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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69087 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69087)
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-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MURDER OF ROGER ACKROYD
-***
-
-
-
-
-
- THE MURDER OF
- ROGER ACKROYD
-
- BY
-
- AGATHA CHRISTIE
-
- AUTHOR OF
- THE SECRET OF CHIMNEYS,
- THE MURDER ON THE LINKS, Etc.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- GROSSET & DUNLAP
- PUBLISHERS NEW YORK
-
-
- Copyright, 1926,
- By DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY, Inc.
-
-
- To Punkie,
- who likes an orthodox detective
- story, murder, inquest, and suspicion
- falling on every one in turn!
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I DR. SHEPPARD AT THE BREAKFAST TABLE 1
-
- II WHO’S WHO IN KING’S ABBOT 7
-
- III THE MAN WHO GREW VEGETABLE MARROWS 17
-
- IV DINNER AT FERNLY 31
-
- V MURDER 49
-
- VI THE TUNISIAN DAGGER 65
-
- VII I LEARN MY NEIGHBOR’S PROFESSION 75
-
- VIII INSPECTOR RAGLAN IS CONFIDENT 92
-
- IX THE GOLDFISH POND 106
-
- X THE PARLORMAID 118
-
- XI POIROT PAYS A CALL 136
-
- XII ROUND THE TABLE 145
-
- XIII THE GOOSE QUILL 156
-
- XIV MRS. ACKROYD 165
-
- XV GEOFFREY RAYMOND 178
-
- XVI AN EVENING AT MAH JONG 190
-
- XVII PARKER 202
-
- XVIII CHARLES KENT 218
-
- XIX FLORA ACKROYD 226
-
- XX MISS RUSSELL 238
-
- XXI THE PARAGRAPH IN THE PAPER 251
-
- XXII URSULA’S STORY 260
-
- XXIII POIROT’S LITTLE REUNION 269
-
- XXIV RALPH PATON’S STORY 284
-
- XXV THE WHOLE TRUTH 289
-
- XXVI AND NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH 298
-
- XXVII APOLOGIA 303
-
-
-
-
- THE MURDER OF
- ROGER ACKROYD
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- DR. SHEPPARD AT THE BREAKFAST TABLE
-
-
-Mrs. Ferrars died on the night of the 16th–17th September—a Thursday. I
-was sent for at eight o’clock on the morning of Friday the 17th. There
-was nothing to be done. She had been dead some hours.
-
-It was just a few minutes after nine when I reached home once more. I
-opened the front door with my latch-key, and purposely delayed a few
-moments in the hall, hanging up my hat and the light overcoat that
-I had deemed a wise precaution against the chill of an early autumn
-morning. To tell the truth, I was considerably upset and worried. I am
-not going to pretend that at that moment I foresaw the events of the
-next few weeks. I emphatically did not do so. But my instinct told me
-that there were stirring times ahead.
-
-From the dining-room on my left there came the rattle of tea-cups and
-the short, dry cough of my sister Caroline.
-
-“Is that you, James?” she called.
-
-An unnecessary question, since who else could it be? To tell the
-truth, it was precisely my sister Caroline who was the cause of my few
-minutes’ delay. The motto of the mongoose family, so Mr. Kipling tells
-us, is: “Go and find out.” If Caroline ever adopts a crest, I should
-certainly suggest a mongoose rampant. One might omit the first part
-of the motto. Caroline can do any amount of finding out by sitting
-placidly at home. I don’t know how she manages it, but there it is. I
-suspect that the servants and the tradesmen constitute her Intelligence
-Corps. When she goes out, it is not to gather in information, but to
-spread it. At that, too, she is amazingly expert.
-
-It was really this last named trait of hers which was causing me these
-pangs of indecision. Whatever I told Caroline now concerning the demise
-of Mrs. Ferrars would be common knowledge all over the village within
-the space of an hour and a half. As a professional man, I naturally
-aim at discretion. Therefore I have got into the habit of continually
-withholding all information possible from my sister. She usually finds
-out just the same, but I have the moral satisfaction of knowing that I
-am in no way to blame.
-
-Mrs. Ferrars’ husband died just over a year ago, and Caroline has
-constantly asserted, without the least foundation for the assertion,
-that his wife poisoned him.
-
-She scorns my invariable rejoinder that Mr. Ferrars died of acute
-gastritis, helped on by habitual over-indulgence in alcoholic
-beverages. The symptoms of gastritis and arsenical poisoning are not,
-I agree, unlike, but Caroline bases her accusation on quite different
-lines.
-
-“You’ve only got to look at her,” I have heard her say.
-
-Mrs. Ferrars, though not in her first youth, was a very attractive
-woman, and her clothes, though simple, always seemed to fit her very
-well, but all the same, lots of women buy their clothes in Paris and
-have not, on that account, necessarily poisoned their husbands.
-
-As I stood hesitating in the hall, with all this passing through my
-mind, Caroline’s voice came again, with a sharper note in it.
-
-“What on earth are you doing out there, James? Why don’t you come and
-get your breakfast?”
-
-“Just coming, my dear,” I said hastily. “I’ve been hanging up my
-overcoat.”
-
-“You could have hung up half a dozen overcoats in this time.”
-
-She was quite right. I could have.
-
-I walked into the dining-room, gave Caroline the accustomed peck on the
-cheek, and sat down to eggs and bacon. The bacon was rather cold.
-
-“You’ve had an early call,” remarked Caroline.
-
-“Yes,” I said. “King’s Paddock. Mrs. Ferrars.”
-
-“I know,” said my sister.
-
-“How did you know?”
-
-“Annie told me.”
-
-Annie is the house parlormaid. A nice girl, but an inveterate talker.
-
-There was a pause. I continued to eat eggs and bacon. My sister’s nose,
-which is long and thin, quivered a little at the tip, as it always does
-when she is interested or excited over anything.
-
-“Well?” she demanded.
-
-“A bad business. Nothing to be done. Must have died in her sleep.”
-
-“I know,” said my sister again.
-
-This time I was annoyed.
-
-“You can’t know,” I snapped. “I didn’t know myself until I got there,
-and I haven’t mentioned it to a soul yet. If that girl Annie knows, she
-must be a clairvoyant.”
-
-“It wasn’t Annie who told me. It was the milkman. He had it from the
-Ferrars’ cook.”
-
-As I say, there is no need for Caroline to go out to get information.
-She sits at home, and it comes to her.
-
-My sister continued:
-
-“What did she die of? Heart failure?”
-
-“Didn’t the milkman tell you that?” I inquired sarcastically.
-
-Sarcasm is wasted on Caroline. She takes it seriously and answers
-accordingly.
-
-“He didn’t know,” she explained.
-
-After all, Caroline was bound to hear sooner or later. She might as
-well hear from me.
-
-“She died of an overdose of veronal. She’s been taking it lately for
-sleeplessness. Must have taken too much.”
-
-“Nonsense,” said Caroline immediately. “She took it on purpose. Don’t
-tell me!”
-
-It is odd how, when you have a secret belief of your own which you do
-not wish to acknowledge, the voicing of it by some one else will rouse
-you to a fury of denial. I burst immediately into indignant speech.
-
-“There you go again,” I said. “Rushing along without rhyme or reason.
-Why on earth should Mrs. Ferrars wish to commit suicide? A widow,
-fairly young still, very well off, good health, and nothing to do but
-enjoy life. It’s absurd.”
-
-“Not at all. Even you must have noticed how different she has been
-looking lately. It’s been coming on for the last six months. She’s
-looked positively hag-ridden. And you have just admitted that she
-hasn’t been able to sleep.”
-
-“What is your diagnosis?” I demanded coldly. “An unfortunate love
-affair, I suppose?”
-
-My sister shook her head.
-
-“_Remorse_,” she said, with great gusto.
-
-“Remorse?”
-
-“Yes. You never would believe me when I told you she poisoned her
-husband. I’m more than ever convinced of it now.”
-
-“I don’t think you’re very logical,” I objected. “Surely if a woman
-committed a crime like murder, she’d be sufficiently cold-blooded to
-enjoy the fruits of it without any weak-minded sentimentality such as
-repentance.”
-
-Caroline shook her head.
-
-“There probably are women like that—but Mrs. Ferrars wasn’t one of
-them. She was a mass of nerves. An overmastering impulse drove her on
-to get rid of her husband because she was the sort of person who simply
-can’t endure suffering of any kind, and there’s no doubt that the wife
-of a man like Ashley Ferrars must have had to suffer a good deal——”
-
-I nodded.
-
-“And ever since she’s been haunted by what she did. I can’t help
-feeling sorry for her.”
-
-I don’t think Caroline ever felt sorry for Mrs. Ferrars whilst she was
-alive. Now that she has gone where (presumably) Paris frocks can no
-longer be worn, Caroline is prepared to indulge in the softer emotions
-of pity and comprehension.
-
-I told her firmly that her whole idea was nonsense. I was all the more
-firm because I secretly agreed with some part, at least, of what she
-had said. But it is all wrong that Caroline should arrive at the truth
-simply by a kind of inspired guesswork. I wasn’t going to encourage
-that sort of thing. She will go round the village airing her views, and
-every one will think that she is doing so on medical data supplied by
-me. Life is very trying.
-
-“Nonsense,” said Caroline, in reply to my strictures. “You’ll see. Ten
-to one she’s left a letter confessing everything.”
-
-“She didn’t leave a letter of any kind,” I said sharply, and not seeing
-where the admission was going to land me.
-
-“Oh!” said Caroline. “So you _did_ inquire about that, did you? I
-believe, James, that in your heart of hearts, you think very much as I
-do. You’re a precious old humbug.”
-
-“One always has to take the possibility of suicide into consideration,”
-I said repressively.
-
-“Will there be an inquest?”
-
-“There may be. It all depends. If I am able to declare myself
-absolutely satisfied that the overdose was taken accidentally, an
-inquest might be dispensed with.”
-
-“And are you absolutely satisfied?” asked my sister shrewdly.
-
-I did not answer, but got up from table.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- WHO’S WHO IN KING’S ABBOT
-
-
-Before I proceed further with what I said to Caroline and what Caroline
-said to me, it might be as well to give some idea of what I should
-describe as our local geography. Our village, King’s Abbot, is, I
-imagine, very much like any other village. Our big town is Cranchester,
-nine miles away. We have a large railway station, a small post office,
-and two rival “General Stores.” Able-bodied men are apt to leave the
-place early in life, but we are rich in unmarried ladies and retired
-military officers. Our hobbies and recreations can be summed up in the
-one word, “gossip.”
-
-There are only two houses of any importance in King’s Abbot. One
-is King’s Paddock, left to Mrs. Ferrars by her late husband. The
-other, Fernly Park, is owned by Roger Ackroyd. Ackroyd has always
-interested me by being a man more impossibly like a country squire
-than any country squire could really be. He reminds one of the
-red-faced sportsmen who always appeared early in the first act of an
-old-fashioned musical comedy, the setting being the village green. They
-usually sang a song about going up to London. Nowadays we have revues,
-and the country squire has died out of musical fashion.
-
-Of course, Ackroyd is not really a country squire. He is an immensely
-successful manufacturer of (I think) wagon wheels. He is a man of
-nearly fifty years of age, rubicund of face and genial of manner.
-He is hand and glove with the vicar, subscribes liberally to parish
-funds (though rumor has it that he is extremely mean in personal
-expenditure), encourages cricket matches, Lads’ Clubs, and Disabled
-Soldiers’ Institutes. He is, in fact, the life and soul of our peaceful
-village of King’s Abbot.
-
-Now when Roger Ackroyd was a lad of twenty-one, he fell in love with,
-and married, a beautiful woman some five or six years his senior. Her
-name was Paton, and she was a widow with one child. The history of the
-marriage was short and painful. To put it bluntly, Mrs. Ackroyd was
-a dipsomaniac. She succeeded in drinking herself into her grave four
-years after her marriage.
-
-In the years that followed, Ackroyd showed no disposition to make a
-second matrimonial adventure. His wife’s child by her first marriage
-was only seven years old when his mother died. He is now twenty-five.
-Ackroyd has always regarded him as his own son, and has brought him up
-accordingly, but he has been a wild lad and a continual source of worry
-and trouble to his stepfather. Nevertheless we are all very fond of
-Ralph Paton in King’s Abbot. He is such a good-looking youngster for
-one thing.
-
-As I said before, we are ready enough to gossip in our village.
-Everybody noticed from the first that Ackroyd and Mrs. Ferrars got on
-very well together. After her husband’s death, the intimacy became
-more marked. They were always seen about together, and it was freely
-conjectured that at the end of her period of mourning, Mrs. Ferrars
-would become Mrs. Roger Ackroyd. It was felt, indeed, that there was a
-certain fitness in the thing. Roger Ackroyd’s wife had admittedly died
-of drink. Ashley Ferrars had been a drunkard for many years before his
-death. It was only fitting that these two victims of alcoholic excess
-should make up to each other for all that they had previously endured
-at the hands of their former spouses.
-
-The Ferrars only came to live here just over a year ago, but a halo of
-gossip has surrounded Ackroyd for many years past. All the time that
-Ralph Paton was growing up to manhood, a series of lady housekeepers
-presided over Ackroyd’s establishment, and each in turn was regarded
-with lively suspicion by Caroline and her cronies. It is not too
-much to say that for at least fifteen years the whole village has
-confidently expected Ackroyd to marry one of his housekeepers. The last
-of them, a redoubtable lady called Miss Russell, has reigned undisputed
-for five years, twice as long as any of her predecessors. It is felt
-that but for the advent of Mrs. Ferrars, Ackroyd could hardly have
-escaped. That—and one other factor—the unexpected arrival of a widowed
-sister-in-law with her daughter from Canada. Mrs. Cecil Ackroyd, widow
-of Ackroyd’s ne’er-do-well younger brother, has taken up her residence
-at Fernly Park, and has succeeded, according to Caroline, in putting
-Miss Russell in her proper place.
-
-I don’t know exactly what a “proper place” constitutes—it sounds chilly
-and unpleasant—but I know that Miss Russell goes about with pinched
-lips, and what I can only describe as an acid smile, and that she
-professes the utmost sympathy for “poor Mrs. Ackroyd—dependent on the
-charity of her husband’s brother. The bread of charity is so bitter, is
-it not? _I_ should be quite miserable if I did not work for my living.”
-
-I don’t know what Mrs. Cecil Ackroyd thought of the Ferrars affair when
-it came on the tapis. It was clearly to her advantage that Ackroyd
-should remain unmarried. She was always very charming—not to say
-gushing—to Mrs. Ferrars when they met. Caroline says that proves less
-than nothing.
-
-Such have been our preoccupations in King’s Abbot for the last few
-years. We have discussed Ackroyd and his affairs from every standpoint.
-Mrs. Ferrars has fitted into her place in the scheme.
-
-Now there has been a rearrangement of the kaleidoscope. From a mild
-discussion of probable wedding presents, we have been jerked into the
-midst of tragedy.
-
-Revolving these and sundry other matters in my mind, I went
-mechanically on my round. I had no cases of special interest to attend,
-which was, perhaps, as well, for my thoughts returned again and again
-to the mystery of Mrs. Ferrars’s death. Had she taken her own life?
-Surely, if she had done so, she would have left some word behind to
-say what she contemplated doing? Women, in my experience, if they once
-reach the determination to commit suicide, usually wish to reveal the
-state of mind that led to the fatal action. They covet the limelight.
-
-When had I last seen her? Not for over a week. Her manner then had been
-normal enough considering—well—considering everything.
-
-Then I suddenly remembered that I had seen her, though not to speak
-to, only yesterday. She had been walking with Ralph Paton, and I had
-been surprised because I had had no idea that he was likely to be in
-King’s Abbot. I thought, indeed, that he had quarreled finally with
-his stepfather. Nothing had been seen of him down here for nearly six
-months. They had been walking along, side by side, their heads close
-together, and she had been talking very earnestly.
-
-I think I can safely say that it was at this moment that a foreboding
-of the future first swept over me. Nothing tangible as yet—but a vague
-premonition of the way things were setting. That earnest _tête-à-tête_
-between Ralph Paton and Mrs. Ferrars the day before struck me
-disagreeably.
-
-I was still thinking of it when I came face to face with Roger Ackroyd.
-
-“Sheppard!” he exclaimed. “Just the man I wanted to get hold of. This
-is a terrible business.”
-
-“You’ve heard then?”
-
-He nodded. He had felt the blow keenly, I could see. His big red cheeks
-seemed to have fallen in, and he looked a positive wreck of his usual
-jolly, healthy self.
-
-“It’s worse than you know,” he said quietly. “Look here, Sheppard, I’ve
-got to talk to you. Can you come back with me now?”
-
-“Hardly. I’ve got three patients to see still, and I must be back by
-twelve to see my surgery patients.”
-
-“Then this afternoon—no, better still, dine to-night. At 7.30? Will
-that suit you?”
-
-“Yes—I can manage that all right. What’s wrong? Is it Ralph?”
-
-I hardly knew why I said that—except, perhaps, that it had so often
-been Ralph.
-
-Ackroyd stared blankly at me as though he hardly understood. I began to
-realize that there must be something very wrong indeed somewhere. I had
-never seen Ackroyd so upset before.
-
-“Ralph?” he said vaguely. “Oh! no, it’s not Ralph. Ralph’s in
-London——Damn! Here’s old Miss Ganett coming. I don’t want to have to
-talk to her about this ghastly business. See you to-night, Sheppard.
-Seven-thirty.”
-
-I nodded, and he hurried away, leaving me wondering. Ralph in London?
-But he had certainly been in King’s Abbot the preceding afternoon. He
-must have gone back to town last night or early this morning, and yet
-Ackroyd’s manner had conveyed quite a different impression. He had
-spoken as though Ralph had not been near the place for months.
-
-I had no time to puzzle the matter out further. Miss Ganett was upon
-me, thirsting for information. Miss Ganett has all the characteristics
-of my sister Caroline, but she lacks that unerring aim in jumping to
-conclusions which lends a touch of greatness to Caroline’s maneuvers.
-Miss Ganett was breathless and interrogatory.
-
-Wasn’t it sad about poor dear Mrs. Ferrars? A lot of people were saying
-she had been a confirmed drug-taker for years. So wicked the way
-people went about saying things. And yet, the worst of it was, there
-was usually a grain of truth somewhere in these wild statements. No
-smoke without fire! They were saying too that Mr. Ackroyd had found
-out about it, and had broken off the engagement—because there _was_ an
-engagement. She, Miss Ganett, had proof positive of that. Of course _I_
-must know all about it—doctors always did—but they never tell?
-
-And all this with a sharp beady eye on me to see how I reacted to
-these suggestions. Fortunately long association with Caroline has led
-me to preserve an impassive countenance, and to be ready with small
-non-committal remarks.
-
-On this occasion I congratulated Miss Ganett on not joining in
-ill-natured gossip. Rather a neat counterattack, I thought. It left
-her in difficulties, and before she could pull herself together, I had
-passed on.
-
-I went home thoughtful, to find several patients waiting for me in the
-surgery.
-
-I had dismissed the last of them, as I thought, and was just
-contemplating a few minutes in the garden before lunch when I perceived
-one more patient waiting for me. She rose and came towards me as I
-stood somewhat surprised.
-
-I don’t know why I should have been, except that there is a suggestion
-of cast iron about Miss Russell, a something that is above the ills of
-the flesh.
-
-Ackroyd’s housekeeper is a tall woman, handsome but forbidding in
-appearance. She has a stern eye, and lips that shut tightly, and I feel
-that if I were an under housemaid or a kitchenmaid I should run for my
-life whenever I heard her coming.
-
-“Good morning, Dr. Sheppard,” said Miss Russell. “I should be much
-obliged if you would take a look at my knee.”
-
-I took a look, but, truth to tell, I was very little wiser when I had
-done so. Miss Russell’s account of vague pains was so unconvincing that
-with a woman of less integrity of character I should have suspected a
-trumped-up tale. It did cross my mind for one moment that Miss Russell
-might have deliberately invented this affection of the knee in order
-to pump me on the subject of Mrs. Ferrars’s death, but I soon saw that
-there, at least, I had misjudged her. She made a brief reference to the
-tragedy, nothing more. Yet she certainly seemed disposed to linger and
-chat.
-
-“Well, thank you very much for this bottle of liniment, doctor,” she
-said at last. “Not that I believe it will do the least good.”
-
-I didn’t think it would either, but I protested in duty bound. After
-all, it couldn’t do any harm, and one must stick up for the tools of
-one’s trade.
-
-“I don’t believe in all these drugs,” said Miss Russell, her eyes
-sweeping over my array of bottles disparagingly. “Drugs do a lot of
-harm. Look at the cocaine habit.”
-
-“Well, as far as that goes——”
-
-“It’s very prevalent in high society.”
-
-I’m sure Miss Russell knows far more about high society than I do. I
-didn’t attempt to argue with her.
-
-“Just tell me this, doctor,” said Miss Russell. “Suppose you are really
-a slave of the drug habit. Is there any cure?”
-
-One cannot answer a question like that offhand. I gave her a short
-lecture on the subject, and she listened with close attention. I still
-suspected her of seeking information about Mrs. Ferrars.
-
-“Now, veronal, for instance——” I proceeded.
-
-But, strangely enough, she didn’t seem interested in veronal. Instead
-she changed the subject, and asked me if it was true that there were
-certain poisons so rare as to baffle detection.
-
-“Ah!” I said. “You’ve been reading detective stories.”
-
-She admitted that she had.
-
-“The essence of a detective story,” I said, “is to have a rare
-poison—if possible something from South America, that nobody has ever
-heard of—something that one obscure tribe of savages use to poison
-their arrows with. Death is instantaneous, and Western science is
-powerless to detect it. That is the kind of thing you mean?”
-
-“Yes. Is there really such a thing?”
-
-I shook my head regretfully.
-
-“I’m afraid there isn’t. There’s _curare_, of course.”
-
-I told her a good deal about curare, but she seemed to have lost
-interest once more. She asked me if I had any in my poison cupboard,
-and when I replied in the negative I fancy I fell in her estimation.
-
-She said she must be getting back, and I saw her out at the surgery
-door just as the luncheon gong went.
-
-I should never have suspected Miss Russell of a fondness for detective
-stories. It pleases me very much to think of her stepping out of the
-housekeeper’s room to rebuke a delinquent housemaid, and then returning
-to a comfortable perusal of _The Mystery of the Seventh Death_, or
-something of the kind.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- THE MAN WHO GREW VEGETABLE MARROWS
-
-
-I told Caroline at lunch time that I should be dining at Fernly. She
-expressed no objection—on the contrary——
-
-“Excellent,” she said. “You’ll hear all about it. By the way, what is
-the trouble with Ralph?”
-
-“With Ralph?” I said, surprised; “there’s isn’t any.”
-
-“Then why is he staying at the Three Boars instead of at Fernly Park?”
-
-I did not for a minute question Caroline’s statement that Ralph Paton
-was staying at the local inn. That Caroline said so was enough for me.
-
-“Ackroyd told me he was in London,” I said. In the surprise of
-the moment I departed from my valuable rule of never parting with
-information.
-
-“Oh!” said Caroline. I could see her nose twitching as she worked on
-this.
-
-“He arrived at the Three Boars yesterday morning,” she said. “And he’s
-still there. Last night he was out with a girl.”
-
-That did not surprise me in the least. Ralph, I should say, is out
-with a girl most nights of his life. But I did rather wonder that he
-chose to indulge in the pastime in King’s Abbot instead of in the gay
-metropolis.
-
-“One of the barmaids?” I asked.
-
-“No. That’s just it. He went out to meet her. I don’t know who she is.”
-
-(Bitter for Caroline to have to admit such a thing.)
-
-“But I can guess,” continued my indefatigable sister.
-
-I waited patiently.
-
-“His cousin.”
-
-“Flora Ackroyd?” I exclaimed in surprise.
-
-Flora Ackroyd is, of course, no relation whatever really to Ralph
-Paton, but Ralph has been looked upon for so long as practically
-Ackroyd’s own son, that cousinship is taken for granted.
-
-“Flora Ackroyd,” said my sister.
-
-“But why not go to Fernly if he wanted to see her?”
-
-“Secretly engaged,” said Caroline, with immense enjoyment. “Old Ackroyd
-won’t hear of it, and they have to meet this way.”
-
-I saw a good many flaws in Caroline’s theory, but I forbore to point
-them out to her. An innocent remark about our new neighbor created a
-diversion.
-
-The house next door, The Larches, has recently been taken by a
-stranger. To Caroline’s extreme annoyance, she has not been able
-to find out anything about him, except that he is a foreigner. The
-Intelligence Corps has proved a broken reed. Presumably the man has
-milk and vegetables and joints of meat and occasional whitings just
-like everybody else, but none of the people who make it their business
-to supply these things seem to have acquired any information. His name,
-apparently, is Mr. Porrott—a name which conveys an odd feeling of
-unreality. The one thing we do know about him is that he is interested
-in the growing of vegetable marrows.
-
-But that is certainly not the sort of information that Caroline is
-after. She wants to know where he comes from, what he does, whether he
-is married, what his wife was, or is, like, whether he has children,
-what his mother’s maiden name was—and so on. Somebody very like
-Caroline must have invented the questions on passports, I think.
-
-“My dear Caroline,” I said. “There’s no doubt at all about what the
-man’s profession has been. He’s a retired hairdresser. Look at that
-mustache of his.”
-
-Caroline dissented. She said that if the man was a hairdresser, he
-would have wavy hair—not straight. All hairdressers did.
-
-I cited several hairdressers personally known to me who had straight
-hair, but Caroline refused to be convinced.
-
-“I can’t make him out at all,” she said in an aggrieved voice. “I
-borrowed some garden tools the other day, and he was most polite, but
-I couldn’t get anything out of him. I asked him point blank at last
-whether he was a Frenchman, and he said he wasn’t—and somehow I didn’t
-like to ask him any more.”
-
-I began to be more interested in our mysterious neighbor. A man who
-is capable of shutting up Caroline and sending her, like the Queen of
-Sheba, empty away must be something of a personality.
-
-“I believe,” said Caroline, “that he’s got one of those new vacuum
-cleaners——”
-
-I saw a meditated loan and the opportunity of further questioning
-gleaming from her eye. I seized the chance to escape into the garden.
-I am rather fond of gardening. I was busily exterminating dandelion
-roots when a shout of warning sounded from close by and a heavy body
-whizzed by my ear and fell at my feet with a repellant squelch. It was
-a vegetable marrow!
-
-I looked up angrily. Over the wall, to my left, there appeared a face.
-An egg-shaped head, partially covered with suspiciously black hair, two
-immense mustaches, and a pair of watchful eyes. It was our mysterious
-neighbor, Mr. Porrott.
-
-He broke at once into fluent apologies.
-
-“I demand of you a thousand pardons, monsieur. I am without defense.
-For some months now I cultivate the marrows. This morning suddenly
-I enrage myself with these marrows. I send them to promenade
-themselves—alas! not only mentally but physically. I seize the biggest.
-I hurl him over the wall. Monsieur, I am ashamed. I prostrate myself.”
-
-Before such profuse apologies, my anger was forced to melt. After
-all, the wretched vegetable hadn’t hit me. But I sincerely hoped that
-throwing large vegetables over walls was not our new friend’s hobby.
-Such a habit could hardly endear him to us as a neighbor.
-
-The strange little man seemed to read my thoughts.
-
-“Ah! no,” he exclaimed. “Do not disquiet yourself. It is not with me a
-habit. But can you figure to yourself, monsieur, that a man may work
-towards a certain object, may labor and toil to attain a certain kind
-of leisure and occupation, and then find that, after all, he yearns
-for the old busy days, and the old occupations that he thought himself
-so glad to leave?”
-
-“Yes,” I said slowly. “I fancy that that is a common enough occurrence.
-I myself am perhaps an instance. A year ago I came into a legacy—enough
-to enable me to realize a dream. I have always wanted to travel, to see
-the world. Well, that was a year ago, as I said, and—I am still here.”
-
-My little neighbor nodded.
-
-“The chains of habit. We work to attain an object, and the object
-gained, we find that what we miss is the daily toil. And mark you,
-monsieur, my work was interesting work. The most interesting work there
-is in the world.”
-
-“Yes?” I said encouragingly. For the moment the spirit of Caroline was
-strong within me.
-
-“The study of human nature, monsieur!”
-
-“Just so,” I said kindly.
-
-Clearly a retired hairdresser. Who knows the secrets of human nature
-better than a hairdresser?
-
-“Also, I had a friend—a friend who for many years never left my side.
-Occasionally of an imbecility to make one afraid, nevertheless he was
-very dear to me. Figure to yourself that I miss even his stupidity.
-His _naïveté_, his honest outlook, the pleasure of delighting and
-surprising him by my superior gifts—all these I miss more than I can
-tell you.”
-
-“He died?” I asked sympathetically.
-
-“Not so. He lives and flourishes—but on the other side of the world. He
-is now in the Argentine.”
-
-“In the Argentine,” I said enviously.
-
-I have always wanted to go to South America. I sighed, and then
-looked up to find Mr. Porrott eyeing me sympathetically. He seemed an
-understanding little man.
-
-“You will go there, yes?” he asked.
-
-I shook my head with a sigh.
-
-“I could have gone,” I said, “a year ago. But I was foolish—and worse
-than foolish—greedy. I risked the substance for the shadow.”
-
-“I comprehend,” said Mr. Porrott. “You speculated?”
-
-I nodded mournfully, but in spite of myself I felt secretly
-entertained. This ridiculous little man was so portentously solemn.
-
-“Not the Porcupine Oilfields?” he asked suddenly.
-
-I stared.
-
-“I thought of them, as a matter of fact, but in the end I plumped for a
-gold mine in Western Australia.”
-
-My neighbor was regarding me with a strange expression which I could
-not fathom.
-
-“It is Fate,” he said at last.
-
-“What is Fate?” I asked irritably.
-
-“That I should live next to a man who seriously considers Porcupine
-Oilfields, and also West Australian Gold Mines. Tell me, have you also
-a penchant for auburn hair?”
-
-I stared at him open-mouthed, and he burst out laughing.
-
-“No, no, it is not the insanity that I suffer from. Make your mind
-easy. It was a foolish question that I put to you there, for, see you,
-my friend of whom I spoke was a young man, a man who thought all women
-good, and most of them beautiful. But you are a man of middle age, a
-doctor, a man who knows the folly and the vanity of most things in this
-life of ours. Well, well, we are neighbors. I beg of you to accept and
-present to your excellent sister my best marrow.”
-
-He stooped, and with a flourish produced an immense specimen of the
-tribe, which I duly accepted in the spirit in which it was offered.
-
-“Indeed,” said the little man cheerfully, “this has not been a wasted
-morning. I have made the acquaintance of a man who in some ways
-resembles my far-off friend. By the way, I should like to ask you a
-question. You doubtless know every one in this tiny village. Who is the
-young man with the very dark hair and eyes, and the handsome face. He
-walks with his head flung back, and an easy smile on his lips?”
-
-The description left me in no doubt.
-
-“That must be Captain Ralph Paton,” I said slowly.
-
-“I have not seen him about here before?”
-
-“No, he has not been here for some time. But he is the son—adopted son,
-rather—of Mr. Ackroyd of Fernly Park.”
-
-My neighbor made a slight gesture of impatience.
-
-“Of course, I should have guessed. Mr. Ackroyd spoke of him many times.”
-
-“You know Mr. Ackroyd?” I said, slightly surprised.
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd knew me in London—when I was at work there. I have asked
-him to say nothing of my profession down here.”
-
-“I see,” I said, rather amused by this patent snobbery, as I thought it.
-
-But the little man went on with an almost grandiloquent smirk.
-
-“One prefers to remain incognito. I am not anxious for notoriety. I
-have not even troubled to correct the local version of my name.”
-
-“Indeed,” I said, not knowing quite what to say.
-
-“Captain Ralph Paton,” mused Mr. Porrott. “And so he is engaged to Mr.
-Ackroyd’s niece, the charming Miss Flora.”
-
-“Who told you so?” I asked, very much surprised.
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd. About a week ago. He is very pleased about it—has long
-desired that such a thing should come to pass, or so I understood
-from him. I even believe that he brought some pressure to bear upon
-the young man. That is never wise. A young man should marry to please
-himself—not to please a stepfather from whom he has expectations.”
-
-My ideas were completely upset. I could not see Ackroyd taking a
-hairdresser into his confidence, and discussing the marriage of his
-niece and stepson with him. Ackroyd extends a genial patronage to the
-lower orders, but he has a very great sense of his own dignity. I began
-to think that Porrott couldn’t be a hairdresser after all.
-
-To hide my confusion, I said the first thing that came into my head.
-
-“What made you notice Ralph Paton? His good looks?”
-
-“No, not that alone—though he is unusually good-looking for an
-Englishman—what your lady novelists would call a Greek God. No, there
-was something about that young man that I did not understand.”
-
-He said the last sentence in a musing tone of voice which made an
-indefinable impression upon me. It was as though he was summing up the
-boy by the light of some inner knowledge that I did not share. It was
-that impression that was left with me, for at that moment my sister’s
-voice called me from the house.
-
-I went in. Caroline had her hat on, and had evidently just come in from
-the village. She began without preamble.
-
-“I met Mr. Ackroyd.”
-
-“Yes?” I said.
-
-“I stopped him, of course, but he seemed in a great hurry, and anxious
-to get away.”
-
-I have no doubt but that that was the case. He would feel towards
-Caroline much as he had felt towards Miss Ganett earlier in the
-day—perhaps more so. Caroline is less easy to shake off.
-
-“I asked him at once about Ralph. He was absolutely astonished. Had no
-idea the boy was down here. He actually said he thought I must have
-made a mistake. I! A mistake!”
-
-“Ridiculous,” I said. “He ought to have known you better.”
-
-“Then he went on to tell me that Ralph and Flora are engaged.”
-
-“I know that too,” I interrupted, with modest pride.
-
-“Who told you?”
-
-“Our new neighbor.”
-
-Caroline visibly wavered for a second or two, much as a roulette ball
-might coyly hover between two numbers. Then she declined the tempting
-red herring.
-
-“I told Mr. Ackroyd that Ralph was staying at the Three Boars.”
-
-“Caroline,” I said, “do you never reflect that you might do a lot of
-harm with this habit of yours of repeating everything indiscriminately?”
-
-“Nonsense,” said my sister. “People ought to know things. I consider it
-my duty to tell them. Mr. Ackroyd was very grateful to me.”
-
-“Well?” I said, for there was clearly more to come.
-
-“I think he went straight off to the Three Boars, but if so he didn’t
-find Ralph there.”
-
-“No?”
-
-“No. Because as I was coming back through the wood——”
-
-“Coming back through the wood?” I interrupted.
-
-Caroline had the grace to blush.
-
-“It was such a lovely day,” she exclaimed. “I thought I would make a
-little round. The woods with their autumnal tints are so perfect at
-this time of year.”
-
-Caroline does not care a hang for woods at any time of year. Normally
-she regards them as places where you get your feet damp, and where all
-kinds of unpleasant things may drop on your head. No, it was good sound
-mongoose instinct which took her to our local wood. It is the only
-place adjacent to the village of King’s Abbot where you can talk with
-a young woman unseen by the whole of the village. It adjoins the Park
-of Fernly.
-
-“Well,” I said, “go on.”
-
-“As I say, I was just coming back through the wood when I heard voices.”
-
-Caroline paused.
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“One was Ralph Paton’s—I knew it at once. The other was a girl’s. Of
-course I didn’t mean to listen——”
-
-“Of course not,” I interjected, with patent sarcasm—which was, however,
-wasted on Caroline.
-
-“But I simply couldn’t help overhearing. The girl said something—I
-didn’t quite catch what it was, and Ralph answered. He sounded very
-angry. ‘My dear girl,’ he said. ‘Don’t you realize that it is quite
-on the cards the old man will cut me off with a shilling? He’s been
-pretty fed up with me for the last few years. A little more would do
-it. And we need the dibs, my dear. I shall be a very rich man when
-the old fellow pops off. He’s mean as they make ’em, but he’s rolling
-in money really. I don’t want him to go altering his will. You leave
-it to me, and don’t worry.’ Those were his exact words. I remember
-them perfectly. Unfortunately, just then I stepped on a dry twig or
-something, and they lowered their voices and moved away. I couldn’t, of
-course, go rushing after them, so wasn’t able to see who the girl was.”
-
-“That must have been most vexing,” I said. “I suppose, though, you
-hurried on to the Three Boars, felt faint, and went into the bar for a
-glass of brandy, and so were able to see if both the barmaids were on
-duty?”
-
-“It wasn’t a barmaid,” said Caroline unhesitatingly. “In fact, I’m
-almost sure that it was Flora Ackroyd, only——”
-
-“Only it doesn’t seem to make sense,” I agreed.
-
-“But if it wasn’t Flora, who could it have been?”
-
-Rapidly my sister ran over a list of maidens living in the
-neighborhood, with profuse reasons for and against.
-
-When she paused for breath, I murmured something about a patient, and
-slipped out.
-
-I proposed to make my way to the Three Boars. It seemed likely that
-Ralph Paton would have returned there by now.
-
-I knew Ralph very well—better, perhaps, than any one else in King’s
-Abbot, for I had known his mother before him, and therefore I
-understood much in him that puzzled others. He was, to a certain
-extent, the victim of heredity. He had not inherited his mother’s
-fatal propensity for drink, but nevertheless he had in him a strain
-of weakness. As my new friend of this morning had declared, he was
-extraordinarily handsome. Just on six feet, perfectly proportioned,
-with the easy grace of an athlete, he was dark, like his mother,
-with a handsome, sunburnt face always ready to break into a smile.
-Ralph Paton was of those born to charm easily and without effort. He
-was self-indulgent and extravagant, with no veneration for anything
-on earth, but he was lovable nevertheless, and his friends were all
-devoted to him.
-
-Could I do anything with the boy? I thought I could.
-
-On inquiry at the Three Boars I found that Captain Paton had just come
-in. I went up to his room and entered unannounced.
-
-For a moment, remembering what I had heard and seen, I was doubtful of
-my reception, but I need have had no misgivings.
-
-“Why, it’s Sheppard! Glad to see you.”
-
-He came forward to meet me, hand outstretched, a sunny smile lighting
-up his face.
-
-“The one person I am glad to see in this infernal place.”
-
-I raised my eyebrows.
-
-“What’s the place been doing?”
-
-He gave a vexed laugh.
-
-“It’s a long story. Things haven’t been going well with me, doctor. But
-have a drink, won’t you?”
-
-“Thanks,” I said, “I will.”
-
-He pressed the bell, then, coming back, threw himself into a chair.
-
-“Not to mince matters,” he said gloomily, “I’m in the devil of a mess.
-In fact, I haven’t the least idea what to do next.”
-
-“What’s the matter?” I asked sympathetically.
-
-“It’s my confounded stepfather.”
-
-“What has he done?”
-
-“It isn’t what he’s done yet, but what he’s likely to do.”
-
-The bell was answered, and Ralph ordered the drinks. When the man had
-gone again, he sat hunched in the arm-chair, frowning to himself.
-
-“Is it really—serious?” I asked.
-
-He nodded.
-
-“I’m fairly up against it this time,” he said soberly.
-
-The unusual ring of gravity in his voice told me that he spoke the
-truth. It took a good deal to make Ralph grave.
-
-“In fact,” he continued, “I can’t see my way ahead.... I’m damned if I
-can.”
-
-“If I could help——” I suggested diffidently.
-
-But he shook his head very decidedly.
-
-“Good of you, doctor. But I can’t let you in on this. I’ve got to play
-a lone hand.”
-
-He was silent a minute and then repeated in a slightly different tone
-of voice:—
-
-“Yes—I’ve got to play a lone hand....”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- DINNER AT FERNLY
-
-
-It was just a few minutes before half-past seven when I rang the
-front door bell of Fernly Park. The door was opened with admirable
-promptitude by Parker, the butler.
-
-The night was such a fine one that I had preferred to come on foot. I
-stepped into the big square hall and Parker relieved me of my overcoat.
-Just then Ackroyd’s secretary, a pleasant young fellow by the name of
-Raymond, passed through the hall on his way to Ackroyd’s study, his
-hands full of papers.
-
-“Good-evening, doctor. Coming to dine? Or is this a professional call?”
-
-The last was in allusion to my black bag, which I had laid down on the
-oak chest.
-
-I explained that I expected a summons to a confinement case at any
-moment, and so had come out prepared for an emergency call. Raymond
-nodded, and went on his way, calling over his shoulder:—
-
-“Go into the drawing-room. You know the way. The ladies will be down in
-a minute. I must just take these papers to Mr. Ackroyd, and I’ll tell
-him you’re here.”
-
-On Raymond’s appearance Parker had withdrawn, so I was alone in the
-hall. I settled my tie, glanced in a large mirror which hung there, and
-crossed to the door directly facing me, which was, as I knew, the door
-of the drawing-room.
-
-I noticed, just as I was turning the handle, a sound from within—the
-shutting down of a window, I took it to be. I noted it, I may say,
-quite mechanically, without attaching any importance to it at the time.
-
-I opened the door and walked in. As I did so, I almost collided with
-Miss Russell, who was just coming out. We both apologized.
-
-For the first time I found myself appraising the housekeeper and
-thinking what a handsome woman she must once have been—indeed, as far
-as that goes, still was. Her dark hair was unstreaked with gray, and
-when she had a color, as she had at this minute, the stern quality of
-her looks was not so apparent.
-
-Quite subconsciously I wondered whether she had been out, for she was
-breathing hard, as though she had been running.
-
-“I’m afraid I’m a few minutes early,” I said.
-
-“Oh! I don’t think so. It’s gone half-past seven, Dr. Sheppard.” She
-paused a minute before saying, “I—didn’t know you were expected to
-dinner to-night. Mr. Ackroyd didn’t mention it.”
-
-I received a vague impression that my dining there displeased her in
-some way, but I couldn’t imagine why.
-
-“How’s the knee?” I inquired.
-
-“Much the same, thank you, doctor. I must be going now. Mrs. Ackroyd
-will be down in a moment. I—I only came in here to see if the flowers
-were all right.”
-
-She passed quickly out of the room. I strolled to the window,
-wondering at her evident desire to justify her presence in the room. As
-I did so, I saw what, of course, I might have known all the time had
-I troubled to give my mind to it, namely, that the windows were long
-French ones opening on the terrace. The sound I had heard, therefore,
-could not have been that of a window being shut down.
-
-Quite idly, and more to distract my mind from painful thoughts than for
-any other reason, I amused myself by trying to guess what could have
-caused the sound in question.
-
-Coals on the fire? No, that was not the kind of noise at all. A drawer
-of the bureau pushed in? No, not that.
-
-Then my eye was caught by what, I believe, is called a silver table,
-the lid of which lifts, and through the glass of which you can see the
-contents. I crossed over to it, studying the things. There were one
-or two pieces of old silver, a baby shoe belonging to King Charles
-the First, some Chinese jade figures, and quite a number of African
-implements and curios. Wanting to examine one of the jade figures more
-closely, I lifted the lid. It slipped through my fingers and fell.
-
-At once I recognized the sound I had heard. It was this same table lid
-being shut down gently and carefully. I repeated the action once or
-twice for my own satisfaction. Then I lifted the lid to scrutinize the
-contents more closely.
-
-I was still bending over the open silver table when Flora Ackroyd came
-into the room.
-
-Quite a lot of people do not like Flora Ackroyd, but nobody can help
-admiring her. And to her friends she can be very charming. The first
-thing that strikes you about her is her extraordinary fairness. She has
-the real Scandinavian pale gold hair. Her eyes are blue—blue as the
-waters of a Norwegian fiord, and her skin is cream and roses. She has
-square, boyish shoulders and slight hips. And to a jaded medical man it
-is very refreshing to come across such perfect health.
-
-A simple straight-forward English girl—I may be old-fashioned, but I
-think the genuine article takes a lot of beating.
-
-Flora joined me by the silver table, and expressed heretical doubts as
-to King Charles I ever having worn the baby shoe.
-
-“And anyway,” continued Miss Flora, “all this making a fuss about
-things because some one wore or used them seems to me all nonsense.
-They’re not wearing or using them now. The pen that George Eliot wrote
-_The Mill on the Floss_ with—that sort of thing—well, it’s only just a
-pen after all. If you’re really keen on George Eliot, why not get _The
-Mill on the Floss_ in a cheap edition and read it.”
-
-“I suppose you never read such old out-of-date stuff, Miss Flora?”
-
-“You’re wrong, Dr. Sheppard. I love _The Mill on the Floss_.”
-
-I was rather pleased to hear it. The things young women read nowadays
-and profess to enjoy positively frighten me.
-
-“You haven’t congratulated me yet, Dr. Sheppard,” said Flora. “Haven’t
-you heard?”
-
-She held out her left hand. On the third finger of it was an
-exquisitely set single pearl.
-
-“I’m going to marry Ralph, you know,” she went on. “Uncle is very
-pleased. It keeps me in the family, you see.”
-
-I took both her hands in mine.
-
-“My dear,” I said, “I hope you’ll be very happy.”
-
-“We’ve been engaged for about a month,” continued Flora in her cool
-voice, “but it was only announced yesterday. Uncle is going to do up
-Cross-stones, and give it to us to live in, and we’re going to pretend
-to farm. Really, we shall hunt all the winter, town for the season, and
-then go yachting. I love the sea. And, of course, I shall take a great
-interest in the parish affairs, and attend all the Mothers’ Meetings.”
-
-Just then Mrs. Ackroyd rustled in, full of apologies for being late.
-
-I am sorry to say I detest Mrs. Ackroyd. She is all chains and teeth
-and bones. A most unpleasant woman. She has small pale flinty blue
-eyes, and however gushing her words may be, those eyes of hers always
-remain coldly speculative.
-
-I went across to her, leaving Flora by the window. She gave me a
-handful of assorted knuckles and rings to squeeze, and began talking
-volubly.
-
-Had I heard about Flora’s engagement? So suitable in every way. The
-dear young things had fallen in love at first sight. Such a perfect
-pair, he so dark and she so fair.
-
-“I can’t tell you, my dear Dr. Sheppard, the relief to a mother’s
-heart.”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd sighed—a tribute to her mother’s heart, whilst her eyes
-remained shrewdly observant of me.
-
-“I was wondering. You are such an old friend of dear Roger’s. We
-know how much he trusts to your judgment. So difficult for me—in
-my position, as poor Cecil’s widow. But there are so many tiresome
-things—settlements, you know—all that. I fully believe that Roger
-intends to make settlements upon dear Flora, but, as you know, he is
-just a _leetle_ peculiar about money. Very usual, I’ve heard, amongst
-men who are captains of industry. I wondered, you know, if you could
-just _sound_ him on the subject? Flora is so fond of you. We feel you
-are quite an old friend, although we have only really known you just
-over two years.”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd’s eloquence was cut short as the drawing-room door opened
-once more. I was pleased at the interruption. I hate interfering in
-other people’s affairs, and I had not the least intention of tackling
-Ackroyd on the subject of Flora’s settlements. In another moment I
-should have been forced to tell Mrs. Ackroyd as much.
-
-“You know Major Blunt, don’t you, doctor?”
-
-“Yes, indeed,” I said.
-
-A lot of people know Hector Blunt—at least by repute. He has shot more
-wild animals in unlikely places than any man living, I suppose. When
-you mention him, people say: “Blunt—you don’t mean the big game man, do
-you?”
-
-His friendship with Ackroyd has always puzzled me a little. The two men
-are so totally dissimilar. Hector Blunt is perhaps five years Ackroyd’s
-junior. They made friends early in life, and though their ways have
-diverged, the friendship still holds. About once in two years Blunt
-spends a fortnight at Fernly, and an immense animal’s head, with an
-amazing number of horns which fixes you with a glazed stare as soon
-as you come inside the front door, is a permanent reminder of the
-friendship.
-
-Blunt had entered the room now with his own peculiar, deliberate, yet
-soft-footed tread. He is a man of medium height, sturdily and rather
-stockily built. His face is almost mahogany-colored, and is peculiarly
-expressionless. He has gray eyes that give the impression of always
-watching something that is happening very far away. He talks little,
-and what he does say is said jerkily, as though the words were forced
-out of him unwillingly.
-
-He said now: “How are you, Sheppard?” in his usual abrupt fashion, and
-then stood squarely in front of the fireplace looking over our heads as
-though he saw something very interesting happening in Timbuctoo.
-
-“Major Blunt,” said Flora, “I wish you’d tell me about these African
-things. I’m sure you know what they all are.”
-
-I have heard Hector Blunt described as a woman hater, but I noticed
-that he joined Flora at the silver table with what might be described
-as alacrity. They bent over it together.
-
-I was afraid Mrs. Ackroyd would begin talking about settlements again,
-so I made a few hurried remarks about the new sweet pea. I knew there
-was a new sweet pea because the _Daily Mail_ had told me so that
-morning. Mrs. Ackroyd knows nothing about horticulture, but she is the
-kind of woman who likes to appear well-informed about the topics of the
-day, and she, too, reads the _Daily Mail_. We were able to converse
-quite intelligently until Ackroyd and his secretary joined us, and
-immediately afterwards Parker announced dinner.
-
-My place at table was between Mrs. Ackroyd and Flora. Blunt was on Mrs.
-Ackroyd’s other side, and Geoffrey Raymond next to him.
-
-Dinner was not a cheerful affair. Ackroyd was visibly preoccupied. He
-looked wretched, and ate next to nothing. Mrs. Ackroyd, Raymond, and
-I kept the conversation going. Flora seemed affected by her uncle’s
-depression, and Blunt relapsed into his usual taciturnity.
-
-Immediately after dinner Ackroyd slipped his arm through mine and led
-me off to his study.
-
-“Once we’ve had coffee, we shan’t be disturbed again,” he explained. “I
-told Raymond to see to it that we shouldn’t be interrupted.”
-
-I studied him quietly without appearing to do so. He was clearly under
-the influence of some strong excitement. For a minute or two he paced
-up and down the room, then, as Parker entered with the coffee tray, he
-sank into an arm-chair in front of the fire.
-
-The study was a comfortable apartment. Book-shelves lined one wall of
-it. The chairs were big and covered in dark blue leather. A large desk
-stood by the window and was covered with papers neatly docketed and
-filed. On a round table were various magazines and sporting papers.
-
-“I’ve had a return of that pain after food lately,” remarked Ackroyd
-casually, as he helped himself to coffee. “You must give me some more
-of those tablets of yours.”
-
-It struck me that he was anxious to convey the impression that our
-conference was a medical one. I played up accordingly.
-
-“I thought as much. I brought some up with me.”
-
-“Good man. Hand them over now.”
-
-“They’re in my bag in the hall. I’ll get them.”
-
-Ackroyd arrested me.
-
-“Don’t you trouble. Parker will get them. Bring in the doctor’s bag,
-will you, Parker?”
-
-“Very good, sir.”
-
-Parker withdrew. As I was about to speak, Ackroyd threw up his hand.
-
-“Not yet. Wait. Don’t you see I’m in such a state of nerves that I can
-hardly contain myself?”
-
-I saw that plainly enough. And I was very uneasy. All sorts of
-forebodings assailed me.
-
-Ackroyd spoke again almost immediately.
-
-“Make certain that window’s closed, will you?” he asked.
-
-Somewhat surprised, I got up and went to it. It was not a French
-window, but one of the ordinary sash type. The heavy blue velvet
-curtains were drawn in front of it, but the window itself was open at
-the top.
-
-Parker reëntered the room with my bag while I was still at the window.
-
-“That’s all right,” I said, emerging again into the room.
-
-“You’ve put the latch across?”
-
-“Yes, yes. What’s the matter with you, Ackroyd?”
-
-The door had just closed behind Parker, or I would not have put the
-question.
-
-Ackroyd waited just a minute before replying.
-
-“I’m in hell,” he said slowly, after a minute. “No, don’t bother with
-those damned tablets. I only said that for Parker. Servants are so
-curious. Come here and sit down. The door’s closed too, isn’t it?”
-
-“Yes. Nobody can overhear; don’t be uneasy.”
-
-“Sheppard, nobody knows what I’ve gone through in the last twenty-four
-hours. If a man’s house ever fell in ruins about him, mine has about
-me. This business of Ralph’s is the last straw. But we won’t talk about
-that now. It’s the other—the other——! I don’t know what to do about it.
-And I’ve got to make up my mind soon.”
-
-“What’s the trouble?”
-
-Ackroyd remained silent for a minute or two. He seemed curiously averse
-to begin. When he did speak, the question he asked came as a complete
-surprise. It was the last thing I expected.
-
-“Sheppard, you attended Ashley Ferrars in his last illness, didn’t you?”
-
-“Yes, I did.”
-
-He seemed to find even greater difficulty in framing his next question.
-
-“Did you never suspect—did it ever enter your head—that—well, that he
-might have been poisoned?”
-
-I was silent for a minute or two. Then I made up my mind what to say.
-Roger Ackroyd was not Caroline.
-
-“I’ll tell you the truth,” I said. “At the time I had no suspicion
-whatever, but since—well, it was mere idle talk on my sister’s part
-that first put the idea into my head. Since then I haven’t been able to
-get it out again. But, mind you, I’ve no foundation whatever for that
-suspicion.”
-
-“He _was_ poisoned,” said Ackroyd.
-
-He spoke in a dull heavy voice.
-
-“Who by?” I asked sharply.
-
-“His wife.”
-
-“How do you know that?”
-
-“She told me so herself.”
-
-“When?”
-
-“Yesterday! My God! yesterday! It seems ten years ago.”
-
-I waited a minute, and then he went on.
-
-“You understand, Sheppard, I’m telling you this in confidence. It’s to
-go no further. I want your advice—I can’t carry the whole weight by
-myself. As I said just now, I don’t know what to do.”
-
-“Can you tell me the whole story?” I said. “I’m still in the dark. How
-did Mrs. Ferrars come to make this confession to you?”
-
-“It’s like this. Three months ago I asked Mrs. Ferrars to marry me.
-She refused. I asked her again and she consented, but she refused to
-allow me to make the engagement public until her year of mourning was
-up. Yesterday I called upon her, pointed out that a year and three
-weeks had now elapsed since her husband’s death, and that there could
-be no further objection to making the engagement public property. I
-had noticed that she had been very strange in her manner for some days.
-Now, suddenly, without the least warning, she broke down completely.
-She—she told me everything. Her hatred of her brute of a husband, her
-growing love for me, and the—the dreadful means she had taken. Poison!
-My God! It was murder in cold blood.”
-
-I saw the repulsion, the horror, in Ackroyd’s face. So Mrs. Ferrars
-must have seen it. Ackroyd is not the type of the great lover who can
-forgive all for love’s sake. He is fundamentally a good citizen. All
-that was sound and wholesome and law-abiding in him must have turned
-from her utterly in that moment of revelation.
-
-“Yes,” he went on, in a low, monotonous voice, “she confessed
-everything. It seems that there is one person who has known all
-along—who has been blackmailing her for huge sums. It was the strain of
-that that drove her nearly mad.”
-
-“Who was the man?”
-
-Suddenly before my eyes there arose the picture of Ralph Paton and Mrs.
-Ferrars side by side. Their heads so close together. I felt a momentary
-throb of anxiety. Supposing—oh! but surely that was impossible. I
-remembered the frankness of Ralph’s greeting that very afternoon.
-Absurd!
-
-“She wouldn’t tell me his name,” said Ackroyd slowly. “As a matter of
-fact, she didn’t actually say that it was a man. But of course——”
-
-“Of course,” I agreed. “It must have been a man. And you’ve no
-suspicion at all?”
-
-For answer Ackroyd groaned and dropped his head into his hands.
-
-“It can’t be,” he said. “I’m mad even to think of such a thing. No, I
-won’t even admit to you the wild suspicion that crossed my mind. I’ll
-tell you this much, though. Something she said made me think that the
-person in question might be actually among my household—but that can’t
-be so. I must have misunderstood her.”
-
-“What did you say to her?” I asked.
-
-“What could I say? She saw, of course, the awful shock it had been to
-me. And then there was the question, what was my duty in the matter?
-She had made me, you see, an accessory after the fact. She saw all
-that, I think, quicker than I did. I was stunned, you know. She asked
-me for twenty-four hours—made me promise to do nothing till the end
-of that time. And she steadfastly refused to give me the name of the
-scoundrel who had been blackmailing her. I suppose she was afraid that
-I might go straight off and hammer him, and then the fat would have
-been in the fire as far as she was concerned. She told me that I should
-hear from her before twenty-four hours had passed. My God! I swear to
-you, Sheppard, that it never entered my head what she meant to do.
-Suicide! And I drove her to it.”
-
-“No, no,” I said. “Don’t take an exaggerated view of things. The
-responsibility for her death doesn’t lie at your door.”
-
-“The question is, what am I to do now? The poor lady is dead. Why rake
-up past trouble?”
-
-“I rather agree with you,” I said.
-
-“But there’s another point. How am I to get hold of that scoundrel who
-drove her to death as surely as if he’d killed her. He knew of the
-first crime, and he fastened on to it like some obscene vulture. She’s
-paid the penalty. Is he to go scot-free?”
-
-“I see,” I said slowly. “You want to hunt him down? It will mean a lot
-of publicity, you know.”
-
-“Yes, I’ve thought of that. I’ve zigzagged to and fro in my mind.”
-
-“I agree with you that the villain ought to be punished, but the cost
-has got to be reckoned.”
-
-Ackroyd rose and walked up and down. Presently he sank into the chair
-again.
-
-“Look here, Sheppard, suppose we leave it like this. If no word comes
-from her, we’ll let the dead things lie.”
-
-“What do you mean by word coming from her?” I asked curiously.
-
-“I have the strongest impression that somewhere or somehow she must
-have left a message for me—before she went. I can’t argue about it, but
-there it is.”
-
-I shook my head.
-
-“She left no letter or word of any kind. I asked.”
-
-“Sheppard, I’m convinced that she did. And more, I’ve a feeling that by
-deliberately choosing death, she wanted the whole thing to come out, if
-only to be revenged on the man who drove her to desperation. I believe
-that if I could have seen her then, she would have told me his name and
-bid me go for him for all I was worth.”
-
-He looked at me.
-
-“You don’t believe in impressions?”
-
-“Oh, yes, I do, in a sense. If, as you put it, word should come from
-her——”
-
-I broke off. The door opened noiselessly and Parker entered with a
-salver on which were some letters.
-
-“The evening post, sir,” he said, handing the salver to Ackroyd.
-
-Then he collected the coffee cups and withdrew.
-
-My attention, diverted for a moment, came back to Ackroyd. He was
-staring like a man turned to stone at a long blue envelope. The other
-letters he had let drop to the ground.
-
-“_Her writing_,” he said in a whisper. “She must have gone out and
-posted it last night, just before—before——”
-
-He ripped open the envelope and drew out a thick enclosure. Then he
-looked up sharply.
-
-“You’re sure you shut the window?” he said.
-
-“Quite sure,” I said, surprised. “Why?”
-
-“All this evening I’ve had a queer feeling of being watched, spied
-upon. What’s that——?”
-
-He turned sharply. So did I. We both had the impression of hearing the
-latch of the door give ever so slightly. I went across to it and opened
-it. There was no one there.
-
-“Nerves,” murmured Ackroyd to himself.
-
-He unfolded the thick sheets of paper, and read aloud in a low voice.
-
- “_My dear, my very dear Roger,—A life calls for a life. I see
- that—I saw it in your face this afternoon. So I am taking the only
- road open to me. I leave to you the punishment of the person who
- has made my life a hell upon earth for the last year. I would not
- tell you the name this afternoon, but I propose to write it to you
- now. I have no children or near relations to be spared, so do not
- fear publicity. If you can, Roger, my very dear Roger, forgive me
- the wrong I meant to do you, since when the time came, I could not
- do it after all...._”
-
-Ackroyd, his finger on the sheet to turn it over, paused.
-
-“Sheppard, forgive me, but I must read this alone,” he said unsteadily.
-“It was meant for my eyes, and my eyes only.”
-
-He put the letter in the envelope and laid it on the table.
-
-“Later, when I am alone.”
-
-“No,” I cried impulsively, “read it now.”
-
-Ackroyd stared at me in some surprise.
-
-“I beg your pardon,” I said, reddening. “I do not mean read it aloud to
-me. But read it through whilst I am still here.”
-
-Ackroyd shook his head.
-
-“No, I’d rather wait.”
-
-But for some reason, obscure to myself, I continued to urge him.
-
-“At least, read the name of the man,” I said.
-
-Now Ackroyd is essentially pig-headed. The more you urge him to do a
-thing, the more determined he is not to do it. All my arguments were in
-vain.
-
-The letter had been brought in at twenty minutes to nine. It was just
-on ten minutes to nine when I left him, the letter still unread. I
-hesitated with my hand on the door handle, looking back and wondering
-if there was anything I had left undone. I could think of nothing. With
-a shake of the head I passed out and closed the door behind me.
-
-I was startled by seeing the figure of Parker close at hand. He looked
-embarrassed, and it occurred to me that he might have been listening at
-the door.
-
-What a fat, smug, oily face the man had, and surely there was something
-decidedly shifty in his eye.
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd particularly does not want to be disturbed,” I said
-coldly. “He told me to tell you so.”
-
-“Quite so, sir. I—I fancied I heard the bell ring.”
-
-This was such a palpable untruth that I did not trouble to reply.
-Preceding me to the hall, Parker helped me on with my overcoat, and I
-stepped out into the night. The moon was overcast and everything seemed
-very dark and still. The village church clock chimed nine o’clock
-as I passed through the lodge gates. I turned to the left towards
-the village, and almost cannoned into a man coming in the opposite
-direction.
-
-“This the way to Fernly Park, mister?” asked the stranger in a hoarse
-voice.
-
-I looked at him. He was wearing a hat pulled down over his eyes, and
-his coat collar turned up. I could see little or nothing of his face,
-but he seemed a young fellow. The voice was rough and uneducated.
-
-“These are the lodge gates here,” I said.
-
-“Thank you, mister.” He paused, and then added, quite unnecessarily,
-“I’m a stranger in these parts, you see.”
-
-He went on, passing through the gates as I turned to look after him.
-
-The odd thing was that his voice reminded me of some one’s voice that I
-knew, but whose it was I could not think.
-
-Ten minutes later I was at home once more. Caroline was full of
-curiosity to know why I had returned so early. I had to make up a
-slightly fictitious account of the evening in order to satisfy her, and
-I had an uneasy feeling that she saw through the transparent device.
-
-At ten o’clock I rose, yawned, and suggested bed. Caroline acquiesced.
-
-It was Friday night, and on Friday night I wind the clocks. I did it as
-usual, whilst Caroline satisfied herself that the servants had locked
-up the kitchen properly.
-
-It was a quarter past ten as we went up the stairs. I had just reached
-the top when the telephone rang in the hall below.
-
-“Mrs. Bates,” said Caroline immediately.
-
-“I’m afraid so,” I said ruefully.
-
-I ran down the stairs and took up the receiver.
-
-“What?” I said. “_What?_ Certainly, I’ll come at once.”
-
-I ran upstairs, caught up my bag, and stuffed a few extra dressings
-into it.
-
-“Parker telephoning,” I shouted to Caroline, “from Fernly. They’ve just
-found Roger Ackroyd murdered.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- MURDER
-
-
-I got out the car in next to no time, and drove rapidly to Fernly.
-Jumping out, I pulled the bell impatiently. There was some delay in
-answering, and I rang again.
-
-Then I heard the rattle of the chain and Parker, his impassivity of
-countenance quite unmoved, stood in the open doorway.
-
-I pushed past him into the hall.
-
-“Where is he?” I demanded sharply.
-
-“I beg your pardon, sir?”
-
-“Your master. Mr. Ackroyd. Don’t stand there staring at me, man. Have
-you notified the police?”
-
-“The police, sir? Did you say the police?” Parker stared at me as
-though I were a ghost.
-
-“What’s the matter with you, Parker? If, as you say, your master has
-been murdered——”
-
-A gasp broke from Parker.
-
-“The master? Murdered? Impossible, sir!”
-
-It was my turn to stare.
-
-“Didn’t you telephone to me, not five minutes ago, and tell me that Mr.
-Ackroyd had been found murdered?”
-
-“Me, sir? Oh! no indeed, sir. I wouldn’t dream of doing such a thing.”
-
-“Do you mean to say it’s all a hoax? That there’s nothing the matter
-with Mr. Ackroyd?”
-
-“Excuse me, sir, did the person telephoning use my name?”
-
-“I’ll give you the exact words I heard. ‘_Is that Dr. Sheppard? Parker,
-the butler at Fernly, speaking. Will you please come at once, sir. Mr.
-Ackroyd has been murdered._’”
-
-Parker and I stared at each other blankly.
-
-“A very wicked joke to play, sir,” he said at last, in a shocked tone.
-“Fancy saying a thing like that.”
-
-“Where is Mr. Ackroyd?” I asked suddenly.
-
-“Still in the study, I fancy, sir. The ladies have gone to bed, and
-Major Blunt and Mr. Raymond are in the billiard room.”
-
-“I think I’ll just look in and see him for a minute,” I said. “I know
-he didn’t want to be disturbed again, but this odd practical joke has
-made me uneasy. I’d just like to satisfy myself that he’s all right.”
-
-“Quite so, sir. It makes me feel quite uneasy myself. If you don’t
-object to my accompanying you as far as the door, sir——?”
-
-“Not at all,” I said. “Come along.”
-
-I passed through the door on the right, Parker on my heels, traversed
-the little lobby where a small flight of stairs led upstairs to
-Ackroyd’s bedroom, and tapped on the study door.
-
-There was no answer. I turned the handle, but the door was locked.
-
-“Allow me, sir,” said Parker.
-
-Very nimbly, for a man of his build, he dropped on one knee and applied
-his eye to the keyhole.
-
-“Key is in the lock all right, sir,” he said, rising. “On the inside.
-Mr. Ackroyd must have locked himself in and possibly just dropped off
-to sleep.”
-
-I bent down and verified Parker’s statement.
-
-“It seems all right,” I said, “but, all the same, Parker, I’m going
-to wake your master up. I shouldn’t be satisfied to go home without
-hearing from his own lips that he’s quite all right.”
-
-So saying, I rattled the handle and called out, “Ackroyd, Ackroyd, just
-a minute.”
-
-But still there was no answer. I glanced over my shoulder.
-
-“I don’t want to alarm the household,” I said hesitatingly.
-
-Parker went across and shut the door from the big hall through which we
-had come.
-
-“I think that will be all right now, sir. The billiard room is at
-the other side of the house, and so are the kitchen quarters and the
-ladies’ bedrooms.”
-
-I nodded comprehendingly. Then I banged once more frantically on the
-door, and stooping down, fairly bawled through the keyhole:—
-
-“Ackroyd, Ackroyd! It’s Sheppard. Let me in.”
-
-And still—silence. Not a sign of life from within the locked room.
-Parker and I glanced at each other.
-
-“Look here, Parker,” I said, “I’m going to break this door in—or
-rather, we are. I’ll take the responsibility.”
-
-“If you say so, sir,” said Parker, rather doubtfully.
-
-“I do say so. I’m seriously alarmed about Mr. Ackroyd.”
-
-I looked round the small lobby and picked up a heavy oak chair. Parker
-and I held it between us and advanced to the assault. Once, twice, and
-three times we hurled it against the lock. At the third blow it gave,
-and we staggered into the room.
-
-Ackroyd was sitting as I had left him in the arm-chair before the fire.
-His head had fallen sideways, and clearly visible, just below the
-collar of his coat, was a shining piece of twisted metalwork.
-
-Parker and I advanced till we stood over the recumbent figure. I heard
-the butler draw in his breath with a sharp hiss.
-
-“Stabbed from be’ind,” he murmured. “’Orrible!”
-
-He wiped his moist brow with his handkerchief, then stretched out a
-hand gingerly towards the hilt of the dagger.
-
-“You mustn’t touch that,” I said sharply. “Go at once to the telephone
-and ring up the police station. Inform them of what has happened. Then
-tell Mr. Raymond and Major Blunt.”
-
-“Very good, sir.”
-
-Parker hurried away, still wiping his perspiring brow.
-
-I did what little had to be done. I was careful not to disturb the
-position of the body, and not to handle the dagger at all. No object
-was to be attained by moving it. Ackroyd had clearly been dead some
-little time.
-
-Then I heard young Raymond’s voice, horror-stricken and incredulous,
-outside.
-
-“What do you say? Oh! impossible! Where’s the doctor?”
-
-He appeared impetuously in the doorway, then stopped dead, his face
-very white. A hand put him aside, and Hector Blunt came past him into
-the room.
-
-“My God!” said Raymond from behind him; “it’s true, then.”
-
-Blunt came straight on till he reached the chair. He bent over the
-body, and I thought that, like Parker, he was going to lay hold of the
-dagger hilt. I drew him back with one hand.
-
-“Nothing must be moved,” I explained. “The police must see him exactly
-as he is now.”
-
-Blunt nodded in instant comprehension. His face was expressionless as
-ever, but I thought I detected signs of emotion beneath the stolid
-mask. Geoffrey Raymond had joined us now, and stood peering over
-Blunt’s shoulder at the body.
-
-“This is terrible,” he said in a low voice.
-
-He had regained his composure, but as he took off the pince-nez he
-habitually wore and polished them I observed that his hand was shaking.
-
-“Robbery, I suppose,” he said. “How did the fellow get in? Through the
-window? Has anything been taken?”
-
-He went towards the desk.
-
-“You think it’s burglary?” I said slowly.
-
-“What else could it be? There’s no question of suicide, I suppose?”
-
-“No man could stab himself in such a way,” I said confidently. “It’s
-murder right enough. But with what motive?”
-
-“Roger hadn’t an enemy in the world,” said Blunt quietly. “Must have
-been burglars. But what was the thief after? Nothing seems to be
-disarranged?”
-
-He looked round the room. Raymond was still sorting the papers on the
-desk.
-
-“There seems nothing missing, and none of the drawers show signs of
-having been tampered with,” the secretary observed at last. “It’s very
-mysterious.”
-
-Blunt made a slight motion with his head.
-
-“There are some letters on the floor here,” he said.
-
-I looked down. Three or four letters still lay where Ackroyd had
-dropped them earlier in the evening.
-
-But the blue envelope containing Mrs. Ferrars’s letter had disappeared.
-I half opened my mouth to speak, but at that moment the sound of a bell
-pealed through the house. There was a confused murmur of voices in the
-hall, and then Parker appeared with our local inspector and a police
-constable.
-
-“Good evening, gentlemen,” said the inspector. “I’m terribly sorry for
-this! A good kind gentleman like Mr. Ackroyd. The butler says it is
-murder. No possibility of accident or suicide, doctor?”
-
-“None whatever,” I said.
-
-“Ah! A bad business.”
-
-He came and stood over the body.
-
-“Been moved at all?” he asked sharply.
-
-“Beyond making certain that life was extinct—an easy matter—I have not
-disturbed the body in any way.”
-
-“Ah! And everything points to the murderer having got clear away—for
-the moment, that is. Now then, let me hear all about it. Who found the
-body?”
-
-I explained the circumstances carefully.
-
-“A telephone message, you say? From the butler?”
-
-“A message that I never sent,” declared Parker earnestly. “I’ve not
-been near the telephone the whole evening. The others can bear me out
-that I haven’t.”
-
-“Very odd, that. Did it sound like Parker’s voice, doctor?”
-
-“Well—I can’t say I noticed. I took it for granted, you see.”
-
-“Naturally. Well, you got up here, broke in the door, and found poor
-Mr. Ackroyd like this. How long should you say he had been dead,
-doctor?”
-
-“Half an hour at least—perhaps longer,” I said.
-
-“The door was locked on the inside, you say? What about the window?”
-
-“I myself closed and bolted it earlier in the evening at Mr. Ackroyd’s
-request.”
-
-The inspector strode across to it and threw back the curtains.
-
-“Well, it’s open now anyway,” he remarked.
-
-True enough, the window was open, the lower sash being raised to its
-fullest extent.
-
-The inspector produced a pocket torch and flashed it along the sill
-outside.
-
-“This is the way he went all right,” he remarked, “_and_ got in. See
-here.”
-
-In the light of the powerful torch, several clearly defined footmarks
-could be seen. They seemed to be those of shoes with rubber studs
-in the soles. One particularly clear one pointed inwards, another,
-slightly overlapping it, pointed outwards.
-
-“Plain as a pikestaff,” said the inspector. “Any valuables missing?”
-
-Geoffrey Raymond shook his head.
-
-“Not so that we can discover. Mr. Ackroyd never kept anything of
-particular value in this room.”
-
-“H’m,” said the inspector. “Man found an open window. Climbed in, saw
-Mr. Ackroyd sitting there—maybe he’d fallen asleep. Man stabbed him
-from behind, then lost his nerve and made off. But he’s left his tracks
-pretty clearly. We ought to get hold of _him_ without much difficulty.
-No suspicious strangers been hanging about anywhere?”
-
-“Oh!” I said suddenly.
-
-“What is it, doctor?”
-
-“I met a man this evening—just as I was turning out of the gate. He
-asked me the way to Fernly Park.”
-
-“What time would that be?”
-
-“Just nine o’clock. I heard it chime the hour as I was turning out of
-the gate.”
-
-“Can you describe him?”
-
-I did so to the best of my ability.
-
-The inspector turned to the butler.
-
-“Any one answering that description come to the front door?”
-
-“No, sir. No one has been to the house at all this evening.”
-
-“What about the back?”
-
-“I don’t think so, sir, but I’ll make inquiries.”
-
-He moved towards the door, but the inspector held up a large hand.
-
-“No, thanks. I’ll do my own inquiring. But first of all I want to fix
-the time a little more clearly. When was Mr. Ackroyd last seen alive?”
-
-“Probably by me,” I said, “when I left at—let me see—about ten minutes
-to nine. He told me that he didn’t wish to be disturbed, and I repeated
-the order to Parker.”
-
-“Just so, sir,” said Parker respectfully.
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd was certainly alive at half-past nine,” put in Raymond,
-“for I heard his voice in here talking.”
-
-“Who was he talking to?”
-
-“That I don’t know. Of course, at the time I took it for granted that
-it was Dr. Sheppard who was with him. I wanted to ask him a question
-about some papers I was engaged upon, but when I heard the voices I
-remembered that he had said he wanted to talk to Dr. Sheppard without
-being disturbed, and I went away again. But now it seems that the
-doctor had already left?”
-
-I nodded.
-
-“I was at home by a quarter-past nine,” I said. “I didn’t go out again
-until I received the telephone call.”
-
-“Who could have been with him at half-past nine?” queried the
-inspector. “It wasn’t you, Mr.—er——”
-
-“Major Blunt,” I said.
-
-“Major Hector Blunt?” asked the inspector, a respectful tone creeping
-into his voice.
-
-Blunt merely jerked his head affirmatively.
-
-“I think we’ve seen you down here before, sir,” said the inspector.
-“I didn’t recognize you for the moment, but you were staying with Mr.
-Ackroyd a year ago last May.”
-
-“June,” corrected Blunt.
-
-“Just so, June it was. Now, as I was saying, it wasn’t you with Mr.
-Ackroyd at nine-thirty this evening?”
-
-Blunt shook his head.
-
-“Never saw him after dinner,” he volunteered.
-
-The inspector turned once more to Raymond.
-
-“You didn’t overhear any of the conversation going on, did you, sir?”
-
-“I did catch just a fragment of it,” said the secretary, “and,
-supposing as I did that it was Dr. Sheppard who was with Mr. Ackroyd,
-that fragment struck me as distinctly odd. As far as I can remember,
-the exact words were these. Mr. Ackroyd was speaking. ‘The calls
-on my purse have been so frequent of late’—that is what he was
-saying—‘of late, that I fear it is impossible for me to accede to your
-request....’ I went away again at once, of course, so did not hear any
-more. But I rather wondered because Dr. Sheppard——”
-
-“——Does not ask for loans for himself or subscriptions for others,” I
-finished.
-
-“A demand for money,” said the inspector musingly. “It may be that here
-we have a very important clew.” He turned to the butler. “You say,
-Parker, that nobody was admitted by the front door this evening?”
-
-“That’s what I say, sir.”
-
-“Then it seems almost certain that Mr. Ackroyd himself must have
-admitted this stranger. But I don’t quite see——”
-
-The inspector went into a kind of day-dream for some minutes.
-
-“One thing’s clear,” he said at length, rousing himself from his
-absorption. “Mr. Ackroyd was alive and well at nine-thirty. That is the
-last moment at which he is known to have been alive.”
-
-Parker gave vent to an apologetic cough which brought the inspector’s
-eyes on him at once.
-
-“Well?” he said sharply.
-
-“If you’ll excuse me, sir, Miss Flora saw him after that.”
-
-“Miss Flora?”
-
-“Yes, sir. About a quarter to ten that would be. It was after that that
-she told me Mr. Ackroyd wasn’t to be disturbed again to-night.”
-
-“Did he send her to you with that message?”
-
-“Not exactly, sir. I was bringing a tray with soda and whisky when Miss
-Flora, who was just coming out of this room, stopped me and said her
-uncle didn’t want to be disturbed.”
-
-The inspector looked at the butler with rather closer attention than he
-had bestowed on him up to now.
-
-“You’d already been told that Mr. Ackroyd didn’t want to be disturbed,
-hadn’t you?”
-
-Parker began to stammer. His hands shook.
-
-“Yes, sir. Yes, sir. Quite so, sir.”
-
-“And yet you were proposing to do so?”
-
-“I’d forgotten, sir. At least I mean, I always bring the whisky and
-soda about that time, sir, and ask if there’s anything more, and I
-thought—well, I was doing as usual without thinking.”
-
-It was at this moment that it began to dawn upon me that Parker was
-most suspiciously flustered. The man was shaking and twitching all over.
-
-“H’m,” said the inspector. “I must see Miss Ackroyd at once. For the
-moment we’ll leave this room exactly as it is. I can return here after
-I’ve heard what Miss Ackroyd has to tell me. I shall just take the
-precaution of shutting and bolting the window.”
-
-This precaution accomplished, he led the way into the hall and we
-followed him. He paused a moment, as he glanced up at the little
-staircase, then spoke over his shoulder to the constable.
-
-“Jones, you’d better stay here. Don’t let any one go into that room.”
-
-Parker interposed deferentially.
-
-“If you’ll excuse me, sir. If you were to lock the door into the main
-hall, nobody could gain access to this part. That staircase leads only
-to Mr. Ackroyd’s bedroom and bathroom. There is no communication with
-the other part of the house. There once was a door through, but Mr.
-Ackroyd had it blocked up. He liked to feel that his suite was entirely
-private.”
-
-To make things clear and explain the position, I have appended a rough
-sketch of the right-hand wing of the house. The small staircase leads,
-as Parker explained, to a big bedroom (made by two being knocked into
-one) and an adjoining bathroom and lavatory.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- +------------------------------------.
- | TERRACE .
- |--==--+--==---==--+---==---==----+ .
- |PANTRY| DINING | DRAWING | .
- | | ROOM | ROOM | .
- | | | | .
- |___/ _+___/ __/ _+_/ +__________+ .
- | | | .
- |___ ___+____+ \STAIRS‖‖‖| .
- | \ |====| +-- /------+ .
- | |====| | | .
- |BILLIARD|====| HALL | | .
- | ROOM |====| | STUDY ‖ .
- | +----+ | ‖ .
- | |STAIRCASE | | .
- | | | | .
- | \ | | .
- +-==-==--+-------+ +--+----------+- -+
- | | . .
- FRONT DOOR . .
- . . . .
- . . . .
- . . . .
- . . PATH .
- . . . . ..
- LAWN . . . . . .
- . . . . . .
- . . . . ..
- . . . . SUMMER
- . +---+ HOUSE
- . | |LODGE
- -----------------+ +---+--------------
-]
-
-The inspector took in the position at a glance. We went through into
-the large hall and he locked the door behind him, slipping the key into
-his pocket. Then he gave the constable some low-voiced instructions,
-and the latter prepared to depart.
-
-“We must get busy on those shoe tracks,” explained the inspector. “But
-first of all, I must have a word with Miss Ackroyd. She was the last
-person to see her uncle alive. Does she know yet?”
-
-Raymond shook his head.
-
-“Well, no need to tell her for another five minutes. She can answer my
-questions better without being upset by knowing the truth about her
-uncle. Tell her there’s been a burglary, and ask her if she would mind
-dressing and coming down to answer a few questions.”
-
-It was Raymond who went upstairs on this errand.
-
-“Miss Ackroyd will be down in a minute,” he said, when he returned. “I
-told her just what you suggested.”
-
-In less than five minutes Flora descended the staircase. She was
-wrapped in a pale pink silk kimono. She looked anxious and excited.
-
-The inspector stepped forward.
-
-“Good-evening, Miss Ackroyd,” he said civilly. “We’re afraid there’s
-been an attempt at robbery, and we want you to help us. What’s this
-room—the billiard room? Come in here and sit down.”
-
-Flora sat down composedly on the wide divan which ran the length of the
-wall, and looked up at the inspector.
-
-“I don’t quite understand. What has been stolen? What do you want me to
-tell you?”
-
-“It’s just this, Miss Ackroyd. Parker here says you came out of your
-uncle’s study at about a quarter to ten. Is that right?”
-
-“Quite right. I had been to say good-night to him.”
-
-“And the time is correct?”
-
-“Well, it must have been about then. I can’t say exactly. It might have
-been later.”
-
-“Was your uncle alone, or was there any one with him?”
-
-“He was alone. Dr. Sheppard had gone.”
-
-“Did you happen to notice whether the window was open or shut?”
-
-Flora shook her head.
-
-“I can’t say. The curtains were drawn.”
-
-“Exactly. And your uncle seemed quite as usual?”
-
-“I think so.”
-
-“Do you mind telling us exactly what passed between you?”
-
-Flora paused a minute, as though to collect her recollections.
-
-“I went in and said, ‘Good-night, uncle, I’m going to bed now. I’m
-tired to-night.’ He gave a sort of grunt, and—I went over and kissed
-him, and he said something about my looking nice in the frock I had on,
-and then he told me to run away as he was busy. So I went.”
-
-“Did he ask specially not to be disturbed?”
-
-“Oh! yes, I forgot. He said: ‘Tell Parker I don’t want anything more
-to-night, and that he’s not to disturb me.’ I met Parker just outside
-the door and gave him uncle’s message.”
-
-“Just so,” said the inspector.
-
-“Won’t you tell me what it is that has been stolen?”
-
-“We’re not quite—certain,” said the inspector hesitatingly.
-
-A wide look of alarm came into the girl’s eyes. She started up.
-
-“What is it? You’re hiding something from me?”
-
-Moving in his usual unobtrusive manner, Hector Blunt came between her
-and the inspector. She half stretched out her hand, and he took it in
-both of his, patting it as though she were a very small child, and she
-turned to him as though something in his stolid, rocklike demeanor
-promised comfort and safety.
-
-“It’s bad news, Flora,” he said quietly. “Bad news for all of us. Your
-Uncle Roger——”
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“It will be a shock to you. Bound to be. Poor Roger’s dead.”
-
-Flora drew away from him, her eyes dilating with horror.
-
-“When?” she whispered. “When?”
-
-“Very soon after you left him, I’m afraid,” said Blunt gravely.
-
-Flora raised her hand to her throat, gave a little cry, and I hurried
-to catch her as she fell. She had fainted, and Blunt and I carried her
-upstairs and laid her on her bed. Then I got him to wake Mrs. Ackroyd
-and tell her the news. Flora soon revived, and I brought her mother to
-her, telling her what to do for the girl. Then I hurried downstairs
-again.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- THE TUNISIAN DAGGER
-
-
-I met the inspector just coming from the door which led into the
-kitchen quarters.
-
-“How’s the young lady, doctor?”
-
-“Coming round nicely. Her mother’s with her.”
-
-“That’s good. I’ve been questioning the servants. They all declare that
-no one has been to the back door to-night. Your description of that
-stranger was rather vague. Can’t you give us something more definite to
-go upon?”
-
-“I’m afraid not,” I said regretfully. “It was a dark night, you see,
-and the fellow had his coat collar well pulled up and his hat squashed
-down over his eyes.”
-
-“H’m,” said the inspector. “Looked as though he wanted to conceal his
-face. Sure it was no one you know?”
-
-I replied in the negative, but not as decidedly as I might have done. I
-remembered my impression that the stranger’s voice was not unfamiliar
-to me. I explained this rather haltingly to the inspector.
-
-“It was a rough, uneducated voice, you say?”
-
-I agreed, but it occurred to me that the roughness had been of an
-almost exaggerated quality. If, as the inspector thought, the man had
-wished to hide his face, he might equally well have tried to disguise
-his voice.
-
-“Do you mind coming into the study with me again, doctor? There are one
-or two things I want to ask you.”
-
-I acquiesced. Inspector Davis unlocked the door of the lobby, we passed
-through, and he locked the door again behind him.
-
-“We don’t want to be disturbed,” he said grimly. “And we don’t want any
-eavesdropping either. What’s all this about blackmail?”
-
-“Blackmail!” I exclaimed, very much startled.
-
-“Is it an effort of Parker’s imagination? Or is there something in it?”
-
-“If Parker heard anything about blackmail,” I said slowly, “he must
-have been listening outside this door with his ear glued against the
-keyhole.”
-
-Davis nodded.
-
-“Nothing more likely. You see, I’ve been instituting a few inquiries as
-to what Parker has been doing with himself this evening. To tell the
-truth, I didn’t like his manner. The man knows something. When I began
-to question him, he got the wind up, and plumped out some garbled story
-of blackmail.”
-
-I took an instant decision.
-
-“I’m rather glad you’ve brought the matter up,” I said. “I’ve been
-trying to decide whether to make a clean breast of things or not. I’d
-already practically decided to tell you everything, but I was going to
-wait for a favorable opportunity. You might as well have it now.”
-
-And then and there I narrated the whole events of the evening as I
-have set them down here. The inspector listened keenly, occasionally
-interjecting a question.
-
-“Most extraordinary story I ever heard,” he said, when I had finished.
-“And you say that letter has completely disappeared? It looks bad—it
-looks very bad indeed. It gives us what we’ve been looking for—a motive
-for the murder.”
-
-I nodded.
-
-“I realize that.”
-
-“You say that Mr. Ackroyd hinted at a suspicion he had that some member
-of his household was involved? Household’s rather an elastic term.”
-
-“You don’t think that Parker himself might be the man we’re after?” I
-suggested.
-
-“It looks very like it. He was obviously listening at the door when
-you came out. Then Miss Ackroyd came across him later bent on entering
-the study. Say he tried again when she was safely out of the way. He
-stabbed Ackroyd, locked the door on the inside, opened the window, and
-got out that way, and went round to a side door which he had previously
-left open. How’s that?”
-
-“There’s only one thing against it,” I said slowly. “If Ackroyd went on
-reading that letter as soon as I left, as he intended to do, I don’t
-see him continuing to sit on here and turn things over in his mind for
-another hour. He’d have had Parker in at once, accused him then and
-there, and there would have been a fine old uproar. Remember, Ackroyd
-was a man of choleric temper.”
-
-“Mightn’t have had time to go on with the letter just then,” suggested
-the inspector. “We know some one was with him at half-past nine. If
-that visitor turned up as soon as you left, and after he went, Miss
-Ackroyd came in to say good-night—well, he wouldn’t be able to go on
-with the letter until close upon ten o’clock.”
-
-“And the telephone call?”
-
-“Parker sent that all right—perhaps before he thought of the locked
-door and open window. Then he changed his mind—or got in a panic—and
-decided to deny all knowledge of it. That was it, depend upon it.”
-
-“Ye-es,” I said rather doubtfully.
-
-“Anyway, we can find out the truth about the telephone call from the
-exchange. If it was put through from here, I don’t see how any one
-else but Parker could have sent it. Depend upon it, he’s our man.
-But keep it dark—we don’t want to alarm him just yet, till we’ve got
-all the evidence. I’ll see to it he doesn’t give us the slip. To all
-appearances we’ll be concentrating on your mysterious stranger.”
-
-He rose from where he had been sitting astride the chair belonging to
-the desk, and crossed over to the still form in the arm-chair.
-
-“The weapon ought to give us a clew,” he remarked, looking up. “It’s
-something quite unique—a curio, I should think, by the look of it.”
-
-He bent down, surveying the handle attentively, and I heard him give a
-grunt of satisfaction. Then, very gingerly, he pressed his hands down
-below the hilt and drew the blade out from the wound. Still carrying it
-so as not to touch the handle, he placed it in a wide china mug which
-adorned the mantelpiece.
-
-“Yes,” he said, nodding at it. “Quite a work of art. There can’t be
-many of them about.”
-
-It was indeed a beautiful object. A narrow, tapering blade, and a hilt
-of elaborately intertwined metals of curious and careful workmanship.
-He touched the blade gingerly with his finger, testing its sharpness,
-and made an appreciative grimace.
-
-“Lord, what an edge,” he exclaimed. “A child could drive that into a
-man—as easy as cutting butter. A dangerous sort of toy to have about.”
-
-“May I examine the body properly now?” I asked.
-
-He nodded.
-
-“Go ahead.”
-
-I made a thorough examination.
-
-“Well?” said the inspector, when I had finished.
-
-“I’ll spare you the technical language,” I said. “We’ll keep that
-for the inquest. The blow was delivered by a right-handed man
-standing behind him, and death must have been instantaneous. By the
-expression on the dead man’s face, I should say that the blow was quite
-unexpected. He probably died without knowing who his assailant was.”
-
-“Butlers can creep about as soft-footed as cats,” said Inspector Davis.
-“There’s not going to be much mystery about this crime. Take a look at
-the hilt of that dagger.”
-
-I took the look.
-
-“I dare say they’re not apparent to you, but I can see them clearly
-enough.” He lowered his voice. “_Fingerprints!_”
-
-He stood off a few steps to judge of his effect.
-
-“Yes,” I said mildly. “I guessed that.”
-
-I do not see why I should be supposed to be totally devoid of
-intelligence. After all, I read detective stories, and the newspapers,
-and am a man of quite average ability. If there had been toe marks on
-the dagger handle, now, that would have been quite a different thing. I
-would then have registered any amount of surprise and awe.
-
-I think the inspector was annoyed with me for declining to get
-thrilled. He picked up the china mug and invited me to accompany him to
-the billiard room.
-
-“I want to see if Mr. Raymond can tell us anything about this dagger,”
-he explained.
-
-Locking the outer door behind us again, we made our way to the billiard
-room, where we found Geoffrey Raymond. The inspector held up his
-exhibit.
-
-“Ever seen this before, Mr. Raymond?”
-
-“Why—I believe—I’m almost sure that is a curio given to Mr. Ackroyd
-by Major Blunt. It comes from Morocco—no, Tunis. So the crime was
-committed with that? What an extraordinary thing. It seems almost
-impossible, and yet there could hardly be two daggers the same. May I
-fetch Major Blunt?”
-
-Without waiting for an answer, he hurried off.
-
-“Nice young fellow that,” said the inspector. “Something honest and
-ingenuous about him.”
-
-I agreed. In the two years that Geoffrey Raymond has been secretary to
-Ackroyd, I have never seen him ruffled or out of temper. And he has
-been, I know, a most efficient secretary.
-
-In a minute or two Raymond returned, accompanied by Blunt.
-
-“I was right,” said Raymond excitedly. “It _is_ the Tunisian dagger.”
-
-“Major Blunt hasn’t looked at it yet,” objected the inspector.
-
-“Saw it the moment I came into the study,” said the quiet man.
-
-“You recognized it then?”
-
-Blunt nodded.
-
-“You said nothing about it,” said the inspector suspiciously.
-
-“Wrong moment,” said Blunt. “Lot of harm done by blurting out things at
-the wrong time.”
-
-He returned the inspector’s stare placidly enough.
-
-The latter grunted at last and turned away. He brought the dagger over
-to Blunt.
-
-“You’re quite sure about it, sir. You identify it positively?”
-
-“Absolutely. No doubt whatever.”
-
-“Where was this—er—curio usually kept? Can you tell me that, sir?”
-
-It was the secretary who answered.
-
-“In the silver table in the drawing-room.”
-
-“What?” I exclaimed.
-
-The others looked at me.
-
-“Yes, doctor?” said the inspector encouragingly.
-
-“It’s nothing.”
-
-“Yes, doctor?” said the inspector again, still more encouragingly.
-
-“It’s so trivial,” I explained apologetically. “Only that when I
-arrived last night for dinner I heard the lid of the silver table being
-shut down in the drawing-room.”
-
-I saw profound skepticism and a trace of suspicion on the inspector’s
-countenance.
-
-“How did you know it was the silver table lid?”
-
-I was forced to explain in detail—a long, tedious explanation which I
-would infinitely rather not have had to make.
-
-The inspector heard me to the end.
-
-“Was the dagger in its place when you were looking over the contents?”
-he asked.
-
-“I don’t know,” I said. “I can’t say I remember noticing it—but, of
-course, it may have been there all the time.”
-
-“We’d better get hold of the housekeeper,” remarked the inspector, and
-pulled the bell.
-
-A few minutes later Miss Russell, summoned by Parker, entered the room.
-
-“I don’t think I went near the silver table,” she said, when the
-inspector had posed his question. “I was looking to see that all the
-flowers were fresh. Oh! yes, I remember now. The silver table was
-open—which it had no business to be, and I shut the lid down as I
-passed.”
-
-She looked at him aggressively.
-
-“I see,” said the inspector. “Can you tell me if this dagger was in its
-place then?”
-
-Miss Russell looked at the weapon composedly.
-
-“I can’t say, I’m sure,” she replied. “I didn’t stop to look. I knew
-the family would be down any minute, and I wanted to get away.”
-
-“Thank you,” said the inspector.
-
-There was just a trace of hesitation in his manner, as though he would
-have liked to question her further, but Miss Russell clearly accepted
-the words as a dismissal, and glided from the room.
-
-“Rather a Tartar, I should fancy, eh?” said the inspector, looking
-after her. “Let me see. This silver table is in front of one of the
-windows, I think you said, doctor?”
-
-Raymond answered for me.
-
-“Yes, the left-hand window.”
-
-“And the window was open?”
-
-“They were both ajar.”
-
-“Well, I don’t think we need go into the question much further.
-Somebody—I’ll just say somebody—could get that dagger any time he
-liked, and exactly when he got it doesn’t matter in the least. I’ll be
-coming up in the morning with the chief constable, Mr. Raymond. Until
-then, I’ll keep the key of that door. I want Colonel Melrose to see
-everything exactly as it is. I happen to know that he’s dining out the
-other side of the county, and, I believe, staying the night....”
-
-We watched the inspector take up the jar.
-
-“I shall have to pack this carefully,” he observed. “It’s going to be
-an important piece of evidence in more ways than one.”
-
-A few minutes later as I came out of the billiard room with Raymond,
-the latter gave a low chuckle of amusement.
-
-I felt the pressure of his hand on my arm, and followed the direction
-of his eyes. Inspector Davis seemed to be inviting Parker’s opinion of
-a small pocket diary.
-
-“A little obvious,” murmured my companion. “So Parker is the suspect,
-is he? Shall we oblige Inspector Davis with a set of our fingerprints
-also?”
-
-He took two cards from the card tray, wiped them with his silk
-handkerchief, then handed one to me and took the other himself. Then,
-with a grin, he handed them to the police inspector.
-
-“Souvenirs,” he said. “No. 1, Dr. Sheppard; No. 2, my humble self. One
-from Major Blunt will be forthcoming in the morning.”
-
-Youth is very buoyant. Even the brutal murder of his friend and
-employer could not dim Geoffrey Raymond’s spirits for long. Perhaps
-that is as it should be. I do not know. I have lost the quality of
-resilience long since myself.
-
-It was very late when I got back, and I hoped that Caroline would have
-gone to bed. I might have known better.
-
-She had hot cocoa waiting for me, and whilst I drank it, she extracted
-the whole history of the evening from me. I said nothing of the
-blackmailing business, but contented myself with giving her the facts
-of the murder.
-
-“The police suspect Parker,” I said, as I rose to my feet and prepared
-to ascend to bed. “There seems a fairly clear case against him.”
-
-“Parker!” said my sister. “Fiddlesticks! That inspector must be a
-perfect fool. Parker indeed! Don’t tell me.”
-
-With which obscure pronouncement we went up to bed.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- I LEARN MY NEIGHBOR’S PROFESSION
-
-
-On the following morning I hurried unforgivably over my round. My
-excuse can be that I had no very serious cases to attend. On my return
-Caroline came into the hall to greet me.
-
-“Flora Ackroyd is here,” she announced in an excited whisper.
-
-“What?”
-
-I concealed my surprise as best I could.
-
-“She’s very anxious to see you. She’s been here half an hour.”
-
-Caroline led the way into our small sitting-room, and I followed.
-
-Flora was sitting on the sofa by the window. She was in black and she
-sat nervously twisting her hands together. I was shocked by the sight
-of her face. All the color had faded away from it. But when she spoke
-her manner was as composed and resolute as possible.
-
-“Dr. Sheppard, I have come to ask you to help me.”
-
-“Of course he’ll help you, my dear,” said Caroline.
-
-I don’t think Flora really wished Caroline to be present at the
-interview. She would, I am sure, have infinitely preferred to speak to
-me privately. But she also wanted to waste no time, so she made the
-best of it.
-
-“I want you to come to The Larches with me.”
-
-“The Larches?” I queried, surprised.
-
-“To see that funny little man?” exclaimed Caroline.
-
-“Yes. You know who he is, don’t you?”
-
-“We fancied,” I said, “that he might be a retired hairdresser.”
-
-Flora’s blue eyes opened very wide.
-
-“Why, he’s Hercule Poirot! You know who I mean—the private detective.
-They say he’s done the most wonderful things—just like detectives do in
-books. A year ago he retired and came to live down here. Uncle knew who
-he was, but he promised not to tell any one, because M. Poirot wanted
-to live quietly without being bothered by people.”
-
-“So that’s who he is,” I said slowly.
-
-“You’ve heard of him, of course?”
-
-“I’m rather an old fogey, as Caroline tells me,” I said, “but I _have_
-just heard of him.”
-
-“Extraordinary!” commented Caroline.
-
-I don’t know what she was referring to—possibly her own failure to
-discover the truth.
-
-“You want to go and see him?” I asked slowly. “Now why?”
-
-“To get him to investigate this murder, of course,” said Caroline
-sharply. “Don’t be so stupid, James.”
-
-I was not really being stupid. Caroline does not always understand what
-I am driving at.
-
-“You haven’t got confidence in Inspector Davis?” I went on.
-
-“Of course she hasn’t,” said Caroline. “I haven’t either.”
-
-Any one would have thought it was Caroline’s uncle who had been
-murdered.
-
-“And how do you know he would take up the case?” I asked. “Remember he
-has retired from active work.”
-
-“That’s just it,” said Flora simply. “I’ve got to persuade him.”
-
-“You are sure you are doing wisely?” I asked gravely.
-
-“Of course she is,” said Caroline. “I’ll go with her myself if she
-likes.”
-
-“I’d rather the doctor came with me if you don’t mind, Miss Sheppard,”
-said Flora.
-
-She knows the value of being direct on certain occasions. Any hints
-would certainly have been wasted on Caroline.
-
-“You see,” she explained, following directness with tact, “Dr. Sheppard
-being the doctor, and having found the body, he would be able to give
-all the details to M. Poirot.”
-
-“Yes,” said Caroline grudgingly, “I see that.”
-
-I took a turn or two up and down the room.
-
-“Flora,” I said gravely, “be guided by me. I advise you not to drag
-this detective into the case.”
-
-Flora sprang to her feet. The color rushed into her cheeks.
-
-“I know why you say that,” she cried. “But it’s exactly for that reason
-I’m so anxious to go. You’re afraid! But I’m not. I know Ralph better
-than you do.”
-
-“Ralph,” said Caroline. “What has Ralph got to do with it?”
-
-Neither of us heeded her.
-
-“Ralph may be weak,” continued Flora. “He may have done foolish things
-in the past—wicked things even—but he wouldn’t murder any one.”
-
-“No, no,” I exclaimed. “I never thought it of him.”
-
-“Then why did you go to the Three Boars last night?” demanded Flora,
-“on your way home—after uncle’s body was found?”
-
-I was momentarily silenced. I had hoped that that visit of mine would
-remain unnoticed.
-
-“How did you know about that?” I countered.
-
-“I went there this morning,” said Flora. “I heard from the servants
-that Ralph was staying there——”
-
-I interrupted her.
-
-“You had no idea that he was in King’s Abbot?”
-
-“No. I was astounded. I couldn’t understand it. I went there and asked
-for him. They told me, what I suppose they told you last night, that
-he went out at about nine o’clock yesterday evening—and—and never came
-back.”
-
-Her eyes met mine defiantly, and as though answering something in my
-look, she burst out:—
-
-“Well, why shouldn’t he? He might have gone—anywhere. He may even have
-gone back to London.”
-
-“Leaving his luggage behind?” I asked gently.
-
-Flora stamped her foot.
-
-“I don’t care. There must be a simple explanation.”
-
-“And that’s why you want to go to Hercule Poirot? Isn’t it better to
-leave things as they are? The police don’t suspect Ralph in the least,
-remember. They’re working on quite another tack.”
-
-“But that’s just _it_,” cried the girl. “They _do_ suspect him. A man
-from Cranchester turned up this morning—Inspector Raglan, a horrid,
-weaselly little man. I found he had been to the Three Boars this
-morning before me. They told me all about his having been there, and
-the questions he had asked. He must think Ralph did it.”
-
-“That’s a change of mind from last night, if so,” I said slowly. “He
-doesn’t believe in Davis’s theory that it was Parker then?”
-
-“Parker indeed,” said my sister, and snorted.
-
-Flora came forward and laid her hand on my arm.
-
-“Oh! Dr. Sheppard, let us go at once to this M. Poirot. He will find
-out the truth.”
-
-“My dear Flora,” I said gently, laying my hand on hers. “Are you quite
-sure it is the truth we want?”
-
-She looked at me, nodding her head gravely.
-
-“You’re not sure,” she said. “I am. I know Ralph better than you do.”
-
-“Of course he didn’t do it,” said Caroline, who had been keeping silent
-with great difficulty. “Ralph may be extravagant, but he’s a dear boy,
-and has the nicest manners.”
-
-I wanted to tell Caroline that large numbers of murderers have had
-nice manners, but the presence of Flora restrained me. Since the
-girl was determined, I was forced to give in to her and we started
-at once, getting away before my sister was able to fire off any more
-pronouncements beginning with her favorite words, “Of course.”
-
-An old woman with an immense Breton cap opened the door of The Larches
-to us. M. Poirot was at home, it seemed.
-
-We were ushered into a little sitting-room arranged with formal
-precision, and there, after the lapse of a minute or so, my friend of
-yesterday came to us.
-
-“Monsieur le docteur,” he said, smiling. “Mademoiselle.”
-
-He bowed to Flora.
-
-“Perhaps,” I began, “you have heard of the tragedy which occurred last
-night.”
-
-His face grew grave.
-
-“But certainly I have heard. It is horrible. I offer mademoiselle all
-my sympathy. In what way can I serve you?”
-
-“Miss Ackroyd,” I said, “wants you to—to——”
-
-“To find the murderer,” said Flora in a clear voice.
-
-“I see,” said the little man. “But the police will do that, will they
-not?”
-
-“They might make a mistake,” said Flora. “They are on their way to make
-a mistake now, I think. Please, M. Poirot, won’t you help us? If—if it
-is a question of money——”
-
-Poirot held up his hand.
-
-“Not that, I beg of you, mademoiselle. Not that I do not care for
-money.” His eyes showed a momentary twinkle. “Money, it means much to
-me and always has done. No, if I go into this, you must understand one
-thing clearly. _I shall go through with it to the end._ The good dog,
-he does not leave the scent, remember! You may wish that, after all,
-you had left it to the local police.”
-
-“I want the truth,” said Flora, looking him straight in the eyes.
-
-“All the truth?”
-
-“All the truth.”
-
-“Then I accept,” said the little man quietly. “And I hope you will not
-regret those words. Now, tell me all the circumstances.”
-
-“Dr. Sheppard had better tell you,” said Flora. “He knows more than I
-do.”
-
-Thus enjoined, I plunged into a careful narrative, embodying all the
-facts I have previously set down. Poirot listened carefully, inserting
-a question here and there, but for the most part sitting in silence,
-his eyes on the ceiling.
-
-I brought my story to a close with the departure of the inspector and
-myself from Fernly Park the previous night.
-
-“And now,” said Flora, as I finished, “tell him all about Ralph.”
-
-I hesitated, but her imperious glance drove me on.
-
-“You went to this inn—this Three Boars—last night on your way home?”
-asked Poirot, as I brought my tale to a close. “Now exactly why was
-that?”
-
-I paused a moment to choose my words carefully.
-
-“I thought some one ought to inform the young man of his uncle’s death.
-It occurred to me after I had left Fernly that possibly no one but
-myself and Mr. Ackroyd were aware that he was staying in the village.”
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“Quite so. That was your only motive in going there, eh?”
-
-“That was my only motive,” I said stiffly.
-
-“It was not to—shall we say—reassure yourself about _ce jeune homme_?”
-
-“Reassure myself?”
-
-“I think, M. le docteur, that you know very well what I mean, though
-you pretend not to do so. I suggest that it would have been a relief
-to you if you had found that Captain Paton had been at home all the
-evening.”
-
-“Not at all,” I said sharply.
-
-The little detective shook his head at me gravely.
-
-“You have not the trust in me of Miss Flora,” he said. “But no matter.
-What we have to look at is this—Captain Paton is missing, under
-circumstances which call for an explanation. I will not hide from you
-that the matter looks grave. Still, it may admit of a perfectly simple
-explanation.”
-
-“That’s just what I keep saying,” cried Flora eagerly.
-
-Poirot touched no more upon that theme. Instead he suggested an
-immediate visit to the local police. He thought it better for Flora
-to return home, and for me to be the one to accompany him there and
-introduce him to the officer in charge of the case.
-
-We carried out this plan forthwith. We found Inspector Davis outside
-the police station looking very glum indeed. With him was Colonel
-Melrose, the Chief Constable, and another man whom, from Flora’s
-description of “weaselly,” I had no difficulty in recognizing as
-Inspector Raglan from Cranchester.
-
-I know Melrose fairly well, and I introduced Poirot to him and
-explained the situation. The chief constable was clearly vexed, and
-Inspector Raglan looked as black as thunder. Davis, however, seemed
-slightly exhilarated by the sight of his superior officer’s annoyance.
-
-“The case is going to be plain as a pikestaff,” said Raglan. “Not the
-least need for amateurs to come butting in. You’d think any fool would
-have seen the way things were last night, and then we shouldn’t have
-lost twelve hours.”
-
-He directed a vengeful glance at poor Davis, who received it with
-perfect stolidity.
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd’s family must, of course, do what they see fit,” said
-Colonel Melrose. “But we cannot have the official investigation
-hampered in any way. I know M. Poirot’s great reputation, of course,”
-he added courteously.
-
-“The police can’t advertise themselves, worse luck,” said Raglan.
-
-It was Poirot who saved the situation.
-
-“It is true that I have retired from the world,” he said. “I never
-intended to take up a case again. Above all things, I have a horror of
-publicity. I must beg, that in the case of my being able to contribute
-something to the solution of the mystery, my name may not be mentioned.”
-
-Inspector Raglan’s face lightened a little.
-
-“I’ve heard of some very remarkable successes of yours,” observed the
-colonel, thawing.
-
-“I have had much experience,” said Poirot quietly. “But most of my
-successes have been obtained by the aid of the police. I admire
-enormously your English police. If Inspector Raglan permits me to
-assist him, I shall be both honored and flattered.”
-
-The inspector’s countenance became still more gracious.
-
-Colonel Melrose drew me aside.
-
-“From all I hear, this little fellow’s done some really remarkable
-things,” he murmured. “We’re naturally anxious not to have to call in
-Scotland Yard. Raglan seems very sure of himself, but I’m not quite
-certain that I agree with him. You see, I—er—know the parties concerned
-better than he does. This fellow doesn’t seem out after kudos, does he?
-Would work in with us unobtrusively, eh?”
-
-“To the greater glory of Inspector Raglan,” I said solemnly.
-
-“Well, well,” said Colonel Melrose breezily in a louder voice, “we must
-put you wise to the latest developments, M. Poirot.”
-
-“I thank you,” said Poirot. “My friend, Dr. Sheppard, said something of
-the butler being suspected?”
-
-“That’s all bunkum,” said Raglan instantly. “These high-class servants
-get in such a funk that they act suspiciously for nothing at all.”
-
-“The fingerprints?” I hinted.
-
-“Nothing like Parker’s.” He gave a faint smile, and added: “And yours
-and Mr. Raymond’s don’t fit either, doctor.”
-
-“What about those of Captain Ralph Paton?” asked Poirot quietly.
-
-I felt a secret admiration for the way he took the bull by the horns. I
-saw a look of respect creep into the inspector’s eye.
-
-“I see you don’t let the grass grow under your feet, Mr. Poirot. It
-will be a pleasure to work with you, I’m sure. We’re going to take that
-young gentleman’s fingerprints as soon as we can lay hands upon him.”
-
-“I can’t help thinking you’re mistaken, inspector,” said Colonel
-Melrose warmly. “I’ve known Ralph Paton from a boy upward. He’d never
-stoop to murder.”
-
-“Maybe not,” said the inspector tonelessly.
-
-“What have you got against him?” I asked.
-
-“Went out just on nine o’clock last night. Was seen in neighborhood of
-Fernly Park somewhere about nine-thirty. Not been seen since. Believed
-to be in serious money difficulties. I’ve got a pair of his shoes
-here—shoes with rubber studs in them. He had two pairs, almost exactly
-alike. I’m going up now to compare them with those footmarks. The
-constable is up there seeing that no one tampers with them.”
-
-“We’ll go at once,” said Colonel Melrose. “You and M. Poirot will
-accompany us, will you not?”
-
-We assented, and all drove up in the colonel’s car. The inspector was
-anxious to get at once to the footmarks, and asked to be put down at
-the lodge. About half-way up the drive, on the right, a path branched
-off which led round to the terrace and the window of Ackroyd’s study.
-
-“Would you like to go with the inspector, M. Poirot?” asked the chief
-constable, “or would you prefer to examine the study?”
-
-Poirot chose the latter alternative. Parker opened the door to us. His
-manner was smug and deferential, and he seemed to have recovered from
-his panic of the night before.
-
-Colonel Melrose took a key from his pocket, and unlocking the door
-which led into the lobby, he ushered us through into the study.
-
-“Except for the removal of the body, M. Poirot, this room is exactly as
-it was last night.”
-
-“And the body was found—where?”
-
-As precisely as possible, I described Ackroyd’s position. The arm-chair
-still stood in front of the fire.
-
-Poirot went and sat down in it.
-
-“The blue letter you speak of, where was it when you left the room?”
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd had laid it down on this little table at his right hand.”
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“Except for that, everything was in its place?”
-
-“Yes, I think so.”
-
-“Colonel Melrose, would you be so extremely obliging as to sit down in
-this chair a minute. I thank you. Now, M. le docteur, will you kindly
-indicate to me the exact position of the dagger?”
-
-I did so, whilst the little man stood in the doorway.
-
-“The hilt of the dagger was plainly visible from the door then. Both
-you and Parker could see it at once?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-Poirot went next to the window.
-
-“The electric light was on, of course, when you discovered the body?”
-he asked over his shoulder.
-
-I assented, and joined him where he was studying the marks on the
-window-sill.
-
-“The rubber studs are the same pattern as those in Captain Paton’s
-shoes,” he said quietly.
-
-Then he came back once more to the middle of the room. His eye traveled
-round, searching everything in the room with a quick, trained glance.
-
-“Are you a man of good observation, Dr. Sheppard?” he asked at last.
-
-“I think so,” I said, surprised.
-
-“There was a fire in the grate, I see. When you broke the door down and
-found Mr. Ackroyd dead, how was the fire? Was it low?”
-
-I gave a vexed laugh.
-
-“I—I really can’t say. I didn’t notice. Perhaps Mr. Raymond or Major
-Blunt——”
-
-The little man opposite me shook his head with a faint smile.
-
-“One must always proceed with method. I made an error of judgment in
-asking you that question. To each man his own knowledge. You could tell
-me the details of the patient’s appearance—nothing there would escape
-you. If I wanted information about the papers on that desk, Mr. Raymond
-would have noticed anything there was to see. To find out about the
-fire, I must ask the man whose business it is to observe such things.
-You permit——”
-
-He moved swiftly to the fireplace and rang the bell.
-
-After a lapse of a minute or two Parker appeared.
-
-“The bell rang, sir,” he said hesitatingly.
-
-“Come in, Parker,” said Colonel Melrose. “This gentleman wants to ask
-you something.”
-
-Parker transferred a respectful attention to Poirot.
-
-“Parker,” said the little man, “when you broke down the door with Dr.
-Sheppard last night, and found your master dead, what was the state of
-the fire?”
-
-Parker replied without a pause.
-
-“It had burned very low, sir. It was almost out.”
-
-“Ah!” said Poirot. The exclamation sounded almost triumphant. He went
-on:—
-
-“Look round you, my good Parker. Is this room exactly as it was then?”
-
-The butler’s eye swept round. It came to rest on the windows.
-
-“The curtains were drawn, sir, and the electric light was on.”
-
-Poirot nodded approval.
-
-“Anything else?”
-
-“Yes, sir, this chair was drawn out a little more.”
-
-He indicated a big grandfather chair to the left of the door between it
-and the window. I append a plan of the room with the chair in question
-marked with an X.
-
-“Just show me,” said Poirot.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- +---------------- +-----------------+
- | + DOOR / GRANDFATHER |
- | / \ / CHAIR +---+ |
- | / + ] | |
- | + / SMALL X ] | |
- | \ / TABLE +---+ |
- | + |
- +++ |
- ||| +---+ CHAIR IN WHICH ___ |
- ||| ] | ACKROYD WAS / \ |
- ||| +---+ FOUND TABLE | | |
- ||| \___/ |
- ||| |
- ||| |
- +++ +---+ + |
- | ^ ] | CHAIR IN WHICH / \ |
- | | +---+ SHEPPARD SAT / / + |
- | | / / |
- | | DESK & + / |
- | | FIREPLACE CHAIR \ / |
- | +------------ + |
- +----------------------------------------+
-]
-
-The butler drew the chair in question out a good two feet from the
-wall, turning it so that the seat faced the door.
-
-“_Voilà ce qui est curieux_,” murmured Poirot. “No one would want to
-sit in a chair in such a position, I fancy. Now who pushed it back into
-place again, I wonder? Did you, my friend?”
-
-“No, sir,” said Parker. “I was too upset with seeing the master and
-all.”
-
-Poirot looked across at me.
-
-“Did you, doctor?”
-
-I shook my head.
-
-“It was back in position when I arrived with the police, sir,” put in
-Parker. “I’m sure of that.”
-
-“Curious,” said Poirot again.
-
-“Raymond or Blunt must have pushed it back,” I suggested. “Surely it
-isn’t important?”
-
-“It is completely unimportant,” said Poirot. “That is why it is so
-interesting,” he added softly.
-
-“Excuse me a minute,” said Colonel Melrose. He left the room with
-Parker.
-
-“Do you think Parker is speaking the truth?” I asked.
-
-“About the chair, yes. Otherwise I do not know. You will find, M. le
-docteur, if you have much to do with cases of this kind, that they all
-resemble each other in one thing.”
-
-“What is that?” I asked curiously.
-
-“Every one concerned in them has something to hide.”
-
-“Have I?” I asked, smiling.
-
-Poirot looked at me attentively.
-
-“I think you have,” he said quietly.
-
-“But——”
-
-“Have you told me everything known to you about this young man Paton?”
-He smiled as I grew red. “Oh! do not fear. I will not press you. I
-shall learn it in good time.”
-
-“I wish you’d tell me something of your methods,” I said hastily, to
-cover my confusion. “The point about the fire, for instance?”
-
-“Oh! that was very simple. You leave Mr. Ackroyd at—ten minutes to
-nine, was it not?”
-
-“Yes, exactly, I should say.”
-
-“The window is then closed and bolted and the door unlocked. At a
-quarter past ten when the body is discovered, the door is locked and
-the window is open. Who opened it? Clearly only Mr. Ackroyd himself
-could have done so, and for one of two reasons. Either because the room
-became unbearably hot (but since the fire was nearly out and there was
-a sharp drop in temperature last night, that cannot be the reason),
-or because he admitted some one that way. And if he admitted some one
-that way, it must have been some one well known to him, since he had
-previously shown himself uneasy on the subject of that same window.”
-
-“It sounds very simple,” I said.
-
-“Everything is simple, if you arrange the facts methodically. We are
-concerned now with the personality of the person who was with him at
-nine-thirty last night. Everything goes to show that that was the
-individual admitted by the window, and though Mr. Ackroyd was seen
-alive later by Miss Flora, we cannot approach a solution of the mystery
-until we know who that visitor was. The window may have been left open
-after his departure and so afforded entrance to the murderer, or the
-same person may have returned a second time. Ah! here is the colonel
-who returns.”
-
-Colonel Melrose entered with an animated manner.
-
-“That telephone call has been traced at last,” he said. “It did not
-come from here. It was put through to Dr. Sheppard at 10.15 last night
-from a public call office at King’s Abbot station. And at 10.23 the
-night mail leaves for Liverpool.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- INSPECTOR RAGLAN IS CONFIDENT
-
-
-We looked at each other.
-
-“You’ll have inquiries made at the station, of course?” I said.
-
-“Naturally, but I’m not over sanguine as to the result. You know what
-that station is like.”
-
-I did. King’s Abbot is a mere village, but its station happens to
-be an important junction. Most of the big expresses stop there, and
-trains are shunted, re-sorted, and made up. It has two or three public
-telephone boxes. At that time of night three local trains come in
-close upon each other, to catch the connection with the express for
-the north which comes in at 10.19 and leaves at 10.23. The whole place
-is in a bustle, and the chances of one particular person being noticed
-telephoning or getting into the express are very small indeed.
-
-“But why telephone at all?” demanded Melrose. “That is what I find so
-extraordinary. There seems no rhyme or reason in the thing.”
-
-Poirot carefully straightened a china ornament on one of the bookcases.
-
-“Be sure there was a reason,” he said over his shoulder.
-
-“But what reason could it be?”
-
-“When we know that, we shall know everything. This case is very curious
-and very interesting.”
-
-There was something almost indescribable in the way he said those last
-words. I felt that he was looking at the case from some peculiar angle
-of his own, and what he saw I could not tell.
-
-He went to the window and stood there, looking out.
-
-“You say it was nine o’clock, Dr. Sheppard, when you met this stranger
-outside the gate?”
-
-He asked the question without turning round.
-
-“Yes,” I replied. “I heard the church clock chime the hour.”
-
-“How long would it take him to reach the house—to reach this window,
-for instance?”
-
-“Five minutes at the outside. Two or three minutes only if he took the
-path at the right of the drive and came straight here.”
-
-“But to do that he would have to know the way. How can I explain
-myself?—it would mean that he had been here before—that he knew his
-surroundings.”
-
-“That is true,” replied Colonel Melrose.
-
-“We could find out, doubtless, if Mr. Ackroyd had received any
-strangers during the past week?”
-
-“Young Raymond could tell us that,” I said.
-
-“Or Parker,” suggested Colonel Melrose.
-
-“_Ou tous les deux_,” suggested Poirot, smiling.
-
-Colonel Melrose went in search of Raymond, and I rang the bell once
-more for Parker.
-
-Colonel Melrose returned almost immediately, accompanied by the young
-secretary, whom he introduced to Poirot. Geoffrey Raymond was fresh and
-debonair as ever. He seemed surprised and delighted to make Poirot’s
-acquaintance.
-
-“No idea you’d been living among us incognito, M. Poirot,” he said. “It
-will be a great privilege to watch you at work——Hallo, what’s this?”
-
-Poirot had been standing just to the left of the door. Now he moved
-aside suddenly, and I saw that while my back was turned he must have
-swiftly drawn out the arm-chair till it stood in the position Parker
-had indicated.
-
-“Want me to sit in the chair whilst you take a blood test?” asked
-Raymond good-humoredly. “What’s the idea?”
-
-“M. Raymond, this chair was pulled out—so—last night when Mr. Ackroyd
-was found killed. Some one moved it back again into place. Did you do
-so?”
-
-The secretary’s reply came without a second’s hesitation.
-
-“No, indeed I didn’t. I don’t even remember that it was in that
-position, but it must have been if you say so. Anyway, somebody else
-must have moved it back to its proper place. Have they destroyed a clew
-in doing so? Too bad!”
-
-“It is of no consequence,” said the detective. “Of no consequence
-whatever. What I really want to ask you is this, M. Raymond: Did any
-stranger come to see Mr. Ackroyd during this past week?”
-
-The secretary reflected for a minute or two, knitting his brows, and
-during the pause Parker appeared in answer to the bell.
-
-“No,” said Raymond at last. “I can’t remember any one. Can you, Parker?”
-
-“I beg your pardon, sir?”
-
-“Any stranger coming to see Mr. Ackroyd this week?”
-
-The butler reflected for a minute or two.
-
-“There was the young man who came on Wednesday, sir,” he said at last.
-“From Curtis and Troute, I understood he was.”
-
-Raymond moved this aside with an impatient hand.
-
-“Oh! yes, I remember, but that is not the kind of stranger this
-gentleman means.” He turned to Poirot. “Mr. Ackroyd had some idea of
-purchasing a dictaphone,” he explained. “It would have enabled us to
-get through a lot more work in a limited time. The firm in question
-sent down their representative, but nothing came of it. Mr. Ackroyd did
-not make up his mind to purchase.”
-
-Poirot turned to the butler.
-
-“Can you describe this young man to me, my good Parker?”
-
-“He was fair-haired, sir, and short. Very neatly dressed in a blue
-serge suit. A very presentable young man, sir, for his station in life.”
-
-Poirot turned to me.
-
-“The man you met outside the gate, doctor, was tall, was he not?”
-
-“Yes,” I said. “Somewhere about six feet, I should say.”
-
-“There is nothing in that, then,” declared the Belgian. “I thank you,
-Parker.”
-
-The butler spoke to Raymond.
-
-“Mr. Hammond has just arrived, sir,” he said. “He is anxious to know if
-he can be of any service, and he would be glad to have a word with you.”
-
-“I’ll come at once,” said the young man. He hurried out. Poirot looked
-inquiringly at the chief constable.
-
-“The family solicitor, M. Poirot,” said the latter.
-
-“It is a busy time for this young M. Raymond,” murmured M. Poirot. “He
-has the air efficient, that one.”
-
-“I believe Mr. Ackroyd considered him a most able secretary.”
-
-“He has been here—how long?”
-
-“Just on two years, I fancy.”
-
-“His duties he fulfills punctiliously. Of that I am sure. In what
-manner does he amuse himself? Does he go in for _le sport_?”
-
-“Private secretaries haven’t much time for that sort of thing,” said
-Colonel Melrose, smiling. “Raymond plays golf, I believe. And tennis in
-the summer time.”
-
-“He does not attend the courses—I should say the running of the horses?”
-
-“Race meetings? No, I don’t think he’s interested in racing.”
-
-Poirot nodded and seemed to lose interest. He glanced slowly round the
-study.
-
-“I have seen, I think, all that there is to be seen here.”
-
-I, too, looked round.
-
-“If those walls could speak,” I murmured.
-
-Poirot shook his head.
-
-“A tongue is not enough,” he said. “They would have to have also eyes
-and ears. But do not be too sure that these dead things”—he touched
-the top of the bookcase as he spoke—“are always dumb. To me they speak
-sometimes—chairs, tables—they have their message!”
-
-He turned away towards the door.
-
-“What message?” I cried. “What have they said to you to-day?”
-
-He looked over his shoulder and raised one eyebrow quizzically.
-
-“An opened window,” he said. “A locked door. A chair that apparently
-moved itself. To all three I say, ‘Why?’ and I find no answer.”
-
-He shook his head, puffed out his chest, and stood blinking at us. He
-looked ridiculously full of his own importance. It crossed my mind
-to wonder whether he was really any good as a detective. Had his big
-reputation been built up on a series of lucky chances?
-
-I think the same thought must have occurred to Colonel Melrose, for he
-frowned.
-
-“Anything more you want to see, M. Poirot?” he inquired brusquely.
-
-“You would perhaps be so kind as to show me the silver table from which
-the weapon was taken? After that, I will trespass on your kindness no
-longer.”
-
-We went to the drawing-room, but on the way the constable waylaid the
-colonel, and after a muttered conversation the latter excused himself
-and left us together. I showed Poirot the silver table, and after
-raising the lid once or twice and letting it fall, he pushed open the
-window and stepped out on the terrace. I followed him.
-
-Inspector Raglan had just turned the corner of the house, and was
-coming towards us. His face looked grim and satisfied.
-
-“So there you are, M. Poirot,” he said. “Well, this isn’t going to be
-much of a case. I’m sorry, too. A nice enough young fellow gone wrong.”
-
-Poirot’s face fell, and he spoke very mildly.
-
-“I’m afraid I shall not be able to be of much aid to you, then?”
-
-“Next time, perhaps,” said the inspector soothingly. “Though we don’t
-have murders every day in this quiet little corner of the world.”
-
-Poirot’s gaze took on an admiring quality.
-
-“You have been of a marvelous promptness,” he observed. “How exactly
-did you go to work, if I may ask?”
-
-“Certainly,” said the inspector. “To begin with—method. That’s what I
-always say—method!”
-
-“Ah!” cried the other. “That, too, is my watchword. Method, order, and
-the little gray cells.”
-
-“The cells?” said the inspector, staring.
-
-“The little gray cells of the brain,” explained the Belgian.
-
-“Oh, of course; well, we all use them, I suppose.”
-
-“In a greater or lesser degree,” murmured Poirot. “And there are, too,
-differences in quality. Then there is the psychology of a crime. One
-must study that.”
-
-“Ah!” said the inspector, “you’ve been bitten with all this
-psychoanalysis stuff? Now, I’m a plain man——”
-
-“Mrs. Raglan would not agree, I am sure, to that,” said Poirot, making
-him a little bow.
-
-Inspector Raglan, a little taken aback, bowed.
-
-“You don’t understand,” he said, grinning broadly. “Lord, what a lot of
-difference language makes. I’m telling you how I set to work. First of
-all, method. Mr. Ackroyd was last seen alive at a quarter to ten by his
-niece, Miss Flora Ackroyd. That’s fact number one, isn’t it?”
-
-“If you say so.”
-
-“Well, it is. At half-past ten, the doctor here says that Mr. Ackroyd
-has been dead at least half an hour. You stick to that, doctor?”
-
-“Certainly,” I said. “Half an hour or longer.”
-
-“Very good. That gives us exactly a quarter of an hour in which the
-crime must have been committed. I make a list of every one in the
-house, and work through it, setting down opposite their names where
-they were and what they were doing between the hour of 9.45 and 10 p.m.”
-
-He handed a sheet of paper to Poirot. I read it over his shoulder. It
-ran as follows, written in a neat script:—
-
- _Major Blunt.—In billiard room with Mr. Raymond. (Latter confirms.)_
-
- _Mr. Raymond.—Billiard room. (See above.)_
-
- _Mrs. Ackroyd.—9.45 watching billiard match. Went up to bed 9.55.
- (Raymond and Blunt watched her up staircase.)_
-
- _Miss Ackroyd.—Went straight from her uncle’s room upstairs.
- (Confirmed by Parker, also housemaid, Elsie Dale.)_
-
- _Servants_:—
-
- _Parker.—Went straight to butler’s pantry. (Confirmed by
- housekeeper, Miss Russell, who came down to speak to him about
- something at 9.47, and remained at least ten minutes.)_
-
- _Miss Russell.—As above. Spoke to housemaid, Elsie Dale, upstairs
- at 9.45._
-
- _Ursula Bourne (parlormaid).—In her own room until 9.55. Then in
- Servants’ Hall._
-
- _Mrs. Cooper (cook).—In Servants’ Hall._
-
- _Gladys Jones (second housemaid).—In Servants’ Hall._
-
- _Elsie Dale.—Upstairs in bedroom. Seen there by Miss Russell and
- Miss Flora Ackroyd._
-
- _Mary Thripp (kitchenmaid).—Servants’ Hall._
-
-“The cook has been here seven years, the parlormaid eighteen months,
-and Parker just over a year. The others are new. Except for something
-fishy about Parker, they all seem quite all right.”
-
-“A very complete list,” said Poirot, handing it back to him. “I am
-quite sure that Parker did not do the murder,” he added gravely.
-
-“So is my sister,” I struck in. “And she’s usually right.” Nobody paid
-any attention to my interpolation.
-
-“That disposes pretty effectually of the household,” continued the
-inspector. “Now we come to a very grave point. The woman at the
-lodge—Mary Black—was pulling the curtains last night when she saw
-Ralph Paton turn in at the gate and go up towards the house.”
-
-“She is sure of that?” I asked sharply.
-
-“Quite sure. She knows him well by sight. He went past very quickly
-and turned off by the path to the right, which is a short cut to the
-terrace.”
-
-“And what time was that?” asked Poirot, who had sat with an immovable
-face.
-
-“Exactly twenty-five minutes past nine,” said the inspector gravely.
-
-There was a silence. Then the inspector spoke again.
-
-“It’s all clear enough. It fits in without a flaw. At twenty-five
-minutes past nine, Captain Paton is seen passing the lodge; at
-nine-thirty or thereabouts, Mr. Geoffrey Raymond hears some one in here
-asking for money and Mr. Ackroyd refusing. What happens next? Captain
-Paton leaves the same way—through the window. He walks along the
-terrace, angry and baffled. He comes to the open drawing-room window.
-Say it’s now a quarter to ten. Miss Flora Ackroyd is saying good-night
-to her uncle. Major Blunt, Mr. Raymond, and Mrs. Ackroyd are in the
-billiard room. The drawing-room is empty. He steals in, takes the
-dagger from the silver table, and returns to the study window. He slips
-off his shoes, climbs in, and—well, I don’t need to go into details.
-Then he slips out again and goes off. Hadn’t the nerve to go back to
-the inn. He makes for the station, rings up from there——”
-
-“Why?” said Poirot softly.
-
-I jumped at the interruption. The little man was leaning forward. His
-eyes shone with a queer green light.
-
-For a moment Inspector Raglan was taken aback by the question.
-
-“It’s difficult to say exactly why he did that,” he said at last. “But
-murderers do funny things. You’d know that if you were in the police
-force. The cleverest of them make stupid mistakes sometimes. But come
-along and I’ll show you those footprints.”
-
-We followed him round the corner of the terrace to the study window. At
-a word from Raglan a police constable produced the shoes which had been
-obtained from the local inn.
-
-The inspector laid them over the marks.
-
-“They’re the same,” he said confidently. “That is to say, they’re not
-the same pair that actually made these prints. He went away in those.
-This is a pair just like them, but older—see how the studs are worn
-down.”
-
-“Surely a great many people wear shoes with rubber studs in them?”
-asked Poirot.
-
-“That’s so, of course,” said the inspector. “I shouldn’t put so much
-stress on the footmarks if it wasn’t for everything else.”
-
-“A very foolish young man, Captain Ralph Paton,” said Poirot
-thoughtfully. “To leave so much evidence of his presence.”
-
-“Ah! well,” said the inspector, “it was a dry, fine night, you know. He
-left no prints on the terrace or on the graveled path. But, unluckily
-for him, a spring must have welled up just lately at the end of the
-path from the drive. See here.”
-
-A small graveled path joined the terrace a few feet away. In one
-spot, a few yards from its termination, the ground was wet and boggy.
-Crossing this wet place there were again the marks of footsteps, and
-amongst them the shoes with rubber studs.
-
-Poirot followed the path on a little way, the inspector by his side.
-
-“You noticed the women’s footprints?” he said suddenly.
-
-The inspector laughed.
-
-“Naturally. But several different women have walked this way—and men
-as well. It’s a regular short cut to the house, you see. It would be
-impossible to sort out all the footsteps. After all, it’s the ones on
-the window-sill that are really important.”
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“It’s no good going farther,” said the inspector, as we came in view of
-the drive. “It’s all graveled again here, and hard as it can be.”
-
-Again Poirot nodded, but his eyes were fixed on a small garden house—a
-kind of superior summer-house. It was a little to the left of the path
-ahead of us, and a graveled walk ran up to it.
-
-Poirot lingered about until the inspector had gone back towards the
-house. Then he looked at me.
-
-“You must have indeed been sent from the good God to replace my
-friend Hastings,” he said, with a twinkle. “I observe that you do not
-quit my side. How say you, Dr. Sheppard, shall we investigate that
-summer-house? It interests me.”
-
-He went up to the door and opened it. Inside, the place was almost
-dark. There were one or two rustic seats, a croquet set, and some
-folded deck-chairs.
-
-I was startled to observe my new friend. He had dropped to his hands
-and knees and was crawling about the floor. Every now and then he shook
-his head as though not satisfied. Finally, he sat back on his heels.
-
-“Nothing,” he murmured. “Well, perhaps it was not to be expected. But
-it would have meant so much——”
-
-He broke off, stiffening all over. Then he stretched out his hand to
-one of the rustic chairs. He detached something from one side of it.
-
-“What is it?” I cried. “What have you found?”
-
-He smiled, unclosing his hand so that I should see what lay in the palm
-of it. A scrap of stiff white cambric.
-
-I took it from him, looked at it curiously, and then handed it back.
-
-“What do you make of it, eh, my friend?” he asked, eyeing me keenly.
-
-“A scrap torn from a handkerchief,” I suggested, shrugging my shoulders.
-
-He made another dart and picked up a small quill—a goose quill by the
-look of it.
-
-“And that?” he cried triumphantly. “What do you make of that?”
-
-I only stared.
-
-He slipped the quill into his pocket, and looked again at the scrap of
-white stuff.
-
-“A fragment of a handkerchief?” he mused. “Perhaps you are right. But
-remember this—_a good laundry does not starch a handkerchief_.”
-
-He nodded at me triumphantly, then he put away the scrap carefully in
-his pocket-book.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- THE GOLDFISH POND
-
-
-We walked back to the house together. There was no sign of the
-inspector. Poirot paused on the terrace and stood with his back to the
-house, slowly turning his head from side to side.
-
-“_Une belle propriété_,” he said at last appreciatively. “Who inherits
-it?”
-
-His words gave me almost a shock. It is an odd thing, but until that
-moment the question of inheritance had never come into my head. Poirot
-watched me keenly.
-
-“It is a new idea to you, that,” he said at last. “You had not thought
-of it before—eh?”
-
-“No,” I said truthfully. “I wish I had.”
-
-He looked at me again curiously.
-
-“I wonder just what you mean by that,” he said thoughtfully. “Ah! no,”
-as I was about to speak. “_Inutile!_ You would not tell me your real
-thought.”
-
-“Every one has something to hide,” I quoted, smiling.
-
-“Exactly.”
-
-“You still believe that?”
-
-“More than ever, my friend. But it is not easy to hide things from
-Hercule Poirot. He has a knack of finding out.”
-
-He descended the steps of the Dutch garden as he spoke.
-
-“Let us walk a little,” he said over his shoulder. “The air is pleasant
-to-day.”
-
-I followed him. He led me down a path to the left enclosed in yew
-hedges. A walk led down the middle, bordered each side with formal
-flower beds, and at the end was a round paved recess with a seat and
-a pond of goldfish. Instead of pursuing the path to the end, Poirot
-took another which wound up the side of a wooded slope. In one spot the
-trees had been cleared away, and a seat had been put. Sitting there one
-had a splendid view over the countryside, and one looked right down on
-the paved recess and the goldfish pond.
-
-“England is very beautiful,” said Poirot, his eyes straying over the
-prospect. Then he smiled. “And so are English girls,” he said in a
-lower tone. “Hush, my friend, and look at the pretty picture below us.”
-
-It was then that I saw Flora. She was moving along the path we had
-just left and she was humming a little snatch of song. Her step was
-more dancing than walking, and in spite of her black dress, there was
-nothing but joy in her whole attitude. She gave a sudden pirouette on
-her toes, and her black draperies swung out. At the same time she flung
-her head back and laughed outright.
-
-As she did so a man stepped out from the trees. It was Hector Blunt.
-
-The girl started. Her expression changed a little.
-
-“How you startled me—I didn’t see you.”
-
-Blunt said nothing, but stood looking at her for a minute or two in
-silence.
-
-“What I like about you,” said Flora, with a touch of malice, “is your
-cheery conversation.”
-
-I fancy that at that Blunt reddened under his tan. His voice, when he
-spoke, sounded different—it had a curious sort of humility in it.
-
-“Never was much of a fellow for talking. Not even when I was young.”
-
-“That was a very long time ago, I suppose,” said Flora gravely.
-
-I caught the undercurrent of laughter in her voice, but I don’t think
-Blunt did.
-
-“Yes,” he said simply, “it was.”
-
-“How does it feel to be Methuselah?” asked Flora.
-
-This time the laughter was more apparent, but Blunt was following out
-an idea of his own.
-
-“Remember the Johnny who sold his soul to the devil? In return for
-being made young again? There’s an opera about it.”
-
-“Faust, you mean?”
-
-“That’s the beggar. Rum story. Some of us would do it if we could.”
-
-“Any one would think you were creaking at the joints to hear you talk,”
-cried Flora, half vexed, half amused.
-
-Blunt said nothing for a minute or two. Then he looked away from Flora
-into the middle distance and observed to an adjacent tree trunk that it
-was about time he got back to Africa.
-
-“Are you going on another expedition—shooting things?”
-
-“Expect so. Usually do, you know—shoot things, I mean.”
-
-“You shot that head in the hall, didn’t you?”
-
-Blunt nodded. Then he jerked out, going rather red, as he did so:—
-
-“Care for some decent skins any time? If so, I could get ’em for you.”
-
-“Oh! please do,” cried Flora. “Will you really? You won’t forget?”
-
-“I shan’t forget,” said Hector Blunt.
-
-He added, in a sudden burst of communicativeness:—
-
-“Time I went. I’m no good in this sort of life. Haven’t got the manners
-for it. I’m a rough fellow, no use in society. Never remember the
-things one’s expected to say. Yes, time I went.”
-
-“But you’re not going at once,” cried Flora. “Not—not while we’re in
-all this trouble. Oh! please. If you go——”
-
-She turned away a little.
-
-“You want me to stay?” asked Blunt.
-
-He spoke deliberately but quite simply.
-
-“We all——”
-
-“I meant you personally,” said Blunt, with directness.
-
-Flora turned slowly back again and met his eyes.
-
-“I want you to stay,” she said, “if—if that makes any difference.”
-
-“It makes all the difference,” said Blunt.
-
-There was a moment’s silence. They sat down on the stone seat by the
-goldfish pond. It seemed as though neither of them knew quite what to
-say next.
-
-“It—it’s such a lovely morning,” said Flora at last. “You know, I can’t
-help feeling happy, in spite—in spite of everything. That’s awful, I
-suppose?”
-
-“Quite natural,” said Blunt. “Never saw your uncle until two years ago,
-did you? Can’t be expected to grieve very much. Much better to have no
-humbug about it.”
-
-“There’s something awfully consoling about you,” said Flora. “You make
-things so simple.”
-
-“Things are simple as a rule,” said the big game hunter.
-
-“Not always,” said Flora.
-
-Her voice had lowered itself, and I saw Blunt turn and look at her,
-bringing his eyes back from (apparently) the coast of Africa to do so.
-He evidently put his own construction on her change of tone, for he
-said, after a minute or two, in rather an abrupt manner:—
-
-“I say, you know, you mustn’t worry. About that young chap, I mean.
-Inspector’s an ass. Everybody knows—utterly absurd to think he could
-have done it. Man from outside. Burglar chap. That’s the only possible
-solution.”
-
-Flora turned to look at him.
-
-“You really think so?”
-
-“Don’t you?” said Blunt quickly.
-
-“I—oh, yes, of course.”
-
-Another silence, and then Flora burst out:—
-
-“I’m—I’ll tell you why I felt so happy this morning. However heartless
-you think me, I’d rather tell you. It’s because the lawyer has been—Mr.
-Hammond. He told us about the will. Uncle Roger has left me twenty
-thousand pounds. Think of it—twenty thousand beautiful pounds.”
-
-Blunt looked surprised.
-
-“Does it mean so much to you?”
-
-“Mean much to me? Why, it’s everything. Freedom—life—no more scheming
-and scraping and lying——”
-
-“Lying?” said Blunt, sharply interrupting.
-
-Flora seemed taken aback for a minute.
-
-“You know what I mean,” she said uncertainly. “Pretending to be
-thankful for all the nasty castoff things rich relations give you. Last
-year’s coats and skirts and hats.”
-
-“Don’t know much about ladies’ clothes; should have said you were
-always very well turned out.”
-
-“It’s cost me something, though,” said Flora in a low voice. “Don’t
-let’s talk of horrid things. I’m so happy. I’m free. Free to do what I
-like. Free not to——”
-
-She stopped suddenly.
-
-“Not to what?” asked Blunt quickly.
-
-“I forget now. Nothing important.”
-
-Blunt had a stick in his hand, and he thrust it into the pond, poking
-at something.
-
-“What are you doing, Major Blunt?”
-
-“There’s something bright down there. Wondered what it was—looks like a
-gold brooch. Now I’ve stirred up the mud and it’s gone.”
-
-“Perhaps it’s a crown,” suggested Flora. “Like the one Mélisande saw in
-the water.”
-
-“Mélisande,” said Blunt reflectively—“she’s in an opera, isn’t she?”
-
-“Yes, you seem to know a lot about operas.”
-
-“People take me sometimes,” said Blunt sadly. “Funny idea of
-pleasure—worse racket than the natives make with their tom-toms.”
-
-Flora laughed.
-
-“I remember Mélisande,” continued Blunt, “married an old chap old
-enough to be her father.”
-
-He threw a small piece of flint into the goldfish pond. Then, with a
-change of manner, he turned to Flora.
-
-“Miss Ackroyd, can I do anything? About Paton, I mean. I know how
-dreadfully anxious you must be.”
-
-“Thank you,” said Flora in a cold voice. “There is really nothing to
-be done. Ralph will be all right. I’ve got hold of the most wonderful
-detective in the world, and he’s going to find out all about it.”
-
-For some time I had felt uneasy as to our position. We were not exactly
-eavesdropping, since the two in the garden below had only to lift their
-heads to see us. Nevertheless, I should have drawn attention to our
-presence before now, had not my companion put a warning pressure on my
-arm. Clearly he wished me to remain silent.
-
-But now he rose briskly to his feet, clearing his throat.
-
-“I demand pardon,” he cried. “I cannot allow mademoiselle thus
-extravagantly to compliment me, and not draw attention to my presence.
-They say the listener hears no good of himself, but that is not the
-case this time. To spare my blushes, I must join you and apologize.”
-
-He hurried down the path with me close behind him, and joined the
-others by the pond.
-
-“This is M. Hercule Poirot,” said Flora. “I expect you’ve heard of him.”
-
-Poirot bowed.
-
-“I know Major Blunt by reputation,” he said politely. “I am glad to
-have encountered you, monsieur. I am in need of some information that
-you can give me.”
-
-Blunt looked at him inquiringly.
-
-“When did you last see M. Ackroyd alive?”
-
-“At dinner.”
-
-“And you neither saw nor heard anything of him after that?”
-
-“Didn’t see him. Heard his voice.”
-
-“How was that?”
-
-“I strolled out on the terrace——”
-
-“Pardon me, what time was this?”
-
-“About half-past nine. I was walking up and down smoking in front of
-the drawing-room window. I heard Ackroyd talking in his study——”
-
-Poirot stooped and removed a microscopic weed.
-
-“Surely you couldn’t hear voices in the study from that part of the
-terrace,” he murmured.
-
-He was not looking at Blunt, but I was, and to my intense surprise, I
-saw the latter flush.
-
-“Went as far as the corner,” he explained unwillingly.
-
-“Ah! indeed?” said Poirot.
-
-In the mildest manner he conveyed an impression that more was wanted.
-
-“Thought I saw—a woman disappearing into the bushes. Just a gleam of
-white, you know. Must have been mistaken. It was while I was standing
-at the corner of the terrace that I heard Ackroyd’s voice speaking to
-that secretary of his.”
-
-“Speaking to Mr. Geoffrey Raymond?”
-
-“Yes—that’s what I supposed at the time. Seems I was wrong.”
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd didn’t address him by name?”
-
-“Oh, no.”
-
-“Then, if I may ask, why did you think——?”
-
-Blunt explained laboriously.
-
-“Took it for granted that it _would_ be Raymond, because he had said
-just before I came out that he was taking some papers to Ackroyd. Never
-thought of it being anybody else.”
-
-“Can you remember what the words you heard were?”
-
-“Afraid I can’t. Something quite ordinary and unimportant. Only caught
-a scrap of it. I was thinking of something else at the time.”
-
-“It is of no importance,” murmured Poirot. “Did you move a chair back
-against the wall when you went into the study after the body was
-discovered?”
-
-“Chair? No—why should I?”
-
-Poirot shrugged his shoulders but did not answer. He turned to Flora.
-
-“There is one thing I should like to know from you, mademoiselle. When
-you were examining the things in the silver table with Dr. Sheppard,
-was the dagger in its place, or was it not?”
-
-Flora’s chin shot up.
-
-“Inspector Raglan has been asking me that,” she said resentfully. “I’ve
-told him, and I’ll tell you. I’m perfectly certain the dagger was _not_
-there. He thinks it was and that Ralph sneaked it later in the evening.
-And—and he doesn’t believe me. He thinks I’m saying it to—to shield
-Ralph.”
-
-“And aren’t you?” I asked gravely.
-
-Flora stamped her foot.
-
-“You, too, Dr. Sheppard! Oh! it’s too bad.”
-
-Poirot tactfully made a diversion.
-
-“It is true what I heard you say, Major Blunt. There is something that
-glitters in this pond. Let us see if I can reach it.”
-
-He knelt down by the pond, baring his arm to the elbow, and lowered it
-in very slowly, so as not to disturb the bottom of the pond. But in
-spite of all his precautions the mud eddied and swirled, and he was
-forced to draw his arm out again empty-handed.
-
-He gazed ruefully at the mud upon his arm. I offered him my
-handkerchief, which he accepted with fervent protestations of thanks.
-Blunt looked at his watch.
-
-“Nearly lunch time,” he said. “We’d better be getting back to the
-house.”
-
-“You will lunch with us, M. Poirot?” asked Flora. “I should like you to
-meet my mother. She is—very fond of Ralph.”
-
-The little man bowed.
-
-“I shall be delighted, mademoiselle.”
-
-“And you will stay, too, won’t you, Dr. Sheppard?”
-
-I hesitated.
-
-“Oh, do!”
-
-I wanted to, so I accepted the invitation without further ceremony.
-
-We set out towards the house, Flora and Blunt walking ahead.
-
-“What hair,” said Poirot to me in a low tone, nodding towards Flora.
-“The real gold! They will make a pretty couple. She and the dark,
-handsome Captain Paton. Will they not?”
-
-I looked at him inquiringly, but he began to fuss about a few
-microscopic drops of water on his coat sleeve. The man reminded me in
-some ways of a cat. His green eyes and his finicking habits.
-
-“And all for nothing, too,” I said sympathetically. “I wonder what it
-was in the pond?”
-
-“Would you like to see?” asked Poirot.
-
-I stared at him. He nodded.
-
-“My good friend,” he said gently and reproachfully, “Hercule Poirot
-does not run the risk of disarranging his costume without being sure
-of attaining his object. To do so would be ridiculous and absurd. I am
-never ridiculous.”
-
-“But you brought your hand out empty,” I objected.
-
-“There are times when it is necessary to have discretion. Do you tell
-your patients everything—everything, doctor? I think not. Nor do you
-tell your excellent sister everything either, is it not so? Before
-showing my empty hand, I dropped what it contained into my other hand.
-You shall see what that was.”
-
-He held out his left hand, palm open. On it lay a little circlet of
-gold. A woman’s wedding ring.
-
-I took it from him.
-
-“Look inside,” commanded Poirot.
-
-I did so. Inside was an inscription in fine writing:—
-
- _From R., March 13th._
-
-I looked at Poirot, but he was busy inspecting his appearance in a tiny
-pocket glass. He paid particular attention to his mustaches, and none
-at all to me. I saw that he did not intend to be communicative.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- THE PARLORMAID
-
-
-We found Mrs. Ackroyd in the hall. With her was a small dried-up little
-man, with an aggressive chin and sharp gray eyes, and “lawyer” written
-all over him.
-
-“Mr. Hammond is staying to lunch with us,” said Mrs. Ackroyd. “You know
-Major Blunt, Mr. Hammond? And dear Dr. Sheppard—also a close friend of
-poor Roger’s. And, let me see——”
-
-She paused, surveying Hercule Poirot in some perplexity.
-
-“This is M. Poirot, mother,” said Flora. “I told you about him this
-morning.”
-
-“Oh! yes,” said Mrs. Ackroyd vaguely. “Of course, my dear, of course.
-He is to find Ralph, is he not?”
-
-“He is to find out who killed uncle,” said Flora.
-
-“Oh! my dear,” cried her mother. “Please! My poor nerves. I am a wreck
-this morning, a positive wreck. Such a dreadful thing to happen. I
-can’t help feeling that it must have been an accident of some kind.
-Roger was so fond of handling queer curios. His hand must have slipped,
-or something.”
-
-This theory was received in polite silence. I saw Poirot edge up to the
-lawyer, and speak to him in a confidential undertone. They moved aside
-into the embrasure of the window. I joined them—then hesitated.
-
-“Perhaps I’m intruding,” I said.
-
-“Not at all,” cried Poirot heartily. “You and I, M. le docteur, we
-investigate this affair side by side. Without you I should be lost. I
-desire a little information from the good Mr. Hammond.”
-
-“You are acting on behalf of Captain Ralph Paton, I understand,” said
-the lawyer cautiously.
-
-Poirot shook his head.
-
-“Not so. I am acting in the interests of justice. Miss Ackroyd has
-asked me to investigate the death of her uncle.”
-
-Mr. Hammond seemed slightly taken aback.
-
-“I cannot seriously believe that Captain Paton can be concerned in this
-crime,” he said, “however strong the circumstantial evidence against
-him may be. The mere fact that he was hard pressed for money——”
-
-“Was he hard pressed for money?” interpolated Poirot quickly.
-
-The lawyer shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“It was a chronic condition with Ralph Paton,” he said dryly. “Money
-went through his hands like water. He was always applying to his
-stepfather.”
-
-“Had he done so of late? During the last year, for instance?”
-
-“I cannot say. Mr. Ackroyd did not mention the fact to me.”
-
-“I comprehend. Mr. Hammond, I take it that you are acquainted with the
-provisions of Mr. Ackroyd’s will?”
-
-“Certainly. That is my principal business here to-day.”
-
-“Then, seeing that I am acting for Miss Ackroyd, you will not object to
-telling me the terms of that will?”
-
-“They are quite simple. Shorn of legal phraseology, and after paying
-certain legacies and bequests——”
-
-“Such as——?” interrupted Poirot.
-
-Mr. Hammond seemed a little surprised.
-
-“A thousand pounds to his housekeeper, Miss Russell; fifty pounds
-to the cook, Emma Cooper; five hundred pounds to his secretary, Mr.
-Geoffrey Raymond. Then to various hospitals——”
-
-Poirot held up his hand.
-
-“Ah! the charitable bequests, they interest me not.”
-
-“Quite so. The income on ten thousand pounds’ worth of shares to be
-paid to Mrs. Cecil Ackroyd during her lifetime. Miss Flora Ackroyd
-inherits twenty thousand pounds outright. The residue—including this
-property, and the shares in Ackroyd and Son—to his adopted son, Ralph
-Paton.”
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd possessed a large fortune?”
-
-“A very large fortune. Captain Paton will be an exceedingly wealthy
-young man.”
-
-There was a silence. Poirot and the lawyer looked at each other.
-
-“Mr. Hammond,” came Mrs. Ackroyd’s voice plaintively from the fireplace.
-
-The lawyer answered the summons. Poirot took my arm and drew me right
-into the window.
-
-“Regard the irises,” he remarked in rather a loud voice. “Magnificent,
-are they not? A straight and pleasing effect.”
-
-At the same time I felt the pressure of his hand on my arm, and he
-added in a low tone:—
-
-“Do you really wish to aid me? To take part in this investigation?”
-
-“Yes, indeed,” I said eagerly. “There’s nothing I should like better.
-You don’t know what a dull old fogey’s life I lead. Never anything out
-of the ordinary.”
-
-“Good, we will be colleagues then. In a minute or two I fancy Major
-Blunt will join us. He is not happy with the good mamma. Now there are
-some things I want to know—but I do not wish to seem to want to know
-them. You comprehend? So it will be your part to ask the questions.”
-
-“What questions do you want me to ask?” I asked apprehensively.
-
-“I want you to introduce the name of Mrs. Ferrars.”
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“Speak of her in a natural fashion. Ask him if he was down here when
-her husband died. You understand the kind of thing I mean. And while he
-replies, watch his face without seeming to watch it. _C’est compris?_”
-
-There was no time for more, for at that minute, as Poirot had
-prophesied, Blunt left the others in his abrupt fashion and came over
-to us.
-
-I suggested strolling on the terrace, and he acquiesced. Poirot stayed
-behind.
-
-I stopped to examine a late rose.
-
-“How things change in the course of a day or so,” I observed. “I was
-up here last Wednesday, I remember, walking up and down this same
-terrace. Ackroyd was with me—full of spirits. And now—three days
-later—Ackroyd’s dead, poor fellow, Mrs. Ferrars’s dead—you knew her,
-didn’t you? But of course you did.”
-
-Blunt nodded his head.
-
-“Had you seen her since you’d been down this time?”
-
-“Went with Ackroyd to call. Last Tuesday, think it was. Fascinating
-woman—but something queer about her. Deep—one would never know what she
-was up to.”
-
-I looked into his steady gray eyes. Nothing there surely. I went on:—
-
-“I suppose you’d met her before.”
-
-“Last time I was here—she and her husband had just come here to live.”
-He paused a minute and then added: “Rum thing, she had changed a lot
-between then and now.”
-
-“How—changed?” I asked.
-
-“Looked ten years older.”
-
-“Were you down here when her husband died?” I asked, trying to make the
-question sound as casual as possible.
-
-“No. From all I heard it would be a good riddance. Uncharitable,
-perhaps, but the truth.”
-
-I agreed.
-
-“Ashley Ferrars was by no means a pattern husband,” I said cautiously.
-
-“Blackguard, I thought,” said Blunt.
-
-“No,” I said, “only a man with more money than was good for him.”
-
-“Oh! money! All the troubles in the world can be put down to money—or
-the lack of it.”
-
-“Which has been your particular trouble?” I asked.
-
-“I’ve enough for what I want. I’m one of the lucky ones.”
-
-“Indeed.”
-
-“I’m not too flush just now, as a matter of fact. Came into a legacy a
-year ago, and like a fool let myself be persuaded into putting it into
-some wild-cat scheme.”
-
-I sympathized, and narrated my own similar trouble.
-
-Then the gong pealed out, and we all went in to lunch. Poirot drew me
-back a little.
-
-“_Eh! bien?_”
-
-“He’s all right,” I said. “I’m sure of it.”
-
-“Nothing—disturbing?”
-
-“He had a legacy just a year ago,” I said. “But why not? Why shouldn’t
-he? I’ll swear the man is perfectly square and aboveboard.”
-
-“Without doubt, without doubt,” said Poirot soothingly. “Do not upset
-yourself.”
-
-He spoke as though to a fractious child.
-
-We all trooped into the dining-room. It seemed incredible that less
-than twenty-four hours had passed since I last sat at that table.
-
-Afterwards, Mrs. Ackroyd took me aside and sat down with me on a sofa.
-
-“I can’t help feeling a little hurt,” she murmured, producing a
-handkerchief of the kind obviously not meant to be cried into. “Hurt,
-I mean, by Roger’s lack of confidence in me. That twenty thousand
-pounds ought to have been left to _me_—not to Flora. A mother could be
-trusted to safeguard the interests of her child. A lack of trust, I
-call it.”
-
-“You forget, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said, “Flora was Ackroyd’s own niece, a
-blood relation. It would have been different had you been his sister
-instead of his sister-in-law.”
-
-“As poor Cecil’s widow, I think my feelings ought to have been
-considered,” said the lady, touching her eye-lashes gingerly with
-the handkerchief. “But Roger was always most peculiar—not to say
-_mean_—about money matters. It has been a most difficult position
-for both Flora and myself. He did not even give the poor child an
-allowance. He would pay her bills, you know, and even that with a good
-deal of reluctance and asking what she wanted all those fal-lals for—so
-like a man—but—now I’ve forgotten what it was I was going to say!
-Oh, yes, not a penny we could call our own, you know. Flora resented
-it—yes, I must say she resented it—very strongly. Though devoted to
-her uncle, of course. But any girl would have resented it. Yes, I must
-say Roger had very strange ideas about money. He wouldn’t even buy new
-face towels, though I told him the old ones were in holes. And then,”
-proceeded Mrs. Ackroyd, with a sudden leap highly characteristic of
-her conversation, “to leave all that money—a thousand pounds—fancy, a
-thousand pounds!—to that woman.”
-
-“What woman?”
-
-“That Russell woman. Something very queer about her, and so I’ve always
-said. But Roger wouldn’t hear a word against her. Said she was a woman
-of great force of character, and that he admired and respected her.
-He was always going on about her rectitude and independence and moral
-worth. _I_ think there’s something fishy about her. She was certainly
-doing her best to marry Roger. But I soon put a stop to that. She’s
-always hated me. Naturally. _I_ saw through her.”
-
-I began to wonder if there was any chance of stemming Mrs. Ackroyd’s
-eloquence, and getting away.
-
-Mr. Hammond provided the necessary diversion by coming up to say
-good-by. I seized my chance and rose also.
-
-“About the inquest,” I said. “Where would you prefer it to be held.
-Here, or at the Three Boars?”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd stared at me with a dropped jaw.
-
-“The inquest?” she asked, the picture of consternation. “But surely
-there won’t have to be an inquest?”
-
-Mr. Hammond gave a dry little cough and murmured, “Inevitable. Under
-the circumstances,” in two short little barks.
-
-“But surely Dr. Sheppard can arrange——”
-
-“There are limits to my powers of arrangement,” I said dryly.
-
-“If his death was an accident——”
-
-“He was murdered, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said brutally.
-
-She gave a little cry.
-
-“No theory of accident will hold water for a minute.”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd looked at me in distress. I had no patience with what I
-thought was her silly fear of unpleasantness.
-
-“If there’s an inquest, I—I shan’t have to answer questions and all
-that, shall I?” she asked.
-
-“I don’t know what will be necessary,” I answered. “I imagine
-Mr. Raymond will take the brunt of it off you. He knows all the
-circumstances, and can give formal evidence of identification.”
-
-The lawyer assented with a little bow.
-
-“I really don’t think there is anything to dread, Mrs. Ackroyd,” he
-said. “You will be spared all unpleasantness. Now, as to the question
-of money, have you all you need for the present? I mean,” he added, as
-she looked at him inquiringly, “ready money. Cash, you know. If not, I
-can arrange to let you have whatever you require.”
-
-“That ought to be all right,” said Raymond, who was standing by. “Mr.
-Ackroyd cashed a cheque for a hundred pounds yesterday.”
-
-“A hundred pounds?”
-
-“Yes. For wages and other expenses due to-day. At the moment it is
-still intact.”
-
-“Where is this money? In his desk?”
-
-“No, he always kept his cash in his bedroom. In an old collar-box, to
-be accurate. Funny idea, wasn’t it?”
-
-“I think,” said the lawyer, “we ought to make sure the money is there
-before I leave.”
-
-“Certainly,” agreed the secretary. “I’ll take you up now.... Oh! I
-forgot. The door’s locked.”
-
-Inquiry from Parker elicited the information that Inspector Raglan was
-in the housekeeper’s room asking a few supplementary questions. A few
-minutes later the inspector joined the party in the hall, bringing the
-key with him. He unlocked the door and we passed into the lobby and up
-the small staircase. At the top of the stairs the door into Ackroyd’s
-bedroom stood open. Inside the room it was dark, the curtains were
-drawn, and the bed was turned down just as it had been last night. The
-inspector drew the curtains, letting in the sunlight, and Geoffrey
-Raymond went to the top drawer of a rosewood bureau.
-
-“He kept his money like that, in an unlocked drawer. Just fancy,”
-commented the inspector.
-
-The secretary flushed a little.
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd had perfect faith in the honesty of all the servants,” he
-said hotly.
-
-“Oh! quite so,” said the inspector hastily.
-
-Raymond opened the drawer, took out a round leather collar-box from the
-back of it, and opening it, drew out a thick wallet.
-
-“Here is the money,” he said, taking out a fat roll of notes. “You
-will find the hundred intact, I know, for Mr. Ackroyd put it in the
-collar-box in my presence last night when he was dressing for dinner,
-and of course it has not been touched since.”
-
-Mr. Hammond took the roll from him and counted it. He looked up sharply.
-
-“A hundred pounds, you said. But there is only sixty here.”
-
-Raymond stared at him.
-
-“Impossible,” he cried, springing forward. Taking the notes from the
-other’s hand, he counted them aloud.
-
-Mr. Hammond had been right. The total amounted to sixty pounds.
-
-“But—I can’t understand it,” cried the secretary, bewildered.
-
-Poirot asked a question.
-
-“You saw Mr. Ackroyd put this money away last night when he was
-dressing for dinner? You are sure he had not paid away any of it
-already?”
-
-“I’m sure he hadn’t. He even said, ‘I don’t want to take a hundred
-pounds down to dinner with me. Too bulgy.’”
-
-“Then the affair is very simple,” remarked Poirot. “Either he paid out
-that forty pounds sometime last evening, or else it has been stolen.”
-
-“That’s the matter in a nutshell,” agreed the inspector. He turned
-to Mrs. Ackroyd. “Which of the servants would come in here yesterday
-evening?”
-
-“I suppose the housemaid would turn down the bed.”
-
-“Who is she? What do you know about her?”
-
-“She’s not been here very long,” said Mrs. Ackroyd. “But she’s a nice
-ordinary country girl.”
-
-“I think we ought to clear this matter up,” said the inspector. “If
-Mr. Ackroyd paid that money away himself, it may have a bearing on the
-mystery of the crime. The other servants all right, as far as you know?”
-
-“Oh, I think so.”
-
-“Not missed anything before?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“None of them leaving, or anything like that?”
-
-“The parlormaid is leaving.”
-
-“When?”
-
-“She gave notice yesterday, I believe.”
-
-“To you?”
-
-“Oh, no. _I_ have nothing to do with the servants. Miss Russell attends
-to the household matters.”
-
-The inspector remained lost in thought for a minute or two. Then he
-nodded his head and remarked, “I think I’d better have a word with Miss
-Russell, and I’ll see the girl Dale as well.”
-
-Poirot and I accompanied him to the housekeeper’s room. Miss Russell
-received us with her usual sang-froid.
-
-Elsie Dale had been at Fernly five months. A nice girl, quick at her
-duties, and most respectable. Good references. The last girl in the
-world to take anything not belonging to her.
-
-What about the parlormaid?
-
-“She, too, was a most superior girl. Very quiet and ladylike. An
-excellent worker.”
-
-“Then why is she leaving?” asked the inspector.
-
-Miss Russell pursed up her lips.
-
-“It was none of my doing. I understand Mr. Ackroyd found fault with
-her yesterday afternoon. It was her duty to do the study, and she
-disarranged some of the papers on his desk, I believe. He was very
-annoyed about it, and she gave notice. At least, that is what I
-understood from her, but perhaps you’d like to see her yourselves?”
-
-The inspector assented. I had already noticed the girl when she was
-waiting on us at lunch. A tall girl, with a lot of brown hair rolled
-tightly away at the back of her neck, and very steady gray eyes. She
-came in answer to the housekeeper’s summons, and stood very straight
-with those same gray eyes fixed on us.
-
-“You are Ursula Bourne?” asked the inspector.
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“I understand you are leaving?”
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“Why is that?”
-
-“I disarranged some papers on Mr. Ackroyd’s desk. He was very angry
-about it, and I said I had better leave. He told me to go as soon as
-possible.”
-
-“Were you in Mr. Ackroyd’s bedroom at all last night? Tidying up or
-anything?”
-
-“No, sir. That is Elsie’s work. I never went near that part of the
-house.”
-
-“I must tell you, my girl, that a large sum of money is missing from
-Mr. Ackroyd’s room.”
-
-At last I saw her roused. A wave of color swept over her face.
-
-“I know nothing about any money. If you think I took it, and that that
-is why Mr. Ackroyd dismissed me, you are wrong.”
-
-“I’m not accusing you of taking it, my girl,” said the inspector.
-“Don’t flare up so.”
-
-The girl looked at him coldly.
-
-“You can search my things if you like,” she said disdainfully. “But you
-won’t find anything.”
-
-Poirot suddenly interposed.
-
-“It was yesterday afternoon that Mr. Ackroyd dismissed you—or you
-dismissed yourself, was it not?” he asked.
-
-The girl nodded.
-
-“How long did the interview last?”
-
-“The interview?”
-
-“Yes, the interview between you and Mr. Ackroyd in the study?”
-
-“I—I don’t know.”
-
-“Twenty minutes? Half an hour?”
-
-“Something like that.”
-
-“Not longer?”
-
-“Not longer than half an hour, certainly.”
-
-“Thank you, mademoiselle.”
-
-I looked curiously at him. He was rearranging a few objects on the
-table, setting them straight with precise fingers. His eyes were
-shining.
-
-“That’ll do,” said the inspector.
-
-Ursula Bourne disappeared. The inspector turned to Miss Russell.
-
-“How long has she been here? Have you got a copy of the reference you
-had with her?”
-
-Without answering the first question, Miss Russell moved to an adjacent
-bureau, opened one of the drawers, and took out a handful of letters
-clipped together with a patent fastener. She selected one and handed it
-to the inspector.
-
-“H’m,” said he. “Reads all right. Mrs. Richard Folliott, Marby Grange,
-Marby. Who’s this woman?”
-
-“Quite good county people,” said Miss Russell.
-
-“Well,” said the inspector, handing it back, “let’s have a look at the
-other one, Elsie Dale.”
-
-Elsie Dale was a big fair girl, with a pleasant but slightly stupid
-face. She answered our questions readily enough, and showed much
-distress and concern at the loss of the money.
-
-“I don’t think there’s anything wrong with her,” observed the
-inspector, after he had dismissed her.
-
-“What about Parker?”
-
-Miss Russell pursed her lips together and made no reply.
-
-“I’ve a feeling there’s something wrong about that man,” the inspector
-continued thoughtfully. “The trouble is that I don’t quite see when he
-got his opportunity. He’d be busy with his duties immediately after
-dinner, and he’s got a pretty good alibi all through the evening. I
-know, for I’ve been devoting particular attention to it. Well, thank
-you very much, Miss Russell. We’ll leave things as they are for the
-present. It’s highly probable Mr. Ackroyd paid that money away himself.”
-
-The housekeeper bade us a dry good-afternoon, and we took our leave.
-
-I left the house with Poirot.
-
-“I wonder,” I said, breaking the silence, “what the papers the girl
-disarranged could have been for Ackroyd to have got into such a state
-about them? I wonder if there is any clew there to the mystery.”
-
-“The secretary said there were no papers of particular importance on
-the desk,” said Poirot quietly.
-
-“Yes, but——” I paused.
-
-“It strikes you as odd that Ackroyd should have flown into a rage about
-so trivial a matter?”
-
-“Yes, it does rather.”
-
-“But was it a trivial matter?”
-
-“Of course,” I admitted, “we don’t know what those papers may have
-been. But Raymond certainly said——”
-
-“Leave M. Raymond out of it for a minute. What did you think of that
-girl?”
-
-“Which girl? The parlormaid?”
-
-“Yes, the parlormaid. Ursula Bourne.”
-
-“She seemed a nice girl,” I said hesitatingly.
-
-Poirot repeated my words, but whereas I had laid a slight stress on the
-fourth word, he put it on the second.
-
-“She _seemed_ a nice girl—yes.”
-
-Then, after a minute’s silence, he took something from his pocket and
-handed it to me.
-
-“See, my friend, I will show you something. Look there.”
-
-The paper he had handed me was that compiled by the inspector and given
-by him to Poirot that morning. Following the pointing finger, I saw a
-small cross marked in pencil opposite the name Ursula Bourne.
-
-“You may not have noticed it at the time, my good friend, but there was
-one person on this list whose alibi had no kind of confirmation. Ursula
-Bourne.”
-
-“You don’t think——”
-
-“Dr. Sheppard, I dare to think anything. Ursula Bourne may have killed
-Mr. Ackroyd, but I confess I can see no motive for her doing so. Can
-you?”
-
-He looked at me very hard—so hard that I felt uncomfortable.
-
-“Can you?” he repeated.
-
-“No motive whatsoever,” I said firmly.
-
-His gaze relaxed. He frowned and murmured to himself:—
-
-“Since the blackmailer was a man, it follows that she cannot be the
-blackmailer, then——”
-
-I coughed.
-
-“As far as that goes——” I began doubtfully.
-
-He spun round on me.
-
-“What? What are you going to say?”
-
-“Nothing. Nothing. Only that, strictly speaking, Mrs. Ferrars in her
-letter mentioned a _person_—she didn’t actually specify a man. But we
-took it for granted, Ackroyd and I, that it _was_ a man.”
-
-Poirot did not seem to be listening to me. He was muttering to himself
-again.
-
-“But then it is possible after all—yes, certainly it is possible—but
-then—ah! I must rearrange my ideas. Method, order; never have I needed
-them more. Everything must fit in—in its appointed place—otherwise I am
-on the wrong tack.”
-
-He broke off, and whirled round upon me again.
-
-“Where is Marby?”
-
-“It’s on the other side of Cranchester.”
-
-“How far away?”
-
-“Oh!—fourteen miles, perhaps.”
-
-“Would it be possible for you to go there? To-morrow, say?”
-
-“To-morrow? Let me see, that’s Sunday. Yes, I could arrange it. What do
-you want me to do there?”
-
-“See this Mrs. Folliott. Find out all you can about Ursula Bourne.”
-
-“Very well. But—I don’t much care for the job.”
-
-“It is not the time to make difficulties. A man’s life may hang on
-this.”
-
-“Poor Ralph,” I said with a sigh. “You believe him to be innocent,
-though?”
-
-Poirot looked at me very gravely.
-
-“Do you want to know the truth?”
-
-“Of course.”
-
-“Then you shall have it. My friend, everything points to the assumption
-that he is guilty.”
-
-“What!” I exclaimed.
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“Yes, that stupid inspector—for he is stupid—has everything pointing
-his way. I seek for the truth—and the truth leads me every time to
-Ralph Paton. Motive, opportunity, means. But I will leave no stone
-unturned. I promised Mademoiselle Flora. And she was very sure, that
-little one. But very sure indeed.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
- POIROT PAYS A CALL
-
-
-I was slightly nervous when I rang the bell at Marby Grange the
-following afternoon. I wondered very much what Poirot expected to
-find out. He had entrusted the job to me. Why? Was it because, as
-in the case of questioning Major Blunt, he wished to remain in the
-background? The wish, intelligible in the first case, seemed to me
-quite meaningless here.
-
-My meditations were interrupted by the advent of a smart parlormaid.
-
-Yes, Mrs. Folliott was at home. I was ushered into a big drawing-room,
-and looked round me curiously as I waited for the mistress of the
-house. A large bare room, some good bits of old china, and some
-beautiful etchings, shabby covers and curtains. A lady’s room in every
-sense of the term.
-
-I turned from the inspection of a Bartolozzi on the wall as Mrs.
-Folliott came into the room. She was a tall woman, with untidy brown
-hair, and a very winning smile.
-
-“Dr. Sheppard,” she said hesitatingly.
-
-“That is my name,” I replied. “I must apologize for calling upon you
-like this, but I wanted some information about a parlormaid previously
-employed by you, Ursula Bourne.”
-
-With the utterance of the name the smile vanished from her face, and
-all the cordiality froze out of her manner. She looked uncomfortable
-and ill at ease.
-
-“Ursula Bourne?” she said hesitatingly.
-
-“Yes,” I said. “Perhaps you don’t remember the name?”
-
-“Oh, yes, of course. I—I remember perfectly.”
-
-“She left you just over a year ago, I understand?”
-
-“Yes. Yes, she did. That is quite right.”
-
-“And you were satisfied with her whilst she was with you? How long was
-she with you, by the way?”
-
-“Oh! a year or two—I can’t remember exactly how long. She—she is very
-capable. I’m sure you will find her quite satisfactory. I didn’t know
-she was leaving Fernly. I hadn’t the least idea of it.”
-
-“Can you tell me anything about her?” I asked.
-
-“Anything about her?”
-
-“Yes, where she comes from, who her people are—that sort of thing?”
-
-Mrs. Folliott’s face wore more than ever its frozen look.
-
-“I don’t know at all.”
-
-“Who was she with before she came to you?”
-
-“I’m afraid I don’t remember.”
-
-There was a spark of anger now underlying her nervousness. She flung up
-her head in a gesture that was vaguely familiar.
-
-“Is it really necessary to ask all these questions?”
-
-“Not at all,” I said, with an air of surprise and a tinge of apology
-in my manner. “I had no idea you would mind answering them. I am very
-sorry.”
-
-Her anger left her and she became confused again.
-
-“Oh! I don’t mind answering them. I assure you I don’t. Why should I?
-It—it just seemed a little odd, you know. That’s all. A little odd.”
-
-One advantage of being a medical practitioner is that you can usually
-tell when people are lying to you. I should have known from Mrs.
-Folliott’s manner, if from nothing else, that she did mind answering my
-questions—minded intensely. She was thoroughly uncomfortable and upset,
-and there was plainly some mystery in the background. I judged her to
-be a woman quite unused to deception of any kind, and consequently
-rendered acutely uneasy when forced to practice it. A child could have
-seen through her.
-
-But it was also clear that she had no intention of telling me anything
-further. Whatever the mystery centering around Ursula Bourne might be,
-I was not going to learn it through Mrs. Folliott.
-
-Defeated, I apologized once more for disturbing her, took my hat and
-departed.
-
-I went to see a couple of patients and arrived home about six o’clock.
-Caroline was sitting beside the wreck of tea things. She had that
-look of suppressed exultation on her face which I know only too well.
-It is a sure sign with her, of either the getting or the giving of
-information. I wondered which it had been.
-
-“I’ve had a very interesting afternoon,” began Caroline as I dropped
-into my own particular easy chair, and stretched out my feet to the
-inviting blaze in the fireplace.
-
-“Have you?” I asked. “Miss Ganett drop in to tea?”
-
-Miss Ganett is one of the chief of our newsmongers.
-
-“Guess again,” said Caroline with intense complacency.
-
-I guessed several times, working slowly through all the members of
-Caroline’s Intelligence Corps. My sister received each guess with
-a triumphant shake of the head. In the end she volunteered the
-information herself.
-
-“M. Poirot!” she said. “Now what do you think of that?”
-
-I thought a good many things of it, but I was careful not to say them
-to Caroline.
-
-“Why did he come?” I asked.
-
-“To see me, of course. He said that knowing my brother so well, he
-hoped he might be permitted to make the acquaintance of his charming
-sister—your charming sister, I’ve got mixed up, but you know what I
-mean.”
-
-“What did he talk about?” I asked.
-
-“He told me a lot about himself and his cases. You know that Prince
-Paul of Mauretania—the one who’s just married a dancer?”
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“I saw a most intriguing paragraph about her in Society Snippets the
-other day, hinting that she was really a Russian Grand Duchess—one
-of the Czar’s daughters who managed to escape from the Bolsheviks.
-Well, it seems that M. Poirot solved a baffling murder mystery that
-threatened to involve them both. Prince Paul was beside himself with
-gratitude.”
-
-“Did he give him an emerald tie pin the size of a plover’s egg?” I
-inquired sarcastically.
-
-“He didn’t mention it. Why?”
-
-“Nothing,” I said. “I thought it was always done. It is in detective
-fiction anyway. The super detective always has his rooms littered with
-rubies and pearls and emeralds from grateful Royal clients.”
-
-“It’s very interesting to hear about these things from the inside,”
-said my sister complacently.
-
-It would be—to Caroline. I could not but admire the ingenuity of M.
-Hercule Poirot, who had selected unerringly the case of all others that
-would most appeal to an elderly maiden lady living in a small village.
-
-“Did he tell you if the dancer was really a Grand Duchess?” I inquired.
-
-“He was not at liberty to speak,” said Caroline importantly.
-
-I wondered how far Poirot had strained the truth in talking to
-Caroline—probably not at all. He had conveyed his innuendoes by means
-of his eyebrows and his shoulders.
-
-“And after all this,” I remarked, “I suppose you were ready to eat out
-of his hand.”
-
-“Don’t be coarse, James. I don’t know where you get these vulgar
-expressions from.”
-
-“Probably from my only link with the outside world—my patients.
-Unfortunately my practice does not lie amongst Royal princes and
-interesting Russian émigrés.”
-
-Caroline pushed her spectacles up and looked at me.
-
-“You seem very grumpy, James. It must be your liver. A blue pill, I
-think, to-night.”
-
-To see me in my own home, you would never imagine that I was a doctor
-of medicine. Caroline does the home prescribing both for herself and me.
-
-“Damn my liver,” I said irritably. “Did you talk about the murder at
-all?”
-
-“Well, naturally, James. What else is there to talk about locally?
-I was able to set M. Poirot right upon several points. He was very
-grateful to me. He said I had the makings of a born detective in me—and
-a wonderful psychological insight into human nature.”
-
-Caroline was exactly like a cat that is full to overflowing with rich
-cream. She was positively purring.
-
-“He talked a lot about the little gray cells of the brain, and of their
-functions. His own, he says, are of the first quality.”
-
-“He would say so,” I remarked bitterly. “Modesty is certainly not his
-middle name.”
-
-“I wish you would not be so horribly American, James. He thought it
-very important that Ralph should be found as soon as possible, and
-induced to come forward and give an account of himself. He says that
-his disappearance will produce a very unfortunate impression at the
-inquest.”
-
-“And what did you say to that?”
-
-“I agreed with him,” said Caroline importantly. “And I was able to tell
-him the way people were already talking about it.”
-
-“Caroline,” I said sharply, “did you tell M. Poirot what you overheard
-in the wood that day?”
-
-“I did,” said Caroline complacently.
-
-I got up and began to walk about.
-
-“You realize what you’re doing, I hope,” I jerked out. “You’re putting
-a halter round Ralph Paton’s neck as surely as you’re sitting in that
-chair.”
-
-“Not at all,” said Caroline, quite unruffled. “I was surprised _you_
-hadn’t told him.”
-
-“I took very good care not to,” I said. “I’m fond of that boy.”
-
-“So am I. That’s why I say you’re talking nonsense. I don’t believe
-Ralph did it, and so the truth can’t hurt him, and we ought to give M.
-Poirot all the help we can. Why, think, very likely Ralph was out with
-that identical girl on the night of the murder, and if so, he’s got a
-perfect alibi.”
-
-“If he’s got a perfect alibi,” I retorted, “why doesn’t he come forward
-and say so?”
-
-“Might get the girl into trouble,” said Caroline sapiently. “But if M.
-Poirot gets hold of her, and puts it to her as her duty, she’ll come
-forward of her own accord and clear Ralph.”
-
-“You seem to have invented a romantic fairy story of your own,” I said.
-“You read too many trashy novels, Caroline. I’ve always told you so.”
-
-I dropped into my chair again.
-
-“Did Poirot ask you any more questions?” I inquired.
-
-“Only about the patients you had that morning.”
-
-“The patients?” I demanded, unbelievingly.
-
-“Yes, your surgery patients. How many and who they were?”
-
-“Do you mean to say you were able to tell him that?” I demanded.
-
-Caroline is really amazing.
-
-“Why not?” asked my sister triumphantly. “I can see the path up to the
-surgery door perfectly from this window. And I’ve got an excellent
-memory, James. Much better than yours, let me tell you.”
-
-“I’m sure you have,” I murmured mechanically.
-
-My sister went on, checking the names on her fingers.
-
-“There was old Mrs. Bennett, and that boy from the farm with the bad
-finger, Dolly Grice to have a needle out of her finger; that American
-steward off the liner. Let me see—that’s four. Yes, and old George
-Evans with his ulcer. And lastly——”
-
-She paused significantly.
-
-“Well?”
-
-Caroline brought out her climax triumphantly. She hissed in the most
-approved style—aided by the fortunate number of s’s at her disposal.
-
-“_Miss Russell!_”
-
-She sat back in her chair and looked at me meaningly, and when Caroline
-looks at you meaningly, it is impossible to miss it.
-
-“I don’t know what you mean,” I said, quite untruthfully. “Why
-shouldn’t Miss Russell consult me about her bad knee?”
-
-“Bad knee,” said Caroline. “Fiddlesticks! No more bad knee than you and
-I. She was after something else.”
-
-“What?” I asked.
-
-Caroline had to admit that she didn’t know.
-
-“But depend upon it, that was what he was trying to get at, M. Poirot,
-I mean. There’s something fishy about that woman, and he knows it.”
-
-“Precisely the remark Mrs. Ackroyd made to me yesterday,” I said. “That
-there was something fishy about Miss Russell.”
-
-“Ah!” said Caroline darkly, “Mrs. Ackroyd! There’s another!”
-
-“Another what?”
-
-Caroline refused to explain her remarks. She merely nodded her head
-several times, rolled up her knitting, and went upstairs to don the
-high mauve silk blouse and the gold locket which she calls dressing for
-dinner.
-
-I stayed there staring into the fire and thinking over Caroline’s
-words. Had Poirot really come to gain information about Miss Russell,
-or was it only Caroline’s tortuous mind that interpreted everything
-according to her own ideas?
-
-There had certainly been nothing in Miss Russell’s manner that morning
-to arouse suspicion. At least——
-
-I remembered her persistent conversation on the subject of drug-taking
-and from that she had led the conversation to poisons and poisoning.
-But there was nothing in that. Ackroyd had not been poisoned. Still, it
-was odd....
-
-I heard Caroline’s voice, rather acid in note, calling from the top of
-the stairs.
-
-“James, you will be late for dinner.”
-
-I put some coal on the fire and went upstairs obediently.
-
-It is well at any price to have peace in the home.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
- ROUND THE TABLE
-
-
-A joint inquest was held on Monday.
-
-I do not propose to give the proceedings in detail. To do so would only
-be to go over the same ground again and again. By arrangement with the
-police, very little was allowed to come out. I gave evidence as to the
-cause of Ackroyd’s death and the probable time. The absence of Ralph
-Paton was commented on by the coroner, but not unduly stressed.
-
-Afterwards, Poirot and I had a few words with Inspector Raglan. The
-inspector was very grave.
-
-“It looks bad, Mr. Poirot,” he said. “I’m trying to judge the thing
-fair and square. I’m a local man, and I’ve seen Captain Paton many
-times in Cranchester. I’m not wanting him to be the guilty one—but it’s
-bad whichever way you look at it. If he’s innocent, why doesn’t he come
-forward? We’ve got evidence against him, but it’s just possible that
-that evidence could be explained away. Then why doesn’t he give an
-explanation?”
-
-A lot more lay behind the inspector’s words than I knew at the time.
-Ralph’s description had been wired to every port and railway station
-in England. The police everywhere were on the alert. His rooms in town
-were watched, and any houses he had been known to be in the habit
-of frequenting. With such a _cordon_ it seemed impossible that Ralph
-should be able to evade detection. He had no luggage, and, as far as
-any one knew, no money.
-
-“I can’t find any one who saw him at the station that night,” continued
-the inspector. “And yet he’s well known down here, and you’d think
-somebody would have noticed him. There’s no news from Liverpool either.”
-
-“You think he went to Liverpool?” queried Poirot.
-
-“Well, it’s on the cards. That telephone message from the station,
-just three minutes before the Liverpool express left—there ought to be
-something in that.”
-
-“Unless it was deliberately intended to throw you off the scent. That
-might just possibly be the point of the telephone message.”
-
-“That’s an idea,” said the inspector eagerly. “Do you really think
-that’s the explanation of the telephone call?”
-
-“My friend,” said Poirot gravely, “I do not know. But I will tell you
-this: I believe that when we find the explanation of that telephone
-call we shall find the explanation of the murder.”
-
-“You said something like that before, I remember,” I observed, looking
-at him curiously.
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“I always come back to it,” he said seriously.
-
-“It seems to me utterly irrelevant,” I declared.
-
-“I wouldn’t say that,” demurred the inspector. “But I must confess I
-think Mr. Poirot here harps on it a little too much. We’ve better clews
-than that. The fingerprints on the dagger, for instance.”
-
-Poirot became suddenly very foreign in manner, as he often did when
-excited over anything.
-
-“M. l’Inspecteur,” he said, “beware of the blind—the blind—_comment
-dire?_—the little street that has no end to it.”
-
-Inspector Raglan stared, but I was quicker.
-
-“You mean a blind alley?” I said.
-
-“That is it—the blind street that leads nowhere. So it may be with
-those fingerprints—they may lead you nowhere.”
-
-“I don’t see how that can well be,” said the police officer. “I suppose
-you’re hinting that they’re faked? I’ve read of such things being done,
-though I can’t say I’ve ever come across it in my experience. But fake
-or true—they’re bound to lead _somewhere_.”
-
-Poirot merely shrugged his shoulders, flinging out his arms wide.
-
-The inspector then showed us various enlarged photographs of the
-fingerprints, and proceeded to become technical on the subject of loops
-and whorls.
-
-“Come now,” he said at last, annoyed by Poirot’s detached manner,
-“you’ve got to admit that those prints were made by some one who was in
-the house that night?”
-
-“_Bien entendu_,” said Poirot, nodding his head.
-
-“Well, I’ve taken the prints of every member of the household, every
-one, mind you, from the old lady down to the kitchenmaid.”
-
-I don’t think Mrs. Ackroyd would enjoy being referred to as the old
-lady. She must spend a considerable amount on cosmetics.
-
-“Every one’s,” repeated the inspector fussily.
-
-“Including mine,” I said dryly.
-
-“Very well. None of them correspond. That leaves us two alternatives.
-Ralph Paton, or the mysterious stranger the doctor here tells us about.
-When we get hold of those two——”
-
-“Much valuable time may have been lost,” broke in Poirot.
-
-“I don’t quite get you, Mr. Poirot?”
-
-“You have taken the prints of every one in the house, you say,”
-murmured Poirot. “Is that the exact truth you are telling me there, M.
-l’Inspecteur?”
-
-“Certainly.”
-
-“Without overlooking any one?”
-
-“Without overlooking any one.”
-
-“The quick or the dead?”
