Death Under the Moonflower Read online




  Death Under the Moonflower

  A Peter Bounty Mystery

  Todd Downing

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  1

  If ever a voice had honey in it, South Texas honey, it was the voice at the other end of the wire.

  “Sheriff Peter Bounty speaking.”

  “Sheriff?” Mallory Winters pressed the receiver to her ear and turned to face the open window, whose curtains were beginning to ripple in the breeze from the Gulf of Mexico which everyone in Las Palmas seemed to spend the day anticipating.

  “Yes, sheriff of Hesperides County. You’re in Hesperides now, you know.”

  Mallory didn’t know. “There’s some mistake. This is Mallory Winters at the Sutherland Hotel,” she said distinctly, wondering what flower it was that spiced the breeze so.

  “The young lady who arrived on the eight-ten train from Corpus Christi last night and met the nine o’clock plane from New York?”

  “Why—yes.”

  “Good. I’m sending a deputy over to talk to you. Right away, if it’s convenient.”

  “But what about? I’m a total stranger here.”

  “I know.” The voice’s honey had acquired a tang. “My deputy will explain. Thanks, Miss Winters. Bert—” Mallory hung up, too, with suddenly lax fingers, and stood listening for sounds from the adjoining room. If Fred had gone out he would have steered his course to the nearest bar. He had been on edge all day and snappish, what with the heat, idleness and her unwelcome presence. But if he had got into trouble the sheriff would have asked if she were Fred’s cousin, not about her arrival in Las Palmas.

  On the telephone stand was a directory on whose cover was printed “Las Palmas, Cameron County, Texas.” Mallory stared at the words for an instant, waiting for meaning to resolve itself out of them. Then she hastily opened the book and turned the pages, to the Bs and Cs and Ss. A section at the back was devoted to advertising, and she found several land companies’ maps of the lower Rio Grande Valley, from Laredo to the Gulf. She slapped the directory shut, took up the receiver again and with difficulty made the liquid-voiced operator understand the name Fred Winters.

  Two men went along the corridor, their musically slurred foreign speech coming in through the ventilating slats of the false door. The Spanish one heard on all sides here wasn’t the Spanish Mallory had studied in school. It gave point to a feeling which had been growing in her since from the train window she had first sighted palm trees: a feeling of utter isolation, and in her own United States. Everything down in this Magic Valley had an exotic stamp, too tawny or too vividly colored. And on the map it looked like the jumping-off place, with rail, air and ship lines converging here to shoot vaguely off the bottom of the paper….

  “Yes?” Fred’s voice was a breathless little hiss in her ear and she knew for a certainty that he was up to something, that he was expecting a call.

  “Fred, did you get some man to call me up and say he was the sheriff?”

  “Did I do wha-at?”

  Mallory repeated the conversation, listening for a snicker which didn’t come. “Tell me the truth now, Fred. Because I know this is a joke. No one named Bounty is listed in the directory. This isn’t a county seat and there’s no sheriff’s office here. What’s more, my smart cousin, there is no such county as Hesperides!”

  The silence at Fred’s end was profound. It was a full half minute before he laughed weakly. “I don’t know anything about it, Mal,” he said in a tone which sounded convincing enough. “Honest. I’ve been resting. One of the local cowboys must be getting playful. Sure he didn’t ask for me?”

  “I’m sure, Fred. But how could he find out so much about me? I don’t know what to think. Can you come in? I want you with me when I see this man.”

  “Soon as I get some clothes on.”

  Mallory snapped on lights, smoothed down her white sharkskin suit and glanced askance at the mirror. After those days on the beach at Corpus Christi her face looked shrimp pink and shiny from the various oils which people had recommended. Most of the curl was gone from her blonde hair. The squint the sun had forced on her blue eyes seemed permanent.

  Hesperides. By the door was a wicker table whose sole purpose was to hold a huge beribboned basket of fruit, a plate of green Mexican pottery and a silver knife. Every time you turned your head that cornucopia was replenished, with fruits that were familiar and fruits whose skins were familiar but whose pulp was strange. The Mexican maid that morning had tried to teach her the names of some of them. Kumquats, shaddocks, citranges. Pomelos, tangelos, mandarins.….

  Fred lumbered in and to her surprise carefully closed both doors. He wore no vest, and braces rather than a belt, so that his gray trousers, pleated at the top, showed how his waist-line had bulged in the past year. He was losing his blond hair rapidly. His large-featured face was no longer firm-fleshed but puffed, with a coarse and grainy appearance. His mouth looked as if he had a bad taste in it all the time. Fred’s general dilapidation had shocked Mallory when she met him at the airport the night before. Something in his manner now, something secretive behind his bluffness, was a renewed shock, the greater because she had suspected its presence at once and, unable to account for it, had been trying to close her eyes to it.

  “You say this guy asked about last night, Mal,” Fred said. “Well, what happened?”

