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where you are located before using this ebook. Title:
The Mysterious Affair at Styles
Author: Agatha Christie
Release Date: July 27, 2008 [EBook #863]
Last Updated: September
29, 2019 Language: English
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERIOUS
AFFAIR AT STYLES ***
Produced by Charles Keller
by Agatha Christie
Contents
CHAPTER I. I GO TO STYLES
CHAPTER II. THE 16TH AND 17TH OF JULY CHAPTER III. THE NIGHT OF THE TRAGEDY CHAPTER IV. POIROT
INVESTIGATES CHAPTER V. “IT ISN’T STRYCHNINE, IS IT?” CHAPTER VI. THE INQUEST
CHAPTER VII. POIROT PAYS HIS DEBTS CHAPTER VIII. FRESH
SUSPICIONS CHAPTER IX. DR. BAUERSTEIN CHAPTER X. THE ARREST
CHAPTER XI. THE CASE FOR THE PROSECUTION CHAPTER XII. THE LAST LINK
CHAPTER XIII. POIROT EXPLAINS
CHAPTER I.
I GO TO STYLES
The intense interest aroused in the public by what
was known at the time as “The Styles
Case” has now somewhat subsided. Nevertheless, in view of the world-wide notoriety which attended it, I
have been asked, both by my friend Poirot
and the family themselves, to write an account of the whole story. This, we trust, will effectually silence
the sensational rumours
which still persist.
I will therefore briefly set down the circumstances
which led to my being connected with the affair.
I had been invalided home from the Front; and, after spending
some months in a rather
depressing Convalescent Home,
was given a month’s sick leave. Having
no near relations or friends,
I was trying to make up my mind what to do, when I ran across
John Cavendish. I had seen very little
of him for some years.
Indeed, I had never known him particularly well.
He was a good fifteen years my senior, for
one thing, though he hardly looked his forty-five years. As a boy, though, I had often stayed
at Styles, his mother’s place in Essex.
We had a good yarn about old times, and it ended in
his inviting me down to Styles to spend my leave there.
“The mater will be delighted to see you
again—after all those years,” he added.
“Your mother keeps well?” I asked.
“Oh, yes. I suppose
you know that she has married again?”
I am afraid I showed my surprise rather plainly.
Mrs. Cavendish, who had married
John’s father when he was a widower with two sons, had been a handsome
woman of middle-age as I remembered her. She certainly
could not be a day less than seventy now. I recalled
her as an energetic, autocratic personality, somewhat
inclined to charitable and social notoriety, with a fondness for opening bazaars and playing the Lady Bountiful.
She was a most generous woman, and possessed a considerable fortune
of her own.
Their country-place, Styles Court, had been purchased
by Mr. Cavendish early in their married life. He had been completely
under his wife’s ascendancy, so
much so that, on dying, he left the place to her
for her lifetime, as well as the larger
part of his income; an arrangement that was distinctly unfair to his two sons. Their step-mother, however, had
always been most generous to them; indeed,
they were so young at the time of their father’s remarriage that they always
thought of her as their own mother.
Lawrence, the younger, had been a delicate youth.
He had qualified as a doctor but
early relinquished the profession of medicine, and lived at home while pursuing literary ambitions; though
his verses never had any marked success.
John
practised for some time as a barrister, but had finally
settled down to the more congenial life of a country squire.
He had married two years ago, and had taken
his wife to live at Styles, though I entertained a shrewd suspicion that he would have preferred his mother to
increase his allowance, which would have enabled
him to have a home of his own. Mrs. Cavendish, however, was a lady who liked to make her own plans,
and expected other people to fall in with them,
and in this case she certainly had the whip hand, namely:
the purse strings.
John noticed my surprise at the news of his
mother’s remarriage and smiled rather ruefully.
“Rotten little bounder too!” he said
savagely. “I can tell you, Hastings, it’s making life jolly difficult
for us. As for Evie—you
remember Evie?”
“No.”
“Oh, I suppose
she was after your time. She’s the mater’s factotum,
companion, Jack of all trades! A great sport—old Evie! Not
precisely young and beautiful, but as game as they make them.”
“You were going to say——?”
“Oh, this fellow!
He turned up from nowhere,
on the pretext of being a second
cousin or something of Evie’s, though she didn’t seem particularly keen
to acknowledge the relationship. The fellow is an absolute
outsider, anyone can see that.
He’s got a great black beard, and wears patent
leather boots in all weathers! But the mater
cottoned to him at once, took him on as secretary—you know how she’s
always running a hundred societies?”
I nodded.
“Well, of course
the war has turned the hundreds into thousands. No doubt the fellow
was very useful to her. But you could have knocked us all down with a feather when, three months ago, she
suddenly announced that she and Alfred were engaged!
The fellow must be at least twenty
years younger than she is! It’s
simply bare-faced fortune hunting; but there you
are—she is her own mistress, and she’s
married him.”
“It must be a difficult
situation for you all.” “Difficult! It’s damnable!”
Thus it came about that, three days later, I
descended from the train at Styles St. Mary, an absurd
little station, with no apparent
reason for existence, perched up in the midst of green fields and country lanes.
John Cavendish was waiting on the platform, and piloted me out to the car.
“Got a drop or two of petrol
still, you see,” he remarked.
“Mainly owing to the mater’s
activities.”
The village of Styles St. Mary was situated about
two miles from the little station, and Styles Court lay a mile the other side of it. It was a still,
warm day in early
July. As one looked out over the flat Essex country, lying so green and peaceful under the afternoon sun, it
seemed almost impossible to believe that, not
so very far away, a great war was running its appointed course. I felt I had suddenly strayed into another world. As we
turned in at the lodge gates, John said:
“I’m afraid you’ll find it very quiet down here, Hastings.” “My dear fellow,
that’s just what I want.”
“Oh, it’s pleasant enough if you want to lead the
idle life. I drill with the volunteers twice a week, and lend a hand at the farms. My wife works regularly ‘on the land’. She is up at five every
morning to milk, and keeps at it steadily until
lunchtime. It’s a jolly good life taking it all round—if it weren’t for that fellow Alfred Inglethorp!” He checked the
car suddenly, and glanced at his watch. “I wonder if we’ve time to pick up Cynthia.
No, she’ll have started from
the hospital by now.”
“Cynthia! That’s not your wife?”
“No, Cynthia is a protégée
of my mother’s, the daughter
of an old schoolfellow of
hers, who married a rascally solicitor. He came a cropper, and the girl was left an orphan and penniless.
My mother came to the rescue, and Cynthia
has been with us nearly two years now. She works in the Red Cross Hospital
at Tadminster, seven miles away.”
As he spoke the last words, we drew up in front of
the fine old house. A lady in a stout tweed skirt, who was bending
over a flower bed, straightened herself at our approach.
“Hullo, Evie, here’s our wounded hero! Mr. Hastings—Miss Howard.”
Miss Howard shook hands with a hearty, almost
painful, grip. I had an impression of
very blue eyes in a sunburnt face. She was a pleasant-looking woman of about forty, with a deep voice,
almost manly in its stentorian tones, and
had a large sensible square body, with feet to match—these last encased in good thick boots. Her conversation, I soon found, was couched
in the telegraphic style.
“Weeds grow like house afire. Can’t keep even with ’em. Shall press you in.
Better be careful.”
“I’m sure I shall be only too delighted to make myself
useful,” I responded. “Don’t say it. Never does. Wish you hadn’t later.”
“You’re a cynic, Evie,” said John, laughing. “Where’s
tea to-day—inside or out?”
“Out. Too fine a day to be cooped up in the house.”
“Come on then, you’ve done enough gardening for to-day. ‘The labourer is worthy of his hire’,
you know. Come and be refreshed.”
“Well,” said Miss Howard,
drawing off her gardening gloves,
“I’m inclined to agree with you.”
She led the way round the house to where tea was spread under the shade of a large
sycamore.
A figure rose from one of the basket chairs,
and came a few steps to meet us. “My wife,
Hastings,” said John.
I shall never forget my first sight of Mary
Cavendish. Her tall, slender form, outlined
against the bright light; the vivid sense of slumbering fire that seemed to find expression only in those wonderful tawny eyes of hers, remarkable eyes, different from
any other woman’s that I have ever known; the intense power of stillness she possessed, which
nevertheless conveyed the impression of a wild
untamed spirit in an exquisitely civilised body—all these things are
burnt into my memory. I shall never forget them.
She greeted me with a few words of pleasant welcome
in a low clear voice, and I sank into
a basket chair feeling distinctly glad that I had accepted John’s invitation. Mrs. Cavendish gave me some tea, and her few quiet remarks
heightened my first impression of her as a thoroughly fascinating woman.
An appreciative listener is always
stimulating, and I described, in a humorous manner,
certain incidents of my Convalescent Home, in a way which, I flatter myself, greatly amused my hostess. John,
of course, good fellow though he is, could hardly
be called a brilliant conversationalist.
At that moment a well remembered voice floated
through the open French window near at hand:
“Then you’ll write to the Princess after tea, Alfred?
I’ll write to Lady Tadminster for the second day, myself.
Or shall we wait until we hear from the Princess?
In case of a refusal, Lady Tadminster might open it the first day, and Mrs. Crosbie the second. Then there’s the Duchess—about the school fête.”
There was the murmur of a man’s voice, and then
Mrs. Inglethorp’s rose in reply:
“Yes, certainly. After tea will do
quite well. You are so thoughtful, Alfred dear.”
The French window swung open a little
wider, and a handsome white-haired old
lady, with a somewhat masterful cast of features, stepped out of it on to the lawn. A man followed her, a suggestion of deference in his manner.
Mrs. Inglethorp
greeted me with effusion.
“Why, if it isn’t too delightful to see you again,
Mr. Hastings, after all these years. Alfred,
darling, Mr. Hastings—my husband.”
I looked with some curiosity at “Alfred
darling”. He certainly struck a rather alien
note. I did not wonder at John objecting to his beard. It was one of the longest
and blackest I have ever seen. He wore gold-rimmed pince-nez, and had a
curious impassivity of feature. It struck me that he might look natural on a stage, but was strangely out of place in
real life. His voice was rather deep and unctuous. He placed a wooden hand in mine and said:
“This is a pleasure, Mr. Hastings.” Then, turning to his wife: “Emily dearest,
I think that cushion is a little
damp.”
She beamed fondly on him, as he substituted another
with every demonstration of the tenderest care. Strange infatuation of an otherwise sensible woman!
With the presence
of Mr. Inglethorp, a sense of constraint and veiled hostility
seemed to settle down upon the company. Miss Howard, in particular, took
no pains to conceal her feelings. Mrs. Inglethorp, however,
seemed to notice
nothing unusual. Her volubility, which I remembered of old, had lost nothing
in the intervening years, and she poured out a steady flood of conversation, mainly
on the subject of the forthcoming bazaar which she was organizing and
which was to take place shortly.
Occasionally she referred to her husband over a question of days or dates.
His watchful and attentive manner
never varied. From
the very first I took a firm and rooted dislike to him, and I flatter
myself that my
first judgments are usually fairly shrewd.
Presently Mrs. Inglethorp turned
to give some instructions about
letters to Evelyn
Howard, and her husband addressed
me in his painstaking voice:
“Is soldiering your regular profession, Mr. Hastings?” “No, before the war I was in Lloyd’s.”
“And you will return there
after it is over?” “Perhaps.
Either that or a fresh start altogether.” Mary Cavendish leant forward.
“What would you really
choose as a profession, if you could just consult
your inclination?”
“Well, that depends.”
“No secret
hobby?”
she
asked.
“Tell
me—you’re
drawn
to
something?
Everyone
is—usually something absurd.”
“You’ll laugh at me.”
She smiled. “Perhaps.”
“Well, I’ve always had a secret hankering to be a detective!” “The real thing—Scotland Yard? Or Sherlock
Holmes?”
“Oh, Sherlock Holmes by all means. But really, seriously, I am awfully
drawn to it. I came across a man in Belgium once, a very famous detective, and he quite
inflamed me. He was a marvellous little fellow. He used to say that all
good detective work was a mere matter
of method. My system is based on his— though
of course I have progressed rather further. He was a funny little man, a great dandy, but wonderfully clever.”
“Like a good detective story myself,” remarked Miss
Howard. “Lots of nonsense written,
though. Criminal discovered in last chapter.
Everyone dumbfounded. Real crime—you’d know at once.”
“There have been a great number
of undiscovered crimes,”
I argued.
“Don’t mean the police, but the people that are right in it. The family.
You couldn’t really
hoodwink them. They’d know.”
“Then,” I said, much amused, “you think that if you were mixed up in a crime,
say a murder, you’d be able to spot the murderer right off?”
“Of course I should.
Mightn’t be able to prove it to a pack of lawyers.
But I’m certain
I’d know. I’d feel it in my fingertips if he came near me.”
“It might be a ‘she’,” I suggested.
“Might. But murder’s a violent crime.
Associate it more with a man.”
“Not in a case of poisoning.” Mrs. Cavendish’s
clear voice startled me. “Dr. Bauerstein
was saying yesterday that, owing to the general ignorance of the more uncommon poisons among the medical
profession, there were probably countless cases
of poisoning quite
unsuspected.”
“Why,
Mary, what a gruesome conversation!” cried Mrs. Inglethorp. “It makes me feel as if a goose were walking
over my grave. Oh, there’s
Cynthia!”
A young girl in V.A.D. uniform ran lightly across the lawn.
“Why, Cynthia, you are late to-day. This is Mr.
Hastings—Miss Murdoch.” Cynthia Murdoch
was a fresh-looking young creature,
full of life and vigour.
She
tossed off her little V.A.D. cap, and I admired the great loose waves of her
auburn hair, and the smallness and whiteness of the
hand she held out to claim her tea. With dark eyes and eyelashes she would have been a beauty.
She flung herself
down on the ground beside John, and as I handed her a plate
of sandwiches she smiled up at me.
“Sit down here on the grass,
do. It’s ever so much nicer.” I dropped down obediently.
“You work at Tadminster, don’t you, Miss Murdoch?” She nodded.
“For my sins.”
“Do they bully
you, then?” I asked, smiling.
“I should like to see them!” cried Cynthia with dignity.
“I have got a cousin who is nursing,”
I remarked. “And she is terrified of ‘Sisters’.”
“I don’t wonder.
Sisters are, you know,
Mr. Hastings. They simp-ly are!
You’ve no idea! But I’m not a nurse, thank heaven,
I work in the dispensary.” “How many people
do you poison?” I asked, smiling.
Cynthia smiled too.
“Oh, hundreds!” she said.
“Cynthia,”
called Mrs. Inglethorp, “do you think you could write a few notes for me?”
“Certainly, Aunt Emily.”
She jumped up promptly, and something in her manner reminded me that her
position was a dependent one, and that Mrs.
Inglethorp, kind as she might be in the main, did not allow her to forget
it.
My hostess
turned to me.
“John will show you your room. Supper is at
half-past seven. We have given up
late dinner for some time now. Lady Tadminster, our Member’s wife—she was the late Lord Abbotsbury’s
daughter—does the same. She agrees with me that one must set an example
of economy. We are quite a war household; nothing
is wasted here—every scrap of waste
paper, even, is saved and sent away in sacks.”
I expressed my appreciation, and John took me into
the house and up the broad staircase,
which forked right and left half-way to different wings of the building.
My room was in the left wing, and looked
out over the park.
John left me, and a few minutes later I
saw him from my window walking slowly across the grass arm in arm with Cynthia Murdoch.
I heard Mrs. Inglethorp call
“Cynthia” impatiently, and the girl started and ran back to the house. At the same moment, a man stepped
out from the shadow of a tree and walked
slowly in the same direction. He looked about forty, very dark with a melancholy clean-shaven face. Some violent
emotion seemed to be mastering him. He looked up at my window as he passed,
and I recognized him, though he had changed much in the fifteen years
that had elapsed
since we last met. It was John’s younger brother, Lawrence
Cavendish. I wondered what it was that had brought that singular expression to his face.
Then I dismissed
him from my mind, and returned to the contemplation of my own affairs.
The evening passed pleasantly enough;
and I dreamed that night of that enigmatical woman,
Mary Cavendish.
The next morning
dawned bright and sunny, and I was full of the anticipation of a delightful visit.
I did not see Mrs. Cavendish until
lunch-time, when she volunteered to take me
for a walk, and we spent a charming afternoon roaming in the woods, returning
to the house about five.
As we entered
the large hall, John beckoned
us both into the smoking-room. I saw at once by his
face that something disturbing had occurred. We followed him in, and he shut the door after us.
“Look here, Mary, there’s the deuce of a mess.
Evie’s had a row with Alfred Inglethorp, and she’s off.”
“Evie? Off?”
John nodded gloomily.
“Yes; you see she went to the mater, and—Oh,—here’s Evie herself.”
Miss Howard entered. Her lips were set grimly
together, and she carried a small suit-case. She looked excited
and determined, and slightly on the defensive.
“At any rate,” she burst out, “I’ve spoken my mind!”
“My dear Evelyn,” cried Mrs. Cavendish, “this can’t be true!” Miss
Howard nodded grimly.
“True enough! Afraid
I said some things to Emily she won’t forget
or forgive in a hurry. Don’t mind if they’ve
only sunk in a bit. Probably water off a duck’s back,
though. I said right out: ‘You’re an old woman, Emily, and there’s no fool like an old fool. The man’s twenty years
younger than you, and don’t you fool yourself
as to what he married you for. Money! Well, don’t let him have too much of it. Farmer Raikes
has got a very pretty
young wife. Just ask your Alfred how much time he spends over there.’ She
was very angry. Natural! I went on, ‘I’m
going to warn you, whether you like it or not. That man would as soon murder
you in your bed as look at you. He’s a bad lot. You can say what you like to me, but remember what I’ve told you. He’s a bad lot!’”
“What did she say?”
Miss Howard made an extremely expressive grimace.
“‘Darling Alfred’—‘dearest Alfred’—‘wicked calumnies’ —‘wicked lies’—‘wicked woman’—to accuse her ‘dear
husband!’ The sooner I left her house the better. So I’m off.”
“But not now?” “This minute!”
For a moment we sat and stared at her. Finally John
Cavendish, finding his persuasions of
no avail, went off to look up the trains. His wife followed him, murmuring
something about persuading Mrs. Inglethorp to think better of it.
As she left the room, Miss Howard’s
face changed. She leant towards me eagerly.
“Mr. Hastings, you’re honest. I can trust
you?”
I was a little startled. She laid her hand on my
arm, and sank her voice to a whisper.
“Look after her, Mr. Hastings. My poor Emily.
They’re a lot of sharks—all of
them. Oh, I know what I’m talking
about. There isn’t one of them that’s not hard
up and trying to get money out of her. I’ve protected her as much as I
could. Now I’m out of the way, they’ll impose
upon her.”
“Of course, Miss Howard,” I said, “I’ll
do everything I can, but I’m sure you’re excited
and overwrought.”
She interrupted
me by slowly shaking her forefinger.
“Young man, trust me. I’ve lived in the world rather longer than you have. All I ask you is to keep your eyes open. You’ll see what I mean.”
The throb of the motor came through
the open window,
and Miss Howard
rose and moved to the door.
John’s voice sounded outside. With her hand on the handle, she turned
her head over her shoulder,
and beckoned to me.
“Above all, Mr. Hastings,
watch that devil—her
husband!”
There was no time for more. Miss Howard was
swallowed up in an eager chorus of protests and good-byes. The Inglethorps did not appear.
As the motor drove away, Mrs. Cavendish
suddenly detached herself
from the group, and moved across the drive to the
lawn to meet a tall bearded man who had
been evidently making for the house. The colour rose in her cheeks as she held out her hand to him.
“Who is that?” I asked sharply, for instinctively I distrusted the man. “That’s
Dr. Bauerstein,” said John shortly.
“And who is Dr. Bauerstein?”
“He’s staying in the village
doing a rest cure, after a bad nervous breakdown. He’s a London specialist; a very clever man—one of the
greatest living experts on poisons,
I believe.”
“And he’s a
great friend of Mary’s,” put in Cynthia, the irrepressible. John Cavendish
frowned and changed
the subject.
“Come for a stroll, Hastings. This has been a most rotten business. She always had a rough tongue, but there is no
stauncher friend in England than Evelyn Howard.”
He took the path through the
plantation, and we walked down to the village
through the woods which bordered
one side of the estate.
As we passed
through one of the gates on our way home again, a pretty young woman of gipsy type coming in the opposite
direction bowed and smiled.
“That’s a
pretty girl,” I remarked appreciatively. John’s face hardened.
“That is Mrs. Raikes.”
“The one that Miss Howard——”
“Exactly,” said John, with rather unnecessary abruptness.
I thought of the white-haired old lady in the big
house, and that vivid wicked little
face that had just smiled into ours, and a vague chill of foreboding crept over me. I brushed it aside.
“Styles is really
a glorious old place,” I said to John. He nodded rather gloomily.
“Yes, it’s a fine property. It’ll be mine some
day—should be mine now by rights, if
my father had only made a decent will. And then I shouldn’t be so damned
hard up as I am now.”
“Hard up, are you?”
“My dear Hastings, I don’t mind telling you that
I’m at my wits’ end for money.”
“Couldn’t your brother help you?”
“Lawrence? He’s gone through every penny he ever
had, publishing rotten verses in
fancy bindings. No, we’re an impecunious lot. My mother’s always been awfully good to us, I must say. That
is, up to now. Since her marriage, of course——” he broke off, frowning.
For the first time I felt that, with Evelyn Howard,
something indefinable had gone from
the atmosphere. Her presence had spelt security. Now that security was removed—and the air seemed rife with
suspicion. The sinister face of Dr. Bauerstein
recurred to me unpleasantly. A vague suspicion of everyone and everything filled my mind. Just for a moment I had a premonition of approaching evil.
CHAPTER II.
THE 16TH AND 17TH OF JULY
I had arrived
at Styles on the 5th of July. I come now to the events
of the 16th and 17th of
that month. For the convenience of the reader I will recapitulate the incidents of those days in as exact a
manner as possible. They were elicited subsequently at the trial by a process of long and tedious cross-examinations.
I received a letter from Evelyn Howard a couple of
days after her departure, telling me
she was working as a nurse at the big hospital in Middlingham, a manufacturing town some fifteen
miles away, and begging me to let her know if Mrs.
Inglethorp should show any wish to be reconciled.
The only fly in the ointment of my peaceful days
was Mrs. Cavendish’s extraordinary,
and, for my part, unaccountable preference for the society of Dr. Bauerstein. What she saw in the man I
cannot imagine, but she was always asking
him up to the house, and often went off for long expeditions with him. I must confess that I was quite unable
to see his attraction.
The 16th of July fell on a Monday. It was a day of turmoil. The famous bazaar
had taken place
on Saturday, and an entertainment, in connection with the same charity,
at which Mrs. Inglethorp was to recite a War poem, was to be held that night.
We were all busy during
the morning arranging and decorating the Hall in the
village where it was to take place. We had a late luncheon and spent the afternoon resting in the garden. I noticed
that John’s manner was somewhat unusual. He seemed very excited and restless.
After tea, Mrs. Inglethorp went to lie down to rest
before her efforts in the evening and I challenged Mary Cavendish to a single
at tennis.
About a quarter to seven, Mrs.
Inglethorp called us that we should be late as
supper was early that night. We had rather a scramble to get ready in
time; and before the meal was over the motor was waiting at the door.
The entertainment was a great success,
Mrs. Inglethorp’s recitation receiving tremendous
applause. There were also some tableaux in which Cynthia took part. She did not return with us, having
been asked to a supper party, and to remain the night with some friends
who had been acting with her in the tableaux.
The following morning,
Mrs. Inglethorp stayed
in bed to breakfast, as she was rather
overtired; but she appeared in her briskest mood about 12.30, and swept Lawrence
and myself off to a luncheon party.
“Such a charming invitation from Mrs.
Rolleston. Lady Tadminster’s sister, you
know. The Rollestons came over with the Conqueror—one of our oldest families.”
Mary had excused herself on the plea of an engagement with Dr. Bauerstein.
We had a pleasant luncheon, and as we drove away
Lawrence suggested that we should
return by Tadminster, which was barely a mile out of our way, and pay a visit to Cynthia
in her dispensary. Mrs. Inglethorp replied that this was an excellent
idea, but as she had several letters to write she would drop us there, and we could come back with Cynthia
in the pony-trap.
We were detained
under suspicion by the hospital
porter, until Cynthia
appeared to vouch for us, looking very cool and sweet in her long white overall.
She took us up to her sanctum, and introduced us to her fellow
dispenser, a rather awe-inspiring individual, whom Cynthia
cheerily addressed as “Nibs.”
“What a lot of bottles!” I exclaimed, as my eye
travelled round the small room. “Do you really know what’s
in them all?”
“Say
something original,” groaned
Cynthia. “Every single person who comes up here says that. We are really thinking
of bestowing a prize on the first individual
who does not say: ‘What a lot of
bottles!’ And I know the next thing you’re going to say is: ‘How many people
have you poisoned?’”
I pleaded guilty
with a laugh.
“If you people
only knew how fatally easy it is to poison
someone by mistake,
you wouldn’t joke about it. Come on, let’s have tea. We’ve got all sorts of secret stories in that cupboard. No,
Lawrence—that’s the poison cupboard. The big
cupboard—that’s right.”
We
had a very cheery tea, and assisted Cynthia to wash up afterwards. We had just put away the last tea-spoon
when a knock came at the door. The countenances of Cynthia and Nibs were
suddenly petrified into a stern and forbidding expression.
“Come in,” said Cynthia, in a sharp professional tone.
A young and rather scared looking nurse appeared
with a bottle which she proffered to Nibs, who waved her towards Cynthia
with the somewhat
enigmatical remark:
“I’m not really here to-day.”
Cynthia took the bottle
and examined it with the severity of a judge.
“This should have been sent up this morning.”
“Sister is very sorry. She forgot.”
“Sister should read the rules outside
the door.”
I gathered from the little nurse’s expression that
there was not the least likelihood of
her having the hardihood to retail this message to the dreaded “Sister”.
“So now it can’t be done until to-morrow,” finished Cynthia. “Don’t you think you could possibly
let us have it to-night?”
“Well,” said Cynthia graciously, “we are very busy, but if we have time it shall be done.”
The little nurse withdrew, and Cynthia
promptly took a jar from the shelf, refilled the bottle, and placed it on the table outside
the door.
I laughed.
“Discipline must be maintained?”
“Exactly. Come out on our little balcony. You can
see all the outside wards there.”
I followed Cynthia and her friend and
they pointed out the different wards to me.
Lawrence remained behind, but after a few moments Cynthia called to him over her shoulder
to come and join us. Then she looked at her watch.
“Nothing more to do, Nibs?” “No.”
“All right. Then we can lock up and go.”
I had seen Lawrence in quite a different light that
afternoon. Compared to John, he was
an astoundingly difficult person to get to know. He was the opposite
of his brother in almost every respect,
being unusually shy and reserved. Yet he had a certain charm of
manner, and I fancied that, if one really knew
him well, one could have a deep affection for him. I had always fancied that his manner to Cynthia was rather
constrained, and that she on her side was inclined
to be shy of him. But they were both gay enough this afternoon, and chatted
together like a couple of children.
As we drove through the village, I remembered that I wanted
some stamps, so accordingly we pulled up at the post office.
As I came out again, I cannoned into a little man
who was just entering. I drew aside and apologised, when suddenly, with a loud exclamation, he clasped
me in his arms and kissed me warmly.
“Mon ami Hastings!” he cried.
“It is indeed mon ami Hastings!” “Poirot!” I exclaimed.
I turned to the pony-trap.
“This is a very pleasant meeting for me, Miss
Cynthia. This is my old friend, Monsieur Poirot,
whom I have not seen for years.”
“Oh, we know Monsieur Poirot,” said Cynthia gaily.
“But I had no idea he was a friend of yours.”
“Yes, indeed,” said Poirot seriously.
“I know Mademoiselle Cynthia. It is by the charity
of that good Mrs. Inglethorp that I am here.” Then, as I looked at him inquiringly: “Yes, my friend,
she had kindly extended hospitality to seven of my countrypeople who, alas, are refugees
from their native land. We Belgians will always remember
her with gratitude.”
Poirot was an extraordinary looking little man. He
was hardly more than five feet, four inches, but carried himself
with great dignity.
His head was exactly the shape of an egg, and he always perched
it a little on one side. His moustache was very stiff and military.
The neatness of his attire
was almost incredible. I believe a speck of dust would have caused him
more pain than a bullet wound. Yet this quaint dandified little man who, I was sorry to see, now limped badly,
had been in his time one of the most celebrated
members of the Belgian police. As a detective,
his flair had been extraordinary, and
he had achieved triumphs by unravelling some of the most baffling
cases of the day.
He pointed out to me the little house inhabited
by him and his fellow
Belgians, and I promised to go and see him at an early date. Then he
raised his hat with a flourish
to Cynthia, and we drove away.
“He’s a dear little man,” said Cynthia.
“I’d no idea you knew him.” “You’ve
been entertaining a celebrity unawares,” I replied.
And, for the rest of the way home, I recited to
them the various exploits and triumphs of Hercule Poirot.
We arrived back in a very cheerful
mood. As we entered the hall, Mrs.
Inglethorp came out of her boudoir. She looked flushed
and upset. “Oh,
it’s you,” she said.
“Is there anything the matter, Aunt Emily?” asked Cynthia.
“Certainly not,” said Mrs. Inglethorp sharply.
“What should there be?” Then catching sight of Dorcas,
the parlourmaid, going into the dining-room, she called
to her to bring some stamps into the boudoir.
“Yes, m’m.” The old servant hesitated, then added diffidently: “Don’t you think,
m’m, you’d better
get to bed? You’re looking
very tired.”
“Perhaps you’re right, Dorcas—yes—no—not now. I’ve some letters I must finish
by post-time. Have you lighted
the fire in my room as I told you?”
“Yes, m’m.”
“Then I’ll go to bed directly after supper.”
She went into the boudoir
again, and Cynthia stared after her. “Goodness gracious!
I wonder what’s up?” she said to Lawrence.
He did not seem to have heard her, for without a word he turned on his heel and went out of the house.
I suggested a quick game of tennis before
supper and, Cynthia
agreeing, I ran upstairs to fetch my racquet.
Mrs. Cavendish was coming
down the stairs.
It may have been my fancy, but she, too, was looking
odd and disturbed.
“Had a good walk with Dr. Bauerstein?” I asked, trying to appear as indifferent as I could.
“I didn’t go,” she replied abruptly. “Where is Mrs. Inglethorp?” “In the boudoir.”
Her hand clenched
itself on the banisters, then she seemed
to nerve herself
for some encounter, and went
rapidly past me down the stairs across the hall to the boudoir, the door of which she shut behind her.
As I ran out to the tennis court a few
moments later, I had to pass the open boudoir
window, and was unable to help overhearing the following scrap of dialogue. Mary Cavendish was saying in the
voice of a woman desperately controlling herself:
“Then you won’t show it to me?” To which Mrs. Inglethorp replied:
“My dear Mary, it has nothing to do with that matter.”
“Then show it to me.”
“I tell you it is not what you imagine. It does not concern you in the least.” To which Mary Cavendish replied,
with a rising bitterness:
“Of course, I might have
known you would shield him.” Cynthia
was waiting for me, and greeted me eagerly with:
“I say! There’s
been the most awful row! I’ve got it all out of Dorcas.” “What
kind of a row?”
“Between Aunt Emily and him. I do hope she’s found him out at last!”
“Was Dorcas there,
then?”
“Of course not. She ‘happened to be near the door’.
It was a real old bust-up. I do wish I knew what it was all about.”
I thought of Mrs. Raikes’s gipsy face, and Evelyn
Howard’s warnings, but wisely decided
to hold my peace, whilst Cynthia exhausted every possible hypothesis, and cheerfully hoped, “Aunt
Emily will send him away, and will never speak to him again.”
I was anxious to get hold of John, but he was
nowhere to be seen. Evidently something very momentous had occurred that afternoon. I tried to forget the few words
I had overheard; but, do what I would, I could not dismiss them altogether from
my mind. What was Mary Cavendish’s concern
in the matter?
Mr. Inglethorp was in the drawing-room when I came
down to supper. His face was
impassive as ever, and the strange unreality of the man struck me afresh.
Mrs.
Inglethorp came down last. She still looked
agitated, and during
the meal there
was a somewhat constrained silence.
Inglethorp was unusually quiet. As a rule,
he surrounded his wife with little attentions, placing a cushion at her back, and altogether playing
the part of the devoted
husband. Immediately after
supper, Mrs. Inglethorp retired to her boudoir again.
“Send my coffee in here, Mary,” she called. “I’ve
just five minutes to catch the post.”
Cynthia and I went and sat by the open
window in the drawing-room. Mary Cavendish brought
our coffee to us. She seemed excited.
“Do you young people want lights, or do
you enjoy the twilight?” she asked. “Will you take Mrs. Inglethorp her coffee, Cynthia?
I will pour it out.”
“Do not trouble,
Mary,” said Inglethorp. “I will take it to Emily.” He poured it out, and went out of the room carrying
it carefully.
Lawrence followed him, and Mrs. Cavendish sat down by us.
We three sat for some time in silence.
It was a glorious night, hot and still.
Mrs. Cavendish
fanned herself gently with a palm leaf.
“It’s almost too hot,” she murmured.
“We shall have a thunderstorm.”
Alas, that these harmonious moments can never endure! My paradise was
rudely shattered by the sound of a well known, and heartily
disliked, voice in the hall.
“Dr. Bauerstein!” exclaimed Cynthia.
“What a funny time to come.”
I glanced jealously
at Mary Cavendish, but she seemed quite undisturbed, the delicate pallor
of her cheeks did not vary.
In a few moments, Alfred Inglethorp had
ushered the doctor in, the latter laughing,
and protesting that he was in no fit state for a drawing-room. In truth, he presented a sorry spectacle, being literally plastered
with mud.
“What have you been doing, doctor?” cried Mrs. Cavendish.
“I must make my apologies,” said the doctor. “I did
not really mean to come in, but Mr. Inglethorp insisted.”
“Well, Bauerstein, you are in a
plight,” said John, strolling in from the hall. “Have some coffee,
and tell us what you have been up to.”
“Thank you, I will.” He laughed rather
ruefully, as he described how he had discovered a very rare species of fern in an inaccessible place, and in his efforts
to obtain it had lost his footing, and slipped ignominiously into a
neighbouring pond.
“The sun soon dried me off,” he added, “but I’m afraid
my appearance is very disreputable.”
At this juncture, Mrs. Inglethorp called to Cynthia
from the hall, and the girl ran out.
“Just carry up my despatch-case, will you, dear?
I’m going to bed.”
The door into the hall was a wide one. I had risen when Cynthia did, John was close
by me. There were therefore three witnesses who could swear that Mrs. Inglethorp was carrying her coffee, as yet untasted, in her hand.
My evening was utterly and entirely
spoilt by the presence of Dr. Bauerstein. It
seemed to me the man would never go. He rose at last, however, and I breathed
a sigh of relief.
“I’ll walk down to the village with you,” said Mr. Inglethorp. “I must see our agent
over those estate
accounts.” He turned
to John. “No one need sit up. I will
take the latch-key.”
CHAPTER III.
THE NIGHT OF THE TRAGEDY
To make this part of my story clear, I append the
following plan of the first floor of
Styles. The servants’ rooms are reached through the door B. They have no communication with the right wing,
where the Inglethorps’ rooms were situated.
It seemed to be the middle of the night when I was
awakened by Lawrence Cavendish. He
had a candle in his hand, and the agitation of his face told me at once
that something was seriously wrong.
“What’s the matter?” I asked, sitting
up in bed, and trying to collect my scattered thoughts.
“We are afraid my mother
is very ill. She seems to be having some kind of fit.
Unfortunately she has locked herself in.” “I’ll come at once.”
I sprang out of bed; and, pulling on a
dressing-gown, followed Lawrence along the passage and the gallery
to the right wing of the house.
John
Cavendish joined us, and one or two of the servants were standing round
in a state of awe-stricken excitement. Lawrence turned
to his brother.
“What do you think we had better
do?”
Never, I thought, had his indecision of character been more apparent.