-
-For a moment the inspector looked bewildered at what he took to be a
-religious observation. Then he reacted slowly.
-
-“You mean——”
-
-“The dead, M. l’Inspecteur.”
-
-The inspector still took a minute or two to understand.
-
-“I am suggesting,” said Poirot placidly, “that the fingerprints on the
-dagger handle are those of Mr. Ackroyd himself. It is an easy matter to
-verify. His body is still available.”
-
-“But why? What would be the point of it? You’re surely not suggesting
-suicide, Mr. Poirot?”
-
-“Ah! no. My theory is that the murderer wore gloves or wrapped
-something round his hand. After the blow was struck, he picked up the
-victim’s hand and closed it round the dagger handle.”
-
-“But why?”
-
-Poirot shrugged his shoulders again.
-
-“To make a confusing case even more confusing.”
-
-“Well,” said the inspector, “I’ll look into it. What gave you the idea
-in the first place?”
-
-“When you were so kind as to show me the dagger and draw attention to
-the fingerprints. I know very little of loops and whorls—see, I confess
-my ignorance frankly. But it did occur to me that the position of the
-prints was somewhat awkward. Not so would I have held a dagger in order
-to strike. Naturally, with the right hand brought up over the shoulder
-backwards, it would have been difficult to put it in exactly the right
-position.”
-
-Inspector Raglan stared at the little man. Poirot, with an air of great
-unconcern, flecked a speck of dust from his coat sleeve.
-
-“Well,” said the inspector, “it’s an idea. I’ll look into it all right,
-but don’t you be disappointed if nothing comes of it.”
-
-He endeavored to make his tone kindly and patronizing. Poirot watched
-him go off. Then he turned to me with twinkling eyes.
-
-“Another time,” he observed, “I must be more careful of his _amour
-propre_. And now that we are left to our own devices, what do you
-think, my good friend, of a little reunion of the family?”
-
-The “little reunion,” as Poirot called it, took place about half an
-hour later. We sat round the table in the dining-room at Fernly—Poirot
-at the head of the table, like the chairman of some ghastly board
-meeting. The servants were not present, so we were six in all. Mrs.
-Ackroyd, Flora, Major Blunt, young Raymond, Poirot, and myself.
-
-When every one was assembled, Poirot rose and bowed.
-
-“Messieurs, mesdames, I have called you together for a certain
-purpose.” He paused. “To begin with, I want to make a very special plea
-to mademoiselle.”
-
-“To me?” said Flora.
-
-“Mademoiselle, you are engaged to Captain Ralph Paton. If any one
-is in his confidence, you are. I beg you, most earnestly, if you
-know of his whereabouts, to persuade him to come forward. One little
-minute”—as Flora raised her head to speak—“say nothing till you have
-well reflected. Mademoiselle, his position grows daily more dangerous.
-If he had come forward at once, no matter how damning the facts, he
-might have had a chance of explaining them away. But this silence—this
-flight—what can it mean? Surely only one thing, knowledge of guilt.
-Mademoiselle, if you really believe in his innocence, persuade him to
-come forward before it is too late.”
-
-Flora’s face had gone very white.
-
-“Too late!” she repeated, very low.
-
-Poirot leant forward, looking at her.
-
-“See now, mademoiselle,” he said very gently, “it is Papa Poirot who
-asks you this. The old Papa Poirot who has much knowledge and much
-experience. I would not seek to entrap you, mademoiselle. Will you not
-trust me—and tell me where Ralph Paton is hiding?”
-
-The girl rose, and stood facing him.
-
-“M. Poirot,” she said in a clear voice, “I swear to you—swear
-solemnly—that I have no idea where Ralph is, and that I have neither
-seen him nor heard from him either on the day of—of the murder, or
-since.”
-
-She sat down again. Poirot gazed at her in silence for a minute or two,
-then he brought his hand down on the table with a sharp rap.
-
-“_Bien!_ That is that,” he said. His face hardened. “Now I appeal to
-these others who sit round this table, Mrs. Ackroyd, Major Blunt, Dr.
-Sheppard, Mr. Raymond. You are all friends and intimates of the missing
-man. If you know where Ralph Paton is hiding, speak out.”
-
-There was a long silence. Poirot looked to each in turn.
-
-“I beg of you,” he said in a low voice, “speak out.”
-
-But still there was silence, broken at last by Mrs. Ackroyd.
-
-“I must say,” she observed in a plaintive voice, “that Ralph’s absence
-is most peculiar—most peculiar indeed. Not to come forward at such a
-time. It looks, you know, as though there were something _behind_ it.
-I can’t help thinking, Flora dear, that it was a very fortunate thing
-your engagement was never formally announced.”
-
-“Mother!” cried Flora angrily.
-
-“Providence,” declared Mrs. Ackroyd. “I have a devout belief in
-Providence—a divinity that shapes our ends, as Shakespeare’s beautiful
-line runs.”
-
-“Surely you don’t make the Almighty directly responsible for
-thick ankles, Mrs. Ackroyd, do you?” asked Geoffrey Raymond, his
-irresponsible laugh ringing out.
-
-His idea was, I think, to loosen the tension, but Mrs. Ackroyd threw
-him a glance of reproach and took out her handkerchief.
-
-“Flora has been saved a terrible amount of notoriety and
-unpleasantness. Not for a moment that I think dear Ralph had anything
-to do with poor Roger’s death. I _don’t_ think so. But then I have a
-trusting heart—I always have had, ever since a child. I am loath to
-believe the worst of any one. But, of course, one must remember that
-Ralph was in several air raids as a young boy. The results are apparent
-long after, sometimes, they say. People are not responsible for their
-actions in the least. They lose control, you know, without being able
-to help it.”
-
-“Mother,” cried Flora, “you don’t think Ralph did it?”
-
-“Come, Mrs. Ackroyd,” said Blunt.
-
-“I don’t know what to think,” said Mrs. Ackroyd tearfully. “It’s all
-very upsetting. What would happen to the estate, I wonder, if Ralph
-were found guilty?”
-
-Raymond pushed his chair away from the table violently. Major Blunt
-remained very quiet, looking thoughtfully at her. “Like shell-shock,
-you know,” said Mrs. Ackroyd obstinately, “and I dare say Roger kept
-him very short of money—with the best intentions, of course. I can see
-you are all against me, but I do think it is very odd that Ralph has
-not come forward, and I must say I am thankful Flora’s engagement was
-never announced formally.”
-
-“It will be to-morrow,” said Flora in a clear voice.
-
-“Flora!” cried her mother, aghast.
-
-Flora had turned to the secretary.
-
-“Will you send the announcement to the _Morning Post_ and the _Times_,
-please, Mr. Raymond.”
-
-“If you are sure that it is wise, Miss Ackroyd,” he replied gravely.
-
-She turned impulsively to Blunt.
-
-“You understand,” she said. “What else can I do? As things are, I must
-stand by Ralph. Don’t you see that I must?”
-
-She looked very searchingly at him, and after a long pause he nodded
-abruptly.
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd burst out into shrill protests. Flora remained unmoved.
-Then Raymond spoke.
-
-“I appreciate your motives, Miss Ackroyd. But don’t you think you’re
-being rather precipitate? Wait a day or two.”
-
-“To-morrow,” said Flora, in a clear voice. “It’s no good, mother, going
-on like this. Whatever else I am, I’m not disloyal to my friends.”
-
-“M. Poirot,” Mrs. Ackroyd appealed tearfully, “can’t you say anything
-at all?”
-
-“Nothing to be said,” interpolated Blunt. “She’s doing the right thing.
-I’ll stand by her through thick and thin.”
-
-Flora held out her hand to him.
-
-“Thank you, Major Blunt,” she said.
-
-“Mademoiselle,” said Poirot, “will you let an old man congratulate you
-on your courage and your loyalty? And will you not misunderstand me if
-I ask you—ask you most solemnly—to postpone the announcement you speak
-of for at least two days more?”
-
-Flora hesitated.
-
-“I ask it in Ralph Paton’s interests as much as in yours, mademoiselle.
-You frown. You do not see how that can be. But I assure you that it
-is so. _Pas de blagues_. You put the case into my hands—you must not
-hamper me now.”
-
-Flora paused a few minutes before replying.
-
-“I do not like it,” she said at last, “but I will do what you say.”
-
-She sat down again at the table.
-
-“And now, messieurs et mesdames,” said Poirot rapidly, “I will continue
-with what I was about to say. Understand this, I mean to arrive at
-the truth. The truth, however ugly in itself, is always curious and
-beautiful to the seeker after it. I am much aged, my powers may not
-be what they were.” Here he clearly expected a contradiction. “In all
-probability this is the last case I shall ever investigate. But Hercule
-Poirot does not end with a failure. Messieurs et mesdames, I tell you,
-I mean to _know_. And I shall know—in spite of you all.”
-
-He brought out the last words provocatively, hurling them in our face
-as it were. I think we all flinched back a little, excepting Geoffrey
-Raymond, who remained good humored and imperturbable as usual.
-
-“How do you mean—in spite of us all?” he asked, with slightly raised
-eyebrows.
-
-“But—just that, monsieur. Every one of you in this room is concealing
-something from me.” He raised his hand as a faint murmur of protest
-arose. “Yes, yes, I know what I am saying. It may be something
-unimportant—trivial—which is supposed to have no bearing on the case,
-but there it is. _Each one of you has something to hide._ Come, now, am
-I right?”
-
-His glance, challenging and accusing, swept round the table. And every
-pair of eyes dropped before his. Yes, mine as well.
-
-“I am answered,” said Poirot, with a curious laugh. He got up from his
-seat. “I appeal to you all. Tell me the truth—the whole truth.” There
-was a silence. “Will no one speak?”
-
-He gave the same short laugh again.
-
-“_C’est dommage_,” he said, and went out.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
- THE GOOSE QUILL
-
-
-That evening, at Poirot’s request, I went over to his house after
-dinner. Caroline saw me depart with visible reluctance. I think she
-would have liked to have accompanied me.
-
-Poirot greeted me hospitably. He had placed a bottle of Irish whisky
-(which I detest) on a small table, with a soda water siphon and a
-glass. He himself was engaged in brewing hot chocolate. It was a
-favorite beverage of his, I discovered later.
-
-He inquired politely after my sister, whom he declared to be a most
-interesting woman.
-
-“I’m afraid you’ve been giving her a swelled head,” I said dryly. “What
-about Sunday afternoon?”
-
-He laughed and twinkled.
-
-“I always like to employ the expert,” he remarked obscurely, but he
-refused to explain the remark.
-
-“You got all the local gossip anyway,” I remarked. “True, and untrue.”
-
-“And a great deal of valuable information,” he added quietly.
-
-“Such as——?”
-
-He shook his head.
-
-“Why not have told me the truth?” he countered. “In a place like this,
-all Ralph Paton’s doings were bound to be known. If your sister had not
-happened to pass through the wood that day somebody else would have
-done so.”
-
-“I suppose they would,” I said grumpily. “What about this interest of
-yours in my patients?”
-
-Again he twinkled.
-
-“Only one of them, doctor. Only one of them.”
-
-“The last?” I hazarded.
-
-“I find Miss Russell a study of the most interesting,” he said
-evasively.
-
-“Do you agree with my sister and Mrs. Ackroyd that there is something
-fishy about her?” I asked.
-
-“Eh? What do you say—fishy?”
-
-I explained to the best of my ability.
-
-“And they say that, do they?”
-
-“Didn’t my sister convey as much to you yesterday afternoon?”
-
-“_C’est possible._”
-
-“For no reason whatever,” I declared.
-
-“_Les femmes_,” generalized Poirot. “They are marvelous! They invent
-haphazard—and by miracle they are right. Not that it is that, really.
-Women observe subconsciously a thousand little details, without knowing
-that they are doing so. Their subconscious mind adds these little
-things together—and they call the result intuition. Me, I am very
-skilled in psychology. I know these things.”
-
-He swelled his chest out importantly, looking so ridiculous, that I
-found it difficult not to burst out laughing. Then he took a small sip
-of his chocolate, and carefully wiped his mustache.
-
-“I wish you’d tell me,” I burst out, “what you really think of it all?”
-
-He put down his cup.
-
-“You wish that?”
-
-“I do.”
-
-“You have seen what I have seen. Should not our ideas be the same?”
-
-“I’m afraid you’re laughing at me,” I said stiffly. “Of course, I’ve no
-experience of matters of this kind.”
-
-Poirot smiled at me indulgently.
-
-“You are like the little child who wants to know the way the engine
-works. You wish to see the affair, not as the family doctor sees it,
-but with the eye of a detective who knows and cares for no one—to whom
-they are all strangers and all equally liable to suspicion.”
-
-“You put it very well,” I said.
-
-“So I give you then, a little lecture. The first thing is to get a
-clear history of what happened that evening—always bearing in mind that
-the person who speaks may be lying.”
-
-I raised my eyebrows.
-
-“Rather a suspicious attitude.”
-
-“But necessary—I assure you, necessary. Now first—Dr. Sheppard leaves
-the house at ten minutes to nine. How do I know that?”
-
-“Because I told you so.”
-
-“But you might not be speaking the truth—or the watch you went by might
-be wrong. But Parker also says that you left the house at ten minutes
-to nine. So we accept that statement and pass on. At nine o’clock you
-run into a man—and here we come to what we will call the Romance of the
-Mysterious Stranger—just outside the Park gates. How do I know that
-that is so?”
-
-“I told you so,” I began again, but Poirot interrupted me with a
-gesture of impatience.
-
-“Ah! but it is that you are a little stupid to-night, my friend. _You_
-know that it is so—but how am _I_ to know? _Eh bien_, I am able to
-tell you that the Mysterious Stranger was not a hallucination on your
-part, because the maid of a Miss Ganett met him a few minutes before
-you did, and of her too he inquired the way to Fernly Park. We accept
-his presence, therefore, and we can be fairly sure of two things about
-him—that he was a stranger to the neighborhood, and that whatever his
-object in going to Fernly, there was no great secrecy about it, since
-he twice asked the way there.”
-
-“Yes,” I said, “I see that.”
-
-“Now I have made it my business to find out more about this man. He had
-a drink at the Three Boars, I learn, and the barmaid there says that he
-spoke with an American accent and mentioned having just come over from
-the States. Did it strike you that he had an American accent?”
-
-“Yes, I think he had,” I said, after a minute or two, during which I
-cast my mind back; “but a very slight one.”
-
-“_Précisément._ There is also this which, you will remember, I picked
-up in the summer-house?”
-
-He held out to me the little quill. I looked at it curiously. Then a
-memory of something I had read stirred in me.
-
-Poirot, who had been watching my face, nodded.
-
-“Yes, heroin ‘snow.’ Drug-takers carry it like this, and sniff it up
-the nose.”
-
-“Diamorphine hydrochloride,” I murmured mechanically.
-
-“This method of taking the drug is very common on the other side.
-Another proof, if we wanted one, that the man came from Canada or the
-States.”
-
-“What first attracted your attention to that summer-house?” I asked
-curiously.
-
-“My friend the inspector took it for granted that any one using that
-path did so as a short cut to the house, but as soon as I saw the
-summer-house, I realized that the same path would be taken by any one
-using the summer-house as a rendezvous. Now it seems fairly certain
-that the stranger came neither to the front nor to the back door. Then
-did some one from the house go out and meet him? If so, what could be a
-more convenient place than that little summer-house? I searched it with
-the hope that I might find some clew inside. I found two, the scrap of
-cambric and the quill.”
-
-“And the scrap of cambric?” I asked curiously. “What about that?”
-
-Poirot raised his eyebrows.
-
-“You do not use your little gray cells,” he remarked dryly. “The scrap
-of starched cambric should be obvious.”
-
-“Not very obvious to me.” I changed the subject. “Anyway,” I said,
-“this man went to the summer-house to meet somebody. Who was that
-somebody?”
-
-“Exactly the question,” said Poirot. “You will remember that Mrs.
-Ackroyd and her daughter came over from Canada to live here?”
-
-“Is that what you meant to-day when you accused them of hiding the
-truth?”
-
-“Perhaps. Now another point. What did you think of the parlormaid’s
-story?”
-
-“What story?”
-
-“The story of her dismissal. Does it take half an hour to dismiss a
-servant? Was the story of those important papers a likely one? And
-remember, though she says she was in her bedroom from nine-thirty until
-ten o’clock, there is no one to confirm her statement.”
-
-“You bewilder me,” I said.
-
-“To me it grows clearer. But tell me now your own ideas and theories.”
-
-I drew a piece of paper from my pocket.
-
-“I just scribbled down a few suggestions,” I said apologetically.
-
-“But excellent—you have method. Let us hear them.”
-
-I read out in a somewhat embarrassed voice.
-
-“To begin with, one must look at the thing logically——”
-
-“Just what my poor Hastings used to say,” interrupted Poirot, “but
-alas! he never did so.”
-
-“_Point No. 1._—Mr. Ackroyd was heard talking to some one at half-past
-nine.
-
-“_Point No. 2._—At some time during the evening Ralph Paton must have
-come in through the window, as evidenced by the prints of his shoes.
-
-“_Point No. 3._—Mr. Ackroyd was nervous that evening, and would only
-have admitted some one he knew.
-
-“_Point No. 4._—The person with Mr. Ackroyd at nine-thirty was asking
-for money. We know Ralph Paton was in a scrape.
-
-“_These four points go to show that the person with Mr. Ackroyd at
-nine-thirty was Ralph Paton. But we know that Mr. Ackroyd was alive at
-a quarter to ten, therefore it was not Ralph who killed him. Ralph left
-the window open. Afterwards the murderer came in that way._”
-
-“And who was the murderer?” inquired Poirot.
-
-“The American stranger. He may have been in league with Parker, and
-possibly in Parker we have the man who blackmailed Mrs. Ferrars. If
-so, Parker may have heard enough to realize the game was up, have told
-his accomplice so, and the latter did the crime with the dagger which
-Parker gave him.”
-
-“It is a theory that,” admitted Poirot. “Decidedly you have cells of a
-kind. But it leaves a good deal unaccounted for.”
-
-“Such as——?”
-
-“The telephone call, the pushed-out chair——”
-
-“Do you really think the latter important?” I interrupted.
-
-“Perhaps not,” admitted my friend. “It may have been pulled out
-by accident, and Raymond or Blunt may have shoved it into place
-unconsciously under the stress of emotion. Then there is the missing
-forty pounds.”
-
-“Given by Ackroyd to Ralph,” I suggested. “He may have reconsidered his
-first refusal.”
-
-“That still leaves one thing unexplained?”
-
-“What?”
-
-“Why was Blunt so certain in his own mind that it was Raymond with Mr.
-Ackroyd at nine-thirty?”
-
-“He explained that,” I said.
-
-“You think so? I will not press the point. Tell me instead, what were
-Ralph Paton’s reasons for disappearing?”
-
-“That’s rather more difficult,” I said slowly. “I shall have to speak
-as a medical man. Ralph’s nerves must have gone phut! If he suddenly
-found out that his uncle had been murdered within a few minutes of his
-leaving him—after, perhaps, a rather stormy interview—well, he might
-get the wind up and clear right out. Men have been known to do that—act
-guiltily when they’re perfectly innocent.”
-
-“Yes, that is true,” said Poirot. “But we must not lose sight of one
-thing.”
-
-“I know what you’re going to say,” I remarked: “motive. Ralph Paton
-inherits a great fortune by his uncle’s death.”
-
-“That is one motive,” agreed Poirot.
-
-“One?”
-
-“_Mais oui._ Do you realize that there are three separate motives
-staring us in the face. Somebody certainly stole the blue envelope and
-its contents. That is one motive. Blackmail! Ralph Paton may have been
-the man who blackmailed Mrs. Ferrars. Remember, as far as Hammond
-knew, Ralph Paton had not applied to his uncle for help of late. That
-looks as though he were being supplied with money elsewhere. Then there
-is the fact that he was in some—how do you say—scrape?—which he feared
-might get to his uncle’s ears. And finally there is the one you have
-just mentioned.”
-
-“Dear me,” I said, rather taken aback. “The case does seem black
-against him.”
-
-“Does it?” said Poirot. “That is where we disagree, you and I. Three
-motives—it is almost too much. I am inclined to believe that, after
-all, Ralph Paton is innocent.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
- MRS. ACKROYD
-
-
-After the evening talk I have just chronicled, the affair seemed to
-me to enter on a different phase. The whole thing can be divided into
-two parts, each clear and distinct from the other. Part I. ranges from
-Ackroyd’s death on the Friday evening to the following Monday night.
-It is the straight-forward narrative of what occurred, as presented
-to Hercule Poirot. I was at Poirot’s elbow the whole time. I saw what
-he saw. I tried my best to read his mind. As I know now, I failed in
-this latter task. Though Poirot showed me all his discoveries—as, for
-instance, the gold wedding-ring—he held back the vital and yet logical
-impressions that he formed. As I came to know later, this secrecy was
-characteristic of him. He would throw out hints and suggestions, but
-beyond that he would not go.
-
-As I say, up till the Monday evening, my narrative might have been that
-of Poirot himself. I played Watson to his Sherlock. But after Monday
-our ways diverged. Poirot was busy on his own account. I got to hear
-of what he was doing, because, in King’s Abbot, you get to hear of
-everything, but he did not take me into his confidence beforehand. And
-I, too, had my own preoccupations.
-
-On looking back, the thing that strikes me most is the piecemeal
-character of this period. Every one had a hand in the elucidation of
-the mystery. It was rather like a jig-saw puzzle to which every one
-contributed their own little piece of knowledge or discovery. But their
-task ended there. To Poirot alone belongs the renown of fitting those
-pieces into their correct place.
-
-Some of the incidents seemed at the time irrelevant and unmeaning.
-There was, for instance, the question of the black boots. But that
-comes later.... To take things strictly in chronological order, I must
-begin with the summons from Mrs. Ackroyd.
-
-She sent for me early on Tuesday morning, and since the summons sounded
-an urgent one, I hastened there, expecting to find her _in extremis_.
-
-The lady was in bed. So much did she concede to the etiquette of the
-situation. She gave me her bony hand, and indicated a chair drawn up to
-the bedside.
-
-“Well, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said, “and what’s the matter with you?”
-
-I spoke with that kind of spurious geniality which seems to be expected
-of general practitioners.
-
-“I’m prostrated,” said Mrs. Ackroyd in a faint voice. “Absolutely
-prostrated. It’s the shock of poor Roger’s death. They say these
-things often aren’t felt at the _time_, you know. It’s the reaction
-afterwards.”
-
-It is a pity that a doctor is precluded by his profession from being
-able sometimes to say what he really thinks.
-
-I would have given anything to be able to answer “Bunkum!”
-
-Instead, I suggested a tonic. Mrs. Ackroyd accepted the tonic. One
-move in the game seemed now to be concluded. Not for a moment did I
-imagine that I had been sent for because of the shock occasioned by
-Ackroyd’s death. But Mrs. Ackroyd is totally incapable of pursuing
-a straight-forward course on any subject. She always approaches her
-object by tortuous means. I wondered very much why it was she had sent
-for me.
-
-“And then that scene—yesterday,” continued my patient.
-
-She paused as though expecting me to take up a cue.
-
-“What scene?”
-
-“Doctor, how can you? Have you forgotten? That dreadful little
-Frenchman—or Belgian—or whatever he is. Bullying us all like he did. It
-has quite upset me. Coming on top of Roger’s death.”
-
-“I’m very sorry, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said.
-
-“I don’t know what he meant—shouting at us like he did. I should hope I
-know my duty too well to _dream_ of concealing anything. I have given
-the police _every_ assistance in my power.”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd paused, and I said, “Quite so.” I was beginning to have a
-glimmering of what all the trouble was about.
-
-“No one can say that I have failed in my duty,” continued Mrs. Ackroyd.
-“I am sure Inspector Raglan is perfectly satisfied. Why should this
-little upstart of a foreigner make a fuss? A most ridiculous-looking
-creature he is too—just like a comic Frenchman in a revue. I can’t
-think why Flora insisted on bringing him into the case. She never said
-a word to me about it. Just went off and did it on her own. Flora is
-too independent. I am a woman of the world and her mother. She should
-have come to me for advice first.”
-
-I listened to all this in silence.
-
-“What does he think? That’s what I want to know. Does he actually
-imagine I’m hiding something? He—he—positively _accused_ me yesterday.”
-
-I shrugged my shoulders.
-
-“It is surely of no consequence, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said. “Since you are
-not concealing anything, any remarks he may have made do not apply to
-you.”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd went off at a tangent, after her usual fashion.
-
-“Servants are so tiresome,” she said. “They gossip, and talk amongst
-themselves. And then it gets round—and all the time there’s probably
-nothing in it at all.”
-
-“Have the servants been talking?” I asked. “What about?”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd cast a very shrewd glance at me. It quite threw me off my
-balance.
-
-“I was sure _you’d_ know, doctor, if any one did. You were with M.
-Poirot all the time, weren’t you?”
-
-“I was.”
-
-“Then of course you know. It was that girl, Ursula Bourne, wasn’t it?
-Naturally—she’s leaving. She _would_ want to make all the trouble
-she could. Spiteful, that’s what they are. They’re all alike. Now,
-you being there, doctor, you must know exactly what she did say? I’m
-most anxious that no wrong impression should get about. After all,
-you don’t repeat every little detail to the police, do you? There are
-family matters sometimes—nothing to do with the question of the murder.
-But if the girl was spiteful, she may have made out all sorts of
-things.”
-
-I was shrewd enough to see that a very real anxiety lay behind these
-outpourings. Poirot had been justified in his premises. Of the six
-people round the table yesterday, Mrs. Ackroyd at least had had
-something to hide. It was for me to discover what that something might
-be.
-
-“If I were you, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said brusquely, “I should make a clean
-breast of things.”
-
-She gave a little scream.
-
-“Oh! doctor, how can you be so abrupt. It sounds as though—as
-though——And I can explain everything so simply.”
-
-“Then why not do so,” I suggested.
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd took out a frilled handkerchief, and became tearful.
-
-“I thought, doctor, that you might put it to M. Poirot—explain it, you
-know—because it’s so difficult for a foreigner to see our point of
-view. And you don’t know—nobody could know—what I’ve had to contend
-with. A martyrdom—a long martyrdom. That’s what my life has been. I
-don’t like to speak ill of the dead—but there it is. Not the smallest
-bill, but it had all to be gone over—just as though Roger had had a
-few miserly hundreds a year instead of being (as Mr. Hammond told me
-yesterday) one of the wealthiest men in these parts.”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd paused to dab her eyes with the frilled handkerchief.
-
-“Yes,” I said encouragingly. “You were talking about bills?”
-
-“Those dreadful bills. And some I didn’t like to show Roger at all.
-They were things a man wouldn’t understand. He would have said the
-things weren’t necessary. And of course they mounted up, you know, and
-they kept coming in——”
-
-She looked at me appealingly, as though asking me to condole with her
-on this striking peculiarity.
-
-“It’s a habit they have,” I agreed.
-
-“And the tone altered—became quite abusive. I assure you, doctor,
-I was becoming a nervous wreck. I couldn’t sleep at nights. And a
-dreadful fluttering round the heart. And then I got a letter from a
-Scotch gentleman—as a matter of fact there were two letters—both Scotch
-gentlemen. Mr. Bruce MacPherson was one, and the other were Colin
-MacDonald. Quite a coincidence.”
-
-“Hardly that,” I said dryly. “They are usually Scotch gentlemen, but I
-suspect a Semitic strain in their ancestry.”
-
-“Ten pounds to ten thousand on note of hand alone,” murmured Mrs.
-Ackroyd reminiscently. “I wrote to one of them, but it seemed there
-were difficulties.”
-
-She paused.
-
-I gathered that we were just coming to delicate ground. I have never
-known any one more difficult to bring to the point.
-
-“You see,” murmured Mrs. Ackroyd, “it’s all a question of expectations,
-isn’t it? Testamentary expectations. And though, of course, I expected
-that Roger would provide for me, I didn’t _know_. I thought that if
-only I could glance over a copy of his will—not in any sense of vulgar
-prying—but just so that I could make my own arrangements.”
-
-She glanced sideways at me. The position was now very delicate indeed.
-Fortunately words, ingeniously used, will serve to mask the ugliness of
-naked facts.
-
-“I could only tell this to you, dear Dr. Sheppard,” said Mrs. Ackroyd
-rapidly. “I can trust you not to misjudge me, and to represent the
-matter in the right light to M. Poirot. It was on Friday afternoon——”
-
-She came to a stop and swallowed uncertainly.
-
-“Yes,” I repeated encouragingly. “On Friday afternoon. Well?”
-
-“Every one was out, or so I thought. And I went into Roger’s study—I
-had some real reason for going there—I mean, there was nothing
-underhand about it. And as I saw all the papers heaped on the desk, it
-just came to me, like a flash: ‘I wonder if Roger keeps his will in
-one of the drawers of the desk.’ I’m so impulsive, always was, from a
-child. I do things on the spur of the moment. He’d left his keys—very
-careless of him—in the lock of the top drawer.”
-
-“I see,” I said helpfully. “So you searched the desk. Did you find the
-will?”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd gave a little scream, and I realized that I had not been
-sufficiently diplomatic.
-
-“How dreadful it sounds. But it wasn’t at all like that really.”
-
-“Of course it wasn’t,” I said hastily. “You must forgive my unfortunate
-way of putting things.”
-
-“You see, men are so peculiar. In dear Roger’s place, I should not
-have objected to revealing the provisions of my will. But men are so
-secretive. One is forced to adopt little subterfuges in self-defence.”
-
-“And the result of the little subterfuge?” I asked.
-
-“That’s just what I’m telling you. As I got to the bottom drawer,
-Bourne came in. Most awkward. Of course I shut the drawer and stood
-up, and I called her attention to a few specks of dust on the surface.
-But I didn’t like the way she looked—quite respectful in manner, but a
-very nasty light in her eyes. Almost contemptuous, if you know what I
-mean. I never have liked that girl very much. She’s a good servant, and
-she says Ma’am, and doesn’t object to wearing caps and aprons (which
-I declare to you a lot of them do nowadays), and she can say ‘Not at
-home’ without scruples if she has to answer the door instead of Parker,
-and she doesn’t have those peculiar gurgling noises inside which so
-many parlormaids seem to have when they wait at table——Let me see,
-where was I?”
-
-“You were saying, that in spite of several valuable qualities, you
-never liked Bourne.”
-
-“No more I do. She’s—odd. There’s something different about her from
-the others. Too well educated, that’s my opinion. You can’t tell who
-are ladies and who aren’t nowadays.”
-
-“And what happened next?” I asked.
-
-“Nothing. At least, Roger came in. And I thought he was out for a
-walk. And he said: ‘What’s all this?’ and I said, ‘Nothing. I just came
-in to fetch _Punch_.’ And I took _Punch_ and went out with it. Bourne
-stayed behind. I heard her asking Roger if she could speak to him for a
-minute. I went straight up to my room, to lie down. I was very upset.”
-
-There was a pause.
-
-“You will explain to M. Poirot, won’t you? You can see for yourself
-what a trivial matter the whole thing was. But, of course, when he was
-so stern about concealing things, I thought of this at once. Bourne
-may have made some extraordinary story out of it, but you can explain,
-can’t you?”
-
-“That is all?” I said. “You have told me everything?”
-
-“Ye-es,” said Mrs. Ackroyd. “Oh! yes,” she added firmly.
-
-But I had noted the momentary hesitation, and I knew that there was
-still something she was keeping back. It was nothing less than a flash
-of sheer genius that prompted me to ask the question I did.
-
-“Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said, “was it you who left the silver table open?”
-
-I had my answer in the blush of guilt that even rouge and powder could
-not conceal.
-
-“How did you know?” she whispered.
-
-“It was you, then?”
-
-“Yes—I—you see—there were one or two pieces of old silver—very
-interesting. I had been reading up the subject and there was an
-illustration of quite a small piece which had fetched an immense
-sum at Christy’s. It looked to me just the same as the one in the
-silver table. I thought I would take it up to London with me when I
-went—and—and have it valued. Then if it really was a valuable piece,
-just think what a charming surprise it would have been for Roger?”
-
-I refrained from comments, accepting Mrs. Ackroyd’s story on its
-merits. I even forbore to ask her why it was necessary to abstract what
-she wanted in such a surreptitious manner.
-
-“Why did you leave the lid open?” I asked. “Did you forget?”
-
-“I was startled,” said Mrs. Ackroyd. “I heard footsteps coming along
-the terrace outside. I hastened out of the room and just got up the
-stairs before Parker opened the front door to you.”
-
-“That must have been Miss Russell,” I said thoughtfully. Mrs. Ackroyd
-had revealed to me one fact that was extremely interesting. Whether her
-designs upon Ackroyd’s silver had been strictly honorable I neither
-knew nor cared. What did interest me was the fact that Miss Russell
-must have entered the drawing-room by the window, and that I had not
-been wrong when I judged her to be out of breath with running. Where
-had she been? I thought of the summer-house and the scrap of cambric.
-
-“I wonder if Miss Russell has her handkerchiefs starched!” I exclaimed
-on the spur of the moment.
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd’s start recalled me to myself, and I rose.
-
-“You think you can explain to M. Poirot?” she asked anxiously.
-
-“Oh, certainly. Absolutely.”
-
-I got away at last, after being forced to listen to more justifications
-of her conduct.
-
-The parlormaid was in the hall, and it was she who helped me on with my
-overcoat. I observed her more closely than I had done heretofore. It
-was clear that she had been crying.
-
-“How is it,” I asked, “that you told us that Mr. Ackroyd sent for you
-on Friday to his study? I hear now that it was _you_ who asked to speak
-to _him_?”
-
-For a minute the girl’s eyes dropped before mine.
-
-Then she spoke.
-
-“I meant to leave in any case,” she said uncertainly.
-
-I said no more. She opened the front door for me. Just as I was passing
-out, she said suddenly in a low voice:—
-
-“Excuse me, sir, is there any news of Captain Paton?”
-
-I shook my head, looking at her inquiringly.
-
-“He ought to come back,” she said. “Indeed—indeed he ought to come
-back.”
-
-She was looking at me with appealing eyes.
-
-“Does no one know where he is?” she asked.
-
-“Do you?” I said sharply.
-
-She shook her head.
-
-“No, indeed. I know nothing. But any one who was a friend to him would
-tell him this: he ought to come back.”
-
-I lingered, thinking that perhaps the girl would say more. Her next
-question surprised me.
-
-“When do they think the murder was done? Just before ten o’clock?”
-
-“That is the idea,” I said. “Between a quarter to ten and the hour.”
-
-“Not earlier? Not before a quarter to ten?”
-
-I looked at her attentively. She was so clearly eager for a reply in
-the affirmative.
-
-“That’s out of the question,” I said. “Miss Ackroyd saw her uncle alive
-at a quarter to ten.”
-
-She turned away, and her whole figure seemed to droop.
-
-“A handsome girl,” I said to myself as I drove off. “An exceedingly
-handsome girl.”
-
-Caroline was at home. She had had a visit from Poirot and was very
-pleased and important about it.
-
-“I am helping him with the case,” she explained.
-
-I felt rather uneasy. Caroline is bad enough as it is. What will she be
-like with her detective instincts encouraged?
-
-“Are you going round the neighborhood looking for Ralph Paton’s
-mysterious girl?” I inquired.
-
-“I might do that on my own account,” said Caroline. “No, this is a
-special thing M. Poirot wants me to find out for him.”
-
-“What is it?” I asked.
-
-“He wants to know whether Ralph Paton’s boots were black or brown,”
-said Caroline with tremendous solemnity.
-
-I stared at her. I see now that I was unbelievably stupid about these
-boots. I failed altogether to grasp the point.
-
-“They were brown shoes,” I said. “I saw them.”
-
-“Not shoes, James, boots. M. Poirot wants to know whether a pair of
-boots Ralph had with him at the hotel were brown or black. A lot hangs
-on it.”
-
-Call me dense if you like. I didn’t see.
-
-“And how are you going to find out?” I asked.
-
-Caroline said there would be no difficulty about that. Our Annie’s
-dearest friend was Miss Ganett’s maid, Clara. And Clara was walking
-out with the boots at the Three Boars. The whole thing was simplicity
-itself, and by the aid of Miss Ganett, who coöperated loyally, at once
-giving Clara leave of absence, the matter was rushed through at express
-speed.
-
-It was when we were sitting down to lunch that Caroline remarked, with
-would-be unconcern:—
-
-“About those boots of Ralph Paton’s.”
-
-“Well,” I said, “what about them?”
-
-“M. Poirot thought they were probably brown. He was wrong. They’re
-black.”
-
-And Caroline nodded her head several times. She evidently felt that she
-had scored a point over Poirot.
-
-I did not answer. I was puzzling over what the color of a pair of Ralph
-Paton’s boots had to do with the case.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
- GEOFFREY RAYMOND
-
-
-I was to have a further proof that day of the success of Poirot’s
-tactics. That challenge of his had been a subtle touch born of his
-knowledge of human nature. A mixture of fear and guilt had wrung the
-truth from Mrs. Ackroyd. She was the first to react.
-
-That afternoon when I returned from seeing my patients, Caroline told
-me that Geoffrey Raymond had just left.
-
-“Did he want to see me?” I asked, as I hung up my coat in the hall.
-
-Caroline was hovering by my elbow.
-
-“It was M. Poirot he wanted to see,” she said. “He’d just come from The
-Larches. M. Poirot was out. Mr. Raymond thought that he might be here,
-or that you might know where he was.”
-
-“I haven’t the least idea.”
-
-“I tried to make him wait,” said Caroline, “but he said he would call
-back at The Larches in half an hour, and went away down the village. A
-great pity, because M. Poirot came in practically the minute after he
-left.”
-
-“Came in here?”
-
-“No, to his own house.”
-
-“How do you know?”
-
-“The side window,” said Caroline briefly.
-
-It seemed to me that we had now exhausted the topic. Caroline thought
-otherwise.
-
-“Aren’t you going across?”
-
-“Across where?”
-
-“To The Larches, of course.”
-
-“My dear Caroline,” I said, “what for?”
-
-“Mr. Raymond wanted to see him very particularly,” said Caroline. “You
-might hear what it’s all about.”
-
-I raised my eyebrows.
-
-“Curiosity is not my besetting sin,” I remarked coldly. “I can exist
-comfortably without knowing exactly what my neighbors are doing and
-thinking.”
-
-“Stuff and nonsense, James,” said my sister. “You want to know just
-as much as I do. You’re not so honest, that’s all. You always have to
-pretend.”
-
-“Really, Caroline,” I said, and retired into my surgery.
-
-Ten minutes later Caroline tapped at the door and entered. In her hand
-she held what seemed to be a pot of jam.
-
-“I wonder, James,” she said, “if you would mind taking this pot of
-medlar jelly across to M. Poirot? I promised it to him. He has never
-tasted any home-made medlar jelly.”
-
-“Why can’t Annie go?” I asked coldly.
-
-“She’s doing some mending. I can’t spare her.”
-
-Caroline and I looked at each other.
-
-“Very well,” I said, rising. “But if I take the beastly thing, I shall
-just leave it at the door. You understand that?”
-
-My sister raised her eyebrows.
-
-“Naturally,” she said. “Who suggested you should do anything else?”
-
-The honors were with Caroline.
-
-“If you _do_ happen to see M. Poirot,” she said, as I opened the front
-door, “you might tell him about the boots.”
-
-It was a most subtle parting shot. I wanted dreadfully to understand
-the enigma of the boots. When the old lady with the Breton cap opened
-the door to me, I found myself asking if M. Poirot was in, quite
-automatically.
-
-Poirot sprang up to meet me, with every appearance of pleasure.
-
-“Sit down, my good friend,” he said. “The big chair? This small one?
-The room is not too hot, no?”
-
-I thought it was stifling, but refrained from saying so. The windows
-were closed, and a large fire burned in the grate.
-
-“The English people, they have a mania for the fresh air,” declared
-Poirot. “The big air, it is all very well outside, where it belongs.
-Why admit it to the house? But let us not discuss such banalities. You
-have something for me, yes?”
-
-“Two things,” I said. “First—this—from my sister.”
-
-I handed over the pot of medlar jelly.
-
-“How kind of Mademoiselle Caroline. She has remembered her promise. And
-the second thing?”
-
-“Information—of a kind.”
-
-And I told him of my interview with Mrs. Ackroyd. He listened with
-interest, but not much excitement.
-
-“It clears the ground,” he said thoughtfully. “And it has a certain
-value as confirming the evidence of the housekeeper. She said, you
-remember, that she found the silver table lid open and closed it down
-in passing.”
-
-“What about her statement that she went into the drawing-room to see if
-the flowers were fresh?”
-
-“Ah! we never took that very seriously, did we, my friend? It was
-patently an excuse, trumped up in a hurry, by a woman who felt it
-urgent to explain her presence—which, by the way, you would probably
-never have thought of questioning. I considered it possible that her
-agitation might arise from the fact that she had been tampering with
-the silver table, but I think now that we must look for another cause.”
-
-“Yes,” I said. “Whom did she go out to meet? And why?”
-
-“You think she went to meet some one?”
-
-“I do.”
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“So do I,” he said thoughtfully.
-
-There was a pause.
-
-“By the way,” I said, “I’ve got a message for you from my sister. Ralph
-Paton’s boots were black, not brown.”
-
-I was watching him closely as I gave the message, and I fancied that
-I saw a momentary flicker of discomposure. If so, it passed almost
-immediately.
-
-“She is absolutely positive they are not brown?”
-
-“Absolutely.”
-
-“Ah!” said Poirot regretfully. “That is a pity.”
-
-And he seemed quite crestfallen.
-
-He entered into no explanations, but at once started a new subject of
-conversation.
-
-“The housekeeper, Miss Russell, who came to consult you on that Friday
-morning—is it indiscreet to ask what passed at the interview—apart from
-the medical details, I mean?”
-
-“Not at all,” I said. “When the professional part of the conversation
-was over, we talked for a few minutes about poisons, and the ease or
-difficulty of detecting them, and about drug-taking and drug-takers.”
-
-“With special reference to cocaine?” asked Poirot.
-
-“How did you know?” I asked, somewhat surprised.
-
-For answer, the little man rose and crossed the room to where
-newspapers were filed. He brought me a copy of the _Daily Budget_,
-dated Friday, 16th September, and showed me an article dealing with the
-smuggling of cocaine. It was a somewhat lurid article, written with an
-eye to picturesque effect.
-
-“That is what put cocaine into her head, my friend,” he said.
-
-I would have catechized him further, for I did not quite understand his
-meaning, but at that moment the door opened and Geoffrey Raymond was
-announced.
-
-He came in fresh and debonair as ever, and greeted us both.
-
-“How are you, doctor? M. Poirot, this is the second time I’ve been here
-this morning. I was anxious to catch you.”
-
-“Perhaps I’d better be off,” I suggested rather awkwardly.
-
-“Not on my account, doctor. No, it’s just this,” he went on, seating
-himself at a wave of invitation from Poirot, “I’ve got a confession to
-make.”
-
-“_En verité_?” said Poirot, with an air of polite interest.
-
-“Oh, it’s of no consequence, really. But, as a matter of fact, my
-conscience has been pricking me ever since yesterday afternoon. You
-accused us all of keeping back something, M. Poirot. I plead guilty.
-I’ve had something up my sleeve.”
-
-“And what is that, M. Raymond?”
-
-“As I say, it’s nothing of consequence—just this. I was in debt—badly,
-and that legacy came in the nick of time. Five hundred pounds puts me
-on my feet again with a little to spare.”
-
-He smiled at us both with that engaging frankness that made him such a
-likable youngster.
-
-“You know how it is. Suspicious looking policeman—don’t like to admit
-you were hard up for money—think it will look bad to them. But I was
-a fool, really, because Blunt and I were in the billiard room from a
-quarter to ten onwards, so I’ve got a watertight alibi and nothing to
-fear. Still, when you thundered out that stuff about concealing things,
-I felt a nasty prick of conscience, and I thought I’d like to get it
-off my mind.”
-
-He got up again and stood smiling at us.
-
-“You are a very wise young man,” said Poirot, nodding at him with
-approval. “See you, when I know that any one is hiding things from me,
-I suspect that the thing hidden may be something very bad indeed. You
-have done well.”
-
-“I’m glad I’m cleared from suspicion,” laughed Raymond. “I’ll be off
-now.”
-
-“So that is that,” I remarked, as the door closed behind the young
-secretary.
-
-“Yes,” agreed Poirot. “A mere bagatelle—but if he had not been in the
-billiard room—who knows? After all, many crimes have been committed for
-the sake of less than five hundred pounds. It all depends on what sum
-is sufficient to break a man. A question of the relativity, is it not
-so? Have you reflected, my friend, that many people in that house stood
-to benefit by Mr. Ackroyd’s death? Mrs. Ackroyd, Miss Flora, young Mr.
-Raymond, the housekeeper, Miss Russell. Only one, in fact, does not,
-Major Blunt.”
-
-His tone in uttering that name was so peculiar that I looked up,
-puzzled.
-
-“I don’t quite understand you?” I said.
-
-“Two of the people I accused have given me the truth.”
-
-“You think Major Blunt has something to conceal also?”
-
-“As for that,” remarked Poirot nonchalantly, “there is a saying, is
-there not, that Englishmen conceal only one thing—their love? And Major
-Blunt, I should say, is not good at concealments.”
-
-“Sometimes,” I said, “I wonder if we haven’t rather jumped to
-conclusions on one point.”
-
-“What is that?”
-
-“We’ve assumed that the blackmailer of Mrs. Ferrars is necessarily the
-murderer of Mr. Ackroyd. Mightn’t we be mistaken?”
-
-Poirot nodded energetically.
-
-“Very good. Very good indeed. I wondered if that idea would come to
-you. Of course it is possible. But we must remember one point. The
-letter disappeared. Still, that, as you say, may not necessarily mean
-that the murderer took it. When you first found the body, Parker may
-have abstracted the letter unnoticed by you.”
-
-“Parker?”
-
-“Yes, Parker. I always come back to Parker—not as the murderer—no, he
-did not commit the murder; but who is more suitable than he as the
-mysterious scoundrel who terrorized Mrs. Ferrars? He may have got his
-information about Mr. Ferrars’s death from one of the King’s Paddock
-servants. At any rate, he is more likely to have come upon it than a
-casual guest such as Blunt, for instance.”
-
-“Parker might have taken the letter,” I admitted. “It wasn’t till later
-that I noticed it was gone.”
-
-“How much later? After Blunt and Raymond were in the room, or before?”
-
-“I can’t remember,” I said slowly. “I think it was before—no,
-afterwards. Yes, I’m almost sure it was afterwards.”
-
-“That widens the field to three,” said Poirot thoughtfully. “But Parker
-is the most likely. It is in my mind to try a little experiment with
-Parker. How say you, my friend, will you accompany me to Fernly?”
-
-I acquiesced, and we set out at once. Poirot asked to see Miss Ackroyd,
-and presently Flora came to us.
-
-“Mademoiselle Flora,” said Poirot, “I have to confide in you a little
-secret. I am not yet satisfied of the innocence of Parker. I propose to
-make a little experiment with your assistance. I want to reconstruct
-some of his actions on that night. But we must think of something to
-tell him—ah! I have it. I wish to satisfy myself as to whether voices
-in the little lobby could have been heard outside on the terrace. Now,
-ring for Parker, if you will be so good.”
-
-I did so, and presently the butler appeared, suave as ever.
-
-“You rang, sir?”
-
-“Yes, my good Parker. I have in mind a little experiment. I have placed
-Major Blunt on the terrace outside the study window. I want to see if
-any one there could have heard the voices of Miss Ackroyd and yourself
-in the lobby that night. I want to enact that little scene over again.
-Perhaps you would fetch the tray or whatever it was you were carrying?”
-
-Parker vanished, and we repaired to the lobby outside the study door.
-Presently we heard a chink in the outer hall, and Parker appeared in
-the doorway carrying a tray with a siphon, a decanter of whisky, and
-two glasses on it.
-
-“One moment,” cried Poirot, raising his hand and seemingly very
-excited. “We must have everything in order. Just as it occurred. It is
-a little method of mine.”
-
-“A foreign custom, sir,” said Parker. “Reconstruction of the crime they
-call it, do they not?”
-
-He was quite imperturbable as he stood there politely waiting on
-Poirot’s orders.
-
-“Ah! he knows something, the good Parker,” cried Poirot. “He has read
-of these things. Now, I beg you, let us have everything of the most
-exact. You came from the outer hall—so. Mademoiselle was—where?”
-
-“Here,” said Flora, taking up her stand just outside the study door.
-
-“Quite right, sir,” said Parker.
-
-“I had just closed the door,” continued Flora.
-
-“Yes, miss,” agreed Parker. “Your hand was still on the handle as it is
-now.”
-
-“Then _allez_,” said Poirot. “Play me the little comedy.”
-
-Flora stood with her hand on the door handle, and Parker came stepping
-through the door from the hall, bearing the tray.
-
-He stopped just inside the door. Flora spoke.
-
-“Oh! Parker. Mr. Ackroyd doesn’t want to be disturbed again to-night.”
-
-“Is that right?” she added in an undertone.
-
-“To the best of my recollection, Miss Flora,” said Parker, “but I fancy
-you used the word evening instead of night.” Then, raising his voice
-in a somewhat theatrical fashion: “Very good, miss. Shall I lock up as
-usual?”
-
-“Yes, please.”
-
-Parker retired through the door, Flora followed him, and started to
-ascend the main staircase.
-
-“Is that enough?” she asked over her shoulder.
-
-“Admirable,” declared the little man, rubbing his hands. “By the way,
-Parker, are you sure there were two glasses on the tray that evening?
-Who was the second one for?”
-
-“I always bring two glasses, sir,” said Parker. “Is there anything
-further?”
-
-“Nothing. I thank you.”
-
-Parker withdrew, dignified to the last.
-
-Poirot stood in the middle of the hall frowning. Flora came down and
-joined us.
-
-“Has your experiment been successful?” she asked. “I don’t quite
-understand, you know——”
-
-Poirot smiled admiringly at her.
-
-“It is not necessary that you should,” he said. “But tell me, were
-there indeed two glasses on Parker’s tray that night?”
-
-Flora wrinkled her brows a minute.
-
-“I really can’t remember,” she said. “I think there were. Is—is that
-the object of your experiment?”
-
-Poirot took her hand and patted it.
-
-“Put it this way,” he said. “I am always interested to see if people
-will speak the truth.”
-
-“And did Parker speak the truth?”
-
-“I rather think he did,” said Poirot thoughtfully.
-
-A few minutes later saw us retracing our steps to the village.
-
-“What was the point of that question about the glasses?” I asked
-curiously.
-
-Poirot shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“One must say something,” he remarked. “That particular question did as
-well as any other.”
-
-I stared at him.
-
-“At any rate, my friend,” he said more seriously, “I know now something
-I wanted to know. Let us leave it at that.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
- AN EVENING AT MAH JONG
-
-
-That night we had a little Mah Jong party. This kind of simple
-entertainment is very popular in King’s Abbot. The guests arrive in
-goloshes and waterproofs after dinner. They partake of coffee and later
-of cake, sandwiches, and tea.
-
-On this particular night our guests were Miss Ganett and Colonel
-Carter, who lives near the church. A good deal of gossip is handed
-round at these evenings, sometimes seriously interfering with the
-game in progress. We used to play bridge—chatty bridge of the worst
-description. We find Mah Jong much more peaceful. The irritated demand
-as to why on earth your partner did not lead a certain card is entirely
-done away with, and though we still express criticisms frankly, there
-is not the same acrimonious spirit.
-
-“Very cold evening, eh, Sheppard?” said Colonel Carter, standing with
-his back to the fire. Caroline had taken Miss Ganett to her own room,
-and was there assisting her to disentangle herself from her many wraps.
-“Reminds me of the Afghan passes.”
-
-“Indeed?” I said politely.
-
-“Very mysterious business this about poor Ackroyd,” continued the
-colonel, accepting a cup of coffee. “A deuce of a lot behind it—that’s
-what I say. Between you and me, Sheppard, I’ve heard the word blackmail
-mentioned!”
-
-The colonel gave me the look which might be tabulated “one man of the
-world to another.”
-
-“A woman in it, no doubt,” he said. “Depend upon it, a woman in it.”
-
-Caroline and Miss Ganett joined us at this minute. Miss Ganett drank
-coffee whilst Caroline got out the Mah Jong box and poured out the
-tiles upon the table.
-
-“Washing the tiles,” said the colonel facetiously. “That’s
-right—washing the tiles, as we used to say in the Shanghai Club.”
-
-It is the private opinion of both Caroline and myself that Colonel
-Carter has never been in the Shanghai Club in his life. More, that he
-has never been farther east than India, where he juggled with tins of
-bully beef and plum and apple jam during the Great War. But the colonel
-is determinedly military, and in King’s Abbot we permit people to
-indulge their little idiosyncrasies freely.
-
-“Shall we begin?” said Caroline.
-
-We sat round the table. For some five minutes there was complete
-silence, owing to the fact that there is tremendous secret competition
-amongst us as to who can build their wall quickest.
-
-“Go on, James,” said Caroline at last. “You’re East Wind.”
-
-I discarded a tile. A round or two proceeded, broken by the monotonous
-remarks of “Three Bamboos,” “Two Circles,” “Pung,” and frequently
-from Miss Ganett “Unpung,” owing to that lady’s habit of too hastily
-claiming tiles to which she had no right.
-
-“I saw Flora Ackroyd this morning,” said Miss Ganett. “Pung—no—Unpung.
-I made a mistake.”
-
-“Four Circles,” said Caroline. “Where did you see her?”
-
-“She didn’t see _me_,” said Miss Ganett, with that tremendous
-significance only to be met with in small villages.
-
-“Ah!” said Caroline interestedly. “Chow.”
-
-“I believe,” said Miss Ganett, temporarily diverted, “that it’s the
-right thing nowadays to say ‘Chee’ not ‘Chow.’”
-
-“Nonsense,” said Caroline. “I have always said ‘_Chow_.’”
-
-“In the Shanghai Club,” said Colonel Carter, “they say ‘_Chow_.’”
-
-Miss Ganett retired, crushed.
-
-“What were you saying about Flora Ackroyd?” asked Caroline, after a
-moment or two devoted to the game. “Was she with any one?”
-
-“Very much so,” said Miss Ganett.
-
-The eyes of the two ladies met, and seemed to exchange information.
-
-“Really,” said Caroline interestedly. “Is that it? Well, it doesn’t
-surprise me in the least.”
-
-“We’re waiting for you to discard, Miss Caroline,” said the colonel. He
-sometimes affects the pose of the bluff male, intent on the game and
-indifferent to gossip. But nobody is deceived.
-
-“If you ask me,” said Miss Ganett. (“Was that a Bamboo you discarded,
-dear? Oh! no, I see now—it was a Circle.) As I was saying, if you ask
-me, Flora’s been exceedingly lucky. Exceedingly lucky she’s been.”
-
-“How’s that, Miss Ganett?” asked the colonel. “I’ll Pung that Green
-Dragon. How do you make out that Miss Flora’s been lucky? Very charming
-girl and all that, I know.”
-
-“I mayn’t know very much about crime,” said Miss Ganett, with the air
-of one who knows everything there is to know, “but I can tell you one
-thing. The first question that’s always asked is ‘Who last saw the
-deceased alive?’ And the person who did is regarded with suspicion.
-Now, Flora Ackroyd last saw her uncle alive. It might have looked very
-nasty for her—very nasty indeed. It’s my opinion—and I give it for what
-it’s worth, that Ralph Paton is staying away on her account, to draw
-suspicion away from her.”
-
-“Come, now,” I protested mildly, “you surely can’t suggest that a young
-girl like Flora Ackroyd is capable of stabbing her uncle in cold blood?”
-
-“Well, I don’t know,” said Miss Ganett. “I’ve just been reading a book
-from the library about the underworld of Paris, and it says that some
-of the worst women criminals are young girls with the faces of angels.”
-
-“That’s in France,” said Caroline instantly.
-
-“Just so,” said the colonel. “Now, I’ll tell you a very curious thing—a
-story that was going round the Bazaars in India....”
-
-The colonel’s story was one of interminable length, and of curiously
-little interest. A thing that happened in India many years ago cannot
-compare for a moment with an event that took place in King’s Abbot the
-day before yesterday.
-
-It was Caroline who brought the colonel’s story to a close by
-fortunately going Mah Jong. After the slight unpleasantness always
-occasioned by my corrections of Caroline’s somewhat faulty arithmetic,
-we started a new hand.
-
-“East Wind passes,” said Caroline. “I’ve got an idea of my own about
-Ralph Paton. Three Characters. But I’m keeping it to myself for the
-present.”
-
-“Are you, dear?” said Miss Ganett. “Chow—I mean Pung.”
-
-“Yes,” said Caroline firmly.
-
-“Was it all right about the boots?” asked Miss Ganett. “Their being
-black, I mean?”
-
-“Quite all right,” said Caroline.
-
-“What was the point, do you think?” asked Miss Ganett.
-
-Caroline pursed up her lips, and shook her head with an air of knowing
-all about it.
-
-“Pung,” said Miss Ganett. “No—Unpung. I suppose that now the doctor’s
-in with M. Poirot he knows all the secrets?”
-
-“Far from it,” I said.
-
-“James is so modest,” said Caroline. “Ah! a concealed Kong.”
-
-The colonel gave vent to a whistle. For the moment gossip was
-forgotten.
-
-“Your own wind, too,” he said. “_And_ you’ve got two Pungs of Dragons.
-We must be careful. Miss Caroline’s out for a big hand.”
-
-We played for some minutes with no irrelevant conversation.
-
-“This M. Poirot now,” said Colonel Carter, “is he really such a great
-detective?”
-
-“The greatest the world has ever known,” said Caroline solemnly. “He
-had to come here incognito to avoid publicity.”
-
-“Chow,” said Miss Ganett. “Quite wonderful for our little village, I’m
-sure. By the way, Clara—my maid, you know—is great friends with Elsie,
-the housemaid at Fernly, and what do you think Elsie told her? That
-there’s been a lot of money stolen, and it’s her opinion—Elsie’s—I
-mean, that the parlormaid had something to do with it. She’s leaving
-at the month, and she’s crying a good deal at night. If you ask me,
-the girl is very likely in league with a _gang_. She’s always been a
-queer girl—she’s not friends with any of the girls round here. She
-goes off by herself on her days out—very unnatural, I call it, and
-most suspicious. I asked her once to come to our Girls’ Friendly
-Evenings, but she refused, and then I asked her a few questions about
-her home and her family—all that sort of thing, and I’m bound to say I
-considered her manner most impertinent. Outwardly very respectful—but
-she shut me up in the most barefaced way.”
-
-Miss Ganett stopped for breath, and the colonel, who was totally
-uninterested in the servant question, remarked that in the Shanghai
-Club brisk play was the invariable rule.
-
-We had a round of brisk play.
-
-“That Miss Russell,” said Caroline. “She came here pretending to
-consult James on Friday morning. It’s my opinion she wanted to see
-where the poisons were kept. Five Characters.”
-
-“Chow,” said Miss Ganett. “What an extraordinary idea? I wonder if you
-can be right.”
-
-“Talking of poisons,” said the colonel. “Eh—what? Haven’t I discarded?
-Oh! Eight Bamboos.”
-
-“Mah Jong!” said Miss Ganett.
-
-Caroline was very much annoyed.
-
-“One Red Dragon,” she said regretfully, “and I should have had a hand
-of three doubles.”
-
-“I’ve had two Red Dragons all the time,” I mentioned.
-
-“So exactly like you, James,” said Caroline reproachfully. “You’ve no
-conception of the spirit of the game.”
-
-I myself thought I had played rather cleverly. I should have had to pay
-Caroline an enormous amount if she had gone Mah Jong. Miss Ganett’s Mah
-Jong was of the poorest variety possible, as Caroline did not fail to
-point out to her.
-
-East Wind passed, and we started a new hand in silence.
-
-“What I was going to tell you just now was this,” said Caroline.
-
-“Yes?” said Miss Ganett encouragingly.
-
-“My idea about Ralph Paton, I mean.”
-
-“Yes, dear,” said Miss Ganett, still more encouragingly. “Chow!”
-
-“It’s a sign of weakness to Chow so early,” said Caroline severely.
-“You should go for a big hand.”
-
-“I know,” said Miss Ganett. “You were saying—about Ralph Paton, you
-know?”
-
-“Yes. Well, I’ve a pretty shrewd idea where he is.”
-
-We all stopped to stare at her.
-
-“This is very interesting, Miss Caroline,” said Colonel Carter. “All
-your own idea, eh?”
-
-“Well, not exactly. I’ll tell you about it. You know that big map of
-the county we have in the hall?”
-
-We all said Yes.
-
-“As M. Poirot was going out the other day, he stopped and looked at it,
-and he made some remark—I can’t remember exactly what it was. Something
-about Cranchester being the only big town anywhere near us—which is
-true, of course. But after he had gone—it came to me suddenly.”
-
-“What came to you?”
-
-“His meaning. Of course Ralph is in Cranchester.”
-
-It was at that moment that I knocked down the rack that held my pieces.
-My sister immediately reproved me for clumsiness, but half-heartedly.
-She was intent on her theory.
-
-“Cranchester, Miss Caroline?” said Colonel Carter. “Surely not
-Cranchester! It’s so near.”
-
-“That’s exactly it,” cried Caroline triumphantly. “It seems quite clear
-by now that he didn’t get away from here by train. He must simply have
-walked into Cranchester. And I believe he’s there still. No one would
-dream of his being so near at hand.”
-
-I pointed out several objections to the theory, but when once Caroline
-has got something firmly into her head, nothing dislodges it.
-
-“And you think M. Poirot has the same idea,” said Miss Ganett
-thoughtfully. “It’s a curious coincidence, but I was out for a walk
-this afternoon on the Cranchester road, and he passed me in a car
-coming from that direction.”
-
-We all looked at each other.
-
-“Why, dear me,” said Miss Ganett suddenly, “I’m Mah Jong all the time,
-and I never noticed it.”
-
-Caroline’s attention was distracted from her own inventive exercises.
-She pointed out to Miss Ganett that a hand consisting of mixed suits
-and too many Chows was hardly worth going Mah Jong on. Miss Ganett
-listened imperturbably and collected her counters.
-
-“Yes, dear, I know what you mean,” she said. “But it rather depends on
-what kind of a hand you have to start with, doesn’t it?”
-
-“You’ll never get the big hands if you don’t go for them,” urged
-Caroline.
-
-“Well, we must all play our own way, mustn’t we?” said Miss Ganett. She
-looked down at her counters. “After all, I’m up, so far.”
-
-Caroline, who was considerably down, said nothing.
-
-East Wind passed, and we set to once more. Annie brought in the tea
-things. Caroline and Miss Ganett were both slightly ruffled as is
-often the case during one of these festive evenings.
-
-“If you would only play a leetle quicker, dear,” said Caroline, as Miss
-Ganett hesitated over her discard. “The Chinese put down the tiles so
-quickly it sounds like little birds pattering.”
-
-For some few minutes we played like the Chinese.
-
-“You haven’t contributed much to the sum of information, Sheppard,”
-said Colonel Carter genially. “You’re a sly dog. Hand in glove with the
-great detective, and not a hint as to the way things are going.”
-
-“James is an extraordinary creature,” said Caroline. “He can _not_
-bring himself to part with information.”
-
-She looked at me with some disfavor.
-
-“I assure you,” I said, “that I don’t know anything. Poirot keeps his
-own counsel.”
-
-“Wise man,” said the colonel with a chuckle. “He doesn’t give himself
-away. But they’re wonderful fellows, these foreign detectives. Up to
-all sorts of dodges, I believe.”
-
-“Pung,” said Miss Ganett, in a tone of quiet triumph. “And Mah Jong.”
-
-The situation became more strained. It was annoyance at Miss Ganett’s
-going Mah Jong for the third time running which prompted Caroline to
-say to me as we built a fresh wall:—
-
-“You are too tiresome, James. You sit there like a dead head, and say
-nothing at all!”
-
-“But, my dear,” I protested, “I have really nothing to say—that is, of
-the kind you mean.”
-
-“Nonsense,” said Caroline, as she sorted her hand. “You _must_ know
-something interesting.”
-
-I did not answer for a moment. I was overwhelmed and intoxicated. I had
-read of there being such a thing as the Perfect Winning—going Mah Jong
-on one’s original hand. I had never hoped to hold the hand myself.
-
-With suppressed triumph I laid my hand face upwards on the table.
-
-“As they say in the Shanghai Club,” I remarked, “Tin-ho—the Perfect
-Winning!”
-
-The colonel’s eyes nearly bulged out of his head.
-
-“Upon my soul,” he said. “What an extraordinary thing. I never saw that
-happen before!”
-
-It was then that I went on, goaded by Caroline’s gibes, and rendered
-reckless by my triumph.
-
-“And as to anything interesting,” I said. “What about a gold wedding
-ring with a date and ‘From R.’ inside.”
-
-I pass over the scene that followed. I was made to say exactly where
-this treasure was found. I was made to reveal the date.
-
-“March 13th,” said Caroline. “Just six months ago. Ah!”
-
-Out of the babel of excited suggestions and suppositions three theories
-were evolved:—
-
-1. That of Colonel Carter: that Ralph was secretly married to Flora.
-The first or most simple solution.
-
-2. That of Miss Ganett: that Roger Ackroyd had been secretly married to
-Mrs. Ferrars.
-
-3. That of my sister: that Roger Ackroyd had married his housekeeper,
-Miss Russell.
-
-A fourth or super-theory was propounded by Caroline later as we went up
-to bed.
-
-“Mark my words,” she said suddenly, “I shouldn’t be at all surprised if
-Geoffrey Raymond and Flora weren’t married.”
-
-“Surely it would be ‘From G,’ not ‘From R’ then,” I suggested.
-
-“You never know. Some girls call men by their surnames. And you heard
-what Miss Ganett said this evening—about Flora’s carryings on.”
-
-Strictly speaking, I had not heard Miss Ganett say anything of the
-kind, but I respected Caroline’s knowledge of innuendoes.
-
-“How about Hector Blunt,” I hinted. “If it’s anybody——”
-
-“Nonsense,” said Caroline. “I dare say he admires her—may even be in
-love with her. But depend upon it a girl isn’t going to fall in love
-with a man old enough to be her father when there’s a good-looking
-young secretary about. She may encourage Major Blunt just as a blind.
-Girls are very artful. But there’s one thing I _do_ tell you, James
-Sheppard. Flora Ackroyd does not care a penny piece for Ralph Paton,
-and never has. You can take it from me.”
-
-I took it from her meekly.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
- PARKER
-
-
-It occurred to me the next morning that under the exhilaration
-produced by Tin-ho, or the Perfect Winning, I might have been slightly
-indiscreet. True, Poirot had not asked me to keep the discovery of
-the ring to myself. On the other hand, he had said nothing about it
-whilst at Fernly, and as far as I knew, I was the only person aware
-that it had been found. I felt distinctly guilty. The fact was by now
-spreading through King’s Abbot like wildfire. I was expecting wholesale
-reproaches from Poirot any minute.
-
-The joint funeral of Mrs. Ferrars and Roger Ackroyd was fixed for
-eleven o’clock. It was a melancholy and impressive ceremony. All the
-party from Fernly were there.
-
-After it was over, Poirot, who had also been present, took me by the
-arm, and invited me to accompany him back to The Larches. He was
-looking very grave, and I feared that my indiscretion of the night
-before had got round to his ears. But it soon transpired that his
-thoughts were occupied by something of a totally different nature.
-
-“See you,” he said. “We must act. With your help I propose to examine a
-witness. We will question him, we will put such fear into him that the
-truth is bound to come out.”
-
-“What witness are you talking of?” I asked, very much surprised.
-
-“Parker!” said Poirot. “I asked him to be at my house this morning at
-twelve o’clock. He should await us there at this very minute.”
-
-“What do you think,” I ventured, glancing sideways at his face.
-
-“I know this—that I am not satisfied.”
-
-“You think that it was he who blackmailed Mrs. Ferrars?”
-
-“Either that, or——”
-
-“Well?” I said, after waiting a minute or two.
-
-“My friend, I will say this to you—I hope it was he.”
-
-The gravity of his manner, and something indefinable that tinged it,
-reduced me to silence.
-
-On arrival at The Larches, we were informed that Parker was already
-there awaiting our return. As we entered the room, the butler rose
-respectfully.
-
-“Good morning, Parker,” said Poirot pleasantly. “One instant, I pray of
-you.”
-
-He removed his overcoat and gloves.
-
-“Allow me, sir,” said Parker, and sprang forward to assist him. He
-deposited the articles neatly on a chair by the door. Poirot watched
-him with approval.
-
-“Thank you, my good Parker,” he said. “Take a seat, will you not? What
-I have to say may take some time.”
-
-Parker seated himself with an apologetic bend of the head.
-
-“Now what do you think I asked you to come here for this morning—eh?”
-
-Parker coughed.
-
-“I understood, sir, that you wished to ask me a few questions about my
-late master—private like.”
-
-“_Précisément_,” said Poirot, beaming. “Have you made many experiments
-in blackmail?”
-
-“Sir!”
-
-The butler sprang to his feet.
-
-“Do not excite yourself,” said Poirot placidly. “Do not play the farce
-of the honest, injured man. You know all there is to know about the
-blackmail, is it not so?”
-
-“Sir, I—I’ve never—never been——”
-
-“Insulted,” suggested Poirot, “in such a way before. Then why, my
-excellent Parker, were you so anxious to overhear the conversation in
-Mr. Ackroyd’s study the other evening, after you had caught the word
-blackmail?”
-
-“I wasn’t—I——”
-
-“Who was your last master?” rapped out Poirot suddenly.
-
-“My last master?”
-
-“Yes, the master you were with before you came to Mr. Ackroyd.”
-
-“A Major Ellerby, sir——”
-
-Poirot took the words out of his mouth.
-
-“Just so, Major Ellerby. Major Ellerby was addicted to drugs, was he
-not? You traveled about with him. When he was in Bermuda there was some
-trouble—a man was killed. Major Ellerby was partly responsible. It was
-hushed up. But you knew about it. How much did Major Ellerby pay you to
-keep your mouth shut?”
-
-Parker was staring at him open-mouthed. The man had gone to pieces, his
-cheeks shook flabbily.
-
-“You see, me, I have made inquiries,” said Poirot pleasantly. “It is
-as I say. You got a good sum then as blackmail, and Major Ellerby went
-on paying you until he died. Now I want to hear about your latest
-experiment.”
-
-Parker still stared.
-
-“It is useless to deny. Hercule Poirot _knows_. It is so, what I have
-said about Major Ellerby, is it not?”
-
-As though against his will, Parker nodded reluctantly once. His face
-was ashen pale.
-
-“But I never hurt a hair of Mr. Ackroyd’s head,” he moaned. “Honest to
-God, sir, I didn’t. I’ve been afraid of this coming all the time. And I
-tell you I didn’t—I didn’t kill him.”
-
-His voice rose almost to a scream.
-
-“I am inclined to believe you, my friend,” said Poirot. “You have not
-the nerve—the courage. But I must have the truth.”
-
-“I’ll tell you anything, sir, anything you want to know. It’s true that
-I tried to listen that night. A word or two I heard made me curious.
-And Mr. Ackroyd’s wanting not to be disturbed, and shutting himself up
-with the doctor the way he did. It’s God’s own truth what I told the
-police. I heard the word blackmail, sir, and well——”
-
-He paused.
-
-“You thought there might be something in it for you?” suggested Poirot
-smoothly.
-
-“Well—well, yes, I did, sir. I thought that if Mr. Ackroyd was being
-blackmailed, why shouldn’t I have a share of the pickings?”
-
-A very curious expression passed over Poirot’s face. He leaned forward.
-
-“Had you any reason to suppose before that night that Mr. Ackroyd was
-being blackmailed?”
-
-“No, indeed, sir. It was a great surprise to me. Such a regular
-gentleman in all his habits.”
-
-“How much did you overhear?”
-
-“Not very much, sir. There seemed what I might call a spite against me.
-Of course I had to attend to my duties in the pantry. And when I did
-creep along once or twice to the study it was no use. The first time
-Dr. Sheppard came out and almost caught me in the act, and another time
-Mr. Raymond passed me in the big hall and went that way, so I knew it
-was no use; and when I went with the tray, Miss Flora headed me off.”
-
-Poirot stared for a long time at the man, as if to test his sincerity.
-Parker returned his gaze earnestly.
-
-“I hope you believe me, sir. I’ve been afraid all along the police
-would rake up that old business with Major Ellerby and be suspicious of
-me in consequence.”
-
-“_Eh bien_,” said Poirot at last. “I am disposed to believe you. But
-there is one thing I must request of you—to show me your bank-book. You
-have a bank-book, I presume?”
-
-“Yes, sir, as a matter of fact, I have it with me now.”
-
-With no sign of confusion, he produced it from his pocket. Poirot took
-the slim, green-covered book and perused the entries.
-
-“Ah! I perceive you have purchased £500 of National Savings
-Certificates this year?”
-
-“Yes, sir. I have already over a thousand pounds saved—the result of
-my connection with—er—my late master, Major Ellerby. And I have had
-quite a little flutter on some horses this year—very successful. If you
-remember, sir, a rank outsider won the Jubilee. I was fortunate enough
-to back it—£20.”
-
-Poirot handed him back the book.
-
-“I will wish you good-morning. I believe that you have told me the
-truth. If you have not—so much the worse for you, my friend.”
-
-When Parker had departed, Poirot picked up his overcoat once more.
-
-“Going out again?” I asked.
-
-“Yes, we will pay a little visit to the good M. Hammond.”
-
-“You believe Parker’s story?”
-
-“It is credible enough on the face of it. It seems clear that—unless
-he is a very good actor indeed—he genuinely believes it was Ackroyd
-himself who was the victim of blackmail. If so, he knows nothing at all
-about the Mrs. Ferrars business.”
-
-“Then in that case—who——”
-
-“_Précisément!_ Who? But our visit to M. Hammond will accomplish one
-purpose. It will either clear Parker completely or else——”
-
-“Well?”
-
-“I fall into the bad habit of leaving my sentences unfinished this
-morning,” said Poirot apologetically. “You must bear with me.”
-
-“By the way,” I said, rather sheepishly, “I’ve got a confession to
-make. I’m afraid I have inadvertently let out something about that
-ring.”
-
-“What ring?”
-
-“The ring you found in the goldfish pond.”
-
-“Ah! yes,” said Poirot, smiling broadly.
-
-“I hope you’re not annoyed? It was very careless of me.”
-
-“But not at all, my good friend, not at all. I laid no commands upon
-you. You were at liberty to speak of it if you so wished. She was
-interested, your sister?”
-
-“She was indeed. It created a sensation. All sorts of theories are
-flying about.”
-
-“Ah! And yet it is so simple. The true explanation leapt to the eye,
-did it not?”
-
-“Did it?” I said dryly.
-
-Poirot laughed.
-
-“The wise man does not commit himself,” he observed. “Is not that so?
-But here we are at Mr. Hammond’s.”
-
-The lawyer was in his office, and we were ushered in without any delay.
-He rose and greeted us in his dry, precise manner.
-
-Poirot came at once to the point.
-
-“Monsieur, I desire from you certain information, that is, if you will
-be so good as to give it to me. You acted, I understand, for the late
-Mrs. Ferrars of King’s Paddock?”
-
-I noticed the swift gleam of surprise which showed in the lawyer’s
-eyes, before his professional reserve came down once more like a mask
-over his face.
-
-“Certainly. All her affairs passed through our hands.”
-
-“Very good. Now, before I ask you to tell me anything, I should like
-you to listen to the story Dr. Sheppard will relate to you. You have no
-objection, have you, my friend, to repeating the conversation you had
-with Mr. Ackroyd last Friday night?”
-
-“Not in the least,” I said, and straightway began the recital of that
-strange evening.
-
-Hammond listened with close attention.
-
-“That is all,” I said, when I had finished.
-
-“Blackmail,” said the lawyer thoughtfully.
-
-“You are surprised?” asked Poirot.
-
-The lawyer took off his pince-nez and polished them with his
-handkerchief.
-
-“No,” he replied, “I can hardly say that I am surprised. I have
-suspected something of the kind for some time.”
-
-“That brings us,” said Poirot, “to the information for which I am
-asking. If any one can give us an idea of the actual sums paid, you are
-the man, monsieur.”
-
-“I see no object in withholding the information,” said Hammond, after
-a moment or two. “During the past year, Mrs. Ferrars has sold out
-certain securities, and the money for them was paid into her account
-and not reinvested. As her income was a large one, and she lived very
-quietly after her husband’s death, it seems certain that these sums of
-money were paid away for some special purpose. I once sounded her on
-the subject, and she said that she was obliged to support several of
-her husband’s poor relations. I let the matter drop, of course. Until
-now, I have always imagined that the money was paid to some woman who
-had had a claim on Ashley Ferrars. I never dreamed that Mrs. Ferrars
-herself was involved.”
-
-“And the amount?” asked Poirot.
-
-“In all, I should say the various sums totaled at least twenty thousand
-pounds.”
-
-“Twenty thousand pounds!” I exclaimed. “In one year!”
-
-“Mrs. Ferrars was a very wealthy woman,” said Poirot dryly. “And the
-penalty for murder is not a pleasant one.”
-
-“Is there anything else that I can tell you?” inquired Mr. Hammond.
-
-“I thank you, no,” said Poirot, rising. “All my excuses for having
-deranged you.”
-
-“Not at all, not at all.”
-
-“The word derange,” I remarked, when we were outside again, “is
-applicable to mental disorder only.”
-
-“Ah!” cried Poirot, “never will my English be quite perfect. A curious
-language. I should then have said disarranged, _n’est-ce pas_?”
-
-“Disturbed is the word you had in mind.”
-
-“I thank you, my friend. The word exact, you are zealous for it. _Eh
-bien_, what about our friend Parker now? With twenty thousand pounds
-in hand, would he have continued being a butler? _Je ne pense pas._ It
-is, of course, possible that he banked the money under another name,
-but I am disposed to believe he spoke the truth to us. If he is a
-scoundrel, he is a scoundrel on a mean scale. He has not the big ideas.
-That leaves us as a possibility, Raymond, or—well—Major Blunt.”
-
-“Surely not Raymond,” I objected. “Since we know that he was
-desperately hard up for a matter of five hundred pounds.”
-
-“That is what he says, yes.”
-
-“And as to Hector Blunt——”
-
-“I will tell you something as to the good Major Blunt,” interrupted
-Poirot. “It is my business to make inquiries. I make them. _Eh
-bien_—that legacy of which he speaks, I have discovered that the amount
-of it was close upon twenty thousand pounds. What do you think of that?”
-
-I was so taken aback that I could hardly speak.
-
-“It’s impossible,” I said at last. “A well-known man like Hector Blunt.”
-
-Poirot shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“Who knows? At least he is a man with big ideas. I confess that I
-hardly see him as a blackmailer, but there is another possibility that
-you have not even considered.”
-
-“What is that?”
-
-“The fire, my friend. Ackroyd himself may have destroyed that letter,
-blue envelope and all, after you left him.”
-
-“I hardly think that likely,” I said slowly. “And yet—of course, it
-may be so. He might have changed his mind.”
-
-We had just arrived at my house, and on the spur of the moment I
-invited Poirot to come in and take pot luck.
-
-I thought Caroline would be pleased with me, but it is hard to satisfy
-one’s women folk. It appears that we were eating chops for lunch—the
-kitchen staff being regaled on tripe and onions. And two chops set
-before three people are productive of embarrassment.
-
-But Caroline is seldom daunted for long. With magnificent mendacity,
-she explained to Poirot that although James laughed at her for
-doing so, she adhered strictly to a vegetarian diet. She descanted
-ecstatically on the delights of nut cutlets (which I am quite sure
-she has never tasted) and ate a Welsh rarebit with gusto and frequent
-cutting remarks as to the dangers of “flesh” foods.
-
-Afterwards, when we were sitting in front of the fire and smoking,
-Caroline attacked Poirot directly.
-
-“Not found Ralph Paton yet?” she asked.
-
-“Where should I find him, mademoiselle?”
-
-“I thought, perhaps, you’d found him in Cranchester,” said Caroline,
-with intense meaning in her tone.
-
-Poirot looked merely bewildered.
-
-“In Cranchester? But why in Cranchester?”
-
-I enlightened him with a touch of malice.
-
-“One of our ample staff of private detectives happened to see you in a
-car on the Cranchester road yesterday,” I explained.
-
-Poirot’s bewilderment vanished. He laughed heartily.
-
-“Ah, that! A simple visit to the dentist, _c’est tout_. My tooth, it
-aches. I go there. My tooth, it is at once better. I think to return
-quickly. The dentist, he says No. Better to have it out. I argue. He
-insists. He has his way! That particular tooth, it will never ache
-again.”
-
-Caroline collapsed rather like a pricked balloon.
-
-We fell to discussing Ralph Paton.
-
-“A weak nature,” I insisted. “But not a vicious one.”
-
-“Ah!” said Poirot. “But weakness, where does it end?”
-
-“Exactly,” said Caroline. “Take James here—weak as water, if I weren’t
-about to look after him.”
-
-“My dear Caroline,” I said irritably, “can’t you talk without dragging
-in personalities?”
-
-“You _are_ weak, James,” said Caroline, quite unmoved. “I’m eight years
-older than you are—oh! I don’t mind M. Poirot knowing that——”
-
-“I should never have guessed it, mademoiselle,” said Poirot, with a
-gallant little bow.
-
-“Eight years older. But I’ve always considered it my duty to look after
-you. With a bad bringing up, Heaven knows what mischief you might have
-got into by now.”
-
-“I might have married a beautiful adventuress,” I murmured, gazing at
-the ceiling, and blowing smoke rings.
-
-“Adventuress!” said Caroline, with a snort. “If we’re talking of
-adventuresses——”
-
-She left the sentence unfinished.
-
-“Well?” I said, with some curiosity.
-
-“Nothing. But I can think of some one not a hundred miles away.”
-
-Then she turned to Poirot suddenly.
-
-“James sticks to it that you believe some one in the house committed
-the murder. All I can say is, you’re wrong.”
-
-“I should not like to be wrong,” said Poirot. “It is not—how do you
-say—my _métier_?”
-
-“I’ve got the facts pretty clearly,” continued Caroline, taking no
-notice of Poirot’s remark, “from James and others. As far as I can see,
-of the people in the house, only two _could_ have had the chance of
-doing it. Ralph Paton and Flora Ackroyd.”
-
-“My dear Caroline——”
-
-“Now, James, don’t interrupt me. I know what I’m talking about. Parker
-met her _outside_ the door, didn’t he? He didn’t hear her uncle saying
-good-night to her. She could have killed him then and there.”
-
-“Caroline.”
-
-“I’m not saying she _did_, James. I’m saying she _could_ have done. As
-a matter of fact, though Flora is like all these young girls nowadays,
-with no veneration for their betters and thinking they know best on
-every subject under the sun, I don’t for a minute believe she’d kill
-even a chicken. But there it is. Mr. Raymond and Major Blunt have
-alibis. Mrs. Ackroyd’s got an alibi. Even that Russell woman seems to
-have one—and a good job for her it is she has. Who is left? Only Ralph
-and Flora! And say what you will, I don’t believe Ralph Paton is a
-murderer. A boy we’ve known all our lives.”
-
-Poirot was silent for a minute, watching the curling smoke rise from
-his cigarette. When at last he spoke, it was in a gentle far-away voice
-that produced a curious impression. It was totally unlike his usual
-manner.
-
-“Let us take a man—a very ordinary man. A man with no idea of murder
-in his heart. There is in him somewhere a strain of weakness—deep
-down. It has so far never been called into play. Perhaps it never will
-be—and if so he will go to his grave honored and respected by every
-one. But let us suppose that something occurs. He is in difficulties—or
-perhaps not that even. He may stumble by accident on a secret—a secret
-involving life or death to some one. And his first impulse will be to
-speak out—to do his duty as an honest citizen. And then the strain of
-weakness tells. Here is a chance of money—a great amount of money.
-He wants money—he desires it—and it is so easy. He has to do nothing
-for it—just keep silence. That is the beginning. The desire for money
-grows. He must have more—and more! He is intoxicated by the gold mine
-which has opened at his feet. He becomes greedy. And in his greed he
-overreaches himself. One can press a man as far as one likes—but with
-a woman one must not press too far. For a woman has at heart a great
-desire to speak the truth. How many husbands who have deceived their
-wives go comfortably to their graves, carrying their secret with them!
-How many wives who have deceived their husbands wreck their lives by
-throwing the fact in those same husbands’ teeth! They have been pressed
-too far. In a reckless moment (which they will afterwards regret, _bien
-entendu_) they fling safety to the winds and turn at bay, proclaiming
-the truth with great momentary satisfaction to themselves. So it was, I
-think, in this case. The strain was too great. And so there came your
-proverb, the death of the goose that laid the golden eggs. But that is
-not the end. Exposure faced the man of whom we are speaking. And he is
-not the same man he was—say, a year ago. His moral fiber is blunted.
-He is desperate. He is fighting a losing battle, and he is prepared to
-take any means that come to his hand, for exposure means ruin to him.
-And so—the dagger strikes!”
-
-He was silent for a moment. It was as though he had laid a spell upon
-the room. I cannot try to describe the impression his words produced.
-There was something in the merciless analysis, and the ruthless power
-of vision which struck fear into both of us.
-
-“Afterwards,” he went on softly, “the danger removed, he will be
-himself again, normal, kindly. But if the need again arises, then once
-more he will strike.”
-
-Caroline roused herself at last.
-
-“You are speaking of Ralph Paton,” she said. “You may be right, you may
-not, but you have no business to condemn a man unheard.”
-
-The telephone bell rang sharply. I went out into the hall, and took off
-the receiver.
-
-“What?” I said. “Yes. Dr. Sheppard speaking.”
-
-I listened for a minute or two, then replied briefly. Replacing the
-receiver, I went back into the drawing-room.
-
-“Poirot,” I said, “they have detained a man at Liverpool. His name is
-Charles Kent, and he is believed to be the stranger who visited Fernly
-that night. They want me to go to Liverpool at once and identify him.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
- CHARLES KENT
-
-
-Half an hour later saw Poirot, myself, and Inspector Raglan in the
-train on the way to Liverpool. The inspector was clearly very excited.
-
-“We may get a line on the blackmailing part of the business, if on
-nothing else,” he declared jubilantly. “He’s a rough customer, this
-fellow, by what I heard over the phone. Takes dope, too. We ought to
-find it easy to get what we want out of him. If there was the shadow of
-a motive, nothing’s more likely than that he killed Mr. Ackroyd. But in
-that case, why is young Paton keeping out of the way? The whole thing’s
-a muddle—that’s what it is. By the way, M. Poirot, you were quite right
-about those fingerprints. They were Mr. Ackroyd’s own. I had rather the
-same idea myself, but I dismissed it as hardly feasible.”
-
-I smiled to myself. Inspector Raglan was so very plainly saving his
-face.
-
-“As regards this man,” said Poirot, “he is not yet arrested, eh?”
-
-“No, detained under suspicion.”
-
-“And what account does he give of himself?”
-
-“Precious little,” said the inspector, with a grin. “He’s a wary bird,
-I gather. A lot of abuse, but very little more.”
-
-On arrival at Liverpool I was surprised to find that Poirot was
-welcomed with acclamation. Superintendent Hayes, who met us, had worked
-with Poirot over some case long ago, and had evidently an exaggerated
-opinion of his powers.
-
-“Now we’ve got M. Poirot here we shan’t be long,” he said cheerfully.
-“I thought you’d retired, moosior?”
-
-“So I had, my good Hayes, so I had. But how tedious is retirement! You
-cannot imagine to yourself the monotony with which day comes after day.”
-
-“Very likely. So you’ve come to have a look at our own particular find?
-Is this Dr. Sheppard? Think you’ll be able to identify him, sir?”
-
-“I’m not very sure,” I said doubtfully.
-
-“How did you get hold of him?” inquired Poirot.
-
-“Description was circulated, as you know. In the press and privately.
-Not much to go on, I admit. This fellow has an American accent all
-right, and he doesn’t deny that he was near King’s Abbot that night.
-Just asks what the hell it is to do with us, and that he’ll see us in
-—— before he answers any questions.”
-
-“Is it permitted that I, too, see him?” asked Poirot.
-
-The superintendent closed one eye knowingly.
-
-“Very glad to have you, sir. You’ve got permission to do anything you
-please. Inspector Japp of Scotland Yard was asking after you the other
-day. Said he’d heard you were connected unofficially with this case.
-Where’s Captain Paton hiding, sir, can you tell me that?”
-
-“I doubt if it would be wise at the present juncture,” said Poirot
-primly, and I bit my lips to prevent a smile.
-
-The little man really did it very well.
-
-After some further parley, we were taken to interview the prisoner.
-
-He was a young fellow, I should say not more than twenty-two or
-three. Tall, thin, with slightly shaking hands, and the evidences of
-considerable physical strength somewhat run to seed. His hair was dark,
-but his eyes were blue and shifty, seldom meeting a glance squarely. I
-had all along cherished the illusion that there was something familiar
-about the figure I had met that night, but if this were indeed he, I
-was completely mistaken. He did not remind me in the least of any one I
-knew.
-
-“Now then, Kent,” said the superintendent, “stand up. Here are some
-visitors come to see you. Recognize any of them.”
-
-Kent glared at us sullenly, but did not reply. I saw his glance waver
-over the three of us, and come back to rest on me.
-
-“Well, sir,” said the superintendent to me, “what do you say?”
-
-“The height’s the same,” I said, “and as far as general appearance goes
-it might well be the man in question. Beyond that, I couldn’t go.”
-
-“What the hell’s the meaning of all this?” asked Kent. “What have you
-got against me? Come on, out with it! What am I supposed to have done?”
-
-I nodded my head.
-
-“It’s the man,” I said. “I recognize the voice.”
-
-“Recognize my voice, do you? Where do you think you heard it before?”
-
-“On Friday evening last, outside the gates of Fernly Park. You asked me
-the way there.”
-
-“I did, did I?”
-
-“Do you admit it?” asked the inspector.
-
-“I don’t admit anything. Not till I know what you’ve got on me.”
-
-“Have you not read the papers in the last few days?” asked Poirot,
-speaking for the first time.
-
-The man’s eyes narrowed.
-
-“So that’s it, is it? I saw an old gent had been croaked at Fernly.
-Trying to make out I did the job, are you?”
-
-“You were there that night,” said Poirot quietly.
-
-“How do you know, mister?”
-
-“By this.” Poirot took something from his pocket and held it out.
-
-It was the goose quill we had found in the summer-house.
-
-At the sight of it the man’s face changed. He half held out his hand.
-
-“Snow,” said Poirot thoughtfully. “No, my friend, it is empty. It lay
-where you dropped it in the summer-house that night.”
-
-Charles Kent looked at him uncertainly.
-
-“You seem to know a hell of a lot about everything, you little foreign
-cock duck. Perhaps you remember this: the papers say that the old gent
-was croaked between a quarter to ten and ten o’clock?”
-
-“That is so,” agreed Poirot.
-
-“Yes, but is it really so? That’s what I’m getting at.”
-
-“This gentleman will tell you,” said Poirot.
-
-He indicated Inspector Raglan. The latter hesitated, glanced at
-Superintendent Hayes, then at Poirot, and finally, as though receiving
-sanction, he said:—
-
-“That’s right. Between a quarter to ten and ten o’clock.”
-
-“Then you’ve nothing to keep me here for,” said Kent. “I was away from
-Fernly Park by twenty-five minutes past nine. You can ask at the Dog
-and Whistle. That’s a saloon about a mile out of Fernly on the road to
-Cranchester. I kicked up a bit of a row there, I remember. As near as
-nothing to quarter to ten, it was. How about that?”
-
-Inspector Raglan wrote down something in his notebook.
-
-“Well?” demanded Kent.
-
-“Inquiries will be made,” said the inspector. “If you’ve spoken the
-truth, you won’t have anything to complain about. What were you doing
-at Fernly Park anyway?”
-
-“Went there to meet some one.”
-
-“Who?”
-
-“That’s none of your business.”
-
-“You’d better keep a civil tongue in your head, my man,” the
-superintendent warned him.
-
-“To hell with a civil tongue. I went there on my own business, and
-that’s all there is to it. If I was clear away before the murder was
-done, that’s all that concerns the cops.”
-
-“Your name, it is Charles Kent,” said Poirot. “Where were you born?”
-
-The man stared at him, then he grinned.
-
-“I’m a full-blown Britisher all right,” he said.
-
-“Yes,” said Poirot meditatively, “I think you are. I fancy you were
-born in Kent.”
-
-The man stared.
-
-“Why’s that? Because of my name? What’s that to do with it? Is a man
-whose name is Kent bound to be born in that particular county?”
-
-“Under certain circumstances, I can imagine he might be,” said Poirot
-very deliberately. “Under certain circumstances, you comprehend.”
-
-There was so much meaning in his voice as to surprise the two police
-officers. As for Charles Kent, he flushed a brick red, and for a moment
-I thought he was going to spring at Poirot. He thought better of it,
-however, and turned away with a kind of laugh.
-
-Poirot nodded as though satisfied, and made his way out through the
-door. He was joined presently by the two officers.
-
-“We’ll verify that statement,” remarked Raglan. “I don’t think he’s
-lying, though. But he’s got to come clear with a statement as to
-what he was doing at Fernly. It looks to me as though we’d got our
-blackmailer all right. On the other hand, granted his story’s correct,
-he couldn’t have had anything to do with the actual murder. He’d got
-ten pounds on him when he was arrested—rather a large sum. I fancy that
-forty pounds went to him—the numbers of the notes didn’t correspond,
-but of course he’d have changed them first thing. Mr. Ackroyd must
-have given him the money, and he made off with it as fast as possible.
-What was that about Kent being his birthplace? What’s that got to do
-with it?”
-
-“Nothing whatever,” said Poirot mildly. “A little idea of mine, that
-was all. Me, I am famous for my little ideas.”
-
-“Are you really?” said Raglan, studying him with a puzzled expression.
-
-The superintendent went into a roar of laughter.
-
-“Many’s the time I’ve heard Inspector Japp say that. M. Poirot and his
-little ideas! Too fanciful for me, he’d say, but always something in
-them.”
-
-“You mock yourself at me,” said Poirot, smiling; “but never mind. The
-old ones they laugh last sometimes, when the young, clever ones do not
-laugh at all.”
-
-And nodding his head at them in a sage manner, he walked out into the
-street.
-
-He and I lunched together at an hotel. I know now that the whole thing
-lay clearly unravelled before him. He had got the last thread he needed
-to lead him to the truth.
-
-But at the time I had no suspicion of the fact. I overestimated his
-general self-confidence, and I took it for granted that the things
-which puzzled me must be equally puzzling to him.
-
-My chief puzzle was what the man Charles Kent could have been doing at
-Fernly. Again and again I put the question to myself and could get no
-satisfactory reply.
-
-At last I ventured a tentative query to Poirot. His reply was immediate.
-
-“_Mon ami_, I do not think; I know.”
-
-“Really?” I said incredulously.
-
-“Yes, indeed. I suppose now that to you it would not make sense if I
-said that he went to Fernly that night because he was born in Kent?”
-
-I stared at him.
-
-“It certainly doesn’t seem to make sense to me,” I said dryly.
-
-“Ah!” said Poirot pityingly. “Well, no matter. I have still my little
-idea.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
- FLORA ACKROYD
-
-
-As I was returning from my round the following morning, I was hailed by
-Inspector Raglan. I pulled up, and the inspector mounted on the step.
-
-“Good-morning, Dr. Sheppard,” he said. “Well, that alibi is all right
-enough.”
-
-“Charles Kent’s?”
-
-“Charles Kent’s. The barmaid at the Dog and Whistle, Sally Jones, she
-remembers him perfectly. Picked out his photograph from among five
-others. It was just a quarter to ten when he came into the bar, and the
-Dog and Whistle is well over a mile from Fernly Park. The girl mentions
-that he had a lot of money on him—she saw him take a handful of notes
-out of his pocket. Rather surprised her, it did, seeing the class of
-fellow he was, with a pair of boots clean dropping off him. That’s
-where that forty pounds went right enough.”
-
-“The man still refuses to give an account of his visit to Fernly?”
-
-“Obstinate as a mule he is. I had a chat with Hayes at Liverpool over
-the wire this morning.”
-
-“Hercule Poirot says he knows the reason the man went there that
-night,” I observed.
-
-“Does he?” cried the inspector eagerly.
-
-“Yes,” I said maliciously. “He says he went there because he was born
-in Kent.”
-
-I felt a distinct pleasure in passing on my own discomfiture.
-
-Raglan stared at me for a moment or two uncomprehendingly. Then a
-grin overspread his weaselly countenance and he tapped his forehead
-significantly.
-
-“Bit gone here,” he said. “I’ve thought so for some time. Poor old
-chap, so that’s why he had to give up and come down here. In the
-family, very likely. He’s got a nephew who’s quite off his crumpet.”
-
-“Poirot has?” I said, very surprised.
-
-“Yes. Hasn’t he ever mentioned him to you? Quite docile, I believe, and
-all that, but mad as a hatter, poor lad.”
-
-“Who told you that?”
-
-Again a grin showed itself on Inspector Raglan’s face.
-
-“Your sister, Miss Sheppard, she told me all about it.”
-
-Really, Caroline is amazing. She never rests until she knows the last
-details of everybody’s family secrets. Unfortunately, I have never been
-able to instill into her the decency of keeping them to herself.
-
-“Jump in, inspector,” I said, opening the door of the car. “We’ll go
-up to The Larches together, and acquaint our Belgian friend with the
-latest news.”
-
-“Might as well, I suppose. After all, even if he is a bit balmy, it was
-a useful tip he gave me about those fingerprints. He’s got a bee in his
-bonnet about the man Kent, but who knows—there may be something useful
-behind it.”
-
-Poirot received us with his usual smiling courtesy.
-
-He listened to the information we had brought him, nodding his head now
-and then.
-
-“Seems quite O.K., doesn’t it?” said the inspector rather gloomily. “A
-chap can’t be murdering some one in one place when he’s drinking in the
-bar in another place a mile away.”
-
-“Are you going to release him?”
-
-“Don’t see what else we can do. We can’t very well hold him for
-obtaining money on false pretences. Can’t prove a ruddy thing.”
-
-The inspector tossed a match into the grate in a disgruntled fashion.
-Poirot retrieved it and put it neatly in a little receptacle designed
-for the purpose. His action was purely mechanical. I could see that his
-thoughts were on something very different.
-
-“If I were you,” he said at last, “I should not release the man Charles
-Kent yet.”
-
-“What do you mean?”
-
-Raglan stared at him.
-
-“What I say. I should not release him yet.”
-
-“You don’t think he can have had anything to do with the murder, do
-you?”
-
-“I think probably not—but one cannot be certain yet.”
-
-“But haven’t I just told you——”
-
-Poirot raised a hand protestingly.
-
-“_Mais oui, mais oui._ I heard. I am not deaf—nor stupid, thank the
-good God! But see you, you approach the matter from the wrong—the
-wrong—premises, is not that the word?”
-
-The inspector stared at him heavily.
-
-“I don’t see how you make that out. Look here, we know Mr. Ackroyd was
-alive at a quarter to ten. You admit that, don’t you?”
-
-Poirot looked at him for a moment, then shook his head with a quick
-smile.
-
-“I admit nothing that is not—_proved_!”
-
-“Well, we’ve got proof enough of that. We’ve got Miss Flora Ackroyd’s
-evidence.”
-
-“That she said good-night to her uncle? But me—I do not always believe
-what a young lady tells me—no, not even when she is charming and
-beautiful.”
-
-“But hang it all, man, Parker saw her coming out of the door.”
-
-“No.” Poirot’s voice rang out with sudden sharpness. “That is just what
-he did not see. I satisfied myself of that by a little experiment the
-other day—you remember, doctor? Parker saw her _outside_ the door, with
-her hand on the handle. He did not see her come out of the room.”
-
-“But—where else could she have been?”
-
-“Perhaps on the stairs.”
-
-“The stairs?”
-
-“That is my little idea—yes.”
-
-“But those stairs only lead to Mr. Ackroyd’s bedroom.”
-
-“Precisely.”
-
-And still the inspector stared.
-
-“You think she’d been up to her uncle’s bedroom? Well, why not? Why
-should she lie about it?”
-
-“Ah! that is just the question. It depends on what she was doing there,
-does it not?”
-
-“You mean—the money? Hang it all, you don’t suggest that it was Miss
-Ackroyd who took that forty pounds?”
-
-“I suggest nothing,” said Poirot. “But I will remind you of this. Life
-was not very easy for that mother and daughter. There were bills—there
-was constant trouble over small sums of money. Roger Ackroyd was a
-peculiar man over money matters. The girl might be at her wit’s end for
-a comparatively small sum. Figure to yourself then what happens. She
-has taken the money, she descends the little staircase. When she is
-half-way down she hears the chink of glass from the hall. She has not a
-doubt of what it is—Parker coming to the study. At all costs she must
-not be found on the stairs—Parker will not forget it, he will think it
-odd. If the money is missed, Parker is sure to remember having seen her
-come down those stairs. She has just time to rush down to the study
-door—with her hand on the handle to show that she has just come out,
-when Parker appears in the doorway. She says the first thing that comes
-into her head, a repetition of Roger Ackroyd’s orders earlier in the
-evening, and then goes upstairs to her own room.”
-
-“Yes, but later,” persisted the inspector, “she must have realized the
-vital importance of speaking the truth? Why, the whole case hinges on
-it!”
-
-“Afterwards,” said Poirot dryly, “it was a little difficult for
-Mademoiselle Flora. She is told simply that the police are here and
-that there has been a robbery. Naturally she jumps to the conclusion
-that the theft of the money has been discovered. Her one idea is to
-stick to her story. When she learns that her uncle is dead she is
-panic-stricken. Young women do not faint nowadays, monsieur, without
-considerable provocation. _Eh bien!_ there it is. She is bound to stick
-to her story, or else confess everything. And a young and pretty girl
-does not like to admit that she is a thief—especially before those
-whose esteem she is anxious to retain.”
-
-Raglan brought his fist down with a thump on the table.
-
-“I’ll not believe it,” he said. “It’s—it’s not credible. And you—you’ve
-known this all along?”
-
-“The possibility has been in my mind from the first,” admitted Poirot.
-“I was always convinced that Mademoiselle Flora was hiding something
-from us. To satisfy myself, I made the little experiment I told you of.
-Dr. Sheppard accompanied me.”
-
-“A test for Parker, you said it was,” I remarked bitterly.
-
-“_Mon ami_,” said Poirot apologetically, “as I told you at the time,
-one must say something.”
-
-The inspector rose.
-
-“There’s only one thing for it,” he declared. “We must tackle the young
-lady right away. You’ll come up to Fernly with me, M. Poirot?”
-
-“Certainly. Dr. Sheppard will drive us up in his car.”
-
-I acquiesced willingly.
-
-On inquiry for Miss Ackroyd, we were shown into the billiard room.
-Flora and Major Hector Blunt were sitting on the long window seat.
-
-“Good-morning, Miss Ackroyd,” said the inspector. “Can we have a word
-or two alone with you?”
-
-Blunt got up at once and moved to the door.
-
-“What is it?” asked Flora nervously. “Don’t go, Major Blunt. He can
-stay, can’t he?” she asked, turning to the inspector.
-
-“That’s as you like,” said the inspector dryly. “There’s a question
-or two it’s my duty to put to you, miss, but I’d prefer to do so
-privately, and I dare say you’d prefer it also.”
-
-Flora looked keenly at him. I saw her face grow whiter. Then she turned
-and spoke to Blunt.
-
-“I want you to stay—please—yes, I mean it. Whatever the inspector has
-to say to me, I’d rather you heard it.”
-
-Raglan shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“Well, if you will have it so, that’s all there is to it. Now, Miss
-Ackroyd, M. Poirot here has made a certain suggestion to me. He
-suggests that you weren’t in the study at all last Friday night, that
-you never saw Mr. Ackroyd to say good-night to him, that instead of
-being in the study you were on the stairs leading down from your
-uncle’s bedroom when you heard Parker coming across the hall.”
-
-Flora’s gaze shifted to Poirot. He nodded back at her.
-
-“Mademoiselle, the other day, when we sat round the table, I implored
-you to be frank with me. What one does not tell to Papa Poirot he finds
-out. It was that, was it not? See, I will make it easy for you. You
-took the money, did you not?”
-
-“The money,” said Blunt sharply.
-
-There was a silence which lasted for at least a minute.
-
-Then Flora drew herself up and spoke.
-
-“M. Poirot is right. I took that money. I stole. I am a thief—yes, a
-common, vulgar little thief. Now you know! I am glad it has come out.
-It’s been a nightmare, these last few days!” She sat down suddenly and
-buried her face in her hands. She spoke huskily through her fingers.
-“You don’t know what my life has been since I came here. Wanting
-things, scheming for them, lying, cheating, running up bills, promising
-to pay—oh! I hate myself when I think of it all! That’s what brought us
-together, Ralph and I. We were both weak! I understood him, and I was
-sorry—because I’m the same underneath. We’re not strong enough to stand
-alone, either of us. We’re weak, miserable, despicable things.”
-
-She looked at Blunt and suddenly stamped her foot.
-
-“Why do you look at me like that—as though you couldn’t believe? I may
-be a thief—but at any rate I’m real now. I’m not lying any more. I’m
-not pretending to be the kind of girl you like, young and innocent and
-simple. I don’t care if you never want to see me again. I hate myself,
-despise myself—but you’ve got to believe one thing, if speaking the
-truth would have made things better for Ralph, I would have spoken out.
-But I’ve seen all along that it wouldn’t be better for Ralph—it makes
-the case against him blacker than ever. I was not doing him any harm by
-sticking to my lie.”
-
-“Ralph,” said Blunt. “I see—always Ralph.”
-
-“You don’t understand,” said Flora hopelessly. “You never will.”
-
-She turned to the inspector.
-
-“I admit everything; I was at my wit’s end for money. I never saw my
-uncle that evening after he left the dinner-table. As to the money, you
-can take what steps you please. Nothing could be worse than it is now!”
-
-Suddenly she broke down again, hid her face in her hands, and rushed
-from the room.
-
-“Well,” said the inspector in a flat tone, “so that’s that.”
-
-He seemed rather at a loss what to do next.
-
-Blunt came forward.
-
-“Inspector Raglan,” he said quietly, “that money was given to me by Mr.
-Ackroyd for a special purpose. Miss Ackroyd never touched it. When she
-says she did, she is lying with the idea of shielding Captain Paton.
-The truth is as I said, and I am prepared to go into the witness box
-and swear to it.”
-
-He made a kind of jerky bow, then turning abruptly, he left the room.
-
-Poirot was after him in a flash. He caught the other up in the hall.
-
-“Monsieur—a moment, I beg of you, if you will be so good.”
-
-“Well, sir?”
-
-Blunt was obviously impatient. He stood frowning down on Poirot.
-
-“It is this,” said Poirot rapidly: “I am not deceived by your little
-fantasy. No, indeed. It was truly Miss Flora who took the money. All
-the same it is well imagined what you say—it pleases me. It is very
-good what you have done there. You are a man quick to think and to act.”
-
-“I’m not in the least anxious for your opinion, thank you,” said Blunt
-coldly.
-
-He made once more as though to pass on, but Poirot, not at all
-offended, laid a detaining hand on his arm.
-
-“Ah! but you are to listen to me. I have more to say. The other day I
-spoke of concealments. Very well, all along have I seen what you are
-concealing. Mademoiselle Flora, you love her with all your heart. From
-the first moment you saw her, is it not so? Oh! let us not mind saying
-these things—why must one in England think it necessary to mention
-love as though it were some disgraceful secret? You love Mademoiselle
-Flora. You seek to conceal that fact from all the world. That is very
-good—that is as it should be. But take the advice of Hercule Poirot—do
-not conceal it from mademoiselle herself.”
-
-Blunt had shown several signs of restlessness whilst Poirot was
-speaking, but the closing words seemed to rivet his attention.
-
-“What d’you mean by that?” he said sharply.
-
-“You think that she loves the Capitaine Ralph Paton—but I, Hercule
-Poirot, tell you that that is not so. Mademoiselle Flora accepted
-Captain Paton to please her uncle, and because she saw in the marriage
-a way of escape from her life here which was becoming frankly
-insupportable to her. She liked him, and there was much sympathy
-and understanding between them. But love—no! It is not Captain Paton
-Mademoiselle Flora loves.”
-
-“What the devil do you mean?” asked Blunt.
-
-I saw the dark flush under his tan.
-
-“You have been blind, monsieur. Blind! She is loyal, the little one.
-Ralph Paton is under a cloud, she is bound in honor to stick by him.”
-
-I felt it was time I put in a word to help on the good work.
-
-“My sister told me the other night,” I said encouragingly, “that Flora
-had never cared a penny piece for Ralph Paton, and never would. My
-sister is always right about these things.”
-
-Blunt ignored my well-meant efforts. He spoke to Poirot.
-
-“D’you really think——” he began, and stopped.
-
-He is one of those inarticulate men who find it hard to put things into
-words.
-
-Poirot knows no such disability.
-
-“If you doubt me, ask her yourself, monsieur. But perhaps you no longer
-care to—the affair of the money——”
-
-Blunt gave a sound like an angry laugh.
-
-“Think I’d hold that against her? Roger was always a queer chap about
-money. She got in a mess and didn’t dare tell him. Poor kid. Poor
-lonely kid.”
-
-Poirot looked thoughtfully at the side door.
-
-“Mademoiselle Flora went into the garden, I think,” he murmured.
-
-“I’ve been every kind of a fool,” said Blunt abruptly. “Rum
-conversation we’ve been having. Like one of those Danish plays. But
-you’re a sound fellow, M. Poirot. Thank you.”
-
-He took Poirot’s hand and gave it a grip which caused the other to
-wince in anguish. Then he strode to the side door and passed out into
-the garden.
-
-“Not every kind of a fool,” murmured Poirot, tenderly nursing the
-injured member. “Only one kind—the fool in love.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
- MISS RUSSELL
-
-
-Inspector Raglan had received a bad jolt. He was not deceived by
-Blunt’s valiant lie any more than we had been. Our way back to the
-village was punctuated by his complaints.
-
-“This alters everything, this does. I don’t know whether you’ve
-realized it, Monsieur Poirot?”
-
-“I think so, yes, I think so,” said Poirot. “You see, me, I have been
-familiar with the idea for some time.”
-
-Inspector Raglan, who had only had the idea presented to him a short
-half-hour ago, looked at Poirot unhappily, and went on with his
-discoveries.
-
-“Those alibis now. Worthless! Absolutely worthless. Got to start
-again. Find out what every one was doing from nine-thirty onwards.
-Nine-thirty—that’s the time we’ve got to hang on to. You were quite
-right about the man Kent—we don’t release _him_ yet awhile. Let me see
-now—nine-forty-five at the Dog and Whistle. He might have got there
-in a quarter of an hour if he ran. It’s just possible that it was
-_his_ voice Mr. Raymond heard talking to Mr. Ackroyd—asking for money
-which Mr. Ackroyd refused. But one thing’s clear—it wasn’t he who
-sent the telephone message. The station is half a mile in the other
-direction—over a mile and a half from the Dog and Whistle, and he was
-at the Dog and Whistle until about ten minutes past ten. Dang that
-telephone call! We always come up against it.”
-
-“We do indeed,” agreed Poirot. “It is curious.”
-
-“It’s just possible that if Captain Paton climbed into his uncle’s room
-and found him there murdered, _he_ may have sent it. Got the wind up,
-thought he’d be accused, and cleared out. That’s possible, isn’t it?”
-
-“Why should he have telephoned?”
-
-“May have had doubts if the old man was really dead. Thought he’d
-get the doctor up there as soon as possible, but didn’t want to give
-himself away. Yes, I say now, how’s that for a theory? Something in
-that, I should say.”
-
-The inspector swelled his chest out importantly. He was so plainly
-delighted with himself that any words of ours would have been quite
-superfluous.
-
-We arrived back at my house at this minute, and I hurried in to my
-surgery patients, who had all been waiting a considerable time, leaving
-Poirot to walk to the police station with the inspector.
-
-Having dismissed the last patient, I strolled into the little room at
-the back of the house which I call my workshop—I am rather proud of the
-home-made wireless set I turned out. Caroline hates my workroom. I keep
-my tools there, and Annie is not allowed to wreak havoc with a dustpan
-and brush. I was just adjusting the interior of an alarm clock which
-had been denounced as wholly unreliable by the household, when the door
-opened and Caroline put her head in.
-
-“Oh! there you are, James,” she said, with deep disapproval. “M. Poirot
-wants to see you.”
-
-“Well,” I said, rather irritably, for her sudden entrance had startled
-me and I had let go of a piece of delicate mechanism, “if he wants to
-see me, he can come in here.”
-
-“In here?” said Caroline.
-
-“That’s what I said—in here.”
-
-Caroline gave a sniff of disapproval and retired. She returned in a
-moment or two, ushering in Poirot, and then retired again, shutting the
-door with a bang.
-
-“Aha! my friend,” said Poirot, coming forward and rubbing his hands.
-“You have not got rid of me so easily, you see!”
-
-“Finished with the inspector?” I asked.
-
-“For the moment, yes. And you, you have seen all the patients?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-Poirot sat down and looked at me, tilting his egg-shaped head on one
-side, with the air of one who savors a very delicious joke.
-
-“You are in error,” he said at last. “You have still one patient to
-see.”
-
-“Not you?” I exclaimed in surprise.
-
-“Ah, not me, _bien entendu_. Me, I have the health magnificent. No, to
-tell you the truth, it is a little _complot_ of mine. There is some one
-I wish to see, you understand—and at the same time it is not necessary
-that the whole village should intrigue itself about the matter—which is
-what would happen if the lady were seen to come to my house—for it is
-a lady. But to you she has already come as a patient before.”
-
-“Miss Russell!” I exclaimed.
-
-“_Précisément._ I wish much to speak with her, so I send her the little
-note and make the appointment in your surgery. You are not annoyed with
-me?”
-
-“On the contrary,” I said. “That is, presuming I am allowed to be
-present at the interview?”
-
-“But naturally! In your own surgery!”
-
-“You know,” I said, throwing down the pincers I was holding, “it’s
-extraordinarily intriguing, the whole thing. Every new development that
-arises is like the shake you give to a kaleidoscope—the thing changes
-entirely in aspect. Now, why are you so anxious to see Miss Russell?”
-
-Poirot raised his eyebrows.
-
-“Surely it is obvious?” he murmured.
-
-“There you go again,” I grumbled. “According to you everything is
-obvious. But you leave me walking about in a fog.”
-
-Poirot shook his head genially at me.
-
-“You mock yourself at me. Take the matter of Mademoiselle Flora. The
-inspector was surprised—but you—you were not.”
-
-“I never dreamed of her being the thief,” I expostulated.
-
-“That—perhaps no. But I was watching your face and you were not—like
-Inspector Raglan—startled and incredulous.”
-
-I thought for a minute or two.
-
-“Perhaps you are right,” I said at last. “All along I’ve felt that
-Flora was keeping back something—so the truth, when it came, was
-subconsciously expected. It upset Inspector Raglan very much indeed,
-poor man.”
-
-“Ah! _pour ça, oui_! The poor man must rearrange all his ideas. I
-profited by his state of mental chaos to induce him to grant me a
-little favor.”
-
-“What was that?”
-
-Poirot took a sheet of notepaper from his pocket. Some words were
-written on it, and he read them aloud.
-
-“The police have, for some days, been seeking for Captain Ralph Paton,
-the nephew of Mr. Ackroyd of Fernly Park, whose death occurred under
-such tragic circumstances last Friday. Captain Paton has been found at
-Liverpool, where he was on the point of embarking for America.”
-
-He folded up the piece of paper again.
-
-“That, my friend, will be in the newspapers to-morrow morning.”
-
-I stared at him, dumbfounded.
-
-“But—but it isn’t true! He’s not at Liverpool!”
-
-Poirot beamed on me.
-
-“You have the intelligence so quick! No, he has not been found at
-Liverpool. Inspector Raglan was very loath to let me send this
-paragraph to the press, especially as I could not take him into my
-confidence. But I assured him most solemnly that very interesting
-results would follow its appearance in print, so he gave in, after
-stipulating that he was, on no account, to bear the responsibility.”
-
-I stared at Poirot. He smiled back at me.
-
-“It beats me,” I said at last, “what you expect to get out of that.”
-
-“You should employ your little gray cells,” said Poirot gravely.
-
-He rose and came across to the bench.
-
-“It is that you have really the love of the machinery,” he said, after
-inspecting the débris of my labors.
-
-Every man has his hobby. I immediately drew Poirot’s attention to my
-home-made wireless. Finding him sympathetic, I showed him one or two
-little inventions of my own—trifling things, but useful in the house.
-
-“Decidedly,” said Poirot, “you should be an inventor by trade, not a
-doctor. But I hear the bell—that is your patient. Let us go into the
-surgery.”
-
-Once before I had been struck by the remnants of beauty in the
-housekeeper’s face. This morning I was struck anew. Very simply dressed
-in black, tall, upright and independent as ever, with her big dark eyes
-and an unwonted flush of color in her usually pale cheeks, I realized
-that as a girl she must have been startlingly handsome.
-
-“Good-morning, mademoiselle,” said Poirot. “Will you be seated? Dr.
-Sheppard is so kind as to permit me the use of his surgery for a little
-conversation I am anxious to have with you.”
-
-Miss Russell sat down with her usual composure. If she felt any inward
-agitation, it did not display itself in any outward manifestation.
-
-“It seems a queer way of doing things, if you’ll allow me to say so,”
-she remarked.
-
-“Miss Russell—I have news to give you.”
-
-“Indeed!”
-
-“Charles Kent has been arrested at Liverpool.”
-
-Not a muscle of her face moved. She merely opened her eyes a trifle
-wider, and asked, with a tinge of defiance:
-
-“Well, what of it?”
-
-But at that moment it came to me—the resemblance that had haunted me
-all along, something familiar in the defiance of Charles Kent’s manner.
-The two voices, one rough and coarse, the other painfully ladylike—were
-strangely the same in timbre. It was of Miss Russell that I had been
-reminded that night outside the gates of Fernly Park.
-
-I looked at Poirot, full of my discovery, and he gave me an
-imperceptible nod.
-
-In answer to Miss Russell’s question, he threw out his hands in a
-thoroughly French gesture.
-
-“I thought you might be interested, that is all,” he said mildly.
-
-“Well, I’m not particularly,” said Miss Russell. “Who is this Charles
-Kent anyway?”
-
-“He is a man, mademoiselle, who was at Fernly on the night of the
-murder.”
-
-“Really?”
-
-“Fortunately for him, he has an alibi. At a quarter to ten he was at a
-public-house a mile from here.”
-
-“Lucky for him,” commented Miss Russell.
-
-“But we still do not know what he was doing at Fernly—who it was he
-went to meet, for instance.”
-
-“I’m afraid I can’t help you at all,” said the housekeeper politely.
-“Nothing came to _my_ ears. If that is all——”
-
-She made a tentative movement as though to rise. Poirot stopped her.
-
-“It is not quite all,” he said smoothly. “This morning fresh
-developments have arisen. It seems now that Mr. Ackroyd was murdered,
-not at a quarter to ten, but _before_. Between ten minutes to nine,
-when Dr. Sheppard left, and a quarter to ten.”
-
-I saw the color drain from the housekeeper’s face, leaving it dead
-white. She leaned forward, her figure swaying.
-
-“But Miss Ackroyd said—Miss Ackroyd said——”
-
-“Miss Ackroyd has admitted that she was lying. She was never in the
-study at all that evening.”
-
-“Then——?”
-
-“Then it would seem that in this Charles Kent we have the man we are
-looking for. He came to Fernly, can give no account of what he was
-doing there——”
-
-“I can tell you what he was doing there. He never touched a hair of old
-Ackroyd’s head—he never went near the study. He didn’t do it, I tell
-you.”
-
-She was leaning forward. That iron self-control was broken through at
-last. Terror and desperation were in her face.
-
-“M. Poirot! M. Poirot! Oh, do believe me.”
-
-Poirot got up and came to her. He patted her reassuringly on the
-shoulder.
-
-“But yes—but yes, I will believe. I had to make you speak, you know.”
-
-For an instant suspicion flared up in her.
-
-“Is what you said true?”
-
-“That Charles Kent is suspected of the crime? Yes, that is true. You
-alone can save him, by telling the reason for his being at Fernly.”
-
-“He came to see me.” She spoke in a low, hurried voice. “I went out to
-meet him——”
-
-“In the summer-house, yes, I know.”
-
-“How do you know?”
-
-“Mademoiselle, it is the business of Hercule Poirot to know things. I
-know that you went out earlier in the evening, that you left a message
-in the summer-house to say what time you would be there.”
-
-“Yes, I did. I had heard from him—saying he was coming. I dared not
-let him come to the house. I wrote to the address he gave me and said
-I would meet him in the summer-house, and described it to him so that
-he would be able to find it. Then I was afraid he might not wait there
-patiently, and I ran out and left a piece of paper to say I would be
-there about ten minutes past nine. I didn’t want the servants to see
-me, so I slipped out through the drawing-room window. As I came back, I
-met Dr. Sheppard, and I fancied that he would think it queer. I was out
-of breath, for I had been running. I had no idea that he was expected
-to dinner that night.”
-
-She paused.
-
-“Go on,” said Poirot. “You went out to meet him at ten minutes past
-nine. What did you say to each other?”
-
-“It’s difficult. You see——”
-
-“Mademoiselle,” said Poirot, interrupting her, “in this matter I must
-have the whole truth. What you tell us need never go beyond these four
-walls. Dr. Sheppard will be discreet, and so shall I. See, I will help
-you. This Charles Kent, he is your son, is he not?”
-
-She nodded. The color had flamed into her cheeks.
-
-“No one has ever known. It was long ago—long ago—down in Kent. I was
-not married....”
-
-“So you took the name of the county as a surname for him. I understand.”
-
-“I got work. I managed to pay for his board and lodging. I never told
-him that I was his mother. But he turned out badly, he drank, then took
-to drugs. I managed to pay his passage out to Canada. I didn’t hear of
-him for a year or two. Then, somehow or other, he found out that I was
-his mother. He wrote asking me for money. Finally, I heard from him
-back in this country again. He was coming to see me at Fernly, he said.
-I dared not let him come to the house. I have always been considered
-so—so very respectable. If any one got an inkling—it would have been
-all up with my post as housekeeper. So I wrote to him in the way I have
-just told you.”
-
-“And in the morning you came to see Dr. Sheppard?”
-
-“Yes. I wondered if something could be done. He was not a bad
-boy—before he took to drugs.”
-
-“I see,” said Poirot. “Now let us go on with the story. He came that
-night to the summer-house?”
-
-“Yes, he was waiting for me when I got there. He was very rough and
-abusive. I had brought with me all the money I had, and I gave it to
-him. We talked a little, and then he went away.”
-
-“What time was that?”
-
-“It must have been between twenty and twenty-five minutes past nine. It
-was not yet half-past when I got back to the house.”
-
-“Which way did he go?”
-
-“Straight out the same way he came, by the path that joined the drive
-just inside the lodge gates.”
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“And you, what did you do?”
-
-“I went back to the house. Major Blunt was walking up and down the
-terrace smoking, so I made a detour to get round to the side door. It
-was then just on half-past nine, as I tell you.”
-
-Poirot nodded again. He made a note or two in a microscopic pocket-book.
-
-“I think that is all,” he said thoughtfully.
-
-“Ought I——” she hesitated. “Ought I to tell all this to Inspector
-Raglan?”
-
-“It may come to that. But let us not be in a hurry. Let us proceed
-slowly, with due order and method. Charles Kent is not yet formally
-charged with murder. Circumstances may arise which will render your
-story unnecessary.”
-
-Miss Russell rose.
-
-“Thank you very much, M. Poirot,” she said. “You have been very
-kind—very kind indeed. You—you do believe me, don’t you? That Charles
-had nothing to do with this wicked murder!”
-
-“There seems no doubt that the man who was talking to Mr. Ackroyd in
-the library at nine-thirty could not possibly have been your son. Be of
-good courage, mademoiselle. All will yet be well.”
-
-Miss Russell departed. Poirot and I were left together.
-
-“So that’s that,” I said. “Every time we come back to Ralph Paton. How
-did you manage to spot Miss Russell as the person Charles Kent came to
-meet? Did you notice the resemblance?”
-
-“I had connected her with the unknown man long before we actually
-came face to face with him. As soon as we found that quill. The quill
-suggested dope, and I remembered your account of Miss Russell’s visit
-to you. Then I found the article on cocaine in that morning’s paper. It
-all seemed very clear. She had heard from some one that morning—some
-one addicted to drugs, she read the article in the paper, and she came
-to you to ask a few tentative questions. She mentioned cocaine, since
-the article in question was on cocaine. Then, when you seemed too
-interested, she switched hurriedly to the subject of detective stories
-and untraceable poisons. I suspected a son or a brother, or some other
-undesirable male relation. Ah! but I must go. It is the time of the
-lunch.”
-
-“Stay and lunch with us,” I suggested.
-
-Poirot shook his head. A faint twinkle came into his eye.
-
-“Not again to-day. I should not like to force Mademoiselle Caroline to
-adopt a vegetarian diet two days in succession.”
-
-It occurred to me that there was not much which escaped Hercule Poirot.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
-
- THE PARAGRAPH IN THE PAPER
-
-
-Caroline, of course, had not failed to see Miss Russell come
-to the surgery door. I had anticipated this, and had ready an
-elaborate account of the lady’s bad knee. But Caroline was not in a
-cross-questioning mood. Her point of view was that she knew what Miss
-Russell had really come for and that _I_ didn’t.
-
-“Pumping you, James,” said Caroline. “Pumping you in the most shameless
-manner, I’ve not a doubt. It’s no good interrupting. I dare say you
-hadn’t the least idea she was doing it even. Men _are_ so simple. She
-knows that you are in M. Poirot’s confidence, and she wants to find out
-things. Do you know what I think, James?”
-
-“I couldn’t begin to imagine. You think so many extraordinary things.”
-
-“It’s no good being sarcastic. I think Miss Russell knows more about
-Mr. Ackroyd’s death than she is prepared to admit.”
-
-Caroline leaned back triumphantly in her chair.
-
-“Do you really think so?” I said absently.
-
-“You are very dull to-day, James. No animation about you. It’s that
-liver of yours.”
-
-Our conversation then dealt with purely personal matters.
-
-The paragraph inspired by Poirot duly appeared in our daily paper the
-next morning. I was in the dark as to its purpose, but its effect on
-Caroline was immense.
-
-She began by stating, most untruly, that she had said as much all
-along. I raised my eyebrows, but did not argue. Caroline, however, must
-have felt a prick of conscience, for she went on:—
-
-“I mayn’t have actually mentioned Liverpool, but I knew he’d try to get
-away to America. That’s what Crippen did.”
-
-“Without much success,” I reminded her.
-
-“Poor boy, and so they’ve caught him. I consider, James, that it’s your
-duty to see that he isn’t hung.”
-
-“What do you expect me to do?”
-
-“Why, you’re a medical man, aren’t you? You’ve known him from a boy
-upwards. Not mentally responsible. That’s the line to take, clearly. I
-read only the other day that they’re very happy in Broadmoor—it’s quite
-like a high-class club.”
-
-But Caroline’s words had reminded me of something.
-
-“I never knew that Poirot had an imbecile nephew?” I said curiously.
-
-“Didn’t you? Oh, he told me all about it. Poor lad. It’s a great grief
-to all the family. They’ve kept him at home so far, but it’s getting
-to such a pitch that they’re afraid he’ll have to go into some kind of
-institution.”
-
-“I suppose you know pretty well everything there is to know about
-Poirot’s family by this time,” I said, exasperated.
-
-“Pretty well,” said Caroline complacently. “It’s a great relief to
-people to be able to tell all their troubles to some one.”
-
-“It might be,” I said, “if they were ever allowed to do so
-spontaneously. Whether they enjoy having confidences screwed out of
-them by force is another matter.”
-
-Caroline merely looked at me with the air of a Christian martyr
-enjoying martyrdom.
-
-“You are so self-contained, James,” she said. “You hate speaking out,
-or parting with any information yourself, and you think everybody else
-must be just like you. I should hope that I never screw confidences out
-of anybody. For instance, if M. Poirot comes in this afternoon, as he
-said he might do, I shall not dream of asking him who it was arrived at
-his house early this morning.”
-
-“Early this morning?” I queried.
-
-“Very early,” said Caroline. “Before the milk came. I just happened
-to be looking out of the window—the blind was flapping. It was a man.
-He came in a closed car, and he was all muffled up. I couldn’t get a
-glimpse of his face. But I will tell you _my_ idea, and you’ll see that
-I’m right.”
-
-“What’s your idea?”
-
-Caroline dropped her voice mysteriously.
-
-“A Home Office expert,” she breathed.
-
-“A Home Office expert,” I said, amazed. “My dear Caroline!”
-
-“Mark my words, James, you’ll see that I’m right. That Russell woman
-was here that morning after your poisons. Roger Ackroyd might easily
-have been poisoned in his food that night.”
-
-I laughed out loud.
-
-“Nonsense,” I cried. “He was stabbed in the neck. You know that as well
-as I do.”
-
-“After death, James,” said Caroline; “to make a false clew.”
-
-“My good woman,” I said, “I examined the body, and I know what I’m
-talking about. That wound wasn’t inflicted after death—it was the cause
-of death, and you need make no mistake about it.”
-
-Caroline merely continued to look omniscient, which so annoyed me that
-I went on:—
-
-“Perhaps you will tell me, Caroline, if I have a medical degree or if I
-have not?”
-
-“You have the medical degree, I dare say, James—at least, I mean I know
-you have. But you’ve no imagination whatever.”
-
-“Having endowed you with a treble portion, there was none left over for
-me,” I said dryly.
-
-I was amused to notice Caroline’s maneuvers that afternoon when Poirot
-duly arrived. My sister, without asking a direct question, skirted the
-subject of the mysterious guest in every way imaginable. By the twinkle
-in Poirot’s eyes, I saw that he realized her object. He remained
-blandly impervious, and blocked her bowling so successfully that she
-herself was at a loss how to proceed.
-
-Having, I suspect, quietly enjoyed the little game, he rose to his feet
-and suggested a walk.
-
-“It is that I need to reduce the figure a little,” he explained. “You
-will come with me, doctor? And perhaps later Miss Caroline will give us
-some tea.”
-
-“Delighted,” said Caroline. “Won’t your—er—guest come in also?”
-
-“You are too kind,” said Poirot. “But no, my friend reposes himself.
-Soon you must make his acquaintance.”
-
-“Quite an old friend of yours, so somebody told me,” said Caroline,
-making one last valiant effort.
-
-“Did they?” murmured Poirot. “Well, we must start.”
-
-Our tramp took us in the direction of Fernly. I had guessed beforehand
-that it might do so. I was beginning to understand Poirot’s methods.
-Every little irrelevancy had a bearing upon the whole.
-
-“I have a commission for you, my friend,” he said at last. “To-night,
-at my house, I desire to have a little conference. You will attend,
-will you not?”
-
-“Certainly,” I said.
-
-“Good. I need also all those in the house—that is to say: Mrs. Ackroyd,
-Mademoiselle Flora, Major Blunt, M. Raymond. I want you to be my
-ambassador. This little reunion is fixed for nine o’clock. You will ask
-them—yes?”
-
-“With pleasure; but why not ask them yourself?”
-
-“Because they will then put the questions: Why? What for? They will
-demand what my idea is. And, as you know, my friend, I much dislike to
-have to explain my little ideas until the time comes.”
-
-I smiled a little.
-
-“My friend Hastings, he of whom I told you, used to say of me that I
-was the human oyster. But he was unjust. Of facts, I keep nothing to
-myself. But to every one his own interpretation of them.”
-
-“When do you want me to do this?”
-
-“Now, if you will. We are close to the house.”
-
-“Aren’t you coming in?”
-
-“No, me, I will promenade myself in the grounds. I will rejoin you by
-the lodge gates in a quarter of an hour’s time.”
-
-I nodded, and set off on my task. The only member of the family at home
-proved to be Mrs. Ackroyd, who was sipping an early cup of tea. She
-received me very graciously.
-
-“So grateful to you, doctor,” she murmured, “for clearing up that
-little matter with M. Poirot. But life is one trouble after another.
-You have heard about Flora, of course?”
-
-“What exactly?” I asked cautiously.
-
-“This new engagement. Flora and Hector Blunt. Of course not such a good
-match as Ralph would have been. But after all, happiness comes first.
-What dear Flora needs is an older man—some one steady and reliable, and
-then Hector is really a very distinguished man in his way. You saw the
-news of Ralph’s arrest in the paper this morning?”
-
-“Yes,” I said, “I did.”
-
-“Horrible.” Mrs. Ackroyd closed her eyes and shuddered. “Geoffrey
-Raymond was in a terrible way. Rang up Liverpool. But they wouldn’t
-tell him anything at the police station there. In fact, they said
-they hadn’t arrested Ralph at all. Mr. Raymond insists that it’s all
-a mistake—a—what do they call it?—_canard_ of the newspaper’s. I’ve
-forbidden it to be mentioned before the servants. Such a terrible
-disgrace. Fancy if Flora had actually been married to him.”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd shut her eyes in anguish. I began to wonder how soon I
-should be able to deliver Poirot’s invitation.
-
-Before I had time to speak, Mrs. Ackroyd was off again.
-
-“You were here yesterday, weren’t you, with that dreadful Inspector
-Raglan? Brute of a man—he terrified Flora into saying she took that
-money from poor Roger’s room. And the matter was so simple, really. The
-dear child wanted to borrow a few pounds, didn’t like to disturb her
-uncle since he’d given strict orders against it, but knowing where he
-kept his notes she went there and took what she needed.”
-
-“Is that Flora’s account of the matter?” I asked.
-
-“My dear doctor, you know what girls are nowadays. So easily acted on
-by suggestion. You, of course, know all about hypnosis and that sort of
-thing. The inspector shouts at her, says the word ‘steal’ over and over
-again, until the poor child gets an inhibition—or is it a complex?—I
-always mix up those two words—and actually thinks herself that she has
-stolen the money. I saw at once how it was. But I can’t be too thankful
-for the whole misunderstanding in one way—it seems to have brought
-those two together—Hector and Flora, I mean. And I assure you that I
-have been very much worried about Flora in the past: why, at one time
-I actually thought there was going to be some kind of understanding
-between her and young Raymond. Just think of it!” Mrs. Ackroyd’s voice
-rose in shrill horror. “A private secretary—with practically no means
-of his own.”
-
-“It would have been a severe blow to you,” I said. “Now, Mrs. Ackroyd,
-I’ve got a message for you from M. Hercule Poirot.”
-
-“For me?”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd looked quite alarmed.
-
-I hastened to reassure her, and I explained what Poirot wanted.
-
-“Certainly,” said Mrs. Ackroyd rather doubtfully, “I suppose we must
-come if M. Poirot says so. But what is it all about? I like to know
-beforehand.”
-
-I assured the lady truthfully that I myself did not know any more than
-she did.
-
-“Very well,” said Mrs. Ackroyd at last, rather grudgingly, “I will tell
-the others, and we will be there at nine o’clock.”
-
-Thereupon I took my leave, and joined Poirot at the agreed
-meeting-place.
-
-“I’ve been longer than a quarter of an hour, I’m afraid,” I remarked.
-“But once that good lady starts talking it’s a matter of the utmost
-difficulty to get a word in edgeways.”
-
-“It is of no matter,” said Poirot. “Me, I have been well amused. This
-park is magnificent.”
-
-We set off homewards. When we arrived, to our great surprise Caroline,
-who had evidently been watching for us, herself opened the door.
-
-She put her fingers to her lips. Her face was full of importance and
-excitement.
-
-“Ursula Bourne,” she said, “the parlormaid from Fernly. She’s here!
-I’ve put her in the dining-room. She’s in a terrible way, poor thing.
-Says she must see M. Poirot at once. I’ve done all I could. Taken her a
-cup of hot tea. It really goes to one’s heart to see any one in such a
-state.”
-
-“In the dining-room?” asked Poirot.
-
-“This way,” I said, and flung open the door.
-
-Ursula Bourne was sitting by the table. Her arms were spread out in
-front of her, and she had evidently just lifted her head from where it
-had been buried. Her eyes were red with weeping.
-
-“Ursula Bourne,” I murmured.
-
-But Poirot went past me with outstretched hands.
-
-“No,” he said, “that is not quite right, I think. It is not Ursula
-Bourne, is it, my child—but Ursula Paton? Mrs. Ralph Paton.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
-
- URSULA’S STORY
-
-
-For a moment or two the girl looked mutely at Poirot. Then, her reserve
-breaking down completely, she nodded her head once, and burst into an
-outburst of sobs.
-
-Caroline pushed past me, and putting her arm round the girl, patted her
-on the shoulder.
-
-“There, there, my dear,” she said soothingly, “it will be all right.
-You’ll see—everything will be all right.”
-
-Buried under curiosity and scandal-mongering there is a lot of kindness
-in Caroline. For the moment, even the interest of Poirot’s revelation
-was lost in the sight of the girl’s distress.
-
-Presently Ursula sat up and wiped her eyes.
-
-“This is very weak and silly of me,” she said.
-
-“No, no, my child,” said Poirot kindly. “We can all realize the strain
-of this last week.”
-
-“It must have been a terrible ordeal,” I said.
-
-“And then to find that you knew,” continued Ursula. “How did you know?
-Was it Ralph who told you?”
-
-Poirot shook his head.
-
-“You know what brought me to you to-night,” went on the girl. “_This_——”
-
-She held out a crumpled piece of newspaper, and I recognized the
-paragraph that Poirot had had inserted.
-
-“It says that Ralph has been arrested. So everything is useless. I need
-not pretend any longer.”
-
-“Newspaper paragraphs are not always true, mademoiselle,” murmured
-Poirot, having the grace to look ashamed of himself. “All the same, I
-think you will do well to make a clean breast of things. The truth is
-what we need now.”
-
-The girl hesitated, looking at him doubtfully.
-
-“You do not trust me,” said Poirot gently. “Yet all the same you came
-here to find me, did you not? Why was that?”
-
-“Because I don’t believe that Ralph did it,” said the girl in a very
-low voice. “And I think that you are clever, and will find out the
-truth. And also——”
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“I think you are kind.”
-
-Poirot nodded his head several times.
-
-“It is very good that—yes, it is very good. Listen, I do in verity
-believe that this husband of yours is innocent—but the affair marches
-badly. If I am to save him, I must know all there is to know—even if it
-should seem to make the case against him blacker than before.”
-
-“How well you understand,” said Ursula.
-
-“So you will tell me the whole story, will you not? From the beginning.”
-
-“You’re not going to send _me_ away, I hope,” said Caroline, settling
-herself comfortably in an arm-chair. “What I want to know,” she
-continued, “is why this child was masquerading as a parlormaid?”
-
-“Masquerading?” I queried.
-
-“That’s what I said. Why did you do it, child? For a wager?”
-
-“For a living,” said Ursula dryly.
-
-And encouraged, she began the story which I reproduce here in my own
-words.
-
-Ursula Bourne, it seemed, was one of a family of seven—impoverished
-Irish gentlefolk. On the death of her father, most of the girls were
-cast out into the world to earn their own living. Ursula’s eldest
-sister was married to Captain Folliott. It was she whom I had seen
-that Sunday, and the cause of her embarrassment was clear enough now.
-Determined to earn her living and not attracted to the idea of being a
-nursery governess—the one profession open to an untrained girl, Ursula
-preferred the job of parlormaid. She scorned to label herself a “lady
-parlormaid.” She would be the real thing, her reference being supplied
-by her sister. At Fernly, despite an aloofness which, as has been seen,
-caused some comment, she was a success at her job—quick, competent, and
-thorough.
-
-“I enjoyed the work,” she explained. “And I had plenty of time to
-myself.”
-
-And then came her meeting with Ralph Paton, and the love affair which
-culminated in a secret marriage. Ralph had persuaded her into that,
-somewhat against her will. He had declared that his stepfather would
-not hear of his marrying a penniless girl. Better to be married
-secretly, and break the news to him at some later and more favorable
-minute.
-
-And so the deed was done, and Ursula Bourne became Ursula Paton.
-Ralph had declared that he meant to pay off his debts, find a job, and
-then, when he was in a position to support her, and independent of his
-adopted father, they would break the news to him.
-
-But to people like Ralph Paton, turning over a new leaf is easier in
-theory than in practice. He hoped that his stepfather, whilst still
-in ignorance of the marriage, might be persuaded to pay his debts and
-put him on his feet again. But the revelation of the amount of Ralph’s
-liabilities merely enraged Roger Ackroyd, and he refused to do anything
-at all. Some months passed, and then Ralph was bidden once more to
-Fernly. Roger Ackroyd did not beat about the bush. It was the desire of
-his heart that Ralph should marry Flora, and he put the matter plainly
-before the young man.
-
-And here it was that the innate weakness of Ralph Paton showed itself.
-As always, he grasped at the easy, the immediate solution. As far
-as I could make out, neither Flora nor Ralph made any pretence of
-love. It was, on both sides, a business arrangement. Roger Ackroyd
-dictated his wishes—they agreed to them. Flora accepted a chance of
-liberty, money, and an enlarged horizon, Ralph, of course, was playing
-a different game. But he was in a very awkward hole financially. He
-seized at the chance. His debts would be paid. He could start again
-with a clean sheet. His was not a nature to envisage the future, but
-I gather that he saw vaguely the engagement with Flora being broken
-off after a decent interval had elapsed. Both Flora and he stipulated
-that it should be kept a secret for the present. He was anxious to
-conceal it from Ursula. He felt instinctively that her nature, strong
-and resolute, with an inherent distaste for duplicity, was not one to
-welcome such a course.
-
-Then came the crucial moment when Roger Ackroyd, always high-handed,
-decided to announce the engagement. He said no word of his intention
-to Ralph—only to Flora, and Flora, apathetic, raised no objection. On
-Ursula, the news fell like a bombshell. Summoned by her, Ralph came
-hurriedly down from town. They met in the wood, where part of their
-conversation was overheard by my sister. Ralph implored her to keep
-silent for a little while longer, Ursula was equally determined to have
-done with concealments. She would tell Mr. Ackroyd the truth without
-any further delay. Husband and wife parted acrimoniously.
-
-Ursula, steadfast in her purpose, sought an interview with Roger
-Ackroyd that very afternoon, and revealed the truth to him. Their
-interview was a stormy one—it might have been even more stormy had not
-Roger Ackroyd been already obsessed with his own troubles. It was bad
-enough, however. Ackroyd was not the kind of man to forgive the deceit
-that had been practiced upon him. His rancor was mainly directed to
-Ralph, but Ursula came in for her share, since he regarded her as a
-girl who had deliberately tried to “entrap” the adopted son of a very
-wealthy man. Unforgivable things were said on both sides.
-
-That same evening Ursula met Ralph by appointment in the small
-summer-house, stealing out from the house by the side door in order to
-do so. Their interview was made up of reproaches on both sides. Ralph
-charged Ursula with having irretrievably ruined his prospects by her
-ill-timed revelation. Ursula reproached Ralph with his duplicity.
-
-They parted at last. A little over half an hour later came the
-discovery of Roger Ackroyd’s body. Since that night Ursula had neither
-seen nor heard from Ralph.
-
-As the story unfolded itself, I realized more and more what a damning
-series of facts it was. Alive, Ackroyd could hardly have failed to
-alter his will—I knew him well enough to realize that to do so would
-be his first thought. His death came in the nick of time for Ralph and
-Ursula Paton. Small wonder the girl had held her tongue, and played her
-part so consistently.
-
-My meditations were interrupted. It was Poirot’s voice speaking, and I
-knew from the gravity of his tone that he, too, was fully alive to the
-implications of the position.
-
-“Mademoiselle, I must ask you one question, and you must answer it
-truthfully, for on it everything may hang: What time was it when you
-parted from Captain Ralph Paton in the summer-house? Now, take a little
-minute so that your answer may be very exact.”
-
-The girl gave a half laugh, bitter enough in all conscience.
-
-“Do you think I haven’t gone over that again and again in my own mind?
-It was just half-past nine when I went out to meet him. Major Blunt
-was walking up and down the terrace, so I had to go round through the
-bushes to avoid him. It must have been about twenty-seven minutes to
-ten when I reached the summer-house. Ralph was waiting for me. I was
-with him ten minutes—not longer, for it was just a quarter to ten when
-I got back to the house.”
-
-I saw now the insistence of her question the other day. If only Ackroyd
-could have been proved to have been killed before a quarter to ten, and
-not after.
-
-I saw the reflection of that thought in Poirot’s next question.
-
-“Who left the summer-house first?”
-
-“I did.”
-
-“Leaving Ralph Paton in the summer-house?”
-
-“Yes—but you don’t think——”
-
-“Mademoiselle, it is of no importance what I think. What did you do
-when you got back to the house?”
-
-“I went up to my room.”
-
-“And stayed there until when?”
-
-“Until about ten o’clock.”
-
-“Is there any one who can prove that?”
-
-“Prove? That I was in my room, you mean? Oh! no. But surely—oh! I see,
-they might think—they might think——”
-
-I saw the dawning horror in her eyes.
-
-Poirot finished the sentence for her.
-
-“That it was _you_ who entered by the window and stabbed Mr. Ackroyd as
-he sat in his chair? Yes, they might think just that.”
-
-“Nobody but a fool would think any such thing,” said Caroline
-indignantly.
-
-She patted Ursula on the shoulder.
-
-The girl had her face hidden in her hands.
-
-“Horrible,” she was murmuring. “Horrible.”
-
-Caroline gave her a friendly shake.
-
-“Don’t worry, my dear,” she said. “M. Poirot doesn’t think that really.
-As for that husband of yours, I don’t think much of him, and I tell you
-so candidly. Running away and leaving you to face the music.”
-
-But Ursula shook her head energetically.
-
-“Oh, no,” she cried. “It wasn’t like that at all. Ralph would not run
-away on his own account. I see now. If he heard of his stepfather’s
-murder, he might think himself that I had done it.”
-
-“He wouldn’t think any such thing,” said Caroline.
-
-“I was so cruel to him that night—so hard and bitter. I wouldn’t listen
-to what he was trying to say—wouldn’t believe that he really cared.
-I just stood there telling him what I thought of him, and saying the
-coldest, cruelest things that came into my mind—trying my best to hurt
-him.”
-
-“Do him no harm,” said Caroline. “Never worry about what you say to a
-man. They’re so conceited that they never believe you mean it if it’s
-unflattering.”
-
-Ursula went on, nervously twisting and untwisting her hands.
-
-“When the murder was discovered and he didn’t come forward, I was
-terribly upset. Just for a moment I wondered—but then I knew he
-couldn’t—he couldn’t.... But I wished he would come forward and say
-openly that he’d had nothing to do with it. I knew that he was very
-fond of Dr. Sheppard, and I fancied that perhaps Dr. Sheppard might
-know where he was hiding.”
-
-She turned to me.
-
-“That’s why I said what I did to you that day. I thought, if you knew
-where he was, you might pass on the message to him.”
-
-“I?” I exclaimed.
-
-“Why should James know where he was?” demanded Caroline sharply.
-
-“It was very unlikely, I know,” admitted Ursula, “but Ralph had often
-spoken of Dr. Sheppard, and I knew that he would be likely to consider
-him as his best friend in King’s Abbot.”
-
-“My dear child,” I said, “I have not the least idea where Ralph Paton
-is at the present moment.”
-
-“That is true enough,” said Poirot.
-
-“But——” Ursula held out the newspaper cutting in a puzzled fashion.
-
-“Ah! that,” said Poirot, slightly embarrassed; “a _bagatelle_,
-mademoiselle. A _rien du tout_. Not for a moment do I believe that
-Ralph Paton has been arrested.”
-
-“But then——” began the girl slowly.
-
-Poirot went on quickly:—
-
-“There is one thing I should like to know—did Captain Paton wear shoes
-or boots that night?”
-
-Ursula shook her head.
-
-“I can’t remember.”
-
-“A pity! But how should you? Now, madame,” he smiled at her, his head
-on one side, his forefinger wagging eloquently, “no questions. And
-do not torment yourself. Be of good courage, and place your faith in
-Hercule Poirot.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
-
- POIROT’S LITTLE REUNION
-
-
-“And now,” said Caroline, rising, “that child is coming upstairs to lie
-down. Don’t you worry, my dear. M. Poirot will do everything he can for
-you—be sure of that.”
-
-“I ought to go back to Fernly,” said Ursula uncertainly.
-
-But Caroline silenced her protests with a firm hand.
-
-“Nonsense. You’re in my hands for the time being. You’ll stay here for
-the present, anyway—eh, M. Poirot?”
-
-“It will be the best plan,” agreed the little Belgian. “This evening I
-shall want mademoiselle—I beg her pardon, madame—to attend my little
-reunion. Nine o’clock at my house. It is most necessary that she should
-be there.”
-
-Caroline nodded, and went with Ursula out of the room. The door shut
-behind them. Poirot dropped down into a chair again.
-
-“So far, so good,” he said. “Things are straightening themselves out.”
-
-“They’re getting to look blacker and blacker against Ralph Paton,” I
-observed gloomily.
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“Yes, that is so. But it was to be expected, was it not?”
-
-I looked at him, slightly puzzled by the remark. He was leaning back in
-the chair, his eyes half closed, the tips of his fingers just touching
-each other. Suddenly he sighed and shook his head.
-
-“What is it?” I asked.
-
-“It is that there are moments when a great longing for my friend
-Hastings comes over me. That is the friend of whom I spoke to you—the
-one who resides now in the Argentine. Always, when I have had a big
-case, he has been by my side. And he has helped me—yes, often he has
-helped me. For he had a knack, that one, of stumbling over the truth
-unawares—without noticing it himself, _bien entendu_. At times he has
-said something particularly foolish, and behold that foolish remark has
-revealed the truth to me! And then, too, it was his practice to keep a
-written record of the cases that proved interesting.”
-
-I gave a slight embarrassed cough.
-
-“As far as that goes,” I began, and then stopped.
-
-Poirot sat upright in his chair. His eyes sparkled.
-
-“But yes? What is it that you would say?”
-
-“Well, as a matter of fact, I’ve read some of Captain Hastings’s
-narratives, and I thought, why not try my hand at something of the same
-kind? Seemed a pity not to—unique opportunity—probably the only time
-I’ll be mixed up with anything of this kind.”
-
-I felt myself getting hotter and hotter, and more and more incoherent,
-as I floundered through the above speech.
-
-Poirot sprang from his chair. I had a moment’s terror that he was going
-to embrace me French fashion, but mercifully he refrained.
-
-“But this is magnificent—you have then written down your impressions of
-the case as you went along?”
-
-I nodded.
-
-“_Epatant!_” cried Poirot. “Let me see them—this instant.”
-
-I was not quite prepared for such a sudden demand. I racked my brains
-to remember certain details.
-
-“I hope you won’t mind,” I stammered. “I may have been a
-little—er—_personal_ now and then.”
-
-“Oh! I comprehend perfectly; you have referred to me as comic—as,
-perhaps, ridiculous now and then? It matters not at all. Hastings,
-he also was not always polite. Me, I have the mind above such
-trivialities.”
-
-Still somewhat doubtful, I rummaged in the drawers of my desk and
-produced an untidy pile of manuscript which I handed over to him. With
-an eye on possible publication in the future, I had divided the work
-into chapters, and the night before I had brought it up to date with an
-account of Miss Russell’s visit. Poirot had therefore twenty chapters.
-
-I left him with them.
-
-I was obliged to go out to a case at some distance away, and it was
-past eight o’clock when I got back, to be greeted with a plate of hot
-dinner on a tray, and the announcement that Poirot and my sister had
-supped together at half-past seven, and that the former had then gone
-to my workshop to finish his reading of the manuscript.
-
-“I hope, James,” said my sister, “that you’ve been careful in what you
-say about me in it?”
-
-My jaw dropped. I had not been careful at all.
-
-“Not that it matters very much,” said Caroline, reading my expression
-correctly. “M. Poirot will know what to think. He understands me much
-better than you do.”
-
-I went into the workshop. Poirot was sitting by the window. The
-manuscript lay neatly piled on a chair beside him. He laid his hand on
-it and spoke.
-
-“_Eh bien_,” he said, “I congratulate you—on your modesty!”
-
-“Oh!” I said, rather taken aback.
-
-“And on your reticence,” he added.
-
-I said “Oh!” again.
-
-“Not so did Hastings write,” continued my friend. “On every page,
-many, many times was the word ‘I.’ What _he_ thought—what _he_ did.
-But you—you have kept your personality in the background; only once or
-twice does it obtrude—in scenes of home life, shall we say?”
-
-I blushed a little before the twinkle in his eye.
-
-“What do you really think of the stuff?” I asked nervously.
-
-“You want my candid opinion?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-Poirot laid his jesting manner aside.
-
-“A very meticulous and accurate account,” he said kindly. “You have
-recorded all the facts faithfully and exactly—though you have shown
-yourself becomingly reticent as to your own share in them.”
-
-“And it has helped you?”
-
-“Yes. I may say that it has helped me considerably. Come, we must go
-over to my house and set the stage for my little performance.”
-
-Caroline was in the hall. I think she hoped that she might be invited
-to accompany us. Poirot dealt with the situation tactfully.
-
-“I should much like to have had you present, mademoiselle,” he said
-regretfully, “but at this juncture it would not be wise. See you, all
-these people to-night are suspects. Amongst them, I shall find the
-person who killed Mr. Ackroyd.”
-
-“You really believe that?” I said incredulously.
-
-“I see that you do not,” said Poirot dryly. “Not yet do you appreciate
-Hercule Poirot at his true worth.”
-
-At that minute Ursula came down the staircase.
-
-“You are ready, my child?” said Poirot. “That is good. We will go to
-my house together. Mademoiselle Caroline, believe me, I do everything
-possible to render you service. Good-evening.”
-
-We went out, leaving Caroline, rather like a dog who has been refused a
-walk, standing on the front door step gazing after us.
-
-The sitting-room at The Larches had been got ready. On the table were
-various _sirops_ and glasses. Also a plate of biscuits. Several chairs
-had been brought in from the other room.
-
-Poirot ran to and fro rearranging things. Pulling out a chair here,
-altering the position of a lamp there, occasionally stooping to
-straighten one of the mats that covered the floor. He was specially
-fussy over the lighting. The lamps were arranged in such a way as to
-throw a clear light on the side of the room where the chairs were
-grouped, at the same time leaving the other end of the room, where I
-presumed Poirot himself would sit, in a dim twilight.
-
-Ursula and I watched him. Presently a bell was heard.
-
-“They arrive,” said Poirot. “Good, all is in readiness.”
-
-The door opened and the party from Fernly filed in. Poirot went forward
-and greeted Mrs. Ackroyd and Flora.
-
-“It is most good of you to come,” he said. “And Major Blunt and Mr.
-Raymond.”
-
-The secretary was debonair as ever.
-
-“What’s the great idea?” he said, laughing. “Some scientific machine?
-Do we have bands round our wrists which register guilty heart-beats?
-There is such an invention, isn’t there?”
-
-“I have read of it, yes,” admitted Poirot. “But me, I am old-fashioned.
-I use the old methods. I work only with the little gray cells. Now let
-us begin—but first I have an announcement to make to you all.”
-
-He took Ursula’s hand and drew her forward.
-
-“This lady is Mrs. Ralph Paton. She was married to Captain Paton last
-March.”
-
-A little shriek burst from Mrs. Ackroyd.
-
-“Ralph! Married! Last March! Oh! but it’s absurd. How could he be?”
-
-She stared at Ursula as though she had never seen her before.
-
-“Married to Bourne?” she said. “Really, M. Poirot, I don’t believe you.”
-
-Ursula flushed and began to speak, but Flora forestalled her.
-
-Going quickly to the other girl’s side, she passed her hand through her
-arm.
-
-“You must not mind our being surprised,” she said. “You see, we had no
-idea of such a thing. You and Ralph have kept your secret very well. I
-am—very glad about it.”
-
-“You are very kind, Miss Ackroyd,” said Ursula in a low voice, “and
-you have every right to be exceedingly angry. Ralph behaved very
-badly—especially to you.”
-
-“You needn’t worry about that,” said Flora, giving her arm a consoling
-little pat. “Ralph was in a corner and took the only way out. I should
-probably have done the same in his place. I do think he might have
-trusted me with the secret, though. I wouldn’t have let him down.”
-
-Poirot rapped gently on a table and cleared his throat significantly.
-
-“The board meeting’s going to begin,” said Flora. “M. Poirot hints that
-we mustn’t talk. But just tell me one thing. Where is Ralph? You must
-know if any one does.”
-
-“But I don’t,” cried Ursula, almost in a wail. “That’s just it, I
-don’t.”
-
-“Isn’t he detained at Liverpool?” asked Raymond. “It said so in the
-paper.”
-
-“He is not at Liverpool,” said Poirot shortly.
-
-“In fact,” I remarked, “no one knows where he is.”
-
-“Excepting Hercule Poirot, eh?” said Raymond.
-
-Poirot replied seriously to the other’s banter.
-
-“Me, I know everything. Remember that.”
-
-Geoffrey Raymond lifted his eyebrows.
-
-“Everything?” He whistled. “Whew! that’s a tall order.”
-
-“Do you mean to say you can really guess where Ralph Paton is hiding?”
-I asked incredulously.
-
-“You call it guessing. I call it knowing, my friend.”
-
-“In Cranchester?” I hazarded.
-
-“No,” replied Poirot gravely, “not in Cranchester.”
-
-He said no more, but at a gesture from him the assembled party took
-their seats. As they did so, the door opened once more and two other
-people came in and sat down near the door. They were Parker and the
-housekeeper.
-
-“The number is complete,” said Poirot. “Every one is here.”
-
-There was a ring of satisfaction in his tone. And with the sound of it
-I saw a ripple of something like uneasiness pass over all those faces
-grouped at the other end of the room. There was a suggestion in all
-this as of a trap—a trap that had closed.
-
-Poirot read from a list in an important manner.
-
-“Mrs. Ackroyd, Miss Flora Ackroyd, Major Blunt, Mr. Geoffrey Raymond,
-Mrs. Ralph Paton, John Parker, Elizabeth Russell.”
-
-He laid the paper down on the table.
-
-“What’s the meaning of all this?” began Raymond.
-
-“The list I have just read,” said Poirot, “is a list of suspected
-persons. Every one of you present had the opportunity to kill Mr.
-Ackroyd——”
-
-With a cry Mrs. Ackroyd sprang up, her throat working.
-
-“I don’t like it,” she wailed. “I don’t like it. I would much prefer to
-go home.”
-
-“You cannot go home, madame,” said Poirot sternly, “until you have
-heard what I have to say.”
-
-He paused a moment, then cleared his throat.
-
-“I will start at the beginning. When Miss Ackroyd asked me to
-investigate the case, I went up to Fernly Park with the good Dr.
-Sheppard. I walked with him along the terrace, where I was shown the
-footprints on the window-sill. From there Inspector Raglan took me
-along the path which leads to the drive. My eye was caught by a little
-summer-house, and I searched it thoroughly. I found two things—a scrap
-of starched cambric and an empty goose quill. The scrap of cambric
-immediately suggested to me a maid’s apron. When Inspector Raglan
-showed me his list of the people in the house, I noticed at once that
-one of the maids—Ursula Bourne, the parlormaid—had no real alibi.
-According to her own story, she was in her bedroom from nine-thirty
-until ten. But supposing that instead she was in the summer-house?
-If so, she must have gone there to meet some one. Now we know from
-Dr. Sheppard that some one from outside _did_ come to the house that
-night—the stranger whom he met just by the gate. At a first glance it
-would seem that our problem was solved, and that the stranger went to
-the summer-house to meet Ursula Bourne. It was fairly certain that he
-_did_ go to the summer-house because of the goose quill. That suggested
-at once to my mind a taker of drugs—and one who had acquired the habit
-on the other side of the Atlantic where sniffing ‘snow’ is more common
-than in this country. The man whom Dr. Sheppard met had an American
-accent, which fitted in with that supposition.
-
-“But I was held up by one point. _The times did not fit._ Ursula
-Bourne could certainly not have gone to the summer-house before
-nine-thirty, whereas the man must have got there by a few minutes
-past nine. I could, of course, assume that he waited there for half
-an hour. The only alternative supposition was that there had been two
-separate meetings in the summer-house that night. _Eh bien_, as soon
-as I went into that alternative I found several significant facts. I
-discovered that Miss Russell, the housekeeper, had visited Dr. Sheppard
-that morning, and had displayed a good deal of interest in cures for
-victims of the drug habit. Taking that in conjunction with the goose
-quill, I assumed that the man in question came to Fernly to meet the
-housekeeper, and not Ursula Bourne. Who, then, did Ursula Bourne come
-to the rendezvous to meet? I was not long in doubt. First I found a
-ring—a wedding ring—with ‘From R.’ and a date inside it. Then I learnt
-that Ralph Paton had been seen coming up the path which led to the
-summer-house at twenty-five minutes past nine, and I also heard of
-a certain conversation which had taken place in the wood near the
-village that very afternoon—a conversation between Ralph Paton and
-some unknown girl. So I had my facts succeeding each other in a neat
-and orderly manner. A secret marriage, an engagement announced on the
-day of the tragedy, the stormy interview in the wood, and the meeting
-arranged for the summer-house that night.
-
-“Incidentally this proved to me one thing, that both Ralph Paton and
-Ursula Bourne (or Paton) had the strongest motives for wishing Mr.
-Ackroyd out of the way. And it also made one other point unexpectedly
-clear. It could not have been Ralph Paton who was with Mr. Ackroyd in
-the study at nine-thirty.
-
-“So we come to another and most interesting aspect of the crime. Who
-was it in the room with Mr. Ackroyd at nine-thirty? Not Ralph Paton,
-who was in the summer-house with his wife. Not Charles Kent, who
-had already left. Who, then? I posed my cleverest—my most audacious
-question: _Was any one with him?_”
-
-Poirot leaned forward and shot the last words triumphantly at us,
-drawing back afterwards with the air of one who has made a decided hit.
-
-Raymond, however, did not seem impressed, and lodged a mild protest.
-
-“I don’t know if you’re trying to make me out a liar, M. Poirot, but
-the matter does not rest on my evidence alone—except perhaps as to the
-exact words used. Remember, Major Blunt also heard Mr. Ackroyd talking
-to some one. He was on the terrace outside, and couldn’t catch the
-words clearly, but he distinctly heard the voices.”
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“I have not forgotten,” he said quietly. “But Major Blunt was under the
-impression that it was _you_ to whom Mr. Ackroyd was speaking.”
-
-For a moment Raymond seemed taken aback. Then he recovered himself.
-
-“Blunt knows now that he was mistaken,” he said.
-
-“Exactly,” agreed the other man.
-
-“Yet there must have been some reason for his thinking so,” mused
-Poirot. “Oh! no,” he held up his hand in protest, “I know the reason
-you will give—but it is not enough. We must seek elsewhere. I will put
-it this way. From the beginning of the case I have been struck by one
-thing—the nature of those words which Mr. Raymond overheard. It has
-been amazing to me that no one has commented on them—has seen anything
-odd about them.”
-
-He paused a minute, and then quoted softly:—
-
-“... _The calls on my purse have been so frequent of late that I fear
-it is impossible for me to accede to your request._ Does nothing strike
-you as odd about that?”
-
-“I don’t think so,” said Raymond. “He has frequently dictated letters
-to me, using almost exactly those same words.”
-
-“Exactly,” cried Poirot. “That is what I seek to arrive at. Would any
-man use such a phrase in _talking_ to another? Impossible that that
-should be part of a real conversation. Now, if he had been dictating a
-letter——”
-
-“You mean he was reading a letter aloud,” said Raymond slowly. “Even
-so, he must have been reading to some one.”
-
-“But why? We have no evidence that there was any one else in the room.
-No other voice but Mr. Ackroyd’s was heard, remember.”
-
-“Surely a man wouldn’t read letters of that type aloud to himself—not
-unless he was—well—going balmy.”
-
-“You have all forgotten one thing,” said Poirot softly: “the stranger
-who called at the house the preceding Wednesday.”
-
-They all stared at him.
-
-“But yes,” said Poirot, nodding encouragingly, “on Wednesday. The
-young man was not of himself important. But the firm he represented
-interested me very much.”
-
-“The Dictaphone Company,” gasped Raymond. “I see it now. A dictaphone.
-That’s what you think?”
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd had promised to invest in a dictaphone, you remember.
-Me, I had the curiosity to inquire of the company in question. Their
-reply is that Mr. Ackroyd _did_ purchase a dictaphone from their
-representative. Why he concealed the matter from you, I do not know.”
-
-“He must have meant to surprise me with it,” murmured Raymond. “He had
-quite a childish love of surprising people. Meant to keep it up his
-sleeve for a day or so. Probably was playing with it like a new toy.
-Yes, it fits in. You’re quite right—no one would use quite those words
-in casual conversation.”
-
-“It explains, too,” said Poirot, “why Major Blunt thought it was you
-who were in the study. Such scraps as came to him were fragments of
-dictation, and so his subconscious mind deduced that you were with him.
-His conscious mind was occupied with something quite different—the
-white figure he had caught a glimpse of. He fancied it was Miss
-Ackroyd. Really, of course, it was Ursula Bourne’s white apron he saw
-as she was stealing down to the summer-house.”
-
-Raymond had recovered from his first surprise.
-
-“All the same,” he remarked, “this discovery of yours, brilliant though
-it is (I’m quite sure I should never have thought of it), leaves the
-essential position unchanged. Mr. Ackroyd was alive at nine-thirty,
-since he was speaking into the dictaphone. It seems clear that the man
-Charles Kent was really off the premises by then. As to Ralph Paton——?”
-
-He hesitated, glancing at Ursula.
-
-Her color flared up, but she answered steadily enough.
-
-“Ralph and I parted just before a quarter to ten. He never went near
-the house, I am sure of that. He had no intention of doing so. The last
-thing on earth he wanted was to face his stepfather. He would have
-funked it badly.”
-
-“It isn’t that I doubt your story for a moment,” explained Raymond.
-“I’ve always been quite sure Captain Paton was innocent. But one has to
-think of a court of law—and the questions that would be asked. He is in
-a most unfortunate position, but if he were to come forward——”
-
-Poirot interrupted.
-
-“That is your advice, yes? That he should come forward?”
-
-“Certainly. If you know where he is——”
-
-“I perceive that you do not believe that I do know. And yet I have told
-you just now that I know everything. The truth of the telephone call,
-of the footprints on the window-sill, of the hiding-place of Ralph
-Paton——”
-
-“Where is he?” said Blunt sharply.
-
-“Not very far away,” said Poirot, smiling.
-
-“In Cranchester?” I asked.
-
-Poirot turned towards me.
-
-“Always you ask me that. The idea of Cranchester it is with you an
-_idée fixe_. No, he is not in Cranchester. He is—_there_!”
-
-He pointed a dramatic forefinger. Every one’s head turned.
-
-Ralph Paton was standing in the doorway.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
-
- RALPH PATON’S STORY
-
-
-It was a very uncomfortable minute for _me_. I hardly took in what
-happened next, but there were exclamations and cries of surprise! When
-I was sufficiently master of myself to be able to realize what was
-going on, Ralph Paton was standing by his wife, her hand in his, and he
-was smiling across the room at me.
-
-Poirot, too, was smiling, and at the same time shaking an eloquent
-finger at me.
-
-“Have I not told you at least thirty-six times that it is useless to
-conceal things from Hercule Poirot?” he demanded. “That in such a case
-he finds out?”
-
-He turned to the others.
-
-“One day, you remember, we held a little séance about a table—just
-the six of us. I accused the other five persons present of concealing
-something from me. Four of them gave up their secret. Dr. Sheppard did
-not give up his. But all along I have had my suspicions. Dr. Sheppard
-went to the Three Boars that night hoping to find Ralph. He did not
-find him there; but supposing, I said to myself, that he met him in the
-street on his way home? Dr. Sheppard was a friend of Captain Paton’s,
-and he had come straight from the scene of the crime. He must know that
-things looked very black against him. Perhaps he knew more than the
-general public did——”
-
-“I did,” I said ruefully. “I suppose I might as well make a clean
-breast of things now. I went to see Ralph that afternoon. At first he
-refused to take me into his confidence, but later he told me about his
-marriage, and the hole he was in. As soon as the murder was discovered,
-I realized that once the facts were known, suspicion could not fail to
-attach to Ralph—or, if not to him, to the girl he loved. That night I
-put the facts plainly before him. The thought of having possibly to
-give evidence which might incriminate his wife made him resolve at all
-costs to—to——”
-
-I hesitated, and Ralph filled up the gap.
-
-“To do a bunk,” he said graphically. “You see, Ursula left me to go
-back to the house. I thought it possible that she might have attempted
-to have another interview with my stepfather. He had already been very
-rude to her that afternoon. It occurred to me that he might have so
-insulted her—in such an unforgivable manner—that without knowing what
-she was doing——”
-
-He stopped. Ursula released her hand from his, and stepped back.
-
-“You thought that, Ralph! You actually thought that I might have done
-it?”
-
-“Let us get back to the culpable conduct of Dr. Sheppard,” said Poirot
-dryly. “Dr. Sheppard consented to do what he could to help him. He was
-successful in hiding Captain Paton from the police.”
-
-“Where?” asked Raymond. “In his own house?”
-
-“Ah, no, indeed,” said Poirot. “You should ask yourself the question
-that I did. If the good doctor is concealing the young man, what place
-would he choose? It must necessarily be somewhere near at hand. I think
-of Cranchester. A hotel? No. Lodgings? Even more emphatically, no.
-Where, then? Ah! I have it. A nursing home. A home for the mentally
-unfit. I test my theory. I invent a nephew with mental trouble. I
-consult Mademoiselle Sheppard as to suitable homes. She gives me the
-names of two near Cranchester to which her brother has sent patients. I
-make inquiries. Yes, at one of them a patient was brought there by the
-doctor himself early on Saturday morning. That patient, though known
-by another name, I had no difficulty in identifying as Captain Paton.
-After certain necessary formalities, I was allowed to bring him away.
-He arrived at my house in the early hours of yesterday morning.”
-
-I looked at him ruefully.
-
-“Caroline’s Home Office expert,” I murmured. “And to think I never
-guessed!”
-
-“You see now why I drew attention to the reticence of your manuscript,”
-murmured Poirot. “It was strictly truthful as far as it went—but it did
-not go very far, eh, my friend?”
-
-I was too abashed to argue.
-
-“Dr. Sheppard has been very loyal,” said Ralph. “He has stood by me
-through thick and thin. He did what he thought was the best. I see now,
-from what M. Poirot has told me, that it was not really the best. I
-should have come forward and faced the music. You see, in the home, we
-never saw a newspaper. I knew nothing of what was going on.”
-
-“Dr. Sheppard has been a model of discretion,” said Poirot dryly. “But
-me, I discover all the little secrets. It is my business.”
-
-“Now we can have your story of what happened that night,” said Raymond
-impatiently.
-
-“You know it already,” said Ralph. “There’s very little for me to add.
-I left the summer-house about nine-forty-five, and tramped about the
-lanes, trying to make up my mind as to what to do next—what line to
-take. I’m bound to admit that I’ve not the shadow of an alibi, but I
-give you my solemn word that I never went to the study, that I never
-saw my stepfather alive—or dead. Whatever the world thinks, I’d like
-all of you to believe me.”
-
-“No alibi,” murmured Raymond. “That’s bad. I believe you, of course,
-but—it’s a bad business.”
-
-“It makes things very simple, though,” said Poirot, in a cheerful
-voice. “Very simple indeed.”
-
-We all stared at him.
-
-“You see what I mean? No? Just this—to save Captain Paton the real
-criminal must confess.”
-
-He beamed round at us all.
-
-“But yes—I mean what I say. See now, I did not invite Inspector Raglan
-to be present. That was for a reason. I did not want to tell him all
-that I knew—at least I did not want to tell him to-night.”
-
-He leaned forward, and suddenly his voice and his whole personality
-changed. He suddenly became dangerous.
-
-“I who speak to you—I know the murderer of Mr. Ackroyd is in this
-room now. It is to the murderer I speak. _To-morrow the truth goes to
-Inspector Raglan._ You understand?”
-
-There was a tense silence. Into the midst of it came the old Breton
-woman with a telegram on a salver. Poirot tore it open.
-
-Blunt’s voice rose abrupt and resonant.
-
-“The murderer is amongst us, you say? You know—which?”
-
-Poirot had read the message. He crumpled it up in his hand.
-
-“I know—now.”
-
-He tapped the crumpled ball of paper.
-
-“What is that?” said Raymond sharply.
-
-“A wireless message—from a steamer now on her way to the United States.”
-
-There was a dead silence. Poirot rose to his feet bowing.
-
-“Messieurs et Mesdames, this reunion of mine is at an end.
-Remember—_the truth goes to Inspector Raglan in the morning_.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV
-
- THE WHOLE TRUTH
-
-
-A slight gesture from Poirot enjoined me to stay behind the rest. I
-obeyed, going over to the fire and thoughtfully stirring the big logs
-on it with the toe of my boot.
-
-I was puzzled. For the first time I was absolutely at sea as to
-Poirot’s meaning. For a moment I was inclined to think that the scene
-I had just witnessed was a gigantic piece of bombast—that he had been
-what he called “playing the comedy” with a view to making himself
-interesting and important. But, in spite of myself, I was forced to
-believe in an underlying reality. There had been real menace in his
-words—a certain indisputable sincerity. But I still believed him to be
-on entirely the wrong tack.
-
-When the door shut behind the last of the party he came over to the
-fire.
-
-“Well, my friend,” he said quietly, “and what do you think of it all?”
-
-“I don’t know what to think,” I said frankly. “What was the point? Why
-not go straight to Inspector Raglan with the truth instead of giving
-the guilty person this elaborate warning?”
-
-Poirot sat down and drew out his case of tiny Russian cigarettes. He
-smoked for a minute or two in silence. Then:—
-
-“Use your little gray cells,” he said. “There is always a reason behind
-my actions.”
-
-I hesitated for a moment, and then I said slowly:
-
-“The first one that occurs to me is that you yourself do not know who
-the guilty person is, but that you are sure that he is to be found
-amongst the people here to-night. Therefore your words were intended to
-force a confession from the unknown murderer?”
-
-Poirot nodded approvingly.
-
-“A clever idea, but not the truth.”
-
-“I thought, perhaps, that by making him believe you knew, you might
-force him out into the open—not necessarily by confession. He might try
-to silence you as he formerly silenced Mr. Ackroyd—before you could act
-to-morrow morning.”
-
-“A trap with myself as the bait! _Merci, mon ami_, but I am not
-sufficiently heroic for that.”
-
-“Then I fail to understand you. Surely you are running the risk of
-letting the murderer escape by thus putting him on his guard?”
-
-Poirot shook his head.
-
-“He cannot escape,” he said gravely. “There is only one way out—and
-that way does not lead to freedom.”
-
-“You really believe that one of those people here to-night committed
-the murder?” I asked incredulously.
-
-“Yes, my friend.”
-
-“Which one?”
-
-There was a silence for some minutes. Then Poirot tossed the stump of
-his cigarette into the grate and began to speak in a quiet, reflective
-tone.
-
-“I will take you the way that I have traveled myself. Step by step
-you shall accompany me, and see for yourself that all the facts point
-indisputably to one person. Now, to begin with, there were two facts
-and one little discrepancy in time which especially attracted my
-attention. The first fact was the telephone call. If Ralph Paton were
-indeed the murderer, the telephone call became meaningless and absurd.
-Therefore, I said to myself, Ralph Paton is not the murderer.
-
-“I satisfied myself that the call could not have been sent by any one
-in the house, yet I was convinced that it was amongst those present
-on the fatal evening that I had to look for my criminal. Therefore I
-concluded that the telephone call must have been sent by an accomplice.
-I was not quite pleased with that deduction, but I let it stand for the
-minute.
-
-“I next examined the _motive_ for the call. That was difficult. I could
-only get at it by judging its _result_. Which was—that the murder was
-discovered that night instead of—in all probability—the following
-morning. You agree with that?”
-
-“Ye-es,” I admitted. “Yes. As you say, Mr. Ackroyd, having given orders
-that he was not to be disturbed, nobody would have been likely to go to
-the study that night.”
-
-“_Très bien._ The affair marches, does it not? But matters were
-still obscure. What was the advantage of having the crime discovered
-that night in preference to the following morning? The only idea I
-could get hold of was that the murderer, knowing the crime was to be
-discovered at a certain time, could make sure of being present when the
-door was broken in—or at any rate immediately afterwards. And now we
-come to the second fact—the chair pulled out from the wall. Inspector
-Raglan dismissed that as of no importance. I, on the contrary, have
-always regarded it as of supreme importance.
-
-“In your manuscript you have drawn a neat little plan of the study.
-If you had it with you this minute you would see that—the chair being
-drawn out in the position indicated by Parker—it would stand in a
-direct line between the door and the window.”
-
-“The window!” I said quickly.
-
-“You, too, have my first idea. I imagined that the chair was drawn out
-so that something connected with the window should not be seen by any
-one entering through the door. But I soon abandoned that supposition,
-for though the chair was a grandfather with a high back, it obscured
-very little of the window—only the part between the sash and the
-ground. No, _mon ami_—but remember that just in front of the window
-there stood a table with books and magazines upon it. Now that table
-_was_ completely hidden by the drawn-out chair—and immediately I had my
-first shadowy suspicion of the truth.
-
-“Supposing that there had been something on that table not intended
-to be seen? Something placed there by the murderer? As yet I had no
-inkling of what that something might be. But I knew certain very
-interesting facts about it. For instance, it was something that the
-murderer had not been able to take away with him at the time that he
-committed the crime. At the same time it was vital that it should be
-removed as soon as possible after the crime had been discovered. And
-so—the telephone message, and the opportunity for the murderer to be on
-the spot when the body was discovered.
-
-“Now four people were on the scene before the police arrived. Yourself,
-Parker, Major Blunt, and Mr. Raymond. Parker I eliminated at once,
-since at whatever time the crime was discovered, he was the one
-person certain to be on the spot. Also it was he who told me of the
-pulled-out chair. Parker, then, was cleared (of the murder, that is. I
-still thought it possible that he had been blackmailing Mrs. Ferrars).
-Raymond and Blunt, however, remained under suspicion since, if the
-crime had been discovered in the early hours of the morning, it was
-quite possible that they might have arrived on the scene too late to
-prevent the object on the round table being discovered.
-
-“Now what was that object? You heard my arguments to-night in reference
-to the scrap of conversation overheard? As soon as I learned that
-a representative of a dictaphone company had called, the idea of a
-dictaphone took root in my mind. You heard what I said in this room not
-half an hour ago? They all agreed with my theory—but one vital fact
-seems to have escaped them. Granted that a dictaphone was being used by
-Mr. Ackroyd that night—why was no dictaphone found?”
-
-“I never thought of that,” I said.
-
-“We know that a dictaphone was supplied to Mr. Ackroyd. But no
-dictaphone has been found amongst his effects. So, if something was
-taken from that table—why should not that something be the dictaphone?
-But there were certain difficulties in the way. The attention of every
-one was, of course, focused on the murdered man. I think any one could
-have gone to the table unnoticed by the other people in the room. But
-a dictaphone has a certain bulk—it cannot be slipped casually into
-a pocket. There must have been a receptacle of some kind capable of
-holding it.
-
-“You see where I am arriving? The figure of the murderer is taking
-shape. A person who was on the scene straightway, but who might not
-have been if the crime had been discovered the following morning.
-A person carrying a receptacle into which the dictaphone might be
-fitted——”
-
-I interrupted.
-
-“But why remove the dictaphone? What was the point?”
-
-“You are like Mr. Raymond. You take it for granted that what was heard
-at nine-thirty was Mr. Ackroyd’s voice speaking into a dictaphone. But
-consider this useful invention for a little minute. You dictate into
-it, do you not? And at some later time a secretary or a typist turns it
-on, and the voice speaks again.”
-
-“You mean——” I gasped.
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“Yes, I mean that. _At nine-thirty Mr. Ackroyd was already dead._ It
-was the dictaphone speaking—not the man.”
-
-“And the murderer switched it on. Then he must have been in the room at
-that minute?”
-
-“Possibly. But we must not exclude the likelihood of some mechanical
-device having been applied—something after the nature of a time lock,
-or even of a simple alarm clock. But in that case we must add two
-qualifications to our imaginary portrait of the murderer. It must be
-some one who knew of Mr. Ackroyd’s purchase of the dictaphone and also
-some one with the necessary mechanical knowledge.
-
-“I had got thus far in my own mind when we came to the footprints on
-the window ledge. Here there were three conclusions open to me. (1)
-They might really have been made by Ralph Paton. He had been at Fernly
-that night, and might have climbed into the study and found his uncle
-dead there. That was one hypothesis. (2) There was the possibility that
-the footmarks might have been made by somebody else who happened to
-have the same kind of studs in his shoes. But the inmates of the house
-had shoes soled with crepe rubber, and I declined to believe in the
-coincidence of some one from outside having the same kind of shoes as
-Ralph Paton wore. Charles Kent, as we know from the barmaid of the Dog
-and Whistle, had on a pair of boots ‘clean dropping off him.’ (3) Those
-prints were made by some one deliberately trying to throw suspicion
-on Ralph Paton. To test this last conclusion, it was necessary to
-ascertain certain facts. One pair of Ralph’s shoes had been obtained
-from the Three Boars by the police. Neither Ralph nor any one else
-could have worn them that evening, since they were downstairs being
-cleaned. According to the police theory, Ralph was wearing another pair
-of the same kind, and I found out that it was true that he had two
-pairs. Now for my theory to be proved correct it was necessary for the
-murderer to have worn Ralph’s shoes that evening—in which case Ralph
-must have been wearing yet a _third_ pair of footwear of some kind.
-I could hardly suppose that he would bring three pairs of shoes all
-alike—the third pair of footwear were more likely to be boots. I got
-your sister to make inquiries on this point—laying some stress on the
-color, in order—I admit it frankly—to obscure the real reason for my
-asking.
-
-“You know the result of her investigations. Ralph Paton _had_ had a
-pair of boots with him. The first question I asked him when he came to
-my house yesterday morning was what he was wearing on his feet on the
-fatal night. He replied at once that he had worn _boots_—he was still
-wearing them, in fact—having nothing else to put on.
-
-“So we get a step further in our description of the murderer—a person
-who had the opportunity to take these shoes of Ralph Paton’s from the
-Three Boars that day.”
-
-He paused, and then said, with a slightly raised voice:—
-
-“There is one further point. The murderer must have been a person who
-had the opportunity to purloin that dagger from the silver table. You
-might argue that any one in the house might have done so, but I will
-recall to you that Miss Ackroyd was very positive that the dagger was
-not there when she examined the silver table.”
-
-He paused again.
-
-“Let us recapitulate—now that all is clear. A person who was at the
-Three Boars earlier that day, a person who knew Ackroyd well enough
-to know that he had purchased a dictaphone, a person who was of a
-mechanical turn of mind, who had the opportunity to take the dagger
-from the silver table before Miss Flora arrived, who had with him a
-receptacle suitable for hiding the dictaphone—such as a black bag, and
-who had the study to himself for a few minutes after the crime was
-discovered while Parker was telephoning for the police. In fact—_Dr.
-Sheppard!_”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI
-
- AND NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH
-
-
-There was a dead silence for a minute and a half.
-
-Then I laughed.
-
-“You’re mad,” I said.
-
-“No,” said Poirot placidly. “I am not mad. It was the little
-discrepancy in time that first drew my attention to you—right at the
-beginning.”
-
-“Discrepancy in time?” I queried, puzzled.
-
-“But yes. You will remember that every one agreed—you yourself
-included—that it took five minutes to walk from the lodge to the
-house—less if you took the short cut to the terrace. But you left the
-house at ten minutes to nine—both by your own statement and that of
-Parker, and yet it was nine o’clock as you passed through the lodge
-gates. It was a chilly night—not an evening a man would be inclined to
-dawdle; why had you taken ten minutes to do a five-minutes’ walk? All
-along I realized that we had only your statement for it that the study
-window was ever fastened. Ackroyd asked you if you had done so—he never
-looked to see. Supposing, then, that the study window was unfastened?
-Would there be time in that ten minutes for you to run round the
-outside of the house, change your shoes, climb in through the window,
-kill Ackroyd, and get to the gate by nine o’clock? I decided against
-that theory since in all probability a man as nervous as Ackroyd was
-that night would hear you climbing in, and then there would have been
-a struggle. But supposing that you killed Ackroyd _before_ you left—as
-you were standing beside his chair? Then you go out of the front door,
-run round to the summer-house, take Ralph Paton’s shoes out of the bag
-you brought up with you that night, slip them on, walk through the
-mud in them, and leave prints on the window ledge, you climb in, lock
-the study door on the inside, run back to the summer-house, change
-back into your own shoes, and race down to the gate. (I went through
-similar actions the other day, when you were with Mrs. Ackroyd—it took
-ten minutes exactly.) Then home—and an alibi—since you had timed the
-dictaphone for half-past nine.”
-
-“My dear Poirot,” I said in a voice that sounded strange and forced to
-my own ears, “you’ve been brooding over this case too long. What on
-earth had I to gain by murdering Ackroyd?”
-
-“Safety. It was you who blackmailed Mrs. Ferrars. Who could have had
-a better knowledge of what killed Mr. Ferrars than the doctor who was
-attending him? When you spoke to me that first day in the garden,
-you mentioned a legacy received about a year ago. I have been unable
-to discover any trace of a legacy. You had to invent some way of
-accounting for Mrs. Ferrars’s twenty thousand pounds. It has not done
-you much good. You lost most of it in speculation—then you put the
-screw on too hard, and Mrs. Ferrars took a way out that you had not
-expected. If Ackroyd had learnt the truth he would have had no mercy on
-you—you were ruined for ever.”
-
-“And the telephone call?” I asked, trying to rally. “You have a
-plausible explanation of that also, I suppose?”
-
-“I will confess to you that it was my greatest stumbling block when
-I found that a call had actually been put through to you from King’s
-Abbot station. I at first believed that you had simply invented the
-story. It was a very clever touch, that. You must have some excuse for
-arriving at Fernly, finding the body, and so getting the chance to
-remove the dictaphone on which your alibi depended. I had a very vague
-notion of how it was worked when I came to see your sister that first
-day and inquired as to what patients you had seen on Friday morning. I
-had no thought of Miss Russell in my mind at that time. Her visit was a
-lucky coincidence, since it distracted your mind from the real object
-of my questions. I found what I was looking for. Among your patients
-that morning was the steward of an American liner. Who more suitable
-than he to be leaving for Liverpool by the train that evening? And
-afterwards he would be on the high seas, well out of the way. I noted
-that the _Orion_ sailed on Saturday, and having obtained the name of
-the steward I sent him a wireless message asking a certain question.
