~ 76 ~
"Yes, murdered. That night we had been playing tennis without Cartwright who had
gone shooting to the jungle and without Bronson who had cycled to Kabulong to get the
money to pay his coolies' their wages and he was to come along to the club when he got back.
Cartwright came back when we started playing bridge. Suddenly I was called to police
sergeant outside. I went out. He told me that the Malays had come to the police station and
said that there was a white man with red hair lying dead on the path that led through the
jungle to Kabulong. I understood that it was Bronson.
For a moment I didn't know what to do and how to break the news to Mrs. Bronson. I
came up to her and said that there had been an accident and her husband had been wounded.
She leapt to her feet and stared at Cartwright who went as pale as death. Then I said that he
was dead after which she collapsed into her chair and burst into tears.
When the sergeant, the doctor and I arrived at the scene of the accident we saw that he
had been shot through the head and there was no money about him. From the footprints I saw
that he had stopped to talk to someone before he was shot. Whoever had murdered Bronson
hadn't done it for money. It was obvious that he had stopped to talk with a friend.
Meanwhile Cartwright took up the management of Bronson's estate. He moved in at
once. Four months later Olive, the daughter, was born. And soon Mrs. Bronson and
Cartwright were married. The murderer was never found. Suspicion fell on the coolies, of
course. We examined them all – pretty carefully – but there was not a scrap of evidence to
connect them with the crime. I knew who the murderer was..."
"Who?"
"Don't you guess?"
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