John rattled the handle of Mrs. Inglethorp’s door violently, but with no effect. It was obviously locked or bolted on the
inside. The whole household was aroused by now. The most alarming
sounds were audible
from the interior
of the room. Clearly something must be done.
“Try going through Mr. Inglethorp’s room, sir,”
cried Dorcas. “Oh, the poor mistress!”
Suddenly I realized that Alfred Inglethorp was not with us—that he alone had given
no sign of his presence. John opened the door of his room. It was pitch dark, but Lawrence
was following with the candle,
and by its feeble light we saw
that the bed had not been slept in, and that there was no sign of the room having been occupied.
We went straight to the connecting door. That, too,
was locked or bolted on the inside.
What was to be done?
“Oh, dear, sir,” cried Dorcas, wringing her hands,
“what ever shall we do?” “We must try and break the door in, I suppose.
It’ll be a tough job, though.
Here, let one of the maids go down and wake Baily and tell him to go for Dr.
Wilkins at once.
Now then, we’ll
have a try at the door. Half a moment,
though, isn’t there
a door into Miss Cynthia’s rooms?”
“Yes, sir, but
that’s always bolted. It’s never been undone.”
“Well, we might just see.”
He ran rapidly down the corridor to Cynthia’s room.
Mary Cavendish was there, shaking the
girl—who must have been an unusually sound sleeper—and trying to wake her.
In a moment or two he was back.
“No good. That’s bolted too. We must break in the
door. I think this one is a shade less solid than the one in the passage.”
We strained and heaved together. The
framework of the door was solid, and for
a long time it resisted our efforts, but at last we felt it give beneath our weight,
and finally, with a resounding crash, it was burst open.
We stumbled in together, Lawrence still
holding his candle. Mrs. Inglethorp was
lying on the bed, her whole form agitated by violent convulsions, in one of which she must have overturned the table
beside her. As we entered, however, her limbs
relaxed, and she fell back upon the pillows.
John strode across the room, and lit the gas.
Turning to Annie, one of the housemaids, he sent her downstairs to the dining-room for brandy. Then he went across to his mother
whilst I unbolted
the door that gave on the corridor.
I turned to Lawrence, to suggest that I
had better leave them now that there was no further need of my services, but the words were frozen
on my lips. Never have I seen such a ghastly look on any
man’s face. He was white as chalk, the candle
he held in his shaking hand was sputtering onto the carpet, and his eyes, petrified with terror, or some such kindred emotion,
stared fixedly over my head at a point on the further
wall. It was as though
he had seen something that turned him to stone. I instinctively followed
the direction of his eyes, but I could see nothing
unusual. The still feebly flickering ashes in the grate, and the row of prim ornaments on the mantelpiece, were surely harmless
enough.
The violence of Mrs. Inglethorp’s attack seemed to
be passing. She was able to speak in short gasps.
“Better now—very sudden—stupid of me—to lock myself in.”
A shadow fell on the bed and, looking up, I saw
Mary Cavendish standing near the door with her arm around Cynthia.
She seemed to be supporting the girl, who looked utterly dazed and unlike
herself. Her face was heavily flushed, and
she yawned repeatedly.
“Poor Cynthia is quite frightened,” said Mrs.
Cavendish in a low clear voice. She herself,
I noticed, was dressed in her white land smock.
Then it must be later
than I thought. I saw that a faint streak of daylight was showing
through the curtains of the windows,
and that the clock on the mantelpiece pointed to close upon five o’clock.
A strangled cry from the bed startled me. A fresh
access of pain seized the unfortunate
old lady. The convulsions were of a violence terrible to behold. Everything was confusion. We thronged round her, powerless
to help or alleviate. A final
convulsion lifted her from the bed, until she appeared to rest upon her head and her heels, with her body
arched in an extraordinary manner. In
vain Mary and John tried to administer more brandy. The moments flew. Again the body arched itself
in that peculiar fashion.
At that moment,
Dr. Bauerstein pushed
his way authoritatively into the room.
For one instant he stopped
dead, staring at the figure
on the bed, and, at the same instant,
Mrs. Inglethorp cried out in a strangled voice, her eyes fixed on the doctor:
“Alfred—Alfred——” Then she fell back motionless on the pillows.
With a stride, the doctor reached the bed, and
seizing her arms worked them energetically,
applying what I knew to be artificial respiration. He issued a few short
sharp orders to the servants.
An imperious wave of his hand drove
us all to the door. We
watched him, fascinated, though I think we all knew in our hearts that it was too late, and that nothing
could be done now. I could see by the expression on his face that he himself had little hope.
Finally he abandoned his task, shaking his head
gravely. At that moment, we heard footsteps
outside, and Dr. Wilkins, Mrs. Inglethorp’s own doctor, a portly, fussy
little man, came bustling in.
In a few words Dr. Bauerstein explained
how he had happened to be passing the
lodge gates as the car came out, and had run up to the house as fast as he could, whilst the car went on to fetch Dr.
Wilkins. With a faint gesture of the hand, he indicated the figure on the bed.
“Ve—ry sad. Ve—ry sad,” murmured Dr. Wilkins. “Poor
dear lady. Always did far too
much—far too much—against my advice. I warned her. Her heart was far from strong. ‘Take it
easy,’ I said to her, ‘Take—it—easy’. But no—her zeal for good works
was too great. Nature rebelled.
Na—ture—re—belled.”
Dr. Bauerstein, I noticed, was watching the local doctor narrowly. He still kept his eyes fixed on him as he spoke.
“The convulsions were of a peculiar
violence, Dr. Wilkins. I am sorry you were not here in time to witness them. They were quite—tetanic in character.”
“Ah!” said Dr. Wilkins wisely.
“I should like to speak to you in private,” said
Dr. Bauerstein. He turned to John. “You do not object?”
“Certainly not.”
We
all trooped out into the corridor, leaving the two doctors alone, and I heard the key turned in the lock behind us.
We went slowly down the stairs. I was violently excited. I have a certain
talent for deduction, and Dr. Bauerstein’s manner had started a flock of wild
surmises in my mind. Mary Cavendish laid her hand upon my arm.
“What is it? Why did Dr. Bauerstein
seem so—peculiar?” I looked at her.
“Do you know what I think?”
“What?”
“Listen!” I looked
round, the others were out of earshot.
I lowered my voice to a whisper.
“I believe she has been poisoned! I’m certain Dr. Bauerstein suspects
it.”
“What?”
She shrank against the wall, the pupils of her eyes dilating wildly. Then, with a sudden cry that startled me,
she cried out: “No, no—not that—not that!”
And breaking from me, fled up the stairs. I followed her, afraid that she was going to faint. I found her leaning
against the bannisters, deadly pale. She waved me away impatiently.
“No, no—leave me. I’d rather be alone. Let me just
be quiet for a minute or two. Go down to the others.”
I obeyed her reluctantly. John and Lawrence
were in the dining-room. I joined them. We were all silent, but I suppose
I voiced the thoughts of us all when I at last broke it by saying:
“Where is Mr. Inglethorp?”
John shook his head. “He’s not in the house.”
Our eyes met. Where was Alfred Inglethorp? His absence was strange and inexplicable. I remembered Mrs.
Inglethorp’s dying words. What lay beneath them? What more could she have told us, if she had had time?
At last we heard the doctors descending
the stairs. Dr. Wilkins was looking important
and excited, and trying to conceal an inward exultation under a manner
of decorous calm. Dr. Bauerstein remained in the background, his grave bearded face unchanged. Dr. Wilkins was the
spokesman for the two. He addressed
himself to John:
“Mr. Cavendish, I should like your consent to a post-mortem.”
“Is that
necessary?” asked John gravely. A spasm of pain crossed his face. “Absolutely,” said Dr. Bauerstein.
“You mean by that——?”
“That neither Dr. Wilkins nor myself could give a
death certificate under the circumstances.”
John bent his head.
“In that case, I have no alternative but to agree.”
“Thank you,” said Dr. Wilkins briskly. “We propose
that it should take place to-morrow
night—or rather to-night.” And he glanced at the daylight. “Under the circumstances, I am afraid an inquest
can hardly be avoided—these formalities are necessary, but I beg that you won’t distress
yourselves.”
There was a pause, and then Dr. Bauerstein drew two
keys from his pocket, and handed
them to John.
“These
are the keys of the two rooms.
I have locked them and, in my opinion, they would be better kept locked for the present.”
The doctors then departed.
I had been turning over an idea in my head, and I
felt that the moment had now come to
broach it. Yet I was a little chary of doing so. John, I knew, had a horror of any kind of publicity, and was
an easygoing optimist, who preferred never
to meet trouble half-way. It might be difficult to convince him of the soundness
of my plan. Lawrence, on the other
hand, being less conventional, and having
more imagination, I felt I might count upon as an ally. There was no doubt that the moment had come for me to take the lead.
“John,” I said, “I am going to ask you something.”
“Well?”
“You remember my speaking of my friend Poirot? The Belgian who is here?
He has been a most famous
detective.” “Yes.”
“I want you to let me call him in—to investigate this matter.” “What—now? Before the post-mortem?”
“Yes, time is an advantage if—if—there has been foul play.”
“Rubbish!” cried Lawrence angrily. “In my opinion
the whole thing is a mare’s nest of
Bauerstein’s! Wilkins hadn’t an idea of such a thing, until Bauerstein put it into his head. But, like all specialists, Bauerstein’s got a bee in his bonnet.
Poisons are his hobby, so of course
he sees them everywhere.”
I confess that I was surprised by Lawrence’s
attitude. He was so seldom vehement about anything.
John hesitated.
“I can’t feel as you do, Lawrence,” he said at
last. “I’m inclined to give Hastings
a free hand, though I should prefer to wait a bit. We don’t want any unnecessary scandal.”
“No, no,” I cried eagerly, “you need have no fear
of that. Poirot is discretion itself.”
“Very well, then,
have it your own way. I leave
it in your hands. Though,
if it is as we suspect, it seems a clear enough
case. God forgive
me if I am wronging
him!”
I looked
at my watch. It was six o’clock.
I determined to lose no time.
Five minutes’ delay, however, I allowed myself. I
spent it in ransacking the library until
I discovered a medical book which gave a description of strychnine poisoning.
CHAPTER IV. POIROT
INVESTIGATES
The house which the Belgians occupied in the
village was quite close to the park gates.
One could save time by taking a narrow path through the long grass,
which cut off the detours
of the winding drive. So I, accordingly, went that way.
I had nearly reached the lodge, when my attention was arrested by the
running figure of a man approaching
me. It was Mr. Inglethorp. Where had he been?
How did he intend to explain his absence?
He accosted me eagerly.
“My God! This is terrible! My poor wife! I have only just heard.” “Where
have you been?”
I asked.
“Denby kept me late last night. It was one o’clock before
we’d finished. Then
I found that I’d forgotten the latch-key after all. I didn’t want to
arouse the household, so Denby gave me a bed.”
“How did you hear the news?” I asked.
“Wilkins knocked Denby up to tell him. My poor
Emily! She was so self- sacrificing—such a noble character. She over-taxed her strength.”
A wave of revulsion swept over me. What
a consummate hypocrite the man was!
“I must hurry on,” I said, thankful
that he did not ask me whither
I was bound. In a few minutes
I was knocking at the door of Leastways Cottage.
Getting no answer,
I repeated my summons impatiently. A window above
me was cautiously opened, and Poirot
himself looked out.
He gave an exclamation of surprise at seeing me. In
a few brief words, I explained the tragedy that had occurred,
and that I wanted his help.
“Wait, my friend, I will let you in,
and you shall recount to me the affair whilst I dress.”
In a few moments he had unbarred the
door, and I followed him up to his room.
There he installed me in a chair, and I related the whole story, keeping back nothing, and omitting no circumstance, however
insignificant, whilst he
himself made a careful and deliberate toilet.
I told him of my awakening, of Mrs. Inglethorp’s dying words, of her husband’s absence, of the quarrel the
day before, of the scrap of conversation between Mary and her mother-in-law that I had overheard, of the former
quarrel between Mrs. Inglethorp and Evelyn Howard,
and of the latter’s innuendoes.
I was hardly as clear as I could wish. I repeated
myself several times, and occasionally
had to go back to some detail that I had forgotten. Poirot smiled kindly on me.
“The mind is confused? Is it not so?
Take time, mon ami. You are agitated; you are excited—it is but natural. Presently, when we are calmer,
we will arrange the
facts, neatly, each in his proper place. We will examine—and reject. Those of importance we will put on one side; those
of no importance, pouf!”—he screwed
up his cherub-like face, and puffed comically
enough—“blow them away!”
“That’s all very well,” I objected, “but how are
you going to decide what is important, and what isn’t?
That always seems the difficulty to me.”
Poirot shook his head energetically. He was now arranging his moustache with exquisite care.
“Not
so. Voyons! One fact leads to another—so we continue. Does the next fit in with that? A merveille! Good! We can proceed. This next little fact—no! Ah, that
is curious! There is something
missing—a link in the chain that is not there.
We examine. We search. And that little curious fact, that possibly
paltry little detail that will not
tally, we put it here!” He made an extravagant gesture with his hand. “It is significant! It is tremendous!”
“Y—es——”
“Ah!” Poirot shook his forefinger so fiercely at me
that I quailed before it. “Beware!
Peril to the detective who says: ‘It is so small—it does not matter. It will not agree. I will forget it.’ That way lies confusion! Everything
matters.”
“I know. You always told me that. That’s why I have gone into all the details of this thing
whether they seemed
to me relevant or not.”
“And I am pleased with you. You have a
good memory, and you have given me
the facts faithfully. Of the order in which you present them, I say nothing— truly,
it is deplorable! But I make allowances—you are upset. To that I attribute the circumstance that you have omitted one fact of paramount importance.”
“What is that?” I asked.
“You have not told me if Mrs. Inglethorp ate well last night.”
I stared at him. Surely
the war had affected the little man’s
brain. He was
carefully engaged in brushing his coat before
putting it on, and seemed wholly engrossed in the task.
“I don’t remember,” I said. “And, anyway, I don’t see——” “You do not see? But it is of the first importance.”
“I can’t see why,” I said, rather
nettled. “As far as I can remember, she didn’t eat much. She was obviously
upset, and it had taken her appetite
away. That was only natural.”
“Yes,” said Poirot thoughtfully, “it was only natural.”
He opened a drawer, and took out a small
despatch-case, then turned to me. “Now I am ready. We will proceed to the château,
and study matters
on the
spot. Excuse me, mon ami, you dressed in haste, and your tie is on one side.
Permit me.” With a deft gesture, he rearranged it. “Ųa y est! Now, shall
we start?”
We hurried up the village,
and turned in at the lodge gates.
Poirot stopped for a
moment, and gazed sorrowfully over the beautiful expanse of park, still glittering with morning dew.
“So beautiful, so beautiful, and yet, the poor
family, plunged in sorrow, prostrated with grief.”
He looked at me keenly as he spoke, and I was aware
that I reddened under his prolonged gaze.
Was
the family prostrated by grief? Was the sorrow
at Mrs. Inglethorp’s death so great?
I realized that there was an emotional
lack in the atmosphere. The dead woman had not the gift of commanding
love. Her death was a shock and a distress, but she would not be passionately regretted.
Poirot seemed to follow my thoughts. He nodded his head gravely.
“No, you are right,” he said, “it is not as though
there was a blood tie. She has been kind and generous
to these Cavendishes, but she was not their
own mother. Blood
tells—always remember that—blood tells.”
“Poirot,” I said, “I wish you would
tell me why you wanted to know if Mrs. Inglethorp ate well last night? I have been turning it over in my mind, but I can’t see how it has anything
to do with the matter?”
He was silent for a minute or two as we walked along, but finally he said:
“I do not mind telling
you—though, as you know, it is not my habit to explain
until the end is reached. The present contention is that Mrs. Inglethorp
died of strychnine poisoning, presumably administered in her coffee.”
“Yes?”
“Well, what time was the coffee served?”
“About eight o’clock.”
“Therefore she drank it between
then and half-past
eight—certainly not much
later. Well, strychnine is a fairly rapid poison.
Its effects would be felt very soon, probably
in about an hour. Yet, in Mrs. Inglethorp’s case, the symptoms do not manifest themselves until five o’clock the next morning:
nine hours! But a heavy
meal, taken at about the same time as the poison, might retard its effects, though
hardly to that extent. Still, it is a possibility to be taken into
account. But, according to you, she
ate very little for supper, and yet the symptoms do not develop until early the next morning! Now that is a curious
circumstance, my friend. Something may
arise at the autopsy to explain it. In the meantime, remember it.”
As we neared the house, John came out and met us.
His face looked weary and haggard.
“This is a very dreadful business,
Monsieur Poirot,” he said. “Hastings has explained to you that we are anxious for no publicity?”
“I comprehend
perfectly.”
“You see, it is
only suspicion so far. We have nothing to go upon.” “Precisely. It is a matter of precaution only.”
John turned to me, taking out his cigarette-case,
and lighting a cigarette as he did so.
“You know that
fellow Inglethorp is back?” “Yes. I met him.”
John flung the match into an adjacent flower
bed, a proceeding which was too much
for Poirot’s feelings. He retrieved it, and buried
it neatly.
“It’s jolly difficult to know how to treat him.”
“That difficulty will not exist long,” pronounced Poirot quietly.
John looked puzzled, not quite understanding the portent of this cryptic
saying. He handed the two keys which
Dr. Bauerstein had given him to me.
“Show Monsieur Poirot everything he wants to see.” “The
rooms are locked?”
asked Poirot.
“Dr. Bauerstein considered it advisable.” Poirot nodded
thoughtfully.
“Then he is very sure. Well, that simplifies matters
for us.”
We went up together
to the room of the tragedy. For convenience I append a plan of the room and the principal articles
of furniture in it.
Poirot locked the door on the inside, and proceeded
to a minute inspection of the room. He darted from one object to the other with the agility of a grasshopper. I remained by the door,
fearing to obliterate any clues. Poirot, however, did not seem grateful to me for my forbearance.
“What have you, my friend,” he cried, “that you
remain there like—how do you say it?—ah, yes, the stuck pig?”
I explained that I was afraid of obliterating any foot-marks.
“Foot-marks? But what an idea!
There has already
been practically an army in the
room! What foot-marks are we likely to find? No, come here and aid me in my search. I will put down my little case until I need it.”
He did so, on the round table by the window, but it
was an ill-advised proceeding; for,
the top of it being loose, it tilted up, and precipitated the despatch-case on the floor.
“Eh
voilà une table!” cried Poirot. “Ah, my friend, one may live in a big house and yet have no comfort.”
After which piece of moralizing, he resumed his search.
A small purple despatch-case, with a key in the
lock, on the writing-table, engaged
his attention for some time. He took out the key from the lock, and passed it to me to inspect. I saw nothing
peculiar, however. It was an ordinary key of the Yale type, with a bit of twisted
wire through the handle.
Next, he examined the framework of the
door we had broken in, assuring himself
that the bolt had really been shot. Then he went to the door opposite leading
into Cynthia’s room. That door was also bolted, as I had stated. However, he went to the length of
unbolting it, and opening and shutting it several
times; this he did with the utmost precaution against making any noise. Suddenly
something in the bolt itself
seemed to rivet
his attention. He examined it carefully, and then, nimbly whipping out a pair of small forceps from his case,
he drew out some minute
particle which he carefully sealed
up in a tiny envelope.
On the chest of drawers there was a tray with a
spirit lamp and a small saucepan
on it. A small quantity of a dark fluid remained in the saucepan, and an empty cup and saucer
that had been drunk out of stood near it.
I wondered how I could have been so unobservant as
to overlook this. Here was a clue
worth having. Poirot delicately dipped his finger into liquid, and tasted it gingerly.
He made a grimace.
“Cocoa—with—I think—rum in it.”
He passed on to the debris on the floor, where the
table by the bed had been overturned.
A reading-lamp, some books, matches, a bunch of keys, and the crushed
fragments of a coffee-cup lay scattered about.
“Ah, this is curious,” said Poirot.
“I must confess that I see nothing particularly curious about it.”
“You
do not? Observe the lamp—the chimney is broken in two places; they lie there as they fell. But see, the coffee-cup is absolutely smashed
to powder.”
“Well,” I said wearily, “I suppose someone must have stepped on it.” “Exactly,” said Poirot, in an odd voice. “Someone
stepped on it.”
He rose from his knees, and walked slowly across to
the mantelpiece, where he stood
abstractedly fingering the ornaments, and straightening them—a trick of his when he was agitated.
“Mon ami,”
he said, turning
to me, “somebody stepped on that cup, grinding it to powder,
and the reason
they did so was either
because it contained
strychnine or—which is far more serious—because it did not contain strychnine!”
I made no reply. I was bewildered, but I knew that it was no good asking
him to explain. In a moment
or two he roused himself, and went on with his
investigations. He picked
up the bunch of keys from the floor, and twirling them round in his fingers
finally selected one, very bright
and shining, which
he tried in the lock of the purple despatch-case. It fitted, and he opened
the box, but after a moment’s hesitation, closed and relocked
it, and slipped the bunch of keys, as well as the key that had originally stood in the lock, into his own pocket.
“I have no authority to go through these papers.
But it should be done—at once!”
He then made a very careful examination
of the drawers of the wash-stand. Crossing
the room to the left-hand window, a round stain, hardly visible on the dark brown carpet, seemed to interest
him particularly. He went down on his knees, examining
it minutely—even going so far as to smell it.
Finally, he poured a few drops of the cocoa into a
test tube, sealing it up carefully. His next proceeding was to take out a little notebook.
“We have found in this
room,” he said, writing busily, “six points of interest.
Shall I enumerate them, or will you?”
“Oh, you,” I replied hastily.
“Very well, then.
One, a coffee-cup that has been ground
into powder; two, a despatch-case with a key in the lock; three,
a stain on the floor.”
“That may have been done some time ago,” I interrupted.
“No, for it is still perceptibly damp and smells of
coffee. Four, a fragment of some dark green fabric—only a thread or two, but recognizable.”
“Ah!” I cried. “That was what you sealed up in the envelope.”
“Yes. It may turn out to be a piece of one of Mrs.
Inglethorp’s own dresses, and quite
unimportant. We shall see. Five, this!”
With a dramatic gesture, he pointed
to a large splash of candle grease on the floor by the writing-table. “It must have been done since yesterday,
otherwise a good housemaid would have at once removed it with blotting-paper and a hot iron. One of my best hats once
—but that is not to the point.”
“It was very likely done last night. We were very agitated. Or perhaps Mrs.
Inglethorp herself dropped her candle.”
“You brought only one candle into the room?”
“Yes. Lawrence Cavendish
was carrying it. But he was very upset. He seemed to see something over here”—I indicated
the mantelpiece—“that absolutely paralysed him.”
“That is interesting,” said Poirot
quickly. “Yes, it is suggestive”—his eye sweeping the whole length
of the wall—“but it was not his candle that made this great patch, for you perceive that this is white grease;
whereas Monsieur Lawrence’s candle, which is still on the
dressing-table, is pink. On the other hand, Mrs. Inglethorp had no candlestick in the room, only a reading-lamp.”
“Then,” I said, “what
do you deduce?”
To which my friend only made a rather irritating
reply, urging me to use my own natural
faculties.
“And the sixth point?” I asked. “I suppose it is the sample of cocoa.”
“No,” said Poirot
thoughtfully. “I might have included
that in the six, but I did not. No, the sixth point I will keep to myself
for the present.”
He looked quickly round the room. “There is nothing
more to be done here, I think, unless”—he stared earnestly and long at the dead ashes in the grate. “The fire
burns—and it destroys.
But by chance—there might be—let us see!”
Deftly, on hands and knees, he began to sort the
ashes from the grate into the fender, handling
them with the greatest caution.
Suddenly, he gave a faint
exclamation.
“The forceps, Hastings!”
I quickly
handed them to him, and with skill he extracted
a small piece of half charred paper.
“There, mon ami!” he cried. “What do you think of that?”
I scrutinized the fragment. This is an exact reproduction of it:— 03
I was puzzled.
It
was
unusually
thick,
quite
unlike
ordinary
notepaper.
Suddenly an idea struck me.
“Poirot!” I cried. “This
is a fragment of a will!” “Exactly.”
I looked up at him sharply. “You are not surprised?”
“No,” he said gravely, “I expected
it.”
I relinquished the piece of paper, and watched him
put it away in his case, with the same methodical care that he bestowed on everything. My brain was in a whirl. What was this complication of a will? Who had destroyed it? The person
who had left the candle grease on the floor? Obviously. But how had
anyone gained admission? All the doors had been bolted
on the inside.
“Now, my friend,” said Poirot briskly, “we will go.
I should like to ask a few questions of the parlourmaid—Dorcas, her name is, is it not?”
We passed through
Alfred Inglethorp’s room, and Poirot
delayed long enough
to make a brief but fairly comprehensive examination of it. We
went out through that door, locking
both it and that of Mrs. Inglethorp’s room as before.
I took him down to the boudoir which he
had expressed a wish to see, and went myself in search
of Dorcas.
When I returned with her, however, the boudoir was empty. “Poirot,” I cried,
“where are you?”
“I am here, my friend.”
He had stepped
outside the French
window, and was standing, apparently lost in admiration, before the various
shaped flower beds.
“Admirable!” he murmured. “Admirable! What symmetry! Observe
that crescent; and those
diamonds—their neatness rejoices the eye. The spacing of the plants, also, is perfect.
It has been recently done; is it not so?”
“Yes, I believe they were at it yesterday
afternoon. But come in—Dorcas is here.”
“Eh bien, eh bien! Do
not grudge me a moment’s
satisfaction of the eye.” “Yes,
but this affair
is more important.”
“And how do you know that these fine begonias
are not of equal importance?”
I shrugged my shoulders. There
was really no arguing with him if he chose to take
that line.
“You do not agree? But such things have
been. Well, we will come in and interview the brave Dorcas.”
Dorcas was standing in the boudoir, her hands
folded in front of her, and her grey
hair rose in stiff waves under her white cap. She was the very model and picture
of a good old-fashioned servant.
In her attitude towards Poirot, she was inclined to
be suspicious, but he soon broke down her defences. He drew forward
a chair.
“Pray be seated,
mademoiselle.” “Thank you, sir.”
“You have been with your mistress many years, is it not so?” “Ten years,
sir.”
“That is a long time, and very faithful
service. You were much attached
to her, were you not?”
“She was a very good mistress to me, sir.”
“Then you will not object to answering a few questions. I put them to you with Mr. Cavendish’s full approval.”
“Oh, certainly, sir.”
“Then I will begin by asking you about the events of yesterday afternoon.
Your mistress
had a quarrel?”
“Yes, sir. But I don’t know that I ought——”
Dorcas hesitated. Poirot looked
at her keenly.
“My good Dorcas, it is necessary that I should know
every detail of that quarrel as fully
as possible. Do not think that you are betraying your mistress’s secrets. Your mistress lies dead, and it
is necessary that we should know all—if we are to avenge
her. Nothing can bring her back to life, but we do hope, if there has been foul play, to bring the murderer to justice.”
“Amen to that,”
said Dorcas fiercely. “And, naming no names, there’s one in
this house that none of us could ever abide! And an ill day it was when first he
darkened the threshold.”
Poirot waited for her indignation to subside, and then, resuming
his business- like
tone, he asked:
“Now, as to this quarrel?
What is the first you heard of it?”
“Well, sir, I happened to be going along the hall outside yesterday——” “What time was that?”
“I couldn’t say exactly, sir, but it wasn’t tea-time
by a long way. Perhaps
four o’clock—or it may have
been a bit later. Well, sir, as I said, I happened to be passing along, when I heard voices very loud and angry in here. I didn’t exactly
mean to listen, but—well, there it is. I stopped. The door was shut, but
the mistress was speaking very sharp
and clear, and I heard what she said quite plainly.
‘You have lied to me, and deceived me,’ she said. I didn’t hear what Mr. Inglethorp
replied. He spoke a good bit lower than she did—but she answered: ‘How dare you? I have kept you and clothed
you and fed you! You owe everything to me! And this is how you repay me! By bringing
disgrace upon our name!’
Again I didn’t hear what he said, but she went on: ‘Nothing that you can say will
make any difference. I see my duty clearly. My mind is made up. You need not think that any fear of publicity,
or scandal between husband and wife will deter me.’ Then I thought I heard them coming out, so I went off quickly.”
“You are sure
it was Mr. Inglethorp’s voice you heard?” “Oh, yes, sir, whose else’s
could it be?”
“Well, what happened next?”
“Later, I came back to the hall; but it was all
quiet. At five o’clock, Mrs. Inglethorp rang the bell and told me to bring her a cup of tea—nothing to eat—to the boudoir. She was looking dreadful—so
white and upset. ‘Dorcas,’ she says, ‘I’ve had a great shock.’ ‘I’m sorry for that, m’m,’ I says. ‘You’ll feel better after a nice hot cup of tea, m’m.’ She had something in
her hand. I don’t know if it was a letter, or just a piece of paper, but it had writing on it, and she kept staring at it, almost as if she couldn’t believe
what was written there. She whispered to herself, as though she had forgotten
I was there: ‘These few words—and everything’s changed.’ And then she says
to me: ‘Never trust a man, Dorcas, they’re
not worth it!’ I hurried off, and got her a good strong cup of tea, and she thanked
me, and said she’d feel better when she’d drunk it. ‘I don’t know what to do,’ she says. ‘Scandal between husband and wife is a dreadful thing, Dorcas. I’d
rather hush it up if I could.’ Mrs. Cavendish came in just then, so she didn’t say any more.”
“She still had the letter, or whatever it was, in her hand?”
“Yes, sir.”
“What would she be likely
to do with it afterwards?”
“Well, I don’t know, sir, I expect she would lock it up in that purple case of hers.”
“Is that where she usually kept important papers?”
“Yes, sir. She brought it down with her every morning,
and took it up every night.”
“When did she lose the key of it?”
“She missed it yesterday at lunch-time, sir, and told me to look carefully
for it.
She was very much put out about it.” “But
she had a duplicate key?” “Oh, yes, sir.”
Dorcas was looking
very curiously at him and, to tell the truth,
so was I. What was all this about a lost key? Poirot smiled.
“Never
mind, Dorcas, it is my business to know things.
Is this the key that was lost?” He drew from his pocket the key
that he had found in the lock of the despatch-case upstairs.
Dorcas’s eyes looked as though they would pop out of her head.
“That’s it, sir, right enough. But where did you
find it? I looked everywhere for it.”
“Ah, but you see it was not in the same place yesterday as it was to-day. Now,
to pass to another subject,
had your mistress
a dark green dress in her wardrobe?”
Dorcas was rather startled by the unexpected question. “No, sir.”
“Are you quite sure?” “Oh, yes, sir.”
“Has anyone else in the house got a green dress?”
Dorcas reflected.
“Miss Cynthia has a green evening dress.” “Light
or dark green?”
“A light green, sir; a sort of chiffon, they call it.”
“Ah, that is not what I want. And nobody
else has anything
green?” “No, sir—not
that I know of.”
Poirot’s face did not betray a trace of whether
he was disappointed or otherwise. He merely remarked:
“Good, we will leave that and pass on.
Have you any reason to believe that your mistress
was likely to take a sleeping powder last night?”
“Not last night, sir, I know she didn’t.”
“Why do you know so positively?”
“Because the box was empty. She took the last one
two days ago, and she didn’t have any more made up.”
“You are quite
sure of that?” “Positive, sir.”
“Then that is cleared up! By the way, your mistress didn’t
ask you to sign any paper yesterday?”
“To sign a paper? No, sir.”
“When
Mr. Hastings and Mr. Lawrence came in yesterday evening, they found your
mistress busy writing letters. I suppose you can give me no idea to whom these letters were addressed?”
“I’m afraid I couldn’t, sir. I was out in the
evening. Perhaps Annie could tell you, though she’s a careless girl. Never cleared
the coffee-cups away last night.
That’s what happens
when I’m not here to look after
things.”
Poirot lifted his hand.
“Since they have been left, Dorcas, leave them a
little longer, I pray you. I should like to examine
them.”
“Very well, sir.”
“What time did you go out last evening?” “About
six o’clock, sir.”
“Thank you, Dorcas, that is all I have to ask you.”
He rose and strolled to the window.
“I have been admiring these flower beds. How many gardeners are employed
here, by the way?”
“Only three now, sir. Five, we had,
before the war, when it was kept as a gentleman’s place should be. I wish you could
have seen it then, sir. A fair sight it was. But now there’s only old
Manning, and young William, and a new- fashioned
woman gardener in breeches and such-like. Ah, these are dreadful times!”
“The good times will come again, Dorcas.
At least, we hope so. Now, will you send
Annie to me here?”
“Yes, sir. Thank you, sir.”
“How did you know that Mrs. Inglethorp took sleeping powders?”
I asked, in lively
curiosity, as Dorcas left the room. “And about the lost key and the duplicate?”
“One thing at a time. As to the
sleeping powders, I knew by this.” He suddenly produced
a small cardboard box, such as chemists use for powders.
“Where did you find it?”
“In the wash-stand drawer in Mrs. Inglethorp’s bedroom.
It was Number Six of my catalogue.”
“But I suppose, as the last powder was taken two days ago, it is not of much importance?”
“Probably not, but do you notice anything that strikes you as peculiar
about this box?”
I examined it closely. “No, I can’t say that I do.” “Look at the label.”
I read the label carefully:
“‘One powder to be taken at bedtime,
if required.
Mrs. Inglethorp.’ No, I see nothing unusual.”
“Not the fact that there is no chemist’s name?”
“Ah!” I exclaimed. “To be sure,
that is odd!”
“Have you ever known a chemist
to send out a box like that, without his printed name?”
“No, I can’t
say that I have.”
I was becoming quite
excited, but Poirot damped my ardour by remarking: “Yet the explanation is quite simple. So do not intrigue
yourself, my friend.”
An audible
creaking proclaimed the approach of Annie, so I had no time to reply.
Annie was a fine, strapping girl, and was evidently labouring
under intense excitement, mingled with a certain ghoulish
enjoyment of the tragedy.
Poirot came to the point
at once, with a business-like briskness.
“I sent for you, Annie, because
I thought you might be able to tell me something about the letters
Mrs. Inglethorp wrote
last night. How many were
there?
And can you tell me any of the names and addresses?” Annie considered.
“There were four letters, sir. One was to Miss
Howard, and one was to Mr. Wells, the lawyer, and the other two I don’t think I remember,
sir—oh, yes, one was to Ross’s, the caterers in Tadminster. The other one, I don’t remember.”
“Think,” urged Poirot.
Annie racked her brains in vain.
“I’m sorry, sir, but it’s clean gone. I don’t think I can have noticed it.”
“It does not matter,” said Poirot, not betraying
any sign of disappointment. “Now I
want to ask you about something else. There is a saucepan in Mrs. Inglethorp’s room with some cocoa in it. Did she have that every night?”
“Yes, sir, it was put in her room every
evening, and she warmed it up in the night—whenever she fancied it.”
“What was it? Plain cocoa?”
“Yes, sir, made with milk, with a teaspoonful of
sugar, and two teaspoonfuls of rum in it.”
“Who took it to her room?”
“I did, sir.”
“Always?”
“Yes, sir.”
“At what time?”
“When I went to draw the
curtains, as a rule, sir.” “Did you bring it straight up from the kitchen then?”
“No, sir, you see there’s not much room on the gas
stove, so cook used to make it early, before putting the vegetables on for supper.
Then I used to bring it up, and put it on the table
by the swing door, and take it into her room later.”
“The swing door is in the left wing, is it not?” “Yes,
sir.”
“And the table, is it on this side of the door, or on the farther—servants’ side?” “It’s this side,
sir.”
“What time did you bring it
up last night?” “About quarter-past seven, I should say, sir.”
“And when did you take it into Mrs. Inglethorp’s room?”
“When I went to shut up, sir. About eight o’clock.
Mrs. Inglethorp came up to bed before
I’d finished.”
“Then, between seven-fifteen and eight o’clock,
the cocoa was standing on the table in the left wing?”
“Yes, sir.” Annie had been growing
redder and redder
in the face, and now she blurted
out unexpectedly:
“And if there was salt
in it, sir, it wasn’t me. I never took the salt near it.” “What makes
you think there was salt in it?” asked Poirot.
“Seeing it on the tray, sir.”
“You saw some salt on the tray?”
“Yes. Coarse kitchen
salt, it looked.