-This is his reply you saw me receive just now.”
-
-He held out the message to me. It ran as follows—
-
-“Quite correct. Dr. Sheppard asked me to leave a note at a patient’s
-house. I was to ring him up from the station with the reply. Reply was
-‘No answer.’”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“It was a clever idea,” said Poirot. “The call was genuine. Your sister
-saw you take it. But there was only one man’s word as to what was
-actually said—your own!”
-
-I yawned.
-
-“All this,” I said, “is very interesting—but hardly in the sphere of
-practical politics.”
-
-“You think not? Remember what I said—the truth goes to Inspector Raglan
-in the morning. But, for the sake of your good sister, I am willing to
-give you the chance of another way out. There might be, for instance,
-an overdose of a sleeping draught. You comprehend me? But Captain Ralph
-Paton must be cleared—_ça va sans dire_. I should suggest that you
-finish that very interesting manuscript of yours—but abandoning your
-former reticence.”
-
-“You seem to be very prolific of suggestions,” I remarked. “Are you
-sure you’ve quite finished.”
-
-“Now that you remind me of the fact, it is true that there is one thing
-more. It would be most unwise on your part to attempt to silence me as
-you silenced M. Ackroyd. That kind of business does not succeed against
-Hercule Poirot, you understand.”
-
-“My dear Poirot,” I said, smiling a little, “whatever else I may be, I
-am not a fool.”
-
-I rose to my feet.
-
-“Well, well,” I said, with a slight yawn, “I must be off home. Thank
-you for a most interesting and instructive evening.”
-
-Poirot also rose and bowed with his accustomed politeness as I passed
-out of the room.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVII
-
- APOLOGIA
-
-
-Five a.m. I am very tired—but I have finished my task. My arm aches
-from writing.
-
-A strange end to my manuscript. I meant it to be published some day as
-the history of one of Poirot’s failures! Odd, how things pan out.
-
-All along I’ve had a premonition of disaster, from the moment I saw
-Ralph Paton and Mrs. Ferrars with their heads together. I thought then
-that she was confiding in him; as it happened I was quite wrong there,
-but the idea persisted even after I went into the study with Ackroyd
-that night, until he told me the truth.
-
-Poor old Ackroyd. I’m always glad that I gave him a chance. I urged him
-to read that letter before it was too late. Or let me be honest—didn’t
-I subconsciously realize that with a pig-headed chap like him, it was
-my best chance of getting him _not_ to read it? His nervousness that
-night was interesting psychologically. He knew danger was close at
-hand. And yet he never suspected _me_.
-
-The dagger was an afterthought. I’d brought up a very handy little
-weapon of my own, but when I saw the dagger lying in the silver table,
-it occurred to me at once how much better it would be to use a weapon
-that couldn’t be traced to me.
-
-I suppose I must have meant to murder him all along. As soon as I heard
-of Mrs. Ferrars’s death, I felt convinced that she would have told him
-everything before she died. When I met him and he seemed so agitated,
-I thought that perhaps he knew the truth, but that he couldn’t bring
-himself to believe it, and was going to give me the chance of refuting
-it.
-
-So I went home and took my precautions. If the trouble were after all
-only something to do with Ralph—well, no harm would have been done. The
-dictaphone he had given me two days before to adjust. Something had
-gone a little wrong with it, and I persuaded him to let me have a go at
-it, instead of sending it back. I did what I wanted to it, and took it
-up with me in my bag that evening.
-
-I am rather pleased with myself as a writer. What could be neater, for
-instance, than the following:—
-
-“_The letters were brought in at twenty minutes to nine. It was just
-on ten minutes to nine when I left him, the letter still unread. I
-hesitated with my hand on the door handle, looking back and wondering
-if there was anything I had left undone._”
-
-All true, you see. But suppose I had put a row of stars after the first
-sentence! Would somebody then have wondered what exactly happened in
-that blank ten minutes?
-
-When I looked round the room from the door, I was quite satisfied.
-Nothing had been left undone. The dictaphone was on the table by the
-window, timed to go off at nine-thirty (the mechanism of that little
-device was rather clever—based on the principle of an alarm clock), and
-the arm-chair was pulled out so as to hide it from the door.
-
-I must admit that it gave me rather a shock to run into Parker just
-outside the door. I have faithfully recorded that fact.
-
-Then later, when the body was discovered, and I had sent Parker to
-telephone for the police, what a judicious use of words: “_I did
-what little had to be done!_” It was quite little—just to shove the
-dictaphone into my bag and push back the chair against the wall in
-its proper place. I never dreamed that Parker would have noticed
-that chair. Logically, he ought to have been so agog over the body
-as to be blind to everything else. But I hadn’t reckoned with the
-trained-servant complex.
-
-I wish I could have known beforehand that Flora was going to say she’d
-seen her uncle alive at a quarter to ten. That puzzled me more than
-I can say. In fact, all through the case there have been things that
-puzzled me hopelessly. Every one seems to have taken a hand.
-
-My greatest fear all through has been Caroline. I have fancied she
-might guess. Curious the way she spoke that day of my “strain of
-weakness.”
-
-Well, she will never know the truth. There is, as Poirot said, one way
-out....
-
-I can trust him. He and Inspector Raglan will manage it between them. I
-should not like Caroline to know. She is fond of me, and then, too, she
-is proud.... My death will be a grief to her, but grief passes....
-
-When I have finished writing, I shall enclose this whole manuscript in
-an envelope and address it to Poirot.
-
-And then—what shall it be? Veronal? There would be a kind of poetic
-justice. Not that I take any responsibility for Mrs. Ferrars’s death.
-It was the direct consequence of her own actions. I feel no pity for
-her.
-
-I have no pity for myself either.
-
-So let it be veronal.
-
-But I wish Hercule Poirot had never retired from work and come here to
-grow vegetable marrows.
-
-
- THE END
-
-
-
-
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-Transcriber’s Notes:
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- - Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
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-
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-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MURDER OF ROGER ACKROYD *** \ No newline at end of file
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-<body>
-<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MURDER OF ROGER ACKROYD ***</div>
- <div class="figcenter illowp66 x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" id="cover">
- <div class="covernote">The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="titlepage bold bbox">
- <div class="bbox2">
- <h1>THE MURDER OF<br>
- ROGER ACKROYD</h1>
-
- <div class="mt5">BY<br>
- <span class="xxlarge">AGATHA CHRISTIE</span></div>
-
- <div class="mt5"><span class="small">AUTHOR OF</span><br>
- THE SECRET OF CHIMNEYS,<br>
- THE MURDER ON THE LINKS, <span class="smcap">Etc.</span></div>
-
- <div class="center mt15">
- <img style="width: 15%;" src="images/signet.png" alt="">
- </div>
-
- <div class="mt15 mb3">
- <span class="gesperrt2 xlarge">GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP</span><br>
- <span class="gesperrt1 large">PUBLISHERS&#160; &#160; &#160; NEW YORK</span>
- </div>
- </div></div>
-
- <div class="chapter center">
- <span class="smcap">Copyright, 1926,<br>
- By DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY, Inc.</span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="chapter center smcap">
- To Punkie,<br>
- who likes an orthodox detective<br>
- story, murder, inquest, and suspicion<br>
- falling on every one in turn!
- </div>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii"></span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
- </div>
-
- <table>
- <thead>
- <tr>
- <th class="chapnum"><div>CHAPTER</div></th>
- <th>&#160;</th>
- <th class="tdr"><div>PAGE</div></th>
- </tr>
- </thead>
- <tbody>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_I">I</a></div></td>
- <td>DR. SHEPPARD AT THE BREAKFAST TABLE</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>1</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_II">II</a></div></td>
- <td>WHO’S WHO IN KING’S ABBOT</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>7</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_III">III</a></div></td>
- <td>THE MAN WHO GREW VEGETABLE MARROWS</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>17</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">IV</a></div></td>
- <td>DINNER AT FERNLY</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>31</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_V">V</a></div></td>
- <td>MURDER</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>49</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">VI</a></div></td>
- <td>THE TUNISIAN DAGGER</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>65</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">VII</a></div></td>
- <td>I LEARN MY NEIGHBOR’S PROFESSION</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>75</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">VIII</a></div></td>
- <td>INSPECTOR RAGLAN IS CONFIDENT</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>92</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">IX</a></div></td>
- <td>THE GOLDFISH POND</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>106</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_X">X</a></div></td>
- <td>THE PARLORMAID</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>118</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">XI</a></div></td>
- <td>POIROT PAYS A CALL</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>136</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">XII</a></div></td>
- <td>ROUND THE TABLE</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>145</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">XIII</a></div></td>
- <td>THE GOOSE QUILL</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>156</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">XIV</a></div></td>
- <td>MRS. ACKROYD</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>165</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">XV</a></div></td>
- <td>GEOFFREY RAYMOND</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>178</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">XVI</a></div></td>
- <td>AN EVENING AT MAH JONG</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>190</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">XVII</a></div></td>
- <td>PARKER</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>202</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">XVIII</a></div></td>
- <td>CHARLES KENT</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>218</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">XIX</a></div></td>
- <td>FLORA ACKROYD</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>226</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">XX</a></div></td>
- <td>MISS RUSSELL</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>238</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">XXI</a></div></td>
- <td>THE PARAGRAPH IN THE PAPER</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>251</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">XXII</a></div></td>
- <td>URSULA’S STORY</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>260</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">XXIII</a></div></td>
- <td>POIROT’S LITTLE REUNION</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>269</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">XXIV</a></div></td>
- <td>RALPH PATON’S STORY</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>284</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">XXV</a></div></td>
- <td>THE WHOLE TRUTH</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>289</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">XXVI</a></div></td>
- <td>AND NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>298</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">XXVII</a></div></td>
- <td>APOLOGIA</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>303</div></td>
- </tr>
- </tbody>
- </table>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter mb10">
- <div class="center xlarge bold">THE MURDER OF<br>ROGER ACKROYD</div>
- </div>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">1</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">DR. SHEPPARD AT THE BREAKFAST TABLE</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ferrars</span> died on the night of the 16th–17th September—a Thursday. I
- was sent for at eight o’clock on the morning of Friday the 17th. There
- was nothing to be done. She had been dead some hours.</p>
-
- <p>It was just a few minutes after nine when I reached home once more. I
- opened the front door with my latch-key, and purposely delayed a few
- moments in the hall, hanging up my hat and the light overcoat that
- I had deemed a wise precaution against the chill of an early autumn
- morning. To tell the truth, I was considerably upset and worried. I am
- not going to pretend that at that moment I foresaw the events of the
- next few weeks. I emphatically did not do so. But my instinct told me
- that there were stirring times ahead.</p>
-
- <p>From the dining-room on my left there came the rattle of tea-cups and
- the short, dry cough of my sister Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“Is that you, James?” she called.</p>
-
- <p>An unnecessary question, since who else could it be? To tell the
- truth, it was precisely my sister Caroline who was the cause of my few
- minutes’ delay. The motto of the mongoose family, so Mr. Kipling tells
- us, is: “Go and find out.” If Caroline ever adopts a crest, I should
- certainly suggest a mongoose rampant. One<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">2</span> might omit the first part
- of the motto. Caroline can do any amount of finding out by sitting
- placidly at home. I don’t know how she manages it, but there it is. I
- suspect that the servants and the tradesmen constitute her Intelligence
- Corps. When she goes out, it is not to gather in information, but to
- spread it. At that, too, she is amazingly expert.</p>
-
- <p>It was really this last named trait of hers which was causing me these
- pangs of indecision. Whatever I told Caroline now concerning the demise
- of Mrs. Ferrars would be common knowledge all over the village within
- the space of an hour and a half. As a professional man, I naturally
- aim at discretion. Therefore I have got into the habit of continually
- withholding all information possible from my sister. She usually finds
- out just the same, but I have the moral satisfaction of knowing that I
- am in no way to blame.</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ferrars’ husband died just over a year ago, and Caroline has
- constantly asserted, without the least foundation for the assertion,
- that his wife poisoned him.</p>
-
- <p>She scorns my invariable rejoinder that Mr. Ferrars died of acute
- gastritis, helped on by habitual over-indulgence in alcoholic
- beverages. The symptoms of gastritis and arsenical poisoning are not,
- I agree, unlike, but Caroline bases her accusation on quite different
- lines.</p>
-
- <p>“You’ve only got to look at her,” I have heard her say.</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ferrars, though not in her first youth, was a very attractive
- woman, and her clothes, though simple, always seemed to fit her very
- well, but all the same, lots of women buy their clothes in Paris and
- have not, on that account, necessarily poisoned their husbands.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">3</span></p>
-
- <p>As I stood hesitating in the hall, with all this passing through my
- mind, Caroline’s voice came again, with a sharper note in it.</p>
-
- <p>“What on earth are you doing out there, James? Why don’t you come and
- get your breakfast?”</p>
-
- <p>“Just coming, my dear,” I said hastily. “I’ve been hanging up my
- overcoat.”</p>
-
- <p>“You could have hung up half a dozen overcoats in this time.”</p>
-
- <p>She was quite right. I could have.</p>
-
- <p>I walked into the dining-room, gave Caroline the accustomed peck on the
- cheek, and sat down to eggs and bacon. The bacon was rather cold.</p>
-
- <p>“You’ve had an early call,” remarked Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said. “King’s Paddock. Mrs. Ferrars.”</p>
-
- <p>“I know,” said my sister.</p>
-
- <p>“How did you know?”</p>
-
- <p>“Annie told me.”</p>
-
- <p>Annie is the house parlormaid. A nice girl, but an inveterate talker.</p>
-
- <p>There was a pause. I continued to eat eggs and bacon. My sister’s nose,
- which is long and thin, quivered a little at the tip, as it always does
- when she is interested or excited over anything.</p>
-
- <p>“Well?” she demanded.</p>
-
- <p>“A bad business. Nothing to be done. Must have died in her sleep.”</p>
-
- <p>“I know,” said my sister again.</p>
-
- <p>This time I was annoyed.</p>
-
- <p>“You can’t know,” I snapped. “I didn’t know myself<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">4</span> until I got there,
- and I haven’t mentioned it to a soul yet. If that girl Annie knows, she
- must be a clairvoyant.”</p>
-
- <p>“It wasn’t Annie who told me. It was the milkman. He had it from the
- Ferrars’ cook.”</p>
-
- <p>As I say, there is no need for Caroline to go out to get information.
- She sits at home, and it comes to her.</p>
-
- <p>My sister continued:</p>
-
- <p>“What did she die of? Heart failure?”</p>
-
- <p>“Didn’t the milkman tell you that?” I inquired sarcastically.</p>
-
- <p>Sarcasm is wasted on Caroline. She takes it seriously and answers
- accordingly.</p>
-
- <p>“He didn’t know,” she explained.</p>
-
- <p>After all, Caroline was bound to hear sooner or later. She might as
- well hear from me.</p>
-
- <p>“She died of an overdose of veronal. She’s been taking it lately for
- sleeplessness. Must have taken too much.”</p>
-
- <p>“Nonsense,” said Caroline immediately. “She took it on purpose. Don’t
- tell me!”</p>
-
- <p>It is odd how, when you have a secret belief of your own which you do
- not wish to acknowledge, the voicing of it by some one else will rouse
- you to a fury of denial. I burst immediately into indignant speech.</p>
-
- <p>“There you go again,” I said. “Rushing along without rhyme or reason.
- Why on earth should Mrs. Ferrars wish to commit suicide? A widow,
- fairly young still, very well off, good health, and nothing to do but
- enjoy life. It’s absurd.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">5</span></p>
-
- <p>“Not at all. Even you must have noticed how different she has been
- looking lately. It’s been coming on for the last six months. She’s
- looked positively hag-ridden. And you have just admitted that she
- hasn’t been able to sleep.”</p>
-
- <p>“What is your diagnosis?” I demanded coldly. “An unfortunate love
- affair, I suppose?”</p>
-
- <p>My sister shook her head.</p>
-
- <p>“<em>Remorse</em>,” she said, with great gusto.</p>
-
- <p>“Remorse?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. You never would believe me when I told you she poisoned her
- husband. I’m more than ever convinced of it now.”</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t think you’re very logical,” I objected. “Surely if a woman
- committed a crime like murder, she’d be sufficiently cold-blooded to
- enjoy the fruits of it without any weak-minded sentimentality such as
- repentance.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline shook her head.</p>
-
- <p>“There probably are women like that—but Mrs. Ferrars wasn’t one of
- them. She was a mass of nerves. An overmastering impulse drove her on
- to get rid of her husband because she was the sort of person who simply
- can’t endure suffering of any kind, and there’s no doubt that the wife
- of a man like Ashley Ferrars must have had to suffer a good deal——”</p>
-
- <p>I nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“And ever since she’s been haunted by what she did. I can’t help
- feeling sorry for her.”</p>
-
- <p>I don’t think Caroline ever felt sorry for Mrs. Ferrars whilst she was
- alive. Now that she has gone where (presumably)<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">6</span> Paris frocks can no
- longer be worn, Caroline is prepared to indulge in the softer emotions
- of pity and comprehension.</p>
-
- <p>I told her firmly that her whole idea was nonsense. I was all the more
- firm because I secretly agreed with some part, at least, of what she
- had said. But it is all wrong that Caroline should arrive at the truth
- simply by a kind of inspired guesswork. I wasn’t going to encourage
- that sort of thing. She will go round the village airing her views, and
- every one will think that she is doing so on medical data supplied by
- me. Life is very trying.</p>
-
- <p>“Nonsense,” said Caroline, in reply to my strictures. “You’ll see. Ten
- to one she’s left a letter confessing everything.”</p>
-
- <p>“She didn’t leave a letter of any kind,” I said sharply, and not seeing
- where the admission was going to land me.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh!” said Caroline. “So you <em>did</em> inquire about that, did you? I
- believe, James, that in your heart of hearts, you think very much as I
- do. You’re a precious old humbug.”</p>
-
- <p>“One always has to take the possibility of suicide into consideration,”
- I said repressively.</p>
-
- <p>“Will there be an inquest?”</p>
-
- <p>“There may be. It all depends. If I am able to declare myself
- absolutely satisfied that the overdose was taken accidentally, an
- inquest might be dispensed with.”</p>
-
- <p>“And are you absolutely satisfied?” asked my sister shrewdly.</p>
-
- <p>I did not answer, but got up from table.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">WHO’S WHO IN KING’S ABBOT</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Before</span> I proceed further with what I said to Caroline and what Caroline
- said to me, it might be as well to give some idea of what I should
- describe as our local geography. Our village, King’s Abbot, is, I
- imagine, very much like any other village. Our big town is Cranchester,
- nine miles away. We have a large railway station, a small post office,
- and two rival “General Stores.” Able-bodied men are apt to leave the
- place early in life, but we are rich in unmarried ladies and retired
- military officers. Our hobbies and recreations can be summed up in the
- one word, “gossip.”</p>
-
- <p>There are only two houses of any importance in King’s Abbot. One
- is King’s Paddock, left to Mrs. Ferrars by her late husband. The
- other, Fernly Park, is owned by Roger Ackroyd. Ackroyd has always
- interested me by being a man more impossibly like a country squire
- than any country squire could really be. He reminds one of the
- red-faced sportsmen who always appeared early in the first act of an
- old-fashioned musical comedy, the setting being the village green. They
- usually sang a song about going up to London. Nowadays we have revues,
- and the country squire has died out of musical fashion.</p>
-
- <p>Of course, Ackroyd is not really a country squire. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span> is an immensely
- successful manufacturer of (I think) wagon wheels. He is a man of
- nearly fifty years of age, rubicund of face and genial of manner.
- He is hand and glove with the vicar, subscribes liberally to parish
- funds (though rumor has it that he is extremely mean in personal
- expenditure), encourages cricket matches, Lads’ Clubs, and Disabled
- Soldiers’ Institutes. He is, in fact, the life and soul of our peaceful
- village of King’s Abbot.</p>
-
- <p>Now when Roger Ackroyd was a lad of twenty-one, he fell in love with,
- and married, a beautiful woman some five or six years his senior. Her
- name was Paton, and she was a widow with one child. The history of the
- marriage was short and painful. To put it bluntly, Mrs. Ackroyd was
- a dipsomaniac. She succeeded in drinking herself into her grave four
- years after her marriage.</p>
-
- <p>In the years that followed, Ackroyd showed no disposition to make a
- second matrimonial adventure. His wife’s child by her first marriage
- was only seven years old when his mother died. He is now twenty-five.
- Ackroyd has always regarded him as his own son, and has brought him up
- accordingly, but he has been a wild lad and a continual source of worry
- and trouble to his stepfather. Nevertheless we are all very fond of
- Ralph Paton in King’s Abbot. He is such a good-looking youngster for
- one thing.</p>
-
- <p>As I said before, we are ready enough to gossip in our village.
- Everybody noticed from the first that Ackroyd and Mrs. Ferrars got on
- very well together. After her husband’s death, the intimacy became
- more marked. They were always seen about together, and it was freely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span>
- conjectured that at the end of her period of mourning, Mrs. Ferrars
- would become Mrs. Roger Ackroyd. It was felt, indeed, that there was a
- certain fitness in the thing. Roger Ackroyd’s wife had admittedly died
- of drink. Ashley Ferrars had been a drunkard for many years before his
- death. It was only fitting that these two victims of alcoholic excess
- should make up to each other for all that they had previously endured
- at the hands of their former spouses.</p>
-
- <p>The Ferrars only came to live here just over a year ago, but a halo of
- gossip has surrounded Ackroyd for many years past. All the time that
- Ralph Paton was growing up to manhood, a series of lady housekeepers
- presided over Ackroyd’s establishment, and each in turn was regarded
- with lively suspicion by Caroline and her cronies. It is not too
- much to say that for at least fifteen years the whole village has
- confidently expected Ackroyd to marry one of his housekeepers. The last
- of them, a redoubtable lady called Miss Russell, has reigned undisputed
- for five years, twice as long as any of her predecessors. It is felt
- that but for the advent of Mrs. Ferrars, Ackroyd could hardly have
- escaped. That—and one other factor—the unexpected arrival of a widowed
- sister-in-law with her daughter from Canada. Mrs. Cecil Ackroyd, widow
- of Ackroyd’s ne’er-do-well younger brother, has taken up her residence
- at Fernly Park, and has succeeded, according to Caroline, in putting
- Miss Russell in her proper place.</p>
-
- <p>I don’t know exactly what a “proper place” constitutes—it sounds chilly
- and unpleasant—but I know that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">10</span> Miss Russell goes about with pinched
- lips, and what I can only describe as an acid smile, and that she
- professes the utmost sympathy for “poor Mrs. Ackroyd—dependent on the
- charity of her husband’s brother. The bread of charity is so bitter,
- is it not? <em>I</em> should be quite miserable if I did not work for my
- living.”</p>
-
- <p>I don’t know what Mrs. Cecil Ackroyd thought of the Ferrars affair when
- it came on the tapis. It was clearly to her advantage that Ackroyd
- should remain unmarried. She was always very charming—not to say
- gushing—to Mrs. Ferrars when they met. Caroline says that proves less
- than nothing.</p>
-
- <p>Such have been our preoccupations in King’s Abbot for the last few
- years. We have discussed Ackroyd and his affairs from every standpoint.
- Mrs. Ferrars has fitted into her place in the scheme.</p>
-
- <p>Now there has been a rearrangement of the kaleidoscope. From a mild
- discussion of probable wedding presents, we have been jerked into the
- midst of tragedy.</p>
-
- <p>Revolving these and sundry other matters in my mind, I went
- mechanically on my round. I had no cases of special interest to attend,
- which was, perhaps, as well, for my thoughts returned again and again
- to the mystery of Mrs. Ferrars’s death. Had she taken her own life?
- Surely, if she had done so, she would have left some word behind to
- say what she contemplated doing? Women, in my experience, if they once
- reach the determination to commit suicide, usually wish to reveal the
- state of mind that led to the fatal action. They covet the limelight.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span></p>
-
- <p>When had I last seen her? Not for over a week. Her manner then had been
- normal enough considering—well—considering everything.</p>
-
- <p>Then I suddenly remembered that I had seen her, though not to speak
- to, only yesterday. She had been walking with Ralph Paton, and I had
- been surprised because I had had no idea that he was likely to be in
- King’s Abbot. I thought, indeed, that he had quarreled finally with
- his stepfather. Nothing had been seen of him down here for nearly six
- months. They had been walking along, side by side, their heads close
- together, and she had been talking very earnestly.</p>
-
- <p>I think I can safely say that it was at this moment that a foreboding
- of the future first swept over me. Nothing tangible as yet—but a
- vague premonition of the way things were setting. That earnest
- <i lang="fr">tête-à-tête</i> between Ralph Paton and Mrs. Ferrars the day before
- struck me disagreeably.</p>
-
- <p>I was still thinking of it when I came face to face with Roger Ackroyd.</p>
-
- <p>“Sheppard!” he exclaimed. “Just the man I wanted to get hold of. This
- is a terrible business.”</p>
-
- <p>“You’ve heard then?”</p>
-
- <p>He nodded. He had felt the blow keenly, I could see. His big red cheeks
- seemed to have fallen in, and he looked a positive wreck of his usual
- jolly, healthy self.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s worse than you know,” he said quietly. “Look here, Sheppard, I’ve
- got to talk to you. Can you come back with me now?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span></p>
-
- <p>“Hardly. I’ve got three patients to see still, and I must be back by
- twelve to see my surgery patients.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then this afternoon—no, better still, dine to-night. At 7.30? Will
- that suit you?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes—I can manage that all right. What’s wrong? Is it Ralph?”</p>
-
- <p>I hardly knew why I said that—except, perhaps, that it had so often
- been Ralph.</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd stared blankly at me as though he hardly understood. I began to
- realize that there must be something very wrong indeed somewhere. I had
- never seen Ackroyd so upset before.</p>
-
- <p>“Ralph?” he said vaguely. “Oh! no, it’s not Ralph. Ralph’s in
- London——Damn! Here’s old Miss Ganett coming. I don’t want to have to
- talk to her about this ghastly business. See you to-night, Sheppard.
- Seven-thirty.”</p>
-
- <p>I nodded, and he hurried away, leaving me wondering. Ralph in London?
- But he had certainly been in King’s Abbot the preceding afternoon. He
- must have gone back to town last night or early this morning, and yet
- Ackroyd’s manner had conveyed quite a different impression. He had
- spoken as though Ralph had not been near the place for months.</p>
-
- <p>I had no time to puzzle the matter out further. Miss Ganett was upon
- me, thirsting for information. Miss Ganett has all the characteristics
- of my sister Caroline, but she lacks that unerring aim in jumping to
- conclusions which lends a touch of greatness to Caroline’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span> maneuvers.
- Miss Ganett was breathless and interrogatory.</p>
-
- <p>Wasn’t it sad about poor dear Mrs. Ferrars? A lot of people were saying
- she had been a confirmed drug-taker for years. So wicked the way
- people went about saying things. And yet, the worst of it was, there
- was usually a grain of truth somewhere in these wild statements. No
- smoke without fire! They were saying too that Mr. Ackroyd had found out
- about it, and had broken off the engagement—because there <em>was</em>
- an engagement. She, Miss Ganett, had proof positive of that. Of course
- <em>I</em> must know all about it—doctors always did—but they never tell?</p>
-
- <p>And all this with a sharp beady eye on me to see how I reacted to
- these suggestions. Fortunately long association with Caroline has led
- me to preserve an impassive countenance, and to be ready with small
- non-committal remarks.</p>
-
- <p>On this occasion I congratulated Miss Ganett on not joining in
- ill-natured gossip. Rather a neat counterattack, I thought. It left
- her in difficulties, and before she could pull herself together, I had
- passed on.</p>
-
- <p>I went home thoughtful, to find several patients waiting for me in the
- surgery.</p>
-
- <p>I had dismissed the last of them, as I thought, and was just
- contemplating a few minutes in the garden before lunch when I perceived
- one more patient waiting for me. She rose and came towards me as I
- stood somewhat surprised.</p>
-
- <p>I don’t know why I should have been, except that there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span> is a suggestion
- of cast iron about Miss Russell, a something that is above the ills of
- the flesh.</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd’s housekeeper is a tall woman, handsome but forbidding in
- appearance. She has a stern eye, and lips that shut tightly, and I feel
- that if I were an under housemaid or a kitchenmaid I should run for my
- life whenever I heard her coming.</p>
-
- <p>“Good morning, Dr. Sheppard,” said Miss Russell. “I should be much
- obliged if you would take a look at my knee.”</p>
-
- <p>I took a look, but, truth to tell, I was very little wiser when I had
- done so. Miss Russell’s account of vague pains was so unconvincing that
- with a woman of less integrity of character I should have suspected a
- trumped-up tale. It did cross my mind for one moment that Miss Russell
- might have deliberately invented this affection of the knee in order
- to pump me on the subject of Mrs. Ferrars’s death, but I soon saw that
- there, at least, I had misjudged her. She made a brief reference to the
- tragedy, nothing more. Yet she certainly seemed disposed to linger and
- chat.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, thank you very much for this bottle of liniment, doctor,” she
- said at last. “Not that I believe it will do the least good.”</p>
-
- <p>I didn’t think it would either, but I protested in duty bound. After
- all, it couldn’t do any harm, and one must stick up for the tools of
- one’s trade.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t believe in all these drugs,” said Miss Russell, her eyes
- sweeping over my array of bottles disparagingly.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span> “Drugs do a lot of
- harm. Look at the cocaine habit.”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, as far as that goes——”</p>
-
- <p>“It’s very prevalent in high society.”</p>
-
- <p>I’m sure Miss Russell knows far more about high society than I do. I
- didn’t attempt to argue with her.</p>
-
- <p>“Just tell me this, doctor,” said Miss Russell. “Suppose you are really
- a slave of the drug habit. Is there any cure?”</p>
-
- <p>One cannot answer a question like that offhand. I gave her a short
- lecture on the subject, and she listened with close attention. I still
- suspected her of seeking information about Mrs. Ferrars.</p>
-
- <p>“Now, veronal, for instance——” I proceeded.</p>
-
- <p>But, strangely enough, she didn’t seem interested in veronal. Instead
- she changed the subject, and asked me if it was true that there were
- certain poisons so rare as to baffle detection.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” I said. “You’ve been reading detective stories.”</p>
-
- <p>She admitted that she had.</p>
-
- <p>“The essence of a detective story,” I said, “is to have a rare
- poison—if possible something from South America, that nobody has ever
- heard of—something that one obscure tribe of savages use to poison
- their arrows with. Death is instantaneous, and Western science is
- powerless to detect it. That is the kind of thing you mean?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. Is there really such a thing?”</p>
-
- <p>I shook my head regretfully.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m afraid there isn’t. There’s <em>curare</em>, of course.”</p>
-
- <p>I told her a good deal about curare, but she seemed to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span> have lost
- interest once more. She asked me if I had any in my poison cupboard,
- and when I replied in the negative I fancy I fell in her estimation.</p>
-
- <p>She said she must be getting back, and I saw her out at the surgery
- door just as the luncheon gong went.</p>
-
- <p>I should never have suspected Miss Russell of a fondness for detective
- stories. It pleases me very much to think of her stepping out of the
- housekeeper’s room to rebuke a delinquent housemaid, and then returning
- to a comfortable perusal of <cite>The Mystery of the Seventh Death</cite>, or
- something of the kind.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">THE MAN WHO GREW VEGETABLE MARROWS</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">I told</span> Caroline at lunch time that I should be dining at Fernly. She
- expressed no objection—on the contrary——</p>
-
- <p>“Excellent,” she said. “You’ll hear all about it. By the way, what is
- the trouble with Ralph?”</p>
-
- <p>“With Ralph?” I said, surprised; “there’s isn’t any.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then why is he staying at the Three Boars instead of at Fernly Park?”</p>
-
- <p>I did not for a minute question Caroline’s statement that Ralph Paton
- was staying at the local inn. That Caroline said so was enough for me.</p>
-
- <p>“Ackroyd told me he was in London,” I said. In the surprise of
- the moment I departed from my valuable rule of never parting with
- information.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh!” said Caroline. I could see her nose twitching as she worked on
- this.</p>
-
- <p>“He arrived at the Three Boars yesterday morning,” she said. “And he’s
- still there. Last night he was out with a girl.”</p>
-
- <p>That did not surprise me in the least. Ralph, I should say, is out
- with a girl most nights of his life. But I did rather wonder that he
- chose to indulge in the pastime in King’s Abbot instead of in the gay
- metropolis.</p>
-
- <p>“One of the barmaids?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span></p>
-
- <p>“No. That’s just it. He went out to meet her. I don’t know who she is.”</p>
-
- <p>(Bitter for Caroline to have to admit such a thing.)</p>
-
- <p>“But I can guess,” continued my indefatigable sister.</p>
-
- <p>I waited patiently.</p>
-
- <p>“His cousin.”</p>
-
- <p>“Flora Ackroyd?” I exclaimed in surprise.</p>
-
- <p>Flora Ackroyd is, of course, no relation whatever really to Ralph
- Paton, but Ralph has been looked upon for so long as practically
- Ackroyd’s own son, that cousinship is taken for granted.</p>
-
- <p>“Flora Ackroyd,” said my sister.</p>
-
- <p>“But why not go to Fernly if he wanted to see her?”</p>
-
- <p>“Secretly engaged,” said Caroline, with immense enjoyment. “Old Ackroyd
- won’t hear of it, and they have to meet this way.”</p>
-
- <p>I saw a good many flaws in Caroline’s theory, but I forbore to point
- them out to her. An innocent remark about our new neighbor created a
- diversion.</p>
-
- <p>The house next door, The Larches, has recently been taken by a
- stranger. To Caroline’s extreme annoyance, she has not been able
- to find out anything about him, except that he is a foreigner. The
- Intelligence Corps has proved a broken reed. Presumably the man has
- milk and vegetables and joints of meat and occasional whitings just
- like everybody else, but none of the people who make it their business
- to supply these things seem to have acquired any information. His name,
- apparently, is Mr. Porrott—a name which conveys an odd feeling of
- unreality. The one thing we do know about him is that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span> he is interested
- in the growing of vegetable marrows.</p>
-
- <p>But that is certainly not the sort of information that Caroline is
- after. She wants to know where he comes from, what he does, whether he
- is married, what his wife was, or is, like, whether he has children,
- what his mother’s maiden name was—and so on. Somebody very like
- Caroline must have invented the questions on passports, I think.</p>
-
- <p>“My dear Caroline,” I said. “There’s no doubt at all about what the
- man’s profession has been. He’s a retired hairdresser. Look at that
- mustache of his.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline dissented. She said that if the man was a hairdresser, he
- would have wavy hair—not straight. All hairdressers did.</p>
-
- <p>I cited several hairdressers personally known to me who had straight
- hair, but Caroline refused to be convinced.</p>
-
- <p>“I can’t make him out at all,” she said in an aggrieved voice. “I
- borrowed some garden tools the other day, and he was most polite, but
- I couldn’t get anything out of him. I asked him point blank at last
- whether he was a Frenchman, and he said he wasn’t—and somehow I didn’t
- like to ask him any more.”</p>
-
- <p>I began to be more interested in our mysterious neighbor. A man who
- is capable of shutting up Caroline and sending her, like the Queen of
- Sheba, empty away must be something of a personality.</p>
-
- <p>“I believe,” said Caroline, “that he’s got one of those new vacuum
- cleaners——”</p>
-
- <p>I saw a meditated loan and the opportunity of further<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span> questioning
- gleaming from her eye. I seized the chance to escape into the garden.
- I am rather fond of gardening. I was busily exterminating dandelion
- roots when a shout of warning sounded from close by and a heavy body
- whizzed by my ear and fell at my feet with a repellant squelch. It was
- a vegetable marrow!</p>
-
- <p>I looked up angrily. Over the wall, to my left, there appeared a face.
- An egg-shaped head, partially covered with suspiciously black hair, two
- immense mustaches, and a pair of watchful eyes. It was our mysterious
- neighbor, Mr. Porrott.</p>
-
- <p>He broke at once into fluent apologies.</p>
-
- <p>“I demand of you a thousand pardons, monsieur. I am without defense.
- For some months now I cultivate the marrows. This morning suddenly
- I enrage myself with these marrows. I send them to promenade
- themselves—alas! not only mentally but physically. I seize the biggest.
- I hurl him over the wall. Monsieur, I am ashamed. I prostrate myself.”</p>
-
- <p>Before such profuse apologies, my anger was forced to melt. After
- all, the wretched vegetable hadn’t hit me. But I sincerely hoped that
- throwing large vegetables over walls was not our new friend’s hobby.
- Such a habit could hardly endear him to us as a neighbor.</p>
-
- <p>The strange little man seemed to read my thoughts.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! no,” he exclaimed. “Do not disquiet yourself. It is not with me a
- habit. But can you figure to yourself, monsieur, that a man may work
- towards a certain object, may labor and toil to attain a certain kind
- of leisure and occupation, and then find that, after all, he yearns
- for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span> the old busy days, and the old occupations that he thought himself
- so glad to leave?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said slowly. “I fancy that that is a common enough occurrence.
- I myself am perhaps an instance. A year ago I came into a legacy—enough
- to enable me to realize a dream. I have always wanted to travel, to see
- the world. Well, that was a year ago, as I said, and—I am still here.”</p>
-
- <p>My little neighbor nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“The chains of habit. We work to attain an object, and the object
- gained, we find that what we miss is the daily toil. And mark you,
- monsieur, my work was interesting work. The most interesting work there
- is in the world.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes?” I said encouragingly. For the moment the spirit of Caroline was
- strong within me.</p>
-
- <p>“The study of human nature, monsieur!”</p>
-
- <p>“Just so,” I said kindly.</p>
-
- <p>Clearly a retired hairdresser. Who knows the secrets of human nature
- better than a hairdresser?</p>
-
- <p>“Also, I had a friend—a friend who for many years never left my side.
- Occasionally of an imbecility to make one afraid, nevertheless he was
- very dear to me. Figure to yourself that I miss even his stupidity.
- His <i lang="fr">naïveté</i>, his honest outlook, the pleasure of delighting and
- surprising him by my superior gifts—all these I miss more than I can
- tell you.”</p>
-
- <p>“He died?” I asked sympathetically.</p>
-
- <p>“Not so. He lives and flourishes—but on the other side of the world. He
- is now in the Argentine.”</p>
-
- <p>“In the Argentine,” I said enviously.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span></p>
-
- <p>I have always wanted to go to South America. I sighed, and then
- looked up to find Mr. Porrott eyeing me sympathetically. He seemed an
- understanding little man.</p>
-
- <p>“You will go there, yes?” he asked.</p>
-
- <p>I shook my head with a sigh.</p>
-
- <p>“I could have gone,” I said, “a year ago. But I was foolish—and worse
- than foolish—greedy. I risked the substance for the shadow.”</p>
-
- <p>“I comprehend,” said Mr. Porrott. “You speculated?”</p>
-
- <p>I nodded mournfully, but in spite of myself I felt secretly
- entertained. This ridiculous little man was so portentously solemn.</p>
-
- <p>“Not the Porcupine Oilfields?” he asked suddenly.</p>
-
- <p>I stared.</p>
-
- <p>“I thought of them, as a matter of fact, but in the end I plumped for a
- gold mine in Western Australia.”</p>
-
- <p>My neighbor was regarding me with a strange expression which I could
- not fathom.</p>
-
- <p>“It is Fate,” he said at last.</p>
-
- <p>“What is Fate?” I asked irritably.</p>
-
- <p>“That I should live next to a man who seriously considers Porcupine
- Oilfields, and also West Australian Gold Mines. Tell me, have you also
- a penchant for auburn hair?”</p>
-
- <p>I stared at him open-mouthed, and he burst out laughing.</p>
-
- <p>“No, no, it is not the insanity that I suffer from. Make your mind
- easy. It was a foolish question that I put to you there, for, see you,
- my friend of whom I spoke was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span> a young man, a man who thought all women
- good, and most of them beautiful. But you are a man of middle age, a
- doctor, a man who knows the folly and the vanity of most things in this
- life of ours. Well, well, we are neighbors. I beg of you to accept and
- present to your excellent sister my best marrow.”</p>
-
- <p>He stooped, and with a flourish produced an immense specimen of the
- tribe, which I duly accepted in the spirit in which it was offered.</p>
-
- <p>“Indeed,” said the little man cheerfully, “this has not been a wasted
- morning. I have made the acquaintance of a man who in some ways
- resembles my far-off friend. By the way, I should like to ask you a
- question. You doubtless know every one in this tiny village. Who is the
- young man with the very dark hair and eyes, and the handsome face. He
- walks with his head flung back, and an easy smile on his lips?”</p>
-
- <p>The description left me in no doubt.</p>
-
- <p>“That must be Captain Ralph Paton,” I said slowly.</p>
-
- <p>“I have not seen him about here before?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, he has not been here for some time. But he is the son—adopted son,
- rather—of Mr. Ackroyd of Fernly Park.”</p>
-
- <p>My neighbor made a slight gesture of impatience.</p>
-
- <p>“Of course, I should have guessed. Mr. Ackroyd spoke of him many times.”</p>
-
- <p>“You know Mr. Ackroyd?” I said, slightly surprised.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd knew me in London—when I was at work there. I have asked
- him to say nothing of my profession down here.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span></p>
-
- <p>“I see,” I said, rather amused by this patent snobbery, as I thought it.</p>
-
- <p>But the little man went on with an almost grandiloquent smirk.</p>
-
- <p>“One prefers to remain incognito. I am not anxious for notoriety. I
- have not even troubled to correct the local version of my name.”</p>
-
- <p>“Indeed,” I said, not knowing quite what to say.</p>
-
- <p>“Captain Ralph Paton,” mused Mr. Porrott. “And so he is engaged to Mr.
- Ackroyd’s niece, the charming Miss Flora.”</p>
-
- <p>“Who told you so?” I asked, very much surprised.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd. About a week ago. He is very pleased about it—has long
- desired that such a thing should come to pass, or so I understood
- from him. I even believe that he brought some pressure to bear upon
- the young man. That is never wise. A young man should marry to please
- himself—not to please a stepfather from whom he has expectations.”</p>
-
- <p>My ideas were completely upset. I could not see Ackroyd taking a
- hairdresser into his confidence, and discussing the marriage of his
- niece and stepson with him. Ackroyd extends a genial patronage to the
- lower orders, but he has a very great sense of his own dignity. I began
- to think that Porrott couldn’t be a hairdresser after all.</p>
-
- <p>To hide my confusion, I said the first thing that came into my head.</p>
-
- <p>“What made you notice Ralph Paton? His good looks?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, not that alone—though he is unusually good-looking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span> for an
- Englishman—what your lady novelists would call a Greek God. No, there
- was something about that young man that I did not understand.”</p>
-
- <p>He said the last sentence in a musing tone of voice which made an
- indefinable impression upon me. It was as though he was summing up the
- boy by the light of some inner knowledge that I did not share. It was
- that impression that was left with me, for at that moment my sister’s
- voice called me from the house.</p>
-
- <p>I went in. Caroline had her hat on, and had evidently just come in from
- the village. She began without preamble.</p>
-
- <p>“I met Mr. Ackroyd.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes?” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“I stopped him, of course, but he seemed in a great hurry, and anxious
- to get away.”</p>
-
- <p>I have no doubt but that that was the case. He would feel towards
- Caroline much as he had felt towards Miss Ganett earlier in the
- day—perhaps more so. Caroline is less easy to shake off.</p>
-
- <p>“I asked him at once about Ralph. He was absolutely astonished. Had no
- idea the boy was down here. He actually said he thought I must have
- made a mistake. I! A mistake!”</p>
-
- <p>“Ridiculous,” I said. “He ought to have known you better.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then he went on to tell me that Ralph and Flora are engaged.”</p>
-
- <p>“I know that too,” I interrupted, with modest pride.</p>
-
- <p>“Who told you?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span></p>
-
- <p>“Our new neighbor.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline visibly wavered for a second or two, much as a roulette ball
- might coyly hover between two numbers. Then she declined the tempting
- red herring.</p>
-
- <p>“I told Mr. Ackroyd that Ralph was staying at the Three Boars.”</p>
-
- <p>“Caroline,” I said, “do you never reflect that you might do a lot of
- harm with this habit of yours of repeating everything indiscriminately?”</p>
-
- <p>“Nonsense,” said my sister. “People ought to know things. I consider it
- my duty to tell them. Mr. Ackroyd was very grateful to me.”</p>
-
- <p>“Well?” I said, for there was clearly more to come.</p>
-
- <p>“I think he went straight off to the Three Boars, but if so he didn’t
- find Ralph there.”</p>
-
- <p>“No?”</p>
-
- <p>“No. Because as I was coming back through the wood——”</p>
-
- <p>“Coming back through the wood?” I interrupted.</p>
-
- <p>Caroline had the grace to blush.</p>
-
- <p>“It was such a lovely day,” she exclaimed. “I thought I would make a
- little round. The woods with their autumnal tints are so perfect at
- this time of year.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline does not care a hang for woods at any time of year. Normally
- she regards them as places where you get your feet damp, and where all
- kinds of unpleasant things may drop on your head. No, it was good sound
- mongoose instinct which took her to our local wood. It is the only
- place adjacent to the village of King’s Abbot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span> where you can talk with
- a young woman unseen by the whole of the village. It adjoins the Park
- of Fernly.</p>
-
- <p>“Well,” I said, “go on.”</p>
-
- <p>“As I say, I was just coming back through the wood when I heard voices.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline paused.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes?”</p>
-
- <p>“One was Ralph Paton’s—I knew it at once. The other was a girl’s. Of
- course I didn’t mean to listen——”</p>
-
- <p>“Of course not,” I interjected, with patent sarcasm—which was, however,
- wasted on Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“But I simply couldn’t help overhearing. The girl said something—I
- didn’t quite catch what it was, and Ralph answered. He sounded very
- angry. ‘My dear girl,’ he said. ‘Don’t you realize that it is quite
- on the cards the old man will cut me off with a shilling? He’s been
- pretty fed up with me for the last few years. A little more would do
- it. And we need the dibs, my dear. I shall be a very rich man when
- the old fellow pops off. He’s mean as they make ’em, but he’s rolling
- in money really. I don’t want him to go altering his will. You leave
- it to me, and don’t worry.’ Those were his exact words. I remember
- them perfectly. Unfortunately, just then I stepped on a dry twig or
- something, and they lowered their voices and moved away. I couldn’t, of
- course, go rushing after them, so wasn’t able to see who the girl was.”</p>
-
- <p>“That must have been most vexing,” I said. “I suppose, though, you
- hurried on to the Three Boars, felt<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span> faint, and went into the bar for a
- glass of brandy, and so were able to see if both the barmaids were on
- duty?”</p>
-
- <p>“It wasn’t a barmaid,” said Caroline unhesitatingly. “In fact, I’m
- almost sure that it was Flora Ackroyd, only——”</p>
-
- <p>“Only it doesn’t seem to make sense,” I agreed.</p>
-
- <p>“But if it wasn’t Flora, who could it have been?”</p>
-
- <p>Rapidly my sister ran over a list of maidens living in the
- neighborhood, with profuse reasons for and against.</p>
-
- <p>When she paused for breath, I murmured something about a patient, and
- slipped out.</p>
-
- <p>I proposed to make my way to the Three Boars. It seemed likely that
- Ralph Paton would have returned there by now.</p>
-
- <p>I knew Ralph very well—better, perhaps, than any one else in King’s
- Abbot, for I had known his mother before him, and therefore I
- understood much in him that puzzled others. He was, to a certain
- extent, the victim of heredity. He had not inherited his mother’s
- fatal propensity for drink, but nevertheless he had in him a strain
- of weakness. As my new friend of this morning had declared, he was
- extraordinarily handsome. Just on six feet, perfectly proportioned,
- with the easy grace of an athlete, he was dark, like his mother,
- with a handsome, sunburnt face always ready to break into a smile.
- Ralph Paton was of those born to charm easily and without effort. He
- was self-indulgent and extravagant, with no veneration for anything
- on earth, but he was lovable nevertheless, and his friends were all
- devoted to him.</p>
-
- <p>Could I do anything with the boy? I thought I could.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span></p>
-
- <p>On inquiry at the Three Boars I found that Captain Paton had just come
- in. I went up to his room and entered unannounced.</p>
-
- <p>For a moment, remembering what I had heard and seen, I was doubtful of
- my reception, but I need have had no misgivings.</p>
-
- <p>“Why, it’s Sheppard! Glad to see you.”</p>
-
- <p>He came forward to meet me, hand outstretched, a sunny smile lighting
- up his face.</p>
-
- <p>“The one person I am glad to see in this infernal place.”</p>
-
- <p>I raised my eyebrows.</p>
-
- <p>“What’s the place been doing?”</p>
-
- <p>He gave a vexed laugh.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s a long story. Things haven’t been going well with me, doctor. But
- have a drink, won’t you?”</p>
-
- <p>“Thanks,” I said, “I will.”</p>
-
- <p>He pressed the bell, then, coming back, threw himself into a chair.</p>
-
- <p>“Not to mince matters,” he said gloomily, “I’m in the devil of a mess.
- In fact, I haven’t the least idea what to do next.”</p>
-
- <p>“What’s the matter?” I asked sympathetically.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s my confounded stepfather.”</p>
-
- <p>“What has he done?”</p>
-
- <p>“It isn’t what he’s done yet, but what he’s likely to do.”</p>
-
- <p>The bell was answered, and Ralph ordered the drinks. When the man had
- gone again, he sat hunched in the arm-chair, frowning to himself.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span></p>
-
- <p>“Is it really—serious?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>He nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m fairly up against it this time,” he said soberly.</p>
-
- <p>The unusual ring of gravity in his voice told me that he spoke the
- truth. It took a good deal to make Ralph grave.</p>
-
- <p>“In fact,” he continued, “I can’t see my way ahead.... I’m damned if I
- can.”</p>
-
- <p>“If I could help——” I suggested diffidently.</p>
-
- <p>But he shook his head very decidedly.</p>
-
- <p>“Good of you, doctor. But I can’t let you in on this. I’ve got to play
- a lone hand.”</p>
-
- <p>He was silent a minute and then repeated in a slightly different tone
- of voice:—</p>
-
- <p>“Yes—I’ve got to play a lone hand....”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">DINNER AT FERNLY</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">It</span> was just a few minutes before half-past seven when I rang the
- front door bell of Fernly Park. The door was opened with admirable
- promptitude by Parker, the butler.</p>
-
- <p>The night was such a fine one that I had preferred to come on foot. I
- stepped into the big square hall and Parker relieved me of my overcoat.
- Just then Ackroyd’s secretary, a pleasant young fellow by the name of
- Raymond, passed through the hall on his way to Ackroyd’s study, his
- hands full of papers.</p>
-
- <p>“Good-evening, doctor. Coming to dine? Or is this a professional call?”</p>
-
- <p>The last was in allusion to my black bag, which I had laid down on the
- oak chest.</p>
-
- <p>I explained that I expected a summons to a confinement case at any
- moment, and so had come out prepared for an emergency call. Raymond
- nodded, and went on his way, calling over his shoulder:—</p>
-
- <p>“Go into the drawing-room. You know the way. The ladies will be down in
- a minute. I must just take these papers to Mr. Ackroyd, and I’ll tell
- him you’re here.”</p>
-
- <p>On Raymond’s appearance Parker had withdrawn, so I was alone in the
- hall. I settled my tie, glanced in a large mirror which hung there, and
- crossed to the door<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span> directly facing me, which was, as I knew, the door
- of the drawing-room.</p>
-
- <p>I noticed, just as I was turning the handle, a sound from within—the
- shutting down of a window, I took it to be. I noted it, I may say,
- quite mechanically, without attaching any importance to it at the time.</p>
-
- <p>I opened the door and walked in. As I did so, I almost collided with
- Miss Russell, who was just coming out. We both apologized.</p>
-
- <p>For the first time I found myself appraising the housekeeper and
- thinking what a handsome woman she must once have been—indeed, as far
- as that goes, still was. Her dark hair was unstreaked with gray, and
- when she had a color, as she had at this minute, the stern quality of
- her looks was not so apparent.</p>
-
- <p>Quite subconsciously I wondered whether she had been out, for she was
- breathing hard, as though she had been running.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m afraid I’m a few minutes early,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! I don’t think so. It’s gone half-past seven, Dr. Sheppard.” She
- paused a minute before saying, “I—didn’t know you were expected to
- dinner to-night. Mr. Ackroyd didn’t mention it.”</p>
-
- <p>I received a vague impression that my dining there displeased her in
- some way, but I couldn’t imagine why.</p>
-
- <p>“How’s the knee?” I inquired.</p>
-
- <p>“Much the same, thank you, doctor. I must be going now. Mrs. Ackroyd
- will be down in a moment. I—I only came in here to see if the flowers
- were all right.”</p>
-
- <p>She passed quickly out of the room. I strolled to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span> window,
- wondering at her evident desire to justify her presence in the room. As
- I did so, I saw what, of course, I might have known all the time had
- I troubled to give my mind to it, namely, that the windows were long
- French ones opening on the terrace. The sound I had heard, therefore,
- could not have been that of a window being shut down.</p>
-
- <p>Quite idly, and more to distract my mind from painful thoughts than for
- any other reason, I amused myself by trying to guess what could have
- caused the sound in question.</p>
-
- <p>Coals on the fire? No, that was not the kind of noise at all. A drawer
- of the bureau pushed in? No, not that.</p>
-
- <p>Then my eye was caught by what, I believe, is called a silver table,
- the lid of which lifts, and through the glass of which you can see the
- contents. I crossed over to it, studying the things. There were one
- or two pieces of old silver, a baby shoe belonging to King Charles
- the First, some Chinese jade figures, and quite a number of African
- implements and curios. Wanting to examine one of the jade figures more
- closely, I lifted the lid. It slipped through my fingers and fell.</p>
-
- <p>At once I recognized the sound I had heard. It was this same table lid
- being shut down gently and carefully. I repeated the action once or
- twice for my own satisfaction. Then I lifted the lid to scrutinize the
- contents more closely.</p>
-
- <p>I was still bending over the open silver table when Flora Ackroyd came
- into the room.</p>
-
- <p>Quite a lot of people do not like Flora Ackroyd, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span> nobody can help
- admiring her. And to her friends she can be very charming. The first
- thing that strikes you about her is her extraordinary fairness. She has
- the real Scandinavian pale gold hair. Her eyes are blue—blue as the
- waters of a Norwegian fiord, and her skin is cream and roses. She has
- square, boyish shoulders and slight hips. And to a jaded medical man it
- is very refreshing to come across such perfect health.</p>
-
- <p>A simple straight-forward English girl—I may be old-fashioned, but I
- think the genuine article takes a lot of beating.</p>
-
- <p>Flora joined me by the silver table, and expressed heretical doubts as
- to King Charles I ever having worn the baby shoe.</p>
-
- <p>“And anyway,” continued Miss Flora, “all this making a fuss about
- things because some one wore or used them seems to me all nonsense.
- They’re not wearing or using them now. The pen that George Eliot wrote
- <cite>The Mill on the Floss</cite> with—that sort of thing—well, it’s only
- just a pen after all. If you’re really keen on George Eliot, why not
- get <cite>The Mill on the Floss</cite> in a cheap edition and read it.”</p>
-
- <p>“I suppose you never read such old out-of-date stuff, Miss Flora?”</p>
-
- <p>“You’re wrong, Dr. Sheppard. I love <cite>The Mill on the Floss</cite>.”</p>
-
- <p>I was rather pleased to hear it. The things young women read nowadays
- and profess to enjoy positively frighten me.</p>
-
- <p>“You haven’t congratulated me yet, Dr. Sheppard,” said Flora. “Haven’t
- you heard?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span></p>
-
- <p>She held out her left hand. On the third finger of it was an
- exquisitely set single pearl.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m going to marry Ralph, you know,” she went on. “Uncle is very
- pleased. It keeps me in the family, you see.”</p>
-
- <p>I took both her hands in mine.</p>
-
- <p>“My dear,” I said, “I hope you’ll be very happy.”</p>
-
- <p>“We’ve been engaged for about a month,” continued Flora in her cool
- voice, “but it was only announced yesterday. Uncle is going to do up
- Cross-stones, and give it to us to live in, and we’re going to pretend
- to farm. Really, we shall hunt all the winter, town for the season, and
- then go yachting. I love the sea. And, of course, I shall take a great
- interest in the parish affairs, and attend all the Mothers’ Meetings.”</p>
-
- <p>Just then Mrs. Ackroyd rustled in, full of apologies for being late.</p>
-
- <p>I am sorry to say I detest Mrs. Ackroyd. She is all chains and teeth
- and bones. A most unpleasant woman. She has small pale flinty blue
- eyes, and however gushing her words may be, those eyes of hers always
- remain coldly speculative.</p>
-
- <p>I went across to her, leaving Flora by the window. She gave me a
- handful of assorted knuckles and rings to squeeze, and began talking
- volubly.</p>
-
- <p>Had I heard about Flora’s engagement? So suitable in every way. The
- dear young things had fallen in love at first sight. Such a perfect
- pair, he so dark and she so fair.</p>
-
- <p>“I can’t tell you, my dear Dr. Sheppard, the relief to a mother’s
- heart.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span></p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd sighed—a tribute to her mother’s heart, whilst her eyes
- remained shrewdly observant of me.</p>
-
- <p>“I was wondering. You are such an old friend of dear Roger’s. We
- know how much he trusts to your judgment. So difficult for me—in
- my position, as poor Cecil’s widow. But there are so many tiresome
- things—settlements, you know—all that. I fully believe that Roger
- intends to make settlements upon dear Flora, but, as you know, he is
- just a <em>leetle</em> peculiar about money. Very usual, I’ve heard,
- amongst men who are captains of industry. I wondered, you know, if you
- could just <em>sound</em> him on the subject? Flora is so fond of you. We
- feel you are quite an old friend, although we have only really known
- you just over two years.”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd’s eloquence was cut short as the drawing-room door opened
- once more. I was pleased at the interruption. I hate interfering in
- other people’s affairs, and I had not the least intention of tackling
- Ackroyd on the subject of Flora’s settlements. In another moment I
- should have been forced to tell Mrs. Ackroyd as much.</p>
-
- <p>“You know Major Blunt, don’t you, doctor?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, indeed,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>A lot of people know Hector Blunt—at least by repute. He has shot more
- wild animals in unlikely places than any man living, I suppose. When
- you mention him, people say: “Blunt—you don’t mean the big game man, do
- you?”</p>
-
- <p>His friendship with Ackroyd has always puzzled me a little. The two men
- are so totally dissimilar. Hector Blunt is perhaps five years Ackroyd’s
- junior. They made<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span> friends early in life, and though their ways have
- diverged, the friendship still holds. About once in two years Blunt
- spends a fortnight at Fernly, and an immense animal’s head, with an
- amazing number of horns which fixes you with a glazed stare as soon
- as you come inside the front door, is a permanent reminder of the
- friendship.</p>
-
- <p>Blunt had entered the room now with his own peculiar, deliberate, yet
- soft-footed tread. He is a man of medium height, sturdily and rather
- stockily built. His face is almost mahogany-colored, and is peculiarly
- expressionless. He has gray eyes that give the impression of always
- watching something that is happening very far away. He talks little,
- and what he does say is said jerkily, as though the words were forced
- out of him unwillingly.</p>
-
- <p>He said now: “How are you, Sheppard?” in his usual abrupt fashion, and
- then stood squarely in front of the fireplace looking over our heads as
- though he saw something very interesting happening in Timbuctoo.</p>
-
- <p>“Major Blunt,” said Flora, “I wish you’d tell me about these African
- things. I’m sure you know what they all are.”</p>
-
- <p>I have heard Hector Blunt described as a woman hater, but I noticed
- that he joined Flora at the silver table with what might be described
- as alacrity. They bent over it together.</p>
-
- <p>I was afraid Mrs. Ackroyd would begin talking about settlements again,
- so I made a few hurried remarks about the new sweet pea. I knew there
- was a new sweet pea because the <cite>Daily Mail</cite> had told me so that
- morning.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span> Mrs. Ackroyd knows nothing about horticulture, but she is
- the kind of woman who likes to appear well-informed about the topics
- of the day, and she, too, reads the <cite>Daily Mail</cite>. We were able to
- converse quite intelligently until Ackroyd and his secretary joined us,
- and immediately afterwards Parker announced dinner.</p>
-
- <p>My place at table was between Mrs. Ackroyd and Flora. Blunt was on Mrs.
- Ackroyd’s other side, and Geoffrey Raymond next to him.</p>
-
- <p>Dinner was not a cheerful affair. Ackroyd was visibly preoccupied. He
- looked wretched, and ate next to nothing. Mrs. Ackroyd, Raymond, and
- I kept the conversation going. Flora seemed affected by her uncle’s
- depression, and Blunt relapsed into his usual taciturnity.</p>
-
- <p>Immediately after dinner Ackroyd slipped his arm through mine and led
- me off to his study.</p>
-
- <p>“Once we’ve had coffee, we shan’t be disturbed again,” he explained. “I
- told Raymond to see to it that we shouldn’t be interrupted.”</p>
-
- <p>I studied him quietly without appearing to do so. He was clearly under
- the influence of some strong excitement. For a minute or two he paced
- up and down the room, then, as Parker entered with the coffee tray, he
- sank into an arm-chair in front of the fire.</p>
-
- <p>The study was a comfortable apartment. Book-shelves lined one wall of
- it. The chairs were big and covered in dark blue leather. A large desk
- stood by the window and was covered with papers neatly docketed and
- filed. On a round table were various magazines and sporting papers.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span></p>
-
- <p>“I’ve had a return of that pain after food lately,” remarked Ackroyd
- casually, as he helped himself to coffee. “You must give me some more
- of those tablets of yours.”</p>
-
- <p>It struck me that he was anxious to convey the impression that our
- conference was a medical one. I played up accordingly.</p>
-
- <p>“I thought as much. I brought some up with me.”</p>
-
- <p>“Good man. Hand them over now.”</p>
-
- <p>“They’re in my bag in the hall. I’ll get them.”</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd arrested me.</p>
-
- <p>“Don’t you trouble. Parker will get them. Bring in the doctor’s bag,
- will you, Parker?”</p>
-
- <p>“Very good, sir.”</p>
-
- <p>Parker withdrew. As I was about to speak, Ackroyd threw up his hand.</p>
-
- <p>“Not yet. Wait. Don’t you see I’m in such a state of nerves that I can
- hardly contain myself?”</p>
-
- <p>I saw that plainly enough. And I was very uneasy. All sorts of
- forebodings assailed me.</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd spoke again almost immediately.</p>
-
- <p>“Make certain that window’s closed, will you?” he asked.</p>
-
- <p>Somewhat surprised, I got up and went to it. It was not a French
- window, but one of the ordinary sash type. The heavy blue velvet
- curtains were drawn in front of it, but the window itself was open at
- the top.</p>
-
- <p>Parker reëntered the room with my bag while I was still at the window.</p>
-
- <p>“That’s all right,” I said, emerging again into the room.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span></p>
-
- <p>“You’ve put the latch across?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, yes. What’s the matter with you, Ackroyd?”</p>
-
- <p>The door had just closed behind Parker, or I would not have put the
- question.</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd waited just a minute before replying.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m in hell,” he said slowly, after a minute. “No, don’t bother with
- those damned tablets. I only said that for Parker. Servants are so
- curious. Come here and sit down. The door’s closed too, isn’t it?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. Nobody can overhear; don’t be uneasy.”</p>
-
- <p>“Sheppard, nobody knows what I’ve gone through in the last twenty-four
- hours. If a man’s house ever fell in ruins about him, mine has about
- me. This business of Ralph’s is the last straw. But we won’t talk about
- that now. It’s the other—the other——! I don’t know what to do about it.
- And I’ve got to make up my mind soon.”</p>
-
- <p>“What’s the trouble?”</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd remained silent for a minute or two. He seemed curiously averse
- to begin. When he did speak, the question he asked came as a complete
- surprise. It was the last thing I expected.</p>
-
- <p>“Sheppard, you attended Ashley Ferrars in his last illness, didn’t you?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, I did.”</p>
-
- <p>He seemed to find even greater difficulty in framing his next question.</p>
-
- <p>“Did you never suspect—did it ever enter your head—that—well, that he
- might have been poisoned?”</p>
-
- <p>I was silent for a minute or two. Then I made up my mind what to say.
- Roger Ackroyd was not Caroline.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span></p>
-
- <p>“I’ll tell you the truth,” I said. “At the time I had no suspicion
- whatever, but since—well, it was mere idle talk on my sister’s part
- that first put the idea into my head. Since then I haven’t been able to
- get it out again. But, mind you, I’ve no foundation whatever for that
- suspicion.”</p>
-
- <p>“He <em>was</em> poisoned,” said Ackroyd.</p>
-
- <p>He spoke in a dull heavy voice.</p>
-
- <p>“Who by?” I asked sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“His wife.”</p>
-
- <p>“How do you know that?”</p>
-
- <p>“She told me so herself.”</p>
-
- <p>“When?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yesterday! My God! yesterday! It seems ten years ago.”</p>
-
- <p>I waited a minute, and then he went on.</p>
-
- <p>“You understand, Sheppard, I’m telling you this in confidence. It’s to
- go no further. I want your advice—I can’t carry the whole weight by
- myself. As I said just now, I don’t know what to do.”</p>
-
- <p>“Can you tell me the whole story?” I said. “I’m still in the dark. How
- did Mrs. Ferrars come to make this confession to you?”</p>
-
- <p>“It’s like this. Three months ago I asked Mrs. Ferrars to marry me.
- She refused. I asked her again and she consented, but she refused to
- allow me to make the engagement public until her year of mourning was
- up. Yesterday I called upon her, pointed out that a year and three
- weeks had now elapsed since her husband’s death, and that there could
- be no further objection to making the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span> engagement public property. I
- had noticed that she had been very strange in her manner for some days.
- Now, suddenly, without the least warning, she broke down completely.
- She—she told me everything. Her hatred of her brute of a husband, her
- growing love for me, and the—the dreadful means she had taken. Poison!
- My God! It was murder in cold blood.”</p>
-
- <p>I saw the repulsion, the horror, in Ackroyd’s face. So Mrs. Ferrars
- must have seen it. Ackroyd is not the type of the great lover who can
- forgive all for love’s sake. He is fundamentally a good citizen. All
- that was sound and wholesome and law-abiding in him must have turned
- from her utterly in that moment of revelation.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” he went on, in a low, monotonous voice, “she confessed
- everything. It seems that there is one person who has known all
- along—who has been blackmailing her for huge sums. It was the strain of
- that that drove her nearly mad.”</p>
-
- <p>“Who was the man?”</p>
-
- <p>Suddenly before my eyes there arose the picture of Ralph Paton and Mrs.
- Ferrars side by side. Their heads so close together. I felt a momentary
- throb of anxiety. Supposing—oh! but surely that was impossible. I
- remembered the frankness of Ralph’s greeting that very afternoon.
- Absurd!</p>
-
- <p>“She wouldn’t tell me his name,” said Ackroyd slowly. “As a matter of
- fact, she didn’t actually say that it was a man. But of course——”</p>
-
- <p>“Of course,” I agreed. “It must have been a man. And you’ve no
- suspicion at all?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span></p>
-
- <p>For answer Ackroyd groaned and dropped his head into his hands.</p>
-
- <p>“It can’t be,” he said. “I’m mad even to think of such a thing. No, I
- won’t even admit to you the wild suspicion that crossed my mind. I’ll
- tell you this much, though. Something she said made me think that the
- person in question might be actually among my household—but that can’t
- be so. I must have misunderstood her.”</p>
-
- <p>“What did you say to her?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“What could I say? She saw, of course, the awful shock it had been to
- me. And then there was the question, what was my duty in the matter?
- She had made me, you see, an accessory after the fact. She saw all
- that, I think, quicker than I did. I was stunned, you know. She asked
- me for twenty-four hours—made me promise to do nothing till the end
- of that time. And she steadfastly refused to give me the name of the
- scoundrel who had been blackmailing her. I suppose she was afraid that
- I might go straight off and hammer him, and then the fat would have
- been in the fire as far as she was concerned. She told me that I should
- hear from her before twenty-four hours had passed. My God! I swear to
- you, Sheppard, that it never entered my head what she meant to do.
- Suicide! And I drove her to it.”</p>
-
- <p>“No, no,” I said. “Don’t take an exaggerated view of things. The
- responsibility for her death doesn’t lie at your door.”</p>
-
- <p>“The question is, what am I to do now? The poor lady is dead. Why rake
- up past trouble?”</p>
-
- <p>“I rather agree with you,” I said.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span></p>
-
- <p>“But there’s another point. How am I to get hold of that scoundrel who
- drove her to death as surely as if he’d killed her. He knew of the
- first crime, and he fastened on to it like some obscene vulture. She’s
- paid the penalty. Is he to go scot-free?”</p>
-
- <p>“I see,” I said slowly. “You want to hunt him down? It will mean a lot
- of publicity, you know.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, I’ve thought of that. I’ve zigzagged to and fro in my mind.”</p>
-
- <p>“I agree with you that the villain ought to be punished, but the cost
- has got to be reckoned.”</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd rose and walked up and down. Presently he sank into the chair
- again.</p>
-
- <p>“Look here, Sheppard, suppose we leave it like this. If no word comes
- from her, we’ll let the dead things lie.”</p>
-
- <p>“What do you mean by word coming from her?” I asked curiously.</p>
-
- <p>“I have the strongest impression that somewhere or somehow she must
- have left a message for me—before she went. I can’t argue about it, but
- there it is.”</p>
-
- <p>I shook my head.</p>
-
- <p>“She left no letter or word of any kind. I asked.”</p>
-
- <p>“Sheppard, I’m convinced that she did. And more, I’ve a feeling that by
- deliberately choosing death, she wanted the whole thing to come out, if
- only to be revenged on the man who drove her to desperation. I believe
- that if I could have seen her then, she would have told me his name and
- bid me go for him for all I was worth.”</p>
-
- <p>He looked at me.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span></p>
-
- <p>“You don’t believe in impressions?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, yes, I do, in a sense. If, as you put it, word should come from
- her——”</p>
-
- <p>I broke off. The door opened noiselessly and Parker entered with a
- salver on which were some letters.</p>
-
- <p>“The evening post, sir,” he said, handing the salver to Ackroyd.</p>
-
- <p>Then he collected the coffee cups and withdrew.</p>
-
- <p>My attention, diverted for a moment, came back to Ackroyd. He was
- staring like a man turned to stone at a long blue envelope. The other
- letters he had let drop to the ground.</p>
-
- <p>“<em>Her writing</em>,” he said in a whisper. “She must have gone out and
- posted it last night, just before—before——”</p>
-
- <p>He ripped open the envelope and drew out a thick enclosure. Then he
- looked up sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“You’re sure you shut the window?” he said.</p>
-
- <p>“Quite sure,” I said, surprised. “Why?”</p>
-
- <p>“All this evening I’ve had a queer feeling of being watched, spied
- upon. What’s that——?”</p>
-
- <p>He turned sharply. So did I. We both had the impression of hearing the
- latch of the door give ever so slightly. I went across to it and opened
- it. There was no one there.</p>
-
- <p>“Nerves,” murmured Ackroyd to himself.</p>
-
- <p>He unfolded the thick sheets of paper, and read aloud in a low voice.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span></p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>“<i>My dear, my very dear Roger,—A life calls for a life. I see
- that—I saw it in your face this afternoon. So I am taking the only
- road open to me. I leave to you the punishment of the person who
- has made my life a hell upon earth for the last year. I would not
- tell you the name this afternoon, but I propose to write it to you
- now. I have no children or near relations to be spared, so do not
- fear publicity. If you can, Roger, my very dear Roger, forgive me
- the wrong I meant to do you, since when the time came, I could not
- do it after all....</i>”</p>
- </blockquote>
-
- <p>Ackroyd, his finger on the sheet to turn it over, paused.</p>
-
- <p>“Sheppard, forgive me, but I must read this alone,” he said unsteadily.
- “It was meant for my eyes, and my eyes only.”</p>
-
- <p>He put the letter in the envelope and laid it on the table.</p>
-
- <p>“Later, when I am alone.”</p>
-
- <p>“No,” I cried impulsively, “read it now.”</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd stared at me in some surprise.</p>
-
- <p>“I beg your pardon,” I said, reddening. “I do not mean read it aloud to
- me. But read it through whilst I am still here.”</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“No, I’d rather wait.”</p>
-
- <p>But for some reason, obscure to myself, I continued to urge him.</p>
-
- <p>“At least, read the name of the man,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>Now Ackroyd is essentially pig-headed. The more you urge him to do a
- thing, the more determined he is not to do it. All my arguments were in
- vain.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span></p>
-
- <p>The letter had been brought in at twenty minutes to nine. It was just
- on ten minutes to nine when I left him, the letter still unread. I
- hesitated with my hand on the door handle, looking back and wondering
- if there was anything I had left undone. I could think of nothing. With
- a shake of the head I passed out and closed the door behind me.</p>
-
- <p>I was startled by seeing the figure of Parker close at hand. He looked
- embarrassed, and it occurred to me that he might have been listening at
- the door.</p>
-
- <p>What a fat, smug, oily face the man had, and surely there was something
- decidedly shifty in his eye.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd particularly does not want to be disturbed,” I said
- coldly. “He told me to tell you so.”</p>
-
- <p>“Quite so, sir. I—I fancied I heard the bell ring.”</p>
-
- <p>This was such a palpable untruth that I did not trouble to reply.
- Preceding me to the hall, Parker helped me on with my overcoat, and I
- stepped out into the night. The moon was overcast and everything seemed
- very dark and still. The village church clock chimed nine o’clock
- as I passed through the lodge gates. I turned to the left towards
- the village, and almost cannoned into a man coming in the opposite
- direction.</p>
-
- <p>“This the way to Fernly Park, mister?” asked the stranger in a hoarse
- voice.</p>
-
- <p>I looked at him. He was wearing a hat pulled down over his eyes, and
- his coat collar turned up. I could see little or nothing of his face,
- but he seemed a young fellow. The voice was rough and uneducated.</p>
-
- <p>“These are the lodge gates here,” I said.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span></p>
-
- <p>“Thank you, mister.” He paused, and then added, quite unnecessarily,
- “I’m a stranger in these parts, you see.”</p>
-
- <p>He went on, passing through the gates as I turned to look after him.</p>
-
- <p>The odd thing was that his voice reminded me of some one’s voice that I
- knew, but whose it was I could not think.</p>
-
- <p>Ten minutes later I was at home once more. Caroline was full of
- curiosity to know why I had returned so early. I had to make up a
- slightly fictitious account of the evening in order to satisfy her, and
- I had an uneasy feeling that she saw through the transparent device.</p>
-
- <p>At ten o’clock I rose, yawned, and suggested bed. Caroline acquiesced.</p>
-
- <p>It was Friday night, and on Friday night I wind the clocks. I did it as
- usual, whilst Caroline satisfied herself that the servants had locked
- up the kitchen properly.</p>
-
- <p>It was a quarter past ten as we went up the stairs. I had just reached
- the top when the telephone rang in the hall below.</p>
-
- <p>“Mrs. Bates,” said Caroline immediately.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m afraid so,” I said ruefully.</p>
-
- <p>I ran down the stairs and took up the receiver.</p>
-
- <p>“What?” I said. “<em>What?</em> Certainly, I’ll come at once.”</p>
-
- <p>I ran upstairs, caught up my bag, and stuffed a few extra dressings
- into it.</p>
-
- <p>“Parker telephoning,” I shouted to Caroline, “from Fernly. They’ve just
- found Roger Ackroyd murdered.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">MURDER</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">I got</span> out the car in next to no time, and drove rapidly to Fernly.
- Jumping out, I pulled the bell impatiently. There was some delay in
- answering, and I rang again.</p>
-
- <p>Then I heard the rattle of the chain and Parker, his impassivity of
- countenance quite unmoved, stood in the open doorway.</p>
-
- <p>I pushed past him into the hall.</p>
-
- <p>“Where is he?” I demanded sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“I beg your pardon, sir?”</p>
-
- <p>“Your master. Mr. Ackroyd. Don’t stand there staring at me, man. Have
- you notified the police?”</p>
-
- <p>“The police, sir? Did you say the police?” Parker stared at me as
- though I were a ghost.</p>
-
- <p>“What’s the matter with you, Parker? If, as you say, your master has
- been murdered——”</p>
-
- <p>A gasp broke from Parker.</p>
-
- <p>“The master? Murdered? Impossible, sir!”</p>
-
- <p>It was my turn to stare.</p>
-
- <p>“Didn’t you telephone to me, not five minutes ago, and tell me that Mr.
- Ackroyd had been found murdered?”</p>
-
- <p>“Me, sir? Oh! no indeed, sir. I wouldn’t dream of doing such a thing.”</p>
-
- <p>“Do you mean to say it’s all a hoax? That there’s nothing the matter
- with Mr. Ackroyd?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span></p>
-
- <p>“Excuse me, sir, did the person telephoning use my name?”</p>
-
- <p>“I’ll give you the exact words I heard. ‘<em>Is that Dr. Sheppard?
- Parker, the butler at Fernly, speaking. Will you please come at once,
- sir. Mr. Ackroyd has been murdered.</em>’”</p>
-
- <p>Parker and I stared at each other blankly.</p>
-
- <p>“A very wicked joke to play, sir,” he said at last, in a shocked tone.
- “Fancy saying a thing like that.”</p>
-
- <p>“Where is Mr. Ackroyd?” I asked suddenly.</p>
-
- <p>“Still in the study, I fancy, sir. The ladies have gone to bed, and
- Major Blunt and Mr. Raymond are in the billiard room.”</p>
-
- <p>“I think I’ll just look in and see him for a minute,” I said. “I know
- he didn’t want to be disturbed again, but this odd practical joke has
- made me uneasy. I’d just like to satisfy myself that he’s all right.”</p>
-
- <p>“Quite so, sir. It makes me feel quite uneasy myself. If you don’t
- object to my accompanying you as far as the door, sir——?”</p>
-
- <p>“Not at all,” I said. “Come along.”</p>
-
- <p>I passed through the door on the right, Parker on my heels, traversed
- the little lobby where a small flight of stairs led upstairs to
- Ackroyd’s bedroom, and tapped on the study door.</p>
-
- <p>There was no answer. I turned the handle, but the door was locked.</p>
-
- <p>“Allow me, sir,” said Parker.</p>
-
- <p>Very nimbly, for a man of his build, he dropped on one knee and applied
- his eye to the keyhole.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span></p>
-
- <p>“Key is in the lock all right, sir,” he said, rising. “On the inside.
- Mr. Ackroyd must have locked himself in and possibly just dropped off
- to sleep.”</p>
-
- <p>I bent down and verified Parker’s statement.</p>
-
- <p>“It seems all right,” I said, “but, all the same, Parker, I’m going
- to wake your master up. I shouldn’t be satisfied to go home without
- hearing from his own lips that he’s quite all right.”</p>
-
- <p>So saying, I rattled the handle and called out, “Ackroyd, Ackroyd, just
- a minute.”</p>
-
- <p>But still there was no answer. I glanced over my shoulder.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t want to alarm the household,” I said hesitatingly.</p>
-
- <p>Parker went across and shut the door from the big hall through which we
- had come.</p>
-
- <p>“I think that will be all right now, sir. The billiard room is at
- the other side of the house, and so are the kitchen quarters and the
- ladies’ bedrooms.”</p>
-
- <p>I nodded comprehendingly. Then I banged once more frantically on the
- door, and stooping down, fairly bawled through the keyhole:—</p>
-
- <p>“Ackroyd, Ackroyd! It’s Sheppard. Let me in.”</p>
-
- <p>And still—silence. Not a sign of life from within the locked room.
- Parker and I glanced at each other.</p>
-
- <p>“Look here, Parker,” I said, “I’m going to break this door in—or
- rather, we are. I’ll take the responsibility.”</p>
-
- <p>“If you say so, sir,” said Parker, rather doubtfully.</p>
-
- <p>“I do say so. I’m seriously alarmed about Mr. Ackroyd.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">52</span></p>
-
- <p>I looked round the small lobby and picked up a heavy oak chair. Parker
- and I held it between us and advanced to the assault. Once, twice, and
- three times we hurled it against the lock. At the third blow it gave,
- and we staggered into the room.</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd was sitting as I had left him in the arm-chair before the fire.
- His head had fallen sideways, and clearly visible, just below the
- collar of his coat, was a shining piece of twisted metalwork.</p>
-
- <p>Parker and I advanced till we stood over the recumbent figure. I heard
- the butler draw in his breath with a sharp hiss.</p>
-
- <p>“Stabbed from be’ind,” he murmured. “’Orrible!”</p>
-
- <p>He wiped his moist brow with his handkerchief, then stretched out a
- hand gingerly towards the hilt of the dagger.</p>
-
- <p>“You mustn’t touch that,” I said sharply. “Go at once to the telephone
- and ring up the police station. Inform them of what has happened. Then
- tell Mr. Raymond and Major Blunt.”</p>
-
- <p>“Very good, sir.”</p>
-
- <p>Parker hurried away, still wiping his perspiring brow.</p>
-
- <p>I did what little had to be done. I was careful not to disturb the
- position of the body, and not to handle the dagger at all. No object
- was to be attained by moving it. Ackroyd had clearly been dead some
- little time.</p>
-
- <p>Then I heard young Raymond’s voice, horror-stricken and incredulous,
- outside.</p>
-
- <p>“What do you say? Oh! impossible! Where’s the doctor?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span></p>
-
- <p>He appeared impetuously in the doorway, then stopped dead, his face
- very white. A hand put him aside, and Hector Blunt came past him into
- the room.</p>
-
- <p>“My God!” said Raymond from behind him; “it’s true, then.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt came straight on till he reached the chair. He bent over the
- body, and I thought that, like Parker, he was going to lay hold of the
- dagger hilt. I drew him back with one hand.</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing must be moved,” I explained. “The police must see him exactly
- as he is now.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt nodded in instant comprehension. His face was expressionless as
- ever, but I thought I detected signs of emotion beneath the stolid
- mask. Geoffrey Raymond had joined us now, and stood peering over
- Blunt’s shoulder at the body.</p>
-
- <p>“This is terrible,” he said in a low voice.</p>
-
- <p>He had regained his composure, but as he took off the pince-nez he
- habitually wore and polished them I observed that his hand was shaking.</p>
-
- <p>“Robbery, I suppose,” he said. “How did the fellow get in? Through the
- window? Has anything been taken?”</p>
-
- <p>He went towards the desk.</p>
-
- <p>“You think it’s burglary?” I said slowly.</p>
-
- <p>“What else could it be? There’s no question of suicide, I suppose?”</p>
-
- <p>“No man could stab himself in such a way,” I said confidently. “It’s
- murder right enough. But with what motive?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span></p>
-
- <p>“Roger hadn’t an enemy in the world,” said Blunt quietly. “Must have
- been burglars. But what was the thief after? Nothing seems to be
- disarranged?”</p>
-
- <p>He looked round the room. Raymond was still sorting the papers on the
- desk.</p>
-
- <p>“There seems nothing missing, and none of the drawers show signs of
- having been tampered with,” the secretary observed at last. “It’s very
- mysterious.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt made a slight motion with his head.</p>
-
- <p>“There are some letters on the floor here,” he said.</p>
-
- <p>I looked down. Three or four letters still lay where Ackroyd had
- dropped them earlier in the evening.</p>
-
- <p>But the blue envelope containing Mrs. Ferrars’s letter had disappeared.
- I half opened my mouth to speak, but at that moment the sound of a bell
- pealed through the house. There was a confused murmur of voices in the
- hall, and then Parker appeared with our local inspector and a police
- constable.</p>
-
- <p>“Good evening, gentlemen,” said the inspector. “I’m terribly sorry for
- this! A good kind gentleman like Mr. Ackroyd. The butler says it is
- murder. No possibility of accident or suicide, doctor?”</p>
-
- <p>“None whatever,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! A bad business.”</p>
-
- <p>He came and stood over the body.</p>
-
- <p>“Been moved at all?” he asked sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“Beyond making certain that life was extinct—an easy matter—I have not
- disturbed the body in any way.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! And everything points to the murderer having<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span> got clear away—for
- the moment, that is. Now then, let me hear all about it. Who found the
- body?”</p>
-
- <p>I explained the circumstances carefully.</p>
-
- <p>“A telephone message, you say? From the butler?”</p>
-
- <p>“A message that I never sent,” declared Parker earnestly. “I’ve not
- been near the telephone the whole evening. The others can bear me out
- that I haven’t.”</p>
-
- <p>“Very odd, that. Did it sound like Parker’s voice, doctor?”</p>
-
- <p>“Well—I can’t say I noticed. I took it for granted, you see.”</p>
-
- <p>“Naturally. Well, you got up here, broke in the door, and found poor
- Mr. Ackroyd like this. How long should you say he had been dead,
- doctor?”</p>
-
- <p>“Half an hour at least—perhaps longer,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“The door was locked on the inside, you say? What about the window?”</p>
-
- <p>“I myself closed and bolted it earlier in the evening at Mr. Ackroyd’s
- request.”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector strode across to it and threw back the curtains.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, it’s open now anyway,” he remarked.</p>
-
- <p>True enough, the window was open, the lower sash being raised to its
- fullest extent.</p>
-
- <p>The inspector produced a pocket torch and flashed it along the sill
- outside.</p>
-
- <p>“This is the way he went all right,” he remarked, “<em>and</em> got in.
- See here.”</p>
-
- <p>In the light of the powerful torch, several clearly defined footmarks
- could be seen. They seemed to be those<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span> of shoes with rubber studs
- in the soles. One particularly clear one pointed inwards, another,
- slightly overlapping it, pointed outwards.</p>
-
- <p>“Plain as a pikestaff,” said the inspector. “Any valuables missing?”</p>
-
- <p>Geoffrey Raymond shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“Not so that we can discover. Mr. Ackroyd never kept anything of
- particular value in this room.”</p>
-
- <p>“H’m,” said the inspector. “Man found an open window. Climbed in,
- saw Mr. Ackroyd sitting there—maybe he’d fallen asleep. Man stabbed
- him from behind, then lost his nerve and made off. But he’s left his
- tracks pretty clearly. We ought to get hold of <em>him</em> without much
- difficulty. No suspicious strangers been hanging about anywhere?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh!” I said suddenly.</p>
-
- <p>“What is it, doctor?”</p>
-
- <p>“I met a man this evening—just as I was turning out of the gate. He
- asked me the way to Fernly Park.”</p>
-
- <p>“What time would that be?”</p>
-
- <p>“Just nine o’clock. I heard it chime the hour as I was turning out of
- the gate.”</p>
-
- <p>“Can you describe him?”</p>
-
- <p>I did so to the best of my ability.</p>
-
- <p>The inspector turned to the butler.</p>
-
- <p>“Any one answering that description come to the front door?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, sir. No one has been to the house at all this evening.”</p>
-
- <p>“What about the back?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span></p>
-
- <p>“I don’t think so, sir, but I’ll make inquiries.”</p>
-
- <p>He moved towards the door, but the inspector held up a large hand.</p>
-
- <p>“No, thanks. I’ll do my own inquiring. But first of all I want to fix
- the time a little more clearly. When was Mr. Ackroyd last seen alive?”</p>
-
- <p>“Probably by me,” I said, “when I left at—let me see—about ten minutes
- to nine. He told me that he didn’t wish to be disturbed, and I repeated
- the order to Parker.”</p>
-
- <p>“Just so, sir,” said Parker respectfully.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd was certainly alive at half-past nine,” put in Raymond,
- “for I heard his voice in here talking.”</p>
-
- <p>“Who was he talking to?”</p>
-
- <p>“That I don’t know. Of course, at the time I took it for granted that
- it was Dr. Sheppard who was with him. I wanted to ask him a question
- about some papers I was engaged upon, but when I heard the voices I
- remembered that he had said he wanted to talk to Dr. Sheppard without
- being disturbed, and I went away again. But now it seems that the
- doctor had already left?”</p>
-
- <p>I nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“I was at home by a quarter-past nine,” I said. “I didn’t go out again
- until I received the telephone call.”</p>
-
- <p>“Who could have been with him at half-past nine?” queried the
- inspector. “It wasn’t you, Mr.—er——”</p>
-
- <p>“Major Blunt,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“Major Hector Blunt?” asked the inspector, a respectful tone creeping
- into his voice.</p>
-
- <p>Blunt merely jerked his head affirmatively.</p>
-
- <p>“I think we’ve seen you down here before, sir,” said the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span> inspector.
- “I didn’t recognize you for the moment, but you were staying with Mr.
- Ackroyd a year ago last May.”</p>
-
- <p>“June,” corrected Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>“Just so, June it was. Now, as I was saying, it wasn’t you with Mr.
- Ackroyd at nine-thirty this evening?”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“Never saw him after dinner,” he volunteered.</p>
-
- <p>The inspector turned once more to Raymond.</p>
-
- <p>“You didn’t overhear any of the conversation going on, did you, sir?”</p>
-
- <p>“I did catch just a fragment of it,” said the secretary, “and,
- supposing as I did that it was Dr. Sheppard who was with Mr. Ackroyd,
- that fragment struck me as distinctly odd. As far as I can remember,
- the exact words were these. Mr. Ackroyd was speaking. ‘The calls
- on my purse have been so frequent of late’—that is what he was
- saying—‘of late, that I fear it is impossible for me to accede to your
- request....’ I went away again at once, of course, so did not hear any
- more. But I rather wondered because Dr. Sheppard——”</p>
-
- <p>“——Does not ask for loans for himself or subscriptions for others,” I
- finished.</p>
-
- <p>“A demand for money,” said the inspector musingly. “It may be that here
- we have a very important clew.” He turned to the butler. “You say,
- Parker, that nobody was admitted by the front door this evening?”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s what I say, sir.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then it seems almost certain that Mr. Ackroyd himself<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span> must have
- admitted this stranger. But I don’t quite see——”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector went into a kind of day-dream for some minutes.</p>
-
- <p>“One thing’s clear,” he said at length, rousing himself from his
- absorption. “Mr. Ackroyd was alive and well at nine-thirty. That is the
- last moment at which he is known to have been alive.”</p>
-
- <p>Parker gave vent to an apologetic cough which brought the inspector’s
- eyes on him at once.</p>
-
- <p>“Well?” he said sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“If you’ll excuse me, sir, Miss Flora saw him after that.”</p>
-
- <p>“Miss Flora?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, sir. About a quarter to ten that would be. It was after that that
- she told me Mr. Ackroyd wasn’t to be disturbed again to-night.”</p>
-
- <p>“Did he send her to you with that message?”</p>
-
- <p>“Not exactly, sir. I was bringing a tray with soda and whisky when Miss
- Flora, who was just coming out of this room, stopped me and said her
- uncle didn’t want to be disturbed.”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector looked at the butler with rather closer attention than he
- had bestowed on him up to now.</p>
-
- <p>“You’d already been told that Mr. Ackroyd didn’t want to be disturbed,
- hadn’t you?”</p>
-
- <p>Parker began to stammer. His hands shook.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, sir. Yes, sir. Quite so, sir.”</p>
-
- <p>“And yet you were proposing to do so?”</p>
-
- <p>“I’d forgotten, sir. At least I mean, I always bring<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span> the whisky and
- soda about that time, sir, and ask if there’s anything more, and I
- thought—well, I was doing as usual without thinking.”</p>
-
- <p>It was at this moment that it began to dawn upon me that Parker was
- most suspiciously flustered. The man was shaking and twitching all over.</p>
-
- <p>“H’m,” said the inspector. “I must see Miss Ackroyd at once. For the
- moment we’ll leave this room exactly as it is. I can return here after
- I’ve heard what Miss Ackroyd has to tell me. I shall just take the
- precaution of shutting and bolting the window.”</p>
-
- <p>This precaution accomplished, he led the way into the hall and we
- followed him. He paused a moment, as he glanced up at the little
- staircase, then spoke over his shoulder to the constable.</p>
-
- <p>“Jones, you’d better stay here. Don’t let any one go into that room.”</p>
-
- <p>Parker interposed deferentially.</p>
-
- <p>“If you’ll excuse me, sir. If you were to lock the door into the main
- hall, nobody could gain access to this part. That staircase leads only
- to Mr. Ackroyd’s bedroom and bathroom. There is no communication with
- the other part of the house. There once was a door through, but Mr.
- Ackroyd had it blocked up. He liked to feel that his suite was entirely
- private.”</p>
-
- <p>To make things clear and explain the position, I have appended a rough
- sketch of the right-hand wing of the house. The small staircase leads,
- as Parker explained, to a big bedroom (made by two being knocked into
- one) and an adjoining bathroom and lavatory.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span></p>
-
- <div class="figcenter illowp66">
- <img src="images/i061.jpg" alt="">
- </div>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span></p>
-
- <p>The inspector took in the position at a glance. We went through into
- the large hall and he locked the door behind him, slipping the key into
- his pocket. Then he gave the constable some low-voiced instructions,
- and the latter prepared to depart.</p>
-
- <p>“We must get busy on those shoe tracks,” explained the inspector. “But
- first of all, I must have a word with Miss Ackroyd. She was the last
- person to see her uncle alive. Does she know yet?”</p>
-
- <p>Raymond shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, no need to tell her for another five minutes. She can answer my
- questions better without being upset by knowing the truth about her
- uncle. Tell her there’s been a burglary, and ask her if she would mind
- dressing and coming down to answer a few questions.”</p>
-
- <p>It was Raymond who went upstairs on this errand.</p>
-
- <p>“Miss Ackroyd will be down in a minute,” he said, when he returned. “I
- told her just what you suggested.”</p>
-
- <p>In less than five minutes Flora descended the staircase. She was
- wrapped in a pale pink silk kimono. She looked anxious and excited.</p>
-
- <p>The inspector stepped forward.</p>
-
- <p>“Good-evening, Miss Ackroyd,” he said civilly. “We’re afraid there’s
- been an attempt at robbery, and we want you to help us. What’s this
- room—the billiard room? Come in here and sit down.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora sat down composedly on the wide divan which ran the length of the
- wall, and looked up at the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t quite understand. What has been stolen? What do you want me to
- tell you?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span></p>
-
- <p>“It’s just this, Miss Ackroyd. Parker here says you came out of your
- uncle’s study at about a quarter to ten. Is that right?”</p>
-
- <p>“Quite right. I had been to say good-night to him.”</p>
-
- <p>“And the time is correct?”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, it must have been about then. I can’t say exactly. It might have
- been later.”</p>
-
- <p>“Was your uncle alone, or was there any one with him?”</p>
-
- <p>“He was alone. Dr. Sheppard had gone.”</p>
-
- <p>“Did you happen to notice whether the window was open or shut?”</p>
-
- <p>Flora shook her head.</p>
-
- <p>“I can’t say. The curtains were drawn.”</p>
-
- <p>“Exactly. And your uncle seemed quite as usual?”</p>
-
- <p>“I think so.”</p>
-
- <p>“Do you mind telling us exactly what passed between you?”</p>
-
- <p>Flora paused a minute, as though to collect her recollections.</p>
-
- <p>“I went in and said, ‘Good-night, uncle, I’m going to bed now. I’m
- tired to-night.’ He gave a sort of grunt, and—I went over and kissed
- him, and he said something about my looking nice in the frock I had on,
- and then he told me to run away as he was busy. So I went.”</p>
-
- <p>“Did he ask specially not to be disturbed?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! yes, I forgot. He said: ‘Tell Parker I don’t want anything more
- to-night, and that he’s not to disturb me.’ I met Parker just outside
- the door and gave him uncle’s message.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span></p>
-
- <p>“Just so,” said the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“Won’t you tell me what it is that has been stolen?”</p>
-
- <p>“We’re not quite—certain,” said the inspector hesitatingly.</p>
-
- <p>A wide look of alarm came into the girl’s eyes. She started up.</p>
-
- <p>“What is it? You’re hiding something from me?”</p>
-
- <p>Moving in his usual unobtrusive manner, Hector Blunt came between her
- and the inspector. She half stretched out her hand, and he took it in
- both of his, patting it as though she were a very small child, and she
- turned to him as though something in his stolid, rocklike demeanor
- promised comfort and safety.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s bad news, Flora,” he said quietly. “Bad news for all of us. Your
- Uncle Roger——”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes?”</p>
-
- <p>“It will be a shock to you. Bound to be. Poor Roger’s dead.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora drew away from him, her eyes dilating with horror.</p>
-
- <p>“When?” she whispered. “When?”</p>
-
- <p>“Very soon after you left him, I’m afraid,” said Blunt gravely.</p>
-
- <p>Flora raised her hand to her throat, gave a little cry, and I hurried
- to catch her as she fell. She had fainted, and Blunt and I carried her
- upstairs and laid her on her bed. Then I got him to wake Mrs. Ackroyd
- and tell her the news. Flora soon revived, and I brought her mother to
- her, telling her what to do for the girl. Then I hurried downstairs again.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">65</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">THE TUNISIAN DAGGER</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">I met</span> the inspector just coming from the door which led into the
- kitchen quarters.</p>
-
- <p>“How’s the young lady, doctor?”</p>
-
- <p>“Coming round nicely. Her mother’s with her.”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s good. I’ve been questioning the servants. They all declare that
- no one has been to the back door to-night. Your description of that
- stranger was rather vague. Can’t you give us something more definite to
- go upon?”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m afraid not,” I said regretfully. “It was a dark night, you see,
- and the fellow had his coat collar well pulled up and his hat squashed
- down over his eyes.”</p>
-
- <p>“H’m,” said the inspector. “Looked as though he wanted to conceal his
- face. Sure it was no one you know?”</p>
-
- <p>I replied in the negative, but not as decidedly as I might have done. I
- remembered my impression that the stranger’s voice was not unfamiliar
- to me. I explained this rather haltingly to the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“It was a rough, uneducated voice, you say?”</p>
-
- <p>I agreed, but it occurred to me that the roughness had been of an
- almost exaggerated quality. If, as the inspector thought, the man had
- wished to hide his face, he might equally well have tried to disguise
- his voice.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span></p>
-
- <p>“Do you mind coming into the study with me again, doctor? There are one
- or two things I want to ask you.”</p>
-
- <p>I acquiesced. Inspector Davis unlocked the door of the lobby, we passed
- through, and he locked the door again behind him.</p>
-
- <p>“We don’t want to be disturbed,” he said grimly. “And we don’t want any
- eavesdropping either. What’s all this about blackmail?”</p>
-
- <p>“Blackmail!” I exclaimed, very much startled.</p>
-
- <p>“Is it an effort of Parker’s imagination? Or is there something in it?”</p>
-
- <p>“If Parker heard anything about blackmail,” I said slowly, “he must
- have been listening outside this door with his ear glued against the
- keyhole.”</p>
-
- <p>Davis nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing more likely. You see, I’ve been instituting a few inquiries as
- to what Parker has been doing with himself this evening. To tell the
- truth, I didn’t like his manner. The man knows something. When I began
- to question him, he got the wind up, and plumped out some garbled story
- of blackmail.”</p>
-
- <p>I took an instant decision.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m rather glad you’ve brought the matter up,” I said. “I’ve been
- trying to decide whether to make a clean breast of things or not. I’d
- already practically decided to tell you everything, but I was going to
- wait for a favorable opportunity. You might as well have it now.”</p>
-
- <p>And then and there I narrated the whole events of the evening as I
- have set them down here. The inspector listened keenly, occasionally
- interjecting a question.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">67</span></p>
-
- <p>“Most extraordinary story I ever heard,” he said, when I had finished.
- “And you say that letter has completely disappeared? It looks bad—it
- looks very bad indeed. It gives us what we’ve been looking for—a motive
- for the murder.”</p>
-
- <p>I nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“I realize that.”</p>
-
- <p>“You say that Mr. Ackroyd hinted at a suspicion he had that some member
- of his household was involved? Household’s rather an elastic term.”</p>
-
- <p>“You don’t think that Parker himself might be the man we’re after?” I
- suggested.</p>
-
- <p>“It looks very like it. He was obviously listening at the door when
- you came out. Then Miss Ackroyd came across him later bent on entering
- the study. Say he tried again when she was safely out of the way. He
- stabbed Ackroyd, locked the door on the inside, opened the window, and
- got out that way, and went round to a side door which he had previously
- left open. How’s that?”</p>
-
- <p>“There’s only one thing against it,” I said slowly. “If Ackroyd went on
- reading that letter as soon as I left, as he intended to do, I don’t
- see him continuing to sit on here and turn things over in his mind for
- another hour. He’d have had Parker in at once, accused him then and
- there, and there would have been a fine old uproar. Remember, Ackroyd
- was a man of choleric temper.”</p>
-
- <p>“Mightn’t have had time to go on with the letter just then,” suggested
- the inspector. “We know some one was with him at half-past nine. If
- that visitor turned up as soon as you left, and after he went, Miss
- Ackroyd came in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">68</span> to say good-night—well, he wouldn’t be able to go on
- with the letter until close upon ten o’clock.”</p>
-
- <p>“And the telephone call?”</p>
-
- <p>“Parker sent that all right—perhaps before he thought of the locked
- door and open window. Then he changed his mind—or got in a panic—and
- decided to deny all knowledge of it. That was it, depend upon it.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ye-es,” I said rather doubtfully.</p>
-
- <p>“Anyway, we can find out the truth about the telephone call from the
- exchange. If it was put through from here, I don’t see how any one
- else but Parker could have sent it. Depend upon it, he’s our man.
- But keep it dark—we don’t want to alarm him just yet, till we’ve got
- all the evidence. I’ll see to it he doesn’t give us the slip. To all
- appearances we’ll be concentrating on your mysterious stranger.”</p>
-
- <p>He rose from where he had been sitting astride the chair belonging to
- the desk, and crossed over to the still form in the arm-chair.</p>
-
- <p>“The weapon ought to give us a clew,” he remarked, looking up. “It’s
- something quite unique—a curio, I should think, by the look of it.”</p>
-
- <p>He bent down, surveying the handle attentively, and I heard him give a
- grunt of satisfaction. Then, very gingerly, he pressed his hands down
- below the hilt and drew the blade out from the wound. Still carrying it
- so as not to touch the handle, he placed it in a wide china mug which
- adorned the mantelpiece.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” he said, nodding at it. “Quite a work of art. There can’t be
- many of them about.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">69</span></p>
-
- <p>It was indeed a beautiful object. A narrow, tapering blade, and a hilt
- of elaborately intertwined metals of curious and careful workmanship.
- He touched the blade gingerly with his finger, testing its sharpness,
- and made an appreciative grimace.</p>
-
- <p>“Lord, what an edge,” he exclaimed. “A child could drive that into a
- man—as easy as cutting butter. A dangerous sort of toy to have about.”</p>
-
- <p>“May I examine the body properly now?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>He nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“Go ahead.”</p>
-
- <p>I made a thorough examination.</p>
-
- <p>“Well?” said the inspector, when I had finished.</p>
-
- <p>“I’ll spare you the technical language,” I said. “We’ll keep that
- for the inquest. The blow was delivered by a right-handed man
- standing behind him, and death must have been instantaneous. By the
- expression on the dead man’s face, I should say that the blow was quite
- unexpected. He probably died without knowing who his assailant was.”</p>
-
- <p>“Butlers can creep about as soft-footed as cats,” said Inspector Davis.
- “There’s not going to be much mystery about this crime. Take a look at
- the hilt of that dagger.”</p>
-
- <p>I took the look.</p>
-
- <p>“I dare say they’re not apparent to you, but I can see them clearly
- enough.” He lowered his voice. “<em>Fingerprints!</em>”</p>
-
- <p>He stood off a few steps to judge of his effect.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said mildly. “I guessed that.”</p>
-
- <p>I do not see why I should be supposed to be totally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span> devoid of
- intelligence. After all, I read detective stories, and the newspapers,
- and am a man of quite average ability. If there had been toe marks on
- the dagger handle, now, that would have been quite a different thing. I
- would then have registered any amount of surprise and awe.</p>
-
- <p>I think the inspector was annoyed with me for declining to get
- thrilled. He picked up the china mug and invited me to accompany him to
- the billiard room.</p>
-
- <p>“I want to see if Mr. Raymond can tell us anything about this dagger,”
- he explained.</p>
-
- <p>Locking the outer door behind us again, we made our way to the billiard
- room, where we found Geoffrey Raymond. The inspector held up his
- exhibit.</p>
-
- <p>“Ever seen this before, Mr. Raymond?”</p>
-
- <p>“Why—I believe—I’m almost sure that is a curio given to Mr. Ackroyd
- by Major Blunt. It comes from Morocco—no, Tunis. So the crime was
- committed with that? What an extraordinary thing. It seems almost
- impossible, and yet there could hardly be two daggers the same. May I
- fetch Major Blunt?”</p>
-
- <p>Without waiting for an answer, he hurried off.</p>
-
- <p>“Nice young fellow that,” said the inspector. “Something honest and
- ingenuous about him.”</p>
-
- <p>I agreed. In the two years that Geoffrey Raymond has been secretary to
- Ackroyd, I have never seen him ruffled or out of temper. And he has
- been, I know, a most efficient secretary.</p>
-
- <p>In a minute or two Raymond returned, accompanied by Blunt.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span></p>
-
- <p>“I was right,” said Raymond excitedly. “It <em>is</em> the Tunisian
- dagger.”</p>
-
- <p>“Major Blunt hasn’t looked at it yet,” objected the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“Saw it the moment I came into the study,” said the quiet man.</p>
-
- <p>“You recognized it then?”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“You said nothing about it,” said the inspector suspiciously.</p>
-
- <p>“Wrong moment,” said Blunt. “Lot of harm done by blurting out things at
- the wrong time.”</p>
-
- <p>He returned the inspector’s stare placidly enough.</p>
-
- <p>The latter grunted at last and turned away. He brought the dagger over
- to Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>“You’re quite sure about it, sir. You identify it positively?”</p>
-
- <p>“Absolutely. No doubt whatever.”</p>
-
- <p>“Where was this—er—curio usually kept? Can you tell me that, sir?”</p>
-
- <p>It was the secretary who answered.</p>
-
- <p>“In the silver table in the drawing-room.”</p>
-
- <p>“What?” I exclaimed.</p>
-
- <p>The others looked at me.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, doctor?” said the inspector encouragingly.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s nothing.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, doctor?” said the inspector again, still more encouragingly.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s so trivial,” I explained apologetically. “Only that when I
- arrived last night for dinner I heard the lid of the silver table being
- shut down in the drawing-room.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span></p>
-
- <p>I saw profound skepticism and a trace of suspicion on the inspector’s
- countenance.</p>
-
- <p>“How did you know it was the silver table lid?”</p>
-
- <p>I was forced to explain in detail—a long, tedious explanation which I
- would infinitely rather not have had to make.</p>
-
- <p>The inspector heard me to the end.</p>
-
- <p>“Was the dagger in its place when you were looking over the contents?”
- he asked.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t know,” I said. “I can’t say I remember noticing it—but, of
- course, it may have been there all the time.”</p>
-
- <p>“We’d better get hold of the housekeeper,” remarked the inspector, and
- pulled the bell.</p>
-
- <p>A few minutes later Miss Russell, summoned by Parker, entered the room.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t think I went near the silver table,” she said, when the
- inspector had posed his question. “I was looking to see that all the
- flowers were fresh. Oh! yes, I remember now. The silver table was
- open—which it had no business to be, and I shut the lid down as I
- passed.”</p>
-
- <p>She looked at him aggressively.</p>
-
- <p>“I see,” said the inspector. “Can you tell me if this dagger was in its
- place then?”</p>
-
- <p>Miss Russell looked at the weapon composedly.</p>
-
- <p>“I can’t say, I’m sure,” she replied. “I didn’t stop to look. I knew
- the family would be down any minute, and I wanted to get away.”</p>
-
- <p>“Thank you,” said the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>There was just a trace of hesitation in his manner, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span> though he would
- have liked to question her further, but Miss Russell clearly accepted
- the words as a dismissal, and glided from the room.</p>
-
- <p>“Rather a Tartar, I should fancy, eh?” said the inspector, looking
- after her. “Let me see. This silver table is in front of one of the
- windows, I think you said, doctor?”</p>
-
- <p>Raymond answered for me.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, the left-hand window.”</p>
-
- <p>“And the window was open?”</p>
-
- <p>“They were both ajar.”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, I don’t think we need go into the question much further.
- Somebody—I’ll just say somebody—could get that dagger any time he
- liked, and exactly when he got it doesn’t matter in the least. I’ll be
- coming up in the morning with the chief constable, Mr. Raymond. Until
- then, I’ll keep the key of that door. I want Colonel Melrose to see
- everything exactly as it is. I happen to know that he’s dining out the
- other side of the county, and, I believe, staying the night....”</p>
-
- <p>We watched the inspector take up the jar.</p>
-
- <p>“I shall have to pack this carefully,” he observed. “It’s going to be
- an important piece of evidence in more ways than one.”</p>
-
- <p>A few minutes later as I came out of the billiard room with Raymond,
- the latter gave a low chuckle of amusement.</p>
-
- <p>I felt the pressure of his hand on my arm, and followed the direction
- of his eyes. Inspector Davis seemed to be inviting Parker’s opinion of
- a small pocket diary.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span></p>
-
- <p>“A little obvious,” murmured my companion. “So Parker is the suspect,
- is he? Shall we oblige Inspector Davis with a set of our fingerprints
- also?”</p>
-
- <p>He took two cards from the card tray, wiped them with his silk
- handkerchief, then handed one to me and took the other himself. Then,
- with a grin, he handed them to the police inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“Souvenirs,” he said. “<abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 1, Dr. Sheppard; <abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 2, my humble self. One
- from Major Blunt will be forthcoming in the morning.”</p>
-
- <p>Youth is very buoyant. Even the brutal murder of his friend and
- employer could not dim Geoffrey Raymond’s spirits for long. Perhaps
- that is as it should be. I do not know. I have lost the quality of
- resilience long since myself.</p>
-
- <p>It was very late when I got back, and I hoped that Caroline would have
- gone to bed. I might have known better.</p>
-
- <p>She had hot cocoa waiting for me, and whilst I drank it, she extracted
- the whole history of the evening from me. I said nothing of the
- blackmailing business, but contented myself with giving her the facts
- of the murder.</p>
-
- <p>“The police suspect Parker,” I said, as I rose to my feet and prepared
- to ascend to bed. “There seems a fairly clear case against him.”</p>
-
- <p>“Parker!” said my sister. “Fiddlesticks! That inspector must be a
- perfect fool. Parker indeed! Don’t tell me.”</p>
-
- <p>With which obscure pronouncement we went up to bed.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">I LEARN MY NEIGHBOR’S PROFESSION</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">On</span> the following morning I hurried unforgivably over my round. My
- excuse can be that I had no very serious cases to attend. On my return
- Caroline came into the hall to greet me.</p>
-
- <p>“Flora Ackroyd is here,” she announced in an excited whisper.</p>
-
- <p>“What?”</p>
-
- <p>I concealed my surprise as best I could.</p>
-
- <p>“She’s very anxious to see you. She’s been here half an hour.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline led the way into our small sitting-room, and I followed.</p>
-
- <p>Flora was sitting on the sofa by the window. She was in black and she
- sat nervously twisting her hands together. I was shocked by the sight
- of her face. All the color had faded away from it. But when she spoke
- her manner was as composed and resolute as possible.</p>
-
- <p>“Dr. Sheppard, I have come to ask you to help me.”</p>
-
- <p>“Of course he’ll help you, my dear,” said Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>I don’t think Flora really wished Caroline to be present at the
- interview. She would, I am sure, have infinitely preferred to speak to
- me privately. But she also wanted to waste no time, so she made the
- best of it.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span></p>
-
- <p>“I want you to come to The Larches with me.”</p>
-
- <p>“The Larches?” I queried, surprised.</p>
-
- <p>“To see that funny little man?” exclaimed Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. You know who he is, don’t you?”</p>
-
- <p>“We fancied,” I said, “that he might be a retired hairdresser.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora’s blue eyes opened very wide.</p>
-
- <p>“Why, he’s Hercule Poirot! You know who I mean—the private detective.
- They say he’s done the most wonderful things—just like detectives do in
- books. A year ago he retired and came to live down here. Uncle knew who
- he was, but he promised not to tell any one, because M. Poirot wanted
- to live quietly without being bothered by people.”</p>
-
- <p>“So that’s who he is,” I said slowly.</p>
-
- <p>“You’ve heard of him, of course?”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m rather an old fogey, as Caroline tells me,” I said, “but I
- <em>have</em> just heard of him.”</p>
-
- <p>“Extraordinary!” commented Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>I don’t know what she was referring to—possibly her own failure to
- discover the truth.</p>
-
- <p>“You want to go and see him?” I asked slowly. “Now why?”</p>
-
- <p>“To get him to investigate this murder, of course,” said Caroline
- sharply. “Don’t be so stupid, James.”</p>
-
- <p>I was not really being stupid. Caroline does not always understand what
- I am driving at.</p>
-
- <p>“You haven’t got confidence in Inspector Davis?” I went on.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span></p>
-
- <p>“Of course she hasn’t,” said Caroline. “I haven’t either.”</p>
-
- <p>Any one would have thought it was Caroline’s uncle who had been
- murdered.</p>
-
- <p>“And how do you know he would take up the case?” I asked. “Remember he
- has retired from active work.”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s just it,” said Flora simply. “I’ve got to persuade him.”</p>
-
- <p>“You are sure you are doing wisely?” I asked gravely.</p>
-
- <p>“Of course she is,” said Caroline. “I’ll go with her myself if she
- likes.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’d rather the doctor came with me if you don’t mind, Miss Sheppard,”
- said Flora.</p>
-
- <p>She knows the value of being direct on certain occasions. Any hints
- would certainly have been wasted on Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“You see,” she explained, following directness with tact, “Dr. Sheppard
- being the doctor, and having found the body, he would be able to give
- all the details to M. Poirot.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” said Caroline grudgingly, “I see that.”</p>
-
- <p>I took a turn or two up and down the room.</p>
-
- <p>“Flora,” I said gravely, “be guided by me. I advise you not to drag
- this detective into the case.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora sprang to her feet. The color rushed into her cheeks.</p>
-
- <p>“I know why you say that,” she cried. “But it’s exactly for that reason
- I’m so anxious to go. You’re afraid! But I’m not. I know Ralph better
- than you do.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span></p>
-
- <p>“Ralph,” said Caroline. “What has Ralph got to do with it?”</p>
-
- <p>Neither of us heeded her.</p>
-
- <p>“Ralph may be weak,” continued Flora. “He may have done foolish things
- in the past—wicked things even—but he wouldn’t murder any one.”</p>
-
- <p>“No, no,” I exclaimed. “I never thought it of him.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then why did you go to the Three Boars last night?” demanded Flora,
- “on your way home—after uncle’s body was found?”</p>
-
- <p>I was momentarily silenced. I had hoped that that visit of mine would
- remain unnoticed.</p>
-
- <p>“How did you know about that?” I countered.</p>
-
- <p>“I went there this morning,” said Flora. “I heard from the servants
- that Ralph was staying there——”</p>
-
- <p>I interrupted her.</p>
-
- <p>“You had no idea that he was in King’s Abbot?”</p>
-
- <p>“No. I was astounded. I couldn’t understand it. I went there and asked
- for him. They told me, what I suppose they told you last night, that
- he went out at about nine o’clock yesterday evening—and—and never came
- back.”</p>
-
- <p>Her eyes met mine defiantly, and as though answering something in my
- look, she burst out:—</p>
-
- <p>“Well, why shouldn’t he? He might have gone—anywhere. He may even have
- gone back to London.”</p>
-
- <p>“Leaving his luggage behind?” I asked gently.</p>
-
- <p>Flora stamped her foot.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t care. There must be a simple explanation.”</p>
-
- <p>“And that’s why you want to go to Hercule Poirot?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span> Isn’t it better to
- leave things as they are? The police don’t suspect Ralph in the least,
- remember. They’re working on quite another tack.”</p>
-
- <p>“But that’s just <em>it</em>,” cried the girl. “They <em>do</em> suspect
- him. A man from Cranchester turned up this morning—Inspector Raglan,
- a horrid, weaselly little man. I found he had been to the Three Boars
- this morning before me. They told me all about his having been there,
- and the questions he had asked. He must think Ralph did it.”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s a change of mind from last night, if so,” I said slowly. “He
- doesn’t believe in Davis’s theory that it was Parker then?”</p>
-
- <p>“Parker indeed,” said my sister, and snorted.</p>
-
- <p>Flora came forward and laid her hand on my arm.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! Dr. Sheppard, let us go at once to this M. Poirot. He will find
- out the truth.”</p>
-
- <p>“My dear Flora,” I said gently, laying my hand on hers. “Are you quite
- sure it is the truth we want?”</p>
-
- <p>She looked at me, nodding her head gravely.</p>
-
- <p>“You’re not sure,” she said. “I am. I know Ralph better than you do.”</p>
-
- <p>“Of course he didn’t do it,” said Caroline, who had been keeping silent
- with great difficulty. “Ralph may be extravagant, but he’s a dear boy,
- and has the nicest manners.”</p>
-
- <p>I wanted to tell Caroline that large numbers of murderers have had
- nice manners, but the presence of Flora restrained me. Since the
- girl was determined, I was forced to give in to her and we started
- at once, getting away before my sister was able to fire off any more
- pronouncements<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span> beginning with her favorite words, “Of course.”</p>
-
- <p>An old woman with an immense Breton cap opened the door of The Larches
- to us. M. Poirot was at home, it seemed.</p>
-
- <p>We were ushered into a little sitting-room arranged with formal
- precision, and there, after the lapse of a minute or so, my friend of
- yesterday came to us.</p>
-
- <p>“Monsieur le docteur,” he said, smiling. “Mademoiselle.”</p>
-
- <p>He bowed to Flora.</p>
-
- <p>“Perhaps,” I began, “you have heard of the tragedy which occurred last
- night.”</p>
-
- <p>His face grew grave.</p>
-
- <p>“But certainly I have heard. It is horrible. I offer mademoiselle all
- my sympathy. In what way can I serve you?”</p>
-
- <p>“Miss Ackroyd,” I said, “wants you to—to——”</p>
-
- <p>“To find the murderer,” said Flora in a clear voice.</p>
-
- <p>“I see,” said the little man. “But the police will do that, will they
- not?”</p>
-
- <p>“They might make a mistake,” said Flora. “They are on their way to make
- a mistake now, I think. Please, M. Poirot, won’t you help us? If—if it
- is a question of money——”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot held up his hand.</p>
-
- <p>“Not that, I beg of you, mademoiselle. Not that I do not care for
- money.” His eyes showed a momentary twinkle. “Money, it means much to
- me and always has done. No, if I go into this, you must understand one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span>
- thing clearly. <em>I shall go through with it to the end.</em> The good
- dog, he does not leave the scent, remember! You may wish that, after
- all, you had left it to the local police.”</p>
-
- <p>“I want the truth,” said Flora, looking him straight in the eyes.</p>
-
- <p>“All the truth?”</p>
-
- <p>“All the truth.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then I accept,” said the little man quietly. “And I hope you will not
- regret those words. Now, tell me all the circumstances.”</p>
-
- <p>“Dr. Sheppard had better tell you,” said Flora. “He knows more than I
- do.”</p>
-
- <p>Thus enjoined, I plunged into a careful narrative, embodying all the
- facts I have previously set down. Poirot listened carefully, inserting
- a question here and there, but for the most part sitting in silence,
- his eyes on the ceiling.</p>
-
- <p>I brought my story to a close with the departure of the inspector and
- myself from Fernly Park the previous night.</p>
-
- <p>“And now,” said Flora, as I finished, “tell him all about Ralph.”</p>
-
- <p>I hesitated, but her imperious glance drove me on.</p>
-
- <p>“You went to this inn—this Three Boars—last night on your way home?”
- asked Poirot, as I brought my tale to a close. “Now exactly why was
- that?”</p>
-
- <p>I paused a moment to choose my words carefully.</p>
-
- <p>“I thought some one ought to inform the young man of his uncle’s death.
- It occurred to me after I had left<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span> Fernly that possibly no one but
- myself and Mr. Ackroyd were aware that he was staying in the village.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“Quite so. That was your only motive in going there, eh?”</p>
-
- <p>“That was my only motive,” I said stiffly.</p>
-
- <p>“It was not to—shall we say—reassure yourself about <i lang="fr">ce jeune homme</i>?”</p>
-
- <p>“Reassure myself?”</p>
-
- <p>“I think, M. le docteur, that you know very well what I mean, though
- you pretend not to do so. I suggest that it would have been a relief
- to you if you had found that Captain Paton had been at home all the
- evening.”</p>
-
- <p>“Not at all,” I said sharply.</p>
-
- <p>The little detective shook his head at me gravely.</p>
-
- <p>“You have not the trust in me of Miss Flora,” he said. “But no matter.
- What we have to look at is this—Captain Paton is missing, under
- circumstances which call for an explanation. I will not hide from you
- that the matter looks grave. Still, it may admit of a perfectly simple
- explanation.”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s just what I keep saying,” cried Flora eagerly.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot touched no more upon that theme. Instead he suggested an
- immediate visit to the local police. He thought it better for Flora
- to return home, and for me to be the one to accompany him there and
- introduce him to the officer in charge of the case.</p>
-
- <p>We carried out this plan forthwith. We found Inspector Davis outside
- the police station looking very glum indeed. With him was Colonel
- Melrose, the Chief Constable,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span> and another man whom, from Flora’s
- description of “weaselly,” I had no difficulty in recognizing as
- Inspector Raglan from Cranchester.</p>
-
- <p>I know Melrose fairly well, and I introduced Poirot to him and
- explained the situation. The chief constable was clearly vexed, and
- Inspector Raglan looked as black as thunder. Davis, however, seemed
- slightly exhilarated by the sight of his superior officer’s annoyance.</p>
-
- <p>“The case is going to be plain as a pikestaff,” said Raglan. “Not the
- least need for amateurs to come butting in. You’d think any fool would
- have seen the way things were last night, and then we shouldn’t have
- lost twelve hours.”</p>
-
- <p>He directed a vengeful glance at poor Davis, who received it with
- perfect stolidity.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd’s family must, of course, do what they see fit,” said
- Colonel Melrose. “But we cannot have the official investigation
- hampered in any way. I know M. Poirot’s great reputation, of course,”
- he added courteously.</p>
-
- <p>“The police can’t advertise themselves, worse luck,” said Raglan.</p>
-
- <p>It was Poirot who saved the situation.</p>
-
- <p>“It is true that I have retired from the world,” he said. “I never
- intended to take up a case again. Above all things, I have a horror of
- publicity. I must beg, that in the case of my being able to contribute
- something to the solution of the mystery, my name may not be mentioned.”</p>
-
- <p>Inspector Raglan’s face lightened a little.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span></p>
-
- <p>“I’ve heard of some very remarkable successes of yours,” observed the
- colonel, thawing.</p>
-
- <p>“I have had much experience,” said Poirot quietly. “But most of my
- successes have been obtained by the aid of the police. I admire
- enormously your English police. If Inspector Raglan permits me to
- assist him, I shall be both honored and flattered.”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector’s countenance became still more gracious.</p>
-
- <p>Colonel Melrose drew me aside.</p>
-
- <p>“From all I hear, this little fellow’s done some really remarkable
- things,” he murmured. “We’re naturally anxious not to have to call in
- Scotland Yard. Raglan seems very sure of himself, but I’m not quite
- certain that I agree with him. You see, I—er—know the parties concerned
- better than he does. This fellow doesn’t seem out after kudos, does he?
- Would work in with us unobtrusively, eh?”</p>
-
- <p>“To the greater glory of Inspector Raglan,” I said solemnly.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, well,” said Colonel Melrose breezily in a louder voice, “we must
- put you wise to the latest developments, M. Poirot.”</p>
-
- <p>“I thank you,” said Poirot. “My friend, Dr. Sheppard, said something of
- the butler being suspected?”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s all bunkum,” said Raglan instantly. “These high-class servants
- get in such a funk that they act suspiciously for nothing at all.”</p>
-
- <p>“The fingerprints?” I hinted.</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing like Parker’s.” He gave a faint smile, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span> added: “And yours
- and Mr. Raymond’s don’t fit either, doctor.”</p>
-
- <p>“What about those of Captain Ralph Paton?” asked Poirot quietly.</p>
-
- <p>I felt a secret admiration for the way he took the bull by the horns. I
- saw a look of respect creep into the inspector’s eye.</p>
-
- <p>“I see you don’t let the grass grow under your feet, Mr. Poirot. It
- will be a pleasure to work with you, I’m sure. We’re going to take that
- young gentleman’s fingerprints as soon as we can lay hands upon him.”</p>
-
- <p>“I can’t help thinking you’re mistaken, inspector,” said Colonel
- Melrose warmly. “I’ve known Ralph Paton from a boy upward. He’d never
- stoop to murder.”</p>
-
- <p>“Maybe not,” said the inspector tonelessly.</p>
-
- <p>“What have you got against him?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“Went out just on nine o’clock last night. Was seen in neighborhood of
- Fernly Park somewhere about nine-thirty. Not been seen since. Believed
- to be in serious money difficulties. I’ve got a pair of his shoes
- here—shoes with rubber studs in them. He had two pairs, almost exactly
- alike. I’m going up now to compare them with those footmarks. The
- constable is up there seeing that no one tampers with them.”</p>
-
- <p>“We’ll go at once,” said Colonel Melrose. “You and M. Poirot will
- accompany us, will you not?”</p>
-
- <p>We assented, and all drove up in the colonel’s car. The inspector was
- anxious to get at once to the footmarks, and asked to be put down at
- the lodge. About half-way up the drive, on the right, a path branched
- off<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span> which led round to the terrace and the window of Ackroyd’s study.</p>
-
- <p>“Would you like to go with the inspector, M. Poirot?” asked the chief
- constable, “or would you prefer to examine the study?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot chose the latter alternative. Parker opened the door to us. His
- manner was smug and deferential, and he seemed to have recovered from
- his panic of the night before.</p>
-
- <p>Colonel Melrose took a key from his pocket, and unlocking the door
- which led into the lobby, he ushered us through into the study.</p>
-
- <p>“Except for the removal of the body, M. Poirot, this room is exactly as
- it was last night.”</p>
-
- <p>“And the body was found—where?”</p>
-
- <p>As precisely as possible, I described Ackroyd’s position. The arm-chair
- still stood in front of the fire.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot went and sat down in it.</p>
-
- <p>“The blue letter you speak of, where was it when you left the room?”</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd had laid it down on this little table at his right hand.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“Except for that, everything was in its place?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, I think so.”</p>
-
- <p>“Colonel Melrose, would you be so extremely obliging as to sit down in
- this chair a minute. I thank you. Now, M. le docteur, will you kindly
- indicate to me the exact position of the dagger?”</p>
-
- <p>I did so, whilst the little man stood in the doorway.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span></p>
-
- <p>“The hilt of the dagger was plainly visible from the door then. Both
- you and Parker could see it at once?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot went next to the window.</p>
-
- <p>“The electric light was on, of course, when you discovered the body?”
- he asked over his shoulder.</p>
-
- <p>I assented, and joined him where he was studying the marks on the
- window-sill.</p>
-
- <p>“The rubber studs are the same pattern as those in Captain Paton’s
- shoes,” he said quietly.</p>
-
- <p>Then he came back once more to the middle of the room. His eye traveled
- round, searching everything in the room with a quick, trained glance.</p>
-
- <p>“Are you a man of good observation, Dr. Sheppard?” he asked at last.</p>
-
- <p>“I think so,” I said, surprised.</p>
-
- <p>“There was a fire in the grate, I see. When you broke the door down and
- found Mr. Ackroyd dead, how was the fire? Was it low?”</p>
-
- <p>I gave a vexed laugh.</p>
-
- <p>“I—I really can’t say. I didn’t notice. Perhaps Mr. Raymond or Major
- Blunt——”</p>
-
- <p>The little man opposite me shook his head with a faint smile.</p>
-
- <p>“One must always proceed with method. I made an error of judgment in
- asking you that question. To each man his own knowledge. You could tell
- me the details of the patient’s appearance—nothing there would escape
- you. If I wanted information about the papers on that desk, Mr. Raymond
- would have noticed anything<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span> there was to see. To find out about the
- fire, I must ask the man whose business it is to observe such things.
- You permit——”</p>
-
- <p>He moved swiftly to the fireplace and rang the bell.</p>
-
- <p>After a lapse of a minute or two Parker appeared.</p>
-
- <p>“The bell rang, sir,” he said hesitatingly.</p>
-
- <p>“Come in, Parker,” said Colonel Melrose. “This gentleman wants to ask
- you something.”</p>
-
- <p>Parker transferred a respectful attention to Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“Parker,” said the little man, “when you broke down the door with Dr.
- Sheppard last night, and found your master dead, what was the state of
- the fire?”</p>
-
- <p>Parker replied without a pause.</p>
-
- <p>“It had burned very low, sir. It was almost out.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” said Poirot. The exclamation sounded almost triumphant. He went
- on:—</p>
-
- <p>“Look round you, my good Parker. Is this room exactly as it was then?”</p>
-
- <p>The butler’s eye swept round. It came to rest on the windows.</p>
-
- <p>“The curtains were drawn, sir, and the electric light was on.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded approval.</p>
-
- <p>“Anything else?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, sir, this chair was drawn out a little more.”</p>
-
- <p>He indicated a big grandfather chair to the left of the door between it
- and the window. I append a plan of the room with the chair in question
- marked with an X.</p>
-
- <p>“Just show me,” said Poirot.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span></p>
-
- <div class="figcenter illowp100">
- <img src="images/i089.jpg" alt="">
- </div>
-
- <p>The butler drew the chair in question out a good two feet from the
- wall, turning it so that the seat faced the door.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Voilà ce qui est curieux</i>,” murmured Poirot. “No one would want
- to sit in a chair in such a position, I fancy. Now who pushed it back
- into place again, I wonder? Did you, my friend?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, sir,” said Parker. “I was too upset with seeing the master and
- all.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot looked across at me.</p>
-
- <p>“Did you, doctor?”</p>
-
- <p>I shook my head.</p>
-
- <p>“It was back in position when I arrived with the police, sir,” put in
- Parker. “I’m sure of that.”</p>
-
- <p>“Curious,” said Poirot again.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span></p>
-
- <p>“Raymond or Blunt must have pushed it back,” I suggested. “Surely it
- isn’t important?”</p>
-
- <p>“It is completely unimportant,” said Poirot. “That is why it is so
- interesting,” he added softly.</p>
-
- <p>“Excuse me a minute,” said Colonel Melrose. He left the room with
- Parker.</p>
-
- <p>“Do you think Parker is speaking the truth?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“About the chair, yes. Otherwise I do not know. You will find, M. le
- docteur, if you have much to do with cases of this kind, that they all
- resemble each other in one thing.”</p>
-
- <p>“What is that?” I asked curiously.</p>
-
- <p>“Every one concerned in them has something to hide.”</p>
-
- <p>“Have I?” I asked, smiling.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot looked at me attentively.</p>
-
- <p>“I think you have,” he said quietly.</p>
-
- <p>“But——”</p>
-
- <p>“Have you told me everything known to you about this young man Paton?”
- He smiled as I grew red. “Oh! do not fear. I will not press you. I
- shall learn it in good time.”</p>
-
- <p>“I wish you’d tell me something of your methods,” I said hastily, to
- cover my confusion. “The point about the fire, for instance?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! that was very simple. You leave Mr. Ackroyd at—ten minutes to
- nine, was it not?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, exactly, I should say.”</p>
-
- <p>“The window is then closed and bolted and the door unlocked. At a
- quarter past ten when the body is discovered, the door is locked and
- the window is open.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span> Who opened it? Clearly only Mr. Ackroyd himself
- could have done so, and for one of two reasons. Either because the room
- became unbearably hot (but since the fire was nearly out and there was
- a sharp drop in temperature last night, that cannot be the reason),
- or because he admitted some one that way. And if he admitted some one
- that way, it must have been some one well known to him, since he had
- previously shown himself uneasy on the subject of that same window.”</p>
-
- <p>“It sounds very simple,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“Everything is simple, if you arrange the facts methodically. We are
- concerned now with the personality of the person who was with him at
- nine-thirty last night. Everything goes to show that that was the
- individual admitted by the window, and though Mr. Ackroyd was seen
- alive later by Miss Flora, we cannot approach a solution of the mystery
- until we know who that visitor was. The window may have been left open
- after his departure and so afforded entrance to the murderer, or the
- same person may have returned a second time. Ah! here is the colonel
- who returns.”</p>
-
- <p>Colonel Melrose entered with an animated manner.</p>
-
- <p>“That telephone call has been traced at last,” he said. “It did not
- come from here. It was put through to Dr. Sheppard at 10.15 last night
- from a public call office at King’s Abbot station. And at 10.23 the
- night mail leaves for Liverpool.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">INSPECTOR RAGLAN IS CONFIDENT</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">We</span> looked at each other.</p>
-
- <p>“You’ll have inquiries made at the station, of course?” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“Naturally, but I’m not over sanguine as to the result. You know what
- that station is like.”</p>
-
- <p>I did. King’s Abbot is a mere village, but its station happens to
- be an important junction. Most of the big expresses stop there, and
- trains are shunted, re-sorted, and made up. It has two or three public
- telephone boxes. At that time of night three local trains come in
- close upon each other, to catch the connection with the express for
- the north which comes in at 10.19 and leaves at 10.23. The whole place
- is in a bustle, and the chances of one particular person being noticed
- telephoning or getting into the express are very small indeed.</p>
-
- <p>“But why telephone at all?” demanded Melrose. “That is what I find so
- extraordinary. There seems no rhyme or reason in the thing.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot carefully straightened a china ornament on one of the bookcases.</p>
-
- <p>“Be sure there was a reason,” he said over his shoulder.</p>
-
- <p>“But what reason could it be?”</p>
-
- <p>“When we know that, we shall know everything. This case is very curious
- and very interesting.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span></p>
-
- <p>There was something almost indescribable in the way he said those last
- words. I felt that he was looking at the case from some peculiar angle
- of his own, and what he saw I could not tell.</p>
-
- <p>He went to the window and stood there, looking out.</p>
-
- <p>“You say it was nine o’clock, Dr. Sheppard, when you met this stranger
- outside the gate?”</p>
-
- <p>He asked the question without turning round.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I replied. “I heard the church clock chime the hour.”</p>
-
- <p>“How long would it take him to reach the house—to reach this window,
- for instance?”</p>
-
- <p>“Five minutes at the outside. Two or three minutes only if he took the
- path at the right of the drive and came straight here.”</p>
-
- <p>“But to do that he would have to know the way. How can I explain
- myself?—it would mean that he had been here before—that he knew his
- surroundings.”</p>
-
- <p>“That is true,” replied Colonel Melrose.</p>
-
- <p>“We could find out, doubtless, if Mr. Ackroyd had received any
- strangers during the past week?”</p>
-
- <p>“Young Raymond could tell us that,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“Or Parker,” suggested Colonel Melrose.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Ou tous les deux</i>,” suggested Poirot, smiling.</p>
-
- <p>Colonel Melrose went in search of Raymond, and I rang the bell once
- more for Parker.</p>
-
- <p>Colonel Melrose returned almost immediately, accompanied by the young
- secretary, whom he introduced to Poirot. Geoffrey Raymond was fresh and
- debonair as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">94</span> ever. He seemed surprised and delighted to make Poirot’s
- acquaintance.</p>
-
- <p>“No idea you’d been living among us incognito, M. Poirot,” he said. “It
- will be a great privilege to watch you at work——Hallo, what’s this?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot had been standing just to the left of the door. Now he moved
- aside suddenly, and I saw that while my back was turned he must have
- swiftly drawn out the arm-chair till it stood in the position Parker
- had indicated.</p>
-
- <p>“Want me to sit in the chair whilst you take a blood test?” asked
- Raymond good-humoredly. “What’s the idea?”</p>
-
- <p>“M. Raymond, this chair was pulled out—so—last night when Mr. Ackroyd
- was found killed. Some one moved it back again into place. Did you do
- so?”</p>
-
- <p>The secretary’s reply came without a second’s hesitation.</p>
-
- <p>“No, indeed I didn’t. I don’t even remember that it was in that
- position, but it must have been if you say so. Anyway, somebody else
- must have moved it back to its proper place. Have they destroyed a clew
- in doing so? Too bad!”</p>
-
- <p>“It is of no consequence,” said the detective. “Of no consequence
- whatever. What I really want to ask you is this, M. Raymond: Did any
- stranger come to see Mr. Ackroyd during this past week?”</p>
-
- <p>The secretary reflected for a minute or two, knitting his brows, and
- during the pause Parker appeared in answer to the bell.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">95</span></p>
-
- <p>“No,” said Raymond at last. “I can’t remember any one. Can you, Parker?”</p>
-
- <p>“I beg your pardon, sir?”</p>
-
- <p>“Any stranger coming to see Mr. Ackroyd this week?”</p>
-
- <p>The butler reflected for a minute or two.</p>
-
- <p>“There was the young man who came on Wednesday, sir,” he said at last.
- “From Curtis and Troute, I understood he was.”</p>
-
- <p>Raymond moved this aside with an impatient hand.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! yes, I remember, but that is not the kind of stranger this
- gentleman means.” He turned to Poirot. “Mr. Ackroyd had some idea of
- purchasing a dictaphone,” he explained. “It would have enabled us to
- get through a lot more work in a limited time. The firm in question
- sent down their representative, but nothing came of it. Mr. Ackroyd did
- not make up his mind to purchase.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot turned to the butler.</p>
-
- <p>“Can you describe this young man to me, my good Parker?”</p>
-
- <p>“He was fair-haired, sir, and short. Very neatly dressed in a blue
- serge suit. A very presentable young man, sir, for his station in life.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot turned to me.</p>
-
- <p>“The man you met outside the gate, doctor, was tall, was he not?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said. “Somewhere about six feet, I should say.”</p>
-
- <p>“There is nothing in that, then,” declared the Belgian. “I thank you,
- Parker.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">96</span></p>
-
- <p>The butler spoke to Raymond.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Hammond has just arrived, sir,” he said. “He is anxious to know if
- he can be of any service, and he would be glad to have a word with you.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’ll come at once,” said the young man. He hurried out. Poirot looked
- inquiringly at the chief constable.</p>
-
- <p>“The family solicitor, M. Poirot,” said the latter.</p>
-
- <p>“It is a busy time for this young M. Raymond,” murmured M. Poirot. “He
- has the air efficient, that one.”</p>
-
- <p>“I believe Mr. Ackroyd considered him a most able secretary.”</p>
-
- <p>“He has been here—how long?”</p>
-
- <p>“Just on two years, I fancy.”</p>
-
- <p>“His duties he fulfills punctiliously. Of that I am sure. In what
- manner does he amuse himself? Does he go in for <i lang="fr">le sport</i>?”</p>
-
- <p>“Private secretaries haven’t much time for that sort of thing,” said
- Colonel Melrose, smiling. “Raymond plays golf, I believe. And tennis in
- the summer time.”</p>
-
- <p>“He does not attend the courses—I should say the running of the horses?”</p>
-
- <p>“Race meetings? No, I don’t think he’s interested in racing.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded and seemed to lose interest. He glanced slowly round the
- study.</p>
-
- <p>“I have seen, I think, all that there is to be seen here.”</p>
-
- <p>I, too, looked round.</p>
-
- <p>“If those walls could speak,” I murmured.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“A tongue is not enough,” he said. “They would have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">97</span> to have also eyes
- and ears. But do not be too sure that these dead things”—he touched
- the top of the bookcase as he spoke—“are always dumb. To me they speak
- sometimes—chairs, tables—they have their message!”</p>
-
- <p>He turned away towards the door.</p>
-
- <p>“What message?” I cried. “What have they said to you to-day?”</p>
-
- <p>He looked over his shoulder and raised one eyebrow quizzically.</p>
-
- <p>“An opened window,” he said. “A locked door. A chair that apparently
- moved itself. To all three I say, ‘Why?’ and I find no answer.”</p>
-
- <p>He shook his head, puffed out his chest, and stood blinking at us. He
- looked ridiculously full of his own importance. It crossed my mind
- to wonder whether he was really any good as a detective. Had his big
- reputation been built up on a series of lucky chances?</p>
-
- <p>I think the same thought must have occurred to Colonel Melrose, for he
- frowned.</p>
-
- <p>“Anything more you want to see, M. Poirot?” he inquired brusquely.</p>
-
- <p>“You would perhaps be so kind as to show me the silver table from which
- the weapon was taken? After that, I will trespass on your kindness no
- longer.”</p>
-
- <p>We went to the drawing-room, but on the way the constable waylaid the
- colonel, and after a muttered conversation the latter excused himself
- and left us together. I showed Poirot the silver table, and after
- raising the lid once or twice and letting it fall, he pushed open the
- window and stepped out on the terrace. I followed him.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">98</span></p>
-
- <p>Inspector Raglan had just turned the corner of the house, and was
- coming towards us. His face looked grim and satisfied.</p>
-
- <p>“So there you are, M. Poirot,” he said. “Well, this isn’t going to be
- much of a case. I’m sorry, too. A nice enough young fellow gone wrong.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot’s face fell, and he spoke very mildly.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m afraid I shall not be able to be of much aid to you, then?”</p>
-
- <p>“Next time, perhaps,” said the inspector soothingly. “Though we don’t
- have murders every day in this quiet little corner of the world.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot’s gaze took on an admiring quality.</p>
-
- <p>“You have been of a marvelous promptness,” he observed. “How exactly
- did you go to work, if I may ask?”</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly,” said the inspector. “To begin with—method. That’s what I
- always say—method!”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” cried the other. “That, too, is my watchword. Method, order, and
- the little gray cells.”</p>
-
- <p>“The cells?” said the inspector, staring.</p>
-
- <p>“The little gray cells of the brain,” explained the Belgian.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, of course; well, we all use them, I suppose.”</p>
-
- <p>“In a greater or lesser degree,” murmured Poirot. “And there are, too,
- differences in quality. Then there is the psychology of a crime. One
- must study that.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” said the inspector, “you’ve been bitten with all this
- psychoanalysis stuff? Now, I’m a plain man——”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">99</span></p>
-
- <p>“Mrs. Raglan would not agree, I am sure, to that,” said Poirot, making
- him a little bow.</p>
-
- <p>Inspector Raglan, a little taken aback, bowed.</p>
-
- <p>“You don’t understand,” he said, grinning broadly. “Lord, what a lot of
- difference language makes. I’m telling you how I set to work. First of
- all, method. Mr. Ackroyd was last seen alive at a quarter to ten by his
- niece, Miss Flora Ackroyd. That’s fact number one, isn’t it?”</p>
-
- <p>“If you say so.”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, it is. At half-past ten, the doctor here says that Mr. Ackroyd
- has been dead at least half an hour. You stick to that, doctor?”</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly,” I said. “Half an hour or longer.”</p>
-
- <p>“Very good. That gives us exactly a quarter of an hour in which the
- crime must have been committed. I make a list of every one in the
- house, and work through it, setting down opposite their names where
- they were and what they were doing between the hour of 9.45 and 10 p.m.”</p>
-
- <p>He handed a sheet of paper to Poirot. I read it over his shoulder. It
- ran as follows, written in a neat script:—</p>
-
- <blockquote>
- <p class="hang"><i>Major Blunt.—In billiard room with Mr. Raymond. (Latter
- confirms.)</i></p>
-
- <p class="hang"><i>Mr. Raymond.—Billiard room. (See above.)</i></p>
-
- <p class="hang"><i>Mrs. Ackroyd.—9.45 watching billiard match. Went up to bed 9.55.
- (Raymond and Blunt watched her up staircase.)</i> </p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">100</span></p>
-
- <p class="hang"><i>Miss Ackroyd.—Went straight from her uncle’s room upstairs.
- (Confirmed by Parker, also housemaid, Elsie Dale.)</i></p>
-
- <p class="hang"><i>Servants</i>:—</p>
-
- <p class="hang2"><i>Parker.—Went straight to butler’s pantry. (Confirmed by
- housekeeper, Miss Russell, who came down to speak to him about
- something at 9.47, and remained at least ten minutes.)</i></p>
-
- <p class="hang2"><i>Miss Russell.—As above. Spoke to housemaid, Elsie Dale, upstairs
- at 9.45.</i></p>
-
- <p class="hang2"><i>Ursula Bourne (parlormaid).—In her own room until 9.55. Then in
- Servants’ Hall.</i></p>
-
- <p class="hang2"><i>Mrs. Cooper (cook).—In Servants’ Hall.</i></p>
-
- <p class="hang2"><i>Gladys Jones (second housemaid).—In Servants’ Hall.</i></p>
-
- <p class="hang2"><i>Elsie Dale.—Upstairs in bedroom. Seen there by Miss Russell and
- Miss Flora Ackroyd.</i></p>
-
- <p class="hang2"><i>Mary Thripp (kitchenmaid).—Servants’ Hall.</i></p>
- </blockquote>
-
- <p>“The cook has been here seven years, the parlormaid eighteen months,
- and Parker just over a year. The others are new. Except for something
- fishy about Parker, they all seem quite all right.”</p>
-
- <p>“A very complete list,” said Poirot, handing it back to him. “I am
- quite sure that Parker did not do the murder,” he added gravely.</p>
-
- <p>“So is my sister,” I struck in. “And she’s usually right.” Nobody paid
- any attention to my interpolation.</p>
-
- <p>“That disposes pretty effectually of the household,” continued the
- inspector. “Now we come to a very grave point. The woman at the
- lodge—Mary Black—was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">101</span> pulling the curtains last night when she saw
- Ralph Paton turn in at the gate and go up towards the house.”</p>
-
- <p>“She is sure of that?” I asked sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“Quite sure. She knows him well by sight. He went past very quickly
- and turned off by the path to the right, which is a short cut to the
- terrace.”</p>
-
- <p>“And what time was that?” asked Poirot, who had sat with an immovable
- face.</p>
-
- <p>“Exactly twenty-five minutes past nine,” said the inspector gravely.</p>
-
- <p>There was a silence. Then the inspector spoke again.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s all clear enough. It fits in without a flaw. At twenty-five
- minutes past nine, Captain Paton is seen passing the lodge; at
- nine-thirty or thereabouts, Mr. Geoffrey Raymond hears some one in here
- asking for money and Mr. Ackroyd refusing. What happens next? Captain
- Paton leaves the same way—through the window. He walks along the
- terrace, angry and baffled. He comes to the open drawing-room window.
- Say it’s now a quarter to ten. Miss Flora Ackroyd is saying good-night
- to her uncle. Major Blunt, Mr. Raymond, and Mrs. Ackroyd are in the
- billiard room. The drawing-room is empty. He steals in, takes the
- dagger from the silver table, and returns to the study window. He slips
- off his shoes, climbs in, and—well, I don’t need to go into details.
- Then he slips out again and goes off. Hadn’t the nerve to go back to
- the inn. He makes for the station, rings up from there——”</p>
-
- <p>“Why?” said Poirot softly.</p>
-
- <p>I jumped at the interruption. The little man was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">102</span> leaning forward. His
- eyes shone with a queer green light.</p>
-
- <p>For a moment Inspector Raglan was taken aback by the question.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s difficult to say exactly why he did that,” he said at last. “But
- murderers do funny things. You’d know that if you were in the police
- force. The cleverest of them make stupid mistakes sometimes. But come
- along and I’ll show you those footprints.”</p>
-
- <p>We followed him round the corner of the terrace to the study window. At
- a word from Raglan a police constable produced the shoes which had been
- obtained from the local inn.</p>
-
- <p>The inspector laid them over the marks.</p>
-
- <p>“They’re the same,” he said confidently. “That is to say, they’re not
- the same pair that actually made these prints. He went away in those.
- This is a pair just like them, but older—see how the studs are worn
- down.”</p>
-
- <p>“Surely a great many people wear shoes with rubber studs in them?”
- asked Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“That’s so, of course,” said the inspector. “I shouldn’t put so much
- stress on the footmarks if it wasn’t for everything else.”</p>
-
- <p>“A very foolish young man, Captain Ralph Paton,” said Poirot
- thoughtfully. “To leave so much evidence of his presence.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! well,” said the inspector, “it was a dry, fine night, you know. He
- left no prints on the terrace or on the graveled path. But, unluckily
- for him, a spring<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">103</span> must have welled up just lately at the end of the
- path from the drive. See here.”</p>
-
- <p>A small graveled path joined the terrace a few feet away. In one
- spot, a few yards from its termination, the ground was wet and boggy.
- Crossing this wet place there were again the marks of footsteps, and
- amongst them the shoes with rubber studs.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot followed the path on a little way, the inspector by his side.</p>
-
- <p>“You noticed the women’s footprints?” he said suddenly.</p>
-
- <p>The inspector laughed.</p>
-
- <p>“Naturally. But several different women have walked this way—and men
- as well. It’s a regular short cut to the house, you see. It would be
- impossible to sort out all the footsteps. After all, it’s the ones on
- the window-sill that are really important.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s no good going farther,” said the inspector, as we came in view of
- the drive. “It’s all graveled again here, and hard as it can be.”</p>
-
- <p>Again Poirot nodded, but his eyes were fixed on a small garden house—a
- kind of superior summer-house. It was a little to the left of the path
- ahead of us, and a graveled walk ran up to it.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot lingered about until the inspector had gone back towards the
- house. Then he looked at me.</p>
-
- <p>“You must have indeed been sent from the good God to replace my
- friend Hastings,” he said, with a twinkle. “I observe that you do not
- quit my side. How say<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</span> you, Dr. Sheppard, shall we investigate that
- summer-house? It interests me.”</p>
-
- <p>He went up to the door and opened it. Inside, the place was almost
- dark. There were one or two rustic seats, a croquet set, and some
- folded deck-chairs.</p>
-
- <p>I was startled to observe my new friend. He had dropped to his hands
- and knees and was crawling about the floor. Every now and then he shook
- his head as though not satisfied. Finally, he sat back on his heels.</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing,” he murmured. “Well, perhaps it was not to be expected. But
- it would have meant so much——”</p>
-
- <p>He broke off, stiffening all over. Then he stretched out his hand to
- one of the rustic chairs. He detached something from one side of it.</p>
-
- <p>“What is it?” I cried. “What have you found?”</p>
-
- <p>He smiled, unclosing his hand so that I should see what lay in the palm
- of it. A scrap of stiff white cambric.</p>
-
- <p>I took it from him, looked at it curiously, and then handed it back.</p>
-
- <p>“What do you make of it, eh, my friend?” he asked, eyeing me keenly.</p>
-
- <p>“A scrap torn from a handkerchief,” I suggested, shrugging my shoulders.</p>
-
- <p>He made another dart and picked up a small quill—a goose quill by the
- look of it.</p>
-
- <p>“And that?” he cried triumphantly. “What do you make of that?”</p>
-
- <p>I only stared.</p>
-
- <p>He slipped the quill into his pocket, and looked again at the scrap of
- white stuff.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</span></p>
-
- <p>“A fragment of a handkerchief?” he mused. “Perhaps you are right. But
- remember this—<em>a good laundry does not starch a handkerchief</em>.”</p>
-
- <p>He nodded at me triumphantly, then he put away the scrap carefully in
- his pocket-book.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">THE GOLDFISH POND</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">We</span> walked back to the house together. There was no sign of the
- inspector. Poirot paused on the terrace and stood with his back to the
- house, slowly turning his head from side to side.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Une belle propriété</i>,” he said at last appreciatively. “Who
- inherits it?”</p>
-
- <p>His words gave me almost a shock. It is an odd thing, but until that
- moment the question of inheritance had never come into my head. Poirot
- watched me keenly.</p>
-
- <p>“It is a new idea to you, that,” he said at last. “You had not thought
- of it before—eh?”</p>
-
- <p>“No,” I said truthfully. “I wish I had.”</p>
-
- <p>He looked at me again curiously.</p>
-
- <p>“I wonder just what you mean by that,” he said thoughtfully. “Ah! no,”
- as I was about to speak. “<i lang="fr">Inutile!</i> You would not tell me your
- real thought.”</p>
-
- <p>“Every one has something to hide,” I quoted, smiling.</p>
-
- <p>“Exactly.”</p>
-
- <p>“You still believe that?”</p>
-
- <p>“More than ever, my friend. But it is not easy to hide things from
- Hercule Poirot. He has a knack of finding out.”</p>
-
- <p>He descended the steps of the Dutch garden as he spoke.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</span></p>
-
- <p>“Let us walk a little,” he said over his shoulder. “The air is pleasant
- to-day.”</p>
-
- <p>I followed him. He led me down a path to the left enclosed in yew
- hedges. A walk led down the middle, bordered each side with formal
- flower beds, and at the end was a round paved recess with a seat and
- a pond of goldfish. Instead of pursuing the path to the end, Poirot
- took another which wound up the side of a wooded slope. In one spot the
- trees had been cleared away, and a seat had been put. Sitting there one
- had a splendid view over the countryside, and one looked right down on
- the paved recess and the goldfish pond.</p>
-
- <p>“England is very beautiful,” said Poirot, his eyes straying over the
- prospect. Then he smiled. “And so are English girls,” he said in a
- lower tone. “Hush, my friend, and look at the pretty picture below us.”</p>
-
- <p>It was then that I saw Flora. She was moving along the path we had
- just left and she was humming a little snatch of song. Her step was
- more dancing than walking, and in spite of her black dress, there was
- nothing but joy in her whole attitude. She gave a sudden pirouette on
- her toes, and her black draperies swung out. At the same time she flung
- her head back and laughed outright.</p>
-
- <p>As she did so a man stepped out from the trees. It was Hector Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>The girl started. Her expression changed a little.</p>
-
- <p>“How you startled me—I didn’t see you.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt said nothing, but stood looking at her for a minute or two in
- silence.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">108</span></p>
-
- <p>“What I like about you,” said Flora, with a touch of malice, “is your
- cheery conversation.”</p>
-
- <p>I fancy that at that Blunt reddened under his tan. His voice, when he
- spoke, sounded different—it had a curious sort of humility in it.</p>
-
- <p>“Never was much of a fellow for talking. Not even when I was young.”</p>
-
- <p>“That was a very long time ago, I suppose,” said Flora gravely.</p>
-
- <p>I caught the undercurrent of laughter in her voice, but I don’t think
- Blunt did.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” he said simply, “it was.”</p>
-
- <p>“How does it feel to be Methuselah?” asked Flora.</p>
-
- <p>This time the laughter was more apparent, but Blunt was following out
- an idea of his own.</p>
-
- <p>“Remember the Johnny who sold his soul to the devil? In return for
- being made young again? There’s an opera about it.”</p>
-
- <p>“Faust, you mean?”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s the beggar. Rum story. Some of us would do it if we could.”</p>
-
- <p>“Any one would think you were creaking at the joints to hear you talk,”
- cried Flora, half vexed, half amused.</p>
-
- <p>Blunt said nothing for a minute or two. Then he looked away from Flora
- into the middle distance and observed to an adjacent tree trunk that it
- was about time he got back to Africa.</p>
-
- <p>“Are you going on another expedition—shooting things?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">109</span></p>
-
- <p>“Expect so. Usually do, you know—shoot things, I mean.”</p>
-
- <p>“You shot that head in the hall, didn’t you?”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt nodded. Then he jerked out, going rather red, as he did so:—</p>
-
- <p>“Care for some decent skins any time? If so, I could get ’em for you.”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! please do,” cried Flora. “Will you really? You won’t forget?”</p>
-
- <p>“I shan’t forget,” said Hector Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>He added, in a sudden burst of communicativeness:—</p>
-
- <p>“Time I went. I’m no good in this sort of life. Haven’t got the manners
- for it. I’m a rough fellow, no use in society. Never remember the
- things one’s expected to say. Yes, time I went.”</p>
-
- <p>“But you’re not going at once,” cried Flora. “Not—not while we’re in
- all this trouble. Oh! please. If you go——”</p>
-
- <p>She turned away a little.</p>
-
- <p>“You want me to stay?” asked Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>He spoke deliberately but quite simply.</p>
-
- <p>“We all——”</p>
-
- <p>“I meant you personally,” said Blunt, with directness.</p>
-
- <p>Flora turned slowly back again and met his eyes.</p>
-
- <p>“I want you to stay,” she said, “if—if that makes any difference.”</p>
-
- <p>“It makes all the difference,” said Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>There was a moment’s silence. They sat down on the stone seat by the
- goldfish pond. It seemed as though neither of them knew quite what to
- say next.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">110</span></p>
-
- <p>“It—it’s such a lovely morning,” said Flora at last. “You know, I can’t
- help feeling happy, in spite—in spite of everything. That’s awful, I
- suppose?”</p>
-
- <p>“Quite natural,” said Blunt. “Never saw your uncle until two years ago,
- did you? Can’t be expected to grieve very much. Much better to have no
- humbug about it.”</p>
-
- <p>“There’s something awfully consoling about you,” said Flora. “You make
- things so simple.”</p>
-
- <p>“Things are simple as a rule,” said the big game hunter.</p>
-
- <p>“Not always,” said Flora.</p>
-
- <p>Her voice had lowered itself, and I saw Blunt turn and look at her,
- bringing his eyes back from (apparently) the coast of Africa to do so.
- He evidently put his own construction on her change of tone, for he
- said, after a minute or two, in rather an abrupt manner:—</p>
-
- <p>“I say, you know, you mustn’t worry. About that young chap, I mean.
- Inspector’s an ass. Everybody knows—utterly absurd to think he could
- have done it. Man from outside. Burglar chap. That’s the only possible
- solution.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora turned to look at him.</p>
-
- <p>“You really think so?”</p>
-
- <p>“Don’t you?” said Blunt quickly.</p>
-
- <p>“I—oh, yes, of course.”</p>
-
- <p>Another silence, and then Flora burst out:—</p>
-
- <p>“I’m—I’ll tell you why I felt so happy this morning. However heartless
- you think me, I’d rather tell you. It’s because the lawyer has been—Mr.
- Hammond. He told us about the will. Uncle Roger has left me twenty
- thousand<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">111</span> pounds. Think of it—twenty thousand beautiful pounds.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt looked surprised.</p>
-
- <p>“Does it mean so much to you?”</p>
-
- <p>“Mean much to me? Why, it’s everything. Freedom—life—no more scheming
- and scraping and lying——”</p>
-
- <p>“Lying?” said Blunt, sharply interrupting.</p>
-
- <p>Flora seemed taken aback for a minute.</p>
-
- <p>“You know what I mean,” she said uncertainly. “Pretending to be
- thankful for all the nasty castoff things rich relations give you. Last
- year’s coats and skirts and hats.”</p>
-
- <p>“Don’t know much about ladies’ clothes; should have said you were
- always very well turned out.”</p>
-
- <p>“It’s cost me something, though,” said Flora in a low voice. “Don’t
- let’s talk of horrid things. I’m so happy. I’m free. Free to do what I
- like. Free not to——”</p>
-
- <p>She stopped suddenly.</p>
-
- <p>“Not to what?” asked Blunt quickly.</p>
-
- <p>“I forget now. Nothing important.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt had a stick in his hand, and he thrust it into the pond, poking
- at something.</p>
-
- <p>“What are you doing, Major Blunt?”</p>
-
- <p>“There’s something bright down there. Wondered what it was—looks like a
- gold brooch. Now I’ve stirred up the mud and it’s gone.”</p>
-
- <p>“Perhaps it’s a crown,” suggested Flora. “Like the one Mélisande saw in
- the water.”</p>
-
- <p>“Mélisande,” said Blunt reflectively—“she’s in an opera, isn’t she?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">112</span></p>
-
- <p>“Yes, you seem to know a lot about operas.”</p>
-
- <p>“People take me sometimes,” said Blunt sadly. “Funny idea of
- pleasure—worse racket than the natives make with their tom-toms.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora laughed.</p>
-
- <p>“I remember Mélisande,” continued Blunt, “married an old chap old
- enough to be her father.”</p>
-
- <p>He threw a small piece of flint into the goldfish pond. Then, with a
- change of manner, he turned to Flora.</p>
-
- <p>“Miss Ackroyd, can I do anything? About Paton, I mean. I know how
- dreadfully anxious you must be.”</p>
-
- <p>“Thank you,” said Flora in a cold voice. “There is really nothing to
- be done. Ralph will be all right. I’ve got hold of the most wonderful
- detective in the world, and he’s going to find out all about it.”</p>
-
- <p>For some time I had felt uneasy as to our position. We were not exactly
- eavesdropping, since the two in the garden below had only to lift their
- heads to see us. Nevertheless, I should have drawn attention to our
- presence before now, had not my companion put a warning pressure on my
- arm. Clearly he wished me to remain silent.</p>
-
- <p>But now he rose briskly to his feet, clearing his throat.</p>
-
- <p>“I demand pardon,” he cried. “I cannot allow mademoiselle thus
- extravagantly to compliment me, and not draw attention to my presence.
- They say the listener hears no good of himself, but that is not the
- case this time. To spare my blushes, I must join you and apologize.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">113</span></p>
-
- <p>He hurried down the path with me close behind him, and joined the
- others by the pond.</p>
-
- <p>“This is M. Hercule Poirot,” said Flora. “I expect you’ve heard of him.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot bowed.</p>
-
- <p>“I know Major Blunt by reputation,” he said politely. “I am glad to
- have encountered you, monsieur. I am in need of some information that
- you can give me.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt looked at him inquiringly.</p>
-
- <p>“When did you last see M. Ackroyd alive?”</p>
-
- <p>“At dinner.”</p>
-
- <p>“And you neither saw nor heard anything of him after that?”</p>
-
- <p>“Didn’t see him. Heard his voice.”</p>
-
- <p>“How was that?”</p>
-
- <p>“I strolled out on the terrace——”</p>
-
- <p>“Pardon me, what time was this?”</p>
-
- <p>“About half-past nine. I was walking up and down smoking in front of
- the drawing-room window. I heard Ackroyd talking in his study——”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot stooped and removed a microscopic weed.</p>
-
- <p>“Surely you couldn’t hear voices in the study from that part of the
- terrace,” he murmured.</p>
-
- <p>He was not looking at Blunt, but I was, and to my intense surprise, I
- saw the latter flush.</p>
-
- <p>“Went as far as the corner,” he explained unwillingly.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! indeed?” said Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>In the mildest manner he conveyed an impression that more was wanted.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">114</span></p>
-
- <p>“Thought I saw—a woman disappearing into the bushes. Just a gleam of
- white, you know. Must have been mistaken. It was while I was standing
- at the corner of the terrace that I heard Ackroyd’s voice speaking to
- that secretary of his.”</p>
-
- <p>“Speaking to Mr. Geoffrey Raymond?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes—that’s what I supposed at the time. Seems I was wrong.”</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd didn’t address him by name?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, no.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then, if I may ask, why did you think——?”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt explained laboriously.</p>
-
- <p>“Took it for granted that it <em>would</em> be Raymond, because he had
- said just before I came out that he was taking some papers to Ackroyd.
- Never thought of it being anybody else.”</p>
-
- <p>“Can you remember what the words you heard were?”</p>
-
- <p>“Afraid I can’t. Something quite ordinary and unimportant. Only caught
- a scrap of it. I was thinking of something else at the time.”</p>
-
- <p>“It is of no importance,” murmured Poirot. “Did you move a chair back
- against the wall when you went into the study after the body was
- discovered?”</p>
-
- <p>“Chair? No—why should I?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot shrugged his shoulders but did not answer. He turned to Flora.</p>
-
- <p>“There is one thing I should like to know from you, mademoiselle. When
- you were examining the things in the silver table with Dr. Sheppard,
- was the dagger in its place, or was it not?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">115</span></p>
-
- <p>Flora’s chin shot up.</p>
-
- <p>“Inspector Raglan has been asking me that,” she said resentfully.
- “I’ve told him, and I’ll tell you. I’m perfectly certain the dagger
- was <em>not</em> there. He thinks it was and that Ralph sneaked it later
- in the evening. And—and he doesn’t believe me. He thinks I’m saying it
- to—to shield Ralph.”</p>
-
- <p>“And aren’t you?” I asked gravely.</p>
-
- <p>Flora stamped her foot.</p>
-
- <p>“You, too, Dr. Sheppard! Oh! it’s too bad.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot tactfully made a diversion.</p>
-
- <p>“It is true what I heard you say, Major Blunt. There is something that
- glitters in this pond. Let us see if I can reach it.”</p>
-
- <p>He knelt down by the pond, baring his arm to the elbow, and lowered it
- in very slowly, so as not to disturb the bottom of the pond. But in
- spite of all his precautions the mud eddied and swirled, and he was
- forced to draw his arm out again empty-handed.</p>
-
- <p>He gazed ruefully at the mud upon his arm. I offered him my
- handkerchief, which he accepted with fervent protestations of thanks.
- Blunt looked at his watch.</p>
-
- <p>“Nearly lunch time,” he said. “We’d better be getting back to the
- house.”</p>
-
- <p>“You will lunch with us, M. Poirot?” asked Flora. “I should like you to
- meet my mother. She is—very fond of Ralph.”</p>
-
- <p>The little man bowed.</p>
-
- <p>“I shall be delighted, mademoiselle.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">116</span></p>
-
- <p>“And you will stay, too, won’t you, Dr. Sheppard?”</p>
-
- <p>I hesitated.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, do!”</p>
-
- <p>I wanted to, so I accepted the invitation without further ceremony.</p>
-
- <p>We set out towards the house, Flora and Blunt walking ahead.</p>
-
- <p>“What hair,” said Poirot to me in a low tone, nodding towards Flora.
- “The real gold! They will make a pretty couple. She and the dark,
- handsome Captain Paton. Will they not?”</p>
-
- <p>I looked at him inquiringly, but he began to fuss about a few
- microscopic drops of water on his coat sleeve. The man reminded me in
- some ways of a cat. His green eyes and his finicking habits.</p>
-
- <p>“And all for nothing, too,” I said sympathetically. “I wonder what it
- was in the pond?”</p>
-
- <p>“Would you like to see?” asked Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>I stared at him. He nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“My good friend,” he said gently and reproachfully, “Hercule Poirot
- does not run the risk of disarranging his costume without being sure
- of attaining his object. To do so would be ridiculous and absurd. I am
- never ridiculous.”</p>
-
- <p>“But you brought your hand out empty,” I objected.</p>
-
- <p>“There are times when it is necessary to have discretion. Do you tell
- your patients everything—everything, doctor? I think not. Nor do you
- tell your excellent sister everything either, is it not so? Before
- showing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">117</span> my empty hand, I dropped what it contained into my other hand.
- You shall see what that was.”</p>
-
- <p>He held out his left hand, palm open. On it lay a little circlet of
- gold. A woman’s wedding ring.</p>
-
- <p>I took it from him.</p>
-
- <p>“Look inside,” commanded Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>I did so. Inside was an inscription in fine writing:—</p>
-
- <p class="center"><i>From R., March 13th.</i></p>
-
- <p>I looked at Poirot, but he was busy inspecting his appearance in a tiny
- pocket glass. He paid particular attention to his mustaches, and none
- at all to me. I saw that he did not intend to be communicative.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">118</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">THE PARLORMAID</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">We</span> found Mrs. Ackroyd in the hall. With her was a small dried-up little
- man, with an aggressive chin and sharp gray eyes, and “lawyer” written
- all over him.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Hammond is staying to lunch with us,” said Mrs. Ackroyd. “You know
- Major Blunt, Mr. Hammond? And dear Dr. Sheppard—also a close friend of
- poor Roger’s. And, let me see——”</p>
-
- <p>She paused, surveying Hercule Poirot in some perplexity.</p>
-
- <p>“This is M. Poirot, mother,” said Flora. “I told you about him this
- morning.”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! yes,” said Mrs. Ackroyd vaguely. “Of course, my dear, of course.
- He is to find Ralph, is he not?”</p>
-
- <p>“He is to find out who killed uncle,” said Flora.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! my dear,” cried her mother. “Please! My poor nerves. I am a wreck
- this morning, a positive wreck. Such a dreadful thing to happen. I
- can’t help feeling that it must have been an accident of some kind.
- Roger was so fond of handling queer curios. His hand must have slipped,
- or something.”</p>
-
- <p>This theory was received in polite silence. I saw Poirot edge up to the
- lawyer, and speak to him in a confidential undertone. They moved aside
- into the embrasure of the window. I joined them—then hesitated.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">119</span></p>
-
- <p>“Perhaps I’m intruding,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“Not at all,” cried Poirot heartily. “You and I, M. le docteur, we
- investigate this affair side by side. Without you I should be lost. I
- desire a little information from the good Mr. Hammond.”</p>
-
- <p>“You are acting on behalf of Captain Ralph Paton, I understand,” said
- the lawyer cautiously.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“Not so. I am acting in the interests of justice. Miss Ackroyd has
- asked me to investigate the death of her uncle.”</p>
-
- <p>Mr. Hammond seemed slightly taken aback.</p>
-
- <p>“I cannot seriously believe that Captain Paton can be concerned in this
- crime,” he said, “however strong the circumstantial evidence against
- him may be. The mere fact that he was hard pressed for money——”</p>
-
- <p>“Was he hard pressed for money?” interpolated Poirot quickly.</p>
-
- <p>The lawyer shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
- <p>“It was a chronic condition with Ralph Paton,” he said dryly. “Money
- went through his hands like water. He was always applying to his
- stepfather.”</p>
-
- <p>“Had he done so of late? During the last year, for instance?”</p>
-
- <p>“I cannot say. Mr. Ackroyd did not mention the fact to me.”</p>
-
- <p>“I comprehend. Mr. Hammond, I take it that you are acquainted with the
- provisions of Mr. Ackroyd’s will?”</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly. That is my principal business here to-day.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span></p>
-
- <p>“Then, seeing that I am acting for Miss Ackroyd, you will not object to
- telling me the terms of that will?”</p>
-
- <p>“They are quite simple. Shorn of legal phraseology, and after paying
- certain legacies and bequests——”</p>
-
- <p>“Such as——?” interrupted Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>Mr. Hammond seemed a little surprised.</p>
-
- <p>“A thousand pounds to his housekeeper, Miss Russell; fifty pounds
- to the cook, Emma Cooper; five hundred pounds to his secretary, Mr.
- Geoffrey Raymond. Then to various hospitals——”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot held up his hand.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! the charitable bequests, they interest me not.”</p>
-
- <p>“Quite so. The income on ten thousand pounds’ worth of shares to be
- paid to Mrs. Cecil Ackroyd during her lifetime. Miss Flora Ackroyd
- inherits twenty thousand pounds outright. The residue—including this
- property, and the shares in Ackroyd and Son—to his adopted son, Ralph
- Paton.”</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd possessed a large fortune?”</p>
-
- <p>“A very large fortune. Captain Paton will be an exceedingly wealthy
- young man.”</p>
-
- <p>There was a silence. Poirot and the lawyer looked at each other.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Hammond,” came Mrs. Ackroyd’s voice plaintively from the fireplace.</p>
-
- <p>The lawyer answered the summons. Poirot took my arm and drew me right
- into the window.</p>
-
- <p>“Regard the irises,” he remarked in rather a loud voice. “Magnificent,
- are they not? A straight and pleasing effect.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span></p>
-
- <p>At the same time I felt the pressure of his hand on my arm, and he
- added in a low tone:—</p>
-
- <p>“Do you really wish to aid me? To take part in this investigation?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, indeed,” I said eagerly. “There’s nothing I should like better.
- You don’t know what a dull old fogey’s life I lead. Never anything out
- of the ordinary.”</p>
-
- <p>“Good, we will be colleagues then. In a minute or two I fancy Major
- Blunt will join us. He is not happy with the good mamma. Now there are
- some things I want to know—but I do not wish to seem to want to know
- them. You comprehend? So it will be your part to ask the questions.”</p>
-
- <p>“What questions do you want me to ask?” I asked apprehensively.</p>
-
- <p>“I want you to introduce the name of Mrs. Ferrars.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes?”</p>
-
- <p>“Speak of her in a natural fashion. Ask him if he was down here when
- her husband died. You understand the kind of thing I mean. And while
- he replies, watch his face without seeming to watch it. <i lang="fr">C’est
- compris?</i>”</p>
-
- <p>There was no time for more, for at that minute, as Poirot had
- prophesied, Blunt left the others in his abrupt fashion and came over
- to us.</p>
-
- <p>I suggested strolling on the terrace, and he acquiesced. Poirot stayed
- behind.</p>
-
- <p>I stopped to examine a late rose.</p>
-
- <p>“How things change in the course of a day or so,” I observed. “I was
- up here last Wednesday, I remember, walking up and down this same
- terrace. Ackroyd was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</span> with me—full of spirits. And now—three days
- later—Ackroyd’s dead, poor fellow, Mrs. Ferrars’s dead—you knew her,
- didn’t you? But of course you did.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt nodded his head.</p>
-
- <p>“Had you seen her since you’d been down this time?”</p>
-
- <p>“Went with Ackroyd to call. Last Tuesday, think it was. Fascinating
- woman—but something queer about her. Deep—one would never know what she
- was up to.”</p>
-
- <p>I looked into his steady gray eyes. Nothing there surely. I went on:—</p>
-
- <p>“I suppose you’d met her before.”</p>
-
- <p>“Last time I was here—she and her husband had just come here to live.”
- He paused a minute and then added: “Rum thing, she had changed a lot
- between then and now.”</p>
-
- <p>“How—changed?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“Looked ten years older.”</p>
-
- <p>“Were you down here when her husband died?” I asked, trying to make the
- question sound as casual as possible.</p>
-
- <p>“No. From all I heard it would be a good riddance. Uncharitable,
- perhaps, but the truth.”</p>
-
- <p>I agreed.</p>
-
- <p>“Ashley Ferrars was by no means a pattern husband,” I said cautiously.</p>
-
- <p>“Blackguard, I thought,” said Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>“No,” I said, “only a man with more money than was good for him.”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! money! All the troubles in the world can be put down to money—or
- the lack of it.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</span></p>
-
- <p>“Which has been your particular trouble?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“I’ve enough for what I want. I’m one of the lucky ones.”</p>
-
- <p>“Indeed.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m not too flush just now, as a matter of fact. Came into a legacy a
- year ago, and like a fool let myself be persuaded into putting it into
- some wild-cat scheme.”</p>
-
- <p>I sympathized, and narrated my own similar trouble.</p>
-
- <p>Then the gong pealed out, and we all went in to lunch. Poirot drew me
- back a little.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Eh! bien?</i>”</p>
-
- <p>“He’s all right,” I said. “I’m sure of it.”</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing—disturbing?”</p>
-
- <p>“He had a legacy just a year ago,” I said. “But why not? Why shouldn’t
- he? I’ll swear the man is perfectly square and aboveboard.”</p>
-
- <p>“Without doubt, without doubt,” said Poirot soothingly. “Do not upset
- yourself.”</p>
-
- <p>He spoke as though to a fractious child.</p>
-
- <p>We all trooped into the dining-room. It seemed incredible that less
- than twenty-four hours had passed since I last sat at that table.</p>
-
- <p>Afterwards, Mrs. Ackroyd took me aside and sat down with me on a sofa.</p>
-
- <p>“I can’t help feeling a little hurt,” she murmured, producing a
- handkerchief of the kind obviously not meant to be cried into. “Hurt, I
- mean, by Roger’s lack of confidence in me. That twenty thousand pounds
- ought to have been left to <em>me</em>—not to Flora. A mother could be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</span>
- trusted to safeguard the interests of her child. A lack of trust, I
- call it.”</p>
-
- <p>“You forget, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said, “Flora was Ackroyd’s own niece, a
- blood relation. It would have been different had you been his sister
- instead of his sister-in-law.”</p>
-
- <p>“As poor Cecil’s widow, I think my feelings ought to have been
- considered,” said the lady, touching her eye-lashes gingerly with
- the handkerchief. “But Roger was always most peculiar—not to say
- <em>mean</em>—about money matters. It has been a most difficult position
- for both Flora and myself. He did not even give the poor child an
- allowance. He would pay her bills, you know, and even that with a good
- deal of reluctance and asking what she wanted all those fal-lals for—so
- like a man—but—now I’ve forgotten what it was I was going to say!
- Oh, yes, not a penny we could call our own, you know. Flora resented
- it—yes, I must say she resented it—very strongly. Though devoted to
- her uncle, of course. But any girl would have resented it. Yes, I must
- say Roger had very strange ideas about money. He wouldn’t even buy new
- face towels, though I told him the old ones were in holes. And then,”
- proceeded Mrs. Ackroyd, with a sudden leap highly characteristic of
- her conversation, “to leave all that money—a thousand pounds—fancy, a
- thousand pounds!—to that woman.”</p>
-
- <p>“What woman?”</p>
-
- <p>“That Russell woman. Something very queer about her, and so I’ve always
- said. But Roger wouldn’t hear a word against her. Said she was a woman
- of great force of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</span> character, and that he admired and respected her.
- He was always going on about her rectitude and independence and moral
- worth. <em>I</em> think there’s something fishy about her. She was
- certainly doing her best to marry Roger. But I soon put a stop to that.
- She’s always hated me. Naturally. <em>I</em> saw through her.”</p>
-
- <p>I began to wonder if there was any chance of stemming Mrs. Ackroyd’s
- eloquence, and getting away.</p>
-
- <p>Mr. Hammond provided the necessary diversion by coming up to say
- good-by. I seized my chance and rose also.</p>
-
- <p>“About the inquest,” I said. “Where would you prefer it to be held.
- Here, or at the Three Boars?”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd stared at me with a dropped jaw.</p>
-
- <p>“The inquest?” she asked, the picture of consternation. “But surely
- there won’t have to be an inquest?”</p>
-
- <p>Mr. Hammond gave a dry little cough and murmured, “Inevitable. Under
- the circumstances,” in two short little barks.</p>
-
- <p>“But surely Dr. Sheppard can arrange——”</p>
-
- <p>“There are limits to my powers of arrangement,” I said dryly.</p>
-
- <p>“If his death was an accident——”</p>
-
- <p>“He was murdered, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said brutally.</p>
-
- <p>She gave a little cry.</p>
-
- <p>“No theory of accident will hold water for a minute.”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd looked at me in distress. I had no patience with what I
- thought was her silly fear of unpleasantness.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</span></p>
-
- <p>“If there’s an inquest, I—I shan’t have to answer questions and all
- that, shall I?” she asked.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t know what will be necessary,” I answered. “I imagine
- Mr. Raymond will take the brunt of it off you. He knows all the
- circumstances, and can give formal evidence of identification.”</p>
-
- <p>The lawyer assented with a little bow.</p>
-
- <p>“I really don’t think there is anything to dread, Mrs. Ackroyd,” he
- said. “You will be spared all unpleasantness. Now, as to the question
- of money, have you all you need for the present? I mean,” he added, as
- she looked at him inquiringly, “ready money. Cash, you know. If not, I
- can arrange to let you have whatever you require.”</p>
-
- <p>“That ought to be all right,” said Raymond, who was standing by. “Mr.
- Ackroyd cashed a cheque for a hundred pounds yesterday.”</p>
-
- <p>“A hundred pounds?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. For wages and other expenses due to-day. At the moment it is
- still intact.”</p>
-
- <p>“Where is this money? In his desk?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, he always kept his cash in his bedroom. In an old collar-box, to
- be accurate. Funny idea, wasn’t it?”</p>
-
- <p>“I think,” said the lawyer, “we ought to make sure the money is there
- before I leave.”</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly,” agreed the secretary. “I’ll take you up now.... Oh! I
- forgot. The door’s locked.”</p>
-
- <p>Inquiry from Parker elicited the information that Inspector Raglan was
- in the housekeeper’s room asking a few supplementary questions. A few
- minutes later the inspector joined the party in the hall, bringing the
- key with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">127</span> him. He unlocked the door and we passed into the lobby and up
- the small staircase. At the top of the stairs the door into Ackroyd’s
- bedroom stood open. Inside the room it was dark, the curtains were
- drawn, and the bed was turned down just as it had been last night. The
- inspector drew the curtains, letting in the sunlight, and Geoffrey
- Raymond went to the top drawer of a rosewood bureau.</p>
-
- <p>“He kept his money like that, in an unlocked drawer. Just fancy,”
- commented the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>The secretary flushed a little.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd had perfect faith in the honesty of all the servants,” he
- said hotly.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! quite so,” said the inspector hastily.</p>
-
- <p>Raymond opened the drawer, took out a round leather collar-box from the
- back of it, and opening it, drew out a thick wallet.</p>
-
- <p>“Here is the money,” he said, taking out a fat roll of notes. “You
- will find the hundred intact, I know, for Mr. Ackroyd put it in the
- collar-box in my presence last night when he was dressing for dinner,
- and of course it has not been touched since.”</p>
-
- <p>Mr. Hammond took the roll from him and counted it. He looked up sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“A hundred pounds, you said. But there is only sixty here.”</p>
-
- <p>Raymond stared at him.</p>
-
- <p>“Impossible,” he cried, springing forward. Taking the notes from the
- other’s hand, he counted them aloud.</p>
-
- <p>Mr. Hammond had been right. The total amounted to sixty pounds.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">128</span></p>
-
- <p>“But—I can’t understand it,” cried the secretary, bewildered.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot asked a question.</p>
-
- <p>“You saw Mr. Ackroyd put this money away last night when he was
- dressing for dinner? You are sure he had not paid away any of it
- already?”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m sure he hadn’t. He even said, ‘I don’t want to take a hundred
- pounds down to dinner with me. Too bulgy.’”</p>
-
- <p>“Then the affair is very simple,” remarked Poirot. “Either he paid out
- that forty pounds sometime last evening, or else it has been stolen.”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s the matter in a nutshell,” agreed the inspector. He turned
- to Mrs. Ackroyd. “Which of the servants would come in here yesterday
- evening?”</p>
-
- <p>“I suppose the housemaid would turn down the bed.”</p>
-
- <p>“Who is she? What do you know about her?”</p>
-
- <p>“She’s not been here very long,” said Mrs. Ackroyd. “But she’s a nice
- ordinary country girl.”</p>
-
- <p>“I think we ought to clear this matter up,” said the inspector. “If
- Mr. Ackroyd paid that money away himself, it may have a bearing on the
- mystery of the crime. The other servants all right, as far as you know?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, I think so.”</p>
-
- <p>“Not missed anything before?”</p>
-
- <p>“No.”</p>
-
- <p>“None of them leaving, or anything like that?”</p>
-
- <p>“The parlormaid is leaving.”</p>
-
- <p>“When?”</p>
-
- <p>“She gave notice yesterday, I believe.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">129</span></p>
-
- <p>“To you?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, no. <em>I</em> have nothing to do with the servants. Miss Russell
- attends to the household matters.”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector remained lost in thought for a minute or two. Then he
- nodded his head and remarked, “I think I’d better have a word with Miss
- Russell, and I’ll see the girl Dale as well.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot and I accompanied him to the housekeeper’s room. Miss Russell
- received us with her usual sang-froid.</p>
-
- <p>Elsie Dale had been at Fernly five months. A nice girl, quick at her
- duties, and most respectable. Good references. The last girl in the
- world to take anything not belonging to her.</p>
-
- <p>What about the parlormaid?</p>
-
- <p>“She, too, was a most superior girl. Very quiet and ladylike. An
- excellent worker.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then why is she leaving?” asked the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>Miss Russell pursed up her lips.</p>
-
- <p>“It was none of my doing. I understand Mr. Ackroyd found fault with
- her yesterday afternoon. It was her duty to do the study, and she
- disarranged some of the papers on his desk, I believe. He was very
- annoyed about it, and she gave notice. At least, that is what I
- understood from her, but perhaps you’d like to see her yourselves?”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector assented. I had already noticed the girl when she was
- waiting on us at lunch. A tall girl, with a lot of brown hair rolled
- tightly away at the back of her neck, and very steady gray eyes. She
- came in answer to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">130</span> the housekeeper’s summons, and stood very straight
- with those same gray eyes fixed on us.</p>
-
- <p>“You are Ursula Bourne?” asked the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
-
- <p>“I understand you are leaving?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
-
- <p>“Why is that?”</p>
-
- <p>“I disarranged some papers on Mr. Ackroyd’s desk. He was very angry
- about it, and I said I had better leave. He told me to go as soon as
- possible.”</p>
-
- <p>“Were you in Mr. Ackroyd’s bedroom at all last night? Tidying up or
- anything?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, sir. That is Elsie’s work. I never went near that part of the
- house.”</p>
-
- <p>“I must tell you, my girl, that a large sum of money is missing from
- Mr. Ackroyd’s room.”</p>
-
- <p>At last I saw her roused. A wave of color swept over her face.</p>
-
- <p>“I know nothing about any money. If you think I took it, and that that
- is why Mr. Ackroyd dismissed me, you are wrong.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m not accusing you of taking it, my girl,” said the inspector.
