登陆注册
20072700000005

第5章 CHAPTER II THE BROKEN WILLOW TWIG(1)

As soon as the corpse had been taken away, the police commissioner returned to the station. But Muller remained there all alone to make a thorough examination of the entire vicinity.

It was not a very attractive spot, this particular part of the street. There must have been a nursery there at one time, for there were still several ordered rows of small trees to be seen.

There were traces of flower cultivation as well, for several trailing vines and overgrown bushes showed where shrubs had been grown which do not usually grow without man's assistance.

Immediately back of the old elder tree Muller found several fine examples of rare flowers, or rather he found the shrubs which his experienced eye recognised as having once borne these unusual blossoms. One or two blooms still hung to the bushes and the detective, who was a great lover of flowers, picked them and put them in his buttonhole. While he did this, his keen eyes were darting about the place taking in all the details. This vacant lot had evidently been used as an unlicensed dumping ground for some time, for all sorts of odds and ends, old boots, bits of stuff, silk and rags, broken bottles and empty tin cans, lay about between the bushes or half buried in the earth. What had once been an orderly garden was now an untidy receptacle for waste.

The pedantically neat detective looked about him in disgust, then suddenly he forgot his displeasure and a gleam shot up in his eye.

It was very little, the thing this man had seen, this man who saw so much more than others.

About ten paces from where he stood a high wooden fence hemmed in the lot. The fence belonged to the neighbouring property, as the lot in which he stood was not protected in any way. To the back it was closed off by a corn field where the tall stalks rustled gently in the faint morning breeze. All this could be seen by anybody and Muller had seen it all at his first glance. But now he had seen something else. Something that excited him because it might possibly have some connection with the newly discovered crime. His keen eyes, in glancing along the wooden fence at his right hand, had caught sight of a little twig which had worked its way through the fence. This twig belonged to a willow tree which grew on the other side, and which spread its grey-green foliage over the fence or through its wide openings. One of the little twigs which had crept in between the planks was broken, and it had been broken very recently, for the leaves were still fresh and the sap was oozing from the crushed stem. Muller walked over to the fence and examined the twig carefully. He soon saw how it came to be broken. The broken part was about the height of a man's knee from the ground. And just at this height there was quite a space between two of the planks of the fence, heavy planks which were laid cross-ways and nailed to thick posts. It would have been very easy for anybody to get a foothold in this open space between the planks.

It was very evidently some foot thrust in between the planks which had broken the little willow twig, and its soft rind had left a green mark on the lower plank. "I wonder if that has anything to do with the murder," thought Muller, looking over the fence into the lot on the other side.

This neighbouring plot was evidently a neglected garden. It had once worn an aristocratic air, with stone statues and artistic arrangement of flower beds and shrubs. It was still attractive even in its neglected condition. Beyond it, through the foliage of its heavy trees, glass windows caught the sunlight. Muller remembered that there was a handsome old house in this direction, a house with a mansard roof and wide-reaching wings. He did not now know to whom this handsome old house belonged, a house that must have been built in the time of Maria Theresa, ... but he was sure of one thing, and that was that he would soon find out to whom it belonged. At present it was the garden which interested him, and he was anxious to see where it ended. A few moments' further inspection showed him what he wanted to know. The garden extended to the beginning of the park-like grounds which surrounded the old house with the mansard roof. A tall iron railing separated the garden from the park, but this railing did not extend down as far as the quiet lane. Where it ended there was a light, well-built wooden fence. Along the street side of the fence there was a high thick hedge. Muller walked along this hedge until he came to a little gate. Then crossing the street, he saw that the house whose windows glistened in the sunlight was a house which he knew well from its other side, its front facade.

Now he went back to the elder tree and then walked slowly away from this to the spot where he found the broken willow twig. He examined every foot of the ground, but there was nothing to be seen that was of any interest to him-not a footprint, or anything to prove that some one else had passed that way a short time before. And yet it would have been impossible to pass that way without leaving some trace, for the ground was cut up in all directions by mole hills.

Next the detective scrutinised as much of the surroundings as would come into immediate connection with the spot where the corpse had been found. There was nothing to be seen there either, and Muller was obliged to acknowledge that he had discovered nothing that would lead to an understanding of the crime, unless, indeed, the broken willow twig should prove to be a clue. He sprang back across the ditch, turned up the edges of his trousers where they had been moistened by the dew and walked slowly along the dusty street. He was no longer alone in the lane. An old man, accompanied by a large dog, came out from one of the new houses and walked towards the detective, he was very evidently going in the direction of the elder-tree, which had already been such a centre of interest that morning. When he met Muller, the old man halted, touched his cap and asked in a confidential tone: "I suppose you've been to see the place already?""Which place?" was Muller's reserved answer.