I never noticed it when I took the tray up, but when I came to take it into the
mistress’s room I saw it at once, and I suppose
I ought to have taken it down again, and asked cook to make some fresh. But I was in a hurry, because
Dorcas was out, and I thought maybe the cocoa itself
was all right, and the salt had only gone on the tray. So I dusted
it off with my apron,
and took it in.”
I had the utmost difficulty in controlling my excitement. Unknown
to herself, Annie had provided us with an important
piece of evidence. How she would have gaped if she had realized
that her “coarse
kitchen salt” was strychnine, one of the most deadly
poisons known to mankind. I marvelled at Poirot’s calm.
His self-control was
astonishing. I awaited his next question with impatience, but it disappointed me.
“When you went into Mrs. Inglethorp’s room, was the door leading
into Miss Cynthia’s room bolted?”
“Oh! Yes, sir; it always
was. It had never been opened.”
“And the door into Mr. Inglethorp’s room? Did you
notice if that was bolted too?”
Annie hesitated.
“I couldn’t rightly
say, sir; it was shut but I couldn’t say whether it was bolted
or not.”
“When you finally
left the room, did Mrs. Inglethorp bolt the door after you?” “No, sir, not then, but I expect she did later. She usually did lock it at night.
The
door into the passage, that is.”
“Did you notice any candle grease on the floor when
you did the room yesterday?”
“Candle grease?
Oh, no, sir. Mrs. Inglethorp didn’t have a candle, only a reading-lamp.”
“Then, if there had been a large patch
of candle grease
on the floor, you think
you would have been sure to have seen it?”
“Yes, sir, and I would have taken it out with a piece of blotting-paper and a hot iron.”
Then Poirot repeated the question he had put to Dorcas:
“Did your mistress
ever have a green dress?”
“No, sir.”
“Nor a mantle, nor a cape, nor a—how do you call it?—a sports coat?”
“Not green, sir.”
“Nor anyone else in the house?”
Annie reflected.
“No, sir.”
“You are sure of that?”
“Quite sure.”
“Bien! That
is all I want to know. Thank you very much.”
With a nervous giggle,
Annie took herself
creakingly out of the room. My pent-up
excitement burst forth.
“Poirot,” I cried, “I congratulate you! This is a great discovery.” “What is a great discovery?”
“Why, that it was the cocoa and not the coffee that
was poisoned. That explains
everything! Of course it did not take effect until the early morning, since the cocoa was only drunk in the middle
of the night.”
“So you think that the cocoa—mark well
what I say, Hastings, the cocoa— contained
strychnine?”
“Of course! That salt on the tray, what else could it have been?”
“It might have been salt,”
replied Poirot placidly.
I shrugged my shoulders. If he was going to take the matter that way, it was no good
arguing with him. The idea crossed my mind, not for the first time, that poor old Poirot was growing old. Privately
I thought it lucky that he had associated with him someone
of a more receptive type of mind.
Poirot was surveying me with quietly twinkling eyes. “You are not pleased
with me, mon ami?”
“My dear Poirot,”
I said coldly, “it is not for me to dictate to you. You have a right to your own opinion, just as I have to mine.”
“A most admirable sentiment,” remarked Poirot,
rising briskly to his feet. “Now I
have finished with this room. By the way, whose is the smaller desk in the corner?”
“Mr. Inglethorp’s.”
“Ah!” He tried the roll top tentatively. “Locked.
But perhaps one of Mrs. Inglethorp’s
keys would open it.” He tried several, twisting and turning them with a practiced hand, and finally
uttering an ejaculation of satisfaction. “Voilà! It
is not the key, but it will open it at a pinch.” He slid back the roll top, and ran a rapid eye over the neatly filed papers. To my surprise,
he did not examine them, merely remarking
approvingly as he relocked the desk: “Decidedly, he is a man of method, this Mr. Inglethorp!”
A “man of method” was, in Poirot’s estimation, the
highest praise that could be bestowed
on any individual.
I felt that my friend was not what he had been as he rambled on disconnectedly:
“There were no stamps in his desk, but
there might have been, eh, mon ami? There
might have been? Yes”—his eyes wandered round the room—“this boudoir has nothing
more to tell us. It did not yield much.
Only this.”
He pulled a crumpled envelope out of
his pocket, and tossed it over to me. It was
rather a curious document. A plain, dirty looking old envelope with a few words scrawled across it, apparently at
random. The following is a facsimile of it.
CHAPTER
V.
“IT ISN’T STRYCHNINE, IS
IT?”
“Where did you find this?” I asked Poirot, in lively curiosity. “In the waste-paper basket. You recognise the
handwriting?” “Yes, it is Mrs. Inglethorp’s. But what does it mean?”
Poirot shrugged his shoulders.
“I cannot
say—but it is suggestive.”
A wild idea flashed across me. Was it possible that
Mrs. Inglethorp’s mind was deranged?
Had she some fantastic idea of demoniacal possession? And, if that were so, was it not also possible that she might
have taken her own life?
I was about to expound
these theories to Poirot, when his own words distracted me.
“Come,” he said, “now to examine the coffee-cups!”
“My dear Poirot! What on earth is the good of that,
now that we know about the cocoa?”
“Oh, là là! That miserable cocoa!” cried Poirot flippantly.
He laughed with apparent enjoyment, raising his
arms to heaven in mock despair, in what I could not but consider
the worst possible
taste.
“And,
anyway,” I said, with increasing coldness, “as Mrs. Inglethorp took her coffee upstairs with her, I do not see
what you expect to find, unless you consider
it likely that we shall discover a packet of strychnine on the coffee tray!”
Poirot was sobered at once.
“Come, come, my friend,” he said, slipping his arms
through mine. “Ne vous fâchez pas! Allow me to interest
myself in my coffee-cups, and I will respect
your cocoa. There!
Is it a bargain?”
He was so quaintly humorous
that I was forced to laugh; and we went together to the drawing-room, where the coffee-cups and tray remained undisturbed as we had left them.
Poirot made me recapitulate the scene of the night before, listening very
carefully, and verifying the position of the various
cups.
“So Mrs. Cavendish stood by the tray—and poured
out. Yes. Then she came across to the
window where you sat with Mademoiselle Cynthia. Yes. Here are the three cups. And the cup on the
mantelpiece, half drunk, that would be Mr. Lawrence Cavendish’s. And the one on the tray?”
“John Cavendish’s. I saw him put it down there.”
“Good. One, two, three, four, five—but where, then, is the cup of Mr.
Inglethorp?”
“He does not take coffee.”
“Then all are accounted for. One moment,
my friend.”
With infinite care, he took a drop or two from the grounds in each cup, sealing them up in separate test tubes, tasting
each in turn as he did so. His physiognomy underwent a curious change. An expression gathered there that
I can only describe as half puzzled,
and half relieved.
“Bien!”
he said at last. “It is evident! I had an idea—but clearly I was mistaken. Yes, altogether I was mistaken.
Yet it is strange. But no matter!”
And, with a characteristic shrug, he dismissed
whatever it was that was worrying him
from his mind. I could have told him from the beginning that this obsession of his over the coffee was
bound to end in a blind alley, but I restrained
my tongue. After all, though he was old, Poirot had been a great man in his day.
“Breakfast is ready,”
said John Cavendish, coming in from the hall.
“You will breakfast with us, Monsieur
Poirot?”
Poirot acquiesced. I observed John. Already he was
almost restored to his normal self. The shock
of the events of the last night
had upset him temporarily, but his equable
poise soon swung back to the normal.
He was a man of very little
imagination, in sharp contrast with his brother,
who had, perhaps,
too much.
Ever since the early hours of the morning, John had
been hard at work, sending telegrams—one of the first had gone to Evelyn Howard—writing notices for the papers, and generally
occupying himself with the melancholy duties that a death entails.
“May I ask how things are proceeding?” he said. “Do
your investigations point to my
mother having died a natural death—or—or must we prepare ourselves for the worst?”
“I think, Mr. Cavendish,” said Poirot
gravely, “that you would do well not to buoy yourself up with any false hopes. Can you tell me the views of the other
members of the family?”
“My brother Lawrence
is convinced that we are making a fuss over nothing.
He says that everything points to its being a simple case of heart failure.”
“He does,
does he? That is very interesting—very interesting,” murmured Poirot softly.
“And Mrs. Cavendish?”
A faint cloud passed over John’s face.
“I have not the least idea what my wife’s views on the subject
are.”
The answer brought a momentary stiffness
in its train. John broke the rather
awkward silence by saying with a slight
effort:
“I told you, didn’t I, that Mr. Inglethorp has returned?” Poirot
bent his head.
“It’s an awkward
position for all of us. Of course
one has to treat him as usual
—but, hang it all, one’s gorge does rise at sitting
down to eat with a possible murderer!”
Poirot nodded sympathetically.
“I quite understand. It is a very difficult
situation for you, Mr. Cavendish. I would like to ask you one question. Mr. Inglethorp’s reason
for not returning last night was, I believe,
that he had forgotten the latch-key. Is not that so?”
“Yes.”
“I suppose
you are quite sure that the latch-key
was forgotten—that he did not take
it after all?”
“I have no idea. I never
thought of looking.
We always keep it in the hall drawer. I’ll go and see if it’s there now.”
Poirot held up his hand with a faint smile.
“No, no, Mr. Cavendish, it is too late now. I am certain that you would find it.
If Mr. Inglethorp did take it, he has had ample time to replace it by now.” “But do you think——”
“I think
nothing. If anyone had chanced
to look this morning before his return,
and seen it there, it would have been a valuable point
in his favour. That is all.”
John looked perplexed.
“Do not worry,” said Poirot smoothly.
“I assure you that you need not let it trouble you. Since you are so kind, let us go and have some breakfast.”
Everyone was assembled in the dining-room. Under the circumstances, we were naturally
not a cheerful party. The reaction after a shock is always trying,
and I think we were all suffering from it. Decorum
and good breeding naturally enjoined
that our demeanour should be much as usual, yet I could not help wondering
if this self-control were really a matter of great difficulty. There were no red eyes, no signs of secretly
indulged grief. I felt that I was right in my
opinion that Dorcas was the person most affected by the personal side of
the tragedy.
I pass over Alfred Inglethorp, who acted the
bereaved widower in a manner that I felt to be disgusting in its hypocrisy. Did he know that we suspected him, I wondered. Surely he could not be unaware
of the fact, conceal it as we would. Did he feel some secret stirring
of fear, or was he confident that his crime would go unpunished? Surely the suspicion in
the atmosphere must warn him that he was already
a marked man.
But did everyone
suspect him? What about Mrs. Cavendish? I watched her as she sat at the head of the table,
graceful, composed, enigmatic. In her soft grey frock, with white ruffles at the wrists falling over her slender
hands, she looked very beautiful.
When she chose, however, her face could be sphinx-like in its inscrutability. She was very silent, hardly opening her lips, and yet in some queer
way I felt that the great strength
of her personality was dominating us all.
And little Cynthia? Did she suspect? She looked
very tired and ill, I thought. The
heaviness and languor of her manner were very marked. I asked her if she were feeling ill, and she answered frankly:
“Yes, I’ve got the most beastly
headache.”
“Have another cup of coffee,
mademoiselle?” said Poirot
solicitously. “It will
revive you. It is unparalleled for the mal de tête.” He jumped up and took her cup.
“No sugar,” said Cynthia, watching him, as he picked
up the sugar-tongs. “No sugar?
You abandon it in the war-time, eh?”
“No, I never take it in coffee.”
“Sacré!” murmured Poirot to himself, as he brought
back the replenished cup.
Only I heard him, and glancing up curiously at the
little man I saw that his face was
working with suppressed excitement, and his eyes were as green as a cat’s. He had heard or seen something
that had affected
him strongly—but what was it? I do not usually
label myself as dense, but I must confess that nothing out of the ordinary had attracted my attention.
In another moment, the door opened and Dorcas appeared. “Mr. Wells to see you, sir,” she said to John.
I remembered the name as being that of the lawyer
to whom Mrs. Inglethorp had written
the night before.
John rose immediately.
“Show him into my study.” Then he turned to us. “My
mother’s lawyer,” he explained. And in a lower voice:
“He is also Coroner—you understand. Perhaps you would
like to come with me?”
We acquiesced and followed him out of the room. John strode
on ahead and I took the opportunity of whispering to Poirot:
“There will be an inquest
then?”
Poirot nodded absently. He seemed absorbed in
thought; so much so that my curiosity was aroused.
“What is it? You are not attending
to what I say.” “It is
true, my friend. I am much worried.” “Why?”
“Because Mademoiselle Cynthia does not take sugar in her coffee.”
“What? You cannot
be serious?”
“But I am most serious.
Ah, there is something there
that I do not understand.
My instinct was right.” “What instinct?”
“The instinct that led me to insist on examining
those coffee-cups. Chut! no more now!”
We followed John into his study, and he closed the door behind us.
Mr. Wells was a pleasant man of middle-age, with
keen eyes, and the typical lawyer’s
mouth. John introduced us both, and explained the reason of our presence.
“You
will understand, Wells,” he added, “that this is all strictly private. We are still hoping
that there will turn out to be no need for investigation of any kind.”
“Quite so, quite so,” said Mr. Wells soothingly. “I wish we could have spared you the pain and publicity of an
inquest, but of course it’s quite unavoidable in the absence of a doctor’s
certificate.”
“Yes, I suppose so.”
“Clever man, Bauerstein. Great authority on toxicology, I believe.”
“Indeed,” said John with a certain stiffness in his
manner. Then he added rather hesitatingly: “Shall we have to appear as witnesses—all of us, I mean?”
“You, of course—and ah—er—Mr.—er—Inglethorp.”
A slight pause ensued before the lawyer went on in his soothing manner:
“Any other evidence will be simply confirmatory, a mere matter
of form.” “I see.”
A
faint expression of relief swept over John’s face. It puzzled me, for I saw no occasion for it.
“If you know of nothing
to the contrary,” pursued Mr. Wells, “I had thought
of Friday. That will give us plenty
of time for the doctor’s
report. The post-mortem is to take place to-night,
I believe?”
“Yes.”
“Then that arrangement will suit you?” “Perfectly.”
“I need not tell you, my dear Cavendish, how distressed I am at this most tragic affair.”
“Can you give us no help in solving
it, monsieur?” interposed Poirot, speaking for the first time since we had entered the room.
“I?”
“Yes, we heard that Mrs. Inglethorp wrote to you last night. You should
have received the letter this morning.”
“I did, but it contains no information.
It is merely a note asking me to call upon her this morning,
as she wanted my advice on a matter of great importance.”
“She gave you no hint as to what that matter
might be?” “Unfortunately, no.”
“That is a pity,” said John.
“A great pity,” agreed Poirot gravely.
There was silence. Poirot remained lost in thought
for a few minutes. Finally he turned to the lawyer again.
“Mr. Wells, there is one thing I should
like to ask you—that is, if it is not against
professional etiquette. In the event of Mrs. Inglethorp’s death, who would inherit her money?”
The lawyer hesitated
a moment, and then replied:
“The knowledge will be public property very soon,
so if Mr. Cavendish does not object——”
“Not at all,” interpolated John.
“I do not see any reason why I should not answer
your question. By her last will,
dated August of last year, after various unimportant legacies to servants, etc., she gave her entire
fortune to her stepson, Mr. John Cavendish.”
“Was not that—pardon the question, Mr.
Cavendish—rather unfair to her other stepson,
Mr. Lawrence Cavendish?”
“No, I do not think so. You see, under the terms of
their father’s will, while John
inherited the property, Lawrence, at his stepmother’s death, would come into a considerable sum of money. Mrs.
Inglethorp left her money to her elder stepson,
knowing that he would have to keep up Styles. It was, to my mind, a very fair and equitable distribution.”
Poirot nodded thoughtfully.
“I see. But I am right in saying, am I not, that by
your English law that will was automatically revoked when Mrs. Inglethorp remarried?”
Mr. Wells bowed his head.
“As I was about to proceed, Monsieur Poirot, that
document is now null and void.”
“Hein!” said Poirot. He reflected for a moment, and then asked: “Was Mrs.
Inglethorp herself aware of that fact?” “I do not know. She may have been.”
“She was,” said John unexpectedly. “We were
discussing the matter of wills being revoked
by marriage only yesterday.”
“Ah! One more question, Mr. Wells. You say ‘her last will.’
Had Mrs.
Inglethorp, then, made several former wills?”
“On an average, she made a new will at least once a
year,” said Mr. Wells imperturbably.
“She was given to changing her mind as to her testamentary dispositions, now benefiting one, now another
member of her family.”
“Suppose,” suggested Poirot, “that,
unknown to you, she had made a new will in
favour of someone who was not, in any sense of the word, a member of the family—we
will say Miss Howard, for instance—would you be surprised?”
“Not in the least.”
“Ah!” Poirot seemed to have exhausted his questions.
I drew close to him, while John and the lawyer were
debating the question of going through
Mrs. Inglethorp’s papers.
“Do you think Mrs. Inglethorp made a will leaving all her money to Miss
Howard?” I asked in a low voice,
with some curiosity.
Poirot smiled. “No.”
“Then why did you ask?”
“Hush!”
John Cavendish had turned to Poirot.
“Will
you come with us, Monsieur Poirot? We are going through my mother’s papers.
Mr. Inglethorp is quite willing to leave it entirely to Mr. Wells and myself.”
“Which simplifies matters very much,” murmured the lawyer. “As technically, of course, he was entitled——” He did not finish the sentence.
“We will look through the desk in the boudoir
first,” explained John, “and go up
to her bedroom afterwards. She kept her most important papers in a purple despatch-case, which we must look through
carefully.”
“Yes,” said the lawyer, “it is quite possible that
there may be a later will than the one in my possession.”
“There is a later will.” It was Poirot who spoke. “What?” John and the lawyer looked
at him startled.
“Or, rather,” pursued my friend imperturbably, “there was one.” “What
do you mean—there was one? Where is it now?”
“Burnt!”
“Burnt?”
“Yes. See here.” He took out the charred fragment
we had found in the grate in Mrs.
Inglethorp’s room, and handed it to the lawyer with a brief explanation of when and where he had found it.
“But possibly this is an old will?”
“I do not think so. In fact I am almost certain
that it was made no earlier than yesterday afternoon.”
“What?” “Impossible!” broke
simultaneously from both men. Poirot turned to John.
“If you will allow me to send for your gardener,
I will prove it to you.” “Oh, of course—but I don’t see——”
Poirot raised his hand.
“Do as I ask you. Afterwards you shall question
as much as you please.”
“Very well.” He rang the bell.
Dorcas answered it in due course.
“Dorcas, will you tell Manning to come round and speak to me here.” “Yes,
sir.”
Dorcas withdrew.
We waited in a tense silence. Poirot alone seemed
perfectly at his ease, and dusted a forgotten corner
of the bookcase.
The clumping of hobnailed boots on the gravel outside
proclaimed the approach
of Manning. John looked questioningly at Poirot. The latter nodded.
“Come inside, Manning,” said John, “I want to speak to you.”
Manning came slowly
and hesitatingly through
the French window,
and stood as near it as he could. He held his cap
in his hands, twisting it very carefully round and round. His back was much bent,
though he was probably not as old as he looked, but his eyes were sharp
and intelligent, and belied his slow and rather cautious
speech.
“Manning,” said John, “this gentleman will put some questions to you which I want you to answer.”
“Yessir,” mumbled Manning.
Poirot stepped forward briskly. Manning’s eye swept
over him with a faint contempt.
“You were planting a bed of begonias
round by the south side of the house yesterday afternoon, were you not, Manning?”
“Yes, sir, me and Willum.”
“And Mrs. Inglethorp came to the window and called you, did she not?” “Yes,
sir, she did.”
“Tell me in your own words exactly what happened after
that.”
“Well, sir, nothing much. She just told Willum to
go on his bicycle down to the
village, and bring back a form of will, or such-like—I don’t know what exactly—she wrote it down for him.”
“Well?”
“Well, he did, sir.”
“And what happened next?”
“We went on with the begonias,
sir.”
“Did not Mrs. Inglethorp
call you again?” “Yes, sir, both me and Willum, she called.”
“And
then?”
“She made us come right in, and sign our names at the bottom
of a long paper
—under where she’d signed.”
“Did you see anything
of what was written above
her signature?” asked
Poirot sharply.
“No, sir, there was a bit of blotting
paper over that part.” “And you signed where she told you?”
“Yes,
sir, first me and then Willum.” “What
did she do with it afterwards?”
“Well, sir, she slipped
it into a long envelope,
and put it inside a sort of purple box that was standing on the desk.”
“What time was it when she first called
you?” “About four, I should say, sir.”
“Not earlier? Couldn’t it have been about half-past three?”
“No, I shouldn’t
say so, sir. It would
be more likely to be a bit after four—not
before it.”
“Thank you, Manning, that will do,” said Poirot pleasantly.
The gardener glanced
at his master, who nodded,
whereupon Manning lifted
a finger to his forehead
with a low mumble, and backed cautiously out of the window.
We all looked at each other.
“Good heavens!” murmured
John. “What an extraordinary coincidence.” “How—a coincidence?”
“That my mother should
have made a will on the very day of her death!”
Mr. Wells cleared
his throat and remarked drily:
“Are you so sure it is a coincidence, Cavendish?” “What do you mean?”
“Your mother,
you tell me, had a violent quarrel
with—someone yesterday afternoon——”
“What do
you mean?” cried John again. There was a tremor in his voice, and he had gone very pale.
“In consequence of that quarrel, your mother very
suddenly and hurriedly makes a new will. The contents
of that will we shall never know. She told no one of
its provisions. This morning, no doubt, she would have consulted me on the subject—but she had no chance. The will
disappears, and she takes its secret with
her to her grave. Cavendish, I much fear there is no coincidence there. Monsieur
Poirot, I am sure you agree with me that the facts are very suggestive.”
“Suggestive, or not,” interrupted John, “we are
most grateful to Monsieur Poirot for
elucidating the matter. But for him, we should never have known of this will. I suppose, I may not ask you,
monsieur, what first led you to suspect the fact?”
Poirot smiled and answered:
“A scribbled over old envelope, and a freshly planted bed of begonias.”
John, I think,
would have pressed
his questions further,
but at that moment the loud
purr of a motor was audible, and we all turned to the window as it swept past.
“Evie!” cried John. “Excuse me, Wells.” He went hurriedly out into the hall. Poirot
looked inquiringly at me.
“Miss Howard,” I explained.
“Ah, I am glad she has come. There is a woman with
a head and a heart too, Hastings. Though the good God gave her no beauty!”
I followed John’s example, and went out
into the hall, where Miss Howard was
endeavouring to extricate herself from the voluminous mass of veils that enveloped
her head. As her eyes fell on me, a sudden pang of guilt shot through
me. This was the woman who had warned me so earnestly, and to whose warning I had, alas, paid no heed! How
soon, and how contemptuously, I had dismissed it from my mind. Now that she had been proved justified
in so tragic a manner, I felt ashamed. She had known
Alfred Inglethorp only too well. I wondered
whether, if she had remained at Styles, the tragedy would have taken place,
or would the man have feared her watchful eyes?
I was relieved when she shook me by the hand, with
her well remembered painful grip. The
eyes that met mine were sad, but not reproachful; that she had been crying bitterly, I could tell by
the redness of her eyelids, but her manner was unchanged
from its old gruffness.
“Started the moment I got the wire. Just come off night duty. Hired car.
Quickest way to get here.”
“Have you had anything to eat this morning, Evie?”
asked John.
“No.”
“I thought not. Come along, breakfast’s not cleared
away yet, and they’ll make you some fresh tea.” He turned to me. “Look after her, Hastings, will you? Wells
is waiting for me. Oh, here’s Monsieur
Poirot. He’s helping
us, you know, Evie.”
Miss Howard shook hands with Poirot, but glanced
suspiciously over her shoulder at John.
“What do you mean—helping us?” “Helping us to investigate.”
“Nothing to investigate. Have they taken him to prison yet?” “Taken who to prison?”
“Who? Alfred Inglethorp, of course!”
“My dear Evie, do be careful. Lawrence
is of the opinion that my mother
died from heart seizure.”
“More fool, Lawrence!” retorted Miss
Howard. “Of course Alfred Inglethorp murdered poor Emily—as I always told you he would.”
“My dear Evie, don’t shout
so. Whatever we may think or suspect,
it is better to say as little as possible
for the present. The inquest
isn’t until Friday.”
“Not until fiddlesticks!” The snort
Miss Howard gave was truly magnificent. “You’re
all off your heads. The man will be out of the country by then. If he’s any sense, he won’t stay here tamely
and wait to be hanged.”
John Cavendish looked at her helplessly.
“I know what it is,” she accused him, “you’ve been
listening to the doctors. Never should.
What do they know? Nothing
at all—or just enough to make them
dangerous. I ought to know—my
own father was a doctor.
That little Wilkins
is about the greatest fool that even I have ever seen. Heart seizure!
Sort of thing he would say. Anyone with any sense could
see at once that her husband had poisoned her. I always
said he’d murder
her in her bed, poor soul. Now he’s done
it. And all you can do is to murmur silly things about ‘heart seizure’ and ‘inquest on Friday.’ You ought to be ashamed of yourself,
John Cavendish.”
“What do you want me to do?” asked John, unable to help a faint smile.
“Dash it all, Evie, I can’t
haul him down to the local police station by the scruff of his neck.”
“Well, you might do something. Find out how he did it. He’s a crafty
beggar.
Dare say he soaked fly papers.
Ask cook if she’s missed
any.”
It occurred to me very forcibly at that moment that
to harbour Miss Howard and Alfred
Inglethorp under the same roof, and keep the peace between them, was likely to prove a Herculean task, and I did not envy John. I could see by the expression of his face that he fully appreciated the difficulty of the position.
For the moment,
he sought refuge
in retreat, and left the room precipitately.
Dorcas brought in fresh tea. As she left the room,
Poirot came over from the window where he had been standing, and sat down facing Miss Howard.
“Mademoiselle,” he said gravely, “I want to ask you something.” “Ask away,” said the lady, eyeing him with some disfavour.
“I want to be able to count upon your help.”
“I’ll help you to hang Alfred with pleasure,” she
replied gruffly. “Hanging’s too good for him. Ought to be drawn
and quartered, like in good old times.”
“We are at one
then,” said Poirot, “for I, too, want to hang the criminal.” “Alfred Inglethorp?”
“Him, or another.”
“No question of another. Poor Emily was never murdered
until he came along.
I don’t say she wasn’t
surrounded by sharks—she was. But it was only her purse
they were after. Her life was safe enough. But along comes Mr. Alfred Inglethorp—and within
two months—hey presto!”
“Believe me, Miss Howard,” said Poirot very
earnestly, “if Mr. Inglethorp is the
man, he shall not escape me. On my honour, I will hang him as high as Haman!”
“That’s better,” said Miss Howard more enthusiastically.
“But I must ask you to trust
me. Now your help may be very valuable to me. I will tell you why. Because, in all this house of mourning, yours are the only eyes that have wept.”
Miss Howard blinked,
and a new note crept into the gruffness of her voice.
“If you mean that I was fond of her—yes, I was. You
know, Emily was a selfish old woman
in her way. She was very generous, but she always wanted a return. She never let people forget what
she had done for them—and, that way she
missed love. Don’t think she ever realized it, though, or felt the lack of it. Hope not, anyway. I was on a different
footing. I took my stand from the first. ‘So many pounds a year I’m worth to you. Well and good. But not a penny piece besides—not a pair of gloves, nor a
theatre ticket.’ She didn’t understand—was
very offended sometimes. Said I was foolishly proud. It wasn’t that—but
I couldn’t explain. Anyway, I kept my self-respect. And so, out of the whole
bunch, I was the only one who could allow myself to
be fond of her. I watched over her. I
guarded her from the lot of them, and then a glib-tongued scoundrel comes along, and pooh! all my years
of devotion go for nothing.”
Poirot nodded sympathetically.
“I understand, mademoiselle, I understand all you feel. It is most natural.
You think that we are lukewarm—that we lack fire and energy—but trust me, it is not so.”
John
stuck his head in at this juncture, and invited us both to come up to Mrs.
Inglethorp’s room, as he and Mr. Wells had finished
looking through the desk in the boudoir.
As we went up the stairs, John looked
back to the dining-room door, and lowered his voice confidentially:
“Look here, what’s going to happen when these two meet?”
I shook my head helplessly.
“I’ve told Mary to keep them apart if she can.”
“Will she be able to do so?”
“The Lord only knows. There’s one thing, Inglethorp himself won’t be too keen
on meeting her.”
“You’ve got the keys still, haven’t you, Poirot?” I asked, as we reached the door of the locked
room.
Taking the keys from Poirot, John unlocked it, and we all passed
in. The lawyer
went straight to the desk, and John followed him.
“My mother kept most of her important papers in this despatch-case, I believe,” he said.
Poirot drew out the small bunch of keys.
“Permit me. I locked
it, out of precaution, this morning.” “But it’s not locked now.”
“Impossible!”
“See.” And John lifted the lid as he spoke.
“Milles
tonnerres!” cried Poirot, dumbfounded. “And I—who have both the keys in my pocket!” He flung himself
upon the case. Suddenly he stiffened. “Eh voilà
une affaire! This
lock has been forced.”
“What?”
Poirot laid down the case again.
“But who forced it? Why should they? When? But the
door was locked?” These exclamations burst from us disjointedly.
Poirot answered them categorically—almost mechanically.
“Who? That is the question. Why? Ah, if I only
knew. When? Since I was here an hour
ago. As to the door being locked, it is a very ordinary lock. Probably
any other of the doorkeys
in this passage
would fit it.”
We stared at one another blankly.
Poirot had walked over to the mantelpiece.
He was outwardly calm, but I noticed his hands, which from long force of
habit were mechanically straightening the spill vases on the mantelpiece, were shaking violently.
“See here, it was like this,” he said at last. “There
was something in that case
—some piece of evidence, slight in itself perhaps,
but still enough of a clue to connect
the murderer with the crime. It was vital to him that it should be destroyed before it was discovered and its
significance appreciated. Therefore, he
took the risk, the great risk, of coming in here. Finding the case locked, he was obliged to force it, thus betraying
his presence. For him to take that risk, it must have been something of great importance.”
“But what was it?”
“Ah!” cried Poirot, with a gesture of anger. “That, I do not know! A document of some kind, without
doubt, possibly the scrap of paper Dorcas
saw in her hand yesterday afternoon. And I—” his anger
burst forth freely—“miserable animal that
I am! I guessed nothing! I have behaved like an imbecile! I should never have left that case here. I should have
carried it away with me. Ah, triple pig! And now it is gone. It is destroyed—but is it destroyed? Is there not yet a chance
—we
must leave no stone unturned—”
He rushed like a madman
from the room, and I followed him as soon as I had sufficiently recovered my wits. But, by
the time I had reached the top of the stairs, he was out of sight.
Mary
Cavendish was standing
where the staircase
branched, staring down into the hall in the direction in which he had disappeared.
“What
has happened to your extraordinary little friend, Mr. Hastings? He has just rushed past me like a mad bull.”
“He’s
rather upset about
something,” I remarked
feebly. I really
did not know
how much Poirot would wish me to disclose. As I saw a faint smile gather
on Mrs. Cavendish’s expressive mouth, I endeavoured to try and turn the conversation by saying: “They haven’t met yet, have they?”
“Who?”
“Mr. Inglethorp
and Miss Howard.”
She looked at me in rather a disconcerting manner.
“Do you think it would be such a disaster if they did meet?” “Well,
don’t you?” I said, rather
taken aback.
“No.” She was smiling in her quiet way. “I should like to see a good flare up. It
would clear the air. At present we are all thinking so much, and saying so little.”
“John doesn’t think so,” I remarked. “He’s anxious to keep them apart.”
“Oh, John!”
Something in her tone fired me, and I blurted
out:
“Old John’s an awfully good sort.”
She studied
me curiously for a minute
or two, and then said,
to my great surprise:
“You are loyal to your friend.
I like you for that.”
“Aren’t you my friend too?”
“I am a very bad friend.”
“Why do you say that?”
“Because it is true. I am charming
to my friends one day, and forget
all about them
the next.”
I don’t know what impelled
me, but I was nettled,
and I said foolishly and not in the best of taste:
“Yet you seem to be invariably charming to Dr. Bauerstein!”
Instantly I regretted my words. Her face stiffened.
I had the impression of a steel curtain
coming down and blotting out the real woman. Without
a word, she turned and went swiftly
up the stairs, whilst I stood like an idiot gaping after her.
I was recalled
to other matters
by a frightful row going on below.
I could hear Poirot shouting
and expounding. I was vexed to think that my diplomacy had been in vain. The little man appeared to
be taking the whole house into his confidence, a proceeding of which I, for one, doubted the wisdom. Once again I could
not help regretting that my friend was so prone to lose his head in moments of excitement. I stepped briskly
down the stairs. The sight of me calmed Poirot
almost immediately. I drew him aside.
“My dear fellow,”
I said, “is this wise? Surely you don’t want the whole house
to know of this occurrence? You are actually
playing into the criminal’s hands.”
“You
think so, Hastings?”
“I am sure of it.”
“Well, well, my friend, I will be guided by you.”
“Good. Although, unfortunately, it is a little too late now.” “Sure.”
He looked
so crestfallen and abashed that I felt quite sorry, though I still thought
my rebuke a just and wise one.
“Well,” he said at last, “let us go, mon ami.” “You
have finished here?”
“For the moment, yes. You will walk back with me to the village?”
“Willingly.”
He picked up his little
suit-case, and we went out through the open window
in the drawing-room. Cynthia Murdoch was just coming
in, and Poirot stood aside
to let her pass.
“Excuse me, mademoiselle, one minute.” “Yes?” she turned inquiringly.
“Did you ever make up Mrs. Inglethorp’s medicines?”
A slight flush rose in her face, as she answered rather constrainedly: “No.”
“Only her powders?”
The flush deepened as Cynthia replied:
“Oh, yes, I did make up some sleeping
powders for her once.” “These?”
Poirot produced the empty box which had contained powders. She nodded.
“Can you tell me what they were? Sulphonal? Veronal?” “No, they were bromide powders.”
“Ah! Thank you, mademoiselle; good morning.”
As we walked briskly away from the house, I glanced at him more than once.
I had often before noticed that, if anything excited him, his eyes
turned green like a cat’s. They were shining
like emeralds now.
“My friend,” he broke out at last, “I have a little
idea, a very strange, and
probably utterly impossible idea. And yet—it fits in.”
I shrugged my shoulders. I privately thought that
Poirot was rather too much given to
these fantastic ideas. In this case, surely, the truth was only too plain and apparent.
“So that is the explanation of the blank label on
the box,” I remarked. “Very simple, as you said. I really wonder that I did not think
of it myself.”
Poirot did not appear to be listening
to me.
“They have made one more discovery, là-bas,” he observed, jerking his thumb over his shoulder in the direction of Styles. “Mr. Wells told me as we were going upstairs.”
“What was it?”
“Locked up in the desk in the boudoir, they found a will of Mrs. Inglethorp’s, dated before her marriage, leaving
her fortune to Alfred Inglethorp. It must have
been made just at the time they were engaged. It came quite as a
surprise to Wells—and to John
Cavendish also. It was written on one of those printed will forms, and witnessed by two of the servants—not Dorcas.”
“Did Mr.
Inglethorp know of it?” “He says not.”
“One might take that with a grain of salt,” I
remarked sceptically. “All these wills are very confusing. Tell me, how did those scribbled words on the envelope help you to discover that a will was made yesterday afternoon?”
Poirot smiled.
“Mon ami,
have you ever, when writing
a letter, been arrested by the fact that you did not know how to spell
a certain word?”
“Yes, often. I suppose everyone has.”
“Exactly. And have you not, in such a case, tried
the word once or twice on the edge of the blotting-paper, or a spare scrap of paper, to see if it looked right? Well,
that is what Mrs. Inglethorp did. You will notice that the word ‘possessed’ is spelt first with one ‘s’ and
subsequently with two—correctly. To make sure,
she had further tried it in a
sentence, thus: ‘I am possessed.’ Now, what did that tell me? It told me that Mrs. Inglethorp had been writing the
word ‘possessed’ that afternoon, and,
having the fragment of paper found in the grate fresh in my mind,
the possibility of a will—(a
document almost certain
to contain that word)
—occurred to me at once. This possibility was confirmed by a further
circumstance. In the general confusion, the boudoir had not been swept
that morning, and near the desk were several traces of brown mould and earth. The
weather had been perfectly fine for some days, and
no ordinary boots would have left such a heavy deposit.