- “Don’t flare up so.”</p>
-
- <p>The girl looked at him coldly.</p>
-
- <p>“You can search my things if you like,” she said disdainfully. “But you
- won’t find anything.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot suddenly interposed.</p>
-
- <p>“It was yesterday afternoon that Mr. Ackroyd dismissed you—or you
- dismissed yourself, was it not?” he asked.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">131</span></p>
-
- <p>The girl nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“How long did the interview last?”</p>
-
- <p>“The interview?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, the interview between you and Mr. Ackroyd in the study?”</p>
-
- <p>“I—I don’t know.”</p>
-
- <p>“Twenty minutes? Half an hour?”</p>
-
- <p>“Something like that.”</p>
-
- <p>“Not longer?”</p>
-
- <p>“Not longer than half an hour, certainly.”</p>
-
- <p>“Thank you, mademoiselle.”</p>
-
- <p>I looked curiously at him. He was rearranging a few objects on the
- table, setting them straight with precise fingers. His eyes were
- shining.</p>
-
- <p>“That’ll do,” said the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>Ursula Bourne disappeared. The inspector turned to Miss Russell.</p>
-
- <p>“How long has she been here? Have you got a copy of the reference you
- had with her?”</p>
-
- <p>Without answering the first question, Miss Russell moved to an adjacent
- bureau, opened one of the drawers, and took out a handful of letters
- clipped together with a patent fastener. She selected one and handed it
- to the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“H’m,” said he. “Reads all right. Mrs. Richard Folliott, Marby Grange,
- Marby. Who’s this woman?”</p>
-
- <p>“Quite good county people,” said Miss Russell.</p>
-
- <p>“Well,” said the inspector, handing it back, “let’s have a look at the
- other one, Elsie Dale.”</p>
-
- <p>Elsie Dale was a big fair girl, with a pleasant but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">132</span> slightly stupid
- face. She answered our questions readily enough, and showed much
- distress and concern at the loss of the money.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t think there’s anything wrong with her,” observed the
- inspector, after he had dismissed her.</p>
-
- <p>“What about Parker?”</p>
-
- <p>Miss Russell pursed her lips together and made no reply.</p>
-
- <p>“I’ve a feeling there’s something wrong about that man,” the inspector
- continued thoughtfully. “The trouble is that I don’t quite see when he
- got his opportunity. He’d be busy with his duties immediately after
- dinner, and he’s got a pretty good alibi all through the evening. I
- know, for I’ve been devoting particular attention to it. Well, thank
- you very much, Miss Russell. We’ll leave things as they are for the
- present. It’s highly probable Mr. Ackroyd paid that money away himself.”</p>
-
- <p>The housekeeper bade us a dry good-afternoon, and we took our leave.</p>
-
- <p>I left the house with Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“I wonder,” I said, breaking the silence, “what the papers the girl
- disarranged could have been for Ackroyd to have got into such a state
- about them? I wonder if there is any clew there to the mystery.”</p>
-
- <p>“The secretary said there were no papers of particular importance on
- the desk,” said Poirot quietly.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, but——” I paused.</p>
-
- <p>“It strikes you as odd that Ackroyd should have flown into a rage about
- so trivial a matter?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, it does rather.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">133</span></p>
-
- <p>“But was it a trivial matter?”</p>
-
- <p>“Of course,” I admitted, “we don’t know what those papers may have
- been. But Raymond certainly said——”</p>
-
- <p>“Leave M. Raymond out of it for a minute. What did you think of that
- girl?”</p>
-
- <p>“Which girl? The parlormaid?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, the parlormaid. Ursula Bourne.”</p>
-
- <p>“She seemed a nice girl,” I said hesitatingly.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot repeated my words, but whereas I had laid a slight stress on the
- fourth word, he put it on the second.</p>
-
- <p>“She <em>seemed</em> a nice girl—yes.”</p>
-
- <p>Then, after a minute’s silence, he took something from his pocket and
- handed it to me.</p>
-
- <p>“See, my friend, I will show you something. Look there.”</p>
-
- <p>The paper he had handed me was that compiled by the inspector and given
- by him to Poirot that morning. Following the pointing finger, I saw a
- small cross marked in pencil opposite the name Ursula Bourne.</p>
-
- <p>“You may not have noticed it at the time, my good friend, but there was
- one person on this list whose alibi had no kind of confirmation. Ursula
- Bourne.”</p>
-
- <p>“You don’t think——”</p>
-
- <p>“Dr. Sheppard, I dare to think anything. Ursula Bourne may have killed
- Mr. Ackroyd, but I confess I can see no motive for her doing so. Can
- you?”</p>
-
- <p>He looked at me very hard—so hard that I felt uncomfortable.</p>
-
- <p>“Can you?” he repeated.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">134</span></p>
-
- <p>“No motive whatsoever,” I said firmly.</p>
-
- <p>His gaze relaxed. He frowned and murmured to himself:—</p>
-
- <p>“Since the blackmailer was a man, it follows that she cannot be the
- blackmailer, then——”</p>
-
- <p>I coughed.</p>
-
- <p>“As far as that goes——” I began doubtfully.</p>
-
- <p>He spun round on me.</p>
-
- <p>“What? What are you going to say?”</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing. Nothing. Only that, strictly speaking, Mrs. Ferrars in her
- letter mentioned a <em>person</em>—she didn’t actually specify a man. But
- we took it for granted, Ackroyd and I, that it <em>was</em> a man.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot did not seem to be listening to me. He was muttering to himself
- again.</p>
-
- <p>“But then it is possible after all—yes, certainly it is possible—but
- then—ah! I must rearrange my ideas. Method, order; never have I needed
- them more. Everything must fit in—in its appointed place—otherwise I am
- on the wrong tack.”</p>
-
- <p>He broke off, and whirled round upon me again.</p>
-
- <p>“Where is Marby?”</p>
-
- <p>“It’s on the other side of Cranchester.”</p>
-
- <p>“How far away?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh!—fourteen miles, perhaps.”</p>
-
- <p>“Would it be possible for you to go there? To-morrow, say?”</p>
-
- <p>“To-morrow? Let me see, that’s Sunday. Yes, I could arrange it. What do
- you want me to do there?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">135</span></p>
-
- <p>“See this Mrs. Folliott. Find out all you can about Ursula Bourne.”</p>
-
- <p>“Very well. But—I don’t much care for the job.”</p>
-
- <p>“It is not the time to make difficulties. A man’s life may hang on
- this.”</p>
-
- <p>“Poor Ralph,” I said with a sigh. “You believe him to be innocent,
- though?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot looked at me very gravely.</p>
-
- <p>“Do you want to know the truth?”</p>
-
- <p>“Of course.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then you shall have it. My friend, everything points to the assumption
- that he is guilty.”</p>
-
- <p>“What!” I exclaimed.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, that stupid inspector—for he is stupid—has everything pointing
- his way. I seek for the truth—and the truth leads me every time to
- Ralph Paton. Motive, opportunity, means. But I will leave no stone
- unturned. I promised Mademoiselle Flora. And she was very sure, that
- little one. But very sure indeed.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">136</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">POIROT PAYS A CALL</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">I was</span> slightly nervous when I rang the bell at Marby Grange the
- following afternoon. I wondered very much what Poirot expected to
- find out. He had entrusted the job to me. Why? Was it because, as
- in the case of questioning Major Blunt, he wished to remain in the
- background? The wish, intelligible in the first case, seemed to me
- quite meaningless here.</p>
-
- <p>My meditations were interrupted by the advent of a smart parlormaid.</p>
-
- <p>Yes, Mrs. Folliott was at home. I was ushered into a big drawing-room,
- and looked round me curiously as I waited for the mistress of the
- house. A large bare room, some good bits of old china, and some
- beautiful etchings, shabby covers and curtains. A lady’s room in every
- sense of the term.</p>
-
- <p>I turned from the inspection of a Bartolozzi on the wall as Mrs.
- Folliott came into the room. She was a tall woman, with untidy brown
- hair, and a very winning smile.</p>
-
- <p>“Dr. Sheppard,” she said hesitatingly.</p>
-
- <p>“That is my name,” I replied. “I must apologize for calling upon you
- like this, but I wanted some information about a parlormaid previously
- employed by you, Ursula Bourne.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">137</span></p>
-
- <p>With the utterance of the name the smile vanished from her face, and
- all the cordiality froze out of her manner. She looked uncomfortable
- and ill at ease.</p>
-
- <p>“Ursula Bourne?” she said hesitatingly.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said. “Perhaps you don’t remember the name?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, yes, of course. I—I remember perfectly.”</p>
-
- <p>“She left you just over a year ago, I understand?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. Yes, she did. That is quite right.”</p>
-
- <p>“And you were satisfied with her whilst she was with you? How long was
- she with you, by the way?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! a year or two—I can’t remember exactly how long. She—she is very
- capable. I’m sure you will find her quite satisfactory. I didn’t know
- she was leaving Fernly. I hadn’t the least idea of it.”</p>
-
- <p>“Can you tell me anything about her?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“Anything about her?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, where she comes from, who her people are—that sort of thing?”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Folliott’s face wore more than ever its frozen look.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t know at all.”</p>
-
- <p>“Who was she with before she came to you?”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m afraid I don’t remember.”</p>
-
- <p>There was a spark of anger now underlying her nervousness. She flung up
- her head in a gesture that was vaguely familiar.</p>
-
- <p>“Is it really necessary to ask all these questions?”</p>
-
- <p>“Not at all,” I said, with an air of surprise and a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">138</span> tinge of apology
- in my manner. “I had no idea you would mind answering them. I am very
- sorry.”</p>
-
- <p>Her anger left her and she became confused again.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! I don’t mind answering them. I assure you I don’t. Why should I?
- It—it just seemed a little odd, you know. That’s all. A little odd.”</p>
-
- <p>One advantage of being a medical practitioner is that you can usually
- tell when people are lying to you. I should have known from Mrs.
- Folliott’s manner, if from nothing else, that she did mind answering my
- questions—minded intensely. She was thoroughly uncomfortable and upset,
- and there was plainly some mystery in the background. I judged her to
- be a woman quite unused to deception of any kind, and consequently
- rendered acutely uneasy when forced to practice it. A child could have
- seen through her.</p>
-
- <p>But it was also clear that she had no intention of telling me anything
- further. Whatever the mystery centering around Ursula Bourne might be,
- I was not going to learn it through Mrs. Folliott.</p>
-
- <p>Defeated, I apologized once more for disturbing her, took my hat and
- departed.</p>
-
- <p>I went to see a couple of patients and arrived home about six o’clock.
- Caroline was sitting beside the wreck of tea things. She had that
- look of suppressed exultation on her face which I know only too well.
- It is a sure sign with her, of either the getting or the giving of
- information. I wondered which it had been.</p>
-
- <p>“I’ve had a very interesting afternoon,” began Caroline as I dropped
- into my own particular easy chair, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">139</span> stretched out my feet to the
- inviting blaze in the fireplace.</p>
-
- <p>“Have you?” I asked. “Miss Ganett drop in to tea?”</p>
-
- <p>Miss Ganett is one of the chief of our newsmongers.</p>
-
- <p>“Guess again,” said Caroline with intense complacency.</p>
-
- <p>I guessed several times, working slowly through all the members of
- Caroline’s Intelligence Corps. My sister received each guess with
- a triumphant shake of the head. In the end she volunteered the
- information herself.</p>
-
- <p>“M. Poirot!” she said. “Now what do you think of that?”</p>
-
- <p>I thought a good many things of it, but I was careful not to say them
- to Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“Why did he come?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“To see me, of course. He said that knowing my brother so well, he
- hoped he might be permitted to make the acquaintance of his charming
- sister—your charming sister, I’ve got mixed up, but you know what I
- mean.”</p>
-
- <p>“What did he talk about?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“He told me a lot about himself and his cases. You know that Prince
- Paul of Mauretania—the one who’s just married a dancer?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes?”</p>
-
- <p>“I saw a most intriguing paragraph about her in Society Snippets the
- other day, hinting that she was really a Russian Grand Duchess—one
- of the Czar’s daughters who managed to escape from the Bolsheviks.
- Well, it seems that M. Poirot solved a baffling murder mystery that
- threatened to involve them both. Prince Paul was beside himself with
- gratitude.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">140</span></p>
-
- <p>“Did he give him an emerald tie pin the size of a plover’s egg?” I
- inquired sarcastically.</p>
-
- <p>“He didn’t mention it. Why?”</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing,” I said. “I thought it was always done. It is in detective
- fiction anyway. The super detective always has his rooms littered with
- rubies and pearls and emeralds from grateful Royal clients.”</p>
-
- <p>“It’s very interesting to hear about these things from the inside,”
- said my sister complacently.</p>
-
- <p>It would be—to Caroline. I could not but admire the ingenuity of M.
- Hercule Poirot, who had selected unerringly the case of all others that
- would most appeal to an elderly maiden lady living in a small village.</p>
-
- <p>“Did he tell you if the dancer was really a Grand Duchess?” I inquired.</p>
-
- <p>“He was not at liberty to speak,” said Caroline importantly.</p>
-
- <p>I wondered how far Poirot had strained the truth in talking to
- Caroline—probably not at all. He had conveyed his innuendoes by means
- of his eyebrows and his shoulders.</p>
-
- <p>“And after all this,” I remarked, “I suppose you were ready to eat out
- of his hand.”</p>
-
- <p>“Don’t be coarse, James. I don’t know where you get these vulgar
- expressions from.”</p>
-
- <p>“Probably from my only link with the outside world—my patients.
- Unfortunately my practice does not lie amongst Royal princes and
- interesting Russian émigrés.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline pushed her spectacles up and looked at me.</p>
-
- <p>“You seem very grumpy, James. It must be your liver. A blue pill, I
- think, to-night.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">141</span></p>
-
- <p>To see me in my own home, you would never imagine that I was a doctor
- of medicine. Caroline does the home prescribing both for herself and me.</p>
-
- <p>“Damn my liver,” I said irritably. “Did you talk about the murder at
- all?”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, naturally, James. What else is there to talk about locally?
- I was able to set M. Poirot right upon several points. He was very
- grateful to me. He said I had the makings of a born detective in me—and
- a wonderful psychological insight into human nature.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline was exactly like a cat that is full to overflowing with rich
- cream. She was positively purring.</p>
-
- <p>“He talked a lot about the little gray cells of the brain, and of their
- functions. His own, he says, are of the first quality.”</p>
-
- <p>“He would say so,” I remarked bitterly. “Modesty is certainly not his
- middle name.”</p>
-
- <p>“I wish you would not be so horribly American, James. He thought it
- very important that Ralph should be found as soon as possible, and
- induced to come forward and give an account of himself. He says that
- his disappearance will produce a very unfortunate impression at the
- inquest.”</p>
-
- <p>“And what did you say to that?”</p>
-
- <p>“I agreed with him,” said Caroline importantly. “And I was able to tell
- him the way people were already talking about it.”</p>
-
- <p>“Caroline,” I said sharply, “did you tell M. Poirot what you overheard
- in the wood that day?”</p>
-
- <p>“I did,” said Caroline complacently.</p>
-
- <p>I got up and began to walk about.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">142</span></p>
-
- <p>“You realize what you’re doing, I hope,” I jerked out. “You’re putting
- a halter round Ralph Paton’s neck as surely as you’re sitting in that
- chair.”</p>
-
- <p>“Not at all,” said Caroline, quite unruffled. “I was surprised
- <em>you</em> hadn’t told him.”</p>
-
- <p>“I took very good care not to,” I said. “I’m fond of that boy.”</p>
-
- <p>“So am I. That’s why I say you’re talking nonsense. I don’t believe
- Ralph did it, and so the truth can’t hurt him, and we ought to give M.
- Poirot all the help we can. Why, think, very likely Ralph was out with
- that identical girl on the night of the murder, and if so, he’s got a
- perfect alibi.”</p>
-
- <p>“If he’s got a perfect alibi,” I retorted, “why doesn’t he come forward
- and say so?”</p>
-
- <p>“Might get the girl into trouble,” said Caroline sapiently. “But if M.
- Poirot gets hold of her, and puts it to her as her duty, she’ll come
- forward of her own accord and clear Ralph.”</p>
-
- <p>“You seem to have invented a romantic fairy story of your own,” I said.
- “You read too many trashy novels, Caroline. I’ve always told you so.”</p>
-
- <p>I dropped into my chair again.</p>
-
- <p>“Did Poirot ask you any more questions?” I inquired.</p>
-
- <p>“Only about the patients you had that morning.”</p>
-
- <p>“The patients?” I demanded, unbelievingly.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, your surgery patients. How many and who they were?”</p>
-
- <p>“Do you mean to say you were able to tell him that?” I demanded.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">143</span></p>
-
- <p>Caroline is really amazing.</p>
-
- <p>“Why not?” asked my sister triumphantly. “I can see the path up to the
- surgery door perfectly from this window. And I’ve got an excellent
- memory, James. Much better than yours, let me tell you.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m sure you have,” I murmured mechanically.</p>
-
- <p>My sister went on, checking the names on her fingers.</p>
-
- <p>“There was old Mrs. Bennett, and that boy from the farm with the bad
- finger, Dolly Grice to have a needle out of her finger; that American
- steward off the liner. Let me see—that’s four. Yes, and old George
- Evans with his ulcer. And lastly——”</p>
-
- <p>She paused significantly.</p>
-
- <p>“Well?”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline brought out her climax triumphantly. She hissed in the most
- approved style—aided by the fortunate number of s’s at her disposal.</p>
-
- <p>“<em>Miss Russell!</em>”</p>
-
- <p>She sat back in her chair and looked at me meaningly, and when Caroline
- looks at you meaningly, it is impossible to miss it.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t know what you mean,” I said, quite untruthfully. “Why
- shouldn’t Miss Russell consult me about her bad knee?”</p>
-
- <p>“Bad knee,” said Caroline. “Fiddlesticks! No more bad knee than you and
- I. She was after something else.”</p>
-
- <p>“What?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>Caroline had to admit that she didn’t know.</p>
-
- <p>“But depend upon it, that was what he was trying to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">144</span> get at, M. Poirot,
- I mean. There’s something fishy about that woman, and he knows it.”</p>
-
- <p>“Precisely the remark Mrs. Ackroyd made to me yesterday,” I said. “That
- there was something fishy about Miss Russell.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” said Caroline darkly, “Mrs. Ackroyd! There’s another!”</p>
-
- <p>“Another what?”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline refused to explain her remarks. She merely nodded her head
- several times, rolled up her knitting, and went upstairs to don the
- high mauve silk blouse and the gold locket which she calls dressing for
- dinner.</p>
-
- <p>I stayed there staring into the fire and thinking over Caroline’s
- words. Had Poirot really come to gain information about Miss Russell,
- or was it only Caroline’s tortuous mind that interpreted everything
- according to her own ideas?</p>
-
- <p>There had certainly been nothing in Miss Russell’s manner that morning
- to arouse suspicion. At least——</p>
-
- <p>I remembered her persistent conversation on the subject of drug-taking
- and from that she had led the conversation to poisons and poisoning.
- But there was nothing in that. Ackroyd had not been poisoned. Still, it
- was odd....</p>
-
- <p>I heard Caroline’s voice, rather acid in note, calling from the top of
- the stairs.</p>
-
- <p>“James, you will be late for dinner.”</p>
-
- <p>I put some coal on the fire and went upstairs obediently.</p>
-
- <p>It is well at any price to have peace in the home.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">145</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">ROUND THE TABLE</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">A joint</span> inquest was held on Monday.</p>
-
- <p>I do not propose to give the proceedings in detail. To do so would only
- be to go over the same ground again and again. By arrangement with the
- police, very little was allowed to come out. I gave evidence as to the
- cause of Ackroyd’s death and the probable time. The absence of Ralph
- Paton was commented on by the coroner, but not unduly stressed.</p>
-
- <p>Afterwards, Poirot and I had a few words with Inspector Raglan. The
- inspector was very grave.</p>
-
- <p>“It looks bad, Mr. Poirot,” he said. “I’m trying to judge the thing
- fair and square. I’m a local man, and I’ve seen Captain Paton many
- times in Cranchester. I’m not wanting him to be the guilty one—but it’s
- bad whichever way you look at it. If he’s innocent, why doesn’t he come
- forward? We’ve got evidence against him, but it’s just possible that
- that evidence could be explained away. Then why doesn’t he give an
- explanation?”</p>
-
- <p>A lot more lay behind the inspector’s words than I knew at the time.
- Ralph’s description had been wired to every port and railway station
- in England. The police everywhere were on the alert. His rooms in town
- were watched, and any houses he had been known to be in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">146</span> the habit of
- frequenting. With such a <em>cordon</em> it seemed impossible that Ralph
- should be able to evade detection. He had no luggage, and, as far as
- any one knew, no money.</p>
-
- <p>“I can’t find any one who saw him at the station that night,” continued
- the inspector. “And yet he’s well known down here, and you’d think
- somebody would have noticed him. There’s no news from Liverpool either.”</p>
-
- <p>“You think he went to Liverpool?” queried Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, it’s on the cards. That telephone message from the station,
- just three minutes before the Liverpool express left—there ought to be
- something in that.”</p>
-
- <p>“Unless it was deliberately intended to throw you off the scent. That
- might just possibly be the point of the telephone message.”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s an idea,” said the inspector eagerly. “Do you really think
- that’s the explanation of the telephone call?”</p>
-
- <p>“My friend,” said Poirot gravely, “I do not know. But I will tell you
- this: I believe that when we find the explanation of that telephone
- call we shall find the explanation of the murder.”</p>
-
- <p>“You said something like that before, I remember,” I observed, looking
- at him curiously.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“I always come back to it,” he said seriously.</p>
-
- <p>“It seems to me utterly irrelevant,” I declared.</p>
-
- <p>“I wouldn’t say that,” demurred the inspector. “But I must confess I
- think Mr. Poirot here harps on it a little too much. We’ve better clews
- than that. The fingerprints on the dagger, for instance.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</span></p>
-
- <p>Poirot became suddenly very foreign in manner, as he often did when
- excited over anything.</p>
-
- <p>“M. l’Inspecteur,” he said, “beware of the blind—the blind—<i lang="fr">comment
- dire?</i>—the little street that has no end to it.”</p>
-
- <p>Inspector Raglan stared, but I was quicker.</p>
-
- <p>“You mean a blind alley?” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“That is it—the blind street that leads nowhere. So it may be with
- those fingerprints—they may lead you nowhere.”</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t see how that can well be,” said the police officer. “I suppose
- you’re hinting that they’re faked? I’ve read of such things being done,
- though I can’t say I’ve ever come across it in my experience. But fake
- or true—they’re bound to lead <em>somewhere</em>.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot merely shrugged his shoulders, flinging out his arms wide.</p>
-
- <p>The inspector then showed us various enlarged photographs of the
- fingerprints, and proceeded to become technical on the subject of loops
- and whorls.</p>
-
- <p>“Come now,” he said at last, annoyed by Poirot’s detached manner,
- “you’ve got to admit that those prints were made by some one who was in
- the house that night?”</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Bien entendu</i>,” said Poirot, nodding his head.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, I’ve taken the prints of every member of the household, every
- one, mind you, from the old lady down to the kitchenmaid.”</p>
-
- <p>I don’t think Mrs. Ackroyd would enjoy being referred to as the old
- lady. She must spend a considerable amount on cosmetics.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</span></p>
-
- <p>“Every one’s,” repeated the inspector fussily.</p>
-
- <p>“Including mine,” I said dryly.</p>
-
- <p>“Very well. None of them correspond. That leaves us two alternatives.
- Ralph Paton, or the mysterious stranger the doctor here tells us about.
- When we get hold of those two——”</p>
-
- <p>“Much valuable time may have been lost,” broke in Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t quite get you, Mr. Poirot?”</p>
-
- <p>“You have taken the prints of every one in the house, you say,”
- murmured Poirot. “Is that the exact truth you are telling me there, M.
- l’Inspecteur?”</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly.”</p>
-
- <p>“Without overlooking any one?”</p>
-
- <p>“Without overlooking any one.”</p>
-
- <p>“The quick or the dead?”</p>
-
- <p>For a moment the inspector looked bewildered at what he took to be a
- religious observation. Then he reacted slowly.</p>
-
- <p>“You mean——”</p>
-
- <p>“The dead, M. l’Inspecteur.”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector still took a minute or two to understand.</p>
-
- <p>“I am suggesting,” said Poirot placidly, “that the fingerprints on the
- dagger handle are those of Mr. Ackroyd himself. It is an easy matter to
- verify. His body is still available.”</p>
-
- <p>“But why? What would be the point of it? You’re surely not suggesting
- suicide, Mr. Poirot?”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! no. My theory is that the murderer wore gloves<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">149</span> or wrapped
- something round his hand. After the blow was struck, he picked up the
- victim’s hand and closed it round the dagger handle.”</p>
-
- <p>“But why?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot shrugged his shoulders again.</p>
-
- <p>“To make a confusing case even more confusing.”</p>
-
- <p>“Well,” said the inspector, “I’ll look into it. What gave you the idea
- in the first place?”</p>
-
- <p>“When you were so kind as to show me the dagger and draw attention to
- the fingerprints. I know very little of loops and whorls—see, I confess
- my ignorance frankly. But it did occur to me that the position of the
- prints was somewhat awkward. Not so would I have held a dagger in order
- to strike. Naturally, with the right hand brought up over the shoulder
- backwards, it would have been difficult to put it in exactly the right
- position.”</p>
-
- <p>Inspector Raglan stared at the little man. Poirot, with an air of great
- unconcern, flecked a speck of dust from his coat sleeve.</p>
-
- <p>“Well,” said the inspector, “it’s an idea. I’ll look into it all right,
- but don’t you be disappointed if nothing comes of it.”</p>
-
- <p>He endeavored to make his tone kindly and patronizing. Poirot watched
- him go off. Then he turned to me with twinkling eyes.</p>
-
- <p>“Another time,” he observed, “I must be more careful of his <i lang="fr">amour
- propre</i>. And now that we are left to our own devices, what do you
- think, my good friend, of a little reunion of the family?”</p>
-
- <p>The “little reunion,” as Poirot called it, took place<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">150</span> about half an
- hour later. We sat round the table in the dining-room at Fernly—Poirot
- at the head of the table, like the chairman of some ghastly board
- meeting. The servants were not present, so we were six in all. Mrs.
- Ackroyd, Flora, Major Blunt, young Raymond, Poirot, and myself.</p>
-
- <p>When every one was assembled, Poirot rose and bowed.</p>
-
- <p>“Messieurs, mesdames, I have called you together for a certain
- purpose.” He paused. “To begin with, I want to make a very special plea
- to mademoiselle.”</p>
-
- <p>“To me?” said Flora.</p>
-
- <p>“Mademoiselle, you are engaged to Captain Ralph Paton. If any one
- is in his confidence, you are. I beg you, most earnestly, if you
- know of his whereabouts, to persuade him to come forward. One little
- minute”—as Flora raised her head to speak—“say nothing till you have
- well reflected. Mademoiselle, his position grows daily more dangerous.
- If he had come forward at once, no matter how damning the facts, he
- might have had a chance of explaining them away. But this silence—this
- flight—what can it mean? Surely only one thing, knowledge of guilt.
- Mademoiselle, if you really believe in his innocence, persuade him to
- come forward before it is too late.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora’s face had gone very white.</p>
-
- <p>“Too late!” she repeated, very low.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot leant forward, looking at her.</p>
-
- <p>“See now, mademoiselle,” he said very gently, “it is Papa Poirot who
- asks you this. The old Papa Poirot who has much knowledge and much
- experience. I would not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">151</span> seek to entrap you, mademoiselle. Will you not
- trust me—and tell me where Ralph Paton is hiding?”</p>
-
- <p>The girl rose, and stood facing him.</p>
-
- <p>“M. Poirot,” she said in a clear voice, “I swear to you—swear
- solemnly—that I have no idea where Ralph is, and that I have neither
- seen him nor heard from him either on the day of—of the murder, or
- since.”</p>
-
- <p>She sat down again. Poirot gazed at her in silence for a minute or two,
- then he brought his hand down on the table with a sharp rap.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Bien!</i> That is that,” he said. His face hardened. “Now I appeal
- to these others who sit round this table, Mrs. Ackroyd, Major Blunt,
- Dr. Sheppard, Mr. Raymond. You are all friends and intimates of the
- missing man. If you know where Ralph Paton is hiding, speak out.”</p>
-
- <p>There was a long silence. Poirot looked to each in turn.</p>
-
- <p>“I beg of you,” he said in a low voice, “speak out.”</p>
-
- <p>But still there was silence, broken at last by Mrs. Ackroyd.</p>
-
- <p>“I must say,” she observed in a plaintive voice, “that Ralph’s absence
- is most peculiar—most peculiar indeed. Not to come forward at such a
- time. It looks, you know, as though there were something <em>behind</em>
- it. I can’t help thinking, Flora dear, that it was a very fortunate
- thing your engagement was never formally announced.”</p>
-
- <p>“Mother!” cried Flora angrily.</p>
-
- <p>“Providence,” declared Mrs. Ackroyd. “I have a devout<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">152</span> belief in
- Providence—a divinity that shapes our ends, as Shakespeare’s beautiful
- line runs.”</p>
-
- <p>“Surely you don’t make the Almighty directly responsible for
- thick ankles, Mrs. Ackroyd, do you?” asked Geoffrey Raymond, his
- irresponsible laugh ringing out.</p>
-
- <p>His idea was, I think, to loosen the tension, but Mrs. Ackroyd threw
- him a glance of reproach and took out her handkerchief.</p>
-
- <p>“Flora has been saved a terrible amount of notoriety and
- unpleasantness. Not for a moment that I think dear Ralph had anything
- to do with poor Roger’s death. I <em>don’t</em> think so. But then I have
- a trusting heart—I always have had, ever since a child. I am loath to
- believe the worst of any one. But, of course, one must remember that
- Ralph was in several air raids as a young boy. The results are apparent
- long after, sometimes, they say. People are not responsible for their
- actions in the least. They lose control, you know, without being able
- to help it.”</p>
-
- <p>“Mother,” cried Flora, “you don’t think Ralph did it?”</p>
-
- <p>“Come, Mrs. Ackroyd,” said Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t know what to think,” said Mrs. Ackroyd tearfully. “It’s all
- very upsetting. What would happen to the estate, I wonder, if Ralph
- were found guilty?”</p>
-
- <p>Raymond pushed his chair away from the table violently. Major Blunt
- remained very quiet, looking thoughtfully at her. “Like shell-shock,
- you know,” said Mrs. Ackroyd obstinately, “and I dare say Roger kept
- him very short of money—with the best intentions, of course. I can see
- you are all against me, but I do think<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">153</span> it is very odd that Ralph has
- not come forward, and I must say I am thankful Flora’s engagement was
- never announced formally.”</p>
-
- <p>“It will be to-morrow,” said Flora in a clear voice.</p>
-
- <p>“Flora!” cried her mother, aghast.</p>
-
- <p>Flora had turned to the secretary.</p>
-
- <p>“Will you send the announcement to the <cite>Morning Post</cite> and the
- <cite>Times</cite>, please, Mr. Raymond.”</p>
-
- <p>“If you are sure that it is wise, Miss Ackroyd,” he replied gravely.</p>
-
- <p>She turned impulsively to Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>“You understand,” she said. “What else can I do? As things are, I must
- stand by Ralph. Don’t you see that I must?”</p>
-
- <p>She looked very searchingly at him, and after a long pause he nodded
- abruptly.</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd burst out into shrill protests. Flora remained unmoved.
- Then Raymond spoke.</p>
-
- <p>“I appreciate your motives, Miss Ackroyd. But don’t you think you’re
- being rather precipitate? Wait a day or two.”</p>
-
- <p>“To-morrow,” said Flora, in a clear voice. “It’s no good, mother, going
- on like this. Whatever else I am, I’m not disloyal to my friends.”</p>
-
- <p>“M. Poirot,” Mrs. Ackroyd appealed tearfully, “can’t you say anything
- at all?”</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing to be said,” interpolated Blunt. “She’s doing the right thing.
- I’ll stand by her through thick and thin.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora held out her hand to him.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">154</span></p>
-
- <p>“Thank you, Major Blunt,” she said.</p>
-
- <p>“Mademoiselle,” said Poirot, “will you let an old man congratulate you
- on your courage and your loyalty? And will you not misunderstand me if
- I ask you—ask you most solemnly—to postpone the announcement you speak
- of for at least two days more?”</p>
-
- <p>Flora hesitated.</p>
-
- <p>“I ask it in Ralph Paton’s interests as much as in yours, mademoiselle.
- You frown. You do not see how that can be. But I assure you that it is
- so. <i lang="fr">Pas de blagues</i>. You put the case into my hands—you must not
- hamper me now.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora paused a few minutes before replying.</p>
-
- <p>“I do not like it,” she said at last, “but I will do what you say.”</p>
-
- <p>She sat down again at the table.</p>
-
- <p>“And now, messieurs et mesdames,” said Poirot rapidly, “I will continue
- with what I was about to say. Understand this, I mean to arrive at
- the truth. The truth, however ugly in itself, is always curious and
- beautiful to the seeker after it. I am much aged, my powers may not
- be what they were.” Here he clearly expected a contradiction. “In all
- probability this is the last case I shall ever investigate. But Hercule
- Poirot does not end with a failure. Messieurs et mesdames, I tell you,
- I mean to <em>know</em>. And I shall know—in spite of you all.”</p>
-
- <p>He brought out the last words provocatively, hurling them in our face
- as it were. I think we all flinched back a little, excepting Geoffrey
- Raymond, who remained good humored and imperturbable as usual.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">155</span></p>
-
- <p>“How do you mean—in spite of us all?” he asked, with slightly raised
- eyebrows.</p>
-
- <p>“But—just that, monsieur. Every one of you in this room is concealing
- something from me.” He raised his hand as a faint murmur of protest
- arose. “Yes, yes, I know what I am saying. It may be something
- unimportant—trivial—which is supposed to have no bearing on the case,
- but there it is. <em>Each one of you has something to hide.</em> Come,
- now, am I right?”</p>
-
- <p>His glance, challenging and accusing, swept round the table. And every
- pair of eyes dropped before his. Yes, mine as well.</p>
-
- <p>“I am answered,” said Poirot, with a curious laugh. He got up from his
- seat. “I appeal to you all. Tell me the truth—the whole truth.” There
- was a silence. “Will no one speak?”</p>
-
- <p>He gave the same short laugh again.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">C’est dommage</i>,” he said, and went out.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">156</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">THE GOOSE QUILL</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">That</span> evening, at Poirot’s request, I went over to his house after
- dinner. Caroline saw me depart with visible reluctance. I think she
- would have liked to have accompanied me.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot greeted me hospitably. He had placed a bottle of Irish whisky
- (which I detest) on a small table, with a soda water siphon and a
- glass. He himself was engaged in brewing hot chocolate. It was a
- favorite beverage of his, I discovered later.</p>
-
- <p>He inquired politely after my sister, whom he declared to be a most
- interesting woman.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m afraid you’ve been giving her a swelled head,” I said dryly. “What
- about Sunday afternoon?”</p>
-
- <p>He laughed and twinkled.</p>
-
- <p>“I always like to employ the expert,” he remarked obscurely, but he
- refused to explain the remark.</p>
-
- <p>“You got all the local gossip anyway,” I remarked. “True, and untrue.”</p>
-
- <p>“And a great deal of valuable information,” he added quietly.</p>
-
- <p>“Such as——?”</p>
-
- <p>He shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“Why not have told me the truth?” he countered.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">157</span> “In a place like this,
- all Ralph Paton’s doings were bound to be known. If your sister had not
- happened to pass through the wood that day somebody else would have
- done so.”</p>
-
- <p>“I suppose they would,” I said grumpily. “What about this interest of
- yours in my patients?”</p>
-
- <p>Again he twinkled.</p>
-
- <p>“Only one of them, doctor. Only one of them.”</p>
-
- <p>“The last?” I hazarded.</p>
-
- <p>“I find Miss Russell a study of the most interesting,” he said
- evasively.</p>
-
- <p>“Do you agree with my sister and Mrs. Ackroyd that there is something
- fishy about her?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“Eh? What do you say—fishy?”</p>
-
- <p>I explained to the best of my ability.</p>
-
- <p>“And they say that, do they?”</p>
-
- <p>“Didn’t my sister convey as much to you yesterday afternoon?”</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">C’est possible.</i>”</p>
-
- <p>“For no reason whatever,” I declared.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Les femmes</i>,” generalized Poirot. “They are marvelous! They
- invent haphazard—and by miracle they are right. Not that it is that,
- really. Women observe subconsciously a thousand little details, without
- knowing that they are doing so. Their subconscious mind adds these
- little things together—and they call the result intuition. Me, I am
- very skilled in psychology. I know these things.”</p>
-
- <p>He swelled his chest out importantly, looking so ridiculous, that I
- found it difficult not to burst out laughing.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">158</span> Then he took a small sip
- of his chocolate, and carefully wiped his mustache.</p>
-
- <p>“I wish you’d tell me,” I burst out, “what you really think of it all?”</p>
-
- <p>He put down his cup.</p>
-
- <p>“You wish that?”</p>
-
- <p>“I do.”</p>
-
- <p>“You have seen what I have seen. Should not our ideas be the same?”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m afraid you’re laughing at me,” I said stiffly. “Of course, I’ve no
- experience of matters of this kind.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot smiled at me indulgently.</p>
-
- <p>“You are like the little child who wants to know the way the engine
- works. You wish to see the affair, not as the family doctor sees it,
- but with the eye of a detective who knows and cares for no one—to whom
- they are all strangers and all equally liable to suspicion.”</p>
-
- <p>“You put it very well,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“So I give you then, a little lecture. The first thing is to get a
- clear history of what happened that evening—always bearing in mind that
- the person who speaks may be lying.”</p>
-
- <p>I raised my eyebrows.</p>
-
- <p>“Rather a suspicious attitude.”</p>
-
- <p>“But necessary—I assure you, necessary. Now first—Dr. Sheppard leaves
- the house at ten minutes to nine. How do I know that?”</p>
-
- <p>“Because I told you so.”</p>
-
- <p>“But you might not be speaking the truth—or the watch you went by might
- be wrong. But Parker also says<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">159</span> that you left the house at ten minutes
- to nine. So we accept that statement and pass on. At nine o’clock you
- run into a man—and here we come to what we will call the Romance of the
- Mysterious Stranger—just outside the Park gates. How do I know that
- that is so?”</p>
-
- <p>“I told you so,” I began again, but Poirot interrupted me with a
- gesture of impatience.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! but it is that you are a little stupid to-night, my friend.
- <em>You</em> know that it is so—but how am <em>I</em> to know? <i lang="fr">Eh
- bien</i>, I am able to tell you that the Mysterious Stranger was not
- a hallucination on your part, because the maid of a Miss Ganett met
- him a few minutes before you did, and of her too he inquired the way
- to Fernly Park. We accept his presence, therefore, and we can be
- fairly sure of two things about him—that he was a stranger to the
- neighborhood, and that whatever his object in going to Fernly, there
- was no great secrecy about it, since he twice asked the way there.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said, “I see that.”</p>
-
- <p>“Now I have made it my business to find out more about this man. He had
- a drink at the Three Boars, I learn, and the barmaid there says that he
- spoke with an American accent and mentioned having just come over from
- the States. Did it strike you that he had an American accent?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, I think he had,” I said, after a minute or two, during which I
- cast my mind back; “but a very slight one.”</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Précisément.</i> There is also this which, you will remember, I
- picked up in the summer-house?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">160</span></p>
-
- <p>He held out to me the little quill. I looked at it curiously. Then a
- memory of something I had read stirred in me.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot, who had been watching my face, nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, heroin ‘snow.’ Drug-takers carry it like this, and sniff it up
- the nose.”</p>
-
- <p>“Diamorphine hydrochloride,” I murmured mechanically.</p>
-
- <p>“This method of taking the drug is very common on the other side.
- Another proof, if we wanted one, that the man came from Canada or the
- States.”</p>
-
- <p>“What first attracted your attention to that summer-house?” I asked
- curiously.</p>
-
- <p>“My friend the inspector took it for granted that any one using that
- path did so as a short cut to the house, but as soon as I saw the
- summer-house, I realized that the same path would be taken by any one
- using the summer-house as a rendezvous. Now it seems fairly certain
- that the stranger came neither to the front nor to the back door. Then
- did some one from the house go out and meet him? If so, what could be a
- more convenient place than that little summer-house? I searched it with
- the hope that I might find some clew inside. I found two, the scrap of
- cambric and the quill.”</p>
-
- <p>“And the scrap of cambric?” I asked curiously. “What about that?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot raised his eyebrows.</p>
-
- <p>“You do not use your little gray cells,” he remarked dryly. “The scrap
- of starched cambric should be obvious.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">161</span></p>
-
- <p>“Not very obvious to me.” I changed the subject. “Anyway,” I said,
- “this man went to the summer-house to meet somebody. Who was that
- somebody?”</p>
-
- <p>“Exactly the question,” said Poirot. “You will remember that Mrs.
- Ackroyd and her daughter came over from Canada to live here?”</p>
-
- <p>“Is that what you meant to-day when you accused them of hiding the
- truth?”</p>
-
- <p>“Perhaps. Now another point. What did you think of the parlormaid’s
- story?”</p>
-
- <p>“What story?”</p>
-
- <p>“The story of her dismissal. Does it take half an hour to dismiss a
- servant? Was the story of those important papers a likely one? And
- remember, though she says she was in her bedroom from nine-thirty until
- ten o’clock, there is no one to confirm her statement.”</p>
-
- <p>“You bewilder me,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“To me it grows clearer. But tell me now your own ideas and theories.”</p>
-
- <p>I drew a piece of paper from my pocket.</p>
-
- <p>“I just scribbled down a few suggestions,” I said apologetically.</p>
-
- <p>“But excellent—you have method. Let us hear them.”</p>
-
- <p>I read out in a somewhat embarrassed voice.</p>
-
- <p>“To begin with, one must look at the thing logically——”</p>
-
- <p>“Just what my poor Hastings used to say,” interrupted Poirot, “but
- alas! he never did so.”</p>
-
- <p>“<em>Point <abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 1.</em>—Mr. Ackroyd was heard talking to some one at
- half-past nine.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">162</span></p>
-
- <p>“<em>Point <abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 2.</em>—At some time during the evening Ralph Paton must
- have come in through the window, as evidenced by the prints of his
- shoes.</p>
-
- <p>“<em>Point <abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 3.</em>—Mr. Ackroyd was nervous that evening, and would
- only have admitted some one he knew.</p>
-
- <p>“<em>Point <abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 4.</em>—The person with Mr. Ackroyd at nine-thirty was
- asking for money. We know Ralph Paton was in a scrape.</p>
-
- <p>“<em>These four points go to show that the person with Mr. Ackroyd at
- nine-thirty was Ralph Paton. But we know that Mr. Ackroyd was alive at
- a quarter to ten, therefore it was not Ralph who killed him. Ralph left
- the window open. Afterwards the murderer came in that way.</em>”</p>
-
- <p>“And who was the murderer?” inquired Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“The American stranger. He may have been in league with Parker, and
- possibly in Parker we have the man who blackmailed Mrs. Ferrars. If
- so, Parker may have heard enough to realize the game was up, have told
- his accomplice so, and the latter did the crime with the dagger which
- Parker gave him.”</p>
-
- <p>“It is a theory that,” admitted Poirot. “Decidedly you have cells of a
- kind. But it leaves a good deal unaccounted for.”</p>
-
- <p>“Such as——?”</p>
-
- <p>“The telephone call, the pushed-out chair——”</p>
-
- <p>“Do you really think the latter important?” I interrupted.</p>
-
- <p>“Perhaps not,” admitted my friend. “It may have been pulled out
- by accident, and Raymond or Blunt may have shoved it into place
- unconsciously under the stress<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">163</span> of emotion. Then there is the missing
- forty pounds.”</p>
-
- <p>“Given by Ackroyd to Ralph,” I suggested. “He may have reconsidered his
- first refusal.”</p>
-
- <p>“That still leaves one thing unexplained?”</p>
-
- <p>“What?”</p>
-
- <p>“Why was Blunt so certain in his own mind that it was Raymond with Mr.
- Ackroyd at nine-thirty?”</p>
-
- <p>“He explained that,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“You think so? I will not press the point. Tell me instead, what were
- Ralph Paton’s reasons for disappearing?”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s rather more difficult,” I said slowly. “I shall have to speak
- as a medical man. Ralph’s nerves must have gone phut! If he suddenly
- found out that his uncle had been murdered within a few minutes of his
- leaving him—after, perhaps, a rather stormy interview—well, he might
- get the wind up and clear right out. Men have been known to do that—act
- guiltily when they’re perfectly innocent.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, that is true,” said Poirot. “But we must not lose sight of one
- thing.”</p>
-
- <p>“I know what you’re going to say,” I remarked: “motive. Ralph Paton
- inherits a great fortune by his uncle’s death.”</p>
-
- <p>“That is one motive,” agreed Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“One?”</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Mais oui.</i> Do you realize that there are three separate motives
- staring us in the face. Somebody certainly stole the blue envelope and
- its contents. That is one motive. Blackmail! Ralph Paton may have been
- the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">164</span> man who blackmailed Mrs. Ferrars. Remember, as far as Hammond
- knew, Ralph Paton had not applied to his uncle for help of late. That
- looks as though he were being supplied with money elsewhere. Then there
- is the fact that he was in some—how do you say—scrape?—which he feared
- might get to his uncle’s ears. And finally there is the one you have
- just mentioned.”</p>
-
- <p>“Dear me,” I said, rather taken aback. “The case does seem black
- against him.”</p>
-
- <p>“Does it?” said Poirot. “That is where we disagree, you and I. Three
- motives—it is almost too much. I am inclined to believe that, after
- all, Ralph Paton is innocent.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">165</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">MRS. ACKROYD</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">After</span> the evening talk I have just chronicled, the affair seemed to
- me to enter on a different phase. The whole thing can be divided into
- two parts, each clear and distinct from the other. Part I. ranges from
- Ackroyd’s death on the Friday evening to the following Monday night.
- It is the straight-forward narrative of what occurred, as presented
- to Hercule Poirot. I was at Poirot’s elbow the whole time. I saw what
- he saw. I tried my best to read his mind. As I know now, I failed in
- this latter task. Though Poirot showed me all his discoveries—as, for
- instance, the gold wedding-ring—he held back the vital and yet logical
- impressions that he formed. As I came to know later, this secrecy was
- characteristic of him. He would throw out hints and suggestions, but
- beyond that he would not go.</p>
-
- <p>As I say, up till the Monday evening, my narrative might have been that
- of Poirot himself. I played Watson to his Sherlock. But after Monday
- our ways diverged. Poirot was busy on his own account. I got to hear
- of what he was doing, because, in King’s Abbot, you get to hear of
- everything, but he did not take me into his confidence beforehand. And
- I, too, had my own preoccupations.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">166</span></p>
-
- <p>On looking back, the thing that strikes me most is the piecemeal
- character of this period. Every one had a hand in the elucidation of
- the mystery. It was rather like a jig-saw puzzle to which every one
- contributed their own little piece of knowledge or discovery. But their
- task ended there. To Poirot alone belongs the renown of fitting those
- pieces into their correct place.</p>
-
- <p>Some of the incidents seemed at the time irrelevant and unmeaning.
- There was, for instance, the question of the black boots. But that
- comes later.... To take things strictly in chronological order, I must
- begin with the summons from Mrs. Ackroyd.</p>
-
- <p>She sent for me early on Tuesday morning, and since the summons
- sounded an urgent one, I hastened there, expecting to find her <i lang="la">in
- extremis</i>.</p>
-
- <p>The lady was in bed. So much did she concede to the etiquette of the
- situation. She gave me her bony hand, and indicated a chair drawn up to
- the bedside.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said, “and what’s the matter with you?”</p>
-
- <p>I spoke with that kind of spurious geniality which seems to be expected
- of general practitioners.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m prostrated,” said Mrs. Ackroyd in a faint voice. “Absolutely
- prostrated. It’s the shock of poor Roger’s death. They say these things
- often aren’t felt at the <em>time</em>, you know. It’s the reaction
- afterwards.”</p>
-
- <p>It is a pity that a doctor is precluded by his profession from being
- able sometimes to say what he really thinks.</p>
-
- <p>I would have given anything to be able to answer “Bunkum!”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">167</span></p>
-
- <p>Instead, I suggested a tonic. Mrs. Ackroyd accepted the tonic. One
- move in the game seemed now to be concluded. Not for a moment did I
- imagine that I had been sent for because of the shock occasioned by
- Ackroyd’s death. But Mrs. Ackroyd is totally incapable of pursuing
- a straight-forward course on any subject. She always approaches her
- object by tortuous means. I wondered very much why it was she had sent
- for me.</p>
-
- <p>“And then that scene—yesterday,” continued my patient.</p>
-
- <p>She paused as though expecting me to take up a cue.</p>
-
- <p>“What scene?”</p>
-
- <p>“Doctor, how can you? Have you forgotten? That dreadful little
- Frenchman—or Belgian—or whatever he is. Bullying us all like he did. It
- has quite upset me. Coming on top of Roger’s death.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m very sorry, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t know what he meant—shouting at us like he did. I should hope
- I know my duty too well to <em>dream</em> of concealing anything. I have
- given the police <em>every</em> assistance in my power.”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd paused, and I said, “Quite so.” I was beginning to have a
- glimmering of what all the trouble was about.</p>
-
- <p>“No one can say that I have failed in my duty,” continued Mrs. Ackroyd.
- “I am sure Inspector Raglan is perfectly satisfied. Why should this
- little upstart of a foreigner make a fuss? A most ridiculous-looking
- creature he is too—just like a comic Frenchman in a revue. I can’t
- think why Flora insisted on bringing him into the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">168</span> case. She never said
- a word to me about it. Just went off and did it on her own. Flora is
- too independent. I am a woman of the world and her mother. She should
- have come to me for advice first.”</p>
-
- <p>I listened to all this in silence.</p>
-
- <p>“What does he think? That’s what I want to know. Does he actually
- imagine I’m hiding something? He—he—positively <em>accused</em> me
- yesterday.”</p>
-
- <p>I shrugged my shoulders.</p>
-
- <p>“It is surely of no consequence, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said. “Since you are
- not concealing anything, any remarks he may have made do not apply to
- you.”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd went off at a tangent, after her usual fashion.</p>
-
- <p>“Servants are so tiresome,” she said. “They gossip, and talk amongst
- themselves. And then it gets round—and all the time there’s probably
- nothing in it at all.”</p>
-
- <p>“Have the servants been talking?” I asked. “What about?”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd cast a very shrewd glance at me. It quite threw me off my
- balance.</p>
-
- <p>“I was sure <em>you’d</em> know, doctor, if any one did. You were with M.
- Poirot all the time, weren’t you?”</p>
-
- <p>“I was.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then of course you know. It was that girl, Ursula Bourne, wasn’t it?
- Naturally—she’s leaving. She <em>would</em> want to make all the trouble
- she could. Spiteful, that’s what they are. They’re all alike. Now,
- you being there, doctor, you must know exactly what she did say? I’m
- most anxious that no wrong impression should get about.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">169</span> After all,
- you don’t repeat every little detail to the police, do you? There are
- family matters sometimes—nothing to do with the question of the murder.
- But if the girl was spiteful, she may have made out all sorts of
- things.”</p>
-
- <p>I was shrewd enough to see that a very real anxiety lay behind these
- outpourings. Poirot had been justified in his premises. Of the six
- people round the table yesterday, Mrs. Ackroyd at least had had
- something to hide. It was for me to discover what that something might
- be.</p>
-
- <p>“If I were you, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said brusquely, “I should make a clean
- breast of things.”</p>
-
- <p>She gave a little scream.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! doctor, how can you be so abrupt. It sounds as though—as
- though——And I can explain everything so simply.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then why not do so,” I suggested.</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd took out a frilled handkerchief, and became tearful.</p>
-
- <p>“I thought, doctor, that you might put it to M. Poirot—explain it, you
- know—because it’s so difficult for a foreigner to see our point of
- view. And you don’t know—nobody could know—what I’ve had to contend
- with. A martyrdom—a long martyrdom. That’s what my life has been. I
- don’t like to speak ill of the dead—but there it is. Not the smallest
- bill, but it had all to be gone over—just as though Roger had had a
- few miserly hundreds a year instead of being (as Mr. Hammond told me
- yesterday) one of the wealthiest men in these parts.”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd paused to dab her eyes with the frilled handkerchief.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span></p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said encouragingly. “You were talking about bills?”</p>
-
- <p>“Those dreadful bills. And some I didn’t like to show Roger at all.
- They were things a man wouldn’t understand. He would have said the
- things weren’t necessary. And of course they mounted up, you know, and
- they kept coming in——”</p>
-
- <p>She looked at me appealingly, as though asking me to condole with her
- on this striking peculiarity.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s a habit they have,” I agreed.</p>
-
- <p>“And the tone altered—became quite abusive. I assure you, doctor,
- I was becoming a nervous wreck. I couldn’t sleep at nights. And a
- dreadful fluttering round the heart. And then I got a letter from a
- Scotch gentleman—as a matter of fact there were two letters—both Scotch
- gentlemen. Mr. Bruce MacPherson was one, and the other were Colin
- MacDonald. Quite a coincidence.”</p>
-
- <p>“Hardly that,” I said dryly. “They are usually Scotch gentlemen, but I
- suspect a Semitic strain in their ancestry.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ten pounds to ten thousand on note of hand alone,” murmured Mrs.
- Ackroyd reminiscently. “I wrote to one of them, but it seemed there
- were difficulties.”</p>
-
- <p>She paused.</p>
-
- <p>I gathered that we were just coming to delicate ground. I have never
- known any one more difficult to bring to the point.</p>
-
- <p>“You see,” murmured Mrs. Ackroyd, “it’s all a question of expectations,
- isn’t it? Testamentary expectations. And though, of course, I expected
- that Roger<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">171</span> would provide for me, I didn’t <em>know</em>. I thought that
- if only I could glance over a copy of his will—not in any sense of
- vulgar prying—but just so that I could make my own arrangements.”</p>
-
- <p>She glanced sideways at me. The position was now very delicate indeed.
- Fortunately words, ingeniously used, will serve to mask the ugliness of
- naked facts.</p>
-
- <p>“I could only tell this to you, dear Dr. Sheppard,” said Mrs. Ackroyd
- rapidly. “I can trust you not to misjudge me, and to represent the
- matter in the right light to M. Poirot. It was on Friday afternoon——”</p>
-
- <p>She came to a stop and swallowed uncertainly.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I repeated encouragingly. “On Friday afternoon. Well?”</p>
-
- <p>“Every one was out, or so I thought. And I went into Roger’s study—I
- had some real reason for going there—I mean, there was nothing
- underhand about it. And as I saw all the papers heaped on the desk, it
- just came to me, like a flash: ‘I wonder if Roger keeps his will in
- one of the drawers of the desk.’ I’m so impulsive, always was, from a
- child. I do things on the spur of the moment. He’d left his keys—very
- careless of him—in the lock of the top drawer.”</p>
-
- <p>“I see,” I said helpfully. “So you searched the desk. Did you find the
- will?”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd gave a little scream, and I realized that I had not been
- sufficiently diplomatic.</p>
-
- <p>“How dreadful it sounds. But it wasn’t at all like that really.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">172</span></p>
-
- <p>“Of course it wasn’t,” I said hastily. “You must forgive my unfortunate
- way of putting things.”</p>
-
- <p>“You see, men are so peculiar. In dear Roger’s place, I should not
- have objected to revealing the provisions of my will. But men are so
- secretive. One is forced to adopt little subterfuges in self-defence.”</p>
-
- <p>“And the result of the little subterfuge?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“That’s just what I’m telling you. As I got to the bottom drawer,
- Bourne came in. Most awkward. Of course I shut the drawer and stood
- up, and I called her attention to a few specks of dust on the surface.
- But I didn’t like the way she looked—quite respectful in manner, but
- a very nasty light in her eyes. Almost contemptuous, if you know what
- I mean. I never have liked that girl very much. She’s a good servant,
- and she says Ma’am, and doesn’t object to wearing caps and aprons (which
- I declare to you a lot of them do nowadays), and she can say ‘Not at
- home’ without scruples if she has to answer the door instead of Parker,
- and she doesn’t have those peculiar gurgling noises inside which so
- many parlormaids seem to have when they wait at table——Let me see,
- where was I?”</p>
-
- <p>“You were saying, that in spite of several valuable qualities, you
- never liked Bourne.”</p>
-
- <p>“No more I do. She’s—odd. There’s something different about her from
- the others. Too well educated, that’s my opinion. You can’t tell who
- are ladies and who aren’t nowadays.”</p>
-
- <p>“And what happened next?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing. At least, Roger came in. And I thought<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span> he was out for a
- walk. And he said: ‘What’s all this?’ and I said, ‘Nothing. I just came
- in to fetch <cite>Punch</cite>.’ And I took <cite>Punch</cite> and went out with
- it. Bourne stayed behind. I heard her asking Roger if she could speak
- to him for a minute. I went straight up to my room, to lie down. I was
- very upset.”</p>
-
- <p>There was a pause.</p>
-
- <p>“You will explain to M. Poirot, won’t you? You can see for yourself
- what a trivial matter the whole thing was. But, of course, when he was
- so stern about concealing things, I thought of this at once. Bourne
- may have made some extraordinary story out of it, but you can explain,
- can’t you?”</p>
-
- <p>“That is all?” I said. “You have told me everything?”</p>
-
- <p>“Ye-es,” said Mrs. Ackroyd. “Oh! yes,” she added firmly.</p>
-
- <p>But I had noted the momentary hesitation, and I knew that there was
- still something she was keeping back. It was nothing less than a flash
- of sheer genius that prompted me to ask the question I did.</p>
-
- <p>“Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said, “was it you who left the silver table open?”</p>
-
- <p>I had my answer in the blush of guilt that even rouge and powder could
- not conceal.</p>
-
- <p>“How did you know?” she whispered.</p>
-
- <p>“It was you, then?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes—I—you see—there were one or two pieces of old silver—very
- interesting. I had been reading up the subject and there was an
- illustration of quite a small piece which had fetched an immense
- sum at Christy’s.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span> It looked to me just the same as the one in the
- silver table. I thought I would take it up to London with me when I
- went—and—and have it valued. Then if it really was a valuable piece,
- just think what a charming surprise it would have been for Roger?”</p>
-
- <p>I refrained from comments, accepting Mrs. Ackroyd’s story on its
- merits. I even forbore to ask her why it was necessary to abstract what
- she wanted in such a surreptitious manner.</p>
-
- <p>“Why did you leave the lid open?” I asked. “Did you forget?”</p>
-
- <p>“I was startled,” said Mrs. Ackroyd. “I heard footsteps coming along
- the terrace outside. I hastened out of the room and just got up the
- stairs before Parker opened the front door to you.”</p>
-
- <p>“That must have been Miss Russell,” I said thoughtfully. Mrs. Ackroyd
- had revealed to me one fact that was extremely interesting. Whether her
- designs upon Ackroyd’s silver had been strictly honorable I neither
- knew nor cared. What did interest me was the fact that Miss Russell
- must have entered the drawing-room by the window, and that I had not
- been wrong when I judged her to be out of breath with running. Where
- had she been? I thought of the summer-house and the scrap of cambric.</p>
-
- <p>“I wonder if Miss Russell has her handkerchiefs starched!” I exclaimed
- on the spur of the moment.</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd’s start recalled me to myself, and I rose.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span></p>
-
- <p>“You think you can explain to M. Poirot?” she asked anxiously.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, certainly. Absolutely.”</p>
-
- <p>I got away at last, after being forced to listen to more justifications
- of her conduct.</p>
-
- <p>The parlormaid was in the hall, and it was she who helped me on with my
- overcoat. I observed her more closely than I had done heretofore. It
- was clear that she had been crying.</p>
-
- <p>“How is it,” I asked, “that you told us that Mr. Ackroyd sent for you
- on Friday to his study? I hear now that it was <em>you</em> who asked to
- speak to <em>him</em>?”</p>
-
- <p>For a minute the girl’s eyes dropped before mine.</p>
-
- <p>Then she spoke.</p>
-
- <p>“I meant to leave in any case,” she said uncertainly.</p>
-
- <p>I said no more. She opened the front door for me. Just as I was passing
- out, she said suddenly in a low voice:—</p>
-
- <p>“Excuse me, sir, is there any news of Captain Paton?”</p>
-
- <p>I shook my head, looking at her inquiringly.</p>
-
- <p>“He ought to come back,” she said. “Indeed—indeed he ought to come
- back.”</p>
-
- <p>She was looking at me with appealing eyes.</p>
-
- <p>“Does no one know where he is?” she asked.</p>
-
- <p>“Do you?” I said sharply.</p>
-
- <p>She shook her head.</p>
-
- <p>“No, indeed. I know nothing. But any one who was a friend to him would
- tell him this: he ought to come back.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">176</span></p>
-
- <p>I lingered, thinking that perhaps the girl would say more. Her next
- question surprised me.</p>
-
- <p>“When do they think the murder was done? Just before ten o’clock?”</p>
-
- <p>“That is the idea,” I said. “Between a quarter to ten and the hour.”</p>
-
- <p>“Not earlier? Not before a quarter to ten?”</p>
-
- <p>I looked at her attentively. She was so clearly eager for a reply in
- the affirmative.</p>
-
- <p>“That’s out of the question,” I said. “Miss Ackroyd saw her uncle alive
- at a quarter to ten.”</p>
-
- <p>She turned away, and her whole figure seemed to droop.</p>
-
- <p>“A handsome girl,” I said to myself as I drove off. “An exceedingly
- handsome girl.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline was at home. She had had a visit from Poirot and was very
- pleased and important about it.</p>
-
- <p>“I am helping him with the case,” she explained.</p>
-
- <p>I felt rather uneasy. Caroline is bad enough as it is. What will she be
- like with her detective instincts encouraged?</p>
-
- <p>“Are you going round the neighborhood looking for Ralph Paton’s
- mysterious girl?” I inquired.</p>
-
- <p>“I might do that on my own account,” said Caroline. “No, this is a
- special thing M. Poirot wants me to find out for him.”</p>
-
- <p>“What is it?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“He wants to know whether Ralph Paton’s boots were black or brown,”
- said Caroline with tremendous solemnity.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">177</span></p>
-
- <p>I stared at her. I see now that I was unbelievably stupid about these
- boots. I failed altogether to grasp the point.</p>
-
- <p>“They were brown shoes,” I said. “I saw them.”</p>
-
- <p>“Not shoes, James, boots. M. Poirot wants to know whether a pair of
- boots Ralph had with him at the hotel were brown or black. A lot hangs
- on it.”</p>
-
- <p>Call me dense if you like. I didn’t see.</p>
-
- <p>“And how are you going to find out?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>Caroline said there would be no difficulty about that. Our Annie’s
- dearest friend was Miss Ganett’s maid, Clara. And Clara was walking
- out with the boots at the Three Boars. The whole thing was simplicity
- itself, and by the aid of Miss Ganett, who coöperated loyally, at once
- giving Clara leave of absence, the matter was rushed through at express
- speed.</p>
-
- <p>It was when we were sitting down to lunch that Caroline remarked, with
- would-be unconcern:—</p>
-
- <p>“About those boots of Ralph Paton’s.”</p>
-
- <p>“Well,” I said, “what about them?”</p>
-
- <p>“M. Poirot thought they were probably brown. He was wrong. They’re
- black.”</p>
-
- <p>And Caroline nodded her head several times. She evidently felt that she
- had scored a point over Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>I did not answer. I was puzzling over what the color of a pair of Ralph
- Paton’s boots had to do with the case.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">178</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">GEOFFREY RAYMOND</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">I was</span> to have a further proof that day of the success of Poirot’s
- tactics. That challenge of his had been a subtle touch born of his
- knowledge of human nature. A mixture of fear and guilt had wrung the
- truth from Mrs. Ackroyd. She was the first to react.</p>
-
- <p>That afternoon when I returned from seeing my patients, Caroline told
- me that Geoffrey Raymond had just left.</p>
-
- <p>“Did he want to see me?” I asked, as I hung up my coat in the hall.</p>
-
- <p>Caroline was hovering by my elbow.</p>
-
- <p>“It was M. Poirot he wanted to see,” she said. “He’d just come from The
- Larches. M. Poirot was out. Mr. Raymond thought that he might be here,
- or that you might know where he was.”</p>
-
- <p>“I haven’t the least idea.”</p>
-
- <p>“I tried to make him wait,” said Caroline, “but he said he would call
- back at The Larches in half an hour, and went away down the village. A
- great pity, because M. Poirot came in practically the minute after he
- left.”</p>
-
- <p>“Came in here?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, to his own house.”</p>
-
- <p>“How do you know?”</p>
-
- <p>“The side window,” said Caroline briefly.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">179</span></p>
-
- <p>It seemed to me that we had now exhausted the topic. Caroline thought
- otherwise.</p>
-
- <p>“Aren’t you going across?”</p>
-
- <p>“Across where?”</p>
-
- <p>“To The Larches, of course.”</p>
-
- <p>“My dear Caroline,” I said, “what for?”</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Raymond wanted to see him very particularly,” said Caroline. “You
- might hear what it’s all about.”</p>
-
- <p>I raised my eyebrows.</p>
-
- <p>“Curiosity is not my besetting sin,” I remarked coldly. “I can exist
- comfortably without knowing exactly what my neighbors are doing and
- thinking.”</p>
-
- <p>“Stuff and nonsense, James,” said my sister. “You want to know just
- as much as I do. You’re not so honest, that’s all. You always have to
- pretend.”</p>
-
- <p>“Really, Caroline,” I said, and retired into my surgery.</p>
-
- <p>Ten minutes later Caroline tapped at the door and entered. In her hand
- she held what seemed to be a pot of jam.</p>
-
- <p>“I wonder, James,” she said, “if you would mind taking this pot of
- medlar jelly across to M. Poirot? I promised it to him. He has never
- tasted any home-made medlar jelly.”</p>
-
- <p>“Why can’t Annie go?” I asked coldly.</p>
-
- <p>“She’s doing some mending. I can’t spare her.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline and I looked at each other.</p>
-
- <p>“Very well,” I said, rising. “But if I take the beastly thing, I shall
- just leave it at the door. You understand that?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">180</span></p>
-
- <p>My sister raised her eyebrows.</p>
-
- <p>“Naturally,” she said. “Who suggested you should do anything else?”</p>
-
- <p>The honors were with Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“If you <em>do</em> happen to see M. Poirot,” she said, as I opened the
- front door, “you might tell him about the boots.”</p>
-
- <p>It was a most subtle parting shot. I wanted dreadfully to understand
- the enigma of the boots. When the old lady with the Breton cap opened
- the door to me, I found myself asking if M. Poirot was in, quite
- automatically.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot sprang up to meet me, with every appearance of pleasure.</p>
-
- <p>“Sit down, my good friend,” he said. “The big chair? This small one?
- The room is not too hot, no?”</p>
-
- <p>I thought it was stifling, but refrained from saying so. The windows
- were closed, and a large fire burned in the grate.</p>
-
- <p>“The English people, they have a mania for the fresh air,” declared
- Poirot. “The big air, it is all very well outside, where it belongs. Why
- admit it to the house? But let us not discuss such banalities. You have
- something for me, yes?”</p>
-
- <p>“Two things,” I said. “First—this—from my sister.”</p>
-
- <p>I handed over the pot of medlar jelly.</p>
-
- <p>“How kind of Mademoiselle Caroline. She has remembered her promise. And
- the second thing?”</p>
-
- <p>“Information—of a kind.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">181</span></p>
-
- <p>And I told him of my interview with Mrs. Ackroyd. He listened with
- interest, but not much excitement.</p>
-
- <p>“It clears the ground,” he said thoughtfully. “And it has a certain
- value as confirming the evidence of the housekeeper. She said, you
- remember, that she found the silver table lid open and closed it down
- in passing.”</p>
-
- <p>“What about her statement that she went into the drawing-room to see if
- the flowers were fresh?”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! we never took that very seriously, did we, my friend? It was
- patently an excuse, trumped up in a hurry, by a woman who felt it
- urgent to explain her presence—which, by the way, you would probably
- never have thought of questioning. I considered it possible that her
- agitation might arise from the fact that she had been tampering with
- the silver table, but I think now that we must look for another cause.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said. “Whom did she go out to meet? And why?”</p>
-
- <p>“You think she went to meet some one?”</p>
-
- <p>“I do.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“So do I,” he said thoughtfully.</p>
-
- <p>There was a pause.</p>
-
- <p>“By the way,” I said, “I’ve got a message for you from my sister. Ralph
- Paton’s boots were black, not brown.”</p>
-
- <p>I was watching him closely as I gave the message, and I fancied that
- I saw a momentary flicker of discomposure. If so, it passed almost
- immediately.</p>
-
- <p>“She is absolutely positive they are not brown?”</p>
-
- <p>“Absolutely.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">182</span></p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” said Poirot regretfully. “That is a pity.”</p>
-
- <p>And he seemed quite crestfallen.</p>
-
- <p>He entered into no explanations, but at once started a new subject of
- conversation.</p>
-
- <p>“The housekeeper, Miss Russell, who came to consult you on that Friday
- morning—is it indiscreet to ask what passed at the interview—apart from
- the medical details, I mean?”</p>
-
- <p>“Not at all,” I said. “When the professional part of the conversation
- was over, we talked for a few minutes about poisons, and the ease or
- difficulty of detecting them, and about drug-taking and drug-takers.”</p>
-
- <p>“With special reference to cocaine?” asked Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“How did you know?” I asked, somewhat surprised.</p>
-
- <p>For answer, the little man rose and crossed the room to where
- newspapers were filed. He brought me a copy of the <cite>Daily Budget</cite>,
- dated Friday, 16th September, and showed me an article dealing with the
- smuggling of cocaine. It was a somewhat lurid article, written with an
- eye to picturesque effect.</p>
-
- <p>“That is what put cocaine into her head, my friend,” he said.</p>
-
- <p>I would have catechized him further, for I did not quite understand his
- meaning, but at that moment the door opened and Geoffrey Raymond was
- announced.</p>
-
- <p>He came in fresh and debonair as ever, and greeted us both.</p>
-
- <p>“How are you, doctor? M. Poirot, this is the second time I’ve been here
- this morning. I was anxious to catch you.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">183</span></p>
-
- <p>“Perhaps I’d better be off,” I suggested rather awkwardly.</p>
-
- <p>“Not on my account, doctor. No, it’s just this,” he went on, seating
- himself at a wave of invitation from Poirot, “I’ve got a confession to
- make.”</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">En verité</i>?” said Poirot, with an air of polite interest.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, it’s of no consequence, really. But, as a matter of fact, my
- conscience has been pricking me ever since yesterday afternoon. You
- accused us all of keeping back something, M. Poirot. I plead guilty.
- I’ve had something up my sleeve.”</p>
-
- <p>“And what is that, M. Raymond?”</p>
-
- <p>“As I say, it’s nothing of consequence—just this. I was in debt—badly,
- and that legacy came in the nick of time. Five hundred pounds puts me
- on my feet again with a little to spare.”</p>
-
- <p>He smiled at us both with that engaging frankness that made him such a
- likable youngster.</p>
-
- <p>“You know how it is. Suspicious looking policeman—don’t like to admit
- you were hard up for money—think it will look bad to them. But I was
- a fool, really, because Blunt and I were in the billiard room from a
- quarter to ten onwards, so I’ve got a watertight alibi and nothing to
- fear. Still, when you thundered out that stuff about concealing things,
- I felt a nasty prick of conscience, and I thought I’d like to get it
- off my mind.”</p>
-
- <p>He got up again and stood smiling at us.</p>
-
- <p>“You are a very wise young man,” said Poirot, nodding at him with
- approval. “See you, when I know that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">184</span> any one is hiding things from me,
- I suspect that the thing hidden may be something very bad indeed. You
- have done well.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m glad I’m cleared from suspicion,” laughed Raymond. “I’ll be off
- now.”</p>
-
- <p>“So that is that,” I remarked, as the door closed behind the young
- secretary.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” agreed Poirot. “A mere bagatelle—but if he had not been in the
- billiard room—who knows? After all, many crimes have been committed for
- the sake of less than five hundred pounds. It all depends on what sum
- is sufficient to break a man. A question of the relativity, is it not
- so? Have you reflected, my friend, that many people in that house stood
- to benefit by Mr. Ackroyd’s death? Mrs. Ackroyd, Miss Flora, young Mr.
- Raymond, the housekeeper, Miss Russell. Only one, in fact, does not,
- Major Blunt.”</p>
-
- <p>His tone in uttering that name was so peculiar that I looked up,
- puzzled.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t quite understand you?” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“Two of the people I accused have given me the truth.”</p>
-
- <p>“You think Major Blunt has something to conceal also?”</p>
-
- <p>“As for that,” remarked Poirot nonchalantly, “there is a saying, is
- there not, that Englishmen conceal only one thing—their love? And Major
- Blunt, I should say, is not good at concealments.”</p>
-
- <p>“Sometimes,” I said, “I wonder if we haven’t rather jumped to
- conclusions on one point.”</p>
-
- <p>“What is that?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">185</span></p>
-
- <p>“We’ve assumed that the blackmailer of Mrs. Ferrars is necessarily the
- murderer of Mr. Ackroyd. Mightn’t we be mistaken?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded energetically.</p>
-
- <p>“Very good. Very good indeed. I wondered if that idea would come to
- you. Of course it is possible. But we must remember one point. The
- letter disappeared. Still, that, as you say, may not necessarily mean
- that the murderer took it. When you first found the body, Parker may
- have abstracted the letter unnoticed by you.”</p>
-
- <p>“Parker?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, Parker. I always come back to Parker—not as the murderer—no, he
- did not commit the murder; but who is more suitable than he as the
- mysterious scoundrel who terrorized Mrs. Ferrars? He may have got his
- information about Mr. Ferrars’s death from one of the King’s Paddock
- servants. At any rate, he is more likely to have come upon it than a
- casual guest such as Blunt, for instance.”</p>
-
- <p>“Parker might have taken the letter,” I admitted. “It wasn’t till later
- that I noticed it was gone.”</p>
-
- <p>“How much later? After Blunt and Raymond were in the room, or before?”</p>
-
- <p>“I can’t remember,” I said slowly. “I think it was before—no,
- afterwards. Yes, I’m almost sure it was afterwards.”</p>
-
- <p>“That widens the field to three,” said Poirot thoughtfully. “But Parker
- is the most likely. It is in my mind to try a little experiment with
- Parker. How say you, my friend, will you accompany me to Fernly?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">186</span></p>
-
- <p>I acquiesced, and we set out at once. Poirot asked to see Miss Ackroyd,
- and presently Flora came to us.</p>
-
- <p>“Mademoiselle Flora,” said Poirot, “I have to confide in you a little
- secret. I am not yet satisfied of the innocence of Parker. I propose to
- make a little experiment with your assistance. I want to reconstruct
- some of his actions on that night. But we must think of something to
- tell him—ah! I have it. I wish to satisfy myself as to whether voices
- in the little lobby could have been heard outside on the terrace. Now,
- ring for Parker, if you will be so good.”</p>
-
- <p>I did so, and presently the butler appeared, suave as ever.</p>
-
- <p>“You rang, sir?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, my good Parker. I have in mind a little experiment. I have placed
- Major Blunt on the terrace outside the study window. I want to see if
- any one there could have heard the voices of Miss Ackroyd and yourself
- in the lobby that night. I want to enact that little scene over again.
- Perhaps you would fetch the tray or whatever it was you were carrying?”</p>
-
- <p>Parker vanished, and we repaired to the lobby outside the study door.
- Presently we heard a chink in the outer hall, and Parker appeared in
- the doorway carrying a tray with a siphon, a decanter of whisky, and
- two glasses on it.</p>
-
- <p>“One moment,” cried Poirot, raising his hand and seemingly very
- excited. “We must have everything in order. Just as it occurred. It is
- a little method of mine.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">187</span></p>
-
- <p>“A foreign custom, sir,” said Parker. “Reconstruction of the crime they
- call it, do they not?”</p>
-
- <p>He was quite imperturbable as he stood there politely waiting on
- Poirot’s orders.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! he knows something, the good Parker,” cried Poirot. “He has read
- of these things. Now, I beg you, let us have everything of the most
- exact. You came from the outer hall—so. Mademoiselle was—where?”</p>
-
- <p>“Here,” said Flora, taking up her stand just outside the study door.</p>
-
- <p>“Quite right, sir,” said Parker.</p>
-
- <p>“I had just closed the door,” continued Flora.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, miss,” agreed Parker. “Your hand was still on the handle as it is
- now.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then <i lang="fr">allez</i>,” said Poirot. “Play me the little comedy.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora stood with her hand on the door handle, and Parker came stepping
- through the door from the hall, bearing the tray.</p>
-
- <p>He stopped just inside the door. Flora spoke.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! Parker. Mr. Ackroyd doesn’t want to be disturbed again to-night.”</p>
-
- <p>“Is that right?” she added in an undertone.</p>
-
- <p>“To the best of my recollection, Miss Flora,” said Parker, “but I fancy
- you used the word evening instead of night.” Then, raising his voice
- in a somewhat theatrical fashion: “Very good, miss. Shall I lock up as
- usual?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, please.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">188</span></p>
-
- <p>Parker retired through the door, Flora followed him, and started to
- ascend the main staircase.</p>
-
- <p>“Is that enough?” she asked over her shoulder.</p>
-
- <p>“Admirable,” declared the little man, rubbing his hands. “By the way,
- Parker, are you sure there were two glasses on the tray that evening?
- Who was the second one for?”</p>
-
- <p>“I always bring two glasses, sir,” said Parker. “Is there anything
- further?”</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing. I thank you.”</p>
-
- <p>Parker withdrew, dignified to the last.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot stood in the middle of the hall frowning. Flora came down and
- joined us.</p>
-
- <p>“Has your experiment been successful?” she asked. “I don’t quite
- understand, you know——”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot smiled admiringly at her.</p>
-
- <p>“It is not necessary that you should,” he said. “But tell me, were
- there indeed two glasses on Parker’s tray that night?”</p>
-
- <p>Flora wrinkled her brows a minute.</p>
-
- <p>“I really can’t remember,” she said. “I think there were. Is—is that
- the object of your experiment?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot took her hand and patted it.</p>
-
- <p>“Put it this way,” he said. “I am always interested to see if people
- will speak the truth.”</p>
-
- <p>“And did Parker speak the truth?”</p>
-
- <p>“I rather think he did,” said Poirot thoughtfully.</p>
-
- <p>A few minutes later saw us retracing our steps to the village.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">189</span></p>
-
- <p>“What was the point of that question about the glasses?” I asked
- curiously.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
- <p>“One must say something,” he remarked. “That particular question did as
- well as any other.”</p>
-
- <p>I stared at him.</p>
-
- <p>“At any rate, my friend,” he said more seriously, “I know now something
- I wanted to know. Let us leave it at that.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">190</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">AN EVENING AT MAH JONG</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">That</span> night we had a little Mah Jong party. This kind of simple
- entertainment is very popular in King’s Abbot. The guests arrive in
- goloshes and waterproofs after dinner. They partake of coffee and later
- of cake, sandwiches, and tea.</p>
-
- <p>On this particular night our guests were Miss Ganett and Colonel
- Carter, who lives near the church. A good deal of gossip is handed
- round at these evenings, sometimes seriously interfering with the
- game in progress. We used to play bridge—chatty bridge of the worst
- description. We find Mah Jong much more peaceful. The irritated demand
- as to why on earth your partner did not lead a certain card is entirely
- done away with, and though we still express criticisms frankly, there
- is not the same acrimonious spirit.</p>
-
- <p>“Very cold evening, eh, Sheppard?” said Colonel Carter, standing with
- his back to the fire. Caroline had taken Miss Ganett to her own room,
- and was there assisting her to disentangle herself from her many wraps.
- “Reminds me of the Afghan passes.”</p>
-
- <p>“Indeed?” I said politely.</p>
-
- <p>“Very mysterious business this about poor Ackroyd,” continued the
- colonel, accepting a cup of coffee. “A<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">191</span> deuce of a lot behind it—that’s
- what I say. Between you and me, Sheppard, I’ve heard the word blackmail
- mentioned!”</p>
-
- <p>The colonel gave me the look which might be tabulated “one man of the
- world to another.”</p>
-
- <p>“A woman in it, no doubt,” he said. “Depend upon it, a woman in it.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline and Miss Ganett joined us at this minute. Miss Ganett drank
- coffee whilst Caroline got out the Mah Jong box and poured out the
- tiles upon the table.</p>
-
- <p>“Washing the tiles,” said the colonel facetiously. “That’s
- right—washing the tiles, as we used to say in the Shanghai Club.”</p>
-
- <p>It is the private opinion of both Caroline and myself that Colonel
- Carter has never been in the Shanghai Club in his life. More, that he
- has never been farther east than India, where he juggled with tins of
- bully beef and plum and apple jam during the Great War. But the colonel
- is determinedly military, and in King’s Abbot we permit people to
- indulge their little idiosyncrasies freely.</p>
-
- <p>“Shall we begin?” said Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>We sat round the table. For some five minutes there was complete
- silence, owing to the fact that there is tremendous secret competition
- amongst us as to who can build their wall quickest.</p>
-
- <p>“Go on, James,” said Caroline at last. “You’re East Wind.”</p>
-
- <p>I discarded a tile. A round or two proceeded, broken by the monotonous
- remarks of “Three Bamboos,” “Two Circles,” “Pung,” and frequently
- from Miss Ganett “Unpung,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">192</span> owing to that lady’s habit of too hastily
- claiming tiles to which she had no right.</p>
-
- <p>“I saw Flora Ackroyd this morning,” said Miss Ganett. “Pung—no—Unpung.
- I made a mistake.”</p>
-
- <p>“Four Circles,” said Caroline. “Where did you see her?”</p>
-
- <p>“She didn’t see <em>me</em>,” said Miss Ganett, with that tremendous
- significance only to be met with in small villages.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” said Caroline interestedly. “Chow.”</p>
-
- <p>“I believe,” said Miss Ganett, temporarily diverted, “that it’s the
- right thing nowadays to say ‘Chee’ not ‘Chow.’”</p>
-
- <p>“Nonsense,” said Caroline. “I have always said ‘<em>Chow</em>.’”</p>
-
- <p>“In the Shanghai Club,” said Colonel Carter, “they say ‘<em>Chow</em>.’”</p>
-
- <p>Miss Ganett retired, crushed.</p>
-
- <p>“What were you saying about Flora Ackroyd?” asked Caroline, after a
- moment or two devoted to the game. “Was she with any one?”</p>
-
- <p>“Very much so,” said Miss Ganett.</p>
-
- <p>The eyes of the two ladies met, and seemed to exchange information.</p>
-
- <p>“Really,” said Caroline interestedly. “Is that it? Well, it doesn’t
- surprise me in the least.”</p>
-
- <p>“We’re waiting for you to discard, Miss Caroline,” said the colonel. He
- sometimes affects the pose of the bluff male, intent on the game and
- indifferent to gossip. But nobody is deceived.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">193</span></p>
-
- <p>“If you ask me,” said Miss Ganett. (“Was that a Bamboo you discarded,
- dear? Oh! no, I see now—it was a Circle.) As I was saying, if you ask
- me, Flora’s been exceedingly lucky. Exceedingly lucky she’s been.”</p>
-
- <p>“How’s that, Miss Ganett?” asked the colonel. “I’ll Pung that Green
- Dragon. How do you make out that Miss Flora’s been lucky? Very charming
- girl and all that, I know.”</p>
-
- <p>“I mayn’t know very much about crime,” said Miss Ganett, with the air
- of one who knows everything there is to know, “but I can tell you one
- thing. The first question that’s always asked is ‘Who last saw the
- deceased alive?’ And the person who did is regarded with suspicion.
- Now, Flora Ackroyd last saw her uncle alive. It might have looked very
- nasty for her—very nasty indeed. It’s my opinion—and I give it for what
- it’s worth, that Ralph Paton is staying away on her account, to draw
- suspicion away from her.”</p>
-
- <p>“Come, now,” I protested mildly, “you surely can’t suggest that a young
- girl like Flora Ackroyd is capable of stabbing her uncle in cold blood?”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, I don’t know,” said Miss Ganett. “I’ve just been reading a book
- from the library about the underworld of Paris, and it says that some
- of the worst women criminals are young girls with the faces of angels.”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s in France,” said Caroline instantly.</p>
-
- <p>“Just so,” said the colonel. “Now, I’ll tell you a very curious thing—a
- story that was going round the Bazaars in India....”</p>
-
- <p>The colonel’s story was one of interminable length,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">194</span> and of curiously
- little interest. A thing that happened in India many years ago cannot
- compare for a moment with an event that took place in King’s Abbot the
- day before yesterday.</p>
-
- <p>It was Caroline who brought the colonel’s story to a close by
- fortunately going Mah Jong. After the slight unpleasantness always
- occasioned by my corrections of Caroline’s somewhat faulty arithmetic,
- we started a new hand.</p>
-
- <p>“East Wind passes,” said Caroline. “I’ve got an idea of my own about
- Ralph Paton. Three Characters. But I’m keeping it to myself for the
- present.”</p>
-
- <p>“Are you, dear?” said Miss Ganett. “Chow—I mean Pung.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” said Caroline firmly.</p>
-
- <p>“Was it all right about the boots?” asked Miss Ganett. “Their being
- black, I mean?”</p>
-
- <p>“Quite all right,” said Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“What was the point, do you think?” asked Miss Ganett.</p>
-
- <p>Caroline pursed up her lips, and shook her head with an air of knowing
- all about it.</p>
-
- <p>“Pung,” said Miss Ganett. “No—Unpung. I suppose that now the doctor’s
- in with M. Poirot he knows all the secrets?”</p>
-
- <p>“Far from it,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“James is so modest,” said Caroline. “Ah! a concealed Kong.”</p>
-
- <p>The colonel gave vent to a whistle. For the moment gossip was
- forgotten.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">195</span></p>
-
- <p>“Your own wind, too,” he said. “<em>And</em> you’ve got two Pungs of
- Dragons. We must be careful. Miss Caroline’s out for a big hand.”</p>
-
- <p>We played for some minutes with no irrelevant conversation.</p>
-
- <p>“This M. Poirot now,” said Colonel Carter, “is he really such a great
- detective?”</p>
-
- <p>“The greatest the world has ever known,” said Caroline solemnly. “He
- had to come here incognito to avoid publicity.”</p>
-
- <p>“Chow,” said Miss Ganett. “Quite wonderful for our little village, I’m
- sure. By the way, Clara—my maid, you know—is great friends with Elsie,
- the housemaid at Fernly, and what do you think Elsie told her? That
- there’s been a lot of money stolen, and it’s her opinion—Elsie’s—I
- mean, that the parlormaid had something to do with it. She’s leaving
- at the month, and she’s crying a good deal at night. If you ask me,
- the girl is very likely in league with a <em>gang</em>. She’s always
- been a queer girl—she’s not friends with any of the girls round here.
- She goes off by herself on her days out—very unnatural, I call it,
- and most suspicious. I asked her once to come to our Girls’ Friendly
- Evenings, but she refused, and then I asked her a few questions about
- her home and her family—all that sort of thing, and I’m bound to say I
- considered her manner most impertinent. Outwardly very respectful—but
- she shut me up in the most barefaced way.”</p>
-
- <p>Miss Ganett stopped for breath, and the colonel, who was totally
- uninterested in the servant question, remarked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">196</span> that in the Shanghai
- Club brisk play was the invariable rule.</p>
-
- <p>We had a round of brisk play.</p>
-
- <p>“That Miss Russell,” said Caroline. “She came here pretending to
- consult James on Friday morning. It’s my opinion she wanted to see
- where the poisons were kept. Five Characters.”</p>
-
- <p>“Chow,” said Miss Ganett. “What an extraordinary idea? I wonder if you
- can be right.”</p>
-
- <p>“Talking of poisons,” said the colonel. “Eh—what? Haven’t I discarded?
- Oh! Eight Bamboos.”</p>
-
- <p>“Mah Jong!” said Miss Ganett.</p>
-
- <p>Caroline was very much annoyed.</p>
-
- <p>“One Red Dragon,” she said regretfully, “and I should have had a hand
- of three doubles.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’ve had two Red Dragons all the time,” I mentioned.</p>
-
- <p>“So exactly like you, James,” said Caroline reproachfully. “You’ve no
- conception of the spirit of the game.”</p>
-
- <p>I myself thought I had played rather cleverly. I should have had to pay
- Caroline an enormous amount if she had gone Mah Jong. Miss Ganett’s Mah
- Jong was of the poorest variety possible, as Caroline did not fail to
- point out to her.</p>
-
- <p>East Wind passed, and we started a new hand in silence.</p>
-
- <p>“What I was going to tell you just now was this,” said Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes?” said Miss Ganett encouragingly.</p>
-
- <p>“My idea about Ralph Paton, I mean.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">197</span></p>
-
- <p>“Yes, dear,” said Miss Ganett, still more encouragingly. “Chow!”</p>
-
- <p>“It’s a sign of weakness to Chow so early,” said Caroline severely.
- “You should go for a big hand.”</p>
-
- <p>“I know,” said Miss Ganett. “You were saying—about Ralph Paton, you
- know?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. Well, I’ve a pretty shrewd idea where he is.”</p>
-
- <p>We all stopped to stare at her.</p>
-
- <p>“This is very interesting, Miss Caroline,” said Colonel Carter. “All
- your own idea, eh?”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, not exactly. I’ll tell you about it. You know that big map of
- the county we have in the hall?”</p>
-
- <p>We all said Yes.</p>
-
- <p>“As M. Poirot was going out the other day, he stopped and looked at it,
- and he made some remark—I can’t remember exactly what it was. Something
- about Cranchester being the only big town anywhere near us—which is
- true, of course. But after he had gone—it came to me suddenly.”</p>
-
- <p>“What came to you?”</p>
-
- <p>“His meaning. Of course Ralph is in Cranchester.”</p>
-
- <p>It was at that moment that I knocked down the rack that held my pieces.
- My sister immediately reproved me for clumsiness, but half-heartedly.
- She was intent on her theory.</p>
-
- <p>“Cranchester, Miss Caroline?” said Colonel Carter. “Surely not
- Cranchester! It’s so near.”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s exactly it,” cried Caroline triumphantly. “It seems quite clear
- by now that he didn’t get away from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">198</span> here by train. He must simply have
- walked into Cranchester. And I believe he’s there still. No one would
- dream of his being so near at hand.”</p>
-
- <p>I pointed out several objections to the theory, but when once Caroline
- has got something firmly into her head, nothing dislodges it.</p>
-
- <p>“And you think M. Poirot has the same idea,” said Miss Ganett
- thoughtfully. “It’s a curious coincidence, but I was out for a walk
- this afternoon on the Cranchester road, and he passed me in a car
- coming from that direction.”</p>
-
- <p>We all looked at each other.</p>
-
- <p>“Why, dear me,” said Miss Ganett suddenly, “I’m Mah Jong all the time,
- and I never noticed it.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline’s attention was distracted from her own inventive exercises.
- She pointed out to Miss Ganett that a hand consisting of mixed suits
- and too many Chows was hardly worth going Mah Jong on. Miss Ganett
- listened imperturbably and collected her counters.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, dear, I know what you mean,” she said. “But it rather depends on
- what kind of a hand you have to start with, doesn’t it?”</p>
-
- <p>“You’ll never get the big hands if you don’t go for them,” urged
- Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, we must all play our own way, mustn’t we?” said Miss Ganett. She
- looked down at her counters. “After all, I’m up, so far.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline, who was considerably down, said nothing.</p>
-
- <p>East Wind passed, and we set to once more. Annie brought in the tea
- things. Caroline and Miss Ganett<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">199</span> were both slightly ruffled as is
- often the case during one of these festive evenings.</p>
-
- <p>“If you would only play a leetle quicker, dear,” said Caroline, as Miss
- Ganett hesitated over her discard. “The Chinese put down the tiles so
- quickly it sounds like little birds pattering.”</p>
-
- <p>For some few minutes we played like the Chinese.</p>
-
- <p>“You haven’t contributed much to the sum of information, Sheppard,”
- said Colonel Carter genially. “You’re a sly dog. Hand in glove with the
- great detective, and not a hint as to the way things are going.”</p>
-
- <p>“James is an extraordinary creature,” said Caroline. “He can <em>not</em>
- bring himself to part with information.”</p>
-
- <p>She looked at me with some disfavor.</p>
-
- <p>“I assure you,” I said, “that I don’t know anything. Poirot keeps his
- own counsel.”</p>
-
- <p>“Wise man,” said the colonel with a chuckle. “He doesn’t give himself
- away. But they’re wonderful fellows, these foreign detectives. Up to
- all sorts of dodges, I believe.”</p>
-
- <p>“Pung,” said Miss Ganett, in a tone of quiet triumph. “And Mah Jong.”</p>
-
- <p>The situation became more strained. It was annoyance at Miss Ganett’s
- going Mah Jong for the third time running which prompted Caroline to
- say to me as we built a fresh wall:—</p>
-
- <p>“You are too tiresome, James. You sit there like a dead head, and say
- nothing at all!”</p>
-
- <p>“But, my dear,” I protested, “I have really nothing to say—that is, of
- the kind you mean.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">200</span></p>
-
- <p>“Nonsense,” said Caroline, as she sorted her hand. “You <em>must</em>
- know something interesting.”</p>
-
- <p>I did not answer for a moment. I was overwhelmed and intoxicated. I had
- read of there being such a thing as the Perfect Winning—going Mah Jong
- on one’s original hand. I had never hoped to hold the hand myself.</p>
-
- <p>With suppressed triumph I laid my hand face upwards on the table.</p>
-
- <p>“As they say in the Shanghai Club,” I remarked, “Tin-ho—the Perfect
- Winning!”</p>
-
- <p>The colonel’s eyes nearly bulged out of his head.</p>
-
- <p>“Upon my soul,” he said. “What an extraordinary thing. I never saw that
- happen before!”</p>
-
- <p>It was then that I went on, goaded by Caroline’s gibes, and rendered
- reckless by my triumph.</p>
-
- <p>“And as to anything interesting,” I said. “What about a gold wedding
- ring with a date and ‘From R.’ inside.”</p>
-
- <p>I pass over the scene that followed. I was made to say exactly where
- this treasure was found. I was made to reveal the date.</p>
-
- <p>“March 13th,” said Caroline. “Just six months ago. Ah!”</p>
-
- <p>Out of the babel of excited suggestions and suppositions three theories
- were evolved:—</p>
-
- <p>1. That of Colonel Carter: that Ralph was secretly married to Flora.
- The first or most simple solution.</p>
-
- <p>2. That of Miss Ganett: that Roger Ackroyd had been secretly married to
- Mrs. Ferrars.</p>
-
- <p>3. That of my sister: that Roger Ackroyd had married his housekeeper,
- Miss Russell.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">201</span></p>
-
- <p>A fourth or super-theory was propounded by Caroline later as we went up
- to bed.</p>
-
- <p>“Mark my words,” she said suddenly, “I shouldn’t be at all surprised if
- Geoffrey Raymond and Flora weren’t married.”</p>
-
- <p>“Surely it would be ‘From G,’ not ‘From R’ then,” I suggested.</p>
-
- <p>“You never know. Some girls call men by their surnames. And you heard
- what Miss Ganett said this evening—about Flora’s carryings on.”</p>
-
- <p>Strictly speaking, I had not heard Miss Ganett say anything of the
- kind, but I respected Caroline’s knowledge of innuendoes.</p>
-
- <p>“How about Hector Blunt,” I hinted. “If it’s anybody——”</p>
-
- <p>“Nonsense,” said Caroline. “I dare say he admires her—may even be in
- love with her. But depend upon it a girl isn’t going to fall in love
- with a man old enough to be her father when there’s a good-looking
- young secretary about. She may encourage Major Blunt just as a blind.
- Girls are very artful. But there’s one thing I <em>do</em> tell you,
- James Sheppard. Flora Ackroyd does not care a penny piece for Ralph
- Paton, and never has. You can take it from me.”</p>
-
- <p>I took it from her meekly.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">202</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">PARKER</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">It</span> occurred to me the next morning that under the exhilaration
- produced by Tin-ho, or the Perfect Winning, I might have been slightly
- indiscreet. True, Poirot had not asked me to keep the discovery of
- the ring to myself. On the other hand, he had said nothing about it
- whilst at Fernly, and as far as I knew, I was the only person aware
- that it had been found. I felt distinctly guilty. The fact was by now
- spreading through King’s Abbot like wildfire. I was expecting wholesale
- reproaches from Poirot any minute.</p>
-
- <p>The joint funeral of Mrs. Ferrars and Roger Ackroyd was fixed for
- eleven o’clock. It was a melancholy and impressive ceremony. All the
- party from Fernly were there.</p>
-
- <p>After it was over, Poirot, who had also been present, took me by the
- arm, and invited me to accompany him back to The Larches. He was
- looking very grave, and I feared that my indiscretion of the night
- before had got round to his ears. But it soon transpired that his
- thoughts were occupied by something of a totally different nature.</p>
-
- <p>“See you,” he said. “We must act. With your help I propose to examine a
- witness. We will question him, we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">203</span> will put such fear into him that the
- truth is bound to come out.”</p>
-
- <p>“What witness are you talking of?” I asked, very much surprised.</p>
-
- <p>“Parker!” said Poirot. “I asked him to be at my house this morning at
- twelve o’clock. He should await us there at this very minute.”</p>
-
- <p>“What do you think,” I ventured, glancing sideways at his face.</p>
-
- <p>“I know this—that I am not satisfied.”</p>
-
- <p>“You think that it was he who blackmailed Mrs. Ferrars?”</p>
-
- <p>“Either that, or——”</p>
-
- <p>“Well?” I said, after waiting a minute or two.</p>
-
- <p>“My friend, I will say this to you—I hope it was he.”</p>
-
- <p>The gravity of his manner, and something indefinable that tinged it,
- reduced me to silence.</p>
-
- <p>On arrival at The Larches, we were informed that Parker was already
- there awaiting our return. As we entered the room, the butler rose
- respectfully.</p>
-
- <p>“Good morning, Parker,” said Poirot pleasantly. “One instant, I pray of
- you.”</p>
-
- <p>He removed his overcoat and gloves.</p>
-
- <p>“Allow me, sir,” said Parker, and sprang forward to assist him. He
- deposited the articles neatly on a chair by the door. Poirot watched
- him with approval.</p>
-
- <p>“Thank you, my good Parker,” he said. “Take a seat, will you not? What
- I have to say may take some time.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">204</span></p>
-
- <p>Parker seated himself with an apologetic bend of the head.</p>
-
- <p>“Now what do you think I asked you to come here for this morning—eh?”</p>
-
- <p>Parker coughed.</p>
-
- <p>“I understood, sir, that you wished to ask me a few questions about my
- late master—private like.”</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Précisément</i>,” said Poirot, beaming. “Have you made many
- experiments in blackmail?”</p>
-
- <p>“Sir!”</p>
-
- <p>The butler sprang to his feet.</p>
-
- <p>“Do not excite yourself,” said Poirot placidly. “Do not play the farce
- of the honest, injured man. You know all there is to know about the
- blackmail, is it not so?”</p>
-
- <p>“Sir, I—I’ve never—never been——”</p>
-
- <p>“Insulted,” suggested Poirot, “in such a way before. Then why, my
- excellent Parker, were you so anxious to overhear the conversation in
- Mr. Ackroyd’s study the other evening, after you had caught the word
- blackmail?”</p>
-
- <p>“I wasn’t—I——”</p>
-
- <p>“Who was your last master?” rapped out Poirot suddenly.</p>
-
- <p>“My last master?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, the master you were with before you came to Mr. Ackroyd.”</p>
-
- <p>“A Major Ellerby, sir——”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot took the words out of his mouth.</p>
-
- <p>“Just so, Major Ellerby. Major Ellerby was addicted to drugs, was he
- not? You traveled about with him. When he was in Bermuda there was some
- trouble—a man<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">205</span> was killed. Major Ellerby was partly responsible. It was
- hushed up. But you knew about it. How much did Major Ellerby pay you to
- keep your mouth shut?”</p>
-
- <p>Parker was staring at him open-mouthed. The man had gone to pieces, his
- cheeks shook flabbily.</p>
-
- <p>“You see, me, I have made inquiries,” said Poirot pleasantly. “It is
- as I say. You got a good sum then as blackmail, and Major Ellerby went
- on paying you until he died. Now I want to hear about your latest
- experiment.”</p>
-
- <p>Parker still stared.</p>
-
- <p>“It is useless to deny. Hercule Poirot <em>knows</em>. It is so, what I
- have said about Major Ellerby, is it not?”</p>
-
- <p>As though against his will, Parker nodded reluctantly once. His face
- was ashen pale.</p>
-
- <p>“But I never hurt a hair of Mr. Ackroyd’s head,” he moaned. “Honest to
- God, sir, I didn’t. I’ve been afraid of this coming all the time. And I
- tell you I didn’t—I didn’t kill him.”</p>
-
- <p>His voice rose almost to a scream.</p>
-
- <p>“I am inclined to believe you, my friend,” said Poirot. “You have not
- the nerve—the courage. But I must have the truth.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’ll tell you anything, sir, anything you want to know. It’s true that
- I tried to listen that night. A word or two I heard made me curious.
- And Mr. Ackroyd’s wanting not to be disturbed, and shutting himself up
- with the doctor the way he did. It’s God’s own truth what I told the
- police. I heard the word blackmail, sir, and well——”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">206</span></p>
-
- <p>He paused.</p>
-
- <p>“You thought there might be something in it for you?” suggested Poirot
- smoothly.</p>
-
- <p>“Well—well, yes, I did, sir. I thought that if Mr. Ackroyd was being
- blackmailed, why shouldn’t I have a share of the pickings?”</p>
-
- <p>A very curious expression passed over Poirot’s face. He leaned forward.</p>
-
- <p>“Had you any reason to suppose before that night that Mr. Ackroyd was
- being blackmailed?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, indeed, sir. It was a great surprise to me. Such a regular
- gentleman in all his habits.”</p>
-
- <p>“How much did you overhear?”</p>
-
- <p>“Not very much, sir. There seemed what I might call a spite against me.
- Of course I had to attend to my duties in the pantry. And when I did
- creep along once or twice to the study it was no use. The first time
- Dr. Sheppard came out and almost caught me in the act, and another time
- Mr. Raymond passed me in the big hall and went that way, so I knew it
- was no use; and when I went with the tray, Miss Flora headed me off.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot stared for a long time at the man, as if to test his sincerity.
- Parker returned his gaze earnestly.</p>
-
- <p>“I hope you believe me, sir. I’ve been afraid all along the police
- would rake up that old business with Major Ellerby and be suspicious of
- me in consequence.”</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Eh bien</i>,” said Poirot at last. “I am disposed to believe you.
- But there is one thing I must request of you—to show me your bank-book.
- You have a bank-book, I presume?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">207</span></p>
-
- <p>“Yes, sir, as a matter of fact, I have it with me now.”</p>
-
- <p>With no sign of confusion, he produced it from his pocket. Poirot took
- the slim, green-covered book and perused the entries.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! I perceive you have purchased £500 of National Savings
- Certificates this year?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, sir. I have already over a thousand pounds saved—the result of
- my connection with—er—my late master, Major Ellerby. And I have had
- quite a little flutter on some horses this year—very successful. If you
- remember, sir, a rank outsider won the Jubilee. I was fortunate enough
- to back it—£20.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot handed him back the book.</p>
-
- <p>“I will wish you good-morning. I believe that you have told me the
- truth. If you have not—so much the worse for you, my friend.”</p>
-
- <p>When Parker had departed, Poirot picked up his overcoat once more.</p>
-
- <p>“Going out again?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, we will pay a little visit to the good M. Hammond.”</p>
-
- <p>“You believe Parker’s story?”</p>
-
- <p>“It is credible enough on the face of it. It seems clear that—unless
- he is a very good actor indeed—he genuinely believes it was Ackroyd
- himself who was the victim of blackmail. If so, he knows nothing at all
- about the Mrs. Ferrars business.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then in that case—who——”</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Précisément!</i> Who? But our visit to M. Hammond<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">208</span> will accomplish
- one purpose. It will either clear Parker completely or else——”</p>
-
- <p>“Well?”</p>
-
- <p>“I fall into the bad habit of leaving my sentences unfinished this
- morning,” said Poirot apologetically. “You must bear with me.”</p>
-
- <p>“By the way,” I said, rather sheepishly, “I’ve got a confession to
- make. I’m afraid I have inadvertently let out something about that
- ring.”</p>
-
- <p>“What ring?”</p>
-
- <p>“The ring you found in the goldfish pond.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! yes,” said Poirot, smiling broadly.</p>
-
- <p>“I hope you’re not annoyed? It was very careless of me.”</p>
-
- <p>“But not at all, my good friend, not at all. I laid no commands upon
- you. You were at liberty to speak of it if you so wished. She was
- interested, your sister?”</p>
-
- <p>“She was indeed. It created a sensation. All sorts of theories are
- flying about.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! And yet it is so simple. The true explanation leapt to the eye,
- did it not?”</p>
-
- <p>“Did it?” I said dryly.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot laughed.</p>
-
- <p>“The wise man does not commit himself,” he observed. “Is not that so?
- But here we are at Mr. Hammond’s.”</p>
-
- <p>The lawyer was in his office, and we were ushered in without any delay.
- He rose and greeted us in his dry, precise manner.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot came at once to the point.</p>
-
- <p>“Monsieur, I desire from you certain information, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">209</span> is, if you will
- be so good as to give it to me. You acted, I understand, for the late
- Mrs. Ferrars of King’s Paddock?”</p>
-
- <p>I noticed the swift gleam of surprise which showed in the lawyer’s
- eyes, before his professional reserve came down once more like a mask
- over his face.</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly. All her affairs passed through our hands.”</p>
-
- <p>“Very good. Now, before I ask you to tell me anything, I should like
- you to listen to the story Dr. Sheppard will relate to you. You have no
- objection, have you, my friend, to repeating the conversation you had
- with Mr. Ackroyd last Friday night?”</p>
-
- <p>“Not in the least,” I said, and straightway began the recital of that
- strange evening.</p>
-
- <p>Hammond listened with close attention.</p>
-
- <p>“That is all,” I said, when I had finished.</p>
-
- <p>“Blackmail,” said the lawyer thoughtfully.</p>
-
- <p>“You are surprised?” asked Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>The lawyer took off his pince-nez and polished them with his
- handkerchief.</p>
-
- <p>“No,” he replied, “I can hardly say that I am surprised. I have
- suspected something of the kind for some time.”</p>
-
- <p>“That brings us,” said Poirot, “to the information for which I am
- asking. If any one can give us an idea of the actual sums paid, you are
- the man, monsieur.”</p>
-
- <p>“I see no object in withholding the information,” said Hammond, after
- a moment or two. “During the past year, Mrs. Ferrars has sold out
- certain securities, and the money for them was paid into her account
- and not reinvested. As her income was a large one, and she lived<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">210</span> very
- quietly after her husband’s death, it seems certain that these sums of
- money were paid away for some special purpose. I once sounded her on
- the subject, and she said that she was obliged to support several of
- her husband’s poor relations. I let the matter drop, of course. Until
- now, I have always imagined that the money was paid to some woman who
- had had a claim on Ashley Ferrars. I never dreamed that Mrs. Ferrars
- herself was involved.”</p>
-
- <p>“And the amount?” asked Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“In all, I should say the various sums totaled at least twenty thousand
- pounds.”</p>
-
- <p>“Twenty thousand pounds!” I exclaimed. “In one year!”</p>
-
- <p>“Mrs. Ferrars was a very wealthy woman,” said Poirot dryly. “And the
- penalty for murder is not a pleasant one.”</p>
-
- <p>“Is there anything else that I can tell you?” inquired Mr. Hammond.</p>
-
- <p>“I thank you, no,” said Poirot, rising. “All my excuses for having
- deranged you.”</p>
-
- <p>“Not at all, not at all.”</p>
-
- <p>“The word derange,” I remarked, when we were outside again, “is
- applicable to mental disorder only.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” cried Poirot, “never will my English be quite perfect. A curious
- language. I should then have said disarranged, <i lang="fr">n’est-ce pas</i>?”</p>
-
- <p>“Disturbed is the word you had in mind.”</p>
-
- <p>“I thank you, my friend. The word exact, you are zealous for it. <i lang="fr">Eh
- bien</i>, what about our friend Parker<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">211</span> now? With twenty thousand
- pounds in hand, would he have continued being a butler? <i lang="fr">Je ne pense
- pas.</i> It is, of course, possible that he banked the money under
- another name, but I am disposed to believe he spoke the truth to us.
- If he is a scoundrel, he is a scoundrel on a mean scale. He has not
- the big ideas. That leaves us as a possibility, Raymond, or—well—Major
- Blunt.”</p>
-
- <p>“Surely not Raymond,” I objected. “Since we know that he was
- desperately hard up for a matter of five hundred pounds.”</p>
-
- <p>“That is what he says, yes.”</p>
-
- <p>“And as to Hector Blunt——”</p>
-
- <p>“I will tell you something as to the good Major Blunt,” interrupted
- Poirot. “It is my business to make inquiries. I make them. <i lang="fr">Eh
- bien</i>—that legacy of which he speaks, I have discovered that the
- amount of it was close upon twenty thousand pounds. What do you think
- of that?”</p>
-
- <p>I was so taken aback that I could hardly speak.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s impossible,” I said at last. “A well-known man like Hector Blunt.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
- <p>“Who knows? At least he is a man with big ideas. I confess that I
- hardly see him as a blackmailer, but there is another possibility that
- you have not even considered.”</p>
-
- <p>“What is that?”</p>
-
- <p>“The fire, my friend. Ackroyd himself may have destroyed that letter,
- blue envelope and all, after you left him.”</p>
-
- <p>“I hardly think that likely,” I said slowly. “And yet—<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">212</span>of course, it
- may be so. He might have changed his mind.”</p>
-
- <p>We had just arrived at my house, and on the spur of the moment I
- invited Poirot to come in and take pot luck.</p>
-
- <p>I thought Caroline would be pleased with me, but it is hard to satisfy
- one’s women folk. It appears that we were eating chops for lunch—the
- kitchen staff being regaled on tripe and onions. And two chops set
- before three people are productive of embarrassment.</p>
-
- <p>But Caroline is seldom daunted for long. With magnificent mendacity,
- she explained to Poirot that although James laughed at her for
- doing so, she adhered strictly to a vegetarian diet. She descanted
- ecstatically on the delights of nut cutlets (which I am quite sure
- she has never tasted) and ate a Welsh rarebit with gusto and frequent
- cutting remarks as to the dangers of “flesh” foods.</p>
-
- <p>Afterwards, when we were sitting in front of the fire and smoking,
- Caroline attacked Poirot directly.</p>
-
- <p>“Not found Ralph Paton yet?” she asked.</p>
-
- <p>“Where should I find him, mademoiselle?”</p>
-
- <p>“I thought, perhaps, you’d found him in Cranchester,” said Caroline,
- with intense meaning in her tone.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot looked merely bewildered.</p>
-
- <p>“In Cranchester? But why in Cranchester?”</p>
-
- <p>I enlightened him with a touch of malice.</p>
-
- <p>“One of our ample staff of private detectives happened to see you in a
- car on the Cranchester road yesterday,” I explained.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot’s bewilderment vanished. He laughed heartily.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</span></p>
-
- <p>“Ah, that! A simple visit to the dentist, <i lang="fr">c’est tout</i>. My tooth,
- it aches. I go there. My tooth, it is at once better. I think to return
- quickly. The dentist, he says No. Better to have it out. I argue. He
- insists. He has his way! That particular tooth, it will never ache
- again.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline collapsed rather like a pricked balloon.</p>
-
- <p>We fell to discussing Ralph Paton.</p>
-
- <p>“A weak nature,” I insisted. “But not a vicious one.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” said Poirot. “But weakness, where does it end?”</p>
-
- <p>“Exactly,” said Caroline. “Take James here—weak as water, if I weren’t
- about to look after him.”</p>
-
- <p>“My dear Caroline,” I said irritably, “can’t you talk without dragging
- in personalities?”</p>
-
- <p>“You <em>are</em> weak, James,” said Caroline, quite unmoved. “I’m eight
- years older than you are—oh! I don’t mind M. Poirot knowing that——”</p>
-
- <p>“I should never have guessed it, mademoiselle,” said Poirot, with a
- gallant little bow.</p>
-
- <p>“Eight years older. But I’ve always considered it my duty to look after
- you. With a bad bringing up, Heaven knows what mischief you might have
- got into by now.”</p>
-
- <p>“I might have married a beautiful adventuress,” I murmured, gazing at
- the ceiling, and blowing smoke rings.</p>
-
- <p>“Adventuress!” said Caroline, with a snort. “If we’re talking of
- adventuresses——”</p>
-
- <p>She left the sentence unfinished.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">214</span></p>
-
- <p>“Well?” I said, with some curiosity.</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing. But I can think of some one not a hundred miles away.”</p>
-
- <p>Then she turned to Poirot suddenly.</p>
-
- <p>“James sticks to it that you believe some one in the house committed
- the murder. All I can say is, you’re wrong.”</p>
-
- <p>“I should not like to be wrong,” said Poirot. “It is not—how do you
- say—my <i lang="fr">métier</i>?”</p>
-
- <p>“I’ve got the facts pretty clearly,” continued Caroline, taking no
- notice of Poirot’s remark, “from James and others. As far as I can see,
- of the people in the house, only two <em>could</em> have had the chance
- of doing it. Ralph Paton and Flora Ackroyd.”</p>
-
- <p>“My dear Caroline——”</p>
-
- <p>“Now, James, don’t interrupt me. I know what I’m talking about. Parker
- met her <em>outside</em> the door, didn’t he? He didn’t hear her uncle
- saying good-night to her. She could have killed him then and there.”</p>
-
- <p>“Caroline.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m not saying she <em>did</em>, James. I’m saying she <em>could</em> have
- done. As a matter of fact, though Flora is like all these young girls
- nowadays, with no veneration for their betters and thinking they know
- best on every subject under the sun, I don’t for a minute believe she’d
- kill even a chicken. But there it is. Mr. Raymond and Major Blunt have
- alibis. Mrs. Ackroyd’s got an alibi. Even that Russell woman seems to
- have one—and a good job for her it is she has. Who is left? Only Ralph
- and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">215</span> Flora! And say what you will, I don’t believe Ralph Paton is a
- murderer. A boy we’ve known all our lives.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot was silent for a minute, watching the curling smoke rise from
- his cigarette. When at last he spoke, it was in a gentle far-away voice
- that produced a curious impression. It was totally unlike his usual
- manner.</p>
-
- <p>“Let us take a man—a very ordinary man. A man with no idea of murder
- in his heart. There is in him somewhere a strain of weakness—deep
- down. It has so far never been called into play. Perhaps it never will
- be—and if so he will go to his grave honored and respected by every
- one. But let us suppose that something occurs. He is in difficulties—or
- perhaps not that even. He may stumble by accident on a secret—a secret
- involving life or death to some one. And his first impulse will be to
- speak out—to do his duty as an honest citizen. And then the strain of
- weakness tells. Here is a chance of money—a great amount of money.
- He wants money—he desires it—and it is so easy. He has to do nothing
- for it—just keep silence. That is the beginning. The desire for money
- grows. He must have more—and more! He is intoxicated by the gold mine
- which has opened at his feet. He becomes greedy. And in his greed he
- overreaches himself. One can press a man as far as one likes—but with
- a woman one must not press too far. For a woman has at heart a great
- desire to speak the truth. How many husbands who have deceived their
- wives go comfortably to their graves, carrying their secret with them!
- How many wives who have deceived their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">216</span> husbands wreck their lives by
- throwing the fact in those same husbands’ teeth! They have been pressed
- too far. In a reckless moment (which they will afterwards regret,
- <i lang="fr">bien entendu</i>) they fling safety to the winds and turn at bay,
- proclaiming the truth with great momentary satisfaction to themselves.
- So it was, I think, in this case. The strain was too great. And so
- there came your proverb, the death of the goose that laid the golden
- eggs. But that is not the end. Exposure faced the man of whom we are
- speaking. And he is not the same man he was—say, a year ago. His moral
- fiber is blunted. He is desperate. He is fighting a losing battle, and
- he is prepared to take any means that come to his hand, for exposure
- means ruin to him. And so—the dagger strikes!”</p>
-
- <p>He was silent for a moment. It was as though he had laid a spell upon
- the room. I cannot try to describe the impression his words produced.
- There was something in the merciless analysis, and the ruthless power
- of vision which struck fear into both of us.</p>
-
- <p>“Afterwards,” he went on softly, “the danger removed, he will be
- himself again, normal, kindly. But if the need again arises, then once
- more he will strike.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline roused herself at last.</p>
-
- <p>“You are speaking of Ralph Paton,” she said. “You may be right, you may
- not, but you have no business to condemn a man unheard.”</p>
-
- <p>The telephone bell rang sharply. I went out into the hall, and took off
- the receiver.</p>
-
- <p>“What?” I said. “Yes. Dr. Sheppard speaking.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">217</span></p>
-
- <p>I listened for a minute or two, then replied briefly. Replacing the
- receiver, I went back into the drawing-room.</p>
-
- <p>“Poirot,” I said, “they have detained a man at Liverpool. His name is
- Charles Kent, and he is believed to be the stranger who visited Fernly
- that night. They want me to go to Liverpool at once and identify him.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">218</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">CHARLES KENT</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Half</span> an hour later saw Poirot, myself, and Inspector Raglan in the
- train on the way to Liverpool. The inspector was clearly very excited.</p>
-
- <p>“We may get a line on the blackmailing part of the business, if on
- nothing else,” he declared jubilantly. “He’s a rough customer, this
- fellow, by what I heard over the phone. Takes dope, too. We ought to
- find it easy to get what we want out of him. If there was the shadow of
- a motive, nothing’s more likely than that he killed Mr. Ackroyd. But in
- that case, why is young Paton keeping out of the way? The whole thing’s
- a muddle—that’s what it is. By the way, M. Poirot, you were quite right
- about those fingerprints. They were Mr. Ackroyd’s own. I had rather the
- same idea myself, but I dismissed it as hardly feasible.”</p>
-
- <p>I smiled to myself. Inspector Raglan was so very plainly saving his
- face.</p>
-
- <p>“As regards this man,” said Poirot, “he is not yet arrested, eh?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, detained under suspicion.”</p>
-
- <p>“And what account does he give of himself?”</p>
-
- <p>“Precious little,” said the inspector, with a grin. “He’s a wary bird,
- I gather. A lot of abuse, but very little more.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">219</span></p>
-
- <p>On arrival at Liverpool I was surprised to find that Poirot was
- welcomed with acclamation. Superintendent Hayes, who met us, had worked
- with Poirot over some case long ago, and had evidently an exaggerated
- opinion of his powers.</p>
-
- <p>“Now we’ve got M. Poirot here we shan’t be long,” he said cheerfully.
- “I thought you’d retired, moosior?”</p>
-
- <p>“So I had, my good Hayes, so I had. But how tedious is retirement! You
- cannot imagine to yourself the monotony with which day comes after day.”</p>
-
- <p>“Very likely. So you’ve come to have a look at our own particular find?
- Is this Dr. Sheppard? Think you’ll be able to identify him, sir?”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m not very sure,” I said doubtfully.</p>
-
- <p>“How did you get hold of him?” inquired Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“Description was circulated, as you know. In the press and privately.
- Not much to go on, I admit. This fellow has an American accent all
- right, and he doesn’t deny that he was near King’s Abbot that night.
- Just asks what the hell it is to do with us, and that he’ll see us in
- —— before he answers any questions.”</p>
-
- <p>“Is it permitted that I, too, see him?” asked Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>The superintendent closed one eye knowingly.</p>
-
- <p>“Very glad to have you, sir. You’ve got permission to do anything you
- please. Inspector Japp of Scotland Yard was asking after you the other
- day. Said he’d heard you were connected unofficially with this case.
- Where’s Captain Paton hiding, sir, can you tell me that?”</p>
-
- <p>“I doubt if it would be wise at the present juncture,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">220</span> said Poirot
- primly, and I bit my lips to prevent a smile.</p>
-
- <p>The little man really did it very well.</p>
-
- <p>After some further parley, we were taken to interview the prisoner.</p>
-
- <p>He was a young fellow, I should say not more than twenty-two or
- three. Tall, thin, with slightly shaking hands, and the evidences of
- considerable physical strength somewhat run to seed. His hair was dark,
- but his eyes were blue and shifty, seldom meeting a glance squarely. I
- had all along cherished the illusion that there was something familiar
- about the figure I had met that night, but if this were indeed he, I
- was completely mistaken. He did not remind me in the least of any one I
- knew.</p>
-
- <p>“Now then, Kent,” said the superintendent, “stand up. Here are some
- visitors come to see you. Recognize any of them.”</p>
-
- <p>Kent glared at us sullenly, but did not reply. I saw his glance waver
- over the three of us, and come back to rest on me.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, sir,” said the superintendent to me, “what do you say?”</p>
-
- <p>“The height’s the same,” I said, “and as far as general appearance goes
- it might well be the man in question. Beyond that, I couldn’t go.”</p>
-
- <p>“What the hell’s the meaning of all this?” asked Kent. “What have you
- got against me? Come on, out with it! What am I supposed to have done?”</p>
-
- <p>I nodded my head.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s the man,” I said. “I recognize the voice.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">221</span></p>
-
- <p>“Recognize my voice, do you? Where do you think you heard it before?”</p>
-
- <p>“On Friday evening last, outside the gates of Fernly Park. You asked me
- the way there.”</p>
-
- <p>“I did, did I?”</p>
-
- <p>“Do you admit it?” asked the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t admit anything. Not till I know what you’ve got on me.”</p>
-
- <p>“Have you not read the papers in the last few days?” asked Poirot,
- speaking for the first time.</p>
-
- <p>The man’s eyes narrowed.</p>
-
- <p>“So that’s it, is it? I saw an old gent had been croaked at Fernly.
- Trying to make out I did the job, are you?”</p>
-
- <p>“You were there that night,” said Poirot quietly.</p>
-
- <p>“How do you know, mister?”</p>
-
- <p>“By this.” Poirot took something from his pocket and held it out.</p>
-
- <p>It was the goose quill we had found in the summer-house.</p>
-
- <p>At the sight of it the man’s face changed. He half held out his hand.</p>
-
- <p>“Snow,” said Poirot thoughtfully. “No, my friend, it is empty. It lay
- where you dropped it in the summer-house that night.”</p>
-
- <p>Charles Kent looked at him uncertainly.</p>
-
- <p>“You seem to know a hell of a lot about everything, you little foreign
- cock duck. Perhaps you remember this: the papers say that the old gent
- was croaked between a quarter to ten and ten o’clock?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">222</span></p>
-
- <p>“That is so,” agreed Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, but is it really so? That’s what I’m getting at.”</p>
-
- <p>“This gentleman will tell you,” said Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>He indicated Inspector Raglan. The latter hesitated, glanced at
- Superintendent Hayes, then at Poirot, and finally, as though receiving
- sanction, he said:—</p>
-
- <p>“That’s right. Between a quarter to ten and ten o’clock.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then you’ve nothing to keep me here for,” said Kent. “I was away from
- Fernly Park by twenty-five minutes past nine. You can ask at the Dog
- and Whistle. That’s a saloon about a mile out of Fernly on the road to
- Cranchester. I kicked up a bit of a row there, I remember. As near as
- nothing to quarter to ten, it was. How about that?”</p>
-
- <p>Inspector Raglan wrote down something in his notebook.</p>
-
- <p>“Well?” demanded Kent.</p>
-
- <p>“Inquiries will be made,” said the inspector. “If you’ve spoken the
- truth, you won’t have anything to complain about. What were you doing
- at Fernly Park anyway?”</p>
-
- <p>“Went there to meet some one.”</p>
-
- <p>“Who?”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s none of your business.”</p>
-
- <p>“You’d better keep a civil tongue in your head, my man,” the
- superintendent warned him.</p>
-
- <p>“To hell with a civil tongue. I went there on my own business, and
- that’s all there is to it. If I was clear away before the murder was
- done, that’s all that concerns the cops.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">223</span></p>
-
- <p>“Your name, it is Charles Kent,” said Poirot. “Where were you born?”</p>
-
- <p>The man stared at him, then he grinned.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m a full-blown Britisher all right,” he said.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” said Poirot meditatively, “I think you are. I fancy you were
- born in Kent.”</p>
-
- <p>The man stared.</p>
-
- <p>“Why’s that? Because of my name? What’s that to do with it? Is a man
- whose name is Kent bound to be born in that particular county?”</p>
-
- <p>“Under certain circumstances, I can imagine he might be,” said Poirot
- very deliberately. “Under certain circumstances, you comprehend.”</p>
-
- <p>There was so much meaning in his voice as to surprise the two police
- officers. As for Charles Kent, he flushed a brick red, and for a moment
- I thought he was going to spring at Poirot. He thought better of it,
- however, and turned away with a kind of laugh.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded as though satisfied, and made his way out through the
- door. He was joined presently by the two officers.</p>
-
- <p>“We’ll verify that statement,” remarked Raglan. “I don’t think he’s
- lying, though. But he’s got to come clear with a statement as to
- what he was doing at Fernly. It looks to me as though we’d got our
- blackmailer all right. On the other hand, granted his story’s correct,
- he couldn’t have had anything to do with the actual murder. He’d got
- ten pounds on him when he was arrested—rather a large sum. I fancy that
- forty pounds went to him—the numbers of the notes didn’t correspond,
- but of course<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">224</span> he’d have changed them first thing. Mr. Ackroyd must
- have given him the money, and he made off with it as fast as possible.
- What was that about Kent being his birthplace? What’s that got to do
- with it?”</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing whatever,” said Poirot mildly. “A little idea of mine, that
- was all. Me, I am famous for my little ideas.”</p>
-
- <p>“Are you really?” said Raglan, studying him with a puzzled expression.</p>
-
- <p>The superintendent went into a roar of laughter.</p>
-
- <p>“Many’s the time I’ve heard Inspector Japp say that. M. Poirot and his
- little ideas! Too fanciful for me, he’d say, but always something in
- them.”</p>
-
- <p>“You mock yourself at me,” said Poirot, smiling; “but never mind. The
- old ones they laugh last sometimes, when the young, clever ones do not
- laugh at all.”</p>
-
- <p>And nodding his head at them in a sage manner, he walked out into the
- street.</p>
-
- <p>He and I lunched together at an hotel. I know now that the whole thing
- lay clearly unravelled before him. He had got the last thread he needed
- to lead him to the truth.</p>
-
- <p>But at the time I had no suspicion of the fact. I overestimated his
- general self-confidence, and I took it for granted that the things
- which puzzled me must be equally puzzling to him.</p>
-
- <p>My chief puzzle was what the man Charles Kent could have been doing at
- Fernly. Again and again I put the question to myself and could get no
- satisfactory reply.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">225</span></p>
-
- <p>At last I ventured a tentative query to Poirot. His reply was immediate.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Mon ami</i>, I do not think; I know.”</p>
-
- <p>“Really?” I said incredulously.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, indeed. I suppose now that to you it would not make sense if I
- said that he went to Fernly that night because he was born in Kent?”</p>
-
- <p>I stared at him.</p>
-
- <p>“It certainly doesn’t seem to make sense to me,” I said dryly.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” said Poirot pityingly. “Well, no matter. I have still my little idea.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">226</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">FLORA ACKROYD</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">As</span> I was returning from my round the following morning, I was hailed by
- Inspector Raglan. I pulled up, and the inspector mounted on the step.</p>
-
- <p>“Good-morning, Dr. Sheppard,” he said. “Well, that alibi is all right
- enough.”</p>
-
- <p>“Charles Kent’s?”</p>
-
- <p>“Charles Kent’s. The barmaid at the Dog and Whistle, Sally Jones, she
- remembers him perfectly. Picked out his photograph from among five
- others. It was just a quarter to ten when he came into the bar, and the
- Dog and Whistle is well over a mile from Fernly Park. The girl mentions
- that he had a lot of money on him—she saw him take a handful of notes
- out of his pocket. Rather surprised her, it did, seeing the class of
- fellow he was, with a pair of boots clean dropping off him. That’s
- where that forty pounds went right enough.”</p>
-
- <p>“The man still refuses to give an account of his visit to Fernly?”</p>
-
- <p>“Obstinate as a mule he is. I had a chat with Hayes at Liverpool over
- the wire this morning.”</p>
-
- <p>“Hercule Poirot says he knows the reason the man went there that
- night,” I observed.</p>
-
- <p>“Does he?” cried the inspector eagerly.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">227</span></p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said maliciously. “He says he went there because he was born
- in Kent.”</p>
-
- <p>I felt a distinct pleasure in passing on my own discomfiture.</p>
-
- <p>Raglan stared at me for a moment or two uncomprehendingly. Then a
- grin overspread his weaselly countenance and he tapped his forehead
- significantly.</p>
-
- <p>“Bit gone here,” he said. “I’ve thought so for some time. Poor old
- chap, so that’s why he had to give up and come down here. In the
- family, very likely. He’s got a nephew who’s quite off his crumpet.”</p>
-
- <p>“Poirot has?” I said, very surprised.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. Hasn’t he ever mentioned him to you? Quite docile, I believe, and
- all that, but mad as a hatter, poor lad.”</p>
-
- <p>“Who told you that?”</p>
-
- <p>Again a grin showed itself on Inspector Raglan’s face.</p>
-
- <p>“Your sister, Miss Sheppard, she told me all about it.”</p>
-
- <p>Really, Caroline is amazing. She never rests until she knows the last
- details of everybody’s family secrets. Unfortunately, I have never been
- able to instill into her the decency of keeping them to herself.</p>
-
- <p>“Jump in, inspector,” I said, opening the door of the car. “We’ll go
- up to The Larches together, and acquaint our Belgian friend with the
- latest news.”</p>
-
- <p>“Might as well, I suppose. After all, even if he is a bit balmy, it was
- a useful tip he gave me about those fingerprints. He’s got a bee in his
- bonnet about the man Kent, but who knows—there may be something useful
- behind it.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">228</span></p>
-
- <p>Poirot received us with his usual smiling courtesy.</p>
-
- <p>He listened to the information we had brought him, nodding his head now
- and then.</p>
-
- <p>“Seems quite O.K., doesn’t it?” said the inspector rather gloomily. “A
- chap can’t be murdering some one in one place when he’s drinking in the
- bar in another place a mile away.”</p>
-
- <p>“Are you going to release him?”</p>
-
- <p>“Don’t see what else we can do. We can’t very well hold him for
- obtaining money on false pretences. Can’t prove a ruddy thing.”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector tossed a match into the grate in a disgruntled fashion.
- Poirot retrieved it and put it neatly in a little receptacle designed
- for the purpose. His action was purely mechanical. I could see that his
- thoughts were on something very different.</p>
-
- <p>“If I were you,” he said at last, “I should not release the man Charles
- Kent yet.”</p>
-
- <p>“What do you mean?”</p>
-
- <p>Raglan stared at him.</p>
-
- <p>“What I say. I should not release him yet.”</p>
-
- <p>“You don’t think he can have had anything to do with the murder, do
- you?”</p>
-
- <p>“I think probably not—but one cannot be certain yet.”</p>
-
- <p>“But haven’t I just told you——”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot raised a hand protestingly.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Mais oui, mais oui.</i> I heard. I am not deaf—nor stupid, thank
- the good God! But see you, you approach the matter from the wrong—the
- wrong—premises, is not that the word?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">229</span></p>
-
- <p>The inspector stared at him heavily.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t see how you make that out. Look here, we know Mr. Ackroyd was
- alive at a quarter to ten. You admit that, don’t you?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot looked at him for a moment, then shook his head with a quick
- smile.</p>
-
- <p>“I admit nothing that is not—<em>proved</em>!”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, we’ve got proof enough of that. We’ve got Miss Flora Ackroyd’s
- evidence.”</p>
-
- <p>“That she said good-night to her uncle? But me—I do not always believe
- what a young lady tells me—no, not even when she is charming and
- beautiful.”</p>
-
- <p>“But hang it all, man, Parker saw her coming out of the door.”</p>
-
- <p>“No.” Poirot’s voice rang out with sudden sharpness. “That is just what
- he did not see. I satisfied myself of that by a little experiment the
- other day—you remember, doctor? Parker saw her <em>outside</em> the door,
- with her hand on the handle. He did not see her come out of the room.”</p>
-
- <p>“But—where else could she have been?”</p>
-
- <p>“Perhaps on the stairs.”</p>
-
- <p>“The stairs?”</p>
-
- <p>“That is my little idea—yes.”</p>
-
- <p>“But those stairs only lead to Mr. Ackroyd’s bedroom.”</p>
-
- <p>“Precisely.”</p>
-
- <p>And still the inspector stared.</p>
-
- <p>“You think she’d been up to her uncle’s bedroom? Well, why not? Why
- should she lie about it?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">230</span></p>
-
- <p>“Ah! that is just the question. It depends on what she was doing there,
- does it not?”</p>
-
- <p>“You mean—the money? Hang it all, you don’t suggest that it was Miss
- Ackroyd who took that forty pounds?”</p>
-
- <p>“I suggest nothing,” said Poirot. “But I will remind you of this. Life
- was not very easy for that mother and daughter. There were bills—there
- was constant trouble over small sums of money. Roger Ackroyd was a
- peculiar man over money matters. The girl might be at her wit’s end for
- a comparatively small sum. Figure to yourself then what happens. She
- has taken the money, she descends the little staircase. When she is
- half-way down she hears the chink of glass from the hall. She has not a
- doubt of what it is—Parker coming to the study. At all costs she must
- not be found on the stairs—Parker will not forget it, he will think it
- odd. If the money is missed, Parker is sure to remember having seen her
- come down those stairs. She has just time to rush down to the study
- door—with her hand on the handle to show that she has just come out,
- when Parker appears in the doorway. She says the first thing that comes
- into her head, a repetition of Roger Ackroyd’s orders earlier in the
- evening, and then goes upstairs to her own room.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, but later,” persisted the inspector, “she must have realized the
- vital importance of speaking the truth? Why, the whole case hinges on
- it!”</p>
-
- <p>“Afterwards,” said Poirot dryly, “it was a little difficult for
- Mademoiselle Flora. She is told simply that the police are here and
- that there has been a robbery. Naturally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">231</span> she jumps to the conclusion
- that the theft of the money has been discovered. Her one idea is to
- stick to her story. When she learns that her uncle is dead she is
- panic-stricken. Young women do not faint nowadays, monsieur, without
- considerable provocation. <i lang="fr">Eh bien!</i> there it is. She is bound to
- stick to her story, or else confess everything. And a young and pretty
- girl does not like to admit that she is a thief—especially before those
- whose esteem she is anxious to retain.”</p>
-
- <p>Raglan brought his fist down with a thump on the table.</p>
-
- <p>“I’ll not believe it,” he said. “It’s—it’s not credible. And you—you’ve
- known this all along?”</p>
-
- <p>“The possibility has been in my mind from the first,” admitted Poirot.
- “I was always convinced that Mademoiselle Flora was hiding something
- from us. To satisfy myself, I made the little experiment I told you of.
- Dr. Sheppard accompanied me.”</p>
-
- <p>“A test for Parker, you said it was,” I remarked bitterly.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Mon ami</i>,” said Poirot apologetically, “as I told you at the
- time, one must say something.”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector rose.</p>
-
- <p>“There’s only one thing for it,” he declared. “We must tackle the young
- lady right away. You’ll come up to Fernly with me, M. Poirot?”</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly. Dr. Sheppard will drive us up in his car.”</p>
-
- <p>I acquiesced willingly.</p>
-
- <p>On inquiry for Miss Ackroyd, we were shown into the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">232</span> billiard room.
- Flora and Major Hector Blunt were sitting on the long window seat.</p>
-
- <p>“Good-morning, Miss Ackroyd,” said the inspector. “Can we have a word
- or two alone with you?”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt got up at once and moved to the door.</p>
-
- <p>“What is it?” asked Flora nervously. “Don’t go, Major Blunt. He can
- stay, can’t he?” she asked, turning to the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“That’s as you like,” said the inspector dryly. “There’s a question
- or two it’s my duty to put to you, miss, but I’d prefer to do so
- privately, and I dare say you’d prefer it also.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora looked keenly at him. I saw her face grow whiter. Then she turned
- and spoke to Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>“I want you to stay—please—yes, I mean it. Whatever the inspector has
- to say to me, I’d rather you heard it.”</p>
-
- <p>Raglan shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, if you will have it so, that’s all there is to it. Now, Miss
- Ackroyd, M. Poirot here has made a certain suggestion to me. He
- suggests that you weren’t in the study at all last Friday night, that
- you never saw Mr. Ackroyd to say good-night to him, that instead of
- being in the study you were on the stairs leading down from your
- uncle’s bedroom when you heard Parker coming across the hall.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora’s gaze shifted to Poirot. He nodded back at her.</p>
-
- <p>“Mademoiselle, the other day, when we sat round the table, I implored
- you to be frank with me. What one does not tell to Papa Poirot he finds
- out. It was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">233</span> that, was it not? See, I will make it easy for you. You
- took the money, did you not?”</p>
-
- <p>“The money,” said Blunt sharply.</p>
-
- <p>There was a silence which lasted for at least a minute.</p>
-
- <p>Then Flora drew herself up and spoke.</p>
-
- <p>“M. Poirot is right. I took that money. I stole. I am a thief—yes, a
- common, vulgar little thief. Now you know! I am glad it has come out.
- It’s been a nightmare, these last few days!” She sat down suddenly and
- buried her face in her hands. She spoke huskily through her fingers.
- “You don’t know what my life has been since I came here. Wanting
- things, scheming for them, lying, cheating, running up bills, promising
- to pay—oh! I hate myself when I think of it all! That’s what brought us
- together, Ralph and I. We were both weak! I understood him, and I was
- sorry—because I’m the same underneath. We’re not strong enough to stand
- alone, either of us. We’re weak, miserable, despicable things.”</p>
-
- <p>She looked at Blunt and suddenly stamped her foot.</p>
-
- <p>“Why do you look at me like that—as though you couldn’t believe? I may
- be a thief—but at any rate I’m real now. I’m not lying any more. I’m
- not pretending to be the kind of girl you like, young and innocent and
- simple. I don’t care if you never want to see me again. I hate myself,
- despise myself—but you’ve got to believe one thing, if speaking the
- truth would have made things better for Ralph, I would have spoken out.
- But I’ve seen all along that it wouldn’t be better for Ralph—it makes
- the case against him blacker than ever. I was not doing him any harm by
- sticking to my lie.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">234</span></p>
-
- <p>“Ralph,” said Blunt. “I see—always Ralph.”</p>
-
- <p>“You don’t understand,” said Flora hopelessly. “You never will.”</p>
-
- <p>She turned to the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“I admit everything; I was at my wit’s end for money. I never saw my
- uncle that evening after he left the dinner-table. As to the money, you
- can take what steps you please. Nothing could be worse than it is now!”</p>
-
- <p>Suddenly she broke down again, hid her face in her hands, and rushed
- from the room.</p>
-
- <p>“Well,” said the inspector in a flat tone, “so that’s that.”</p>
-
- <p>He seemed rather at a loss what to do next.</p>
-
- <p>Blunt came forward.</p>
-
- <p>“Inspector Raglan,” he said quietly, “that money was given to me by Mr.
- Ackroyd for a special purpose. Miss Ackroyd never touched it. When she
- says she did, she is lying with the idea of shielding Captain Paton.
- The truth is as I said, and I am prepared to go into the witness box
- and swear to it.”</p>
-
- <p>He made a kind of jerky bow, then turning abruptly, he left the room.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot was after him in a flash. He caught the other up in the hall.</p>
-
- <p>“Monsieur—a moment, I beg of you, if you will be so good.”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, sir?”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt was obviously impatient. He stood frowning down on Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“It is this,” said Poirot rapidly: “I am not deceived by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">235</span> your little
- fantasy. No, indeed. It was truly Miss Flora who took the money. All
- the same it is well imagined what you say—it pleases me. It is very
- good what you have done there. You are a man quick to think and to act.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m not in the least anxious for your opinion, thank you,” said Blunt
- coldly.</p>
-
- <p>He made once more as though to pass on, but Poirot, not at all
- offended, laid a detaining hand on his arm.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! but you are to listen to me. I have more to say. The other day I
- spoke of concealments. Very well, all along have I seen what you are
- concealing. Mademoiselle Flora, you love her with all your heart. From
- the first moment you saw her, is it not so? Oh! let us not mind saying
- these things—why must one in England think it necessary to mention
- love as though it were some disgraceful secret? You love Mademoiselle
- Flora. You seek to conceal that fact from all the world. That is very
- good—that is as it should be. But take the advice of Hercule Poirot—do
- not conceal it from mademoiselle herself.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt had shown several signs of restlessness whilst Poirot was
- speaking, but the closing words seemed to rivet his attention.</p>
-
- <p>“What d’you mean by that?” he said sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“You think that she loves the Capitaine Ralph Paton—but I, Hercule
- Poirot, tell you that that is not so. Mademoiselle Flora accepted
- Captain Paton to please her uncle, and because she saw in the marriage
- a way of escape from her life here which was becoming frankly
- insupportable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">236</span> to her. She liked him, and there was much sympathy
- and understanding between them. But love—no! It is not Captain Paton
- Mademoiselle Flora loves.”</p>
-
- <p>“What the devil do you mean?” asked Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>I saw the dark flush under his tan.</p>
-
- <p>“You have been blind, monsieur. Blind! She is loyal, the little one.
- Ralph Paton is under a cloud, she is bound in honor to stick by him.”</p>
-
- <p>I felt it was time I put in a word to help on the good work.</p>
-
- <p>“My sister told me the other night,” I said encouragingly, “that Flora
- had never cared a penny piece for Ralph Paton, and never would. My
- sister is always right about these things.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt ignored my well-meant efforts. He spoke to Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“D’you really think——” he began, and stopped.</p>
-
- <p>He is one of those inarticulate men who find it hard to put things into
- words.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot knows no such disability.</p>
-
- <p>“If you doubt me, ask her yourself, monsieur. But perhaps you no longer
- care to—the affair of the money——”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt gave a sound like an angry laugh.</p>
-
- <p>“Think I’d hold that against her? Roger was always a queer chap about
- money. She got in a mess and didn’t dare tell him. Poor kid. Poor
- lonely kid.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot looked thoughtfully at the side door.</p>
-
- <p>“Mademoiselle Flora went into the garden, I think,” he murmured.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">237</span></p>
-
- <p>“I’ve been every kind of a fool,” said Blunt abruptly. “Rum
- conversation we’ve been having. Like one of those Danish plays. But
- you’re a sound fellow, M. Poirot. Thank you.”</p>
-
- <p>He took Poirot’s hand and gave it a grip which caused the other to
- wince in anguish. Then he strode to the side door and passed out into
- the garden.</p>
-
- <p>“Not every kind of a fool,” murmured Poirot, tenderly nursing the
- injured member. “Only one kind—the fool in love.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">238</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">MISS RUSSELL</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Inspector Raglan</span> had received a bad jolt. He was not deceived by
- Blunt’s valiant lie any more than we had been. Our way back to the
- village was punctuated by his complaints.</p>
-
- <p>“This alters everything, this does. I don’t know whether you’ve
- realized it, Monsieur Poirot?”</p>
-
- <p>“I think so, yes, I think so,” said Poirot. “You see, me, I have been
- familiar with the idea for some time.”</p>
-
- <p>Inspector Raglan, who had only had the idea presented to him a short
- half-hour ago, looked at Poirot unhappily, and went on with his
- discoveries.</p>
-
- <p>“Those alibis now. Worthless! Absolutely worthless. Got to start
- again. Find out what every one was doing from nine-thirty onwards.
- Nine-thirty—that’s the time we’ve got to hang on to. You were quite
- right about the man Kent—we don’t release <em>him</em> yet awhile. Let
- me see now—nine-forty-five at the Dog and Whistle. He might have got
- there in a quarter of an hour if he ran. It’s just possible that it was
- <em>his</em> voice Mr. Raymond heard talking to Mr. Ackroyd—asking for
- money which Mr. Ackroyd refused. But one thing’s clear—it wasn’t he who
- sent the telephone message. The station is half a mile in the other
- direction—over a mile and a half from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">239</span> the Dog and Whistle, and he was
- at the Dog and Whistle until about ten minutes past ten. Dang that
- telephone call! We always come up against it.”</p>
-
- <p>“We do indeed,” agreed Poirot. “It is curious.”</p>
-
- <p>“It’s just possible that if Captain Paton climbed into his uncle’s room
- and found him there murdered, <em>he</em> may have sent it. Got the wind
- up, thought he’d be accused, and cleared out. That’s possible, isn’t
- it?”</p>
-
- <p>“Why should he have telephoned?”</p>
-
- <p>“May have had doubts if the old man was really dead. Thought he’d
- get the doctor up there as soon as possible, but didn’t want to give
- himself away. Yes, I say now, how’s that for a theory? Something in
- that, I should say.”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector swelled his chest out importantly. He was so plainly
- delighted with himself that any words of ours would have been quite
- superfluous.</p>
-
- <p>We arrived back at my house at this minute, and I hurried in to my
- surgery patients, who had all been waiting a considerable time, leaving
- Poirot to walk to the police station with the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>Having dismissed the last patient, I strolled into the little room at
- the back of the house which I call my workshop—I am rather proud of the
- home-made wireless set I turned out. Caroline hates my workroom. I keep
- my tools there, and Annie is not allowed to wreak havoc with a dustpan
- and brush. I was just adjusting the interior of an alarm clock which
- had been denounced as wholly unreliable by the household, when the door
- opened and Caroline put her head in.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">240</span></p>
-
- <p>“Oh! there you are, James,” she said, with deep disapproval. “M. Poirot
- wants to see you.”</p>
-
- <p>“Well,” I said, rather irritably, for her sudden entrance had startled
- me and I had let go of a piece of delicate mechanism, “if he wants to
- see me, he can come in here.”</p>
-
- <p>“In here?” said Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“That’s what I said—in here.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline gave a sniff of disapproval and retired. She returned in a
- moment or two, ushering in Poirot, and then retired again, shutting the
- door with a bang.</p>
-
- <p>“Aha! my friend,” said Poirot, coming forward and rubbing his hands.
- “You have not got rid of me so easily, you see!”</p>
-
- <p>“Finished with the inspector?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“For the moment, yes. And you, you have seen all the patients?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot sat down and looked at me, tilting his egg-shaped head on one
- side, with the air of one who savors a very delicious joke.</p>
-
- <p>“You are in error,” he said at last. “You have still one patient to
- see.”</p>
-
- <p>“Not you?” I exclaimed in surprise.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah, not me, <i lang="fr">bien entendu</i>. Me, I have the health magnificent.
- No, to tell you the truth, it is a little <i lang="fr">complot</i> of mine. There
- is some one I wish to see, you understand—and at the same time it is
- not necessary that the whole village should intrigue itself about the
- matter—which is what would happen if the lady were seen to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">241</span> come to my
- house—for it is a lady. But to you she has already come as a patient
- before.”</p>
-
- <p>“Miss Russell!” I exclaimed.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Précisément.</i> I wish much to speak with her, so I send her the
- little note and make the appointment in your surgery. You are not
- annoyed with me?”</p>
-
- <p>“On the contrary,” I said. “That is, presuming I am allowed to be
- present at the interview?”</p>
-
- <p>“But naturally! In your own surgery!”</p>
-
- <p>“You know,” I said, throwing down the pincers I was holding, “it’s
- extraordinarily intriguing, the whole thing. Every new development that
- arises is like the shake you give to a kaleidoscope—the thing changes
- entirely in aspect. Now, why are you so anxious to see Miss Russell?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot raised his eyebrows.</p>
-
- <p>“Surely it is obvious?” he murmured.</p>
-
- <p>“There you go again,” I grumbled. “According to you everything is
- obvious. But you leave me walking about in a fog.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot shook his head genially at me.</p>
-
- <p>“You mock yourself at me. Take the matter of Mademoiselle Flora. The
- inspector was surprised—but you—you were not.”</p>
-
- <p>“I never dreamed of her being the thief,” I expostulated.</p>
-
- <p>“That—perhaps no. But I was watching your face and you were not—like
- Inspector Raglan—startled and incredulous.”</p>
-
- <p>I thought for a minute or two.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">242</span></p>
-
- <p>“Perhaps you are right,” I said at last. “All along I’ve felt that
- Flora was keeping back something—so the truth, when it came, was
- subconsciously expected. It upset Inspector Raglan very much indeed,
- poor man.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! <i lang="fr">pour ça, oui</i>! The poor man must rearrange all his ideas.
- I profited by his state of mental chaos to induce him to grant me a
- little favor.”</p>
-
- <p>“What was that?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot took a sheet of notepaper from his pocket. Some words were
- written on it, and he read them aloud.</p>
-
- <p>“The police have, for some days, been seeking for Captain Ralph Paton,
- the nephew of Mr. Ackroyd of Fernly Park, whose death occurred under
- such tragic circumstances last Friday. Captain Paton has been found at
- Liverpool, where he was on the point of embarking for America.”</p>
-
- <p>He folded up the piece of paper again.</p>
-
- <p>“That, my friend, will be in the newspapers to-morrow morning.”</p>
-
- <p>I stared at him, dumbfounded.</p>
-
- <p>“But—but it isn’t true! He’s not at Liverpool!”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot beamed on me.</p>
-
- <p>“You have the intelligence so quick! No, he has not been found at
- Liverpool. Inspector Raglan was very loath to let me send this
- paragraph to the press, especially as I could not take him into my
- confidence. But I assured him most solemnly that very interesting
- results would follow its appearance in print, so he gave in, after
- stipulating that he was, on no account, to bear the responsibility.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">243</span></p>
-
- <p>I stared at Poirot. He smiled back at me.</p>
-
- <p>“It beats me,” I said at last, “what you expect to get out of that.”</p>
-
- <p>“You should employ your little gray cells,” said Poirot gravely.</p>
-
- <p>He rose and came across to the bench.</p>
-
- <p>“It is that you have really the love of the machinery,” he said, after
- inspecting the débris of my labors.</p>
-
- <p>Every man has his hobby. I immediately drew Poirot’s attention to my
- home-made wireless. Finding him sympathetic, I showed him one or two
- little inventions of my own—trifling things, but useful in the house.</p>
-
- <p>“Decidedly,” said Poirot, “you should be an inventor by trade, not a
- doctor. But I hear the bell—that is your patient. Let us go into the
- surgery.”</p>
-
- <p>Once before I had been struck by the remnants of beauty in the
- housekeeper’s face. This morning I was struck anew. Very simply dressed
- in black, tall, upright and independent as ever, with her big dark eyes
- and an unwonted flush of color in her usually pale cheeks, I realized
- that as a girl she must have been startlingly handsome.</p>
-
- <p>“Good-morning, mademoiselle,” said Poirot. “Will you be seated? Dr.
- Sheppard is so kind as to permit me the use of his surgery for a little
- conversation I am anxious to have with you.”</p>
-
- <p>Miss Russell sat down with her usual composure. If she felt any inward
- agitation, it did not display itself in any outward manifestation.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">244</span></p>
-
- <p>“It seems a queer way of doing things, if you’ll allow me to say so,”
- she remarked.</p>
-
- <p>“Miss Russell—I have news to give you.”</p>
-
- <p>“Indeed!”</p>
-
- <p>“Charles Kent has been arrested at Liverpool.”</p>
-
- <p>Not a muscle of her face moved. She merely opened her eyes a trifle
- wider, and asked, with a tinge of defiance:</p>
-
- <p>“Well, what of it?”</p>
-
- <p>But at that moment it came to me—the resemblance that had haunted me
- all along, something familiar in the defiance of Charles Kent’s manner.
- The two voices, one rough and coarse, the other painfully ladylike—were
- strangely the same in timbre. It was of Miss Russell that I had been
- reminded that night outside the gates of Fernly Park.</p>
-
- <p>I looked at Poirot, full of my discovery, and he gave me an
- imperceptible nod.</p>
-
- <p>In answer to Miss Russell’s question, he threw out his hands in a
- thoroughly French gesture.</p>
-
- <p>“I thought you might be interested, that is all,” he said mildly.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, I’m not particularly,” said Miss Russell. “Who is this Charles
- Kent anyway?”</p>
-
- <p>“He is a man, mademoiselle, who was at Fernly on the night of the
- murder.”</p>
-
- <p>“Really?”</p>
-
- <p>“Fortunately for him, he has an alibi. At a quarter to ten he was at a
- public-house a mile from here.”</p>
-
- <p>“Lucky for him,” commented Miss Russell.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">245</span></p>
-
- <p>“But we still do not know what he was doing at Fernly—who it was he
- went to meet, for instance.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m afraid I can’t help you at all,” said the housekeeper politely.
- “Nothing came to <em>my</em> ears. If that is all——”</p>
-
- <p>She made a tentative movement as though to rise. Poirot stopped her.</p>
-
- <p>“It is not quite all,” he said smoothly. “This morning fresh
- developments have arisen. It seems now that Mr. Ackroyd was murdered,
- not at a quarter to ten, but <em>before</em>. Between ten minutes to
- nine, when Dr. Sheppard left, and a quarter to ten.”</p>
-
- <p>I saw the color drain from the housekeeper’s face, leaving it dead
- white. She leaned forward, her figure swaying.</p>
-
- <p>“But Miss Ackroyd said—Miss Ackroyd said——”</p>
-
- <p>“Miss Ackroyd has admitted that she was lying. She was never in the
- study at all that evening.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then——?”</p>
-
- <p>“Then it would seem that in this Charles Kent we have the man we are
- looking for. He came to Fernly, can give no account of what he was
- doing there——”</p>
-
- <p>“I can tell you what he was doing there. He never touched a hair of old
- Ackroyd’s head—he never went near the study. He didn’t do it, I tell
- you.”</p>
-
- <p>She was leaning forward. That iron self-control was broken through at
- last. Terror and desperation were in her face.</p>
-
- <p>“M. Poirot! M. Poirot! Oh, do believe me.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">246</span></p>
-
- <p>Poirot got up and came to her. He patted her reassuringly on the
- shoulder.</p>
-
- <p>“But yes—but yes, I will believe. I had to make you speak, you know.”</p>
-
- <p>For an instant suspicion flared up in her.</p>
-
- <p>“Is what you said true?”</p>
-
- <p>“That Charles Kent is suspected of the crime? Yes, that is true. You
- alone can save him, by telling the reason for his being at Fernly.”</p>
-
- <p>“He came to see me.” She spoke in a low, hurried voice. “I went out to
- meet him——”</p>
-
- <p>“In the summer-house, yes, I know.”</p>
-
- <p>“How do you know?”</p>
-
- <p>“Mademoiselle, it is the business of Hercule Poirot to know things. I
- know that you went out earlier in the evening, that you left a message
- in the summer-house to say what time you would be there.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, I did. I had heard from him—saying he was coming. I dared not
- let him come to the house. I wrote to the address he gave me and said
- I would meet him in the summer-house, and described it to him so that
- he would be able to find it. Then I was afraid he might not wait there
- patiently, and I ran out and left a piece of paper to say I would be
- there about ten minutes past nine. I didn’t want the servants to see
- me, so I slipped out through the drawing-room window. As I came back, I
- met Dr. Sheppard, and I fancied that he would think it queer. I was out
- of breath, for I had been running. I had no idea that he was expected
- to dinner that night.”</p>
-
- <p>She paused.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">247</span></p>
-
- <p>“Go on,” said Poirot. “You went out to meet him at ten minutes past
- nine. What did you say to each other?”</p>
-
- <p>“It’s difficult. You see——”</p>
-
- <p>“Mademoiselle,” said Poirot, interrupting her, “in this matter I must
- have the whole truth. What you tell us need never go beyond these four
- walls. Dr. Sheppard will be discreet, and so shall I. See, I will help
- you. This Charles Kent, he is your son, is he not?”</p>
-
- <p>She nodded. The color had flamed into her cheeks.</p>
-
- <p>“No one has ever known. It was long ago—long ago—down in Kent. I was
- not married....”</p>
-
- <p>“So you took the name of the county as a surname for him. I understand.”</p>
-
- <p>“I got work. I managed to pay for his board and lodging. I never told
- him that I was his mother. But he turned out badly, he drank, then took
- to drugs. I managed to pay his passage out to Canada. I didn’t hear of
- him for a year or two. Then, somehow or other, he found out that I was
- his mother. He wrote asking me for money. Finally, I heard from him
- back in this country again. He was coming to see me at Fernly, he said.
- I dared not let him come to the house. I have always been considered
- so—so very respectable. If any one got an inkling—it would have been
- all up with my post as housekeeper. So I wrote to him in the way I have
- just told you.”</p>
-
- <p>“And in the morning you came to see Dr. Sheppard?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. I wondered if something could be done. He was not a bad
- boy—before he took to drugs.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">248</span></p>
-
- <p>“I see,” said Poirot. “Now let us go on with the story. He came that
- night to the summer-house?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, he was waiting for me when I got there. He was very rough and
- abusive. I had brought with me all the money I had, and I gave it to
- him. We talked a little, and then he went away.”</p>
-
- <p>“What time was that?”</p>
-
- <p>“It must have been between twenty and twenty-five minutes past nine. It
- was not yet half-past when I got back to the house.”</p>
-
- <p>“Which way did he go?”</p>
-
- <p>“Straight out the same way he came, by the path that joined the drive
- just inside the lodge gates.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“And you, what did you do?”</p>
-
- <p>“I went back to the house. Major Blunt was walking up and down the
- terrace smoking, so I made a detour to get round to the side door. It
- was then just on half-past nine, as I tell you.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded again. He made a note or two in a microscopic pocket-book.</p>
-
- <p>“I think that is all,” he said thoughtfully.</p>
-
- <p>“Ought I——” she hesitated. “Ought I to tell all this to Inspector
- Raglan?”</p>
-
- <p>“It may come to that. But let us not be in a hurry. Let us proceed
- slowly, with due order and method. Charles Kent is not yet formally
- charged with murder. Circumstances may arise which will render your
- story unnecessary.”</p>
-
- <p>Miss Russell rose.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">249</span></p>
-
- <p>“Thank you very much, M. Poirot,” she said. “You have been very
- kind—very kind indeed. You—you do believe me, don’t you? That Charles
- had nothing to do with this wicked murder!”</p>
-
- <p>“There seems no doubt that the man who was talking to Mr. Ackroyd in
- the library at nine-thirty could not possibly have been your son. Be of
- good courage, mademoiselle. All will yet be well.”</p>
-
- <p>Miss Russell departed. Poirot and I were left together.</p>
-
- <p>“So that’s that,” I said. “Every time we come back to Ralph Paton. How
- did you manage to spot Miss Russell as the person Charles Kent came to
- meet? Did you notice the resemblance?”</p>
-
- <p>“I had connected her with the unknown man long before we actually
- came face to face with him. As soon as we found that quill. The quill
- suggested dope, and I remembered your account of Miss Russell’s visit
- to you. Then I found the article on cocaine in that morning’s paper. It
- all seemed very clear. She had heard from some one that morning—some
- one addicted to drugs, she read the article in the paper, and she came
- to you to ask a few tentative questions. She mentioned cocaine, since
- the article in question was on cocaine. Then, when you seemed too
- interested, she switched hurriedly to the subject of detective stories
- and untraceable poisons. I suspected a son or a brother, or some other
- undesirable male relation. Ah! but I must go. It is the time of the
- lunch.”</p>
-
- <p>“Stay and lunch with us,” I suggested.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">250</span></p>
-
- <p>Poirot shook his head. A faint twinkle came into his eye.</p>
-
- <p>“Not again to-day. I should not like to force Mademoiselle Caroline to
- adopt a vegetarian diet two days in succession.”</p>
-
- <p>It occurred to me that there was not much which escaped Hercule Poirot.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">251</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">THE PARAGRAPH IN THE PAPER</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Caroline</span>, of course, had not failed to see Miss Russell come
- to the surgery door. I had anticipated this, and had ready an
- elaborate account of the lady’s bad knee. But Caroline was not in a
- cross-questioning mood. Her point of view was that she knew what Miss
- Russell had really come for and that <em>I</em> didn’t.</p>
-
- <p>“Pumping you, James,” said Caroline. “Pumping you in the most shameless
- manner, I’ve not a doubt. It’s no good interrupting. I dare say you
- hadn’t the least idea she was doing it even. Men <em>are</em> so simple.
- She knows that you are in M. Poirot’s confidence, and she wants to find
- out things. Do you know what I think, James?”</p>
-
- <p>“I couldn’t begin to imagine. You think so many extraordinary things.”</p>
-
- <p>“It’s no good being sarcastic. I think Miss Russell knows more about
- Mr. Ackroyd’s death than she is prepared to admit.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline leaned back triumphantly in her chair.</p>
-
- <p>“Do you really think so?” I said absently.</p>
-
- <p>“You are very dull to-day, James. No animation about you. It’s that
- liver of yours.”</p>
-
- <p>Our conversation then dealt with purely personal matters.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">252</span></p>
-
- <p>The paragraph inspired by Poirot duly appeared in our daily paper the
- next morning. I was in the dark as to its purpose, but its effect on
- Caroline was immense.</p>
-
- <p>She began by stating, most untruly, that she had said as much all
- along. I raised my eyebrows, but did not argue. Caroline, however, must
- have felt a prick of conscience, for she went on:—</p>
-
- <p>“I mayn’t have actually mentioned Liverpool, but I knew he’d try to get
- away to America. That’s what Crippen did.”</p>
-
- <p>“Without much success,” I reminded her.</p>
-
- <p>“Poor boy, and so they’ve caught him. I consider, James, that it’s your
- duty to see that he isn’t hung.”</p>
-
- <p>“What do you expect me to do?”</p>
-
- <p>“Why, you’re a medical man, aren’t you? You’ve known him from a boy
- upwards. Not mentally responsible. That’s the line to take, clearly. I
- read only the other day that they’re very happy in Broadmoor—it’s quite
- like a high-class club.”</p>
-
- <p>But Caroline’s words had reminded me of something.</p>
-
- <p>“I never knew that Poirot had an imbecile nephew?” I said curiously.</p>
-
- <p>“Didn’t you? Oh, he told me all about it. Poor lad. It’s a great grief
- to all the family. They’ve kept him at home so far, but it’s getting
- to such a pitch that they’re afraid he’ll have to go into some kind of
- institution.”</p>
-
- <p>“I suppose you know pretty well everything there is to know about
- Poirot’s family by this time,” I said, exasperated.</p>
-
- <p>“Pretty well,” said Caroline complacently. “It’s a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">253</span> great relief to
- people to be able to tell all their troubles to some one.”</p>
-
- <p>“It might be,” I said, “if they were ever allowed to do so
- spontaneously. Whether they enjoy having confidences screwed out of
- them by force is another matter.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline merely looked at me with the air of a Christian martyr
- enjoying martyrdom.</p>
-
- <p>“You are so self-contained, James,” she said. “You hate speaking out,
- or parting with any information yourself, and you think everybody else
- must be just like you. I should hope that I never screw confidences out
- of anybody. For instance, if M. Poirot comes in this afternoon, as he
- said he might do, I shall not dream of asking him who it was arrived at
- his house early this morning.”</p>
-
- <p>“Early this morning?” I queried.</p>
-
- <p>“Very early,” said Caroline. “Before the milk came. I just happened
- to be looking out of the window—the blind was flapping. It was a man.
- He came in a closed car, and he was all muffled up. I couldn’t get a
- glimpse of his face. But I will tell you <em>my</em> idea, and you’ll see
- that I’m right.”</p>
-
- <p>“What’s your idea?”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline dropped her voice mysteriously.</p>
-
- <p>“A Home Office expert,” she breathed.</p>
-
- <p>“A Home Office expert,” I said, amazed. “My dear Caroline!”</p>
-
- <p>“Mark my words, James, you’ll see that I’m right. That Russell woman
- was here that morning after your poisons. Roger Ackroyd might easily
- have been poisoned in his food that night.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">254</span></p>
-
- <p>I laughed out loud.</p>
-
- <p>“Nonsense,” I cried. “He was stabbed in the neck. You know that as well
- as I do.”</p>
-
- <p>“After death, James,” said Caroline; “to make a false clew.”</p>
-
- <p>“My good woman,” I said, “I examined the body, and I know what I’m
- talking about. That wound wasn’t inflicted after death—it was the cause
- of death, and you need make no mistake about it.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline merely continued to look omniscient, which so annoyed me that
- I went on:—</p>
-
- <p>“Perhaps you will tell me, Caroline, if I have a medical degree or if I
- have not?”</p>
-
- <p>“You have the medical degree, I dare say, James—at least, I mean I know
- you have. But you’ve no imagination whatever.”</p>
-
- <p>“Having endowed you with a treble portion, there was none left over for
- me,” I said dryly.</p>
-
- <p>I was amused to notice Caroline’s maneuvers that afternoon when Poirot
- duly arrived. My sister, without asking a direct question, skirted the
- subject of the mysterious guest in every way imaginable. By the twinkle
- in Poirot’s eyes, I saw that he realized her object. He remained
- blandly impervious, and blocked her bowling so successfully that she
- herself was at a loss how to proceed.</p>
-
- <p>Having, I suspect, quietly enjoyed the little game, he rose to his feet
- and suggested a walk.</p>
-
- <p>“It is that I need to reduce the figure a little,” he explained.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">255</span> “You
- will come with me, doctor? And perhaps later Miss Caroline will give us
- some tea.”</p>
-
- <p>“Delighted,” said Caroline. “Won’t your—er—guest come in also?”</p>
-
- <p>“You are too kind,” said Poirot. “But no, my friend reposes himself.
- Soon you must make his acquaintance.”</p>
-
- <p>“Quite an old friend of yours, so somebody told me,” said Caroline,
- making one last valiant effort.</p>
-
- <p>“Did they?” murmured Poirot. “Well, we must start.”</p>
-
- <p>Our tramp took us in the direction of Fernly. I had guessed beforehand
- that it might do so. I was beginning to understand Poirot’s methods.
- Every little irrelevancy had a bearing upon the whole.</p>
-
- <p>“I have a commission for you, my friend,” he said at last. “To-night,
- at my house, I desire to have a little conference. You will attend,
- will you not?”</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“Good. I need also all those in the house—that is to say: Mrs. Ackroyd,
- Mademoiselle Flora, Major Blunt, M. Raymond. I want you to be my
- ambassador. This little reunion is fixed for nine o’clock. You will ask
- them—yes?”</p>
-
- <p>“With pleasure; but why not ask them yourself?”</p>
-
- <p>“Because they will then put the questions: Why? What for? They will
- demand what my idea is. And, as you know, my friend, I much dislike to
- have to explain my little ideas until the time comes.”</p>
-
- <p>I smiled a little.</p>
-
- <p>“My friend Hastings, he of whom I told you, used to say of me that I
- was the human oyster. But he was unjust.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">256</span> Of facts, I keep nothing to
- myself. But to every one his own interpretation of them.”</p>
-
- <p>“When do you want me to do this?”</p>
-
- <p>“Now, if you will. We are close to the house.”</p>
-
- <p>“Aren’t you coming in?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, me, I will promenade myself in the grounds. I will rejoin you by
- the lodge gates in a quarter of an hour’s time.”</p>
-
- <p>I nodded, and set off on my task. The only member of the family at home
- proved to be Mrs. Ackroyd, who was sipping an early cup of tea. She
- received me very graciously.</p>
-
- <p>“So grateful to you, doctor,” she murmured, “for clearing up that
- little matter with M. Poirot. But life is one trouble after another.
- You have heard about Flora, of course?”</p>
-
- <p>“What exactly?” I asked cautiously.</p>
-
- <p>“This new engagement. Flora and Hector Blunt. Of course not such a good
- match as Ralph would have been. But after all, happiness comes first.
- What dear Flora needs is an older man—some one steady and reliable, and
- then Hector is really a very distinguished man in his way. You saw the
- news of Ralph’s arrest in the paper this morning?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said, “I did.”</p>
-
- <p>“Horrible.” Mrs. Ackroyd closed her eyes and shuddered. “Geoffrey
- Raymond was in a terrible way. Rang up Liverpool. But they wouldn’t
- tell him anything at the police station there. In fact, they said
- they hadn’t arrested Ralph at all. Mr. Raymond insists that it’s all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">257</span>
- a mistake—a—what do they call it?—<em>canard</em> of the newspaper’s.
- I’ve forbidden it to be mentioned before the servants. Such a terrible
- disgrace. Fancy if Flora had actually been married to him.”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd shut her eyes in anguish. I began to wonder how soon I
- should be able to deliver Poirot’s invitation.</p>
-
- <p>Before I had time to speak, Mrs. Ackroyd was off again.</p>
-
- <p>“You were here yesterday, weren’t you, with that dreadful Inspector
- Raglan? Brute of a man—he terrified Flora into saying she took that
- money from poor Roger’s room. And the matter was so simple, really. The
- dear child wanted to borrow a few pounds, didn’t like to disturb her
- uncle since he’d given strict orders against it, but knowing where he
- kept his notes she went there and took what she needed.”</p>
-
- <p>“Is that Flora’s account of the matter?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“My dear doctor, you know what girls are nowadays. So easily acted on
- by suggestion. You, of course, know all about hypnosis and that sort of
- thing. The inspector shouts at her, says the word ‘steal’ over and over
- again, until the poor child gets an inhibition—or is it a complex?—I
- always mix up those two words—and actually thinks herself that she has
- stolen the money. I saw at once how it was. But I can’t be too thankful
- for the whole misunderstanding in one way—it seems to have brought
- those two together—Hector and Flora, I mean. And I assure you that I
- have been very much worried about Flora in the past: why, at one time
- I actually<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">258</span> thought there was going to be some kind of understanding
- between her and young Raymond. Just think of it!” Mrs. Ackroyd’s voice
- rose in shrill horror. “A private secretary—with practically no means
- of his own.”</p>
-
- <p>“It would have been a severe blow to you,” I said. “Now, Mrs. Ackroyd,
- I’ve got a message for you from M. Hercule Poirot.”</p>
-
- <p>“For me?”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd looked quite alarmed.</p>
-
- <p>I hastened to reassure her, and I explained what Poirot wanted.</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly,” said Mrs. Ackroyd rather doubtfully, “I suppose we must
- come if M. Poirot says so. But what is it all about? I like to know
- beforehand.”</p>
-
- <p>I assured the lady truthfully that I myself did not know any more than
- she did.</p>
-
- <p>“Very well,” said Mrs. Ackroyd at last, rather grudgingly, “I will tell
- the others, and we will be there at nine o’clock.”</p>
-
- <p>Thereupon I took my leave, and joined Poirot at the agreed
- meeting-place.</p>
-
- <p>“I’ve been longer than a quarter of an hour, I’m afraid,” I remarked.
- “But once that good lady starts talking it’s a matter of the utmost
- difficulty to get a word in edgeways.”</p>
-
- <p>“It is of no matter,” said Poirot. “Me, I have been well amused. This
- park is magnificent.”</p>
-
- <p>We set off homewards. When we arrived, to our great surprise Caroline,
- who had evidently been watching for us, herself opened the door.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">259</span></p>
-
- <p>She put her fingers to her lips. Her face was full of importance and
- excitement.</p>
-
- <p>“Ursula Bourne,” she said, “the parlormaid from Fernly. She’s here!
- I’ve put her in the dining-room. She’s in a terrible way, poor thing.
- Says she must see M. Poirot at once. I’ve done all I could. Taken her a
- cup of hot tea. It really goes to one’s heart to see any one in such a
- state.”</p>
-
- <p>“In the dining-room?” asked Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“This way,” I said, and flung open the door.</p>
-
- <p>Ursula Bourne was sitting by the table. Her arms were spread out in
- front of her, and she had evidently just lifted her head from where it
- had been buried. Her eyes were red with weeping.</p>
-
- <p>“Ursula Bourne,” I murmured.</p>
-
- <p>But Poirot went past me with outstretched hands.</p>
-
- <p>“No,” he said, “that is not quite right, I think. It is not Ursula
- Bourne, is it, my child—but Ursula Paton? Mrs. Ralph Paton.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">260</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">URSULA’S STORY</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">For</span> a moment or two the girl looked mutely at Poirot. Then, her reserve
- breaking down completely, she nodded her head once, and burst into an
- outburst of sobs.</p>
-
- <p>Caroline pushed past me, and putting her arm round the girl, patted her
- on the shoulder.</p>
-
- <p>“There, there, my dear,” she said soothingly, “it will be all right.
- You’ll see—everything will be all right.”</p>
-
- <p>Buried under curiosity and scandal-mongering there is a lot of kindness
- in Caroline. For the moment, even the interest of Poirot’s revelation
- was lost in the sight of the girl’s distress.</p>
-
- <p>Presently Ursula sat up and wiped her eyes.</p>
-
- <p>“This is very weak and silly of me,” she said.</p>
-
- <p>“No, no, my child,” said Poirot kindly. “We can all realize the strain
- of this last week.”</p>
-
- <p>“It must have been a terrible ordeal,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“And then to find that you knew,” continued Ursula. “How did you know?
- Was it Ralph who told you?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“You know what brought me to you to-night,” went on the girl.
- “<em>This</em>——”</p>
-
- <p>She held out a crumpled piece of newspaper, and I recognized the
- paragraph that Poirot had had inserted.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">261</span></p>
-
- <p>“It says that Ralph has been arrested. So everything is useless. I need
- not pretend any longer.”</p>
-
- <p>“Newspaper paragraphs are not always true, mademoiselle,” murmured
- Poirot, having the grace to look ashamed of himself. “All the same, I
- think you will do well to make a clean breast of things. The truth is
- what we need now.”</p>
-
- <p>The girl hesitated, looking at him doubtfully.</p>
-
- <p>“You do not trust me,” said Poirot gently. “Yet all the same you came
- here to find me, did you not? Why was that?”</p>
-
- <p>“Because I don’t believe that Ralph did it,” said the girl in a very
- low voice. “And I think that you are clever, and will find out the
- truth. And also——”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes?”</p>
-
- <p>“I think you are kind.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded his head several times.</p>
-
- <p>“It is very good that—yes, it is very good. Listen, I do in verity
- believe that this husband of yours is innocent—but the affair marches
- badly. If I am to save him, I must know all there is to know—even if it
- should seem to make the case against him blacker than before.”</p>
-
- <p>“How well you understand,” said Ursula.</p>
-
- <p>“So you will tell me the whole story, will you not? From the beginning.”</p>
-
- <p>“You’re not going to send <em>me</em> away, I hope,” said Caroline,
- settling herself comfortably in an arm-chair. “What I want to know,”
- she continued, “is why this child was masquerading as a parlormaid?”</p>
-
- <p>“Masquerading?” I queried.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">262</span></p>
-
- <p>“That’s what I said. Why did you do it, child? For a wager?”</p>
-
- <p>“For a living,” said Ursula dryly.</p>
-
- <p>And encouraged, she began the story which I reproduce here in my own
- words.</p>
-
- <p>Ursula Bourne, it seemed, was one of a family of seven—impoverished
- Irish gentlefolk. On the death of her father, most of the girls were
- cast out into the world to earn their own living. Ursula’s eldest
- sister was married to Captain Folliott. It was she whom I had seen
- that Sunday, and the cause of her embarrassment was clear enough now.
- Determined to earn her living and not attracted to the idea of being a
- nursery governess—the one profession open to an untrained girl, Ursula
- preferred the job of parlormaid. She scorned to label herself a “lady
- parlormaid.” She would be the real thing, her reference being supplied
- by her sister. At Fernly, despite an aloofness which, as has been seen,
- caused some comment, she was a success at her job—quick, competent, and
- thorough.</p>
-
- <p>“I enjoyed the work,” she explained. “And I had plenty of time to
- myself.”</p>
-
- <p>And then came her meeting with Ralph Paton, and the love affair which
- culminated in a secret marriage. Ralph had persuaded her into that,
- somewhat against her will. He had declared that his stepfather would
- not hear of his marrying a penniless girl. Better to be married
- secretly, and break the news to him at some later and more favorable
- minute.</p>
-
- <p>And so the deed was done, and Ursula Bourne became<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">263</span> Ursula Paton.
- Ralph had declared that he meant to pay off his debts, find a job, and
- then, when he was in a position to support her, and independent of his
- adopted father, they would break the news to him.</p>
-
- <p>But to people like Ralph Paton, turning over a new leaf is easier in
- theory than in practice. He hoped that his stepfather, whilst still
- in ignorance of the marriage, might be persuaded to pay his debts and
- put him on his feet again. But the revelation of the amount of Ralph’s
- liabilities merely enraged Roger Ackroyd, and he refused to do anything
- at all. Some months passed, and then Ralph was bidden once more to
- Fernly. Roger Ackroyd did not beat about the bush. It was the desire of
- his heart that Ralph should marry Flora, and he put the matter plainly
- before the young man.</p>
-
- <p>And here it was that the innate weakness of Ralph Paton showed itself.
- As always, he grasped at the easy, the immediate solution. As far
- as I could make out, neither Flora nor Ralph made any pretence of
- love. It was, on both sides, a business arrangement. Roger Ackroyd
- dictated his wishes—they agreed to them. Flora accepted a chance of
- liberty, money, and an enlarged horizon, Ralph, of course, was playing
- a different game. But he was in a very awkward hole financially. He
- seized at the chance. His debts would be paid. He could start again
- with a clean sheet. His was not a nature to envisage the future, but
- I gather that he saw vaguely the engagement with Flora being broken
- off after a decent interval had elapsed. Both Flora and he stipulated
- that it should be kept a secret for the present. He was anxious to
- conceal it from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">264</span> Ursula. He felt instinctively that her nature, strong
- and resolute, with an inherent distaste for duplicity, was not one to
- welcome such a course.</p>
-
- <p>Then came the crucial moment when Roger Ackroyd, always high-handed,
- decided to announce the engagement. He said no word of his intention
- to Ralph—only to Flora, and Flora, apathetic, raised no objection. On
- Ursula, the news fell like a bombshell. Summoned by her, Ralph came
- hurriedly down from town. They met in the wood, where part of their
- conversation was overheard by my sister. Ralph implored her to keep
- silent for a little while longer, Ursula was equally determined to have
- done with concealments. She would tell Mr. Ackroyd the truth without
- any further delay. Husband and wife parted acrimoniously.</p>
-
- <p>Ursula, steadfast in her purpose, sought an interview with Roger
- Ackroyd that very afternoon, and revealed the truth to him. Their
- interview was a stormy one—it might have been even more stormy had not
- Roger Ackroyd been already obsessed with his own troubles. It was bad
- enough, however. Ackroyd was not the kind of man to forgive the deceit
- that had been practiced upon him. His rancor was mainly directed to
- Ralph, but Ursula came in for her share, since he regarded her as a
- girl who had deliberately tried to “entrap” the adopted son of a very
- wealthy man. Unforgivable things were said on both sides.</p>
-
- <p>That same evening Ursula met Ralph by appointment in the small
- summer-house, stealing out from the house by the side door in order to
- do so. Their interview was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">265</span> made up of reproaches on both sides. Ralph
- charged Ursula with having irretrievably ruined his prospects by her
- ill-timed revelation. Ursula reproached Ralph with his duplicity.</p>
-
- <p>They parted at last. A little over half an hour later came the
- discovery of Roger Ackroyd’s body. Since that night Ursula had neither
- seen nor heard from Ralph.</p>
-
- <p>As the story unfolded itself, I realized more and more what a damning
- series of facts it was. Alive, Ackroyd could hardly have failed to
- alter his will—I knew him well enough to realize that to do so would
- be his first thought. His death came in the nick of time for Ralph and
- Ursula Paton. Small wonder the girl had held her tongue, and played her
- part so consistently.</p>
-
- <p>My meditations were interrupted. It was Poirot’s voice speaking, and I
- knew from the gravity of his tone that he, too, was fully alive to the
- implications of the position.</p>
-
- <p>“Mademoiselle, I must ask you one question, and you must answer it
- truthfully, for on it everything may hang: What time was it when you
- parted from Captain Ralph Paton in the summer-house? Now, take a little
- minute so that your answer may be very exact.”</p>
-
- <p>The girl gave a half laugh, bitter enough in all conscience.</p>
-
- <p>“Do you think I haven’t gone over that again and again in my own mind?
- It was just half-past nine when I went out to meet him. Major Blunt
- was walking up and down the terrace, so I had to go round through the
- bushes to avoid him. It must have been about twenty-seven minutes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">266</span> to
- ten when I reached the summer-house. Ralph was waiting for me. I was
- with him ten minutes—not longer, for it was just a quarter to ten when
- I got back to the house.”</p>
-
- <p>I saw now the insistence of her question the other day. If only Ackroyd
- could have been proved to have been killed before a quarter to ten, and
- not after.</p>
-
- <p>I saw the reflection of that thought in Poirot’s next question.</p>
-
- <p>“Who left the summer-house first?”</p>
-
- <p>“I did.”</p>
-
- <p>“Leaving Ralph Paton in the summer-house?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes—but you don’t think——”</p>
-
- <p>“Mademoiselle, it is of no importance what I think. What did you do
- when you got back to the house?”</p>
-
- <p>“I went up to my room.”</p>
-
- <p>“And stayed there until when?”</p>
-
- <p>“Until about ten o’clock.”</p>
-
- <p>“Is there any one who can prove that?”</p>
-
- <p>“Prove? That I was in my room, you mean? Oh! no. But surely—oh! I see,
- they might think—they might think——”</p>
-
- <p>I saw the dawning horror in her eyes.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot finished the sentence for her.</p>
-
- <p>“That it was <em>you</em> who entered by the window and stabbed Mr.
- Ackroyd as he sat in his chair? Yes, they might think just that.”</p>
-
- <p>“Nobody but a fool would think any such thing,” said Caroline
- indignantly.</p>
-
- <p>She patted Ursula on the shoulder.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">267</span></p>
-
- <p>The girl had her face hidden in her hands.</p>
-
- <p>“Horrible,” she was murmuring. “Horrible.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline gave her a friendly shake.</p>
-
- <p>“Don’t worry, my dear,” she said. “M. Poirot doesn’t think that really.
- As for that husband of yours, I don’t think much of him, and I tell you
- so candidly. Running away and leaving you to face the music.”</p>
-
- <p>But Ursula shook her head energetically.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, no,” she cried. “It wasn’t like that at all. Ralph would not run
- away on his own account. I see now. If he heard of his stepfather’s
- murder, he might think himself that I had done it.”</p>
-
- <p>“He wouldn’t think any such thing,” said Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“I was so cruel to him that night—so hard and bitter. I wouldn’t listen
- to what he was trying to say—wouldn’t believe that he really cared.
- I just stood there telling him what I thought of him, and saying the
- coldest, cruelest things that came into my mind—trying my best to hurt
- him.”</p>
-
- <p>“Do him no harm,” said Caroline. “Never worry about what you say to a
- man. They’re so conceited that they never believe you mean it if it’s
- unflattering.”</p>
-
- <p>Ursula went on, nervously twisting and untwisting her hands.</p>
-
- <p>“When the murder was discovered and he didn’t come forward, I was
- terribly upset. Just for a moment I wondered—but then I knew he
- couldn’t—he couldn’t.... But I wished he would come forward and say
- openly that he’d had nothing to do with it. I knew that he was very
- fond of Dr. Sheppard, and I fancied that perhaps Dr. Sheppard might
- know where he was hiding.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">268</span></p>
-
- <p>She turned to me.</p>
-
- <p>“That’s why I said what I did to you that day. I thought, if you knew
- where he was, you might pass on the message to him.”</p>
-
- <p>“I?” I exclaimed.</p>
-
- <p>“Why should James know where he was?” demanded Caroline sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“It was very unlikely, I know,” admitted Ursula, “but Ralph had often
- spoken of Dr. Sheppard, and I knew that he would be likely to consider
- him as his best friend in King’s Abbot.”</p>
-
- <p>“My dear child,” I said, “I have not the least idea where Ralph Paton
- is at the present moment.”</p>
-
- <p>“That is true enough,” said Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“But——” Ursula held out the newspaper cutting in a puzzled fashion.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! that,” said Poirot, slightly embarrassed; “a <i lang="fr">bagatelle</i>,
- mademoiselle. A <i lang="fr">rien du tout</i>. Not for a moment do I believe that
- Ralph Paton has been arrested.”</p>
-
- <p>“But then——” began the girl slowly.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot went on quickly:—</p>
-
- <p>“There is one thing I should like to know—did Captain Paton wear shoes
- or boots that night?”</p>
-
- <p>Ursula shook her head.</p>
-
- <p>“I can’t remember.”</p>
-
- <p>“A pity! But how should you? Now, madame,” he smiled at her, his head
- on one side, his forefinger wagging eloquently, “no questions. And
- do not torment yourself. Be of good courage, and place your faith in
- Hercule Poirot.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">269</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">POIROT’S LITTLE REUNION</div>
-
- <p class="noindent">“<span class="smcap">And</span> now,” said Caroline, rising, “that child is coming upstairs to lie
- down. Don’t you worry, my dear. M. Poirot will do everything he can for
- you—be sure of that.”</p>
-
- <p>“I ought to go back to Fernly,” said Ursula uncertainly.</p>
-
- <p>But Caroline silenced her protests with a firm hand.</p>
-
- <p>“Nonsense. You’re in my hands for the time being. You’ll stay here for
- the present, anyway—eh, M. Poirot?”</p>
-
- <p>“It will be the best plan,” agreed the little Belgian. “This evening I
- shall want mademoiselle—I beg her pardon, madame—to attend my little
- reunion. Nine o’clock at my house. It is most necessary that she should
- be there.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline nodded, and went with Ursula out of the room. The door shut
- behind them. Poirot dropped down into a chair again.</p>
-
- <p>“So far, so good,” he said. “Things are straightening themselves out.”</p>
-
- <p>“They’re getting to look blacker and blacker against Ralph Paton,” I
- observed gloomily.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">270</span></p>
-
- <p>“Yes, that is so. But it was to be expected, was it not?”</p>
-
- <p>I looked at him, slightly puzzled by the remark. He was leaning back in
- the chair, his eyes half closed, the tips of his fingers just touching
- each other. Suddenly he sighed and shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“What is it?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“It is that there are moments when a great longing for my friend
- Hastings comes over me. That is the friend of whom I spoke to you—the
- one who resides now in the Argentine. Always, when I have had a big
- case, he has been by my side. And he has helped me—yes, often he has
- helped me. For he had a knack, that one, of stumbling over the truth
- unawares—without noticing it himself, <i lang="fr">bien entendu</i>. At times he
- has said something particularly foolish, and behold that foolish remark
- has revealed the truth to me! And then, too, it was his practice to
- keep a written record of the cases that proved interesting.”</p>
-
- <p>I gave a slight embarrassed cough.</p>
-
- <p>“As far as that goes,” I began, and then stopped.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot sat upright in his chair. His eyes sparkled.</p>
-
- <p>“But yes? What is it that you would say?”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, as a matter of fact, I’ve read some of Captain Hastings’s
- narratives, and I thought, why not try my hand at something of the same
- kind? Seemed a pity not to—unique opportunity—probably the only time
- I’ll be mixed up with anything of this kind.”</p>
-
- <p>I felt myself getting hotter and hotter, and more and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">271</span> more incoherent,
- as I floundered through the above speech.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot sprang from his chair. I had a moment’s terror that he was going
- to embrace me French fashion, but mercifully he refrained.</p>
-
- <p>“But this is magnificent—you have then written down your impressions of
- the case as you went along?”</p>
-
- <p>I nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Epatant!</i>” cried Poirot. “Let me see them—this instant.”</p>
-
- <p>I was not quite prepared for such a sudden demand. I racked my brains
- to remember certain details.</p>
-
- <p>“I hope you won’t mind,” I stammered. “I may have been a
- little—er—<em>personal</em> now and then.”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! I comprehend perfectly; you have referred to me as comic—as,
- perhaps, ridiculous now and then? It matters not at all. Hastings,
- he also was not always polite. Me, I have the mind above such
- trivialities.”</p>
-
- <p>Still somewhat doubtful, I rummaged in the drawers of my desk and
- produced an untidy pile of manuscript which I handed over to him. With
- an eye on possible publication in the future, I had divided the work
- into chapters, and the night before I had brought it up to date with an
- account of Miss Russell’s visit. Poirot had therefore twenty chapters.</p>
-
- <p>I left him with them.</p>
-
- <p>I was obliged to go out to a case at some distance away, and it was
- past eight o’clock when I got back, to be greeted with a plate of hot
- dinner on a tray, and the announcement that Poirot and my sister had
- supped together<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">272</span> at half-past seven, and that the former had then gone
- to my workshop to finish his reading of the manuscript.</p>
-
- <p>“I hope, James,” said my sister, “that you’ve been careful in what you
- say about me in it?”</p>
-
- <p>My jaw dropped. I had not been careful at all.</p>
-
- <p>“Not that it matters very much,” said Caroline, reading my expression
- correctly. “M. Poirot will know what to think. He understands me much
- better than you do.”</p>
-
- <p>I went into the workshop. Poirot was sitting by the window. The
- manuscript lay neatly piled on a chair beside him. He laid his hand on
- it and spoke.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Eh bien</i>,” he said, “I congratulate you—on your modesty!”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh!” I said, rather taken aback.</p>
-
- <p>“And on your reticence,” he added.</p>
-
- <p>I said “Oh!” again.</p>
-
- <p>“Not so did Hastings write,” continued my friend. “On every page, many,
- many times was the word ‘I.’ What <em>he</em> thought—what <em>he</em> did.