  “Not a thing. I merely took a taxi from the railway station to the airport. I didn’t speak to a soul except the driver. But”—Mallory hesitated—“you may be right. One of the town bloods came into the waiting room at plane time. With his servant. I shouldn’t be surprised if he’s trying to get acquainted. He must have followed us. I saw the servant down at the desk this morning, probably getting my name from the register. I absolutely won’t see him.”

  “What did he look like?”

  “A black panther. An American but dark as a Mexican. Fred, you have to go down and get rid of him. He’ll be here any minute now.”

  “All right, I’ll go shoo him off. I want to see if there’s a message at the desk anyway. Then we’d better be thinking about having dinner sent up. I want to eat in my room again.”

  “Why, Fred?”

  Mallory followed him to the door without getting an answer. “While you’re down there,” she said then, “send Sue a wire, won’t you? So she’ll get it before bedtime. Tell her you’re here and something about what you’re doing. Please, Fred.”

  “To hell with Sue! What she doesn’t know won’t hurt her.” He asked from the hall: “You sure there’s no Hesperides in Texas? Seems to me I’ve heard of the place.”

  “Not in Texas, Fred.”

  Alone in a room which was cool, clean and pungently cool, Mallory wandered to the window; that perfume, heavy, cloying, like and yet unlike tuberose, muddling her thoughts about Fred and Sue and a marriage which was in the process of going to pot.

  Fred was a consulting engineer, always at loose ends, and from one place and then another Sue, who had been her senior roommate in college, had kept Mallory posted as to their bickerings, Fred’s increasing surliness and philanderings. Their present address was New York. It was a telephone call from there which had interrupted Mallory’s vacation in Corpus Christi with Minnesota friends. Out of a clear sky, it seemed, Fred had announced that he was catching the next plane to South Texas. His evasiveness at departure had aroused Sue’s suspicions. That plane made an overnight stop at Las Palmas, on the border, then continued on to Mexico City. A friend had been talking about Mexican divorce mills, and Sue had got it into her head that Fred was going to cut loose from her, on terms of his own making. A telegram had come to his office, she had learned. Hence she was convinced that he had a rendezvous with a woman. She implored Mallory to intercept him at Las Palmas and worm the truth out of him.

  Against her better judgment and in disgust at the commonness of it all, Mallory had come, getting a scowl of exasperation for her welcome at the airport. She was going to make one more attempt at peace-patching tonight, then wash her hands of the affair and depart in the morning, with nothing gained from the experience but profound disillusionment and the decision to enter forthwith upon some career. She had seen enough of the blessed state of matrimony….

  The phone rang. It was Fred, speaking in a hurried undertone: “Listen, Mal. You’ll have to talk to this fellow. We’ll meet you on the mezzanine. Sort of string him along, see? From his looks he’s big-mouthed and dumb. And, whatever you do, don’t say a word about anything that ever happened to me. Just leave me out of the conversation. For all you know, I never was inside a hospital in my life.”

  “Fred, a hospital!”

  He was gone and the odor of that flower was a drug to be fought against, because it stupefied and threatened to leave you helpless when you had to have your wits about you.

  As she put on her black straw breton hat and went up th
e hall to the elevators, Mallory was seeing Fred and his actions in a new and coldly disturbing light. Last night she had had to accept his vague offhand allusions to a deal which must be kept under cover at all costs. Today, when he had stayed close to his room with the explanation that it was Sunday and no business could be transacted, she had told herself that she wasn’t deceived: he was engaged in some shady enterprise and was biding his time until she left. Now she had to shift everything into another pattern. She recalled their conversation of that morning, about the newspaper article, and her astonishment at the heartlessness and egoism which Fred had manifested, his promptness in changing the subject.

  Before the elevator completed its drop from the fifth floor she had grasped the significance of the quantities of food which Fred had been consuming all day, the bottle after bottle of milk which he had ordered when whisky would better have suited his taste.

  The doors slid open and Mallory had the sensation of looking up and up a shaft of mahogany, trimly clad in brown tweed, to a pair of large and suddenly alert brown eyes.

  Fred was beside him, stunted. “Sure enough it was the Big Bad Wolf!” Fred announced. “Mallory, this is Mr. Larrick. Bert Larrick. He is a deputy sheriff, with a badge to prove it. And, believe it or not, he says we are in Hesperides.”

  The clean mahogany became very much alive, a hale young giant with the well-proportioned brawn of a basketball player. “Well, I certainly am glad to know you!” he exclaimed with too much emphasis, in a voice which had a slight drawl. “I had no idea what you’d be like.”

  “Naturally not. I didn’t know what to expect myself.”

  “We’re blocking traffic,” Fred said. “Let’s sit down.”

  The lobby of the Sutherland was a glass-roofed patio, with pillars supporting the projecting balcony of the mezzanine. Palms and mirrors and lights with cocoa-brown shades gave this last the effect of extending back into dim cool regions where the bustle of the lobby would never reach.