“I strolled to the window, and saw at once that the
begonia beds had been newly planted.
The mould in the beds was exactly similar to that on the floor of the boudoir, and also I learnt from you
that they had been planted yesterday afternoon. I was now sure that one, or possibly both of the gardeners—for there
were two sets of footprints in the bed—had entered the boudoir, for if
Mrs. Inglethorp had merely wished
to speak to them she would in all probability have stood at the
window, and they would not have come into the room at all. I was now quite convinced that she had made a fresh
will, and had called the two gardeners
in to witness her signature. Events proved that I was right in my supposition.”
“That was very ingenious,” I could not help
admitting. “I must confess that the conclusions I drew from those few scribbled words were quite
erroneous.”
He smiled.
“You gave too much rein to your imagination.
Imagination is a good servant, and a bad master.
The simplest explanation is always the most likely.”
“Another point—how did you know that
the key of the despatch-case had been lost?”
“I did not know it. It was a guess that
turned out to be correct. You observed that
it had a piece of twisted wire through the handle. That suggested to me at once that it had possibly been wrenched
off a flimsy key-ring. Now, if it had been
lost and recovered, Mrs. Inglethorp would at once have replaced it on her bunch; but on her bunch I found what was obviously the duplicate key, very new and
bright, which led me to the hypothesis that somebody else had inserted the original
key in the lock of the despatch-case.”
“Yes,” I said,
“Alfred Inglethorp, without doubt.” Poirot looked at me curiously.
“You are very sure of his guilt?”
“Well,
naturally. Every fresh circumstance seems to establish it more clearly.” “On the contrary,” said Poirot quietly, “there are several points in his favour.” “Oh, come now!”
“Yes.”
“I see only one.” “And that?”
“That he was not in the house
last night.”
“‘Bad shot!’ as you English say! You have chosen
the one point that to my mind tells
against him.”
“How is that?”
“Because if Mr. Inglethorp knew that his wife would
be poisoned last night, he would
certainly have arranged
to be away from the house. His excuse was an obviously trumped up one. That leaves
us two possibilities: either he knew what
was going to happen or he had a reason
of his own for his absence.”
“And that reason?” I asked sceptically. Poirot shrugged his shoulders.
“How should I know? Discreditable, without doubt.
This Mr. Inglethorp, I should say, is somewhat
of a scoundrel—but that does not of necessity make him a murderer.”
I shook my head, unconvinced.
“We do not agree, eh?” said Poirot. “Well, let us
leave it. Time will show which of us
is right. Now let us turn to other aspects of the case. What do you make of the fact that all the doors of the bedroom
were bolted on the inside?”
“Well——” I considered. “One must look at it logically.” “True.”
“I should put it this way. The doors were bolted—our own eyes have told us that—yet the presence of the candle grease
on the floor, and the destruction of the
will, prove that during the night someone entered the room. You agree so far?”
“Perfectly. Put with admirable
clearness. Proceed.”
“Well,” I said, encouraged, “as the person who
entered did not do so by the window,
nor by miraculous means, it follows that the door must have been opened from inside by Mrs. Inglethorp
herself. That strengthens the conviction that
the person in question was her husband. She would naturally open the door to her own husband.”
Poirot shook his head.
“Why should she? She had bolted the door leading
into his room—a most unusual
proceeding on her part—she had had a most violent quarrel with him that very afternoon. No, he was the last person she would admit.”
“But you agree with me that the door must have been opened by Mrs.
Inglethorp herself?”
“There is another
possibility. She may have forgotten to bolt the door into the passage when she went to bed, and have
got up later, towards morning, and bolted it then.”
“Poirot, is that seriously your opinion?”
“No, I do not say it is so, but it might
be. Now, to turn to another feature,
what do you make of the scrap of conversation you overheard between
Mrs. Cavendish and her mother-in-law?”
“I had forgotten that,” I said
thoughtfully. “That is as enigmatical as ever. It seems incredible that a woman like Mrs. Cavendish, proud and
reticent to the last degree,
should interfere so violently in what was certainly not her affair.”
“Precisely. It was an astonishing thing for a woman of her breeding
to do.”
“It is certainly curious,” I agreed. “Still, it is
unimportant, and need not be taken into account.”
A groan burst from Poirot.
“What have I always told you? Everything must be
taken into account. If the fact will not fit the theory—let the theory go.”
“Well, we shall see,” I said, nettled. “Yes, we shall see.”
We
had reached Leastways Cottage, and Poirot ushered me upstairs to his own room. He
offered me one of the tiny Russian cigarettes he himself occasionally smoked. I was amused to notice that he
stowed away the used matches most carefully in a little china pot. My momentary annoyance vanished.
Poirot had placed our two chairs in front of the open window which commanded
a view of the village street. The fresh air blew in warm and pleasant.
It was going to be a hot day.
Suddenly my attention was arrested by a
weedy looking young man rushing down
the street at a great pace. It was the expression on his face that was extraordinary—a curious mingling of terror and agitation.
“Look, Poirot!” I said. He leant forward.
“Tiens!”
he said. “It is Mr. Mace, from the chemist’s shop. He is coming here.”
The young man came to a halt before Leastways Cottage,
and, after hesitating a moment, pounded
vigorously at the door.
“A little minute,” cried Poirot from the window.
“I come.”
Motioning to me to follow him, he ran swiftly down the stairs and opened the door.
Mr. Mace began at once.
“Oh, Mr. Poirot, I’m sorry for the inconvenience, but I heard that you’d just come back from the Hall?”
“Yes, we have.”
The young man moistened his dry lips. His face was working
curiously.
“It’s all over the village about old Mrs. Inglethorp dying so suddenly.
They do say—” he lowered
his voice cautiously—“that it’s poison?”
Poirot’s face remained
quite impassive. “Only the doctors
can tell us that, Mr. Mace.”
“Yes, exactly—of course——”
The young man hesitated, and then his agitation
was too much for him. He clutched Poirot by the arm, and sank his voice to a whisper: “Just tell me this,
Mr. Poirot, it isn’t—it isn’t strychnine, is
it?”
I hardly heard what Poirot replied. Something
evidently of a non-committal nature.
The young man departed, and as he closed the door Poirot’s eyes met mine.
“Yes,” he said, nodding gravely. “He
will have evidence to give at the inquest.”
We went slowly upstairs again. I was
opening my lips, when Poirot stopped me with a gesture
of his hand.
“Not now, not now, mon ami. I have need of reflection. My mind is in some disorder—which is not well.”
For about ten minutes he sat in dead silence,
perfectly still, except
for several expressive motions of his eyebrows, and
all the time his eyes grew steadily greener. At last he heaved a deep sigh.
“It is well. The bad moment has passed.
Now all is arranged and classified. One
must never permit confusion. The case is not clear yet—no. For it is of the most complicated! It puzzles me. Me,
Hercule Poirot! There are two facts of significance.”
“And what are they?”
“The first is the state of the weather yesterday.
That is very important.” “But it was a glorious day!” I interrupted. “Poirot, you’re pulling
my leg!”
“Not at all. The thermometer registered 80 degrees
in the shade. Do not forget that, my friend.
It is the key to the whole riddle!”
“And the second
point?” I asked.
“The important fact that Monsieur
Inglethorp wears very peculiar clothes,
has a black beard, and uses glasses.”
“Poirot, I cannot believe you are serious.” “I am absolutely serious, my friend.” “But this is childish!”
“No, it is very momentous.”
“And supposing the Coroner’s jury returns a verdict of Wilful Murder
against Alfred Inglethorp. What becomes of your theories,
then?”
“They
would not be shaken because
twelve stupid men had happened
to make a mistake! But that will not occur.
For one thing, a country
jury is not anxious to take
responsibility upon itself, and Mr. Inglethorp stands practically in the position
of local squire.
Also,” he added placidly, “I should not allow it!”
“You would not allow it?” “No.”
I looked at the extraordinary little man, divided
between annoyance and amusement. He
was so tremendously sure of himself. As though he read my thoughts,
he nodded gently.
“Oh,
yes, mon ami, I would do what I say.” He got up and laid his hand on my shoulder.
His physiognomy underwent a complete change. Tears came into his eyes. “In all this, you see, I think of
that poor Mrs. Inglethorp who is dead. She
was not extravagantly loved—no. But she was very good to us Belgians—I owe her a debt.”
I endeavoured to interrupt, but Poirot swept
on.
“Let me tell you this, Hastings. She would never
forgive me if I let Alfred Inglethorp,
her husband, be arrested now—when a
word from me could save him!”
CHAPTER VI. THE INQUEST
In the interval before the inquest, Poirot
was unfailing in his activity. Twice he was closeted with Mr. Wells. He also
took long walks into the country. I rather
resented his not taking me into his confidence, the more so as I could
not in the least guess what he was driving
at.
It occurred to me that he might have been making
inquiries at Raikes’s farm; so, finding
him out when I called at Leastways Cottage on Wednesday
evening, I walked over there by the fields, hoping
to meet him. But there was no sign of him, and I hesitated to go right
up to the farm itself.
As I walked away, I met an aged rustic,
who leered at me cunningly.
“You’m from the Hall, bain’t you?” he asked.
“Yes. I’m looking
for a friend of mine whom I thought might have walked this way.”
“A little chap? As waves his hands when
he talks? One of them Belgies from the village?”
“Yes,” I said eagerly. “He has been here, then?”
“Oh, ay, he’s been here,
right enough. More’n
once too. Friend
of yours, is he? Ah, you gentlemen from the Hall—you’m a
pretty lot!” And he leered more jocosely than ever.
“Why, do the gentlemen from the Hall come here often?” I asked, as carelessly as I could.
He winked at me knowingly.
“One does, mister. Naming no names, mind. And a very liberal gentleman too!
Oh, thank you, sir, I’m sure.”
I walked on sharply. Evelyn
Howard had been right then, and I experienced a sharp
twinge of disgust, as I thought of Alfred Inglethorp’s liberality with another woman’s money. Had that piquant
gipsy face been at the bottom of the crime, or was it the baser mainspring of money? Probably
a judicious mixture
of both.
On one point, Poirot seemed to have a curious
obsession. He once or twice observed
to me that he thought Dorcas must have made an error in fixing the time of the quarrel. He suggested to her repeatedly that it was four-thirty, and not four
o’clock when she had heard the voices.
But
Dorcas was unshaken. Quite an hour, or even more, had elapsed between
the time when she had heard the voices and five o’clock,
when she had taken tea to her mistress.
The inquest was held on Friday at the Stylites
Arms in the village. Poirot and I sat together, not being required
to give evidence.
The preliminaries were gone through. The jury
viewed the body, and John Cavendish gave evidence of identification.
Further questioned, he described his
awakening in the early hours of the morning, and the circumstances of his mother’s
death.
The
medical evidence was next taken.
There was a breathless hush,
and every eye was fixed on the famous London specialist, who was known to be one of the greatest authorities of the day on the subject
of toxicology.
In a few brief words,
he summed up the result
of the post-mortem. Shorn of its medical
phraseology and technicalities, it amounted to the fact that Mrs. Inglethorp had met her death as the result of strychnine poisoning. Judging from the
quantity recovered, she must have taken not less than three-quarters of a grain of strychnine, but probably one grain or slightly over.
“Is it possible that she could have swallowed the
poison by accident?” asked the Coroner.
“I should consider it very unlikely. Strychnine is
not used for domestic purposes, as some poisons
are, and there
are restrictions placed on its sale.”
“Does anything in your examination lead
you to determine how the poison was administered?”
“No.”
“You arrived at Styles before Dr. Wilkins, I believe?”
“That is so. The motor met me just outside the lodge gates, and I hurried there
as fast as I could.”
“Will you relate
to us exactly what happened
next?”
“I entered
Mrs. Inglethorp’s room. She was at that moment in a typical
tetanic convulsion. She turned towards
me, and gasped out: ‘Alfred—Alfred——’”
“Could the strychnine have been administered in Mrs. Inglethorp’s after-
dinner coffee which was taken to her by her husband?”
“Possibly, but strychnine is a fairly rapid drug in
its action. The symptoms appear from
one to two hours after it has been swallowed. It is retarded under certain conditions, none of which,
however, appear to have been present in this
case. I presume
Mrs. Inglethorp took the coffee
after dinner about eight o’clock,
whereas the symptoms did not manifest themselves until the early hours
of the morning, which, on the face of
it, points to the drug having been taken much
later in the evening.”
“Mrs. Inglethorp was in the habit of drinking a cup
of cocoa in the middle of the night. Could the strychnine have been administered in that?”
“No,
I myself took a sample of the cocoa remaining
in the saucepan and had it analysed. There was no strychnine present.”
I heard Poirot chuckle softly beside
me. “How did you know?” I
whispered. “Listen.”
“I should
say”—the doctor was continuing—“that I would have been considerably surprised at any other result.”
“Why?”
“Simply because strychnine has an unusually bitter taste. It can be detected in a
solution of one in seventy thousand, and can only be disguised by some strongly
flavoured substance. Cocoa would be quite powerless
to mask it.”
One of the jury wanted
to know if the same objection applied
to coffee.
“No. Coffee has a bitter
taste of its own which
would probably cover the taste
of strychnine.”
“Then you consider it more likely that the drug was
administered in the coffee, but that for some unknown
reason its action
was delayed.”
“Yes, but, the cup being completely
smashed, there is no possibility of analyzing its contents.”
This concluded Dr. Bauerstein’s
evidence. Dr. Wilkins corroborated it on all
points. Sounded as to the possibility of suicide, he repudiated it
utterly. The deceased, he said,
suffered from a weak heart, but otherwise enjoyed perfect health,
and was of a cheerful
and well-balanced disposition. She would be one of the last people to take her own life.
Lawrence Cavendish was next called. His evidence
was quite unimportant, being a mere repetition of that of his brother.
Just as he was about to step down,
he paused, and said rather hesitatingly:
“I should like to make a suggestion if I may?”
He glanced deprecatingly at the Coroner, who replied briskly:
“Certainly, Mr. Cavendish, we are here to arrive
at the truth of this matter, and welcome anything
that may lead to further
elucidation.”
“It is just an idea of mine,” explained
Lawrence. “Of course I may be quite wrong, but it still seems to me that my mother’s
death might be accounted for by natural
means.”
“How do you make that out, Mr. Cavendish?”
“My mother, at the time of her death, and for some time before
it, was taking a tonic containing strychnine.”
“Ah!” said the Coroner.
The jury looked up, interested.
“I believe,” continued Lawrence, “that there have
been cases where the cumulative
effect of a drug, administered for some time, has ended by causing death. Also, is it not possible that she
may have taken an overdose of her medicine by accident?”
“This is the first we have heard of the deceased
taking strychnine at the time of her death. We are much obliged to you, Mr. Cavendish.”
Dr. Wilkins was recalled and ridiculed the idea.
“What Mr. Cavendish suggests is quite impossible. Any doctor would tell you the
same. Strychnine is, in a certain sense, a cumulative poison, but it would be quite
impossible for it to result
in sudden death in this way. There would have to be a long period of chronic symptoms
which would at once have attracted my attention. The whole thing is absurd.”
“And the second suggestion? That Mrs. Inglethorp
may have inadvertently taken an overdose?”
“Three, or even four doses, would not have resulted in death. Mrs. Inglethorp always had an extra large amount of
medicine made up at a time, as she dealt with Coot’s,
the Cash Chemists
in Tadminster. She would have had to take very nearly the whole bottle
to account for the amount of strychnine found at the post- mortem.”
“Then you consider that we may dismiss the tonic as
not being in any way instrumental in causing her death?”
“Certainly. The supposition is ridiculous.”
The same juryman
who had interrupted before here suggested that the chemist
who made up the medicine
might have committed
an error.
“That, of course, is always possible,” replied the doctor.
But Dorcas, who was the next witness called,
dispelled even that possibility. The medicine
had not been newly made up. On the contrary,
Mrs. Inglethorp had taken the last dose on the day of her death.
So the question
of the tonic was finally
abandoned, and the Coroner proceeded
with his task. Having elicited
from Dorcas how she had been awakened by the violent ringing of her
mistress’s bell, and had subsequently roused
the household, he passed to the subject of the quarrel on the preceding afternoon.
Dorcas’s evidence on this point was substantially
what Poirot and I had already heard,
so I will not repeat it here.
The next witness
was Mary Cavendish. She stood very upright, and spoke in a low, clear, and perfectly composed
voice. In answer to the Coroner’s question, she told how, her alarm clock having aroused
her at four-thirty as usual,
she was dressing, when she was startled by the sound of something
heavy falling.
“That would have been the table by the bed?” commented the Coroner.
“I opened my door,” continued Mary, “and listened.
In a few minutes a bell rang
violently. Dorcas came running down and woke my husband, and we all went to my mother-in-law’s room,
but it was locked——”
The Coroner interrupted her.
“I really do not think we need trouble you further
on that point. We know all that can be known of the subsequent happenings. But I should be obliged
if you would tell us all you overheard of the quarrel
the day before.”
“I?”
There was a faint insolence
in her voice. She raised
her hand and adjusted the ruffle
of lace at her neck, turning her head a little as she did so. And quite spontaneously the thought flashed
across my mind:
“She is gaining time!”
“Yes. I understand,” continued the Coroner deliberately, “that you were sitting reading
on the bench just outside
the long window
of the boudoir. That is so, is it not?”
This was news to me and glancing sideways at
Poirot, I fancied that it was news to him as well.
There was the faintest pause, the mere
hesitation of a moment, before she answered:
“Yes, that is so.”
“And the boudoir window was
open, was it not?” Surely her face grew a little
paler as she answered:
“Yes.”
“Then you cannot
have failed to hear the voices inside,
especially as they were raised in anger. In fact, they would be
more audible where you were than in the hall.”
“Possibly.”
“Will you repeat to us what you overheard of the quarrel?”
“I really do not remember
hearing anything.”
“Do you mean to say you did not hear voices?”
“Oh,
yes, I heard the voices, but I did not hear what they said.” A faint spot of colour
came into her cheek. “I am not in the habit of listening to private conversations.”
The Coroner persisted.
“And you remember nothing at all? Nothing, Mrs. Cavendish? Not one stray word or phrase
to make you realize that it was a
private conversation?”
She paused, and seemed to reflect, still outwardly as calm as ever.
“Yes; I remember. Mrs. Inglethorp said something—I do not remember exactly what—about causing
scandal between husband
and wife.”
“Ah!” the Coroner leant back satisfied.
“That corresponds with what Dorcas heard.
But excuse me, Mrs. Cavendish, although you realized it was a private conversation, you did not move away?
You remained where you were?”
I caught the momentary gleam of her tawny
eyes as she raised them. I felt certain
that at that moment she would willingly have torn the little lawyer, with his insinuations, into pieces, but she replied
quietly enough:
“No. I was very comfortable where I was. I fixed my mind on my book.” “And
that is all you can tell us?”
“That is all.”
The examination was over, though I doubted if the
Coroner was entirely satisfied with it. I think he suspected that Mary Cavendish could tell more if she chose.
Amy Hill, shop assistant, was next called, and
deposed to having sold a will form on the afternoon of the 17th to William
Earl, under-gardener at Styles.
William Earl and Manning succeeded
her, and testified
to witnessing a document.
Manning fixed the time at about four-thirty, William was of the opinion
that it was rather earlier.
Cynthia Murdoch came next. She had,
however, little to tell. She had known nothing of the tragedy,
until awakened by Mrs. Cavendish.
“You did not
hear the table fall?” “No. I was fast asleep.”
The Coroner smiled.
“A good conscience makes a sound sleeper,” he
observed. “Thank you, Miss Murdoch, that is all.”
“Miss Howard.”
Miss Howard produced the letter written to her by
Mrs. Inglethorp on the evening of the 17th. Poirot and I had, of course
already seen it. It added nothing to our knowledge of the tragedy.
The following is a facsimile:
STYLES COURT ESSEX
hand written note:
July 17th
My dear Evelyn Can we not bury the hachet? I have
found it hard to forgive the things you said against my dear husband but I am an old woman & very fond of you Yours affectionately, Emily Inglethorpe
It was handed to the jury who scrutinized it attentively.
“I fear it does not help us much,” said the Coroner, with a sigh. “There is no mention
of any of the events
of that afternoon.”
“Plain as a pikestaff
to me,” said Miss Howard shortly. “It shows clearly
enough that my poor old friend had just found out she’d
been made a fool of!”
“It says nothing
of the kind in the letter,” the Coroner pointed
out.
“No, because Emily never could bear to put herself
in the wrong. But I know her. She wanted me back. But she wasn’t
going to own that I’d been right. She went round about. Most people do. Don’t believe
in it myself.”
Mr. Wells smiled faintly. So, I
noticed, did several of the jury. Miss Howard
was obviously quite a public character.
“Anyway, all this tomfoolery is a great
waste of time,” continued the lady, glancing
up and down the jury disparagingly. “Talk—talk—talk! When all the time we know perfectly well——”
The Coroner interrupted her in an agony of apprehension: “Thank you, Miss Howard, that is all.”
I fancy he breathed
a sigh of relief when she complied.
Then came the sensation of the day. The Coroner
called Albert Mace,
chemist’s assistant.
It was our agitated young man of the
pale face. In answer to the Coroner’s questions, he explained that he was a qualified pharmacist, but had only recently
come to this particular shop, as the assistant formerly there had just
been called up for the army.
These preliminaries completed, the Coroner proceeded to business.
“Mr. Mace, have you lately sold strychnine
to any unauthorized person?” “Yes, sir.”
“When was this?” “Last Monday night.”
“Monday? Not Tuesday?” “No, sir, Monday, the 16th.”
“Will you tell us to whom you sold it?” You could have heard a pin drop.
“Yes, sir. It was to Mr. Inglethorp.”
Every eye turned simultaneously to where Alfred
Inglethorp was sitting, impassive and
wooden. He started slightly, as the damning words fell from the young man’s lips. I half thought he was
going to rise from his chair, but he remained
seated, although a remarkably well acted expression of astonishment rose on his face.
“You are sure of
what you say?” asked the Coroner sternly. “Quite sure, sir.”
“Are you in the habit of selling strychnine indiscriminately
over the counter?” The wretched young man wilted
visibly under the Coroner’s frown.
“Oh, no, sir—of course not. But, seeing it was Mr.
Inglethorp of the Hall, I thought there was no harm in it. He said it was to poison a dog.”
Inwardly I sympathized. It was only
human nature to endeavour to please “The
Hall”—especially when it might result in custom being transferred from Coot’s to the local establishment.
“Is it not customary for anyone purchasing poison to sign a book?”
“Yes, sir, Mr. Inglethorp did so.”
“Have you got the book here?”
“Yes, sir.”
It was produced; and, with a few words of stern censure, the Coroner dismissed the wretched Mr. Mace.
Then, amidst
a breathless silence,
Alfred Inglethorp was called. Did he realize, I wondered, how closely the halter was being drawn around his neck?
The Coroner went straight to the point.
“On Monday
evening last, did you purchase
strychnine for the purpose of poisoning a dog?”
Inglethorp replied
with perfect calmness:
“No, I did not. There is no dog at Styles, except an outdoor sheepdog,
which is in perfect health.”
“You deny absolutely having
purchased strychnine from Albert Mace on Monday
last?”
“I do.”
“Do you also deny this?”
The Coroner handed him the
register in which his signature was inscribed.
“Certainly I do. The hand-writing is quite different
from mine. I will show
you.”
He took an
old envelope out of his pocket, and wrote his name on it, handing it to the jury. It was certainly utterly dissimilar.
“Then what is your explanation of Mr. Mace’s statement?” Alfred Inglethorp replied imperturbably:
“Mr. Mace must have been mistaken.”
The Coroner hesitated for a moment,
and then said:
“Mr. Inglethorp, as a mere matter of form, would you mind telling us where you were on the evening
of Monday, July 16th?”
“Really—I cannot remember.”
“That is absurd,
Mr. Inglethorp,” said the Coroner
sharply. “Think again.”
Inglethorp shook his head.
“I cannot tell you. I have an idea that I was out walking.” “In what direction?”
“I really can’t remember.”
The Coroner’s face grew
graver. “Were you in company with anyone?”
“No.”
“Did you meet anyone
on your walk?”
“No.”
“That is a pity,” said the Coroner dryly. “I am to
take it then that you decline to
say where you were at the time that Mr. Mace positively recognized you as entering
the shop to purchase strychnine?”
“If you like to take it that way, yes.” “Be careful, Mr. Inglethorp.”
Poirot was fidgeting nervously.
“Sacré!” he murmured. “Does this imbecile
of a man want to be arrested?”
Inglethorp was indeed
creating a bad impression. His futile denials
would not have
convinced a child.
The Coroner, however,
passed briskly to the next point, and Poirot drew a deep breath of relief.
“You had a discussion
with your wife on Tuesday afternoon?”
“Pardon me,” interrupted Alfred Inglethorp, “you
have been misinformed. I had no
quarrel with my dear wife. The whole story is absolutely untrue. I was absent
from the house the entire
afternoon.”
“Have you anyone who can
testify to that?” “You have my word,” said Inglethorp
haughtily. The Coroner did not trouble
to reply.
“There are two witnesses
who will swear to having heard your disagreement with Mrs. Inglethorp.”
“Those witnesses
were mistaken.”
I was puzzled.
The man spoke with such quiet assurance
that I was staggered. I looked at Poirot. There was an expression
of exultation on his face which I could not understand. Was he at last convinced
of Alfred Inglethorp’s guilt?
“Mr.
Inglethorp,” said the Coroner, “you have heard your wife’s
dying words repeated
here. Can you explain them in any way?”
“Certainly I can.” “You can?”
“It seems to me very simple. The room was dimly
lighted. Dr. Bauerstein is much of my
height and build, and, like me, wears a beard. In the dim light, and suffering as she was, my poor wife mistook
him for me.”
“Ah!” murmured
Poirot to himself.
“But it is an idea, that!” “You think it is true?”
I whispered.
“I do not say that.
But it is truly an ingenious supposition.”
“You read my wife’s last words as an accusation”—Inglethorp was continuing
—“they were,
on the contrary, an appeal
to me.” The Coroner reflected a moment, then he said:
“I believe, Mr. Inglethorp, that you yourself
poured out the coffee, and took it to your wife that evening?”
“I poured it out, yes. But I did not
take it to her. I meant to do so, but I was told that a friend
was at the hall door, so I laid down the coffee
on the hall table. When I came through the hall again
a few minutes later, it was gone.”
This statement might, or might not, be
true, but it did not seem to me to improve
matters much for Inglethorp. In any case, he had had ample time to introduce
the poison.
At that point, Poirot nudged me gently, indicating
two men who were sitting together
near the door. One was a little, sharp, dark, ferret-faced man, the other was tall and fair.
I questioned Poirot mutely. He put his lips to my ear. “Do you know who that little man is?”
I shook my head.
“That is Detective Inspector
James Japp of Scotland Yard—Jimmy Japp. The other
man is from Scotland Yard too. Things
are moving quickly,
my friend.”
I stared at the two men intently. There was certainly nothing of the policeman about
them. I should
never have suspected
them of being official personages.
I was still staring, when I was startled and recalled by the verdict
being given:
“Wilful Murder against some person or persons unknown.”
CHAPTER VII. POIROT PAYS
HIS DEBTS
As we came out of the Stylites Arms, Poirot drew me
aside by a gentle pressure of the
arm. I understood his object. He was waiting for the Scotland Yard men.
In a few moments, they emerged, and Poirot at once
stepped forward, and accosted the shorter of the two.
“I fear you do not remember
me, Inspector Japp.”
“Why, if it isn’t Mr. Poirot!” cried the Inspector.
He turned to the other man. “You’ve heard me speak of Mr. Poirot? It was in 1904 he and I worked together
—the Abercrombie forgery
case—you remember, he was run down in Brussels. Ah, those were great days, moosier.
Then, do you remember ‘Baron’ Altara? There
was a pretty rogue for you! He eluded the clutches of half the police in Europe.
But we nailed him in Antwerp—thanks to Mr. Poirot
here.”
As these friendly reminiscences were being indulged
in, I drew nearer, and was introduced to Detective-Inspector Japp, who, in his turn,
introduced us both
to his companion, Superintendent Summerhaye.
“I need hardly ask what you are doing here, gentlemen,” remarked
Poirot. Japp closed
one eye knowingly.
“No, indeed. Pretty clear case I should say.”
But Poirot answered
gravely:
“There I differ from you.”
“Oh, come!” said Summerhaye, opening
his lips for the first time. “Surely
the whole thing
is clear as daylight. The man’s caught
red-handed. How he could be such a fool beats
me!”
But Japp was looking attentively at Poirot.
“Hold your fire, Summerhaye,” he remarked jocularly. “Me and Moosier
here have met before—and there’s
no man’s judgment
I’d sooner take than his. If I’m not greatly
mistaken, he’s got something up his sleeve.
Isn’t that so, moosier?”
Poirot smiled.
“I have drawn certain conclusions—yes.”
Summerhaye was still looking rather sceptical, but Japp continued his scrutiny of Poirot.
“It’s this way,” he said, “so far,
we’ve only seen the case from the outside. That’s
where the Yard’s at a disadvantage in a case of this kind, where the murder’s only out, so to speak, after the
inquest. A lot depends on being on the spot
first thing, and that’s where Mr. Poirot’s had the start of us. We shouldn’t have been here as soon as this even, if it hadn’t
been for the fact that there was a smart doctor on the spot, who gave us
the tip through the Coroner. But you’ve been
on the spot from the first, and you may have picked up some little hints. From the evidence at the inquest, Mr.
Inglethorp murdered his wife as sure as I stand here,
and if anyone but you hinted the contrary I’d laugh in his face. I must
say I was surprised the jury didn’t bring it in Wilful Murder against
him right off. I think they would have, if it hadn’t been for the Coroner—he seemed
to be holding them back.”
“Perhaps, though, you have a warrant for his arrest
in your pocket now,” suggested Poirot.
A kind of wooden shutter of officialdom
came down from Japp’s expressive countenance.
“Perhaps I have, and perhaps I haven’t,” he remarked dryly. Poirot looked
at him thoughtfully.
“I am very anxious,
Messieurs, that he should not be arrested.” “I dare say,”
observed Summerhaye sarcastically.
Japp was regarding Poirot with comical perplexity.
“Can’t you go a little further, Mr. Poirot? A
wink’s as good as a nod—from you. You’ve
been on the spot—and the Yard doesn’t
want to make any mistakes,
you know.”
Poirot nodded gravely.
“That is exactly what I thought. Well, I will tell
you this. Use your warrant: Arrest Mr. Inglethorp. But it will bring you no kudos—the case against him will be dismissed at once! Comme ça!”
And he snapped his fingers
expressively.
Japp’s face grew grave, though Summerhaye
gave an incredulous snort.
As for me, I was literally dumb with astonishment. I could only conclude that Poirot was mad.
Japp had taken out a handkerchief, and was gently
dabbing his brow.
“I daren’t do it, Mr. Poirot. I’d take your word, but there’s others over me who’ll be asking what the devil I mean by
it. Can’t you give me a little more to go on?”
Poirot reflected a moment.
“It can be done,” he said at last. “I admit I do not wish it. It forces
my hand. I would have preferred to work in the dark just for the present,
but what you say is very
just—the word of a Belgian policeman, whose day is past, is not enough! And Alfred Inglethorp must not be
arrested. That I have sworn, as my friend Hastings here knows. See, then, my good Japp,
you go at once to Styles?”
“Well, in about half an hour. We’re seeing the
Coroner and the doctor first.” “Good. Call for me in passing—the last house in the village. I will go with
you. At Styles, Mr. Inglethorp will give you, or if he refuses—as is probable—I
will give you such proofs that shall satisfy you
that the case against him could not possibly
be sustained. Is that a bargain?”
“That’s a bargain,”
said Japp heartily.
“And, on behalf
of the Yard, I’m much obliged
to you, though I’m bound to confess I can’t at present see the faintest possible
loop-hole in the evidence, but you always
were a marvel! So long, then, moosier.”
The two detectives strode away, Summerhaye with an incredulous grin on his face.
“Well, my friend,” cried Poirot, before
I could get in a word, “what do you think?
Mon Dieu! I had some warm moments in
that court; I did not figure to myself
that the man would be so pig-headed as to refuse to say anything at all. Decidedly, it was the policy of an imbecile.”
“H’m! There are other explanations besides that of
imbecility,” I remarked. “For, if the
case against him is true, how could he defend himself except by silence?”
“Why, in a thousand ingenious ways,”
cried Poirot. “See; say that it is I who have
committed this murder, I can think of seven most plausible stories! Far more convincing than Mr. Inglethorp’s stony denials!”
I could not help laughing.
“My dear Poirot, I am sure you are capable of
thinking of seventy! But, seriously,
in spite of what I heard you say to the detectives, you surely cannot still believe in the possibility of Alfred Inglethorp’s innocence?”
“Why not now as much as before?
Nothing has changed.”
“But the evidence
is so conclusive.”
“Yes, too conclusive.”
We turned in at the gate of Leastways Cottage, and
proceeded up the now familiar stairs.
“Yes,
yes, too conclusive,” continued Poirot, almost to himself.
“Real evidence is usually vague and unsatisfactory. It has to be examined—sifted. But here the whole thing is cut and dried.
No, my friend, this evidence
has been very
cleverly manufactured—so cleverly
that it has defeated its own ends.”
“How do you make that out?”
“Because, so long as the evidence against him was
vague and intangible, it was very hard to disprove. But, in his anxiety, the criminal has drawn the net so closely that one cut will set Inglethorp free.”
I was silent. And in a minute
or two, Poirot continued:
“Let us look at the matter like this. Here is a
man, let us say, who sets out to poison
his wife. He has lived by his wits as the saying goes. Presumably, therefore, he has some wits. He is not
altogether a fool. Well, how does he set about it? He goes boldly to the village
chemist’s and purchases
strychnine under his own name,
with a trumped up story about a dog which
is bound to be proved
absurd. He does not employ
the poison that night. No, he waits
until he has had a violent
quarrel with her, of which the whole household is cognisant, and which naturally directs their suspicions upon him. He prepares no defence—no shadow
of an alibi, yet he knows the chemist’s assistant must necessarily come
forward with the facts. Bah! Do not
ask me to believe that any man could be so idiotic! Only a lunatic, who wished to commit suicide by causing himself
to be hanged, would act so!”
“Still—I do not see——” I began.
“Neither do I see. I tell you, mon ami, it puzzles me. Me—Hercule
Poirot!” “But if you believe
him innocent, how do you explain his buying the
strychnine?”
“Very simply. He did not buy it.” “But Mace recognized him!”
“I beg your pardon, he saw a man with a black beard
like Mr. Inglethorp’s, and wearing
glasses like Mr. Inglethorp, and dressed in Mr. Inglethorp’s rather noticeable clothes. He could not recognize
a man whom he had probably only seen
in the distance, since, you remember, he himself had only been in the village
a fortnight, and Mrs. Inglethorp dealt principally with Coot’s in Tadminster.”
“Then you think——”
“Mon ami, do you remember
the two points I laid stress upon? Leave the first one for the moment, what was the second?”
“The important fact that Alfred Inglethorp wears peculiar clothes,
has a black beard, and uses glasses,” I quoted.
“Exactly. Now suppose anyone wished to pass himself
off as John or Lawrence Cavendish. Would it be easy?”
“No,” I said thoughtfully. “Of course an actor——” But Poirot cut me short ruthlessly.
“And why would it not be easy? I will tell you, my
friend: Because they are both
clean-shaven men. To make up successfully as one of these two in broad daylight,
it would need an actor of genius,
and a certain initial facial resemblance.
But in the case of Alfred Inglethorp, all that is changed. His clothes, his beard, the glasses which hide
his eyes—those are the salient points about his personal appearance. Now, what is the first instinct of the criminal? To divert suspicion
from himself, is it not so? And how can he best do that? By throwing
it on someone else. In this instance, there was a man ready
to his hand. Everybody was predisposed to believe in Mr. Inglethorp’s guilt. It was a foregone conclusion that he would be
suspected; but, to make it a sure thing there
must be tangible proof—such as the actual buying of the poison, and that, with a man of the peculiar appearance of
Mr. Inglethorp, was not difficult. Remember,
this young Mace had never actually spoken to Mr. Inglethorp. How should he doubt that the man in his
clothes, with his beard and his glasses, was
not Alfred Inglethorp?”