- But you—you have kept your personality in the background; only once or
- twice does it obtrude—in scenes of home life, shall we say?”</p>
-
- <p>I blushed a little before the twinkle in his eye.</p>
-
- <p>“What do you really think of the stuff?” I asked nervously.</p>
-
- <p>“You want my candid opinion?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot laid his jesting manner aside.</p>
-
- <p>“A very meticulous and accurate account,” he said kindly. “You have
- recorded all the facts faithfully and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">273</span> exactly—though you have shown
- yourself becomingly reticent as to your own share in them.”</p>
-
- <p>“And it has helped you?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. I may say that it has helped me considerably. Come, we must go
- over to my house and set the stage for my little performance.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline was in the hall. I think she hoped that she might be invited
- to accompany us. Poirot dealt with the situation tactfully.</p>
-
- <p>“I should much like to have had you present, mademoiselle,” he said
- regretfully, “but at this juncture it would not be wise. See you, all
- these people to-night are suspects. Amongst them, I shall find the
- person who killed Mr. Ackroyd.”</p>
-
- <p>“You really believe that?” I said incredulously.</p>
-
- <p>“I see that you do not,” said Poirot dryly. “Not yet do you appreciate
- Hercule Poirot at his true worth.”</p>
-
- <p>At that minute Ursula came down the staircase.</p>
-
- <p>“You are ready, my child?” said Poirot. “That is good. We will go to
- my house together. Mademoiselle Caroline, believe me, I do everything
- possible to render you service. Good-evening.”</p>
-
- <p>We went out, leaving Caroline, rather like a dog who has been refused a
- walk, standing on the front door step gazing after us.</p>
-
- <p>The sitting-room at The Larches had been got ready. On the table were
- various <em>sirops</em> and glasses. Also a plate of biscuits. Several
- chairs had been brought in from the other room.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot ran to and fro rearranging things. Pulling out<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">274</span> a chair here,
- altering the position of a lamp there, occasionally stooping to
- straighten one of the mats that covered the floor. He was specially
- fussy over the lighting. The lamps were arranged in such a way as to
- throw a clear light on the side of the room where the chairs were
- grouped, at the same time leaving the other end of the room, where I
- presumed Poirot himself would sit, in a dim twilight.</p>
-
- <p>Ursula and I watched him. Presently a bell was heard.</p>
-
- <p>“They arrive,” said Poirot. “Good, all is in readiness.”</p>
-
- <p>The door opened and the party from Fernly filed in. Poirot went forward
- and greeted Mrs. Ackroyd and Flora.</p>
-
- <p>“It is most good of you to come,” he said. “And Major Blunt and Mr.
- Raymond.”</p>
-
- <p>The secretary was debonair as ever.</p>
-
- <p>“What’s the great idea?” he said, laughing. “Some scientific machine?
- Do we have bands round our wrists which register guilty heart-beats?
- There is such an invention, isn’t there?”</p>
-
- <p>“I have read of it, yes,” admitted Poirot. “But me, I am old-fashioned.
- I use the old methods. I work only with the little gray cells. Now let
- us begin—but first I have an announcement to make to you all.”</p>
-
- <p>He took Ursula’s hand and drew her forward.</p>
-
- <p>“This lady is Mrs. Ralph Paton. She was married to Captain Paton last
- March.”</p>
-
- <p>A little shriek burst from Mrs. Ackroyd.</p>
-
- <p>“Ralph! Married! Last March! Oh! but it’s absurd. How could he be?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">275</span></p>
-
- <p>She stared at Ursula as though she had never seen her before.</p>
-
- <p>“Married to Bourne?” she said. “Really, M. Poirot, I don’t believe you.”</p>
-
- <p>Ursula flushed and began to speak, but Flora forestalled her.</p>
-
- <p>Going quickly to the other girl’s side, she passed her hand through her
- arm.</p>
-
- <p>“You must not mind our being surprised,” she said. “You see, we had no
- idea of such a thing. You and Ralph have kept your secret very well. I
- am—very glad about it.”</p>
-
- <p>“You are very kind, Miss Ackroyd,” said Ursula in a low voice, “and
- you have every right to be exceedingly angry. Ralph behaved very
- badly—especially to you.”</p>
-
- <p>“You needn’t worry about that,” said Flora, giving her arm a consoling
- little pat. “Ralph was in a corner and took the only way out. I should
- probably have done the same in his place. I do think he might have
- trusted me with the secret, though. I wouldn’t have let him down.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot rapped gently on a table and cleared his throat significantly.</p>
-
- <p>“The board meeting’s going to begin,” said Flora. “M. Poirot hints that
- we mustn’t talk. But just tell me one thing. Where is Ralph? You must
- know if any one does.”</p>
-
- <p>“But I don’t,” cried Ursula, almost in a wail. “That’s just it, I
- don’t.”</p>
-
- <p>“Isn’t he detained at Liverpool?” asked Raymond. “It said so in the
- paper.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">276</span></p>
-
- <p>“He is not at Liverpool,” said Poirot shortly.</p>
-
- <p>“In fact,” I remarked, “no one knows where he is.”</p>
-
- <p>“Excepting Hercule Poirot, eh?” said Raymond.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot replied seriously to the other’s banter.</p>
-
- <p>“Me, I know everything. Remember that.”</p>
-
- <p>Geoffrey Raymond lifted his eyebrows.</p>
-
- <p>“Everything?” He whistled. “Whew! that’s a tall order.”</p>
-
- <p>“Do you mean to say you can really guess where Ralph Paton is hiding?”
- I asked incredulously.</p>
-
- <p>“You call it guessing. I call it knowing, my friend.”</p>
-
- <p>“In Cranchester?” I hazarded.</p>
-
- <p>“No,” replied Poirot gravely, “not in Cranchester.”</p>
-
- <p>He said no more, but at a gesture from him the assembled party took
- their seats. As they did so, the door opened once more and two other
- people came in and sat down near the door. They were Parker and the
- housekeeper.</p>
-
- <p>“The number is complete,” said Poirot. “Every one is here.”</p>
-
- <p>There was a ring of satisfaction in his tone. And with the sound of it
- I saw a ripple of something like uneasiness pass over all those faces
- grouped at the other end of the room. There was a suggestion in all
- this as of a trap—a trap that had closed.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot read from a list in an important manner.</p>
-
- <p>“Mrs. Ackroyd, Miss Flora Ackroyd, Major Blunt, Mr. Geoffrey Raymond,
- Mrs. Ralph Paton, John Parker, Elizabeth Russell.”</p>
-
- <p>He laid the paper down on the table.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">277</span></p>
-
- <p>“What’s the meaning of all this?” began Raymond.</p>
-
- <p>“The list I have just read,” said Poirot, “is a list of suspected
- persons. Every one of you present had the opportunity to kill Mr.
- Ackroyd——”</p>
-
- <p>With a cry Mrs. Ackroyd sprang up, her throat working.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t like it,” she wailed. “I don’t like it. I would much prefer to
- go home.”</p>
-
- <p>“You cannot go home, madame,” said Poirot sternly, “until you have
- heard what I have to say.”</p>
-
- <p>He paused a moment, then cleared his throat.</p>
-
- <p>“I will start at the beginning. When Miss Ackroyd asked me to
- investigate the case, I went up to Fernly Park with the good Dr.
- Sheppard. I walked with him along the terrace, where I was shown the
- footprints on the window-sill. From there Inspector Raglan took me
- along the path which leads to the drive. My eye was caught by a little
- summer-house, and I searched it thoroughly. I found two things—a scrap
- of starched cambric and an empty goose quill. The scrap of cambric
- immediately suggested to me a maid’s apron. When Inspector Raglan
- showed me his list of the people in the house, I noticed at once that
- one of the maids—Ursula Bourne, the parlormaid—had no real alibi.
- According to her own story, she was in her bedroom from nine-thirty
- until ten. But supposing that instead she was in the summer-house? If
- so, she must have gone there to meet some one. Now we know from Dr.
- Sheppard that some one from outside <em>did</em> come to the house that
- night—the stranger whom he met just by the gate. At a first glance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">278</span>
- it would seem that our problem was solved, and that the stranger went
- to the summer-house to meet Ursula Bourne. It was fairly certain that
- he <em>did</em> go to the summer-house because of the goose quill. That
- suggested at once to my mind a taker of drugs—and one who had acquired
- the habit on the other side of the Atlantic where sniffing ‘snow’ is
- more common than in this country. The man whom Dr. Sheppard met had an
- American accent, which fitted in with that supposition.</p>
-
- <p>“But I was held up by one point. <em>The times did not fit.</em> Ursula
- Bourne could certainly not have gone to the summer-house before
- nine-thirty, whereas the man must have got there by a few minutes past
- nine. I could, of course, assume that he waited there for half an hour.
- The only alternative supposition was that there had been two separate
- meetings in the summer-house that night. <i lang="fr">Eh bien</i>, as soon as
- I went into that alternative I found several significant facts. I
- discovered that Miss Russell, the housekeeper, had visited Dr. Sheppard
- that morning, and had displayed a good deal of interest in cures for
- victims of the drug habit. Taking that in conjunction with the goose
- quill, I assumed that the man in question came to Fernly to meet the
- housekeeper, and not Ursula Bourne. Who, then, did Ursula Bourne come
- to the rendezvous to meet? I was not long in doubt. First I found a
- ring—a wedding ring—with ‘From R.’ and a date inside it. Then I learnt
- that Ralph Paton had been seen coming up the path which led to the
- summer-house at twenty-five minutes past nine, and I also heard of
- a certain conversation which had taken place in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">279</span> the wood near the
- village that very afternoon—a conversation between Ralph Paton and
- some unknown girl. So I had my facts succeeding each other in a neat
- and orderly manner. A secret marriage, an engagement announced on the
- day of the tragedy, the stormy interview in the wood, and the meeting
- arranged for the summer-house that night.</p>
-
- <p>“Incidentally this proved to me one thing, that both Ralph Paton and
- Ursula Bourne (or Paton) had the strongest motives for wishing Mr.
- Ackroyd out of the way. And it also made one other point unexpectedly
- clear. It could not have been Ralph Paton who was with Mr. Ackroyd in
- the study at nine-thirty.</p>
-
- <p>“So we come to another and most interesting aspect of the crime. Who
- was it in the room with Mr. Ackroyd at nine-thirty? Not Ralph Paton,
- who was in the summer-house with his wife. Not Charles Kent, who
- had already left. Who, then? I posed my cleverest—my most audacious
- question: <em>Was any one with him?</em>”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot leaned forward and shot the last words triumphantly at us,
- drawing back afterwards with the air of one who has made a decided hit.</p>
-
- <p>Raymond, however, did not seem impressed, and lodged a mild protest.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t know if you’re trying to make me out a liar, M. Poirot, but
- the matter does not rest on my evidence alone—except perhaps as to the
- exact words used. Remember, Major Blunt also heard Mr. Ackroyd talking
- to some one. He was on the terrace outside, and couldn’t<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">280</span> catch the
- words clearly, but he distinctly heard the voices.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“I have not forgotten,” he said quietly. “But Major Blunt was under the
- impression that it was <em>you</em> to whom Mr. Ackroyd was speaking.”</p>
-
- <p>For a moment Raymond seemed taken aback. Then he recovered himself.</p>
-
- <p>“Blunt knows now that he was mistaken,” he said.</p>
-
- <p>“Exactly,” agreed the other man.</p>
-
- <p>“Yet there must have been some reason for his thinking so,” mused
- Poirot. “Oh! no,” he held up his hand in protest, “I know the reason
- you will give—but it is not enough. We must seek elsewhere. I will put
- it this way. From the beginning of the case I have been struck by one
- thing—the nature of those words which Mr. Raymond overheard. It has
- been amazing to me that no one has commented on them—has seen anything
- odd about them.”</p>
-
- <p>He paused a minute, and then quoted softly:—</p>
-
- <p>“... <i>The calls on my purse have been so frequent of late that I fear
- it is impossible for me to accede to your request.</i> Does nothing
- strike you as odd about that?”</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t think so,” said Raymond. “He has frequently dictated letters
- to me, using almost exactly those same words.”</p>
-
- <p>“Exactly,” cried Poirot. “That is what I seek to arrive at. Would
- any man use such a phrase in <em>talking</em> to another? Impossible
- that that should be part of a real conversation. Now, if he had been
- dictating a letter——”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">281</span></p>
-
- <p>“You mean he was reading a letter aloud,” said Raymond slowly. “Even
- so, he must have been reading to some one.”</p>
-
- <p>“But why? We have no evidence that there was any one else in the room.
- No other voice but Mr. Ackroyd’s was heard, remember.”</p>
-
- <p>“Surely a man wouldn’t read letters of that type aloud to himself—not
- unless he was—well—going balmy.”</p>
-
- <p>“You have all forgotten one thing,” said Poirot softly: “the stranger
- who called at the house the preceding Wednesday.”</p>
-
- <p>They all stared at him.</p>
-
- <p>“But yes,” said Poirot, nodding encouragingly, “on Wednesday. The
- young man was not of himself important. But the firm he represented
- interested me very much.”</p>
-
- <p>“The Dictaphone Company,” gasped Raymond. “I see it now. A dictaphone.
- That’s what you think?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd had promised to invest in a dictaphone, you remember.
- Me, I had the curiosity to inquire of the company in question. Their
- reply is that Mr. Ackroyd <em>did</em> purchase a dictaphone from their
- representative. Why he concealed the matter from you, I do not know.”</p>
-
- <p>“He must have meant to surprise me with it,” murmured Raymond. “He had
- quite a childish love of surprising people. Meant to keep it up his
- sleeve for a day or so. Probably was playing with it like a new toy.
- Yes, it fits in. You’re quite right—no one would use quite those words
- in casual conversation.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">282</span></p>
-
- <p>“It explains, too,” said Poirot, “why Major Blunt thought it was you
- who were in the study. Such scraps as came to him were fragments of
- dictation, and so his subconscious mind deduced that you were with him.
- His conscious mind was occupied with something quite different—the
- white figure he had caught a glimpse of. He fancied it was Miss
- Ackroyd. Really, of course, it was Ursula Bourne’s white apron he saw
- as she was stealing down to the summer-house.”</p>
-
- <p>Raymond had recovered from his first surprise.</p>
-
- <p>“All the same,” he remarked, “this discovery of yours, brilliant though
- it is (I’m quite sure I should never have thought of it), leaves the
- essential position unchanged. Mr. Ackroyd was alive at nine-thirty,
- since he was speaking into the dictaphone. It seems clear that the man
- Charles Kent was really off the premises by then. As to Ralph Paton——?”</p>
-
- <p>He hesitated, glancing at Ursula.</p>
-
- <p>Her color flared up, but she answered steadily enough.</p>
-
- <p>“Ralph and I parted just before a quarter to ten. He never went near
- the house, I am sure of that. He had no intention of doing so. The last
- thing on earth he wanted was to face his stepfather. He would have
- funked it badly.”</p>
-
- <p>“It isn’t that I doubt your story for a moment,” explained Raymond.
- “I’ve always been quite sure Captain Paton was innocent. But one has to
- think of a court of law—and the questions that would be asked. He is in
- a most unfortunate position, but if he were to come forward——”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">283</span></p>
-
- <p>Poirot interrupted.</p>
-
- <p>“That is your advice, yes? That he should come forward?”</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly. If you know where he is——”</p>
-
- <p>“I perceive that you do not believe that I do know. And yet I have told
- you just now that I know everything. The truth of the telephone call,
- of the footprints on the window-sill, of the hiding-place of Ralph
- Paton——”</p>
-
- <p>“Where is he?” said Blunt sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“Not very far away,” said Poirot, smiling.</p>
-
- <p>“In Cranchester?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot turned towards me.</p>
-
- <p>“Always you ask me that. The idea of Cranchester it is with you an
- <i lang="fr">idée fixe</i>. No, he is not in Cranchester. He is—<i>there</i>!”</p>
-
- <p>He pointed a dramatic forefinger. Every one’s head turned.</p>
-
- <p>Ralph Paton was standing in the doorway.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">284</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">RALPH PATON’S STORY</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">It</span> was a very uncomfortable minute for <em>me</em>. I hardly took in what
- happened next, but there were exclamations and cries of surprise! When
- I was sufficiently master of myself to be able to realize what was
- going on, Ralph Paton was standing by his wife, her hand in his, and he
- was smiling across the room at me.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot, too, was smiling, and at the same time shaking an eloquent
- finger at me.</p>
-
- <p>“Have I not told you at least thirty-six times that it is useless to
- conceal things from Hercule Poirot?” he demanded. “That in such a case
- he finds out?”</p>
-
- <p>He turned to the others.</p>
-
- <p>“One day, you remember, we held a little séance about a table—just
- the six of us. I accused the other five persons present of concealing
- something from me. Four of them gave up their secret. Dr. Sheppard did
- not give up his. But all along I have had my suspicions. Dr. Sheppard
- went to the Three Boars that night hoping to find Ralph. He did not
- find him there; but supposing, I said to myself, that he met him in the
- street on his way home? Dr. Sheppard was a friend of Captain Paton’s,
- and he had come straight from the scene of the crime. He must know that
- things looked very black against him. Perhaps he knew more than the
- general public did——”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">285</span></p>
-
- <p>“I did,” I said ruefully. “I suppose I might as well make a clean
- breast of things now. I went to see Ralph that afternoon. At first he
- refused to take me into his confidence, but later he told me about his
- marriage, and the hole he was in. As soon as the murder was discovered,
- I realized that once the facts were known, suspicion could not fail to
- attach to Ralph—or, if not to him, to the girl he loved. That night I
- put the facts plainly before him. The thought of having possibly to
- give evidence which might incriminate his wife made him resolve at all
- costs to—to——”</p>
-
- <p>I hesitated, and Ralph filled up the gap.</p>
-
- <p>“To do a bunk,” he said graphically. “You see, Ursula left me to go
- back to the house. I thought it possible that she might have attempted
- to have another interview with my stepfather. He had already been very
- rude to her that afternoon. It occurred to me that he might have so
- insulted her—in such an unforgivable manner—that without knowing what
- she was doing——”</p>
-
- <p>He stopped. Ursula released her hand from his, and stepped back.</p>
-
- <p>“You thought that, Ralph! You actually thought that I might have done
- it?”</p>
-
- <p>“Let us get back to the culpable conduct of Dr. Sheppard,” said Poirot
- dryly. “Dr. Sheppard consented to do what he could to help him. He was
- successful in hiding Captain Paton from the police.”</p>
-
- <p>“Where?” asked Raymond. “In his own house?”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah, no, indeed,” said Poirot. “You should ask yourself the question
- that I did. If the good doctor is concealing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">286</span> the young man, what place
- would he choose? It must necessarily be somewhere near at hand. I think
- of Cranchester. A hotel? No. Lodgings? Even more emphatically, no.
- Where, then? Ah! I have it. A nursing home. A home for the mentally
- unfit. I test my theory. I invent a nephew with mental trouble. I
- consult Mademoiselle Sheppard as to suitable homes. She gives me the
- names of two near Cranchester to which her brother has sent patients. I
- make inquiries. Yes, at one of them a patient was brought there by the
- doctor himself early on Saturday morning. That patient, though known
- by another name, I had no difficulty in identifying as Captain Paton.
- After certain necessary formalities, I was allowed to bring him away.
- He arrived at my house in the early hours of yesterday morning.”</p>
-
- <p>I looked at him ruefully.</p>
-
- <p>“Caroline’s Home Office expert,” I murmured. “And to think I never
- guessed!”</p>
-
- <p>“You see now why I drew attention to the reticence of your manuscript,”
- murmured Poirot. “It was strictly truthful as far as it went—but it did
- not go very far, eh, my friend?”</p>
-
- <p>I was too abashed to argue.</p>
-
- <p>“Dr. Sheppard has been very loyal,” said Ralph. “He has stood by me
- through thick and thin. He did what he thought was the best. I see now,
- from what M. Poirot has told me, that it was not really the best. I
- should have come forward and faced the music. You see, in the home, we
- never saw a newspaper. I knew nothing of what was going on.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">287</span></p>
-
- <p>“Dr. Sheppard has been a model of discretion,” said Poirot dryly. “But
- me, I discover all the little secrets. It is my business.”</p>
-
- <p>“Now we can have your story of what happened that night,” said Raymond
- impatiently.</p>
-
- <p>“You know it already,” said Ralph. “There’s very little for me to add.
- I left the summer-house about nine-forty-five, and tramped about the
- lanes, trying to make up my mind as to what to do next—what line to
- take. I’m bound to admit that I’ve not the shadow of an alibi, but I
- give you my solemn word that I never went to the study, that I never
- saw my stepfather alive—or dead. Whatever the world thinks, I’d like
- all of you to believe me.”</p>
-
- <p>“No alibi,” murmured Raymond. “That’s bad. I believe you, of course,
- but—it’s a bad business.”</p>
-
- <p>“It makes things very simple, though,” said Poirot, in a cheerful
- voice. “Very simple indeed.”</p>
-
- <p>We all stared at him.</p>
-
- <p>“You see what I mean? No? Just this—to save Captain Paton the real
- criminal must confess.”</p>
-
- <p>He beamed round at us all.</p>
-
- <p>“But yes—I mean what I say. See now, I did not invite Inspector Raglan
- to be present. That was for a reason. I did not want to tell him all
- that I knew—at least I did not want to tell him to-night.”</p>
-
- <p>He leaned forward, and suddenly his voice and his whole personality
- changed. He suddenly became dangerous.</p>
-
- <p>“I who speak to you—I know the murderer of Mr.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">288</span> Ackroyd is in this room
- now. It is to the murderer I speak. <em>To-morrow the truth goes to
- Inspector Raglan.</em> You understand?”</p>
-
- <p>There was a tense silence. Into the midst of it came the old Breton
- woman with a telegram on a salver. Poirot tore it open.</p>
-
- <p>Blunt’s voice rose abrupt and resonant.</p>
-
- <p>“The murderer is amongst us, you say? You know—which?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot had read the message. He crumpled it up in his hand.</p>
-
- <p>“I know—now.”</p>
-
- <p>He tapped the crumpled ball of paper.</p>
-
- <p>“What is that?” said Raymond sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“A wireless message—from a steamer now on her way to the United States.”</p>
-
- <p>There was a dead silence. Poirot rose to his feet bowing.</p>
-
- <p>“Messieurs et Mesdames, this reunion of mine is at an end.
- Remember—<em>the truth goes to Inspector Raglan in the morning</em>.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">289</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">THE WHOLE TRUTH</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">A slight</span> gesture from Poirot enjoined me to stay behind the rest. I
- obeyed, going over to the fire and thoughtfully stirring the big logs
- on it with the toe of my boot.</p>
-
- <p>I was puzzled. For the first time I was absolutely at sea as to
- Poirot’s meaning. For a moment I was inclined to think that the scene
- I had just witnessed was a gigantic piece of bombast—that he had been
- what he called “playing the comedy” with a view to making himself
- interesting and important. But, in spite of myself, I was forced to
- believe in an underlying reality. There had been real menace in his
- words—a certain indisputable sincerity. But I still believed him to be
- on entirely the wrong tack.</p>
-
- <p>When the door shut behind the last of the party he came over to the
- fire.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, my friend,” he said quietly, “and what do you think of it all?”</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t know what to think,” I said frankly. “What was the point? Why
- not go straight to Inspector Raglan with the truth instead of giving
- the guilty person this elaborate warning?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot sat down and drew out his case of tiny Russian<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">290</span> cigarettes. He
- smoked for a minute or two in silence. Then:—</p>
-
- <p>“Use your little gray cells,” he said. “There is always a reason behind
- my actions.”</p>
-
- <p>I hesitated for a moment, and then I said slowly:</p>
-
- <p>“The first one that occurs to me is that you yourself do not know who
- the guilty person is, but that you are sure that he is to be found
- amongst the people here to-night. Therefore your words were intended to
- force a confession from the unknown murderer?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded approvingly.</p>
-
- <p>“A clever idea, but not the truth.”</p>
-
- <p>“I thought, perhaps, that by making him believe you knew, you might
- force him out into the open—not necessarily by confession. He might try
- to silence you as he formerly silenced Mr. Ackroyd—before you could act
- to-morrow morning.”</p>
-
- <p>“A trap with myself as the bait! <i lang="fr">Merci, mon ami</i>, but I am not
- sufficiently heroic for that.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then I fail to understand you. Surely you are running the risk of
- letting the murderer escape by thus putting him on his guard?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“He cannot escape,” he said gravely. “There is only one way out—and
- that way does not lead to freedom.”</p>
-
- <p>“You really believe that one of those people here to-night committed
- the murder?” I asked incredulously.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, my friend.”</p>
-
- <p>“Which one?”</p>
-
- <p>There was a silence for some minutes. Then Poirot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">291</span> tossed the stump of
- his cigarette into the grate and began to speak in a quiet, reflective
- tone.</p>
-
- <p>“I will take you the way that I have traveled myself. Step by step
- you shall accompany me, and see for yourself that all the facts point
- indisputably to one person. Now, to begin with, there were two facts
- and one little discrepancy in time which especially attracted my
- attention. The first fact was the telephone call. If Ralph Paton were
- indeed the murderer, the telephone call became meaningless and absurd.
- Therefore, I said to myself, Ralph Paton is not the murderer.</p>
-
- <p>“I satisfied myself that the call could not have been sent by any one
- in the house, yet I was convinced that it was amongst those present
- on the fatal evening that I had to look for my criminal. Therefore I
- concluded that the telephone call must have been sent by an accomplice.
- I was not quite pleased with that deduction, but I let it stand for the
- minute.</p>
-
- <p>“I next examined the <em>motive</em> for the call. That was difficult.
- I could only get at it by judging its <em>result</em>. Which was—that
- the murder was discovered that night instead of—in all probability—the
- following morning. You agree with that?”</p>
-
- <p>“Ye-es,” I admitted. “Yes. As you say, Mr. Ackroyd, having given orders
- that he was not to be disturbed, nobody would have been likely to go to
- the study that night.”</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Très bien.</i> The affair marches, does it not? But matters were
- still obscure. What was the advantage of having the crime discovered
- that night in preference to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">292</span> the following morning? The only idea I
- could get hold of was that the murderer, knowing the crime was to be
- discovered at a certain time, could make sure of being present when the
- door was broken in—or at any rate immediately afterwards. And now we
- come to the second fact—the chair pulled out from the wall. Inspector
- Raglan dismissed that as of no importance. I, on the contrary, have
- always regarded it as of supreme importance.</p>
-
- <p>“In your manuscript you have drawn a neat little plan of the study.
- If you had it with you this minute you would see that—the chair being
- drawn out in the position indicated by Parker—it would stand in a
- direct line between the door and the window.”</p>
-
- <p>“The window!” I said quickly.</p>
-
- <p>“You, too, have my first idea. I imagined that the chair was drawn
- out so that something connected with the window should not be seen
- by any one entering through the door. But I soon abandoned that
- supposition, for though the chair was a grandfather with a high back,
- it obscured very little of the window—only the part between the sash
- and the ground. No, <i lang="fr">mon ami</i>—but remember that just in front of
- the window there stood a table with books and magazines upon it. Now
- that table <em>was</em> completely hidden by the drawn-out chair—and
- immediately I had my first shadowy suspicion of the truth.</p>
-
- <p>“Supposing that there had been something on that table not intended
- to be seen? Something placed there by the murderer? As yet I had no
- inkling of what that something might be. But I knew certain very
- interesting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">293</span> facts about it. For instance, it was something that the
- murderer had not been able to take away with him at the time that he
- committed the crime. At the same time it was vital that it should be
- removed as soon as possible after the crime had been discovered. And
- so—the telephone message, and the opportunity for the murderer to be on
- the spot when the body was discovered.</p>
-
- <p>“Now four people were on the scene before the police arrived. Yourself,
- Parker, Major Blunt, and Mr. Raymond. Parker I eliminated at once,
- since at whatever time the crime was discovered, he was the one
- person certain to be on the spot. Also it was he who told me of the
- pulled-out chair. Parker, then, was cleared (of the murder, that is. I
- still thought it possible that he had been blackmailing Mrs. Ferrars).
- Raymond and Blunt, however, remained under suspicion since, if the
- crime had been discovered in the early hours of the morning, it was
- quite possible that they might have arrived on the scene too late to
- prevent the object on the round table being discovered.</p>
-
- <p>“Now what was that object? You heard my arguments to-night in reference
- to the scrap of conversation overheard? As soon as I learned that
- a representative of a dictaphone company had called, the idea of a
- dictaphone took root in my mind. You heard what I said in this room not
- half an hour ago? They all agreed with my theory—but one vital fact
- seems to have escaped them. Granted that a dictaphone was being used by
- Mr. Ackroyd that night—why was no dictaphone found?”</p>
-
- <p>“I never thought of that,” I said.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">294</span></p>
-
- <p>“We know that a dictaphone was supplied to Mr. Ackroyd. But no
- dictaphone has been found amongst his effects. So, if something was
- taken from that table—why should not that something be the dictaphone?
- But there were certain difficulties in the way. The attention of every
- one was, of course, focused on the murdered man. I think any one could
- have gone to the table unnoticed by the other people in the room. But
- a dictaphone has a certain bulk—it cannot be slipped casually into
- a pocket. There must have been a receptacle of some kind capable of
- holding it.</p>
-
- <p>“You see where I am arriving? The figure of the murderer is taking
- shape. A person who was on the scene straightway, but who might not
- have been if the crime had been discovered the following morning.
- A person carrying a receptacle into which the dictaphone might be
- fitted——”</p>
-
- <p>I interrupted.</p>
-
- <p>“But why remove the dictaphone? What was the point?”</p>
-
- <p>“You are like Mr. Raymond. You take it for granted that what was heard
- at nine-thirty was Mr. Ackroyd’s voice speaking into a dictaphone. But
- consider this useful invention for a little minute. You dictate into
- it, do you not? And at some later time a secretary or a typist turns it
- on, and the voice speaks again.”</p>
-
- <p>“You mean——” I gasped.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, I mean that. <em>At nine-thirty Mr. Ackroyd was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">295</span> already dead.</em>
- It was the dictaphone speaking—not the man.”</p>
-
- <p>“And the murderer switched it on. Then he must have been in the room at
- that minute?”</p>
-
- <p>“Possibly. But we must not exclude the likelihood of some mechanical
- device having been applied—something after the nature of a time lock,
- or even of a simple alarm clock. But in that case we must add two
- qualifications to our imaginary portrait of the murderer. It must be
- some one who knew of Mr. Ackroyd’s purchase of the dictaphone and also
- some one with the necessary mechanical knowledge.</p>
-
- <p>“I had got thus far in my own mind when we came to the footprints on
- the window ledge. Here there were three conclusions open to me. (1)
- They might really have been made by Ralph Paton. He had been at Fernly
- that night, and might have climbed into the study and found his uncle
- dead there. That was one hypothesis. (2) There was the possibility that
- the footmarks might have been made by somebody else who happened to
- have the same kind of studs in his shoes. But the inmates of the house
- had shoes soled with crepe rubber, and I declined to believe in the
- coincidence of some one from outside having the same kind of shoes as
- Ralph Paton wore. Charles Kent, as we know from the barmaid of the Dog
- and Whistle, had on a pair of boots ‘clean dropping off him.’ (3) Those
- prints were made by some one deliberately trying to throw suspicion
- on Ralph Paton. To test this last conclusion, it was necessary to
- ascertain certain facts. One pair of Ralph’s shoes had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">296</span> obtained
- from the Three Boars by the police. Neither Ralph nor any one else
- could have worn them that evening, since they were downstairs being
- cleaned. According to the police theory, Ralph was wearing another pair
- of the same kind, and I found out that it was true that he had two
- pairs. Now for my theory to be proved correct it was necessary for the
- murderer to have worn Ralph’s shoes that evening—in which case Ralph
- must have been wearing yet a <em>third</em> pair of footwear of some
- kind. I could hardly suppose that he would bring three pairs of shoes
- all alike—the third pair of footwear were more likely to be boots. I
- got your sister to make inquiries on this point—laying some stress on
- the color, in order—I admit it frankly—to obscure the real reason for
- my asking.</p>
-
- <p>“You know the result of her investigations. Ralph Paton <em>had</em> had
- a pair of boots with him. The first question I asked him when he came
- to my house yesterday morning was what he was wearing on his feet on
- the fatal night. He replied at once that he had worn <em>boots</em>—he
- was still wearing them, in fact—having nothing else to put on.</p>
-
- <p>“So we get a step further in our description of the murderer—a person
- who had the opportunity to take these shoes of Ralph Paton’s from the
- Three Boars that day.”</p>
-
- <p>He paused, and then said, with a slightly raised voice:—</p>
-
- <p>“There is one further point. The murderer must have been a person who
- had the opportunity to purloin that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">297</span> dagger from the silver table. You
- might argue that any one in the house might have done so, but I will
- recall to you that Miss Ackroyd was very positive that the dagger was
- not there when she examined the silver table.”</p>
-
- <p>He paused again.</p>
-
- <p>“Let us recapitulate—now that all is clear. A person who was at the
- Three Boars earlier that day, a person who knew Ackroyd well enough
- to know that he had purchased a dictaphone, a person who was of a
- mechanical turn of mind, who had the opportunity to take the dagger
- from the silver table before Miss Flora arrived, who had with him a
- receptacle suitable for hiding the dictaphone—such as a black bag, and
- who had the study to himself for a few minutes after the crime was
- discovered while Parker was telephoning for the police. In fact—<em>Dr. Sheppard!</em>”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">298</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">AND NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">There</span> was a dead silence for a minute and a half.</p>
-
- <p>Then I laughed.</p>
-
- <p>“You’re mad,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“No,” said Poirot placidly. “I am not mad. It was the little
- discrepancy in time that first drew my attention to you—right at the
- beginning.”</p>
-
- <p>“Discrepancy in time?” I queried, puzzled.</p>
-
- <p>“But yes. You will remember that every one agreed—you yourself
- included—that it took five minutes to walk from the lodge to the
- house—less if you took the short cut to the terrace. But you left the
- house at ten minutes to nine—both by your own statement and that of
- Parker, and yet it was nine o’clock as you passed through the lodge
- gates. It was a chilly night—not an evening a man would be inclined
- to dawdle; why had you taken ten minutes to do a five-minutes’ walk?
- All along I realized that we had only your statement for it that the
- study window was ever fastened. Ackroyd asked you if you had done
- so—he never looked to see. Supposing, then, that the study window was
- unfastened? Would there be time in that ten minutes for you to run
- round the outside of the house, change your shoes, climb in through
- the window, kill Ackroyd, and get to the gate by nine<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">299</span> o’clock? I
- decided against that theory since in all probability a man as nervous
- as Ackroyd was that night would hear you climbing in, and then there
- would have been a struggle. But supposing that you killed Ackroyd
- <em>before</em> you left—as you were standing beside his chair? Then you
- go out of the front door, run round to the summer-house, take Ralph
- Paton’s shoes out of the bag you brought up with you that night, slip
- them on, walk through the mud in them, and leave prints on the window
- ledge, you climb in, lock the study door on the inside, run back to the
- summer-house, change back into your own shoes, and race down to the
- gate. (I went through similar actions the other day, when you were with
- Mrs. Ackroyd—it took ten minutes exactly.) Then home—and an alibi—since
- you had timed the dictaphone for half-past nine.”</p>
-
- <p>“My dear Poirot,” I said in a voice that sounded strange and forced to
- my own ears, “you’ve been brooding over this case too long. What on
- earth had I to gain by murdering Ackroyd?”</p>
-
- <p>“Safety. It was you who blackmailed Mrs. Ferrars. Who could have had
- a better knowledge of what killed Mr. Ferrars than the doctor who was
- attending him? When you spoke to me that first day in the garden,
- you mentioned a legacy received about a year ago. I have been unable
- to discover any trace of a legacy. You had to invent some way of
- accounting for Mrs. Ferrars’s twenty thousand pounds. It has not done
- you much good. You lost most of it in speculation—then you put the
- screw on too hard, and Mrs. Ferrars took a way out<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">300</span> that you had not
- expected. If Ackroyd had learnt the truth he would have had no mercy on
- you—you were ruined for ever.”</p>
-
- <p>“And the telephone call?” I asked, trying to rally. “You have a
- plausible explanation of that also, I suppose?”</p>
-
- <p>“I will confess to you that it was my greatest stumbling block when
- I found that a call had actually been put through to you from King’s
- Abbot station. I at first believed that you had simply invented the
- story. It was a very clever touch, that. You must have some excuse for
- arriving at Fernly, finding the body, and so getting the chance to
- remove the dictaphone on which your alibi depended. I had a very vague
- notion of how it was worked when I came to see your sister that first
- day and inquired as to what patients you had seen on Friday morning. I
- had no thought of Miss Russell in my mind at that time. Her visit was a
- lucky coincidence, since it distracted your mind from the real object
- of my questions. I found what I was looking for. Among your patients
- that morning was the steward of an American liner. Who more suitable
- than he to be leaving for Liverpool by the train that evening? And
- afterwards he would be on the high seas, well out of the way. I noted
- that the <cite>Orion</cite> sailed on Saturday, and having obtained the name
- of the steward I sent him a wireless message asking a certain question.
- This is his reply you saw me receive just now.”</p>
-
- <p>He held out the message to me. It ran as follows—</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">301</span></p>
-
- <p>“Quite correct. Dr. Sheppard asked me to leave a note at a patient’s
- house. I was to ring him up from the station with the reply. Reply was
- ‘No answer.’”</p>
-
- <div class="center">*<span class="col3">*</span>
- <span class="col3">*</span><span class="col3">*</span><span class="col3">*</span></div>
-
- <p>“It was a clever idea,” said Poirot. “The call was genuine. Your sister
- saw you take it. But there was only one man’s word as to what was
- actually said—your own!”</p>
-
- <p>I yawned.</p>
-
- <p>“All this,” I said, “is very interesting—but hardly in the sphere of
- practical politics.”</p>
-
- <p>“You think not? Remember what I said—the truth goes to Inspector Raglan
- in the morning. But, for the sake of your good sister, I am willing to
- give you the chance of another way out. There might be, for instance,
- an overdose of a sleeping draught. You comprehend me? But Captain Ralph
- Paton must be cleared—<i lang="fr">ça va sans dire</i>. I should suggest that you
- finish that very interesting manuscript of yours—but abandoning your
- former reticence.”</p>
-
- <p>“You seem to be very prolific of suggestions,” I remarked. “Are you
- sure you’ve quite finished.”</p>
-
- <p>“Now that you remind me of the fact, it is true that there is one thing
- more. It would be most unwise on your part to attempt to silence me as
- you silenced M. Ackroyd. That kind of business does not succeed against
- Hercule Poirot, you understand.”</p>
-
- <p>“My dear Poirot,” I said, smiling a little, “whatever else I may be, I
- am not a fool.”</p>
-
- <p>I rose to my feet.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">302</span></p>
-
- <p>“Well, well,” I said, with a slight yawn, “I must be off home. Thank
- you for a most interesting and instructive evening.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot also rose and bowed with his accustomed politeness as I passed
- out of the room.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">303</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">APOLOGIA</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Five</span> a.m. I am very tired—but I have finished my task. My arm aches
- from writing.</p>
-
- <p>A strange end to my manuscript. I meant it to be published some day as
- the history of one of Poirot’s failures! Odd, how things pan out.</p>
-
- <p>All along I’ve had a premonition of disaster, from the moment I saw
- Ralph Paton and Mrs. Ferrars with their heads together. I thought
- then that she was confiding in him; as it happened I was quite wrong
- there, but the idea persisted even after I went into the study with
- Ackroyd that night, until he told me the truth.</p>
-
- <p>Poor old Ackroyd. I’m always glad that I gave him a chance. I urged him
- to read that letter before it was too late. Or let me be honest—didn’t
- I subconsciously realize that with a pig-headed chap like him, it was
- my best chance of getting him <em>not</em> to read it? His nervousness
- that night was interesting psychologically. He knew danger was close at
- hand. And yet he never suspected <em>me</em>.</p>
-
- <p>The dagger was an afterthought. I’d brought up a very handy little
- weapon of my own, but when I saw the dagger lying in the silver table,
- it occurred to me at once how much better it would be to use a weapon
- that couldn’t be traced to me.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">304</span></p>
-
- <p>I suppose I must have meant to murder him all along. As soon as I heard
- of Mrs. Ferrars’s death, I felt convinced that she would have told him
- everything before she died. When I met him and he seemed so agitated,
- I thought that perhaps he knew the truth, but that he couldn’t bring
- himself to believe it, and was going to give me the chance of refuting
- it.</p>
-
- <p>So I went home and took my precautions. If the trouble were after all
- only something to do with Ralph—well, no harm would have been done. The
- dictaphone he had given me two days before to adjust. Something had
- gone a little wrong with it, and I persuaded him to let me have a go at
- it, instead of sending it back. I did what I wanted to it, and took it
- up with me in my bag that evening.</p>
-
- <p>I am rather pleased with myself as a writer. What could be neater, for
- instance, than the following:—</p>
-
- <p>“<i>The letters were brought in at twenty minutes to nine. It was just
- on ten minutes to nine when I left him, the letter still unread. I
- hesitated with my hand on the door handle, looking back and wondering
- if there was anything I had left undone.</i>”</p>
-
- <p>All true, you see. But suppose I had put a row of stars after the first
- sentence! Would somebody then have wondered what exactly happened in
- that blank ten minutes?</p>
-
- <p>When I looked round the room from the door, I was quite satisfied.
- Nothing had been left undone. The dictaphone was on the table by the
- window, timed to go off<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">305</span> at nine-thirty (the mechanism of that little
- device was rather clever—based on the principle of an alarm clock), and
- the arm-chair was pulled out so as to hide it from the door.</p>
-
- <p>I must admit that it gave me rather a shock to run into Parker just
- outside the door. I have faithfully recorded that fact.</p>
-
- <p>Then later, when the body was discovered, and I had sent Parker to
- telephone for the police, what a judicious use of words: “<em>I did
- what little had to be done!</em>” It was quite little—just to shove
- the dictaphone into my bag and push back the chair against the wall
- in its proper place. I never dreamed that Parker would have noticed
- that chair. Logically, he ought to have been so agog over the body
- as to be blind to everything else. But I hadn’t reckoned with the
- trained-servant complex.</p>
-
- <p>I wish I could have known beforehand that Flora was going to say she’d
- seen her uncle alive at a quarter to ten. That puzzled me more than
- I can say. In fact, all through the case there have been things that
- puzzled me hopelessly. Every one seems to have taken a hand.</p>
-
- <p>My greatest fear all through has been Caroline. I have fancied she
- might guess. Curious the way she spoke that day of my “strain of
- weakness.”</p>
-
- <p>Well, she will never know the truth. There is, as Poirot said, one way
- out....</p>
-
- <p>I can trust him. He and Inspector Raglan will manage it between them. I
- should not like Caroline to know. She is fond of me, and then, too, she
- is proud....<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">306</span> My death will be a grief to her, but grief passes....</p>
-
- <p>When I have finished writing, I shall enclose this whole manuscript in
- an envelope and address it to Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>And then—what shall it be? Veronal? There would be a kind of poetic
- justice. Not that I take any responsibility for Mrs. Ferrars’s death.
- It was the direct consequence of her own actions. I feel no pity for her.</p>
-
- <p>I have no pity for myself either.</p>
-
- <p>So let it be veronal.</p>
-
- <p>But I wish Hercule Poirot had never retired from work and come here to
- grow vegetable marrows.</p>
-
- <div class="center mt10">THE END</div>
-
- <div class="bbox mt10" style="width: 100%;">
- <div style="margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 5%">
- <div class="center mt2 mb2">
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-
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- When you feel in the mood for a good romance, refer to the carefully
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- prominent writers of the day which is printed on the back of every
- Grosset &amp; Dunlap book wrapper.</p>
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- for every mood and for every taste</i></div>
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-
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- older and a successful lawyer, Diana soon runs away to New York
- where a terrible experience brings her to her senses.</p>
-
- <div class="xlarge u">THE GREATER LOVE</div>
-
- <p>A story in which Nancy Gage found after trials and tribulations
- that the superficialities of pride are only surface deep. But that
- true love is everlasting.</p>
-
- <div class="xlarge u">SONIA</div>
-
- <p>Sonia Marsh goes to San Francisco to seek a new life and a happy
- one but she finds everything is not smooth sailing. After many
- harrowing experiences she finally marries the man she loves.</p>
-
- <div class="xlarge u">SEQUEL TO SONIA</div>
-
- <p>It continues the life story of Sonia Marsh, who left her small
- town to go to the city, where she falls in love with a Doctor and
- marries him.</p>
-
- <hr class="double">
- <div class="center large bold">GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <i>Publishers,</i> NEW YORK</div>
- <hr class="double">
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- Rafael Sabatini.</p>
-
- <p>He first went to school in Switzerland and from there to Lycee of Oporto,
- Portugal, and has never attended an English school. But English is
- hardly an adopted language for him, as he learned it from his mother,
- an English woman.</p>
-
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- Fiction.”</p>
-
- <ul class="u mt">
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- <li> CAPTAIN BLOOD</li>
- <li> THE SEA-HAWK</li>
- <li> SCARAMOUCHE</li>
- </ul>
-
- <hr class="double">
- <div class="center large bold">GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <i>Publishers,</i> NEW YORK</div>
- <hr class="double">
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-
- <hr class="double">
- <div class="center bold">May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset &amp; Dunlap’s list.</div>
- <hr class="double">
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-
- <div class="center">*<span class="col2">*</span>
- <span class="col2">*</span><span class="col2">*</span><span class="col2">*</span>
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-
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-
- <ul>
- <li> ROPING LIONS IN THE GRAND CANYON</li>
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- <li> THE YOUNG FORESTER</li>
- <li> THE YOUNG PITCHER</li>
- <li> THE SHORT STOP</li>
- <li> THE RED-HEADED OUTFIELD AND OTHER BASEBALL STORIES</li>
- </ul>
-
- <hr class="double">
- <div class="center large bold">GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <i>Publishers,</i> NEW YORK</div>
- <hr class="double">
-
- <div class="transnote mt5">
- <div class="large center"><b>Transcriber’s Notes:</b></div>
- <ul class="spaced small">
- <li>Blank pages have been removed.</li>
- <li>Obvious typographical errors have been silently corrected.</li>
- </ul>
- </div>
-
-<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MURDER OF ROGER ACKROYD ***</div>
-</body>
-
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The murder of Roger Ackroyd, by Agatha
-Christie
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The murder of Roger Ackroyd
-
-Author: Agatha Christie
-
-Release Date: October 2, 2022 [eBook #69087]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Emmanuel Ackerman, Robert Tonsing and the Online
- Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
- book was produced from images made available by the
- HathiTrust Digital Library.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MURDER OF ROGER
-ACKROYD ***
-
-
-
-
-
- THE MURDER OF
- ROGER ACKROYD
-
- BY
-
- AGATHA CHRISTIE
-
- AUTHOR OF
- THE SECRET OF CHIMNEYS,
- THE MURDER ON THE LINKS, Etc.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- GROSSET & DUNLAP
- PUBLISHERS NEW YORK
-
-
- Copyright, 1926,
- By DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY, Inc.
-
-
- To Punkie,
- who likes an orthodox detective
- story, murder, inquest, and suspicion
- falling on every one in turn!
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I DR. SHEPPARD AT THE BREAKFAST TABLE 1
-
- II WHO’S WHO IN KING’S ABBOT 7
-
- III THE MAN WHO GREW VEGETABLE MARROWS 17
-
- IV DINNER AT FERNLY 31
-
- V MURDER 49
-
- VI THE TUNISIAN DAGGER 65
-
- VII I LEARN MY NEIGHBOR’S PROFESSION 75
-
- VIII INSPECTOR RAGLAN IS CONFIDENT 92
-
- IX THE GOLDFISH POND 106
-
- X THE PARLORMAID 118
-
- XI POIROT PAYS A CALL 136
-
- XII ROUND THE TABLE 145
-
- XIII THE GOOSE QUILL 156
-
- XIV MRS. ACKROYD 165
-
- XV GEOFFREY RAYMOND 178
-
- XVI AN EVENING AT MAH JONG 190
-
- XVII PARKER 202
-
- XVIII CHARLES KENT 218
-
- XIX FLORA ACKROYD 226
-
- XX MISS RUSSELL 238
-
- XXI THE PARAGRAPH IN THE PAPER 251
-
- XXII URSULA’S STORY 260
-
- XXIII POIROT’S LITTLE REUNION 269
-
- XXIV RALPH PATON’S STORY 284
-
- XXV THE WHOLE TRUTH 289
-
- XXVI AND NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH 298
-
- XXVII APOLOGIA 303
-
-
-
-
- THE MURDER OF
- ROGER ACKROYD
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- DR. SHEPPARD AT THE BREAKFAST TABLE
-
-
-Mrs. Ferrars died on the night of the 16th–17th September—a Thursday. I
-was sent for at eight o’clock on the morning of Friday the 17th. There
-was nothing to be done. She had been dead some hours.
-
-It was just a few minutes after nine when I reached home once more. I
-opened the front door with my latch-key, and purposely delayed a few
-moments in the hall, hanging up my hat and the light overcoat that
-I had deemed a wise precaution against the chill of an early autumn
-morning. To tell the truth, I was considerably upset and worried. I am
-not going to pretend that at that moment I foresaw the events of the
-next few weeks. I emphatically did not do so. But my instinct told me
-that there were stirring times ahead.
-
-From the dining-room on my left there came the rattle of tea-cups and
-the short, dry cough of my sister Caroline.
-
-“Is that you, James?” she called.
-
-An unnecessary question, since who else could it be? To tell the
-truth, it was precisely my sister Caroline who was the cause of my few
-minutes’ delay. The motto of the mongoose family, so Mr. Kipling tells
-us, is: “Go and find out.” If Caroline ever adopts a crest, I should
-certainly suggest a mongoose rampant. One might omit the first part
-of the motto. Caroline can do any amount of finding out by sitting
-placidly at home. I don’t know how she manages it, but there it is. I
-suspect that the servants and the tradesmen constitute her Intelligence
-Corps. When she goes out, it is not to gather in information, but to
-spread it. At that, too, she is amazingly expert.
-
-It was really this last named trait of hers which was causing me these
-pangs of indecision. Whatever I told Caroline now concerning the demise
-of Mrs. Ferrars would be common knowledge all over the village within
-the space of an hour and a half. As a professional man, I naturally
-aim at discretion. Therefore I have got into the habit of continually
-withholding all information possible from my sister. She usually finds
-out just the same, but I have the moral satisfaction of knowing that I
-am in no way to blame.
-
-Mrs. Ferrars’ husband died just over a year ago, and Caroline has
-constantly asserted, without the least foundation for the assertion,
-that his wife poisoned him.
-
-She scorns my invariable rejoinder that Mr. Ferrars died of acute
-gastritis, helped on by habitual over-indulgence in alcoholic
-beverages. The symptoms of gastritis and arsenical poisoning are not,
-I agree, unlike, but Caroline bases her accusation on quite different
-lines.
-
-“You’ve only got to look at her,” I have heard her say.
-
-Mrs. Ferrars, though not in her first youth, was a very attractive
-woman, and her clothes, though simple, always seemed to fit her very
-well, but all the same, lots of women buy their clothes in Paris and
-have not, on that account, necessarily poisoned their husbands.
-
-As I stood hesitating in the hall, with all this passing through my
-mind, Caroline’s voice came again, with a sharper note in it.
-
-“What on earth are you doing out there, James? Why don’t you come and
-get your breakfast?”
-
-“Just coming, my dear,” I said hastily. “I’ve been hanging up my
-overcoat.”
-
-“You could have hung up half a dozen overcoats in this time.”
-
-She was quite right. I could have.
-
-I walked into the dining-room, gave Caroline the accustomed peck on the
-cheek, and sat down to eggs and bacon. The bacon was rather cold.
-
-“You’ve had an early call,” remarked Caroline.
-
-“Yes,” I said. “King’s Paddock. Mrs. Ferrars.”
-
-“I know,” said my sister.
-
-“How did you know?”
-
-“Annie told me.”
-
-Annie is the house parlormaid. A nice girl, but an inveterate talker.
-
-There was a pause. I continued to eat eggs and bacon. My sister’s nose,
-which is long and thin, quivered a little at the tip, as it always does
-when she is interested or excited over anything.
-
-“Well?” she demanded.
-
-“A bad business. Nothing to be done. Must have died in her sleep.”
-
-“I know,” said my sister again.
-
-This time I was annoyed.
-
-“You can’t know,” I snapped. “I didn’t know myself until I got there,
-and I haven’t mentioned it to a soul yet. If that girl Annie knows, she
-must be a clairvoyant.”
-
-“It wasn’t Annie who told me. It was the milkman. He had it from the
-Ferrars’ cook.”
-
-As I say, there is no need for Caroline to go out to get information.
-She sits at home, and it comes to her.
-
-My sister continued:
-
-“What did she die of? Heart failure?”
-
-“Didn’t the milkman tell you that?” I inquired sarcastically.
-
-Sarcasm is wasted on Caroline. She takes it seriously and answers
-accordingly.
-
-“He didn’t know,” she explained.
-
-After all, Caroline was bound to hear sooner or later. She might as
-well hear from me.
-
-“She died of an overdose of veronal. She’s been taking it lately for
-sleeplessness. Must have taken too much.”
-
-“Nonsense,” said Caroline immediately. “She took it on purpose. Don’t
-tell me!”
-
-It is odd how, when you have a secret belief of your own which you do
-not wish to acknowledge, the voicing of it by some one else will rouse
-you to a fury of denial. I burst immediately into indignant speech.
-
-“There you go again,” I said. “Rushing along without rhyme or reason.
-Why on earth should Mrs. Ferrars wish to commit suicide? A widow,
-fairly young still, very well off, good health, and nothing to do but
-enjoy life. It’s absurd.”
-
-“Not at all. Even you must have noticed how different she has been
-looking lately. It’s been coming on for the last six months. She’s
-looked positively hag-ridden. And you have just admitted that she
-hasn’t been able to sleep.”
-
-“What is your diagnosis?” I demanded coldly. “An unfortunate love
-affair, I suppose?”
-
-My sister shook her head.
-
-“_Remorse_,” she said, with great gusto.
-
-“Remorse?”
-
-“Yes. You never would believe me when I told you she poisoned her
-husband. I’m more than ever convinced of it now.”
-
-“I don’t think you’re very logical,” I objected. “Surely if a woman
-committed a crime like murder, she’d be sufficiently cold-blooded to
-enjoy the fruits of it without any weak-minded sentimentality such as
-repentance.”
-
-Caroline shook her head.
-
-“There probably are women like that—but Mrs. Ferrars wasn’t one of
-them. She was a mass of nerves. An overmastering impulse drove her on
-to get rid of her husband because she was the sort of person who simply
-can’t endure suffering of any kind, and there’s no doubt that the wife
-of a man like Ashley Ferrars must have had to suffer a good deal——”
-
-I nodded.
-
-“And ever since she’s been haunted by what she did. I can’t help
-feeling sorry for her.”
-
-I don’t think Caroline ever felt sorry for Mrs. Ferrars whilst she was
-alive. Now that she has gone where (presumably) Paris frocks can no
-longer be worn, Caroline is prepared to indulge in the softer emotions
-of pity and comprehension.
-
-I told her firmly that her whole idea was nonsense. I was all the more
-firm because I secretly agreed with some part, at least, of what she
-had said. But it is all wrong that Caroline should arrive at the truth
-simply by a kind of inspired guesswork. I wasn’t going to encourage
-that sort of thing. She will go round the village airing her views, and
-every one will think that she is doing so on medical data supplied by
-me. Life is very trying.
-
-“Nonsense,” said Caroline, in reply to my strictures. “You’ll see. Ten
-to one she’s left a letter confessing everything.”
-
-“She didn’t leave a letter of any kind,” I said sharply, and not seeing
-where the admission was going to land me.
-
-“Oh!” said Caroline. “So you _did_ inquire about that, did you? I
-believe, James, that in your heart of hearts, you think very much as I
-do. You’re a precious old humbug.”
-
-“One always has to take the possibility of suicide into consideration,”
-I said repressively.
-
-“Will there be an inquest?”
-
-“There may be. It all depends. If I am able to declare myself
-absolutely satisfied that the overdose was taken accidentally, an
-inquest might be dispensed with.”
-
-“And are you absolutely satisfied?” asked my sister shrewdly.
-
-I did not answer, but got up from table.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- WHO’S WHO IN KING’S ABBOT
-
-
-Before I proceed further with what I said to Caroline and what Caroline
-said to me, it might be as well to give some idea of what I should
-describe as our local geography. Our village, King’s Abbot, is, I
-imagine, very much like any other village. Our big town is Cranchester,
-nine miles away. We have a large railway station, a small post office,
-and two rival “General Stores.” Able-bodied men are apt to leave the
-place early in life, but we are rich in unmarried ladies and retired
-military officers. Our hobbies and recreations can be summed up in the
-one word, “gossip.”
-
-There are only two houses of any importance in King’s Abbot. One
-is King’s Paddock, left to Mrs. Ferrars by her late husband. The
-other, Fernly Park, is owned by Roger Ackroyd. Ackroyd has always
-interested me by being a man more impossibly like a country squire
-than any country squire could really be. He reminds one of the
-red-faced sportsmen who always appeared early in the first act of an
-old-fashioned musical comedy, the setting being the village green. They
-usually sang a song about going up to London. Nowadays we have revues,
-and the country squire has died out of musical fashion.
-
-Of course, Ackroyd is not really a country squire. He is an immensely
-successful manufacturer of (I think) wagon wheels. He is a man of
-nearly fifty years of age, rubicund of face and genial of manner.
-He is hand and glove with the vicar, subscribes liberally to parish
-funds (though rumor has it that he is extremely mean in personal
-expenditure), encourages cricket matches, Lads’ Clubs, and Disabled
-Soldiers’ Institutes. He is, in fact, the life and soul of our peaceful
-village of King’s Abbot.
-
-Now when Roger Ackroyd was a lad of twenty-one, he fell in love with,
-and married, a beautiful woman some five or six years his senior. Her
-name was Paton, and she was a widow with one child. The history of the
-marriage was short and painful. To put it bluntly, Mrs. Ackroyd was
-a dipsomaniac. She succeeded in drinking herself into her grave four
-years after her marriage.
-
-In the years that followed, Ackroyd showed no disposition to make a
-second matrimonial adventure. His wife’s child by her first marriage
-was only seven years old when his mother died. He is now twenty-five.
-Ackroyd has always regarded him as his own son, and has brought him up
-accordingly, but he has been a wild lad and a continual source of worry
-and trouble to his stepfather. Nevertheless we are all very fond of
-Ralph Paton in King’s Abbot. He is such a good-looking youngster for
-one thing.
-
-As I said before, we are ready enough to gossip in our village.
-Everybody noticed from the first that Ackroyd and Mrs. Ferrars got on
-very well together. After her husband’s death, the intimacy became
-more marked. They were always seen about together, and it was freely
-conjectured that at the end of her period of mourning, Mrs. Ferrars
-would become Mrs. Roger Ackroyd. It was felt, indeed, that there was a
-certain fitness in the thing. Roger Ackroyd’s wife had admittedly died
-of drink. Ashley Ferrars had been a drunkard for many years before his
-death. It was only fitting that these two victims of alcoholic excess
-should make up to each other for all that they had previously endured
-at the hands of their former spouses.
-
-The Ferrars only came to live here just over a year ago, but a halo of
-gossip has surrounded Ackroyd for many years past. All the time that
-Ralph Paton was growing up to manhood, a series of lady housekeepers
-presided over Ackroyd’s establishment, and each in turn was regarded
-with lively suspicion by Caroline and her cronies. It is not too
-much to say that for at least fifteen years the whole village has
-confidently expected Ackroyd to marry one of his housekeepers. The last
-of them, a redoubtable lady called Miss Russell, has reigned undisputed
-for five years, twice as long as any of her predecessors. It is felt
-that but for the advent of Mrs. Ferrars, Ackroyd could hardly have
-escaped. That—and one other factor—the unexpected arrival of a widowed
-sister-in-law with her daughter from Canada. Mrs. Cecil Ackroyd, widow
-of Ackroyd’s ne’er-do-well younger brother, has taken up her residence
-at Fernly Park, and has succeeded, according to Caroline, in putting
-Miss Russell in her proper place.
-
-I don’t know exactly what a “proper place” constitutes—it sounds chilly
-and unpleasant—but I know that Miss Russell goes about with pinched
-lips, and what I can only describe as an acid smile, and that she
-professes the utmost sympathy for “poor Mrs. Ackroyd—dependent on the
-charity of her husband’s brother. The bread of charity is so bitter, is
-it not? _I_ should be quite miserable if I did not work for my living.”
-
-I don’t know what Mrs. Cecil Ackroyd thought of the Ferrars affair when
-it came on the tapis. It was clearly to her advantage that Ackroyd
-should remain unmarried. She was always very charming—not to say
-gushing—to Mrs. Ferrars when they met. Caroline says that proves less
-than nothing.
-
-Such have been our preoccupations in King’s Abbot for the last few
-years. We have discussed Ackroyd and his affairs from every standpoint.
-Mrs. Ferrars has fitted into her place in the scheme.
-
-Now there has been a rearrangement of the kaleidoscope. From a mild
-discussion of probable wedding presents, we have been jerked into the
-midst of tragedy.
-
-Revolving these and sundry other matters in my mind, I went
-mechanically on my round. I had no cases of special interest to attend,
-which was, perhaps, as well, for my thoughts returned again and again
-to the mystery of Mrs. Ferrars’s death. Had she taken her own life?
-Surely, if she had done so, she would have left some word behind to
-say what she contemplated doing? Women, in my experience, if they once
-reach the determination to commit suicide, usually wish to reveal the
-state of mind that led to the fatal action. They covet the limelight.
-
-When had I last seen her? Not for over a week. Her manner then had been
-normal enough considering—well—considering everything.
-
-Then I suddenly remembered that I had seen her, though not to speak
-to, only yesterday. She had been walking with Ralph Paton, and I had
-been surprised because I had had no idea that he was likely to be in
-King’s Abbot. I thought, indeed, that he had quarreled finally with
-his stepfather. Nothing had been seen of him down here for nearly six
-months. They had been walking along, side by side, their heads close
-together, and she had been talking very earnestly.
-
-I think I can safely say that it was at this moment that a foreboding
-of the future first swept over me. Nothing tangible as yet—but a vague
-premonition of the way things were setting. That earnest _tête-à-tête_
-between Ralph Paton and Mrs. Ferrars the day before struck me
-disagreeably.
-
-I was still thinking of it when I came face to face with Roger Ackroyd.
-
-“Sheppard!” he exclaimed. “Just the man I wanted to get hold of. This
-is a terrible business.”
-
-“You’ve heard then?”
-
-He nodded. He had felt the blow keenly, I could see. His big red cheeks
-seemed to have fallen in, and he looked a positive wreck of his usual
-jolly, healthy self.
-
-“It’s worse than you know,” he said quietly. “Look here, Sheppard, I’ve
-got to talk to you. Can you come back with me now?”
-
-“Hardly. I’ve got three patients to see still, and I must be back by
-twelve to see my surgery patients.”
-
-“Then this afternoon—no, better still, dine to-night. At 7.30? Will
-that suit you?”
-
-“Yes—I can manage that all right. What’s wrong? Is it Ralph?”
-
-I hardly knew why I said that—except, perhaps, that it had so often
-been Ralph.
-
-Ackroyd stared blankly at me as though he hardly understood. I began to
-realize that there must be something very wrong indeed somewhere. I had
-never seen Ackroyd so upset before.
-
-“Ralph?” he said vaguely. “Oh! no, it’s not Ralph. Ralph’s in
-London——Damn! Here’s old Miss Ganett coming. I don’t want to have to
-talk to her about this ghastly business. See you to-night, Sheppard.
-Seven-thirty.”
-
-I nodded, and he hurried away, leaving me wondering. Ralph in London?
-But he had certainly been in King’s Abbot the preceding afternoon. He
-must have gone back to town last night or early this morning, and yet
-Ackroyd’s manner had conveyed quite a different impression. He had
-spoken as though Ralph had not been near the place for months.
-
-I had no time to puzzle the matter out further. Miss Ganett was upon
-me, thirsting for information. Miss Ganett has all the characteristics
-of my sister Caroline, but she lacks that unerring aim in jumping to
-conclusions which lends a touch of greatness to Caroline’s maneuvers.
-Miss Ganett was breathless and interrogatory.
-
-Wasn’t it sad about poor dear Mrs. Ferrars? A lot of people were saying
-she had been a confirmed drug-taker for years. So wicked the way
-people went about saying things. And yet, the worst of it was, there
-was usually a grain of truth somewhere in these wild statements. No
-smoke without fire! They were saying too that Mr. Ackroyd had found
-out about it, and had broken off the engagement—because there _was_ an
-engagement. She, Miss Ganett, had proof positive of that. Of course _I_
-must know all about it—doctors always did—but they never tell?
-
-And all this with a sharp beady eye on me to see how I reacted to
-these suggestions. Fortunately long association with Caroline has led
-me to preserve an impassive countenance, and to be ready with small
-non-committal remarks.
-
-On this occasion I congratulated Miss Ganett on not joining in
-ill-natured gossip. Rather a neat counterattack, I thought. It left
-her in difficulties, and before she could pull herself together, I had
-passed on.
-
-I went home thoughtful, to find several patients waiting for me in the
-surgery.
-
-I had dismissed the last of them, as I thought, and was just
-contemplating a few minutes in the garden before lunch when I perceived
-one more patient waiting for me. She rose and came towards me as I
-stood somewhat surprised.
-
-I don’t know why I should have been, except that there is a suggestion
-of cast iron about Miss Russell, a something that is above the ills of
-the flesh.
-
-Ackroyd’s housekeeper is a tall woman, handsome but forbidding in
-appearance. She has a stern eye, and lips that shut tightly, and I feel
-that if I were an under housemaid or a kitchenmaid I should run for my
-life whenever I heard her coming.
-
-“Good morning, Dr. Sheppard,” said Miss Russell. “I should be much
-obliged if you would take a look at my knee.”
-
-I took a look, but, truth to tell, I was very little wiser when I had
-done so. Miss Russell’s account of vague pains was so unconvincing that
-with a woman of less integrity of character I should have suspected a
-trumped-up tale. It did cross my mind for one moment that Miss Russell
-might have deliberately invented this affection of the knee in order
-to pump me on the subject of Mrs. Ferrars’s death, but I soon saw that
-there, at least, I had misjudged her. She made a brief reference to the
-tragedy, nothing more. Yet she certainly seemed disposed to linger and
-chat.
-
-“Well, thank you very much for this bottle of liniment, doctor,” she
-said at last. “Not that I believe it will do the least good.”
-
-I didn’t think it would either, but I protested in duty bound. After
-all, it couldn’t do any harm, and one must stick up for the tools of
-one’s trade.
-
-“I don’t believe in all these drugs,” said Miss Russell, her eyes
-sweeping over my array of bottles disparagingly. “Drugs do a lot of
-harm. Look at the cocaine habit.”
-
-“Well, as far as that goes——”
-
-“It’s very prevalent in high society.”
-
-I’m sure Miss Russell knows far more about high society than I do. I
-didn’t attempt to argue with her.
-
-“Just tell me this, doctor,” said Miss Russell. “Suppose you are really
-a slave of the drug habit. Is there any cure?”
-
-One cannot answer a question like that offhand. I gave her a short
-lecture on the subject, and she listened with close attention. I still
-suspected her of seeking information about Mrs. Ferrars.
-
-“Now, veronal, for instance——” I proceeded.
-
-But, strangely enough, she didn’t seem interested in veronal. Instead
-she changed the subject, and asked me if it was true that there were
-certain poisons so rare as to baffle detection.
-
-“Ah!” I said. “You’ve been reading detective stories.”
-
-She admitted that she had.
-
-“The essence of a detective story,” I said, “is to have a rare
-poison—if possible something from South America, that nobody has ever
-heard of—something that one obscure tribe of savages use to poison
-their arrows with. Death is instantaneous, and Western science is
-powerless to detect it. That is the kind of thing you mean?”
-
-“Yes. Is there really such a thing?”
-
-I shook my head regretfully.
-
-“I’m afraid there isn’t. There’s _curare_, of course.”
-
-I told her a good deal about curare, but she seemed to have lost
-interest once more. She asked me if I had any in my poison cupboard,
-and when I replied in the negative I fancy I fell in her estimation.
-
-She said she must be getting back, and I saw her out at the surgery
-door just as the luncheon gong went.
-
-I should never have suspected Miss Russell of a fondness for detective
-stories. It pleases me very much to think of her stepping out of the
-housekeeper’s room to rebuke a delinquent housemaid, and then returning
-to a comfortable perusal of _The Mystery of the Seventh Death_, or
-something of the kind.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- THE MAN WHO GREW VEGETABLE MARROWS
-
-
-I told Caroline at lunch time that I should be dining at Fernly. She
-expressed no objection—on the contrary——
-
-“Excellent,” she said. “You’ll hear all about it. By the way, what is
-the trouble with Ralph?”
-
-“With Ralph?” I said, surprised; “there’s isn’t any.”
-
-“Then why is he staying at the Three Boars instead of at Fernly Park?”
-
-I did not for a minute question Caroline’s statement that Ralph Paton
-was staying at the local inn. That Caroline said so was enough for me.
-
-“Ackroyd told me he was in London,” I said. In the surprise of
-the moment I departed from my valuable rule of never parting with
-information.
-
-“Oh!” said Caroline. I could see her nose twitching as she worked on
-this.
-
-“He arrived at the Three Boars yesterday morning,” she said. “And he’s
-still there. Last night he was out with a girl.”
-
-That did not surprise me in the least. Ralph, I should say, is out
-with a girl most nights of his life. But I did rather wonder that he
-chose to indulge in the pastime in King’s Abbot instead of in the gay
-metropolis.
-
-“One of the barmaids?” I asked.
-
-“No. That’s just it. He went out to meet her. I don’t know who she is.”
-
-(Bitter for Caroline to have to admit such a thing.)
-
-“But I can guess,” continued my indefatigable sister.
-
-I waited patiently.
-
-“His cousin.”
-
-“Flora Ackroyd?” I exclaimed in surprise.
-
-Flora Ackroyd is, of course, no relation whatever really to Ralph
-Paton, but Ralph has been looked upon for so long as practically
-Ackroyd’s own son, that cousinship is taken for granted.
-
-“Flora Ackroyd,” said my sister.
-
-“But why not go to Fernly if he wanted to see her?”
-
-“Secretly engaged,” said Caroline, with immense enjoyment. “Old Ackroyd
-won’t hear of it, and they have to meet this way.”
-
-I saw a good many flaws in Caroline’s theory, but I forbore to point
-them out to her. An innocent remark about our new neighbor created a
-diversion.
-
-The house next door, The Larches, has recently been taken by a
-stranger. To Caroline’s extreme annoyance, she has not been able
-to find out anything about him, except that he is a foreigner. The
-Intelligence Corps has proved a broken reed. Presumably the man has
-milk and vegetables and joints of meat and occasional whitings just
-like everybody else, but none of the people who make it their business
-to supply these things seem to have acquired any information. His name,
-apparently, is Mr. Porrott—a name which conveys an odd feeling of
-unreality. The one thing we do know about him is that he is interested
-in the growing of vegetable marrows.
-
-But that is certainly not the sort of information that Caroline is
-after. She wants to know where he comes from, what he does, whether he
-is married, what his wife was, or is, like, whether he has children,
-what his mother’s maiden name was—and so on. Somebody very like
-Caroline must have invented the questions on passports, I think.
-
-“My dear Caroline,” I said. “There’s no doubt at all about what the
-man’s profession has been. He’s a retired hairdresser. Look at that
-mustache of his.”
-
-Caroline dissented. She said that if the man was a hairdresser, he
-would have wavy hair—not straight. All hairdressers did.
-
-I cited several hairdressers personally known to me who had straight
-hair, but Caroline refused to be convinced.
-
-“I can’t make him out at all,” she said in an aggrieved voice. “I
-borrowed some garden tools the other day, and he was most polite, but
-I couldn’t get anything out of him. I asked him point blank at last
-whether he was a Frenchman, and he said he wasn’t—and somehow I didn’t
-like to ask him any more.”
-
-I began to be more interested in our mysterious neighbor. A man who
-is capable of shutting up Caroline and sending her, like the Queen of
-Sheba, empty away must be something of a personality.
-
-“I believe,” said Caroline, “that he’s got one of those new vacuum
-cleaners——”
-
-I saw a meditated loan and the opportunity of further questioning
-gleaming from her eye. I seized the chance to escape into the garden.
-I am rather fond of gardening. I was busily exterminating dandelion
-roots when a shout of warning sounded from close by and a heavy body
-whizzed by my ear and fell at my feet with a repellant squelch. It was
-a vegetable marrow!
-
-I looked up angrily. Over the wall, to my left, there appeared a face.
-An egg-shaped head, partially covered with suspiciously black hair, two
-immense mustaches, and a pair of watchful eyes. It was our mysterious
-neighbor, Mr. Porrott.
-
-He broke at once into fluent apologies.
-
-“I demand of you a thousand pardons, monsieur. I am without defense.
-For some months now I cultivate the marrows. This morning suddenly
-I enrage myself with these marrows. I send them to promenade
-themselves—alas! not only mentally but physically. I seize the biggest.
-I hurl him over the wall. Monsieur, I am ashamed. I prostrate myself.”
-
-Before such profuse apologies, my anger was forced to melt. After
-all, the wretched vegetable hadn’t hit me. But I sincerely hoped that
-throwing large vegetables over walls was not our new friend’s hobby.
-Such a habit could hardly endear him to us as a neighbor.
-
-The strange little man seemed to read my thoughts.
-
-“Ah! no,” he exclaimed. “Do not disquiet yourself. It is not with me a
-habit. But can you figure to yourself, monsieur, that a man may work
-towards a certain object, may labor and toil to attain a certain kind
-of leisure and occupation, and then find that, after all, he yearns
-for the old busy days, and the old occupations that he thought himself
-so glad to leave?”
-
-“Yes,” I said slowly. “I fancy that that is a common enough occurrence.
-I myself am perhaps an instance. A year ago I came into a legacy—enough
-to enable me to realize a dream. I have always wanted to travel, to see
-the world. Well, that was a year ago, as I said, and—I am still here.”
-
-My little neighbor nodded.
-
-“The chains of habit. We work to attain an object, and the object
-gained, we find that what we miss is the daily toil. And mark you,
-monsieur, my work was interesting work. The most interesting work there
-is in the world.”
-
-“Yes?” I said encouragingly. For the moment the spirit of Caroline was
-strong within me.
-
-“The study of human nature, monsieur!”
-
-“Just so,” I said kindly.
-
-Clearly a retired hairdresser. Who knows the secrets of human nature
-better than a hairdresser?
-
-“Also, I had a friend—a friend who for many years never left my side.
-Occasionally of an imbecility to make one afraid, nevertheless he was
-very dear to me. Figure to yourself that I miss even his stupidity.
-His _naïveté_, his honest outlook, the pleasure of delighting and
-surprising him by my superior gifts—all these I miss more than I can
-tell you.”
-
-“He died?” I asked sympathetically.
-
-“Not so. He lives and flourishes—but on the other side of the world. He
-is now in the Argentine.”
-
-“In the Argentine,” I said enviously.
-
-I have always wanted to go to South America. I sighed, and then
-looked up to find Mr. Porrott eyeing me sympathetically. He seemed an
-understanding little man.
-
-“You will go there, yes?” he asked.
-
-I shook my head with a sigh.
-
-“I could have gone,” I said, “a year ago. But I was foolish—and worse
-than foolish—greedy. I risked the substance for the shadow.”
-
-“I comprehend,” said Mr. Porrott. “You speculated?”
-
-I nodded mournfully, but in spite of myself I felt secretly
-entertained. This ridiculous little man was so portentously solemn.
-
-“Not the Porcupine Oilfields?” he asked suddenly.
-
-I stared.
-
-“I thought of them, as a matter of fact, but in the end I plumped for a
-gold mine in Western Australia.”
-
-My neighbor was regarding me with a strange expression which I could
-not fathom.
-
-“It is Fate,” he said at last.
-
-“What is Fate?” I asked irritably.
-
-“That I should live next to a man who seriously considers Porcupine
-Oilfields, and also West Australian Gold Mines. Tell me, have you also
-a penchant for auburn hair?”
-
-I stared at him open-mouthed, and he burst out laughing.
-
-“No, no, it is not the insanity that I suffer from. Make your mind
-easy. It was a foolish question that I put to you there, for, see you,
-my friend of whom I spoke was a young man, a man who thought all women
-good, and most of them beautiful. But you are a man of middle age, a
-doctor, a man who knows the folly and the vanity of most things in this
-life of ours. Well, well, we are neighbors. I beg of you to accept and
-present to your excellent sister my best marrow.”
-
-He stooped, and with a flourish produced an immense specimen of the
-tribe, which I duly accepted in the spirit in which it was offered.
-
-“Indeed,” said the little man cheerfully, “this has not been a wasted
-morning. I have made the acquaintance of a man who in some ways
-resembles my far-off friend. By the way, I should like to ask you a
-question. You doubtless know every one in this tiny village. Who is the
-young man with the very dark hair and eyes, and the handsome face. He
-walks with his head flung back, and an easy smile on his lips?”
-
-The description left me in no doubt.
-
-“That must be Captain Ralph Paton,” I said slowly.
-
-“I have not seen him about here before?”
-
-“No, he has not been here for some time. But he is the son—adopted son,
-rather—of Mr. Ackroyd of Fernly Park.”
-
-My neighbor made a slight gesture of impatience.
-
-“Of course, I should have guessed. Mr. Ackroyd spoke of him many times.”
-
-“You know Mr. Ackroyd?” I said, slightly surprised.
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd knew me in London—when I was at work there. I have asked
-him to say nothing of my profession down here.”
-
-“I see,” I said, rather amused by this patent snobbery, as I thought it.
-
-But the little man went on with an almost grandiloquent smirk.
-
-“One prefers to remain incognito. I am not anxious for notoriety. I
-have not even troubled to correct the local version of my name.”
-
-“Indeed,” I said, not knowing quite what to say.
-
-“Captain Ralph Paton,” mused Mr. Porrott. “And so he is engaged to Mr.
-Ackroyd’s niece, the charming Miss Flora.”
-
-“Who told you so?” I asked, very much surprised.
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd. About a week ago. He is very pleased about it—has long
-desired that such a thing should come to pass, or so I understood
-from him. I even believe that he brought some pressure to bear upon
-the young man. That is never wise. A young man should marry to please
-himself—not to please a stepfather from whom he has expectations.”
-
-My ideas were completely upset. I could not see Ackroyd taking a
-hairdresser into his confidence, and discussing the marriage of his
-niece and stepson with him. Ackroyd extends a genial patronage to the
-lower orders, but he has a very great sense of his own dignity. I began
-to think that Porrott couldn’t be a hairdresser after all.
-
-To hide my confusion, I said the first thing that came into my head.
-
-“What made you notice Ralph Paton? His good looks?”
-
-“No, not that alone—though he is unusually good-looking for an
-Englishman—what your lady novelists would call a Greek God. No, there
-was something about that young man that I did not understand.”
-
-He said the last sentence in a musing tone of voice which made an
-indefinable impression upon me. It was as though he was summing up the
-boy by the light of some inner knowledge that I did not share. It was
-that impression that was left with me, for at that moment my sister’s
-voice called me from the house.
-
-I went in. Caroline had her hat on, and had evidently just come in from
-the village. She began without preamble.
-
-“I met Mr. Ackroyd.”
-
-“Yes?” I said.
-
-“I stopped him, of course, but he seemed in a great hurry, and anxious
-to get away.”
-
-I have no doubt but that that was the case. He would feel towards
-Caroline much as he had felt towards Miss Ganett earlier in the
-day—perhaps more so. Caroline is less easy to shake off.
-
-“I asked him at once about Ralph. He was absolutely astonished. Had no
-idea the boy was down here. He actually said he thought I must have
-made a mistake. I! A mistake!”
-
-“Ridiculous,” I said. “He ought to have known you better.”
-
-“Then he went on to tell me that Ralph and Flora are engaged.”
-
-“I know that too,” I interrupted, with modest pride.
-
-“Who told you?”
-
-“Our new neighbor.”
-
-Caroline visibly wavered for a second or two, much as a roulette ball
-might coyly hover between two numbers. Then she declined the tempting
-red herring.
-
-“I told Mr. Ackroyd that Ralph was staying at the Three Boars.”
-
-“Caroline,” I said, “do you never reflect that you might do a lot of
-harm with this habit of yours of repeating everything indiscriminately?”
-
-“Nonsense,” said my sister. “People ought to know things. I consider it
-my duty to tell them. Mr. Ackroyd was very grateful to me.”
-
-“Well?” I said, for there was clearly more to come.
-
-“I think he went straight off to the Three Boars, but if so he didn’t
-find Ralph there.”
-
-“No?”
-
-“No. Because as I was coming back through the wood——”
-
-“Coming back through the wood?” I interrupted.
-
-Caroline had the grace to blush.
-
-“It was such a lovely day,” she exclaimed. “I thought I would make a
-little round. The woods with their autumnal tints are so perfect at
-this time of year.”
-
-Caroline does not care a hang for woods at any time of year. Normally
-she regards them as places where you get your feet damp, and where all
-kinds of unpleasant things may drop on your head. No, it was good sound
-mongoose instinct which took her to our local wood. It is the only
-place adjacent to the village of King’s Abbot where you can talk with
-a young woman unseen by the whole of the village. It adjoins the Park
-of Fernly.
-
-“Well,” I said, “go on.”
-
-“As I say, I was just coming back through the wood when I heard voices.”
-
-Caroline paused.
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“One was Ralph Paton’s—I knew it at once. The other was a girl’s. Of
-course I didn’t mean to listen——”
-
-“Of course not,” I interjected, with patent sarcasm—which was, however,
-wasted on Caroline.
-
-“But I simply couldn’t help overhearing. The girl said something—I
-didn’t quite catch what it was, and Ralph answered. He sounded very
-angry. ‘My dear girl,’ he said. ‘Don’t you realize that it is quite
-on the cards the old man will cut me off with a shilling? He’s been
-pretty fed up with me for the last few years. A little more would do
-it. And we need the dibs, my dear. I shall be a very rich man when
-the old fellow pops off. He’s mean as they make ’em, but he’s rolling
-in money really. I don’t want him to go altering his will. You leave
-it to me, and don’t worry.’ Those were his exact words. I remember
-them perfectly. Unfortunately, just then I stepped on a dry twig or
-something, and they lowered their voices and moved away. I couldn’t, of
-course, go rushing after them, so wasn’t able to see who the girl was.”
-
-“That must have been most vexing,” I said. “I suppose, though, you
-hurried on to the Three Boars, felt faint, and went into the bar for a
-glass of brandy, and so were able to see if both the barmaids were on
-duty?”
-
-“It wasn’t a barmaid,” said Caroline unhesitatingly. “In fact, I’m
-almost sure that it was Flora Ackroyd, only——”
-
-“Only it doesn’t seem to make sense,” I agreed.
-
-“But if it wasn’t Flora, who could it have been?”
-
-Rapidly my sister ran over a list of maidens living in the
-neighborhood, with profuse reasons for and against.
-
-When she paused for breath, I murmured something about a patient, and
-slipped out.
-
-I proposed to make my way to the Three Boars. It seemed likely that
-Ralph Paton would have returned there by now.
-
-I knew Ralph very well—better, perhaps, than any one else in King’s
-Abbot, for I had known his mother before him, and therefore I
-understood much in him that puzzled others. He was, to a certain
-extent, the victim of heredity. He had not inherited his mother’s
-fatal propensity for drink, but nevertheless he had in him a strain
-of weakness. As my new friend of this morning had declared, he was
-extraordinarily handsome. Just on six feet, perfectly proportioned,
-with the easy grace of an athlete, he was dark, like his mother,
-with a handsome, sunburnt face always ready to break into a smile.
-Ralph Paton was of those born to charm easily and without effort. He
-was self-indulgent and extravagant, with no veneration for anything
-on earth, but he was lovable nevertheless, and his friends were all
-devoted to him.
-
-Could I do anything with the boy? I thought I could.
-
-On inquiry at the Three Boars I found that Captain Paton had just come
-in. I went up to his room and entered unannounced.
-
-For a moment, remembering what I had heard and seen, I was doubtful of
-my reception, but I need have had no misgivings.
-
-“Why, it’s Sheppard! Glad to see you.”
-
-He came forward to meet me, hand outstretched, a sunny smile lighting
-up his face.
-
-“The one person I am glad to see in this infernal place.”
-
-I raised my eyebrows.
-
-“What’s the place been doing?”
-
-He gave a vexed laugh.
-
-“It’s a long story. Things haven’t been going well with me, doctor. But
-have a drink, won’t you?”
-
-“Thanks,” I said, “I will.”
-
-He pressed the bell, then, coming back, threw himself into a chair.
-
-“Not to mince matters,” he said gloomily, “I’m in the devil of a mess.
-In fact, I haven’t the least idea what to do next.”
-
-“What’s the matter?” I asked sympathetically.
-
-“It’s my confounded stepfather.”
-
-“What has he done?”
-
-“It isn’t what he’s done yet, but what he’s likely to do.”
-
-The bell was answered, and Ralph ordered the drinks. When the man had
-gone again, he sat hunched in the arm-chair, frowning to himself.
-
-“Is it really—serious?” I asked.
-
-He nodded.
-
-“I’m fairly up against it this time,” he said soberly.
-
-The unusual ring of gravity in his voice told me that he spoke the
-truth. It took a good deal to make Ralph grave.
-
-“In fact,” he continued, “I can’t see my way ahead.... I’m damned if I
-can.”
-
-“If I could help——” I suggested diffidently.
-
-But he shook his head very decidedly.
-
-“Good of you, doctor. But I can’t let you in on this. I’ve got to play
-a lone hand.”
-
-He was silent a minute and then repeated in a slightly different tone
-of voice:—
-
-“Yes—I’ve got to play a lone hand....”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- DINNER AT FERNLY
-
-
-It was just a few minutes before half-past seven when I rang the
-front door bell of Fernly Park. The door was opened with admirable
-promptitude by Parker, the butler.
-
-The night was such a fine one that I had preferred to come on foot. I
-stepped into the big square hall and Parker relieved me of my overcoat.
-Just then Ackroyd’s secretary, a pleasant young fellow by the name of
-Raymond, passed through the hall on his way to Ackroyd’s study, his
-hands full of papers.
-
-“Good-evening, doctor. Coming to dine? Or is this a professional call?”
-
-The last was in allusion to my black bag, which I had laid down on the
-oak chest.
-
-I explained that I expected a summons to a confinement case at any
-moment, and so had come out prepared for an emergency call. Raymond
-nodded, and went on his way, calling over his shoulder:—
-
-“Go into the drawing-room. You know the way. The ladies will be down in
-a minute. I must just take these papers to Mr. Ackroyd, and I’ll tell
-him you’re here.”
-
-On Raymond’s appearance Parker had withdrawn, so I was alone in the
-hall. I settled my tie, glanced in a large mirror which hung there, and
-crossed to the door directly facing me, which was, as I knew, the door
-of the drawing-room.
-
-I noticed, just as I was turning the handle, a sound from within—the
-shutting down of a window, I took it to be. I noted it, I may say,
-quite mechanically, without attaching any importance to it at the time.
-
-I opened the door and walked in. As I did so, I almost collided with
-Miss Russell, who was just coming out. We both apologized.
-
-For the first time I found myself appraising the housekeeper and
-thinking what a handsome woman she must once have been—indeed, as far
-as that goes, still was. Her dark hair was unstreaked with gray, and
-when she had a color, as she had at this minute, the stern quality of
-her looks was not so apparent.
-
-Quite subconsciously I wondered whether she had been out, for she was
-breathing hard, as though she had been running.
-
-“I’m afraid I’m a few minutes early,” I said.
-
-“Oh! I don’t think so. It’s gone half-past seven, Dr. Sheppard.” She
-paused a minute before saying, “I—didn’t know you were expected to
-dinner to-night. Mr. Ackroyd didn’t mention it.”
-
-I received a vague impression that my dining there displeased her in
-some way, but I couldn’t imagine why.
-
-“How’s the knee?” I inquired.
-
-“Much the same, thank you, doctor. I must be going now. Mrs. Ackroyd
-will be down in a moment. I—I only came in here to see if the flowers
-were all right.”
-
-She passed quickly out of the room. I strolled to the window,
-wondering at her evident desire to justify her presence in the room. As
-I did so, I saw what, of course, I might have known all the time had
-I troubled to give my mind to it, namely, that the windows were long
-French ones opening on the terrace. The sound I had heard, therefore,
-could not have been that of a window being shut down.
-
-Quite idly, and more to distract my mind from painful thoughts than for
-any other reason, I amused myself by trying to guess what could have
-caused the sound in question.
-
-Coals on the fire? No, that was not the kind of noise at all. A drawer
-of the bureau pushed in? No, not that.
-
-Then my eye was caught by what, I believe, is called a silver table,
-the lid of which lifts, and through the glass of which you can see the
-contents. I crossed over to it, studying the things. There were one
-or two pieces of old silver, a baby shoe belonging to King Charles
-the First, some Chinese jade figures, and quite a number of African
-implements and curios. Wanting to examine one of the jade figures more
-closely, I lifted the lid. It slipped through my fingers and fell.
-
-At once I recognized the sound I had heard. It was this same table lid
-being shut down gently and carefully. I repeated the action once or
-twice for my own satisfaction. Then I lifted the lid to scrutinize the
-contents more closely.
-
-I was still bending over the open silver table when Flora Ackroyd came
-into the room.
-
-Quite a lot of people do not like Flora Ackroyd, but nobody can help
-admiring her. And to her friends she can be very charming. The first
-thing that strikes you about her is her extraordinary fairness. She has
-the real Scandinavian pale gold hair. Her eyes are blue—blue as the
-waters of a Norwegian fiord, and her skin is cream and roses. She has
-square, boyish shoulders and slight hips. And to a jaded medical man it
-is very refreshing to come across such perfect health.
-
-A simple straight-forward English girl—I may be old-fashioned, but I
-think the genuine article takes a lot of beating.
-
-Flora joined me by the silver table, and expressed heretical doubts as
-to King Charles I ever having worn the baby shoe.
-
-“And anyway,” continued Miss Flora, “all this making a fuss about
-things because some one wore or used them seems to me all nonsense.
-They’re not wearing or using them now. The pen that George Eliot wrote
-_The Mill on the Floss_ with—that sort of thing—well, it’s only just a
-pen after all. If you’re really keen on George Eliot, why not get _The
-Mill on the Floss_ in a cheap edition and read it.”
-
-“I suppose you never read such old out-of-date stuff, Miss Flora?”
-
-“You’re wrong, Dr. Sheppard. I love _The Mill on the Floss_.”
-
-I was rather pleased to hear it. The things young women read nowadays
-and profess to enjoy positively frighten me.
-
-“You haven’t congratulated me yet, Dr. Sheppard,” said Flora. “Haven’t
-you heard?”
-
-She held out her left hand. On the third finger of it was an
-exquisitely set single pearl.
-
-“I’m going to marry Ralph, you know,” she went on. “Uncle is very
-pleased. It keeps me in the family, you see.”
-
-I took both her hands in mine.
-
-“My dear,” I said, “I hope you’ll be very happy.”
-
-“We’ve been engaged for about a month,” continued Flora in her cool
-voice, “but it was only announced yesterday. Uncle is going to do up
-Cross-stones, and give it to us to live in, and we’re going to pretend
-to farm. Really, we shall hunt all the winter, town for the season, and
-then go yachting. I love the sea. And, of course, I shall take a great
-interest in the parish affairs, and attend all the Mothers’ Meetings.”
-
-Just then Mrs. Ackroyd rustled in, full of apologies for being late.
-
-I am sorry to say I detest Mrs. Ackroyd. She is all chains and teeth
-and bones. A most unpleasant woman. She has small pale flinty blue
-eyes, and however gushing her words may be, those eyes of hers always
-remain coldly speculative.
-
-I went across to her, leaving Flora by the window. She gave me a
-handful of assorted knuckles and rings to squeeze, and began talking
-volubly.
-
-Had I heard about Flora’s engagement? So suitable in every way. The
-dear young things had fallen in love at first sight. Such a perfect
-pair, he so dark and she so fair.
-
-“I can’t tell you, my dear Dr. Sheppard, the relief to a mother’s
-heart.”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd sighed—a tribute to her mother’s heart, whilst her eyes
-remained shrewdly observant of me.
-
-“I was wondering. You are such an old friend of dear Roger’s. We
-know how much he trusts to your judgment. So difficult for me—in
-my position, as poor Cecil’s widow. But there are so many tiresome
-things—settlements, you know—all that. I fully believe that Roger
-intends to make settlements upon dear Flora, but, as you know, he is
-just a _leetle_ peculiar about money. Very usual, I’ve heard, amongst
-men who are captains of industry. I wondered, you know, if you could
-just _sound_ him on the subject? Flora is so fond of you. We feel you
-are quite an old friend, although we have only really known you just
-over two years.”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd’s eloquence was cut short as the drawing-room door opened
-once more. I was pleased at the interruption. I hate interfering in
-other people’s affairs, and I had not the least intention of tackling
-Ackroyd on the subject of Flora’s settlements. In another moment I
-should have been forced to tell Mrs. Ackroyd as much.
-
-“You know Major Blunt, don’t you, doctor?”
-
-“Yes, indeed,” I said.
-
-A lot of people know Hector Blunt—at least by repute. He has shot more
-wild animals in unlikely places than any man living, I suppose. When
-you mention him, people say: “Blunt—you don’t mean the big game man, do
-you?”
-
-His friendship with Ackroyd has always puzzled me a little. The two men
-are so totally dissimilar. Hector Blunt is perhaps five years Ackroyd’s
-junior. They made friends early in life, and though their ways have
-diverged, the friendship still holds. About once in two years Blunt
-spends a fortnight at Fernly, and an immense animal’s head, with an
-amazing number of horns which fixes you with a glazed stare as soon
-as you come inside the front door, is a permanent reminder of the
-friendship.
-
-Blunt had entered the room now with his own peculiar, deliberate, yet
-soft-footed tread. He is a man of medium height, sturdily and rather
-stockily built. His face is almost mahogany-colored, and is peculiarly
-expressionless. He has gray eyes that give the impression of always
-watching something that is happening very far away. He talks little,
-and what he does say is said jerkily, as though the words were forced
-out of him unwillingly.
-
-He said now: “How are you, Sheppard?” in his usual abrupt fashion, and
-then stood squarely in front of the fireplace looking over our heads as
-though he saw something very interesting happening in Timbuctoo.
-
-“Major Blunt,” said Flora, “I wish you’d tell me about these African
-things. I’m sure you know what they all are.”
-
-I have heard Hector Blunt described as a woman hater, but I noticed
-that he joined Flora at the silver table with what might be described
-as alacrity. They bent over it together.
-
-I was afraid Mrs. Ackroyd would begin talking about settlements again,
-so I made a few hurried remarks about the new sweet pea. I knew there
-was a new sweet pea because the _Daily Mail_ had told me so that
-morning. Mrs. Ackroyd knows nothing about horticulture, but she is the
-kind of woman who likes to appear well-informed about the topics of the
-day, and she, too, reads the _Daily Mail_. We were able to converse
-quite intelligently until Ackroyd and his secretary joined us, and
-immediately afterwards Parker announced dinner.
-
-My place at table was between Mrs. Ackroyd and Flora. Blunt was on Mrs.
-Ackroyd’s other side, and Geoffrey Raymond next to him.
-
-Dinner was not a cheerful affair. Ackroyd was visibly preoccupied. He
-looked wretched, and ate next to nothing. Mrs. Ackroyd, Raymond, and
-I kept the conversation going. Flora seemed affected by her uncle’s
-depression, and Blunt relapsed into his usual taciturnity.
-
-Immediately after dinner Ackroyd slipped his arm through mine and led
-me off to his study.
-
-“Once we’ve had coffee, we shan’t be disturbed again,” he explained. “I
-told Raymond to see to it that we shouldn’t be interrupted.”
-
-I studied him quietly without appearing to do so. He was clearly under
-the influence of some strong excitement. For a minute or two he paced
-up and down the room, then, as Parker entered with the coffee tray, he
-sank into an arm-chair in front of the fire.
-
-The study was a comfortable apartment. Book-shelves lined one wall of
-it. The chairs were big and covered in dark blue leather. A large desk
-stood by the window and was covered with papers neatly docketed and
-filed. On a round table were various magazines and sporting papers.
-
-“I’ve had a return of that pain after food lately,” remarked Ackroyd
-casually, as he helped himself to coffee. “You must give me some more
-of those tablets of yours.”
-
-It struck me that he was anxious to convey the impression that our
-conference was a medical one. I played up accordingly.
-
-“I thought as much. I brought some up with me.”
-
-“Good man. Hand them over now.”
-
-“They’re in my bag in the hall. I’ll get them.”
-
-Ackroyd arrested me.
-
-“Don’t you trouble. Parker will get them. Bring in the doctor’s bag,
-will you, Parker?”
-
-“Very good, sir.”
-
-Parker withdrew. As I was about to speak, Ackroyd threw up his hand.
-
-“Not yet. Wait. Don’t you see I’m in such a state of nerves that I can
-hardly contain myself?”
-
-I saw that plainly enough. And I was very uneasy. All sorts of
-forebodings assailed me.
-
-Ackroyd spoke again almost immediately.
-
-“Make certain that window’s closed, will you?” he asked.
-
-Somewhat surprised, I got up and went to it. It was not a French
-window, but one of the ordinary sash type. The heavy blue velvet
-curtains were drawn in front of it, but the window itself was open at
-the top.
-
-Parker reëntered the room with my bag while I was still at the window.
-
-“That’s all right,” I said, emerging again into the room.
-
-“You’ve put the latch across?”
-
-“Yes, yes. What’s the matter with you, Ackroyd?”
-
-The door had just closed behind Parker, or I would not have put the
-question.
-
-Ackroyd waited just a minute before replying.
-
-“I’m in hell,” he said slowly, after a minute. “No, don’t bother with
-those damned tablets. I only said that for Parker. Servants are so
-curious. Come here and sit down. The door’s closed too, isn’t it?”
-
-“Yes. Nobody can overhear; don’t be uneasy.”
-
-“Sheppard, nobody knows what I’ve gone through in the last twenty-four
-hours. If a man’s house ever fell in ruins about him, mine has about
-me. This business of Ralph’s is the last straw. But we won’t talk about
-that now. It’s the other—the other——! I don’t know what to do about it.
-And I’ve got to make up my mind soon.”
-
-“What’s the trouble?”
-
-Ackroyd remained silent for a minute or two. He seemed curiously averse
-to begin. When he did speak, the question he asked came as a complete
-surprise. It was the last thing I expected.
-
-“Sheppard, you attended Ashley Ferrars in his last illness, didn’t you?”
-
-“Yes, I did.”
-
-He seemed to find even greater difficulty in framing his next question.
-
-“Did you never suspect—did it ever enter your head—that—well, that he
-might have been poisoned?”
-
-I was silent for a minute or two. Then I made up my mind what to say.
-Roger Ackroyd was not Caroline.
-
-“I’ll tell you the truth,” I said. “At the time I had no suspicion
-whatever, but since—well, it was mere idle talk on my sister’s part
-that first put the idea into my head. Since then I haven’t been able to
-get it out again. But, mind you, I’ve no foundation whatever for that
-suspicion.”
-
-“He _was_ poisoned,” said Ackroyd.
-
-He spoke in a dull heavy voice.
-
-“Who by?” I asked sharply.
-
-“His wife.”
-
-“How do you know that?”
-
-“She told me so herself.”
-
-“When?”
-
-“Yesterday! My God! yesterday! It seems ten years ago.”
-
-I waited a minute, and then he went on.
-
-“You understand, Sheppard, I’m telling you this in confidence. It’s to
-go no further. I want your advice—I can’t carry the whole weight by
-myself. As I said just now, I don’t know what to do.”
-
-“Can you tell me the whole story?” I said. “I’m still in the dark. How
-did Mrs. Ferrars come to make this confession to you?”
-
-“It’s like this. Three months ago I asked Mrs. Ferrars to marry me.
-She refused. I asked her again and she consented, but she refused to
-allow me to make the engagement public until her year of mourning was
-up. Yesterday I called upon her, pointed out that a year and three
-weeks had now elapsed since her husband’s death, and that there could
-be no further objection to making the engagement public property. I
-had noticed that she had been very strange in her manner for some days.
-Now, suddenly, without the least warning, she broke down completely.
-She—she told me everything. Her hatred of her brute of a husband, her
-growing love for me, and the—the dreadful means she had taken. Poison!
-My God! It was murder in cold blood.”
-
-I saw the repulsion, the horror, in Ackroyd’s face. So Mrs. Ferrars
-must have seen it. Ackroyd is not the type of the great lover who can
-forgive all for love’s sake. He is fundamentally a good citizen. All
-that was sound and wholesome and law-abiding in him must have turned
-from her utterly in that moment of revelation.
-
-“Yes,” he went on, in a low, monotonous voice, “she confessed
-everything. It seems that there is one person who has known all
-along—who has been blackmailing her for huge sums. It was the strain of
-that that drove her nearly mad.”
-
-“Who was the man?”
-
-Suddenly before my eyes there arose the picture of Ralph Paton and Mrs.
-Ferrars side by side. Their heads so close together. I felt a momentary
-throb of anxiety. Supposing—oh! but surely that was impossible. I
-remembered the frankness of Ralph’s greeting that very afternoon.
-Absurd!
-
-“She wouldn’t tell me his name,” said Ackroyd slowly. “As a matter of
-fact, she didn’t actually say that it was a man. But of course——”
-
-“Of course,” I agreed. “It must have been a man. And you’ve no
-suspicion at all?”
-
-For answer Ackroyd groaned and dropped his head into his hands.
-
-“It can’t be,” he said. “I’m mad even to think of such a thing. No, I
-won’t even admit to you the wild suspicion that crossed my mind. I’ll
-tell you this much, though. Something she said made me think that the
-person in question might be actually among my household—but that can’t
-be so. I must have misunderstood her.”
-
-“What did you say to her?” I asked.
-
-“What could I say? She saw, of course, the awful shock it had been to
-me. And then there was the question, what was my duty in the matter?
-She had made me, you see, an accessory after the fact. She saw all
-that, I think, quicker than I did. I was stunned, you know. She asked
-me for twenty-four hours—made me promise to do nothing till the end
-of that time. And she steadfastly refused to give me the name of the
-scoundrel who had been blackmailing her. I suppose she was afraid that
-I might go straight off and hammer him, and then the fat would have
-been in the fire as far as she was concerned. She told me that I should
-hear from her before twenty-four hours had passed. My God! I swear to
-you, Sheppard, that it never entered my head what she meant to do.
-Suicide! And I drove her to it.”
-
-“No, no,” I said. “Don’t take an exaggerated view of things. The
-responsibility for her death doesn’t lie at your door.”
-
-“The question is, what am I to do now? The poor lady is dead. Why rake
-up past trouble?”
-
-“I rather agree with you,” I said.
-
-“But there’s another point. How am I to get hold of that scoundrel who
-drove her to death as surely as if he’d killed her. He knew of the
-first crime, and he fastened on to it like some obscene vulture. She’s
-paid the penalty. Is he to go scot-free?”
-
-“I see,” I said slowly. “You want to hunt him down? It will mean a lot
-of publicity, you know.”
-
-“Yes, I’ve thought of that. I’ve zigzagged to and fro in my mind.”
-
-“I agree with you that the villain ought to be punished, but the cost
-has got to be reckoned.”
-
-Ackroyd rose and walked up and down. Presently he sank into the chair
-again.
-
-“Look here, Sheppard, suppose we leave it like this. If no word comes
-from her, we’ll let the dead things lie.”
-
-“What do you mean by word coming from her?” I asked curiously.
-
-“I have the strongest impression that somewhere or somehow she must
-have left a message for me—before she went. I can’t argue about it, but
-there it is.”
-
-I shook my head.
-
-“She left no letter or word of any kind. I asked.”
-
-“Sheppard, I’m convinced that she did. And more, I’ve a feeling that by
-deliberately choosing death, she wanted the whole thing to come out, if
-only to be revenged on the man who drove her to desperation. I believe
-that if I could have seen her then, she would have told me his name and
-bid me go for him for all I was worth.”
-
-He looked at me.
-
-“You don’t believe in impressions?”
-
-“Oh, yes, I do, in a sense. If, as you put it, word should come from
-her——”
-
-I broke off. The door opened noiselessly and Parker entered with a
-salver on which were some letters.
-
-“The evening post, sir,” he said, handing the salver to Ackroyd.
-
-Then he collected the coffee cups and withdrew.
-
-My attention, diverted for a moment, came back to Ackroyd. He was
-staring like a man turned to stone at a long blue envelope. The other
-letters he had let drop to the ground.
-
-“_Her writing_,” he said in a whisper. “She must have gone out and
-posted it last night, just before—before——”
-
-He ripped open the envelope and drew out a thick enclosure. Then he
-looked up sharply.
-
-“You’re sure you shut the window?” he said.
-
-“Quite sure,” I said, surprised. “Why?”
-
-“All this evening I’ve had a queer feeling of being watched, spied
-upon. What’s that——?”
-
-He turned sharply. So did I. We both had the impression of hearing the
-latch of the door give ever so slightly. I went across to it and opened
-it. There was no one there.
-
-“Nerves,” murmured Ackroyd to himself.
-
-He unfolded the thick sheets of paper, and read aloud in a low voice.
-
- “_My dear, my very dear Roger,—A life calls for a life. I see
- that—I saw it in your face this afternoon. So I am taking the only
- road open to me. I leave to you the punishment of the person who
- has made my life a hell upon earth for the last year. I would not
- tell you the name this afternoon, but I propose to write it to you
- now. I have no children or near relations to be spared, so do not
- fear publicity. If you can, Roger, my very dear Roger, forgive me
- the wrong I meant to do you, since when the time came, I could not
- do it after all...._”
-
-Ackroyd, his finger on the sheet to turn it over, paused.
-
-“Sheppard, forgive me, but I must read this alone,” he said unsteadily.
-“It was meant for my eyes, and my eyes only.”
-
-He put the letter in the envelope and laid it on the table.
-
-“Later, when I am alone.”
-
-“No,” I cried impulsively, “read it now.”
-
-Ackroyd stared at me in some surprise.
-
-“I beg your pardon,” I said, reddening. “I do not mean read it aloud to
-me. But read it through whilst I am still here.”
-
-Ackroyd shook his head.
-
-“No, I’d rather wait.”
-
-But for some reason, obscure to myself, I continued to urge him.
-
-“At least, read the name of the man,” I said.
-
-Now Ackroyd is essentially pig-headed. The more you urge him to do a
-thing, the more determined he is not to do it. All my arguments were in
-vain.
-
-The letter had been brought in at twenty minutes to nine. It was just
-on ten minutes to nine when I left him, the letter still unread. I
-hesitated with my hand on the door handle, looking back and wondering
-if there was anything I had left undone. I could think of nothing. With
-a shake of the head I passed out and closed the door behind me.
-
-I was startled by seeing the figure of Parker close at hand. He looked
-embarrassed, and it occurred to me that he might have been listening at
-the door.
-
-What a fat, smug, oily face the man had, and surely there was something
-decidedly shifty in his eye.
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd particularly does not want to be disturbed,” I said
-coldly. “He told me to tell you so.”
-
-“Quite so, sir. I—I fancied I heard the bell ring.”
-
-This was such a palpable untruth that I did not trouble to reply.
-Preceding me to the hall, Parker helped me on with my overcoat, and I
-stepped out into the night. The moon was overcast and everything seemed
-very dark and still. The village church clock chimed nine o’clock
-as I passed through the lodge gates. I turned to the left towards
-the village, and almost cannoned into a man coming in the opposite
-direction.
-
-“This the way to Fernly Park, mister?” asked the stranger in a hoarse
-voice.
-
-I looked at him. He was wearing a hat pulled down over his eyes, and
-his coat collar turned up. I could see little or nothing of his face,
-but he seemed a young fellow. The voice was rough and uneducated.
-
-“These are the lodge gates here,” I said.
-
-“Thank you, mister.” He paused, and then added, quite unnecessarily,
-“I’m a stranger in these parts, you see.”
-
-He went on, passing through the gates as I turned to look after him.
-
-The odd thing was that his voice reminded me of some one’s voice that I
-knew, but whose it was I could not think.
-
-Ten minutes later I was at home once more. Caroline was full of
-curiosity to know why I had returned so early. I had to make up a
-slightly fictitious account of the evening in order to satisfy her, and
-I had an uneasy feeling that she saw through the transparent device.
-
-At ten o’clock I rose, yawned, and suggested bed. Caroline acquiesced.
-
-It was Friday night, and on Friday night I wind the clocks. I did it as
-usual, whilst Caroline satisfied herself that the servants had locked
-up the kitchen properly.
-
-It was a quarter past ten as we went up the stairs. I had just reached
-the top when the telephone rang in the hall below.
-
-“Mrs. Bates,” said Caroline immediately.
-
-“I’m afraid so,” I said ruefully.
-
-I ran down the stairs and took up the receiver.
-
-“What?” I said. “_What?_ Certainly, I’ll come at once.”
-
-I ran upstairs, caught up my bag, and stuffed a few extra dressings
-into it.
-
-“Parker telephoning,” I shouted to Caroline, “from Fernly. They’ve just
-found Roger Ackroyd murdered.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- MURDER
-
-
-I got out the car in next to no time, and drove rapidly to Fernly.
-Jumping out, I pulled the bell impatiently. There was some delay in
-answering, and I rang again.
-
-Then I heard the rattle of the chain and Parker, his impassivity of
-countenance quite unmoved, stood in the open doorway.
-
-I pushed past him into the hall.
-
-“Where is he?” I demanded sharply.
-
-“I beg your pardon, sir?”
-
-“Your master. Mr. Ackroyd. Don’t stand there staring at me, man. Have
-you notified the police?”
-
-“The police, sir? Did you say the police?” Parker stared at me as
-though I were a ghost.
-
-“What’s the matter with you, Parker? If, as you say, your master has
-been murdered——”
-
-A gasp broke from Parker.
-
-“The master? Murdered? Impossible, sir!”
-
-It was my turn to stare.
-
-“Didn’t you telephone to me, not five minutes ago, and tell me that Mr.
-Ackroyd had been found murdered?”
-
-“Me, sir? Oh! no indeed, sir. I wouldn’t dream of doing such a thing.”
-
-“Do you mean to say it’s all a hoax? That there’s nothing the matter
-with Mr. Ackroyd?”
-
-“Excuse me, sir, did the person telephoning use my name?”
-
-“I’ll give you the exact words I heard. ‘_Is that Dr. Sheppard? Parker,
-the butler at Fernly, speaking. Will you please come at once, sir. Mr.
-Ackroyd has been murdered._’”
-
-Parker and I stared at each other blankly.
-
-“A very wicked joke to play, sir,” he said at last, in a shocked tone.
-“Fancy saying a thing like that.”
-
-“Where is Mr. Ackroyd?” I asked suddenly.
-
-“Still in the study, I fancy, sir. The ladies have gone to bed, and
-Major Blunt and Mr. Raymond are in the billiard room.”
-
-“I think I’ll just look in and see him for a minute,” I said. “I know
-he didn’t want to be disturbed again, but this odd practical joke has
-made me uneasy. I’d just like to satisfy myself that he’s all right.”
-
-“Quite so, sir. It makes me feel quite uneasy myself. If you don’t
-object to my accompanying you as far as the door, sir——?”
-
-“Not at all,” I said. “Come along.”
-
-I passed through the door on the right, Parker on my heels, traversed
-the little lobby where a small flight of stairs led upstairs to
-Ackroyd’s bedroom, and tapped on the study door.
-
-There was no answer. I turned the handle, but the door was locked.
-
-“Allow me, sir,” said Parker.
-
-Very nimbly, for a man of his build, he dropped on one knee and applied
-his eye to the keyhole.
-
-“Key is in the lock all right, sir,” he said, rising. “On the inside.
-Mr. Ackroyd must have locked himself in and possibly just dropped off
-to sleep.”
-
-I bent down and verified Parker’s statement.
-
-“It seems all right,” I said, “but, all the same, Parker, I’m going
-to wake your master up. I shouldn’t be satisfied to go home without
-hearing from his own lips that he’s quite all right.”
-
-So saying, I rattled the handle and called out, “Ackroyd, Ackroyd, just
-a minute.”
-
-But still there was no answer. I glanced over my shoulder.
-
-“I don’t want to alarm the household,” I said hesitatingly.
-
-Parker went across and shut the door from the big hall through which we
-had come.
-
-“I think that will be all right now, sir. The billiard room is at
-the other side of the house, and so are the kitchen quarters and the
-ladies’ bedrooms.”
-
-I nodded comprehendingly. Then I banged once more frantically on the
-door, and stooping down, fairly bawled through the keyhole:—
-
-“Ackroyd, Ackroyd! It’s Sheppard. Let me in.”
-
-And still—silence. Not a sign of life from within the locked room.
-Parker and I glanced at each other.
-
-“Look here, Parker,” I said, “I’m going to break this door in—or
-rather, we are. I’ll take the responsibility.”
-
-“If you say so, sir,” said Parker, rather doubtfully.
-
-“I do say so. I’m seriously alarmed about Mr. Ackroyd.”
-
-I looked round the small lobby and picked up a heavy oak chair. Parker
-and I held it between us and advanced to the assault. Once, twice, and
-three times we hurled it against the lock. At the third blow it gave,
-and we staggered into the room.
-
-Ackroyd was sitting as I had left him in the arm-chair before the fire.
-His head had fallen sideways, and clearly visible, just below the
-collar of his coat, was a shining piece of twisted metalwork.
-
-Parker and I advanced till we stood over the recumbent figure. I heard
-the butler draw in his breath with a sharp hiss.
-
-“Stabbed from be’ind,” he murmured. “’Orrible!”
-
-He wiped his moist brow with his handkerchief, then stretched out a
-hand gingerly towards the hilt of the dagger.
-
-“You mustn’t touch that,” I said sharply. “Go at once to the telephone
-and ring up the police station. Inform them of what has happened. Then
-tell Mr. Raymond and Major Blunt.”
-
-“Very good, sir.”
-
-Parker hurried away, still wiping his perspiring brow.
-
-I did what little had to be done. I was careful not to disturb the
-position of the body, and not to handle the dagger at all. No object
-was to be attained by moving it. Ackroyd had clearly been dead some
-little time.
-
-Then I heard young Raymond’s voice, horror-stricken and incredulous,
-outside.
-
-“What do you say? Oh! impossible! Where’s the doctor?”
-
-He appeared impetuously in the doorway, then stopped dead, his face
-very white. A hand put him aside, and Hector Blunt came past him into
-the room.
-
-“My God!” said Raymond from behind him; “it’s true, then.”
-
-Blunt came straight on till he reached the chair. He bent over the
-body, and I thought that, like Parker, he was going to lay hold of the
-dagger hilt. I drew him back with one hand.
-
-“Nothing must be moved,” I explained. “The police must see him exactly
-as he is now.”
-
-Blunt nodded in instant comprehension. His face was expressionless as
-ever, but I thought I detected signs of emotion beneath the stolid
-mask. Geoffrey Raymond had joined us now, and stood peering over
-Blunt’s shoulder at the body.
-
-“This is terrible,” he said in a low voice.
-
-He had regained his composure, but as he took off the pince-nez he
-habitually wore and polished them I observed that his hand was shaking.
-
-“Robbery, I suppose,” he said. “How did the fellow get in? Through the
-window? Has anything been taken?”
-
-He went towards the desk.
-
-“You think it’s burglary?” I said slowly.
-
-“What else could it be? There’s no question of suicide, I suppose?”
-
-“No man could stab himself in such a way,” I said confidently. “It’s
-murder right enough. But with what motive?”
-
-“Roger hadn’t an enemy in the world,” said Blunt quietly. “Must have
-been burglars. But what was the thief after? Nothing seems to be
-disarranged?”
-
-He looked round the room. Raymond was still sorting the papers on the
-desk.
-
-“There seems nothing missing, and none of the drawers show signs of
-having been tampered with,” the secretary observed at last. “It’s very
-mysterious.”
-
-Blunt made a slight motion with his head.
-
-“There are some letters on the floor here,” he said.
-
-I looked down. Three or four letters still lay where Ackroyd had
-dropped them earlier in the evening.
-
-But the blue envelope containing Mrs. Ferrars’s letter had disappeared.
-I half opened my mouth to speak, but at that moment the sound of a bell
-pealed through the house. There was a confused murmur of voices in the
-hall, and then Parker appeared with our local inspector and a police
-constable.
-
-“Good evening, gentlemen,” said the inspector. “I’m terribly sorry for
-this! A good kind gentleman like Mr. Ackroyd. The butler says it is
-murder. No possibility of accident or suicide, doctor?”
-
-“None whatever,” I said.
-
-“Ah! A bad business.”
-
-He came and stood over the body.
-
-“Been moved at all?” he asked sharply.
-
-“Beyond making certain that life was extinct—an easy matter—I have not
-disturbed the body in any way.”
-
-“Ah! And everything points to the murderer having got clear away—for
-the moment, that is. Now then, let me hear all about it. Who found the
-body?”
-
-I explained the circumstances carefully.
-
-“A telephone message, you say? From the butler?”
-
-“A message that I never sent,” declared Parker earnestly. “I’ve not
-been near the telephone the whole evening. The others can bear me out
-that I haven’t.”
-
-“Very odd, that. Did it sound like Parker’s voice, doctor?”
-
-“Well—I can’t say I noticed. I took it for granted, you see.”
-
-“Naturally. Well, you got up here, broke in the door, and found poor
-Mr. Ackroyd like this. How long should you say he had been dead,
-doctor?”
-
-“Half an hour at least—perhaps longer,” I said.
-
-“The door was locked on the inside, you say? What about the window?”
-
-“I myself closed and bolted it earlier in the evening at Mr. Ackroyd’s
-request.”
-
-The inspector strode across to it and threw back the curtains.
-
-“Well, it’s open now anyway,” he remarked.
-
-True enough, the window was open, the lower sash being raised to its
-fullest extent.
-
-The inspector produced a pocket torch and flashed it along the sill
-outside.
-
-“This is the way he went all right,” he remarked, “_and_ got in. See
-here.”
-
-In the light of the powerful torch, several clearly defined footmarks
-could be seen. They seemed to be those of shoes with rubber studs
-in the soles. One particularly clear one pointed inwards, another,
-slightly overlapping it, pointed outwards.
-
-“Plain as a pikestaff,” said the inspector. “Any valuables missing?”
-
-Geoffrey Raymond shook his head.
-
-“Not so that we can discover. Mr. Ackroyd never kept anything of
-particular value in this room.”
-
-“H’m,” said the inspector. “Man found an open window. Climbed in, saw
-Mr. Ackroyd sitting there—maybe he’d fallen asleep. Man stabbed him
-from behind, then lost his nerve and made off. But he’s left his tracks
-pretty clearly. We ought to get hold of _him_ without much difficulty.
-No suspicious strangers been hanging about anywhere?”
-
-“Oh!” I said suddenly.
-
-“What is it, doctor?”
-
-“I met a man this evening—just as I was turning out of the gate. He
-asked me the way to Fernly Park.”
-
-“What time would that be?”
-
-“Just nine o’clock. I heard it chime the hour as I was turning out of
-the gate.”
-
-“Can you describe him?”
-
-I did so to the best of my ability.
-
-The inspector turned to the butler.
-
-“Any one answering that description come to the front door?”
-
-“No, sir. No one has been to the house at all this evening.”
-
-“What about the back?”
-
-“I don’t think so, sir, but I’ll make inquiries.”
-
-He moved towards the door, but the inspector held up a large hand.
-
-“No, thanks. I’ll do my own inquiring. But first of all I want to fix
-the time a little more clearly. When was Mr. Ackroyd last seen alive?”
-
-“Probably by me,” I said, “when I left at—let me see—about ten minutes
-to nine. He told me that he didn’t wish to be disturbed, and I repeated
-the order to Parker.”
-
-“Just so, sir,” said Parker respectfully.
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd was certainly alive at half-past nine,” put in Raymond,
-“for I heard his voice in here talking.”
-
-“Who was he talking to?”
-
-“That I don’t know. Of course, at the time I took it for granted that
-it was Dr. Sheppard who was with him. I wanted to ask him a question
-about some papers I was engaged upon, but when I heard the voices I
-remembered that he had said he wanted to talk to Dr. Sheppard without
-being disturbed, and I went away again. But now it seems that the
-doctor had already left?”
-
-I nodded.
-
-“I was at home by a quarter-past nine,” I said. “I didn’t go out again
-until I received the telephone call.”
-
-“Who could have been with him at half-past nine?” queried the
-inspector. “It wasn’t you, Mr.—er——”
-
-“Major Blunt,” I said.
-
-“Major Hector Blunt?” asked the inspector, a respectful tone creeping
-into his voice.
-
-Blunt merely jerked his head affirmatively.
-
-“I think we’ve seen you down here before, sir,” said the inspector.
-“I didn’t recognize you for the moment, but you were staying with Mr.
-Ackroyd a year ago last May.”
-
-“June,” corrected Blunt.
-
-“Just so, June it was. Now, as I was saying, it wasn’t you with Mr.
-Ackroyd at nine-thirty this evening?”
-
-Blunt shook his head.
-
-“Never saw him after dinner,” he volunteered.
-
-The inspector turned once more to Raymond.
-
-“You didn’t overhear any of the conversation going on, did you, sir?”
-
-“I did catch just a fragment of it,” said the secretary, “and,
-supposing as I did that it was Dr. Sheppard who was with Mr. Ackroyd,
-that fragment struck me as distinctly odd. As far as I can remember,
-the exact words were these. Mr. Ackroyd was speaking. ‘The calls
-on my purse have been so frequent of late’—that is what he was
-saying—‘of late, that I fear it is impossible for me to accede to your
-request....’ I went away again at once, of course, so did not hear any
-more. But I rather wondered because Dr. Sheppard——”
-
-“——Does not ask for loans for himself or subscriptions for others,” I
-finished.
-
-“A demand for money,” said the inspector musingly. “It may be that here
-we have a very important clew.” He turned to the butler. “You say,
-Parker, that nobody was admitted by the front door this evening?”
-
-“That’s what I say, sir.”
-
-“Then it seems almost certain that Mr. Ackroyd himself must have
-admitted this stranger. But I don’t quite see——”
-
-The inspector went into a kind of day-dream for some minutes.
-
-“One thing’s clear,” he said at length, rousing himself from his
-absorption. “Mr. Ackroyd was alive and well at nine-thirty. That is the
-last moment at which he is known to have been alive.”
-
-Parker gave vent to an apologetic cough which brought the inspector’s
-eyes on him at once.
-
-“Well?” he said sharply.
-
-“If you’ll excuse me, sir, Miss Flora saw him after that.”
-
-“Miss Flora?”
-
-“Yes, sir. About a quarter to ten that would be. It was after that that
-she told me Mr. Ackroyd wasn’t to be disturbed again to-night.”
-
-“Did he send her to you with that message?”
-
-“Not exactly, sir. I was bringing a tray with soda and whisky when Miss
-Flora, who was just coming out of this room, stopped me and said her
-uncle didn’t want to be disturbed.”
-
-The inspector looked at the butler with rather closer attention than he
-had bestowed on him up to now.
-
-“You’d already been told that Mr. Ackroyd didn’t want to be disturbed,
-hadn’t you?”
-
-Parker began to stammer. His hands shook.
-
-“Yes, sir. Yes, sir. Quite so, sir.”
-
-“And yet you were proposing to do so?”
-
-“I’d forgotten, sir. At least I mean, I always bring the whisky and
-soda about that time, sir, and ask if there’s anything more, and I
-thought—well, I was doing as usual without thinking.”
-
-It was at this moment that it began to dawn upon me that Parker was
-most suspiciously flustered. The man was shaking and twitching all over.
-
-“H’m,” said the inspector. “I must see Miss Ackroyd at once. For the
-moment we’ll leave this room exactly as it is. I can return here after
-I’ve heard what Miss Ackroyd has to tell me. I shall just take the
-precaution of shutting and bolting the window.”
-
-This precaution accomplished, he led the way into the hall and we
-followed him. He paused a moment, as he glanced up at the little
-staircase, then spoke over his shoulder to the constable.
-
-“Jones, you’d better stay here. Don’t let any one go into that room.”
-
-Parker interposed deferentially.
-
-“If you’ll excuse me, sir. If you were to lock the door into the main
-hall, nobody could gain access to this part. That staircase leads only
-to Mr. Ackroyd’s bedroom and bathroom. There is no communication with
-the other part of the house. There once was a door through, but Mr.
-Ackroyd had it blocked up. He liked to feel that his suite was entirely
-private.”
-
-To make things clear and explain the position, I have appended a rough
-sketch of the right-hand wing of the house. The small staircase leads,
-as Parker explained, to a big bedroom (made by two being knocked into
-one) and an adjoining bathroom and lavatory.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- +------------------------------------.
- | TERRACE .
- |--==--+--==---==--+---==---==----+ .
- |PANTRY| DINING | DRAWING | .
- | | ROOM | ROOM | .
- | | | | .
- |___/ _+___/ __/ _+_/ +__________+ .
- | | | .
- |___ ___+____+ \STAIRS‖‖‖| .
- | \ |====| +-- /------+ .
- | |====| | | .
- |BILLIARD|====| HALL | | .
- | ROOM |====| | STUDY ‖ .
- | +----+ | ‖ .
- | |STAIRCASE | | .
- | | | | .
- | \ | | .
- +-==-==--+-------+ +--+----------+- -+
- | | . .
- FRONT DOOR . .
- . . . .
- . . . .
- . . . .
- . . PATH .
- . . . . ..
- LAWN . . . . . .
- . . . . . .
- . . . . ..
- . . . . SUMMER
- . +---+ HOUSE
- . | |LODGE
- -----------------+ +---+--------------
-]
-
-The inspector took in the position at a glance. We went through into
-the large hall and he locked the door behind him, slipping the key into
-his pocket. Then he gave the constable some low-voiced instructions,
-and the latter prepared to depart.
-
-“We must get busy on those shoe tracks,” explained the inspector. “But
-first of all, I must have a word with Miss Ackroyd. She was the last
-person to see her uncle alive. Does she know yet?”
-
-Raymond shook his head.
-
-“Well, no need to tell her for another five minutes. She can answer my
-questions better without being upset by knowing the truth about her
-uncle. Tell her there’s been a burglary, and ask her if she would mind
-dressing and coming down to answer a few questions.”
-
-It was Raymond who went upstairs on this errand.
-
-“Miss Ackroyd will be down in a minute,” he said, when he returned. “I
-told her just what you suggested.”
-
-In less than five minutes Flora descended the staircase. She was
-wrapped in a pale pink silk kimono. She looked anxious and excited.
-
-The inspector stepped forward.
-
-“Good-evening, Miss Ackroyd,” he said civilly. “We’re afraid there’s
-been an attempt at robbery, and we want you to help us. What’s this
-room—the billiard room? Come in here and sit down.”
-
-Flora sat down composedly on the wide divan which ran the length of the
-wall, and looked up at the inspector.
-
-“I don’t quite understand. What has been stolen? What do you want me to
-tell you?”
-
-“It’s just this, Miss Ackroyd. Parker here says you came out of your
-uncle’s study at about a quarter to ten. Is that right?”
-
-“Quite right. I had been to say good-night to him.”
-
-“And the time is correct?”
-
-“Well, it must have been about then. I can’t say exactly. It might have
-been later.”
-
-“Was your uncle alone, or was there any one with him?”
-
-“He was alone. Dr. Sheppard had gone.”
-
-“Did you happen to notice whether the window was open or shut?”
-
-Flora shook her head.
-
-“I can’t say. The curtains were drawn.”
-
-“Exactly. And your uncle seemed quite as usual?”
-
-“I think so.”
-
-“Do you mind telling us exactly what passed between you?”
-
-Flora paused a minute, as though to collect her recollections.
-
-“I went in and said, ‘Good-night, uncle, I’m going to bed now. I’m
-tired to-night.’ He gave a sort of grunt, and—I went over and kissed
-him, and he said something about my looking nice in the frock I had on,
-and then he told me to run away as he was busy. So I went.”
-
-“Did he ask specially not to be disturbed?”
-
-“Oh! yes, I forgot. He said: ‘Tell Parker I don’t want anything more
-to-night, and that he’s not to disturb me.’ I met Parker just outside
-the door and gave him uncle’s message.”
-
-“Just so,” said the inspector.
-
-“Won’t you tell me what it is that has been stolen?”
-
-“We’re not quite—certain,” said the inspector hesitatingly.
-
-A wide look of alarm came into the girl’s eyes. She started up.
-
-“What is it? You’re hiding something from me?”
-
-Moving in his usual unobtrusive manner, Hector Blunt came between her
-and the inspector. She half stretched out her hand, and he took it in
-both of his, patting it as though she were a very small child, and she
-turned to him as though something in his stolid, rocklike demeanor
-promised comfort and safety.
-
-“It’s bad news, Flora,” he said quietly. “Bad news for all of us. Your
-Uncle Roger——”
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“It will be a shock to you. Bound to be. Poor Roger’s dead.”
-
-Flora drew away from him, her eyes dilating with horror.
-
-“When?” she whispered. “When?”
-
-“Very soon after you left him, I’m afraid,” said Blunt gravely.
-
-Flora raised her hand to her throat, gave a little cry, and I hurried
-to catch her as she fell. She had fainted, and Blunt and I carried her
-upstairs and laid her on her bed. Then I got him to wake Mrs. Ackroyd
-and tell her the news. Flora soon revived, and I brought her mother to
-her, telling her what to do for the girl. Then I hurried downstairs
-again.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- THE TUNISIAN DAGGER
-
-
-I met the inspector just coming from the door which led into the
-kitchen quarters.
-
-“How’s the young lady, doctor?”
-
-“Coming round nicely. Her mother’s with her.”
-
-“That’s good. I’ve been questioning the servants. They all declare that
-no one has been to the back door to-night. Your description of that
-stranger was rather vague. Can’t you give us something more definite to
-go upon?”
-
-“I’m afraid not,” I said regretfully. “It was a dark night, you see,
-and the fellow had his coat collar well pulled up and his hat squashed
-down over his eyes.”
-
-“H’m,” said the inspector. “Looked as though he wanted to conceal his
-face. Sure it was no one you know?”
-
-I replied in the negative, but not as decidedly as I might have done. I
-remembered my impression that the stranger’s voice was not unfamiliar
-to me. I explained this rather haltingly to the inspector.
-
-“It was a rough, uneducated voice, you say?”
-
-I agreed, but it occurred to me that the roughness had been of an
-almost exaggerated quality. If, as the inspector thought, the man had
-wished to hide his face, he might equally well have tried to disguise
-his voice.
-
-“Do you mind coming into the study with me again, doctor? There are one
-or two things I want to ask you.”
-
-I acquiesced. Inspector Davis unlocked the door of the lobby, we passed
-through, and he locked the door again behind him.
-
-“We don’t want to be disturbed,” he said grimly. “And we don’t want any
-eavesdropping either. What’s all this about blackmail?”
-
-“Blackmail!” I exclaimed, very much startled.
-
-“Is it an effort of Parker’s imagination? Or is there something in it?”
-
-“If Parker heard anything about blackmail,” I said slowly, “he must
-have been listening outside this door with his ear glued against the
-keyhole.”
-
-Davis nodded.
-
-“Nothing more likely. You see, I’ve been instituting a few inquiries as
-to what Parker has been doing with himself this evening. To tell the
-truth, I didn’t like his manner. The man knows something. When I began
-to question him, he got the wind up, and plumped out some garbled story
-of blackmail.”
-
-I took an instant decision.
-
-“I’m rather glad you’ve brought the matter up,” I said. “I’ve been
-trying to decide whether to make a clean breast of things or not. I’d
-already practically decided to tell you everything, but I was going to
-wait for a favorable opportunity. You might as well have it now.”
-
-And then and there I narrated the whole events of the evening as I
-have set them down here. The inspector listened keenly, occasionally
-interjecting a question.
-
-“Most extraordinary story I ever heard,” he said, when I had finished.
-“And you say that letter has completely disappeared? It looks bad—it
-looks very bad indeed. It gives us what we’ve been looking for—a motive
-for the murder.”
-
-I nodded.
-
-“I realize that.”
-
-“You say that Mr. Ackroyd hinted at a suspicion he had that some member
-of his household was involved? Household’s rather an elastic term.”
-
-“You don’t think that Parker himself might be the man we’re after?” I
-suggested.
-
-“It looks very like it. He was obviously listening at the door when
-you came out. Then Miss Ackroyd came across him later bent on entering
-the study. Say he tried again when she was safely out of the way. He
-stabbed Ackroyd, locked the door on the inside, opened the window, and
-got out that way, and went round to a side door which he had previously
-left open. How’s that?”
-
-“There’s only one thing against it,” I said slowly. “If Ackroyd went on
-reading that letter as soon as I left, as he intended to do, I don’t
-see him continuing to sit on here and turn things over in his mind for
-another hour. He’d have had Parker in at once, accused him then and
-there, and there would have been a fine old uproar. Remember, Ackroyd
-was a man of choleric temper.”
-
-“Mightn’t have had time to go on with the letter just then,” suggested
-the inspector. “We know some one was with him at half-past nine. If
-that visitor turned up as soon as you left, and after he went, Miss
-Ackroyd came in to say good-night—well, he wouldn’t be able to go on
-with the letter until close upon ten o’clock.”
-
-“And the telephone call?”
-
-“Parker sent that all right—perhaps before he thought of the locked
-door and open window. Then he changed his mind—or got in a panic—and
-decided to deny all knowledge of it. That was it, depend upon it.”
-
-“Ye-es,” I said rather doubtfully.
-
-“Anyway, we can find out the truth about the telephone call from the
-exchange. If it was put through from here, I don’t see how any one
-else but Parker could have sent it. Depend upon it, he’s our man.
-But keep it dark—we don’t want to alarm him just yet, till we’ve got
-all the evidence. I’ll see to it he doesn’t give us the slip. To all
-appearances we’ll be concentrating on your mysterious stranger.”
-
-He rose from where he had been sitting astride the chair belonging to
-the desk, and crossed over to the still form in the arm-chair.
-
-“The weapon ought to give us a clew,” he remarked, looking up. “It’s
-something quite unique—a curio, I should think, by the look of it.”
-
-He bent down, surveying the handle attentively, and I heard him give a
-grunt of satisfaction. Then, very gingerly, he pressed his hands down
-below the hilt and drew the blade out from the wound. Still carrying it
-so as not to touch the handle, he placed it in a wide china mug which
-adorned the mantelpiece.
-
-“Yes,” he said, nodding at it. “Quite a work of art. There can’t be
-many of them about.”
-
-It was indeed a beautiful object. A narrow, tapering blade, and a hilt
-of elaborately intertwined metals of curious and careful workmanship.
-He touched the blade gingerly with his finger, testing its sharpness,
-and made an appreciative grimace.
-
-“Lord, what an edge,” he exclaimed. “A child could drive that into a
-man—as easy as cutting butter. A dangerous sort of toy to have about.”
-
-“May I examine the body properly now?” I asked.
-
-He nodded.
-
-“Go ahead.”
-
-I made a thorough examination.
-
-“Well?” said the inspector, when I had finished.
-
-“I’ll spare you the technical language,” I said. “We’ll keep that
-for the inquest. The blow was delivered by a right-handed man
-standing behind him, and death must have been instantaneous. By the
-expression on the dead man’s face, I should say that the blow was quite
-unexpected. He probably died without knowing who his assailant was.”
-
-“Butlers can creep about as soft-footed as cats,” said Inspector Davis.
-“There’s not going to be much mystery about this crime. Take a look at
-the hilt of that dagger.”
-
-I took the look.
-
-“I dare say they’re not apparent to you, but I can see them clearly
-enough.” He lowered his voice. “_Fingerprints!_”
-
-He stood off a few steps to judge of his effect.
-
-“Yes,” I said mildly. “I guessed that.”
-
-I do not see why I should be supposed to be totally devoid of
-intelligence. After all, I read detective stories, and the newspapers,
-and am a man of quite average ability. If there had been toe marks on
-the dagger handle, now, that would have been quite a different thing. I
-would then have registered any amount of surprise and awe.
-
-I think the inspector was annoyed with me for declining to get
-thrilled. He picked up the china mug and invited me to accompany him to
-the billiard room.
-
-“I want to see if Mr. Raymond can tell us anything about this dagger,”
-he explained.
-
-Locking the outer door behind us again, we made our way to the billiard
-room, where we found Geoffrey Raymond. The inspector held up his
-exhibit.
-
-“Ever seen this before, Mr. Raymond?”
-
-“Why—I believe—I’m almost sure that is a curio given to Mr. Ackroyd
-by Major Blunt. It comes from Morocco—no, Tunis. So the crime was
-committed with that? What an extraordinary thing. It seems almost
-impossible, and yet there could hardly be two daggers the same. May I
-fetch Major Blunt?”
-
-Without waiting for an answer, he hurried off.
-
-“Nice young fellow that,” said the inspector. “Something honest and
-ingenuous about him.”
-
-I agreed. In the two years that Geoffrey Raymond has been secretary to
-Ackroyd, I have never seen him ruffled or out of temper. And he has
-been, I know, a most efficient secretary.
-
-In a minute or two Raymond returned, accompanied by Blunt.
-
-“I was right,” said Raymond excitedly. “It _is_ the Tunisian dagger.”
-
-“Major Blunt hasn’t looked at it yet,” objected the inspector.
-
-“Saw it the moment I came into the study,” said the quiet man.
-
-“You recognized it then?”
-
-Blunt nodded.
-
-“You said nothing about it,” said the inspector suspiciously.
-
-“Wrong moment,” said Blunt. “Lot of harm done by blurting out things at
-the wrong time.”
-
-He returned the inspector’s stare placidly enough.
-
-The latter grunted at last and turned away. He brought the dagger over
-to Blunt.
-
-“You’re quite sure about it, sir. You identify it positively?”
-
-“Absolutely. No doubt whatever.”
-
-“Where was this—er—curio usually kept? Can you tell me that, sir?”
-
-It was the secretary who answered.
-
-“In the silver table in the drawing-room.”
-
-“What?” I exclaimed.
-
-The others looked at me.
-
-“Yes, doctor?” said the inspector encouragingly.
-
-“It’s nothing.”
-
-“Yes, doctor?” said the inspector again, still more encouragingly.
-
-“It’s so trivial,” I explained apologetically. “Only that when I
-arrived last night for dinner I heard the lid of the silver table being
-shut down in the drawing-room.”
-
-I saw profound skepticism and a trace of suspicion on the inspector’s
-countenance.
-
-“How did you know it was the silver table lid?”
-
-I was forced to explain in detail—a long, tedious explanation which I
-would infinitely rather not have had to make.
-
-The inspector heard me to the end.
-
-“Was the dagger in its place when you were looking over the contents?”
-he asked.
-
-“I don’t know,” I said. “I can’t say I remember noticing it—but, of
-course, it may have been there all the time.”
-
-“We’d better get hold of the housekeeper,” remarked the inspector, and
-pulled the bell.
-
-A few minutes later Miss Russell, summoned by Parker, entered the room.
-
-“I don’t think I went near the silver table,” she said, when the
-inspector had posed his question. “I was looking to see that all the
-flowers were fresh. Oh! yes, I remember now. The silver table was
-open—which it had no business to be, and I shut the lid down as I
-passed.”
-
-She looked at him aggressively.
-
-“I see,” said the inspector. “Can you tell me if this dagger was in its
-place then?”
-
-Miss Russell looked at the weapon composedly.
-
-“I can’t say, I’m sure,” she replied. “I didn’t stop to look. I knew
-the family would be down any minute, and I wanted to get away.”
-
-“Thank you,” said the inspector.
-
-There was just a trace of hesitation in his manner, as though he would
-have liked to question her further, but Miss Russell clearly accepted
-the words as a dismissal, and glided from the room.
-
-“Rather a Tartar, I should fancy, eh?” said the inspector, looking
-after her. “Let me see. This silver table is in front of one of the
-windows, I think you said, doctor?”
-
-Raymond answered for me.
-
-“Yes, the left-hand window.”
-
-“And the window was open?”
-
-“They were both ajar.”
-
-“Well, I don’t think we need go into the question much further.
-Somebody—I’ll just say somebody—could get that dagger any time he
-liked, and exactly when he got it doesn’t matter in the least. I’ll be
-coming up in the morning with the chief constable, Mr. Raymond. Until
-then, I’ll keep the key of that door. I want Colonel Melrose to see
-everything exactly as it is. I happen to know that he’s dining out the
-other side of the county, and, I believe, staying the night....”
-
-We watched the inspector take up the jar.
-
-“I shall have to pack this carefully,” he observed. “It’s going to be
-an important piece of evidence in more ways than one.”
-
-A few minutes later as I came out of the billiard room with Raymond,
-the latter gave a low chuckle of amusement.
-
-I felt the pressure of his hand on my arm, and followed the direction
-of his eyes. Inspector Davis seemed to be inviting Parker’s opinion of
-a small pocket diary.
-
-“A little obvious,” murmured my companion. “So Parker is the suspect,
-is he? Shall we oblige Inspector Davis with a set of our fingerprints
-also?”
-
-He took two cards from the card tray, wiped them with his silk
-handkerchief, then handed one to me and took the other himself. Then,
-with a grin, he handed them to the police inspector.
-
-“Souvenirs,” he said. “No. 1, Dr. Sheppard; No. 2, my humble self. One
-from Major Blunt will be forthcoming in the morning.”
-
-Youth is very buoyant. Even the brutal murder of his friend and
-employer could not dim Geoffrey Raymond’s spirits for long. Perhaps
-that is as it should be. I do not know. I have lost the quality of
-resilience long since myself.
-
-It was very late when I got back, and I hoped that Caroline would have
-gone to bed. I might have known better.
-
-She had hot cocoa waiting for me, and whilst I drank it, she extracted
-the whole history of the evening from me. I said nothing of the
-blackmailing business, but contented myself with giving her the facts
-of the murder.
-
-“The police suspect Parker,” I said, as I rose to my feet and prepared
-to ascend to bed. “There seems a fairly clear case against him.”
-
-“Parker!” said my sister. “Fiddlesticks! That inspector must be a
-perfect fool. Parker indeed! Don’t tell me.”
-
-With which obscure pronouncement we went up to bed.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- I LEARN MY NEIGHBOR’S PROFESSION
-
-
-On the following morning I hurried unforgivably over my round. My
-excuse can be that I had no very serious cases to attend. On my return
-Caroline came into the hall to greet me.
-
-“Flora Ackroyd is here,” she announced in an excited whisper.
-
-“What?”
-
-I concealed my surprise as best I could.
-
-“She’s very anxious to see you. She’s been here half an hour.”
-
-Caroline led the way into our small sitting-room, and I followed.
-
-Flora was sitting on the sofa by the window. She was in black and she
-sat nervously twisting her hands together. I was shocked by the sight
-of her face. All the color had faded away from it. But when she spoke
-her manner was as composed and resolute as possible.
-
-“Dr. Sheppard, I have come to ask you to help me.”
-
-“Of course he’ll help you, my dear,” said Caroline.
-
-I don’t think Flora really wished Caroline to be present at the
-interview. She would, I am sure, have infinitely preferred to speak to
-me privately. But she also wanted to waste no time, so she made the
-best of it.
-
-“I want you to come to The Larches with me.”
-
-“The Larches?” I queried, surprised.
-
-“To see that funny little man?” exclaimed Caroline.
-
-“Yes. You know who he is, don’t you?”
-
-“We fancied,” I said, “that he might be a retired hairdresser.”
-
-Flora’s blue eyes opened very wide.
-
-“Why, he’s Hercule Poirot! You know who I mean—the private detective.
-They say he’s done the most wonderful things—just like detectives do in
-books. A year ago he retired and came to live down here. Uncle knew who
-he was, but he promised not to tell any one, because M. Poirot wanted
-to live quietly without being bothered by people.”
-
-“So that’s who he is,” I said slowly.
-
-“You’ve heard of him, of course?”
-
-“I’m rather an old fogey, as Caroline tells me,” I said, “but I _have_
-just heard of him.”
-
-“Extraordinary!” commented Caroline.
-
-I don’t know what she was referring to—possibly her own failure to
-discover the truth.
-
-“You want to go and see him?” I asked slowly. “Now why?”
-
-“To get him to investigate this murder, of course,” said Caroline
-sharply. “Don’t be so stupid, James.”
-
-I was not really being stupid. Caroline does not always understand what
-I am driving at.
-
-“You haven’t got confidence in Inspector Davis?” I went on.
-
-“Of course she hasn’t,” said Caroline. “I haven’t either.”
-
-Any one would have thought it was Caroline’s uncle who had been
-murdered.
-
-“And how do you know he would take up the case?” I asked. “Remember he
-has retired from active work.”
-
-“That’s just it,” said Flora simply. “I’ve got to persuade him.”
-
-“You are sure you are doing wisely?” I asked gravely.
-
-“Of course she is,” said Caroline. “I’ll go with her myself if she
-likes.”
-
-“I’d rather the doctor came with me if you don’t mind, Miss Sheppard,”
-said Flora.
-
-She knows the value of being direct on certain occasions. Any hints
-would certainly have been wasted on Caroline.
-
-“You see,” she explained, following directness with tact, “Dr. Sheppard
-being the doctor, and having found the body, he would be able to give
-all the details to M. Poirot.”
-
-“Yes,” said Caroline grudgingly, “I see that.”
-
-I took a turn or two up and down the room.
-
-“Flora,” I said gravely, “be guided by me. I advise you not to drag
-this detective into the case.”
-
-Flora sprang to her feet. The color rushed into her cheeks.
-
-“I know why you say that,” she cried. “But it’s exactly for that reason
-I’m so anxious to go. You’re afraid! But I’m not. I know Ralph better
-than you do.”
-
-“Ralph,” said Caroline. “What has Ralph got to do with it?”
-
-Neither of us heeded her.
-
-“Ralph may be weak,” continued Flora. “He may have done foolish things
-in the past—wicked things even—but he wouldn’t murder any one.”
-
-“No, no,” I exclaimed. “I never thought it of him.”
-
-“Then why did you go to the Three Boars last night?” demanded Flora,
-“on your way home—after uncle’s body was found?”
-
-I was momentarily silenced. I had hoped that that visit of mine would
-remain unnoticed.
-
-“How did you know about that?” I countered.
-
-“I went there this morning,” said Flora. “I heard from the servants
-that Ralph was staying there——”
-
-I interrupted her.
-
-“You had no idea that he was in King’s Abbot?”
-
-“No. I was astounded. I couldn’t understand it. I went there and asked
-for him. They told me, what I suppose they told you last night, that
-he went out at about nine o’clock yesterday evening—and—and never came
-back.”
-
-Her eyes met mine defiantly, and as though answering something in my
-look, she burst out:—
-
-“Well, why shouldn’t he? He might have gone—anywhere. He may even have
-gone back to London.”
-
-“Leaving his luggage behind?” I asked gently.
-
-Flora stamped her foot.
-
-“I don’t care. There must be a simple explanation.”
-
-“And that’s why you want to go to Hercule Poirot? Isn’t it better to
-leave things as they are? The police don’t suspect Ralph in the least,
-remember. They’re working on quite another tack.”
-
-“But that’s just _it_,” cried the girl. “They _do_ suspect him. A man
-from Cranchester turned up this morning—Inspector Raglan, a horrid,
-weaselly little man. I found he had been to the Three Boars this
-morning before me. They told me all about his having been there, and
-the questions he had asked. He must think Ralph did it.”
-
-“That’s a change of mind from last night, if so,” I said slowly. “He
-doesn’t believe in Davis’s theory that it was Parker then?”
-
-“Parker indeed,” said my sister, and snorted.
-
-Flora came forward and laid her hand on my arm.
-
-“Oh! Dr. Sheppard, let us go at once to this M. Poirot. He will find
-out the truth.”
-
-“My dear Flora,” I said gently, laying my hand on hers. “Are you quite
-sure it is the truth we want?”
-
-She looked at me, nodding her head gravely.
-
-“You’re not sure,” she said. “I am. I know Ralph better than you do.”
-
-“Of course he didn’t do it,” said Caroline, who had been keeping silent
-with great difficulty. “Ralph may be extravagant, but he’s a dear boy,
-and has the nicest manners.”
-
-I wanted to tell Caroline that large numbers of murderers have had
-nice manners, but the presence of Flora restrained me. Since the
-girl was determined, I was forced to give in to her and we started
-at once, getting away before my sister was able to fire off any more
-pronouncements beginning with her favorite words, “Of course.”
-
-An old woman with an immense Breton cap opened the door of The Larches
-to us. M. Poirot was at home, it seemed.
-
-We were ushered into a little sitting-room arranged with formal
-precision, and there, after the lapse of a minute or so, my friend of
-yesterday came to us.
-
-“Monsieur le docteur,” he said, smiling. “Mademoiselle.”
-
-He bowed to Flora.
-
-“Perhaps,” I began, “you have heard of the tragedy which occurred last
-night.”
-
-His face grew grave.
-
-“But certainly I have heard. It is horrible. I offer mademoiselle all
-my sympathy. In what way can I serve you?”
-
-“Miss Ackroyd,” I said, “wants you to—to——”
-
-“To find the murderer,” said Flora in a clear voice.
-
-“I see,” said the little man. “But the police will do that, will they
-not?”
-
-“They might make a mistake,” said Flora. “They are on their way to make
-a mistake now, I think. Please, M. Poirot, won’t you help us? If—if it
-is a question of money——”
-
-Poirot held up his hand.
-
-“Not that, I beg of you, mademoiselle. Not that I do not care for
-money.” His eyes showed a momentary twinkle. “Money, it means much to
-me and always has done. No, if I go into this, you must understand one
-thing clearly. _I shall go through with it to the end._ The good dog,
-he does not leave the scent, remember! You may wish that, after all,
-you had left it to the local police.”
-
-“I want the truth,” said Flora, looking him straight in the eyes.
-
-“All the truth?”
-
-“All the truth.”
-
-“Then I accept,” said the little man quietly. “And I hope you will not
-regret those words. Now, tell me all the circumstances.”
-
-“Dr. Sheppard had better tell you,” said Flora. “He knows more than I
-do.”
-
-Thus enjoined, I plunged into a careful narrative, embodying all the
-facts I have previously set down. Poirot listened carefully, inserting
-a question here and there, but for the most part sitting in silence,
-his eyes on the ceiling.
-
-I brought my story to a close with the departure of the inspector and
-myself from Fernly Park the previous night.
-
-“And now,” said Flora, as I finished, “tell him all about Ralph.”
-
-I hesitated, but her imperious glance drove me on.
-
-“You went to this inn—this Three Boars—last night on your way home?”
-asked Poirot, as I brought my tale to a close. “Now exactly why was
-that?”
-
-I paused a moment to choose my words carefully.
-
-“I thought some one ought to inform the young man of his uncle’s death.
-It occurred to me after I had left Fernly that possibly no one but
-myself and Mr. Ackroyd were aware that he was staying in the village.”
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“Quite so. That was your only motive in going there, eh?”
-
-“That was my only motive,” I said stiffly.
-
-“It was not to—shall we say—reassure yourself about _ce jeune homme_?”
-
-“Reassure myself?”
-
-“I think, M. le docteur, that you know very well what I mean, though
-you pretend not to do so. I suggest that it would have been a relief
-to you if you had found that Captain Paton had been at home all the
-evening.”
-
-“Not at all,” I said sharply.
-
-The little detective shook his head at me gravely.
-
-“You have not the trust in me of Miss Flora,” he said. “But no matter.
-What we have to look at is this—Captain Paton is missing, under
-circumstances which call for an explanation. I will not hide from you
-that the matter looks grave. Still, it may admit of a perfectly simple
-explanation.”
-
-“That’s just what I keep saying,” cried Flora eagerly.
-
-Poirot touched no more upon that theme. Instead he suggested an
-immediate visit to the local police. He thought it better for Flora
-to return home, and for me to be the one to accompany him there and
-introduce him to the officer in charge of the case.
-
-We carried out this plan forthwith. We found Inspector Davis outside
-the police station looking very glum indeed. With him was Colonel
-Melrose, the Chief Constable, and another man whom, from Flora’s
-description of “weaselly,” I had no difficulty in recognizing as
-Inspector Raglan from Cranchester.
-
-I know Melrose fairly well, and I introduced Poirot to him and
-explained the situation. The chief constable was clearly vexed, and
-Inspector Raglan looked as black as thunder. Davis, however, seemed
-slightly exhilarated by the sight of his superior officer’s annoyance.
-
-“The case is going to be plain as a pikestaff,” said Raglan. “Not the
-least need for amateurs to come butting in. You’d think any fool would
-have seen the way things were last night, and then we shouldn’t have
-lost twelve hours.”
-
-He directed a vengeful glance at poor Davis, who received it with
-perfect stolidity.
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd’s family must, of course, do what they see fit,” said
-Colonel Melrose. “But we cannot have the official investigation
-hampered in any way. I know M. Poirot’s great reputation, of course,”
-he added courteously.
-
-“The police can’t advertise themselves, worse luck,” said Raglan.
-
-It was Poirot who saved the situation.
-
-“It is true that I have retired from the world,” he said. “I never
-intended to take up a case again. Above all things, I have a horror of
-publicity. I must beg, that in the case of my being able to contribute
-something to the solution of the mystery, my name may not be mentioned.”
-
-Inspector Raglan’s face lightened a little.
-
-“I’ve heard of some very remarkable successes of yours,” observed the
-colonel, thawing.
-
-“I have had much experience,” said Poirot quietly. “But most of my
-successes have been obtained by the aid of the police. I admire
-enormously your English police. If Inspector Raglan permits me to
-assist him, I shall be both honored and flattered.”
-
-The inspector’s countenance became still more gracious.
-
-Colonel Melrose drew me aside.
-
-“From all I hear, this little fellow’s done some really remarkable
-things,” he murmured. “We’re naturally anxious not to have to call in
-Scotland Yard. Raglan seems very sure of himself, but I’m not quite
-certain that I agree with him. You see, I—er—know the parties concerned
-better than he does. This fellow doesn’t seem out after kudos, does he?
-Would work in with us unobtrusively, eh?”
-
-“To the greater glory of Inspector Raglan,” I said solemnly.
-
-“Well, well,” said Colonel Melrose breezily in a louder voice, “we must
-put you wise to the latest developments, M. Poirot.”
-
-“I thank you,” said Poirot. “My friend, Dr. Sheppard, said something of
-the butler being suspected?”
-
-“That’s all bunkum,” said Raglan instantly. “These high-class servants
-get in such a funk that they act suspiciously for nothing at all.”
-
-“The fingerprints?” I hinted.
-
-“Nothing like Parker’s.” He gave a faint smile, and added: “And yours
-and Mr. Raymond’s don’t fit either, doctor.”
-
-“What about those of Captain Ralph Paton?” asked Poirot quietly.
-
-I felt a secret admiration for the way he took the bull by the horns. I
-saw a look of respect creep into the inspector’s eye.
-
-“I see you don’t let the grass grow under your feet, Mr. Poirot. It
-will be a pleasure to work with you, I’m sure. We’re going to take that
-young gentleman’s fingerprints as soon as we can lay hands upon him.”
-
-“I can’t help thinking you’re mistaken, inspector,” said Colonel
-Melrose warmly. “I’ve known Ralph Paton from a boy upward. He’d never
-stoop to murder.”
-
-“Maybe not,” said the inspector tonelessly.
-
-“What have you got against him?” I asked.
-
-“Went out just on nine o’clock last night. Was seen in neighborhood of
-Fernly Park somewhere about nine-thirty. Not been seen since. Believed
-to be in serious money difficulties. I’ve got a pair of his shoes
-here—shoes with rubber studs in them. He had two pairs, almost exactly
-alike. I’m going up now to compare them with those footmarks. The
-constable is up there seeing that no one tampers with them.”
-
-“We’ll go at once,” said Colonel Melrose. “You and M. Poirot will
-accompany us, will you not?”
-
-We assented, and all drove up in the colonel’s car. The inspector was
-anxious to get at once to the footmarks, and asked to be put down at
-the lodge. About half-way up the drive, on the right, a path branched
-off which led round to the terrace and the window of Ackroyd’s study.
-
-“Would you like to go with the inspector, M. Poirot?” asked the chief
-constable, “or would you prefer to examine the study?”
-
-Poirot chose the latter alternative. Parker opened the door to us. His
-manner was smug and deferential, and he seemed to have recovered from
-his panic of the night before.
-
-Colonel Melrose took a key from his pocket, and unlocking the door
-which led into the lobby, he ushered us through into the study.
-
-“Except for the removal of the body, M. Poirot, this room is exactly as
-it was last night.”
-
-“And the body was found—where?”
-
-As precisely as possible, I described Ackroyd’s position. The arm-chair
-still stood in front of the fire.
-
-Poirot went and sat down in it.
-
-“The blue letter you speak of, where was it when you left the room?”
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd had laid it down on this little table at his right hand.”
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“Except for that, everything was in its place?”
-
-“Yes, I think so.”
-
-“Colonel Melrose, would you be so extremely obliging as to sit down in
-this chair a minute. I thank you. Now, M. le docteur, will you kindly
-indicate to me the exact position of the dagger?”
-
-I did so, whilst the little man stood in the doorway.
-
-“The hilt of the dagger was plainly visible from the door then. Both
-you and Parker could see it at once?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-Poirot went next to the window.
-
-“The electric light was on, of course, when you discovered the body?”
-he asked over his shoulder.
-
-I assented, and joined him where he was studying the marks on the
-window-sill.
-
-“The rubber studs are the same pattern as those in Captain Paton’s
-shoes,” he said quietly.
-
-Then he came back once more to the middle of the room. His eye traveled
-round, searching everything in the room with a quick, trained glance.
-
-“Are you a man of good observation, Dr. Sheppard?” he asked at last.
-
-“I think so,” I said, surprised.
-
-“There was a fire in the grate, I see. When you broke the door down and
-found Mr. Ackroyd dead, how was the fire? Was it low?”
-
-I gave a vexed laugh.
-
-“I—I really can’t say. I didn’t notice. Perhaps Mr. Raymond or Major
-Blunt——”
-
-The little man opposite me shook his head with a faint smile.
-
-“One must always proceed with method. I made an error of judgment in
-asking you that question. To each man his own knowledge. You could tell
-me the details of the patient’s appearance—nothing there would escape
-you. If I wanted information about the papers on that desk, Mr. Raymond
-would have noticed anything there was to see. To find out about the
-fire, I must ask the man whose business it is to observe such things.
-You permit——”
-
-He moved swiftly to the fireplace and rang the bell.
-
-After a lapse of a minute or two Parker appeared.
-
-“The bell rang, sir,” he said hesitatingly.
-
-“Come in, Parker,” said Colonel Melrose. “This gentleman wants to ask
-you something.”
-
-Parker transferred a respectful attention to Poirot.
-
-“Parker,” said the little man, “when you broke down the door with Dr.
-Sheppard last night, and found your master dead, what was the state of
-the fire?”
-
-Parker replied without a pause.
-
-“It had burned very low, sir. It was almost out.”
-
-“Ah!” said Poirot. The exclamation sounded almost triumphant. He went
-on:—
-
-“Look round you, my good Parker. Is this room exactly as it was then?”
-
-The butler’s eye swept round. It came to rest on the windows.
-
-“The curtains were drawn, sir, and the electric light was on.”
-
-Poirot nodded approval.
-
-“Anything else?”
-
-“Yes, sir, this chair was drawn out a little more.”
-
-He indicated a big grandfather chair to the left of the door between it
-and the window. I append a plan of the room with the chair in question
-marked with an X.
-
-“Just show me,” said Poirot.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- +---------------- +-----------------+
- | + DOOR / GRANDFATHER |
- | / \ / CHAIR +---+ |
- | / + ] | |
- | + / SMALL X ] | |
- | \ / TABLE +---+ |
- | + |
- +++ |
- ||| +---+ CHAIR IN WHICH ___ |
- ||| ] | ACKROYD WAS / \ |
- ||| +---+ FOUND TABLE | | |
- ||| \___/ |
- ||| |
- ||| |
- +++ +---+ + |
- | ^ ] | CHAIR IN WHICH / \ |
- | | +---+ SHEPPARD SAT / / + |
- | | / / |
- | | DESK & + / |
- | | FIREPLACE CHAIR \ / |
- | +------------ + |
- +----------------------------------------+
-]
-
-The butler drew the chair in question out a good two feet from the
-wall, turning it so that the seat faced the door.
-
-“_Voilà ce qui est curieux_,” murmured Poirot. “No one would want to
-sit in a chair in such a position, I fancy. Now who pushed it back into
-place again, I wonder? Did you, my friend?”
-
-“No, sir,” said Parker. “I was too upset with seeing the master and
-all.”
-
-Poirot looked across at me.
-
-“Did you, doctor?”
-
-I shook my head.
-
-“It was back in position when I arrived with the police, sir,” put in
-Parker. “I’m sure of that.”
-
-“Curious,” said Poirot again.
-
-“Raymond or Blunt must have pushed it back,” I suggested. “Surely it
-isn’t important?”
-
-“It is completely unimportant,” said Poirot. “That is why it is so
-interesting,” he added softly.
-
-“Excuse me a minute,” said Colonel Melrose. He left the room with
-Parker.
-
-“Do you think Parker is speaking the truth?” I asked.
-
-“About the chair, yes. Otherwise I do not know. You will find, M. le
-docteur, if you have much to do with cases of this kind, that they all
-resemble each other in one thing.”
-
-“What is that?” I asked curiously.
-
-“Every one concerned in them has something to hide.”
-
-“Have I?” I asked, smiling.
-
-Poirot looked at me attentively.
-
-“I think you have,” he said quietly.
-
-“But——”
-
-“Have you told me everything known to you about this young man Paton?”
-He smiled as I grew red. “Oh! do not fear. I will not press you. I
-shall learn it in good time.”
-
-“I wish you’d tell me something of your methods,” I said hastily, to
-cover my confusion. “The point about the fire, for instance?”
-
-“Oh! that was very simple. You leave Mr. Ackroyd at—ten minutes to
-nine, was it not?”
-
-“Yes, exactly, I should say.”
-
-“The window is then closed and bolted and the door unlocked. At a
-quarter past ten when the body is discovered, the door is locked and
-the window is open. Who opened it? Clearly only Mr. Ackroyd himself
-could have done so, and for one of two reasons. Either because the room
-became unbearably hot (but since the fire was nearly out and there was
-a sharp drop in temperature last night, that cannot be the reason),
-or because he admitted some one that way. And if he admitted some one
-that way, it must have been some one well known to him, since he had
-previously shown himself uneasy on the subject of that same window.”
-
-“It sounds very simple,” I said.
-
-“Everything is simple, if you arrange the facts methodically. We are
-concerned now with the personality of the person who was with him at
-nine-thirty last night. Everything goes to show that that was the
-individual admitted by the window, and though Mr. Ackroyd was seen
-alive later by Miss Flora, we cannot approach a solution of the mystery
-until we know who that visitor was. The window may have been left open
-after his departure and so afforded entrance to the murderer, or the
-same person may have returned a second time. Ah! here is the colonel
-who returns.”
-
-Colonel Melrose entered with an animated manner.
-
-“That telephone call has been traced at last,” he said. “It did not
-come from here. It was put through to Dr. Sheppard at 10.15 last night
-from a public call office at King’s Abbot station. And at 10.23 the
-night mail leaves for Liverpool.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- INSPECTOR RAGLAN IS CONFIDENT
-
-
-We looked at each other.
-
-“You’ll have inquiries made at the station, of course?” I said.
-
-“Naturally, but I’m not over sanguine as to the result. You know what
-that station is like.”
-
-I did. King’s Abbot is a mere village, but its station happens to
-be an important junction. Most of the big expresses stop there, and
-trains are shunted, re-sorted, and made up. It has two or three public
-telephone boxes. At that time of night three local trains come in
-close upon each other, to catch the connection with the express for
-the north which comes in at 10.19 and leaves at 10.23. The whole place
-is in a bustle, and the chances of one particular person being noticed
-telephoning or getting into the express are very small indeed.
-
-“But why telephone at all?” demanded Melrose. “That is what I find so
-extraordinary. There seems no rhyme or reason in the thing.”
-
-Poirot carefully straightened a china ornament on one of the bookcases.
-
-“Be sure there was a reason,” he said over his shoulder.
-
-“But what reason could it be?”
-
-“When we know that, we shall know everything. This case is very curious
-and very interesting.”
-
-There was something almost indescribable in the way he said those last
-words. I felt that he was looking at the case from some peculiar angle
-of his own, and what he saw I could not tell.
-
-He went to the window and stood there, looking out.
-
-“You say it was nine o’clock, Dr. Sheppard, when you met this stranger
-outside the gate?”
-
-He asked the question without turning round.
-
-“Yes,” I replied. “I heard the church clock chime the hour.”
-
-“How long would it take him to reach the house—to reach this window,
-for instance?”
-
-“Five minutes at the outside. Two or three minutes only if he took the
-path at the right of the drive and came straight here.”
-
-“But to do that he would have to know the way. How can I explain
-myself?—it would mean that he had been here before—that he knew his
-surroundings.”
-
-“That is true,” replied Colonel Melrose.
-
-“We could find out, doubtless, if Mr. Ackroyd had received any
-strangers during the past week?”
-
-“Young Raymond could tell us that,” I said.
-
-“Or Parker,” suggested Colonel Melrose.
-
-“_Ou tous les deux_,” suggested Poirot, smiling.
-
-Colonel Melrose went in search of Raymond, and I rang the bell once
-more for Parker.
-
-Colonel Melrose returned almost immediately, accompanied by the young
-secretary, whom he introduced to Poirot. Geoffrey Raymond was fresh and
-debonair as ever. He seemed surprised and delighted to make Poirot’s
-acquaintance.
-
-“No idea you’d been living among us incognito, M. Poirot,” he said. “It
-will be a great privilege to watch you at work——Hallo, what’s this?”
-
-Poirot had been standing just to the left of the door. Now he moved
-aside suddenly, and I saw that while my back was turned he must have
-swiftly drawn out the arm-chair till it stood in the position Parker
-had indicated.
-
-“Want me to sit in the chair whilst you take a blood test?” asked
-Raymond good-humoredly. “What’s the idea?”
-
-“M. Raymond, this chair was pulled out—so—last night when Mr. Ackroyd
-was found killed. Some one moved it back again into place. Did you do
-so?”
-
-The secretary’s reply came without a second’s hesitation.
-
-“No, indeed I didn’t. I don’t even remember that it was in that
-position, but it must have been if you say so. Anyway, somebody else
-must have moved it back to its proper place. Have they destroyed a clew
-in doing so? Too bad!”
-
-“It is of no consequence,” said the detective. “Of no consequence
-whatever. What I really want to ask you is this, M. Raymond: Did any
-stranger come to see Mr. Ackroyd during this past week?”
-
-The secretary reflected for a minute or two, knitting his brows, and
-during the pause Parker appeared in answer to the bell.
-
-“No,” said Raymond at last. “I can’t remember any one. Can you, Parker?”
-
-“I beg your pardon, sir?”
-
-“Any stranger coming to see Mr. Ackroyd this week?”
-
-The butler reflected for a minute or two.
-
-“There was the young man who came on Wednesday, sir,” he said at last.
-“From Curtis and Troute, I understood he was.”
-
-Raymond moved this aside with an impatient hand.
-
-“Oh! yes, I remember, but that is not the kind of stranger this
-gentleman means.” He turned to Poirot. “Mr. Ackroyd had some idea of
-purchasing a dictaphone,” he explained. “It would have enabled us to
-get through a lot more work in a limited time. The firm in question
-sent down their representative, but nothing came of it. Mr. Ackroyd did
-not make up his mind to purchase.”
-
-Poirot turned to the butler.
-
-“Can you describe this young man to me, my good Parker?”
-
-“He was fair-haired, sir, and short. Very neatly dressed in a blue
-serge suit. A very presentable young man, sir, for his station in life.”
-
-Poirot turned to me.
-
-“The man you met outside the gate, doctor, was tall, was he not?”
-
-“Yes,” I said. “Somewhere about six feet, I should say.”
-
-“There is nothing in that, then,” declared the Belgian. “I thank you,
-Parker.”
-
-The butler spoke to Raymond.
-
-“Mr. Hammond has just arrived, sir,” he said. “He is anxious to know if
-he can be of any service, and he would be glad to have a word with you.”
-
-“I’ll come at once,” said the young man. He hurried out. Poirot looked
-inquiringly at the chief constable.
-
-“The family solicitor, M. Poirot,” said the latter.
-
-“It is a busy time for this young M. Raymond,” murmured M. Poirot. “He
-has the air efficient, that one.”
-
-“I believe Mr. Ackroyd considered him a most able secretary.”
-
-“He has been here—how long?”
-
-“Just on two years, I fancy.”
-
-“His duties he fulfills punctiliously. Of that I am sure. In what
-manner does he amuse himself? Does he go in for _le sport_?”
-
-“Private secretaries haven’t much time for that sort of thing,” said
-Colonel Melrose, smiling. “Raymond plays golf, I believe. And tennis in
-the summer time.”
-
-“He does not attend the courses—I should say the running of the horses?”
-
-“Race meetings? No, I don’t think he’s interested in racing.”
-
-Poirot nodded and seemed to lose interest. He glanced slowly round the
-study.
-
-“I have seen, I think, all that there is to be seen here.”
-
-I, too, looked round.
-
-“If those walls could speak,” I murmured.
-
-Poirot shook his head.
-
-“A tongue is not enough,” he said. “They would have to have also eyes
-and ears. But do not be too sure that these dead things”—he touched
-the top of the bookcase as he spoke—“are always dumb. To me they speak
-sometimes—chairs, tables—they have their message!”
-
-He turned away towards the door.
-
-“What message?” I cried. “What have they said to you to-day?”
-
-He looked over his shoulder and raised one eyebrow quizzically.
-
-“An opened window,” he said. “A locked door. A chair that apparently
-moved itself. To all three I say, ‘Why?’ and I find no answer.”
-
-He shook his head, puffed out his chest, and stood blinking at us. He
-looked ridiculously full of his own importance. It crossed my mind
-to wonder whether he was really any good as a detective. Had his big
-reputation been built up on a series of lucky chances?
-
-I think the same thought must have occurred to Colonel Melrose, for he
-frowned.
-
-“Anything more you want to see, M. Poirot?” he inquired brusquely.
-
-“You would perhaps be so kind as to show me the silver table from which
-the weapon was taken? After that, I will trespass on your kindness no
-longer.”
-
-We went to the drawing-room, but on the way the constable waylaid the
-colonel, and after a muttered conversation the latter excused himself
-and left us together. I showed Poirot the silver table, and after
-raising the lid once or twice and letting it fall, he pushed open the
-window and stepped out on the terrace. I followed him.
-
-Inspector Raglan had just turned the corner of the house, and was
-coming towards us. His face looked grim and satisfied.
-
-“So there you are, M. Poirot,” he said. “Well, this isn’t going to be
-much of a case. I’m sorry, too. A nice enough young fellow gone wrong.”
-
-Poirot’s face fell, and he spoke very mildly.
-
-“I’m afraid I shall not be able to be of much aid to you, then?”
-
-“Next time, perhaps,” said the inspector soothingly. “Though we don’t
-have murders every day in this quiet little corner of the world.”
-
-Poirot’s gaze took on an admiring quality.
-
-“You have been of a marvelous promptness,” he observed. “How exactly
-did you go to work, if I may ask?”
-
-“Certainly,” said the inspector. “To begin with—method. That’s what I
-always say—method!”
-
-“Ah!” cried the other. “That, too, is my watchword. Method, order, and
-the little gray cells.”
-
-“The cells?” said the inspector, staring.
-
-“The little gray cells of the brain,” explained the Belgian.
-
-“Oh, of course; well, we all use them, I suppose.”
-
-“In a greater or lesser degree,” murmured Poirot. “And there are, too,
-differences in quality. Then there is the psychology of a crime. One
-must study that.”
-
-“Ah!” said the inspector, “you’ve been bitten with all this
-psychoanalysis stuff? Now, I’m a plain man——”
-
-“Mrs. Raglan would not agree, I am sure, to that,” said Poirot, making
-him a little bow.
-
-Inspector Raglan, a little taken aback, bowed.
-
-“You don’t understand,” he said, grinning broadly. “Lord, what a lot of
-difference language makes. I’m telling you how I set to work. First of
-all, method. Mr. Ackroyd was last seen alive at a quarter to ten by his
-niece, Miss Flora Ackroyd. That’s fact number one, isn’t it?”
-
-“If you say so.”
-
-“Well, it is. At half-past ten, the doctor here says that Mr. Ackroyd
-has been dead at least half an hour. You stick to that, doctor?”
-
-“Certainly,” I said. “Half an hour or longer.”
-
-“Very good. That gives us exactly a quarter of an hour in which the
-crime must have been committed. I make a list of every one in the
-house, and work through it, setting down opposite their names where
-they were and what they were doing between the hour of 9.45 and 10 p.m.”
-
-He handed a sheet of paper to Poirot. I read it over his shoulder. It
-ran as follows, written in a neat script:—
-
- _Major Blunt.—In billiard room with Mr. Raymond. (Latter confirms.)_
-
- _Mr. Raymond.—Billiard room. (See above.)_
-
- _Mrs. Ackroyd.—9.45 watching billiard match. Went up to bed 9.55.
- (Raymond and Blunt watched her up staircase.)_
-
- _Miss Ackroyd.—Went straight from her uncle’s room upstairs.
- (Confirmed by Parker, also housemaid, Elsie Dale.)_
-
- _Servants_:—
-
- _Parker.—Went straight to butler’s pantry. (Confirmed by
- housekeeper, Miss Russell, who came down to speak to him about
- something at 9.47, and remained at least ten minutes.)_
-
- _Miss Russell.—As above. Spoke to housemaid, Elsie Dale, upstairs
- at 9.45._
-
- _Ursula Bourne (parlormaid).—In her own room until 9.55. Then in
- Servants’ Hall._
-
- _Mrs. Cooper (cook).—In Servants’ Hall._
-
- _Gladys Jones (second housemaid).—In Servants’ Hall._
-
- _Elsie Dale.—Upstairs in bedroom. Seen there by Miss Russell and
- Miss Flora Ackroyd._
-
- _Mary Thripp (kitchenmaid).—Servants’ Hall._
-
-“The cook has been here seven years, the parlormaid eighteen months,
-and Parker just over a year. The others are new. Except for something
-fishy about Parker, they all seem quite all right.”
-
-“A very complete list,” said Poirot, handing it back to him. “I am
-quite sure that Parker did not do the murder,” he added gravely.
-
-“So is my sister,” I struck in. “And she’s usually right.” Nobody paid
-any attention to my interpolation.
-
-“That disposes pretty effectually of the household,” continued the
-inspector. “Now we come to a very grave point. The woman at the
-lodge—Mary Black—was pulling the curtains last night when she saw
-Ralph Paton turn in at the gate and go up towards the house.”
-
-“She is sure of that?” I asked sharply.
-
-“Quite sure. She knows him well by sight. He went past very quickly
-and turned off by the path to the right, which is a short cut to the
-terrace.”
-
-“And what time was that?” asked Poirot, who had sat with an immovable
-face.
-
-“Exactly twenty-five minutes past nine,” said the inspector gravely.
-
-There was a silence. Then the inspector spoke again.
-
-“It’s all clear enough. It fits in without a flaw. At twenty-five
-minutes past nine, Captain Paton is seen passing the lodge; at
-nine-thirty or thereabouts, Mr. Geoffrey Raymond hears some one in here
-asking for money and Mr. Ackroyd refusing. What happens next? Captain
-Paton leaves the same way—through the window. He walks along the
-terrace, angry and baffled. He comes to the open drawing-room window.
-Say it’s now a quarter to ten. Miss Flora Ackroyd is saying good-night
-to her uncle. Major Blunt, Mr. Raymond, and Mrs. Ackroyd are in the
-billiard room. The drawing-room is empty. He steals in, takes the
-dagger from the silver table, and returns to the study window. He slips
-off his shoes, climbs in, and—well, I don’t need to go into details.
-Then he slips out again and goes off. Hadn’t the nerve to go back to
-the inn. He makes for the station, rings up from there——”
-
-“Why?” said Poirot softly.
-
-I jumped at the interruption. The little man was leaning forward. His
-eyes shone with a queer green light.
-
-For a moment Inspector Raglan was taken aback by the question.
-
-“It’s difficult to say exactly why he did that,” he said at last. “But
-murderers do funny things. You’d know that if you were in the police
-force. The cleverest of them make stupid mistakes sometimes. But come
-along and I’ll show you those footprints.”
-
-We followed him round the corner of the terrace to the study window. At
-a word from Raglan a police constable produced the shoes which had been
-obtained from the local inn.
-
-The inspector laid them over the marks.
-
-“They’re the same,” he said confidently. “That is to say, they’re not
-the same pair that actually made these prints. He went away in those.
-This is a pair just like them, but older—see how the studs are worn
-down.”
-
-“Surely a great many people wear shoes with rubber studs in them?”
-asked Poirot.
-
-“That’s so, of course,” said the inspector. “I shouldn’t put so much
-stress on the footmarks if it wasn’t for everything else.”
-
-“A very foolish young man, Captain Ralph Paton,” said Poirot
-thoughtfully. “To leave so much evidence of his presence.”
-
-“Ah! well,” said the inspector, “it was a dry, fine night, you know. He
-left no prints on the terrace or on the graveled path. But, unluckily
-for him, a spring must have welled up just lately at the end of the
-path from the drive. See here.”
-
-A small graveled path joined the terrace a few feet away. In one
-spot, a few yards from its termination, the ground was wet and boggy.
-Crossing this wet place there were again the marks of footsteps, and
-amongst them the shoes with rubber studs.
-
-Poirot followed the path on a little way, the inspector by his side.
-
-“You noticed the women’s footprints?” he said suddenly.
-
-The inspector laughed.
-
-“Naturally. But several different women have walked this way—and men
-as well. It’s a regular short cut to the house, you see. It would be
-impossible to sort out all the footsteps. After all, it’s the ones on
-the window-sill that are really important.”
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“It’s no good going farther,” said the inspector, as we came in view of
-the drive. “It’s all graveled again here, and hard as it can be.”
-
-Again Poirot nodded, but his eyes were fixed on a small garden house—a
-kind of superior summer-house. It was a little to the left of the path
-ahead of us, and a graveled walk ran up to it.
-
-Poirot lingered about until the inspector had gone back towards the
-house. Then he looked at me.
-
-“You must have indeed been sent from the good God to replace my
-friend Hastings,” he said, with a twinkle. “I observe that you do not
-quit my side. How say you, Dr. Sheppard, shall we investigate that
-summer-house? It interests me.”
-
-He went up to the door and opened it. Inside, the place was almost
-dark. There were one or two rustic seats, a croquet set, and some
-folded deck-chairs.
-
-I was startled to observe my new friend. He had dropped to his hands
-and knees and was crawling about the floor. Every now and then he shook
-his head as though not satisfied. Finally, he sat back on his heels.
-
-“Nothing,” he murmured. “Well, perhaps it was not to be expected. But
-it would have meant so much——”
-
-He broke off, stiffening all over. Then he stretched out his hand to
-one of the rustic chairs. He detached something from one side of it.
-
-“What is it?” I cried. “What have you found?”
-
-He smiled, unclosing his hand so that I should see what lay in the palm
-of it. A scrap of stiff white cambric.
-
-I took it from him, looked at it curiously, and then handed it back.
-
-“What do you make of it, eh, my friend?” he asked, eyeing me keenly.
-
-“A scrap torn from a handkerchief,” I suggested, shrugging my shoulders.
-
-He made another dart and picked up a small quill—a goose quill by the
-look of it.
-
-“And that?” he cried triumphantly. “What do you make of that?”
-
-I only stared.
-
-He slipped the quill into his pocket, and looked again at the scrap of
-white stuff.
-
-“A fragment of a handkerchief?” he mused. “Perhaps you are right. But
-remember this—_a good laundry does not starch a handkerchief_.”
-
-He nodded at me triumphantly, then he put away the scrap carefully in
-his pocket-book.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- THE GOLDFISH POND
-
-
-We walked back to the house together. There was no sign of the
-inspector. Poirot paused on the terrace and stood with his back to the
-house, slowly turning his head from side to side.
-
-“_Une belle propriété_,” he said at last appreciatively. “Who inherits
-it?”
-
-His words gave me almost a shock. It is an odd thing, but until that
-moment the question of inheritance had never come into my head. Poirot
-watched me keenly.
-
-“It is a new idea to you, that,” he said at last. “You had not thought
-of it before—eh?”
-
-“No,” I said truthfully. “I wish I had.”
-
-He looked at me again curiously.
-
-“I wonder just what you mean by that,” he said thoughtfully. “Ah! no,”
-as I was about to speak. “_Inutile!_ You would not tell me your real
-thought.”
-
-“Every one has something to hide,” I quoted, smiling.
-
-“Exactly.”
-
-“You still believe that?”
-
-“More than ever, my friend. But it is not easy to hide things from
-Hercule Poirot. He has a knack of finding out.”
-
-He descended the steps of the Dutch garden as he spoke.
-
-“Let us walk a little,” he said over his shoulder. “The air is pleasant
-to-day.”
-
-I followed him. He led me down a path to the left enclosed in yew
-hedges. A walk led down the middle, bordered each side with formal
-flower beds, and at the end was a round paved recess with a seat and
-a pond of goldfish. Instead of pursuing the path to the end, Poirot
-took another which wound up the side of a wooded slope. In one spot the
-trees had been cleared away, and a seat had been put. Sitting there one
-had a splendid view over the countryside, and one looked right down on
-the paved recess and the goldfish pond.
-
-“England is very beautiful,” said Poirot, his eyes straying over the
-prospect. Then he smiled. “And so are English girls,” he said in a
-lower tone. “Hush, my friend, and look at the pretty picture below us.”
-
-It was then that I saw Flora. She was moving along the path we had
-just left and she was humming a little snatch of song. Her step was
-more dancing than walking, and in spite of her black dress, there was
-nothing but joy in her whole attitude. She gave a sudden pirouette on
-her toes, and her black draperies swung out. At the same time she flung
-her head back and laughed outright.
-
-As she did so a man stepped out from the trees. It was Hector Blunt.
-
-The girl started. Her expression changed a little.
-
-“How you startled me—I didn’t see you.”
-
-Blunt said nothing, but stood looking at her for a minute or two in
-silence.
-
-“What I like about you,” said Flora, with a touch of malice, “is your
-cheery conversation.”
-
-I fancy that at that Blunt reddened under his tan. His voice, when he
-spoke, sounded different—it had a curious sort of humility in it.
-
-“Never was much of a fellow for talking. Not even when I was young.”
-
-“That was a very long time ago, I suppose,” said Flora gravely.
-
-I caught the undercurrent of laughter in her voice, but I don’t think
-Blunt did.
-
-“Yes,” he said simply, “it was.”
-
-“How does it feel to be Methuselah?” asked Flora.
-
-This time the laughter was more apparent, but Blunt was following out
-an idea of his own.
-
-“Remember the Johnny who sold his soul to the devil? In return for
-being made young again? There’s an opera about it.”
-
-“Faust, you mean?”
-
-“That’s the beggar. Rum story. Some of us would do it if we could.”
-
-“Any one would think you were creaking at the joints to hear you talk,”
-cried Flora, half vexed, half amused.
-
-Blunt said nothing for a minute or two. Then he looked away from Flora
-into the middle distance and observed to an adjacent tree trunk that it
-was about time he got back to Africa.
-
-“Are you going on another expedition—shooting things?”
-
-“Expect so. Usually do, you know—shoot things, I mean.”
-
-“You shot that head in the hall, didn’t you?”
-
-Blunt nodded. Then he jerked out, going rather red, as he did so:—
-
-“Care for some decent skins any time? If so, I could get ’em for you.”
-
-“Oh! please do,” cried Flora. “Will you really? You won’t forget?”
-
-“I shan’t forget,” said Hector Blunt.
-
-He added, in a sudden burst of communicativeness:—
-
-“Time I went. I’m no good in this sort of life. Haven’t got the manners
-for it. I’m a rough fellow, no use in society. Never remember the
-things one’s expected to say. Yes, time I went.”
-
-“But you’re not going at once,” cried Flora. “Not—not while we’re in
-all this trouble. Oh! please. If you go——”
-
-She turned away a little.
-
-“You want me to stay?” asked Blunt.
-
-He spoke deliberately but quite simply.
-
-“We all——”
-
-“I meant you personally,” said Blunt, with directness.
-
-Flora turned slowly back again and met his eyes.
-
-“I want you to stay,” she said, “if—if that makes any difference.”
-
-“It makes all the difference,” said Blunt.
-
-There was a moment’s silence. They sat down on the stone seat by the
-goldfish pond. It seemed as though neither of them knew quite what to
-say next.
-
-“It—it’s such a lovely morning,” said Flora at last. “You know, I can’t
-help feeling happy, in spite—in spite of everything. That’s awful, I
-suppose?”
-
-“Quite natural,” said Blunt. “Never saw your uncle until two years ago,
-did you? Can’t be expected to grieve very much. Much better to have no
-humbug about it.”
-
-“There’s something awfully consoling about you,” said Flora. “You make
-things so simple.”
-
-“Things are simple as a rule,” said the big game hunter.
-
-“Not always,” said Flora.
-
-Her voice had lowered itself, and I saw Blunt turn and look at her,
-bringing his eyes back from (apparently) the coast of Africa to do so.