  “Your cousin told me what you thought when Peter Bounty called,” Larrick said as they went toward an isolated couch of deep red leather. “You looked in the old directory. They haven’t had time to get out a new one yet. You see, when these border counties were formed hardly anybody lived down here, so they made’em big. But the population has increased so that now you can’t always tell when one town ends and another begins. Recently they shifted the lines of Zapata, Starr, Hidalgo and Cameron and organized a new county, with Las Palmas the seat. Peter Bounty was the Cameron sheriff but he moved over here. Said he didn’t want to sit all his life in the same chair.” He grinned as if this were very funny indeed, and Mallory had to grin back as she took the middle of the couch.

  Larrick lowered himself beside her as if he were afraid he might break the springs. He crossed then uncrossed his long legs, laid his smart and not too wide-brimmed Stetson across his knees and resumed his contemplation of her. Mallory had been able to meet the probing look of that fellow last night, but before this intense, different gaze she found herself following instead the sweep of his long, strongly hinged jaw and satisfying herself that his skin’s warm, even coloring wasn’t innate but acquired by years of exposure to the sun. If ever sun faddists required a testimonial to the soundness of their doctrines, they need only point out this healthy specimen, whose lightly worn earnestness made him seem younger, less than ever an officer of the law.

  “I love the name Hesperides,” she said, since conversation seemed to be in order.

  “You do? I never thought much of it myself. I wanted’em to call it Citrus County.”

  “Oh no.”

  “No?”

  Fred cleared his throat meaningly but, once launched, Larrick didn’t seem able to stop.

  “I’ve got an idea I know who’s responsible for that name. The Chamber of Commerce had a contest. Whoever sent in the winning name was to get a cash prize and a free trip to the eastern fruit markets on a special boosters’ train. Hesperides was an anonymous entry. Nobody knew what it meant at first. They looked it up and found ‘delightful gardens at the western extremity of the world.’ Not much point to that, of course. But somebody’s kid had a schoolbook where it said the Hesperides raised oranges that the poets called golden apples. Oranges are one of the big crops here, so they announced they’d chosen the name for that reason. Then one of the judges got tight at a banquet and let the cat out of the bag. The real reason they picked Hesperides was because there wouldn’t be anybody to claim the prize and they’d save money.”

  “Say, Larrick,” Fred broke in, “you don’t have a cigarette on you, do you? I meant to get some but I thought you were in such a hurry that I didn’t stop.”

  “Sure.” The deputy dug into a pocket and brought out a package. “Just keep those. I don’t smoke much. Oh, pardon me. Will you have one, Miss Winters?”

  “Not now, thank you.” Mallory bit her lip as she watched the cigarettes disappear into Fred’s pocket. Fred always had been a moocher. She turned her head. “Won’t you relieve my curiosity, Mr. Larrick? I can’t imagine why the sheriff called me.”

  “I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have been so long.” Larrick, getting back his self-possession, crossed his legs and folded his arms. “Maybe you’ve read of Jimmy Norcott,” he said, “the nineteen-year-old boy who’s in the John Belton Lack Hospital here, suffering from a streptococcus infection?”

  Springs creaked and Fred barked out a little cough. The smoke of his cigarette was all at once a disagreeable cloud about Mallory. Her eyes smarted with it and she put a hand to her forehead to hide her bemused state from Larrick’s steady gaze. She nodded. “The young man they’re trying to find blood donors for.”

  (Corpus Christi papers had headlined the case and news commentators on the border radio stations had made the most of its dramatic aspects, somewhat cheaply she had felt. Reading feature stories about the Norcotts, she had wondered how greatly they were exaggerated. It was difficult to accept nowadays these families who lived “like feudal barons” on fenced-in estates of twenty-five thousand acres, who dominated politics and played rex with trespassers.)

  “Jimmy’s in a bad, bad way,” Larrick continued gravely. “The only hope of saving him is transfusion. But the trouble is, it takes a certain type of blood, and the person who gives it must be immune. That is, must have recovered recently from the same kind of infection. Streptococcus viridans, it’s called.”

  Mallory cast a swift sideways glance in Fred’s direction. He sat far back in his corner, seemingly interested only in the antics of his smoke. She said deliberately: “According to the papers, it’s type B that’s needed. Is that correct, Mr. Larrick?”

  He nodded with an air of authority. “There are four blood groups. O, A, B and AB, they’re usually classified. Eighty-five per cent of white people have O or A. Only about ten per cent have B. So you see how that limits the field. Roger Norcott, Jimmy’s uncle and guardian, has broadcast appeals and got lots of volunteers. But not until today was one found that was suitable.”

  “They’ve found a donor, have they?” Fred spoke up. “Who is he?”

  “John Joseph Hieronymus. We haven’t got much of a line on him. He’s from up North somewhere. Came to Brownsville, then on here this spring. For his health, he says. He owns—or did—a little fruit store on the road between here and Mercedes. Lived in the rear.”

  “What do you mean—lived?” came quickly from Fred.

  “The store was blown up last night.”

  “Hieronymus—hurt?”

  Larrick smiled knowingly. “No, he wasn’t hurt. We’re positive he was at the airport when the explosion took place. That’s why I’m here: to find out if Miss Winters saw him and can identify him.”