“It may be so,” I said, fascinated by Poirot’s
eloquence. “But, if that was the case, why does he not say where he was at six o’clock
on Monday evening?”
“Ah, why indeed?” said Poirot, calming
down. “If he were arrested, he probably would speak, but I do not want it to come to that. I must make him see the
gravity of his position. There is, of course, something discreditable behind his silence. If he did not murder his
wife, he is, nevertheless, a scoundrel, and has something
of his own to conceal,
quite apart from the murder.”
“What can it be?” I mused, won over to Poirot’s
views for the moment, although still
retaining a faint conviction that the obvious deduction was the correct
one.
“Can you not guess?” asked Poirot, smiling. “No,
can you?”
“Oh, yes, I had a little
idea sometime ago—and
it has turned out to be correct.”
“You never told me,” I said reproachfully. Poirot spread out his hands apologetically.
“Pardon me, mon ami, you were not precisely sympathique.” He turned to me earnestly. “Tell me—you see now that he must not be arrested?”
“Perhaps,” I said doubtfully, for I was really quite indifferent to the fate of Alfred
Inglethorp, and thought
that a good fright would
do him no harm.
Poirot, who was watching
me intently, gave a sigh.
“Come, my friend,” he said, changing
the subject, “apart
from Mr. Inglethorp, how did the evidence at the inquest
strike you?”
“Oh, pretty much what I expected.”
“Did nothing strike
you as peculiar about it?”
My thoughts flew to Mary Cavendish, and I hedged:
“In what way?”
“Well, Mr. Lawrence Cavendish’s evidence
for instance?” I was relieved.
“Oh, Lawrence! No, I don’t think so. He’s always a nervous
chap.”
“His suggestion that his mother
might have been poisoned accidentally by means of the tonic she was taking, that did not strike you as strange—
hein?”
“No, I can’t say it did. The doctors ridiculed it of course. But it was quite a natural
suggestion for a layman to make.”
“But Monsieur
Lawrence is not a layman. You told me yourself that he had started
by studying medicine,
and that he had taken his degree.”
“Yes, that’s true. I never thought of that.” I was rather
startled. “It is odd.” Poirot nodded.
“From the first, his behaviour
has been peculiar. Of all the household, he alone would be likely to recognize the
symptoms of strychnine poisoning, and yet we
find him the only member of the family to uphold strenuously the theory
of death from natural causes.
If it had been Monsieur
John, I could have understood it. He has no technical
knowledge, and is by nature unimaginative. But Monsieur Lawrence—no! And now, to-day, he puts
forward a suggestion that he himself must have known was ridiculous. There is food for thought
in this, mon ami!”
“It’s very confusing,” I agreed.
“Then there
is Mrs. Cavendish,” continued Poirot.
“That’s another who is not telling all she knows!
What do you make of her attitude?”
“I don’t know what to make of it. It seems inconceivable that she should be shielding Alfred Inglethorp. Yet that is what it looks like.”
Poirot nodded reflectively.
“Yes, it is queer.
One thing is certain, she overheard a good deal more of that ‘private conversation’ than she was willing
to admit.”
“And yet she is the last
person one would accuse of stooping to eavesdrop!” “Exactly. One thing her evidence
has shown me. I made a mistake. Dorcas
was quite right. The quarrel did take place earlier in the afternoon, about four
o’clock, as she said.”
I looked at him curiously. I had never
understood his insistence on that point. “Yes, a good deal that was peculiar came out to-day,”
continued Poirot. “Dr.
Bauerstein, now, what was he doing
up and dressed at that hour in the morning?
It is astonishing to me that no one commented on the fact.”
“He has insomnia, I believe,” I said doubtfully.
“Which is a very good, or a very bad explanation,” remarked
Poirot. “It covers
everything, and explains
nothing. I shall keep my eye on our clever Dr. Bauerstein.”
“Any more faults to find with the evidence?” I inquired satirically.
“Mon ami,” replied Poirot gravely,
“when you find that people are not telling you the truth—look out! Now, unless
I am much mistaken, at the inquest
to-day only one—at most, two
persons were speaking the truth without reservation or subterfuge.”
“Oh, come now, Poirot! I won’t cite Lawrence, or Mrs. Cavendish. But there’s John—and Miss Howard, surely they were speaking the truth?”
“Both of them, my friend? One, I grant you, but both——!”
His words gave me an unpleasant shock. Miss Howard’s
evidence, unimportant as it
was, had been given in such a downright straightforward manner that it had never
occurred to me to doubt
her sincerity. Still,
I had a great respect for Poirot’s sagacity—except on
the occasions when he was what I described to myself as “foolishly pig-headed.”
“Do you really
think so?” I asked. “Miss Howard had always seemed to me so essentially honest—almost uncomfortably so.”
Poirot gave me a curious look,
which I could not quite fathom. He
seemed to
speak, and then checked himself.
“Miss Murdoch too,” I continued, “there’s nothing untruthful about her.”
“No. But it was strange that she never heard a
sound, sleeping next door; whereas
Mrs. Cavendish, in the other wing of the building, distinctly heard the table fall.”
“Well, she’s young. And she sleeps soundly.”
“Ah, yes, indeed! She must be a famous
sleeper, that one!”
I did not quite like the tone of his voice, but at
that moment a smart knock reached our ears, and looking out of the window we perceived the two detectives waiting for us below.
Poirot seized his hat, gave a ferocious
twist to his moustache, and, carefully brushing
an imaginary speck of dust from his sleeve, motioned me to precede him down the stairs; there we joined the detectives and set out for Styles.
I think the appearance of the two
Scotland Yard men was rather a shock— especially to John, though
of course after the verdict,
he had realized that it was only a matter of time. Still, the presence of the detectives brought the truth home to him more than anything
else could have done.
Poirot had conferred with Japp in a low tone on the
way up, and it was the latter
functionary who requested that the household, with the exception of the servants, should be assembled together in
the drawing-room. I realized the significance of this. It was up to Poirot
to make his boast good.
Personally, I was not sanguine. Poirot might have
excellent reasons for his belief in
Inglethorp’s innocence, but a man of the type of Summerhaye would require
tangible proofs, and these I doubted if Poirot could supply.
Before
very long we had all trooped into the drawing-room, the door of which Japp closed. Poirot politely set chairs for everyone. The Scotland Yard men were the
cynosure of all eyes. I think that for the first time we realized that the
thing was not a bad dream, but
a tangible reality. We had read of such things—now we ourselves were actors in the drama. To-morrow the daily papers,
all over England, would blazon out the news in staring
headlines:
“MYSTERIOUS TRAGEDY IN ESSEX” “WEALTHY LADY POISONED”
There would be pictures of Styles, snap-shots of
“The family leaving the Inquest”—the village
photographer had not been idle! All the things that one had read a hundred times—things that happen to other people, not to oneself. And
now, in this house, a murder had been committed. In
front of us were “the detectives in
charge of the case.” The well-known glib phraseology passed rapidly
through my mind in the interval before
Poirot opened the proceedings.
I think everyone was a little surprised
that it should be he and not one of the official detectives who took the initiative.
“Mesdames and messieurs,” said Poirot, bowing
as though he were a celebrity about to deliver a lecture, “I have
asked you to come here all together, for a certain object.
That object, it concerns Mr. Alfred Inglethorp.”
Inglethorp was sitting a little by
himself—I think, unconsciously, everyone had
drawn his chair slightly away from him—and he gave a faint start as Poirot pronounced his name.
“Mr.
Inglethorp,” said Poirot,
addressing him directly, “a very dark shadow is resting on this house—the shadow of murder.”
Inglethorp shook his head sadly.
“My poor wife,”
he murmured. “Poor Emily! It is terrible.”
“I do not think, monsieur,” said Poirot pointedly,
“that you quite realize how terrible it may be—for
you.” And as Inglethorp did not appear
to understand, he added: “Mr. Inglethorp, you are standing
in very grave danger.”
The two detectives fidgeted. I saw the official
caution “Anything you say will be
used in evidence against you,” actually hovering on Summerhaye’s lips. Poirot
went on.
“Do you
understand now, monsieur?” “No. What do you mean?”
“I mean,” said Poirot deliberately, “that you are
suspected of poisoning your wife.”
A little gasp ran round the circle at this plain speaking.
“Good heavens!” cried Inglethorp, starting up.
“What a monstrous idea! I— poison
my dearest Emily!”
“I do not think”—Poirot watched him
narrowly—“that you quite realize the unfavourable
nature of your evidence at the inquest. Mr. Inglethorp, knowing what I have now told you, do you still
refuse to say where you were at six o’clock on Monday afternoon?”
With a groan, Alfred Inglethorp sank down again and
buried his face in his hands. Poirot approached and stood over him.
“Speak!” he cried menacingly.
With an effort, Inglethorp raised his face from his hands. Then, slowly and deliberately, he shook his head.
“You will not speak?”
“No. I do not believe that anyone could be so monstrous as to accuse me of what you say.”
Poirot nodded thoughtfully, like a man whose mind is made up. “Soit!” he said. “Then I must speak for you.”
Alfred Inglethorp sprang up again.
“You? How can you speak? You do not know——”
he broke off abruptly. Poirot turned to face us. “Mesdames and messieurs! I speak!
Listen! I, Hercule
Poirot, affirm that the man who entered the chemist’s shop, and purchased
strychnine at six o’clock on Monday last was not
Mr. Inglethorp, for at six o’clock on
that day Mr. Inglethorp was escorting Mrs. Raikes back to her home from a neighbouring farm. I can produce
no less than five witnesses to swear to having
seen them together, either at six or just after and, as you may know, the Abbey Farm, Mrs. Raikes’s home, is at
least two and a half miles distant from the village.
There is absolutely no question as to the alibi!”
CHAPTER VIII. FRESH SUSPICIONS
There was a moment’s stupefied silence. Japp, who was the least surprised of any of us, was the first to speak.
“My word,” he cried, “you’re the goods!
And no mistake, Mr. Poirot! These witnesses of yours are all right,
I suppose?”
“Voilà!
I have prepared a list of them—names and addresses. You must see them, of course.
But you will find it all right.”
“I’m sure of that.” Japp lowered his voice. “I’m much obliged to you. A
pretty mare’s nest arresting him would have been.” He turned to Inglethorp.
“But, if you’ll excuse me, sir, why couldn’t
you say all this at the inquest?”
“I will tell you why,” interrupted Poirot. “There
was a certain rumour——” “A most malicious and utterly untrue
one,” interrupted Alfred
Inglethorp in an
agitated voice.
“And Mr. Inglethorp was anxious to have no scandal revived just at present.
Am I right?”
“Quite right.” Inglethorp nodded. “With my poor
Emily not yet buried, can you wonder
I was anxious that no more lying rumours should
be started.”
“Between you and me, sir,” remarked Japp, “I’d
sooner have any amount of rumours
than be arrested for murder. And I venture to think your poor lady would have felt the same. And, if it hadn’t been for Mr. Poirot here, arrested
you would have been, as sure as eggs is eggs!”
“I was foolish, no doubt,” murmured Inglethorp.
“But you do not know, inspector, how
I have been persecuted and maligned.” And he shot a baleful glance at Evelyn
Howard.
“Now, sir,” said Japp, turning briskly
to John, “I should like to see the lady’s bedroom, please,
and after that I’ll have a little
chat with the servants. Don’t you bother
about anything. Mr. Poirot, here, will show me the way.”
As they all went out of the room, Poirot turned and
made me a sign to follow him upstairs. There he caught
me by the arm, and drew me aside.
“Quick, go to the other
wing. Stand there—just this side of the baize door. Do not move till I come.” Then, turning rapidly,
he rejoined the two detectives.
I followed his instructions, taking up my position
by the baize door, and wondering what
on earth lay behind the request. Why was I to stand in this particular spot on guard?
I looked thoughtfully down the corridor
in front of me. An idea struck me. With the exception of
Cynthia Murdoch’s, everyone’s room was in this left wing. Had that anything
to do with it? Was I to report who came or went? I stood faithfully at my post.
The minutes passed. Nobody came. Nothing happened.
It must have been quite twenty minutes before
Poirot rejoined me. “You have not stirred?”
“No, I’ve stuck here like a rock.
Nothing’s happened.”
“Ah!” Was he pleased, or disappointed? “You’ve
seen nothing at all?” “No.”
“But you have probably heard something? A big bump—eh,
mon ami?” “No.”
“Is it possible? Ah, but I am vexed with myself! I
am not usually clumsy. I made but a
slight gesture”—I know Poirot’s gestures—“with the left hand, and over went the table by the bed!”
He looked so childishly vexed and crest-fallen that I hastened
to console him. “Never mind,
old chap. What does it matter? Your triumph downstairs excited
you. I can tell you, that was a surprise to us all. There must be more in this affair
of Inglethorp’s with Mrs. Raikes than we thought,
to make him hold his tongue so
persistently. What are you going to do now? Where are the Scotland Yard fellows?”
“Gone down to interview the servants. I
showed them all our exhibits. I am disappointed in Japp. He has no method!”
“Hullo!” I said, looking out of the
window. “Here’s Dr. Bauerstein. I believe you’re right about that man, Poirot.
I don’t like him.”
“He is clever,” observed Poirot meditatively.
“Oh, clever as the devil!
I must say I was overjoyed to see him in the plight he was
in on Tuesday. You never saw such a spectacle!” And I described the doctor’s adventure. “He looked a regular
scarecrow! Plastered with mud from head to foot.”
“You saw him, then?”
“Yes. Of course, he didn’t
want to come in—it was just after
dinner—but Mr.
Inglethorp insisted.”
“What?” Poirot caught me violently by the
shoulders. “Was Dr. Bauerstein here
on Tuesday evening? Here? And you never told me? Why did you not tell me? Why? Why?”
He appeared to be in an absolute
frenzy.
“My dear Poirot,” I expostulated, “I never thought
it would interest you. I didn’t know it was of any importance.”
“Importance? It is of the first
importance! So Dr. Bauerstein was here on Tuesday
night—the night of the murder. Hastings, do you not see? That alters everything—everything!”
I had never seen him so upset.
Loosening his hold of me, he mechanically straightened
a pair of candlesticks, still murmuring to himself: “Yes, that alters everything—everything.”
Suddenly he seemed
to come to a decision.
“Allons!” he said. “We must act at once. Where is Mr. Cavendish?” John was in the smoking-room. Poirot
went straight to him.
“Mr. Cavendish, I have some important business
in Tadminster. A new clue.
May I take your motor?”
“Why, of course. Do you mean at once?”
“If you please.”
John rang the bell, and ordered round the car. In another
ten minutes, we were racing
down the park and along the high road to Tadminster.
“Now, Poirot,” I remarked resignedly,
“perhaps you will tell me what all this is about?”
“Well,
mon ami, a good deal you can guess for yourself. Of course you realize that, now Mr. Inglethorp is out of it,
the whole position is greatly changed. We are
face to face with an entirely new problem. We know now that there is one person who did not buy the poison. We have
cleared away the manufactured clues.
Now for the real ones. I have ascertained that anyone in the household, with the exception of Mrs. Cavendish, who
was playing tennis with you, could have
personated Mr. Inglethorp on Monday evening. In the same way, we have his statement that he put the coffee down in the hall. No one took much notice of that
at the inquest—but now it has a very different significance. We must find out who did take that coffee to Mrs.
Inglethorp eventually, or who passed through the hall whilst it was standing there. From your account, there are only
two people whom we can positively say did not go
near the coffee—Mrs. Cavendish, and Mademoiselle Cynthia.”
“Yes, that is so.” I felt an inexpressible lightening of the heart. Mary Cavendish
could certainly not rest under suspicion.
“In clearing Alfred Inglethorp,”
continued Poirot, “I have been obliged to show
my hand sooner than I intended. As long as I might be thought to be pursuing him, the criminal would be off
his guard. Now, he will be doubly careful.
Yes—doubly careful.” He turned to me abruptly. “Tell me, Hastings, you yourself—have you no suspicions of anybody?”
I
hesitated. To tell the truth, an idea, wild and extravagant in itself, had once
or twice that morning flashed
through my brain.
I had rejected it as absurd, nevertheless it persisted.
“You couldn’t call it a suspicion,” I murmured.
“It’s so utterly foolish.” “Come now,” urged Poirot encouragingly. “Do not fear. Speak your mind. You
should always pay attention to your instincts.”
“Well then,” I blurted out, “it’s absurd—but I
suspect Miss Howard of not telling all she knows!”
“Miss Howard?”
“Yes—you’ll
laugh at me——” “Not at all. Why should
I?”
“I can’t help feeling,” I continued blunderingly; “that we’ve rather
left her out of
the possible suspects, simply on the strength of her having been away from the place. But, after all, she was only
fifteen miles away. A car would do it in half
an hour. Can we say positively that she was away from Styles on the night of the murder?”
“Yes, my friend,” said Poirot unexpectedly, “we
can. One of my first actions was to ring up the hospital
where she was working.”
“Well?”
“Well, I learnt that Miss Howard had been on afternoon duty on Tuesday,
and that—a convoy coming in
unexpectedly—she had kindly offered to remain on night duty, which
offer was gratefully accepted. That disposes
of that.”
“Oh!” I said, rather nonplussed. “Really,” I continued, “it’s her extraordinary vehemence against Inglethorp that started me off suspecting
her. I can’t help feeling she’d do
anything against him. And I had an idea she might know something about the destroying of the will. She might have burnt
the new one, mistaking it for the earlier one in his favour. She is so terribly bitter
against
him.”
“You consider her vehemence
unnatural?”
“Y—es. She is so very violent. I wondered really whether she is quite sane on that point.”
Poirot shook his head energetically.
“No, no, you are on a wrong tack there. There is
nothing weak-minded or degenerate
about Miss Howard. She is an excellent specimen of well-balanced English
beef and brawn.
She is sanity itself.”
“Yet her hatred of Inglethorp seems
almost a mania. My idea was—a very ridiculous
one, no doubt—that she had intended to poison him—and that, in some way, Mrs. Inglethorp got hold of it by mistake. But I don’t at all see how it could have been done. The whole thing is
absurd and ridiculous to the last degree.”
“Still you are right in one thing. It is always
wise to suspect everybody until you
can prove logically, and to your own satisfaction, that they are innocent. Now, what reasons are there against
Miss Howard’s having deliberately poisoned Mrs. Inglethorp?”
“Why, she was devoted to her!” I exclaimed.
“Tcha! Tcha!” cried Poirot irritably. “You argue like a child.
If Miss Howard were capable
of poisoning the old lady, she would be quite equally capable of simulating devotion. No, we must look
elsewhere. You are perfectly correct in your
assumption that her vehemence against Alfred Inglethorp is too violent to be natural; but you are quite wrong in the
deduction you draw from it. I have drawn
my own deductions, which I believe to be correct, but I will not speak of them at present.” He paused a minute,
then went on. “Now, to my way of thinking, there is one insuperable objection
to Miss Howard’s being the murderess.”
“And that is?”
“That in no possible way could Mrs. Inglethorp’s death benefit Miss Howard.
Now there is no murder
without a motive.”
I reflected.
“Could not Mrs. Inglethorp have made a will in her favour?”
Poirot shook his head.
“But you yourself
suggested that possibility to Mr. Wells?”
Poirot smiled.
“That was for a reason.
I did not want to mention the name of the person
who was actually in my mind.
Miss Howard occupied very much the same position, so I used her name instead.”
“Still, Mrs. Inglethorp might have done
so. Why, that will, made on the afternoon of her death
may——”
But Poirot’s shake
of the head was so energetic that I stopped.
“No, my friend.
I have certain little ideas of my own about that will. But I can tell you this much—it was not in Miss Howard’s
favour.”
I accepted his assurance, though I did
not really see how he could be so positive about the matter.
“Well,” I said, with a sigh, “we will
acquit Miss Howard, then. It is partly your
fault that I ever came to suspect her. It was what you said about her evidence
at the inquest that set me off.”
Poirot looked puzzled.
“What did I say about her evidence at the inquest?”
“Don’t you remember? When I cited her and John
Cavendish as being above suspicion?”
“Oh—ah—yes.” He seemed a little
confused, but recovered himself. “By the way, Hastings,
there is something
I want you to do for me.”
“Certainly. What is it?”
“Next time you happen to be alone with Lawrence
Cavendish, I want you to say this to him. ‘I have a message
for you, from Poirot. He says: “Find
the extra coffee-cup, and you can rest in peace!”’ Nothing
more. Nothing less.”
“‘Find the extra coffee-cup, and you can rest in peace.’ Is that right?”
I asked, much mystified.
“Excellent.”
“But what does it mean?”
“Ah, that I will leave you to find out. You have access to the facts. Just say that to him, and see what he says.”
“Very well—but it’s all extremely mysterious.”
We were running into Tadminster now, and Poirot
directed the car to the “Analytical Chemist.”
Poirot hopped down briskly,
and went inside.
In a few minutes he was back again.
“There,” he said. “That is all my business.”
“What were you doing there?” I asked, in lively curiosity. “I left something
to be analysed.”
“Yes, but what?”
“The sample of cocoa I took from the saucepan
in the bedroom.”
“But that has already been tested!” I cried,
stupefied. “Dr. Bauerstein had it tested,
and you yourself laughed at the possibility of there being strychnine in it.”
“I know Dr. Bauerstein had it tested,”
replied Poirot quietly.
“Well, then?”
“Well, I have a fancy for having it analysed again, that is all.” And not another
word on the subject could I drag out of him.
This proceeding of Poirot’s, in respect of the
cocoa, puzzled me intensely. I could see neither rhyme nor reason
in it. However, my confidence in him, which
at one time had rather waned, was fully restored since his belief in
Alfred Inglethorp’s innocence had been so triumphantly vindicated.
The funeral of Mrs. Inglethorp took place the following day, and on Monday, as I came down to a late breakfast, John
drew me aside, and informed me that Mr.
Inglethorp was leaving that morning, to take up his quarters at the Stylites Arms until he should have completed his plans.
“And really it’s a great relief to
think he’s going, Hastings,” continued my honest friend.
“It was bad enough before,
when we thought
he’d done it, but I’m hanged if it isn’t
worse now, when we all feel guilty
for having been so down on the fellow. The fact is, we’ve treated
him abominably. Of course, things
did look black against him. I don’t see how
anyone could blame us for jumping to the conclusions
we did. Still, there it is, we were in the wrong, and now there’s a beastly feeling that one ought to make
amends; which is difficult, when one doesn’t
like the fellow a bit better than one did before. The whole thing’s damned awkward! And I’m thankful he’s had
the tact to take himself off. It’s a good
thing Styles wasn’t the mater’s to leave to him. Couldn’t bear to think of the fellow lording
it here. He’s welcome to her money.”
“You’ll be able to keep up the place all right?”
I asked.
“Oh, yes. There are the death duties, of course,
but half my father’s money goes with
the place, and Lawrence will stay with us for the present, so there is his share as well. We shall be pinched at
first, of course, because, as I once told you, I am in a bit of a hole financially myself. Still, the Johnnies will wait now.”
In the general relief at Inglethorp’s approaching
departure, we had the most genial
breakfast we had experienced since the tragedy. Cynthia, whose young spirits were naturally buoyant, was
looking quite her pretty self again, and we all, with the exception of Lawrence, who seemed unalterably gloomy and nervous, were quietly cheerful,
at the opening of a new and hopeful future.
The papers, of course, had been full of the tragedy. Glaring
headlines, sandwiched
biographies of every member of the household, subtle innuendoes, the usual familiar tag about the police
having a clue. Nothing was spared us. It was a slack time. The war was momentarily inactive, and the newspapers seized
with avidity on this crime in fashionable life: “The Mysterious Affair
at Styles” was the topic of the moment.
Naturally it was very annoying
for the Cavendishes. The house was constantly besieged by reporters, who were consistently denied admission, but who continued to haunt the village and the
grounds, where they lay in wait with cameras,
for any unwary members of the household. We all lived in a blast of publicity. The Scotland Yard men came and went, examining, questioning, lynx- eyed and
reserved of tongue. Towards what end they were working, we did not know. Had they any clue, or would the
whole thing remain in the category of undiscovered crimes?
After breakfast, Dorcas came up to me rather
mysteriously, and asked if she might have a few words with me.
“Certainly. What is it, Dorcas?”
“Well, it’s just this, sir. You’ll be seeing the
Belgian gentleman to-day perhaps?” I
nodded. “Well, sir, you know how he asked me so particular if the mistress,
or anyone else, had a green dress?”
“Yes, yes. You have found one?” My interest
was aroused.
“No, not that, sir. But since then I’ve remembered what the young gentlemen”—John and Lawrence were still the “young gentlemen” to Dorcas
—“call the ‘dressing-up box.’ It’s up in the front
attic, sir. A great chest, full of old
clothes and fancy dresses, and what not. And it came to me sudden like that there might be a green dress amongst
them. So, if you’d tell the Belgian gentleman——”
“I will tell him, Dorcas,” I promised.
“Thank you very much, sir. A very nice gentleman he
is, sir. And quite a different class
from them two detectives from London, what goes prying about, and asking questions. I don’t hold with
foreigners as a rule, but from what the newspapers say I make out as how these brave Belges isn’t the ordinary run of
foreigners, and certainly he’s a most polite spoken gentleman.”
Dear old Dorcas!
As she stood there, with her honest
face upturned to mine, I thought what a fine specimen she was of the old-fashioned servant that is so fast dying out.
I thought I might as well go down to the village at
once, and look up Poirot; but I met him half-way, coming
up to the house, and at once gave him Dorcas’s message.
“Ah, the brave Dorcas! We will look at
the chest, although—but no matter— we will examine it all the same.”
We entered the house by one of the
windows. There was no one in the hall, and we went straight
up to the attic.
Sure
enough, there was the chest,
a fine old piece, all studded with brass nails,
and full to overflowing with every imaginable type of garment.
Poirot bundled everything out on the floor with
scant ceremony. There were one or two green fabrics of varying shades;
but Poirot shook
his head over them all.
He seemed somewhat
apathetic in the search, as though he expected no great results
from it. Suddenly
he gave an exclamation.
“What is it?” “Look!”
The chest was nearly empty, and there, reposing
right at the bottom, was a magnificent black beard.
“Ohó!”
said Poirot. “Ohó!” He turned it over
in his hands, examining it closely. “New,”
he remarked. “Yes,
quite new.”
After a moment’s hesitation, he replaced it in the
chest, heaped all the other things on
top of it as before, and made his way briskly downstairs. He went straight
to the pantry, where we found Dorcas
busily polishing her silver.
Poirot wished her good morning
with Gallic politeness, and went on:
“We have been looking through
that chest, Dorcas.
I am much obliged to you for mentioning it. There is, indeed, a
fine collection there. Are they often used, may I ask?”
“Well, sir, not very often nowadays,
though from time to time we do have what the young gentlemen
call ‘a dress-up night.’ And very funny it is sometimes, sir. Mr. Lawrence, he’s wonderful. Most comic! I shall never forget the night he came down as the Char of
Persia, I think he called it—a sort of Eastern King it was. He had the big paper knife in his hand, and ‘Mind, Dorcas,’
he says, ‘you’ll
have to be very respectful. This is my specially sharpened
scimitar, and it’s off with your head if I’m at all
displeased with you!’ Miss Cynthia,
she was what they call an Apache, or some such name—a Frenchified sort of cut-throat, I take it to be. A
real sight she looked. You’d never have believed
a pretty young lady like that could have made herself into such a ruffian.
Nobody would have known her.”
“These evenings must have been great fun,” said
Poirot genially. “I suppose Mr. Lawrence
wore that fine black beard
in the chest upstairs, when he was Shah of Persia?”
“He did have a beard, sir,” replied
Dorcas, smiling. “And well I know it, for he
borrowed two skeins of my black wool to make it with! And I’m sure it looked wonderfully natural at a distance.
I didn’t know as there was a beard up there
at all. It must have been got quite lately, I think. There was a red wig, I know, but nothing
else in the way of hair. Burnt corks they use mostly—though ‘tis messy getting it off again. Miss Cynthia was a nigger
once, and, oh, the trouble she had.”
“So Dorcas knows nothing about that black beard,”
said Poirot thoughtfully, as we walked out into the hall again.
“Do you think it is the one?”
I whispered eagerly.
Poirot nodded.
“I do. You notice it had been trimmed?” “No.”
“Yes. It was cut exactly
the shape of Mr. Inglethorp’s, and I found
one or two snipped hairs. Hastings, this affair is very deep.”
“Who put it in the chest, I wonder?”
“Someone with a good deal of intelligence,”
remarked Poirot dryly. “You realize
that he chose the one place in the house to hide it where its presence would not be remarked? Yes, he is
intelligent. But we must be more intelligent.
We must be so intelligent that he does not suspect us of being intelligent at all.”
I acquiesced.
“There, mon ami, you will be of great
assistance to me.”
I was pleased with the compliment. There had been
times when I hardly thought that Poirot appreciated me at my true worth.
“Yes,”
he continued, staring at me
thoughtfully, “you will be invaluable.” This was naturally
gratifying, but Poirot’s next words were not so welcome. “I must have an ally in the house,” he observed reflectively.
“You have me,” I protested. “True, but you are not sufficient.”
I was hurt, and showed
it. Poirot hurried
to explain himself.
“You do not quite take my meaning. You are known
to be working with me. I want
somebody who is not associated with us in any way.”
“Oh, I see. How about John?”
“No, I think not.”
“The dear fellow isn’t perhaps very bright,” I said thoughtfully.
“Here comes Miss Howard,” said Poirot suddenly.
“She is the very person. But I am in her black books, since I cleared
Mr. Inglethorp. Still, we can but try.”
With
a nod that was barely
civil, Miss Howard
assented to Poirot’s
request for a few minutes’
conversation.
We went into the little morning-room, and Poirot closed the door.
“Well, Monsieur Poirot,”
said Miss Howard
impatiently, “what is it? Out with it. I’m busy.”
“Do you remember, mademoiselle, that I once asked you to help me?”
“Yes, I do.” The lady nodded. “And I told you I’d help you with pleasure—to hang Alfred Inglethorp.”
“Ah!”
Poirot studied her seriously. “Miss Howard, I will ask you one question. I beg of you to reply to it truthfully.”
“Never tell lies,” replied Miss Howard.
“It is this. Do you still believe that Mrs.
Inglethorp was poisoned by her husband?”
“What do you mean?” she asked sharply. “You needn’t
think your pretty explanations influence me in the slightest. I’ll admit that it wasn’t
he who bought strychnine at the chemist’s
shop. What of that? I dare say he soaked
fly paper, as I told you at the beginning.”
“That is arsenic—not strychnine,” said Poirot mildly.
“What does that matter? Arsenic
would put poor Emily out of the way just as well as strychnine. If I’m convinced he
did it, it doesn’t matter a jot to me how he
did it.”
“Exactly. If you are convinced he did it,” said Poirot quietly. “I will put
my question in another form. Did you
ever in your heart of hearts believe that Mrs.
Inglethorp was poisoned
by her husband?”
“Good heavens!” cried
Miss Howard. “Haven’t
I always told you the man is a villain? Haven’t I always told you he
would murder her in her bed? Haven’t I always hated him like poison?”
“Exactly,” said Poirot. “That bears out my little idea entirely.” “What little idea?”
“Miss Howard, do you remember
a conversation that took place on the day of my
friend’s arrival here? He repeated it to me, and there is a sentence of yours that has impressed me very much. Do you
remember affirming that if a crime had been committed, and anyone you loved had been murdered,
you felt certain
that you would know by instinct who the criminal was, even if you were
quite unable to prove it?”
“Yes, I remember
saying that. I believe it too. I suppose you think it nonsense?”
“Not at all.”
“And yet you will pay no attention to my instinct
against Alfred Inglethorp.” “No,” said Poirot curtly. “Because your instinct
is not against Mr. Inglethorp.” “What?”
“No. You wish to believe
he committed the crime. You believe him capable of committing it. But
your instinct tells you he
did not commit it. It tells
you more
—shall I go on?”
She was staring
at him, fascinated, and made a slight affirmative movement of the hand.
“Shall
I tell you why you have been so vehement
against Mr. Inglethorp? It is because you have been trying to believe
what you wish to believe. It is because you are trying to drown and stifle your instinct, which tells you another name
——”
“No, no, no!” cried Miss Howard
wildly, flinging up her hands.
“Don’t say it! Oh, don’t say it! It isn’t true! It can’t be true. I don’t know what put such a wild
—such a dreadful—idea into my head!” “I am right, am I not?” asked Poirot.
“Yes, yes; you must be a wizard to have guessed.
But it can’t be so—it’s
too monstrous, too impossible. It must be Alfred
Inglethorp.”
Poirot shook his head gravely.
“Don’t ask me about it,” continued
Miss Howard, “because
I shan’t tell you. I won’t admit it, even to myself.
I must be mad to think of such a thing.”
Poirot nodded, as if satisfied.
“I will ask you nothing. It is enough for me that
it is as I thought. And I—I, too, have an instinct.
We are working together towards
a common end.”
“Don’t ask me to help you, because
I won’t. I wouldn’t lift a finger to—to
——” She faltered.
“You will help me in spite of yourself. I ask you nothing—but you will be my ally.
You will not be able to help yourself. You will do the only thing that I want of you.”
“And that is?” “You will watch!”
Evelyn Howard bowed her head.
“Yes, I can’t
help doing that.
I am always watching—always hoping
I shall be proved wrong.”
“If we are wrong, well and good,” said
Poirot. “No one will be more pleased than I shall. But, if we are right? If we are right,
Miss Howard, on whose side are you then?”
“I don’t know, I don’t know——” “Come now.”
“It could be hushed up.”
“There must be no hushing
up.”
“But Emily herself——” She broke off.
“Miss Howard,” said Poirot gravely, “this is unworthy of you.” Suddenly
she took her face from her hands.
“Yes,” she said quietly, “that
was not Evelyn
Howard who spoke!”
She flung her head up proudly. “This is
Evelyn Howard! And she is on the side of Justice! Let the cost be what it may.” And with these words,
she walked firmly
out of the room.
“There,” said Poirot, looking after her, “goes a
very valuable ally. That woman, Hastings,
has got brains
as well as a heart.”
I did not reply.
“Instinct is a marvellous thing,”
mused Poirot. “It can neither
be explained nor ignored.”
“You
and Miss Howard seem to know what you are talking about,”
I observed coldly.
“Perhaps you don’t
realize that I am
still in the dark.”
“Really? Is that so, mon ami?” “Yes. Enlighten me, will you?”
Poirot studied
me attentively for a moment
or two. Then, to my intense surprise, he shook his head decidedly.
“No, my friend.”
“Oh, look here, why not?” “Two is enough for a secret.”
“Well, I think it is very unfair
to keep back facts from me.”
“I am not keeping back facts. Every fact that I
know is in your possession. You can
draw your own deductions from them. This time it is a question of ideas.”
“Still, it would be interesting to know.”
Poirot looked at me very earnestly, and again shook his head. “You see,” he said sadly, “you have no instincts.”
“It was intelligence you were requiring just now,” I pointed out. “The two often go together,” said Poirot enigmatically.
The remark
seemed so utterly
irrelevant that I did not even take the trouble
to answer it. But I decided that if I made any interesting and important discoveries
—as no doubt I should—I would keep them to myself, and surprise Poirot with the ultimate result.
There are times when it is one’s duty to assert oneself.
CHAPTER IX. DR. BAUERSTEIN
I had had no opportunity as yet of passing on
Poirot’s message to Lawrence. But now, as I strolled out on the lawn, still nursing a grudge against
my friend’s high-handedness, I saw Lawrence on the
croquet lawn, aimlessly knocking a couple of very ancient
balls about, with a still more ancient
mallet.
It struck me that it would be a good opportunity to
deliver my message. Otherwise, Poirot
himself might relieve me of it. It was true that I did not quite gather
its purport, but I flattered myself that by Lawrence’s reply,
and perhaps a little skillful
cross-examination on my part, I should soon perceive its significance. Accordingly I accosted him.