-He evidently put his own construction on her change of tone, for he
-said, after a minute or two, in rather an abrupt manner:—
-
-“I say, you know, you mustn’t worry. About that young chap, I mean.
-Inspector’s an ass. Everybody knows—utterly absurd to think he could
-have done it. Man from outside. Burglar chap. That’s the only possible
-solution.”
-
-Flora turned to look at him.
-
-“You really think so?”
-
-“Don’t you?” said Blunt quickly.
-
-“I—oh, yes, of course.”
-
-Another silence, and then Flora burst out:—
-
-“I’m—I’ll tell you why I felt so happy this morning. However heartless
-you think me, I’d rather tell you. It’s because the lawyer has been—Mr.
-Hammond. He told us about the will. Uncle Roger has left me twenty
-thousand pounds. Think of it—twenty thousand beautiful pounds.”
-
-Blunt looked surprised.
-
-“Does it mean so much to you?”
-
-“Mean much to me? Why, it’s everything. Freedom—life—no more scheming
-and scraping and lying——”
-
-“Lying?” said Blunt, sharply interrupting.
-
-Flora seemed taken aback for a minute.
-
-“You know what I mean,” she said uncertainly. “Pretending to be
-thankful for all the nasty castoff things rich relations give you. Last
-year’s coats and skirts and hats.”
-
-“Don’t know much about ladies’ clothes; should have said you were
-always very well turned out.”
-
-“It’s cost me something, though,” said Flora in a low voice. “Don’t
-let’s talk of horrid things. I’m so happy. I’m free. Free to do what I
-like. Free not to——”
-
-She stopped suddenly.
-
-“Not to what?” asked Blunt quickly.
-
-“I forget now. Nothing important.”
-
-Blunt had a stick in his hand, and he thrust it into the pond, poking
-at something.
-
-“What are you doing, Major Blunt?”
-
-“There’s something bright down there. Wondered what it was—looks like a
-gold brooch. Now I’ve stirred up the mud and it’s gone.”
-
-“Perhaps it’s a crown,” suggested Flora. “Like the one Mélisande saw in
-the water.”
-
-“Mélisande,” said Blunt reflectively—“she’s in an opera, isn’t she?”
-
-“Yes, you seem to know a lot about operas.”
-
-“People take me sometimes,” said Blunt sadly. “Funny idea of
-pleasure—worse racket than the natives make with their tom-toms.”
-
-Flora laughed.
-
-“I remember Mélisande,” continued Blunt, “married an old chap old
-enough to be her father.”
-
-He threw a small piece of flint into the goldfish pond. Then, with a
-change of manner, he turned to Flora.
-
-“Miss Ackroyd, can I do anything? About Paton, I mean. I know how
-dreadfully anxious you must be.”
-
-“Thank you,” said Flora in a cold voice. “There is really nothing to
-be done. Ralph will be all right. I’ve got hold of the most wonderful
-detective in the world, and he’s going to find out all about it.”
-
-For some time I had felt uneasy as to our position. We were not exactly
-eavesdropping, since the two in the garden below had only to lift their
-heads to see us. Nevertheless, I should have drawn attention to our
-presence before now, had not my companion put a warning pressure on my
-arm. Clearly he wished me to remain silent.
-
-But now he rose briskly to his feet, clearing his throat.
-
-“I demand pardon,” he cried. “I cannot allow mademoiselle thus
-extravagantly to compliment me, and not draw attention to my presence.
-They say the listener hears no good of himself, but that is not the
-case this time. To spare my blushes, I must join you and apologize.”
-
-He hurried down the path with me close behind him, and joined the
-others by the pond.
-
-“This is M. Hercule Poirot,” said Flora. “I expect you’ve heard of him.”
-
-Poirot bowed.
-
-“I know Major Blunt by reputation,” he said politely. “I am glad to
-have encountered you, monsieur. I am in need of some information that
-you can give me.”
-
-Blunt looked at him inquiringly.
-
-“When did you last see M. Ackroyd alive?”
-
-“At dinner.”
-
-“And you neither saw nor heard anything of him after that?”
-
-“Didn’t see him. Heard his voice.”
-
-“How was that?”
-
-“I strolled out on the terrace——”
-
-“Pardon me, what time was this?”
-
-“About half-past nine. I was walking up and down smoking in front of
-the drawing-room window. I heard Ackroyd talking in his study——”
-
-Poirot stooped and removed a microscopic weed.
-
-“Surely you couldn’t hear voices in the study from that part of the
-terrace,” he murmured.
-
-He was not looking at Blunt, but I was, and to my intense surprise, I
-saw the latter flush.
-
-“Went as far as the corner,” he explained unwillingly.
-
-“Ah! indeed?” said Poirot.
-
-In the mildest manner he conveyed an impression that more was wanted.
-
-“Thought I saw—a woman disappearing into the bushes. Just a gleam of
-white, you know. Must have been mistaken. It was while I was standing
-at the corner of the terrace that I heard Ackroyd’s voice speaking to
-that secretary of his.”
-
-“Speaking to Mr. Geoffrey Raymond?”
-
-“Yes—that’s what I supposed at the time. Seems I was wrong.”
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd didn’t address him by name?”
-
-“Oh, no.”
-
-“Then, if I may ask, why did you think——?”
-
-Blunt explained laboriously.
-
-“Took it for granted that it _would_ be Raymond, because he had said
-just before I came out that he was taking some papers to Ackroyd. Never
-thought of it being anybody else.”
-
-“Can you remember what the words you heard were?”
-
-“Afraid I can’t. Something quite ordinary and unimportant. Only caught
-a scrap of it. I was thinking of something else at the time.”
-
-“It is of no importance,” murmured Poirot. “Did you move a chair back
-against the wall when you went into the study after the body was
-discovered?”
-
-“Chair? No—why should I?”
-
-Poirot shrugged his shoulders but did not answer. He turned to Flora.
-
-“There is one thing I should like to know from you, mademoiselle. When
-you were examining the things in the silver table with Dr. Sheppard,
-was the dagger in its place, or was it not?”
-
-Flora’s chin shot up.
-
-“Inspector Raglan has been asking me that,” she said resentfully. “I’ve
-told him, and I’ll tell you. I’m perfectly certain the dagger was _not_
-there. He thinks it was and that Ralph sneaked it later in the evening.
-And—and he doesn’t believe me. He thinks I’m saying it to—to shield
-Ralph.”
-
-“And aren’t you?” I asked gravely.
-
-Flora stamped her foot.
-
-“You, too, Dr. Sheppard! Oh! it’s too bad.”
-
-Poirot tactfully made a diversion.
-
-“It is true what I heard you say, Major Blunt. There is something that
-glitters in this pond. Let us see if I can reach it.”
-
-He knelt down by the pond, baring his arm to the elbow, and lowered it
-in very slowly, so as not to disturb the bottom of the pond. But in
-spite of all his precautions the mud eddied and swirled, and he was
-forced to draw his arm out again empty-handed.
-
-He gazed ruefully at the mud upon his arm. I offered him my
-handkerchief, which he accepted with fervent protestations of thanks.
-Blunt looked at his watch.
-
-“Nearly lunch time,” he said. “We’d better be getting back to the
-house.”
-
-“You will lunch with us, M. Poirot?” asked Flora. “I should like you to
-meet my mother. She is—very fond of Ralph.”
-
-The little man bowed.
-
-“I shall be delighted, mademoiselle.”
-
-“And you will stay, too, won’t you, Dr. Sheppard?”
-
-I hesitated.
-
-“Oh, do!”
-
-I wanted to, so I accepted the invitation without further ceremony.
-
-We set out towards the house, Flora and Blunt walking ahead.
-
-“What hair,” said Poirot to me in a low tone, nodding towards Flora.
-“The real gold! They will make a pretty couple. She and the dark,
-handsome Captain Paton. Will they not?”
-
-I looked at him inquiringly, but he began to fuss about a few
-microscopic drops of water on his coat sleeve. The man reminded me in
-some ways of a cat. His green eyes and his finicking habits.
-
-“And all for nothing, too,” I said sympathetically. “I wonder what it
-was in the pond?”
-
-“Would you like to see?” asked Poirot.
-
-I stared at him. He nodded.
-
-“My good friend,” he said gently and reproachfully, “Hercule Poirot
-does not run the risk of disarranging his costume without being sure
-of attaining his object. To do so would be ridiculous and absurd. I am
-never ridiculous.”
-
-“But you brought your hand out empty,” I objected.
-
-“There are times when it is necessary to have discretion. Do you tell
-your patients everything—everything, doctor? I think not. Nor do you
-tell your excellent sister everything either, is it not so? Before
-showing my empty hand, I dropped what it contained into my other hand.
-You shall see what that was.”
-
-He held out his left hand, palm open. On it lay a little circlet of
-gold. A woman’s wedding ring.
-
-I took it from him.
-
-“Look inside,” commanded Poirot.
-
-I did so. Inside was an inscription in fine writing:—
-
- _From R., March 13th._
-
-I looked at Poirot, but he was busy inspecting his appearance in a tiny
-pocket glass. He paid particular attention to his mustaches, and none
-at all to me. I saw that he did not intend to be communicative.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- THE PARLORMAID
-
-
-We found Mrs. Ackroyd in the hall. With her was a small dried-up little
-man, with an aggressive chin and sharp gray eyes, and “lawyer” written
-all over him.
-
-“Mr. Hammond is staying to lunch with us,” said Mrs. Ackroyd. “You know
-Major Blunt, Mr. Hammond? And dear Dr. Sheppard—also a close friend of
-poor Roger’s. And, let me see——”
-
-She paused, surveying Hercule Poirot in some perplexity.
-
-“This is M. Poirot, mother,” said Flora. “I told you about him this
-morning.”
-
-“Oh! yes,” said Mrs. Ackroyd vaguely. “Of course, my dear, of course.
-He is to find Ralph, is he not?”
-
-“He is to find out who killed uncle,” said Flora.
-
-“Oh! my dear,” cried her mother. “Please! My poor nerves. I am a wreck
-this morning, a positive wreck. Such a dreadful thing to happen. I
-can’t help feeling that it must have been an accident of some kind.
-Roger was so fond of handling queer curios. His hand must have slipped,
-or something.”
-
-This theory was received in polite silence. I saw Poirot edge up to the
-lawyer, and speak to him in a confidential undertone. They moved aside
-into the embrasure of the window. I joined them—then hesitated.
-
-“Perhaps I’m intruding,” I said.
-
-“Not at all,” cried Poirot heartily. “You and I, M. le docteur, we
-investigate this affair side by side. Without you I should be lost. I
-desire a little information from the good Mr. Hammond.”
-
-“You are acting on behalf of Captain Ralph Paton, I understand,” said
-the lawyer cautiously.
-
-Poirot shook his head.
-
-“Not so. I am acting in the interests of justice. Miss Ackroyd has
-asked me to investigate the death of her uncle.”
-
-Mr. Hammond seemed slightly taken aback.
-
-“I cannot seriously believe that Captain Paton can be concerned in this
-crime,” he said, “however strong the circumstantial evidence against
-him may be. The mere fact that he was hard pressed for money——”
-
-“Was he hard pressed for money?” interpolated Poirot quickly.
-
-The lawyer shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“It was a chronic condition with Ralph Paton,” he said dryly. “Money
-went through his hands like water. He was always applying to his
-stepfather.”
-
-“Had he done so of late? During the last year, for instance?”
-
-“I cannot say. Mr. Ackroyd did not mention the fact to me.”
-
-“I comprehend. Mr. Hammond, I take it that you are acquainted with the
-provisions of Mr. Ackroyd’s will?”
-
-“Certainly. That is my principal business here to-day.”
-
-“Then, seeing that I am acting for Miss Ackroyd, you will not object to
-telling me the terms of that will?”
-
-“They are quite simple. Shorn of legal phraseology, and after paying
-certain legacies and bequests——”
-
-“Such as——?” interrupted Poirot.
-
-Mr. Hammond seemed a little surprised.
-
-“A thousand pounds to his housekeeper, Miss Russell; fifty pounds
-to the cook, Emma Cooper; five hundred pounds to his secretary, Mr.
-Geoffrey Raymond. Then to various hospitals——”
-
-Poirot held up his hand.
-
-“Ah! the charitable bequests, they interest me not.”
-
-“Quite so. The income on ten thousand pounds’ worth of shares to be
-paid to Mrs. Cecil Ackroyd during her lifetime. Miss Flora Ackroyd
-inherits twenty thousand pounds outright. The residue—including this
-property, and the shares in Ackroyd and Son—to his adopted son, Ralph
-Paton.”
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd possessed a large fortune?”
-
-“A very large fortune. Captain Paton will be an exceedingly wealthy
-young man.”
-
-There was a silence. Poirot and the lawyer looked at each other.
-
-“Mr. Hammond,” came Mrs. Ackroyd’s voice plaintively from the fireplace.
-
-The lawyer answered the summons. Poirot took my arm and drew me right
-into the window.
-
-“Regard the irises,” he remarked in rather a loud voice. “Magnificent,
-are they not? A straight and pleasing effect.”
-
-At the same time I felt the pressure of his hand on my arm, and he
-added in a low tone:—
-
-“Do you really wish to aid me? To take part in this investigation?”
-
-“Yes, indeed,” I said eagerly. “There’s nothing I should like better.
-You don’t know what a dull old fogey’s life I lead. Never anything out
-of the ordinary.”
-
-“Good, we will be colleagues then. In a minute or two I fancy Major
-Blunt will join us. He is not happy with the good mamma. Now there are
-some things I want to know—but I do not wish to seem to want to know
-them. You comprehend? So it will be your part to ask the questions.”
-
-“What questions do you want me to ask?” I asked apprehensively.
-
-“I want you to introduce the name of Mrs. Ferrars.”
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“Speak of her in a natural fashion. Ask him if he was down here when
-her husband died. You understand the kind of thing I mean. And while he
-replies, watch his face without seeming to watch it. _C’est compris?_”
-
-There was no time for more, for at that minute, as Poirot had
-prophesied, Blunt left the others in his abrupt fashion and came over
-to us.
-
-I suggested strolling on the terrace, and he acquiesced. Poirot stayed
-behind.
-
-I stopped to examine a late rose.
-
-“How things change in the course of a day or so,” I observed. “I was
-up here last Wednesday, I remember, walking up and down this same
-terrace. Ackroyd was with me—full of spirits. And now—three days
-later—Ackroyd’s dead, poor fellow, Mrs. Ferrars’s dead—you knew her,
-didn’t you? But of course you did.”
-
-Blunt nodded his head.
-
-“Had you seen her since you’d been down this time?”
-
-“Went with Ackroyd to call. Last Tuesday, think it was. Fascinating
-woman—but something queer about her. Deep—one would never know what she
-was up to.”
-
-I looked into his steady gray eyes. Nothing there surely. I went on:—
-
-“I suppose you’d met her before.”
-
-“Last time I was here—she and her husband had just come here to live.”
-He paused a minute and then added: “Rum thing, she had changed a lot
-between then and now.”
-
-“How—changed?” I asked.
-
-“Looked ten years older.”
-
-“Were you down here when her husband died?” I asked, trying to make the
-question sound as casual as possible.
-
-“No. From all I heard it would be a good riddance. Uncharitable,
-perhaps, but the truth.”
-
-I agreed.
-
-“Ashley Ferrars was by no means a pattern husband,” I said cautiously.
-
-“Blackguard, I thought,” said Blunt.
-
-“No,” I said, “only a man with more money than was good for him.”
-
-“Oh! money! All the troubles in the world can be put down to money—or
-the lack of it.”
-
-“Which has been your particular trouble?” I asked.
-
-“I’ve enough for what I want. I’m one of the lucky ones.”
-
-“Indeed.”
-
-“I’m not too flush just now, as a matter of fact. Came into a legacy a
-year ago, and like a fool let myself be persuaded into putting it into
-some wild-cat scheme.”
-
-I sympathized, and narrated my own similar trouble.
-
-Then the gong pealed out, and we all went in to lunch. Poirot drew me
-back a little.
-
-“_Eh! bien?_”
-
-“He’s all right,” I said. “I’m sure of it.”
-
-“Nothing—disturbing?”
-
-“He had a legacy just a year ago,” I said. “But why not? Why shouldn’t
-he? I’ll swear the man is perfectly square and aboveboard.”
-
-“Without doubt, without doubt,” said Poirot soothingly. “Do not upset
-yourself.”
-
-He spoke as though to a fractious child.
-
-We all trooped into the dining-room. It seemed incredible that less
-than twenty-four hours had passed since I last sat at that table.
-
-Afterwards, Mrs. Ackroyd took me aside and sat down with me on a sofa.
-
-“I can’t help feeling a little hurt,” she murmured, producing a
-handkerchief of the kind obviously not meant to be cried into. “Hurt,
-I mean, by Roger’s lack of confidence in me. That twenty thousand
-pounds ought to have been left to _me_—not to Flora. A mother could be
-trusted to safeguard the interests of her child. A lack of trust, I
-call it.”
-
-“You forget, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said, “Flora was Ackroyd’s own niece, a
-blood relation. It would have been different had you been his sister
-instead of his sister-in-law.”
-
-“As poor Cecil’s widow, I think my feelings ought to have been
-considered,” said the lady, touching her eye-lashes gingerly with
-the handkerchief. “But Roger was always most peculiar—not to say
-_mean_—about money matters. It has been a most difficult position
-for both Flora and myself. He did not even give the poor child an
-allowance. He would pay her bills, you know, and even that with a good
-deal of reluctance and asking what she wanted all those fal-lals for—so
-like a man—but—now I’ve forgotten what it was I was going to say!
-Oh, yes, not a penny we could call our own, you know. Flora resented
-it—yes, I must say she resented it—very strongly. Though devoted to
-her uncle, of course. But any girl would have resented it. Yes, I must
-say Roger had very strange ideas about money. He wouldn’t even buy new
-face towels, though I told him the old ones were in holes. And then,”
-proceeded Mrs. Ackroyd, with a sudden leap highly characteristic of
-her conversation, “to leave all that money—a thousand pounds—fancy, a
-thousand pounds!—to that woman.”
-
-“What woman?”
-
-“That Russell woman. Something very queer about her, and so I’ve always
-said. But Roger wouldn’t hear a word against her. Said she was a woman
-of great force of character, and that he admired and respected her.
-He was always going on about her rectitude and independence and moral
-worth. _I_ think there’s something fishy about her. She was certainly
-doing her best to marry Roger. But I soon put a stop to that. She’s
-always hated me. Naturally. _I_ saw through her.”
-
-I began to wonder if there was any chance of stemming Mrs. Ackroyd’s
-eloquence, and getting away.
-
-Mr. Hammond provided the necessary diversion by coming up to say
-good-by. I seized my chance and rose also.
-
-“About the inquest,” I said. “Where would you prefer it to be held.
-Here, or at the Three Boars?”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd stared at me with a dropped jaw.
-
-“The inquest?” she asked, the picture of consternation. “But surely
-there won’t have to be an inquest?”
-
-Mr. Hammond gave a dry little cough and murmured, “Inevitable. Under
-the circumstances,” in two short little barks.
-
-“But surely Dr. Sheppard can arrange——”
-
-“There are limits to my powers of arrangement,” I said dryly.
-
-“If his death was an accident——”
-
-“He was murdered, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said brutally.
-
-She gave a little cry.
-
-“No theory of accident will hold water for a minute.”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd looked at me in distress. I had no patience with what I
-thought was her silly fear of unpleasantness.
-
-“If there’s an inquest, I—I shan’t have to answer questions and all
-that, shall I?” she asked.
-
-“I don’t know what will be necessary,” I answered. “I imagine
-Mr. Raymond will take the brunt of it off you. He knows all the
-circumstances, and can give formal evidence of identification.”
-
-The lawyer assented with a little bow.
-
-“I really don’t think there is anything to dread, Mrs. Ackroyd,” he
-said. “You will be spared all unpleasantness. Now, as to the question
-of money, have you all you need for the present? I mean,” he added, as
-she looked at him inquiringly, “ready money. Cash, you know. If not, I
-can arrange to let you have whatever you require.”
-
-“That ought to be all right,” said Raymond, who was standing by. “Mr.
-Ackroyd cashed a cheque for a hundred pounds yesterday.”
-
-“A hundred pounds?”
-
-“Yes. For wages and other expenses due to-day. At the moment it is
-still intact.”
-
-“Where is this money? In his desk?”
-
-“No, he always kept his cash in his bedroom. In an old collar-box, to
-be accurate. Funny idea, wasn’t it?”
-
-“I think,” said the lawyer, “we ought to make sure the money is there
-before I leave.”
-
-“Certainly,” agreed the secretary. “I’ll take you up now.... Oh! I
-forgot. The door’s locked.”
-
-Inquiry from Parker elicited the information that Inspector Raglan was
-in the housekeeper’s room asking a few supplementary questions. A few
-minutes later the inspector joined the party in the hall, bringing the
-key with him. He unlocked the door and we passed into the lobby and up
-the small staircase. At the top of the stairs the door into Ackroyd’s
-bedroom stood open. Inside the room it was dark, the curtains were
-drawn, and the bed was turned down just as it had been last night. The
-inspector drew the curtains, letting in the sunlight, and Geoffrey
-Raymond went to the top drawer of a rosewood bureau.
-
-“He kept his money like that, in an unlocked drawer. Just fancy,”
-commented the inspector.
-
-The secretary flushed a little.
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd had perfect faith in the honesty of all the servants,” he
-said hotly.
-
-“Oh! quite so,” said the inspector hastily.
-
-Raymond opened the drawer, took out a round leather collar-box from the
-back of it, and opening it, drew out a thick wallet.
-
-“Here is the money,” he said, taking out a fat roll of notes. “You
-will find the hundred intact, I know, for Mr. Ackroyd put it in the
-collar-box in my presence last night when he was dressing for dinner,
-and of course it has not been touched since.”
-
-Mr. Hammond took the roll from him and counted it. He looked up sharply.
-
-“A hundred pounds, you said. But there is only sixty here.”
-
-Raymond stared at him.
-
-“Impossible,” he cried, springing forward. Taking the notes from the
-other’s hand, he counted them aloud.
-
-Mr. Hammond had been right. The total amounted to sixty pounds.
-
-“But—I can’t understand it,” cried the secretary, bewildered.
-
-Poirot asked a question.
-
-“You saw Mr. Ackroyd put this money away last night when he was
-dressing for dinner? You are sure he had not paid away any of it
-already?”
-
-“I’m sure he hadn’t. He even said, ‘I don’t want to take a hundred
-pounds down to dinner with me. Too bulgy.’”
-
-“Then the affair is very simple,” remarked Poirot. “Either he paid out
-that forty pounds sometime last evening, or else it has been stolen.”
-
-“That’s the matter in a nutshell,” agreed the inspector. He turned
-to Mrs. Ackroyd. “Which of the servants would come in here yesterday
-evening?”
-
-“I suppose the housemaid would turn down the bed.”
-
-“Who is she? What do you know about her?”
-
-“She’s not been here very long,” said Mrs. Ackroyd. “But she’s a nice
-ordinary country girl.”
-
-“I think we ought to clear this matter up,” said the inspector. “If
-Mr. Ackroyd paid that money away himself, it may have a bearing on the
-mystery of the crime. The other servants all right, as far as you know?”
-
-“Oh, I think so.”
-
-“Not missed anything before?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“None of them leaving, or anything like that?”
-
-“The parlormaid is leaving.”
-
-“When?”
-
-“She gave notice yesterday, I believe.”
-
-“To you?”
-
-“Oh, no. _I_ have nothing to do with the servants. Miss Russell attends
-to the household matters.”
-
-The inspector remained lost in thought for a minute or two. Then he
-nodded his head and remarked, “I think I’d better have a word with Miss
-Russell, and I’ll see the girl Dale as well.”
-
-Poirot and I accompanied him to the housekeeper’s room. Miss Russell
-received us with her usual sang-froid.
-
-Elsie Dale had been at Fernly five months. A nice girl, quick at her
-duties, and most respectable. Good references. The last girl in the
-world to take anything not belonging to her.
-
-What about the parlormaid?
-
-“She, too, was a most superior girl. Very quiet and ladylike. An
-excellent worker.”
-
-“Then why is she leaving?” asked the inspector.
-
-Miss Russell pursed up her lips.
-
-“It was none of my doing. I understand Mr. Ackroyd found fault with
-her yesterday afternoon. It was her duty to do the study, and she
-disarranged some of the papers on his desk, I believe. He was very
-annoyed about it, and she gave notice. At least, that is what I
-understood from her, but perhaps you’d like to see her yourselves?”
-
-The inspector assented. I had already noticed the girl when she was
-waiting on us at lunch. A tall girl, with a lot of brown hair rolled
-tightly away at the back of her neck, and very steady gray eyes. She
-came in answer to the housekeeper’s summons, and stood very straight
-with those same gray eyes fixed on us.
-
-“You are Ursula Bourne?” asked the inspector.
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“I understand you are leaving?”
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“Why is that?”
-
-“I disarranged some papers on Mr. Ackroyd’s desk. He was very angry
-about it, and I said I had better leave. He told me to go as soon as
-possible.”
-
-“Were you in Mr. Ackroyd’s bedroom at all last night? Tidying up or
-anything?”
-
-“No, sir. That is Elsie’s work. I never went near that part of the
-house.”
-
-“I must tell you, my girl, that a large sum of money is missing from
-Mr. Ackroyd’s room.”
-
-At last I saw her roused. A wave of color swept over her face.
-
-“I know nothing about any money. If you think I took it, and that that
-is why Mr. Ackroyd dismissed me, you are wrong.”
-
-“I’m not accusing you of taking it, my girl,” said the inspector.
-“Don’t flare up so.”
-
-The girl looked at him coldly.
-
-“You can search my things if you like,” she said disdainfully. “But you
-won’t find anything.”
-
-Poirot suddenly interposed.
-
-“It was yesterday afternoon that Mr. Ackroyd dismissed you—or you
-dismissed yourself, was it not?” he asked.
-
-The girl nodded.
-
-“How long did the interview last?”
-
-“The interview?”
-
-“Yes, the interview between you and Mr. Ackroyd in the study?”
-
-“I—I don’t know.”
-
-“Twenty minutes? Half an hour?”
-
-“Something like that.”
-
-“Not longer?”
-
-“Not longer than half an hour, certainly.”
-
-“Thank you, mademoiselle.”
-
-I looked curiously at him. He was rearranging a few objects on the
-table, setting them straight with precise fingers. His eyes were
-shining.
-
-“That’ll do,” said the inspector.
-
-Ursula Bourne disappeared. The inspector turned to Miss Russell.
-
-“How long has she been here? Have you got a copy of the reference you
-had with her?”
-
-Without answering the first question, Miss Russell moved to an adjacent
-bureau, opened one of the drawers, and took out a handful of letters
-clipped together with a patent fastener. She selected one and handed it
-to the inspector.
-
-“H’m,” said he. “Reads all right. Mrs. Richard Folliott, Marby Grange,
-Marby. Who’s this woman?”
-
-“Quite good county people,” said Miss Russell.
-
-“Well,” said the inspector, handing it back, “let’s have a look at the
-other one, Elsie Dale.”
-
-Elsie Dale was a big fair girl, with a pleasant but slightly stupid
-face. She answered our questions readily enough, and showed much
-distress and concern at the loss of the money.
-
-“I don’t think there’s anything wrong with her,” observed the
-inspector, after he had dismissed her.
-
-“What about Parker?”
-
-Miss Russell pursed her lips together and made no reply.
-
-“I’ve a feeling there’s something wrong about that man,” the inspector
-continued thoughtfully. “The trouble is that I don’t quite see when he
-got his opportunity. He’d be busy with his duties immediately after
-dinner, and he’s got a pretty good alibi all through the evening. I
-know, for I’ve been devoting particular attention to it. Well, thank
-you very much, Miss Russell. We’ll leave things as they are for the
-present. It’s highly probable Mr. Ackroyd paid that money away himself.”
-
-The housekeeper bade us a dry good-afternoon, and we took our leave.
-
-I left the house with Poirot.
-
-“I wonder,” I said, breaking the silence, “what the papers the girl
-disarranged could have been for Ackroyd to have got into such a state
-about them? I wonder if there is any clew there to the mystery.”
-
-“The secretary said there were no papers of particular importance on
-the desk,” said Poirot quietly.
-
-“Yes, but——” I paused.
-
-“It strikes you as odd that Ackroyd should have flown into a rage about
-so trivial a matter?”
-
-“Yes, it does rather.”
-
-“But was it a trivial matter?”
-
-“Of course,” I admitted, “we don’t know what those papers may have
-been. But Raymond certainly said——”
-
-“Leave M. Raymond out of it for a minute. What did you think of that
-girl?”
-
-“Which girl? The parlormaid?”
-
-“Yes, the parlormaid. Ursula Bourne.”
-
-“She seemed a nice girl,” I said hesitatingly.
-
-Poirot repeated my words, but whereas I had laid a slight stress on the
-fourth word, he put it on the second.
-
-“She _seemed_ a nice girl—yes.”
-
-Then, after a minute’s silence, he took something from his pocket and
-handed it to me.
-
-“See, my friend, I will show you something. Look there.”
-
-The paper he had handed me was that compiled by the inspector and given
-by him to Poirot that morning. Following the pointing finger, I saw a
-small cross marked in pencil opposite the name Ursula Bourne.
-
-“You may not have noticed it at the time, my good friend, but there was
-one person on this list whose alibi had no kind of confirmation. Ursula
-Bourne.”
-
-“You don’t think——”
-
-“Dr. Sheppard, I dare to think anything. Ursula Bourne may have killed
-Mr. Ackroyd, but I confess I can see no motive for her doing so. Can
-you?”
-
-He looked at me very hard—so hard that I felt uncomfortable.
-
-“Can you?” he repeated.
-
-“No motive whatsoever,” I said firmly.
-
-His gaze relaxed. He frowned and murmured to himself:—
-
-“Since the blackmailer was a man, it follows that she cannot be the
-blackmailer, then——”
-
-I coughed.
-
-“As far as that goes——” I began doubtfully.
-
-He spun round on me.
-
-“What? What are you going to say?”
-
-“Nothing. Nothing. Only that, strictly speaking, Mrs. Ferrars in her
-letter mentioned a _person_—she didn’t actually specify a man. But we
-took it for granted, Ackroyd and I, that it _was_ a man.”
-
-Poirot did not seem to be listening to me. He was muttering to himself
-again.
-
-“But then it is possible after all—yes, certainly it is possible—but
-then—ah! I must rearrange my ideas. Method, order; never have I needed
-them more. Everything must fit in—in its appointed place—otherwise I am
-on the wrong tack.”
-
-He broke off, and whirled round upon me again.
-
-“Where is Marby?”
-
-“It’s on the other side of Cranchester.”
-
-“How far away?”
-
-“Oh!—fourteen miles, perhaps.”
-
-“Would it be possible for you to go there? To-morrow, say?”
-
-“To-morrow? Let me see, that’s Sunday. Yes, I could arrange it. What do
-you want me to do there?”
-
-“See this Mrs. Folliott. Find out all you can about Ursula Bourne.”
-
-“Very well. But—I don’t much care for the job.”
-
-“It is not the time to make difficulties. A man’s life may hang on
-this.”
-
-“Poor Ralph,” I said with a sigh. “You believe him to be innocent,
-though?”
-
-Poirot looked at me very gravely.
-
-“Do you want to know the truth?”
-
-“Of course.”
-
-“Then you shall have it. My friend, everything points to the assumption
-that he is guilty.”
-
-“What!” I exclaimed.
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“Yes, that stupid inspector—for he is stupid—has everything pointing
-his way. I seek for the truth—and the truth leads me every time to
-Ralph Paton. Motive, opportunity, means. But I will leave no stone
-unturned. I promised Mademoiselle Flora. And she was very sure, that
-little one. But very sure indeed.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
- POIROT PAYS A CALL
-
-
-I was slightly nervous when I rang the bell at Marby Grange the
-following afternoon. I wondered very much what Poirot expected to
-find out. He had entrusted the job to me. Why? Was it because, as
-in the case of questioning Major Blunt, he wished to remain in the
-background? The wish, intelligible in the first case, seemed to me
-quite meaningless here.
-
-My meditations were interrupted by the advent of a smart parlormaid.
-
-Yes, Mrs. Folliott was at home. I was ushered into a big drawing-room,
-and looked round me curiously as I waited for the mistress of the
-house. A large bare room, some good bits of old china, and some
-beautiful etchings, shabby covers and curtains. A lady’s room in every
-sense of the term.
-
-I turned from the inspection of a Bartolozzi on the wall as Mrs.
-Folliott came into the room. She was a tall woman, with untidy brown
-hair, and a very winning smile.
-
-“Dr. Sheppard,” she said hesitatingly.
-
-“That is my name,” I replied. “I must apologize for calling upon you
-like this, but I wanted some information about a parlormaid previously
-employed by you, Ursula Bourne.”
-
-With the utterance of the name the smile vanished from her face, and
-all the cordiality froze out of her manner. She looked uncomfortable
-and ill at ease.
-
-“Ursula Bourne?” she said hesitatingly.
-
-“Yes,” I said. “Perhaps you don’t remember the name?”
-
-“Oh, yes, of course. I—I remember perfectly.”
-
-“She left you just over a year ago, I understand?”
-
-“Yes. Yes, she did. That is quite right.”
-
-“And you were satisfied with her whilst she was with you? How long was
-she with you, by the way?”
-
-“Oh! a year or two—I can’t remember exactly how long. She—she is very
-capable. I’m sure you will find her quite satisfactory. I didn’t know
-she was leaving Fernly. I hadn’t the least idea of it.”
-
-“Can you tell me anything about her?” I asked.
-
-“Anything about her?”
-
-“Yes, where she comes from, who her people are—that sort of thing?”
-
-Mrs. Folliott’s face wore more than ever its frozen look.
-
-“I don’t know at all.”
-
-“Who was she with before she came to you?”
-
-“I’m afraid I don’t remember.”
-
-There was a spark of anger now underlying her nervousness. She flung up
-her head in a gesture that was vaguely familiar.
-
-“Is it really necessary to ask all these questions?”
-
-“Not at all,” I said, with an air of surprise and a tinge of apology
-in my manner. “I had no idea you would mind answering them. I am very
-sorry.”
-
-Her anger left her and she became confused again.
-
-“Oh! I don’t mind answering them. I assure you I don’t. Why should I?
-It—it just seemed a little odd, you know. That’s all. A little odd.”
-
-One advantage of being a medical practitioner is that you can usually
-tell when people are lying to you. I should have known from Mrs.
-Folliott’s manner, if from nothing else, that she did mind answering my
-questions—minded intensely. She was thoroughly uncomfortable and upset,
-and there was plainly some mystery in the background. I judged her to
-be a woman quite unused to deception of any kind, and consequently
-rendered acutely uneasy when forced to practice it. A child could have
-seen through her.
-
-But it was also clear that she had no intention of telling me anything
-further. Whatever the mystery centering around Ursula Bourne might be,
-I was not going to learn it through Mrs. Folliott.
-
-Defeated, I apologized once more for disturbing her, took my hat and
-departed.
-
-I went to see a couple of patients and arrived home about six o’clock.
-Caroline was sitting beside the wreck of tea things. She had that
-look of suppressed exultation on her face which I know only too well.
-It is a sure sign with her, of either the getting or the giving of
-information. I wondered which it had been.
-
-“I’ve had a very interesting afternoon,” began Caroline as I dropped
-into my own particular easy chair, and stretched out my feet to the
-inviting blaze in the fireplace.
-
-“Have you?” I asked. “Miss Ganett drop in to tea?”
-
-Miss Ganett is one of the chief of our newsmongers.
-
-“Guess again,” said Caroline with intense complacency.
-
-I guessed several times, working slowly through all the members of
-Caroline’s Intelligence Corps. My sister received each guess with
-a triumphant shake of the head. In the end she volunteered the
-information herself.
-
-“M. Poirot!” she said. “Now what do you think of that?”
-
-I thought a good many things of it, but I was careful not to say them
-to Caroline.
-
-“Why did he come?” I asked.
-
-“To see me, of course. He said that knowing my brother so well, he
-hoped he might be permitted to make the acquaintance of his charming
-sister—your charming sister, I’ve got mixed up, but you know what I
-mean.”
-
-“What did he talk about?” I asked.
-
-“He told me a lot about himself and his cases. You know that Prince
-Paul of Mauretania—the one who’s just married a dancer?”
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“I saw a most intriguing paragraph about her in Society Snippets the
-other day, hinting that she was really a Russian Grand Duchess—one
-of the Czar’s daughters who managed to escape from the Bolsheviks.
-Well, it seems that M. Poirot solved a baffling murder mystery that
-threatened to involve them both. Prince Paul was beside himself with
-gratitude.”
-
-“Did he give him an emerald tie pin the size of a plover’s egg?” I
-inquired sarcastically.
-
-“He didn’t mention it. Why?”
-
-“Nothing,” I said. “I thought it was always done. It is in detective
-fiction anyway. The super detective always has his rooms littered with
-rubies and pearls and emeralds from grateful Royal clients.”
-
-“It’s very interesting to hear about these things from the inside,”
-said my sister complacently.
-
-It would be—to Caroline. I could not but admire the ingenuity of M.
-Hercule Poirot, who had selected unerringly the case of all others that
-would most appeal to an elderly maiden lady living in a small village.
-
-“Did he tell you if the dancer was really a Grand Duchess?” I inquired.
-
-“He was not at liberty to speak,” said Caroline importantly.
-
-I wondered how far Poirot had strained the truth in talking to
-Caroline—probably not at all. He had conveyed his innuendoes by means
-of his eyebrows and his shoulders.
-
-“And after all this,” I remarked, “I suppose you were ready to eat out
-of his hand.”
-
-“Don’t be coarse, James. I don’t know where you get these vulgar
-expressions from.”
-
-“Probably from my only link with the outside world—my patients.
-Unfortunately my practice does not lie amongst Royal princes and
-interesting Russian émigrés.”
-
-Caroline pushed her spectacles up and looked at me.
-
-“You seem very grumpy, James. It must be your liver. A blue pill, I
-think, to-night.”
-
-To see me in my own home, you would never imagine that I was a doctor
-of medicine. Caroline does the home prescribing both for herself and me.
-
-“Damn my liver,” I said irritably. “Did you talk about the murder at
-all?”
-
-“Well, naturally, James. What else is there to talk about locally?
-I was able to set M. Poirot right upon several points. He was very
-grateful to me. He said I had the makings of a born detective in me—and
-a wonderful psychological insight into human nature.”
-
-Caroline was exactly like a cat that is full to overflowing with rich
-cream. She was positively purring.
-
-“He talked a lot about the little gray cells of the brain, and of their
-functions. His own, he says, are of the first quality.”
-
-“He would say so,” I remarked bitterly. “Modesty is certainly not his
-middle name.”
-
-“I wish you would not be so horribly American, James. He thought it
-very important that Ralph should be found as soon as possible, and
-induced to come forward and give an account of himself. He says that
-his disappearance will produce a very unfortunate impression at the
-inquest.”
-
-“And what did you say to that?”
-
-“I agreed with him,” said Caroline importantly. “And I was able to tell
-him the way people were already talking about it.”
-
-“Caroline,” I said sharply, “did you tell M. Poirot what you overheard
-in the wood that day?”
-
-“I did,” said Caroline complacently.
-
-I got up and began to walk about.
-
-“You realize what you’re doing, I hope,” I jerked out. “You’re putting
-a halter round Ralph Paton’s neck as surely as you’re sitting in that
-chair.”
-
-“Not at all,” said Caroline, quite unruffled. “I was surprised _you_
-hadn’t told him.”
-
-“I took very good care not to,” I said. “I’m fond of that boy.”
-
-“So am I. That’s why I say you’re talking nonsense. I don’t believe
-Ralph did it, and so the truth can’t hurt him, and we ought to give M.
-Poirot all the help we can. Why, think, very likely Ralph was out with
-that identical girl on the night of the murder, and if so, he’s got a
-perfect alibi.”
-
-“If he’s got a perfect alibi,” I retorted, “why doesn’t he come forward
-and say so?”
-
-“Might get the girl into trouble,” said Caroline sapiently. “But if M.
-Poirot gets hold of her, and puts it to her as her duty, she’ll come
-forward of her own accord and clear Ralph.”
-
-“You seem to have invented a romantic fairy story of your own,” I said.
-“You read too many trashy novels, Caroline. I’ve always told you so.”
-
-I dropped into my chair again.
-
-“Did Poirot ask you any more questions?” I inquired.
-
-“Only about the patients you had that morning.”
-
-“The patients?” I demanded, unbelievingly.
-
-“Yes, your surgery patients. How many and who they were?”
-
-“Do you mean to say you were able to tell him that?” I demanded.
-
-Caroline is really amazing.
-
-“Why not?” asked my sister triumphantly. “I can see the path up to the
-surgery door perfectly from this window. And I’ve got an excellent
-memory, James. Much better than yours, let me tell you.”
-
-“I’m sure you have,” I murmured mechanically.
-
-My sister went on, checking the names on her fingers.
-
-“There was old Mrs. Bennett, and that boy from the farm with the bad
-finger, Dolly Grice to have a needle out of her finger; that American
-steward off the liner. Let me see—that’s four. Yes, and old George
-Evans with his ulcer. And lastly——”
-
-She paused significantly.
-
-“Well?”
-
-Caroline brought out her climax triumphantly. She hissed in the most
-approved style—aided by the fortunate number of s’s at her disposal.
-
-“_Miss Russell!_”
-
-She sat back in her chair and looked at me meaningly, and when Caroline
-looks at you meaningly, it is impossible to miss it.
-
-“I don’t know what you mean,” I said, quite untruthfully. “Why
-shouldn’t Miss Russell consult me about her bad knee?”
-
-“Bad knee,” said Caroline. “Fiddlesticks! No more bad knee than you and
-I. She was after something else.”
-
-“What?” I asked.
-
-Caroline had to admit that she didn’t know.
-
-“But depend upon it, that was what he was trying to get at, M. Poirot,
-I mean. There’s something fishy about that woman, and he knows it.”
-
-“Precisely the remark Mrs. Ackroyd made to me yesterday,” I said. “That
-there was something fishy about Miss Russell.”
-
-“Ah!” said Caroline darkly, “Mrs. Ackroyd! There’s another!”
-
-“Another what?”
-
-Caroline refused to explain her remarks. She merely nodded her head
-several times, rolled up her knitting, and went upstairs to don the
-high mauve silk blouse and the gold locket which she calls dressing for
-dinner.
-
-I stayed there staring into the fire and thinking over Caroline’s
-words. Had Poirot really come to gain information about Miss Russell,
-or was it only Caroline’s tortuous mind that interpreted everything
-according to her own ideas?
-
-There had certainly been nothing in Miss Russell’s manner that morning
-to arouse suspicion. At least——
-
-I remembered her persistent conversation on the subject of drug-taking
-and from that she had led the conversation to poisons and poisoning.
-But there was nothing in that. Ackroyd had not been poisoned. Still, it
-was odd....
-
-I heard Caroline’s voice, rather acid in note, calling from the top of
-the stairs.
-
-“James, you will be late for dinner.”
-
-I put some coal on the fire and went upstairs obediently.
-
-It is well at any price to have peace in the home.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
- ROUND THE TABLE
-
-
-A joint inquest was held on Monday.
-
-I do not propose to give the proceedings in detail. To do so would only
-be to go over the same ground again and again. By arrangement with the
-police, very little was allowed to come out. I gave evidence as to the
-cause of Ackroyd’s death and the probable time. The absence of Ralph
-Paton was commented on by the coroner, but not unduly stressed.
-
-Afterwards, Poirot and I had a few words with Inspector Raglan. The
-inspector was very grave.
-
-“It looks bad, Mr. Poirot,” he said. “I’m trying to judge the thing
-fair and square. I’m a local man, and I’ve seen Captain Paton many
-times in Cranchester. I’m not wanting him to be the guilty one—but it’s
-bad whichever way you look at it. If he’s innocent, why doesn’t he come
-forward? We’ve got evidence against him, but it’s just possible that
-that evidence could be explained away. Then why doesn’t he give an
-explanation?”
-
-A lot more lay behind the inspector’s words than I knew at the time.
-Ralph’s description had been wired to every port and railway station
-in England. The police everywhere were on the alert. His rooms in town
-were watched, and any houses he had been known to be in the habit
-of frequenting. With such a _cordon_ it seemed impossible that Ralph
-should be able to evade detection. He had no luggage, and, as far as
-any one knew, no money.
-
-“I can’t find any one who saw him at the station that night,” continued
-the inspector. “And yet he’s well known down here, and you’d think
-somebody would have noticed him. There’s no news from Liverpool either.”
-
-“You think he went to Liverpool?” queried Poirot.
-
-“Well, it’s on the cards. That telephone message from the station,
-just three minutes before the Liverpool express left—there ought to be
-something in that.”
-
-“Unless it was deliberately intended to throw you off the scent. That
-might just possibly be the point of the telephone message.”
-
-“That’s an idea,” said the inspector eagerly. “Do you really think
-that’s the explanation of the telephone call?”
-
-“My friend,” said Poirot gravely, “I do not know. But I will tell you
-this: I believe that when we find the explanation of that telephone
-call we shall find the explanation of the murder.”
-
-“You said something like that before, I remember,” I observed, looking
-at him curiously.
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“I always come back to it,” he said seriously.
-
-“It seems to me utterly irrelevant,” I declared.
-
-“I wouldn’t say that,” demurred the inspector. “But I must confess I
-think Mr. Poirot here harps on it a little too much. We’ve better clews
-than that. The fingerprints on the dagger, for instance.”
-
-Poirot became suddenly very foreign in manner, as he often did when
-excited over anything.
-
-“M. l’Inspecteur,” he said, “beware of the blind—the blind—_comment
-dire?_—the little street that has no end to it.”
-
-Inspector Raglan stared, but I was quicker.
-
-“You mean a blind alley?” I said.
-
-“That is it—the blind street that leads nowhere. So it may be with
-those fingerprints—they may lead you nowhere.”
-
-“I don’t see how that can well be,” said the police officer. “I suppose
-you’re hinting that they’re faked? I’ve read of such things being done,
-though I can’t say I’ve ever come across it in my experience. But fake
-or true—they’re bound to lead _somewhere_.”
-
-Poirot merely shrugged his shoulders, flinging out his arms wide.
-
-The inspector then showed us various enlarged photographs of the
-fingerprints, and proceeded to become technical on the subject of loops
-and whorls.
-
-“Come now,” he said at last, annoyed by Poirot’s detached manner,
-“you’ve got to admit that those prints were made by some one who was in
-the house that night?”
-
-“_Bien entendu_,” said Poirot, nodding his head.
-
-“Well, I’ve taken the prints of every member of the household, every
-one, mind you, from the old lady down to the kitchenmaid.”
-
-I don’t think Mrs. Ackroyd would enjoy being referred to as the old
-lady. She must spend a considerable amount on cosmetics.
-
-“Every one’s,” repeated the inspector fussily.
-
-“Including mine,” I said dryly.
-
-“Very well. None of them correspond. That leaves us two alternatives.
-Ralph Paton, or the mysterious stranger the doctor here tells us about.
-When we get hold of those two——”
-
-“Much valuable time may have been lost,” broke in Poirot.
-
-“I don’t quite get you, Mr. Poirot?”
-
-“You have taken the prints of every one in the house, you say,”
-murmured Poirot. “Is that the exact truth you are telling me there, M.
-l’Inspecteur?”
-
-“Certainly.”
-
-“Without overlooking any one?”
-
-“Without overlooking any one.”
-
-“The quick or the dead?”
-
-For a moment the inspector looked bewildered at what he took to be a
-religious observation. Then he reacted slowly.
-
-“You mean——”
-
-“The dead, M. l’Inspecteur.”
-
-The inspector still took a minute or two to understand.
-
-“I am suggesting,” said Poirot placidly, “that the fingerprints on the
-dagger handle are those of Mr. Ackroyd himself. It is an easy matter to
-verify. His body is still available.”
-
-“But why? What would be the point of it? You’re surely not suggesting
-suicide, Mr. Poirot?”
-
-“Ah! no. My theory is that the murderer wore gloves or wrapped
-something round his hand. After the blow was struck, he picked up the
-victim’s hand and closed it round the dagger handle.”
-
-“But why?”
-
-Poirot shrugged his shoulders again.
-
-“To make a confusing case even more confusing.”
-
-“Well,” said the inspector, “I’ll look into it. What gave you the idea
-in the first place?”
-
-“When you were so kind as to show me the dagger and draw attention to
-the fingerprints. I know very little of loops and whorls—see, I confess
-my ignorance frankly. But it did occur to me that the position of the
-prints was somewhat awkward. Not so would I have held a dagger in order
-to strike. Naturally, with the right hand brought up over the shoulder
-backwards, it would have been difficult to put it in exactly the right
-position.”
-
-Inspector Raglan stared at the little man. Poirot, with an air of great
-unconcern, flecked a speck of dust from his coat sleeve.
-
-“Well,” said the inspector, “it’s an idea. I’ll look into it all right,
-but don’t you be disappointed if nothing comes of it.”
-
-He endeavored to make his tone kindly and patronizing. Poirot watched
-him go off. Then he turned to me with twinkling eyes.
-
-“Another time,” he observed, “I must be more careful of his _amour
-propre_. And now that we are left to our own devices, what do you
-think, my good friend, of a little reunion of the family?”
-
-The “little reunion,” as Poirot called it, took place about half an
-hour later. We sat round the table in the dining-room at Fernly—Poirot
-at the head of the table, like the chairman of some ghastly board
-meeting. The servants were not present, so we were six in all. Mrs.
-Ackroyd, Flora, Major Blunt, young Raymond, Poirot, and myself.
-
-When every one was assembled, Poirot rose and bowed.
-
-“Messieurs, mesdames, I have called you together for a certain
-purpose.” He paused. “To begin with, I want to make a very special plea
-to mademoiselle.”
-
-“To me?” said Flora.
-
-“Mademoiselle, you are engaged to Captain Ralph Paton. If any one
-is in his confidence, you are. I beg you, most earnestly, if you
-know of his whereabouts, to persuade him to come forward. One little
-minute”—as Flora raised her head to speak—“say nothing till you have
-well reflected. Mademoiselle, his position grows daily more dangerous.
-If he had come forward at once, no matter how damning the facts, he
-might have had a chance of explaining them away. But this silence—this
-flight—what can it mean? Surely only one thing, knowledge of guilt.
-Mademoiselle, if you really believe in his innocence, persuade him to
-come forward before it is too late.”
-
-Flora’s face had gone very white.
-
-“Too late!” she repeated, very low.
-
-Poirot leant forward, looking at her.
-
-“See now, mademoiselle,” he said very gently, “it is Papa Poirot who
-asks you this. The old Papa Poirot who has much knowledge and much
-experience. I would not seek to entrap you, mademoiselle. Will you not
-trust me—and tell me where Ralph Paton is hiding?”
-
-The girl rose, and stood facing him.
-
-“M. Poirot,” she said in a clear voice, “I swear to you—swear
-solemnly—that I have no idea where Ralph is, and that I have neither
-seen him nor heard from him either on the day of—of the murder, or
-since.”
-
-She sat down again. Poirot gazed at her in silence for a minute or two,
-then he brought his hand down on the table with a sharp rap.
-
-“_Bien!_ That is that,” he said. His face hardened. “Now I appeal to
-these others who sit round this table, Mrs. Ackroyd, Major Blunt, Dr.
-Sheppard, Mr. Raymond. You are all friends and intimates of the missing
-man. If you know where Ralph Paton is hiding, speak out.”
-
-There was a long silence. Poirot looked to each in turn.
-
-“I beg of you,” he said in a low voice, “speak out.”
-
-But still there was silence, broken at last by Mrs. Ackroyd.
-
-“I must say,” she observed in a plaintive voice, “that Ralph’s absence
-is most peculiar—most peculiar indeed. Not to come forward at such a
-time. It looks, you know, as though there were something _behind_ it.
-I can’t help thinking, Flora dear, that it was a very fortunate thing
-your engagement was never formally announced.”
-
-“Mother!” cried Flora angrily.
-
-“Providence,” declared Mrs. Ackroyd. “I have a devout belief in
-Providence—a divinity that shapes our ends, as Shakespeare’s beautiful
-line runs.”
-
-“Surely you don’t make the Almighty directly responsible for
-thick ankles, Mrs. Ackroyd, do you?” asked Geoffrey Raymond, his
-irresponsible laugh ringing out.
-
-His idea was, I think, to loosen the tension, but Mrs. Ackroyd threw
-him a glance of reproach and took out her handkerchief.
-
-“Flora has been saved a terrible amount of notoriety and
-unpleasantness. Not for a moment that I think dear Ralph had anything
-to do with poor Roger’s death. I _don’t_ think so. But then I have a
-trusting heart—I always have had, ever since a child. I am loath to
-believe the worst of any one. But, of course, one must remember that
-Ralph was in several air raids as a young boy. The results are apparent
-long after, sometimes, they say. People are not responsible for their
-actions in the least. They lose control, you know, without being able
-to help it.”
-
-“Mother,” cried Flora, “you don’t think Ralph did it?”
-
-“Come, Mrs. Ackroyd,” said Blunt.
-
-“I don’t know what to think,” said Mrs. Ackroyd tearfully. “It’s all
-very upsetting. What would happen to the estate, I wonder, if Ralph
-were found guilty?”
-
-Raymond pushed his chair away from the table violently. Major Blunt
-remained very quiet, looking thoughtfully at her. “Like shell-shock,
-you know,” said Mrs. Ackroyd obstinately, “and I dare say Roger kept
-him very short of money—with the best intentions, of course. I can see
-you are all against me, but I do think it is very odd that Ralph has
-not come forward, and I must say I am thankful Flora’s engagement was
-never announced formally.”
-
-“It will be to-morrow,” said Flora in a clear voice.
-
-“Flora!” cried her mother, aghast.
-
-Flora had turned to the secretary.
-
-“Will you send the announcement to the _Morning Post_ and the _Times_,
-please, Mr. Raymond.”
-
-“If you are sure that it is wise, Miss Ackroyd,” he replied gravely.
-
-She turned impulsively to Blunt.
-
-“You understand,” she said. “What else can I do? As things are, I must
-stand by Ralph. Don’t you see that I must?”
-
-She looked very searchingly at him, and after a long pause he nodded
-abruptly.
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd burst out into shrill protests. Flora remained unmoved.
-Then Raymond spoke.
-
-“I appreciate your motives, Miss Ackroyd. But don’t you think you’re
-being rather precipitate? Wait a day or two.”
-
-“To-morrow,” said Flora, in a clear voice. “It’s no good, mother, going
-on like this. Whatever else I am, I’m not disloyal to my friends.”
-
-“M. Poirot,” Mrs. Ackroyd appealed tearfully, “can’t you say anything
-at all?”
-
-“Nothing to be said,” interpolated Blunt. “She’s doing the right thing.
-I’ll stand by her through thick and thin.”
-
-Flora held out her hand to him.
-
-“Thank you, Major Blunt,” she said.
-
-“Mademoiselle,” said Poirot, “will you let an old man congratulate you
-on your courage and your loyalty? And will you not misunderstand me if
-I ask you—ask you most solemnly—to postpone the announcement you speak
-of for at least two days more?”
-
-Flora hesitated.
-
-“I ask it in Ralph Paton’s interests as much as in yours, mademoiselle.
-You frown. You do not see how that can be. But I assure you that it
-is so. _Pas de blagues_. You put the case into my hands—you must not
-hamper me now.”
-
-Flora paused a few minutes before replying.
-
-“I do not like it,” she said at last, “but I will do what you say.”
-
-She sat down again at the table.
-
-“And now, messieurs et mesdames,” said Poirot rapidly, “I will continue
-with what I was about to say. Understand this, I mean to arrive at
-the truth. The truth, however ugly in itself, is always curious and
-beautiful to the seeker after it. I am much aged, my powers may not
-be what they were.” Here he clearly expected a contradiction. “In all
-probability this is the last case I shall ever investigate. But Hercule
-Poirot does not end with a failure. Messieurs et mesdames, I tell you,
-I mean to _know_. And I shall know—in spite of you all.”
-
-He brought out the last words provocatively, hurling them in our face
-as it were. I think we all flinched back a little, excepting Geoffrey
-Raymond, who remained good humored and imperturbable as usual.
-
-“How do you mean—in spite of us all?” he asked, with slightly raised
-eyebrows.
-
-“But—just that, monsieur. Every one of you in this room is concealing
-something from me.” He raised his hand as a faint murmur of protest
-arose. “Yes, yes, I know what I am saying. It may be something
-unimportant—trivial—which is supposed to have no bearing on the case,
-but there it is. _Each one of you has something to hide._ Come, now, am
-I right?”
-
-His glance, challenging and accusing, swept round the table. And every
-pair of eyes dropped before his. Yes, mine as well.
-
-“I am answered,” said Poirot, with a curious laugh. He got up from his
-seat. “I appeal to you all. Tell me the truth—the whole truth.” There
-was a silence. “Will no one speak?”
-
-He gave the same short laugh again.
-
-“_C’est dommage_,” he said, and went out.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
- THE GOOSE QUILL
-
-
-That evening, at Poirot’s request, I went over to his house after
-dinner. Caroline saw me depart with visible reluctance. I think she
-would have liked to have accompanied me.
-
-Poirot greeted me hospitably. He had placed a bottle of Irish whisky
-(which I detest) on a small table, with a soda water siphon and a
-glass. He himself was engaged in brewing hot chocolate. It was a
-favorite beverage of his, I discovered later.
-
-He inquired politely after my sister, whom he declared to be a most
-interesting woman.
-
-“I’m afraid you’ve been giving her a swelled head,” I said dryly. “What
-about Sunday afternoon?”
-
-He laughed and twinkled.
-
-“I always like to employ the expert,” he remarked obscurely, but he
-refused to explain the remark.
-
-“You got all the local gossip anyway,” I remarked. “True, and untrue.”
-
-“And a great deal of valuable information,” he added quietly.
-
-“Such as——?”
-
-He shook his head.
-
-“Why not have told me the truth?” he countered. “In a place like this,
-all Ralph Paton’s doings were bound to be known. If your sister had not
-happened to pass through the wood that day somebody else would have
-done so.”
-
-“I suppose they would,” I said grumpily. “What about this interest of
-yours in my patients?”
-
-Again he twinkled.
-
-“Only one of them, doctor. Only one of them.”
-
-“The last?” I hazarded.
-
-“I find Miss Russell a study of the most interesting,” he said
-evasively.
-
-“Do you agree with my sister and Mrs. Ackroyd that there is something
-fishy about her?” I asked.
-
-“Eh? What do you say—fishy?”
-
-I explained to the best of my ability.
-
-“And they say that, do they?”
-
-“Didn’t my sister convey as much to you yesterday afternoon?”
-
-“_C’est possible._”
-
-“For no reason whatever,” I declared.
-
-“_Les femmes_,” generalized Poirot. “They are marvelous! They invent
-haphazard—and by miracle they are right. Not that it is that, really.
-Women observe subconsciously a thousand little details, without knowing
-that they are doing so. Their subconscious mind adds these little
-things together—and they call the result intuition. Me, I am very
-skilled in psychology. I know these things.”
-
-He swelled his chest out importantly, looking so ridiculous, that I
-found it difficult not to burst out laughing. Then he took a small sip
-of his chocolate, and carefully wiped his mustache.
-
-“I wish you’d tell me,” I burst out, “what you really think of it all?”
-
-He put down his cup.
-
-“You wish that?”
-
-“I do.”
-
-“You have seen what I have seen. Should not our ideas be the same?”
-
-“I’m afraid you’re laughing at me,” I said stiffly. “Of course, I’ve no
-experience of matters of this kind.”
-
-Poirot smiled at me indulgently.
-
-“You are like the little child who wants to know the way the engine
-works. You wish to see the affair, not as the family doctor sees it,
-but with the eye of a detective who knows and cares for no one—to whom
-they are all strangers and all equally liable to suspicion.”
-
-“You put it very well,” I said.
-
-“So I give you then, a little lecture. The first thing is to get a
-clear history of what happened that evening—always bearing in mind that
-the person who speaks may be lying.”
-
-I raised my eyebrows.
-
-“Rather a suspicious attitude.”
-
-“But necessary—I assure you, necessary. Now first—Dr. Sheppard leaves
-the house at ten minutes to nine. How do I know that?”
-
-“Because I told you so.”
-
-“But you might not be speaking the truth—or the watch you went by might
-be wrong. But Parker also says that you left the house at ten minutes
-to nine. So we accept that statement and pass on. At nine o’clock you
-run into a man—and here we come to what we will call the Romance of the
-Mysterious Stranger—just outside the Park gates. How do I know that
-that is so?”
-
-“I told you so,” I began again, but Poirot interrupted me with a
-gesture of impatience.
-
-“Ah! but it is that you are a little stupid to-night, my friend. _You_
-know that it is so—but how am _I_ to know? _Eh bien_, I am able to
-tell you that the Mysterious Stranger was not a hallucination on your
-part, because the maid of a Miss Ganett met him a few minutes before
-you did, and of her too he inquired the way to Fernly Park. We accept
-his presence, therefore, and we can be fairly sure of two things about
-him—that he was a stranger to the neighborhood, and that whatever his
-object in going to Fernly, there was no great secrecy about it, since
-he twice asked the way there.”
-
-“Yes,” I said, “I see that.”
-
-“Now I have made it my business to find out more about this man. He had
-a drink at the Three Boars, I learn, and the barmaid there says that he
-spoke with an American accent and mentioned having just come over from
-the States. Did it strike you that he had an American accent?”
-
-“Yes, I think he had,” I said, after a minute or two, during which I
-cast my mind back; “but a very slight one.”
-
-“_Précisément._ There is also this which, you will remember, I picked
-up in the summer-house?”
-
-He held out to me the little quill. I looked at it curiously. Then a
-memory of something I had read stirred in me.
-
-Poirot, who had been watching my face, nodded.
-
-“Yes, heroin ‘snow.’ Drug-takers carry it like this, and sniff it up
-the nose.”
-
-“Diamorphine hydrochloride,” I murmured mechanically.
-
-“This method of taking the drug is very common on the other side.
-Another proof, if we wanted one, that the man came from Canada or the
-States.”
-
-“What first attracted your attention to that summer-house?” I asked
-curiously.
-
-“My friend the inspector took it for granted that any one using that
-path did so as a short cut to the house, but as soon as I saw the
-summer-house, I realized that the same path would be taken by any one
-using the summer-house as a rendezvous. Now it seems fairly certain
-that the stranger came neither to the front nor to the back door. Then
-did some one from the house go out and meet him? If so, what could be a
-more convenient place than that little summer-house? I searched it with
-the hope that I might find some clew inside. I found two, the scrap of
-cambric and the quill.”
-
-“And the scrap of cambric?” I asked curiously. “What about that?”
-
-Poirot raised his eyebrows.
-
-“You do not use your little gray cells,” he remarked dryly. “The scrap
-of starched cambric should be obvious.”
-
-“Not very obvious to me.” I changed the subject. “Anyway,” I said,
-“this man went to the summer-house to meet somebody. Who was that
-somebody?”
-
-“Exactly the question,” said Poirot. “You will remember that Mrs.
-Ackroyd and her daughter came over from Canada to live here?”
-
-“Is that what you meant to-day when you accused them of hiding the
-truth?”
-
-“Perhaps. Now another point. What did you think of the parlormaid’s
-story?”
-
-“What story?”
-
-“The story of her dismissal. Does it take half an hour to dismiss a
-servant? Was the story of those important papers a likely one? And
-remember, though she says she was in her bedroom from nine-thirty until
-ten o’clock, there is no one to confirm her statement.”
-
-“You bewilder me,” I said.
-
-“To me it grows clearer. But tell me now your own ideas and theories.”
-
-I drew a piece of paper from my pocket.
-
-“I just scribbled down a few suggestions,” I said apologetically.
-
-“But excellent—you have method. Let us hear them.”
-
-I read out in a somewhat embarrassed voice.
-
-“To begin with, one must look at the thing logically——”
-
-“Just what my poor Hastings used to say,” interrupted Poirot, “but
-alas! he never did so.”
-
-“_Point No. 1._—Mr. Ackroyd was heard talking to some one at half-past
-nine.
-
-“_Point No. 2._—At some time during the evening Ralph Paton must have
-come in through the window, as evidenced by the prints of his shoes.
-
-“_Point No. 3._—Mr. Ackroyd was nervous that evening, and would only
-have admitted some one he knew.
-
-“_Point No. 4._—The person with Mr. Ackroyd at nine-thirty was asking
-for money. We know Ralph Paton was in a scrape.
-
-“_These four points go to show that the person with Mr. Ackroyd at
-nine-thirty was Ralph Paton. But we know that Mr. Ackroyd was alive at
-a quarter to ten, therefore it was not Ralph who killed him. Ralph left
-the window open. Afterwards the murderer came in that way._”
-
-“And who was the murderer?” inquired Poirot.
-
-“The American stranger. He may have been in league with Parker, and
-possibly in Parker we have the man who blackmailed Mrs. Ferrars. If
-so, Parker may have heard enough to realize the game was up, have told
-his accomplice so, and the latter did the crime with the dagger which
-Parker gave him.”
-
-“It is a theory that,” admitted Poirot. “Decidedly you have cells of a
-kind. But it leaves a good deal unaccounted for.”
-
-“Such as——?”
-
-“The telephone call, the pushed-out chair——”
-
-“Do you really think the latter important?” I interrupted.
-
-“Perhaps not,” admitted my friend. “It may have been pulled out
-by accident, and Raymond or Blunt may have shoved it into place
-unconsciously under the stress of emotion. Then there is the missing
-forty pounds.”
-
-“Given by Ackroyd to Ralph,” I suggested. “He may have reconsidered his
-first refusal.”
-
-“That still leaves one thing unexplained?”
-
-“What?”
-
-“Why was Blunt so certain in his own mind that it was Raymond with Mr.
-Ackroyd at nine-thirty?”
-
-“He explained that,” I said.
-
-“You think so? I will not press the point. Tell me instead, what were
-Ralph Paton’s reasons for disappearing?”
-
-“That’s rather more difficult,” I said slowly. “I shall have to speak
-as a medical man. Ralph’s nerves must have gone phut! If he suddenly
-found out that his uncle had been murdered within a few minutes of his
-leaving him—after, perhaps, a rather stormy interview—well, he might
-get the wind up and clear right out. Men have been known to do that—act
-guiltily when they’re perfectly innocent.”
-
-“Yes, that is true,” said Poirot. “But we must not lose sight of one
-thing.”
-
-“I know what you’re going to say,” I remarked: “motive. Ralph Paton
-inherits a great fortune by his uncle’s death.”
-
-“That is one motive,” agreed Poirot.
-
-“One?”
-
-“_Mais oui._ Do you realize that there are three separate motives
-staring us in the face. Somebody certainly stole the blue envelope and
-its contents. That is one motive. Blackmail! Ralph Paton may have been
-the man who blackmailed Mrs. Ferrars. Remember, as far as Hammond
-knew, Ralph Paton had not applied to his uncle for help of late. That
-looks as though he were being supplied with money elsewhere. Then there
-is the fact that he was in some—how do you say—scrape?—which he feared
-might get to his uncle’s ears. And finally there is the one you have
-just mentioned.”
-
-“Dear me,” I said, rather taken aback. “The case does seem black
-against him.”
-
-“Does it?” said Poirot. “That is where we disagree, you and I. Three
-motives—it is almost too much. I am inclined to believe that, after
-all, Ralph Paton is innocent.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
- MRS. ACKROYD
-
-
-After the evening talk I have just chronicled, the affair seemed to
-me to enter on a different phase. The whole thing can be divided into
-two parts, each clear and distinct from the other. Part I. ranges from
-Ackroyd’s death on the Friday evening to the following Monday night.
-It is the straight-forward narrative of what occurred, as presented
-to Hercule Poirot. I was at Poirot’s elbow the whole time. I saw what
-he saw. I tried my best to read his mind. As I know now, I failed in
-this latter task. Though Poirot showed me all his discoveries—as, for
-instance, the gold wedding-ring—he held back the vital and yet logical
-impressions that he formed. As I came to know later, this secrecy was
-characteristic of him. He would throw out hints and suggestions, but
-beyond that he would not go.
-
-As I say, up till the Monday evening, my narrative might have been that
-of Poirot himself. I played Watson to his Sherlock. But after Monday
-our ways diverged. Poirot was busy on his own account. I got to hear
-of what he was doing, because, in King’s Abbot, you get to hear of
-everything, but he did not take me into his confidence beforehand. And
-I, too, had my own preoccupations.
-
-On looking back, the thing that strikes me most is the piecemeal
-character of this period. Every one had a hand in the elucidation of
-the mystery. It was rather like a jig-saw puzzle to which every one
-contributed their own little piece of knowledge or discovery. But their
-task ended there. To Poirot alone belongs the renown of fitting those
-pieces into their correct place.
-
-Some of the incidents seemed at the time irrelevant and unmeaning.
-There was, for instance, the question of the black boots. But that
-comes later.... To take things strictly in chronological order, I must
-begin with the summons from Mrs. Ackroyd.
-
-She sent for me early on Tuesday morning, and since the summons sounded
-an urgent one, I hastened there, expecting to find her _in extremis_.
-
-The lady was in bed. So much did she concede to the etiquette of the
-situation. She gave me her bony hand, and indicated a chair drawn up to
-the bedside.
-
-“Well, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said, “and what’s the matter with you?”
-
-I spoke with that kind of spurious geniality which seems to be expected
-of general practitioners.
-
-“I’m prostrated,” said Mrs. Ackroyd in a faint voice. “Absolutely
-prostrated. It’s the shock of poor Roger’s death. They say these
-things often aren’t felt at the _time_, you know. It’s the reaction
-afterwards.”
-
-It is a pity that a doctor is precluded by his profession from being
-able sometimes to say what he really thinks.
-
-I would have given anything to be able to answer “Bunkum!”
-
-Instead, I suggested a tonic. Mrs. Ackroyd accepted the tonic. One
-move in the game seemed now to be concluded. Not for a moment did I
-imagine that I had been sent for because of the shock occasioned by
-Ackroyd’s death. But Mrs. Ackroyd is totally incapable of pursuing
-a straight-forward course on any subject. She always approaches her
-object by tortuous means. I wondered very much why it was she had sent
-for me.
-
-“And then that scene—yesterday,” continued my patient.
-
-She paused as though expecting me to take up a cue.
-
-“What scene?”
-
-“Doctor, how can you? Have you forgotten? That dreadful little
-Frenchman—or Belgian—or whatever he is. Bullying us all like he did. It
-has quite upset me. Coming on top of Roger’s death.”
-
-“I’m very sorry, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said.
-
-“I don’t know what he meant—shouting at us like he did. I should hope I
-know my duty too well to _dream_ of concealing anything. I have given
-the police _every_ assistance in my power.”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd paused, and I said, “Quite so.” I was beginning to have a
-glimmering of what all the trouble was about.
-
-“No one can say that I have failed in my duty,” continued Mrs. Ackroyd.
-“I am sure Inspector Raglan is perfectly satisfied. Why should this
-little upstart of a foreigner make a fuss? A most ridiculous-looking
-creature he is too—just like a comic Frenchman in a revue. I can’t
-think why Flora insisted on bringing him into the case. She never said
-a word to me about it. Just went off and did it on her own. Flora is
-too independent. I am a woman of the world and her mother. She should
-have come to me for advice first.”
-
-I listened to all this in silence.
-
-“What does he think? That’s what I want to know. Does he actually
-imagine I’m hiding something? He—he—positively _accused_ me yesterday.”
-
-I shrugged my shoulders.
-
-“It is surely of no consequence, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said. “Since you are
-not concealing anything, any remarks he may have made do not apply to
-you.”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd went off at a tangent, after her usual fashion.
-
-“Servants are so tiresome,” she said. “They gossip, and talk amongst
-themselves. And then it gets round—and all the time there’s probably
-nothing in it at all.”
-
-“Have the servants been talking?” I asked. “What about?”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd cast a very shrewd glance at me. It quite threw me off my
-balance.
-
-“I was sure _you’d_ know, doctor, if any one did. You were with M.
-Poirot all the time, weren’t you?”
-
-“I was.”
-
-“Then of course you know. It was that girl, Ursula Bourne, wasn’t it?
-Naturally—she’s leaving. She _would_ want to make all the trouble
-she could. Spiteful, that’s what they are. They’re all alike. Now,
-you being there, doctor, you must know exactly what she did say? I’m
-most anxious that no wrong impression should get about. After all,
-you don’t repeat every little detail to the police, do you? There are
-family matters sometimes—nothing to do with the question of the murder.
-But if the girl was spiteful, she may have made out all sorts of
-things.”
-
-I was shrewd enough to see that a very real anxiety lay behind these
-outpourings. Poirot had been justified in his premises. Of the six
-people round the table yesterday, Mrs. Ackroyd at least had had
-something to hide. It was for me to discover what that something might
-be.
-
-“If I were you, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said brusquely, “I should make a clean
-breast of things.”
-
-She gave a little scream.
-
-“Oh! doctor, how can you be so abrupt. It sounds as though—as
-though——And I can explain everything so simply.”
-
-“Then why not do so,” I suggested.
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd took out a frilled handkerchief, and became tearful.
-
-“I thought, doctor, that you might put it to M. Poirot—explain it, you
-know—because it’s so difficult for a foreigner to see our point of
-view. And you don’t know—nobody could know—what I’ve had to contend
-with. A martyrdom—a long martyrdom. That’s what my life has been. I
-don’t like to speak ill of the dead—but there it is. Not the smallest
-bill, but it had all to be gone over—just as though Roger had had a
-few miserly hundreds a year instead of being (as Mr. Hammond told me
-yesterday) one of the wealthiest men in these parts.”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd paused to dab her eyes with the frilled handkerchief.
-
-“Yes,” I said encouragingly. “You were talking about bills?”
-
-“Those dreadful bills. And some I didn’t like to show Roger at all.
-They were things a man wouldn’t understand. He would have said the
-things weren’t necessary. And of course they mounted up, you know, and
-they kept coming in——”
-
-She looked at me appealingly, as though asking me to condole with her
-on this striking peculiarity.
-
-“It’s a habit they have,” I agreed.
-
-“And the tone altered—became quite abusive. I assure you, doctor,
-I was becoming a nervous wreck. I couldn’t sleep at nights. And a
-dreadful fluttering round the heart. And then I got a letter from a
-Scotch gentleman—as a matter of fact there were two letters—both Scotch
-gentlemen. Mr. Bruce MacPherson was one, and the other were Colin
-MacDonald. Quite a coincidence.”
-
-“Hardly that,” I said dryly. “They are usually Scotch gentlemen, but I
-suspect a Semitic strain in their ancestry.”
-
-“Ten pounds to ten thousand on note of hand alone,” murmured Mrs.
-Ackroyd reminiscently. “I wrote to one of them, but it seemed there
-were difficulties.”
-
-She paused.
-
-I gathered that we were just coming to delicate ground. I have never
-known any one more difficult to bring to the point.
-
-“You see,” murmured Mrs. Ackroyd, “it’s all a question of expectations,
-isn’t it? Testamentary expectations. And though, of course, I expected
-that Roger would provide for me, I didn’t _know_. I thought that if
-only I could glance over a copy of his will—not in any sense of vulgar
-prying—but just so that I could make my own arrangements.”
-
-She glanced sideways at me. The position was now very delicate indeed.
-Fortunately words, ingeniously used, will serve to mask the ugliness of
-naked facts.
-
-“I could only tell this to you, dear Dr. Sheppard,” said Mrs. Ackroyd
-rapidly. “I can trust you not to misjudge me, and to represent the
-matter in the right light to M. Poirot. It was on Friday afternoon——”
-
-She came to a stop and swallowed uncertainly.
-
-“Yes,” I repeated encouragingly. “On Friday afternoon. Well?”
-
-“Every one was out, or so I thought. And I went into Roger’s study—I
-had some real reason for going there—I mean, there was nothing
-underhand about it. And as I saw all the papers heaped on the desk, it
-just came to me, like a flash: ‘I wonder if Roger keeps his will in
-one of the drawers of the desk.’ I’m so impulsive, always was, from a
-child. I do things on the spur of the moment. He’d left his keys—very
-careless of him—in the lock of the top drawer.”
-
-“I see,” I said helpfully. “So you searched the desk. Did you find the
-will?”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd gave a little scream, and I realized that I had not been
-sufficiently diplomatic.
-
-“How dreadful it sounds. But it wasn’t at all like that really.”
-
-“Of course it wasn’t,” I said hastily. “You must forgive my unfortunate
-way of putting things.”
-
-“You see, men are so peculiar. In dear Roger’s place, I should not
-have objected to revealing the provisions of my will. But men are so
-secretive. One is forced to adopt little subterfuges in self-defence.”
-
-“And the result of the little subterfuge?” I asked.
-
-“That’s just what I’m telling you. As I got to the bottom drawer,
-Bourne came in. Most awkward. Of course I shut the drawer and stood
-up, and I called her attention to a few specks of dust on the surface.
-But I didn’t like the way she looked—quite respectful in manner, but a
-very nasty light in her eyes. Almost contemptuous, if you know what I
-mean. I never have liked that girl very much. She’s a good servant, and
-she says Ma’am, and doesn’t object to wearing caps and aprons (which
-I declare to you a lot of them do nowadays), and she can say ‘Not at
-home’ without scruples if she has to answer the door instead of Parker,
-and she doesn’t have those peculiar gurgling noises inside which so
-many parlormaids seem to have when they wait at table——Let me see,
-where was I?”
-
-“You were saying, that in spite of several valuable qualities, you
-never liked Bourne.”
-
-“No more I do. She’s—odd. There’s something different about her from
-the others. Too well educated, that’s my opinion. You can’t tell who
-are ladies and who aren’t nowadays.”
-
-“And what happened next?” I asked.
-
-“Nothing. At least, Roger came in. And I thought he was out for a
-walk. And he said: ‘What’s all this?’ and I said, ‘Nothing. I just came
-in to fetch _Punch_.’ And I took _Punch_ and went out with it. Bourne
-stayed behind. I heard her asking Roger if she could speak to him for a
-minute. I went straight up to my room, to lie down. I was very upset.”
-
-There was a pause.
-
-“You will explain to M. Poirot, won’t you? You can see for yourself
-what a trivial matter the whole thing was. But, of course, when he was
-so stern about concealing things, I thought of this at once. Bourne
-may have made some extraordinary story out of it, but you can explain,
-can’t you?”
-
-“That is all?” I said. “You have told me everything?”
-
-“Ye-es,” said Mrs. Ackroyd. “Oh! yes,” she added firmly.
-
-But I had noted the momentary hesitation, and I knew that there was
-still something she was keeping back. It was nothing less than a flash
-of sheer genius that prompted me to ask the question I did.
-
-“Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said, “was it you who left the silver table open?”
-
-I had my answer in the blush of guilt that even rouge and powder could
-not conceal.
-
-“How did you know?” she whispered.
-
-“It was you, then?”
-
-“Yes—I—you see—there were one or two pieces of old silver—very
-interesting. I had been reading up the subject and there was an
-illustration of quite a small piece which had fetched an immense
-sum at Christy’s. It looked to me just the same as the one in the
-silver table. I thought I would take it up to London with me when I
-went—and—and have it valued. Then if it really was a valuable piece,
-just think what a charming surprise it would have been for Roger?”
-
-I refrained from comments, accepting Mrs. Ackroyd’s story on its
-merits. I even forbore to ask her why it was necessary to abstract what
-she wanted in such a surreptitious manner.
-
-“Why did you leave the lid open?” I asked. “Did you forget?”
-
-“I was startled,” said Mrs. Ackroyd. “I heard footsteps coming along
-the terrace outside. I hastened out of the room and just got up the
-stairs before Parker opened the front door to you.”
-
-“That must have been Miss Russell,” I said thoughtfully. Mrs. Ackroyd
-had revealed to me one fact that was extremely interesting. Whether her
-designs upon Ackroyd’s silver had been strictly honorable I neither
-knew nor cared. What did interest me was the fact that Miss Russell
-must have entered the drawing-room by the window, and that I had not
-been wrong when I judged her to be out of breath with running. Where
-had she been? I thought of the summer-house and the scrap of cambric.
-
-“I wonder if Miss Russell has her handkerchiefs starched!” I exclaimed
-on the spur of the moment.
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd’s start recalled me to myself, and I rose.
-
-“You think you can explain to M. Poirot?” she asked anxiously.
-
-“Oh, certainly. Absolutely.”
-
-I got away at last, after being forced to listen to more justifications
-of her conduct.
-
-The parlormaid was in the hall, and it was she who helped me on with my
-overcoat. I observed her more closely than I had done heretofore. It
-was clear that she had been crying.
-
-“How is it,” I asked, “that you told us that Mr. Ackroyd sent for you
-on Friday to his study? I hear now that it was _you_ who asked to speak
-to _him_?”
-
-For a minute the girl’s eyes dropped before mine.
-
-Then she spoke.
-
-“I meant to leave in any case,” she said uncertainly.
-
-I said no more. She opened the front door for me. Just as I was passing
-out, she said suddenly in a low voice:—
-
-“Excuse me, sir, is there any news of Captain Paton?”
-
-I shook my head, looking at her inquiringly.
-
-“He ought to come back,” she said. “Indeed—indeed he ought to come
-back.”
-
-She was looking at me with appealing eyes.
-
-“Does no one know where he is?” she asked.
-
-“Do you?” I said sharply.
-
-She shook her head.
-
-“No, indeed. I know nothing. But any one who was a friend to him would
-tell him this: he ought to come back.”
-
-I lingered, thinking that perhaps the girl would say more. Her next
-question surprised me.
-
-“When do they think the murder was done? Just before ten o’clock?”
-
-“That is the idea,” I said. “Between a quarter to ten and the hour.”
-
-“Not earlier? Not before a quarter to ten?”
-
-I looked at her attentively. She was so clearly eager for a reply in
-the affirmative.
-
-“That’s out of the question,” I said. “Miss Ackroyd saw her uncle alive
-at a quarter to ten.”
-
-She turned away, and her whole figure seemed to droop.
-
-“A handsome girl,” I said to myself as I drove off. “An exceedingly
-handsome girl.”
-
-Caroline was at home. She had had a visit from Poirot and was very
-pleased and important about it.
-
-“I am helping him with the case,” she explained.
-
-I felt rather uneasy. Caroline is bad enough as it is. What will she be
-like with her detective instincts encouraged?
-
-“Are you going round the neighborhood looking for Ralph Paton’s
-mysterious girl?” I inquired.
-
-“I might do that on my own account,” said Caroline. “No, this is a
-special thing M. Poirot wants me to find out for him.”
-
-“What is it?” I asked.
-
-“He wants to know whether Ralph Paton’s boots were black or brown,”
-said Caroline with tremendous solemnity.
-
-I stared at her. I see now that I was unbelievably stupid about these
-boots. I failed altogether to grasp the point.
-
-“They were brown shoes,” I said. “I saw them.”
-
-“Not shoes, James, boots. M. Poirot wants to know whether a pair of
-boots Ralph had with him at the hotel were brown or black. A lot hangs
-on it.”
-
-Call me dense if you like. I didn’t see.
-
-“And how are you going to find out?” I asked.
-
-Caroline said there would be no difficulty about that. Our Annie’s
-dearest friend was Miss Ganett’s maid, Clara. And Clara was walking
-out with the boots at the Three Boars. The whole thing was simplicity
-itself, and by the aid of Miss Ganett, who coöperated loyally, at once
-giving Clara leave of absence, the matter was rushed through at express
-speed.
-
-It was when we were sitting down to lunch that Caroline remarked, with
-would-be unconcern:—
-
-“About those boots of Ralph Paton’s.”
-
-“Well,” I said, “what about them?”
-
-“M. Poirot thought they were probably brown. He was wrong. They’re
-black.”
-
-And Caroline nodded her head several times. She evidently felt that she
-had scored a point over Poirot.
-
-I did not answer. I was puzzling over what the color of a pair of Ralph
-Paton’s boots had to do with the case.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
- GEOFFREY RAYMOND
-
-
-I was to have a further proof that day of the success of Poirot’s
-tactics. That challenge of his had been a subtle touch born of his
-knowledge of human nature. A mixture of fear and guilt had wrung the
-truth from Mrs. Ackroyd. She was the first to react.
-
-That afternoon when I returned from seeing my patients, Caroline told
-me that Geoffrey Raymond had just left.
-
-“Did he want to see me?” I asked, as I hung up my coat in the hall.
-
-Caroline was hovering by my elbow.
-
-“It was M. Poirot he wanted to see,” she said. “He’d just come from The
-Larches. M. Poirot was out. Mr. Raymond thought that he might be here,
-or that you might know where he was.”
-
-“I haven’t the least idea.”
-
-“I tried to make him wait,” said Caroline, “but he said he would call
-back at The Larches in half an hour, and went away down the village. A
-great pity, because M. Poirot came in practically the minute after he
-left.”
-
-“Came in here?”
-
-“No, to his own house.”
-
-“How do you know?”
-
-“The side window,” said Caroline briefly.
-
-It seemed to me that we had now exhausted the topic. Caroline thought
-otherwise.
-
-“Aren’t you going across?”
-
-“Across where?”
-
-“To The Larches, of course.”
-
-“My dear Caroline,” I said, “what for?”
-
-“Mr. Raymond wanted to see him very particularly,” said Caroline. “You
-might hear what it’s all about.”
-
-I raised my eyebrows.
-
-“Curiosity is not my besetting sin,” I remarked coldly. “I can exist
-comfortably without knowing exactly what my neighbors are doing and
-thinking.”
-
-“Stuff and nonsense, James,” said my sister. “You want to know just
-as much as I do. You’re not so honest, that’s all. You always have to
-pretend.”
-
-“Really, Caroline,” I said, and retired into my surgery.
-
-Ten minutes later Caroline tapped at the door and entered. In her hand
-she held what seemed to be a pot of jam.
-
-“I wonder, James,” she said, “if you would mind taking this pot of
-medlar jelly across to M. Poirot? I promised it to him. He has never
-tasted any home-made medlar jelly.”
-
-“Why can’t Annie go?” I asked coldly.
-
-“She’s doing some mending. I can’t spare her.”
-
-Caroline and I looked at each other.
-
-“Very well,” I said, rising. “But if I take the beastly thing, I shall
-just leave it at the door. You understand that?”
-
-My sister raised her eyebrows.
-
-“Naturally,” she said. “Who suggested you should do anything else?”
-
-The honors were with Caroline.
-
-“If you _do_ happen to see M. Poirot,” she said, as I opened the front
-door, “you might tell him about the boots.”
-
-It was a most subtle parting shot. I wanted dreadfully to understand
-the enigma of the boots. When the old lady with the Breton cap opened
-the door to me, I found myself asking if M. Poirot was in, quite
-automatically.
-
-Poirot sprang up to meet me, with every appearance of pleasure.
-
-“Sit down, my good friend,” he said. “The big chair? This small one?
-The room is not too hot, no?”
-
-I thought it was stifling, but refrained from saying so. The windows
-were closed, and a large fire burned in the grate.
-
-“The English people, they have a mania for the fresh air,” declared
-Poirot. “The big air, it is all very well outside, where it belongs.
-Why admit it to the house? But let us not discuss such banalities. You
-have something for me, yes?”
-
-“Two things,” I said. “First—this—from my sister.”
-
-I handed over the pot of medlar jelly.
-
-“How kind of Mademoiselle Caroline. She has remembered her promise. And
-the second thing?”
-
-“Information—of a kind.”
-
-And I told him of my interview with Mrs. Ackroyd. He listened with
-interest, but not much excitement.
-
-“It clears the ground,” he said thoughtfully. “And it has a certain
-value as confirming the evidence of the housekeeper. She said, you
-remember, that she found the silver table lid open and closed it down
-in passing.”
-
-“What about her statement that she went into the drawing-room to see if
-the flowers were fresh?”
-
-“Ah! we never took that very seriously, did we, my friend? It was
-patently an excuse, trumped up in a hurry, by a woman who felt it
-urgent to explain her presence—which, by the way, you would probably
-never have thought of questioning. I considered it possible that her
-agitation might arise from the fact that she had been tampering with
-the silver table, but I think now that we must look for another cause.”
-
-“Yes,” I said. “Whom did she go out to meet? And why?”
-
-“You think she went to meet some one?”
-
-“I do.”
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“So do I,” he said thoughtfully.
-
-There was a pause.
-
-“By the way,” I said, “I’ve got a message for you from my sister. Ralph
-Paton’s boots were black, not brown.”
-
-I was watching him closely as I gave the message, and I fancied that
-I saw a momentary flicker of discomposure. If so, it passed almost
-immediately.
-
-“She is absolutely positive they are not brown?”
-
-“Absolutely.”
-
-“Ah!” said Poirot regretfully. “That is a pity.”
-
-And he seemed quite crestfallen.
-
-He entered into no explanations, but at once started a new subject of
-conversation.
-
-“The housekeeper, Miss Russell, who came to consult you on that Friday
-morning—is it indiscreet to ask what passed at the interview—apart from
-the medical details, I mean?”
-
-“Not at all,” I said. “When the professional part of the conversation
-was over, we talked for a few minutes about poisons, and the ease or
-difficulty of detecting them, and about drug-taking and drug-takers.”
-
-“With special reference to cocaine?” asked Poirot.
-
-“How did you know?” I asked, somewhat surprised.
-
-For answer, the little man rose and crossed the room to where
-newspapers were filed. He brought me a copy of the _Daily Budget_,
-dated Friday, 16th September, and showed me an article dealing with the
-smuggling of cocaine. It was a somewhat lurid article, written with an
-eye to picturesque effect.
-
-“That is what put cocaine into her head, my friend,” he said.
-
-I would have catechized him further, for I did not quite understand his
-meaning, but at that moment the door opened and Geoffrey Raymond was
-announced.
-
-He came in fresh and debonair as ever, and greeted us both.
-
-“How are you, doctor? M. Poirot, this is the second time I’ve been here
-this morning. I was anxious to catch you.”
-
-“Perhaps I’d better be off,” I suggested rather awkwardly.
-
-“Not on my account, doctor. No, it’s just this,” he went on, seating
-himself at a wave of invitation from Poirot, “I’ve got a confession to
-make.”
-
-“_En verité_?” said Poirot, with an air of polite interest.
-
-“Oh, it’s of no consequence, really. But, as a matter of fact, my
-conscience has been pricking me ever since yesterday afternoon. You
-accused us all of keeping back something, M. Poirot. I plead guilty.
-I’ve had something up my sleeve.”
-
-“And what is that, M. Raymond?”
-
-“As I say, it’s nothing of consequence—just this. I was in debt—badly,
-and that legacy came in the nick of time. Five hundred pounds puts me
-on my feet again with a little to spare.”
-
-He smiled at us both with that engaging frankness that made him such a
-likable youngster.
-
-“You know how it is. Suspicious looking policeman—don’t like to admit
-you were hard up for money—think it will look bad to them. But I was
-a fool, really, because Blunt and I were in the billiard room from a
-quarter to ten onwards, so I’ve got a watertight alibi and nothing to
-fear. Still, when you thundered out that stuff about concealing things,
-I felt a nasty prick of conscience, and I thought I’d like to get it
-off my mind.”
-
-He got up again and stood smiling at us.
-
-“You are a very wise young man,” said Poirot, nodding at him with
-approval. “See you, when I know that any one is hiding things from me,
-I suspect that the thing hidden may be something very bad indeed. You
-have done well.”
-
-“I’m glad I’m cleared from suspicion,” laughed Raymond. “I’ll be off
-now.”
-
-“So that is that,” I remarked, as the door closed behind the young
-secretary.
-
-“Yes,” agreed Poirot. “A mere bagatelle—but if he had not been in the
-billiard room—who knows? After all, many crimes have been committed for
-the sake of less than five hundred pounds. It all depends on what sum
-is sufficient to break a man. A question of the relativity, is it not
-so? Have you reflected, my friend, that many people in that house stood
-to benefit by Mr. Ackroyd’s death? Mrs. Ackroyd, Miss Flora, young Mr.
-Raymond, the housekeeper, Miss Russell. Only one, in fact, does not,
-Major Blunt.”
-
-His tone in uttering that name was so peculiar that I looked up,
-puzzled.
-
-“I don’t quite understand you?” I said.
-
-“Two of the people I accused have given me the truth.”
-
-“You think Major Blunt has something to conceal also?”
-
-“As for that,” remarked Poirot nonchalantly, “there is a saying, is
-there not, that Englishmen conceal only one thing—their love? And Major
-Blunt, I should say, is not good at concealments.”
-
-“Sometimes,” I said, “I wonder if we haven’t rather jumped to
-conclusions on one point.”
-
-“What is that?”
-
-“We’ve assumed that the blackmailer of Mrs. Ferrars is necessarily the
-murderer of Mr. Ackroyd. Mightn’t we be mistaken?”
-
-Poirot nodded energetically.
-
-“Very good. Very good indeed. I wondered if that idea would come to
-you. Of course it is possible. But we must remember one point. The
-letter disappeared. Still, that, as you say, may not necessarily mean
-that the murderer took it. When you first found the body, Parker may
-have abstracted the letter unnoticed by you.”
-
-“Parker?”
-
-“Yes, Parker. I always come back to Parker—not as the murderer—no, he
-did not commit the murder; but who is more suitable than he as the
-mysterious scoundrel who terrorized Mrs. Ferrars? He may have got his
-information about Mr. Ferrars’s death from one of the King’s Paddock
-servants. At any rate, he is more likely to have come upon it than a
-casual guest such as Blunt, for instance.”
-
-“Parker might have taken the letter,” I admitted. “It wasn’t till later
-that I noticed it was gone.”
-
-“How much later? After Blunt and Raymond were in the room, or before?”
-
-“I can’t remember,” I said slowly. “I think it was before—no,
-afterwards. Yes, I’m almost sure it was afterwards.”
-
-“That widens the field to three,” said Poirot thoughtfully. “But Parker
-is the most likely. It is in my mind to try a little experiment with
-Parker. How say you, my friend, will you accompany me to Fernly?”
-
-I acquiesced, and we set out at once. Poirot asked to see Miss Ackroyd,
-and presently Flora came to us.
-
-“Mademoiselle Flora,” said Poirot, “I have to confide in you a little
-secret. I am not yet satisfied of the innocence of Parker. I propose to
-make a little experiment with your assistance. I want to reconstruct
-some of his actions on that night. But we must think of something to
-tell him—ah! I have it. I wish to satisfy myself as to whether voices
-in the little lobby could have been heard outside on the terrace. Now,
-ring for Parker, if you will be so good.”
-
-I did so, and presently the butler appeared, suave as ever.
-
-“You rang, sir?”
-
-“Yes, my good Parker. I have in mind a little experiment. I have placed
-Major Blunt on the terrace outside the study window. I want to see if
-any one there could have heard the voices of Miss Ackroyd and yourself
-in the lobby that night. I want to enact that little scene over again.
-Perhaps you would fetch the tray or whatever it was you were carrying?”
-
-Parker vanished, and we repaired to the lobby outside the study door.
-Presently we heard a chink in the outer hall, and Parker appeared in
-the doorway carrying a tray with a siphon, a decanter of whisky, and
-two glasses on it.
-
-“One moment,” cried Poirot, raising his hand and seemingly very
-excited. “We must have everything in order. Just as it occurred. It is
-a little method of mine.”
-
-“A foreign custom, sir,” said Parker. “Reconstruction of the crime they
-call it, do they not?”
-
-He was quite imperturbable as he stood there politely waiting on
-Poirot’s orders.
-
-“Ah! he knows something, the good Parker,” cried Poirot. “He has read
-of these things. Now, I beg you, let us have everything of the most
-exact. You came from the outer hall—so. Mademoiselle was—where?”
-
-“Here,” said Flora, taking up her stand just outside the study door.
-
-“Quite right, sir,” said Parker.
-
-“I had just closed the door,” continued Flora.
-
-“Yes, miss,” agreed Parker. “Your hand was still on the handle as it is
-now.”
-
-“Then _allez_,” said Poirot. “Play me the little comedy.”
-
-Flora stood with her hand on the door handle, and Parker came stepping
-through the door from the hall, bearing the tray.
-
-He stopped just inside the door. Flora spoke.
-
-“Oh! Parker. Mr. Ackroyd doesn’t want to be disturbed again to-night.”
-
-“Is that right?” she added in an undertone.
-
-“To the best of my recollection, Miss Flora,” said Parker, “but I fancy
-you used the word evening instead of night.” Then, raising his voice
-in a somewhat theatrical fashion: “Very good, miss. Shall I lock up as
-usual?”
-
-“Yes, please.”
-
-Parker retired through the door, Flora followed him, and started to
-ascend the main staircase.
-
-“Is that enough?” she asked over her shoulder.
-
-“Admirable,” declared the little man, rubbing his hands. “By the way,
-Parker, are you sure there were two glasses on the tray that evening?
-Who was the second one for?”
-
-“I always bring two glasses, sir,” said Parker. “Is there anything
-further?”
-
-“Nothing. I thank you.”
-
-Parker withdrew, dignified to the last.
-
-Poirot stood in the middle of the hall frowning. Flora came down and
-joined us.
-
-“Has your experiment been successful?” she asked. “I don’t quite
-understand, you know——”
-
-Poirot smiled admiringly at her.
-
-“It is not necessary that you should,” he said. “But tell me, were
-there indeed two glasses on Parker’s tray that night?”
-
-Flora wrinkled her brows a minute.
-
-“I really can’t remember,” she said. “I think there were. Is—is that
-the object of your experiment?”
-
-Poirot took her hand and patted it.
-
-“Put it this way,” he said. “I am always interested to see if people
-will speak the truth.”
-
-“And did Parker speak the truth?”
-
-“I rather think he did,” said Poirot thoughtfully.
-
-A few minutes later saw us retracing our steps to the village.
-
-“What was the point of that question about the glasses?” I asked
-curiously.
-
-Poirot shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“One must say something,” he remarked. “That particular question did as
-well as any other.”
-
-I stared at him.
-
-“At any rate, my friend,” he said more seriously, “I know now something
-I wanted to know. Let us leave it at that.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
- AN EVENING AT MAH JONG
-
-
-That night we had a little Mah Jong party. This kind of simple
-entertainment is very popular in King’s Abbot. The guests arrive in
-goloshes and waterproofs after dinner. They partake of coffee and later
-of cake, sandwiches, and tea.
-
-On this particular night our guests were Miss Ganett and Colonel
-Carter, who lives near the church. A good deal of gossip is handed
-round at these evenings, sometimes seriously interfering with the
-game in progress. We used to play bridge—chatty bridge of the worst
-description. We find Mah Jong much more peaceful. The irritated demand
-as to why on earth your partner did not lead a certain card is entirely
-done away with, and though we still express criticisms frankly, there
-is not the same acrimonious spirit.
-
-“Very cold evening, eh, Sheppard?” said Colonel Carter, standing with
-his back to the fire. Caroline had taken Miss Ganett to her own room,
-and was there assisting her to disentangle herself from her many wraps.
-“Reminds me of the Afghan passes.”
-
-“Indeed?” I said politely.
-
-“Very mysterious business this about poor Ackroyd,” continued the
-colonel, accepting a cup of coffee. “A deuce of a lot behind it—that’s
-what I say. Between you and me, Sheppard, I’ve heard the word blackmail
-mentioned!”
-
-The colonel gave me the look which might be tabulated “one man of the
-world to another.”
-
-“A woman in it, no doubt,” he said. “Depend upon it, a woman in it.”
-
-Caroline and Miss Ganett joined us at this minute. Miss Ganett drank
-coffee whilst Caroline got out the Mah Jong box and poured out the
-tiles upon the table.
-
-“Washing the tiles,” said the colonel facetiously. “That’s
-right—washing the tiles, as we used to say in the Shanghai Club.”
-
-It is the private opinion of both Caroline and myself that Colonel
-Carter has never been in the Shanghai Club in his life. More, that he
-has never been farther east than India, where he juggled with tins of
-bully beef and plum and apple jam during the Great War. But the colonel
-is determinedly military, and in King’s Abbot we permit people to
-indulge their little idiosyncrasies freely.
-
-“Shall we begin?” said Caroline.
-
-We sat round the table. For some five minutes there was complete
-silence, owing to the fact that there is tremendous secret competition
-amongst us as to who can build their wall quickest.
-
-“Go on, James,” said Caroline at last. “You’re East Wind.”
-
-I discarded a tile. A round or two proceeded, broken by the monotonous
-remarks of “Three Bamboos,” “Two Circles,” “Pung,” and frequently
-from Miss Ganett “Unpung,” owing to that lady’s habit of too hastily
-claiming tiles to which she had no right.
-
-“I saw Flora Ackroyd this morning,” said Miss Ganett. “Pung—no—Unpung.
-I made a mistake.”
-
-“Four Circles,” said Caroline. “Where did you see her?”
-
-“She didn’t see _me_,” said Miss Ganett, with that tremendous
-significance only to be met with in small villages.
-
-“Ah!” said Caroline interestedly. “Chow.”
-
-“I believe,” said Miss Ganett, temporarily diverted, “that it’s the
-right thing nowadays to say ‘Chee’ not ‘Chow.’”
-
-“Nonsense,” said Caroline. “I have always said ‘_Chow_.’”
-
-“In the Shanghai Club,” said Colonel Carter, “they say ‘_Chow_.’”
-
-Miss Ganett retired, crushed.
-
-“What were you saying about Flora Ackroyd?” asked Caroline, after a
-moment or two devoted to the game. “Was she with any one?”
-
-“Very much so,” said Miss Ganett.
-
-The eyes of the two ladies met, and seemed to exchange information.
-
-“Really,” said Caroline interestedly. “Is that it? Well, it doesn’t
-surprise me in the least.”
-
-“We’re waiting for you to discard, Miss Caroline,” said the colonel. He
-sometimes affects the pose of the bluff male, intent on the game and
-indifferent to gossip. But nobody is deceived.
-
-“If you ask me,” said Miss Ganett. (“Was that a Bamboo you discarded,
-dear? Oh! no, I see now—it was a Circle.) As I was saying, if you ask
-me, Flora’s been exceedingly lucky. Exceedingly lucky she’s been.”
-
-“How’s that, Miss Ganett?” asked the colonel. “I’ll Pung that Green
-Dragon. How do you make out that Miss Flora’s been lucky? Very charming
-girl and all that, I know.”
-
-“I mayn’t know very much about crime,” said Miss Ganett, with the air
-of one who knows everything there is to know, “but I can tell you one
-thing. The first question that’s always asked is ‘Who last saw the
-deceased alive?’ And the person who did is regarded with suspicion.
-Now, Flora Ackroyd last saw her uncle alive. It might have looked very
-nasty for her—very nasty indeed. It’s my opinion—and I give it for what
-it’s worth, that Ralph Paton is staying away on her account, to draw
-suspicion away from her.”
-
-“Come, now,” I protested mildly, “you surely can’t suggest that a young
-girl like Flora Ackroyd is capable of stabbing her uncle in cold blood?”
-
-“Well, I don’t know,” said Miss Ganett. “I’ve just been reading a book
-from the library about the underworld of Paris, and it says that some
-of the worst women criminals are young girls with the faces of angels.”
-
-“That’s in France,” said Caroline instantly.
-
-“Just so,” said the colonel. “Now, I’ll tell you a very curious thing—a
-story that was going round the Bazaars in India....”
-
-The colonel’s story was one of interminable length, and of curiously
-little interest. A thing that happened in India many years ago cannot
-compare for a moment with an event that took place in King’s Abbot the
-day before yesterday.
-
-It was Caroline who brought the colonel’s story to a close by
-fortunately going Mah Jong. After the slight unpleasantness always
-occasioned by my corrections of Caroline’s somewhat faulty arithmetic,
-we started a new hand.
-
-“East Wind passes,” said Caroline. “I’ve got an idea of my own about
-Ralph Paton. Three Characters. But I’m keeping it to myself for the
-present.”
-
-“Are you, dear?” said Miss Ganett. “Chow—I mean Pung.”
-
-“Yes,” said Caroline firmly.
-
-“Was it all right about the boots?” asked Miss Ganett. “Their being
-black, I mean?”
-
-“Quite all right,” said Caroline.
-
-“What was the point, do you think?” asked Miss Ganett.
-
-Caroline pursed up her lips, and shook her head with an air of knowing
-all about it.
-
-“Pung,” said Miss Ganett. “No—Unpung. I suppose that now the doctor’s
-in with M. Poirot he knows all the secrets?”
-
-“Far from it,” I said.
-
-“James is so modest,” said Caroline. “Ah! a concealed Kong.”
-
-The colonel gave vent to a whistle. For the moment gossip was
-forgotten.
-
-“Your own wind, too,” he said. “_And_ you’ve got two Pungs of Dragons.
-We must be careful. Miss Caroline’s out for a big hand.”
-
-We played for some minutes with no irrelevant conversation.
-
-“This M. Poirot now,” said Colonel Carter, “is he really such a great
-detective?”
-
-“The greatest the world has ever known,” said Caroline solemnly. “He
-had to come here incognito to avoid publicity.”
-
-“Chow,” said Miss Ganett. “Quite wonderful for our little village, I’m
-sure. By the way, Clara—my maid, you know—is great friends with Elsie,
-the housemaid at Fernly, and what do you think Elsie told her? That
-there’s been a lot of money stolen, and it’s her opinion—Elsie’s—I
-mean, that the parlormaid had something to do with it. She’s leaving
-at the month, and she’s crying a good deal at night. If you ask me,
-the girl is very likely in league with a _gang_. She’s always been a
-queer girl—she’s not friends with any of the girls round here. She
-goes off by herself on her days out—very unnatural, I call it, and
-most suspicious. I asked her once to come to our Girls’ Friendly
-Evenings, but she refused, and then I asked her a few questions about
-her home and her family—all that sort of thing, and I’m bound to say I
-considered her manner most impertinent. Outwardly very respectful—but
-she shut me up in the most barefaced way.”
-
-Miss Ganett stopped for breath, and the colonel, who was totally
-uninterested in the servant question, remarked that in the Shanghai
-Club brisk play was the invariable rule.
-
-We had a round of brisk play.
-
-“That Miss Russell,” said Caroline. “She came here pretending to
-consult James on Friday morning. It’s my opinion she wanted to see
-where the poisons were kept. Five Characters.”
-
-“Chow,” said Miss Ganett. “What an extraordinary idea? I wonder if you
-can be right.”
-
-“Talking of poisons,” said the colonel. “Eh—what? Haven’t I discarded?
-Oh! Eight Bamboos.”
-
-“Mah Jong!” said Miss Ganett.
-
-Caroline was very much annoyed.
-
-“One Red Dragon,” she said regretfully, “and I should have had a hand
-of three doubles.”
-
-“I’ve had two Red Dragons all the time,” I mentioned.
-
-“So exactly like you, James,” said Caroline reproachfully. “You’ve no
-conception of the spirit of the game.”
-
-I myself thought I had played rather cleverly. I should have had to pay
-Caroline an enormous amount if she had gone Mah Jong. Miss Ganett’s Mah
-Jong was of the poorest variety possible, as Caroline did not fail to
-point out to her.
-
-East Wind passed, and we started a new hand in silence.
-
-“What I was going to tell you just now was this,” said Caroline.
-
-“Yes?” said Miss Ganett encouragingly.
-
-“My idea about Ralph Paton, I mean.”
-
-“Yes, dear,” said Miss Ganett, still more encouragingly. “Chow!”
-
-“It’s a sign of weakness to Chow so early,” said Caroline severely.
-“You should go for a big hand.”
-
-“I know,” said Miss Ganett. “You were saying—about Ralph Paton, you
-know?”
-
-“Yes. Well, I’ve a pretty shrewd idea where he is.”
-
-We all stopped to stare at her.
-
-“This is very interesting, Miss Caroline,” said Colonel Carter. “All
-your own idea, eh?”
-
-“Well, not exactly. I’ll tell you about it. You know that big map of
-the county we have in the hall?”
-
-We all said Yes.
-
-“As M. Poirot was going out the other day, he stopped and looked at it,
-and he made some remark—I can’t remember exactly what it was. Something
-about Cranchester being the only big town anywhere near us—which is
-true, of course. But after he had gone—it came to me suddenly.”
-
-“What came to you?”
-
-“His meaning. Of course Ralph is in Cranchester.”
-
-It was at that moment that I knocked down the rack that held my pieces.
-My sister immediately reproved me for clumsiness, but half-heartedly.
-She was intent on her theory.
-
-“Cranchester, Miss Caroline?” said Colonel Carter. “Surely not
-Cranchester! It’s so near.”
-
-“That’s exactly it,” cried Caroline triumphantly. “It seems quite clear
-by now that he didn’t get away from here by train. He must simply have
-walked into Cranchester. And I believe he’s there still. No one would
-dream of his being so near at hand.”
-
-I pointed out several objections to the theory, but when once Caroline
-has got something firmly into her head, nothing dislodges it.
-
-“And you think M. Poirot has the same idea,” said Miss Ganett
-thoughtfully. “It’s a curious coincidence, but I was out for a walk
-this afternoon on the Cranchester road, and he passed me in a car
-coming from that direction.”
-
-We all looked at each other.
-
-“Why, dear me,” said Miss Ganett suddenly, “I’m Mah Jong all the time,
-and I never noticed it.”
-
-Caroline’s attention was distracted from her own inventive exercises.
-She pointed out to Miss Ganett that a hand consisting of mixed suits
-and too many Chows was hardly worth going Mah Jong on. Miss Ganett
-listened imperturbably and collected her counters.
-
-“Yes, dear, I know what you mean,” she said. “But it rather depends on
-what kind of a hand you have to start with, doesn’t it?”
-
-“You’ll never get the big hands if you don’t go for them,” urged
-Caroline.
-
-“Well, we must all play our own way, mustn’t we?” said Miss Ganett. She
-looked down at her counters. “After all, I’m up, so far.”
-
-Caroline, who was considerably down, said nothing.
-
-East Wind passed, and we set to once more. Annie brought in the tea
-things. Caroline and Miss Ganett were both slightly ruffled as is
-often the case during one of these festive evenings.
-
-“If you would only play a leetle quicker, dear,” said Caroline, as Miss
-Ganett hesitated over her discard. “The Chinese put down the tiles so
-quickly it sounds like little birds pattering.”
-
-For some few minutes we played like the Chinese.
-
-“You haven’t contributed much to the sum of information, Sheppard,”
-said Colonel Carter genially. “You’re a sly dog. Hand in glove with the
-great detective, and not a hint as to the way things are going.”
-
-“James is an extraordinary creature,” said Caroline. “He can _not_
-bring himself to part with information.”
-
-She looked at me with some disfavor.
-
-“I assure you,” I said, “that I don’t know anything. Poirot keeps his
-own counsel.”
-
-“Wise man,” said the colonel with a chuckle. “He doesn’t give himself
-away. But they’re wonderful fellows, these foreign detectives. Up to
-all sorts of dodges, I believe.”
-
-“Pung,” said Miss Ganett, in a tone of quiet triumph. “And Mah Jong.”
-
-The situation became more strained. It was annoyance at Miss Ganett’s
-going Mah Jong for the third time running which prompted Caroline to
-say to me as we built a fresh wall:—
-
-“You are too tiresome, James. You sit there like a dead head, and say
-nothing at all!”
-
-“But, my dear,” I protested, “I have really nothing to say—that is, of
-the kind you mean.”
-
-“Nonsense,” said Caroline, as she sorted her hand. “You _must_ know
-something interesting.”
-
-I did not answer for a moment. I was overwhelmed and intoxicated. I had
-read of there being such a thing as the Perfect Winning—going Mah Jong
-on one’s original hand. I had never hoped to hold the hand myself.
-
-With suppressed triumph I laid my hand face upwards on the table.
-
-“As they say in the Shanghai Club,” I remarked, “Tin-ho—the Perfect
-Winning!”
-
-The colonel’s eyes nearly bulged out of his head.
-
-“Upon my soul,” he said. “What an extraordinary thing. I never saw that
-happen before!”
-
-It was then that I went on, goaded by Caroline’s gibes, and rendered
-reckless by my triumph.
-
-“And as to anything interesting,” I said. “What about a gold wedding
-ring with a date and ‘From R.’ inside.”
-
-I pass over the scene that followed. I was made to say exactly where
-this treasure was found. I was made to reveal the date.
-
-“March 13th,” said Caroline. “Just six months ago. Ah!”
-
-Out of the babel of excited suggestions and suppositions three theories
-were evolved:—
-
-1. That of Colonel Carter: that Ralph was secretly married to Flora.
-The first or most simple solution.
-
-2. That of Miss Ganett: that Roger Ackroyd had been secretly married to
-Mrs. Ferrars.
-
-3. That of my sister: that Roger Ackroyd had married his housekeeper,
-Miss Russell.
-
-A fourth or super-theory was propounded by Caroline later as we went up
-to bed.
-
-“Mark my words,” she said suddenly, “I shouldn’t be at all surprised if
-Geoffrey Raymond and Flora weren’t married.”
-
-“Surely it would be ‘From G,’ not ‘From R’ then,” I suggested.
-
-“You never know. Some girls call men by their surnames. And you heard
-what Miss Ganett said this evening—about Flora’s carryings on.”
-
-Strictly speaking, I had not heard Miss Ganett say anything of the
-kind, but I respected Caroline’s knowledge of innuendoes.
-
-“How about Hector Blunt,” I hinted. “If it’s anybody——”
-
-“Nonsense,” said Caroline. “I dare say he admires her—may even be in
-love with her. But depend upon it a girl isn’t going to fall in love
-with a man old enough to be her father when there’s a good-looking
-young secretary about. She may encourage Major Blunt just as a blind.
-Girls are very artful. But there’s one thing I _do_ tell you, James
-Sheppard. Flora Ackroyd does not care a penny piece for Ralph Paton,
-and never has. You can take it from me.”
-
-I took it from her meekly.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
- PARKER
-
-
-It occurred to me the next morning that under the exhilaration
-produced by Tin-ho, or the Perfect Winning, I might have been slightly
-indiscreet. True, Poirot had not asked me to keep the discovery of
-the ring to myself. On the other hand, he had said nothing about it
-whilst at Fernly, and as far as I knew, I was the only person aware
-that it had been found. I felt distinctly guilty. The fact was by now
-spreading through King’s Abbot like wildfire. I was expecting wholesale
-reproaches from Poirot any minute.
-
-The joint funeral of Mrs. Ferrars and Roger Ackroyd was fixed for
-eleven o’clock. It was a melancholy and impressive ceremony. All the
-party from Fernly were there.
-
-After it was over, Poirot, who had also been present, took me by the
-arm, and invited me to accompany him back to The Larches. He was
-looking very grave, and I feared that my indiscretion of the night
-before had got round to his ears. But it soon transpired that his
-thoughts were occupied by something of a totally different nature.
-
-“See you,” he said. “We must act. With your help I propose to examine a
-witness. We will question him, we will put such fear into him that the
-truth is bound to come out.”
-
-“What witness are you talking of?” I asked, very much surprised.
-
-“Parker!” said Poirot. “I asked him to be at my house this morning at
-twelve o’clock. He should await us there at this very minute.”
-
-“What do you think,” I ventured, glancing sideways at his face.
-
-“I know this—that I am not satisfied.”
-
-“You think that it was he who blackmailed Mrs. Ferrars?”
-
-“Either that, or——”
-
-“Well?” I said, after waiting a minute or two.
-
-“My friend, I will say this to you—I hope it was he.”
-
-The gravity of his manner, and something indefinable that tinged it,
-reduced me to silence.
-
-On arrival at The Larches, we were informed that Parker was already
-there awaiting our return. As we entered the room, the butler rose
-respectfully.
-
-“Good morning, Parker,” said Poirot pleasantly. “One instant, I pray of
-you.”
-
-He removed his overcoat and gloves.
-
-“Allow me, sir,” said Parker, and sprang forward to assist him. He
-deposited the articles neatly on a chair by the door. Poirot watched
-him with approval.
-
-“Thank you, my good Parker,” he said. “Take a seat, will you not? What
-I have to say may take some time.”
-
-Parker seated himself with an apologetic bend of the head.
-
-“Now what do you think I asked you to come here for this morning—eh?”
-
-Parker coughed.
-
-“I understood, sir, that you wished to ask me a few questions about my
-late master—private like.”
-
-“_Précisément_,” said Poirot, beaming. “Have you made many experiments
-in blackmail?”
-
-“Sir!”
-
-The butler sprang to his feet.
-
-“Do not excite yourself,” said Poirot placidly. “Do not play the farce
-of the honest, injured man. You know all there is to know about the
-blackmail, is it not so?”
-
-“Sir, I—I’ve never—never been——”
-
-“Insulted,” suggested Poirot, “in such a way before. Then why, my
-excellent Parker, were you so anxious to overhear the conversation in
-Mr. Ackroyd’s study the other evening, after you had caught the word
-blackmail?”
-
-“I wasn’t—I——”
-
-“Who was your last master?” rapped out Poirot suddenly.
-
-“My last master?”
-
-“Yes, the master you were with before you came to Mr. Ackroyd.”
-
-“A Major Ellerby, sir——”
-
-Poirot took the words out of his mouth.
-
-“Just so, Major Ellerby. Major Ellerby was addicted to drugs, was he
-not? You traveled about with him. When he was in Bermuda there was some
-trouble—a man was killed. Major Ellerby was partly responsible. It was
-hushed up. But you knew about it. How much did Major Ellerby pay you to
-keep your mouth shut?”
-
-Parker was staring at him open-mouthed. The man had gone to pieces, his
-cheeks shook flabbily.
-
-“You see, me, I have made inquiries,” said Poirot pleasantly. “It is
-as I say. You got a good sum then as blackmail, and Major Ellerby went
-on paying you until he died. Now I want to hear about your latest
-experiment.”
-
-Parker still stared.
-
-“It is useless to deny. Hercule Poirot _knows_. It is so, what I have
-said about Major Ellerby, is it not?”
-
-As though against his will, Parker nodded reluctantly once. His face
-was ashen pale.
-
-“But I never hurt a hair of Mr. Ackroyd’s head,” he moaned. “Honest to
-God, sir, I didn’t. I’ve been afraid of this coming all the time. And I
-tell you I didn’t—I didn’t kill him.”
-
-His voice rose almost to a scream.
-
-“I am inclined to believe you, my friend,” said Poirot. “You have not
-the nerve—the courage. But I must have the truth.”
-
-“I’ll tell you anything, sir, anything you want to know. It’s true that
-I tried to listen that night. A word or two I heard made me curious.
-And Mr. Ackroyd’s wanting not to be disturbed, and shutting himself up
-with the doctor the way he did. It’s God’s own truth what I told the
-police. I heard the word blackmail, sir, and well——”
-
-He paused.
-
-“You thought there might be something in it for you?” suggested Poirot
-smoothly.
-
-“Well—well, yes, I did, sir. I thought that if Mr. Ackroyd was being
-blackmailed, why shouldn’t I have a share of the pickings?”
-
-A very curious expression passed over Poirot’s face. He leaned forward.
-
-“Had you any reason to suppose before that night that Mr. Ackroyd was
-being blackmailed?”
-
-“No, indeed, sir. It was a great surprise to me. Such a regular
-gentleman in all his habits.”
-
-“How much did you overhear?”
-
-“Not very much, sir. There seemed what I might call a spite against me.
-Of course I had to attend to my duties in the pantry. And when I did
-creep along once or twice to the study it was no use. The first time
-Dr. Sheppard came out and almost caught me in the act, and another time
-Mr. Raymond passed me in the big hall and went that way, so I knew it
-was no use; and when I went with the tray, Miss Flora headed me off.”
-
-Poirot stared for a long time at the man, as if to test his sincerity.
-Parker returned his gaze earnestly.
-
-“I hope you believe me, sir. I’ve been afraid all along the police
-would rake up that old business with Major Ellerby and be suspicious of
-me in consequence.”
-
-“_Eh bien_,” said Poirot at last. “I am disposed to believe you. But
-there is one thing I must request of you—to show me your bank-book. You
-have a bank-book, I presume?”
-
-“Yes, sir, as a matter of fact, I have it with me now.”
-
-With no sign of confusion, he produced it from his pocket. Poirot took
-the slim, green-covered book and perused the entries.
-
-“Ah! I perceive you have purchased £500 of National Savings
-Certificates this year?”
-
-“Yes, sir. I have already over a thousand pounds saved—the result of
-my connection with—er—my late master, Major Ellerby. And I have had
-quite a little flutter on some horses this year—very successful. If you
-remember, sir, a rank outsider won the Jubilee. I was fortunate enough
-to back it—£20.”
-
-Poirot handed him back the book.
-
-“I will wish you good-morning. I believe that you have told me the
-truth. If you have not—so much the worse for you, my friend.”
-
-When Parker had departed, Poirot picked up his overcoat once more.
-
-“Going out again?” I asked.
-
-“Yes, we will pay a little visit to the good M. Hammond.”
-
-“You believe Parker’s story?”
-
-“It is credible enough on the face of it. It seems clear that—unless
-he is a very good actor indeed—he genuinely believes it was Ackroyd
-himself who was the victim of blackmail. If so, he knows nothing at all
-about the Mrs. Ferrars business.”
-
-“Then in that case—who——”
-
-“_Précisément!_ Who? But our visit to M. Hammond will accomplish one
-purpose. It will either clear Parker completely or else——”
-
-“Well?”
-
-“I fall into the bad habit of leaving my sentences unfinished this
-morning,” said Poirot apologetically. “You must bear with me.”
-
-“By the way,” I said, rather sheepishly, “I’ve got a confession to
-make. I’m afraid I have inadvertently let out something about that
-ring.”
-
-“What ring?”
-
-“The ring you found in the goldfish pond.”
-
-“Ah! yes,” said Poirot, smiling broadly.
-
-“I hope you’re not annoyed? It was very careless of me.”
-
-“But not at all, my good friend, not at all. I laid no commands upon
-you. You were at liberty to speak of it if you so wished. She was
-interested, your sister?”
-
-“She was indeed. It created a sensation. All sorts of theories are
-flying about.”
-
-“Ah! And yet it is so simple. The true explanation leapt to the eye,
-did it not?”
-
-“Did it?” I said dryly.
-
-Poirot laughed.
-
-“The wise man does not commit himself,” he observed. “Is not that so?
-But here we are at Mr. Hammond’s.”
-
-The lawyer was in his office, and we were ushered in without any delay.
-He rose and greeted us in his dry, precise manner.
-
-Poirot came at once to the point.
-
-“Monsieur, I desire from you certain information, that is, if you will
-be so good as to give it to me. You acted, I understand, for the late
-Mrs. Ferrars of King’s Paddock?”
-
-I noticed the swift gleam of surprise which showed in the lawyer’s
-eyes, before his professional reserve came down once more like a mask
-over his face.
-
-“Certainly. All her affairs passed through our hands.”
-
-“Very good. Now, before I ask you to tell me anything, I should like
-you to listen to the story Dr. Sheppard will relate to you. You have no
-objection, have you, my friend, to repeating the conversation you had
-with Mr. Ackroyd last Friday night?”
-
-“Not in the least,” I said, and straightway began the recital of that
-strange evening.
-
-Hammond listened with close attention.
-
-“That is all,” I said, when I had finished.
-
-“Blackmail,” said the lawyer thoughtfully.
-
-“You are surprised?” asked Poirot.
-
-The lawyer took off his pince-nez and polished them with his
-handkerchief.
-
-“No,” he replied, “I can hardly say that I am surprised. I have
-suspected something of the kind for some time.”
-
-“That brings us,” said Poirot, “to the information for which I am
-asking. If any one can give us an idea of the actual sums paid, you are
-the man, monsieur.”
-
-“I see no object in withholding the information,” said Hammond, after
-a moment or two. “During the past year, Mrs. Ferrars has sold out
-certain securities, and the money for them was paid into her account
-and not reinvested. As her income was a large one, and she lived very
-quietly after her husband’s death, it seems certain that these sums of
-money were paid away for some special purpose. I once sounded her on
-the subject, and she said that she was obliged to support several of
-her husband’s poor relations. I let the matter drop, of course. Until
-now, I have always imagined that the money was paid to some woman who
-had had a claim on Ashley Ferrars. I never dreamed that Mrs. Ferrars
-herself was involved.”
-
-“And the amount?” asked Poirot.
-
-“In all, I should say the various sums totaled at least twenty thousand
-pounds.”
-
-“Twenty thousand pounds!” I exclaimed. “In one year!”
-
-“Mrs. Ferrars was a very wealthy woman,” said Poirot dryly. “And the
-penalty for murder is not a pleasant one.”
-
-“Is there anything else that I can tell you?” inquired Mr. Hammond.
-
-“I thank you, no,” said Poirot, rising. “All my excuses for having
-deranged you.”
-
-“Not at all, not at all.”
-
-“The word derange,” I remarked, when we were outside again, “is
-applicable to mental disorder only.”
-
-“Ah!” cried Poirot, “never will my English be quite perfect. A curious
-language. I should then have said disarranged, _n’est-ce pas_?”
-
-“Disturbed is the word you had in mind.”
-
-“I thank you, my friend. The word exact, you are zealous for it. _Eh
-bien_, what about our friend Parker now? With twenty thousand pounds
-in hand, would he have continued being a butler? _Je ne pense pas._ It
-is, of course, possible that he banked the money under another name,
-but I am disposed to believe he spoke the truth to us. If he is a
-scoundrel, he is a scoundrel on a mean scale. He has not the big ideas.
-That leaves us as a possibility, Raymond, or—well—Major Blunt.”
-
-“Surely not Raymond,” I objected. “Since we know that he was
-desperately hard up for a matter of five hundred pounds.”
-
-“That is what he says, yes.”
-
-“And as to Hector Blunt——”
-
-“I will tell you something as to the good Major Blunt,” interrupted
-Poirot. “It is my business to make inquiries. I make them. _Eh
-bien_—that legacy of which he speaks, I have discovered that the amount
-of it was close upon twenty thousand pounds. What do you think of that?”
-
-I was so taken aback that I could hardly speak.
-
-“It’s impossible,” I said at last. “A well-known man like Hector Blunt.”
-
-Poirot shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“Who knows? At least he is a man with big ideas. I confess that I
-hardly see him as a blackmailer, but there is another possibility that
-you have not even considered.”
-
-“What is that?”
-
-“The fire, my friend. Ackroyd himself may have destroyed that letter,
-blue envelope and all, after you left him.”
-
-“I hardly think that likely,” I said slowly. “And yet—of course, it
-may be so. He might have changed his mind.”
-
-We had just arrived at my house, and on the spur of the moment I
-invited Poirot to come in and take pot luck.
-
-I thought Caroline would be pleased with me, but it is hard to satisfy
-one’s women folk. It appears that we were eating chops for lunch—the
-kitchen staff being regaled on tripe and onions. And two chops set
-before three people are productive of embarrassment.
-
-But Caroline is seldom daunted for long. With magnificent mendacity,
-she explained to Poirot that although James laughed at her for
-doing so, she adhered strictly to a vegetarian diet. She descanted
-ecstatically on the delights of nut cutlets (which I am quite sure
-she has never tasted) and ate a Welsh rarebit with gusto and frequent
-cutting remarks as to the dangers of “flesh” foods.
-
-Afterwards, when we were sitting in front of the fire and smoking,
-Caroline attacked Poirot directly.
-
-“Not found Ralph Paton yet?” she asked.
-
-“Where should I find him, mademoiselle?”
-
-“I thought, perhaps, you’d found him in Cranchester,” said Caroline,
-with intense meaning in her tone.
-
-Poirot looked merely bewildered.
-
-“In Cranchester? But why in Cranchester?”
-
-I enlightened him with a touch of malice.
-
-“One of our ample staff of private detectives happened to see you in a
-car on the Cranchester road yesterday,” I explained.
-
-Poirot’s bewilderment vanished. He laughed heartily.
-
-“Ah, that! A simple visit to the dentist, _c’est tout_. My tooth, it
-aches. I go there. My tooth, it is at once better. I think to return
-quickly. The dentist, he says No. Better to have it out. I argue. He
-insists. He has his way! That particular tooth, it will never ache
-again.”
-
-Caroline collapsed rather like a pricked balloon.
-
-We fell to discussing Ralph Paton.
-
-“A weak nature,” I insisted. “But not a vicious one.”
-
-“Ah!” said Poirot. “But weakness, where does it end?”
-
-“Exactly,” said Caroline. “Take James here—weak as water, if I weren’t
-about to look after him.”
-
-“My dear Caroline,” I said irritably, “can’t you talk without dragging
-in personalities?”
-
-“You _are_ weak, James,” said Caroline, quite unmoved. “I’m eight years
-older than you are—oh! I don’t mind M. Poirot knowing that——”
-
-“I should never have guessed it, mademoiselle,” said Poirot, with a
-gallant little bow.
-
-“Eight years older. But I’ve always considered it my duty to look after
-you. With a bad bringing up, Heaven knows what mischief you might have
-got into by now.”
-
-“I might have married a beautiful adventuress,” I murmured, gazing at
-the ceiling, and blowing smoke rings.
-
-“Adventuress!” said Caroline, with a snort. “If we’re talking of
-adventuresses——”
-
-She left the sentence unfinished.
-
-“Well?” I said, with some curiosity.
-
-“Nothing. But I can think of some one not a hundred miles away.”
-
-Then she turned to Poirot suddenly.
-
-“James sticks to it that you believe some one in the house committed
-the murder. All I can say is, you’re wrong.”
-
-“I should not like to be wrong,” said Poirot. “It is not—how do you
-say—my _métier_?”
-
-“I’ve got the facts pretty clearly,” continued Caroline, taking no
-notice of Poirot’s remark, “from James and others. As far as I can see,
-of the people in the house, only two _could_ have had the chance of
-doing it. Ralph Paton and Flora Ackroyd.”
-
-“My dear Caroline——”
-
-“Now, James, don’t interrupt me. I know what I’m talking about. Parker
-met her _outside_ the door, didn’t he? He didn’t hear her uncle saying
-good-night to her. She could have killed him then and there.”
-
-“Caroline.”
-
-“I’m not saying she _did_, James. I’m saying she _could_ have done. As
-a matter of fact, though Flora is like all these young girls nowadays,
-with no veneration for their betters and thinking they know best on
-every subject under the sun, I don’t for a minute believe she’d kill
-even a chicken. But there it is. Mr. Raymond and Major Blunt have
-alibis. Mrs. Ackroyd’s got an alibi. Even that Russell woman seems to
-have one—and a good job for her it is she has. Who is left? Only Ralph
-and Flora! And say what you will, I don’t believe Ralph Paton is a
-murderer. A boy we’ve known all our lives.”
-
-Poirot was silent for a minute, watching the curling smoke rise from
-his cigarette. When at last he spoke, it was in a gentle far-away voice
-that produced a curious impression. It was totally unlike his usual
-manner.
-
-“Let us take a man—a very ordinary man. A man with no idea of murder
-in his heart. There is in him somewhere a strain of weakness—deep
-down. It has so far never been called into play. Perhaps it never will
-be—and if so he will go to his grave honored and respected by every
-one. But let us suppose that something occurs. He is in difficulties—or
-perhaps not that even. He may stumble by accident on a secret—a secret
-involving life or death to some one. And his first impulse will be to
-speak out—to do his duty as an honest citizen. And then the strain of
-weakness tells. Here is a chance of money—a great amount of money.
-He wants money—he desires it—and it is so easy. He has to do nothing
-for it—just keep silence. That is the beginning. The desire for money
-grows. He must have more—and more! He is intoxicated by the gold mine
-which has opened at his feet. He becomes greedy. And in his greed he
-overreaches himself. One can press a man as far as one likes—but with
-a woman one must not press too far. For a woman has at heart a great
-desire to speak the truth. How many husbands who have deceived their
-wives go comfortably to their graves, carrying their secret with them!
-How many wives who have deceived their husbands wreck their lives by
-throwing the fact in those same husbands’ teeth! They have been pressed
-too far. In a reckless moment (which they will afterwards regret, _bien
-entendu_) they fling safety to the winds and turn at bay, proclaiming
-the truth with great momentary satisfaction to themselves. So it was, I
-think, in this case. The strain was too great. And so there came your
-proverb, the death of the goose that laid the golden eggs. But that is
-not the end. Exposure faced the man of whom we are speaking. And he is
-not the same man he was—say, a year ago. His moral fiber is blunted.
-He is desperate. He is fighting a losing battle, and he is prepared to
-take any means that come to his hand, for exposure means ruin to him.
-And so—the dagger strikes!”
-
-He was silent for a moment. It was as though he had laid a spell upon
-the room. I cannot try to describe the impression his words produced.
-There was something in the merciless analysis, and the ruthless power
-of vision which struck fear into both of us.
-
-“Afterwards,” he went on softly, “the danger removed, he will be
-himself again, normal, kindly. But if the need again arises, then once
-more he will strike.”
-
-Caroline roused herself at last.
-
-“You are speaking of Ralph Paton,” she said. “You may be right, you may
-not, but you have no business to condemn a man unheard.”
-
-The telephone bell rang sharply. I went out into the hall, and took off
-the receiver.
-
-“What?” I said. “Yes. Dr. Sheppard speaking.”
-
-I listened for a minute or two, then replied briefly. Replacing the
-receiver, I went back into the drawing-room.
-
-“Poirot,” I said, “they have detained a man at Liverpool. His name is
-Charles Kent, and he is believed to be the stranger who visited Fernly
-that night. They want me to go to Liverpool at once and identify him.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
- CHARLES KENT
-
-
-Half an hour later saw Poirot, myself, and Inspector Raglan in the
-train on the way to Liverpool. The inspector was clearly very excited.
-
-“We may get a line on the blackmailing part of the business, if on
-nothing else,” he declared jubilantly. “He’s a rough customer, this
-fellow, by what I heard over the phone. Takes dope, too. We ought to
-find it easy to get what we want out of him. If there was the shadow of
-a motive, nothing’s more likely than that he killed Mr. Ackroyd. But in
-that case, why is young Paton keeping out of the way? The whole thing’s
-a muddle—that’s what it is. By the way, M. Poirot, you were quite right
-about those fingerprints. They were Mr. Ackroyd’s own. I had rather the
-same idea myself, but I dismissed it as hardly feasible.”
-
-I smiled to myself. Inspector Raglan was so very plainly saving his
-face.
-
-“As regards this man,” said Poirot, “he is not yet arrested, eh?”
-
-“No, detained under suspicion.”
-
-“And what account does he give of himself?”
-
-“Precious little,” said the inspector, with a grin. “He’s a wary bird,
-I gather. A lot of abuse, but very little more.”
-
-On arrival at Liverpool I was surprised to find that Poirot was
-welcomed with acclamation. Superintendent Hayes, who met us, had worked
-with Poirot over some case long ago, and had evidently an exaggerated
-opinion of his powers.
-
-“Now we’ve got M. Poirot here we shan’t be long,” he said cheerfully.
-“I thought you’d retired, moosior?”
-
-“So I had, my good Hayes, so I had. But how tedious is retirement! You
-cannot imagine to yourself the monotony with which day comes after day.”
-
-“Very likely. So you’ve come to have a look at our own particular find?
-Is this Dr. Sheppard? Think you’ll be able to identify him, sir?”
-
-“I’m not very sure,” I said doubtfully.
-
-“How did you get hold of him?” inquired Poirot.
-
-“Description was circulated, as you know. In the press and privately.
-Not much to go on, I admit. This fellow has an American accent all
-right, and he doesn’t deny that he was near King’s Abbot that night.
-Just asks what the hell it is to do with us, and that he’ll see us in
-—— before he answers any questions.”
-
-“Is it permitted that I, too, see him?” asked Poirot.
-
-The superintendent closed one eye knowingly.
-
-“Very glad to have you, sir. You’ve got permission to do anything you
-please. Inspector Japp of Scotland Yard was asking after you the other
-day. Said he’d heard you were connected unofficially with this case.
-Where’s Captain Paton hiding, sir, can you tell me that?”
-
-“I doubt if it would be wise at the present juncture,” said Poirot
-primly, and I bit my lips to prevent a smile.
-
-The little man really did it very well.
-
-After some further parley, we were taken to interview the prisoner.
-
-He was a young fellow, I should say not more than twenty-two or
-three. Tall, thin, with slightly shaking hands, and the evidences of
-considerable physical strength somewhat run to seed. His hair was dark,
-but his eyes were blue and shifty, seldom meeting a glance squarely. I
-had all along cherished the illusion that there was something familiar
-about the figure I had met that night, but if this were indeed he, I
-was completely mistaken. He did not remind me in the least of any one I
-knew.
-
-“Now then, Kent,” said the superintendent, “stand up. Here are some
-visitors come to see you. Recognize any of them.”
-
-Kent glared at us sullenly, but did not reply. I saw his glance waver
-over the three of us, and come back to rest on me.
-
-“Well, sir,” said the superintendent to me, “what do you say?”
-
-“The height’s the same,” I said, “and as far as general appearance goes
-it might well be the man in question. Beyond that, I couldn’t go.”
-
-“What the hell’s the meaning of all this?” asked Kent. “What have you
-got against me? Come on, out with it! What am I supposed to have done?”
-
-I nodded my head.
-
-“It’s the man,” I said. “I recognize the voice.”
-
-“Recognize my voice, do you? Where do you think you heard it before?”
-
-“On Friday evening last, outside the gates of Fernly Park. You asked me
-the way there.”
-
-“I did, did I?”
-
-“Do you admit it?” asked the inspector.
-
-“I don’t admit anything. Not till I know what you’ve got on me.”
-
-“Have you not read the papers in the last few days?” asked Poirot,
-speaking for the first time.
-
-The man’s eyes narrowed.
-
-“So that’s it, is it? I saw an old gent had been croaked at Fernly.
-Trying to make out I did the job, are you?”
-
-“You were there that night,” said Poirot quietly.
-
-“How do you know, mister?”
-
-“By this.” Poirot took something from his pocket and held it out.
-
-It was the goose quill we had found in the summer-house.
-
-At the sight of it the man’s face changed. He half held out his hand.
-
-“Snow,” said Poirot thoughtfully. “No, my friend, it is empty. It lay
-where you dropped it in the summer-house that night.”
-
-Charles Kent looked at him uncertainly.
-
-“You seem to know a hell of a lot about everything, you little foreign
-cock duck. Perhaps you remember this: the papers say that the old gent
-was croaked between a quarter to ten and ten o’clock?”
-
-“That is so,” agreed Poirot.
-
-“Yes, but is it really so? That’s what I’m getting at.”
-
-“This gentleman will tell you,” said Poirot.
-
-He indicated Inspector Raglan. The latter hesitated, glanced at
-Superintendent Hayes, then at Poirot, and finally, as though receiving
-sanction, he said:—
-
-“That’s right. Between a quarter to ten and ten o’clock.”
-
-“Then you’ve nothing to keep me here for,” said Kent. “I was away from
-Fernly Park by twenty-five minutes past nine. You can ask at the Dog
-and Whistle. That’s a saloon about a mile out of Fernly on the road to
-Cranchester. I kicked up a bit of a row there, I remember. As near as
-nothing to quarter to ten, it was. How about that?”
-
-Inspector Raglan wrote down something in his notebook.
-
-“Well?” demanded Kent.
-
-“Inquiries will be made,” said the inspector. “If you’ve spoken the
-truth, you won’t have anything to complain about. What were you doing
-at Fernly Park anyway?”
-
-“Went there to meet some one.”
-
-“Who?”
-
-“That’s none of your business.”
-
-“You’d better keep a civil tongue in your head, my man,” the
-superintendent warned him.
-
-“To hell with a civil tongue. I went there on my own business, and
-that’s all there is to it. If I was clear away before the murder was
-done, that’s all that concerns the cops.”
-
-“Your name, it is Charles Kent,” said Poirot. “Where were you born?”
-
-The man stared at him, then he grinned.
-
-“I’m a full-blown Britisher all right,” he said.
-
-“Yes,” said Poirot meditatively, “I think you are. I fancy you were
-born in Kent.”
-
-The man stared.
-
-“Why’s that? Because of my name? What’s that to do with it? Is a man
-whose name is Kent bound to be born in that particular county?”
-
-“Under certain circumstances, I can imagine he might be,” said Poirot
-very deliberately. “Under certain circumstances, you comprehend.”
-
-There was so much meaning in his voice as to surprise the two police
-officers. As for Charles Kent, he flushed a brick red, and for a moment
-I thought he was going to spring at Poirot. He thought better of it,
-however, and turned away with a kind of laugh.
-
-Poirot nodded as though satisfied, and made his way out through the
-door. He was joined presently by the two officers.
-
-“We’ll verify that statement,” remarked Raglan. “I don’t think he’s
-lying, though. But he’s got to come clear with a statement as to
-what he was doing at Fernly. It looks to me as though we’d got our
-blackmailer all right. On the other hand, granted his story’s correct,
-he couldn’t have had anything to do with the actual murder. He’d got
-ten pounds on him when he was arrested—rather a large sum. I fancy that
-forty pounds went to him—the numbers of the notes didn’t correspond,
-but of course he’d have changed them first thing. Mr. Ackroyd must
-have given him the money, and he made off with it as fast as possible.
-What was that about Kent being his birthplace? What’s that got to do
-with it?”
-
-“Nothing whatever,” said Poirot mildly. “A little idea of mine, that
-was all. Me, I am famous for my little ideas.”
-
-“Are you really?” said Raglan, studying him with a puzzled expression.
-
-The superintendent went into a roar of laughter.
-
-“Many’s the time I’ve heard Inspector Japp say that. M. Poirot and his
-little ideas! Too fanciful for me, he’d say, but always something in
-them.”
-
-“You mock yourself at me,” said Poirot, smiling; “but never mind. The
-old ones they laugh last sometimes, when the young, clever ones do not
-laugh at all.”
-
-And nodding his head at them in a sage manner, he walked out into the
-street.
-
-He and I lunched together at an hotel. I know now that the whole thing
-lay clearly unravelled before him. He had got the last thread he needed
-to lead him to the truth.
-
-But at the time I had no suspicion of the fact. I overestimated his
-general self-confidence, and I took it for granted that the things
-which puzzled me must be equally puzzling to him.
-
-My chief puzzle was what the man Charles Kent could have been doing at
-Fernly. Again and again I put the question to myself and could get no
-satisfactory reply.
-
-At last I ventured a tentative query to Poirot. His reply was immediate.
-
-“_Mon ami_, I do not think; I know.”
-
-“Really?” I said incredulously.
-
-“Yes, indeed. I suppose now that to you it would not make sense if I
-said that he went to Fernly that night because he was born in Kent?”
-
-I stared at him.
-
-“It certainly doesn’t seem to make sense to me,” I said dryly.
-
-“Ah!” said Poirot pityingly. “Well, no matter. I have still my little
-idea.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
- FLORA ACKROYD
-
-
-As I was returning from my round the following morning, I was hailed by
-Inspector Raglan. I pulled up, and the inspector mounted on the step.
-
-“Good-morning, Dr. Sheppard,” he said. “Well, that alibi is all right
-enough.”
-
-“Charles Kent’s?”
-
-“Charles Kent’s. The barmaid at the Dog and Whistle, Sally Jones, she
-remembers him perfectly. Picked out his photograph from among five
-others. It was just a quarter to ten when he came into the bar, and the
-Dog and Whistle is well over a mile from Fernly Park. The girl mentions
-that he had a lot of money on him—she saw him take a handful of notes
-out of his pocket. Rather surprised her, it did, seeing the class of
-fellow he was, with a pair of boots clean dropping off him. That’s
-where that forty pounds went right enough.”
-
-“The man still refuses to give an account of his visit to Fernly?”
-
-“Obstinate as a mule he is. I had a chat with Hayes at Liverpool over
-the wire this morning.”
-
-“Hercule Poirot says he knows the reason the man went there that
-night,” I observed.
-
-“Does he?” cried the inspector eagerly.
-
-“Yes,” I said maliciously. “He says he went there because he was born
-in Kent.”
-
-I felt a distinct pleasure in passing on my own discomfiture.
-
-Raglan stared at me for a moment or two uncomprehendingly. Then a
-grin overspread his weaselly countenance and he tapped his forehead
-significantly.
-
-“Bit gone here,” he said. “I’ve thought so for some time. Poor old
-chap, so that’s why he had to give up and come down here. In the
-family, very likely. He’s got a nephew who’s quite off his crumpet.”
-
-“Poirot has?” I said, very surprised.
-
-“Yes. Hasn’t he ever mentioned him to you? Quite docile, I believe, and
-all that, but mad as a hatter, poor lad.”
-
-“Who told you that?”
-
-Again a grin showed itself on Inspector Raglan’s face.
-
-“Your sister, Miss Sheppard, she told me all about it.”
-
-Really, Caroline is amazing. She never rests until she knows the last
-details of everybody’s family secrets. Unfortunately, I have never been
-able to instill into her the decency of keeping them to herself.
-
-“Jump in, inspector,” I said, opening the door of the car. “We’ll go
-up to The Larches together, and acquaint our Belgian friend with the
-latest news.”
-
-“Might as well, I suppose. After all, even if he is a bit balmy, it was
-a useful tip he gave me about those fingerprints. He’s got a bee in his
-bonnet about the man Kent, but who knows—there may be something useful
-behind it.”
-
-Poirot received us with his usual smiling courtesy.
-
-He listened to the information we had brought him, nodding his head now
-and then.
-
-“Seems quite O.K., doesn’t it?” said the inspector rather gloomily. “A
-chap can’t be murdering some one in one place when he’s drinking in the
-bar in another place a mile away.”
-
-“Are you going to release him?”
-
-“Don’t see what else we can do. We can’t very well hold him for
-obtaining money on false pretences. Can’t prove a ruddy thing.”
-
-The inspector tossed a match into the grate in a disgruntled fashion.
-Poirot retrieved it and put it neatly in a little receptacle designed
-for the purpose. His action was purely mechanical. I could see that his
-thoughts were on something very different.
-
-“If I were you,” he said at last, “I should not release the man Charles
-Kent yet.”
-
-“What do you mean?”
-
-Raglan stared at him.
-
-“What I say. I should not release him yet.”
-
-“You don’t think he can have had anything to do with the murder, do
-you?”
-
-“I think probably not—but one cannot be certain yet.”
-
-“But haven’t I just told you——”
-
-Poirot raised a hand protestingly.
-
-“_Mais oui, mais oui._ I heard. I am not deaf—nor stupid, thank the
-good God! But see you, you approach the matter from the wrong—the
-wrong—premises, is not that the word?”
-
-The inspector stared at him heavily.
-
-“I don’t see how you make that out. Look here, we know Mr. Ackroyd was
-alive at a quarter to ten. You admit that, don’t you?”
-
-Poirot looked at him for a moment, then shook his head with a quick
-smile.
-
-“I admit nothing that is not—_proved_!”
-
-“Well, we’ve got proof enough of that. We’ve got Miss Flora Ackroyd’s
-evidence.”
-
-“That she said good-night to her uncle? But me—I do not always believe
-what a young lady tells me—no, not even when she is charming and
-beautiful.”
-
-“But hang it all, man, Parker saw her coming out of the door.”
-
-“No.” Poirot’s voice rang out with sudden sharpness. “That is just what
-he did not see. I satisfied myself of that by a little experiment the
-other day—you remember, doctor? Parker saw her _outside_ the door, with
-her hand on the handle. He did not see her come out of the room.”
-
-“But—where else could she have been?”
-
-“Perhaps on the stairs.”
-
-“The stairs?”
-
-“That is my little idea—yes.”
-
-“But those stairs only lead to Mr. Ackroyd’s bedroom.”
-
-“Precisely.”
-
-And still the inspector stared.
-
-“You think she’d been up to her uncle’s bedroom? Well, why not? Why
-should she lie about it?”
-
-“Ah! that is just the question. It depends on what she was doing there,
-does it not?”
-
-“You mean—the money? Hang it all, you don’t suggest that it was Miss
-Ackroyd who took that forty pounds?”
-
-“I suggest nothing,” said Poirot. “But I will remind you of this. Life
-was not very easy for that mother and daughter. There were bills—there
-was constant trouble over small sums of money. Roger Ackroyd was a
-peculiar man over money matters. The girl might be at her wit’s end for
-a comparatively small sum. Figure to yourself then what happens. She
-has taken the money, she descends the little staircase. When she is
-half-way down she hears the chink of glass from the hall. She has not a
-doubt of what it is—Parker coming to the study. At all costs she must
-not be found on the stairs—Parker will not forget it, he will think it
-odd. If the money is missed, Parker is sure to remember having seen her
-come down those stairs. She has just time to rush down to the study
-door—with her hand on the handle to show that she has just come out,
-when Parker appears in the doorway. She says the first thing that comes
-into her head, a repetition of Roger Ackroyd’s orders earlier in the
-evening, and then goes upstairs to her own room.”
-
-“Yes, but later,” persisted the inspector, “she must have realized the
-vital importance of speaking the truth? Why, the whole case hinges on
-it!”
-
-“Afterwards,” said Poirot dryly, “it was a little difficult for
-Mademoiselle Flora. She is told simply that the police are here and
-that there has been a robbery. Naturally she jumps to the conclusion
-that the theft of the money has been discovered. Her one idea is to
-stick to her story. When she learns that her uncle is dead she is
-panic-stricken. Young women do not faint nowadays, monsieur, without
-considerable provocation. _Eh bien!_ there it is. She is bound to stick
-to her story, or else confess everything. And a young and pretty girl
-does not like to admit that she is a thief—especially before those
-whose esteem she is anxious to retain.”
-
-Raglan brought his fist down with a thump on the table.
-
-“I’ll not believe it,” he said. “It’s—it’s not credible. And you—you’ve
-known this all along?”
-
-“The possibility has been in my mind from the first,” admitted Poirot.
-“I was always convinced that Mademoiselle Flora was hiding something
-from us. To satisfy myself, I made the little experiment I told you of.
-Dr. Sheppard accompanied me.”
-
-“A test for Parker, you said it was,” I remarked bitterly.
-
-“_Mon ami_,” said Poirot apologetically, “as I told you at the time,
-one must say something.”
-
-The inspector rose.
-
-“There’s only one thing for it,” he declared. “We must tackle the young
-lady right away. You’ll come up to Fernly with me, M. Poirot?”
-
-“Certainly. Dr. Sheppard will drive us up in his car.”
-
-I acquiesced willingly.
-
-On inquiry for Miss Ackroyd, we were shown into the billiard room.
-Flora and Major Hector Blunt were sitting on the long window seat.
-
-“Good-morning, Miss Ackroyd,” said the inspector. “Can we have a word
-or two alone with you?”
-
-Blunt got up at once and moved to the door.
-
-“What is it?” asked Flora nervously. “Don’t go, Major Blunt. He can
-stay, can’t he?” she asked, turning to the inspector.
-
-“That’s as you like,” said the inspector dryly. “There’s a question
-or two it’s my duty to put to you, miss, but I’d prefer to do so
-privately, and I dare say you’d prefer it also.”
-
-Flora looked keenly at him. I saw her face grow whiter. Then she turned
-and spoke to Blunt.
-
-“I want you to stay—please—yes, I mean it. Whatever the inspector has
-to say to me, I’d rather you heard it.”
-
-Raglan shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“Well, if you will have it so, that’s all there is to it. Now, Miss
-Ackroyd, M. Poirot here has made a certain suggestion to me. He
-suggests that you weren’t in the study at all last Friday night, that
-you never saw Mr. Ackroyd to say good-night to him, that instead of
-being in the study you were on the stairs leading down from your
-uncle’s bedroom when you heard Parker coming across the hall.”
-
-Flora’s gaze shifted to Poirot. He nodded back at her.
-
-“Mademoiselle, the other day, when we sat round the table, I implored
-you to be frank with me. What one does not tell to Papa Poirot he finds
-out. It was that, was it not? See, I will make it easy for you. You
-took the money, did you not?”
-
-“The money,” said Blunt sharply.
-
-There was a silence which lasted for at least a minute.
-
-Then Flora drew herself up and spoke.
-
-“M. Poirot is right. I took that money. I stole. I am a thief—yes, a
-common, vulgar little thief. Now you know! I am glad it has come out.
-It’s been a nightmare, these last few days!” She sat down suddenly and
-buried her face in her hands. She spoke huskily through her fingers.
-“You don’t know what my life has been since I came here. Wanting
-things, scheming for them, lying, cheating, running up bills, promising
-to pay—oh! I hate myself when I think of it all! That’s what brought us
-together, Ralph and I. We were both weak! I understood him, and I was
-sorry—because I’m the same underneath. We’re not strong enough to stand
-alone, either of us. We’re weak, miserable, despicable things.”
-
-She looked at Blunt and suddenly stamped her foot.
-
-“Why do you look at me like that—as though you couldn’t believe? I may
-be a thief—but at any rate I’m real now. I’m not lying any more. I’m
-not pretending to be the kind of girl you like, young and innocent and
-simple. I don’t care if you never want to see me again. I hate myself,
-despise myself—but you’ve got to believe one thing, if speaking the
-truth would have made things better for Ralph, I would have spoken out.
-But I’ve seen all along that it wouldn’t be better for Ralph—it makes
-the case against him blacker than ever. I was not doing him any harm by
-sticking to my lie.”
-
-“Ralph,” said Blunt. “I see—always Ralph.”
-
-“You don’t understand,” said Flora hopelessly. “You never will.”
-
-She turned to the inspector.
-
-“I admit everything; I was at my wit’s end for money. I never saw my
-uncle that evening after he left the dinner-table. As to the money, you
-can take what steps you please. Nothing could be worse than it is now!”
-
-Suddenly she broke down again, hid her face in her hands, and rushed
-from the room.
-
-“Well,” said the inspector in a flat tone, “so that’s that.”
-
-He seemed rather at a loss what to do next.
-
-Blunt came forward.
-
-“Inspector Raglan,” he said quietly, “that money was given to me by Mr.
-Ackroyd for a special purpose. Miss Ackroyd never touched it. When she
-says she did, she is lying with the idea of shielding Captain Paton.
-The truth is as I said, and I am prepared to go into the witness box
-and swear to it.”
-
-He made a kind of jerky bow, then turning abruptly, he left the room.
-
-Poirot was after him in a flash. He caught the other up in the hall.
-
-“Monsieur—a moment, I beg of you, if you will be so good.”
-
-“Well, sir?”
-
-Blunt was obviously impatient. He stood frowning down on Poirot.
-
-“It is this,” said Poirot rapidly: “I am not deceived by your little
-fantasy. No, indeed. It was truly Miss Flora who took the money. All
-the same it is well imagined what you say—it pleases me. It is very
-good what you have done there. You are a man quick to think and to act.”
-
-“I’m not in the least anxious for your opinion, thank you,” said Blunt
-coldly.
-
-He made once more as though to pass on, but Poirot, not at all
-offended, laid a detaining hand on his arm.
-
-“Ah! but you are to listen to me. I have more to say. The other day I
-spoke of concealments. Very well, all along have I seen what you are
-concealing. Mademoiselle Flora, you love her with all your heart. From
-the first moment you saw her, is it not so? Oh! let us not mind saying
-these things—why must one in England think it necessary to mention
-love as though it were some disgraceful secret? You love Mademoiselle
-Flora. You seek to conceal that fact from all the world. That is very
-good—that is as it should be. But take the advice of Hercule Poirot—do
-not conceal it from mademoiselle herself.”
-
-Blunt had shown several signs of restlessness whilst Poirot was
-speaking, but the closing words seemed to rivet his attention.
-
-“What d’you mean by that?” he said sharply.
-
-“You think that she loves the Capitaine Ralph Paton—but I, Hercule
-Poirot, tell you that that is not so. Mademoiselle Flora accepted
-Captain Paton to please her uncle, and because she saw in the marriage
-a way of escape from her life here which was becoming frankly
-insupportable to her. She liked him, and there was much sympathy
-and understanding between them. But love—no! It is not Captain Paton
-Mademoiselle Flora loves.”
-
-“What the devil do you mean?” asked Blunt.
-
-I saw the dark flush under his tan.
-
-“You have been blind, monsieur. Blind! She is loyal, the little one.
-Ralph Paton is under a cloud, she is bound in honor to stick by him.”
-
-I felt it was time I put in a word to help on the good work.
-
-“My sister told me the other night,” I said encouragingly, “that Flora
-had never cared a penny piece for Ralph Paton, and never would. My
-sister is always right about these things.”
-
-Blunt ignored my well-meant efforts. He spoke to Poirot.
-
-“D’you really think——” he began, and stopped.
-
-He is one of those inarticulate men who find it hard to put things into
-words.
-
-Poirot knows no such disability.
-
-“If you doubt me, ask her yourself, monsieur. But perhaps you no longer
-care to—the affair of the money——”
-
-Blunt gave a sound like an angry laugh.
-
-“Think I’d hold that against her? Roger was always a queer chap about
-money. She got in a mess and didn’t dare tell him. Poor kid. Poor
-lonely kid.”
-
-Poirot looked thoughtfully at the side door.
-
-“Mademoiselle Flora went into the garden, I think,” he murmured.
-
-“I’ve been every kind of a fool,” said Blunt abruptly. “Rum
-conversation we’ve been having. Like one of those Danish plays. But
-you’re a sound fellow, M. Poirot. Thank you.”
-
-He took Poirot’s hand and gave it a grip which caused the other to
-wince in anguish. Then he strode to the side door and passed out into
-the garden.
-
-“Not every kind of a fool,” murmured Poirot, tenderly nursing the
-injured member. “Only one kind—the fool in love.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
- MISS RUSSELL
-
-
-Inspector Raglan had received a bad jolt. He was not deceived by
-Blunt’s valiant lie any more than we had been. Our way back to the
-village was punctuated by his complaints.
-
-“This alters everything, this does. I don’t know whether you’ve
-realized it, Monsieur Poirot?”
-
-“I think so, yes, I think so,” said Poirot. “You see, me, I have been
-familiar with the idea for some time.”
-
-Inspector Raglan, who had only had the idea presented to him a short
-half-hour ago, looked at Poirot unhappily, and went on with his
-discoveries.
-
-“Those alibis now. Worthless! Absolutely worthless. Got to start
-again. Find out what every one was doing from nine-thirty onwards.
-Nine-thirty—that’s the time we’ve got to hang on to. You were quite
-right about the man Kent—we don’t release _him_ yet awhile. Let me see
-now—nine-forty-five at the Dog and Whistle. He might have got there
-in a quarter of an hour if he ran. It’s just possible that it was
-_his_ voice Mr. Raymond heard talking to Mr. Ackroyd—asking for money
-which Mr. Ackroyd refused. But one thing’s clear—it wasn’t he who
-sent the telephone message. The station is half a mile in the other
-direction—over a mile and a half from the Dog and Whistle, and he was
-at the Dog and Whistle until about ten minutes past ten. Dang that
-telephone call! We always come up against it.”
-
-“We do indeed,” agreed Poirot. “It is curious.”
-
-“It’s just possible that if Captain Paton climbed into his uncle’s room
-and found him there murdered, _he_ may have sent it. Got the wind up,
-thought he’d be accused, and cleared out. That’s possible, isn’t it?”
-
-“Why should he have telephoned?”
-
-“May have had doubts if the old man was really dead. Thought he’d
-get the doctor up there as soon as possible, but didn’t want to give
-himself away. Yes, I say now, how’s that for a theory? Something in
-that, I should say.”
-
-The inspector swelled his chest out importantly. He was so plainly
-delighted with himself that any words of ours would have been quite
-superfluous.
-
-We arrived back at my house at this minute, and I hurried in to my
-surgery patients, who had all been waiting a considerable time, leaving
-Poirot to walk to the police station with the inspector.
-
-Having dismissed the last patient, I strolled into the little room at
-the back of the house which I call my workshop—I am rather proud of the
-home-made wireless set I turned out. Caroline hates my workroom. I keep
-my tools there, and Annie is not allowed to wreak havoc with a dustpan
-and brush. I was just adjusting the interior of an alarm clock which
-had been denounced as wholly unreliable by the household, when the door
-opened and Caroline put her head in.
-
-“Oh! there you are, James,” she said, with deep disapproval. “M. Poirot
-wants to see you.”
-
-“Well,” I said, rather irritably, for her sudden entrance had startled
-me and I had let go of a piece of delicate mechanism, “if he wants to
-see me, he can come in here.”
-
-“In here?” said Caroline.
-
-“That’s what I said—in here.”
-
-Caroline gave a sniff of disapproval and retired. She returned in a
-moment or two, ushering in Poirot, and then retired again, shutting the
-door with a bang.
-
-“Aha! my friend,” said Poirot, coming forward and rubbing his hands.
-“You have not got rid of me so easily, you see!”
-
-“Finished with the inspector?” I asked.
-
-“For the moment, yes. And you, you have seen all the patients?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-Poirot sat down and looked at me, tilting his egg-shaped head on one
-side, with the air of one who savors a very delicious joke.
-
-“You are in error,” he said at last. “You have still one patient to
-see.”
-
-“Not you?” I exclaimed in surprise.
-
-“Ah, not me, _bien entendu_. Me, I have the health magnificent. No, to
-tell you the truth, it is a little _complot_ of mine. There is some one
-I wish to see, you understand—and at the same time it is not necessary
-that the whole village should intrigue itself about the matter—which is
-what would happen if the lady were seen to come to my house—for it is
-a lady. But to you she has already come as a patient before.”
-
-“Miss Russell!” I exclaimed.
-
-“_Précisément._ I wish much to speak with her, so I send her the little
-note and make the appointment in your surgery. You are not annoyed with
-me?”
-
-“On the contrary,” I said. “That is, presuming I am allowed to be
-present at the interview?”
-
-“But naturally! In your own surgery!”
-
-“You know,” I said, throwing down the pincers I was holding, “it’s
-extraordinarily intriguing, the whole thing. Every new development that
-arises is like the shake you give to a kaleidoscope—the thing changes
-entirely in aspect. Now, why are you so anxious to see Miss Russell?”
-
-Poirot raised his eyebrows.
-
-“Surely it is obvious?” he murmured.
-
-“There you go again,” I grumbled. “According to you everything is
-obvious. But you leave me walking about in a fog.”
-
-Poirot shook his head genially at me.
-
-“You mock yourself at me. Take the matter of Mademoiselle Flora. The
-inspector was surprised—but you—you were not.”
-
-“I never dreamed of her being the thief,” I expostulated.
-
-“That—perhaps no. But I was watching your face and you were not—like
-Inspector Raglan—startled and incredulous.”
-
-I thought for a minute or two.
-
-“Perhaps you are right,” I said at last. “All along I’ve felt that
-Flora was keeping back something—so the truth, when it came, was
-subconsciously expected. It upset Inspector Raglan very much indeed,
-poor man.”
-
-“Ah! _pour ça, oui_! The poor man must rearrange all his ideas. I
-profited by his state of mental chaos to induce him to grant me a
-little favor.”
-
-“What was that?”
-
-Poirot took a sheet of notepaper from his pocket. Some words were
-written on it, and he read them aloud.
-
-“The police have, for some days, been seeking for Captain Ralph Paton,
-the nephew of Mr. Ackroyd of Fernly Park, whose death occurred under
-such tragic circumstances last Friday. Captain Paton has been found at
-Liverpool, where he was on the point of embarking for America.”
-
-He folded up the piece of paper again.
-
-“That, my friend, will be in the newspapers to-morrow morning.”
-
-I stared at him, dumbfounded.
-
-“But—but it isn’t true! He’s not at Liverpool!”
-
-Poirot beamed on me.
-
-“You have the intelligence so quick! No, he has not been found at
-Liverpool. Inspector Raglan was very loath to let me send this
-paragraph to the press, especially as I could not take him into my
-confidence. But I assured him most solemnly that very interesting
-results would follow its appearance in print, so he gave in, after
-stipulating that he was, on no account, to bear the responsibility.”
-
-I stared at Poirot. He smiled back at me.
-
-“It beats me,” I said at last, “what you expect to get out of that.”
-
-“You should employ your little gray cells,” said Poirot gravely.
-
-He rose and came across to the bench.
-
-“It is that you have really the love of the machinery,” he said, after
-inspecting the débris of my labors.
-
-Every man has his hobby. I immediately drew Poirot’s attention to my
-home-made wireless. Finding him sympathetic, I showed him one or two
-little inventions of my own—trifling things, but useful in the house.
-
-“Decidedly,” said Poirot, “you should be an inventor by trade, not a
-doctor. But I hear the bell—that is your patient. Let us go into the
-surgery.”
-
-Once before I had been struck by the remnants of beauty in the
-housekeeper’s face. This morning I was struck anew. Very simply dressed
-in black, tall, upright and independent as ever, with her big dark eyes
-and an unwonted flush of color in her usually pale cheeks, I realized
-that as a girl she must have been startlingly handsome.
-
-“Good-morning, mademoiselle,” said Poirot. “Will you be seated? Dr.
-Sheppard is so kind as to permit me the use of his surgery for a little
-conversation I am anxious to have with you.”
-
-Miss Russell sat down with her usual composure. If she felt any inward
-agitation, it did not display itself in any outward manifestation.
-
-“It seems a queer way of doing things, if you’ll allow me to say so,”
-she remarked.
-
-“Miss Russell—I have news to give you.”
-
-“Indeed!”
-
-“Charles Kent has been arrested at Liverpool.”
-
-Not a muscle of her face moved. She merely opened her eyes a trifle
-wider, and asked, with a tinge of defiance:
-
-“Well, what of it?”
-
-But at that moment it came to me—the resemblance that had haunted me
-all along, something familiar in the defiance of Charles Kent’s manner.
-The two voices, one rough and coarse, the other painfully ladylike—were
-strangely the same in timbre. It was of Miss Russell that I had been
-reminded that night outside the gates of Fernly Park.
-
-I looked at Poirot, full of my discovery, and he gave me an
-imperceptible nod.
-
-In answer to Miss Russell’s question, he threw out his hands in a
-thoroughly French gesture.
-
-“I thought you might be interested, that is all,” he said mildly.
-
-“Well, I’m not particularly,” said Miss Russell. “Who is this Charles
-Kent anyway?”
-
-“He is a man, mademoiselle, who was at Fernly on the night of the
-murder.”
-
-“Really?”
-
-“Fortunately for him, he has an alibi. At a quarter to ten he was at a
-public-house a mile from here.”
-
-“Lucky for him,” commented Miss Russell.
-
-“But we still do not know what he was doing at Fernly—who it was he
-went to meet, for instance.”
-
-“I’m afraid I can’t help you at all,” said the housekeeper politely.
-“Nothing came to _my_ ears. If that is all——”
-
-She made a tentative movement as though to rise. Poirot stopped her.
-
-“It is not quite all,” he said smoothly. “This morning fresh
-developments have arisen. It seems now that Mr. Ackroyd was murdered,
-not at a quarter to ten, but _before_. Between ten minutes to nine,
-when Dr. Sheppard left, and a quarter to ten.”
-
-I saw the color drain from the housekeeper’s face, leaving it dead
-white. She leaned forward, her figure swaying.
-
-“But Miss Ackroyd said—Miss Ackroyd said——”
-
-“Miss Ackroyd has admitted that she was lying. She was never in the
-study at all that evening.”
-
-“Then——?”
-
-“Then it would seem that in this Charles Kent we have the man we are
-looking for. He came to Fernly, can give no account of what he was
-doing there——”
-
-“I can tell you what he was doing there. He never touched a hair of old
-Ackroyd’s head—he never went near the study. He didn’t do it, I tell
-you.”
-
-She was leaning forward. That iron self-control was broken through at
-last. Terror and desperation were in her face.
-
-“M. Poirot! M. Poirot! Oh, do believe me.”
-
-Poirot got up and came to her. He patted her reassuringly on the
-shoulder.
-
-“But yes—but yes, I will believe. I had to make you speak, you know.”
-
-For an instant suspicion flared up in her.
-
-“Is what you said true?”
-
-“That Charles Kent is suspected of the crime? Yes, that is true. You
-alone can save him, by telling the reason for his being at Fernly.”
-
-“He came to see me.” She spoke in a low, hurried voice. “I went out to
-meet him——”
-
-“In the summer-house, yes, I know.”
-
-“How do you know?”
-
-“Mademoiselle, it is the business of Hercule Poirot to know things. I
-know that you went out earlier in the evening, that you left a message
-in the summer-house to say what time you would be there.”
-
-“Yes, I did. I had heard from him—saying he was coming. I dared not
-let him come to the house. I wrote to the address he gave me and said
-I would meet him in the summer-house, and described it to him so that
-he would be able to find it. Then I was afraid he might not wait there
-patiently, and I ran out and left a piece of paper to say I would be
-there about ten minutes past nine. I didn’t want the servants to see
-me, so I slipped out through the drawing-room window. As I came back, I
-met Dr. Sheppard, and I fancied that he would think it queer. I was out
-of breath, for I had been running. I had no idea that he was expected
-to dinner that night.”
-
-She paused.
-
-“Go on,” said Poirot. “You went out to meet him at ten minutes past
-nine. What did you say to each other?”
-
-“It’s difficult. You see——”
-
-“Mademoiselle,” said Poirot, interrupting her, “in this matter I must
-have the whole truth. What you tell us need never go beyond these four
-walls. Dr. Sheppard will be discreet, and so shall I. See, I will help
-you. This Charles Kent, he is your son, is he not?”
-
-She nodded. The color had flamed into her cheeks.
-
-“No one has ever known. It was long ago—long ago—down in Kent. I was
-not married....”
-
-“So you took the name of the county as a surname for him. I understand.”
-
-“I got work. I managed to pay for his board and lodging. I never told
-him that I was his mother. But he turned out badly, he drank, then took
-to drugs. I managed to pay his passage out to Canada. I didn’t hear of
-him for a year or two. Then, somehow or other, he found out that I was
-his mother. He wrote asking me for money. Finally, I heard from him
-back in this country again. He was coming to see me at Fernly, he said.
-I dared not let him come to the house. I have always been considered
-so—so very respectable. If any one got an inkling—it would have been
-all up with my post as housekeeper. So I wrote to him in the way I have
-just told you.”
-
-“And in the morning you came to see Dr. Sheppard?”
-
-“Yes. I wondered if something could be done. He was not a bad
-boy—before he took to drugs.”
-
-“I see,” said Poirot. “Now let us go on with the story. He came that
-night to the summer-house?”
-
-“Yes, he was waiting for me when I got there. He was very rough and
-abusive. I had brought with me all the money I had, and I gave it to
-him. We talked a little, and then he went away.”
-
-“What time was that?”
-
-“It must have been between twenty and twenty-five minutes past nine. It
-was not yet half-past when I got back to the house.”
-
-“Which way did he go?”
-
-“Straight out the same way he came, by the path that joined the drive
-just inside the lodge gates.”
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“And you, what did you do?”
-
-“I went back to the house. Major Blunt was walking up and down the
-terrace smoking, so I made a detour to get round to the side door. It
-was then just on half-past nine, as I tell you.”
-
-Poirot nodded again. He made a note or two in a microscopic pocket-book.
-
-“I think that is all,” he said thoughtfully.
-
-“Ought I——” she hesitated. “Ought I to tell all this to Inspector
-Raglan?”
-
-“It may come to that. But let us not be in a hurry. Let us proceed
-slowly, with due order and method. Charles Kent is not yet formally
-charged with murder. Circumstances may arise which will render your
-story unnecessary.”
-
-Miss Russell rose.
-
-“Thank you very much, M. Poirot,” she said. “You have been very
-kind—very kind indeed. You—you do believe me, don’t you? That Charles
-had nothing to do with this wicked murder!”
-
-“There seems no doubt that the man who was talking to Mr. Ackroyd in
-the library at nine-thirty could not possibly have been your son. Be of
-good courage, mademoiselle. All will yet be well.”
-
-Miss Russell departed. Poirot and I were left together.
-
-“So that’s that,” I said. “Every time we come back to Ralph Paton. How
-did you manage to spot Miss Russell as the person Charles Kent came to
-meet? Did you notice the resemblance?”
-
-“I had connected her with the unknown man long before we actually
-came face to face with him. As soon as we found that quill. The quill
-suggested dope, and I remembered your account of Miss Russell’s visit
-to you. Then I found the article on cocaine in that morning’s paper. It
-all seemed very clear. She had heard from some one that morning—some
-one addicted to drugs, she read the article in the paper, and she came
-to you to ask a few tentative questions. She mentioned cocaine, since
-the article in question was on cocaine. Then, when you seemed too
-interested, she switched hurriedly to the subject of detective stories
-and untraceable poisons. I suspected a son or a brother, or some other
-undesirable male relation. Ah! but I must go. It is the time of the
-lunch.”
-
-“Stay and lunch with us,” I suggested.
-
-Poirot shook his head. A faint twinkle came into his eye.
-
-“Not again to-day. I should not like to force Mademoiselle Caroline to
-adopt a vegetarian diet two days in succession.”
-
-It occurred to me that there was not much which escaped Hercule Poirot.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
-
- THE PARAGRAPH IN THE PAPER
-
-
-Caroline, of course, had not failed to see Miss Russell come
-to the surgery door. I had anticipated this, and had ready an
-elaborate account of the lady’s bad knee. But Caroline was not in a
-cross-questioning mood. Her point of view was that she knew what Miss
-Russell had really come for and that _I_ didn’t.
-
-“Pumping you, James,” said Caroline. “Pumping you in the most shameless
-manner, I’ve not a doubt. It’s no good interrupting. I dare say you
-hadn’t the least idea she was doing it even. Men _are_ so simple. She
-knows that you are in M. Poirot’s confidence, and she wants to find out
-things. Do you know what I think, James?”
-
-“I couldn’t begin to imagine. You think so many extraordinary things.”
-
-“It’s no good being sarcastic. I think Miss Russell knows more about
-Mr. Ackroyd’s death than she is prepared to admit.”
-
-Caroline leaned back triumphantly in her chair.
-
-“Do you really think so?” I said absently.
-
-“You are very dull to-day, James. No animation about you. It’s that
-liver of yours.”
-
-Our conversation then dealt with purely personal matters.
-
-The paragraph inspired by Poirot duly appeared in our daily paper the
-next morning. I was in the dark as to its purpose, but its effect on
-Caroline was immense.
-
-She began by stating, most untruly, that she had said as much all
-along. I raised my eyebrows, but did not argue. Caroline, however, must
-have felt a prick of conscience, for she went on:—
-
-“I mayn’t have actually mentioned Liverpool, but I knew he’d try to get
-away to America. That’s what Crippen did.”
-
-“Without much success,” I reminded her.
-
-“Poor boy, and so they’ve caught him. I consider, James, that it’s your
-duty to see that he isn’t hung.”
-
-“What do you expect me to do?”
-
-“Why, you’re a medical man, aren’t you? You’ve known him from a boy
-upwards. Not mentally responsible. That’s the line to take, clearly. I
-read only the other day that they’re very happy in Broadmoor—it’s quite
-like a high-class club.”
-
-But Caroline’s words had reminded me of something.
-
-“I never knew that Poirot had an imbecile nephew?” I said curiously.
-
-“Didn’t you? Oh, he told me all about it. Poor lad. It’s a great grief
-to all the family. They’ve kept him at home so far, but it’s getting
-to such a pitch that they’re afraid he’ll have to go into some kind of
-institution.”
-
-“I suppose you know pretty well everything there is to know about
-Poirot’s family by this time,” I said, exasperated.
-
-“Pretty well,” said Caroline complacently. “It’s a great relief to
-people to be able to tell all their troubles to some one.”
-
-“It might be,” I said, “if they were ever allowed to do so
-spontaneously. Whether they enjoy having confidences screwed out of
-them by force is another matter.”
-
-Caroline merely looked at me with the air of a Christian martyr
-enjoying martyrdom.
-
-“You are so self-contained, James,” she said. “You hate speaking out,
-or parting with any information yourself, and you think everybody else
-must be just like you. I should hope that I never screw confidences out
-of anybody. For instance, if M. Poirot comes in this afternoon, as he
-said he might do, I shall not dream of asking him who it was arrived at
-his house early this morning.”
-
-“Early this morning?” I queried.
-
-“Very early,” said Caroline. “Before the milk came. I just happened
-to be looking out of the window—the blind was flapping. It was a man.
-He came in a closed car, and he was all muffled up. I couldn’t get a
-glimpse of his face. But I will tell you _my_ idea, and you’ll see that
-I’m right.”
-
-“What’s your idea?”
-
-Caroline dropped her voice mysteriously.
-
-“A Home Office expert,” she breathed.
-
-“A Home Office expert,” I said, amazed. “My dear Caroline!”
-
-“Mark my words, James, you’ll see that I’m right. That Russell woman
-was here that morning after your poisons. Roger Ackroyd might easily
-have been poisoned in his food that night.”
-
-I laughed out loud.
-
-“Nonsense,” I cried. “He was stabbed in the neck. You know that as well
-as I do.”
-
-“After death, James,” said Caroline; “to make a false clew.”
-
-“My good woman,” I said, “I examined the body, and I know what I’m
-talking about. That wound wasn’t inflicted after death—it was the cause
-of death, and you need make no mistake about it.”
-
-Caroline merely continued to look omniscient, which so annoyed me that
-I went on:—
-
-“Perhaps you will tell me, Caroline, if I have a medical degree or if I
-have not?”
-
-“You have the medical degree, I dare say, James—at least, I mean I know
-you have. But you’ve no imagination whatever.”
-
-“Having endowed you with a treble portion, there was none left over for
-me,” I said dryly.
-
-I was amused to notice Caroline’s maneuvers that afternoon when Poirot
-duly arrived. My sister, without asking a direct question, skirted the
-subject of the mysterious guest in every way imaginable. By the twinkle
-in Poirot’s eyes, I saw that he realized her object. He remained
-blandly impervious, and blocked her bowling so successfully that she
-herself was at a loss how to proceed.
-
-Having, I suspect, quietly enjoyed the little game, he rose to his feet
-and suggested a walk.
-
-“It is that I need to reduce the figure a little,” he explained. “You
-will come with me, doctor? And perhaps later Miss Caroline will give us
-some tea.”
-
-“Delighted,” said Caroline. “Won’t your—er—guest come in also?”
-
-“You are too kind,” said Poirot. “But no, my friend reposes himself.
-Soon you must make his acquaintance.”
-
-“Quite an old friend of yours, so somebody told me,” said Caroline,
-making one last valiant effort.
-
-“Did they?” murmured Poirot “Well, we must start.”
-
-Our tramp took us in the direction of Fernly. I had guessed beforehand
-that it might do so. I was beginning to understand Poirot’s methods.
-Every little irrelevancy had a bearing upon the whole.
-
-“I have a commission for you, my friend,” he said at last. “To-night,
-at my house, I desire to have a little conference. You will attend,
-will you not?”
-
-“Certainly,” I said.
-
-“Good. I need also all those in the house—that is to say: Mrs. Ackroyd,
-Mademoiselle Flora, Major Blunt, M. Raymond. I want you to be my
-ambassador. This little reunion is fixed for nine o’clock. You will ask
-them—yes?”
-
-“With pleasure; but why not ask them yourself?”
-
-“Because they will then put the questions: Why? What for? They will
-demand what my idea is. And, as you know, my friend, I much dislike to
-have to explain my little ideas until the time comes.”
-
-I smiled a little.
-
-“My friend Hastings, he of whom I told you, used to say of me that I
-was the human oyster. But he was unjust. Of facts, I keep nothing to
-myself. But to every one his own interpretation of them.”
-
-“When do you want me to do this?”
-
-“Now, if you will. We are close to the house.”
-
-“Aren’t you coming in?”
-
-“No, me, I will promenade myself in the grounds. I will rejoin you by
-the lodge gates in a quarter of an hour’s time.”
-
-I nodded, and set off on my task. The only member of the family at home
-proved to be Mrs. Ackroyd, who was sipping an early cup of tea. She
-received me very graciously.
-
-“So grateful to you, doctor,” she murmured, “for clearing up that
-little matter with M. Poirot. But life is one trouble after another.
-You have heard about Flora, of course?”
-
-“What exactly?” I asked cautiously.
-
-“This new engagement. Flora and Hector Blunt. Of course not such a good
-match as Ralph would have been. But after all, happiness comes first.
-What dear Flora needs is an older man—some one steady and reliable, and
-then Hector is really a very distinguished man in his way. You saw the
-news of Ralph’s arrest in the paper this morning?”
-
-“Yes,” I said, “I did.”
-
-“Horrible.” Mrs. Ackroyd closed her eyes and shuddered. “Geoffrey
-Raymond was in a terrible way. Rang up Liverpool. But they wouldn’t
-tell him anything at the police station there. In fact, they said
-they hadn’t arrested Ralph at all. Mr. Raymond insists that it’s all
-a mistake—a—what do they call it?—_canard_ of the newspaper’s. I’ve
-forbidden it to be mentioned before the servants. Such a terrible
-disgrace. Fancy if Flora had actually been married to him.”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd shut her eyes in anguish. I began to wonder how soon I
-should be able to deliver Poirot’s invitation.
-
-Before I had time to speak, Mrs. Ackroyd was off again.
-
-“You were here yesterday, weren’t you, with that dreadful Inspector
-Raglan? Brute of a man—he terrified Flora into saying she took that
-money from poor Roger’s room. And the matter was so simple, really. The
-dear child wanted to borrow a few pounds, didn’t like to disturb her
-uncle since he’d given strict orders against it, but knowing where he
-kept his notes she went there and took what she needed.”
-
-“Is that Flora’s account of the matter?” I asked.
-
-“My dear doctor, you know what girls are nowadays. So easily acted on
-by suggestion. You, of course, know all about hypnosis and that sort of
-thing. The inspector shouts at her, says the word ‘steal’ over and over
-again, until the poor child gets an inhibition—or is it a complex?—I
-always mix up those two words—and actually thinks herself that she has
-stolen the money. I saw at once how it was. But I can’t be too thankful
-for the whole misunderstanding in one way—it seems to have brought
-those two together—Hector and Flora, I mean. And I assure you that I
-have been very much worried about Flora in the past: why, at one time
-I actually thought there was going to be some kind of understanding
-between her and young Raymond. Just think of it!” Mrs. Ackroyd’s voice
-rose in shrill horror. “A private secretary—with practically no means
-of his own.”
-
-“It would have been a severe blow to you,” I said. “Now, Mrs. Ackroyd,
-I’ve got a message for you from M. Hercule Poirot.”
-
-“For me?”
-
-Mrs. Ackroyd looked quite alarmed.
-
-I hastened to reassure her, and I explained what Poirot wanted.
-
-“Certainly,” said Mrs. Ackroyd rather doubtfully, “I suppose we must
-come if M. Poirot says so. But what is it all about? I like to know
-beforehand.”
-
-I assured the lady truthfully that I myself did not know any more than
-she did.
-
-“Very well,” said Mrs. Ackroyd at last, rather grudgingly, “I will tell
-the others, and we will be there at nine o’clock.”
-
-Thereupon I took my leave, and joined Poirot at the agreed
-meeting-place.
-
-“I’ve been longer than a quarter of an hour, I’m afraid,” I remarked.
-“But once that good lady starts talking it’s a matter of the utmost
-difficulty to get a word in edgeways.”
-
-“It is of no matter,” said Poirot. “Me, I have been well amused. This
-park is magnificent.”
-
-We set off homewards. When we arrived, to our great surprise Caroline,
-who had evidently been watching for us, herself opened the door.
-
-She put her fingers to her lips. Her face was full of importance and
-excitement.
-
-“Ursula Bourne,” she said, “the parlormaid from Fernly. She’s here!
-I’ve put her in the dining-room. She’s in a terrible way, poor thing.
-Says she must see M. Poirot at once. I’ve done all I could. Taken her a
-cup of hot tea. It really goes to one’s heart to see any one in such a
-state.”
-
-“In the dining-room?” asked Poirot.
-
-“This way,” I said, and flung open the door.
-
-Ursula Bourne was sitting by the table. Her arms were spread out in
-front of her, and she had evidently just lifted her head from where it
-had been buried. Her eyes were red with weeping.
-
-“Ursula Bourne,” I murmured.
-
-But Poirot went past me with outstretched hands.
-
-“No,” he said, “that is not quite right, I think. It is not Ursula
-Bourne, is it, my child—but Ursula Paton? Mrs. Ralph Paton.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
-
- URSULA’S STORY
-
-
-For a moment or two the girl looked mutely at Poirot. Then, her reserve
-breaking down completely, she nodded her head once, and burst into an
-outburst of sobs.
-
-Caroline pushed past me, and putting her arm round the girl, patted her
-on the shoulder.
-
-“There, there, my dear,” she said soothingly, “it will be all right.
-You’ll see—everything will be all right.”
-
-Buried under curiosity and scandal-mongering there is a lot of kindness
-in Caroline. For the moment, even the interest of Poirot’s revelation
-was lost in the sight of the girl’s distress.
-
-Presently Ursula sat up and wiped her eyes.
-
-“This is very weak and silly of me,” she said.
-
-“No, no, my child,” said Poirot kindly. “We can all realize the strain
-of this last week.”
-
-“It must have been a terrible ordeal,” I said.
-
-“And then to find that you knew,” continued Ursula. “How did you know?
-Was it Ralph who told you?”
-
-Poirot shook his head.
-
-“You know what brought me to you to-night,” went on the girl. “_This_——”
-
-She held out a crumpled piece of newspaper, and I recognized the
-paragraph that Poirot had had inserted.
-
-“It says that Ralph has been arrested. So everything is useless. I need
-not pretend any longer.”
-
-“Newspaper paragraphs are not always true, mademoiselle,” murmured
-Poirot, having the grace to look ashamed of himself. “All the same, I
-think you will do well to make a clean breast of things. The truth is
-what we need now.”
-
-The girl hesitated, looking at him doubtfully.
-
-“You do not trust me,” said Poirot gently. “Yet all the same you came
-here to find me, did you not? Why was that?”
-
-“Because I don’t believe that Ralph did it,” said the girl in a very
-low voice. “And I think that you are clever, and will find out the
-truth. And also——”
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“I think you are kind.”
-
-Poirot nodded his head several times.
-
-“It is very good that—yes, it is very good. Listen, I do in verity
-believe that this husband of yours is innocent—but the affair marches
-badly. If I am to save him, I must know all there is to know—even if it
-should seem to make the case against him blacker than before.”
-
-“How well you understand,” said Ursula.
-
-“So you will tell me the whole story, will you not? From the beginning.”
-
-“You’re not going to send _me_ away, I hope,” said Caroline, settling
-herself comfortably in an arm-chair. “What I want to know,” she
-continued, “is why this child was masquerading as a parlormaid?”
-
-“Masquerading?” I queried.
-
-“That’s what I said. Why did you do it, child? For a wager?”
-
-“For a living,” said Ursula dryly.
-
-And encouraged, she began the story which I reproduce here in my own
-words.
-
-Ursula Bourne, it seemed, was one of a family of seven—impoverished
-Irish gentlefolk. On the death of her father, most of the girls were
-cast out into the world to earn their own living. Ursula’s eldest
-sister was married to Captain Folliott. It was she whom I had seen
-that Sunday, and the cause of her embarrassment was clear enough now.
