ought to have these,’ she said, without apology, and handing the quiver to Fisher. ‘But be careful not to touch the points.’
Fisher thanked her, drew a dart gingerly from the thing, and studied the end. ‘What is this? Cottonwool?’
‘That is to make the dart fit the blow-pipe. It is a fluff of silk-cotton.’
‘There was none of this on the dart which killed Mrs Tollard?’
‘No, it would not remain on the dart, as a feather does on an arrow.’
‘Thank you, Miss Gurdon,’ said he, replacing the venomous thing, and laying the quiver on the table. ‘Perhaps now you would ask Mrs Tollard’s maid to come here.’
Mrs Tollard’s maid came in a few minutes later, alone. She was very nervous, and had been crying, but her evidence did not amount to anything. She had been with Mrs Tollard three months, had found her a good, if exacting, mistress. She believed her to be a healthy woman, in spite of her looks, had rarely known her even to suffer from headaches. She was sure her mistress did not take drugs. On the previous night she had left her in bed, professing violent neuralgia. She had been told not to trouble any more. That was all she knew.
‘So far as you are aware, she was happy with Mr Tollard?’
She