“I’ve been looking for you,” I remarked untruthfully. “Have you?”
“Yes. The truth is, I’ve got a message for you—from Poirot.”
“Yes?”
“He told me to wait until I was alone with you,” I
said, dropping my voice significantly,
and watching him intently out of the corner of my eye. I have always
been rather good at what is called,
I believe, creating
an atmosphere.
“Well?”
There was
no change of expression in the dark melancholic face. Had he any idea of what I was about to say?
“This is the message.”
I dropped my voice still lower. “‘Find
the extra coffee-
cup, and you can rest in peace.’”
“What on earth does he mean?”
Lawrence stared at me in quite unaffected astonishment.
“Don’t you know?”
“Not in the least. Do you?”
I was compelled to shake my head. “What
extra coffee-cup?”
“I don’t know.”
“He’d better ask Dorcas, or one of the maids, if he
wants to know about coffee-cups. It’s
their business, not mine. I don’t know anything about the coffee-cups, except that we’ve
got some that are never used, which are a perfect dream!
Old Worcester. You’re not a connoisseur, are you, Hastings?”
I shook my head.
“You
miss a lot. A really perfect bit of old china—it’s pure delight to handle it, or even to look at it.”
“Well, what am I to tell Poirot?”
“Tell him I don’t know what he’s talking about. It’s double Dutch to me.” “All right.”
I was moving off towards the house again when he suddenly called
me back. “I say, what was the end of that message?
Say it over again, will you?”
“‘Find
the extra coffee-cup, and you can rest in peace.’ Are you sure you don’t know what it means?”
I asked him earnestly.
He shook his head.
“No,” he said musingly, “I don’t. I—I wish I did.”
The boom of the gong sounded from the house, and we
went in together. Poirot had been asked by John to remain
to lunch, and was already
seated at the table.
By tacit consent, all mention of the
tragedy was barred. We conversed on the war, and other outside
topics. But after the cheese
and biscuits had been handed
round, and Dorcas had left the room, Poirot suddenly leant forward to
Mrs. Cavendish.
“Pardon me, madame, for recalling unpleasant
memories, but I have a little idea”—Poirot’s “little ideas” were becoming
a perfect byword—“and would like to ask one or two questions.”
“Of me? Certainly.”
“You are too amiable, madame. What I want to ask is
this: the door leading into Mrs.
Inglethorp’s room from that of Mademoiselle Cynthia, it was bolted, you say?”
“Certainly it was bolted,” replied
Mary Cavendish, rather
surprised. “I said so at the inquest.”
“Bolted?”
“Yes.” She looked perplexed.
“I mean,” explained
Poirot, “you are sure it was bolted,
and not merely
locked?”
“Oh, I see what you mean. No, I don’t know. I said bolted,
meaning that it was fastened, and I could not open it, but I believe
all the doors were found
bolted on the inside.”
“Still, as far as you are concerned, the door might
equally well have been locked?”
“Oh, yes.”
“You yourself did not happen
to notice, madame,
when you entered
Mrs.
Inglethorp’s room, whether that door was bolted or not?” “I—I believe it was.”
“But you did not see it?” “No. I—never
looked.”
“But I did,” interrupted Lawrence suddenly. “I happened to notice that it was
bolted.”
“Ah, that settles it.” And Poirot looked crestfallen.
I could not help rejoicing that, for once, one of his “little ideas” had come to naught.
After lunch Poirot begged
me to accompany him home. I consented
rather stiffly.
“You are annoyed, is it not so?” he asked anxiously, as we walked
through the park.
“Not at all,” I said coldly.
“That is well. That lifts a great load from my mind.”
This was not quite what I had intended. I had hoped
that he would have observed the stiffness of my manner.
Still, the fervour
of his words went towards
the appeasing of my just displeasure. I thawed.
“I gave Lawrence
your message,” I said.
“And what did he say? He was entirely puzzled?”
“Yes. I am quite sure he had no idea of what you meant.”
I had expected Poirot to be disappointed; but, to
my surprise, he replied that that was
as he had thought, and that he was very glad. My pride forbade me to ask any questions.
Poirot switched off on another
tack.
“Mademoiselle Cynthia was not at lunch
to-day? How was that?”
“She is at the hospital
again. She resumed
work to-day.”
“Ah, she is an industrious little demoiselle. And pretty too. She is like pictures
I have seen in Italy. I would rather like to see that dispensary of
hers. Do you think she would show it to me?”
“I am sure she would be delighted. It’s an interesting little
place.” “Does she go there every day?”
“She has all Wednesdays off, and comes back to
lunch on Saturdays. Those are her only times off.”
“I will remember.
Women are doing great work nowadays, and Mademoiselle Cynthia
is clever—oh, yes, she has brains, that little one.”
“Yes. I believe she has passed quite a stiff exam.”
“Without doubt. After all, it is very responsible
work. I suppose they have very strong
poisons there?”
“Yes, she showed them to us. They are kept locked
up in a little cupboard. I believe they have to be very careful. They always take out the key before
leaving the room.”
“Indeed. It is near the window, this cupboard?” “No,
right the other side of the room. Why?” Poirot shrugged
his shoulders.
“I wondered. That is all. Will you come in?” We had reached
the cottage.
“No. I think I’ll be getting back. I shall go round
the long way through the woods.”
The woods round Styles were very
beautiful. After the walk across the open park, it was pleasant
to saunter lazily
through the cool glades. There
was hardly a breath of wind, the very chirp of the birds was faint and subdued. I strolled on a little
way, and finally
flung myself down at the foot of a grand
old beech-tree. My thoughts of mankind were kindly and
charitable. I even forgave Poirot for his absurd secrecy. In fact, I was at peace with the world.
Then I yawned.
I thought about
the crime, and it struck
me as being very unreal
and far off. I yawned
again.
Probably, I thought, it really never happened. Of
course, it was all a bad dream. The
truth of the matter was that it was Lawrence who had murdered Alfred Inglethorp with a croquet
mallet. But it was absurd
of John to make such a fuss about it, and to go shouting
out: “I tell you I won’t have it!”
I woke up with a start.
At once I realized that I was in a very awkward
predicament. For, about twelve feet away from me, John and Mary Cavendish were standing facing
each other, and they were
evidently quarrelling. And, quite as evidently, they were unaware of my vicinity, for before I could
move or speak John repeated the words which
had aroused me from my dream.
“I tell you, Mary, I won’t
have it.” Mary’s voice came, cool and liquid:
“Have you any right to criticize
my actions?”
“It will be the talk of the village!
My mother was only buried on Saturday, and here you are gadding
about with the fellow.”
“Oh,” she shrugged her shoulders, “if it is only village
gossip that you mind!” “But it isn’t. I’ve had enough of the fellow hanging about.
He’s a Polish Jew,
anyway.”
“A tinge of Jewish blood is not a bad thing. It leavens the”—she looked at him
—“stolid stupidity of the ordinary Englishman.”
Fire in her eyes, ice in her voice.
I did not wonder that the blood
rose to John’s face in a crimson
tide.
“Mary!”
“Well?” Her tone did not
change. The pleading died out of his voice.
“Am I to understand that you will continue to see Bauerstein against my express
wishes?”
“If I choose.” “You defy me?”
“No, but I deny your right to criticize
my actions. Have you no friends
of whom I should disapprove?”
John fell back a pace. The colour ebbed slowly from his face. “What do you mean?”
he said, in an unsteady
voice.
“You see!”
said Mary quietly. “You do see, don’t
you, that you have no right to dictate to me as to the choice of my friends?”
John glanced at her pleadingly, a stricken look on his face.
“No right? Have I no right, Mary?” he said unsteadily. He stretched out his hands.
“Mary——”
For a moment,
I thought she wavered. A softer expression came over her face, then suddenly
she turned almost
fiercely away.
“None!”
She was walking away when John sprang after her, and caught her by the arm. “Mary”—his voice was very quiet now—“are
you in love with this fellow
Bauerstein?”
She hesitated, and suddenly there swept across her
face a strange expression, old as
the hills, yet with something eternally young about it. So might some Egyptian
sphinx have smiled.
She freed herself quietly from his arm, and spoke
over her shoulder. “Perhaps,” she said; and then swiftly
passed out of the little
glade, leaving
John standing there as though he had been turned to stone.
Rather ostentatiously, I stepped forward, crackling
some dead branches with my feet as I
did so. John turned. Luckily, he took it for granted that I had only just come upon the scene.
“Hullo, Hastings. Have you seen the little fellow safely back to his cottage?
Quaint little
chap! Is he any good, though, really?”
“He was considered one of the finest detectives of his day.”
“Oh, well, I suppose there must be something in it,
then. What a rotten world it is, though!”
“You find it so?” I asked.
“Good Lord, yes! There’s this terrible business to
start with. Scotland Yard men in and
out of the house like a jack-in-the-box! Never know where they won’t turn up next. Screaming headlines in every paper in the country—damn all journalists, I
say! Do you know there was a whole crowd staring in at the lodge gates
this morning. Sort of Madame
Tussaud’s chamber of horrors business
that can be seen for nothing. Pretty
thick, isn’t it?”
“Cheer up, John!” I said soothingly. “It can’t last for ever.”
“Can’t it, though? It can last long enough for us
never to be able to hold up our heads
again.”
“No, no, you’re getting
morbid on the subject.”
“Enough to make a man morbid, to be stalked
by beastly journalists and stared at by gaping
moon-faced idiots, wherever
he goes! But there’s worse than that.”
“What?”
John lowered his voice:
“Have you ever thought, Hastings—it’s a nightmare
to me—who did it? I can’t help feeling sometimes
it must have been an accident. Because—because
—who could have done it? Now Inglethorp’s out of the way, there’s
no one else; no one, I mean,
except—one of us.”
Yes,
indeed, that was nightmare enough
for any man! One of us? Yes, surely it must be so, unless——-
A new idea suggested itself to my mind.
Rapidly, I considered it. The light increased.
Poirot’s mysterious doings, his hints—they all fitted in. Fool that I was not to have thought
of this possibility before, and what a relief
for us all.
“No, John,” I said, “it isn’t one of us. How could it be?” “I know, but, still, who else is there?”
“Can’t you guess?”
“No.”
I looked cautiously round, and lowered my voice. “Dr.
Bauerstein!” I whispered.
“Impossible!” “Not at all.”
“But what earthly
interest could he have in my mother’s
death?”
“That I don’t see,” I confessed, “but I’ll tell you this: Poirot thinks so.” “Poirot? Does he? How do you know?”
I told him of Poirot’s intense excitement on
hearing that Dr. Bauerstein had been at Styles on the fatal night, and added:
“He said twice: ‘That alters
everything.’ And I’ve been thinking. You know
Inglethorp said he had put down the coffee in the hall? Well, it was just then that Bauerstein
arrived. Isn’t it possible that, as Inglethorp brought him through the hall, the doctor
dropped something into the coffee
in passing?”
“H’m,” said John. “It would have been very risky.”
“Yes, but it was possible.”
“And then,
how could he know it was her coffee? No, old fellow,
I don’t think that will wash.”
But I had remembered something else.
“You’re quite right. That wasn’t how it was done. Listen.”
And I then told him of the cocoa sample
which Poirot had taken to be analysed.
John interrupted just as I had done.
“But, look here, Bauerstein had had it analysed already?”
“Yes, yes, that’s the point. I didn’t see it either until now. Don’t you understand? Bauerstein had it analysed—that’s just it! If Bauerstein’s the murderer,
nothing could be simpler than for him to substitute some ordinary cocoa for his sample, and send that to be
tested. And of course they would find no
strychnine! But no one would dream of suspecting Bauerstein, or think of taking another sample—except Poirot,” I added, with belated
recognition.
“Yes, but what about the bitter taste that cocoa won’t disguise?”
“Well, we’ve only his word for that. And there are
other possibilities. He’s admittedly one of the world’s greatest
toxicologists——”
“One of the world’s greatest
what? Say it again.”
“He knows more about poisons
than almost anybody,”
I explained. “Well,
my idea is, that perhaps
he’s found some way of making strychnine tasteless. Or it may not have been strychnine at all, but
some obscure drug no one has ever heard of, which produces
much the same symptoms.”
“H’m, yes, that might be,” said John. “But look here, how could he have got at the cocoa? That wasn’t downstairs?”
“No, it wasn’t,” I admitted reluctantly.
And then, suddenly, a dreadful possibility flashed
through my mind. I hoped and prayed
it would not occur to John also. I glanced sideways at him. He was frowning
perplexedly, and I drew a deep breath
of relief, for the terrible
thought that had flashed across
my mind was this: that Dr. Bauerstein might have had an accomplice.
Yet surely it could not be! Surely no woman as
beautiful as Mary Cavendish could be a murderess. Yet beautiful women had been known to poison.
And suddenly I remembered that first
conversation at tea on the day of my arrival,
and the gleam in her eyes as she had said that poison was a woman’s weapon. How agitated she had been on that
fatal Tuesday evening! Had Mrs. Inglethorp discovered something between her and Bauerstein, and threatened to tell
her husband? Was it to stop that denunciation that the crime had been committed?
Then I remembered that enigmatical conversation between Poirot and Evelyn Howard.
Was this what they had meant? Was this the monstrous possibility that Evelyn had tried not to believe?
Yes, it all fitted in.
No wonder Miss Howard had suggested
“hushing it up.” Now I understood
that unfinished sentence of hers: “Emily herself——”
And in my heart I agreed with her. Would not Mrs. Inglethorp have preferred to go unavenged rather than have
such terrible dishonour fall upon the name of Cavendish.
“There’s another thing,” said John suddenly,
and the unexpected sound of his voice made me start
guiltily. “Something which
makes me doubt if what you say can be true.”
“What’s that?” I asked, thankful that
he had gone away from the subject of how the poison could have been introduced into the cocoa.
“Why, the fact that Bauerstein demanded
a post-mortem. He needn’t have done
so. Little Wilkins would have been quite content to let it go at heart disease.”
“Yes,” I said doubtfully. “But we don’t
know. Perhaps he thought it safer in the
long run. Someone might have talked afterwards. Then the Home Office might have ordered exhumation. The whole
thing would have come out, then, and he would have been in an awkward
position, for no one would have believed
that a man of his reputation could have been deceived into calling it
heart disease.”
“Yes, that’s possible,” admitted John. “Still,”
he added, “I’m blest if I can see what his motive
could have been.”
I trembled.
“Look here,” I said, “I may be altogether wrong.
And, remember, all this is in confidence.”
“Oh, of course—that goes without saying.”
We had walked, as we talked, and now we passed
through the little gate into the garden.
Voices rose near at hand, for tea was spread out under the sycamore- tree, as it had been on the day of my arrival.
Cynthia was back from the hospital,
and I placed my chair beside her, and told her of Poirot’s wish to visit the dispensary.
“Of course! I’d love him to see it.
He’d better come to tea there one day. I must
fix it up with him. He’s such a dear little man! But he is funny. He made me take
the brooch out of my tie the other day, and put it in again, because he said it wasn’t
straight.”
I laughed.
“It’s quite a mania with him.” “Yes,
isn’t it?”
We were silent for a minute or two, and then, glancing in the direction
of Mary Cavendish, and dropping her voice, Cynthia
said:
“Mr. Hastings.” “Yes?”
“After tea, I want to talk to you.”
Her glance at Mary had set me thinking. I fancied
that between these two there existed
very little sympathy. For the first
time, it occurred
to me to wonder about the girl’s future. Mrs. Inglethorp
had made no provisions of any kind for her, but I imagined
that John and Mary would probably insist
on her making her home with them—at any rate until the end
of the war. John, I knew, was very fond of her, and would be sorry to let her go.
John, who had gone into the house, now reappeared.
His good-natured face wore an unaccustomed frown
of anger.
“Confound those detectives! I can’t think what they’re
after! They’ve been in every
room in the house—turning things
inside out, and upside down. It really
is too bad! I suppose they
took advantage of our all being out. I shall go for that fellow Japp, when I next see him!”
“Lot of Paul Prys,” grunted
Miss Howard.
Lawrence opined that they had to make a show of doing
something. Mary Cavendish said nothing.
After tea, I invited
Cynthia to come for a walk,
and we sauntered off into
the woods together.
“Well?” I inquired, as soon as we were protected from prying eyes by the leafy screen.
With a sigh, Cynthia
flung herself down, and tossed
off her hat. The sunlight,
piercing through the branches, turned
the auburn of her hair to quivering gold.
“Mr. Hastings—you are always so kind, and you know such a lot.”
It struck me at this moment that Cynthia was really a very charming
girl!
Much more charming than Mary, who never said things of that kind.
“Well?” I asked benignantly, as she hesitated.
“I want to ask your advice.
What shall I do?” “Do?”
“Yes. You see, Aunt Emily
always told me I should
be provided for. I suppose
she forgot, or didn’t think she was likely to die—anyway, I am not provided for! And I don’t know what to do. Do you think I ought
to go away from here at
once?”
“Good heavens, no! They don’t want to part with you, I’m sure.”
Cynthia hesitated a moment, plucking up the grass with her tiny hands. Then she said:
“Mrs. Cavendish does. She hates me.”
“Hates you?” I cried, astonished. Cynthia nodded.
“Yes. I don’t know why, but she can’t bear me; and he can’t, either.”
“There I know you’re wrong,” I said warmly. “On the
contrary, John is very fond of you.”
“Oh, yes—John. I meant Lawrence. Not, of course, that I care whether Lawrence hates me or not. Still, it’s
rather horrid when no one loves you, isn’t it?”
“But they do, Cynthia dear,”
I said earnestly. “I’m sure you are mistaken.
Look, there is John—and Miss Howard——”
Cynthia nodded rather gloomily. “Yes, John likes
me, I think, and of course Evie, for
all her gruff ways, wouldn’t be unkind to a fly. But Lawrence never speaks to me if he can help it, and Mary
can hardly bring herself to be civil to me. She wants Evie to stay on, is begging her to, but she doesn’t
want me, and—
and—I don’t know what to do.” Suddenly
the poor child burst out crying.
I don’t know what possessed me. Her beauty,
perhaps, as she sat there, with the sunlight
glinting down on her head; perhaps the sense of relief at encountering
someone who so obviously could have no connection with the tragedy; perhaps honest pity for her youth
and loneliness. Anyway, I leant forward, and taking her little hand, I said awkwardly:
“Marry me, Cynthia.”
Unwittingly, I had hit upon a sovereign remedy for
her tears. She sat up at once, drew her hand away, and said, with some asperity:
“Don’t be silly!”
I was a little annoyed.
“I’m not being silly. I am asking you to do me the
honour of becoming my wife.”
To my intense surprise, Cynthia burst
out laughing, and called me a “funny dear.”
“It’s perfectly sweet
of you,” she said, “but you know you don’t
want to!” “Yes,
I do. I’ve got——”
“Never mind
what you’ve got. You don’t really want to—and I don’t either.” “Well, of course, that settles it,” I said stiffly. “But I don’t see anything
to
laugh at. There’s nothing funny about a proposal.”
“No, indeed,” said Cynthia. “Somebody might accept
you next time. Good- bye, you’ve
cheered me up very much.”
And,
with a final uncontrollable burst of merriment, she vanished through
the trees.
Thinking over the interview,
it struck me as being profoundly
unsatisfactory. It occurred
to me suddenly that I would go down to the village,
and look up
Bauerstein. Somebody ought to be keeping
an eye on the fellow.
At the same
time, it would be wise to allay any suspicions he
might have as to his being suspected. I remembered how Poirot had relied on my diplomacy. Accordingly, I went to the little house with the
“Apartments” card inserted in the window, where I knew he lodged, and tapped on the door.
An old woman came and opened it.
“Good afternoon,” I said pleasantly. “Is Dr. Bauerstein in?” She stared at me.
“Haven’t you heard?”
“Heard what?” “About him.”
“What about him?”
“He’s
took.”
“Took? Dead?”
“No, took by the perlice.”
“By the police!” I gasped. “Do you mean they’ve arrested
him?” “Yes, that’s it, and——”
I waited to hear no more, but tore up the village
to find Poirot.
CHAPTER X. THE
ARREST
To my extreme annoyance, Poirot was not in, and the
old Belgian who answered my knock informed
me that he believed he had gone to London.
I was dumbfounded. What on earth could Poirot
be doing in London! Was it a sudden decision
on his part, or had he already
made up his mind when he parted
from me a few hours earlier?
I retraced my steps to Styles in some
annoyance. With Poirot away, I was uncertain
how to act. Had he foreseen this arrest? Had he not, in all probability, been the cause of it? Those questions I
could not resolve. But in the meantime what was I to do? Should I announce
the arrest openly
at Styles, or not? Though
I did not acknowledge it to myself,
the thought of Mary Cavendish was weighing on me. Would it not be a terrible shock
to her? For the moment, I set aside utterly
any suspicions of her. She could not be implicated—otherwise I should have heard some hint of it.
Of course, there was no possibility of being able
permanently to conceal Dr. Bauerstein’s
arrest from her. It would be announced in every newspaper on the morrow.
Still, I shrank from blurting
it out. If only Poirot had been accessible, I could have asked his advice. What possessed him to go posting off to London
in this unaccountable way?
In spite of myself, my opinion of his sagacity
was immeasurably heightened. I would never have
dreamt of suspecting the doctor, had not Poirot put it into my head.
Yes, decidedly, the little man was clever.
After some reflecting, I decided to
take John into my confidence, and leave him to make the matter public
or not, as he thought
fit.
He gave vent to a prodigious whistle, as I imparted
the news. “Great Scott! You were right, then. I couldn’t
believe it at the time.”
“No, it is astonishing until you get used to the
idea, and see how it makes everything fit in. Now, what are we to do? Of course, it will be generally known
to-morrow.”
John reflected.
“Never mind,” he said at last, “we won’t say
anything at present. There is no need. As you say, it will be known soon enough.”
But to my intense surprise, on getting down early
the next morning, and eagerly opening
the newspapers, there was not a word about the arrest! There was a column of mere padding about “The
Styles Poisoning Case,” but nothing further. It was rather inexplicable, but I supposed
that, for some reason or other, Japp wished to keep it out of the
papers. It worried me just a little, for it suggested the possibility that there might be further
arrests to come.
After breakfast, I decided to go down to the
village, and see if Poirot had returned
yet; but, before I could start, a well-known face blocked one of the windows,
and the well-known voice said:
“Bonjour, mon ami!”
“Poirot,” I exclaimed, with relief, and seizing him
by both hands, I dragged him into the
room. “I was never so glad to see anyone. Listen, I have said nothing
to anybody but John. Is that right?”
“My friend,” replied Poirot,
“I do not know what you are talking about.”
“Dr. Bauerstein’s arrest,
of course,” I answered impatiently.
“Is Bauerstein arrested,
then?” “Did you not know it?”
“Not the least in the world.” But, pausing a moment, he added: “Still, it does not surprise me. After all, we are only four miles from the coast.”
“The coast?” I asked,
puzzled. “What has that got to do with it?” Poirot shrugged
his shoulders.
“Surely, it is obvious!”
“Not to me. No doubt I am very dense, but I cannot
see what the proximity of the coast has got to do with the murder of Mrs. Inglethorp.”
“Nothing at all, of course,” replied
Poirot, smiling. “But we were speaking of the arrest of Dr. Bauerstein.”
“Well, he is arrested for the murder of Mrs. Inglethorp——”
“What?” cried Poirot, in apparently lively
astonishment. “Dr. Bauerstein arrested for the murder of Mrs. Inglethorp?”
“Yes.”
“Impossible! That would be too good a farce!
Who told you that, my friend?” “Well,
no one exactly told me,” I confessed. “But he is arrested.”
“Oh, yes, very likely. But for espionage, mon ami.”
“Espionage?” I gasped.
“Precisely.”
“Not for poisoning Mrs. Inglethorp?”
“Not unless our friend Japp has taken leave of his senses,” replied
Poirot placidly.
“But—but I thought
you thought so too?”
Poirot gave me one look, which
conveyed a wondering
pity, and his full sense
of the utter absurdity of such an idea.
“Do you mean to say,” I asked, slowly
adapting myself to the new idea, “that
Dr. Bauerstein is a spy?”
Poirot nodded.
“Have you never suspected it?” “It never entered my head.”
“It did not strike you as peculiar that a famous
London doctor should bury himself in a little
village like this, and should be in the habit of walking
about at all hours of the night,
fully dressed?”
“No,” I confessed, “I never thought of such a thing.”
“He is, of course, a German by birth,” said Poirot thoughtfully, “though he has practised
so long in this country that nobody thinks of him as anything but an Englishman. He was naturalized about
fifteen years ago. A very clever man—a Jew, of course.”
“The blackguard!”
I cried indignantly.
“Not at all. He is, on the contrary, a patriot.
Think what he stands to lose. I admire the man myself.”
But I could not look at it in Poirot’s
philosophical way.
“And this is the man with whom Mrs. Cavendish
has been wandering
about all over
the country!” I cried indignantly.
“Yes.
I should fancy he had found her very useful,”
remarked Poirot. “So long as gossip busied itself in coupling their names together, any other vagaries
of the doctor’s passed unobserved.”
“Then you think he never really cared for her?” I
asked eagerly—rather too eagerly, perhaps,
under the circumstances.
“That, of course, I cannot say, but—shall
I tell you my own private opinion,
Hastings?”
“Yes.”
“Well, it is this: that Mrs. Cavendish does not care, and never has cared one little
jot about Dr. Bauerstein!”
“Do you really think so?” I could not disguise my pleasure. “I am quite
sure of it. And I will tell you why.”
“Yes?”
“Because she cares for someone
else, mon ami.”
“Oh!” What did he mean? In spite of myself,
an agreeable warmth
spread over me. I am not a vain man where women are concerned, but I remembered certain evidences,
too lightly thought of at the time, perhaps, but which certainly seemed
to indicate——
My pleasing thoughts
were interrupted by the sudden entrance of Miss Howard. She glanced round hastily to
make sure there was no one else in the room,
and quickly produced an old sheet of brown paper. This she handed to Poirot,
murmuring as she did so the cryptic
words:
“On top of the wardrobe.” Then she hurriedly
left the room.
Poirot unfolded the sheet of paper eagerly, and
uttered an exclamation of satisfaction. He spread it out on the table.
“Come here, Hastings.
Now tell me, what is that initial—J. or L.?”
It was a medium sized
sheet of paper,
rather dusty, as though it had lain by for some time. But it was the label that was attracting Poirot’s attention. At the top, it bore the printed
stamp of Messrs.
Parkson’s, the well-known theatrical costumiers,
and it was addressed to “—(the debatable initial) Cavendish, Esq., Styles
Court, Styles St. Mary, Essex.”
“It might be T., or it might be L.,” I said, after studying
the thing for a minute
or two. “It certainly isn’t a J.”
“Good,” replied Poirot, folding
up the paper again. “I, also, am of your way of thinking. It is an L., depend
upon it!”
“Where did it come from?” I asked curiously. “Is it important?”
“Moderately so. It confirms a surmise of mine. Having
deduced its existence, I set Miss Howard to search for it, and, as you see, she has been successful.”
“What did she mean by ‘On the top of the wardrobe’?”
“She meant,” replied
Poirot promptly, “that she found it on top of a wardrobe.”
“A funny place for a piece of brown paper,” I mused.
“Not at all. The top of a wardrobe is an excellent
place for brown paper and cardboard
boxes. I have kept them there myself. Neatly arranged, there is nothing
to offend the eye.”
“Poirot,” I asked earnestly, “have you made up your mind about this crime?” “Yes—that is to say, I believe
I know how it was committed.”
“Ah!”
“Unfortunately,
I have no proof beyond my surmise, unless——” With sudden energy, he caught me by the
arm, and whirled me down the hall, calling out in French in his excitement: “Mademoiselle Dorcas, Mademoiselle
Dorcas, un moment, s’il vous plaît!”
Dorcas, quite flurried
by the noise, came hurrying
out of the pantry.
“My good Dorcas, I have an idea—a little idea—if it
should prove justified, what magnificent chance! Tell me, on Monday,
not Tuesday, Dorcas,
but Monday, the day before the tragedy,
did anything go wrong with Mrs. Inglethorp’s bell?”
Dorcas looked very surprised.
“Yes, sir, now you mention it, it did; though I
don’t know how you came to hear
of it. A mouse, or some such, must have nibbled the wire through. The man came and put it right on Tuesday morning.”
With a long drawn exclamation of
ecstasy, Poirot led the way back to the morning-room.
“See
you, one should
not ask for outside proof—no, reason should be enough. But the flesh is weak, it is consolation
to find that one is on the right track. Ah, my friend,
I am like a giant
refreshed. I run! I leap!”
And,
in very truth, run and leap he did, gambolling wildly down the stretch of lawn outside
the long window.
“What
is your remarkable little friend doing?” asked a voice behind me, and I turned to find Mary Cavendish at my elbow. She smiled,
and so did I. “What is it all about?”
“Really, I can’t tell you. He asked
Dorcas some question about a bell, and appeared so delighted with her answer
that he is capering about as you see!”
Mary laughed.
“How ridiculous! He’s going out of the gate.
Isn’t he coming
back to-day?” “I don’t know. I’ve given up trying
to guess what he’ll do next.”
“Is he quite mad, Mr. Hastings?”
“I honestly don’t know. Sometimes, I feel sure he
is as mad as a hatter; and then, just as he is at his maddest,
I find there is method
in his madness.”
“I see.”
In spite of her laugh, Mary was looking thoughtful
this morning. She seemed grave, almost
sad.
It occurred to me that it would be a
good opportunity to tackle her on the subject
of Cynthia. I began rather tactfully, I thought,
but I had not gone far before she stopped me authoritatively.
“You
are an excellent advocate, I have no doubt, Mr. Hastings, but in this case your
talents are quite thrown away. Cynthia will run no risk of encountering any unkindness from me.”
I began to stammer feebly that I hoped
she hadn’t thought—— But again she stopped
me, and her words were so unexpected that they quite drove Cynthia, and her troubles, out of my mind.
“Mr. Hastings,” she said, “do you think I and my husband
are happy together?”
I was considerably taken aback, and murmured something about it’s not being my business to think anything
of the sort.
“Well,” she said quietly, “whether
it is your business or not, I will tell you that we are not happy.”
I said nothing, for I saw that she had not finished.
She began slowly, walking up and down the room, her
head a little bent, and that slim,
supple figure of hers swaying gently as she walked. She stopped suddenly,
and looked up at me.
“You don’t know anything about me, do
you?” she asked. “Where I come from, who I was before I married John—anything, in fact? Well,
I will tell you. I will
make a father confessor of you. You are kind, I think—yes, I am sure you are kind.”
Somehow, I was not quite as elated as I might have
been. I remembered that Cynthia had
begun her confidences in much the same way. Besides, a father confessor
should be elderly,
it is not at all the role for a young man.
“My father was English,” said Mrs. Cavendish, “but my mother was a Russian.”
“Ah,” I said, “now I understand——”
“Understand what?”
“A hint of something foreign—different—that there
has always been about you.”
“My mother was very beautiful, I
believe. I don’t know, because I never saw
her. She died when I was quite a little child. I believe there was some
tragedy connected with her death—she
took an overdose of some sleeping draught by
mistake. However that may be, my father was broken-hearted. Shortly afterwards, he went into the Consular
Service. Everywhere he went, I went with him.
When I was twenty-three, I had been nearly all over the world. It was a splendid
life—I loved it.”
There was a smile on her face, and her head was
thrown back. She seemed living in the memory
of those old glad days.
“Then my father died. He left me very
badly off. I had to go and live with some
old aunts in Yorkshire.” She shuddered. “You will understand me when I say that it was a deadly life for a girl brought
up as I had been. The narrowness, the deadly monotony of it, almost drove me mad.” She paused a
minute, and added in a different
tone: “And then I met John Cavendish.”
“Yes?”
“You can imagine that, from my aunts’ point of
view, it was a very good match for me. But I can honestly say it was not this fact which
weighed with me. No, he was simply
a way of escape from the insufferable monotony of my life.”
I said nothing, and after a moment,
she went on:
“Don’t misunderstand me. I was quite honest with
him. I told him, what was true, that I liked
him very much,
that I hoped to come to like him more,
but that I was
not in any way what the world calls ‘in love’ with him. He declared that that satisfied him, and so—we were married.”
She waited a long time, a little frown had gathered
on her forehead. She seemed to be looking
back earnestly into those past days.
“I think—I am sure—he cared
for me at first. But I suppose
we were not well matched. Almost at once, we drifted
apart. He—it is not a pleasing thing for my pride,
but it is the truth—tired of me very soon.” I must have made some murmur of dissent,
for she went on quickly:
“Oh, yes, he did! Not that it matters now—now
that we’ve come to the parting of the ways.”
“What do you mean?” She answered
quietly:
“I mean that I am not going to remain
at Styles.”
“You and John are not going to live here?”
“John
may live here, but I shall not.”
“You are going to leave him?” “Yes.”
“But why?”
She paused a long time, and said at last: “Perhaps—because I want to be—free!”
And, as she spoke, I had a sudden vision of broad
spaces, virgin tracts of forests, untrodden lands—and a realization of what freedom
would mean to such a nature as Mary Cavendish. I seemed to
see her for a moment as she was, a proud
wild creature, as untamed by civilization as some shy bird of the hills. A little cry broke from her lips:
“You don’t know, you don’t know, how this hateful
place has been prison to me!”
“I understand,” I said, “but—but don’t do anything
rash.” “Oh, rash!”
Her voice mocked at my prudence.
Then suddenly I said a thing
I could have bitten out my tongue
for: “You know that Dr. Bauerstein has been arrested?”
An instant
coldness passed like a mask over her face, blotting
out all expression.
“John was so kind as to break that to me this morning.”
“Well, what do you think?”
I asked feebly.
“Of what?” “Of the arrest?”
“What should I think? Apparently he is a German
spy; so the gardener had told John.”
Her face and voice were absolutely cold
and expressionless. Did she care, or did she not?
She moved away a step or two, and fingered
one of the flower vases.
“These are quite dead. I must do them again. Would you mind moving—thank you, Mr. Hastings.” And she walked quietly past me out of the
window, with a cool little
nod of dismissal.
No, surely she could not care for Bauerstein. No
woman could act her part with that icy unconcern.
Poirot did not make his appearance the following
morning, and there was no sign of the Scotland
Yard men.
But, at lunch-time, there arrived a new piece of
evidence—or rather lack of evidence.
We had vainly tried to trace the fourth letter, which Mrs. Inglethorp had written on the evening
preceding her death.
Our efforts having been in vain, we had abandoned the matter, hoping
that it might turn up of itself
one day. And this
is just what did happen, in the shape of a communication, which arrived by the second post from a firm of French
music publishers, acknowledging Mrs. Inglethorp’s cheque,
and regretting they had been unable to trace a certain series
of Russian folksongs. So the last hope of solving the mystery, by means of Mrs. Inglethorp’s correspondence on the fatal evening,
had to be abandoned.
Just before tea, I strolled down to tell Poirot of
the new disappointment, but found, to my annoyance, that he was once more out.
“Gone to London again?”
“Oh, no, monsieur, he has but taken the train to
Tadminster. ‘To see a young lady’s dispensary,’ he said.”
“Silly ass!” I ejaculated. “I told him
Wednesday was the one day she wasn’t there! Well, tell him to look us up to-morrow morning,
will you?”
“Certainly, monsieur.”
But, on the following day, no sign of Poirot.
I was getting angry. He was really
treating us in the most cavalier fashion.
After lunch, Lawrence drew me aside,
and asked if I was going down to see him.
“No, I don’t think I shall. He can come up here if he wants to see us.”
“Oh!” Lawrence looked indeterminate. Something
unusually nervous and excited in his manner
roused my curiosity.
“What is it?” I asked.
“I could go if there’s
anything special.”
“It’s nothing
much, but—well, if you are going, will you tell him——” he dropped his voice to a whisper—“I think I’ve found the extra
coffee-cup!”
I had almost forgotten that enigmatical message
of Poirot’s, but now my curiosity was aroused afresh.
Lawrence would
say no more, so I decided that I would descend from my high horse, and once more seek out Poirot at Leastways Cottage.
This time I was received with a smile. Monsieur Poirot was within.
Would I mount? I mounted
accordingly.
Poirot was sitting by the table, his head buried in his hands. He sprang up at my entrance.
“What is it?” I asked solicitously. “You are not ill, I trust?”