-Determined to earn her living and not attracted to the idea of being a
-nursery governess—the one profession open to an untrained girl, Ursula
-preferred the job of parlormaid. She scorned to label herself a “lady
-parlormaid.” She would be the real thing, her reference being supplied
-by her sister. At Fernly, despite an aloofness which, as has been seen,
-caused some comment, she was a success at her job—quick, competent, and
-thorough.
-
-“I enjoyed the work,” she explained. “And I had plenty of time to
-myself.”
-
-And then came her meeting with Ralph Paton, and the love affair which
-culminated in a secret marriage. Ralph had persuaded her into that,
-somewhat against her will. He had declared that his stepfather would
-not hear of his marrying a penniless girl. Better to be married
-secretly, and break the news to him at some later and more favorable
-minute.
-
-And so the deed was done, and Ursula Bourne became Ursula Paton.
-Ralph had declared that he meant to pay off his debts, find a job, and
-then, when he was in a position to support her, and independent of his
-adopted father, they would break the news to him.
-
-But to people like Ralph Paton, turning over a new leaf is easier in
-theory than in practice. He hoped that his stepfather, whilst still
-in ignorance of the marriage, might be persuaded to pay his debts and
-put him on his feet again. But the revelation of the amount of Ralph’s
-liabilities merely enraged Roger Ackroyd, and he refused to do anything
-at all. Some months passed, and then Ralph was bidden once more to
-Fernly. Roger Ackroyd did not beat about the bush. It was the desire of
-his heart that Ralph should marry Flora, and he put the matter plainly
-before the young man.
-
-And here it was that the innate weakness of Ralph Paton showed itself.
-As always, he grasped at the easy, the immediate solution. As far
-as I could make out, neither Flora nor Ralph made any pretence of
-love. It was, on both sides, a business arrangement. Roger Ackroyd
-dictated his wishes—they agreed to them. Flora accepted a chance of
-liberty, money, and an enlarged horizon, Ralph, of course, was playing
-a different game. But he was in a very awkward hole financially. He
-seized at the chance. His debts would be paid. He could start again
-with a clean sheet. His was not a nature to envisage the future, but
-I gather that he saw vaguely the engagement with Flora being broken
-off after a decent interval had elapsed. Both Flora and he stipulated
-that it should be kept a secret for the present. He was anxious to
-conceal it from Ursula. He felt instinctively that her nature, strong
-and resolute, with an inherent distaste for duplicity, was not one to
-welcome such a course.
-
-Then came the crucial moment when Roger Ackroyd, always high-handed,
-decided to announce the engagement. He said no word of his intention
-to Ralph—only to Flora, and Flora, apathetic, raised no objection. On
-Ursula, the news fell like a bombshell. Summoned by her, Ralph came
-hurriedly down from town. They met in the wood, where part of their
-conversation was overheard by my sister. Ralph implored her to keep
-silent for a little while longer, Ursula was equally determined to have
-done with concealments. She would tell Mr. Ackroyd the truth without
-any further delay. Husband and wife parted acrimoniously.
-
-Ursula, steadfast in her purpose, sought an interview with Roger
-Ackroyd that very afternoon, and revealed the truth to him. Their
-interview was a stormy one—it might have been even more stormy had not
-Roger Ackroyd been already obsessed with his own troubles. It was bad
-enough, however. Ackroyd was not the kind of man to forgive the deceit
-that had been practiced upon him. His rancor was mainly directed to
-Ralph, but Ursula came in for her share, since he regarded her as a
-girl who had deliberately tried to “entrap” the adopted son of a very
-wealthy man. Unforgivable things were said on both sides.
-
-That same evening Ursula met Ralph by appointment in the small
-summer-house, stealing out from the house by the side door in order to
-do so. Their interview was made up of reproaches on both sides. Ralph
-charged Ursula with having irretrievably ruined his prospects by her
-ill-timed revelation. Ursula reproached Ralph with his duplicity.
-
-They parted at last. A little over half an hour later came the
-discovery of Roger Ackroyd’s body. Since that night Ursula had neither
-seen nor heard from Ralph.
-
-As the story unfolded itself, I realized more and more what a damning
-series of facts it was. Alive, Ackroyd could hardly have failed to
-alter his will—I knew him well enough to realize that to do so would
-be his first thought. His death came in the nick of time for Ralph and
-Ursula Paton. Small wonder the girl had held her tongue, and played her
-part so consistently.
-
-My meditations were interrupted. It was Poirot’s voice speaking, and I
-knew from the gravity of his tone that he, too, was fully alive to the
-implications of the position.
-
-“Mademoiselle, I must ask you one question, and you must answer it
-truthfully, for on it everything may hang: What time was it when you
-parted from Captain Ralph Paton in the summer-house? Now, take a little
-minute so that your answer may be very exact.”
-
-The girl gave a half laugh, bitter enough in all conscience.
-
-“Do you think I haven’t gone over that again and again in my own mind?
-It was just half-past nine when I went out to meet him. Major Blunt
-was walking up and down the terrace, so I had to go round through the
-bushes to avoid him. It must have been about twenty-seven minutes to
-ten when I reached the summer-house. Ralph was waiting for me. I was
-with him ten minutes—not longer, for it was just a quarter to ten when
-I got back to the house.”
-
-I saw now the insistence of her question the other day. If only Ackroyd
-could have been proved to have been killed before a quarter to ten, and
-not after.
-
-I saw the reflection of that thought in Poirot’s next question.
-
-“Who left the summer-house first?”
-
-“I did.”
-
-“Leaving Ralph Paton in the summer-house?”
-
-“Yes—but you don’t think——”
-
-“Mademoiselle, it is of no importance what I think. What did you do
-when you got back to the house?”
-
-“I went up to my room.”
-
-“And stayed there until when?”
-
-“Until about ten o’clock.”
-
-“Is there any one who can prove that?”
-
-“Prove? That I was in my room, you mean? Oh! no. But surely—oh! I see,
-they might think—they might think——”
-
-I saw the dawning horror in her eyes.
-
-Poirot finished the sentence for her.
-
-“That it was _you_ who entered by the window and stabbed Mr. Ackroyd as
-he sat in his chair? Yes, they might think just that.”
-
-“Nobody but a fool would think any such thing,” said Caroline
-indignantly.
-
-She patted Ursula on the shoulder.
-
-The girl had her face hidden in her hands.
-
-“Horrible,” she was murmuring. “Horrible.”
-
-Caroline gave her a friendly shake.
-
-“Don’t worry, my dear,” she said. “M. Poirot doesn’t think that really.
-As for that husband of yours, I don’t think much of him, and I tell you
-so candidly. Running away and leaving you to face the music.”
-
-But Ursula shook her head energetically.
-
-“Oh, no,” she cried. “It wasn’t like that at all. Ralph would not run
-away on his own account. I see now. If he heard of his stepfather’s
-murder, he might think himself that I had done it.”
-
-“He wouldn’t think any such thing,” said Caroline.
-
-“I was so cruel to him that night—so hard and bitter. I wouldn’t listen
-to what he was trying to say—wouldn’t believe that he really cared.
-I just stood there telling him what I thought of him, and saying the
-coldest, cruelest things that came into my mind—trying my best to hurt
-him.”
-
-“Do him no harm,” said Caroline. “Never worry about what you say to a
-man. They’re so conceited that they never believe you mean it if it’s
-unflattering.”
-
-Ursula went on, nervously twisting and untwisting her hands.
-
-“When the murder was discovered and he didn’t come forward, I was
-terribly upset. Just for a moment I wondered—but then I knew he
-couldn’t—he couldn’t.... But I wished he would come forward and say
-openly that he’d had nothing to do with it. I knew that he was very
-fond of Dr. Sheppard, and I fancied that perhaps Dr. Sheppard might
-know where he was hiding.”
-
-She turned to me.
-
-“That’s why I said what I did to you that day. I thought, if you knew
-where he was, you might pass on the message to him.”
-
-“I?” I exclaimed.
-
-“Why should James know where he was?” demanded Caroline sharply.
-
-“It was very unlikely, I know,” admitted Ursula, “but Ralph had often
-spoken of Dr. Sheppard, and I knew that he would be likely to consider
-him as his best friend in King’s Abbot.”
-
-“My dear child,” I said, “I have not the least idea where Ralph Paton
-is at the present moment.”
-
-“That is true enough,” said Poirot.
-
-“But——” Ursula held out the newspaper cutting in a puzzled fashion.
-
-“Ah! that,” said Poirot, slightly embarrassed; “a _bagatelle_,
-mademoiselle. A _rien du tout_. Not for a moment do I believe that
-Ralph Paton has been arrested.”
-
-“But then——” began the girl slowly.
-
-Poirot went on quickly:—
-
-“There is one thing I should like to know—did Captain Paton wear shoes
-or boots that night?”
-
-Ursula shook her head.
-
-“I can’t remember.”
-
-“A pity! But how should you? Now, madame,” he smiled at her, his head
-on one side, his forefinger wagging eloquently, “no questions. And
-do not torment yourself. Be of good courage, and place your faith in
-Hercule Poirot.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
-
- POIROT’S LITTLE REUNION
-
-
-“And now,” said Caroline, rising, “that child is coming upstairs to lie
-down. Don’t you worry, my dear. M. Poirot will do everything he can for
-you—be sure of that.”
-
-“I ought to go back to Fernly,” said Ursula uncertainly.
-
-But Caroline silenced her protests with a firm hand.
-
-“Nonsense. You’re in my hands for the time being. You’ll stay here for
-the present, anyway—eh, M. Poirot?”
-
-“It will be the best plan,” agreed the little Belgian. “This evening I
-shall want mademoiselle—I beg her pardon, madame—to attend my little
-reunion. Nine o’clock at my house. It is most necessary that she should
-be there.”
-
-Caroline nodded, and went with Ursula out of the room. The door shut
-behind them. Poirot dropped down into a chair again.
-
-“So far, so good,” he said. “Things are straightening themselves out.”
-
-“They’re getting to look blacker and blacker against Ralph Paton,” I
-observed gloomily.
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“Yes, that is so. But it was to be expected, was it not?”
-
-I looked at him, slightly puzzled by the remark. He was leaning back in
-the chair, his eyes half closed, the tips of his fingers just touching
-each other. Suddenly he sighed and shook his head.
-
-“What is it?” I asked.
-
-“It is that there are moments when a great longing for my friend
-Hastings comes over me. That is the friend of whom I spoke to you—the
-one who resides now in the Argentine. Always, when I have had a big
-case, he has been by my side. And he has helped me—yes, often he has
-helped me. For he had a knack, that one, of stumbling over the truth
-unawares—without noticing it himself, _bien entendu_. At times he has
-said something particularly foolish, and behold that foolish remark has
-revealed the truth to me! And then, too, it was his practice to keep a
-written record of the cases that proved interesting.”
-
-I gave a slight embarrassed cough.
-
-“As far as that goes,” I began, and then stopped.
-
-Poirot sat upright in his chair. His eyes sparkled.
-
-“But yes? What is it that you would say?”
-
-“Well, as a matter of fact, I’ve read some of Captain Hastings’s
-narratives, and I thought, why not try my hand at something of the same
-kind? Seemed a pity not to—unique opportunity—probably the only time
-I’ll be mixed up with anything of this kind.”
-
-I felt myself getting hotter and hotter, and more and more incoherent,
-as I floundered through the above speech.
-
-Poirot sprang from his chair. I had a moment’s terror that he was going
-to embrace me French fashion, but mercifully he refrained.
-
-“But this is magnificent—you have then written down your impressions of
-the case as you went along?”
-
-I nodded.
-
-“_Epatant!_” cried Poirot. “Let me see them—this instant.”
-
-I was not quite prepared for such a sudden demand. I racked my brains
-to remember certain details.
-
-“I hope you won’t mind,” I stammered. “I may have been a
-little—er—_personal_ now and then.”
-
-“Oh! I comprehend perfectly; you have referred to me as comic—as,
-perhaps, ridiculous now and then? It matters not at all. Hastings,
-he also was not always polite. Me, I have the mind above such
-trivialities.”
-
-Still somewhat doubtful, I rummaged in the drawers of my desk and
-produced an untidy pile of manuscript which I handed over to him. With
-an eye on possible publication in the future, I had divided the work
-into chapters, and the night before I had brought it up to date with an
-account of Miss Russell’s visit. Poirot had therefore twenty chapters.
-
-I left him with them.
-
-I was obliged to go out to a case at some distance away, and it was
-past eight o’clock when I got back, to be greeted with a plate of hot
-dinner on a tray, and the announcement that Poirot and my sister had
-supped together at half-past seven, and that the former had then gone
-to my workshop to finish his reading of the manuscript.
-
-“I hope, James,” said my sister, “that you’ve been careful in what you
-say about me in it?”
-
-My jaw dropped. I had not been careful at all.
-
-“Not that it matters very much,” said Caroline, reading my expression
-correctly. “M. Poirot will know what to think. He understands me much
-better than you do.”
-
-I went into the workshop. Poirot was sitting by the window. The
-manuscript lay neatly piled on a chair beside him. He laid his hand on
-it and spoke.
-
-“_Eh bien_,” he said, “I congratulate you—on your modesty!”
-
-“Oh!” I said, rather taken aback.
-
-“And on your reticence,” he added.
-
-I said “Oh!” again.
-
-“Not so did Hastings write,” continued my friend. “On every page,
-many, many times was the word ‘I.’ What _he_ thought—what _he_ did.
-But you—you have kept your personality in the background; only once or
-twice does it obtrude—in scenes of home life, shall we say?”
-
-I blushed a little before the twinkle in his eye.
-
-“What do you really think of the stuff?” I asked nervously.
-
-“You want my candid opinion?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-Poirot laid his jesting manner aside.
-
-“A very meticulous and accurate account,” he said kindly. “You have
-recorded all the facts faithfully and exactly—though you have shown
-yourself becomingly reticent as to your own share in them.”
-
-“And it has helped you?”
-
-“Yes. I may say that it has helped me considerably. Come, we must go
-over to my house and set the stage for my little performance.”
-
-Caroline was in the hall. I think she hoped that she might be invited
-to accompany us. Poirot dealt with the situation tactfully.
-
-“I should much like to have had you present, mademoiselle,” he said
-regretfully, “but at this juncture it would not be wise. See you, all
-these people to-night are suspects. Amongst them, I shall find the
-person who killed Mr. Ackroyd.”
-
-“You really believe that?” I said incredulously.
-
-“I see that you do not,” said Poirot dryly. “Not yet do you appreciate
-Hercule Poirot at his true worth.”
-
-At that minute Ursula came down the staircase.
-
-“You are ready, my child?” said Poirot. “That is good. We will go to
-my house together. Mademoiselle Caroline, believe me, I do everything
-possible to render you service. Good-evening.”
-
-We went out, leaving Caroline, rather like a dog who has been refused a
-walk, standing on the front door step gazing after us.
-
-The sitting-room at The Larches had been got ready. On the table were
-various _sirops_ and glasses. Also a plate of biscuits. Several chairs
-had been brought in from the other room.
-
-Poirot ran to and fro rearranging things. Pulling out a chair here,
-altering the position of a lamp there, occasionally stooping to
-straighten one of the mats that covered the floor. He was specially
-fussy over the lighting. The lamps were arranged in such a way as to
-throw a clear light on the side of the room where the chairs were
-grouped, at the same time leaving the other end of the room, where I
-presumed Poirot himself would sit, in a dim twilight.
-
-Ursula and I watched him. Presently a bell was heard.
-
-“They arrive,” said Poirot. “Good, all is in readiness.”
-
-The door opened and the party from Fernly filed in. Poirot went forward
-and greeted Mrs. Ackroyd and Flora.
-
-“It is most good of you to come,” he said. “And Major Blunt and Mr.
-Raymond.”
-
-The secretary was debonair as ever.
-
-“What’s the great idea?” he said, laughing. “Some scientific machine?
-Do we have bands round our wrists which register guilty heart-beats?
-There is such an invention, isn’t there?”
-
-“I have read of it, yes,” admitted Poirot. “But me, I am old-fashioned.
-I use the old methods. I work only with the little gray cells. Now let
-us begin—but first I have an announcement to make to you all.”
-
-He took Ursula’s hand and drew her forward.
-
-“This lady is Mrs. Ralph Paton. She was married to Captain Paton last
-March.”
-
-A little shriek burst from Mrs. Ackroyd.
-
-“Ralph! Married! Last March! Oh! but it’s absurd. How could he be?”
-
-She stared at Ursula as though she had never seen her before.
-
-“Married to Bourne?” she said. “Really, M. Poirot, I don’t believe you.”
-
-Ursula flushed and began to speak, but Flora forestalled her.
-
-Going quickly to the other girl’s side, she passed her hand through her
-arm.
-
-“You must not mind our being surprised,” she said. “You see, we had no
-idea of such a thing. You and Ralph have kept your secret very well. I
-am—very glad about it.”
-
-“You are very kind, Miss Ackroyd,” said Ursula in a low voice, “and
-you have every right to be exceedingly angry. Ralph behaved very
-badly—especially to you.”
-
-“You needn’t worry about that,” said Flora, giving her arm a consoling
-little pat. “Ralph was in a corner and took the only way out. I should
-probably have done the same in his place. I do think he might have
-trusted me with the secret, though. I wouldn’t have let him down.”
-
-Poirot rapped gently on a table and cleared his throat significantly.
-
-“The board meeting’s going to begin,” said Flora. “M. Poirot hints that
-we mustn’t talk. But just tell me one thing. Where is Ralph? You must
-know if any one does.”
-
-“But I don’t,” cried Ursula, almost in a wail. “That’s just it, I
-don’t.”
-
-“Isn’t he detained at Liverpool?” asked Raymond. “It said so in the
-paper.”
-
-“He is not at Liverpool,” said Poirot shortly.
-
-“In fact,” I remarked, “no one knows where he is.”
-
-“Excepting Hercule Poirot, eh?” said Raymond.
-
-Poirot replied seriously to the other’s banter.
-
-“Me, I know everything. Remember that.”
-
-Geoffrey Raymond lifted his eyebrows.
-
-“Everything?” He whistled. “Whew! that’s a tall order.”
-
-“Do you mean to say you can really guess where Ralph Paton is hiding?”
-I asked incredulously.
-
-“You call it guessing. I call it knowing, my friend.”
-
-“In Cranchester?” I hazarded.
-
-“No,” replied Poirot gravely, “not in Cranchester.”
-
-He said no more, but at a gesture from him the assembled party took
-their seats. As they did so, the door opened once more and two other
-people came in and sat down near the door. They were Parker and the
-housekeeper.
-
-“The number is complete,” said Poirot. “Every one is here.”
-
-There was a ring of satisfaction in his tone. And with the sound of it
-I saw a ripple of something like uneasiness pass over all those faces
-grouped at the other end of the room. There was a suggestion in all
-this as of a trap—a trap that had closed.
-
-Poirot read from a list in an important manner.
-
-“Mrs. Ackroyd, Miss Flora Ackroyd, Major Blunt, Mr. Geoffrey Raymond,
-Mrs. Ralph Paton, John Parker, Elizabeth Russell.”
-
-He laid the paper down on the table.
-
-“What’s the meaning of all this?” began Raymond.
-
-“The list I have just read,” said Poirot, “is a list of suspected
-persons. Every one of you present had the opportunity to kill Mr.
-Ackroyd——”
-
-With a cry Mrs. Ackroyd sprang up, her throat working.
-
-“I don’t like it,” she wailed. “I don’t like it. I would much prefer to
-go home.”
-
-“You cannot go home, madame,” said Poirot sternly, “until you have
-heard what I have to say.”
-
-He paused a moment, then cleared his throat.
-
-“I will start at the beginning. When Miss Ackroyd asked me to
-investigate the case, I went up to Fernly Park with the good Dr.
-Sheppard. I walked with him along the terrace, where I was shown the
-footprints on the window-sill. From there Inspector Raglan took me
-along the path which leads to the drive. My eye was caught by a little
-summer-house, and I searched it thoroughly. I found two things—a scrap
-of starched cambric and an empty goose quill. The scrap of cambric
-immediately suggested to me a maid’s apron. When Inspector Raglan
-showed me his list of the people in the house, I noticed at once that
-one of the maids—Ursula Bourne, the parlormaid—had no real alibi.
-According to her own story, she was in her bedroom from nine-thirty
-until ten. But supposing that instead she was in the summer-house?
-If so, she must have gone there to meet some one. Now we know from
-Dr. Sheppard that some one from outside _did_ come to the house that
-night—the stranger whom he met just by the gate. At a first glance it
-would seem that our problem was solved, and that the stranger went to
-the summer-house to meet Ursula Bourne. It was fairly certain that he
-_did_ go to the summer-house because of the goose quill. That suggested
-at once to my mind a taker of drugs—and one who had acquired the habit
-on the other side of the Atlantic where sniffing ‘snow’ is more common
-than in this country. The man whom Dr. Sheppard met had an American
-accent, which fitted in with that supposition.
-
-“But I was held up by one point. _The times did not fit._ Ursula
-Bourne could certainly not have gone to the summer-house before
-nine-thirty, whereas the man must have got there by a few minutes
-past nine. I could, of course, assume that he waited there for half
-an hour. The only alternative supposition was that there had been two
-separate meetings in the summer-house that night. _Eh bien_, as soon
-as I went into that alternative I found several significant facts. I
-discovered that Miss Russell, the housekeeper, had visited Dr. Sheppard
-that morning, and had displayed a good deal of interest in cures for
-victims of the drug habit. Taking that in conjunction with the goose
-quill, I assumed that the man in question came to Fernly to meet the
-housekeeper, and not Ursula Bourne. Who, then, did Ursula Bourne come
-to the rendezvous to meet? I was not long in doubt. First I found a
-ring—a wedding ring—with ‘From R.’ and a date inside it. Then I learnt
-that Ralph Paton had been seen coming up the path which led to the
-summer-house at twenty-five minutes past nine, and I also heard of
-a certain conversation which had taken place in the wood near the
-village that very afternoon—a conversation between Ralph Paton and
-some unknown girl. So I had my facts succeeding each other in a neat
-and orderly manner. A secret marriage, an engagement announced on the
-day of the tragedy, the stormy interview in the wood, and the meeting
-arranged for the summer-house that night.
-
-“Incidentally this proved to me one thing, that both Ralph Paton and
-Ursula Bourne (or Paton) had the strongest motives for wishing Mr.
-Ackroyd out of the way. And it also made one other point unexpectedly
-clear. It could not have been Ralph Paton who was with Mr. Ackroyd in
-the study at nine-thirty.
-
-“So we come to another and most interesting aspect of the crime. Who
-was it in the room with Mr. Ackroyd at nine-thirty? Not Ralph Paton,
-who was in the summer-house with his wife. Not Charles Kent, who
-had already left. Who, then? I posed my cleverest—my most audacious
-question: _Was any one with him?_”
-
-Poirot leaned forward and shot the last words triumphantly at us,
-drawing back afterwards with the air of one who has made a decided hit.
-
-Raymond, however, did not seem impressed, and lodged a mild protest.
-
-“I don’t know if you’re trying to make me out a liar, M. Poirot, but
-the matter does not rest on my evidence alone—except perhaps as to the
-exact words used. Remember, Major Blunt also heard Mr. Ackroyd talking
-to some one. He was on the terrace outside, and couldn’t catch the
-words clearly, but he distinctly heard the voices.”
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“I have not forgotten,” he said quietly. “But Major Blunt was under the
-impression that it was _you_ to whom Mr. Ackroyd was speaking.”
-
-For a moment Raymond seemed taken aback. Then he recovered himself.
-
-“Blunt knows now that he was mistaken,” he said.
-
-“Exactly,” agreed the other man.
-
-“Yet there must have been some reason for his thinking so,” mused
-Poirot. “Oh! no,” he held up his hand in protest, “I know the reason
-you will give—but it is not enough. We must seek elsewhere. I will put
-it this way. From the beginning of the case I have been struck by one
-thing—the nature of those words which Mr. Raymond overheard. It has
-been amazing to me that no one has commented on them—has seen anything
-odd about them.”
-
-He paused a minute, and then quoted softly:—
-
-“... _The calls on my purse have been so frequent of late that I fear
-it is impossible for me to accede to your request._ Does nothing strike
-you as odd about that?”
-
-“I don’t think so,” said Raymond. “He has frequently dictated letters
-to me, using almost exactly those same words.”
-
-“Exactly,” cried Poirot. “That is what I seek to arrive at. Would any
-man use such a phrase in _talking_ to another? Impossible that that
-should be part of a real conversation. Now, if he had been dictating a
-letter——”
-
-“You mean he was reading a letter aloud,” said Raymond slowly. “Even
-so, he must have been reading to some one.”
-
-“But why? We have no evidence that there was any one else in the room.
-No other voice but Mr. Ackroyd’s was heard, remember.”
-
-“Surely a man wouldn’t read letters of that type aloud to himself—not
-unless he was—well—going balmy.”
-
-“You have all forgotten one thing,” said Poirot softly: “the stranger
-who called at the house the preceding Wednesday.”
-
-They all stared at him.
-
-“But yes,” said Poirot, nodding encouragingly, “on Wednesday. The
-young man was not of himself important. But the firm he represented
-interested me very much.”
-
-“The Dictaphone Company,” gasped Raymond. “I see it now. A dictaphone.
-That’s what you think?”
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“Mr. Ackroyd had promised to invest in a dictaphone, you remember.
-Me, I had the curiosity to inquire of the company in question. Their
-reply is that Mr. Ackroyd _did_ purchase a dictaphone from their
-representative. Why he concealed the matter from you, I do not know.”
-
-“He must have meant to surprise me with it,” murmured Raymond. “He had
-quite a childish love of surprising people. Meant to keep it up his
-sleeve for a day or so. Probably was playing with it like a new toy.
-Yes, it fits in. You’re quite right—no one would use quite those words
-in casual conversation.”
-
-“It explains, too,” said Poirot, “why Major Blunt thought it was you
-who were in the study. Such scraps as came to him were fragments of
-dictation, and so his subconscious mind deduced that you were with him.
-His conscious mind was occupied with something quite different—the
-white figure he had caught a glimpse of. He fancied it was Miss
-Ackroyd. Really, of course, it was Ursula Bourne’s white apron he saw
-as she was stealing down to the summer-house.”
-
-Raymond had recovered from his first surprise.
-
-“All the same,” he remarked, “this discovery of yours, brilliant though
-it is (I’m quite sure I should never have thought of it), leaves the
-essential position unchanged. Mr. Ackroyd was alive at nine-thirty,
-since he was speaking into the dictaphone. It seems clear that the man
-Charles Kent was really off the premises by then. As to Ralph Paton——?”
-
-He hesitated, glancing at Ursula.
-
-Her color flared up, but she answered steadily enough.
-
-“Ralph and I parted just before a quarter to ten. He never went near
-the house, I am sure of that. He had no intention of doing so. The last
-thing on earth he wanted was to face his stepfather. He would have
-funked it badly.”
-
-“It isn’t that I doubt your story for a moment,” explained Raymond.
-“I’ve always been quite sure Captain Paton was innocent. But one has to
-think of a court of law—and the questions that would be asked. He is in
-a most unfortunate position, but if he were to come forward——”
-
-Poirot interrupted.
-
-“That is your advice, yes? That he should come forward?”
-
-“Certainly. If you know where he is——”
-
-“I perceive that you do not believe that I do know. And yet I have told
-you just now that I know everything. The truth of the telephone call,
-of the footprints on the window-sill, of the hiding-place of Ralph
-Paton——”
-
-“Where is he?” said Blunt sharply.
-
-“Not very far away,” said Poirot, smiling.
-
-“In Cranchester?” I asked.
-
-Poirot turned towards me.
-
-“Always you ask me that. The idea of Cranchester it is with you an
-_idée fixe_. No, he is not in Cranchester. He is—_there_!”
-
-He pointed a dramatic forefinger. Every one’s head turned.
-
-Ralph Paton was standing in the doorway.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
-
- RALPH PATON’S STORY
-
-
-It was a very uncomfortable minute for _me_. I hardly took in what
-happened next, but there were exclamations and cries of surprise! When
-I was sufficiently master of myself to be able to realize what was
-going on, Ralph Paton was standing by his wife, her hand in his, and he
-was smiling across the room at me.
-
-Poirot, too, was smiling, and at the same time shaking an eloquent
-finger at me.
-
-“Have I not told you at least thirty-six times that it is useless to
-conceal things from Hercule Poirot?” he demanded. “That in such a case
-he finds out?”
-
-He turned to the others.
-
-“One day, you remember, we held a little séance about a table—just
-the six of us. I accused the other five persons present of concealing
-something from me. Four of them gave up their secret. Dr. Sheppard did
-not give up his. But all along I have had my suspicions. Dr. Sheppard
-went to the Three Boars that night hoping to find Ralph. He did not
-find him there; but supposing, I said to myself, that he met him in the
-street on his way home? Dr. Sheppard was a friend of Captain Paton’s,
-and he had come straight from the scene of the crime. He must know that
-things looked very black against him. Perhaps he knew more than the
-general public did——”
-
-“I did,” I said ruefully. “I suppose I might as well make a clean
-breast of things now. I went to see Ralph that afternoon. At first he
-refused to take me into his confidence, but later he told me about his
-marriage, and the hole he was in. As soon as the murder was discovered,
-I realized that once the facts were known, suspicion could not fail to
-attach to Ralph—or, if not to him, to the girl he loved. That night I
-put the facts plainly before him. The thought of having possibly to
-give evidence which might incriminate his wife made him resolve at all
-costs to—to——”
-
-I hesitated, and Ralph filled up the gap.
-
-“To do a bunk,” he said graphically. “You see, Ursula left me to go
-back to the house. I thought it possible that she might have attempted
-to have another interview with my stepfather. He had already been very
-rude to her that afternoon. It occurred to me that he might have so
-insulted her—in such an unforgivable manner—that without knowing what
-she was doing——”
-
-He stopped. Ursula released her hand from his, and stepped back.
-
-“You thought that, Ralph! You actually thought that I might have done
-it?”
-
-“Let us get back to the culpable conduct of Dr. Sheppard,” said Poirot
-dryly. “Dr. Sheppard consented to do what he could to help him. He was
-successful in hiding Captain Paton from the police.”
-
-“Where?” asked Raymond. “In his own house?”
-
-“Ah, no, indeed,” said Poirot. “You should ask yourself the question
-that I did. If the good doctor is concealing the young man, what place
-would he choose? It must necessarily be somewhere near at hand. I think
-of Cranchester. A hotel? No. Lodgings? Even more emphatically, no.
-Where, then? Ah! I have it. A nursing home. A home for the mentally
-unfit. I test my theory. I invent a nephew with mental trouble. I
-consult Mademoiselle Sheppard as to suitable homes. She gives me the
-names of two near Cranchester to which her brother has sent patients. I
-make inquiries. Yes, at one of them a patient was brought there by the
-doctor himself early on Saturday morning. That patient, though known
-by another name, I had no difficulty in identifying as Captain Paton.
-After certain necessary formalities, I was allowed to bring him away.
-He arrived at my house in the early hours of yesterday morning.”
-
-I looked at him ruefully.
-
-“Caroline’s Home Office expert,” I murmured. “And to think I never
-guessed!”
-
-“You see now why I drew attention to the reticence of your manuscript,”
-murmured Poirot. “It was strictly truthful as far as it went—but it did
-not go very far, eh, my friend?”
-
-I was too abashed to argue.
-
-“Dr. Sheppard has been very loyal,” said Ralph. “He has stood by me
-through thick and thin. He did what he thought was the best. I see now,
-from what M. Poirot has told me, that it was not really the best. I
-should have come forward and faced the music. You see, in the home, we
-never saw a newspaper. I knew nothing of what was going on.”
-
-“Dr. Sheppard has been a model of discretion,” said Poirot dryly. “But
-me, I discover all the little secrets. It is my business.”
-
-“Now we can have your story of what happened that night,” said Raymond
-impatiently.
-
-“You know it already,” said Ralph. “There’s very little for me to add.
-I left the summer-house about nine-forty-five, and tramped about the
-lanes, trying to make up my mind as to what to do next—what line to
-take. I’m bound to admit that I’ve not the shadow of an alibi, but I
-give you my solemn word that I never went to the study, that I never
-saw my stepfather alive—or dead. Whatever the world thinks, I’d like
-all of you to believe me.”
-
-“No alibi,” murmured Raymond. “That’s bad. I believe you, of course,
-but—it’s a bad business.”
-
-“It makes things very simple, though,” said Poirot, in a cheerful
-voice. “Very simple indeed.”
-
-We all stared at him.
-
-“You see what I mean? No? Just this—to save Captain Paton the real
-criminal must confess.”
-
-He beamed round at us all.
-
-“But yes—I mean what I say. See now, I did not invite Inspector Raglan
-to be present. That was for a reason. I did not want to tell him all
-that I knew—at least I did not want to tell him to-night.”
-
-He leaned forward, and suddenly his voice and his whole personality
-changed. He suddenly became dangerous.
-
-“I who speak to you—I know the murderer of Mr. Ackroyd is in this
-room now. It is to the murderer I speak. _To-morrow the truth goes to
-Inspector Raglan._ You understand?”
-
-There was a tense silence. Into the midst of it came the old Breton
-woman with a telegram on a salver. Poirot tore it open.
-
-Blunt’s voice rose abrupt and resonant.
-
-“The murderer is amongst us, you say? You know—which?”
-
-Poirot had read the message. He crumpled it up in his hand.
-
-“I know—now.”
-
-He tapped the crumpled ball of paper.
-
-“What is that?” said Raymond sharply.
-
-“A wireless message—from a steamer now on her way to the United States.”
-
-There was a dead silence. Poirot rose to his feet bowing.
-
-“Messieurs et Mesdames, this reunion of mine is at an end.
-Remember—_the truth goes to Inspector Raglan in the morning_.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV
-
- THE WHOLE TRUTH
-
-
-A slight gesture from Poirot enjoined me to stay behind the rest. I
-obeyed, going over to the fire and thoughtfully stirring the big logs
-on it with the toe of my boot.
-
-I was puzzled. For the first time I was absolutely at sea as to
-Poirot’s meaning. For a moment I was inclined to think that the scene
-I had just witnessed was a gigantic piece of bombast—that he had been
-what he called “playing the comedy” with a view to making himself
-interesting and important. But, in spite of myself, I was forced to
-believe in an underlying reality. There had been real menace in his
-words—a certain indisputable sincerity. But I still believed him to be
-on entirely the wrong tack.
-
-When the door shut behind the last of the party he came over to the
-fire.
-
-“Well, my friend,” he said quietly, “and what do you think of it all?”
-
-“I don’t know what to think,” I said frankly. “What was the point? Why
-not go straight to Inspector Raglan with the truth instead of giving
-the guilty person this elaborate warning?”
-
-Poirot sat down and drew out his case of tiny Russian cigarettes. He
-smoked for a minute or two in silence. Then:—
-
-“Use your little gray cells,” he said. “There is always a reason behind
-my actions.”
-
-I hesitated for a moment, and then I said slowly:
-
-“The first one that occurs to me is that you yourself do not know who
-the guilty person is, but that you are sure that he is to be found
-amongst the people here to-night. Therefore your words were intended to
-force a confession from the unknown murderer?”
-
-Poirot nodded approvingly.
-
-“A clever idea, but not the truth.”
-
-“I thought, perhaps, that by making him believe you knew, you might
-force him out into the open—not necessarily by confession. He might try
-to silence you as he formerly silenced Mr. Ackroyd—before you could act
-to-morrow morning.”
-
-“A trap with myself as the bait! _Merci, mon ami_, but I am not
-sufficiently heroic for that.”
-
-“Then I fail to understand you. Surely you are running the risk of
-letting the murderer escape by thus putting him on his guard?”
-
-Poirot shook his head.
-
-“He cannot escape,” he said gravely. “There is only one way out—and
-that way does not lead to freedom.”
-
-“You really believe that one of those people here to-night committed
-the murder?” I asked incredulously.
-
-“Yes, my friend.”
-
-“Which one?”
-
-There was a silence for some minutes. Then Poirot tossed the stump of
-his cigarette into the grate and began to speak in a quiet, reflective
-tone.
-
-“I will take you the way that I have traveled myself. Step by step
-you shall accompany me, and see for yourself that all the facts point
-indisputably to one person. Now, to begin with, there were two facts
-and one little discrepancy in time which especially attracted my
-attention. The first fact was the telephone call. If Ralph Paton were
-indeed the murderer, the telephone call became meaningless and absurd.
-Therefore, I said to myself, Ralph Paton is not the murderer.
-
-“I satisfied myself that the call could not have been sent by any one
-in the house, yet I was convinced that it was amongst those present
-on the fatal evening that I had to look for my criminal. Therefore I
-concluded that the telephone call must have been sent by an accomplice.
-I was not quite pleased with that deduction, but I let it stand for the
-minute.
-
-“I next examined the _motive_ for the call. That was difficult. I could
-only get at it by judging its _result_. Which was—that the murder was
-discovered that night instead of—in all probability—the following
-morning. You agree with that?”
-
-“Ye-es,” I admitted. “Yes. As you say, Mr. Ackroyd, having given orders
-that he was not to be disturbed, nobody would have been likely to go to
-the study that night.”
-
-“_Très bien._ The affair marches, does it not? But matters were
-still obscure. What was the advantage of having the crime discovered
-that night in preference to the following morning? The only idea I
-could get hold of was that the murderer, knowing the crime was to be
-discovered at a certain time, could make sure of being present when the
-door was broken in—or at any rate immediately afterwards. And now we
-come to the second fact—the chair pulled out from the wall. Inspector
-Raglan dismissed that as of no importance. I, on the contrary, have
-always regarded it as of supreme importance.
-
-“In your manuscript you have drawn a neat little plan of the study.
-If you had it with you this minute you would see that—the chair being
-drawn out in the position indicated by Parker—it would stand in a
-direct line between the door and the window.”
-
-“The window!” I said quickly.
-
-“You, too, have my first idea. I imagined that the chair was drawn out
-so that something connected with the window should not be seen by any
-one entering through the door. But I soon abandoned that supposition,
-for though the chair was a grandfather with a high back, it obscured
-very little of the window—only the part between the sash and the
-ground. No, _mon ami_—but remember that just in front of the window
-there stood a table with books and magazines upon it. Now that table
-_was_ completely hidden by the drawn-out chair—and immediately I had my
-first shadowy suspicion of the truth.
-
-“Supposing that there had been something on that table not intended
-to be seen? Something placed there by the murderer? As yet I had no
-inkling of what that something might be. But I knew certain very
-interesting facts about it. For instance, it was something that the
-murderer had not been able to take away with him at the time that he
-committed the crime. At the same time it was vital that it should be
-removed as soon as possible after the crime had been discovered. And
-so—the telephone message, and the opportunity for the murderer to be on
-the spot when the body was discovered.
-
-“Now four people were on the scene before the police arrived. Yourself,
-Parker, Major Blunt, and Mr. Raymond. Parker I eliminated at once,
-since at whatever time the crime was discovered, he was the one
-person certain to be on the spot. Also it was he who told me of the
-pulled-out chair. Parker, then, was cleared (of the murder, that is. I
-still thought it possible that he had been blackmailing Mrs. Ferrars).
-Raymond and Blunt, however, remained under suspicion since, if the
-crime had been discovered in the early hours of the morning, it was
-quite possible that they might have arrived on the scene too late to
-prevent the object on the round table being discovered.
-
-“Now what was that object? You heard my arguments to-night in reference
-to the scrap of conversation overheard? As soon as I learned that
-a representative of a dictaphone company had called, the idea of a
-dictaphone took root in my mind. You heard what I said in this room not
-half an hour ago? They all agreed with my theory—but one vital fact
-seems to have escaped them. Granted that a dictaphone was being used by
-Mr. Ackroyd that night—why was no dictaphone found?”
-
-“I never thought of that,” I said.
-
-“We know that a dictaphone was supplied to Mr. Ackroyd. But no
-dictaphone has been found amongst his effects. So, if something was
-taken from that table—why should not that something be the dictaphone?
-But there were certain difficulties in the way. The attention of every
-one was, of course, focused on the murdered man. I think any one could
-have gone to the table unnoticed by the other people in the room. But
-a dictaphone has a certain bulk—it cannot be slipped casually into
-a pocket. There must have been a receptacle of some kind capable of
-holding it.
-
-“You see where I am arriving? The figure of the murderer is taking
-shape. A person who was on the scene straightway, but who might not
-have been if the crime had been discovered the following morning.
-A person carrying a receptacle into which the dictaphone might be
-fitted——”
-
-I interrupted.
-
-“But why remove the dictaphone? What was the point?”
-
-“You are like Mr. Raymond. You take it for granted that what was heard
-at nine-thirty was Mr. Ackroyd’s voice speaking into a dictaphone. But
-consider this useful invention for a little minute. You dictate into
-it, do you not? And at some later time a secretary or a typist turns it
-on, and the voice speaks again.”
-
-“You mean——” I gasped.
-
-Poirot nodded.
-
-“Yes, I mean that. _At nine-thirty Mr. Ackroyd was already dead._ It
-was the dictaphone speaking—not the man.”
-
-“And the murderer switched it on. Then he must have been in the room at
-that minute?”
-
-“Possibly. But we must not exclude the likelihood of some mechanical
-device having been applied—something after the nature of a time lock,
-or even of a simple alarm clock. But in that case we must add two
-qualifications to our imaginary portrait of the murderer. It must be
-some one who knew of Mr. Ackroyd’s purchase of the dictaphone and also
-some one with the necessary mechanical knowledge.
-
-“I had got thus far in my own mind when we came to the footprints on
-the window ledge. Here there were three conclusions open to me. (1)
-They might really have been made by Ralph Paton. He had been at Fernly
-that night, and might have climbed into the study and found his uncle
-dead there. That was one hypothesis. (2) There was the possibility that
-the footmarks might have been made by somebody else who happened to
-have the same kind of studs in his shoes. But the inmates of the house
-had shoes soled with crepe rubber, and I declined to believe in the
-coincidence of some one from outside having the same kind of shoes as
-Ralph Paton wore. Charles Kent, as we know from the barmaid of the Dog
-and Whistle, had on a pair of boots ‘clean dropping off him.’ (3) Those
-prints were made by some one deliberately trying to throw suspicion
-on Ralph Paton. To test this last conclusion, it was necessary to
-ascertain certain facts. One pair of Ralph’s shoes had been obtained
-from the Three Boars by the police. Neither Ralph nor any one else
-could have worn them that evening, since they were downstairs being
-cleaned. According to the police theory, Ralph was wearing another pair
-of the same kind, and I found out that it was true that he had two
-pairs. Now for my theory to be proved correct it was necessary for the
-murderer to have worn Ralph’s shoes that evening—in which case Ralph
-must have been wearing yet a _third_ pair of footwear of some kind.
-I could hardly suppose that he would bring three pairs of shoes all
-alike—the third pair of footwear were more likely to be boots. I got
-your sister to make inquiries on this point—laying some stress on the
-color, in order—I admit it frankly—to obscure the real reason for my
-asking.
-
-“You know the result of her investigations. Ralph Paton _had_ had a
-pair of boots with him. The first question I asked him when he came to
-my house yesterday morning was what he was wearing on his feet on the
-fatal night. He replied at once that he had worn _boots_—he was still
-wearing them, in fact—having nothing else to put on.
-
-“So we get a step further in our description of the murderer—a person
-who had the opportunity to take these shoes of Ralph Paton’s from the
-Three Boars that day.”
-
-He paused, and then said, with a slightly raised voice:—
-
-“There is one further point. The murderer must have been a person who
-had the opportunity to purloin that dagger from the silver table. You
-might argue that any one in the house might have done so, but I will
-recall to you that Miss Ackroyd was very positive that the dagger was
-not there when she examined the silver table.”
-
-He paused again.
-
-“Let us recapitulate—now that all is clear. A person who was at the
-Three Boars earlier that day, a person who knew Ackroyd well enough
-to know that he had purchased a dictaphone, a person who was of a
-mechanical turn of mind, who had the opportunity to take the dagger
-from the silver table before Miss Flora arrived, who had with him a
-receptacle suitable for hiding the dictaphone—such as a black bag, and
-who had the study to himself for a few minutes after the crime was
-discovered while Parker was telephoning for the police. In fact—_Dr.
-Sheppard!_”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI
-
- AND NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH
-
-
-There was a dead silence for a minute and a half.
-
-Then I laughed.
-
-“You’re mad,” I said.
-
-“No,” said Poirot placidly. “I am not mad. It was the little
-discrepancy in time that first drew my attention to you—right at the
-beginning.”
-
-“Discrepancy in time?” I queried, puzzled.
-
-“But yes. You will remember that every one agreed—you yourself
-included—that it took five minutes to walk from the lodge to the
-house—less if you took the short cut to the terrace. But you left the
-house at ten minutes to nine—both by your own statement and that of
-Parker, and yet it was nine o’clock as you passed through the lodge
-gates. It was a chilly night—not an evening a man would be inclined to
-dawdle; why had you taken ten minutes to do a five-minutes’ walk? All
-along I realized that we had only your statement for it that the study
-window was ever fastened. Ackroyd asked you if you had done so—he never
-looked to see. Supposing, then, that the study window was unfastened?
-Would there be time in that ten minutes for you to run round the
-outside of the house, change your shoes, climb in through the window,
-kill Ackroyd, and get to the gate by nine o’clock? I decided against
-that theory since in all probability a man as nervous as Ackroyd was
-that night would hear you climbing in, and then there would have been
-a struggle. But supposing that you killed Ackroyd _before_ you left—as
-you were standing beside his chair? Then you go out of the front door,
-run round to the summer-house, take Ralph Paton’s shoes out of the bag
-you brought up with you that night, slip them on, walk through the
-mud in them, and leave prints on the window ledge, you climb in, lock
-the study door on the inside, run back to the summer-house, change
-back into your own shoes, and race down to the gate. (I went through
-similar actions the other day, when you were with Mrs. Ackroyd—it took
-ten minutes exactly.) Then home—and an alibi—since you had timed the
-dictaphone for half-past nine.”
-
-“My dear Poirot,” I said in a voice that sounded strange and forced to
-my own ears, “you’ve been brooding over this case too long. What on
-earth had I to gain by murdering Ackroyd?”
-
-“Safety. It was you who blackmailed Mrs. Ferrars. Who could have had
-a better knowledge of what killed Mr. Ferrars than the doctor who was
-attending him? When you spoke to me that first day in the garden,
-you mentioned a legacy received about a year ago. I have been unable
-to discover any trace of a legacy. You had to invent some way of
-accounting for Mrs. Ferrars’s twenty thousand pounds. It has not done
-you much good. You lost most of it in speculation—then you put the
-screw on too hard, and Mrs. Ferrars took a way out that you had not
-expected. If Ackroyd had learnt the truth he would have had no mercy on
-you—you were ruined for ever.”
-
-“And the telephone call?” I asked, trying to rally. “You have a
-plausible explanation of that also, I suppose?”
-
-“I will confess to you that it was my greatest stumbling block when
-I found that a call had actually been put through to you from King’s
-Abbot station. I at first believed that you had simply invented the
-story. It was a very clever touch, that. You must have some excuse for
-arriving at Fernly, finding the body, and so getting the chance to
-remove the dictaphone on which your alibi depended. I had a very vague
-notion of how it was worked when I came to see your sister that first
-day and inquired as to what patients you had seen on Friday morning. I
-had no thought of Miss Russell in my mind at that time. Her visit was a
-lucky coincidence, since it distracted your mind from the real object
-of my questions. I found what I was looking for. Among your patients
-that morning was the steward of an American liner. Who more suitable
-than he to be leaving for Liverpool by the train that evening? And
-afterwards he would be on the high seas, well out of the way. I noted
-that the _Orion_ sailed on Saturday, and having obtained the name of
-the steward I sent him a wireless message asking a certain question.
-This is his reply you saw me receive just now.”
-
-He held out the message to me. It ran as follows—
-
-“Quite correct. Dr. Sheppard asked me to leave a note at a patient’s
-house. I was to ring him up from the station with the reply. Reply was
-‘No answer.’”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“It was a clever idea,” said Poirot. “The call was genuine. Your sister
-saw you take it. But there was only one man’s word as to what was
-actually said—your own!”
-
-I yawned.
-
-“All this,” I said, “is very interesting—but hardly in the sphere of
-practical politics.”
-
-“You think not? Remember what I said—the truth goes to Inspector Raglan
-in the morning. But, for the sake of your good sister, I am willing to
-give you the chance of another way out. There might be, for instance,
-an overdose of a sleeping draught. You comprehend me? But Captain Ralph
-Paton must be cleared—_ça va sans dire_. I should suggest that you
-finish that very interesting manuscript of yours—but abandoning your
-former reticence.”
-
-“You seem to be very prolific of suggestions,” I remarked. “Are you
-sure you’ve quite finished.”
-
-“Now that you remind me of the fact, it is true that there is one thing
-more. It would be most unwise on your part to attempt to silence me as
-you silenced M. Ackroyd. That kind of business does not succeed against
-Hercule Poirot, you understand.”
-
-“My dear Poirot,” I said, smiling a little, “whatever else I may be, I
-am not a fool.”
-
-I rose to my feet.
-
-“Well, well,” I said, with a slight yawn, “I must be off home. Thank
-you for a most interesting and instructive evening.”
-
-Poirot also rose and bowed with his accustomed politeness as I passed
-out of the room.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVII
-
- APOLOGIA
-
-
-Five a.m. I am very tired—but I have finished my task. My arm aches
-from writing.
-
-A strange end to my manuscript. I meant it to be published some day as
-the history of one of Poirot’s failures! Odd, how things pan out.
-
-All along I’ve had a premonition of disaster, from the moment I saw
-Ralph Paton and Mrs. Ferrars with their heads together. I thought then
-that she was confiding in him; as it happened I was quite wrong there,
-but the idea persisted even after I went into the study with Ackroyd
-that night, until he told me the truth.
-
-Poor old Ackroyd. I’m always glad that I gave him a chance. I urged him
-to read that letter before it was too late. Or let me be honest—didn’t
-I subconsciously realize that with a pig-headed chap like him, it was
-my best chance of getting him _not_ to read it? His nervousness that
-night was interesting psychologically. He knew danger was close at
-hand. And yet he never suspected _me_.
-
-The dagger was an afterthought. I’d brought up a very handy little
-weapon of my own, but when I saw the dagger lying in the silver table,
-it occurred to me at once how much better it would be to use a weapon
-that couldn’t be traced to me.
-
-I suppose I must have meant to murder him all along. As soon as I heard
-of Mrs. Ferrars’s death, I felt convinced that she would have told him
-everything before she died. When I met him and he seemed so agitated,
-I thought that perhaps he knew the truth, but that he couldn’t bring
-himself to believe it, and was going to give me the chance of refuting
-it.
-
-So I went home and took my precautions. If the trouble were after all
-only something to do with Ralph—well, no harm would have been done. The
-dictaphone he had given me two days before to adjust. Something had
-gone a little wrong with it, and I persuaded him to let me have a go at
-it, instead of sending it back. I did what I wanted to it, and took it
-up with me in my bag that evening.
-
-I am rather pleased with myself as a writer. What could be neater, for
-instance, than the following:—
-
-“_The letters were brought in at twenty minutes to nine. It was just
-on ten minutes to nine when I left him, the letter still unread. I
-hesitated with my hand on the door handle, looking back and wondering
-if there was anything I had left undone._”
-
-All true, you see. But suppose I had put a row of stars after the first
-sentence! Would somebody then have wondered what exactly happened in
-that blank ten minutes?
-
-When I looked round the room from the door, I was quite satisfied.
-Nothing had been left undone. The dictaphone was on the table by the
-window, timed to go off at nine-thirty (the mechanism of that little
-device was rather clever—based on the principle of an alarm clock), and
-the arm-chair was pulled out so as to hide it from the door.
-
-I must admit that it gave me rather a shock to run into Parker just
-outside the door. I have faithfully recorded that fact.
-
-Then later, when the body was discovered, and I had sent Parker to
-telephone for the police, what a judicious use of words: “_I did
-what little had to be done!_” It was quite little—just to shove the
-dictaphone into my bag and push back the chair against the wall in
-its proper place. I never dreamed that Parker would have noticed
-that chair. Logically, he ought to have been so agog over the body
-as to be blind to everything else. But I hadn’t reckoned with the
-trained-servant complex.
-
-I wish I could have known beforehand that Flora was going to say she’d
-seen her uncle alive at a quarter to ten. That puzzled me more than
-I can say. In fact, all through the case there have been things that
-puzzled me hopelessly. Every one seems to have taken a hand.
-
-My greatest fear all through has been Caroline. I have fancied she
-might guess. Curious the way she spoke that day of my “strain of
-weakness.”
-
-Well, she will never know the truth. There is, as Poirot said, one way
-out....
-
-I can trust him. He and Inspector Raglan will manage it between them. I
-should not like Caroline to know. She is fond of me, and then, too, she
-is proud.... My death will be a grief to her, but grief passes....
-
-When I have finished writing, I shall enclose this whole manuscript in
-an envelope and address it to Poirot.
-
-And then—what shall it be? Veronal? There would be a kind of poetic
-justice. Not that I take any responsibility for Mrs. Ferrars’s death.
-It was the direct consequence of her own actions. I feel no pity for
-her.
-
-I have no pity for myself either.
-
-So let it be veronal.
-
-But I wish Hercule Poirot had never retired from work and come here to
-grow vegetable marrows.
-
-
- THE END
-
-
-
-
- +==================================================================+
- ‖ “_The Books You Like to Read ‖
- ‖ at the Price You Like to Pay_” ‖
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- +==================================================================+
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- THE NOVELS OF VIDA HURST
-=======================================================================
- May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset & Dunlap’s list.
-=======================================================================
-
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-of the Modern Girl.” All of her stories have been widely serialized in
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- marries him.
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- RAFAEL SABATINI’S NOVELS
-=======================================================================
- May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset & Dunlap’s list.
-=======================================================================
-
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-is hardly an adopted language for him, as he learned it from his
-mother, an English woman.
-
-Today Rafael Sabatini is regarded as “The Alexandre Dumas of Modern
-Fiction.”
-
- THE LION’S SKIN
- THE SHAME OF MOTLEY
- THE TRAMPLING OF THE LILIES
- THE GATES OF DOOM
- THE STROLLING SAINT
- THE BANNER OF THE BULL
- THE CAROLINIAN
- SAINT MARTIN’S SUMMER
- MISTRESS WILDING
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- BARDELYS THE MAGNIFICENT
- THE SNARE
- CAPTAIN BLOOD
- THE SEA-HAWK
- SCARAMOUCHE
-
-=======================================================================
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-=======================================================================
-
-
-=======================================================================
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-=======================================================================
-May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset and Dunlap’s list.
-=======================================================================
-
- UNDER THE TONTO RIM
- TAPPAN’S BURRO
- THE VANISHING AMERICAN
- THE THUNDERING HERD
- THE CALL OF THE CANYON
- WANDERER OF THE WASTELAND
- TO THE LAST MAN
- THE MYSTERIOUS RIDER
- THE MAN OF THE FOREST
- THE DESERT OF WHEAT
- THE U. P. TRAIL
- WILDFIRE
- THE BORDER LEGION
- THE RAINBOW TRAIL
- THE HERITAGE OF THE DESERT
- RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE
- THE LIGHT OF WESTERN STARS
- THE LAST OF THE PLAINSMEN
- THE LONE STAR RANGER
- DESERT GOLD
- BETTY ZANE
- THE DAY OF THE BEAST
-
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-Foreword and conclusion by Zane Grey.
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- THE SHORT STOP
- THE RED-HEADED OUTFIELD AND OTHER BASEBALL STORIES
-
-=======================================================================
- GROSSET & DUNLAP, _Publishers,_ NEW YORK
-=======================================================================
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes:
-
- - Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
- - Blank pages have been removed.
- - Obvious typographical errors have been silently corrected.
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The murder of Roger Ackroyd, by Agatha Christie</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
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-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The murder of Roger Ackroyd</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Agatha Christie</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: October 2, 2022 [eBook #69087]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Emmanuel Ackerman, Robert Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MURDER OF ROGER ACKROYD ***</div>
- <div class="figcenter illowp66 x-ebookmaker-drop">
- <img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" id="cover" />
- <div class="covernote">The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="titlepage bold bbox">
- <div class="bbox2">
- <h1>THE MURDER OF<br />
- ROGER ACKROYD</h1>
-
- <div class="mt5">BY<br />
- <span class="xxlarge">AGATHA CHRISTIE</span></div>
-
- <div class="mt5"><span class="small">AUTHOR OF</span><br />
- THE SECRET OF CHIMNEYS,<br />
- THE MURDER ON THE LINKS, <span class="smcap">Etc.</span></div>
-
- <div class="center mt15">
- <img style="width: 15%;" src="images/signet.png" alt="" />
- </div>
-
- <div class="mt15 mb3">
- <span class="gesperrt2 xlarge">GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP</span><br />
- <span class="gesperrt1 large">PUBLISHERS&#160; &#160; &#160; NEW YORK</span>
- </div>
- </div></div>
-
- <div class="chapter center">
- <span class="smcap">Copyright, 1926,<br />
- By DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY, Inc.</span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="chapter center smcap">
- To Punkie,<br />
- who likes an orthodox detective<br />
- story, murder, inquest, and suspicion<br />
- falling on every one in turn!
- </div>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii"></span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
- </div>
-
- <table>
- <thead>
- <tr>
- <th class="chapnum"><div>CHAPTER</div></th>
- <th>&#160;</th>
- <th class="tdr"><div>PAGE</div></th>
- </tr>
- </thead>
- <tbody>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_I">I</a></div></td>
- <td>DR. SHEPPARD AT THE BREAKFAST TABLE</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>1</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_II">II</a></div></td>
- <td>WHO’S WHO IN KING’S ABBOT</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>7</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_III">III</a></div></td>
- <td>THE MAN WHO GREW VEGETABLE MARROWS</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>17</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">IV</a></div></td>
- <td>DINNER AT FERNLY</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>31</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_V">V</a></div></td>
- <td>MURDER</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>49</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">VI</a></div></td>
- <td>THE TUNISIAN DAGGER</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>65</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">VII</a></div></td>
- <td>I LEARN MY NEIGHBOR’S PROFESSION</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>75</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">VIII</a></div></td>
- <td>INSPECTOR RAGLAN IS CONFIDENT</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>92</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">IX</a></div></td>
- <td>THE GOLDFISH POND</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>106</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_X">X</a></div></td>
- <td>THE PARLORMAID</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>118</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">XI</a></div></td>
- <td>POIROT PAYS A CALL</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>136</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">XII</a></div></td>
- <td>ROUND THE TABLE</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>145</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">XIII</a></div></td>
- <td>THE GOOSE QUILL</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>156</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">XIV</a></div></td>
- <td>MRS. ACKROYD</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>165</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">XV</a></div></td>
- <td>GEOFFREY RAYMOND</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>178</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">XVI</a></div></td>
- <td>AN EVENING AT MAH JONG</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>190</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">XVII</a></div></td>
- <td>PARKER</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>202</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">XVIII</a></div></td>
- <td>CHARLES KENT</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>218</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">XIX</a></div></td>
- <td>FLORA ACKROYD</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>226</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">XX</a></div></td>
- <td>MISS RUSSELL</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>238</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">XXI</a></div></td>
- <td>THE PARAGRAPH IN THE PAPER</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>251</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">XXII</a></div></td>
- <td>URSULA’S STORY</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>260</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">XXIII</a></div></td>
- <td>POIROT’S LITTLE REUNION</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>269</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">XXIV</a></div></td>
- <td>RALPH PATON’S STORY</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>284</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">XXV</a></div></td>
- <td>THE WHOLE TRUTH</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>289</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">XXVI</a></div></td>
- <td>AND NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>298</div></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="chapnum"><div><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">XXVII</a></div></td>
- <td>APOLOGIA</td>
- <td class="tdr"><div>303</div></td>
- </tr>
- </tbody>
- </table>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter mb10">
- <div class="center xlarge bold">THE MURDER OF<br />ROGER ACKROYD</div>
- </div>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">1</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">DR. SHEPPARD AT THE BREAKFAST TABLE</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Mrs. Ferrars</span> died on the night of the 16th–17th September—a Thursday. I
- was sent for at eight o’clock on the morning of Friday the 17th. There
- was nothing to be done. She had been dead some hours.</p>
-
- <p>It was just a few minutes after nine when I reached home once more. I
- opened the front door with my latch-key, and purposely delayed a few
- moments in the hall, hanging up my hat and the light overcoat that
- I had deemed a wise precaution against the chill of an early autumn
- morning. To tell the truth, I was considerably upset and worried. I am
- not going to pretend that at that moment I foresaw the events of the
- next few weeks. I emphatically did not do so. But my instinct told me
- that there were stirring times ahead.</p>
-
- <p>From the dining-room on my left there came the rattle of tea-cups and
- the short, dry cough of my sister Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“Is that you, James?” she called.</p>
-
- <p>An unnecessary question, since who else could it be? To tell the
- truth, it was precisely my sister Caroline who was the cause of my few
- minutes’ delay. The motto of the mongoose family, so Mr. Kipling tells
- us, is: “Go and find out.” If Caroline ever adopts a crest, I should
- certainly suggest a mongoose rampant. One<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">2</span> might omit the first part
- of the motto. Caroline can do any amount of finding out by sitting
- placidly at home. I don’t know how she manages it, but there it is. I
- suspect that the servants and the tradesmen constitute her Intelligence
- Corps. When she goes out, it is not to gather in information, but to
- spread it. At that, too, she is amazingly expert.</p>
-
- <p>It was really this last named trait of hers which was causing me these
- pangs of indecision. Whatever I told Caroline now concerning the demise
- of Mrs. Ferrars would be common knowledge all over the village within
- the space of an hour and a half. As a professional man, I naturally
- aim at discretion. Therefore I have got into the habit of continually
- withholding all information possible from my sister. She usually finds
- out just the same, but I have the moral satisfaction of knowing that I
- am in no way to blame.</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ferrars’ husband died just over a year ago, and Caroline has
- constantly asserted, without the least foundation for the assertion,
- that his wife poisoned him.</p>
-
- <p>She scorns my invariable rejoinder that Mr. Ferrars died of acute
- gastritis, helped on by habitual over-indulgence in alcoholic
- beverages. The symptoms of gastritis and arsenical poisoning are not,
- I agree, unlike, but Caroline bases her accusation on quite different
- lines.</p>
-
- <p>“You’ve only got to look at her,” I have heard her say.</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ferrars, though not in her first youth, was a very attractive
- woman, and her clothes, though simple, always seemed to fit her very
- well, but all the same, lots of women buy their clothes in Paris and
- have not, on that account, necessarily poisoned their husbands.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">3</span></p>
-
- <p>As I stood hesitating in the hall, with all this passing through my
- mind, Caroline’s voice came again, with a sharper note in it.</p>
-
- <p>“What on earth are you doing out there, James? Why don’t you come and
- get your breakfast?”</p>
-
- <p>“Just coming, my dear,” I said hastily. “I’ve been hanging up my
- overcoat.”</p>
-
- <p>“You could have hung up half a dozen overcoats in this time.”</p>
-
- <p>She was quite right. I could have.</p>
-
- <p>I walked into the dining-room, gave Caroline the accustomed peck on the
- cheek, and sat down to eggs and bacon. The bacon was rather cold.</p>
-
- <p>“You’ve had an early call,” remarked Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said. “King’s Paddock. Mrs. Ferrars.”</p>
-
- <p>“I know,” said my sister.</p>
-
- <p>“How did you know?”</p>
-
- <p>“Annie told me.”</p>
-
- <p>Annie is the house parlormaid. A nice girl, but an inveterate talker.</p>
-
- <p>There was a pause. I continued to eat eggs and bacon. My sister’s nose,
- which is long and thin, quivered a little at the tip, as it always does
- when she is interested or excited over anything.</p>
-
- <p>“Well?” she demanded.</p>
-
- <p>“A bad business. Nothing to be done. Must have died in her sleep.”</p>
-
- <p>“I know,” said my sister again.</p>
-
- <p>This time I was annoyed.</p>
-
- <p>“You can’t know,” I snapped. “I didn’t know myself<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">4</span> until I got there,
- and I haven’t mentioned it to a soul yet. If that girl Annie knows, she
- must be a clairvoyant.”</p>
-
- <p>“It wasn’t Annie who told me. It was the milkman. He had it from the
- Ferrars’ cook.”</p>
-
- <p>As I say, there is no need for Caroline to go out to get information.
- She sits at home, and it comes to her.</p>
-
- <p>My sister continued:</p>
-
- <p>“What did she die of? Heart failure?”</p>
-
- <p>“Didn’t the milkman tell you that?” I inquired sarcastically.</p>
-
- <p>Sarcasm is wasted on Caroline. She takes it seriously and answers
- accordingly.</p>
-
- <p>“He didn’t know,” she explained.</p>
-
- <p>After all, Caroline was bound to hear sooner or later. She might as
- well hear from me.</p>
-
- <p>“She died of an overdose of veronal. She’s been taking it lately for
- sleeplessness. Must have taken too much.”</p>
-
- <p>“Nonsense,” said Caroline immediately. “She took it on purpose. Don’t
- tell me!”</p>
-
- <p>It is odd how, when you have a secret belief of your own which you do
- not wish to acknowledge, the voicing of it by some one else will rouse
- you to a fury of denial. I burst immediately into indignant speech.</p>
-
- <p>“There you go again,” I said. “Rushing along without rhyme or reason.
- Why on earth should Mrs. Ferrars wish to commit suicide? A widow,
- fairly young still, very well off, good health, and nothing to do but
- enjoy life. It’s absurd.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">5</span></p>
-
- <p>“Not at all. Even you must have noticed how different she has been
- looking lately. It’s been coming on for the last six months. She’s
- looked positively hag-ridden. And you have just admitted that she
- hasn’t been able to sleep.”</p>
-
- <p>“What is your diagnosis?” I demanded coldly. “An unfortunate love
- affair, I suppose?”</p>
-
- <p>My sister shook her head.</p>
-
- <p>“<em>Remorse</em>,” she said, with great gusto.</p>
-
- <p>“Remorse?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. You never would believe me when I told you she poisoned her
- husband. I’m more than ever convinced of it now.”</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t think you’re very logical,” I objected. “Surely if a woman
- committed a crime like murder, she’d be sufficiently cold-blooded to
- enjoy the fruits of it without any weak-minded sentimentality such as
- repentance.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline shook her head.</p>
-
- <p>“There probably are women like that—but Mrs. Ferrars wasn’t one of
- them. She was a mass of nerves. An overmastering impulse drove her on
- to get rid of her husband because she was the sort of person who simply
- can’t endure suffering of any kind, and there’s no doubt that the wife
- of a man like Ashley Ferrars must have had to suffer a good deal——”</p>
-
- <p>I nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“And ever since she’s been haunted by what she did. I can’t help
- feeling sorry for her.”</p>
-
- <p>I don’t think Caroline ever felt sorry for Mrs. Ferrars whilst she was
- alive. Now that she has gone where (presumably)<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">6</span> Paris frocks can no
- longer be worn, Caroline is prepared to indulge in the softer emotions
- of pity and comprehension.</p>
-
- <p>I told her firmly that her whole idea was nonsense. I was all the more
- firm because I secretly agreed with some part, at least, of what she
- had said. But it is all wrong that Caroline should arrive at the truth
- simply by a kind of inspired guesswork. I wasn’t going to encourage
- that sort of thing. She will go round the village airing her views, and
- every one will think that she is doing so on medical data supplied by
- me. Life is very trying.</p>
-
- <p>“Nonsense,” said Caroline, in reply to my strictures. “You’ll see. Ten
- to one she’s left a letter confessing everything.”</p>
-
- <p>“She didn’t leave a letter of any kind,” I said sharply, and not seeing
- where the admission was going to land me.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh!” said Caroline. “So you <em>did</em> inquire about that, did you? I
- believe, James, that in your heart of hearts, you think very much as I
- do. You’re a precious old humbug.”</p>
-
- <p>“One always has to take the possibility of suicide into consideration,”
- I said repressively.</p>
-
- <p>“Will there be an inquest?”</p>
-
- <p>“There may be. It all depends. If I am able to declare myself
- absolutely satisfied that the overdose was taken accidentally, an
- inquest might be dispensed with.”</p>
-
- <p>“And are you absolutely satisfied?” asked my sister shrewdly.</p>
-
- <p>I did not answer, but got up from table.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">WHO’S WHO IN KING’S ABBOT</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Before</span> I proceed further with what I said to Caroline and what Caroline
- said to me, it might be as well to give some idea of what I should
- describe as our local geography. Our village, King’s Abbot, is, I
- imagine, very much like any other village. Our big town is Cranchester,
- nine miles away. We have a large railway station, a small post office,
- and two rival “General Stores.” Able-bodied men are apt to leave the
- place early in life, but we are rich in unmarried ladies and retired
- military officers. Our hobbies and recreations can be summed up in the
- one word, “gossip.”</p>
-
- <p>There are only two houses of any importance in King’s Abbot. One
- is King’s Paddock, left to Mrs. Ferrars by her late husband. The
- other, Fernly Park, is owned by Roger Ackroyd. Ackroyd has always
- interested me by being a man more impossibly like a country squire
- than any country squire could really be. He reminds one of the
- red-faced sportsmen who always appeared early in the first act of an
- old-fashioned musical comedy, the setting being the village green. They
- usually sang a song about going up to London. Nowadays we have revues,
- and the country squire has died out of musical fashion.</p>
-
- <p>Of course, Ackroyd is not really a country squire. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span> is an immensely
- successful manufacturer of (I think) wagon wheels. He is a man of
- nearly fifty years of age, rubicund of face and genial of manner.
- He is hand and glove with the vicar, subscribes liberally to parish
- funds (though rumor has it that he is extremely mean in personal
- expenditure), encourages cricket matches, Lads’ Clubs, and Disabled
- Soldiers’ Institutes. He is, in fact, the life and soul of our peaceful
- village of King’s Abbot.</p>
-
- <p>Now when Roger Ackroyd was a lad of twenty-one, he fell in love with,
- and married, a beautiful woman some five or six years his senior. Her
- name was Paton, and she was a widow with one child. The history of the
- marriage was short and painful. To put it bluntly, Mrs. Ackroyd was
- a dipsomaniac. She succeeded in drinking herself into her grave four
- years after her marriage.</p>
-
- <p>In the years that followed, Ackroyd showed no disposition to make a
- second matrimonial adventure. His wife’s child by her first marriage
- was only seven years old when his mother died. He is now twenty-five.
- Ackroyd has always regarded him as his own son, and has brought him up
- accordingly, but he has been a wild lad and a continual source of worry
- and trouble to his stepfather. Nevertheless we are all very fond of
- Ralph Paton in King’s Abbot. He is such a good-looking youngster for
- one thing.</p>
-
- <p>As I said before, we are ready enough to gossip in our village.
- Everybody noticed from the first that Ackroyd and Mrs. Ferrars got on
- very well together. After her husband’s death, the intimacy became
- more marked. They were always seen about together, and it was freely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span>
- conjectured that at the end of her period of mourning, Mrs. Ferrars
- would become Mrs. Roger Ackroyd. It was felt, indeed, that there was a
- certain fitness in the thing. Roger Ackroyd’s wife had admittedly died
- of drink. Ashley Ferrars had been a drunkard for many years before his
- death. It was only fitting that these two victims of alcoholic excess
- should make up to each other for all that they had previously endured
- at the hands of their former spouses.</p>
-
- <p>The Ferrars only came to live here just over a year ago, but a halo of
- gossip has surrounded Ackroyd for many years past. All the time that
- Ralph Paton was growing up to manhood, a series of lady housekeepers
- presided over Ackroyd’s establishment, and each in turn was regarded
- with lively suspicion by Caroline and her cronies. It is not too
- much to say that for at least fifteen years the whole village has
- confidently expected Ackroyd to marry one of his housekeepers. The last
- of them, a redoubtable lady called Miss Russell, has reigned undisputed
- for five years, twice as long as any of her predecessors. It is felt
- that but for the advent of Mrs. Ferrars, Ackroyd could hardly have
- escaped. That—and one other factor—the unexpected arrival of a widowed
- sister-in-law with her daughter from Canada. Mrs. Cecil Ackroyd, widow
- of Ackroyd’s ne’er-do-well younger brother, has taken up her residence
- at Fernly Park, and has succeeded, according to Caroline, in putting
- Miss Russell in her proper place.</p>
-
- <p>I don’t know exactly what a “proper place” constitutes—it sounds chilly
- and unpleasant—but I know that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">10</span> Miss Russell goes about with pinched
- lips, and what I can only describe as an acid smile, and that she
- professes the utmost sympathy for “poor Mrs. Ackroyd—dependent on the
- charity of her husband’s brother. The bread of charity is so bitter,
- is it not? <em>I</em> should be quite miserable if I did not work for my
- living.”</p>
-
- <p>I don’t know what Mrs. Cecil Ackroyd thought of the Ferrars affair when
- it came on the tapis. It was clearly to her advantage that Ackroyd
- should remain unmarried. She was always very charming—not to say
- gushing—to Mrs. Ferrars when they met. Caroline says that proves less
- than nothing.</p>
-
- <p>Such have been our preoccupations in King’s Abbot for the last few
- years. We have discussed Ackroyd and his affairs from every standpoint.
- Mrs. Ferrars has fitted into her place in the scheme.</p>
-
- <p>Now there has been a rearrangement of the kaleidoscope. From a mild
- discussion of probable wedding presents, we have been jerked into the
- midst of tragedy.</p>
-
- <p>Revolving these and sundry other matters in my mind, I went
- mechanically on my round. I had no cases of special interest to attend,
- which was, perhaps, as well, for my thoughts returned again and again
- to the mystery of Mrs. Ferrars’s death. Had she taken her own life?
- Surely, if she had done so, she would have left some word behind to
- say what she contemplated doing? Women, in my experience, if they once
- reach the determination to commit suicide, usually wish to reveal the
- state of mind that led to the fatal action. They covet the limelight.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span></p>
-
- <p>When had I last seen her? Not for over a week. Her manner then had been
- normal enough considering—well—considering everything.</p>
-
- <p>Then I suddenly remembered that I had seen her, though not to speak
- to, only yesterday. She had been walking with Ralph Paton, and I had
- been surprised because I had had no idea that he was likely to be in
- King’s Abbot. I thought, indeed, that he had quarreled finally with
- his stepfather. Nothing had been seen of him down here for nearly six
- months. They had been walking along, side by side, their heads close
- together, and she had been talking very earnestly.</p>
-
- <p>I think I can safely say that it was at this moment that a foreboding
- of the future first swept over me. Nothing tangible as yet—but a
- vague premonition of the way things were setting. That earnest
- <i lang="fr">tête-à-tête</i> between Ralph Paton and Mrs. Ferrars the day before
- struck me disagreeably.</p>
-
- <p>I was still thinking of it when I came face to face with Roger Ackroyd.</p>
-
- <p>“Sheppard!” he exclaimed. “Just the man I wanted to get hold of. This
- is a terrible business.”</p>
-
- <p>“You’ve heard then?”</p>
-
- <p>He nodded. He had felt the blow keenly, I could see. His big red cheeks
- seemed to have fallen in, and he looked a positive wreck of his usual
- jolly, healthy self.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s worse than you know,” he said quietly. “Look here, Sheppard, I’ve
- got to talk to you. Can you come back with me now?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span></p>
-
- <p>“Hardly. I’ve got three patients to see still, and I must be back by
- twelve to see my surgery patients.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then this afternoon—no, better still, dine to-night. At 7.30? Will
- that suit you?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes—I can manage that all right. What’s wrong? Is it Ralph?”</p>
-
- <p>I hardly knew why I said that—except, perhaps, that it had so often
- been Ralph.</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd stared blankly at me as though he hardly understood. I began to
- realize that there must be something very wrong indeed somewhere. I had
- never seen Ackroyd so upset before.</p>
-
- <p>“Ralph?” he said vaguely. “Oh! no, it’s not Ralph. Ralph’s in
- London——Damn! Here’s old Miss Ganett coming. I don’t want to have to
- talk to her about this ghastly business. See you to-night, Sheppard.
- Seven-thirty.”</p>
-
- <p>I nodded, and he hurried away, leaving me wondering. Ralph in London?
- But he had certainly been in King’s Abbot the preceding afternoon. He
- must have gone back to town last night or early this morning, and yet
- Ackroyd’s manner had conveyed quite a different impression. He had
- spoken as though Ralph had not been near the place for months.</p>
-
- <p>I had no time to puzzle the matter out further. Miss Ganett was upon
- me, thirsting for information. Miss Ganett has all the characteristics
- of my sister Caroline, but she lacks that unerring aim in jumping to
- conclusions which lends a touch of greatness to Caroline’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span> maneuvers.
- Miss Ganett was breathless and interrogatory.</p>
-
- <p>Wasn’t it sad about poor dear Mrs. Ferrars? A lot of people were saying
- she had been a confirmed drug-taker for years. So wicked the way
- people went about saying things. And yet, the worst of it was, there
- was usually a grain of truth somewhere in these wild statements. No
- smoke without fire! They were saying too that Mr. Ackroyd had found out
- about it, and had broken off the engagement—because there <em>was</em>
- an engagement. She, Miss Ganett, had proof positive of that. Of course
- <em>I</em> must know all about it—doctors always did—but they never tell?</p>
-
- <p>And all this with a sharp beady eye on me to see how I reacted to
- these suggestions. Fortunately long association with Caroline has led
- me to preserve an impassive countenance, and to be ready with small
- non-committal remarks.</p>
-
- <p>On this occasion I congratulated Miss Ganett on not joining in
- ill-natured gossip. Rather a neat counterattack, I thought. It left
- her in difficulties, and before she could pull herself together, I had
- passed on.</p>
-
- <p>I went home thoughtful, to find several patients waiting for me in the
- surgery.</p>
-
- <p>I had dismissed the last of them, as I thought, and was just
- contemplating a few minutes in the garden before lunch when I perceived
- one more patient waiting for me. She rose and came towards me as I
- stood somewhat surprised.</p>
-
- <p>I don’t know why I should have been, except that there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span> is a suggestion
- of cast iron about Miss Russell, a something that is above the ills of
- the flesh.</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd’s housekeeper is a tall woman, handsome but forbidding in
- appearance. She has a stern eye, and lips that shut tightly, and I feel
- that if I were an under housemaid or a kitchenmaid I should run for my
- life whenever I heard her coming.</p>
-
- <p>“Good morning, Dr. Sheppard,” said Miss Russell. “I should be much
- obliged if you would take a look at my knee.”</p>
-
- <p>I took a look, but, truth to tell, I was very little wiser when I had
- done so. Miss Russell’s account of vague pains was so unconvincing that
- with a woman of less integrity of character I should have suspected a
- trumped-up tale. It did cross my mind for one moment that Miss Russell
- might have deliberately invented this affection of the knee in order
- to pump me on the subject of Mrs. Ferrars’s death, but I soon saw that
- there, at least, I had misjudged her. She made a brief reference to the
- tragedy, nothing more. Yet she certainly seemed disposed to linger and
- chat.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, thank you very much for this bottle of liniment, doctor,” she
- said at last. “Not that I believe it will do the least good.”</p>
-
- <p>I didn’t think it would either, but I protested in duty bound. After
- all, it couldn’t do any harm, and one must stick up for the tools of
- one’s trade.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t believe in all these drugs,” said Miss Russell, her eyes
- sweeping over my array of bottles disparagingly.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span> “Drugs do a lot of
- harm. Look at the cocaine habit.”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, as far as that goes——”</p>
-
- <p>“It’s very prevalent in high society.”</p>
-
- <p>I’m sure Miss Russell knows far more about high society than I do. I
- didn’t attempt to argue with her.</p>
-
- <p>“Just tell me this, doctor,” said Miss Russell. “Suppose you are really
- a slave of the drug habit. Is there any cure?”</p>
-
- <p>One cannot answer a question like that offhand. I gave her a short
- lecture on the subject, and she listened with close attention. I still
- suspected her of seeking information about Mrs. Ferrars.</p>
-
- <p>“Now, veronal, for instance——” I proceeded.</p>
-
- <p>But, strangely enough, she didn’t seem interested in veronal. Instead
- she changed the subject, and asked me if it was true that there were
- certain poisons so rare as to baffle detection.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” I said. “You’ve been reading detective stories.”</p>
-
- <p>She admitted that she had.</p>
-
- <p>“The essence of a detective story,” I said, “is to have a rare
- poison—if possible something from South America, that nobody has ever
- heard of—something that one obscure tribe of savages use to poison
- their arrows with. Death is instantaneous, and Western science is
- powerless to detect it. That is the kind of thing you mean?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. Is there really such a thing?”</p>
-
- <p>I shook my head regretfully.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m afraid there isn’t. There’s <em>curare</em>, of course.”</p>
-
- <p>I told her a good deal about curare, but she seemed to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span> have lost
- interest once more. She asked me if I had any in my poison cupboard,
- and when I replied in the negative I fancy I fell in her estimation.</p>
-
- <p>She said she must be getting back, and I saw her out at the surgery
- door just as the luncheon gong went.</p>
-
- <p>I should never have suspected Miss Russell of a fondness for detective
- stories. It pleases me very much to think of her stepping out of the
- housekeeper’s room to rebuke a delinquent housemaid, and then returning
- to a comfortable perusal of <cite>The Mystery of the Seventh Death</cite>, or
- something of the kind.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">THE MAN WHO GREW VEGETABLE MARROWS</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">I told</span> Caroline at lunch time that I should be dining at Fernly. She
- expressed no objection—on the contrary——</p>
-
- <p>“Excellent,” she said. “You’ll hear all about it. By the way, what is
- the trouble with Ralph?”</p>
-
- <p>“With Ralph?” I said, surprised; “there’s isn’t any.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then why is he staying at the Three Boars instead of at Fernly Park?”</p>
-
- <p>I did not for a minute question Caroline’s statement that Ralph Paton
- was staying at the local inn. That Caroline said so was enough for me.</p>
-
- <p>“Ackroyd told me he was in London,” I said. In the surprise of
- the moment I departed from my valuable rule of never parting with
- information.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh!” said Caroline. I could see her nose twitching as she worked on
- this.</p>
-
- <p>“He arrived at the Three Boars yesterday morning,” she said. “And he’s
- still there. Last night he was out with a girl.”</p>
-
- <p>That did not surprise me in the least. Ralph, I should say, is out
- with a girl most nights of his life. But I did rather wonder that he
- chose to indulge in the pastime in King’s Abbot instead of in the gay
- metropolis.</p>
-
- <p>“One of the barmaids?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span></p>
-
- <p>“No. That’s just it. He went out to meet her. I don’t know who she is.”</p>
-
- <p>(Bitter for Caroline to have to admit such a thing.)</p>
-
- <p>“But I can guess,” continued my indefatigable sister.</p>
-
- <p>I waited patiently.</p>
-
- <p>“His cousin.”</p>
-
- <p>“Flora Ackroyd?” I exclaimed in surprise.</p>
-
- <p>Flora Ackroyd is, of course, no relation whatever really to Ralph
- Paton, but Ralph has been looked upon for so long as practically
- Ackroyd’s own son, that cousinship is taken for granted.</p>
-
- <p>“Flora Ackroyd,” said my sister.</p>
-
- <p>“But why not go to Fernly if he wanted to see her?”</p>
-
- <p>“Secretly engaged,” said Caroline, with immense enjoyment. “Old Ackroyd
- won’t hear of it, and they have to meet this way.”</p>
-
- <p>I saw a good many flaws in Caroline’s theory, but I forbore to point
- them out to her. An innocent remark about our new neighbor created a
- diversion.</p>
-
- <p>The house next door, The Larches, has recently been taken by a
- stranger. To Caroline’s extreme annoyance, she has not been able
- to find out anything about him, except that he is a foreigner. The
- Intelligence Corps has proved a broken reed. Presumably the man has
- milk and vegetables and joints of meat and occasional whitings just
- like everybody else, but none of the people who make it their business
- to supply these things seem to have acquired any information. His name,
- apparently, is Mr. Porrott—a name which conveys an odd feeling of
- unreality. The one thing we do know about him is that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span> he is interested
- in the growing of vegetable marrows.</p>
-
- <p>But that is certainly not the sort of information that Caroline is
- after. She wants to know where he comes from, what he does, whether he
- is married, what his wife was, or is, like, whether he has children,
- what his mother’s maiden name was—and so on. Somebody very like
- Caroline must have invented the questions on passports, I think.</p>
-
- <p>“My dear Caroline,” I said. “There’s no doubt at all about what the
- man’s profession has been. He’s a retired hairdresser. Look at that
- mustache of his.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline dissented. She said that if the man was a hairdresser, he
- would have wavy hair—not straight. All hairdressers did.</p>
-
- <p>I cited several hairdressers personally known to me who had straight
- hair, but Caroline refused to be convinced.</p>
-
- <p>“I can’t make him out at all,” she said in an aggrieved voice. “I
- borrowed some garden tools the other day, and he was most polite, but
- I couldn’t get anything out of him. I asked him point blank at last
- whether he was a Frenchman, and he said he wasn’t—and somehow I didn’t
- like to ask him any more.”</p>
-
- <p>I began to be more interested in our mysterious neighbor. A man who
- is capable of shutting up Caroline and sending her, like the Queen of
- Sheba, empty away must be something of a personality.</p>
-
- <p>“I believe,” said Caroline, “that he’s got one of those new vacuum
- cleaners——”</p>
-
- <p>I saw a meditated loan and the opportunity of further<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span> questioning
- gleaming from her eye. I seized the chance to escape into the garden.
- I am rather fond of gardening. I was busily exterminating dandelion
- roots when a shout of warning sounded from close by and a heavy body
- whizzed by my ear and fell at my feet with a repellant squelch. It was
- a vegetable marrow!</p>
-
- <p>I looked up angrily. Over the wall, to my left, there appeared a face.
- An egg-shaped head, partially covered with suspiciously black hair, two
- immense mustaches, and a pair of watchful eyes. It was our mysterious
- neighbor, Mr. Porrott.</p>
-
- <p>He broke at once into fluent apologies.</p>
-
- <p>“I demand of you a thousand pardons, monsieur. I am without defense.
- For some months now I cultivate the marrows. This morning suddenly
- I enrage myself with these marrows. I send them to promenade
- themselves—alas! not only mentally but physically. I seize the biggest.
- I hurl him over the wall. Monsieur, I am ashamed. I prostrate myself.”</p>
-
- <p>Before such profuse apologies, my anger was forced to melt. After
- all, the wretched vegetable hadn’t hit me. But I sincerely hoped that
- throwing large vegetables over walls was not our new friend’s hobby.
- Such a habit could hardly endear him to us as a neighbor.</p>
-
- <p>The strange little man seemed to read my thoughts.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! no,” he exclaimed. “Do not disquiet yourself. It is not with me a
- habit. But can you figure to yourself, monsieur, that a man may work
- towards a certain object, may labor and toil to attain a certain kind
- of leisure and occupation, and then find that, after all, he yearns
- for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span> the old busy days, and the old occupations that he thought himself
- so glad to leave?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said slowly. “I fancy that that is a common enough occurrence.
- I myself am perhaps an instance. A year ago I came into a legacy—enough
- to enable me to realize a dream. I have always wanted to travel, to see
- the world. Well, that was a year ago, as I said, and—I am still here.”</p>
-
- <p>My little neighbor nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“The chains of habit. We work to attain an object, and the object
- gained, we find that what we miss is the daily toil. And mark you,
- monsieur, my work was interesting work. The most interesting work there
- is in the world.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes?” I said encouragingly. For the moment the spirit of Caroline was
- strong within me.</p>
-
- <p>“The study of human nature, monsieur!”</p>
-
- <p>“Just so,” I said kindly.</p>
-
- <p>Clearly a retired hairdresser. Who knows the secrets of human nature
- better than a hairdresser?</p>
-
- <p>“Also, I had a friend—a friend who for many years never left my side.
- Occasionally of an imbecility to make one afraid, nevertheless he was
- very dear to me. Figure to yourself that I miss even his stupidity.
- His <i lang="fr">naïveté</i>, his honest outlook, the pleasure of delighting and
- surprising him by my superior gifts—all these I miss more than I can
- tell you.”</p>
-
- <p>“He died?” I asked sympathetically.</p>
-
- <p>“Not so. He lives and flourishes—but on the other side of the world. He
- is now in the Argentine.”</p>
-
- <p>“In the Argentine,” I said enviously.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span></p>
-
- <p>I have always wanted to go to South America. I sighed, and then
- looked up to find Mr. Porrott eyeing me sympathetically. He seemed an
- understanding little man.</p>
-
- <p>“You will go there, yes?” he asked.</p>
-
- <p>I shook my head with a sigh.</p>
-
- <p>“I could have gone,” I said, “a year ago. But I was foolish—and worse
- than foolish—greedy. I risked the substance for the shadow.”</p>
-
- <p>“I comprehend,” said Mr. Porrott. “You speculated?”</p>
-
- <p>I nodded mournfully, but in spite of myself I felt secretly
- entertained. This ridiculous little man was so portentously solemn.</p>
-
- <p>“Not the Porcupine Oilfields?” he asked suddenly.</p>
-
- <p>I stared.</p>
-
- <p>“I thought of them, as a matter of fact, but in the end I plumped for a
- gold mine in Western Australia.”</p>
-
- <p>My neighbor was regarding me with a strange expression which I could
- not fathom.</p>
-
- <p>“It is Fate,” he said at last.</p>
-
- <p>“What is Fate?” I asked irritably.</p>
-
- <p>“That I should live next to a man who seriously considers Porcupine
- Oilfields, and also West Australian Gold Mines. Tell me, have you also
- a penchant for auburn hair?”</p>
-
- <p>I stared at him open-mouthed, and he burst out laughing.</p>
-
- <p>“No, no, it is not the insanity that I suffer from. Make your mind
- easy. It was a foolish question that I put to you there, for, see you,
- my friend of whom I spoke was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span> a young man, a man who thought all women
- good, and most of them beautiful. But you are a man of middle age, a
- doctor, a man who knows the folly and the vanity of most things in this
- life of ours. Well, well, we are neighbors. I beg of you to accept and
- present to your excellent sister my best marrow.”</p>
-
- <p>He stooped, and with a flourish produced an immense specimen of the
- tribe, which I duly accepted in the spirit in which it was offered.</p>
-
- <p>“Indeed,” said the little man cheerfully, “this has not been a wasted
- morning. I have made the acquaintance of a man who in some ways
- resembles my far-off friend. By the way, I should like to ask you a
- question. You doubtless know every one in this tiny village. Who is the
- young man with the very dark hair and eyes, and the handsome face. He
- walks with his head flung back, and an easy smile on his lips?”</p>
-
- <p>The description left me in no doubt.</p>
-
- <p>“That must be Captain Ralph Paton,” I said slowly.</p>
-
- <p>“I have not seen him about here before?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, he has not been here for some time. But he is the son—adopted son,
- rather—of Mr. Ackroyd of Fernly Park.”</p>
-
- <p>My neighbor made a slight gesture of impatience.</p>
-
- <p>“Of course, I should have guessed. Mr. Ackroyd spoke of him many times.”</p>
-
- <p>“You know Mr. Ackroyd?” I said, slightly surprised.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd knew me in London—when I was at work there. I have asked
- him to say nothing of my profession down here.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span></p>
-
- <p>“I see,” I said, rather amused by this patent snobbery, as I thought it.</p>
-
- <p>But the little man went on with an almost grandiloquent smirk.</p>
-
- <p>“One prefers to remain incognito. I am not anxious for notoriety. I
- have not even troubled to correct the local version of my name.”</p>
-
- <p>“Indeed,” I said, not knowing quite what to say.</p>
-
- <p>“Captain Ralph Paton,” mused Mr. Porrott. “And so he is engaged to Mr.
- Ackroyd’s niece, the charming Miss Flora.”</p>
-
- <p>“Who told you so?” I asked, very much surprised.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd. About a week ago. He is very pleased about it—has long
- desired that such a thing should come to pass, or so I understood
- from him. I even believe that he brought some pressure to bear upon
- the young man. That is never wise. A young man should marry to please
- himself—not to please a stepfather from whom he has expectations.”</p>
-
- <p>My ideas were completely upset. I could not see Ackroyd taking a
- hairdresser into his confidence, and discussing the marriage of his
- niece and stepson with him. Ackroyd extends a genial patronage to the
- lower orders, but he has a very great sense of his own dignity. I began
- to think that Porrott couldn’t be a hairdresser after all.</p>
-
- <p>To hide my confusion, I said the first thing that came into my head.</p>
-
- <p>“What made you notice Ralph Paton? His good looks?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, not that alone—though he is unusually good-looking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span> for an
- Englishman—what your lady novelists would call a Greek God. No, there
- was something about that young man that I did not understand.”</p>
-
- <p>He said the last sentence in a musing tone of voice which made an
- indefinable impression upon me. It was as though he was summing up the
- boy by the light of some inner knowledge that I did not share. It was
- that impression that was left with me, for at that moment my sister’s
- voice called me from the house.</p>
-
- <p>I went in. Caroline had her hat on, and had evidently just come in from
- the village. She began without preamble.</p>
-
- <p>“I met Mr. Ackroyd.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes?” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“I stopped him, of course, but he seemed in a great hurry, and anxious
- to get away.”</p>
-
- <p>I have no doubt but that that was the case. He would feel towards
- Caroline much as he had felt towards Miss Ganett earlier in the
- day—perhaps more so. Caroline is less easy to shake off.</p>
-
- <p>“I asked him at once about Ralph. He was absolutely astonished. Had no
- idea the boy was down here. He actually said he thought I must have
- made a mistake. I! A mistake!”</p>
-
- <p>“Ridiculous,” I said. “He ought to have known you better.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then he went on to tell me that Ralph and Flora are engaged.”</p>
-
- <p>“I know that too,” I interrupted, with modest pride.</p>
-
- <p>“Who told you?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span></p>
-
- <p>“Our new neighbor.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline visibly wavered for a second or two, much as a roulette ball
- might coyly hover between two numbers. Then she declined the tempting
- red herring.</p>
-
- <p>“I told Mr. Ackroyd that Ralph was staying at the Three Boars.”</p>
-
- <p>“Caroline,” I said, “do you never reflect that you might do a lot of
- harm with this habit of yours of repeating everything indiscriminately?”</p>
-
- <p>“Nonsense,” said my sister. “People ought to know things. I consider it
- my duty to tell them. Mr. Ackroyd was very grateful to me.”</p>
-
- <p>“Well?” I said, for there was clearly more to come.</p>
-
- <p>“I think he went straight off to the Three Boars, but if so he didn’t
- find Ralph there.”</p>
-
- <p>“No?”</p>
-
- <p>“No. Because as I was coming back through the wood——”</p>
-
- <p>“Coming back through the wood?” I interrupted.</p>
-
- <p>Caroline had the grace to blush.</p>
-
- <p>“It was such a lovely day,” she exclaimed. “I thought I would make a
- little round. The woods with their autumnal tints are so perfect at
- this time of year.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline does not care a hang for woods at any time of year. Normally
- she regards them as places where you get your feet damp, and where all
- kinds of unpleasant things may drop on your head. No, it was good sound
- mongoose instinct which took her to our local wood. It is the only
- place adjacent to the village of King’s Abbot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span> where you can talk with
- a young woman unseen by the whole of the village. It adjoins the Park
- of Fernly.</p>
-
- <p>“Well,” I said, “go on.”</p>
-
- <p>“As I say, I was just coming back through the wood when I heard voices.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline paused.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes?”</p>
-
- <p>“One was Ralph Paton’s—I knew it at once. The other was a girl’s. Of
- course I didn’t mean to listen——”</p>
-
- <p>“Of course not,” I interjected, with patent sarcasm—which was, however,
- wasted on Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“But I simply couldn’t help overhearing. The girl said something—I
- didn’t quite catch what it was, and Ralph answered. He sounded very
- angry. ‘My dear girl,’ he said. ‘Don’t you realize that it is quite
- on the cards the old man will cut me off with a shilling? He’s been
- pretty fed up with me for the last few years. A little more would do
- it. And we need the dibs, my dear. I shall be a very rich man when
- the old fellow pops off. He’s mean as they make ’em, but he’s rolling
- in money really. I don’t want him to go altering his will. You leave
- it to me, and don’t worry.’ Those were his exact words. I remember
- them perfectly. Unfortunately, just then I stepped on a dry twig or
- something, and they lowered their voices and moved away. I couldn’t, of
- course, go rushing after them, so wasn’t able to see who the girl was.”</p>
-
- <p>“That must have been most vexing,” I said. “I suppose, though, you
- hurried on to the Three Boars, felt<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span> faint, and went into the bar for a
- glass of brandy, and so were able to see if both the barmaids were on
- duty?”</p>
-
- <p>“It wasn’t a barmaid,” said Caroline unhesitatingly. “In fact, I’m
- almost sure that it was Flora Ackroyd, only——”</p>
-
- <p>“Only it doesn’t seem to make sense,” I agreed.</p>
-
- <p>“But if it wasn’t Flora, who could it have been?”</p>
-
- <p>Rapidly my sister ran over a list of maidens living in the
- neighborhood, with profuse reasons for and against.</p>
-
- <p>When she paused for breath, I murmured something about a patient, and
- slipped out.</p>
-
- <p>I proposed to make my way to the Three Boars. It seemed likely that
- Ralph Paton would have returned there by now.</p>
-
- <p>I knew Ralph very well—better, perhaps, than any one else in King’s
- Abbot, for I had known his mother before him, and therefore I
- understood much in him that puzzled others. He was, to a certain
- extent, the victim of heredity. He had not inherited his mother’s
- fatal propensity for drink, but nevertheless he had in him a strain
- of weakness. As my new friend of this morning had declared, he was
- extraordinarily handsome. Just on six feet, perfectly proportioned,
- with the easy grace of an athlete, he was dark, like his mother,
- with a handsome, sunburnt face always ready to break into a smile.
- Ralph Paton was of those born to charm easily and without effort. He
- was self-indulgent and extravagant, with no veneration for anything
- on earth, but he was lovable nevertheless, and his friends were all
- devoted to him.</p>
-
- <p>Could I do anything with the boy? I thought I could.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span></p>
-
- <p>On inquiry at the Three Boars I found that Captain Paton had just come
- in. I went up to his room and entered unannounced.</p>
-
- <p>For a moment, remembering what I had heard and seen, I was doubtful of
- my reception, but I need have had no misgivings.</p>
-
- <p>“Why, it’s Sheppard! Glad to see you.”</p>
-
- <p>He came forward to meet me, hand outstretched, a sunny smile lighting
- up his face.</p>
-
- <p>“The one person I am glad to see in this infernal place.”</p>
-
- <p>I raised my eyebrows.</p>
-
- <p>“What’s the place been doing?”</p>
-
- <p>He gave a vexed laugh.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s a long story. Things haven’t been going well with me, doctor. But
- have a drink, won’t you?”</p>
-
- <p>“Thanks,” I said, “I will.”</p>
-
- <p>He pressed the bell, then, coming back, threw himself into a chair.</p>
-
- <p>“Not to mince matters,” he said gloomily, “I’m in the devil of a mess.
- In fact, I haven’t the least idea what to do next.”</p>
-
- <p>“What’s the matter?” I asked sympathetically.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s my confounded stepfather.”</p>
-
- <p>“What has he done?”</p>
-
- <p>“It isn’t what he’s done yet, but what he’s likely to do.”</p>
-
- <p>The bell was answered, and Ralph ordered the drinks. When the man had
- gone again, he sat hunched in the arm-chair, frowning to himself.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span></p>
-
- <p>“Is it really—serious?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>He nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m fairly up against it this time,” he said soberly.</p>
-
- <p>The unusual ring of gravity in his voice told me that he spoke the
- truth. It took a good deal to make Ralph grave.</p>
-
- <p>“In fact,” he continued, “I can’t see my way ahead.... I’m damned if I
- can.”</p>
-
- <p>“If I could help——” I suggested diffidently.</p>
-
- <p>But he shook his head very decidedly.</p>
-
- <p>“Good of you, doctor. But I can’t let you in on this. I’ve got to play
- a lone hand.”</p>
-
- <p>He was silent a minute and then repeated in a slightly different tone
- of voice:—</p>
-
- <p>“Yes—I’ve got to play a lone hand....”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">DINNER AT FERNLY</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">It</span> was just a few minutes before half-past seven when I rang the
- front door bell of Fernly Park. The door was opened with admirable
- promptitude by Parker, the butler.</p>
-
- <p>The night was such a fine one that I had preferred to come on foot. I
- stepped into the big square hall and Parker relieved me of my overcoat.
- Just then Ackroyd’s secretary, a pleasant young fellow by the name of
- Raymond, passed through the hall on his way to Ackroyd’s study, his
- hands full of papers.</p>
-
- <p>“Good-evening, doctor. Coming to dine? Or is this a professional call?”</p>
-
- <p>The last was in allusion to my black bag, which I had laid down on the
- oak chest.</p>
-
- <p>I explained that I expected a summons to a confinement case at any
- moment, and so had come out prepared for an emergency call. Raymond
- nodded, and went on his way, calling over his shoulder:—</p>
-
- <p>“Go into the drawing-room. You know the way. The ladies will be down in
- a minute. I must just take these papers to Mr. Ackroyd, and I’ll tell
- him you’re here.”</p>
-
- <p>On Raymond’s appearance Parker had withdrawn, so I was alone in the
- hall. I settled my tie, glanced in a large mirror which hung there, and
- crossed to the door<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span> directly facing me, which was, as I knew, the door
- of the drawing-room.</p>
-
- <p>I noticed, just as I was turning the handle, a sound from within—the
- shutting down of a window, I took it to be. I noted it, I may say,
- quite mechanically, without attaching any importance to it at the time.</p>
-
- <p>I opened the door and walked in. As I did so, I almost collided with
- Miss Russell, who was just coming out. We both apologized.</p>
-
- <p>For the first time I found myself appraising the housekeeper and
- thinking what a handsome woman she must once have been—indeed, as far
- as that goes, still was. Her dark hair was unstreaked with gray, and
- when she had a color, as she had at this minute, the stern quality of
- her looks was not so apparent.</p>
-
- <p>Quite subconsciously I wondered whether she had been out, for she was
- breathing hard, as though she had been running.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m afraid I’m a few minutes early,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! I don’t think so. It’s gone half-past seven, Dr. Sheppard.” She
- paused a minute before saying, “I—didn’t know you were expected to
- dinner to-night. Mr. Ackroyd didn’t mention it.”</p>
-
- <p>I received a vague impression that my dining there displeased her in
- some way, but I couldn’t imagine why.</p>
-
- <p>“How’s the knee?” I inquired.</p>
-
- <p>“Much the same, thank you, doctor. I must be going now. Mrs. Ackroyd
- will be down in a moment. I—I only came in here to see if the flowers
- were all right.”</p>
-
- <p>She passed quickly out of the room. I strolled to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span> window,
- wondering at her evident desire to justify her presence in the room. As
- I did so, I saw what, of course, I might have known all the time had
- I troubled to give my mind to it, namely, that the windows were long
- French ones opening on the terrace. The sound I had heard, therefore,
- could not have been that of a window being shut down.</p>
-
- <p>Quite idly, and more to distract my mind from painful thoughts than for
- any other reason, I amused myself by trying to guess what could have
- caused the sound in question.</p>
-
- <p>Coals on the fire? No, that was not the kind of noise at all. A drawer
- of the bureau pushed in? No, not that.</p>
-
- <p>Then my eye was caught by what, I believe, is called a silver table,
- the lid of which lifts, and through the glass of which you can see the
- contents. I crossed over to it, studying the things. There were one
- or two pieces of old silver, a baby shoe belonging to King Charles
- the First, some Chinese jade figures, and quite a number of African
- implements and curios. Wanting to examine one of the jade figures more
- closely, I lifted the lid. It slipped through my fingers and fell.</p>
-
- <p>At once I recognized the sound I had heard. It was this same table lid
- being shut down gently and carefully. I repeated the action once or
- twice for my own satisfaction. Then I lifted the lid to scrutinize the
- contents more closely.</p>
-
- <p>I was still bending over the open silver table when Flora Ackroyd came
- into the room.</p>
-
- <p>Quite a lot of people do not like Flora Ackroyd, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span> nobody can help
- admiring her. And to her friends she can be very charming. The first
- thing that strikes you about her is her extraordinary fairness. She has
- the real Scandinavian pale gold hair. Her eyes are blue—blue as the
- waters of a Norwegian fiord, and her skin is cream and roses. She has
- square, boyish shoulders and slight hips. And to a jaded medical man it
- is very refreshing to come across such perfect health.</p>
-
- <p>A simple straight-forward English girl—I may be old-fashioned, but I
- think the genuine article takes a lot of beating.</p>
-
- <p>Flora joined me by the silver table, and expressed heretical doubts as
- to King Charles I ever having worn the baby shoe.</p>
-
- <p>“And anyway,” continued Miss Flora, “all this making a fuss about
- things because some one wore or used them seems to me all nonsense.
- They’re not wearing or using them now. The pen that George Eliot wrote
- <cite>The Mill on the Floss</cite> with—that sort of thing—well, it’s only
- just a pen after all. If you’re really keen on George Eliot, why not
- get <cite>The Mill on the Floss</cite> in a cheap edition and read it.”</p>
-
- <p>“I suppose you never read such old out-of-date stuff, Miss Flora?”</p>
-
- <p>“You’re wrong, Dr. Sheppard. I love <cite>The Mill on the Floss</cite>.”</p>
-
- <p>I was rather pleased to hear it. The things young women read nowadays
- and profess to enjoy positively frighten me.</p>
-
- <p>“You haven’t congratulated me yet, Dr. Sheppard,” said Flora. “Haven’t
- you heard?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span></p>
-
- <p>She held out her left hand. On the third finger of it was an
- exquisitely set single pearl.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m going to marry Ralph, you know,” she went on. “Uncle is very
- pleased. It keeps me in the family, you see.”</p>
-
- <p>I took both her hands in mine.</p>
-
- <p>“My dear,” I said, “I hope you’ll be very happy.”</p>
-
- <p>“We’ve been engaged for about a month,” continued Flora in her cool
- voice, “but it was only announced yesterday. Uncle is going to do up
- Cross-stones, and give it to us to live in, and we’re going to pretend
- to farm. Really, we shall hunt all the winter, town for the season, and
- then go yachting. I love the sea. And, of course, I shall take a great
- interest in the parish affairs, and attend all the Mothers’ Meetings.”</p>
-
- <p>Just then Mrs. Ackroyd rustled in, full of apologies for being late.</p>
-
- <p>I am sorry to say I detest Mrs. Ackroyd. She is all chains and teeth
- and bones. A most unpleasant woman. She has small pale flinty blue
- eyes, and however gushing her words may be, those eyes of hers always
- remain coldly speculative.</p>
-
- <p>I went across to her, leaving Flora by the window. She gave me a
- handful of assorted knuckles and rings to squeeze, and began talking
- volubly.</p>
-
- <p>Had I heard about Flora’s engagement? So suitable in every way. The
- dear young things had fallen in love at first sight. Such a perfect
- pair, he so dark and she so fair.</p>
-
- <p>“I can’t tell you, my dear Dr. Sheppard, the relief to a mother’s
- heart.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span></p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd sighed—a tribute to her mother’s heart, whilst her eyes
- remained shrewdly observant of me.</p>
-
- <p>“I was wondering. You are such an old friend of dear Roger’s. We
- know how much he trusts to your judgment. So difficult for me—in
- my position, as poor Cecil’s widow. But there are so many tiresome
- things—settlements, you know—all that. I fully believe that Roger
- intends to make settlements upon dear Flora, but, as you know, he is
- just a <em>leetle</em> peculiar about money. Very usual, I’ve heard,
- amongst men who are captains of industry. I wondered, you know, if you
- could just <em>sound</em> him on the subject? Flora is so fond of you. We
- feel you are quite an old friend, although we have only really known
- you just over two years.”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd’s eloquence was cut short as the drawing-room door opened
- once more. I was pleased at the interruption. I hate interfering in
- other people’s affairs, and I had not the least intention of tackling
- Ackroyd on the subject of Flora’s settlements. In another moment I
- should have been forced to tell Mrs. Ackroyd as much.</p>
-
- <p>“You know Major Blunt, don’t you, doctor?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, indeed,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>A lot of people know Hector Blunt—at least by repute. He has shot more
- wild animals in unlikely places than any man living, I suppose. When
- you mention him, people say: “Blunt—you don’t mean the big game man, do
- you?”</p>
-
- <p>His friendship with Ackroyd has always puzzled me a little. The two men
- are so totally dissimilar. Hector Blunt is perhaps five years Ackroyd’s
- junior. They made<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span> friends early in life, and though their ways have
- diverged, the friendship still holds. About once in two years Blunt
- spends a fortnight at Fernly, and an immense animal’s head, with an
- amazing number of horns which fixes you with a glazed stare as soon
- as you come inside the front door, is a permanent reminder of the
- friendship.</p>
-
- <p>Blunt had entered the room now with his own peculiar, deliberate, yet
- soft-footed tread. He is a man of medium height, sturdily and rather
- stockily built. His face is almost mahogany-colored, and is peculiarly
- expressionless. He has gray eyes that give the impression of always
- watching something that is happening very far away. He talks little,
- and what he does say is said jerkily, as though the words were forced
- out of him unwillingly.</p>
-
- <p>He said now: “How are you, Sheppard?” in his usual abrupt fashion, and
- then stood squarely in front of the fireplace looking over our heads as
- though he saw something very interesting happening in Timbuctoo.</p>
-
- <p>“Major Blunt,” said Flora, “I wish you’d tell me about these African
- things. I’m sure you know what they all are.”</p>
-
- <p>I have heard Hector Blunt described as a woman hater, but I noticed
- that he joined Flora at the silver table with what might be described
- as alacrity. They bent over it together.</p>
-
- <p>I was afraid Mrs. Ackroyd would begin talking about settlements again,
- so I made a few hurried remarks about the new sweet pea. I knew there
- was a new sweet pea because the <cite>Daily Mail</cite> had told me so that
- morning.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span> Mrs. Ackroyd knows nothing about horticulture, but she is
- the kind of woman who likes to appear well-informed about the topics
- of the day, and she, too, reads the <cite>Daily Mail</cite>. We were able to
- converse quite intelligently until Ackroyd and his secretary joined us,
- and immediately afterwards Parker announced dinner.</p>
-
- <p>My place at table was between Mrs. Ackroyd and Flora. Blunt was on Mrs.
- Ackroyd’s other side, and Geoffrey Raymond next to him.</p>
-
- <p>Dinner was not a cheerful affair. Ackroyd was visibly preoccupied. He
- looked wretched, and ate next to nothing. Mrs. Ackroyd, Raymond, and
- I kept the conversation going. Flora seemed affected by her uncle’s
- depression, and Blunt relapsed into his usual taciturnity.</p>
-
- <p>Immediately after dinner Ackroyd slipped his arm through mine and led
- me off to his study.</p>
-
- <p>“Once we’ve had coffee, we shan’t be disturbed again,” he explained. “I
- told Raymond to see to it that we shouldn’t be interrupted.”</p>
-
- <p>I studied him quietly without appearing to do so. He was clearly under
- the influence of some strong excitement. For a minute or two he paced
- up and down the room, then, as Parker entered with the coffee tray, he
- sank into an arm-chair in front of the fire.</p>
-
- <p>The study was a comfortable apartment. Book-shelves lined one wall of
- it. The chairs were big and covered in dark blue leather. A large desk
- stood by the window and was covered with papers neatly docketed and
- filed. On a round table were various magazines and sporting papers.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span></p>
-
- <p>“I’ve had a return of that pain after food lately,” remarked Ackroyd
- casually, as he helped himself to coffee. “You must give me some more
- of those tablets of yours.”</p>
-
- <p>It struck me that he was anxious to convey the impression that our
- conference was a medical one. I played up accordingly.</p>
-
- <p>“I thought as much. I brought some up with me.”</p>
-
- <p>“Good man. Hand them over now.”</p>
-
- <p>“They’re in my bag in the hall. I’ll get them.”</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd arrested me.</p>
-
- <p>“Don’t you trouble. Parker will get them. Bring in the doctor’s bag,
- will you, Parker?”</p>
-
- <p>“Very good, sir.”</p>
-
- <p>Parker withdrew. As I was about to speak, Ackroyd threw up his hand.</p>
-
- <p>“Not yet. Wait. Don’t you see I’m in such a state of nerves that I can
- hardly contain myself?”</p>
-
- <p>I saw that plainly enough. And I was very uneasy. All sorts of
- forebodings assailed me.</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd spoke again almost immediately.</p>
-
- <p>“Make certain that window’s closed, will you?” he asked.</p>
-
- <p>Somewhat surprised, I got up and went to it. It was not a French
- window, but one of the ordinary sash type. The heavy blue velvet
- curtains were drawn in front of it, but the window itself was open at
- the top.</p>
-
- <p>Parker reëntered the room with my bag while I was still at the window.</p>
-
- <p>“That’s all right,” I said, emerging again into the room.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span></p>
-
- <p>“You’ve put the latch across?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, yes. What’s the matter with you, Ackroyd?”</p>
-
- <p>The door had just closed behind Parker, or I would not have put the
- question.</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd waited just a minute before replying.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m in hell,” he said slowly, after a minute. “No, don’t bother with
- those damned tablets. I only said that for Parker. Servants are so
- curious. Come here and sit down. The door’s closed too, isn’t it?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. Nobody can overhear; don’t be uneasy.”</p>
-
- <p>“Sheppard, nobody knows what I’ve gone through in the last twenty-four
- hours. If a man’s house ever fell in ruins about him, mine has about
- me. This business of Ralph’s is the last straw. But we won’t talk about
- that now. It’s the other—the other——! I don’t know what to do about it.
- And I’ve got to make up my mind soon.”</p>
-
- <p>“What’s the trouble?”</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd remained silent for a minute or two. He seemed curiously averse
- to begin. When he did speak, the question he asked came as a complete
- surprise. It was the last thing I expected.</p>
-
- <p>“Sheppard, you attended Ashley Ferrars in his last illness, didn’t you?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, I did.”</p>
-
- <p>He seemed to find even greater difficulty in framing his next question.</p>
-
- <p>“Did you never suspect—did it ever enter your head—that—well, that he
- might have been poisoned?”</p>
-
- <p>I was silent for a minute or two. Then I made up my mind what to say.
- Roger Ackroyd was not Caroline.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span></p>
-
- <p>“I’ll tell you the truth,” I said. “At the time I had no suspicion
- whatever, but since—well, it was mere idle talk on my sister’s part
- that first put the idea into my head. Since then I haven’t been able to
- get it out again. But, mind you, I’ve no foundation whatever for that
- suspicion.”</p>
-
- <p>“He <em>was</em> poisoned,” said Ackroyd.</p>
-
- <p>He spoke in a dull heavy voice.</p>
-
- <p>“Who by?” I asked sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“His wife.”</p>
-
- <p>“How do you know that?”</p>
-
- <p>“She told me so herself.”</p>
-
- <p>“When?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yesterday! My God! yesterday! It seems ten years ago.”</p>
-
- <p>I waited a minute, and then he went on.</p>
-
- <p>“You understand, Sheppard, I’m telling you this in confidence. It’s to
- go no further. I want your advice—I can’t carry the whole weight by
- myself. As I said just now, I don’t know what to do.”</p>
-
- <p>“Can you tell me the whole story?” I said. “I’m still in the dark. How
- did Mrs. Ferrars come to make this confession to you?”</p>
-
- <p>“It’s like this. Three months ago I asked Mrs. Ferrars to marry me.
- She refused. I asked her again and she consented, but she refused to
- allow me to make the engagement public until her year of mourning was
- up. Yesterday I called upon her, pointed out that a year and three
- weeks had now elapsed since her husband’s death, and that there could
- be no further objection to making the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span> engagement public property. I
- had noticed that she had been very strange in her manner for some days.
- Now, suddenly, without the least warning, she broke down completely.
- She—she told me everything. Her hatred of her brute of a husband, her
- growing love for me, and the—the dreadful means she had taken. Poison!
- My God! It was murder in cold blood.”</p>
-
- <p>I saw the repulsion, the horror, in Ackroyd’s face. So Mrs. Ferrars
- must have seen it. Ackroyd is not the type of the great lover who can
- forgive all for love’s sake. He is fundamentally a good citizen. All
- that was sound and wholesome and law-abiding in him must have turned
- from her utterly in that moment of revelation.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” he went on, in a low, monotonous voice, “she confessed
- everything. It seems that there is one person who has known all
- along—who has been blackmailing her for huge sums. It was the strain of
- that that drove her nearly mad.”</p>
-
- <p>“Who was the man?”</p>
-
- <p>Suddenly before my eyes there arose the picture of Ralph Paton and Mrs.
- Ferrars side by side. Their heads so close together. I felt a momentary
- throb of anxiety. Supposing—oh! but surely that was impossible. I
- remembered the frankness of Ralph’s greeting that very afternoon.
- Absurd!</p>
-
- <p>“She wouldn’t tell me his name,” said Ackroyd slowly. “As a matter of
- fact, she didn’t actually say that it was a man. But of course——”</p>
-
- <p>“Of course,” I agreed. “It must have been a man. And you’ve no
- suspicion at all?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span></p>
-
- <p>For answer Ackroyd groaned and dropped his head into his hands.</p>
-
- <p>“It can’t be,” he said. “I’m mad even to think of such a thing. No, I
- won’t even admit to you the wild suspicion that crossed my mind. I’ll
- tell you this much, though. Something she said made me think that the
- person in question might be actually among my household—but that can’t
- be so. I must have misunderstood her.”</p>
-
- <p>“What did you say to her?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“What could I say? She saw, of course, the awful shock it had been to
- me. And then there was the question, what was my duty in the matter?
- She had made me, you see, an accessory after the fact. She saw all
- that, I think, quicker than I did. I was stunned, you know. She asked
- me for twenty-four hours—made me promise to do nothing till the end
- of that time. And she steadfastly refused to give me the name of the
- scoundrel who had been blackmailing her. I suppose she was afraid that
- I might go straight off and hammer him, and then the fat would have
- been in the fire as far as she was concerned. She told me that I should
- hear from her before twenty-four hours had passed. My God! I swear to
- you, Sheppard, that it never entered my head what she meant to do.
- Suicide! And I drove her to it.”</p>
-
- <p>“No, no,” I said. “Don’t take an exaggerated view of things. The
- responsibility for her death doesn’t lie at your door.”</p>
-
- <p>“The question is, what am I to do now? The poor lady is dead. Why rake
- up past trouble?”</p>
-
- <p>“I rather agree with you,” I said.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span></p>
-
- <p>“But there’s another point. How am I to get hold of that scoundrel who
- drove her to death as surely as if he’d killed her. He knew of the
- first crime, and he fastened on to it like some obscene vulture. She’s
- paid the penalty. Is he to go scot-free?”</p>
-
- <p>“I see,” I said slowly. “You want to hunt him down? It will mean a lot
- of publicity, you know.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, I’ve thought of that. I’ve zigzagged to and fro in my mind.”</p>
-
- <p>“I agree with you that the villain ought to be punished, but the cost
- has got to be reckoned.”</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd rose and walked up and down. Presently he sank into the chair
- again.</p>
-
- <p>“Look here, Sheppard, suppose we leave it like this. If no word comes
- from her, we’ll let the dead things lie.”</p>
-
- <p>“What do you mean by word coming from her?” I asked curiously.</p>
-
- <p>“I have the strongest impression that somewhere or somehow she must
- have left a message for me—before she went. I can’t argue about it, but
- there it is.”</p>
-
- <p>I shook my head.</p>
-
- <p>“She left no letter or word of any kind. I asked.”</p>
-
- <p>“Sheppard, I’m convinced that she did. And more, I’ve a feeling that by
- deliberately choosing death, she wanted the whole thing to come out, if
- only to be revenged on the man who drove her to desperation. I believe
- that if I could have seen her then, she would have told me his name and
- bid me go for him for all I was worth.”</p>
-
- <p>He looked at me.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span></p>
-
- <p>“You don’t believe in impressions?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, yes, I do, in a sense. If, as you put it, word should come from
- her——”</p>
-
- <p>I broke off. The door opened noiselessly and Parker entered with a
- salver on which were some letters.</p>
-
- <p>“The evening post, sir,” he said, handing the salver to Ackroyd.</p>
-
- <p>Then he collected the coffee cups and withdrew.</p>
-
- <p>My attention, diverted for a moment, came back to Ackroyd. He was
- staring like a man turned to stone at a long blue envelope. The other
- letters he had let drop to the ground.</p>
-
- <p>“<em>Her writing</em>,” he said in a whisper. “She must have gone out and
- posted it last night, just before—before——”</p>
-
- <p>He ripped open the envelope and drew out a thick enclosure. Then he
- looked up sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“You’re sure you shut the window?” he said.</p>
-
- <p>“Quite sure,” I said, surprised. “Why?”</p>
-
- <p>“All this evening I’ve had a queer feeling of being watched, spied
- upon. What’s that——?”</p>
-
- <p>He turned sharply. So did I. We both had the impression of hearing the
- latch of the door give ever so slightly. I went across to it and opened
- it. There was no one there.</p>
-
- <p>“Nerves,” murmured Ackroyd to himself.</p>
-
- <p>He unfolded the thick sheets of paper, and read aloud in a low voice.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span></p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>“<i>My dear, my very dear Roger,—A life calls for a life. I see
- that—I saw it in your face this afternoon. So I am taking the only
- road open to me. I leave to you the punishment of the person who
- has made my life a hell upon earth for the last year. I would not
- tell you the name this afternoon, but I propose to write it to you
- now. I have no children or near relations to be spared, so do not
- fear publicity. If you can, Roger, my very dear Roger, forgive me
- the wrong I meant to do you, since when the time came, I could not
- do it after all....</i>”</p>
- </blockquote>
-
- <p>Ackroyd, his finger on the sheet to turn it over, paused.</p>
-
- <p>“Sheppard, forgive me, but I must read this alone,” he said unsteadily.
- “It was meant for my eyes, and my eyes only.”</p>
-
- <p>He put the letter in the envelope and laid it on the table.</p>
-
- <p>“Later, when I am alone.”</p>
-
- <p>“No,” I cried impulsively, “read it now.”</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd stared at me in some surprise.</p>
-
- <p>“I beg your pardon,” I said, reddening. “I do not mean read it aloud to
- me. But read it through whilst I am still here.”</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“No, I’d rather wait.”</p>
-
- <p>But for some reason, obscure to myself, I continued to urge him.</p>
-
- <p>“At least, read the name of the man,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>Now Ackroyd is essentially pig-headed. The more you urge him to do a
- thing, the more determined he is not to do it. All my arguments were in
- vain.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span></p>
-
- <p>The letter had been brought in at twenty minutes to nine. It was just
- on ten minutes to nine when I left him, the letter still unread. I
- hesitated with my hand on the door handle, looking back and wondering
- if there was anything I had left undone. I could think of nothing. With
- a shake of the head I passed out and closed the door behind me.</p>
-
- <p>I was startled by seeing the figure of Parker close at hand. He looked
- embarrassed, and it occurred to me that he might have been listening at
- the door.</p>
-
- <p>What a fat, smug, oily face the man had, and surely there was something
- decidedly shifty in his eye.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd particularly does not want to be disturbed,” I said
- coldly. “He told me to tell you so.”</p>
-
- <p>“Quite so, sir. I—I fancied I heard the bell ring.”</p>
-
- <p>This was such a palpable untruth that I did not trouble to reply.
- Preceding me to the hall, Parker helped me on with my overcoat, and I
- stepped out into the night. The moon was overcast and everything seemed
- very dark and still. The village church clock chimed nine o’clock
- as I passed through the lodge gates. I turned to the left towards
- the village, and almost cannoned into a man coming in the opposite
- direction.</p>
-
- <p>“This the way to Fernly Park, mister?” asked the stranger in a hoarse
- voice.</p>
-
- <p>I looked at him. He was wearing a hat pulled down over his eyes, and
- his coat collar turned up. I could see little or nothing of his face,
- but he seemed a young fellow. The voice was rough and uneducated.</p>
-
- <p>“These are the lodge gates here,” I said.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span></p>
-
- <p>“Thank you, mister.” He paused, and then added, quite unnecessarily,
- “I’m a stranger in these parts, you see.”</p>
-
- <p>He went on, passing through the gates as I turned to look after him.</p>
-
- <p>The odd thing was that his voice reminded me of some one’s voice that I
- knew, but whose it was I could not think.</p>
-
- <p>Ten minutes later I was at home once more. Caroline was full of
- curiosity to know why I had returned so early. I had to make up a
- slightly fictitious account of the evening in order to satisfy her, and
- I had an uneasy feeling that she saw through the transparent device.</p>
-
- <p>At ten o’clock I rose, yawned, and suggested bed. Caroline acquiesced.</p>
-
- <p>It was Friday night, and on Friday night I wind the clocks. I did it as
- usual, whilst Caroline satisfied herself that the servants had locked
- up the kitchen properly.</p>
-
- <p>It was a quarter past ten as we went up the stairs. I had just reached
- the top when the telephone rang in the hall below.</p>
-
- <p>“Mrs. Bates,” said Caroline immediately.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m afraid so,” I said ruefully.</p>
-
- <p>I ran down the stairs and took up the receiver.</p>
-
- <p>“What?” I said. “<em>What?</em> Certainly, I’ll come at once.”</p>
-
- <p>I ran upstairs, caught up my bag, and stuffed a few extra dressings
- into it.</p>
-
- <p>“Parker telephoning,” I shouted to Caroline, “from Fernly. They’ve just
- found Roger Ackroyd murdered.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">MURDER</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">I got</span> out the car in next to no time, and drove rapidly to Fernly.
- Jumping out, I pulled the bell impatiently. There was some delay in
- answering, and I rang again.</p>
-
- <p>Then I heard the rattle of the chain and Parker, his impassivity of
- countenance quite unmoved, stood in the open doorway.</p>
-
- <p>I pushed past him into the hall.</p>
-
- <p>“Where is he?” I demanded sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“I beg your pardon, sir?”</p>
-
- <p>“Your master. Mr. Ackroyd. Don’t stand there staring at me, man. Have
- you notified the police?”</p>
-
- <p>“The police, sir? Did you say the police?” Parker stared at me as
- though I were a ghost.</p>
-
- <p>“What’s the matter with you, Parker? If, as you say, your master has
- been murdered——”</p>
-
- <p>A gasp broke from Parker.</p>
-
- <p>“The master? Murdered? Impossible, sir!”</p>
-
- <p>It was my turn to stare.</p>
-
- <p>“Didn’t you telephone to me, not five minutes ago, and tell me that Mr.
- Ackroyd had been found murdered?”</p>
-
- <p>“Me, sir? Oh! no indeed, sir. I wouldn’t dream of doing such a thing.”</p>
-
- <p>“Do you mean to say it’s all a hoax? That there’s nothing the matter
- with Mr. Ackroyd?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span></p>
-
- <p>“Excuse me, sir, did the person telephoning use my name?”</p>
-
- <p>“I’ll give you the exact words I heard. ‘<em>Is that Dr. Sheppard?
- Parker, the butler at Fernly, speaking. Will you please come at once,
- sir. Mr. Ackroyd has been murdered.</em>’”</p>
-
- <p>Parker and I stared at each other blankly.</p>
-
- <p>“A very wicked joke to play, sir,” he said at last, in a shocked tone.
- “Fancy saying a thing like that.”</p>
-
- <p>“Where is Mr. Ackroyd?” I asked suddenly.</p>
-
- <p>“Still in the study, I fancy, sir. The ladies have gone to bed, and
- Major Blunt and Mr. Raymond are in the billiard room.”</p>
-
- <p>“I think I’ll just look in and see him for a minute,” I said. “I know
- he didn’t want to be disturbed again, but this odd practical joke has
- made me uneasy. I’d just like to satisfy myself that he’s all right.”</p>
-
- <p>“Quite so, sir. It makes me feel quite uneasy myself. If you don’t
- object to my accompanying you as far as the door, sir——?”</p>
-
- <p>“Not at all,” I said. “Come along.”</p>
-
- <p>I passed through the door on the right, Parker on my heels, traversed
- the little lobby where a small flight of stairs led upstairs to
- Ackroyd’s bedroom, and tapped on the study door.</p>
-
- <p>There was no answer. I turned the handle, but the door was locked.</p>
-
- <p>“Allow me, sir,” said Parker.</p>
-
- <p>Very nimbly, for a man of his build, he dropped on one knee and applied
- his eye to the keyhole.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span></p>
-
- <p>“Key is in the lock all right, sir,” he said, rising. “On the inside.
- Mr. Ackroyd must have locked himself in and possibly just dropped off
- to sleep.”</p>
-
- <p>I bent down and verified Parker’s statement.</p>
-
- <p>“It seems all right,” I said, “but, all the same, Parker, I’m going
- to wake your master up. I shouldn’t be satisfied to go home without
- hearing from his own lips that he’s quite all right.”</p>
-
- <p>So saying, I rattled the handle and called out, “Ackroyd, Ackroyd, just
- a minute.”</p>
-
- <p>But still there was no answer. I glanced over my shoulder.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t want to alarm the household,” I said hesitatingly.</p>
-
- <p>Parker went across and shut the door from the big hall through which we
- had come.</p>
-
- <p>“I think that will be all right now, sir. The billiard room is at
- the other side of the house, and so are the kitchen quarters and the
- ladies’ bedrooms.”</p>
-
- <p>I nodded comprehendingly. Then I banged once more frantically on the
- door, and stooping down, fairly bawled through the keyhole:—</p>
-
- <p>“Ackroyd, Ackroyd! It’s Sheppard. Let me in.”</p>
-
- <p>And still—silence. Not a sign of life from within the locked room.
- Parker and I glanced at each other.</p>
-
- <p>“Look here, Parker,” I said, “I’m going to break this door in—or
- rather, we are. I’ll take the responsibility.”</p>
-
- <p>“If you say so, sir,” said Parker, rather doubtfully.</p>
-
- <p>“I do say so. I’m seriously alarmed about Mr. Ackroyd.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">52</span></p>
-
- <p>I looked round the small lobby and picked up a heavy oak chair. Parker
- and I held it between us and advanced to the assault. Once, twice, and
- three times we hurled it against the lock. At the third blow it gave,
- and we staggered into the room.</p>
-
- <p>Ackroyd was sitting as I had left him in the arm-chair before the fire.
- His head had fallen sideways, and clearly visible, just below the
- collar of his coat, was a shining piece of twisted metalwork.</p>
-
- <p>Parker and I advanced till we stood over the recumbent figure. I heard
- the butler draw in his breath with a sharp hiss.</p>
-
- <p>“Stabbed from be’ind,” he murmured. “’Orrible!”</p>
-
- <p>He wiped his moist brow with his handkerchief, then stretched out a
- hand gingerly towards the hilt of the dagger.</p>
-
- <p>“You mustn’t touch that,” I said sharply. “Go at once to the telephone
- and ring up the police station. Inform them of what has happened. Then
- tell Mr. Raymond and Major Blunt.”</p>
-
- <p>“Very good, sir.”</p>
-
- <p>Parker hurried away, still wiping his perspiring brow.</p>
-
- <p>I did what little had to be done. I was careful not to disturb the
- position of the body, and not to handle the dagger at all. No object
- was to be attained by moving it. Ackroyd had clearly been dead some
- little time.</p>
-
- <p>Then I heard young Raymond’s voice, horror-stricken and incredulous,
- outside.</p>
-
- <p>“What do you say? Oh! impossible! Where’s the doctor?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span></p>
-
- <p>He appeared impetuously in the doorway, then stopped dead, his face
- very white. A hand put him aside, and Hector Blunt came past him into
- the room.</p>
-
- <p>“My God!” said Raymond from behind him; “it’s true, then.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt came straight on till he reached the chair. He bent over the
- body, and I thought that, like Parker, he was going to lay hold of the
- dagger hilt. I drew him back with one hand.</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing must be moved,” I explained. “The police must see him exactly
- as he is now.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt nodded in instant comprehension. His face was expressionless as
- ever, but I thought I detected signs of emotion beneath the stolid
- mask. Geoffrey Raymond had joined us now, and stood peering over
- Blunt’s shoulder at the body.</p>
-
- <p>“This is terrible,” he said in a low voice.</p>
-
- <p>He had regained his composure, but as he took off the pince-nez he
- habitually wore and polished them I observed that his hand was shaking.</p>
-
- <p>“Robbery, I suppose,” he said. “How did the fellow get in? Through the
- window? Has anything been taken?”</p>
-
- <p>He went towards the desk.</p>
-
- <p>“You think it’s burglary?” I said slowly.</p>
-
- <p>“What else could it be? There’s no question of suicide, I suppose?”</p>
-
- <p>“No man could stab himself in such a way,” I said confidently. “It’s
- murder right enough. But with what motive?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span></p>
-
- <p>“Roger hadn’t an enemy in the world,” said Blunt quietly. “Must have
- been burglars. But what was the thief after? Nothing seems to be
- disarranged?”</p>
-
- <p>He looked round the room. Raymond was still sorting the papers on the
- desk.</p>
-
- <p>“There seems nothing missing, and none of the drawers show signs of
- having been tampered with,” the secretary observed at last. “It’s very
- mysterious.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt made a slight motion with his head.</p>
-
- <p>“There are some letters on the floor here,” he said.</p>
-
- <p>I looked down. Three or four letters still lay where Ackroyd had
- dropped them earlier in the evening.</p>
-
- <p>But the blue envelope containing Mrs. Ferrars’s letter had disappeared.
- I half opened my mouth to speak, but at that moment the sound of a bell
- pealed through the house. There was a confused murmur of voices in the
- hall, and then Parker appeared with our local inspector and a police
- constable.</p>
-
- <p>“Good evening, gentlemen,” said the inspector. “I’m terribly sorry for
- this! A good kind gentleman like Mr. Ackroyd. The butler says it is
- murder. No possibility of accident or suicide, doctor?”</p>
-
- <p>“None whatever,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! A bad business.”</p>
-
- <p>He came and stood over the body.</p>
-
- <p>“Been moved at all?” he asked sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“Beyond making certain that life was extinct—an easy matter—I have not
- disturbed the body in any way.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! And everything points to the murderer having<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span> got clear away—for
- the moment, that is. Now then, let me hear all about it. Who found the
- body?”</p>
-
- <p>I explained the circumstances carefully.</p>
-
- <p>“A telephone message, you say? From the butler?”</p>
-
- <p>“A message that I never sent,” declared Parker earnestly. “I’ve not
- been near the telephone the whole evening. The others can bear me out
- that I haven’t.”</p>
-
- <p>“Very odd, that. Did it sound like Parker’s voice, doctor?”</p>
-
- <p>“Well—I can’t say I noticed. I took it for granted, you see.”</p>
-
- <p>“Naturally. Well, you got up here, broke in the door, and found poor
- Mr. Ackroyd like this. How long should you say he had been dead,
- doctor?”</p>
-
- <p>“Half an hour at least—perhaps longer,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“The door was locked on the inside, you say? What about the window?”</p>
-
- <p>“I myself closed and bolted it earlier in the evening at Mr. Ackroyd’s
- request.”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector strode across to it and threw back the curtains.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, it’s open now anyway,” he remarked.</p>
-
- <p>True enough, the window was open, the lower sash being raised to its
- fullest extent.</p>
-
- <p>The inspector produced a pocket torch and flashed it along the sill
- outside.</p>
-
- <p>“This is the way he went all right,” he remarked, “<em>and</em> got in.
- See here.”</p>
-
- <p>In the light of the powerful torch, several clearly defined footmarks
- could be seen. They seemed to be those<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span> of shoes with rubber studs
- in the soles. One particularly clear one pointed inwards, another,
- slightly overlapping it, pointed outwards.</p>
-
- <p>“Plain as a pikestaff,” said the inspector. “Any valuables missing?”</p>
-
- <p>Geoffrey Raymond shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“Not so that we can discover. Mr. Ackroyd never kept anything of
- particular value in this room.”</p>
-
- <p>“H’m,” said the inspector. “Man found an open window. Climbed in,
- saw Mr. Ackroyd sitting there—maybe he’d fallen asleep. Man stabbed
- him from behind, then lost his nerve and made off. But he’s left his
- tracks pretty clearly. We ought to get hold of <em>him</em> without much
- difficulty. No suspicious strangers been hanging about anywhere?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh!” I said suddenly.</p>
-
- <p>“What is it, doctor?”</p>
-
- <p>“I met a man this evening—just as I was turning out of the gate. He
- asked me the way to Fernly Park.”</p>
-
- <p>“What time would that be?”</p>
-
- <p>“Just nine o’clock. I heard it chime the hour as I was turning out of
- the gate.”</p>
-
- <p>“Can you describe him?”</p>
-
- <p>I did so to the best of my ability.</p>
-
- <p>The inspector turned to the butler.</p>
-
- <p>“Any one answering that description come to the front door?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, sir. No one has been to the house at all this evening.”</p>
-
- <p>“What about the back?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span></p>
-
- <p>“I don’t think so, sir, but I’ll make inquiries.”</p>
-
- <p>He moved towards the door, but the inspector held up a large hand.</p>
-
- <p>“No, thanks. I’ll do my own inquiring. But first of all I want to fix
- the time a little more clearly. When was Mr. Ackroyd last seen alive?”</p>
-
- <p>“Probably by me,” I said, “when I left at—let me see—about ten minutes
- to nine. He told me that he didn’t wish to be disturbed, and I repeated
- the order to Parker.”</p>
-
- <p>“Just so, sir,” said Parker respectfully.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd was certainly alive at half-past nine,” put in Raymond,
- “for I heard his voice in here talking.”</p>
-
- <p>“Who was he talking to?”</p>
-
- <p>“That I don’t know. Of course, at the time I took it for granted that
- it was Dr. Sheppard who was with him. I wanted to ask him a question
- about some papers I was engaged upon, but when I heard the voices I
- remembered that he had said he wanted to talk to Dr. Sheppard without
- being disturbed, and I went away again. But now it seems that the
- doctor had already left?”</p>
-
- <p>I nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“I was at home by a quarter-past nine,” I said. “I didn’t go out again
- until I received the telephone call.”</p>
-
- <p>“Who could have been with him at half-past nine?” queried the
- inspector. “It wasn’t you, Mr.—er——”</p>
-
- <p>“Major Blunt,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“Major Hector Blunt?” asked the inspector, a respectful tone creeping
- into his voice.</p>
-
- <p>Blunt merely jerked his head affirmatively.</p>
-
- <p>“I think we’ve seen you down here before, sir,” said the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span> inspector.
- “I didn’t recognize you for the moment, but you were staying with Mr.
- Ackroyd a year ago last May.”</p>
-
- <p>“June,” corrected Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>“Just so, June it was. Now, as I was saying, it wasn’t you with Mr.
- Ackroyd at nine-thirty this evening?”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“Never saw him after dinner,” he volunteered.</p>
-
- <p>The inspector turned once more to Raymond.</p>
-
- <p>“You didn’t overhear any of the conversation going on, did you, sir?”</p>
-
- <p>“I did catch just a fragment of it,” said the secretary, “and,
- supposing as I did that it was Dr. Sheppard who was with Mr. Ackroyd,
- that fragment struck me as distinctly odd. As far as I can remember,
- the exact words were these. Mr. Ackroyd was speaking. ‘The calls
- on my purse have been so frequent of late’—that is what he was
- saying—‘of late, that I fear it is impossible for me to accede to your
- request....’ I went away again at once, of course, so did not hear any
- more. But I rather wondered because Dr. Sheppard——”</p>
-
- <p>“——Does not ask for loans for himself or subscriptions for others,” I
- finished.</p>
-
- <p>“A demand for money,” said the inspector musingly. “It may be that here
- we have a very important clew.” He turned to the butler. “You say,
- Parker, that nobody was admitted by the front door this evening?”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s what I say, sir.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then it seems almost certain that Mr. Ackroyd himself<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span> must have
- admitted this stranger. But I don’t quite see——”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector went into a kind of day-dream for some minutes.</p>
-
- <p>“One thing’s clear,” he said at length, rousing himself from his
- absorption. “Mr. Ackroyd was alive and well at nine-thirty. That is the
- last moment at which he is known to have been alive.”</p>
-
- <p>Parker gave vent to an apologetic cough which brought the inspector’s
- eyes on him at once.</p>
-
- <p>“Well?” he said sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“If you’ll excuse me, sir, Miss Flora saw him after that.”</p>
-
- <p>“Miss Flora?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, sir. About a quarter to ten that would be. It was after that that
- she told me Mr. Ackroyd wasn’t to be disturbed again to-night.”</p>
-
- <p>“Did he send her to you with that message?”</p>
-
- <p>“Not exactly, sir. I was bringing a tray with soda and whisky when Miss
- Flora, who was just coming out of this room, stopped me and said her
- uncle didn’t want to be disturbed.”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector looked at the butler with rather closer attention than he
- had bestowed on him up to now.</p>
-
- <p>“You’d already been told that Mr. Ackroyd didn’t want to be disturbed,
- hadn’t you?”</p>
-
- <p>Parker began to stammer. His hands shook.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, sir. Yes, sir. Quite so, sir.”</p>
-
- <p>“And yet you were proposing to do so?”</p>
-
- <p>“I’d forgotten, sir. At least I mean, I always bring<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span> the whisky and
- soda about that time, sir, and ask if there’s anything more, and I
- thought—well, I was doing as usual without thinking.”</p>
-
- <p>It was at this moment that it began to dawn upon me that Parker was
- most suspiciously flustered. The man was shaking and twitching all over.</p>
-
- <p>“H’m,” said the inspector. “I must see Miss Ackroyd at once. For the
- moment we’ll leave this room exactly as it is. I can return here after
- I’ve heard what Miss Ackroyd has to tell me. I shall just take the
- precaution of shutting and bolting the window.”</p>
-
- <p>This precaution accomplished, he led the way into the hall and we
- followed him. He paused a moment, as he glanced up at the little
- staircase, then spoke over his shoulder to the constable.</p>
-
- <p>“Jones, you’d better stay here. Don’t let any one go into that room.”</p>
-
- <p>Parker interposed deferentially.</p>
-
- <p>“If you’ll excuse me, sir. If you were to lock the door into the main
- hall, nobody could gain access to this part. That staircase leads only
- to Mr. Ackroyd’s bedroom and bathroom. There is no communication with
- the other part of the house. There once was a door through, but Mr.
- Ackroyd had it blocked up. He liked to feel that his suite was entirely
- private.”</p>
-
- <p>To make things clear and explain the position, I have appended a rough
- sketch of the right-hand wing of the house. The small staircase leads,
- as Parker explained, to a big bedroom (made by two being knocked into
- one) and an adjoining bathroom and lavatory.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span></p>
-
- <div class="figcenter illowp66">
- <img src="images/i061.jpg" alt="" />
- </div>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span></p>
-
- <p>The inspector took in the position at a glance. We went through into
- the large hall and he locked the door behind him, slipping the key into
- his pocket. Then he gave the constable some low-voiced instructions,
- and the latter prepared to depart.</p>
-
- <p>“We must get busy on those shoe tracks,” explained the inspector. “But
- first of all, I must have a word with Miss Ackroyd. She was the last
- person to see her uncle alive. Does she know yet?”</p>
-
- <p>Raymond shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, no need to tell her for another five minutes. She can answer my
- questions better without being upset by knowing the truth about her
- uncle. Tell her there’s been a burglary, and ask her if she would mind
- dressing and coming down to answer a few questions.”</p>
-
- <p>It was Raymond who went upstairs on this errand.</p>
-
- <p>“Miss Ackroyd will be down in a minute,” he said, when he returned. “I
- told her just what you suggested.”</p>
-
- <p>In less than five minutes Flora descended the staircase. She was
- wrapped in a pale pink silk kimono. She looked anxious and excited.</p>
-
- <p>The inspector stepped forward.</p>
-
- <p>“Good-evening, Miss Ackroyd,” he said civilly. “We’re afraid there’s
- been an attempt at robbery, and we want you to help us. What’s this
- room—the billiard room? Come in here and sit down.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora sat down composedly on the wide divan which ran the length of the
- wall, and looked up at the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t quite understand. What has been stolen? What do you want me to
- tell you?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span></p>
-
- <p>“It’s just this, Miss Ackroyd. Parker here says you came out of your
- uncle’s study at about a quarter to ten. Is that right?”</p>
-
- <p>“Quite right. I had been to say good-night to him.”</p>
-
- <p>“And the time is correct?”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, it must have been about then. I can’t say exactly. It might have
- been later.”</p>
-
- <p>“Was your uncle alone, or was there any one with him?”</p>
-
- <p>“He was alone. Dr. Sheppard had gone.”</p>
-
- <p>“Did you happen to notice whether the window was open or shut?”</p>
-
- <p>Flora shook her head.</p>
-
- <p>“I can’t say. The curtains were drawn.”</p>
-
- <p>“Exactly. And your uncle seemed quite as usual?”</p>
-
- <p>“I think so.”</p>
-
- <p>“Do you mind telling us exactly what passed between you?”</p>
-
- <p>Flora paused a minute, as though to collect her recollections.</p>
-
- <p>“I went in and said, ‘Good-night, uncle, I’m going to bed now. I’m
- tired to-night.’ He gave a sort of grunt, and—I went over and kissed
- him, and he said something about my looking nice in the frock I had on,
- and then he told me to run away as he was busy. So I went.”</p>
-
- <p>“Did he ask specially not to be disturbed?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! yes, I forgot. He said: ‘Tell Parker I don’t want anything more
- to-night, and that he’s not to disturb me.’ I met Parker just outside
- the door and gave him uncle’s message.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span></p>
-
- <p>“Just so,” said the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“Won’t you tell me what it is that has been stolen?”</p>
-
- <p>“We’re not quite—certain,” said the inspector hesitatingly.</p>
-
- <p>A wide look of alarm came into the girl’s eyes. She started up.</p>
-
- <p>“What is it? You’re hiding something from me?”</p>
-
- <p>Moving in his usual unobtrusive manner, Hector Blunt came between her
- and the inspector. She half stretched out her hand, and he took it in
- both of his, patting it as though she were a very small child, and she
- turned to him as though something in his stolid, rocklike demeanor
- promised comfort and safety.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s bad news, Flora,” he said quietly. “Bad news for all of us. Your
- Uncle Roger——”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes?”</p>
-
- <p>“It will be a shock to you. Bound to be. Poor Roger’s dead.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora drew away from him, her eyes dilating with horror.</p>
-
- <p>“When?” she whispered. “When?”</p>
-
- <p>“Very soon after you left him, I’m afraid,” said Blunt gravely.</p>
-
- <p>Flora raised her hand to her throat, gave a little cry, and I hurried
- to catch her as she fell. She had fainted, and Blunt and I carried her
- upstairs and laid her on her bed. Then I got him to wake Mrs. Ackroyd
- and tell her the news. Flora soon revived, and I brought her mother to
- her, telling her what to do for the girl. Then I hurried downstairs again.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">65</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">THE TUNISIAN DAGGER</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">I met</span> the inspector just coming from the door which led into the
- kitchen quarters.</p>
-
- <p>“How’s the young lady, doctor?”</p>
-
- <p>“Coming round nicely. Her mother’s with her.”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s good. I’ve been questioning the servants. They all declare that
- no one has been to the back door to-night. Your description of that
- stranger was rather vague. Can’t you give us something more definite to
- go upon?”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m afraid not,” I said regretfully. “It was a dark night, you see,
- and the fellow had his coat collar well pulled up and his hat squashed
- down over his eyes.”</p>
-
- <p>“H’m,” said the inspector. “Looked as though he wanted to conceal his
- face. Sure it was no one you know?”</p>
-
- <p>I replied in the negative, but not as decidedly as I might have done. I
- remembered my impression that the stranger’s voice was not unfamiliar
- to me. I explained this rather haltingly to the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“It was a rough, uneducated voice, you say?”</p>
-
- <p>I agreed, but it occurred to me that the roughness had been of an
- almost exaggerated quality. If, as the inspector thought, the man had
- wished to hide his face, he might equally well have tried to disguise
- his voice.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span></p>
-
- <p>“Do you mind coming into the study with me again, doctor? There are one
- or two things I want to ask you.”</p>
-
- <p>I acquiesced. Inspector Davis unlocked the door of the lobby, we passed
- through, and he locked the door again behind him.</p>
-
- <p>“We don’t want to be disturbed,” he said grimly. “And we don’t want any
- eavesdropping either. What’s all this about blackmail?”</p>
-
- <p>“Blackmail!” I exclaimed, very much startled.</p>
-
- <p>“Is it an effort of Parker’s imagination? Or is there something in it?”</p>
-
- <p>“If Parker heard anything about blackmail,” I said slowly, “he must
- have been listening outside this door with his ear glued against the
- keyhole.”</p>
-
- <p>Davis nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing more likely. You see, I’ve been instituting a few inquiries as
- to what Parker has been doing with himself this evening. To tell the
- truth, I didn’t like his manner. The man knows something. When I began
- to question him, he got the wind up, and plumped out some garbled story
- of blackmail.”</p>
-
- <p>I took an instant decision.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m rather glad you’ve brought the matter up,” I said. “I’ve been
- trying to decide whether to make a clean breast of things or not. I’d
- already practically decided to tell you everything, but I was going to
- wait for a favorable opportunity. You might as well have it now.”</p>
-
- <p>And then and there I narrated the whole events of the evening as I
- have set them down here. The inspector listened keenly, occasionally
- interjecting a question.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">67</span></p>
-
- <p>“Most extraordinary story I ever heard,” he said, when I had finished.
- “And you say that letter has completely disappeared? It looks bad—it
- looks very bad indeed. It gives us what we’ve been looking for—a motive
- for the murder.”</p>
-
- <p>I nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“I realize that.”</p>
-
- <p>“You say that Mr. Ackroyd hinted at a suspicion he had that some member
- of his household was involved? Household’s rather an elastic term.”</p>
-
- <p>“You don’t think that Parker himself might be the man we’re after?” I
- suggested.</p>
-
- <p>“It looks very like it. He was obviously listening at the door when
- you came out. Then Miss Ackroyd came across him later bent on entering
- the study. Say he tried again when she was safely out of the way. He
- stabbed Ackroyd, locked the door on the inside, opened the window, and
- got out that way, and went round to a side door which he had previously
- left open. How’s that?”</p>
-
- <p>“There’s only one thing against it,” I said slowly. “If Ackroyd went on
- reading that letter as soon as I left, as he intended to do, I don’t
- see him continuing to sit on here and turn things over in his mind for
- another hour. He’d have had Parker in at once, accused him then and
- there, and there would have been a fine old uproar. Remember, Ackroyd
- was a man of choleric temper.”</p>
-
- <p>“Mightn’t have had time to go on with the letter just then,” suggested
- the inspector. “We know some one was with him at half-past nine. If
- that visitor turned up as soon as you left, and after he went, Miss
- Ackroyd came in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">68</span> to say good-night—well, he wouldn’t be able to go on
- with the letter until close upon ten o’clock.”</p>
-
- <p>“And the telephone call?”</p>
-
- <p>“Parker sent that all right—perhaps before he thought of the locked
- door and open window. Then he changed his mind—or got in a panic—and
- decided to deny all knowledge of it. That was it, depend upon it.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ye-es,” I said rather doubtfully.</p>
-
- <p>“Anyway, we can find out the truth about the telephone call from the
- exchange. If it was put through from here, I don’t see how any one
- else but Parker could have sent it. Depend upon it, he’s our man.
- But keep it dark—we don’t want to alarm him just yet, till we’ve got
- all the evidence. I’ll see to it he doesn’t give us the slip. To all
- appearances we’ll be concentrating on your mysterious stranger.”</p>
-
- <p>He rose from where he had been sitting astride the chair belonging to
- the desk, and crossed over to the still form in the arm-chair.</p>
-
- <p>“The weapon ought to give us a clew,” he remarked, looking up. “It’s
- something quite unique—a curio, I should think, by the look of it.”</p>
-
- <p>He bent down, surveying the handle attentively, and I heard him give a
- grunt of satisfaction. Then, very gingerly, he pressed his hands down
- below the hilt and drew the blade out from the wound. Still carrying it
- so as not to touch the handle, he placed it in a wide china mug which
- adorned the mantelpiece.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” he said, nodding at it. “Quite a work of art. There can’t be
- many of them about.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">69</span></p>
-
- <p>It was indeed a beautiful object. A narrow, tapering blade, and a hilt
- of elaborately intertwined metals of curious and careful workmanship.
- He touched the blade gingerly with his finger, testing its sharpness,
- and made an appreciative grimace.</p>
-
- <p>“Lord, what an edge,” he exclaimed. “A child could drive that into a
- man—as easy as cutting butter. A dangerous sort of toy to have about.”</p>
-
- <p>“May I examine the body properly now?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>He nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“Go ahead.”</p>
-
- <p>I made a thorough examination.</p>
-
- <p>“Well?” said the inspector, when I had finished.</p>
-
- <p>“I’ll spare you the technical language,” I said. “We’ll keep that
- for the inquest. The blow was delivered by a right-handed man
- standing behind him, and death must have been instantaneous. By the
- expression on the dead man’s face, I should say that the blow was quite
- unexpected. He probably died without knowing who his assailant was.”</p>
-
- <p>“Butlers can creep about as soft-footed as cats,” said Inspector Davis.
- “There’s not going to be much mystery about this crime. Take a look at
- the hilt of that dagger.”</p>
-
- <p>I took the look.</p>
-
- <p>“I dare say they’re not apparent to you, but I can see them clearly
- enough.” He lowered his voice. “<em>Fingerprints!</em>”</p>
-
- <p>He stood off a few steps to judge of his effect.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said mildly. “I guessed that.”</p>
-
- <p>I do not see why I should be supposed to be totally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span> devoid of
- intelligence. After all, I read detective stories, and the newspapers,
- and am a man of quite average ability. If there had been toe marks on
- the dagger handle, now, that would have been quite a different thing. I
- would then have registered any amount of surprise and awe.</p>
-
- <p>I think the inspector was annoyed with me for declining to get
- thrilled. He picked up the china mug and invited me to accompany him to
- the billiard room.</p>
-
- <p>“I want to see if Mr. Raymond can tell us anything about this dagger,”
- he explained.</p>
-
- <p>Locking the outer door behind us again, we made our way to the billiard
- room, where we found Geoffrey Raymond. The inspector held up his
- exhibit.</p>
-
- <p>“Ever seen this before, Mr. Raymond?”</p>
-
- <p>“Why—I believe—I’m almost sure that is a curio given to Mr. Ackroyd
- by Major Blunt. It comes from Morocco—no, Tunis. So the crime was
- committed with that? What an extraordinary thing. It seems almost
- impossible, and yet there could hardly be two daggers the same. May I
- fetch Major Blunt?”</p>
-
- <p>Without waiting for an answer, he hurried off.</p>
-
- <p>“Nice young fellow that,” said the inspector. “Something honest and
- ingenuous about him.”</p>
-
- <p>I agreed. In the two years that Geoffrey Raymond has been secretary to
- Ackroyd, I have never seen him ruffled or out of temper. And he has
- been, I know, a most efficient secretary.</p>
-
- <p>In a minute or two Raymond returned, accompanied by Blunt.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span></p>
-
- <p>“I was right,” said Raymond excitedly. “It <em>is</em> the Tunisian
- dagger.”</p>
-
- <p>“Major Blunt hasn’t looked at it yet,” objected the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“Saw it the moment I came into the study,” said the quiet man.</p>
-
- <p>“You recognized it then?”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“You said nothing about it,” said the inspector suspiciously.</p>
-
- <p>“Wrong moment,” said Blunt. “Lot of harm done by blurting out things at
- the wrong time.”</p>
-
- <p>He returned the inspector’s stare placidly enough.</p>
-
- <p>The latter grunted at last and turned away. He brought the dagger over
- to Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>“You’re quite sure about it, sir. You identify it positively?”</p>
-
- <p>“Absolutely. No doubt whatever.”</p>
-
- <p>“Where was this—er—curio usually kept? Can you tell me that, sir?”</p>
-
- <p>It was the secretary who answered.</p>
-
- <p>“In the silver table in the drawing-room.”</p>
-
- <p>“What?” I exclaimed.</p>
-
- <p>The others looked at me.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, doctor?” said the inspector encouragingly.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s nothing.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, doctor?” said the inspector again, still more encouragingly.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s so trivial,” I explained apologetically. “Only that when I
- arrived last night for dinner I heard the lid of the silver table being
- shut down in the drawing-room.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span></p>
-
- <p>I saw profound skepticism and a trace of suspicion on the inspector’s
- countenance.</p>
-
- <p>“How did you know it was the silver table lid?”</p>
-
- <p>I was forced to explain in detail—a long, tedious explanation which I
- would infinitely rather not have had to make.</p>
-
- <p>The inspector heard me to the end.</p>
-
- <p>“Was the dagger in its place when you were looking over the contents?”
- he asked.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t know,” I said. “I can’t say I remember noticing it—but, of
- course, it may have been there all the time.”</p>
-
- <p>“We’d better get hold of the housekeeper,” remarked the inspector, and
- pulled the bell.</p>
-
- <p>A few minutes later Miss Russell, summoned by Parker, entered the room.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t think I went near the silver table,” she said, when the
- inspector had posed his question. “I was looking to see that all the
- flowers were fresh. Oh! yes, I remember now. The silver table was
- open—which it had no business to be, and I shut the lid down as I
- passed.”</p>
-
- <p>She looked at him aggressively.</p>
-
- <p>“I see,” said the inspector. “Can you tell me if this dagger was in its
- place then?”</p>
-
- <p>Miss Russell looked at the weapon composedly.</p>
-
- <p>“I can’t say, I’m sure,” she replied. “I didn’t stop to look. I knew
- the family would be down any minute, and I wanted to get away.”</p>
-
- <p>“Thank you,” said the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>There was just a trace of hesitation in his manner, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span> though he would
- have liked to question her further, but Miss Russell clearly accepted
- the words as a dismissal, and glided from the room.</p>
-
- <p>“Rather a Tartar, I should fancy, eh?” said the inspector, looking
- after her. “Let me see. This silver table is in front of one of the
- windows, I think you said, doctor?”</p>
-
- <p>Raymond answered for me.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, the left-hand window.”</p>
-
- <p>“And the window was open?”</p>
-
- <p>“They were both ajar.”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, I don’t think we need go into the question much further.
- Somebody—I’ll just say somebody—could get that dagger any time he
- liked, and exactly when he got it doesn’t matter in the least. I’ll be
- coming up in the morning with the chief constable, Mr. Raymond. Until
- then, I’ll keep the key of that door. I want Colonel Melrose to see
- everything exactly as it is. I happen to know that he’s dining out the
- other side of the county, and, I believe, staying the night....”</p>
-
- <p>We watched the inspector take up the jar.</p>
-
- <p>“I shall have to pack this carefully,” he observed. “It’s going to be
- an important piece of evidence in more ways than one.”</p>
-
- <p>A few minutes later as I came out of the billiard room with Raymond,
- the latter gave a low chuckle of amusement.</p>
-
- <p>I felt the pressure of his hand on my arm, and followed the direction
- of his eyes. Inspector Davis seemed to be inviting Parker’s opinion of
- a small pocket diary.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span></p>
-
- <p>“A little obvious,” murmured my companion. “So Parker is the suspect,
- is he? Shall we oblige Inspector Davis with a set of our fingerprints
- also?”</p>
-
- <p>He took two cards from the card tray, wiped them with his silk
- handkerchief, then handed one to me and took the other himself. Then,
- with a grin, he handed them to the police inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“Souvenirs,” he said. “<abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 1, Dr. Sheppard; <abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 2, my humble self. One
- from Major Blunt will be forthcoming in the morning.”</p>
-
- <p>Youth is very buoyant. Even the brutal murder of his friend and
- employer could not dim Geoffrey Raymond’s spirits for long. Perhaps
- that is as it should be. I do not know. I have lost the quality of
- resilience long since myself.</p>
-
- <p>It was very late when I got back, and I hoped that Caroline would have
- gone to bed. I might have known better.</p>
-
- <p>She had hot cocoa waiting for me, and whilst I drank it, she extracted
- the whole history of the evening from me. I said nothing of the
- blackmailing business, but contented myself with giving her the facts
- of the murder.</p>
-
- <p>“The police suspect Parker,” I said, as I rose to my feet and prepared
- to ascend to bed. “There seems a fairly clear case against him.”</p>
-
- <p>“Parker!” said my sister. “Fiddlesticks! That inspector must be a
- perfect fool. Parker indeed! Don’t tell me.”</p>
-
- <p>With which obscure pronouncement we went up to bed.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">I LEARN MY NEIGHBOR’S PROFESSION</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">On</span> the following morning I hurried unforgivably over my round. My
- excuse can be that I had no very serious cases to attend. On my return
- Caroline came into the hall to greet me.</p>
-
- <p>“Flora Ackroyd is here,” she announced in an excited whisper.</p>
-
- <p>“What?”</p>
-
- <p>I concealed my surprise as best I could.</p>
-
- <p>“She’s very anxious to see you. She’s been here half an hour.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline led the way into our small sitting-room, and I followed.</p>
-
- <p>Flora was sitting on the sofa by the window. She was in black and she
- sat nervously twisting her hands together. I was shocked by the sight
- of her face. All the color had faded away from it. But when she spoke
- her manner was as composed and resolute as possible.</p>
-
- <p>“Dr. Sheppard, I have come to ask you to help me.”</p>
-
- <p>“Of course he’ll help you, my dear,” said Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>I don’t think Flora really wished Caroline to be present at the
- interview. She would, I am sure, have infinitely preferred to speak to
- me privately. But she also wanted to waste no time, so she made the
- best of it.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span></p>
-
- <p>“I want you to come to The Larches with me.”</p>
-
- <p>“The Larches?” I queried, surprised.</p>
-
- <p>“To see that funny little man?” exclaimed Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. You know who he is, don’t you?”</p>
-
- <p>“We fancied,” I said, “that he might be a retired hairdresser.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora’s blue eyes opened very wide.</p>
-
- <p>“Why, he’s Hercule Poirot! You know who I mean—the private detective.
- They say he’s done the most wonderful things—just like detectives do in
- books. A year ago he retired and came to live down here. Uncle knew who
- he was, but he promised not to tell any one, because M. Poirot wanted
- to live quietly without being bothered by people.”</p>
-
- <p>“So that’s who he is,” I said slowly.</p>
-
- <p>“You’ve heard of him, of course?”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m rather an old fogey, as Caroline tells me,” I said, “but I
- <em>have</em> just heard of him.”</p>
-
- <p>“Extraordinary!” commented Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>I don’t know what she was referring to—possibly her own failure to
- discover the truth.</p>
-
- <p>“You want to go and see him?” I asked slowly. “Now why?”</p>
-
- <p>“To get him to investigate this murder, of course,” said Caroline
- sharply. “Don’t be so stupid, James.”</p>
-
- <p>I was not really being stupid. Caroline does not always understand what
- I am driving at.</p>
-
- <p>“You haven’t got confidence in Inspector Davis?” I went on.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span></p>
-
- <p>“Of course she hasn’t,” said Caroline. “I haven’t either.”</p>
-
- <p>Any one would have thought it was Caroline’s uncle who had been
- murdered.</p>
-
- <p>“And how do you know he would take up the case?” I asked. “Remember he
- has retired from active work.”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s just it,” said Flora simply. “I’ve got to persuade him.”</p>
-
- <p>“You are sure you are doing wisely?” I asked gravely.</p>
-
- <p>“Of course she is,” said Caroline. “I’ll go with her myself if she
- likes.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’d rather the doctor came with me if you don’t mind, Miss Sheppard,”
- said Flora.</p>
-
- <p>She knows the value of being direct on certain occasions. Any hints
- would certainly have been wasted on Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“You see,” she explained, following directness with tact, “Dr. Sheppard
- being the doctor, and having found the body, he would be able to give
- all the details to M. Poirot.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” said Caroline grudgingly, “I see that.”</p>
-
- <p>I took a turn or two up and down the room.</p>
-
- <p>“Flora,” I said gravely, “be guided by me. I advise you not to drag
- this detective into the case.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora sprang to her feet. The color rushed into her cheeks.</p>
-
- <p>“I know why you say that,” she cried. “But it’s exactly for that reason
- I’m so anxious to go. You’re afraid! But I’m not. I know Ralph better
- than you do.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span></p>
-
- <p>“Ralph,” said Caroline. “What has Ralph got to do with it?”</p>
-
- <p>Neither of us heeded her.</p>
-
- <p>“Ralph may be weak,” continued Flora. “He may have done foolish things
- in the past—wicked things even—but he wouldn’t murder any one.”</p>
-
- <p>“No, no,” I exclaimed. “I never thought it of him.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then why did you go to the Three Boars last night?” demanded Flora,
- “on your way home—after uncle’s body was found?”</p>
-
- <p>I was momentarily silenced. I had hoped that that visit of mine would
- remain unnoticed.</p>
-
- <p>“How did you know about that?” I countered.</p>
-
- <p>“I went there this morning,” said Flora. “I heard from the servants
- that Ralph was staying there——”</p>
-
- <p>I interrupted her.</p>
-
- <p>“You had no idea that he was in King’s Abbot?”</p>
-
- <p>“No. I was astounded. I couldn’t understand it. I went there and asked
- for him. They told me, what I suppose they told you last night, that
- he went out at about nine o’clock yesterday evening—and—and never came
- back.”</p>
-
- <p>Her eyes met mine defiantly, and as though answering something in my
- look, she burst out:—</p>
-
- <p>“Well, why shouldn’t he? He might have gone—anywhere. He may even have
- gone back to London.”</p>
-
- <p>“Leaving his luggage behind?” I asked gently.</p>
-
- <p>Flora stamped her foot.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t care. There must be a simple explanation.”</p>
-
- <p>“And that’s why you want to go to Hercule Poirot?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span> Isn’t it better to
- leave things as they are? The police don’t suspect Ralph in the least,
- remember. They’re working on quite another tack.”</p>
-
- <p>“But that’s just <em>it</em>,” cried the girl. “They <em>do</em> suspect
- him. A man from Cranchester turned up this morning—Inspector Raglan,
- a horrid, weaselly little man. I found he had been to the Three Boars
- this morning before me. They told me all about his having been there,
- and the questions he had asked. He must think Ralph did it.”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s a change of mind from last night, if so,” I said slowly. “He
- doesn’t believe in Davis’s theory that it was Parker then?”</p>
-
- <p>“Parker indeed,” said my sister, and snorted.</p>
-
- <p>Flora came forward and laid her hand on my arm.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! Dr. Sheppard, let us go at once to this M. Poirot. He will find
- out the truth.”</p>
-
- <p>“My dear Flora,” I said gently, laying my hand on hers. “Are you quite
- sure it is the truth we want?”</p>
-
- <p>She looked at me, nodding her head gravely.</p>
-
- <p>“You’re not sure,” she said. “I am. I know Ralph better than you do.”</p>
-
- <p>“Of course he didn’t do it,” said Caroline, who had been keeping silent
- with great difficulty. “Ralph may be extravagant, but he’s a dear boy,
- and has the nicest manners.”</p>
-
- <p>I wanted to tell Caroline that large numbers of murderers have had
- nice manners, but the presence of Flora restrained me. Since the
- girl was determined, I was forced to give in to her and we started
- at once, getting away before my sister was able to fire off any more
- pronouncements<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span> beginning with her favorite words, “Of course.”</p>
-
- <p>An old woman with an immense Breton cap opened the door of The Larches
- to us. M. Poirot was at home, it seemed.</p>
-
- <p>We were ushered into a little sitting-room arranged with formal
- precision, and there, after the lapse of a minute or so, my friend of
- yesterday came to us.</p>
-
- <p>“Monsieur le docteur,” he said, smiling. “Mademoiselle.”</p>
-
- <p>He bowed to Flora.</p>
-
- <p>“Perhaps,” I began, “you have heard of the tragedy which occurred last
- night.”</p>
-
- <p>His face grew grave.</p>
-
- <p>“But certainly I have heard. It is horrible. I offer mademoiselle all
- my sympathy. In what way can I serve you?”</p>
-
- <p>“Miss Ackroyd,” I said, “wants you to—to——”</p>
-
- <p>“To find the murderer,” said Flora in a clear voice.</p>
-
- <p>“I see,” said the little man. “But the police will do that, will they
- not?”</p>
-
- <p>“They might make a mistake,” said Flora. “They are on their way to make
- a mistake now, I think. Please, M. Poirot, won’t you help us? If—if it
- is a question of money——”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot held up his hand.</p>
-
- <p>“Not that, I beg of you, mademoiselle. Not that I do not care for
- money.” His eyes showed a momentary twinkle. “Money, it means much to
- me and always has done. No, if I go into this, you must understand one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span>
- thing clearly. <em>I shall go through with it to the end.</em> The good
- dog, he does not leave the scent, remember! You may wish that, after
- all, you had left it to the local police.”</p>
-
- <p>“I want the truth,” said Flora, looking him straight in the eyes.</p>
-
- <p>“All the truth?”</p>
-
- <p>“All the truth.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then I accept,” said the little man quietly. “And I hope you will not
- regret those words. Now, tell me all the circumstances.”</p>
-
- <p>“Dr. Sheppard had better tell you,” said Flora. “He knows more than I
- do.”</p>
-
- <p>Thus enjoined, I plunged into a careful narrative, embodying all the
- facts I have previously set down. Poirot listened carefully, inserting
- a question here and there, but for the most part sitting in silence,
- his eyes on the ceiling.</p>
-
- <p>I brought my story to a close with the departure of the inspector and
- myself from Fernly Park the previous night.</p>
-
- <p>“And now,” said Flora, as I finished, “tell him all about Ralph.”</p>
-
- <p>I hesitated, but her imperious glance drove me on.</p>
-
- <p>“You went to this inn—this Three Boars—last night on your way home?”
- asked Poirot, as I brought my tale to a close. “Now exactly why was
- that?”</p>
-
- <p>I paused a moment to choose my words carefully.</p>
-
- <p>“I thought some one ought to inform the young man of his uncle’s death.
- It occurred to me after I had left<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span> Fernly that possibly no one but
- myself and Mr. Ackroyd were aware that he was staying in the village.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“Quite so. That was your only motive in going there, eh?”</p>
-
- <p>“That was my only motive,” I said stiffly.</p>
-
- <p>“It was not to—shall we say—reassure yourself about <i lang="fr">ce jeune homme</i>?”</p>
-
- <p>“Reassure myself?”</p>
-
- <p>“I think, M. le docteur, that you know very well what I mean, though
- you pretend not to do so. I suggest that it would have been a relief
- to you if you had found that Captain Paton had been at home all the
- evening.”</p>
-
- <p>“Not at all,” I said sharply.</p>
-
- <p>The little detective shook his head at me gravely.</p>
-
- <p>“You have not the trust in me of Miss Flora,” he said. “But no matter.
- What we have to look at is this—Captain Paton is missing, under
- circumstances which call for an explanation. I will not hide from you
- that the matter looks grave. Still, it may admit of a perfectly simple
- explanation.”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s just what I keep saying,” cried Flora eagerly.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot touched no more upon that theme. Instead he suggested an
- immediate visit to the local police. He thought it better for Flora
- to return home, and for me to be the one to accompany him there and
- introduce him to the officer in charge of the case.</p>
-
- <p>We carried out this plan forthwith. We found Inspector Davis outside
- the police station looking very glum indeed. With him was Colonel
- Melrose, the Chief Constable,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span> and another man whom, from Flora’s
- description of “weaselly,” I had no difficulty in recognizing as
- Inspector Raglan from Cranchester.</p>
-
- <p>I know Melrose fairly well, and I introduced Poirot to him and
- explained the situation. The chief constable was clearly vexed, and
- Inspector Raglan looked as black as thunder. Davis, however, seemed
- slightly exhilarated by the sight of his superior officer’s annoyance.</p>
-
- <p>“The case is going to be plain as a pikestaff,” said Raglan. “Not the
- least need for amateurs to come butting in. You’d think any fool would
- have seen the way things were last night, and then we shouldn’t have
- lost twelve hours.”</p>
-
- <p>He directed a vengeful glance at poor Davis, who received it with
- perfect stolidity.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd’s family must, of course, do what they see fit,” said
- Colonel Melrose. “But we cannot have the official investigation
- hampered in any way. I know M. Poirot’s great reputation, of course,”
- he added courteously.</p>
-
- <p>“The police can’t advertise themselves, worse luck,” said Raglan.</p>
-
- <p>It was Poirot who saved the situation.</p>
-
- <p>“It is true that I have retired from the world,” he said. “I never
- intended to take up a case again. Above all things, I have a horror of
- publicity. I must beg, that in the case of my being able to contribute
- something to the solution of the mystery, my name may not be mentioned.”</p>
-
- <p>Inspector Raglan’s face lightened a little.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span></p>
-
- <p>“I’ve heard of some very remarkable successes of yours,” observed the
- colonel, thawing.</p>
-
- <p>“I have had much experience,” said Poirot quietly. “But most of my
- successes have been obtained by the aid of the police. I admire
- enormously your English police. If Inspector Raglan permits me to
- assist him, I shall be both honored and flattered.”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector’s countenance became still more gracious.</p>
-
- <p>Colonel Melrose drew me aside.</p>
-
- <p>“From all I hear, this little fellow’s done some really remarkable
- things,” he murmured. “We’re naturally anxious not to have to call in
- Scotland Yard. Raglan seems very sure of himself, but I’m not quite
- certain that I agree with him. You see, I—er—know the parties concerned
- better than he does. This fellow doesn’t seem out after kudos, does he?
- Would work in with us unobtrusively, eh?”</p>
-
- <p>“To the greater glory of Inspector Raglan,” I said solemnly.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, well,” said Colonel Melrose breezily in a louder voice, “we must
- put you wise to the latest developments, M. Poirot.”</p>
-
- <p>“I thank you,” said Poirot. “My friend, Dr. Sheppard, said something of
- the butler being suspected?”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s all bunkum,” said Raglan instantly. “These high-class servants
- get in such a funk that they act suspiciously for nothing at all.”</p>
-
- <p>“The fingerprints?” I hinted.</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing like Parker’s.” He gave a faint smile, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span> added: “And yours
- and Mr. Raymond’s don’t fit either, doctor.”</p>
-
- <p>“What about those of Captain Ralph Paton?” asked Poirot quietly.</p>
-
- <p>I felt a secret admiration for the way he took the bull by the horns. I
- saw a look of respect creep into the inspector’s eye.</p>
-
- <p>“I see you don’t let the grass grow under your feet, Mr. Poirot. It
- will be a pleasure to work with you, I’m sure. We’re going to take that
- young gentleman’s fingerprints as soon as we can lay hands upon him.”</p>
-
- <p>“I can’t help thinking you’re mistaken, inspector,” said Colonel
- Melrose warmly. “I’ve known Ralph Paton from a boy upward. He’d never
- stoop to murder.”</p>
-
- <p>“Maybe not,” said the inspector tonelessly.</p>
-
- <p>“What have you got against him?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“Went out just on nine o’clock last night. Was seen in neighborhood of
- Fernly Park somewhere about nine-thirty. Not been seen since. Believed
- to be in serious money difficulties. I’ve got a pair of his shoes
- here—shoes with rubber studs in them. He had two pairs, almost exactly
- alike. I’m going up now to compare them with those footmarks. The
- constable is up there seeing that no one tampers with them.”</p>
-
- <p>“We’ll go at once,” said Colonel Melrose. “You and M. Poirot will
- accompany us, will you not?”</p>
-
- <p>We assented, and all drove up in the colonel’s car. The inspector was
- anxious to get at once to the footmarks, and asked to be put down at
- the lodge. About half-way up the drive, on the right, a path branched
- off<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span> which led round to the terrace and the window of Ackroyd’s study.</p>
-
- <p>“Would you like to go with the inspector, M. Poirot?” asked the chief
- constable, “or would you prefer to examine the study?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot chose the latter alternative. Parker opened the door to us. His
- manner was smug and deferential, and he seemed to have recovered from
- his panic of the night before.</p>
-
- <p>Colonel Melrose took a key from his pocket, and unlocking the door
- which led into the lobby, he ushered us through into the study.</p>
-
- <p>“Except for the removal of the body, M. Poirot, this room is exactly as
- it was last night.”</p>
-
- <p>“And the body was found—where?”</p>
-
- <p>As precisely as possible, I described Ackroyd’s position. The arm-chair
- still stood in front of the fire.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot went and sat down in it.</p>
-
- <p>“The blue letter you speak of, where was it when you left the room?”</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd had laid it down on this little table at his right hand.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“Except for that, everything was in its place?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, I think so.”</p>
-
- <p>“Colonel Melrose, would you be so extremely obliging as to sit down in
- this chair a minute. I thank you. Now, M. le docteur, will you kindly
- indicate to me the exact position of the dagger?”</p>
-
- <p>I did so, whilst the little man stood in the doorway.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span></p>
-
- <p>“The hilt of the dagger was plainly visible from the door then. Both
- you and Parker could see it at once?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot went next to the window.</p>
-
- <p>“The electric light was on, of course, when you discovered the body?”
- he asked over his shoulder.</p>
-
- <p>I assented, and joined him where he was studying the marks on the
- window-sill.</p>
-
- <p>“The rubber studs are the same pattern as those in Captain Paton’s
- shoes,” he said quietly.</p>
-
- <p>Then he came back once more to the middle of the room. His eye traveled
- round, searching everything in the room with a quick, trained glance.</p>
-
- <p>“Are you a man of good observation, Dr. Sheppard?” he asked at last.</p>
-
- <p>“I think so,” I said, surprised.</p>
-
- <p>“There was a fire in the grate, I see. When you broke the door down and
- found Mr. Ackroyd dead, how was the fire? Was it low?”</p>
-
- <p>I gave a vexed laugh.</p>
-
- <p>“I—I really can’t say. I didn’t notice. Perhaps Mr. Raymond or Major
- Blunt——”</p>
-
- <p>The little man opposite me shook his head with a faint smile.</p>
-
- <p>“One must always proceed with method. I made an error of judgment in
- asking you that question. To each man his own knowledge. You could tell
- me the details of the patient’s appearance—nothing there would escape
- you. If I wanted information about the papers on that desk, Mr. Raymond
- would have noticed anything<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span> there was to see. To find out about the
- fire, I must ask the man whose business it is to observe such things.
- You permit——”</p>
-
- <p>He moved swiftly to the fireplace and rang the bell.</p>
-
- <p>After a lapse of a minute or two Parker appeared.</p>
-
- <p>“The bell rang, sir,” he said hesitatingly.</p>
-
- <p>“Come in, Parker,” said Colonel Melrose. “This gentleman wants to ask
- you something.”</p>
-
- <p>Parker transferred a respectful attention to Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“Parker,” said the little man, “when you broke down the door with Dr.
- Sheppard last night, and found your master dead, what was the state of
- the fire?”</p>
-
- <p>Parker replied without a pause.</p>
-
- <p>“It had burned very low, sir. It was almost out.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” said Poirot. The exclamation sounded almost triumphant. He went
- on:—</p>
-
- <p>“Look round you, my good Parker. Is this room exactly as it was then?”</p>
-
- <p>The butler’s eye swept round. It came to rest on the windows.</p>
-
- <p>“The curtains were drawn, sir, and the electric light was on.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded approval.</p>
-
- <p>“Anything else?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, sir, this chair was drawn out a little more.”</p>
-
- <p>He indicated a big grandfather chair to the left of the door between it
- and the window. I append a plan of the room with the chair in question
- marked with an X.</p>
-
- <p>“Just show me,” said Poirot.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span></p>
-
- <div class="figcenter illowp100">
- <img src="images/i089.jpg" alt="" />
- </div>
-
- <p>The butler drew the chair in question out a good two feet from the
- wall, turning it so that the seat faced the door.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Voilà ce qui est curieux</i>,” murmured Poirot. “No one would want
- to sit in a chair in such a position, I fancy. Now who pushed it back
- into place again, I wonder? Did you, my friend?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, sir,” said Parker. “I was too upset with seeing the master and
- all.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot looked across at me.</p>
-
- <p>“Did you, doctor?”</p>
-
- <p>I shook my head.</p>
-
- <p>“It was back in position when I arrived with the police, sir,” put in
- Parker. “I’m sure of that.”</p>
-
- <p>“Curious,” said Poirot again.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span></p>
-
- <p>“Raymond or Blunt must have pushed it back,” I suggested. “Surely it
- isn’t important?”</p>
-
- <p>“It is completely unimportant,” said Poirot. “That is why it is so
- interesting,” he added softly.</p>
-
- <p>“Excuse me a minute,” said Colonel Melrose. He left the room with
- Parker.</p>
-
- <p>“Do you think Parker is speaking the truth?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“About the chair, yes. Otherwise I do not know. You will find, M. le
- docteur, if you have much to do with cases of this kind, that they all
- resemble each other in one thing.”</p>
-
- <p>“What is that?” I asked curiously.</p>
-
- <p>“Every one concerned in them has something to hide.”</p>
-
- <p>“Have I?” I asked, smiling.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot looked at me attentively.</p>
-
- <p>“I think you have,” he said quietly.</p>
-
- <p>“But——”</p>
-
- <p>“Have you told me everything known to you about this young man Paton?”
- He smiled as I grew red. “Oh! do not fear. I will not press you. I
- shall learn it in good time.”</p>
-
- <p>“I wish you’d tell me something of your methods,” I said hastily, to
- cover my confusion. “The point about the fire, for instance?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! that was very simple. You leave Mr. Ackroyd at—ten minutes to
- nine, was it not?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, exactly, I should say.”</p>
-
- <p>“The window is then closed and bolted and the door unlocked. At a
- quarter past ten when the body is discovered, the door is locked and
- the window is open.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span> Who opened it? Clearly only Mr. Ackroyd himself
- could have done so, and for one of two reasons. Either because the room
- became unbearably hot (but since the fire was nearly out and there was
- a sharp drop in temperature last night, that cannot be the reason),
- or because he admitted some one that way. And if he admitted some one
- that way, it must have been some one well known to him, since he had
- previously shown himself uneasy on the subject of that same window.”</p>
-
- <p>“It sounds very simple,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“Everything is simple, if you arrange the facts methodically. We are
- concerned now with the personality of the person who was with him at
- nine-thirty last night. Everything goes to show that that was the
- individual admitted by the window, and though Mr. Ackroyd was seen
- alive later by Miss Flora, we cannot approach a solution of the mystery
- until we know who that visitor was. The window may have been left open
- after his departure and so afforded entrance to the murderer, or the
- same person may have returned a second time. Ah! here is the colonel
- who returns.”</p>
-
- <p>Colonel Melrose entered with an animated manner.</p>
-
- <p>“That telephone call has been traced at last,” he said. “It did not
- come from here. It was put through to Dr. Sheppard at 10.15 last night
- from a public call office at King’s Abbot station. And at 10.23 the
- night mail leaves for Liverpool.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">INSPECTOR RAGLAN IS CONFIDENT</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">We</span> looked at each other.</p>
-
- <p>“You’ll have inquiries made at the station, of course?” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“Naturally, but I’m not over sanguine as to the result. You know what
- that station is like.”</p>
-
- <p>I did. King’s Abbot is a mere village, but its station happens to
- be an important junction. Most of the big expresses stop there, and
- trains are shunted, re-sorted, and made up. It has two or three public
- telephone boxes. At that time of night three local trains come in
- close upon each other, to catch the connection with the express for
- the north which comes in at 10.19 and leaves at 10.23. The whole place
- is in a bustle, and the chances of one particular person being noticed
- telephoning or getting into the express are very small indeed.</p>
-
- <p>“But why telephone at all?” demanded Melrose. “That is what I find so
- extraordinary. There seems no rhyme or reason in the thing.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot carefully straightened a china ornament on one of the bookcases.</p>
-
- <p>“Be sure there was a reason,” he said over his shoulder.</p>
-
- <p>“But what reason could it be?”</p>
-
- <p>“When we know that, we shall know everything. This case is very curious
- and very interesting.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span></p>
-
- <p>There was something almost indescribable in the way he said those last
- words. I felt that he was looking at the case from some peculiar angle
- of his own, and what he saw I could not tell.</p>
-
- <p>He went to the window and stood there, looking out.</p>
-
- <p>“You say it was nine o’clock, Dr. Sheppard, when you met this stranger
- outside the gate?”</p>
-
- <p>He asked the question without turning round.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I replied. “I heard the church clock chime the hour.”</p>
-
- <p>“How long would it take him to reach the house—to reach this window,
- for instance?”</p>
-
- <p>“Five minutes at the outside. Two or three minutes only if he took the
- path at the right of the drive and came straight here.”</p>
-
- <p>“But to do that he would have to know the way. How can I explain
- myself?—it would mean that he had been here before—that he knew his
- surroundings.”</p>
-
- <p>“That is true,” replied Colonel Melrose.</p>
-
- <p>“We could find out, doubtless, if Mr. Ackroyd had received any
- strangers during the past week?”</p>
-
- <p>“Young Raymond could tell us that,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“Or Parker,” suggested Colonel Melrose.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Ou tous les deux</i>,” suggested Poirot, smiling.</p>
-
- <p>Colonel Melrose went in search of Raymond, and I rang the bell once
- more for Parker.</p>
-
- <p>Colonel Melrose returned almost immediately, accompanied by the young
- secretary, whom he introduced to Poirot. Geoffrey Raymond was fresh and
- debonair as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">94</span> ever. He seemed surprised and delighted to make Poirot’s
- acquaintance.</p>
-
- <p>“No idea you’d been living among us incognito, M. Poirot,” he said. “It
- will be a great privilege to watch you at work——Hallo, what’s this?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot had been standing just to the left of the door. Now he moved
- aside suddenly, and I saw that while my back was turned he must have
- swiftly drawn out the arm-chair till it stood in the position Parker
- had indicated.</p>
-
- <p>“Want me to sit in the chair whilst you take a blood test?” asked
- Raymond good-humoredly. “What’s the idea?”</p>
-
- <p>“M. Raymond, this chair was pulled out—so—last night when Mr. Ackroyd
- was found killed. Some one moved it back again into place. Did you do
- so?”</p>
-
- <p>The secretary’s reply came without a second’s hesitation.</p>
-
- <p>“No, indeed I didn’t. I don’t even remember that it was in that
- position, but it must have been if you say so. Anyway, somebody else
- must have moved it back to its proper place. Have they destroyed a clew
- in doing so? Too bad!”</p>
-
- <p>“It is of no consequence,” said the detective. “Of no consequence
- whatever. What I really want to ask you is this, M. Raymond: Did any
- stranger come to see Mr. Ackroyd during this past week?”</p>
-
- <p>The secretary reflected for a minute or two, knitting his brows, and
- during the pause Parker appeared in answer to the bell.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">95</span></p>
-
- <p>“No,” said Raymond at last. “I can’t remember any one. Can you, Parker?”</p>
-
- <p>“I beg your pardon, sir?”</p>
-
- <p>“Any stranger coming to see Mr. Ackroyd this week?”</p>
-
- <p>The butler reflected for a minute or two.</p>
-
- <p>“There was the young man who came on Wednesday, sir,” he said at last.