同类推荐
  • The Woman in White

    The Woman in White

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 四圣真君灵签

    四圣真君灵签

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说金耀童子经

    佛说金耀童子经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 科试考

    科试考

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 祭统

    祭统

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 半婚不昏

    半婚不昏

    彼时,大家都说:程淮与陆黎是那种不用秀恩爱,只要站在一起就能让人羡慕不已的夫妻,可是,心不在一起,貌合神离的站在一起让人羡慕不已有什么用?陆黎的婚姻可谓是令人称羡的,嫁入豪门,吃喝不愁,老公宠溺,性福无穷,可是,结婚不过区区三个月,她那令人称羡的婚姻居然走到了尽头。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 无邪小妖后:妖王,求放过
  • 破灭苍生

    破灭苍生

    亿世千年,圣魔转世。风烟四起,天下动荡。唯有圣魔,破灭苍生,逆转九天。这是一个被世人认为是废柴的少年为了维护心中的执念的崛起之路。人不犯我,我不犯人,人若犯我,百倍还之是他的宗旨。圣魔不可并存,可他偏偏逆天而行;世人皆认他为妖,他便破灭苍生。锻体境(幻者),幻徒,幻士,幻师,幻尊,幻王,幻皇,幻帝,幻君,幻神,幻圣,幻祖。且让我们看他如何走向大陆巅峰......
  • 龙佛至尊

    龙佛至尊

    这世界上有一个第二世界,传说那是强者的乐园,所以世间巅峰强者谁都争着去那一片乐园。传说,每一个达到圣境九层之人只要饮用一口天龙圣水,修为方可可再次突破,从而才能走入圣罗门进入那一片世界。所以每一次天龙圣水的出现,世间必然掀起起一番腥风血雨。然而东方皇域的辰曦,他发现世间所有强者争夺的东西,他居然有很多,多到可以布置一个水池游泳。
  • 她念

    她念

    她不过是只妖,而他的身份地位注定了她的一生只能仰望于他。她爱他,很爱很爱,可是为什么不懂。她问他,皇权和她只能二选一的时候,他会选谁。他犹豫了。她哭了,她都明白了。她再也不痴心妄想了。她是他生命里的过客,可他却惊艳了她的一生。
  • 回档九九

    回档九九

    老天爷给了杨浩一个逆袭的机会。婚姻不和、事业不顺、家庭不睦的‘三不’青年回到1999年的高中时代。曾经的遗憾必须弥补,曾经的梦想必须实现!且看杨浩如何完成人生跨越,活出别样的精彩!回档九九,回炉人生!
  • 第一玩家:仙生伴奏

    第一玩家:仙生伴奏

    她只喜欢在月光下散步,只喜欢在月光下静静的发着呆。全息网游《月光》,一步一逍遥,千里嗜如魔。再踏一步,便是一生……玩家步步惊心,只怕招惹到这两个恶魔,被他们赶尽杀绝,整个《月光》,只怕已是他们的天下……
  • 凤倾天下:邪王独宠天才妃

    凤倾天下:邪王独宠天才妃

    她叫苏华,出生时遭嫡母下毒,经脉俱断,是天玄大陆最无用的废材。当21世纪的舒华,成为天玄大陆的苏华之后,又会给这大陆带来怎样的变数?当她锋芒展露,那是万丈光芒。未婚夫上面退婚?哼!是姐不要你的的!嫡母嫡姐阴险算计?哼!一个两个都拍走!好不容易清静了,只是某妖孽为啥总是缠着她不放呢?某妖孽:“华儿,为夫替你暖床吧。”
  • 守护风之谷

    守护风之谷

    巨大的工业文明崩坏后一千年,大地到处充满有毒物质,海洋腐败。“腐海”散发毒气的“菌类森林”在不断漫延,威胁人类仅有的生存空间。某天,多鲁美其亚的军队入侵,妄想要消灭“腐海”,为了守护“风之谷”,娜乌西卡挺身而出………
  • 童年时代

    童年时代

    《童年时代》签约上架之后会改名《现代江湖之天下第一》。这是一部打破传统的小说,巧妙将武侠、玄幻、都市、黑道、言情融为一体的现代社会百科全书。故事讲述一群拥有无数梦想的现代孩童,历经几十年沧桑,因各自选择的道路不同,历经了各自不同人生,故各自不同的恩、怨、情、仇纠缠其中,于现实的百态人生中,放眼未来,江湖中谁才是真正的天下第一?每一个男人都曾有一个武侠梦。《现代江湖之天下第一》以武侠风格、写现代生活。在此致敬:金庸、古龙。