“No, no, not ill. But I decide an affair of great moment.” “Whether to catch the criminal or not?” I asked facetiously. But, to my great surprise,
Poirot nodded gravely.
“‘To speak or not to speak,’ as your so great Shakespeare says, ‘that is the question.’”
I did not trouble
to correct the quotation. “You are not serious, Poirot?”
“I am of the most serious.
For the most serious of all things
hangs in the balance.”
“And that is?”
“A woman’s happiness,
mon ami,” he said gravely. I did not quite
know what to say.
“The moment has come,” said Poirot thoughtfully, “and I do not know what to do.
For, see you, it is a big stake for which I play. No one but I, Hercule Poirot, would
attempt it!” And he tapped
himself proudly on the breast.
After pausing a few minutes
respectfully, so as not to spoil his effect, I gave him Lawrence’s message.
“Aha!” he cried. “So he has found the
extra coffee-cup. That is good. He has more
intelligence than would appear, this long-faced Monsieur Lawrence of yours!”
I did not myself think very highly
of Lawrence’s intelligence; but I forebore
to contradict Poirot,
and gently took him to task for forgetting my instructions as to which
were Cynthia’s days off.
“It is true. I have the head of a sieve. However,
the other young lady was most kind. She was sorry for my
disappointment, and showed me everything in the kindest way.”
“Oh, well, that’s all right, then, and
you must go to tea with Cynthia another day.”
I told him about the letter.
“I am sorry for that,”
he said. “I always had hopes of that letter.
But no, it was not to be. This affair must all be
unravelled from within.” He tapped his forehead. “These
little grey cells.
It is ‘up to them’—as
you say over here.”
Then, suddenly, he asked: “Are you a judge of finger-marks, my friend?”
“No,” I said, rather
surprised, “I know that there are no two finger-marks alike, but that’s as far as my science goes.”
“Exactly.”
He
unlocked a little drawer, and took out some photographs which he laid on the table.
“I have numbered them,
1, 2, 3. Will you describe them to me?”
I studied the proofs attentively.
“All greatly magnified, I see. No. 1, I should say,
are a man’s finger-prints; thumb and
first finger. No. 2 are a lady’s; they are much smaller, and quite different
in every way. No. 3”—I paused for some time—“there seem to be a lot of confused
finger-marks, but here, very distinctly, are No. 1’s.”
“Overlapping the others?”
“Yes.”
“You recognize them beyond fail?”
“Oh,
yes; they are identical.”
Poirot nodded, and gently taking the photographs
from me locked them up again.
“I suppose,” I said, “that as usual,
you are not going to explain?”
“On the contrary. No. 1 were the finger-prints of
Monsieur Lawrence. No. 2 were those of Mademoiselle Cynthia. They are not important. I merely obtained
them for comparison. No. 3 is a little
more complicated.”
“Yes?”
“It is, as you see, highly magnified. You may have
noticed a sort of blur extending all
across the picture. I will not describe to you the special apparatus, dusting
powder, etc., which
I used. It is a well-known process
to the police, and by means of it you can obtain
a photograph of the finger-prints of any object
in a very short space of time. Well, my friend, you have seen the
finger-marks—it remains to tell you the particular object on which
they had been left.”
“Go on—I am really excited.”
“Eh bien!
Photo No. 3 represents the highly magnified
surface of a tiny bottle
in the top poison cupboard of the dispensary in the Red Cross Hospital
at Tadminster—which sounds like the house that Jack built!”
“Good
heavens!” I exclaimed. “But what were Lawrence Cavendish’s finger- marks doing
on it? He never went near the poison cupboard
the day we were
there!”
“Oh, yes, he did!”
“Impossible! We were all together
the whole time.”
Poirot shook his head.
“No, my friend, there was a moment when you were
not all together. There was a moment
when you could not have been all together, or it would not have been necessary to call to Monsieur
Lawrence to come and join you on the balcony.”
“I’d forgotten that,” I admitted. “But it was only for a moment.”
“Long enough.”
“Long enough for what?”
Poirot’s smile became rather enigmatical.
“Long enough
for a gentleman who had once studied
medicine to gratify
a very natural interest and curiosity.”
Our eyes
met. Poirot’s were pleasantly vague. He got up and hummed a little tune.
I watched him suspiciously.
“Poirot,” I said, “what was in this particular little bottle?” Poirot
looked out of the window.
“Hydro-chloride of strychnine,” he said, over his shoulder, continuing to hum. “Good heavens!”
I said it quite quietly.
I was not surprised. I had expected
that answer.
“They use the pure hydro-chloride of strychnine very little—only occasionally for
pills. It is the official solution, Liq. Strychnine Hydro-clor. that is used in most medicines. That is why the
finger-marks have remained undisturbed since
then.”
“How did you manage to take this photograph?”
“I dropped my hat from the balcony,” explained Poirot simply.
“Visitors were not permitted below at that hour, so, in spite of my many apologies, Mademoiselle Cynthia’s colleague
had to go down and fetch it for me.”
“Then you knew what you were going to find?”
“No, not at all. I merely realized that it was
possible, from your story, for Monsieur
Lawrence to go to the poison cupboard. The possibility had to be confirmed, or eliminated.”
“Poirot,” I said, “your gaiety does not deceive me. This is a very important
discovery.”
“I do not know,” said Poirot. “But one thing does
strike me. No doubt it has struck you too.”
“What is that?”
“Why, that there is altogether too much strychnine about this case. This is the third
time we run up against
it. There was strychnine in Mrs. Inglethorp’s tonic. There is the strychnine sold across the counter at Styles St. Mary by Mace. Now we have more strychnine, handled by one of the household. It is confusing; and, as you know, I do not like confusion.”
Before I could reply, one of the other Belgians
opened the door and stuck his head in.
“There is a lady below, asking for Mr Hastings.” “A lady?”
I jumped up. Poirot followed
me down the narrow stairs.
Mary Cavendish was standing in the doorway.
“I have been visiting an old woman in
the village,” she explained, “and as Lawrence
told me you were with Monsieur Poirot I thought I would call for you.”
“Alas, madame,” said Poirot, “I thought you had
come to honour me with a visit!”
“I will some day, if you ask me,” she promised him, smiling.
“That is well. If you should need a father
confessor, madame”—she started ever so slightly—“remember, Papa Poirot is always at your service.”
She stared at him for a few minutes, as
though seeking to read some deeper meaning into his words.
Then she turned
abruptly away.
“Come, will you not walk back with us too, Monsieur Poirot?”
“Enchanted, madame.”
All the way to Styles, Mary talked fast and
feverishly. It struck me that in some way she was nervous of Poirot’s eyes.
The weather had broken, and the sharp wind was
almost autumnal in its shrewishness.
Mary shivered a little, and buttoned her black sports coat closer. The wind through the trees made a mournful
noise, like some great giant sighing.
We walked up to the great door of Styles,
and at once the knowledge came to us that something was wrong.
Dorcas came running
out to meet us. She was crying
and wringing her hands. I was aware of other servants huddled
together in the background, all eyes and ears.
“Oh, m’am! Oh, m’am! I don’t know how to tell you——” “What is it, Dorcas?” I asked impatiently. “Tell us at once.”
“It’s those wicked
detectives. They’ve arrested
him—they’ve arrested Mr.
Cavendish!”
“Arrested Lawrence?” I gasped.
I saw a strange look come into Dorcas’s eyes.
“No, sir. Not Mr. Lawrence—Mr. John.”
Behind me, with a wild cry, Mary Cavendish
fell heavily against
me, and as I turned
to catch her I met the quiet triumph in Poirot’s eyes.
CHAPTER XI.
THE CASE FOR THE PROSECUTION
The trial of John Cavendish for the murder of his
stepmother took place two months later.
Of the intervening weeks I will say
little, but my admiration and sympathy went out unfeignedly to Mary Cavendish. She ranged herself
passionately on her husband’s side, scorning the mere idea of his guilt, and fought for him tooth
and nail.
I expressed my admiration to Poirot, and he nodded thoughtfully.
“Yes, she is of those women who show at their best in adversity. It brings out all that is sweetest
and truest in them. Her pride and her jealousy
have——”
“Jealousy?” I queried.
“Yes. Have you not realized
that she is an unusually
jealous woman? As I was saying, her pride and jealousy have been laid aside. She thinks of nothing but her husband, and the terrible
fate that is hanging over him.”
He spoke very feelingly, and I looked
at him earnestly, remembering that last afternoon, when he had been deliberating
whether or not to speak. With his tenderness
for “a woman’s happiness,” I felt glad that the decision had been taken out of his hands.
“Even now,” I said, “I can hardly believe it. You
see, up to the very last minute, I thought it was Lawrence!”
Poirot grinned.
“I know you did.”
“But John! My old friend
John!”
“Every murderer
is probably somebody’s old friend,” observed
Poirot philosophically. “You cannot mix up sentiment
and reason.”
“I must say I think you might
have given me a hint.”
“Perhaps, mon ami, I did not do so, just because
he was your old friend.”
I was rather disconcerted by this, remembering how I had busily passed
on to John what I believed to be Poirot’s views concerning Bauerstein. He, by the way,
had been acquitted of the charge
brought against him. Nevertheless, although
he had been too clever
for them this time, and the charge
of espionage could not be brought home to him, his wings were pretty
well clipped for the future.
I asked Poirot whether he thought John would be
condemned. To my intense surprise,
he replied that,
on the contrary, he was extremely likely
to be acquitted.
“But, Poirot——” I protested.
“Oh, my friend,
have I not said to you all along that I have no proofs.
It is one thing to know
that a man is guilty, it is quite another matter to prove him so. And, in this case, there is terribly
little evidence. That is the whole trouble. I,
Hercule Poirot, know, but I lack the last link in my chain. And unless I
can find that missing
link——” He shook his head gravely.
“When did you first suspect
John Cavendish?” I asked, after a minute
or two. “Did
you not suspect
him at all?”
“No, indeed.”
“Not after that fragment of conversation you overheard between
Mrs. Cavendish and her
mother-in-law, and her subsequent lack of frankness at the inquest?”
“No.”
“Did you not put two and two together, and reflect
that if it was not Alfred Inglethorp who was quarrelling with his wife—and
you remember, he strenuously denied
it at the inquest—it must be either Lawrence or John. Now, if it was Lawrence, Mary Cavendish’s conduct
was just as inexplicable. But if, on the other hand, it was John, the whole thing was explained quite naturally.”
“So,” I cried, a light breaking in upon me, “it was
John who quarrelled with his mother
that afternoon?”
“Exactly.”
“And you have known this all along?”
“Certainly. Mrs. Cavendish’s behaviour could only be explained
that way.” “And yet you say he may be acquitted?”
Poirot shrugged his shoulders.
“Certainly I do. At the police court proceedings, we shall hear the case for the prosecution,
but in all probability his solicitors will advise him to reserve his defence. That will be sprung upon us at
the trial. And—ah, by the way, I have a word of caution to give you, my friend.
I must not appear in the case.”
“What?”
“No. Officially, I have nothing
to do with it. Until
I have found that last link in my
chain, I must remain behind the scenes. Mrs. Cavendish must think I am working
for her husband, not against
him.”
“I say, that’s playing it a bit low down,”
I protested.
“Not
at all. We have to deal with a most clever and unscrupulous man, and we must use
any means in our power—otherwise he will slip through our fingers. That is why I have been careful
to remain in the background. All the discoveries have been made by Japp,
and Japp will take all the credit.
If I am called upon to give evidence at all”—he smiled
broadly—“it will probably be as a witness for
the defence.”
I could hardly believe my ears.
“It is quite en règle,” continued
Poirot. “Strangely enough,
I can give evidence that will demolish
one contention of the prosecution.”
“Which one?”
“The one that relates to the destruction of the
will. John Cavendish did not destroy that will.”
Poirot was a true prophet. I will not go into the
details of the police court proceedings,
as it involves many tiresome repetitions. I will merely state baldly that
John Cavendish reserved
his defence, and was duly committed for trial.
September found us all in London. Mary took a house
in Kensington, Poirot being included
in the family party.
I myself had been given a job at the
War Office, so was able to see them continually.
As the weeks went by, the state of Poirot’s
nerves grew worse and worse.
That “last link” he talked
about was still lacking. Privately, I hoped it might remain so, for what happiness could there be for Mary, if John were not acquitted?
On September 15th John Cavendish appeared in the
dock at the Old Bailey, charged
with “The Wilful Murder of Emily Agnes Inglethorp,” and pleaded “Not
Guilty.”
Sir Ernest Heavywether, the famous K.C., had been engaged to defend him.
Mr. Philips, K.C., opened the case for the Crown.
The murder, he said, was a most premeditated and
cold-blooded one. It was neither more nor less than the deliberate poisoning of a fond and trusting
woman by the stepson to whom
she had been more than a mother. Ever since his boyhood, she had supported him. He and his wife had lived at
Styles Court in every luxury,
surrounded by her care and attention. She had been their kind and
generous benefactress.
He proposed to call witnesses to show how the
prisoner, a profligate and spendthrift, had been at the end of his financial tether,
and had also been carrying
on an intrigue with a certain Mrs. Raikes, a neighbouring farmer’s wife.
This having come to his stepmother’s
ears, she taxed him with it on the afternoon
before her death, and a quarrel ensued, part of which was overheard. On
the previous day, the prisoner had
purchased strychnine at the village chemist’s
shop, wearing a disguise by means of which he hoped to throw the onus of
the crime upon another man—to wit,
Mrs. Inglethorp’s husband, of whom he had been bitterly
jealous. Luckily for Mr. Inglethorp, he had been able to produce an unimpeachable alibi.
On the afternoon of July 17th, continued Counsel,
immediately after the quarrel with
her son, Mrs. Inglethorp made a new will. This will was found destroyed in the grate of her bedroom the
following morning, but evidence had come to light which
showed that it had been drawn up in favour
of her husband. Deceased
had already made a will in his favour before her marriage, but—and Mr. Philips wagged an expressive
forefinger—the prisoner was not aware of that.
What had induced the deceased to make a fresh will, with the old one still extant,
he could not say. She was an old lady, and might possibly have forgotten the former one; or—this seemed
to him more likely—she may have had an idea that it was revoked
by her marriage, as there had been some conversation on the subject. Ladies were not always very well
versed in legal knowledge. She had, about
a year before, executed a will in favour of the prisoner. He would call evidence to show that it was the prisoner
who ultimately handed his stepmother her coffee on the fatal night.
Later in the evening, he had sought
admission to her room,
on which occasion, no doubt, he found an opportunity of destroying the will which, as far as he knew, would render the one in his favour valid.
The prisoner had been arrested in consequence of
the discovery, in his room, by
Detective Inspector Japp—a most brilliant officer—of the identical phial of strychnine which had been sold at the
village chemist’s to the supposed Mr. Inglethorp
on the day before the murder. It would be for the jury to decide whether or not these damning facts
constituted an overwhelming proof of the prisoner’s guilt.
And, subtly implying
that a jury which did not so decide, was quite unthinkable, Mr. Philips sat down and wiped his forehead.
The first witnesses
for the prosecution were mostly those who had been called at the inquest,
the medical evidence
being again taken
first.
Sir Ernest Heavywether, who was famous all over England for the unscrupulous manner in which he bullied
witnesses, only asked two questions.
“I take it, Dr. Bauerstein, that strychnine, as a drug, acts quickly?” “Yes.”
“And that you are unable to account for the delay in this case?” “Yes.”
“Thank you.”
Mr. Mace identified the phial handed him by Counsel
as that sold by him to “Mr.
Inglethorp.” Pressed, he admitted that he only knew Mr. Inglethorp by sight. He had never spoken
to him. The witness was not cross-examined.
Alfred Inglethorp was called, and denied having
purchased the poison. He also denied
having quarrelled with his wife. Various witnesses testified to the accuracy
of these statements.
The gardeners’ evidence, as to the
witnessing of the will was taken, and then
Dorcas was called.
Dorcas, faithful to her “young
gentlemen,” denied strenuously that it could
have been John’s voice she heard, and resolutely declared, in the teeth
of everything, that it was Mr.
Inglethorp who had been in the boudoir with her mistress. A rather wistful smile passed across the face of the
prisoner in the dock. He knew only
too well how useless her gallant defiance was, since it was not the object
of the defence to deny this point.
Mrs. Cavendish, of course, could
not be called upon to give evidence
against her husband.
After various questions on other matters,
Mr. Philips asked:
“In the month of June last, do you remember
a parcel arriving
for Mr.
Lawrence Cavendish from Parkson’s?” Dorcas shook her head.
“I don’t remember, sir. It may have done, but Mr.
Lawrence was away from home part of June.”
“In the event of a parcel arriving for
him whilst he was away, what would be done with it?”
“It would either
be put in his room or sent on after him.” “By you?”
“No, sir, I should leave it on the hall table. It
would be Miss Howard who would attend
to anything like that.”
Evelyn Howard was called and, after being examined on other points,
was
questioned as to the parcel.
“Don’t remember. Lots of parcels come. Can’t
remember one special one.” “You do not know if it was sent after Mr. Lawrence Cavendish
to Wales, or
whether it was put in his room?”
“Don’t think it was sent after him. Should have
remembered it if it was.” “Supposing a parcel arrived
addressed to Mr. Lawrence Cavendish, and
afterwards it disappeared, should you remark its absence?”
“No, don’t think so. I should think someone
had taken charge
of it.”
“I believe, Miss Howard, that it was you who found
this sheet of brown paper?” He held up the same dusty piece which Poirot
and I had examined in the morning-room at Styles.
“Yes, I did.”
“How did you come to look for it?”
“The Belgian detective who was employed
on the case asked me to search
for it.”
“Where did you eventually discover it?” “On the top of—of—a
wardrobe.”
“On top of the prisoner’s wardrobe?” “I—I believe so.”
“Did you not find it yourself?” “Yes.”
“Then you must know where you found it?” “Yes,
it was on the prisoner’s wardrobe.” “That is better.”
An assistant from Parkson’s, Theatrical Costumiers,
testified that on June 29th, they had
supplied a black beard to Mr. L. Cavendish, as requested. It was ordered by letter, and a postal order was
enclosed. No, they had not kept the letter.
All transactions were entered in their books. They had sent the beard, as directed,
to “L. Cavendish, Esq., Styles Court.”
Sir Ernest Heavywether rose ponderously. “Where
was the letter written from?” “From Styles
Court.”
“The same address
to which you sent the parcel?”
“Yes.”
“And the letter came from there?”
“Yes.”
Like a beast of prey, Heavywether fell upon him:
“How do you know?” “I—I don’t understand.”
“How do you know that letter came from Styles? Did you notice the postmark?”
“No—but——”
“Ah, you
did not notice the postmark! And yet
you affirm so confidently that it came from Styles.
It might, in fact, have been any postmark?”
“Y—es.”
“In fact, the letter, though written on stamped
notepaper, might have been posted from anywhere? From Wales, for instance?”
The
witness admitted that such might
be the case, and Sir Ernest signified that he was satisfied.
Elizabeth Wells, second housemaid
at Styles, stated that after she had gone to bed
she remembered that she had bolted the front door, instead of leaving it on the latch as Mr. Inglethorp had requested. She had accordingly gone downstairs again to rectify her error. Hearing a
slight noise in the West wing, she had peeped
along the passage, and had seen Mr. John Cavendish knocking at Mrs. Inglethorp’s door.
Sir Ernest Heavywether made short work of her, and
under his unmerciful bullying she contradicted herself
hopelessly, and Sir Ernest sat down again with a satisfied smile on his face.
With the evidence of Annie, as to the
candle grease on the floor, and as to seeing
the prisoner take the coffee into the boudoir, the proceedings were adjourned
until the following
day.
As we went home, Mary Cavendish spoke
bitterly against the prosecuting counsel.
“That hateful man! What a net he has
drawn around my poor John! How he twisted every little fact until he made it seem what it wasn’t!”
“Well,” I said consolingly, “it will be the other way about to-morrow.”
“Yes,” she said meditatively; then suddenly dropped
her voice. “Mr. Hastings, you do not think—surely it could not have been Lawrence—Oh, no, that could
not be!”
But I myself was puzzled, and as soon as I was
alone with Poirot I asked him what he thought Sir Ernest was driving at.
“Ah!” said Poirot appreciatively. “He is a clever man, that Sir Ernest.”
“Do you think he believes
Lawrence guilty?”
“I do not think he believes or cares anything! No,
what he is trying for is to create
such confusion in the minds of the jury that they are divided in their opinion as to which brother did it. He is
endeavouring to make out that there is quite
as much evidence against Lawrence as against John—and I am not at all sure that he will not succeed.”
Detective-inspector Japp was the first witness
called when the trial was reopened, and gave his evidence succinctly and briefly. After
relating the earlier
events, he proceeded:
“Acting on information received,
Superintendent Summerhaye and myself searched
the prisoner’s room, during his temporary absence from the house. In his chest of drawers, hidden
beneath some underclothing, we found: first,
a pair of gold-rimmed pince-nez similar to those worn by Mr. Inglethorp”—these were exhibited—“secondly, this phial.”
The phial was that already
recognized by the chemist’s assistant, a tiny bottle
of blue glass, containing a few grains
of a white crystalline powder,
and labelled: “Strychnine Hydro-chloride. POISON.”
A fresh piece of evidence discovered by the
detectives since the police court proceedings was a long, almost new piece of blotting-paper. It had been found in Mrs.
Inglethorp’s cheque book, and on being reversed at a mirror, showed clearly the words: “. . . erything of
which I die possessed I leave to my beloved
husband Alfred Ing...” This placed beyond question the fact that the
destroyed will had been in favour of
the deceased lady’s husband. Japp then produced the charred fragment of paper recovered from the grate,
and this, with the discovery
of the beard in the attic, completed
his evidence.
But Sir Ernest’s cross-examination was yet to come.
“What day was it when you searched the prisoner’s room?” “Tuesday, the 24th of July.”
“Exactly a week after the tragedy?” “Yes.”
“You found these two objects, you say, in the chest of drawers.
Was the drawer unlocked?”
“Yes.”
“Does it not strike
you as unlikely that a man who had committed
a crime should keep the evidence of it in an unlocked
drawer for anyone
to find?”
“He might have stowed them there in a hurry.”
“But you have just said it was a whole week since the crime. He would have had ample time to remove them and destroy
them.”
“Perhaps.”
“There is no perhaps about it. Would he, or would he not have had plenty of time to remove and destroy them?”
“Yes.”
“Was the pile of underclothes under which the things were hidden heavy or light?”
“Heavyish.”
“In other words, it was winter underclothing. Obviously,
the prisoner would
not be likely to go to that drawer?”
“Perhaps not.”
“Kindly answer my question. Would the prisoner, in the hottest
week of a hot summer, be likely to go to a drawer
containing winter underclothing. Yes, or no?”
“No.”
“In that case, is it not possible
that the articles
in question might have been put there
by a third person, and that the prisoner was quite unaware
of their presence?”
“I should not think it likely.” “But it is possible?”
“Yes.”
“That is all.”
More evidence followed.
Evidence as to the financial difficulties in which the prisoner had found himself at the end of
July. Evidence as to his intrigue with Mrs. Raikes—poor Mary, that must have been bitter hearing
for a woman of her pride.
Evelyn Howard had been right in her facts, though her animosity against Alfred Inglethorp had caused her to jump
to the conclusion that he was the person concerned.
Lawrence Cavendish was then put into the box. In a
low voice, in answer to Mr. Philips’
questions, he denied
having ordered anything
from Parkson’s in
June. In fact,
on June 29th, he had been staying
away, in Wales.
Instantly, Sir Ernest’s chin was shooting
pugnaciously forward.
“You deny
having ordered a black beard from Parkson’s on June 29th?” “I do.”
“Ah! In the event of anything happening to your
brother, who will inherit Styles Court?”
The brutality of the question
called a flush to Lawrence’s pale face. The judge gave vent to a faint murmur of disapprobation, and the prisoner
in the dock leant forward
angrily.
Heavywether cared nothing for his client’s anger.
“Answer my question, if you please.”
“I suppose,” said Lawrence quietly, “that I should.”
“What do you mean by you ‘suppose’? Your brother has no children. You
would inherit it, wouldn’t you?” “Yes.”
“Ah, that’s better,” said Heavywether, with ferocious geniality.
“And you’d inherit
a good slice of money too, wouldn’t
you?”
“Really, Sir Ernest,” protested the judge, “these questions are not relevant.” Sir Ernest bowed,
and having shot his arrow proceeded.
“On Tuesday,
the 17th July, you went, I believe,
with another guest, to visit the dispensary at the Red Cross Hospital
in Tadminster?”
“Yes.”
“Did you—while you happened to be alone
for a few seconds—unlock the poison cupboard,
and examine some of the bottles?”
“I—I—may have done so.”
“I put it to you that you did do so?” “Yes.”
Sir Ernest fairly shot the next question at him. “Did you examine one bottle in
particular?” “No, I do not think so.”
“Be careful,
Mr. Cavendish. I am referring
to a little bottle of Hydro-chloride of Strychnine.”
Lawrence was turning a sickly greenish colour.
“N—o—I am sure I didn’t.”
“Then how do you account for the fact that you left the unmistakable impress
of your finger-prints on it?”
The bullying manner was highly efficacious with a nervous disposition. “I—I suppose I must have taken up the bottle.”
“I suppose so too! Did you abstract any of the contents of the bottle?”
“Certainly not.”
“Then why did you take it up?”
“I once studied
to be a doctor. Such things naturally
interest me.”
“Ah! So poisons
‘naturally interest’ you, do they? Still, you waited to be alone
before gratifying that ‘interest’ of yours?”
“That was pure chance. If the others had been there, I should have done just the same.”
“Still, as it happens,
the others were not there?”
“No, but——”
“In fact, during the whole afternoon, you were only
alone for a couple of minutes, and it
happened—I say, it happened—to be during those two minutes that you displayed your ‘natural interest’
in Hydro-chloride of Strychnine?”
Lawrence stammered pitiably. “I—I——”
With a satisfied
and expressive countenance, Sir Ernest observed:
“I
have nothing more to ask you, Mr. Cavendish.”
This bit of cross-examination had caused great excitement in court. The heads of the many fashionably attired women
present were busily laid together, and their whispers
became so loud that the judge angrily
threatened to have the court
cleared if there was not immediate silence.
There was little more evidence. The hand-writing experts
were called upon for their opinion of the signature of
“Alfred Inglethorp” in the chemist’s poison register.
They all declared unanimously that it was certainly not his hand- writing, and gave it as their view that it
might be that of the prisoner disguised. Cross-examined,
they admitted that it might be the prisoner’s hand-writing cleverly
counterfeited.
Sir Ernest Heavywether’s speech in opening
the case for the defence
was not a long one, but it
was backed by the full force of his emphatic manner. Never, he said,
in the course of his long experience, had he known a charge
of murder rest
on slighter evidence. Not only was it entirely
circumstantial, but the greater part
of it was practically unproved. Let them take the testimony they had
heard and sift it impartially. The
strychnine had been found in a drawer in the prisoner’s room. That drawer
was an unlocked one, as he had pointed out, and he submitted that there was no evidence to prove that
it was the prisoner who had concealed the
poison there. It was, in fact, a wicked and malicious attempt on the part of some third person to fix the crime on the
prisoner. The prosecution had been unable
to produce a shred of evidence in support of their contention that it was the prisoner who ordered the black beard
from Parkson’s. The quarrel which had taken
place between prisoner
and his stepmother was freely
admitted, but both it and his financial embarrassments had been grossly exaggerated.
His learned friend—Sir Ernest nodded carelessly at
Mr. Philips—had stated that if the
prisoner were an innocent man, he would have come forward at the inquest to explain that it was he, and not
Mr. Inglethorp, who had been the participator
in the quarrel. He thought the facts had been misrepresented. What had actually occurred was this. The
prisoner, returning to the house on Tuesday
evening, had been authoritatively told that there had been a violent
quarrel between Mr. and Mrs.
Inglethorp. No suspicion had entered the prisoner’s head that anyone could possibly have mistaken his voice for that of
Mr. Inglethorp. He naturally
concluded that his stepmother had had two quarrels.
The prosecution averred that on Monday, July 16th,
the prisoner had entered the
chemist’s shop in the village, disguised as Mr. Inglethorp. The prisoner, on the contrary, was at that time at a lonely
spot called Marston’s
Spinney, where he had been summoned by an anonymous
note, couched in blackmailing terms,
and threatening to reveal
certain matters to his wife unless he complied with its demands. The prisoner had, accordingly, gone to the appointed
spot, and after waiting there vainly
for half an hour had returned home. Unfortunately, he had met with no one on the way there or back
who could vouch for the truth of his story, but luckily he had kept the note, and it would be produced as evidence.
As for the statement relating to the destruction of
the will, the prisoner had formerly practised at the Bar, and was perfectly well aware that the will made in his favour a year before was automatically revoked
by his stepmother’s remarriage. He would call evidence to show who did destroy
the will, and it was possible that that might open up quite a new view of the case.
Finally, he would point out to the jury that there
was evidence against other people
besides John Cavendish. He would direct their attention to the fact that the evidence against Mr. Lawrence
Cavendish was quite as strong, if not stronger
than
that against his brother.
He would now call the prisoner.
John acquitted himself well in the witness-box.
Under Sir Ernest’s skilful handling,
he told his tale credibly and well. The anonymous note received by him was produced, and handed to the jury to examine.
The readiness with which he admitted his financial difficulties,
and the disagreement with his stepmother, lent value to his denials.
At the close of his examination, he paused, and said:
“I should like to make one thing clear. I utterly
reject and disapprove of Sir Ernest Heavywether’s insinuations against my brother. My brother, I am convinced, had no more to do with the crime than I have.”
Sir Ernest merely smiled, and noted with a sharp
eye that John’s protest had produced a very favourable impression on the jury.
Then the cross-examination began.
“I understand you to say that it never entered your
head that the witnesses at the inquest
could possibly have mistaken your voice for that of Mr. Inglethorp. Is not that very surprising?”
“No, I don’t think so. I was told there
had been a quarrel between my mother and
Mr. Inglethorp, and it never occurred to me that such was not really the case.”
“Not when the servant Dorcas
repeated certain fragments of the conversation
—fragments which you must have recognized?” “I did not recognize
them.”
“Your memory must be unusually short!”
“No, but we were both angry, and, I think, said more than we meant. I paid very little
attention to my mother’s actual
words.”
Mr. Philips’
incredulous sniff was a triumph
of forensic skill.
He passed on to the subject
of the note.
“You have produced this note very opportunely. Tell me, is there nothing
familiar about the hand-writing of it?”
“Not that I know of.”
“Do you not think that it bears a marked resemblance to your own hand- writing—carelessly disguised?”
“No, I do not think so.”
“I put it to you that it is your own hand-writing!” “No.”
“I put it to you that, anxious to prove an alibi,
you conceived the idea of a fictitious and rather incredible appointment, and wrote this note yourself in order to bear out your statement!”
“No.”
“Is it not a fact that, at the time you claim to
have been waiting about at a solitary
and unfrequented spot, you were really in the chemist’s shop in Styles St. Mary, where you purchased
strychnine in the name of Alfred Inglethorp?”
“No, that is a lie.”
“I put it to you that, wearing a suit of Mr.
Inglethorp’s clothes, with a black beard
trimmed to resemble his, you were there—and signed the register in his name!”
“That is absolutely untrue.”
“Then I will leave the remarkable similarity of hand-writing between
the note, the register, and your own, to the consideration of the jury,”
said Mr. Philips,
and sat down with the air of a man who has done his duty, but who was nevertheless horrified by such deliberate perjury.
After this, as it was growing late, the case was adjourned
till Monday.
Poirot, I noticed,
was looking profoundly discouraged. He had that little frown between
the eyes that I knew so well.
“What is it, Poirot?” I inquired.
“Ah, mon ami, things are going badly, badly.”
In spite of myself, my heart gave a leap of relief.
Evidently there was a likelihood of John Cavendish
being acquitted.
When we reached the house, my little friend
waved aside Mary’s
offer of tea.
“No, I thank you, madame.
I will mount to my room.”
I followed him. Still frowning,
he went across to the desk and took out a small
pack of patience cards. Then he drew up a chair to the table, and, to my
utter amazement, began solemnly to build card houses!
My jaw dropped involuntarily, and he said at once:
“No, mon ami,
I am not in my second childhood! I steady my nerves, that is all. This employment requires precision of
the fingers. With precision of the fingers
goes precision of the brain. And never have I needed that more than now!”
“What is the trouble?” I asked.
With a great thump on the table, Poirot demolished his carefully built
up
edifice.
“It is this, mon
ami! That I can build card houses seven stories high, but I cannot”—thump—“find”—thump—“ that last link of which I spoke to you.”
I could not quite tell what to say, so
I held my peace, and he began slowly building up the cards again, speaking
in jerks as he did so.
“It is done—so! By placing—one card—on
another—with mathematical— precision!”
I watched the card house rising under
his hands, story by story. He never hesitated or faltered. It was really almost like a conjuring trick.
“What a steady hand you’ve got,” I
remarked. “I believe I’ve only seen your hand shake once.”
“On an occasion when I was enraged,
without doubt,” observed Poirot, with great placidity.
“Yes indeed! You were in a towering rage. Do you
remember? It was when you discovered
that the lock of the despatch-case in Mrs. Inglethorp’s bedroom had been forced. You stood by the
mantelpiece, twiddling the things on it in your usual fashion, and your hand shook like a leaf! I must say——”
But
I stopped suddenly. For Poirot, uttering a hoarse and inarticulate cry, again annihilated his masterpiece of cards, and putting his hands over his eyes swayed backwards and forwards, apparently suffering the keenest
agony.
“Good heavens,
Poirot!” I cried.
“What is the matter? Are you taken
ill?” “No, no,” he gasped.
“It is—it is—that
I have an idea!”
“Oh!” I exclaimed, much relieved. “One of your ‘little
ideas’?”
“Ah, ma foi, no!” replied Poirot frankly. “This time it is an idea gigantic!
Stupendous! And you—you, my friend, have given it to me!”
Suddenly clasping me in his arms, he kissed me
warmly on both cheeks, and before I had recovered
from my surprise
ran headlong from the room.
Mary Cavendish entered at that moment.
“What is the
matter with Monsieur Poirot? He rushed past me crying out: ‘A garage! For the love of Heaven, direct
me to a garage, madame!’ And, before I could answer,
he had dashed out into the street.”
I hurried to the window. True enough,
there he was, tearing down the street, hatless, and gesticulating as he went.
I turned to Mary with a gesture
of despair.
“He’ll
be stopped by a policeman in another minute.
There he goes,
round the corner!”
Our eyes met, and we stared helplessly at one another. “What can be the matter?”
I shook my head.
“I don’t
know. He was building card houses, when suddenly he said he had an idea, and rushed off as you saw.”
“Well,” said Mary, “I expect he will be back before dinner.” But night fell, and Poirot
had not returned.
CHAPTER XII. THE LAST LINK
Poirot’s abrupt departure had intrigued us all
greatly. Sunday morning wore away,
and still he did not reappear. But about three o’clock a ferocious and prolonged
hooting outside drove us to the window,
to see Poirot alighting from a car, accompanied by Japp and Summerhaye. The little man was transformed. He radiated an
absurd complacency. He bowed with exaggerated respect to Mary Cavendish.
“Madame, I have your permission to hold a little réunion in the salon? It is necessary for everyone to attend.”
Mary smiled sadly.
“You know,
Monsieur Poirot, that you have carte
blanche in every way.” “You are too amiable, madame.”
Still beaming, Poirot marshalled us all into the drawing-room, bringing forward chairs
as he did so.
“Miss
Howard—here. Mademoiselle Cynthia.
Monsieur Lawrence. The good Dorcas. And Annie. Bien! We must delay our proceedings a few minutes until Mr. Inglethorp arrives.
I have sent him a note.”
Miss Howard rose immediately from her seat. “If that man comes into the house, I leave it!”
“No, no!” Poirot
went up to her and pleaded in a low voice.
Finally Miss Howard consented to return to her
chair. A few minutes later Alfred Inglethorp entered the room.
The company once assembled, Poirot rose from his
seat with the air of a popular lecturer,
and bowed politely
to his audience.
“Messieurs,
mesdames, as you all know, I was called in by Monsieur John Cavendish to investigate this case. I at
once examined the bedroom of the deceased
which, by the advice of the doctors, had been kept locked, and was consequently exactly as it had been when
the tragedy occurred. I found: first, a fragment of green material;
second, a stain on the carpet near the window, still
damp; thirdly, an empty box of bromide powders.
“To take the fragment of green material first, I
found it caught in the bolt of the
communicating door between that room and the adjoining one occupied by Mademoiselle Cynthia. I handed the
fragment over to the police who did not consider
it of much importance. Nor did they recognize it for what it was—a piece torn from a green land armlet.”
There was a little stir of excitement.
“Now there was only one person at Styles who worked
on the land—Mrs. Cavendish. Therefore
it must have been Mrs. Cavendish who entered the deceased’s room through the door communicating with Mademoiselle Cynthia’s room.”
“But that door was bolted
on the inside!” I cried.
“When I examined
the room, yes. But in the first
place we have only her word for it, since it was she who tried that
particular door and reported it fastened. In
the ensuing confusion she would have had ample opportunity to shoot the
bolt across. I took an early opportunity
of verifying my conjectures. To begin with, the fragment
corresponds exactly with a tear in Mrs. Cavendish’s armlet. Also, at the inquest,
Mrs. Cavendish declared
that she had heard, from her own room, the fall
of the table by the bed. I took an early opportunity of testing that statement by stationing my friend Monsieur Hastings
in the left wing of the building, just outside Mrs. Cavendish’s door. I myself,
in company with the police,
went to the deceased’s
room, and whilst there I, apparently accidentally, knocked over the table in question, but found that,
as I had expected, Monsieur
Hastings had heard
no sound at all. This confirmed my belief that Mrs. Cavendish was not speaking
the truth when she declared
that she had been dressing
in her room at the time of the tragedy.
In fact, I was convinced that, far from having been in her own room,
Mrs. Cavendish was actually in the deceased’s room when the alarm was given.”
I shot a quick glance at Mary. She was very pale, but smiling.
“I proceeded to reason on that assumption. Mrs.
Cavendish is in her mother- in-law’s
room. We will say that she is seeking for something and has not yet found it. Suddenly Mrs. Inglethorp awakens
and is seized with an alarming paroxysm.
She flings out her arm, overturning the bed table, and then pulls desperately at the bell. Mrs. Cavendish, startled, drops her candle, scattering the grease on the
carpet. She picks it up, and retreats quickly to Mademoiselle Cynthia’s room, closing the door behind
her. She hurries
out into the passage, for the
servants must not find her where she is. But it is too late! Already footsteps are echoing along the gallery which connects
the two wings. What can she do?
Quick as thought, she hurries back to the young
girl’s room, and starts shaking her
awake. The hastily aroused household come trooping down the passage. They are all busily battering at Mrs.
Inglethorp’s door. It occurs to nobody that Mrs. Cavendish
has not arrived
with the rest, but—and this is significant—I can find no one who
saw her come from the other wing.” He looked at Mary Cavendish. “Am I right, madame?”
She bowed her head.
“Quite right, monsieur. You understand that, if I
had thought I would do my husband any
good by revealing these facts, I would have done so. But it did not seem
to me to bear upon the question
of his guilt or innocence.”
“In a sense, that is correct, madame.
But it cleared my mind of many misconceptions, and left me free to see other
facts in their true significance.”
“The will!”
cried Lawrence. “Then it was you, Mary, who destroyed the will?” She shook
her head, and Poirot shook
his also.
“No,” he said quietly. “There is only one person
who could possibly have destroyed that will—Mrs. Inglethorp herself!”
“Impossible!” I exclaimed. “She had only made it
out that very afternoon!” “Nevertheless, mon ami,
it was Mrs. Inglethorp. Because,
in no other way can
you
account for the fact that, on one of the hottest days of the year, Mrs.
Inglethorp ordered
a fire to be lighted
in her room.”
I gave a gasp. What idiots we had been never to
think of that fire as being incongruous! Poirot was continuing:
“The temperature on that day,
messieurs, was 80 degrees in the shade. Yet Mrs. Inglethorp ordered a fire! Why? Because
she wished to destroy something, and could think of no other way. You will remember that, in consequence of the War economics practiced at Styles, no waste paper
was thrown away.
There was therefore no means of destroying a thick document
such as a will. The moment I heard of a fire being lighted
in Mrs. Inglethorp’s room, I leaped
to the conclusion that it was to destroy some important document—possibly a will. So the discovery of the charred
fragment in the grate was no surprise
to me. I did not, of course, know at the time that the will
in question had only been made this afternoon,
and I will admit that, when I learnt that fact, I fell into a grievous error. I came to the conclusion that Mrs.
Inglethorp’s determination to destroy her
will arose as a direct consequence of the quarrel she had that afternoon, and that therefore the quarrel took place after, and not before the making of the will.
“Here, as we know, I was wrong, and I was forced to abandon
that idea. I
faced the problem
from a new standpoint. Now, at four o’clock, Dorcas overheard
her mistress saying angrily: ‘You need not think that any fear of publicity, or scandal between husband and
wife will deter me.” I conjectured, and conjectured rightly, that these words were addressed, not to her husband, but to
Mr. John Cavendish. At five o’clock, an hour later, she uses almost the same words,
but the standpoint is different. She admits to Dorcas, ‘I don’t know what to do; scandal between husband
and wife is a dreadful thing.’ At four o’clock she has been angry, but completely
mistress of herself. At five o’clock she is in
violent distress, and speaks of having had a great shock.
“Looking at the matter psychologically, I drew one
deduction which I was convinced was
correct. The second ‘scandal’ she spoke of was not the same as the first—and it concerned herself!
“Let us reconstruct. At four o’clock, Mrs.
Inglethorp quarrels with her son, and
threatens to denounce him to his wife—who, by the way, overheard the greater part of the conversation. At
four-thirty, Mrs. Inglethorp, in consequence
of a conversation on the validity of wills, makes
a will in favour of her husband,
which the two gardeners witness.
At five o’clock, Dorcas finds her mistress
in a state of considerable agitation, with a slip of
paper—‘a letter,’ Dorcas thinks—in her hand, and it is then that she orders the fire
in her room to be lighted. Presumably, then,
between four-thirty and five o’clock,
something has occurred
to occasion a complete revolution of feeling, since she is now as
anxious to destroy the will, as she was before to make it. What was that something?
“As far as we know, she was quite alone during that
half-hour. Nobody entered or left that boudoir. What then occasioned this sudden change of sentiment?
“One
can only guess,
but I believe my guess to be correct. Mrs. Inglethorp had no
stamps in her desk. We know this, because later she asked Dorcas to bring her some.
Now in the opposite corner of the room stood her husband’s desk— locked. She was anxious to find some
stamps, and, according to my theory, she tried
her own keys in the desk. That one of them fitted I know. She therefore opened
the desk, and in searching for the stamps
she came across
something else
—that slip of paper which Dorcas saw in her hand,
and which assuredly was never meant
for Mrs. Inglethorp’s eyes. On the other hand, Mrs. Cavendish believed that the slip of paper to which
her mother-in-law clung so tenaciously was a written proof of her own husband’s
infidelity. She demanded
it from Mrs. Inglethorp who assured her, quite truly,
that it had nothing to do with that matter.
Mrs. Cavendish did not believe her. She thought that Mrs. Inglethorp was shielding
her stepson. Now Mrs. Cavendish is a very resolute woman,
and,
behind her mask of reserve,
she was madly jealous of her husband.
She determined to get hold of
that paper at all costs, and in this resolution chance came to her aid. She happened to pick up the key of Mrs. Inglethorp’s despatch-
case, which had been lost that morning. She knew that her mother-in-law invariably kept all important
papers in this particular case.
“Mrs. Cavendish, therefore, made her plans as only a woman driven desperate
through jealousy could have done. Some time in the evening she unbolted
the door leading into Mademoiselle
Cynthia’s room. Possibly she applied oil to the hinges, for I found that it opened
quite noiselessly when I tried it. She put off her project until the early hours of the
morning as being safer, since the servants were
accustomed to hearing her move about her room at that time. She dressed completely in her land kit, and made her
way quietly through Mademoiselle Cynthia’s room into that of Mrs. Inglethorp.”
He paused a moment, and Cynthia interrupted:
“But I should have woken up if anyone had come through my room?” “Not
if you were drugged, mademoiselle.”
“Drugged?” “Mais, oui!”
“You remember”—he addressed us collectively
again—“that through all the tumult
and noise next door Mademoiselle Cynthia slept. That admitted of two possibilities. Either her sleep was
feigned—which I did not believe—or her unconsciousness was indeed by artificial means.
“With this latter idea in my mind, I examined all
the coffee-cups most carefully, remembering that it was Mrs. Cavendish
who had brought Mademoiselle
Cynthia her coffee the night before. I took a sample from each cup, and had them analysed—with no result. I had counted
the cups carefully, in the event of one
having been removed. Six persons had taken coffee, and six cups were duly found. I had to confess myself
mistaken.
“Then I discovered that I had been guilty of a very
grave oversight. Coffee had been brought in for seven
persons, not six, for Dr. Bauerstein had been there
that evening. This changed the face of the whole affair, for there was
now one cup missing. The servants
noticed nothing, since Annie, the housemaid, who took in the coffee, brought
in seven cups, not knowing
that Mr. Inglethorp never drank it, whereas Dorcas,
who cleared them away the following morning,
found six as usual—or
strictly speaking she found five, the sixth being the one found broken
in Mrs. Inglethorp’s room.
“I was confident
that the missing
cup was that of Mademoiselle Cynthia. I had an
additional reason for that belief in the fact that all the cups found contained sugar, which Mademoiselle Cynthia never
took in her coffee. My attention was attracted by the story of Annie about some
‘salt’ on the tray of cocoa which she took
every night to Mrs. Inglethorp’s room. I accordingly secured a sample of that cocoa, and sent it to be analysed.”
“But that had already been done by Dr. Bauerstein,”
said Lawrence quickly. “Not exactly.
The analyst was asked by him to report whether
strychnine was,
or
was not, present.
He did not have it tested, as I did, for a narcotic.”
“For a narcotic?”
“Yes. Here is the analyst’s report. Mrs. Cavendish
administered a safe, but effectual,
narcotic to both Mrs. Inglethorp and Mademoiselle Cynthia. And it is possible that she had a mauvais quart d’heure in consequence!
Imagine her feelings when her mother-in-law is suddenly taken ill and dies, and immediately after
she hears the word ‘Poison’!
She has believed
that the sleeping
draught she administered was perfectly harmless, but
there is no doubt that for one terrible moment she must have feared that Mrs. Inglethorp’s death lay at her door.
She is seized with panic, and under its influence she hurries
downstairs, and quickly drops the coffee-cup and saucer used by Mademoiselle Cynthia into a large brass
vase, where it is discovered later by Monsieur Lawrence. The remains of
the cocoa she dare not touch. Too many eyes are upon her. Guess at her relief when strychnine
is mentioned, and she discovers that after all the tragedy is not her doing.
“We are now able to account for the symptoms
of strychnine poisoning being so long in
making their appearance. A narcotic taken with strychnine will delay the action of the poison
for some hours.”
Poirot paused. Mary looked up at him, the colour
slowly rising in her face. “All you have said is quite true, Monsieur Poirot. It was the most awful hour
of
my life. I shall never forget it. But you are wonderful. I understand now——”
“What I meant when I told you that you could safely confess to Papa Poirot, eh? But you would not trust me.”
“I see everything now,” said Lawrence.
“The drugged cocoa, taken on top of the poisoned
coffee, amply accounts
for the delay.”
“Exactly. But was the coffee poisoned, or was it not? We come to a little
difficulty here, since Mrs. Inglethorp never drank it.”
“What?” The cry of surprise
was universal.
“No. You will remember my speaking of a stain on
the carpet in Mrs. Inglethorp’s room?
There were some peculiar points
about that stain.
It was still damp, it exhaled a strong odour of coffee,
and imbedded in the nap of the carpet I found some little splinters of china.
What had happened was plain to me, for not two minutes before
I had placed my little
case on the table near the window,
and the table, tilting up, had deposited
it upon the floor on precisely the identical spot. In exactly the same way, Mrs.
Inglethorp had laid down her cup of coffee on
reaching her room the night before, and the treacherous table had played her the same trick.
“What happened next is mere guess work on my part,
but I should say that Mrs. Inglethorp
picked up the broken cup and placed it on the table by the bed. Feeling
in need of a stimulant of some kind,
she heated up her cocoa,
and drank it off then and there. Now we are faced with a new problem.
We know the cocoa contained no strychnine. The coffee was
never drunk. Yet the strychnine must have been administered between seven and nine o’clock
that evening. What third medium was there—a medium so suitable for
disguising the taste of strychnine that
it is extraordinary no one has thought of it?” Poirot looked round the room, and then answered
himself impressively. “Her medicine!”
“Do you mean that the murderer introduced the
strychnine into her tonic?” I cried.
“There was no need to introduce it. It
was already there—in the mixture. The strychnine that killed Mrs. Inglethorp was the identical strychnine prescribed by Dr. Wilkins.
To make that clear to you, I will read you an extract from a book on dispensing which I found in the
Dispensary of the Red Cross Hospital at Tadminster:
“‘The following prescription has become famous in text books:
Strychninae Sulph............................. 1 gr.
Potass Bromide................ vi
Aqua ad........................... viii
Fiat Mistura
This solution deposits
in a few hours the greater part of the strychnine salt as an insoluble bromide in transparent
crystals. A lady in England lost her life by
taking a similar
mixture: the precipitated strychnine collected at the bottom,
and in taking the last dose she swallowed nearly
all of it!
“Now there was, of course, no bromide in Dr.
Wilkins’ prescription, but you will remember
that I mentioned an empty box of bromide powders.
One or two
of those powders introduced into the full bottle of
medicine would effectually precipitate
the strychnine, as the book describes, and cause it to be taken in the last dose. You will learn later that the
person who usually poured out Mrs. Inglethorp’s
medicine was always extremely careful not to shake the bottle, but to leave the sediment at the bottom
of it undisturbed.
“Throughout the case, there have been evidences
that the tragedy
was intended to take place on
Monday evening. On that day, Mrs. Inglethorp’s bell wire was neatly cut, and on Monday evening Mademoiselle Cynthia was spending the night with friends, so that
Mrs. Inglethorp would have been quite alone
in the right wing, completely shut off from help of any kind, and would have died, in all probability, before medical aid could have been summoned.
But in her hurry to be in time for the village
entertainment Mrs. Inglethorp forgot to take her medicine, and the next day she lunched away from home,
so that the last
—and fatal—dose was actually taken twenty-four
hours later than had been anticipated
by the murderer; and it is owing to that delay that the final proof— the last link of the chain—is now in my hands.”
Amid breathless excitement, he held out three thin strips of paper.
“A letter in the murderer’s own hand-writing, mes amis! Had it been a little clearer in its terms, it is possible that
Mrs. Inglethorp, warned in time, would have escaped.
As it was, she realized
her danger, but not the manner of it.”
In the deathly silence, Poirot pieced
together the slips of paper and, clearing his throat,
read:
Dearest Evelyn:
‘You
will be anxious at hearing
nothing. It is all right—only it will be to-night
instead of last night. You understand. There’s a good time coming once the old woman is dead and out of the way. No one can possibly
bring home the crime to me. That idea of yours about
the bromides was a stroke
of genius! But we must
be very circumspect. A false step——’
“Here, my
friends, the letter breaks off. Doubtless the writer was interrupted; but there can be no question
as to his identity. We all know this hand-writing and
——”
A howl that was almost a scream broke the silence. “You devil!
How did you get it?”
A chair was overturned. Poirot skipped nimbly aside. A quick movement
on
his part, and his assailant fell with a crash.
“Messieurs,
mesdames,” said Poirot,
with a flourish, “let me introduce you to the murderer, Mr. Alfred Inglethorp!”
CHAPTER XIII. POIROT EXPLAINS
“Poirot, you old villain,” I said, “I’ve half a
mind to strangle you! What do you mean by deceiving me as you have done?”
We were sitting in the library. Several
hectic days lay behind us. In the room below,
John and Mary were together once more, while Alfred Inglethorp and Miss Howard were in custody. Now at last,
I had Poirot to myself, and could relieve my still burning
curiosity.
Poirot did not answer
me for a moment, but at last he said:
“I did not deceive you, mon ami. At most, I permitted you to deceive
yourself.”
“Yes, but why?”
“Well, it is difficult to explain. You see, my
friend, you have a nature so honest, and a countenance so transparent, that—enfin, to conceal your feelings is impossible!
If I had told you my ideas, the very first time you saw Mr. Alfred Inglethorp that astute gentleman would have—in your so expressive idiom
—‘smelt a rat’! And then, bonjour to our chances
of catching him!”
“I think that I have more diplomacy
than you give me credit
for.”
“My friend,” besought Poirot, “I implore you, do
not enrage yourself! Your help has been of the most invaluable. It is but the extremely beautiful nature that you have,
which made me pause.”
“Well,” I grumbled,
a little mollified. “I still think you might have given me a hint.”
“But
I did, my friend. Several
hints. You would not take them. Think now, did I
ever say to you that I believed John Cavendish guilty? Did I not, on the contrary,
tell you that he would almost certainly be acquitted?”
“Yes, but——”
“And did I not immediately afterwards speak of the
difficulty of bringing the murderer
to justice? Was it not plain to you that I was speaking of two entirely different
persons?”
“No,” I said, “it was not plain
to me!”
“Then again,” continued Poirot, “at the beginning,
did I not repeat to you several times
that I didn’t want Mr. Inglethorp arrested now?
That should have conveyed something to you.”
“Do you mean to say you suspected him as long ago as that?”
“Yes. To begin with, whoever else might benefit by
Mrs. Inglethorp’s death, her husband
would benefit the most. There was no getting away from that.
When I went up to Styles with you that first day, I had no idea as to how the crime had been committed, but from what I knew of Mr. Inglethorp I fancied that it would
be very hard to find anything to connect him with it. When I arrived at
the château, I realized at once that
it was Mrs. Inglethorp who had burnt the will;
and there, by the way, you cannot complain, my friend, for I tried my
best to force on you the significance of that bedroom
fire in midsummer.”
“Yes, yes,” I said impatiently. “Go on.”
“Well, my friend, as I say, my views as to Mr.
Inglethorp’s guilt were very much
shaken. There was, in fact, so much evidence against him that I was inclined
to believe that he had not done it.”
“When did you change your mind?”
“When I found that the more efforts I made to clear
him, the more efforts he made to get
himself arrested. Then, when I discovered that Inglethorp had nothing to do with Mrs. Raikes and that in
fact it was John Cavendish who was interested in that quarter,
I was quite sure.”
“But why?”
“Simply this. If it had been Inglethorp who was
carrying on an intrigue with Mrs.
Raikes, his silence was perfectly comprehensible. But, when I discovered that it was known all over the village
that it was John who was attracted by the farmer’s
pretty wife, his silence bore quite a different interpretation. It was nonsense to pretend that he was afraid of
the scandal, as no possible scandal could
attach to him. This attitude of his gave me furiously to think, and I was slowly forced to the conclusion that Alfred Inglethorp wanted to be arrested. Eh bien!
from that moment,
I was equally determined that he should not be arrested.”
“Wait a minute. I don’t
see why he wished to be arrested?”
“Because, mon ami, it is the law of your country
that a man once acquitted can never be tried
again for the same offence. Aha! but it was clever—his idea! Assuredly, he is a man of method. See here, he knew that in his position he was
bound to be suspected, so he conceived the exceedingly clever
idea of preparing a lot of manufactured evidence against himself. He wished to
be arrested. He would then produce
his irreproachable alibi—and, hey presto, he was safe for life!”
“But I still don’t see how he managed
to prove his alibi, and yet go to the chemist’s shop?”
Poirot stared at me in surprise.
“Is it possible? My poor friend! You have not yet
realized that it was Miss Howard who went to the chemist’s
shop?”
“Miss Howard?”
“But, certainly. Who else? It was most easy for
her. She is of a good height, her
voice is deep and manly; moreover, remember, she and Inglethorp are cousins, and there is a distinct
resemblance between them, especially in their gait
and bearing. It was simplicity itself. They are a clever pair!”
“I am still a little
fogged as to how exactly
the bromide business
was done,” I remarked.
“Bon!
I will reconstruct for you as far as possible. I am inclined to think that Miss Howard was the master mind in that
affair. You remember her once mentioning
that her father was a doctor? Possibly she dispensed his medicines for him, or she may have taken
the idea from one of the many books lying
about when Mademoiselle
Cynthia was studying for her exam. Anyway, she was familiar with the fact that the addition of a bromide to a
mixture containing strychnine would
cause the precipitation of the latter.
Probably the idea came to her
quite suddenly. Mrs. Inglethorp had a box of bromide powders, which she occasionally took at night. What could be
easier than quietly to dissolve one or more of those powders
in Mrs. Inglethorp’s large sized bottle
of medicine when
it came from Coot’s? The risk is practically nil. The tragedy will not
take place until nearly a fortnight
later. If anyone has seen either of them touching the medicine, they will have forgotten it by that time. Miss Howard
will have engineered her quarrel, and
departed from the house. The lapse of time, and her absence, will defeat all suspicion. Yes, it was a clever idea!
If they had left it alone, it is possible
the crime might never have been brought
home to them. But they
were not satisfied. They tried to be too clever—and that was their undoing.”
Poirot puffed at his tiny cigarette, his eyes fixed on the ceiling.
“They arranged a plan to throw suspicion on John
Cavendish, by buying strychnine at the village
chemist’s, and signing
the register in his hand-writing.
“On Monday Mrs. Inglethorp will take the last dose of
her medicine. On Monday, therefore,
at six o’clock, Alfred Inglethorp arranges to be seen by a number of people at a spot far removed
from the village. Miss Howard has previously made up a cock and bull story about him and Mrs. Raikes to account for his holding
his tongue afterwards. At six o’clock,
Miss Howard, disguised as Alfred Inglethorp, enters the chemist’s shop, with her story about a dog, obtains the strychnine, and writes the name of
Alfred Inglethorp in John’s handwriting, which she had previously studied carefully.
“But, as it will never do if John, too, can prove
an alibi, she writes him an anonymous
note—still copying his hand-writing—which takes him to a remote spot
where it is exceedingly unlikely
that anyone will see him.
“So far, all goes well. Miss Howard
goes back to Middlingham. Alfred Inglethorp
returns to Styles. There is nothing that can compromise him in any way, since it is Miss Howard who has the
strychnine, which, after all, is only wanted as a blind to throw
suspicion on John Cavendish.
“But now a hitch occurs. Mrs. Inglethorp does not
take her medicine that night. The
broken bell, Cynthia’s absence—arranged by Inglethorp through his wife—all these are wasted.
And then—he makes his slip.
“Mrs. Inglethorp is out, and he sits
down to write to his accomplice, who, he fears,
may be in a panic at the non-success of their plan. It is probable that Mrs. Inglethorp returned earlier than he
expected. Caught in the act, and somewhat flurried
he hastily shuts and locks his desk. He fears that if he remains in the room he may have to open it again, and that Mrs. Inglethorp might catch sight of the letter before he could snatch it up.
So he goes out and walks in the woods, little dreaming
that Mrs. Inglethorp will open his desk, and discover the incriminating document.
“But this, as we know, is what happened. Mrs.
Inglethorp reads it, and becomes
aware of the perfidy of her husband and Evelyn Howard, though, unfortunately, the sentence about
the bromides conveys
no warning to her mind.
She knows that she is in danger—but is ignorant of where the danger
lies. She decides to say nothing to
her husband, but sits down and writes to her solicitor, asking him to come on the morrow,
and she also determines to destroy immediately the will which she has just made. She keeps the fatal letter.”
“It was to discover that letter, then, that her
husband forced the lock of the despatch-case?”
“Yes, and from the enormous risk he ran
we can see how fully he realized its importance. That letter excepted,
there was absolutely nothing to connect him
with the crime.”
“There’s only one thing I can’t make out, why
didn’t he destroy it at once when he got hold of it?”
“Because he did not dare take the biggest
risk of all—that
of keeping it on his own person.”
“I don’t understand.”
“Look at it from his point of view. I have discovered that there were only five
short minutes in which he could have taken it—the five minutes
immediately before our own arrival
on the scene, for before
that time Annie was brushing
the stairs, and would have
seen anyone who passed going to the right wing. Figure to yourself the scene! He enters the room, unlocking the door by means of one of the other
doorkeys—they were all much alike.
He hurries to the despatch-case— it is locked, and the keys are nowhere to be seen. That is a
terrible blow to him, for it means
that his presence in the room cannot be concealed as he had hoped. But he sees clearly that everything must
be risked for the sake of that damning piece of evidence. Quickly,
he forces the lock with a penknife, and turns over the papers
until he finds what he is looking
for.
“But now a fresh dilemma
arises: he dare not keep that piece of paper on him. He may be seen leaving the room—he may be searched.
If the paper is found on him,
it is certain doom. Probably, at this minute,
too, he hears the sounds
below of Mr. Wells and John
leaving the boudoir. He must act quickly. Where can he hide this terrible slip of paper? The contents of the
waste-paper-basket are kept and in
any case, are sure to be examined. There are no means of destroying it; and he dare not keep it. He looks round,
and he sees—what do you think, mon ami?”
I shook my head.
“In a moment, he has torn the letter into long thin
strips, and rolling them up into spills
he thrusts them hurriedly in amongst the other spills
in the vase on the mantle-piece.”
I uttered an exclamation.
“No one would think of looking there,” Poirot continued.
“And he will be able, at his leisure,
to come back and destroy this solitary piece of evidence against him.”
“Then, all the time, it was in the
spill vase in Mrs. Inglethorp’s bedroom, under our very noses?”
I cried.
Poirot nodded.
“Yes,
my friend. That is where I discovered my ‘last link,’ and I owe that very fortunate discovery
to you.”
“To me?”
“Yes. Do you remember telling
me that my hand shook as I was straightening the ornaments on the mantelpiece?”
“Yes, but I don’t see——”
“No, but I saw. Do you know, my friend, I
remembered that earlier in the morning,
when we had been there together, I had straightened all the objects on the mantelpiece. And, if they were already
straightened, there would be no need to straighten them again, unless, in the
meantime, someone else had touched them.”
“Dear me,” I murmured, “so that is the explanation
of your extraordinary behaviour. You rushed down to Styles,
and found it still there?”
“Yes, and it was a race for time.”
“But I still can’t understand why Inglethorp was such a fool as to leave it there
when he had plenty of opportunity to destroy it.”
“Ah, but he had no opportunity. I saw
to that.” “You?”
“Yes. Do you remember
reproving me for taking the household into my confidence on the subject?”
“Yes.”
“Well, my friend, I saw there was just one chance.
I was not sure then if Inglethorp was
the criminal or not, but if he was I reasoned that he would not have the paper on him, but would
have hidden it somewhere, and by enlisting
the sympathy of the
household I could effectually prevent his destroying it. He was already under suspicion, and by making
the matter public I secured the services of
about ten amateur detectives, who would be watching him unceasingly, and being himself aware of their watchfulness
he would not dare seek further to destroy the document. He was therefore
forced to depart
from the house, leaving it in the spill vase.”
“But surely Miss Howard had ample opportunities of aiding him.”
“Yes, but Miss Howard did not know of the paper’s
existence. In accordance with their
prearranged plan, she never spoke to Alfred Inglethorp. They were supposed to be deadly enemies, and until
John Cavendish was safely convicted they
neither of them dared risk a meeting. Of course I had a watch kept on Mr. Inglethorp, hoping that sooner
or later he would lead me to the hiding-place. But
he was too clever to take any chances. The paper was safe where it was; since no one
had thought of looking there in the first week, it was not likely they would do so afterwards. But for your lucky
remark, we might never have been able to bring him to justice.”
“I understand that now; but when did you first begin to suspect Miss Howard?”
“When I discovered that she had told a lie at the inquest about the letter she had received
from Mrs. Inglethorp.”
“Why, what was there to lie about?”
“You saw that letter? Do you recall its general appearance?” “Yes—more or less.”
“You will recollect, then, that Mrs. Inglethorp
wrote a very distinctive hand, and
left large clear spaces between her words. But if you look at the date at the top of the letter you will notice that
‘July 17th’ is quite different in this respect. Do you see what I mean?”
“No,” I confessed, “I don’t.”
“You do not see that that letter was not written on
the 17th, but on the 7th— the day
after Miss Howard’s departure? The ‘1’ was written in before the ‘7’ to turn
it into the ‘17th’.”
“But why?”
“That is exactly what I asked myself. Why does Miss
Howard suppress the letter written on
the 17th, and produce this faked one instead? Because she did not wish to show the letter of the 17th.
Why, again? And at once a suspicion dawned in my mind. You will remember my saying that it was wise to beware of people who were not telling you the truth.”
“And yet,” I cried indignantly, “after that, you gave me two reasons
why Miss Howard
could not have committed the crime!”
“And very good reasons too,” replied
Poirot. “For a long time they were a stumbling-block
to me until I remembered a very significant fact: that she and Alfred Inglethorp were cousins. She could not have committed
the crime single-
handed, but the reasons against
that did not debar her from being an accomplice. And, then, there was that rather over-vehement hatred of hers!
It concealed a very opposite emotion.
There was, undoubtedly, a tie of passion between them long before he came to Styles. They had already
arranged their infamous
plot— that he should marry
this rich, but rather foolish old lady, induce her to make a will leaving her money to him, and then gain their ends by a very cleverly
conceived crime. If all had gone as they planned,
they would probably
have left England, and lived together
on their poor victim’s money.
“They are a very astute and unscrupulous pair.
While suspicion was to be directed against
him, she would be making
quiet preparations for a very different dénouement. She arrives from Middlingham with all the compromising items in her possession. No suspicion attaches
to her. No notice is paid to her coming and going
in the house. She hides
the strychnine and glasses in John’s room.
She puts the beard in the attic. She will see to
it that sooner or later they are duly discovered.”
“I don’t quite see why they tried to fix the blame
on John,” I remarked. “It would have been much easier for them to bring the crime home to Lawrence.”
“Yes,
but that was mere chance.
All the evidence
against him arose
out of pure accident. It must, in fact, have been distinctly annoying to the pair of schemers.”
“His manner was
unfortunate,” I observed thoughtfully. “Yes. You realize, of course, what was at the back of that?”
“No.”
“You did not understand that he believed
Mademoiselle Cynthia guilty
of the crime?”
“No,” I exclaimed, astonished. “Impossible!”
“Not at all. I myself
nearly had the same idea. It was in my mind when I asked
Mr. Wells that first question about the will. Then there were the
bromide powders which she had made up, and her clever male impersonations, as Dorcas recounted them to us. There was really
more evidence against her than anyone else.”
“You are joking, Poirot!”
“No. Shall I tell you what made Monsieur Lawrence
turn so pale when he first entered his mother’s room on the fatal
night? It was because, whilst his mother lay
there, obviously poisoned, he saw, over your shoulder, that the door into Mademoiselle Cynthia’s room was unbolted.”
“But he declared that he saw it bolted!”
I cried.
“Exactly,” said Poirot
dryly. “And that was just what confirmed my suspicion that it was not. He was shielding
Mademoiselle Cynthia.”
“But why should
he shield her?”
“Because he is in love with her.”
I laughed.
“There, Poirot,
you are quite wrong! I happen to know for a fact that, far from being
in love with her, he positively dislikes
her.”
“Who told you that, mon ami?” “Cynthia herself.”
“La pauvre petite! And she was concerned?” “She said that she did not mind at all.”
“Then she certainly did mind very much,” remarked
Poirot. “They are like that—les femmes!”
“What you say about Lawrence
is a great surprise to me,” I said.
“But why? It was most obvious. Did not Monsieur
Lawrence make the sour face every
time Mademoiselle Cynthia spoke and laughed with his brother? He had taken it into his long head that
Mademoiselle Cynthia was in love with Monsieur
John. When he entered his mother’s room, and saw her obviously poisoned,
he jumped to the conclusion that Mademoiselle Cynthia
knew something about the matter.
He was nearly driven desperate. First he crushed
the coffee-cup to powder under
his feet, remembering that she had gone up with his mother the night before, and he
determined that there should be no chance of
testing its contents. Thenceforward, he strenuously, and quite
uselessly, upheld the theory
of ‘Death from natural causes’.”
“And what about the ‘extra coffee-cup’?”
“I was fairly
certain that it was Mrs. Cavendish who had hidden
it, but I had to make
sure. Monsieur Lawrence did not know at all what I meant; but, on reflection, he came to the conclusion that
if he could find an extra coffee-cup anywhere
his lady love would be cleared of suspicion. And he was perfectly right.”
“One thing more. What did Mrs. Inglethorp mean by her dying words?”
“They were, of course, an accusation against
her husband.”
“Dear me, Poirot,”
I said with a sigh, “I think you have explained everything.
I am glad it has all ended so happily. Even John and his wife are reconciled.” “Thanks to me.”
“How do you mean—thanks to you?”
“My dear friend, do you not realize that it was
simply and solely the trial which has
brought them together again? That John Cavendish still loved his wife, I was convinced. Also, that she was equally
in love with him. But they had drifted very far apart.
It all arose from a misunderstanding. She married him
without love. He knew it. He is a sensitive man in
his way, he would not force himself upon her if she did not want him. And, as he withdrew, her love awoke.
But they are both unusually proud, and their pride held them inexorably
apart. He drifted into an entanglement with Mrs. Raikes,
and she deliberately cultivated
the friendship of Dr. Bauerstein. Do you remember the day of John Cavendish’s arrest, when you found me deliberating over a big decision?”
“Yes, I quite understood
your distress.”
“Pardon me, mon
ami, but you did not understand it in the least. I was trying to decide whether or not I would clear
John Cavendish at once. I could have cleared him—though it might have meant a failure to convict the real criminals. They were entirely
in the dark as to my real attitude up to the very last moment
—which partly accounts for my success.”
“Do you mean that you could have saved John Cavendish from being brought
to trial?”
“Yes,
my friend. But I eventually decided in favour
of ‘a woman’s happiness’. Nothing but the great danger through
which they have passed could have brought these two proud souls together
again.”
I looked at Poirot in silent amazement.
The colossal cheek of the little man! Who on earth but Poirot would have thought
of a trial for murder
as a restorer of conjugal
happiness!
“I perceive your thoughts, mon ami,” said Poirot, smiling at me.
“No one but Hercule Poirot would
have attempted such a thing! And you are wrong in condemning it. The happiness of one man and one woman is the greatest
thing in all the world.”
His words took me back to earlier
events. I remembered Mary as she lay white
and exhausted on the sofa, listening, listening. There had come the sound of the bell
below. She had started up. Poirot had opened the door, and meeting her agonized
eyes had nodded
gently. “Yes, madame,”
he said. “I have brought
him back to you.” He had stood aside, and as I went out I had seen the look in Mary’s eyes,
as John Cavendish had caught his wife in his arms.
“Perhaps you are right, Poirot,” I said gently.
“Yes, it is the greatest thing in the world.”
Suddenly, there was a tap at the door, and Cynthia
peeped in. “I—I only——”
“Come in,” I said,
springing up. She came in, but did not sit down.
“I—only wanted
to tell you something——” “Yes?”
Cynthia fidgeted with a little tassel for some moments,
then, suddenly exclaiming: “You dears!” kissed first me
and then Poirot, and rushed out of the room again.
“What on earth does this mean?” I asked, surprised.
It was very nice to be kissed by Cynthia, but the
publicity of the salute rather impaired the pleasure.
“It means that she has discovered
Monsieur Lawrence does not dislike her as much as she thought,” replied Poirot philosophically.
“But——”
“Here he is.”
Lawrence at that moment passed the door.
“Eh! Monsieur
Lawrence,” called Poirot.
“We must congratulate you, is it not so?”
Lawrence blushed,
and then smiled
awkwardly. A man in love is a sorry spectacle. Now Cynthia had looked charming.
I sighed.
“What is it, mon ami?”
“Nothing,” I said sadly. “They are two delightful women!”
“And neither
of them is for you?”
finished Poirot. “Never
mind. Console yourself, my friend. We may hunt together again, who knows? And then——”
THE END
End of Project Gutenberg's The Mysterious Affair at Styles, by Agatha Christie
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