- “From Curtis and Troute, I understood he was.”</p>
-
- <p>Raymond moved this aside with an impatient hand.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! yes, I remember, but that is not the kind of stranger this
- gentleman means.” He turned to Poirot. “Mr. Ackroyd had some idea of
- purchasing a dictaphone,” he explained. “It would have enabled us to
- get through a lot more work in a limited time. The firm in question
- sent down their representative, but nothing came of it. Mr. Ackroyd did
- not make up his mind to purchase.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot turned to the butler.</p>
-
- <p>“Can you describe this young man to me, my good Parker?”</p>
-
- <p>“He was fair-haired, sir, and short. Very neatly dressed in a blue
- serge suit. A very presentable young man, sir, for his station in life.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot turned to me.</p>
-
- <p>“The man you met outside the gate, doctor, was tall, was he not?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said. “Somewhere about six feet, I should say.”</p>
-
- <p>“There is nothing in that, then,” declared the Belgian. “I thank you,
- Parker.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">96</span></p>
-
- <p>The butler spoke to Raymond.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Hammond has just arrived, sir,” he said. “He is anxious to know if
- he can be of any service, and he would be glad to have a word with you.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’ll come at once,” said the young man. He hurried out. Poirot looked
- inquiringly at the chief constable.</p>
-
- <p>“The family solicitor, M. Poirot,” said the latter.</p>
-
- <p>“It is a busy time for this young M. Raymond,” murmured M. Poirot. “He
- has the air efficient, that one.”</p>
-
- <p>“I believe Mr. Ackroyd considered him a most able secretary.”</p>
-
- <p>“He has been here—how long?”</p>
-
- <p>“Just on two years, I fancy.”</p>
-
- <p>“His duties he fulfills punctiliously. Of that I am sure. In what
- manner does he amuse himself? Does he go in for <i lang="fr">le sport</i>?”</p>
-
- <p>“Private secretaries haven’t much time for that sort of thing,” said
- Colonel Melrose, smiling. “Raymond plays golf, I believe. And tennis in
- the summer time.”</p>
-
- <p>“He does not attend the courses—I should say the running of the horses?”</p>
-
- <p>“Race meetings? No, I don’t think he’s interested in racing.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded and seemed to lose interest. He glanced slowly round the
- study.</p>
-
- <p>“I have seen, I think, all that there is to be seen here.”</p>
-
- <p>I, too, looked round.</p>
-
- <p>“If those walls could speak,” I murmured.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“A tongue is not enough,” he said. “They would have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">97</span> to have also eyes
- and ears. But do not be too sure that these dead things”—he touched
- the top of the bookcase as he spoke—“are always dumb. To me they speak
- sometimes—chairs, tables—they have their message!”</p>
-
- <p>He turned away towards the door.</p>
-
- <p>“What message?” I cried. “What have they said to you to-day?”</p>
-
- <p>He looked over his shoulder and raised one eyebrow quizzically.</p>
-
- <p>“An opened window,” he said. “A locked door. A chair that apparently
- moved itself. To all three I say, ‘Why?’ and I find no answer.”</p>
-
- <p>He shook his head, puffed out his chest, and stood blinking at us. He
- looked ridiculously full of his own importance. It crossed my mind
- to wonder whether he was really any good as a detective. Had his big
- reputation been built up on a series of lucky chances?</p>
-
- <p>I think the same thought must have occurred to Colonel Melrose, for he
- frowned.</p>
-
- <p>“Anything more you want to see, M. Poirot?” he inquired brusquely.</p>
-
- <p>“You would perhaps be so kind as to show me the silver table from which
- the weapon was taken? After that, I will trespass on your kindness no
- longer.”</p>
-
- <p>We went to the drawing-room, but on the way the constable waylaid the
- colonel, and after a muttered conversation the latter excused himself
- and left us together. I showed Poirot the silver table, and after
- raising the lid once or twice and letting it fall, he pushed open the
- window and stepped out on the terrace. I followed him.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">98</span></p>
-
- <p>Inspector Raglan had just turned the corner of the house, and was
- coming towards us. His face looked grim and satisfied.</p>
-
- <p>“So there you are, M. Poirot,” he said. “Well, this isn’t going to be
- much of a case. I’m sorry, too. A nice enough young fellow gone wrong.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot’s face fell, and he spoke very mildly.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m afraid I shall not be able to be of much aid to you, then?”</p>
-
- <p>“Next time, perhaps,” said the inspector soothingly. “Though we don’t
- have murders every day in this quiet little corner of the world.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot’s gaze took on an admiring quality.</p>
-
- <p>“You have been of a marvelous promptness,” he observed. “How exactly
- did you go to work, if I may ask?”</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly,” said the inspector. “To begin with—method. That’s what I
- always say—method!”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” cried the other. “That, too, is my watchword. Method, order, and
- the little gray cells.”</p>
-
- <p>“The cells?” said the inspector, staring.</p>
-
- <p>“The little gray cells of the brain,” explained the Belgian.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, of course; well, we all use them, I suppose.”</p>
-
- <p>“In a greater or lesser degree,” murmured Poirot. “And there are, too,
- differences in quality. Then there is the psychology of a crime. One
- must study that.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” said the inspector, “you’ve been bitten with all this
- psychoanalysis stuff? Now, I’m a plain man——”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">99</span></p>
-
- <p>“Mrs. Raglan would not agree, I am sure, to that,” said Poirot, making
- him a little bow.</p>
-
- <p>Inspector Raglan, a little taken aback, bowed.</p>
-
- <p>“You don’t understand,” he said, grinning broadly. “Lord, what a lot of
- difference language makes. I’m telling you how I set to work. First of
- all, method. Mr. Ackroyd was last seen alive at a quarter to ten by his
- niece, Miss Flora Ackroyd. That’s fact number one, isn’t it?”</p>
-
- <p>“If you say so.”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, it is. At half-past ten, the doctor here says that Mr. Ackroyd
- has been dead at least half an hour. You stick to that, doctor?”</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly,” I said. “Half an hour or longer.”</p>
-
- <p>“Very good. That gives us exactly a quarter of an hour in which the
- crime must have been committed. I make a list of every one in the
- house, and work through it, setting down opposite their names where
- they were and what they were doing between the hour of 9.45 and 10 p.m.”</p>
-
- <p>He handed a sheet of paper to Poirot. I read it over his shoulder. It
- ran as follows, written in a neat script:—</p>
-
- <blockquote>
- <p class="hang"><i>Major Blunt.—In billiard room with Mr. Raymond. (Latter
- confirms.)</i></p>
-
- <p class="hang"><i>Mr. Raymond.—Billiard room. (See above.)</i></p>
-
- <p class="hang"><i>Mrs. Ackroyd.—9.45 watching billiard match. Went up to bed 9.55.
- (Raymond and Blunt watched her up staircase.)</i> </p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">100</span></p>
-
- <p class="hang"><i>Miss Ackroyd.—Went straight from her uncle’s room upstairs.
- (Confirmed by Parker, also housemaid, Elsie Dale.)</i></p>
-
- <p class="hang"><i>Servants</i>:—</p>
-
- <p class="hang2"><i>Parker.—Went straight to butler’s pantry. (Confirmed by
- housekeeper, Miss Russell, who came down to speak to him about
- something at 9.47, and remained at least ten minutes.)</i></p>
-
- <p class="hang2"><i>Miss Russell.—As above. Spoke to housemaid, Elsie Dale, upstairs
- at 9.45.</i></p>
-
- <p class="hang2"><i>Ursula Bourne (parlormaid).—In her own room until 9.55. Then in
- Servants’ Hall.</i></p>
-
- <p class="hang2"><i>Mrs. Cooper (cook).—In Servants’ Hall.</i></p>
-
- <p class="hang2"><i>Gladys Jones (second housemaid).—In Servants’ Hall.</i></p>
-
- <p class="hang2"><i>Elsie Dale.—Upstairs in bedroom. Seen there by Miss Russell and
- Miss Flora Ackroyd.</i></p>
-
- <p class="hang2"><i>Mary Thripp (kitchenmaid).—Servants’ Hall.</i></p>
- </blockquote>
-
- <p>“The cook has been here seven years, the parlormaid eighteen months,
- and Parker just over a year. The others are new. Except for something
- fishy about Parker, they all seem quite all right.”</p>
-
- <p>“A very complete list,” said Poirot, handing it back to him. “I am
- quite sure that Parker did not do the murder,” he added gravely.</p>
-
- <p>“So is my sister,” I struck in. “And she’s usually right.” Nobody paid
- any attention to my interpolation.</p>
-
- <p>“That disposes pretty effectually of the household,” continued the
- inspector. “Now we come to a very grave point. The woman at the
- lodge—Mary Black—was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">101</span> pulling the curtains last night when she saw
- Ralph Paton turn in at the gate and go up towards the house.”</p>
-
- <p>“She is sure of that?” I asked sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“Quite sure. She knows him well by sight. He went past very quickly
- and turned off by the path to the right, which is a short cut to the
- terrace.”</p>
-
- <p>“And what time was that?” asked Poirot, who had sat with an immovable
- face.</p>
-
- <p>“Exactly twenty-five minutes past nine,” said the inspector gravely.</p>
-
- <p>There was a silence. Then the inspector spoke again.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s all clear enough. It fits in without a flaw. At twenty-five
- minutes past nine, Captain Paton is seen passing the lodge; at
- nine-thirty or thereabouts, Mr. Geoffrey Raymond hears some one in here
- asking for money and Mr. Ackroyd refusing. What happens next? Captain
- Paton leaves the same way—through the window. He walks along the
- terrace, angry and baffled. He comes to the open drawing-room window.
- Say it’s now a quarter to ten. Miss Flora Ackroyd is saying good-night
- to her uncle. Major Blunt, Mr. Raymond, and Mrs. Ackroyd are in the
- billiard room. The drawing-room is empty. He steals in, takes the
- dagger from the silver table, and returns to the study window. He slips
- off his shoes, climbs in, and—well, I don’t need to go into details.
- Then he slips out again and goes off. Hadn’t the nerve to go back to
- the inn. He makes for the station, rings up from there——”</p>
-
- <p>“Why?” said Poirot softly.</p>
-
- <p>I jumped at the interruption. The little man was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">102</span> leaning forward. His
- eyes shone with a queer green light.</p>
-
- <p>For a moment Inspector Raglan was taken aback by the question.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s difficult to say exactly why he did that,” he said at last. “But
- murderers do funny things. You’d know that if you were in the police
- force. The cleverest of them make stupid mistakes sometimes. But come
- along and I’ll show you those footprints.”</p>
-
- <p>We followed him round the corner of the terrace to the study window. At
- a word from Raglan a police constable produced the shoes which had been
- obtained from the local inn.</p>
-
- <p>The inspector laid them over the marks.</p>
-
- <p>“They’re the same,” he said confidently. “That is to say, they’re not
- the same pair that actually made these prints. He went away in those.
- This is a pair just like them, but older—see how the studs are worn
- down.”</p>
-
- <p>“Surely a great many people wear shoes with rubber studs in them?”
- asked Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“That’s so, of course,” said the inspector. “I shouldn’t put so much
- stress on the footmarks if it wasn’t for everything else.”</p>
-
- <p>“A very foolish young man, Captain Ralph Paton,” said Poirot
- thoughtfully. “To leave so much evidence of his presence.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! well,” said the inspector, “it was a dry, fine night, you know. He
- left no prints on the terrace or on the graveled path. But, unluckily
- for him, a spring<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">103</span> must have welled up just lately at the end of the
- path from the drive. See here.”</p>
-
- <p>A small graveled path joined the terrace a few feet away. In one
- spot, a few yards from its termination, the ground was wet and boggy.
- Crossing this wet place there were again the marks of footsteps, and
- amongst them the shoes with rubber studs.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot followed the path on a little way, the inspector by his side.</p>
-
- <p>“You noticed the women’s footprints?” he said suddenly.</p>
-
- <p>The inspector laughed.</p>
-
- <p>“Naturally. But several different women have walked this way—and men
- as well. It’s a regular short cut to the house, you see. It would be
- impossible to sort out all the footsteps. After all, it’s the ones on
- the window-sill that are really important.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s no good going farther,” said the inspector, as we came in view of
- the drive. “It’s all graveled again here, and hard as it can be.”</p>
-
- <p>Again Poirot nodded, but his eyes were fixed on a small garden house—a
- kind of superior summer-house. It was a little to the left of the path
- ahead of us, and a graveled walk ran up to it.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot lingered about until the inspector had gone back towards the
- house. Then he looked at me.</p>
-
- <p>“You must have indeed been sent from the good God to replace my
- friend Hastings,” he said, with a twinkle. “I observe that you do not
- quit my side. How say<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</span> you, Dr. Sheppard, shall we investigate that
- summer-house? It interests me.”</p>
-
- <p>He went up to the door and opened it. Inside, the place was almost
- dark. There were one or two rustic seats, a croquet set, and some
- folded deck-chairs.</p>
-
- <p>I was startled to observe my new friend. He had dropped to his hands
- and knees and was crawling about the floor. Every now and then he shook
- his head as though not satisfied. Finally, he sat back on his heels.</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing,” he murmured. “Well, perhaps it was not to be expected. But
- it would have meant so much——”</p>
-
- <p>He broke off, stiffening all over. Then he stretched out his hand to
- one of the rustic chairs. He detached something from one side of it.</p>
-
- <p>“What is it?” I cried. “What have you found?”</p>
-
- <p>He smiled, unclosing his hand so that I should see what lay in the palm
- of it. A scrap of stiff white cambric.</p>
-
- <p>I took it from him, looked at it curiously, and then handed it back.</p>
-
- <p>“What do you make of it, eh, my friend?” he asked, eyeing me keenly.</p>
-
- <p>“A scrap torn from a handkerchief,” I suggested, shrugging my shoulders.</p>
-
- <p>He made another dart and picked up a small quill—a goose quill by the
- look of it.</p>
-
- <p>“And that?” he cried triumphantly. “What do you make of that?”</p>
-
- <p>I only stared.</p>
-
- <p>He slipped the quill into his pocket, and looked again at the scrap of
- white stuff.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</span></p>
-
- <p>“A fragment of a handkerchief?” he mused. “Perhaps you are right. But
- remember this—<em>a good laundry does not starch a handkerchief</em>.”</p>
-
- <p>He nodded at me triumphantly, then he put away the scrap carefully in
- his pocket-book.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">THE GOLDFISH POND</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">We</span> walked back to the house together. There was no sign of the
- inspector. Poirot paused on the terrace and stood with his back to the
- house, slowly turning his head from side to side.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Une belle propriété</i>,” he said at last appreciatively. “Who
- inherits it?”</p>
-
- <p>His words gave me almost a shock. It is an odd thing, but until that
- moment the question of inheritance had never come into my head. Poirot
- watched me keenly.</p>
-
- <p>“It is a new idea to you, that,” he said at last. “You had not thought
- of it before—eh?”</p>
-
- <p>“No,” I said truthfully. “I wish I had.”</p>
-
- <p>He looked at me again curiously.</p>
-
- <p>“I wonder just what you mean by that,” he said thoughtfully. “Ah! no,”
- as I was about to speak. “<i lang="fr">Inutile!</i> You would not tell me your
- real thought.”</p>
-
- <p>“Every one has something to hide,” I quoted, smiling.</p>
-
- <p>“Exactly.”</p>
-
- <p>“You still believe that?”</p>
-
- <p>“More than ever, my friend. But it is not easy to hide things from
- Hercule Poirot. He has a knack of finding out.”</p>
-
- <p>He descended the steps of the Dutch garden as he spoke.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</span></p>
-
- <p>“Let us walk a little,” he said over his shoulder. “The air is pleasant
- to-day.”</p>
-
- <p>I followed him. He led me down a path to the left enclosed in yew
- hedges. A walk led down the middle, bordered each side with formal
- flower beds, and at the end was a round paved recess with a seat and
- a pond of goldfish. Instead of pursuing the path to the end, Poirot
- took another which wound up the side of a wooded slope. In one spot the
- trees had been cleared away, and a seat had been put. Sitting there one
- had a splendid view over the countryside, and one looked right down on
- the paved recess and the goldfish pond.</p>
-
- <p>“England is very beautiful,” said Poirot, his eyes straying over the
- prospect. Then he smiled. “And so are English girls,” he said in a
- lower tone. “Hush, my friend, and look at the pretty picture below us.”</p>
-
- <p>It was then that I saw Flora. She was moving along the path we had
- just left and she was humming a little snatch of song. Her step was
- more dancing than walking, and in spite of her black dress, there was
- nothing but joy in her whole attitude. She gave a sudden pirouette on
- her toes, and her black draperies swung out. At the same time she flung
- her head back and laughed outright.</p>
-
- <p>As she did so a man stepped out from the trees. It was Hector Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>The girl started. Her expression changed a little.</p>
-
- <p>“How you startled me—I didn’t see you.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt said nothing, but stood looking at her for a minute or two in
- silence.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">108</span></p>
-
- <p>“What I like about you,” said Flora, with a touch of malice, “is your
- cheery conversation.”</p>
-
- <p>I fancy that at that Blunt reddened under his tan. His voice, when he
- spoke, sounded different—it had a curious sort of humility in it.</p>
-
- <p>“Never was much of a fellow for talking. Not even when I was young.”</p>
-
- <p>“That was a very long time ago, I suppose,” said Flora gravely.</p>
-
- <p>I caught the undercurrent of laughter in her voice, but I don’t think
- Blunt did.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” he said simply, “it was.”</p>
-
- <p>“How does it feel to be Methuselah?” asked Flora.</p>
-
- <p>This time the laughter was more apparent, but Blunt was following out
- an idea of his own.</p>
-
- <p>“Remember the Johnny who sold his soul to the devil? In return for
- being made young again? There’s an opera about it.”</p>
-
- <p>“Faust, you mean?”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s the beggar. Rum story. Some of us would do it if we could.”</p>
-
- <p>“Any one would think you were creaking at the joints to hear you talk,”
- cried Flora, half vexed, half amused.</p>
-
- <p>Blunt said nothing for a minute or two. Then he looked away from Flora
- into the middle distance and observed to an adjacent tree trunk that it
- was about time he got back to Africa.</p>
-
- <p>“Are you going on another expedition—shooting things?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">109</span></p>
-
- <p>“Expect so. Usually do, you know—shoot things, I mean.”</p>
-
- <p>“You shot that head in the hall, didn’t you?”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt nodded. Then he jerked out, going rather red, as he did so:—</p>
-
- <p>“Care for some decent skins any time? If so, I could get ’em for you.”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! please do,” cried Flora. “Will you really? You won’t forget?”</p>
-
- <p>“I shan’t forget,” said Hector Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>He added, in a sudden burst of communicativeness:—</p>
-
- <p>“Time I went. I’m no good in this sort of life. Haven’t got the manners
- for it. I’m a rough fellow, no use in society. Never remember the
- things one’s expected to say. Yes, time I went.”</p>
-
- <p>“But you’re not going at once,” cried Flora. “Not—not while we’re in
- all this trouble. Oh! please. If you go——”</p>
-
- <p>She turned away a little.</p>
-
- <p>“You want me to stay?” asked Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>He spoke deliberately but quite simply.</p>
-
- <p>“We all——”</p>
-
- <p>“I meant you personally,” said Blunt, with directness.</p>
-
- <p>Flora turned slowly back again and met his eyes.</p>
-
- <p>“I want you to stay,” she said, “if—if that makes any difference.”</p>
-
- <p>“It makes all the difference,” said Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>There was a moment’s silence. They sat down on the stone seat by the
- goldfish pond. It seemed as though neither of them knew quite what to
- say next.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">110</span></p>
-
- <p>“It—it’s such a lovely morning,” said Flora at last. “You know, I can’t
- help feeling happy, in spite—in spite of everything. That’s awful, I
- suppose?”</p>
-
- <p>“Quite natural,” said Blunt. “Never saw your uncle until two years ago,
- did you? Can’t be expected to grieve very much. Much better to have no
- humbug about it.”</p>
-
- <p>“There’s something awfully consoling about you,” said Flora. “You make
- things so simple.”</p>
-
- <p>“Things are simple as a rule,” said the big game hunter.</p>
-
- <p>“Not always,” said Flora.</p>
-
- <p>Her voice had lowered itself, and I saw Blunt turn and look at her,
- bringing his eyes back from (apparently) the coast of Africa to do so.
- He evidently put his own construction on her change of tone, for he
- said, after a minute or two, in rather an abrupt manner:—</p>
-
- <p>“I say, you know, you mustn’t worry. About that young chap, I mean.
- Inspector’s an ass. Everybody knows—utterly absurd to think he could
- have done it. Man from outside. Burglar chap. That’s the only possible
- solution.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora turned to look at him.</p>
-
- <p>“You really think so?”</p>
-
- <p>“Don’t you?” said Blunt quickly.</p>
-
- <p>“I—oh, yes, of course.”</p>
-
- <p>Another silence, and then Flora burst out:—</p>
-
- <p>“I’m—I’ll tell you why I felt so happy this morning. However heartless
- you think me, I’d rather tell you. It’s because the lawyer has been—Mr.
- Hammond. He told us about the will. Uncle Roger has left me twenty
- thousand<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">111</span> pounds. Think of it—twenty thousand beautiful pounds.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt looked surprised.</p>
-
- <p>“Does it mean so much to you?”</p>
-
- <p>“Mean much to me? Why, it’s everything. Freedom—life—no more scheming
- and scraping and lying——”</p>
-
- <p>“Lying?” said Blunt, sharply interrupting.</p>
-
- <p>Flora seemed taken aback for a minute.</p>
-
- <p>“You know what I mean,” she said uncertainly. “Pretending to be
- thankful for all the nasty castoff things rich relations give you. Last
- year’s coats and skirts and hats.”</p>
-
- <p>“Don’t know much about ladies’ clothes; should have said you were
- always very well turned out.”</p>
-
- <p>“It’s cost me something, though,” said Flora in a low voice. “Don’t
- let’s talk of horrid things. I’m so happy. I’m free. Free to do what I
- like. Free not to——”</p>
-
- <p>She stopped suddenly.</p>
-
- <p>“Not to what?” asked Blunt quickly.</p>
-
- <p>“I forget now. Nothing important.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt had a stick in his hand, and he thrust it into the pond, poking
- at something.</p>
-
- <p>“What are you doing, Major Blunt?”</p>
-
- <p>“There’s something bright down there. Wondered what it was—looks like a
- gold brooch. Now I’ve stirred up the mud and it’s gone.”</p>
-
- <p>“Perhaps it’s a crown,” suggested Flora. “Like the one Mélisande saw in
- the water.”</p>
-
- <p>“Mélisande,” said Blunt reflectively—“she’s in an opera, isn’t she?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">112</span></p>
-
- <p>“Yes, you seem to know a lot about operas.”</p>
-
- <p>“People take me sometimes,” said Blunt sadly. “Funny idea of
- pleasure—worse racket than the natives make with their tom-toms.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora laughed.</p>
-
- <p>“I remember Mélisande,” continued Blunt, “married an old chap old
- enough to be her father.”</p>
-
- <p>He threw a small piece of flint into the goldfish pond. Then, with a
- change of manner, he turned to Flora.</p>
-
- <p>“Miss Ackroyd, can I do anything? About Paton, I mean. I know how
- dreadfully anxious you must be.”</p>
-
- <p>“Thank you,” said Flora in a cold voice. “There is really nothing to
- be done. Ralph will be all right. I’ve got hold of the most wonderful
- detective in the world, and he’s going to find out all about it.”</p>
-
- <p>For some time I had felt uneasy as to our position. We were not exactly
- eavesdropping, since the two in the garden below had only to lift their
- heads to see us. Nevertheless, I should have drawn attention to our
- presence before now, had not my companion put a warning pressure on my
- arm. Clearly he wished me to remain silent.</p>
-
- <p>But now he rose briskly to his feet, clearing his throat.</p>
-
- <p>“I demand pardon,” he cried. “I cannot allow mademoiselle thus
- extravagantly to compliment me, and not draw attention to my presence.
- They say the listener hears no good of himself, but that is not the
- case this time. To spare my blushes, I must join you and apologize.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">113</span></p>
-
- <p>He hurried down the path with me close behind him, and joined the
- others by the pond.</p>
-
- <p>“This is M. Hercule Poirot,” said Flora. “I expect you’ve heard of him.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot bowed.</p>
-
- <p>“I know Major Blunt by reputation,” he said politely. “I am glad to
- have encountered you, monsieur. I am in need of some information that
- you can give me.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt looked at him inquiringly.</p>
-
- <p>“When did you last see M. Ackroyd alive?”</p>
-
- <p>“At dinner.”</p>
-
- <p>“And you neither saw nor heard anything of him after that?”</p>
-
- <p>“Didn’t see him. Heard his voice.”</p>
-
- <p>“How was that?”</p>
-
- <p>“I strolled out on the terrace——”</p>
-
- <p>“Pardon me, what time was this?”</p>
-
- <p>“About half-past nine. I was walking up and down smoking in front of
- the drawing-room window. I heard Ackroyd talking in his study——”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot stooped and removed a microscopic weed.</p>
-
- <p>“Surely you couldn’t hear voices in the study from that part of the
- terrace,” he murmured.</p>
-
- <p>He was not looking at Blunt, but I was, and to my intense surprise, I
- saw the latter flush.</p>
-
- <p>“Went as far as the corner,” he explained unwillingly.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! indeed?” said Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>In the mildest manner he conveyed an impression that more was wanted.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">114</span></p>
-
- <p>“Thought I saw—a woman disappearing into the bushes. Just a gleam of
- white, you know. Must have been mistaken. It was while I was standing
- at the corner of the terrace that I heard Ackroyd’s voice speaking to
- that secretary of his.”</p>
-
- <p>“Speaking to Mr. Geoffrey Raymond?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes—that’s what I supposed at the time. Seems I was wrong.”</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd didn’t address him by name?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, no.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then, if I may ask, why did you think——?”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt explained laboriously.</p>
-
- <p>“Took it for granted that it <em>would</em> be Raymond, because he had
- said just before I came out that he was taking some papers to Ackroyd.
- Never thought of it being anybody else.”</p>
-
- <p>“Can you remember what the words you heard were?”</p>
-
- <p>“Afraid I can’t. Something quite ordinary and unimportant. Only caught
- a scrap of it. I was thinking of something else at the time.”</p>
-
- <p>“It is of no importance,” murmured Poirot. “Did you move a chair back
- against the wall when you went into the study after the body was
- discovered?”</p>
-
- <p>“Chair? No—why should I?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot shrugged his shoulders but did not answer. He turned to Flora.</p>
-
- <p>“There is one thing I should like to know from you, mademoiselle. When
- you were examining the things in the silver table with Dr. Sheppard,
- was the dagger in its place, or was it not?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">115</span></p>
-
- <p>Flora’s chin shot up.</p>
-
- <p>“Inspector Raglan has been asking me that,” she said resentfully.
- “I’ve told him, and I’ll tell you. I’m perfectly certain the dagger
- was <em>not</em> there. He thinks it was and that Ralph sneaked it later
- in the evening. And—and he doesn’t believe me. He thinks I’m saying it
- to—to shield Ralph.”</p>
-
- <p>“And aren’t you?” I asked gravely.</p>
-
- <p>Flora stamped her foot.</p>
-
- <p>“You, too, Dr. Sheppard! Oh! it’s too bad.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot tactfully made a diversion.</p>
-
- <p>“It is true what I heard you say, Major Blunt. There is something that
- glitters in this pond. Let us see if I can reach it.”</p>
-
- <p>He knelt down by the pond, baring his arm to the elbow, and lowered it
- in very slowly, so as not to disturb the bottom of the pond. But in
- spite of all his precautions the mud eddied and swirled, and he was
- forced to draw his arm out again empty-handed.</p>
-
- <p>He gazed ruefully at the mud upon his arm. I offered him my
- handkerchief, which he accepted with fervent protestations of thanks.
- Blunt looked at his watch.</p>
-
- <p>“Nearly lunch time,” he said. “We’d better be getting back to the
- house.”</p>
-
- <p>“You will lunch with us, M. Poirot?” asked Flora. “I should like you to
- meet my mother. She is—very fond of Ralph.”</p>
-
- <p>The little man bowed.</p>
-
- <p>“I shall be delighted, mademoiselle.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">116</span></p>
-
- <p>“And you will stay, too, won’t you, Dr. Sheppard?”</p>
-
- <p>I hesitated.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, do!”</p>
-
- <p>I wanted to, so I accepted the invitation without further ceremony.</p>
-
- <p>We set out towards the house, Flora and Blunt walking ahead.</p>
-
- <p>“What hair,” said Poirot to me in a low tone, nodding towards Flora.
- “The real gold! They will make a pretty couple. She and the dark,
- handsome Captain Paton. Will they not?”</p>
-
- <p>I looked at him inquiringly, but he began to fuss about a few
- microscopic drops of water on his coat sleeve. The man reminded me in
- some ways of a cat. His green eyes and his finicking habits.</p>
-
- <p>“And all for nothing, too,” I said sympathetically. “I wonder what it
- was in the pond?”</p>
-
- <p>“Would you like to see?” asked Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>I stared at him. He nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“My good friend,” he said gently and reproachfully, “Hercule Poirot
- does not run the risk of disarranging his costume without being sure
- of attaining his object. To do so would be ridiculous and absurd. I am
- never ridiculous.”</p>
-
- <p>“But you brought your hand out empty,” I objected.</p>
-
- <p>“There are times when it is necessary to have discretion. Do you tell
- your patients everything—everything, doctor? I think not. Nor do you
- tell your excellent sister everything either, is it not so? Before
- showing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">117</span> my empty hand, I dropped what it contained into my other hand.
- You shall see what that was.”</p>
-
- <p>He held out his left hand, palm open. On it lay a little circlet of
- gold. A woman’s wedding ring.</p>
-
- <p>I took it from him.</p>
-
- <p>“Look inside,” commanded Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>I did so. Inside was an inscription in fine writing:—</p>
-
- <p class="center"><i>From R., March 13th.</i></p>
-
- <p>I looked at Poirot, but he was busy inspecting his appearance in a tiny
- pocket glass. He paid particular attention to his mustaches, and none
- at all to me. I saw that he did not intend to be communicative.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">118</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">THE PARLORMAID</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">We</span> found Mrs. Ackroyd in the hall. With her was a small dried-up little
- man, with an aggressive chin and sharp gray eyes, and “lawyer” written
- all over him.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Hammond is staying to lunch with us,” said Mrs. Ackroyd. “You know
- Major Blunt, Mr. Hammond? And dear Dr. Sheppard—also a close friend of
- poor Roger’s. And, let me see——”</p>
-
- <p>She paused, surveying Hercule Poirot in some perplexity.</p>
-
- <p>“This is M. Poirot, mother,” said Flora. “I told you about him this
- morning.”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! yes,” said Mrs. Ackroyd vaguely. “Of course, my dear, of course.
- He is to find Ralph, is he not?”</p>
-
- <p>“He is to find out who killed uncle,” said Flora.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! my dear,” cried her mother. “Please! My poor nerves. I am a wreck
- this morning, a positive wreck. Such a dreadful thing to happen. I
- can’t help feeling that it must have been an accident of some kind.
- Roger was so fond of handling queer curios. His hand must have slipped,
- or something.”</p>
-
- <p>This theory was received in polite silence. I saw Poirot edge up to the
- lawyer, and speak to him in a confidential undertone. They moved aside
- into the embrasure of the window. I joined them—then hesitated.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">119</span></p>
-
- <p>“Perhaps I’m intruding,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“Not at all,” cried Poirot heartily. “You and I, M. le docteur, we
- investigate this affair side by side. Without you I should be lost. I
- desire a little information from the good Mr. Hammond.”</p>
-
- <p>“You are acting on behalf of Captain Ralph Paton, I understand,” said
- the lawyer cautiously.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“Not so. I am acting in the interests of justice. Miss Ackroyd has
- asked me to investigate the death of her uncle.”</p>
-
- <p>Mr. Hammond seemed slightly taken aback.</p>
-
- <p>“I cannot seriously believe that Captain Paton can be concerned in this
- crime,” he said, “however strong the circumstantial evidence against
- him may be. The mere fact that he was hard pressed for money——”</p>
-
- <p>“Was he hard pressed for money?” interpolated Poirot quickly.</p>
-
- <p>The lawyer shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
- <p>“It was a chronic condition with Ralph Paton,” he said dryly. “Money
- went through his hands like water. He was always applying to his
- stepfather.”</p>
-
- <p>“Had he done so of late? During the last year, for instance?”</p>
-
- <p>“I cannot say. Mr. Ackroyd did not mention the fact to me.”</p>
-
- <p>“I comprehend. Mr. Hammond, I take it that you are acquainted with the
- provisions of Mr. Ackroyd’s will?”</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly. That is my principal business here to-day.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span></p>
-
- <p>“Then, seeing that I am acting for Miss Ackroyd, you will not object to
- telling me the terms of that will?”</p>
-
- <p>“They are quite simple. Shorn of legal phraseology, and after paying
- certain legacies and bequests——”</p>
-
- <p>“Such as——?” interrupted Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>Mr. Hammond seemed a little surprised.</p>
-
- <p>“A thousand pounds to his housekeeper, Miss Russell; fifty pounds
- to the cook, Emma Cooper; five hundred pounds to his secretary, Mr.
- Geoffrey Raymond. Then to various hospitals——”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot held up his hand.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! the charitable bequests, they interest me not.”</p>
-
- <p>“Quite so. The income on ten thousand pounds’ worth of shares to be
- paid to Mrs. Cecil Ackroyd during her lifetime. Miss Flora Ackroyd
- inherits twenty thousand pounds outright. The residue—including this
- property, and the shares in Ackroyd and Son—to his adopted son, Ralph
- Paton.”</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd possessed a large fortune?”</p>
-
- <p>“A very large fortune. Captain Paton will be an exceedingly wealthy
- young man.”</p>
-
- <p>There was a silence. Poirot and the lawyer looked at each other.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Hammond,” came Mrs. Ackroyd’s voice plaintively from the fireplace.</p>
-
- <p>The lawyer answered the summons. Poirot took my arm and drew me right
- into the window.</p>
-
- <p>“Regard the irises,” he remarked in rather a loud voice. “Magnificent,
- are they not? A straight and pleasing effect.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span></p>
-
- <p>At the same time I felt the pressure of his hand on my arm, and he
- added in a low tone:—</p>
-
- <p>“Do you really wish to aid me? To take part in this investigation?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, indeed,” I said eagerly. “There’s nothing I should like better.
- You don’t know what a dull old fogey’s life I lead. Never anything out
- of the ordinary.”</p>
-
- <p>“Good, we will be colleagues then. In a minute or two I fancy Major
- Blunt will join us. He is not happy with the good mamma. Now there are
- some things I want to know—but I do not wish to seem to want to know
- them. You comprehend? So it will be your part to ask the questions.”</p>
-
- <p>“What questions do you want me to ask?” I asked apprehensively.</p>
-
- <p>“I want you to introduce the name of Mrs. Ferrars.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes?”</p>
-
- <p>“Speak of her in a natural fashion. Ask him if he was down here when
- her husband died. You understand the kind of thing I mean. And while
- he replies, watch his face without seeming to watch it. <i lang="fr">C’est
- compris?</i>”</p>
-
- <p>There was no time for more, for at that minute, as Poirot had
- prophesied, Blunt left the others in his abrupt fashion and came over
- to us.</p>
-
- <p>I suggested strolling on the terrace, and he acquiesced. Poirot stayed
- behind.</p>
-
- <p>I stopped to examine a late rose.</p>
-
- <p>“How things change in the course of a day or so,” I observed. “I was
- up here last Wednesday, I remember, walking up and down this same
- terrace. Ackroyd was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</span> with me—full of spirits. And now—three days
- later—Ackroyd’s dead, poor fellow, Mrs. Ferrars’s dead—you knew her,
- didn’t you? But of course you did.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt nodded his head.</p>
-
- <p>“Had you seen her since you’d been down this time?”</p>
-
- <p>“Went with Ackroyd to call. Last Tuesday, think it was. Fascinating
- woman—but something queer about her. Deep—one would never know what she
- was up to.”</p>
-
- <p>I looked into his steady gray eyes. Nothing there surely. I went on:—</p>
-
- <p>“I suppose you’d met her before.”</p>
-
- <p>“Last time I was here—she and her husband had just come here to live.”
- He paused a minute and then added: “Rum thing, she had changed a lot
- between then and now.”</p>
-
- <p>“How—changed?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“Looked ten years older.”</p>
-
- <p>“Were you down here when her husband died?” I asked, trying to make the
- question sound as casual as possible.</p>
-
- <p>“No. From all I heard it would be a good riddance. Uncharitable,
- perhaps, but the truth.”</p>
-
- <p>I agreed.</p>
-
- <p>“Ashley Ferrars was by no means a pattern husband,” I said cautiously.</p>
-
- <p>“Blackguard, I thought,” said Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>“No,” I said, “only a man with more money than was good for him.”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! money! All the troubles in the world can be put down to money—or
- the lack of it.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</span></p>
-
- <p>“Which has been your particular trouble?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“I’ve enough for what I want. I’m one of the lucky ones.”</p>
-
- <p>“Indeed.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m not too flush just now, as a matter of fact. Came into a legacy a
- year ago, and like a fool let myself be persuaded into putting it into
- some wild-cat scheme.”</p>
-
- <p>I sympathized, and narrated my own similar trouble.</p>
-
- <p>Then the gong pealed out, and we all went in to lunch. Poirot drew me
- back a little.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Eh! bien?</i>”</p>
-
- <p>“He’s all right,” I said. “I’m sure of it.”</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing—disturbing?”</p>
-
- <p>“He had a legacy just a year ago,” I said. “But why not? Why shouldn’t
- he? I’ll swear the man is perfectly square and aboveboard.”</p>
-
- <p>“Without doubt, without doubt,” said Poirot soothingly. “Do not upset
- yourself.”</p>
-
- <p>He spoke as though to a fractious child.</p>
-
- <p>We all trooped into the dining-room. It seemed incredible that less
- than twenty-four hours had passed since I last sat at that table.</p>
-
- <p>Afterwards, Mrs. Ackroyd took me aside and sat down with me on a sofa.</p>
-
- <p>“I can’t help feeling a little hurt,” she murmured, producing a
- handkerchief of the kind obviously not meant to be cried into. “Hurt, I
- mean, by Roger’s lack of confidence in me. That twenty thousand pounds
- ought to have been left to <em>me</em>—not to Flora. A mother could be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</span>
- trusted to safeguard the interests of her child. A lack of trust, I
- call it.”</p>
-
- <p>“You forget, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said, “Flora was Ackroyd’s own niece, a
- blood relation. It would have been different had you been his sister
- instead of his sister-in-law.”</p>
-
- <p>“As poor Cecil’s widow, I think my feelings ought to have been
- considered,” said the lady, touching her eye-lashes gingerly with
- the handkerchief. “But Roger was always most peculiar—not to say
- <em>mean</em>—about money matters. It has been a most difficult position
- for both Flora and myself. He did not even give the poor child an
- allowance. He would pay her bills, you know, and even that with a good
- deal of reluctance and asking what she wanted all those fal-lals for—so
- like a man—but—now I’ve forgotten what it was I was going to say!
- Oh, yes, not a penny we could call our own, you know. Flora resented
- it—yes, I must say she resented it—very strongly. Though devoted to
- her uncle, of course. But any girl would have resented it. Yes, I must
- say Roger had very strange ideas about money. He wouldn’t even buy new
- face towels, though I told him the old ones were in holes. And then,”
- proceeded Mrs. Ackroyd, with a sudden leap highly characteristic of
- her conversation, “to leave all that money—a thousand pounds—fancy, a
- thousand pounds!—to that woman.”</p>
-
- <p>“What woman?”</p>
-
- <p>“That Russell woman. Something very queer about her, and so I’ve always
- said. But Roger wouldn’t hear a word against her. Said she was a woman
- of great force of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</span> character, and that he admired and respected her.
- He was always going on about her rectitude and independence and moral
- worth. <em>I</em> think there’s something fishy about her. She was
- certainly doing her best to marry Roger. But I soon put a stop to that.
- She’s always hated me. Naturally. <em>I</em> saw through her.”</p>
-
- <p>I began to wonder if there was any chance of stemming Mrs. Ackroyd’s
- eloquence, and getting away.</p>
-
- <p>Mr. Hammond provided the necessary diversion by coming up to say
- good-by. I seized my chance and rose also.</p>
-
- <p>“About the inquest,” I said. “Where would you prefer it to be held.
- Here, or at the Three Boars?”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd stared at me with a dropped jaw.</p>
-
- <p>“The inquest?” she asked, the picture of consternation. “But surely
- there won’t have to be an inquest?”</p>
-
- <p>Mr. Hammond gave a dry little cough and murmured, “Inevitable. Under
- the circumstances,” in two short little barks.</p>
-
- <p>“But surely Dr. Sheppard can arrange——”</p>
-
- <p>“There are limits to my powers of arrangement,” I said dryly.</p>
-
- <p>“If his death was an accident——”</p>
-
- <p>“He was murdered, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said brutally.</p>
-
- <p>She gave a little cry.</p>
-
- <p>“No theory of accident will hold water for a minute.”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd looked at me in distress. I had no patience with what I
- thought was her silly fear of unpleasantness.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</span></p>
-
- <p>“If there’s an inquest, I—I shan’t have to answer questions and all
- that, shall I?” she asked.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t know what will be necessary,” I answered. “I imagine
- Mr. Raymond will take the brunt of it off you. He knows all the
- circumstances, and can give formal evidence of identification.”</p>
-
- <p>The lawyer assented with a little bow.</p>
-
- <p>“I really don’t think there is anything to dread, Mrs. Ackroyd,” he
- said. “You will be spared all unpleasantness. Now, as to the question
- of money, have you all you need for the present? I mean,” he added, as
- she looked at him inquiringly, “ready money. Cash, you know. If not, I
- can arrange to let you have whatever you require.”</p>
-
- <p>“That ought to be all right,” said Raymond, who was standing by. “Mr.
- Ackroyd cashed a cheque for a hundred pounds yesterday.”</p>
-
- <p>“A hundred pounds?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. For wages and other expenses due to-day. At the moment it is
- still intact.”</p>
-
- <p>“Where is this money? In his desk?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, he always kept his cash in his bedroom. In an old collar-box, to
- be accurate. Funny idea, wasn’t it?”</p>
-
- <p>“I think,” said the lawyer, “we ought to make sure the money is there
- before I leave.”</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly,” agreed the secretary. “I’ll take you up now.... Oh! I
- forgot. The door’s locked.”</p>
-
- <p>Inquiry from Parker elicited the information that Inspector Raglan was
- in the housekeeper’s room asking a few supplementary questions. A few
- minutes later the inspector joined the party in the hall, bringing the
- key with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">127</span> him. He unlocked the door and we passed into the lobby and up
- the small staircase. At the top of the stairs the door into Ackroyd’s
- bedroom stood open. Inside the room it was dark, the curtains were
- drawn, and the bed was turned down just as it had been last night. The
- inspector drew the curtains, letting in the sunlight, and Geoffrey
- Raymond went to the top drawer of a rosewood bureau.</p>
-
- <p>“He kept his money like that, in an unlocked drawer. Just fancy,”
- commented the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>The secretary flushed a little.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd had perfect faith in the honesty of all the servants,” he
- said hotly.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! quite so,” said the inspector hastily.</p>
-
- <p>Raymond opened the drawer, took out a round leather collar-box from the
- back of it, and opening it, drew out a thick wallet.</p>
-
- <p>“Here is the money,” he said, taking out a fat roll of notes. “You
- will find the hundred intact, I know, for Mr. Ackroyd put it in the
- collar-box in my presence last night when he was dressing for dinner,
- and of course it has not been touched since.”</p>
-
- <p>Mr. Hammond took the roll from him and counted it. He looked up sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“A hundred pounds, you said. But there is only sixty here.”</p>
-
- <p>Raymond stared at him.</p>
-
- <p>“Impossible,” he cried, springing forward. Taking the notes from the
- other’s hand, he counted them aloud.</p>
-
- <p>Mr. Hammond had been right. The total amounted to sixty pounds.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">128</span></p>
-
- <p>“But—I can’t understand it,” cried the secretary, bewildered.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot asked a question.</p>
-
- <p>“You saw Mr. Ackroyd put this money away last night when he was
- dressing for dinner? You are sure he had not paid away any of it
- already?”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m sure he hadn’t. He even said, ‘I don’t want to take a hundred
- pounds down to dinner with me. Too bulgy.’”</p>
-
- <p>“Then the affair is very simple,” remarked Poirot. “Either he paid out
- that forty pounds sometime last evening, or else it has been stolen.”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s the matter in a nutshell,” agreed the inspector. He turned
- to Mrs. Ackroyd. “Which of the servants would come in here yesterday
- evening?”</p>
-
- <p>“I suppose the housemaid would turn down the bed.”</p>
-
- <p>“Who is she? What do you know about her?”</p>
-
- <p>“She’s not been here very long,” said Mrs. Ackroyd. “But she’s a nice
- ordinary country girl.”</p>
-
- <p>“I think we ought to clear this matter up,” said the inspector. “If
- Mr. Ackroyd paid that money away himself, it may have a bearing on the
- mystery of the crime. The other servants all right, as far as you know?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, I think so.”</p>
-
- <p>“Not missed anything before?”</p>
-
- <p>“No.”</p>
-
- <p>“None of them leaving, or anything like that?”</p>
-
- <p>“The parlormaid is leaving.”</p>
-
- <p>“When?”</p>
-
- <p>“She gave notice yesterday, I believe.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">129</span></p>
-
- <p>“To you?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, no. <em>I</em> have nothing to do with the servants. Miss Russell
- attends to the household matters.”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector remained lost in thought for a minute or two. Then he
- nodded his head and remarked, “I think I’d better have a word with Miss
- Russell, and I’ll see the girl Dale as well.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot and I accompanied him to the housekeeper’s room. Miss Russell
- received us with her usual sang-froid.</p>
-
- <p>Elsie Dale had been at Fernly five months. A nice girl, quick at her
- duties, and most respectable. Good references. The last girl in the
- world to take anything not belonging to her.</p>
-
- <p>What about the parlormaid?</p>
-
- <p>“She, too, was a most superior girl. Very quiet and ladylike. An
- excellent worker.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then why is she leaving?” asked the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>Miss Russell pursed up her lips.</p>
-
- <p>“It was none of my doing. I understand Mr. Ackroyd found fault with
- her yesterday afternoon. It was her duty to do the study, and she
- disarranged some of the papers on his desk, I believe. He was very
- annoyed about it, and she gave notice. At least, that is what I
- understood from her, but perhaps you’d like to see her yourselves?”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector assented. I had already noticed the girl when she was
- waiting on us at lunch. A tall girl, with a lot of brown hair rolled
- tightly away at the back of her neck, and very steady gray eyes. She
- came in answer to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">130</span> the housekeeper’s summons, and stood very straight
- with those same gray eyes fixed on us.</p>
-
- <p>“You are Ursula Bourne?” asked the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
-
- <p>“I understand you are leaving?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
-
- <p>“Why is that?”</p>
-
- <p>“I disarranged some papers on Mr. Ackroyd’s desk. He was very angry
- about it, and I said I had better leave. He told me to go as soon as
- possible.”</p>
-
- <p>“Were you in Mr. Ackroyd’s bedroom at all last night? Tidying up or
- anything?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, sir. That is Elsie’s work. I never went near that part of the
- house.”</p>
-
- <p>“I must tell you, my girl, that a large sum of money is missing from
- Mr. Ackroyd’s room.”</p>
-
- <p>At last I saw her roused. A wave of color swept over her face.</p>
-
- <p>“I know nothing about any money. If you think I took it, and that that
- is why Mr. Ackroyd dismissed me, you are wrong.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m not accusing you of taking it, my girl,” said the inspector.
- “Don’t flare up so.”</p>
-
- <p>The girl looked at him coldly.</p>
-
- <p>“You can search my things if you like,” she said disdainfully. “But you
- won’t find anything.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot suddenly interposed.</p>
-
- <p>“It was yesterday afternoon that Mr. Ackroyd dismissed you—or you
- dismissed yourself, was it not?” he asked.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">131</span></p>
-
- <p>The girl nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“How long did the interview last?”</p>
-
- <p>“The interview?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, the interview between you and Mr. Ackroyd in the study?”</p>
-
- <p>“I—I don’t know.”</p>
-
- <p>“Twenty minutes? Half an hour?”</p>
-
- <p>“Something like that.”</p>
-
- <p>“Not longer?”</p>
-
- <p>“Not longer than half an hour, certainly.”</p>
-
- <p>“Thank you, mademoiselle.”</p>
-
- <p>I looked curiously at him. He was rearranging a few objects on the
- table, setting them straight with precise fingers. His eyes were
- shining.</p>
-
- <p>“That’ll do,” said the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>Ursula Bourne disappeared. The inspector turned to Miss Russell.</p>
-
- <p>“How long has she been here? Have you got a copy of the reference you
- had with her?”</p>
-
- <p>Without answering the first question, Miss Russell moved to an adjacent
- bureau, opened one of the drawers, and took out a handful of letters
- clipped together with a patent fastener. She selected one and handed it
- to the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“H’m,” said he. “Reads all right. Mrs. Richard Folliott, Marby Grange,
- Marby. Who’s this woman?”</p>
-
- <p>“Quite good county people,” said Miss Russell.</p>
-
- <p>“Well,” said the inspector, handing it back, “let’s have a look at the
- other one, Elsie Dale.”</p>
-
- <p>Elsie Dale was a big fair girl, with a pleasant but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">132</span> slightly stupid
- face. She answered our questions readily enough, and showed much
- distress and concern at the loss of the money.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t think there’s anything wrong with her,” observed the
- inspector, after he had dismissed her.</p>
-
- <p>“What about Parker?”</p>
-
- <p>Miss Russell pursed her lips together and made no reply.</p>
-
- <p>“I’ve a feeling there’s something wrong about that man,” the inspector
- continued thoughtfully. “The trouble is that I don’t quite see when he
- got his opportunity. He’d be busy with his duties immediately after
- dinner, and he’s got a pretty good alibi all through the evening. I
- know, for I’ve been devoting particular attention to it. Well, thank
- you very much, Miss Russell. We’ll leave things as they are for the
- present. It’s highly probable Mr. Ackroyd paid that money away himself.”</p>
-
- <p>The housekeeper bade us a dry good-afternoon, and we took our leave.</p>
-
- <p>I left the house with Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“I wonder,” I said, breaking the silence, “what the papers the girl
- disarranged could have been for Ackroyd to have got into such a state
- about them? I wonder if there is any clew there to the mystery.”</p>
-
- <p>“The secretary said there were no papers of particular importance on
- the desk,” said Poirot quietly.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, but——” I paused.</p>
-
- <p>“It strikes you as odd that Ackroyd should have flown into a rage about
- so trivial a matter?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, it does rather.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">133</span></p>
-
- <p>“But was it a trivial matter?”</p>
-
- <p>“Of course,” I admitted, “we don’t know what those papers may have
- been. But Raymond certainly said——”</p>
-
- <p>“Leave M. Raymond out of it for a minute. What did you think of that
- girl?”</p>
-
- <p>“Which girl? The parlormaid?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, the parlormaid. Ursula Bourne.”</p>
-
- <p>“She seemed a nice girl,” I said hesitatingly.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot repeated my words, but whereas I had laid a slight stress on the
- fourth word, he put it on the second.</p>
-
- <p>“She <em>seemed</em> a nice girl—yes.”</p>
-
- <p>Then, after a minute’s silence, he took something from his pocket and
- handed it to me.</p>
-
- <p>“See, my friend, I will show you something. Look there.”</p>
-
- <p>The paper he had handed me was that compiled by the inspector and given
- by him to Poirot that morning. Following the pointing finger, I saw a
- small cross marked in pencil opposite the name Ursula Bourne.</p>
-
- <p>“You may not have noticed it at the time, my good friend, but there was
- one person on this list whose alibi had no kind of confirmation. Ursula
- Bourne.”</p>
-
- <p>“You don’t think——”</p>
-
- <p>“Dr. Sheppard, I dare to think anything. Ursula Bourne may have killed
- Mr. Ackroyd, but I confess I can see no motive for her doing so. Can
- you?”</p>
-
- <p>He looked at me very hard—so hard that I felt uncomfortable.</p>
-
- <p>“Can you?” he repeated.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">134</span></p>
-
- <p>“No motive whatsoever,” I said firmly.</p>
-
- <p>His gaze relaxed. He frowned and murmured to himself:—</p>
-
- <p>“Since the blackmailer was a man, it follows that she cannot be the
- blackmailer, then——”</p>
-
- <p>I coughed.</p>
-
- <p>“As far as that goes——” I began doubtfully.</p>
-
- <p>He spun round on me.</p>
-
- <p>“What? What are you going to say?”</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing. Nothing. Only that, strictly speaking, Mrs. Ferrars in her
- letter mentioned a <em>person</em>—she didn’t actually specify a man. But
- we took it for granted, Ackroyd and I, that it <em>was</em> a man.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot did not seem to be listening to me. He was muttering to himself
- again.</p>
-
- <p>“But then it is possible after all—yes, certainly it is possible—but
- then—ah! I must rearrange my ideas. Method, order; never have I needed
- them more. Everything must fit in—in its appointed place—otherwise I am
- on the wrong tack.”</p>
-
- <p>He broke off, and whirled round upon me again.</p>
-
- <p>“Where is Marby?”</p>
-
- <p>“It’s on the other side of Cranchester.”</p>
-
- <p>“How far away?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh!—fourteen miles, perhaps.”</p>
-
- <p>“Would it be possible for you to go there? To-morrow, say?”</p>
-
- <p>“To-morrow? Let me see, that’s Sunday. Yes, I could arrange it. What do
- you want me to do there?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">135</span></p>
-
- <p>“See this Mrs. Folliott. Find out all you can about Ursula Bourne.”</p>
-
- <p>“Very well. But—I don’t much care for the job.”</p>
-
- <p>“It is not the time to make difficulties. A man’s life may hang on
- this.”</p>
-
- <p>“Poor Ralph,” I said with a sigh. “You believe him to be innocent,
- though?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot looked at me very gravely.</p>
-
- <p>“Do you want to know the truth?”</p>
-
- <p>“Of course.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then you shall have it. My friend, everything points to the assumption
- that he is guilty.”</p>
-
- <p>“What!” I exclaimed.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, that stupid inspector—for he is stupid—has everything pointing
- his way. I seek for the truth—and the truth leads me every time to
- Ralph Paton. Motive, opportunity, means. But I will leave no stone
- unturned. I promised Mademoiselle Flora. And she was very sure, that
- little one. But very sure indeed.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">136</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">POIROT PAYS A CALL</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">I was</span> slightly nervous when I rang the bell at Marby Grange the
- following afternoon. I wondered very much what Poirot expected to
- find out. He had entrusted the job to me. Why? Was it because, as
- in the case of questioning Major Blunt, he wished to remain in the
- background? The wish, intelligible in the first case, seemed to me
- quite meaningless here.</p>
-
- <p>My meditations were interrupted by the advent of a smart parlormaid.</p>
-
- <p>Yes, Mrs. Folliott was at home. I was ushered into a big drawing-room,
- and looked round me curiously as I waited for the mistress of the
- house. A large bare room, some good bits of old china, and some
- beautiful etchings, shabby covers and curtains. A lady’s room in every
- sense of the term.</p>
-
- <p>I turned from the inspection of a Bartolozzi on the wall as Mrs.
- Folliott came into the room. She was a tall woman, with untidy brown
- hair, and a very winning smile.</p>
-
- <p>“Dr. Sheppard,” she said hesitatingly.</p>
-
- <p>“That is my name,” I replied. “I must apologize for calling upon you
- like this, but I wanted some information about a parlormaid previously
- employed by you, Ursula Bourne.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">137</span></p>
-
- <p>With the utterance of the name the smile vanished from her face, and
- all the cordiality froze out of her manner. She looked uncomfortable
- and ill at ease.</p>
-
- <p>“Ursula Bourne?” she said hesitatingly.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said. “Perhaps you don’t remember the name?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, yes, of course. I—I remember perfectly.”</p>
-
- <p>“She left you just over a year ago, I understand?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. Yes, she did. That is quite right.”</p>
-
- <p>“And you were satisfied with her whilst she was with you? How long was
- she with you, by the way?”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! a year or two—I can’t remember exactly how long. She—she is very
- capable. I’m sure you will find her quite satisfactory. I didn’t know
- she was leaving Fernly. I hadn’t the least idea of it.”</p>
-
- <p>“Can you tell me anything about her?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“Anything about her?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, where she comes from, who her people are—that sort of thing?”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Folliott’s face wore more than ever its frozen look.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t know at all.”</p>
-
- <p>“Who was she with before she came to you?”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m afraid I don’t remember.”</p>
-
- <p>There was a spark of anger now underlying her nervousness. She flung up
- her head in a gesture that was vaguely familiar.</p>
-
- <p>“Is it really necessary to ask all these questions?”</p>
-
- <p>“Not at all,” I said, with an air of surprise and a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">138</span> tinge of apology
- in my manner. “I had no idea you would mind answering them. I am very
- sorry.”</p>
-
- <p>Her anger left her and she became confused again.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! I don’t mind answering them. I assure you I don’t. Why should I?
- It—it just seemed a little odd, you know. That’s all. A little odd.”</p>
-
- <p>One advantage of being a medical practitioner is that you can usually
- tell when people are lying to you. I should have known from Mrs.
- Folliott’s manner, if from nothing else, that she did mind answering my
- questions—minded intensely. She was thoroughly uncomfortable and upset,
- and there was plainly some mystery in the background. I judged her to
- be a woman quite unused to deception of any kind, and consequently
- rendered acutely uneasy when forced to practice it. A child could have
- seen through her.</p>
-
- <p>But it was also clear that she had no intention of telling me anything
- further. Whatever the mystery centering around Ursula Bourne might be,
- I was not going to learn it through Mrs. Folliott.</p>
-
- <p>Defeated, I apologized once more for disturbing her, took my hat and
- departed.</p>
-
- <p>I went to see a couple of patients and arrived home about six o’clock.
- Caroline was sitting beside the wreck of tea things. She had that
- look of suppressed exultation on her face which I know only too well.
- It is a sure sign with her, of either the getting or the giving of
- information. I wondered which it had been.</p>
-
- <p>“I’ve had a very interesting afternoon,” began Caroline as I dropped
- into my own particular easy chair, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">139</span> stretched out my feet to the
- inviting blaze in the fireplace.</p>
-
- <p>“Have you?” I asked. “Miss Ganett drop in to tea?”</p>
-
- <p>Miss Ganett is one of the chief of our newsmongers.</p>
-
- <p>“Guess again,” said Caroline with intense complacency.</p>
-
- <p>I guessed several times, working slowly through all the members of
- Caroline’s Intelligence Corps. My sister received each guess with
- a triumphant shake of the head. In the end she volunteered the
- information herself.</p>
-
- <p>“M. Poirot!” she said. “Now what do you think of that?”</p>
-
- <p>I thought a good many things of it, but I was careful not to say them
- to Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“Why did he come?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“To see me, of course. He said that knowing my brother so well, he
- hoped he might be permitted to make the acquaintance of his charming
- sister—your charming sister, I’ve got mixed up, but you know what I
- mean.”</p>
-
- <p>“What did he talk about?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“He told me a lot about himself and his cases. You know that Prince
- Paul of Mauretania—the one who’s just married a dancer?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes?”</p>
-
- <p>“I saw a most intriguing paragraph about her in Society Snippets the
- other day, hinting that she was really a Russian Grand Duchess—one
- of the Czar’s daughters who managed to escape from the Bolsheviks.
- Well, it seems that M. Poirot solved a baffling murder mystery that
- threatened to involve them both. Prince Paul was beside himself with
- gratitude.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">140</span></p>
-
- <p>“Did he give him an emerald tie pin the size of a plover’s egg?” I
- inquired sarcastically.</p>
-
- <p>“He didn’t mention it. Why?”</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing,” I said. “I thought it was always done. It is in detective
- fiction anyway. The super detective always has his rooms littered with
- rubies and pearls and emeralds from grateful Royal clients.”</p>
-
- <p>“It’s very interesting to hear about these things from the inside,”
- said my sister complacently.</p>
-
- <p>It would be—to Caroline. I could not but admire the ingenuity of M.
- Hercule Poirot, who had selected unerringly the case of all others that
- would most appeal to an elderly maiden lady living in a small village.</p>
-
- <p>“Did he tell you if the dancer was really a Grand Duchess?” I inquired.</p>
-
- <p>“He was not at liberty to speak,” said Caroline importantly.</p>
-
- <p>I wondered how far Poirot had strained the truth in talking to
- Caroline—probably not at all. He had conveyed his innuendoes by means
- of his eyebrows and his shoulders.</p>
-
- <p>“And after all this,” I remarked, “I suppose you were ready to eat out
- of his hand.”</p>
-
- <p>“Don’t be coarse, James. I don’t know where you get these vulgar
- expressions from.”</p>
-
- <p>“Probably from my only link with the outside world—my patients.
- Unfortunately my practice does not lie amongst Royal princes and
- interesting Russian émigrés.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline pushed her spectacles up and looked at me.</p>
-
- <p>“You seem very grumpy, James. It must be your liver. A blue pill, I
- think, to-night.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">141</span></p>
-
- <p>To see me in my own home, you would never imagine that I was a doctor
- of medicine. Caroline does the home prescribing both for herself and me.</p>
-
- <p>“Damn my liver,” I said irritably. “Did you talk about the murder at
- all?”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, naturally, James. What else is there to talk about locally?
- I was able to set M. Poirot right upon several points. He was very
- grateful to me. He said I had the makings of a born detective in me—and
- a wonderful psychological insight into human nature.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline was exactly like a cat that is full to overflowing with rich
- cream. She was positively purring.</p>
-
- <p>“He talked a lot about the little gray cells of the brain, and of their
- functions. His own, he says, are of the first quality.”</p>
-
- <p>“He would say so,” I remarked bitterly. “Modesty is certainly not his
- middle name.”</p>
-
- <p>“I wish you would not be so horribly American, James. He thought it
- very important that Ralph should be found as soon as possible, and
- induced to come forward and give an account of himself. He says that
- his disappearance will produce a very unfortunate impression at the
- inquest.”</p>
-
- <p>“And what did you say to that?”</p>
-
- <p>“I agreed with him,” said Caroline importantly. “And I was able to tell
- him the way people were already talking about it.”</p>
-
- <p>“Caroline,” I said sharply, “did you tell M. Poirot what you overheard
- in the wood that day?”</p>
-
- <p>“I did,” said Caroline complacently.</p>
-
- <p>I got up and began to walk about.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">142</span></p>
-
- <p>“You realize what you’re doing, I hope,” I jerked out. “You’re putting
- a halter round Ralph Paton’s neck as surely as you’re sitting in that
- chair.”</p>
-
- <p>“Not at all,” said Caroline, quite unruffled. “I was surprised
- <em>you</em> hadn’t told him.”</p>
-
- <p>“I took very good care not to,” I said. “I’m fond of that boy.”</p>
-
- <p>“So am I. That’s why I say you’re talking nonsense. I don’t believe
- Ralph did it, and so the truth can’t hurt him, and we ought to give M.
- Poirot all the help we can. Why, think, very likely Ralph was out with
- that identical girl on the night of the murder, and if so, he’s got a
- perfect alibi.”</p>
-
- <p>“If he’s got a perfect alibi,” I retorted, “why doesn’t he come forward
- and say so?”</p>
-
- <p>“Might get the girl into trouble,” said Caroline sapiently. “But if M.
- Poirot gets hold of her, and puts it to her as her duty, she’ll come
- forward of her own accord and clear Ralph.”</p>
-
- <p>“You seem to have invented a romantic fairy story of your own,” I said.
- “You read too many trashy novels, Caroline. I’ve always told you so.”</p>
-
- <p>I dropped into my chair again.</p>
-
- <p>“Did Poirot ask you any more questions?” I inquired.</p>
-
- <p>“Only about the patients you had that morning.”</p>
-
- <p>“The patients?” I demanded, unbelievingly.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, your surgery patients. How many and who they were?”</p>
-
- <p>“Do you mean to say you were able to tell him that?” I demanded.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">143</span></p>
-
- <p>Caroline is really amazing.</p>
-
- <p>“Why not?” asked my sister triumphantly. “I can see the path up to the
- surgery door perfectly from this window. And I’ve got an excellent
- memory, James. Much better than yours, let me tell you.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m sure you have,” I murmured mechanically.</p>
-
- <p>My sister went on, checking the names on her fingers.</p>
-
- <p>“There was old Mrs. Bennett, and that boy from the farm with the bad
- finger, Dolly Grice to have a needle out of her finger; that American
- steward off the liner. Let me see—that’s four. Yes, and old George
- Evans with his ulcer. And lastly——”</p>
-
- <p>She paused significantly.</p>
-
- <p>“Well?”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline brought out her climax triumphantly. She hissed in the most
- approved style—aided by the fortunate number of s’s at her disposal.</p>
-
- <p>“<em>Miss Russell!</em>”</p>
-
- <p>She sat back in her chair and looked at me meaningly, and when Caroline
- looks at you meaningly, it is impossible to miss it.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t know what you mean,” I said, quite untruthfully. “Why
- shouldn’t Miss Russell consult me about her bad knee?”</p>
-
- <p>“Bad knee,” said Caroline. “Fiddlesticks! No more bad knee than you and
- I. She was after something else.”</p>
-
- <p>“What?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>Caroline had to admit that she didn’t know.</p>
-
- <p>“But depend upon it, that was what he was trying to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">144</span> get at, M. Poirot,
- I mean. There’s something fishy about that woman, and he knows it.”</p>
-
- <p>“Precisely the remark Mrs. Ackroyd made to me yesterday,” I said. “That
- there was something fishy about Miss Russell.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” said Caroline darkly, “Mrs. Ackroyd! There’s another!”</p>
-
- <p>“Another what?”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline refused to explain her remarks. She merely nodded her head
- several times, rolled up her knitting, and went upstairs to don the
- high mauve silk blouse and the gold locket which she calls dressing for
- dinner.</p>
-
- <p>I stayed there staring into the fire and thinking over Caroline’s
- words. Had Poirot really come to gain information about Miss Russell,
- or was it only Caroline’s tortuous mind that interpreted everything
- according to her own ideas?</p>
-
- <p>There had certainly been nothing in Miss Russell’s manner that morning
- to arouse suspicion. At least——</p>
-
- <p>I remembered her persistent conversation on the subject of drug-taking
- and from that she had led the conversation to poisons and poisoning.
- But there was nothing in that. Ackroyd had not been poisoned. Still, it
- was odd....</p>
-
- <p>I heard Caroline’s voice, rather acid in note, calling from the top of
- the stairs.</p>
-
- <p>“James, you will be late for dinner.”</p>
-
- <p>I put some coal on the fire and went upstairs obediently.</p>
-
- <p>It is well at any price to have peace in the home.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">145</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">ROUND THE TABLE</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">A joint</span> inquest was held on Monday.</p>
-
- <p>I do not propose to give the proceedings in detail. To do so would only
- be to go over the same ground again and again. By arrangement with the
- police, very little was allowed to come out. I gave evidence as to the
- cause of Ackroyd’s death and the probable time. The absence of Ralph
- Paton was commented on by the coroner, but not unduly stressed.</p>
-
- <p>Afterwards, Poirot and I had a few words with Inspector Raglan. The
- inspector was very grave.</p>
-
- <p>“It looks bad, Mr. Poirot,” he said. “I’m trying to judge the thing
- fair and square. I’m a local man, and I’ve seen Captain Paton many
- times in Cranchester. I’m not wanting him to be the guilty one—but it’s
- bad whichever way you look at it. If he’s innocent, why doesn’t he come
- forward? We’ve got evidence against him, but it’s just possible that
- that evidence could be explained away. Then why doesn’t he give an
- explanation?”</p>
-
- <p>A lot more lay behind the inspector’s words than I knew at the time.
- Ralph’s description had been wired to every port and railway station
- in England. The police everywhere were on the alert. His rooms in town
- were watched, and any houses he had been known to be in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">146</span> the habit of
- frequenting. With such a <em>cordon</em> it seemed impossible that Ralph
- should be able to evade detection. He had no luggage, and, as far as
- any one knew, no money.</p>
-
- <p>“I can’t find any one who saw him at the station that night,” continued
- the inspector. “And yet he’s well known down here, and you’d think
- somebody would have noticed him. There’s no news from Liverpool either.”</p>
-
- <p>“You think he went to Liverpool?” queried Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, it’s on the cards. That telephone message from the station,
- just three minutes before the Liverpool express left—there ought to be
- something in that.”</p>
-
- <p>“Unless it was deliberately intended to throw you off the scent. That
- might just possibly be the point of the telephone message.”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s an idea,” said the inspector eagerly. “Do you really think
- that’s the explanation of the telephone call?”</p>
-
- <p>“My friend,” said Poirot gravely, “I do not know. But I will tell you
- this: I believe that when we find the explanation of that telephone
- call we shall find the explanation of the murder.”</p>
-
- <p>“You said something like that before, I remember,” I observed, looking
- at him curiously.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“I always come back to it,” he said seriously.</p>
-
- <p>“It seems to me utterly irrelevant,” I declared.</p>
-
- <p>“I wouldn’t say that,” demurred the inspector. “But I must confess I
- think Mr. Poirot here harps on it a little too much. We’ve better clews
- than that. The fingerprints on the dagger, for instance.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</span></p>
-
- <p>Poirot became suddenly very foreign in manner, as he often did when
- excited over anything.</p>
-
- <p>“M. l’Inspecteur,” he said, “beware of the blind—the blind—<i lang="fr">comment
- dire?</i>—the little street that has no end to it.”</p>
-
- <p>Inspector Raglan stared, but I was quicker.</p>
-
- <p>“You mean a blind alley?” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“That is it—the blind street that leads nowhere. So it may be with
- those fingerprints—they may lead you nowhere.”</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t see how that can well be,” said the police officer. “I suppose
- you’re hinting that they’re faked? I’ve read of such things being done,
- though I can’t say I’ve ever come across it in my experience. But fake
- or true—they’re bound to lead <em>somewhere</em>.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot merely shrugged his shoulders, flinging out his arms wide.</p>
-
- <p>The inspector then showed us various enlarged photographs of the
- fingerprints, and proceeded to become technical on the subject of loops
- and whorls.</p>
-
- <p>“Come now,” he said at last, annoyed by Poirot’s detached manner,
- “you’ve got to admit that those prints were made by some one who was in
- the house that night?”</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Bien entendu</i>,” said Poirot, nodding his head.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, I’ve taken the prints of every member of the household, every
- one, mind you, from the old lady down to the kitchenmaid.”</p>
-
- <p>I don’t think Mrs. Ackroyd would enjoy being referred to as the old
- lady. She must spend a considerable amount on cosmetics.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</span></p>
-
- <p>“Every one’s,” repeated the inspector fussily.</p>
-
- <p>“Including mine,” I said dryly.</p>
-
- <p>“Very well. None of them correspond. That leaves us two alternatives.
- Ralph Paton, or the mysterious stranger the doctor here tells us about.
- When we get hold of those two——”</p>
-
- <p>“Much valuable time may have been lost,” broke in Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t quite get you, Mr. Poirot?”</p>
-
- <p>“You have taken the prints of every one in the house, you say,”
- murmured Poirot. “Is that the exact truth you are telling me there, M.
- l’Inspecteur?”</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly.”</p>
-
- <p>“Without overlooking any one?”</p>
-
- <p>“Without overlooking any one.”</p>
-
- <p>“The quick or the dead?”</p>
-
- <p>For a moment the inspector looked bewildered at what he took to be a
- religious observation. Then he reacted slowly.</p>
-
- <p>“You mean——”</p>
-
- <p>“The dead, M. l’Inspecteur.”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector still took a minute or two to understand.</p>
-
- <p>“I am suggesting,” said Poirot placidly, “that the fingerprints on the
- dagger handle are those of Mr. Ackroyd himself. It is an easy matter to
- verify. His body is still available.”</p>
-
- <p>“But why? What would be the point of it? You’re surely not suggesting
- suicide, Mr. Poirot?”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! no. My theory is that the murderer wore gloves<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">149</span> or wrapped
- something round his hand. After the blow was struck, he picked up the
- victim’s hand and closed it round the dagger handle.”</p>
-
- <p>“But why?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot shrugged his shoulders again.</p>
-
- <p>“To make a confusing case even more confusing.”</p>
-
- <p>“Well,” said the inspector, “I’ll look into it. What gave you the idea
- in the first place?”</p>
-
- <p>“When you were so kind as to show me the dagger and draw attention to
- the fingerprints. I know very little of loops and whorls—see, I confess
- my ignorance frankly. But it did occur to me that the position of the
- prints was somewhat awkward. Not so would I have held a dagger in order
- to strike. Naturally, with the right hand brought up over the shoulder
- backwards, it would have been difficult to put it in exactly the right
- position.”</p>
-
- <p>Inspector Raglan stared at the little man. Poirot, with an air of great
- unconcern, flecked a speck of dust from his coat sleeve.</p>
-
- <p>“Well,” said the inspector, “it’s an idea. I’ll look into it all right,
- but don’t you be disappointed if nothing comes of it.”</p>
-
- <p>He endeavored to make his tone kindly and patronizing. Poirot watched
- him go off. Then he turned to me with twinkling eyes.</p>
-
- <p>“Another time,” he observed, “I must be more careful of his <i lang="fr">amour
- propre</i>. And now that we are left to our own devices, what do you
- think, my good friend, of a little reunion of the family?”</p>
-
- <p>The “little reunion,” as Poirot called it, took place<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">150</span> about half an
- hour later. We sat round the table in the dining-room at Fernly—Poirot
- at the head of the table, like the chairman of some ghastly board
- meeting. The servants were not present, so we were six in all. Mrs.
- Ackroyd, Flora, Major Blunt, young Raymond, Poirot, and myself.</p>
-
- <p>When every one was assembled, Poirot rose and bowed.</p>
-
- <p>“Messieurs, mesdames, I have called you together for a certain
- purpose.” He paused. “To begin with, I want to make a very special plea
- to mademoiselle.”</p>
-
- <p>“To me?” said Flora.</p>
-
- <p>“Mademoiselle, you are engaged to Captain Ralph Paton. If any one
- is in his confidence, you are. I beg you, most earnestly, if you
- know of his whereabouts, to persuade him to come forward. One little
- minute”—as Flora raised her head to speak—“say nothing till you have
- well reflected. Mademoiselle, his position grows daily more dangerous.
- If he had come forward at once, no matter how damning the facts, he
- might have had a chance of explaining them away. But this silence—this
- flight—what can it mean? Surely only one thing, knowledge of guilt.
- Mademoiselle, if you really believe in his innocence, persuade him to
- come forward before it is too late.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora’s face had gone very white.</p>
-
- <p>“Too late!” she repeated, very low.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot leant forward, looking at her.</p>
-
- <p>“See now, mademoiselle,” he said very gently, “it is Papa Poirot who
- asks you this. The old Papa Poirot who has much knowledge and much
- experience. I would not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">151</span> seek to entrap you, mademoiselle. Will you not
- trust me—and tell me where Ralph Paton is hiding?”</p>
-
- <p>The girl rose, and stood facing him.</p>
-
- <p>“M. Poirot,” she said in a clear voice, “I swear to you—swear
- solemnly—that I have no idea where Ralph is, and that I have neither
- seen him nor heard from him either on the day of—of the murder, or
- since.”</p>
-
- <p>She sat down again. Poirot gazed at her in silence for a minute or two,
- then he brought his hand down on the table with a sharp rap.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Bien!</i> That is that,” he said. His face hardened. “Now I appeal
- to these others who sit round this table, Mrs. Ackroyd, Major Blunt,
- Dr. Sheppard, Mr. Raymond. You are all friends and intimates of the
- missing man. If you know where Ralph Paton is hiding, speak out.”</p>
-
- <p>There was a long silence. Poirot looked to each in turn.</p>
-
- <p>“I beg of you,” he said in a low voice, “speak out.”</p>
-
- <p>But still there was silence, broken at last by Mrs. Ackroyd.</p>
-
- <p>“I must say,” she observed in a plaintive voice, “that Ralph’s absence
- is most peculiar—most peculiar indeed. Not to come forward at such a
- time. It looks, you know, as though there were something <em>behind</em>
- it. I can’t help thinking, Flora dear, that it was a very fortunate
- thing your engagement was never formally announced.”</p>
-
- <p>“Mother!” cried Flora angrily.</p>
-
- <p>“Providence,” declared Mrs. Ackroyd. “I have a devout<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">152</span> belief in
- Providence—a divinity that shapes our ends, as Shakespeare’s beautiful
- line runs.”</p>
-
- <p>“Surely you don’t make the Almighty directly responsible for
- thick ankles, Mrs. Ackroyd, do you?” asked Geoffrey Raymond, his
- irresponsible laugh ringing out.</p>
-
- <p>His idea was, I think, to loosen the tension, but Mrs. Ackroyd threw
- him a glance of reproach and took out her handkerchief.</p>
-
- <p>“Flora has been saved a terrible amount of notoriety and
- unpleasantness. Not for a moment that I think dear Ralph had anything
- to do with poor Roger’s death. I <em>don’t</em> think so. But then I have
- a trusting heart—I always have had, ever since a child. I am loath to
- believe the worst of any one. But, of course, one must remember that
- Ralph was in several air raids as a young boy. The results are apparent
- long after, sometimes, they say. People are not responsible for their
- actions in the least. They lose control, you know, without being able
- to help it.”</p>
-
- <p>“Mother,” cried Flora, “you don’t think Ralph did it?”</p>
-
- <p>“Come, Mrs. Ackroyd,” said Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t know what to think,” said Mrs. Ackroyd tearfully. “It’s all
- very upsetting. What would happen to the estate, I wonder, if Ralph
- were found guilty?”</p>
-
- <p>Raymond pushed his chair away from the table violently. Major Blunt
- remained very quiet, looking thoughtfully at her. “Like shell-shock,
- you know,” said Mrs. Ackroyd obstinately, “and I dare say Roger kept
- him very short of money—with the best intentions, of course. I can see
- you are all against me, but I do think<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">153</span> it is very odd that Ralph has
- not come forward, and I must say I am thankful Flora’s engagement was
- never announced formally.”</p>
-
- <p>“It will be to-morrow,” said Flora in a clear voice.</p>
-
- <p>“Flora!” cried her mother, aghast.</p>
-
- <p>Flora had turned to the secretary.</p>
-
- <p>“Will you send the announcement to the <cite>Morning Post</cite> and the
- <cite>Times</cite>, please, Mr. Raymond.”</p>
-
- <p>“If you are sure that it is wise, Miss Ackroyd,” he replied gravely.</p>
-
- <p>She turned impulsively to Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>“You understand,” she said. “What else can I do? As things are, I must
- stand by Ralph. Don’t you see that I must?”</p>
-
- <p>She looked very searchingly at him, and after a long pause he nodded
- abruptly.</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd burst out into shrill protests. Flora remained unmoved.
- Then Raymond spoke.</p>
-
- <p>“I appreciate your motives, Miss Ackroyd. But don’t you think you’re
- being rather precipitate? Wait a day or two.”</p>
-
- <p>“To-morrow,” said Flora, in a clear voice. “It’s no good, mother, going
- on like this. Whatever else I am, I’m not disloyal to my friends.”</p>
-
- <p>“M. Poirot,” Mrs. Ackroyd appealed tearfully, “can’t you say anything
- at all?”</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing to be said,” interpolated Blunt. “She’s doing the right thing.
- I’ll stand by her through thick and thin.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora held out her hand to him.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">154</span></p>
-
- <p>“Thank you, Major Blunt,” she said.</p>
-
- <p>“Mademoiselle,” said Poirot, “will you let an old man congratulate you
- on your courage and your loyalty? And will you not misunderstand me if
- I ask you—ask you most solemnly—to postpone the announcement you speak
- of for at least two days more?”</p>
-
- <p>Flora hesitated.</p>
-
- <p>“I ask it in Ralph Paton’s interests as much as in yours, mademoiselle.
- You frown. You do not see how that can be. But I assure you that it is
- so. <i lang="fr">Pas de blagues</i>. You put the case into my hands—you must not
- hamper me now.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora paused a few minutes before replying.</p>
-
- <p>“I do not like it,” she said at last, “but I will do what you say.”</p>
-
- <p>She sat down again at the table.</p>
-
- <p>“And now, messieurs et mesdames,” said Poirot rapidly, “I will continue
- with what I was about to say. Understand this, I mean to arrive at
- the truth. The truth, however ugly in itself, is always curious and
- beautiful to the seeker after it. I am much aged, my powers may not
- be what they were.” Here he clearly expected a contradiction. “In all
- probability this is the last case I shall ever investigate. But Hercule
- Poirot does not end with a failure. Messieurs et mesdames, I tell you,
- I mean to <em>know</em>. And I shall know—in spite of you all.”</p>
-
- <p>He brought out the last words provocatively, hurling them in our face
- as it were. I think we all flinched back a little, excepting Geoffrey
- Raymond, who remained good humored and imperturbable as usual.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">155</span></p>
-
- <p>“How do you mean—in spite of us all?” he asked, with slightly raised
- eyebrows.</p>
-
- <p>“But—just that, monsieur. Every one of you in this room is concealing
- something from me.” He raised his hand as a faint murmur of protest
- arose. “Yes, yes, I know what I am saying. It may be something
- unimportant—trivial—which is supposed to have no bearing on the case,
- but there it is. <em>Each one of you has something to hide.</em> Come,
- now, am I right?”</p>
-
- <p>His glance, challenging and accusing, swept round the table. And every
- pair of eyes dropped before his. Yes, mine as well.</p>
-
- <p>“I am answered,” said Poirot, with a curious laugh. He got up from his
- seat. “I appeal to you all. Tell me the truth—the whole truth.” There
- was a silence. “Will no one speak?”</p>
-
- <p>He gave the same short laugh again.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">C’est dommage</i>,” he said, and went out.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">156</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">THE GOOSE QUILL</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">That</span> evening, at Poirot’s request, I went over to his house after
- dinner. Caroline saw me depart with visible reluctance. I think she
- would have liked to have accompanied me.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot greeted me hospitably. He had placed a bottle of Irish whisky
- (which I detest) on a small table, with a soda water siphon and a
- glass. He himself was engaged in brewing hot chocolate. It was a
- favorite beverage of his, I discovered later.</p>
-
- <p>He inquired politely after my sister, whom he declared to be a most
- interesting woman.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m afraid you’ve been giving her a swelled head,” I said dryly. “What
- about Sunday afternoon?”</p>
-
- <p>He laughed and twinkled.</p>
-
- <p>“I always like to employ the expert,” he remarked obscurely, but he
- refused to explain the remark.</p>
-
- <p>“You got all the local gossip anyway,” I remarked. “True, and untrue.”</p>
-
- <p>“And a great deal of valuable information,” he added quietly.</p>
-
- <p>“Such as——?”</p>
-
- <p>He shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“Why not have told me the truth?” he countered.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">157</span> “In a place like this,
- all Ralph Paton’s doings were bound to be known. If your sister had not
- happened to pass through the wood that day somebody else would have
- done so.”</p>
-
- <p>“I suppose they would,” I said grumpily. “What about this interest of
- yours in my patients?”</p>
-
- <p>Again he twinkled.</p>
-
- <p>“Only one of them, doctor. Only one of them.”</p>
-
- <p>“The last?” I hazarded.</p>
-
- <p>“I find Miss Russell a study of the most interesting,” he said
- evasively.</p>
-
- <p>“Do you agree with my sister and Mrs. Ackroyd that there is something
- fishy about her?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“Eh? What do you say—fishy?”</p>
-
- <p>I explained to the best of my ability.</p>
-
- <p>“And they say that, do they?”</p>
-
- <p>“Didn’t my sister convey as much to you yesterday afternoon?”</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">C’est possible.</i>”</p>
-
- <p>“For no reason whatever,” I declared.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Les femmes</i>,” generalized Poirot. “They are marvelous! They
- invent haphazard—and by miracle they are right. Not that it is that,
- really. Women observe subconsciously a thousand little details, without
- knowing that they are doing so. Their subconscious mind adds these
- little things together—and they call the result intuition. Me, I am
- very skilled in psychology. I know these things.”</p>
-
- <p>He swelled his chest out importantly, looking so ridiculous, that I
- found it difficult not to burst out laughing.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">158</span> Then he took a small sip
- of his chocolate, and carefully wiped his mustache.</p>
-
- <p>“I wish you’d tell me,” I burst out, “what you really think of it all?”</p>
-
- <p>He put down his cup.</p>
-
- <p>“You wish that?”</p>
-
- <p>“I do.”</p>
-
- <p>“You have seen what I have seen. Should not our ideas be the same?”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m afraid you’re laughing at me,” I said stiffly. “Of course, I’ve no
- experience of matters of this kind.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot smiled at me indulgently.</p>
-
- <p>“You are like the little child who wants to know the way the engine
- works. You wish to see the affair, not as the family doctor sees it,
- but with the eye of a detective who knows and cares for no one—to whom
- they are all strangers and all equally liable to suspicion.”</p>
-
- <p>“You put it very well,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“So I give you then, a little lecture. The first thing is to get a
- clear history of what happened that evening—always bearing in mind that
- the person who speaks may be lying.”</p>
-
- <p>I raised my eyebrows.</p>
-
- <p>“Rather a suspicious attitude.”</p>
-
- <p>“But necessary—I assure you, necessary. Now first—Dr. Sheppard leaves
- the house at ten minutes to nine. How do I know that?”</p>
-
- <p>“Because I told you so.”</p>
-
- <p>“But you might not be speaking the truth—or the watch you went by might
- be wrong. But Parker also says<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">159</span> that you left the house at ten minutes
- to nine. So we accept that statement and pass on. At nine o’clock you
- run into a man—and here we come to what we will call the Romance of the
- Mysterious Stranger—just outside the Park gates. How do I know that
- that is so?”</p>
-
- <p>“I told you so,” I began again, but Poirot interrupted me with a
- gesture of impatience.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! but it is that you are a little stupid to-night, my friend.
- <em>You</em> know that it is so—but how am <em>I</em> to know? <i lang="fr">Eh
- bien</i>, I am able to tell you that the Mysterious Stranger was not
- a hallucination on your part, because the maid of a Miss Ganett met
- him a few minutes before you did, and of her too he inquired the way
- to Fernly Park. We accept his presence, therefore, and we can be
- fairly sure of two things about him—that he was a stranger to the
- neighborhood, and that whatever his object in going to Fernly, there
- was no great secrecy about it, since he twice asked the way there.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said, “I see that.”</p>
-
- <p>“Now I have made it my business to find out more about this man. He had
- a drink at the Three Boars, I learn, and the barmaid there says that he
- spoke with an American accent and mentioned having just come over from
- the States. Did it strike you that he had an American accent?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, I think he had,” I said, after a minute or two, during which I
- cast my mind back; “but a very slight one.”</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Précisément.</i> There is also this which, you will remember, I
- picked up in the summer-house?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">160</span></p>
-
- <p>He held out to me the little quill. I looked at it curiously. Then a
- memory of something I had read stirred in me.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot, who had been watching my face, nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, heroin ‘snow.’ Drug-takers carry it like this, and sniff it up
- the nose.”</p>
-
- <p>“Diamorphine hydrochloride,” I murmured mechanically.</p>
-
- <p>“This method of taking the drug is very common on the other side.
- Another proof, if we wanted one, that the man came from Canada or the
- States.”</p>
-
- <p>“What first attracted your attention to that summer-house?” I asked
- curiously.</p>
-
- <p>“My friend the inspector took it for granted that any one using that
- path did so as a short cut to the house, but as soon as I saw the
- summer-house, I realized that the same path would be taken by any one
- using the summer-house as a rendezvous. Now it seems fairly certain
- that the stranger came neither to the front nor to the back door. Then
- did some one from the house go out and meet him? If so, what could be a
- more convenient place than that little summer-house? I searched it with
- the hope that I might find some clew inside. I found two, the scrap of
- cambric and the quill.”</p>
-
- <p>“And the scrap of cambric?” I asked curiously. “What about that?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot raised his eyebrows.</p>
-
- <p>“You do not use your little gray cells,” he remarked dryly. “The scrap
- of starched cambric should be obvious.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">161</span></p>
-
- <p>“Not very obvious to me.” I changed the subject. “Anyway,” I said,
- “this man went to the summer-house to meet somebody. Who was that
- somebody?”</p>
-
- <p>“Exactly the question,” said Poirot. “You will remember that Mrs.
- Ackroyd and her daughter came over from Canada to live here?”</p>
-
- <p>“Is that what you meant to-day when you accused them of hiding the
- truth?”</p>
-
- <p>“Perhaps. Now another point. What did you think of the parlormaid’s
- story?”</p>
-
- <p>“What story?”</p>
-
- <p>“The story of her dismissal. Does it take half an hour to dismiss a
- servant? Was the story of those important papers a likely one? And
- remember, though she says she was in her bedroom from nine-thirty until
- ten o’clock, there is no one to confirm her statement.”</p>
-
- <p>“You bewilder me,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“To me it grows clearer. But tell me now your own ideas and theories.”</p>
-
- <p>I drew a piece of paper from my pocket.</p>
-
- <p>“I just scribbled down a few suggestions,” I said apologetically.</p>
-
- <p>“But excellent—you have method. Let us hear them.”</p>
-
- <p>I read out in a somewhat embarrassed voice.</p>
-
- <p>“To begin with, one must look at the thing logically——”</p>
-
- <p>“Just what my poor Hastings used to say,” interrupted Poirot, “but
- alas! he never did so.”</p>
-
- <p>“<em>Point <abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 1.</em>—Mr. Ackroyd was heard talking to some one at
- half-past nine.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">162</span></p>
-
- <p>“<em>Point <abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 2.</em>—At some time during the evening Ralph Paton must
- have come in through the window, as evidenced by the prints of his
- shoes.</p>
-
- <p>“<em>Point <abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 3.</em>—Mr. Ackroyd was nervous that evening, and would
- only have admitted some one he knew.</p>
-
- <p>“<em>Point <abbr title="number">No.</abbr> 4.</em>—The person with Mr. Ackroyd at nine-thirty was
- asking for money. We know Ralph Paton was in a scrape.</p>
-
- <p>“<em>These four points go to show that the person with Mr. Ackroyd at
- nine-thirty was Ralph Paton. But we know that Mr. Ackroyd was alive at
- a quarter to ten, therefore it was not Ralph who killed him. Ralph left
- the window open. Afterwards the murderer came in that way.</em>”</p>
-
- <p>“And who was the murderer?” inquired Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“The American stranger. He may have been in league with Parker, and
- possibly in Parker we have the man who blackmailed Mrs. Ferrars. If
- so, Parker may have heard enough to realize the game was up, have told
- his accomplice so, and the latter did the crime with the dagger which
- Parker gave him.”</p>
-
- <p>“It is a theory that,” admitted Poirot. “Decidedly you have cells of a
- kind. But it leaves a good deal unaccounted for.”</p>
-
- <p>“Such as——?”</p>
-
- <p>“The telephone call, the pushed-out chair——”</p>
-
- <p>“Do you really think the latter important?” I interrupted.</p>
-
- <p>“Perhaps not,” admitted my friend. “It may have been pulled out
- by accident, and Raymond or Blunt may have shoved it into place
- unconsciously under the stress<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">163</span> of emotion. Then there is the missing
- forty pounds.”</p>
-
- <p>“Given by Ackroyd to Ralph,” I suggested. “He may have reconsidered his
- first refusal.”</p>
-
- <p>“That still leaves one thing unexplained?”</p>
-
- <p>“What?”</p>
-
- <p>“Why was Blunt so certain in his own mind that it was Raymond with Mr.
- Ackroyd at nine-thirty?”</p>
-
- <p>“He explained that,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“You think so? I will not press the point. Tell me instead, what were
- Ralph Paton’s reasons for disappearing?”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s rather more difficult,” I said slowly. “I shall have to speak
- as a medical man. Ralph’s nerves must have gone phut! If he suddenly
- found out that his uncle had been murdered within a few minutes of his
- leaving him—after, perhaps, a rather stormy interview—well, he might
- get the wind up and clear right out. Men have been known to do that—act
- guiltily when they’re perfectly innocent.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, that is true,” said Poirot. “But we must not lose sight of one
- thing.”</p>
-
- <p>“I know what you’re going to say,” I remarked: “motive. Ralph Paton
- inherits a great fortune by his uncle’s death.”</p>
-
- <p>“That is one motive,” agreed Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“One?”</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Mais oui.</i> Do you realize that there are three separate motives
- staring us in the face. Somebody certainly stole the blue envelope and
- its contents. That is one motive. Blackmail! Ralph Paton may have been
- the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">164</span> man who blackmailed Mrs. Ferrars. Remember, as far as Hammond
- knew, Ralph Paton had not applied to his uncle for help of late. That
- looks as though he were being supplied with money elsewhere. Then there
- is the fact that he was in some—how do you say—scrape?—which he feared
- might get to his uncle’s ears. And finally there is the one you have
- just mentioned.”</p>
-
- <p>“Dear me,” I said, rather taken aback. “The case does seem black
- against him.”</p>
-
- <p>“Does it?” said Poirot. “That is where we disagree, you and I. Three
- motives—it is almost too much. I am inclined to believe that, after
- all, Ralph Paton is innocent.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">165</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">MRS. ACKROYD</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">After</span> the evening talk I have just chronicled, the affair seemed to
- me to enter on a different phase. The whole thing can be divided into
- two parts, each clear and distinct from the other. Part I. ranges from
- Ackroyd’s death on the Friday evening to the following Monday night.
- It is the straight-forward narrative of what occurred, as presented
- to Hercule Poirot. I was at Poirot’s elbow the whole time. I saw what
- he saw. I tried my best to read his mind. As I know now, I failed in
- this latter task. Though Poirot showed me all his discoveries—as, for
- instance, the gold wedding-ring—he held back the vital and yet logical
- impressions that he formed. As I came to know later, this secrecy was
- characteristic of him. He would throw out hints and suggestions, but
- beyond that he would not go.</p>
-
- <p>As I say, up till the Monday evening, my narrative might have been that
- of Poirot himself. I played Watson to his Sherlock. But after Monday
- our ways diverged. Poirot was busy on his own account. I got to hear
- of what he was doing, because, in King’s Abbot, you get to hear of
- everything, but he did not take me into his confidence beforehand. And
- I, too, had my own preoccupations.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">166</span></p>
-
- <p>On looking back, the thing that strikes me most is the piecemeal
- character of this period. Every one had a hand in the elucidation of
- the mystery. It was rather like a jig-saw puzzle to which every one
- contributed their own little piece of knowledge or discovery. But their
- task ended there. To Poirot alone belongs the renown of fitting those
- pieces into their correct place.</p>
-
- <p>Some of the incidents seemed at the time irrelevant and unmeaning.
- There was, for instance, the question of the black boots. But that
- comes later.... To take things strictly in chronological order, I must
- begin with the summons from Mrs. Ackroyd.</p>
-
- <p>She sent for me early on Tuesday morning, and since the summons
- sounded an urgent one, I hastened there, expecting to find her <i lang="la">in
- extremis</i>.</p>
-
- <p>The lady was in bed. So much did she concede to the etiquette of the
- situation. She gave me her bony hand, and indicated a chair drawn up to
- the bedside.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said, “and what’s the matter with you?”</p>
-
- <p>I spoke with that kind of spurious geniality which seems to be expected
- of general practitioners.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m prostrated,” said Mrs. Ackroyd in a faint voice. “Absolutely
- prostrated. It’s the shock of poor Roger’s death. They say these things
- often aren’t felt at the <em>time</em>, you know. It’s the reaction
- afterwards.”</p>
-
- <p>It is a pity that a doctor is precluded by his profession from being
- able sometimes to say what he really thinks.</p>
-
- <p>I would have given anything to be able to answer “Bunkum!”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">167</span></p>
-
- <p>Instead, I suggested a tonic. Mrs. Ackroyd accepted the tonic. One
- move in the game seemed now to be concluded. Not for a moment did I
- imagine that I had been sent for because of the shock occasioned by
- Ackroyd’s death. But Mrs. Ackroyd is totally incapable of pursuing
- a straight-forward course on any subject. She always approaches her
- object by tortuous means. I wondered very much why it was she had sent
- for me.</p>
-
- <p>“And then that scene—yesterday,” continued my patient.</p>
-
- <p>She paused as though expecting me to take up a cue.</p>
-
- <p>“What scene?”</p>
-
- <p>“Doctor, how can you? Have you forgotten? That dreadful little
- Frenchman—or Belgian—or whatever he is. Bullying us all like he did. It
- has quite upset me. Coming on top of Roger’s death.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m very sorry, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t know what he meant—shouting at us like he did. I should hope
- I know my duty too well to <em>dream</em> of concealing anything. I have
- given the police <em>every</em> assistance in my power.”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd paused, and I said, “Quite so.” I was beginning to have a
- glimmering of what all the trouble was about.</p>
-
- <p>“No one can say that I have failed in my duty,” continued Mrs. Ackroyd.
- “I am sure Inspector Raglan is perfectly satisfied. Why should this
- little upstart of a foreigner make a fuss? A most ridiculous-looking
- creature he is too—just like a comic Frenchman in a revue. I can’t
- think why Flora insisted on bringing him into the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">168</span> case. She never said
- a word to me about it. Just went off and did it on her own. Flora is
- too independent. I am a woman of the world and her mother. She should
- have come to me for advice first.”</p>
-
- <p>I listened to all this in silence.</p>
-
- <p>“What does he think? That’s what I want to know. Does he actually
- imagine I’m hiding something? He—he—positively <em>accused</em> me
- yesterday.”</p>
-
- <p>I shrugged my shoulders.</p>
-
- <p>“It is surely of no consequence, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said. “Since you are
- not concealing anything, any remarks he may have made do not apply to
- you.”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd went off at a tangent, after her usual fashion.</p>
-
- <p>“Servants are so tiresome,” she said. “They gossip, and talk amongst
- themselves. And then it gets round—and all the time there’s probably
- nothing in it at all.”</p>
-
- <p>“Have the servants been talking?” I asked. “What about?”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd cast a very shrewd glance at me. It quite threw me off my
- balance.</p>
-
- <p>“I was sure <em>you’d</em> know, doctor, if any one did. You were with M.
- Poirot all the time, weren’t you?”</p>
-
- <p>“I was.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then of course you know. It was that girl, Ursula Bourne, wasn’t it?
- Naturally—she’s leaving. She <em>would</em> want to make all the trouble
- she could. Spiteful, that’s what they are. They’re all alike. Now,
- you being there, doctor, you must know exactly what she did say? I’m
- most anxious that no wrong impression should get about.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">169</span> After all,
- you don’t repeat every little detail to the police, do you? There are
- family matters sometimes—nothing to do with the question of the murder.
- But if the girl was spiteful, she may have made out all sorts of
- things.”</p>
-
- <p>I was shrewd enough to see that a very real anxiety lay behind these
- outpourings. Poirot had been justified in his premises. Of the six
- people round the table yesterday, Mrs. Ackroyd at least had had
- something to hide. It was for me to discover what that something might
- be.</p>
-
- <p>“If I were you, Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said brusquely, “I should make a clean
- breast of things.”</p>
-
- <p>She gave a little scream.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! doctor, how can you be so abrupt. It sounds as though—as
- though——And I can explain everything so simply.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then why not do so,” I suggested.</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd took out a frilled handkerchief, and became tearful.</p>
-
- <p>“I thought, doctor, that you might put it to M. Poirot—explain it, you
- know—because it’s so difficult for a foreigner to see our point of
- view. And you don’t know—nobody could know—what I’ve had to contend
- with. A martyrdom—a long martyrdom. That’s what my life has been. I
- don’t like to speak ill of the dead—but there it is. Not the smallest
- bill, but it had all to be gone over—just as though Roger had had a
- few miserly hundreds a year instead of being (as Mr. Hammond told me
- yesterday) one of the wealthiest men in these parts.”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd paused to dab her eyes with the frilled handkerchief.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span></p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said encouragingly. “You were talking about bills?”</p>
-
- <p>“Those dreadful bills. And some I didn’t like to show Roger at all.
- They were things a man wouldn’t understand. He would have said the
- things weren’t necessary. And of course they mounted up, you know, and
- they kept coming in——”</p>
-
- <p>She looked at me appealingly, as though asking me to condole with her
- on this striking peculiarity.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s a habit they have,” I agreed.</p>
-
- <p>“And the tone altered—became quite abusive. I assure you, doctor,
- I was becoming a nervous wreck. I couldn’t sleep at nights. And a
- dreadful fluttering round the heart. And then I got a letter from a
- Scotch gentleman—as a matter of fact there were two letters—both Scotch
- gentlemen. Mr. Bruce MacPherson was one, and the other were Colin
- MacDonald. Quite a coincidence.”</p>
-
- <p>“Hardly that,” I said dryly. “They are usually Scotch gentlemen, but I
- suspect a Semitic strain in their ancestry.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ten pounds to ten thousand on note of hand alone,” murmured Mrs.
- Ackroyd reminiscently. “I wrote to one of them, but it seemed there
- were difficulties.”</p>
-
- <p>She paused.</p>
-
- <p>I gathered that we were just coming to delicate ground. I have never
- known any one more difficult to bring to the point.</p>
-
- <p>“You see,” murmured Mrs. Ackroyd, “it’s all a question of expectations,
- isn’t it? Testamentary expectations. And though, of course, I expected
- that Roger<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">171</span> would provide for me, I didn’t <em>know</em>. I thought that
- if only I could glance over a copy of his will—not in any sense of
- vulgar prying—but just so that I could make my own arrangements.”</p>
-
- <p>She glanced sideways at me. The position was now very delicate indeed.
- Fortunately words, ingeniously used, will serve to mask the ugliness of
- naked facts.</p>
-
- <p>“I could only tell this to you, dear Dr. Sheppard,” said Mrs. Ackroyd
- rapidly. “I can trust you not to misjudge me, and to represent the
- matter in the right light to M. Poirot. It was on Friday afternoon——”</p>
-
- <p>She came to a stop and swallowed uncertainly.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I repeated encouragingly. “On Friday afternoon. Well?”</p>
-
- <p>“Every one was out, or so I thought. And I went into Roger’s study—I
- had some real reason for going there—I mean, there was nothing
- underhand about it. And as I saw all the papers heaped on the desk, it
- just came to me, like a flash: ‘I wonder if Roger keeps his will in
- one of the drawers of the desk.’ I’m so impulsive, always was, from a
- child. I do things on the spur of the moment. He’d left his keys—very
- careless of him—in the lock of the top drawer.”</p>
-
- <p>“I see,” I said helpfully. “So you searched the desk. Did you find the
- will?”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd gave a little scream, and I realized that I had not been
- sufficiently diplomatic.</p>
-
- <p>“How dreadful it sounds. But it wasn’t at all like that really.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">172</span></p>
-
- <p>“Of course it wasn’t,” I said hastily. “You must forgive my unfortunate
- way of putting things.”</p>
-
- <p>“You see, men are so peculiar. In dear Roger’s place, I should not
- have objected to revealing the provisions of my will. But men are so
- secretive. One is forced to adopt little subterfuges in self-defence.”</p>
-
- <p>“And the result of the little subterfuge?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“That’s just what I’m telling you. As I got to the bottom drawer,
- Bourne came in. Most awkward. Of course I shut the drawer and stood
- up, and I called her attention to a few specks of dust on the surface.
- But I didn’t like the way she looked—quite respectful in manner, but
- a very nasty light in her eyes. Almost contemptuous, if you know what
- I mean. I never have liked that girl very much. She’s a good servant,
- and she says Ma’am, and doesn’t object to wearing caps and aprons (which
- I declare to you a lot of them do nowadays), and she can say ‘Not at
- home’ without scruples if she has to answer the door instead of Parker,
- and she doesn’t have those peculiar gurgling noises inside which so
- many parlormaids seem to have when they wait at table——Let me see,
- where was I?”</p>
-
- <p>“You were saying, that in spite of several valuable qualities, you
- never liked Bourne.”</p>
-
- <p>“No more I do. She’s—odd. There’s something different about her from
- the others. Too well educated, that’s my opinion. You can’t tell who
- are ladies and who aren’t nowadays.”</p>
-
- <p>“And what happened next?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing. At least, Roger came in. And I thought<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span> he was out for a
- walk. And he said: ‘What’s all this?’ and I said, ‘Nothing. I just came
- in to fetch <cite>Punch</cite>.’ And I took <cite>Punch</cite> and went out with
- it. Bourne stayed behind. I heard her asking Roger if she could speak
- to him for a minute. I went straight up to my room, to lie down. I was
- very upset.”</p>
-
- <p>There was a pause.</p>
-
- <p>“You will explain to M. Poirot, won’t you? You can see for yourself
- what a trivial matter the whole thing was. But, of course, when he was
- so stern about concealing things, I thought of this at once. Bourne
- may have made some extraordinary story out of it, but you can explain,
- can’t you?”</p>
-
- <p>“That is all?” I said. “You have told me everything?”</p>
-
- <p>“Ye-es,” said Mrs. Ackroyd. “Oh! yes,” she added firmly.</p>
-
- <p>But I had noted the momentary hesitation, and I knew that there was
- still something she was keeping back. It was nothing less than a flash
- of sheer genius that prompted me to ask the question I did.</p>
-
- <p>“Mrs. Ackroyd,” I said, “was it you who left the silver table open?”</p>
-
- <p>I had my answer in the blush of guilt that even rouge and powder could
- not conceal.</p>
-
- <p>“How did you know?” she whispered.</p>
-
- <p>“It was you, then?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes—I—you see—there were one or two pieces of old silver—very
- interesting. I had been reading up the subject and there was an
- illustration of quite a small piece which had fetched an immense
- sum at Christy’s.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span> It looked to me just the same as the one in the
- silver table. I thought I would take it up to London with me when I
- went—and—and have it valued. Then if it really was a valuable piece,
- just think what a charming surprise it would have been for Roger?”</p>
-
- <p>I refrained from comments, accepting Mrs. Ackroyd’s story on its
- merits. I even forbore to ask her why it was necessary to abstract what
- she wanted in such a surreptitious manner.</p>
-
- <p>“Why did you leave the lid open?” I asked. “Did you forget?”</p>
-
- <p>“I was startled,” said Mrs. Ackroyd. “I heard footsteps coming along
- the terrace outside. I hastened out of the room and just got up the
- stairs before Parker opened the front door to you.”</p>
-
- <p>“That must have been Miss Russell,” I said thoughtfully. Mrs. Ackroyd
- had revealed to me one fact that was extremely interesting. Whether her
- designs upon Ackroyd’s silver had been strictly honorable I neither
- knew nor cared. What did interest me was the fact that Miss Russell
- must have entered the drawing-room by the window, and that I had not
- been wrong when I judged her to be out of breath with running. Where
- had she been? I thought of the summer-house and the scrap of cambric.</p>
-
- <p>“I wonder if Miss Russell has her handkerchiefs starched!” I exclaimed
- on the spur of the moment.</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd’s start recalled me to myself, and I rose.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span></p>
-
- <p>“You think you can explain to M. Poirot?” she asked anxiously.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, certainly. Absolutely.”</p>
-
- <p>I got away at last, after being forced to listen to more justifications
- of her conduct.</p>
-
- <p>The parlormaid was in the hall, and it was she who helped me on with my
- overcoat. I observed her more closely than I had done heretofore. It
- was clear that she had been crying.</p>
-
- <p>“How is it,” I asked, “that you told us that Mr. Ackroyd sent for you
- on Friday to his study? I hear now that it was <em>you</em> who asked to
- speak to <em>him</em>?”</p>
-
- <p>For a minute the girl’s eyes dropped before mine.</p>
-
- <p>Then she spoke.</p>
-
- <p>“I meant to leave in any case,” she said uncertainly.</p>
-
- <p>I said no more. She opened the front door for me. Just as I was passing
- out, she said suddenly in a low voice:—</p>
-
- <p>“Excuse me, sir, is there any news of Captain Paton?”</p>
-
- <p>I shook my head, looking at her inquiringly.</p>
-
- <p>“He ought to come back,” she said. “Indeed—indeed he ought to come
- back.”</p>
-
- <p>She was looking at me with appealing eyes.</p>
-
- <p>“Does no one know where he is?” she asked.</p>
-
- <p>“Do you?” I said sharply.</p>
-
- <p>She shook her head.</p>
-
- <p>“No, indeed. I know nothing. But any one who was a friend to him would
- tell him this: he ought to come back.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">176</span></p>
-
- <p>I lingered, thinking that perhaps the girl would say more. Her next
- question surprised me.</p>
-
- <p>“When do they think the murder was done? Just before ten o’clock?”</p>
-
- <p>“That is the idea,” I said. “Between a quarter to ten and the hour.”</p>
-
- <p>“Not earlier? Not before a quarter to ten?”</p>
-
- <p>I looked at her attentively. She was so clearly eager for a reply in
- the affirmative.</p>
-
- <p>“That’s out of the question,” I said. “Miss Ackroyd saw her uncle alive
- at a quarter to ten.”</p>
-
- <p>She turned away, and her whole figure seemed to droop.</p>
-
- <p>“A handsome girl,” I said to myself as I drove off. “An exceedingly
- handsome girl.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline was at home. She had had a visit from Poirot and was very
- pleased and important about it.</p>
-
- <p>“I am helping him with the case,” she explained.</p>
-
- <p>I felt rather uneasy. Caroline is bad enough as it is. What will she be
- like with her detective instincts encouraged?</p>
-
- <p>“Are you going round the neighborhood looking for Ralph Paton’s
- mysterious girl?” I inquired.</p>
-
- <p>“I might do that on my own account,” said Caroline. “No, this is a
- special thing M. Poirot wants me to find out for him.”</p>
-
- <p>“What is it?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“He wants to know whether Ralph Paton’s boots were black or brown,”
- said Caroline with tremendous solemnity.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">177</span></p>
-
- <p>I stared at her. I see now that I was unbelievably stupid about these
- boots. I failed altogether to grasp the point.</p>
-
- <p>“They were brown shoes,” I said. “I saw them.”</p>
-
- <p>“Not shoes, James, boots. M. Poirot wants to know whether a pair of
- boots Ralph had with him at the hotel were brown or black. A lot hangs
- on it.”</p>
-
- <p>Call me dense if you like. I didn’t see.</p>
-
- <p>“And how are you going to find out?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>Caroline said there would be no difficulty about that. Our Annie’s
- dearest friend was Miss Ganett’s maid, Clara. And Clara was walking
- out with the boots at the Three Boars. The whole thing was simplicity
- itself, and by the aid of Miss Ganett, who coöperated loyally, at once
- giving Clara leave of absence, the matter was rushed through at express
- speed.</p>
-
- <p>It was when we were sitting down to lunch that Caroline remarked, with
- would-be unconcern:—</p>
-
- <p>“About those boots of Ralph Paton’s.”</p>
-
- <p>“Well,” I said, “what about them?”</p>
-
- <p>“M. Poirot thought they were probably brown. He was wrong. They’re
- black.”</p>
-
- <p>And Caroline nodded her head several times. She evidently felt that she
- had scored a point over Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>I did not answer. I was puzzling over what the color of a pair of Ralph
- Paton’s boots had to do with the case.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">178</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">GEOFFREY RAYMOND</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">I was</span> to have a further proof that day of the success of Poirot’s
- tactics. That challenge of his had been a subtle touch born of his
- knowledge of human nature. A mixture of fear and guilt had wrung the
- truth from Mrs. Ackroyd. She was the first to react.</p>
-
- <p>That afternoon when I returned from seeing my patients, Caroline told
- me that Geoffrey Raymond had just left.</p>
-
- <p>“Did he want to see me?” I asked, as I hung up my coat in the hall.</p>
-
- <p>Caroline was hovering by my elbow.</p>
-
- <p>“It was M. Poirot he wanted to see,” she said. “He’d just come from The
- Larches. M. Poirot was out. Mr. Raymond thought that he might be here,
- or that you might know where he was.”</p>
-
- <p>“I haven’t the least idea.”</p>
-
- <p>“I tried to make him wait,” said Caroline, “but he said he would call
- back at The Larches in half an hour, and went away down the village. A
- great pity, because M. Poirot came in practically the minute after he
- left.”</p>
-
- <p>“Came in here?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, to his own house.”</p>
-
- <p>“How do you know?”</p>
-
- <p>“The side window,” said Caroline briefly.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">179</span></p>
-
- <p>It seemed to me that we had now exhausted the topic. Caroline thought
- otherwise.</p>
-
- <p>“Aren’t you going across?”</p>
-
- <p>“Across where?”</p>
-
- <p>“To The Larches, of course.”</p>
-
- <p>“My dear Caroline,” I said, “what for?”</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Raymond wanted to see him very particularly,” said Caroline. “You
- might hear what it’s all about.”</p>
-
- <p>I raised my eyebrows.</p>
-
- <p>“Curiosity is not my besetting sin,” I remarked coldly. “I can exist
- comfortably without knowing exactly what my neighbors are doing and
- thinking.”</p>
-
- <p>“Stuff and nonsense, James,” said my sister. “You want to know just
- as much as I do. You’re not so honest, that’s all. You always have to
- pretend.”</p>
-
- <p>“Really, Caroline,” I said, and retired into my surgery.</p>
-
- <p>Ten minutes later Caroline tapped at the door and entered. In her hand
- she held what seemed to be a pot of jam.</p>
-
- <p>“I wonder, James,” she said, “if you would mind taking this pot of
- medlar jelly across to M. Poirot? I promised it to him. He has never
- tasted any home-made medlar jelly.”</p>
-
- <p>“Why can’t Annie go?” I asked coldly.</p>
-
- <p>“She’s doing some mending. I can’t spare her.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline and I looked at each other.</p>
-
- <p>“Very well,” I said, rising. “But if I take the beastly thing, I shall
- just leave it at the door. You understand that?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">180</span></p>
-
- <p>My sister raised her eyebrows.</p>
-
- <p>“Naturally,” she said. “Who suggested you should do anything else?”</p>
-
- <p>The honors were with Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“If you <em>do</em> happen to see M. Poirot,” she said, as I opened the
- front door, “you might tell him about the boots.”</p>
-
- <p>It was a most subtle parting shot. I wanted dreadfully to understand
- the enigma of the boots. When the old lady with the Breton cap opened
- the door to me, I found myself asking if M. Poirot was in, quite
- automatically.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot sprang up to meet me, with every appearance of pleasure.</p>
-
- <p>“Sit down, my good friend,” he said. “The big chair? This small one?
- The room is not too hot, no?”</p>
-
- <p>I thought it was stifling, but refrained from saying so. The windows
- were closed, and a large fire burned in the grate.</p>
-
- <p>“The English people, they have a mania for the fresh air,” declared
- Poirot. “The big air, it is all very well outside, where it belongs. Why
- admit it to the house? But let us not discuss such banalities. You have
- something for me, yes?”</p>
-
- <p>“Two things,” I said. “First—this—from my sister.”</p>
-
- <p>I handed over the pot of medlar jelly.</p>
-
- <p>“How kind of Mademoiselle Caroline. She has remembered her promise. And
- the second thing?”</p>
-
- <p>“Information—of a kind.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">181</span></p>
-
- <p>And I told him of my interview with Mrs. Ackroyd. He listened with
- interest, but not much excitement.</p>
-
- <p>“It clears the ground,” he said thoughtfully. “And it has a certain
- value as confirming the evidence of the housekeeper. She said, you
- remember, that she found the silver table lid open and closed it down
- in passing.”</p>
-
- <p>“What about her statement that she went into the drawing-room to see if
- the flowers were fresh?”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! we never took that very seriously, did we, my friend? It was
- patently an excuse, trumped up in a hurry, by a woman who felt it
- urgent to explain her presence—which, by the way, you would probably
- never have thought of questioning. I considered it possible that her
- agitation might arise from the fact that she had been tampering with
- the silver table, but I think now that we must look for another cause.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said. “Whom did she go out to meet? And why?”</p>
-
- <p>“You think she went to meet some one?”</p>
-
- <p>“I do.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“So do I,” he said thoughtfully.</p>
-
- <p>There was a pause.</p>
-
- <p>“By the way,” I said, “I’ve got a message for you from my sister. Ralph
- Paton’s boots were black, not brown.”</p>
-
- <p>I was watching him closely as I gave the message, and I fancied that
- I saw a momentary flicker of discomposure. If so, it passed almost
- immediately.</p>
-
- <p>“She is absolutely positive they are not brown?”</p>
-
- <p>“Absolutely.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">182</span></p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” said Poirot regretfully. “That is a pity.”</p>
-
- <p>And he seemed quite crestfallen.</p>
-
- <p>He entered into no explanations, but at once started a new subject of
- conversation.</p>
-
- <p>“The housekeeper, Miss Russell, who came to consult you on that Friday
- morning—is it indiscreet to ask what passed at the interview—apart from
- the medical details, I mean?”</p>
-
- <p>“Not at all,” I said. “When the professional part of the conversation
- was over, we talked for a few minutes about poisons, and the ease or
- difficulty of detecting them, and about drug-taking and drug-takers.”</p>
-
- <p>“With special reference to cocaine?” asked Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“How did you know?” I asked, somewhat surprised.</p>
-
- <p>For answer, the little man rose and crossed the room to where
- newspapers were filed. He brought me a copy of the <cite>Daily Budget</cite>,
- dated Friday, 16th September, and showed me an article dealing with the
- smuggling of cocaine. It was a somewhat lurid article, written with an
- eye to picturesque effect.</p>
-
- <p>“That is what put cocaine into her head, my friend,” he said.</p>
-
- <p>I would have catechized him further, for I did not quite understand his
- meaning, but at that moment the door opened and Geoffrey Raymond was
- announced.</p>
-
- <p>He came in fresh and debonair as ever, and greeted us both.</p>
-
- <p>“How are you, doctor? M. Poirot, this is the second time I’ve been here
- this morning. I was anxious to catch you.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">183</span></p>
-
- <p>“Perhaps I’d better be off,” I suggested rather awkwardly.</p>
-
- <p>“Not on my account, doctor. No, it’s just this,” he went on, seating
- himself at a wave of invitation from Poirot, “I’ve got a confession to
- make.”</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">En verité</i>?” said Poirot, with an air of polite interest.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, it’s of no consequence, really. But, as a matter of fact, my
- conscience has been pricking me ever since yesterday afternoon. You
- accused us all of keeping back something, M. Poirot. I plead guilty.
- I’ve had something up my sleeve.”</p>
-
- <p>“And what is that, M. Raymond?”</p>
-
- <p>“As I say, it’s nothing of consequence—just this. I was in debt—badly,
- and that legacy came in the nick of time. Five hundred pounds puts me
- on my feet again with a little to spare.”</p>
-
- <p>He smiled at us both with that engaging frankness that made him such a
- likable youngster.</p>
-
- <p>“You know how it is. Suspicious looking policeman—don’t like to admit
- you were hard up for money—think it will look bad to them. But I was
- a fool, really, because Blunt and I were in the billiard room from a
- quarter to ten onwards, so I’ve got a watertight alibi and nothing to
- fear. Still, when you thundered out that stuff about concealing things,
- I felt a nasty prick of conscience, and I thought I’d like to get it
- off my mind.”</p>
-
- <p>He got up again and stood smiling at us.</p>
-
- <p>“You are a very wise young man,” said Poirot, nodding at him with
- approval. “See you, when I know that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">184</span> any one is hiding things from me,
- I suspect that the thing hidden may be something very bad indeed. You
- have done well.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m glad I’m cleared from suspicion,” laughed Raymond. “I’ll be off
- now.”</p>
-
- <p>“So that is that,” I remarked, as the door closed behind the young
- secretary.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” agreed Poirot. “A mere bagatelle—but if he had not been in the
- billiard room—who knows? After all, many crimes have been committed for
- the sake of less than five hundred pounds. It all depends on what sum
- is sufficient to break a man. A question of the relativity, is it not
- so? Have you reflected, my friend, that many people in that house stood
- to benefit by Mr. Ackroyd’s death? Mrs. Ackroyd, Miss Flora, young Mr.
- Raymond, the housekeeper, Miss Russell. Only one, in fact, does not,
- Major Blunt.”</p>
-
- <p>His tone in uttering that name was so peculiar that I looked up,
- puzzled.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t quite understand you?” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“Two of the people I accused have given me the truth.”</p>
-
- <p>“You think Major Blunt has something to conceal also?”</p>
-
- <p>“As for that,” remarked Poirot nonchalantly, “there is a saying, is
- there not, that Englishmen conceal only one thing—their love? And Major
- Blunt, I should say, is not good at concealments.”</p>
-
- <p>“Sometimes,” I said, “I wonder if we haven’t rather jumped to
- conclusions on one point.”</p>
-
- <p>“What is that?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">185</span></p>
-
- <p>“We’ve assumed that the blackmailer of Mrs. Ferrars is necessarily the
- murderer of Mr. Ackroyd. Mightn’t we be mistaken?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded energetically.</p>
-
- <p>“Very good. Very good indeed. I wondered if that idea would come to
- you. Of course it is possible. But we must remember one point. The
- letter disappeared. Still, that, as you say, may not necessarily mean
- that the murderer took it. When you first found the body, Parker may
- have abstracted the letter unnoticed by you.”</p>
-
- <p>“Parker?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, Parker. I always come back to Parker—not as the murderer—no, he
- did not commit the murder; but who is more suitable than he as the
- mysterious scoundrel who terrorized Mrs. Ferrars? He may have got his
- information about Mr. Ferrars’s death from one of the King’s Paddock
- servants. At any rate, he is more likely to have come upon it than a
- casual guest such as Blunt, for instance.”</p>
-
- <p>“Parker might have taken the letter,” I admitted. “It wasn’t till later
- that I noticed it was gone.”</p>
-
- <p>“How much later? After Blunt and Raymond were in the room, or before?”</p>
-
- <p>“I can’t remember,” I said slowly. “I think it was before—no,
- afterwards. Yes, I’m almost sure it was afterwards.”</p>
-
- <p>“That widens the field to three,” said Poirot thoughtfully. “But Parker
- is the most likely. It is in my mind to try a little experiment with
- Parker. How say you, my friend, will you accompany me to Fernly?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">186</span></p>
-
- <p>I acquiesced, and we set out at once. Poirot asked to see Miss Ackroyd,
- and presently Flora came to us.</p>
-
- <p>“Mademoiselle Flora,” said Poirot, “I have to confide in you a little
- secret. I am not yet satisfied of the innocence of Parker. I propose to
- make a little experiment with your assistance. I want to reconstruct
- some of his actions on that night. But we must think of something to
- tell him—ah! I have it. I wish to satisfy myself as to whether voices
- in the little lobby could have been heard outside on the terrace. Now,
- ring for Parker, if you will be so good.”</p>
-
- <p>I did so, and presently the butler appeared, suave as ever.</p>
-
- <p>“You rang, sir?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, my good Parker. I have in mind a little experiment. I have placed
- Major Blunt on the terrace outside the study window. I want to see if
- any one there could have heard the voices of Miss Ackroyd and yourself
- in the lobby that night. I want to enact that little scene over again.
- Perhaps you would fetch the tray or whatever it was you were carrying?”</p>
-
- <p>Parker vanished, and we repaired to the lobby outside the study door.
- Presently we heard a chink in the outer hall, and Parker appeared in
- the doorway carrying a tray with a siphon, a decanter of whisky, and
- two glasses on it.</p>
-
- <p>“One moment,” cried Poirot, raising his hand and seemingly very
- excited. “We must have everything in order. Just as it occurred. It is
- a little method of mine.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">187</span></p>
-
- <p>“A foreign custom, sir,” said Parker. “Reconstruction of the crime they
- call it, do they not?”</p>
-
- <p>He was quite imperturbable as he stood there politely waiting on
- Poirot’s orders.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! he knows something, the good Parker,” cried Poirot. “He has read
- of these things. Now, I beg you, let us have everything of the most
- exact. You came from the outer hall—so. Mademoiselle was—where?”</p>
-
- <p>“Here,” said Flora, taking up her stand just outside the study door.</p>
-
- <p>“Quite right, sir,” said Parker.</p>
-
- <p>“I had just closed the door,” continued Flora.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, miss,” agreed Parker. “Your hand was still on the handle as it is
- now.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then <i lang="fr">allez</i>,” said Poirot. “Play me the little comedy.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora stood with her hand on the door handle, and Parker came stepping
- through the door from the hall, bearing the tray.</p>
-
- <p>He stopped just inside the door. Flora spoke.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! Parker. Mr. Ackroyd doesn’t want to be disturbed again to-night.”</p>
-
- <p>“Is that right?” she added in an undertone.</p>
-
- <p>“To the best of my recollection, Miss Flora,” said Parker, “but I fancy
- you used the word evening instead of night.” Then, raising his voice
- in a somewhat theatrical fashion: “Very good, miss. Shall I lock up as
- usual?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, please.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">188</span></p>
-
- <p>Parker retired through the door, Flora followed him, and started to
- ascend the main staircase.</p>
-
- <p>“Is that enough?” she asked over her shoulder.</p>
-
- <p>“Admirable,” declared the little man, rubbing his hands. “By the way,
- Parker, are you sure there were two glasses on the tray that evening?
- Who was the second one for?”</p>
-
- <p>“I always bring two glasses, sir,” said Parker. “Is there anything
- further?”</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing. I thank you.”</p>
-
- <p>Parker withdrew, dignified to the last.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot stood in the middle of the hall frowning. Flora came down and
- joined us.</p>
-
- <p>“Has your experiment been successful?” she asked. “I don’t quite
- understand, you know——”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot smiled admiringly at her.</p>
-
- <p>“It is not necessary that you should,” he said. “But tell me, were
- there indeed two glasses on Parker’s tray that night?”</p>
-
- <p>Flora wrinkled her brows a minute.</p>
-
- <p>“I really can’t remember,” she said. “I think there were. Is—is that
- the object of your experiment?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot took her hand and patted it.</p>
-
- <p>“Put it this way,” he said. “I am always interested to see if people
- will speak the truth.”</p>
-
- <p>“And did Parker speak the truth?”</p>
-
- <p>“I rather think he did,” said Poirot thoughtfully.</p>
-
- <p>A few minutes later saw us retracing our steps to the village.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">189</span></p>
-
- <p>“What was the point of that question about the glasses?” I asked
- curiously.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
- <p>“One must say something,” he remarked. “That particular question did as
- well as any other.”</p>
-
- <p>I stared at him.</p>
-
- <p>“At any rate, my friend,” he said more seriously, “I know now something
- I wanted to know. Let us leave it at that.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">190</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">AN EVENING AT MAH JONG</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">That</span> night we had a little Mah Jong party. This kind of simple
- entertainment is very popular in King’s Abbot. The guests arrive in
- goloshes and waterproofs after dinner. They partake of coffee and later
- of cake, sandwiches, and tea.</p>
-
- <p>On this particular night our guests were Miss Ganett and Colonel
- Carter, who lives near the church. A good deal of gossip is handed
- round at these evenings, sometimes seriously interfering with the
- game in progress. We used to play bridge—chatty bridge of the worst
- description. We find Mah Jong much more peaceful. The irritated demand
- as to why on earth your partner did not lead a certain card is entirely
- done away with, and though we still express criticisms frankly, there
- is not the same acrimonious spirit.</p>
-
- <p>“Very cold evening, eh, Sheppard?” said Colonel Carter, standing with
- his back to the fire. Caroline had taken Miss Ganett to her own room,
- and was there assisting her to disentangle herself from her many wraps.
- “Reminds me of the Afghan passes.”</p>
-
- <p>“Indeed?” I said politely.</p>
-
- <p>“Very mysterious business this about poor Ackroyd,” continued the
- colonel, accepting a cup of coffee. “A<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">191</span> deuce of a lot behind it—that’s
- what I say. Between you and me, Sheppard, I’ve heard the word blackmail
- mentioned!”</p>
-
- <p>The colonel gave me the look which might be tabulated “one man of the
- world to another.”</p>
-
- <p>“A woman in it, no doubt,” he said. “Depend upon it, a woman in it.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline and Miss Ganett joined us at this minute. Miss Ganett drank
- coffee whilst Caroline got out the Mah Jong box and poured out the
- tiles upon the table.</p>
-
- <p>“Washing the tiles,” said the colonel facetiously. “That’s
- right—washing the tiles, as we used to say in the Shanghai Club.”</p>
-
- <p>It is the private opinion of both Caroline and myself that Colonel
- Carter has never been in the Shanghai Club in his life. More, that he
- has never been farther east than India, where he juggled with tins of
- bully beef and plum and apple jam during the Great War. But the colonel
- is determinedly military, and in King’s Abbot we permit people to
- indulge their little idiosyncrasies freely.</p>
-
- <p>“Shall we begin?” said Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>We sat round the table. For some five minutes there was complete
- silence, owing to the fact that there is tremendous secret competition
- amongst us as to who can build their wall quickest.</p>
-
- <p>“Go on, James,” said Caroline at last. “You’re East Wind.”</p>
-
- <p>I discarded a tile. A round or two proceeded, broken by the monotonous
- remarks of “Three Bamboos,” “Two Circles,” “Pung,” and frequently
- from Miss Ganett “Unpung,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">192</span> owing to that lady’s habit of too hastily
- claiming tiles to which she had no right.</p>
-
- <p>“I saw Flora Ackroyd this morning,” said Miss Ganett. “Pung—no—Unpung.
- I made a mistake.”</p>
-
- <p>“Four Circles,” said Caroline. “Where did you see her?”</p>
-
- <p>“She didn’t see <em>me</em>,” said Miss Ganett, with that tremendous
- significance only to be met with in small villages.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” said Caroline interestedly. “Chow.”</p>
-
- <p>“I believe,” said Miss Ganett, temporarily diverted, “that it’s the
- right thing nowadays to say ‘Chee’ not ‘Chow.’”</p>
-
- <p>“Nonsense,” said Caroline. “I have always said ‘<em>Chow</em>.’”</p>
-
- <p>“In the Shanghai Club,” said Colonel Carter, “they say ‘<em>Chow</em>.’”</p>
-
- <p>Miss Ganett retired, crushed.</p>
-
- <p>“What were you saying about Flora Ackroyd?” asked Caroline, after a
- moment or two devoted to the game. “Was she with any one?”</p>
-
- <p>“Very much so,” said Miss Ganett.</p>
-
- <p>The eyes of the two ladies met, and seemed to exchange information.</p>
-
- <p>“Really,” said Caroline interestedly. “Is that it? Well, it doesn’t
- surprise me in the least.”</p>
-
- <p>“We’re waiting for you to discard, Miss Caroline,” said the colonel. He
- sometimes affects the pose of the bluff male, intent on the game and
- indifferent to gossip. But nobody is deceived.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">193</span></p>
-
- <p>“If you ask me,” said Miss Ganett. (“Was that a Bamboo you discarded,
- dear? Oh! no, I see now—it was a Circle.) As I was saying, if you ask
- me, Flora’s been exceedingly lucky. Exceedingly lucky she’s been.”</p>
-
- <p>“How’s that, Miss Ganett?” asked the colonel. “I’ll Pung that Green
- Dragon. How do you make out that Miss Flora’s been lucky? Very charming
- girl and all that, I know.”</p>
-
- <p>“I mayn’t know very much about crime,” said Miss Ganett, with the air
- of one who knows everything there is to know, “but I can tell you one
- thing. The first question that’s always asked is ‘Who last saw the
- deceased alive?’ And the person who did is regarded with suspicion.
- Now, Flora Ackroyd last saw her uncle alive. It might have looked very
- nasty for her—very nasty indeed. It’s my opinion—and I give it for what
- it’s worth, that Ralph Paton is staying away on her account, to draw
- suspicion away from her.”</p>
-
- <p>“Come, now,” I protested mildly, “you surely can’t suggest that a young
- girl like Flora Ackroyd is capable of stabbing her uncle in cold blood?”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, I don’t know,” said Miss Ganett. “I’ve just been reading a book
- from the library about the underworld of Paris, and it says that some
- of the worst women criminals are young girls with the faces of angels.”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s in France,” said Caroline instantly.</p>
-
- <p>“Just so,” said the colonel. “Now, I’ll tell you a very curious thing—a
- story that was going round the Bazaars in India....”</p>
-
- <p>The colonel’s story was one of interminable length,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">194</span> and of curiously
- little interest. A thing that happened in India many years ago cannot
- compare for a moment with an event that took place in King’s Abbot the
- day before yesterday.</p>
-
- <p>It was Caroline who brought the colonel’s story to a close by
- fortunately going Mah Jong. After the slight unpleasantness always
- occasioned by my corrections of Caroline’s somewhat faulty arithmetic,
- we started a new hand.</p>
-
- <p>“East Wind passes,” said Caroline. “I’ve got an idea of my own about
- Ralph Paton. Three Characters. But I’m keeping it to myself for the
- present.”</p>
-
- <p>“Are you, dear?” said Miss Ganett. “Chow—I mean Pung.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” said Caroline firmly.</p>
-
- <p>“Was it all right about the boots?” asked Miss Ganett. “Their being
- black, I mean?”</p>
-
- <p>“Quite all right,” said Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“What was the point, do you think?” asked Miss Ganett.</p>
-
- <p>Caroline pursed up her lips, and shook her head with an air of knowing
- all about it.</p>
-
- <p>“Pung,” said Miss Ganett. “No—Unpung. I suppose that now the doctor’s
- in with M. Poirot he knows all the secrets?”</p>
-
- <p>“Far from it,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“James is so modest,” said Caroline. “Ah! a concealed Kong.”</p>
-
- <p>The colonel gave vent to a whistle. For the moment gossip was
- forgotten.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">195</span></p>
-
- <p>“Your own wind, too,” he said. “<em>And</em> you’ve got two Pungs of
- Dragons. We must be careful. Miss Caroline’s out for a big hand.”</p>
-
- <p>We played for some minutes with no irrelevant conversation.</p>
-
- <p>“This M. Poirot now,” said Colonel Carter, “is he really such a great
- detective?”</p>
-
- <p>“The greatest the world has ever known,” said Caroline solemnly. “He
- had to come here incognito to avoid publicity.”</p>
-
- <p>“Chow,” said Miss Ganett. “Quite wonderful for our little village, I’m
- sure. By the way, Clara—my maid, you know—is great friends with Elsie,
- the housemaid at Fernly, and what do you think Elsie told her? That
- there’s been a lot of money stolen, and it’s her opinion—Elsie’s—I
- mean, that the parlormaid had something to do with it. She’s leaving
- at the month, and she’s crying a good deal at night. If you ask me,
- the girl is very likely in league with a <em>gang</em>. She’s always
- been a queer girl—she’s not friends with any of the girls round here.
- She goes off by herself on her days out—very unnatural, I call it,
- and most suspicious. I asked her once to come to our Girls’ Friendly
- Evenings, but she refused, and then I asked her a few questions about
- her home and her family—all that sort of thing, and I’m bound to say I
- considered her manner most impertinent. Outwardly very respectful—but
- she shut me up in the most barefaced way.”</p>
-
- <p>Miss Ganett stopped for breath, and the colonel, who was totally
- uninterested in the servant question, remarked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">196</span> that in the Shanghai
- Club brisk play was the invariable rule.</p>
-
- <p>We had a round of brisk play.</p>
-
- <p>“That Miss Russell,” said Caroline. “She came here pretending to
- consult James on Friday morning. It’s my opinion she wanted to see
- where the poisons were kept. Five Characters.”</p>
-
- <p>“Chow,” said Miss Ganett. “What an extraordinary idea? I wonder if you
- can be right.”</p>
-
- <p>“Talking of poisons,” said the colonel. “Eh—what? Haven’t I discarded?
- Oh! Eight Bamboos.”</p>
-
- <p>“Mah Jong!” said Miss Ganett.</p>
-
- <p>Caroline was very much annoyed.</p>
-
- <p>“One Red Dragon,” she said regretfully, “and I should have had a hand
- of three doubles.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’ve had two Red Dragons all the time,” I mentioned.</p>
-
- <p>“So exactly like you, James,” said Caroline reproachfully. “You’ve no
- conception of the spirit of the game.”</p>
-
- <p>I myself thought I had played rather cleverly. I should have had to pay
- Caroline an enormous amount if she had gone Mah Jong. Miss Ganett’s Mah
- Jong was of the poorest variety possible, as Caroline did not fail to
- point out to her.</p>
-
- <p>East Wind passed, and we started a new hand in silence.</p>
-
- <p>“What I was going to tell you just now was this,” said Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes?” said Miss Ganett encouragingly.</p>
-
- <p>“My idea about Ralph Paton, I mean.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">197</span></p>
-
- <p>“Yes, dear,” said Miss Ganett, still more encouragingly. “Chow!”</p>
-
- <p>“It’s a sign of weakness to Chow so early,” said Caroline severely.
- “You should go for a big hand.”</p>
-
- <p>“I know,” said Miss Ganett. “You were saying—about Ralph Paton, you
- know?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. Well, I’ve a pretty shrewd idea where he is.”</p>
-
- <p>We all stopped to stare at her.</p>
-
- <p>“This is very interesting, Miss Caroline,” said Colonel Carter. “All
- your own idea, eh?”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, not exactly. I’ll tell you about it. You know that big map of
- the county we have in the hall?”</p>
-
- <p>We all said Yes.</p>
-
- <p>“As M. Poirot was going out the other day, he stopped and looked at it,
- and he made some remark—I can’t remember exactly what it was. Something
- about Cranchester being the only big town anywhere near us—which is
- true, of course. But after he had gone—it came to me suddenly.”</p>
-
- <p>“What came to you?”</p>
-
- <p>“His meaning. Of course Ralph is in Cranchester.”</p>
-
- <p>It was at that moment that I knocked down the rack that held my pieces.
- My sister immediately reproved me for clumsiness, but half-heartedly.
- She was intent on her theory.</p>
-
- <p>“Cranchester, Miss Caroline?” said Colonel Carter. “Surely not
- Cranchester! It’s so near.”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s exactly it,” cried Caroline triumphantly. “It seems quite clear
- by now that he didn’t get away from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">198</span> here by train. He must simply have
- walked into Cranchester. And I believe he’s there still. No one would
- dream of his being so near at hand.”</p>
-
- <p>I pointed out several objections to the theory, but when once Caroline
- has got something firmly into her head, nothing dislodges it.</p>
-
- <p>“And you think M. Poirot has the same idea,” said Miss Ganett
- thoughtfully. “It’s a curious coincidence, but I was out for a walk
- this afternoon on the Cranchester road, and he passed me in a car
- coming from that direction.”</p>
-
- <p>We all looked at each other.</p>
-
- <p>“Why, dear me,” said Miss Ganett suddenly, “I’m Mah Jong all the time,
- and I never noticed it.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline’s attention was distracted from her own inventive exercises.
- She pointed out to Miss Ganett that a hand consisting of mixed suits
- and too many Chows was hardly worth going Mah Jong on. Miss Ganett
- listened imperturbably and collected her counters.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, dear, I know what you mean,” she said. “But it rather depends on
- what kind of a hand you have to start with, doesn’t it?”</p>
-
- <p>“You’ll never get the big hands if you don’t go for them,” urged
- Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, we must all play our own way, mustn’t we?” said Miss Ganett. She
- looked down at her counters. “After all, I’m up, so far.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline, who was considerably down, said nothing.</p>
-
- <p>East Wind passed, and we set to once more. Annie brought in the tea
- things. Caroline and Miss Ganett<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">199</span> were both slightly ruffled as is
- often the case during one of these festive evenings.</p>
-
- <p>“If you would only play a leetle quicker, dear,” said Caroline, as Miss
- Ganett hesitated over her discard. “The Chinese put down the tiles so
- quickly it sounds like little birds pattering.”</p>
-
- <p>For some few minutes we played like the Chinese.</p>
-
- <p>“You haven’t contributed much to the sum of information, Sheppard,”
- said Colonel Carter genially. “You’re a sly dog. Hand in glove with the
- great detective, and not a hint as to the way things are going.”</p>
-
- <p>“James is an extraordinary creature,” said Caroline. “He can <em>not</em>
- bring himself to part with information.”</p>
-
- <p>She looked at me with some disfavor.</p>
-
- <p>“I assure you,” I said, “that I don’t know anything. Poirot keeps his
- own counsel.”</p>
-
- <p>“Wise man,” said the colonel with a chuckle. “He doesn’t give himself
- away. But they’re wonderful fellows, these foreign detectives. Up to
- all sorts of dodges, I believe.”</p>
-
- <p>“Pung,” said Miss Ganett, in a tone of quiet triumph. “And Mah Jong.”</p>
-
- <p>The situation became more strained. It was annoyance at Miss Ganett’s
- going Mah Jong for the third time running which prompted Caroline to
- say to me as we built a fresh wall:—</p>
-
- <p>“You are too tiresome, James. You sit there like a dead head, and say
- nothing at all!”</p>
-
- <p>“But, my dear,” I protested, “I have really nothing to say—that is, of
- the kind you mean.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">200</span></p>
-
- <p>“Nonsense,” said Caroline, as she sorted her hand. “You <em>must</em>
- know something interesting.”</p>
-
- <p>I did not answer for a moment. I was overwhelmed and intoxicated. I had
- read of there being such a thing as the Perfect Winning—going Mah Jong
- on one’s original hand. I had never hoped to hold the hand myself.</p>
-
- <p>With suppressed triumph I laid my hand face upwards on the table.</p>
-
- <p>“As they say in the Shanghai Club,” I remarked, “Tin-ho—the Perfect
- Winning!”</p>
-
- <p>The colonel’s eyes nearly bulged out of his head.</p>
-
- <p>“Upon my soul,” he said. “What an extraordinary thing. I never saw that
- happen before!”</p>
-
- <p>It was then that I went on, goaded by Caroline’s gibes, and rendered
- reckless by my triumph.</p>
-
- <p>“And as to anything interesting,” I said. “What about a gold wedding
- ring with a date and ‘From R.’ inside.”</p>
-
- <p>I pass over the scene that followed. I was made to say exactly where
- this treasure was found. I was made to reveal the date.</p>
-
- <p>“March 13th,” said Caroline. “Just six months ago. Ah!”</p>
-
- <p>Out of the babel of excited suggestions and suppositions three theories
- were evolved:—</p>
-
- <p>1. That of Colonel Carter: that Ralph was secretly married to Flora.
- The first or most simple solution.</p>
-
- <p>2. That of Miss Ganett: that Roger Ackroyd had been secretly married to
- Mrs. Ferrars.</p>
-
- <p>3. That of my sister: that Roger Ackroyd had married his housekeeper,
- Miss Russell.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">201</span></p>
-
- <p>A fourth or super-theory was propounded by Caroline later as we went up
- to bed.</p>
-
- <p>“Mark my words,” she said suddenly, “I shouldn’t be at all surprised if
- Geoffrey Raymond and Flora weren’t married.”</p>
-
- <p>“Surely it would be ‘From G,’ not ‘From R’ then,” I suggested.</p>
-
- <p>“You never know. Some girls call men by their surnames. And you heard
- what Miss Ganett said this evening—about Flora’s carryings on.”</p>
-
- <p>Strictly speaking, I had not heard Miss Ganett say anything of the
- kind, but I respected Caroline’s knowledge of innuendoes.</p>
-
- <p>“How about Hector Blunt,” I hinted. “If it’s anybody——”</p>
-
- <p>“Nonsense,” said Caroline. “I dare say he admires her—may even be in
- love with her. But depend upon it a girl isn’t going to fall in love
- with a man old enough to be her father when there’s a good-looking
- young secretary about. She may encourage Major Blunt just as a blind.
- Girls are very artful. But there’s one thing I <em>do</em> tell you,
- James Sheppard. Flora Ackroyd does not care a penny piece for Ralph
- Paton, and never has. You can take it from me.”</p>
-
- <p>I took it from her meekly.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">202</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">PARKER</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">It</span> occurred to me the next morning that under the exhilaration
- produced by Tin-ho, or the Perfect Winning, I might have been slightly
- indiscreet. True, Poirot had not asked me to keep the discovery of
- the ring to myself. On the other hand, he had said nothing about it
- whilst at Fernly, and as far as I knew, I was the only person aware
- that it had been found. I felt distinctly guilty. The fact was by now
- spreading through King’s Abbot like wildfire. I was expecting wholesale
- reproaches from Poirot any minute.</p>
-
- <p>The joint funeral of Mrs. Ferrars and Roger Ackroyd was fixed for
- eleven o’clock. It was a melancholy and impressive ceremony. All the
- party from Fernly were there.</p>
-
- <p>After it was over, Poirot, who had also been present, took me by the
- arm, and invited me to accompany him back to The Larches. He was
- looking very grave, and I feared that my indiscretion of the night
- before had got round to his ears. But it soon transpired that his
- thoughts were occupied by something of a totally different nature.</p>
-
- <p>“See you,” he said. “We must act. With your help I propose to examine a
- witness. We will question him, we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">203</span> will put such fear into him that the
- truth is bound to come out.”</p>
-
- <p>“What witness are you talking of?” I asked, very much surprised.</p>
-
- <p>“Parker!” said Poirot. “I asked him to be at my house this morning at
- twelve o’clock. He should await us there at this very minute.”</p>
-
- <p>“What do you think,” I ventured, glancing sideways at his face.</p>
-
- <p>“I know this—that I am not satisfied.”</p>
-
- <p>“You think that it was he who blackmailed Mrs. Ferrars?”</p>
-
- <p>“Either that, or——”</p>
-
- <p>“Well?” I said, after waiting a minute or two.</p>
-
- <p>“My friend, I will say this to you—I hope it was he.”</p>
-
- <p>The gravity of his manner, and something indefinable that tinged it,
- reduced me to silence.</p>
-
- <p>On arrival at The Larches, we were informed that Parker was already
- there awaiting our return. As we entered the room, the butler rose
- respectfully.</p>
-
- <p>“Good morning, Parker,” said Poirot pleasantly. “One instant, I pray of
- you.”</p>
-
- <p>He removed his overcoat and gloves.</p>
-
- <p>“Allow me, sir,” said Parker, and sprang forward to assist him. He
- deposited the articles neatly on a chair by the door. Poirot watched
- him with approval.</p>
-
- <p>“Thank you, my good Parker,” he said. “Take a seat, will you not? What
- I have to say may take some time.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">204</span></p>
-
- <p>Parker seated himself with an apologetic bend of the head.</p>
-
- <p>“Now what do you think I asked you to come here for this morning—eh?”</p>
-
- <p>Parker coughed.</p>
-
- <p>“I understood, sir, that you wished to ask me a few questions about my
- late master—private like.”</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Précisément</i>,” said Poirot, beaming. “Have you made many
- experiments in blackmail?”</p>
-
- <p>“Sir!”</p>
-
- <p>The butler sprang to his feet.</p>
-
- <p>“Do not excite yourself,” said Poirot placidly. “Do not play the farce
- of the honest, injured man. You know all there is to know about the
- blackmail, is it not so?”</p>
-
- <p>“Sir, I—I’ve never—never been——”</p>
-
- <p>“Insulted,” suggested Poirot, “in such a way before. Then why, my
- excellent Parker, were you so anxious to overhear the conversation in
- Mr. Ackroyd’s study the other evening, after you had caught the word
- blackmail?”</p>
-
- <p>“I wasn’t—I——”</p>
-
- <p>“Who was your last master?” rapped out Poirot suddenly.</p>
-
- <p>“My last master?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, the master you were with before you came to Mr. Ackroyd.”</p>
-
- <p>“A Major Ellerby, sir——”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot took the words out of his mouth.</p>
-
- <p>“Just so, Major Ellerby. Major Ellerby was addicted to drugs, was he
- not? You traveled about with him. When he was in Bermuda there was some
- trouble—a man<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">205</span> was killed. Major Ellerby was partly responsible. It was
- hushed up. But you knew about it. How much did Major Ellerby pay you to
- keep your mouth shut?”</p>
-
- <p>Parker was staring at him open-mouthed. The man had gone to pieces, his
- cheeks shook flabbily.</p>
-
- <p>“You see, me, I have made inquiries,” said Poirot pleasantly. “It is
- as I say. You got a good sum then as blackmail, and Major Ellerby went
- on paying you until he died. Now I want to hear about your latest
- experiment.”</p>
-
- <p>Parker still stared.</p>
-
- <p>“It is useless to deny. Hercule Poirot <em>knows</em>. It is so, what I
- have said about Major Ellerby, is it not?”</p>
-
- <p>As though against his will, Parker nodded reluctantly once. His face
- was ashen pale.</p>
-
- <p>“But I never hurt a hair of Mr. Ackroyd’s head,” he moaned. “Honest to
- God, sir, I didn’t. I’ve been afraid of this coming all the time. And I
- tell you I didn’t—I didn’t kill him.”</p>
-
- <p>His voice rose almost to a scream.</p>
-
- <p>“I am inclined to believe you, my friend,” said Poirot. “You have not
- the nerve—the courage. But I must have the truth.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’ll tell you anything, sir, anything you want to know. It’s true that
- I tried to listen that night. A word or two I heard made me curious.
- And Mr. Ackroyd’s wanting not to be disturbed, and shutting himself up
- with the doctor the way he did. It’s God’s own truth what I told the
- police. I heard the word blackmail, sir, and well——”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">206</span></p>
-
- <p>He paused.</p>
-
- <p>“You thought there might be something in it for you?” suggested Poirot
- smoothly.</p>
-
- <p>“Well—well, yes, I did, sir. I thought that if Mr. Ackroyd was being
- blackmailed, why shouldn’t I have a share of the pickings?”</p>
-
- <p>A very curious expression passed over Poirot’s face. He leaned forward.</p>
-
- <p>“Had you any reason to suppose before that night that Mr. Ackroyd was
- being blackmailed?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, indeed, sir. It was a great surprise to me. Such a regular
- gentleman in all his habits.”</p>
-
- <p>“How much did you overhear?”</p>
-
- <p>“Not very much, sir. There seemed what I might call a spite against me.
- Of course I had to attend to my duties in the pantry. And when I did
- creep along once or twice to the study it was no use. The first time
- Dr. Sheppard came out and almost caught me in the act, and another time
- Mr. Raymond passed me in the big hall and went that way, so I knew it
- was no use; and when I went with the tray, Miss Flora headed me off.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot stared for a long time at the man, as if to test his sincerity.
- Parker returned his gaze earnestly.</p>
-
- <p>“I hope you believe me, sir. I’ve been afraid all along the police
- would rake up that old business with Major Ellerby and be suspicious of
- me in consequence.”</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Eh bien</i>,” said Poirot at last. “I am disposed to believe you.
- But there is one thing I must request of you—to show me your bank-book.
- You have a bank-book, I presume?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">207</span></p>
-
- <p>“Yes, sir, as a matter of fact, I have it with me now.”</p>
-
- <p>With no sign of confusion, he produced it from his pocket. Poirot took
- the slim, green-covered book and perused the entries.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! I perceive you have purchased £500 of National Savings
- Certificates this year?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, sir. I have already over a thousand pounds saved—the result of
- my connection with—er—my late master, Major Ellerby. And I have had
- quite a little flutter on some horses this year—very successful. If you
- remember, sir, a rank outsider won the Jubilee. I was fortunate enough
- to back it—£20.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot handed him back the book.</p>
-
- <p>“I will wish you good-morning. I believe that you have told me the
- truth. If you have not—so much the worse for you, my friend.”</p>
-
- <p>When Parker had departed, Poirot picked up his overcoat once more.</p>
-
- <p>“Going out again?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, we will pay a little visit to the good M. Hammond.”</p>
-
- <p>“You believe Parker’s story?”</p>
-
- <p>“It is credible enough on the face of it. It seems clear that—unless
- he is a very good actor indeed—he genuinely believes it was Ackroyd
- himself who was the victim of blackmail. If so, he knows nothing at all
- about the Mrs. Ferrars business.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then in that case—who——”</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Précisément!</i> Who? But our visit to M. Hammond<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">208</span> will accomplish
- one purpose. It will either clear Parker completely or else——”</p>
-
- <p>“Well?”</p>
-
- <p>“I fall into the bad habit of leaving my sentences unfinished this
- morning,” said Poirot apologetically. “You must bear with me.”</p>
-
- <p>“By the way,” I said, rather sheepishly, “I’ve got a confession to
- make. I’m afraid I have inadvertently let out something about that
- ring.”</p>
-
- <p>“What ring?”</p>
-
- <p>“The ring you found in the goldfish pond.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! yes,” said Poirot, smiling broadly.</p>
-
- <p>“I hope you’re not annoyed? It was very careless of me.”</p>
-
- <p>“But not at all, my good friend, not at all. I laid no commands upon
- you. You were at liberty to speak of it if you so wished. She was
- interested, your sister?”</p>
-
- <p>“She was indeed. It created a sensation. All sorts of theories are
- flying about.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! And yet it is so simple. The true explanation leapt to the eye,
- did it not?”</p>
-
- <p>“Did it?” I said dryly.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot laughed.</p>
-
- <p>“The wise man does not commit himself,” he observed. “Is not that so?
- But here we are at Mr. Hammond’s.”</p>
-
- <p>The lawyer was in his office, and we were ushered in without any delay.
- He rose and greeted us in his dry, precise manner.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot came at once to the point.</p>
-
- <p>“Monsieur, I desire from you certain information, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">209</span> is, if you will
- be so good as to give it to me. You acted, I understand, for the late
- Mrs. Ferrars of King’s Paddock?”</p>
-
- <p>I noticed the swift gleam of surprise which showed in the lawyer’s
- eyes, before his professional reserve came down once more like a mask
- over his face.</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly. All her affairs passed through our hands.”</p>
-
- <p>“Very good. Now, before I ask you to tell me anything, I should like
- you to listen to the story Dr. Sheppard will relate to you. You have no
- objection, have you, my friend, to repeating the conversation you had
- with Mr. Ackroyd last Friday night?”</p>
-
- <p>“Not in the least,” I said, and straightway began the recital of that
- strange evening.</p>
-
- <p>Hammond listened with close attention.</p>
-
- <p>“That is all,” I said, when I had finished.</p>
-
- <p>“Blackmail,” said the lawyer thoughtfully.</p>
-
- <p>“You are surprised?” asked Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>The lawyer took off his pince-nez and polished them with his
- handkerchief.</p>
-
- <p>“No,” he replied, “I can hardly say that I am surprised. I have
- suspected something of the kind for some time.”</p>
-
- <p>“That brings us,” said Poirot, “to the information for which I am
- asking. If any one can give us an idea of the actual sums paid, you are
- the man, monsieur.”</p>
-
- <p>“I see no object in withholding the information,” said Hammond, after
- a moment or two. “During the past year, Mrs. Ferrars has sold out
- certain securities, and the money for them was paid into her account
- and not reinvested. As her income was a large one, and she lived<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">210</span> very
- quietly after her husband’s death, it seems certain that these sums of
- money were paid away for some special purpose. I once sounded her on
- the subject, and she said that she was obliged to support several of
- her husband’s poor relations. I let the matter drop, of course. Until
- now, I have always imagined that the money was paid to some woman who
- had had a claim on Ashley Ferrars. I never dreamed that Mrs. Ferrars
- herself was involved.”</p>
-
- <p>“And the amount?” asked Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“In all, I should say the various sums totaled at least twenty thousand
- pounds.”</p>
-
- <p>“Twenty thousand pounds!” I exclaimed. “In one year!”</p>
-
- <p>“Mrs. Ferrars was a very wealthy woman,” said Poirot dryly. “And the
- penalty for murder is not a pleasant one.”</p>
-
- <p>“Is there anything else that I can tell you?” inquired Mr. Hammond.</p>
-
- <p>“I thank you, no,” said Poirot, rising. “All my excuses for having
- deranged you.”</p>
-
- <p>“Not at all, not at all.”</p>
-
- <p>“The word derange,” I remarked, when we were outside again, “is
- applicable to mental disorder only.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” cried Poirot, “never will my English be quite perfect. A curious
- language. I should then have said disarranged, <i lang="fr">n’est-ce pas</i>?”</p>
-
- <p>“Disturbed is the word you had in mind.”</p>
-
- <p>“I thank you, my friend. The word exact, you are zealous for it. <i lang="fr">Eh
- bien</i>, what about our friend Parker<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">211</span> now? With twenty thousand
- pounds in hand, would he have continued being a butler? <i lang="fr">Je ne pense
- pas.</i> It is, of course, possible that he banked the money under
- another name, but I am disposed to believe he spoke the truth to us.
- If he is a scoundrel, he is a scoundrel on a mean scale. He has not
- the big ideas. That leaves us as a possibility, Raymond, or—well—Major
- Blunt.”</p>
-
- <p>“Surely not Raymond,” I objected. “Since we know that he was
- desperately hard up for a matter of five hundred pounds.”</p>
-
- <p>“That is what he says, yes.”</p>
-
- <p>“And as to Hector Blunt——”</p>
-
- <p>“I will tell you something as to the good Major Blunt,” interrupted
- Poirot. “It is my business to make inquiries. I make them. <i lang="fr">Eh
- bien</i>—that legacy of which he speaks, I have discovered that the
- amount of it was close upon twenty thousand pounds. What do you think
- of that?”</p>
-
- <p>I was so taken aback that I could hardly speak.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s impossible,” I said at last. “A well-known man like Hector Blunt.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
- <p>“Who knows? At least he is a man with big ideas. I confess that I
- hardly see him as a blackmailer, but there is another possibility that
- you have not even considered.”</p>
-
- <p>“What is that?”</p>
-
- <p>“The fire, my friend. Ackroyd himself may have destroyed that letter,
- blue envelope and all, after you left him.”</p>
-
- <p>“I hardly think that likely,” I said slowly. “And yet—<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">212</span>of course, it
- may be so. He might have changed his mind.”</p>
-
- <p>We had just arrived at my house, and on the spur of the moment I
- invited Poirot to come in and take pot luck.</p>
-
- <p>I thought Caroline would be pleased with me, but it is hard to satisfy
- one’s women folk. It appears that we were eating chops for lunch—the
- kitchen staff being regaled on tripe and onions. And two chops set
- before three people are productive of embarrassment.</p>
-
- <p>But Caroline is seldom daunted for long. With magnificent mendacity,
- she explained to Poirot that although James laughed at her for
- doing so, she adhered strictly to a vegetarian diet. She descanted
- ecstatically on the delights of nut cutlets (which I am quite sure
- she has never tasted) and ate a Welsh rarebit with gusto and frequent
- cutting remarks as to the dangers of “flesh” foods.</p>
-
- <p>Afterwards, when we were sitting in front of the fire and smoking,
- Caroline attacked Poirot directly.</p>
-
- <p>“Not found Ralph Paton yet?” she asked.</p>
-
- <p>“Where should I find him, mademoiselle?”</p>
-
- <p>“I thought, perhaps, you’d found him in Cranchester,” said Caroline,
- with intense meaning in her tone.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot looked merely bewildered.</p>
-
- <p>“In Cranchester? But why in Cranchester?”</p>
-
- <p>I enlightened him with a touch of malice.</p>
-
- <p>“One of our ample staff of private detectives happened to see you in a
- car on the Cranchester road yesterday,” I explained.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot’s bewilderment vanished. He laughed heartily.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</span></p>
-
- <p>“Ah, that! A simple visit to the dentist, <i lang="fr">c’est tout</i>. My tooth,
- it aches. I go there. My tooth, it is at once better. I think to return
- quickly. The dentist, he says No. Better to have it out. I argue. He
- insists. He has his way! That particular tooth, it will never ache
- again.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline collapsed rather like a pricked balloon.</p>
-
- <p>We fell to discussing Ralph Paton.</p>
-
- <p>“A weak nature,” I insisted. “But not a vicious one.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” said Poirot. “But weakness, where does it end?”</p>
-
- <p>“Exactly,” said Caroline. “Take James here—weak as water, if I weren’t
- about to look after him.”</p>
-
- <p>“My dear Caroline,” I said irritably, “can’t you talk without dragging
- in personalities?”</p>
-
- <p>“You <em>are</em> weak, James,” said Caroline, quite unmoved. “I’m eight
- years older than you are—oh! I don’t mind M. Poirot knowing that——”</p>
-
- <p>“I should never have guessed it, mademoiselle,” said Poirot, with a
- gallant little bow.</p>
-
- <p>“Eight years older. But I’ve always considered it my duty to look after
- you. With a bad bringing up, Heaven knows what mischief you might have
- got into by now.”</p>
-
- <p>“I might have married a beautiful adventuress,” I murmured, gazing at
- the ceiling, and blowing smoke rings.</p>
-
- <p>“Adventuress!” said Caroline, with a snort. “If we’re talking of
- adventuresses——”</p>
-
- <p>She left the sentence unfinished.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">214</span></p>
-
- <p>“Well?” I said, with some curiosity.</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing. But I can think of some one not a hundred miles away.”</p>
-
- <p>Then she turned to Poirot suddenly.</p>
-
- <p>“James sticks to it that you believe some one in the house committed
- the murder. All I can say is, you’re wrong.”</p>
-
- <p>“I should not like to be wrong,” said Poirot. “It is not—how do you
- say—my <i lang="fr">métier</i>?”</p>
-
- <p>“I’ve got the facts pretty clearly,” continued Caroline, taking no
- notice of Poirot’s remark, “from James and others. As far as I can see,
- of the people in the house, only two <em>could</em> have had the chance
- of doing it. Ralph Paton and Flora Ackroyd.”</p>
-
- <p>“My dear Caroline——”</p>
-
- <p>“Now, James, don’t interrupt me. I know what I’m talking about. Parker
- met her <em>outside</em> the door, didn’t he? He didn’t hear her uncle
- saying good-night to her. She could have killed him then and there.”</p>
-
- <p>“Caroline.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m not saying she <em>did</em>, James. I’m saying she <em>could</em> have
- done. As a matter of fact, though Flora is like all these young girls
- nowadays, with no veneration for their betters and thinking they know
- best on every subject under the sun, I don’t for a minute believe she’d
- kill even a chicken. But there it is. Mr. Raymond and Major Blunt have
- alibis. Mrs. Ackroyd’s got an alibi. Even that Russell woman seems to
- have one—and a good job for her it is she has. Who is left? Only Ralph
- and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">215</span> Flora! And say what you will, I don’t believe Ralph Paton is a
- murderer. A boy we’ve known all our lives.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot was silent for a minute, watching the curling smoke rise from
- his cigarette. When at last he spoke, it was in a gentle far-away voice
- that produced a curious impression. It was totally unlike his usual
- manner.</p>
-
- <p>“Let us take a man—a very ordinary man. A man with no idea of murder
- in his heart. There is in him somewhere a strain of weakness—deep
- down. It has so far never been called into play. Perhaps it never will
- be—and if so he will go to his grave honored and respected by every
- one. But let us suppose that something occurs. He is in difficulties—or
- perhaps not that even. He may stumble by accident on a secret—a secret
- involving life or death to some one. And his first impulse will be to
- speak out—to do his duty as an honest citizen. And then the strain of
- weakness tells. Here is a chance of money—a great amount of money.
- He wants money—he desires it—and it is so easy. He has to do nothing
- for it—just keep silence. That is the beginning. The desire for money
- grows. He must have more—and more! He is intoxicated by the gold mine
- which has opened at his feet. He becomes greedy. And in his greed he
- overreaches himself. One can press a man as far as one likes—but with
- a woman one must not press too far. For a woman has at heart a great
- desire to speak the truth. How many husbands who have deceived their
- wives go comfortably to their graves, carrying their secret with them!
- How many wives who have deceived their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">216</span> husbands wreck their lives by
- throwing the fact in those same husbands’ teeth! They have been pressed
- too far. In a reckless moment (which they will afterwards regret,
- <i lang="fr">bien entendu</i>) they fling safety to the winds and turn at bay,
- proclaiming the truth with great momentary satisfaction to themselves.
- So it was, I think, in this case. The strain was too great. And so
- there came your proverb, the death of the goose that laid the golden
- eggs. But that is not the end. Exposure faced the man of whom we are
- speaking. And he is not the same man he was—say, a year ago. His moral
- fiber is blunted. He is desperate. He is fighting a losing battle, and
- he is prepared to take any means that come to his hand, for exposure
- means ruin to him. And so—the dagger strikes!”</p>
-
- <p>He was silent for a moment. It was as though he had laid a spell upon
- the room. I cannot try to describe the impression his words produced.
- There was something in the merciless analysis, and the ruthless power
- of vision which struck fear into both of us.</p>
-
- <p>“Afterwards,” he went on softly, “the danger removed, he will be
- himself again, normal, kindly. But if the need again arises, then once
- more he will strike.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline roused herself at last.</p>
-
- <p>“You are speaking of Ralph Paton,” she said. “You may be right, you may
- not, but you have no business to condemn a man unheard.”</p>
-
- <p>The telephone bell rang sharply. I went out into the hall, and took off
- the receiver.</p>
-
- <p>“What?” I said. “Yes. Dr. Sheppard speaking.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">217</span></p>
-
- <p>I listened for a minute or two, then replied briefly. Replacing the
- receiver, I went back into the drawing-room.</p>
-
- <p>“Poirot,” I said, “they have detained a man at Liverpool. His name is
- Charles Kent, and he is believed to be the stranger who visited Fernly
- that night. They want me to go to Liverpool at once and identify him.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">218</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">CHARLES KENT</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Half</span> an hour later saw Poirot, myself, and Inspector Raglan in the
- train on the way to Liverpool. The inspector was clearly very excited.</p>
-
- <p>“We may get a line on the blackmailing part of the business, if on
- nothing else,” he declared jubilantly. “He’s a rough customer, this
- fellow, by what I heard over the phone. Takes dope, too. We ought to
- find it easy to get what we want out of him. If there was the shadow of
- a motive, nothing’s more likely than that he killed Mr. Ackroyd. But in
- that case, why is young Paton keeping out of the way? The whole thing’s
- a muddle—that’s what it is. By the way, M. Poirot, you were quite right
- about those fingerprints. They were Mr. Ackroyd’s own. I had rather the
- same idea myself, but I dismissed it as hardly feasible.”</p>
-
- <p>I smiled to myself. Inspector Raglan was so very plainly saving his
- face.</p>
-
- <p>“As regards this man,” said Poirot, “he is not yet arrested, eh?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, detained under suspicion.”</p>
-
- <p>“And what account does he give of himself?”</p>
-
- <p>“Precious little,” said the inspector, with a grin. “He’s a wary bird,
- I gather. A lot of abuse, but very little more.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">219</span></p>
-
- <p>On arrival at Liverpool I was surprised to find that Poirot was
- welcomed with acclamation. Superintendent Hayes, who met us, had worked
- with Poirot over some case long ago, and had evidently an exaggerated
- opinion of his powers.</p>
-
- <p>“Now we’ve got M. Poirot here we shan’t be long,” he said cheerfully.
- “I thought you’d retired, moosior?”</p>
-
- <p>“So I had, my good Hayes, so I had. But how tedious is retirement! You
- cannot imagine to yourself the monotony with which day comes after day.”</p>
-
- <p>“Very likely. So you’ve come to have a look at our own particular find?
- Is this Dr. Sheppard? Think you’ll be able to identify him, sir?”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m not very sure,” I said doubtfully.</p>
-
- <p>“How did you get hold of him?” inquired Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“Description was circulated, as you know. In the press and privately.
- Not much to go on, I admit. This fellow has an American accent all
- right, and he doesn’t deny that he was near King’s Abbot that night.
- Just asks what the hell it is to do with us, and that he’ll see us in
- —— before he answers any questions.”</p>
-
- <p>“Is it permitted that I, too, see him?” asked Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>The superintendent closed one eye knowingly.</p>
-
- <p>“Very glad to have you, sir. You’ve got permission to do anything you
- please. Inspector Japp of Scotland Yard was asking after you the other
- day. Said he’d heard you were connected unofficially with this case.
- Where’s Captain Paton hiding, sir, can you tell me that?”</p>
-
- <p>“I doubt if it would be wise at the present juncture,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">220</span> said Poirot
- primly, and I bit my lips to prevent a smile.</p>
-
- <p>The little man really did it very well.</p>
-
- <p>After some further parley, we were taken to interview the prisoner.</p>
-
- <p>He was a young fellow, I should say not more than twenty-two or
- three. Tall, thin, with slightly shaking hands, and the evidences of
- considerable physical strength somewhat run to seed. His hair was dark,
- but his eyes were blue and shifty, seldom meeting a glance squarely. I
- had all along cherished the illusion that there was something familiar
- about the figure I had met that night, but if this were indeed he, I
- was completely mistaken. He did not remind me in the least of any one I
- knew.</p>
-
- <p>“Now then, Kent,” said the superintendent, “stand up. Here are some
- visitors come to see you. Recognize any of them.”</p>
-
- <p>Kent glared at us sullenly, but did not reply. I saw his glance waver
- over the three of us, and come back to rest on me.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, sir,” said the superintendent to me, “what do you say?”</p>
-
- <p>“The height’s the same,” I said, “and as far as general appearance goes
- it might well be the man in question. Beyond that, I couldn’t go.”</p>
-
- <p>“What the hell’s the meaning of all this?” asked Kent. “What have you
- got against me? Come on, out with it! What am I supposed to have done?”</p>
-
- <p>I nodded my head.</p>
-
- <p>“It’s the man,” I said. “I recognize the voice.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">221</span></p>
-
- <p>“Recognize my voice, do you? Where do you think you heard it before?”</p>
-
- <p>“On Friday evening last, outside the gates of Fernly Park. You asked me
- the way there.”</p>
-
- <p>“I did, did I?”</p>
-
- <p>“Do you admit it?” asked the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t admit anything. Not till I know what you’ve got on me.”</p>
-
- <p>“Have you not read the papers in the last few days?” asked Poirot,
- speaking for the first time.</p>
-
- <p>The man’s eyes narrowed.</p>
-
- <p>“So that’s it, is it? I saw an old gent had been croaked at Fernly.
- Trying to make out I did the job, are you?”</p>
-
- <p>“You were there that night,” said Poirot quietly.</p>
-
- <p>“How do you know, mister?”</p>
-
- <p>“By this.” Poirot took something from his pocket and held it out.</p>
-
- <p>It was the goose quill we had found in the summer-house.</p>
-
- <p>At the sight of it the man’s face changed. He half held out his hand.</p>
-
- <p>“Snow,” said Poirot thoughtfully. “No, my friend, it is empty. It lay
- where you dropped it in the summer-house that night.”</p>
-
- <p>Charles Kent looked at him uncertainly.</p>
-
- <p>“You seem to know a hell of a lot about everything, you little foreign
- cock duck. Perhaps you remember this: the papers say that the old gent
- was croaked between a quarter to ten and ten o’clock?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">222</span></p>
-
- <p>“That is so,” agreed Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, but is it really so? That’s what I’m getting at.”</p>
-
- <p>“This gentleman will tell you,” said Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>He indicated Inspector Raglan. The latter hesitated, glanced at
- Superintendent Hayes, then at Poirot, and finally, as though receiving
- sanction, he said:—</p>
-
- <p>“That’s right. Between a quarter to ten and ten o’clock.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then you’ve nothing to keep me here for,” said Kent. “I was away from
- Fernly Park by twenty-five minutes past nine. You can ask at the Dog
- and Whistle. That’s a saloon about a mile out of Fernly on the road to
- Cranchester. I kicked up a bit of a row there, I remember. As near as
- nothing to quarter to ten, it was. How about that?”</p>
-
- <p>Inspector Raglan wrote down something in his notebook.</p>
-
- <p>“Well?” demanded Kent.</p>
-
- <p>“Inquiries will be made,” said the inspector. “If you’ve spoken the
- truth, you won’t have anything to complain about. What were you doing
- at Fernly Park anyway?”</p>
-
- <p>“Went there to meet some one.”</p>
-
- <p>“Who?”</p>
-
- <p>“That’s none of your business.”</p>
-
- <p>“You’d better keep a civil tongue in your head, my man,” the
- superintendent warned him.</p>
-
- <p>“To hell with a civil tongue. I went there on my own business, and
- that’s all there is to it. If I was clear away before the murder was
- done, that’s all that concerns the cops.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">223</span></p>
-
- <p>“Your name, it is Charles Kent,” said Poirot. “Where were you born?”</p>
-
- <p>The man stared at him, then he grinned.</p>
-
- <p>“I’m a full-blown Britisher all right,” he said.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” said Poirot meditatively, “I think you are. I fancy you were
- born in Kent.”</p>
-
- <p>The man stared.</p>
-
- <p>“Why’s that? Because of my name? What’s that to do with it? Is a man
- whose name is Kent bound to be born in that particular county?”</p>
-
- <p>“Under certain circumstances, I can imagine he might be,” said Poirot
- very deliberately. “Under certain circumstances, you comprehend.”</p>
-
- <p>There was so much meaning in his voice as to surprise the two police
- officers. As for Charles Kent, he flushed a brick red, and for a moment
- I thought he was going to spring at Poirot. He thought better of it,
- however, and turned away with a kind of laugh.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded as though satisfied, and made his way out through the
- door. He was joined presently by the two officers.</p>
-
- <p>“We’ll verify that statement,” remarked Raglan. “I don’t think he’s
- lying, though. But he’s got to come clear with a statement as to
- what he was doing at Fernly. It looks to me as though we’d got our
- blackmailer all right. On the other hand, granted his story’s correct,
- he couldn’t have had anything to do with the actual murder. He’d got
- ten pounds on him when he was arrested—rather a large sum. I fancy that
- forty pounds went to him—the numbers of the notes didn’t correspond,
- but of course<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">224</span> he’d have changed them first thing. Mr. Ackroyd must
- have given him the money, and he made off with it as fast as possible.
- What was that about Kent being his birthplace? What’s that got to do
- with it?”</p>
-
- <p>“Nothing whatever,” said Poirot mildly. “A little idea of mine, that
- was all. Me, I am famous for my little ideas.”</p>
-
- <p>“Are you really?” said Raglan, studying him with a puzzled expression.</p>
-
- <p>The superintendent went into a roar of laughter.</p>
-
- <p>“Many’s the time I’ve heard Inspector Japp say that. M. Poirot and his
- little ideas! Too fanciful for me, he’d say, but always something in
- them.”</p>
-
- <p>“You mock yourself at me,” said Poirot, smiling; “but never mind. The
- old ones they laugh last sometimes, when the young, clever ones do not
- laugh at all.”</p>
-
- <p>And nodding his head at them in a sage manner, he walked out into the
- street.</p>
-
- <p>He and I lunched together at an hotel. I know now that the whole thing
- lay clearly unravelled before him. He had got the last thread he needed
- to lead him to the truth.</p>
-
- <p>But at the time I had no suspicion of the fact. I overestimated his
- general self-confidence, and I took it for granted that the things
- which puzzled me must be equally puzzling to him.</p>
-
- <p>My chief puzzle was what the man Charles Kent could have been doing at
- Fernly. Again and again I put the question to myself and could get no
- satisfactory reply.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">225</span></p>
-
- <p>At last I ventured a tentative query to Poirot. His reply was immediate.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Mon ami</i>, I do not think; I know.”</p>
-
- <p>“Really?” I said incredulously.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, indeed. I suppose now that to you it would not make sense if I
- said that he went to Fernly that night because he was born in Kent?”</p>
-
- <p>I stared at him.</p>
-
- <p>“It certainly doesn’t seem to make sense to me,” I said dryly.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah!” said Poirot pityingly. “Well, no matter. I have still my little idea.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">226</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">FLORA ACKROYD</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">As</span> I was returning from my round the following morning, I was hailed by
- Inspector Raglan. I pulled up, and the inspector mounted on the step.</p>
-
- <p>“Good-morning, Dr. Sheppard,” he said. “Well, that alibi is all right
- enough.”</p>
-
- <p>“Charles Kent’s?”</p>
-
- <p>“Charles Kent’s. The barmaid at the Dog and Whistle, Sally Jones, she
- remembers him perfectly. Picked out his photograph from among five
- others. It was just a quarter to ten when he came into the bar, and the
- Dog and Whistle is well over a mile from Fernly Park. The girl mentions
- that he had a lot of money on him—she saw him take a handful of notes
- out of his pocket. Rather surprised her, it did, seeing the class of
- fellow he was, with a pair of boots clean dropping off him. That’s
- where that forty pounds went right enough.”</p>
-
- <p>“The man still refuses to give an account of his visit to Fernly?”</p>
-
- <p>“Obstinate as a mule he is. I had a chat with Hayes at Liverpool over
- the wire this morning.”</p>
-
- <p>“Hercule Poirot says he knows the reason the man went there that
- night,” I observed.</p>
-
- <p>“Does he?” cried the inspector eagerly.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">227</span></p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said maliciously. “He says he went there because he was born
- in Kent.”</p>
-
- <p>I felt a distinct pleasure in passing on my own discomfiture.</p>
-
- <p>Raglan stared at me for a moment or two uncomprehendingly. Then a
- grin overspread his weaselly countenance and he tapped his forehead
- significantly.</p>
-
- <p>“Bit gone here,” he said. “I’ve thought so for some time. Poor old
- chap, so that’s why he had to give up and come down here. In the
- family, very likely. He’s got a nephew who’s quite off his crumpet.”</p>
-
- <p>“Poirot has?” I said, very surprised.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. Hasn’t he ever mentioned him to you? Quite docile, I believe, and
- all that, but mad as a hatter, poor lad.”</p>
-
- <p>“Who told you that?”</p>
-
- <p>Again a grin showed itself on Inspector Raglan’s face.</p>
-
- <p>“Your sister, Miss Sheppard, she told me all about it.”</p>
-
- <p>Really, Caroline is amazing. She never rests until she knows the last
- details of everybody’s family secrets. Unfortunately, I have never been
- able to instill into her the decency of keeping them to herself.</p>
-
- <p>“Jump in, inspector,” I said, opening the door of the car. “We’ll go
- up to The Larches together, and acquaint our Belgian friend with the
- latest news.”</p>
-
- <p>“Might as well, I suppose. After all, even if he is a bit balmy, it was
- a useful tip he gave me about those fingerprints. He’s got a bee in his
- bonnet about the man Kent, but who knows—there may be something useful
- behind it.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">228</span></p>
-
- <p>Poirot received us with his usual smiling courtesy.</p>
-
- <p>He listened to the information we had brought him, nodding his head now
- and then.</p>
-
- <p>“Seems quite O.K., doesn’t it?” said the inspector rather gloomily. “A
- chap can’t be murdering some one in one place when he’s drinking in the
- bar in another place a mile away.”</p>
-
- <p>“Are you going to release him?”</p>
-
- <p>“Don’t see what else we can do. We can’t very well hold him for
- obtaining money on false pretences. Can’t prove a ruddy thing.”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector tossed a match into the grate in a disgruntled fashion.
- Poirot retrieved it and put it neatly in a little receptacle designed
- for the purpose. His action was purely mechanical. I could see that his
- thoughts were on something very different.</p>
-
- <p>“If I were you,” he said at last, “I should not release the man Charles
- Kent yet.”</p>
-
- <p>“What do you mean?”</p>
-
- <p>Raglan stared at him.</p>
-
- <p>“What I say. I should not release him yet.”</p>
-
- <p>“You don’t think he can have had anything to do with the murder, do
- you?”</p>
-
- <p>“I think probably not—but one cannot be certain yet.”</p>
-
- <p>“But haven’t I just told you——”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot raised a hand protestingly.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Mais oui, mais oui.</i> I heard. I am not deaf—nor stupid, thank
- the good God! But see you, you approach the matter from the wrong—the
- wrong—premises, is not that the word?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">229</span></p>
-
- <p>The inspector stared at him heavily.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t see how you make that out. Look here, we know Mr. Ackroyd was
- alive at a quarter to ten. You admit that, don’t you?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot looked at him for a moment, then shook his head with a quick
- smile.</p>
-
- <p>“I admit nothing that is not—<em>proved</em>!”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, we’ve got proof enough of that. We’ve got Miss Flora Ackroyd’s
- evidence.”</p>
-
- <p>“That she said good-night to her uncle? But me—I do not always believe
- what a young lady tells me—no, not even when she is charming and
- beautiful.”</p>
-
- <p>“But hang it all, man, Parker saw her coming out of the door.”</p>
-
- <p>“No.” Poirot’s voice rang out with sudden sharpness. “That is just what
- he did not see. I satisfied myself of that by a little experiment the
- other day—you remember, doctor? Parker saw her <em>outside</em> the door,
- with her hand on the handle. He did not see her come out of the room.”</p>
-
- <p>“But—where else could she have been?”</p>
-
- <p>“Perhaps on the stairs.”</p>
-
- <p>“The stairs?”</p>
-
- <p>“That is my little idea—yes.”</p>
-
- <p>“But those stairs only lead to Mr. Ackroyd’s bedroom.”</p>
-
- <p>“Precisely.”</p>
-
- <p>And still the inspector stared.</p>
-
- <p>“You think she’d been up to her uncle’s bedroom? Well, why not? Why
- should she lie about it?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">230</span></p>
-
- <p>“Ah! that is just the question. It depends on what she was doing there,
- does it not?”</p>
-
- <p>“You mean—the money? Hang it all, you don’t suggest that it was Miss
- Ackroyd who took that forty pounds?”</p>
-
- <p>“I suggest nothing,” said Poirot. “But I will remind you of this. Life
- was not very easy for that mother and daughter. There were bills—there
- was constant trouble over small sums of money. Roger Ackroyd was a
- peculiar man over money matters. The girl might be at her wit’s end for
- a comparatively small sum. Figure to yourself then what happens. She
- has taken the money, she descends the little staircase. When she is
- half-way down she hears the chink of glass from the hall. She has not a
- doubt of what it is—Parker coming to the study. At all costs she must
- not be found on the stairs—Parker will not forget it, he will think it
- odd. If the money is missed, Parker is sure to remember having seen her
- come down those stairs. She has just time to rush down to the study
- door—with her hand on the handle to show that she has just come out,
- when Parker appears in the doorway. She says the first thing that comes
- into her head, a repetition of Roger Ackroyd’s orders earlier in the
- evening, and then goes upstairs to her own room.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, but later,” persisted the inspector, “she must have realized the
- vital importance of speaking the truth? Why, the whole case hinges on
- it!”</p>
-
- <p>“Afterwards,” said Poirot dryly, “it was a little difficult for
- Mademoiselle Flora. She is told simply that the police are here and
- that there has been a robbery. Naturally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">231</span> she jumps to the conclusion
- that the theft of the money has been discovered. Her one idea is to
- stick to her story. When she learns that her uncle is dead she is
- panic-stricken. Young women do not faint nowadays, monsieur, without
- considerable provocation. <i lang="fr">Eh bien!</i> there it is. She is bound to
- stick to her story, or else confess everything. And a young and pretty
- girl does not like to admit that she is a thief—especially before those
- whose esteem she is anxious to retain.”</p>
-
- <p>Raglan brought his fist down with a thump on the table.</p>
-
- <p>“I’ll not believe it,” he said. “It’s—it’s not credible. And you—you’ve
- known this all along?”</p>
-
- <p>“The possibility has been in my mind from the first,” admitted Poirot.
- “I was always convinced that Mademoiselle Flora was hiding something
- from us. To satisfy myself, I made the little experiment I told you of.
- Dr. Sheppard accompanied me.”</p>
-
- <p>“A test for Parker, you said it was,” I remarked bitterly.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Mon ami</i>,” said Poirot apologetically, “as I told you at the
- time, one must say something.”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector rose.</p>
-
- <p>“There’s only one thing for it,” he declared. “We must tackle the young
- lady right away. You’ll come up to Fernly with me, M. Poirot?”</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly. Dr. Sheppard will drive us up in his car.”</p>
-
- <p>I acquiesced willingly.</p>
-
- <p>On inquiry for Miss Ackroyd, we were shown into the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">232</span> billiard room.
- Flora and Major Hector Blunt were sitting on the long window seat.</p>
-
- <p>“Good-morning, Miss Ackroyd,” said the inspector. “Can we have a word
- or two alone with you?”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt got up at once and moved to the door.</p>
-
- <p>“What is it?” asked Flora nervously. “Don’t go, Major Blunt. He can
- stay, can’t he?” she asked, turning to the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“That’s as you like,” said the inspector dryly. “There’s a question
- or two it’s my duty to put to you, miss, but I’d prefer to do so
- privately, and I dare say you’d prefer it also.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora looked keenly at him. I saw her face grow whiter. Then she turned
- and spoke to Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>“I want you to stay—please—yes, I mean it. Whatever the inspector has
- to say to me, I’d rather you heard it.”</p>
-
- <p>Raglan shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, if you will have it so, that’s all there is to it. Now, Miss
- Ackroyd, M. Poirot here has made a certain suggestion to me. He
- suggests that you weren’t in the study at all last Friday night, that
- you never saw Mr. Ackroyd to say good-night to him, that instead of
- being in the study you were on the stairs leading down from your
- uncle’s bedroom when you heard Parker coming across the hall.”</p>
-
- <p>Flora’s gaze shifted to Poirot. He nodded back at her.</p>
-
- <p>“Mademoiselle, the other day, when we sat round the table, I implored
- you to be frank with me. What one does not tell to Papa Poirot he finds
- out. It was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">233</span> that, was it not? See, I will make it easy for you. You
- took the money, did you not?”</p>
-
- <p>“The money,” said Blunt sharply.</p>
-
- <p>There was a silence which lasted for at least a minute.</p>
-
- <p>Then Flora drew herself up and spoke.</p>
-
- <p>“M. Poirot is right. I took that money. I stole. I am a thief—yes, a
- common, vulgar little thief. Now you know! I am glad it has come out.
- It’s been a nightmare, these last few days!” She sat down suddenly and
- buried her face in her hands. She spoke huskily through her fingers.
- “You don’t know what my life has been since I came here. Wanting
- things, scheming for them, lying, cheating, running up bills, promising
- to pay—oh! I hate myself when I think of it all! That’s what brought us
- together, Ralph and I. We were both weak! I understood him, and I was
- sorry—because I’m the same underneath. We’re not strong enough to stand
- alone, either of us. We’re weak, miserable, despicable things.”</p>
-
- <p>She looked at Blunt and suddenly stamped her foot.</p>
-
- <p>“Why do you look at me like that—as though you couldn’t believe? I may
- be a thief—but at any rate I’m real now. I’m not lying any more. I’m
- not pretending to be the kind of girl you like, young and innocent and
- simple. I don’t care if you never want to see me again. I hate myself,
- despise myself—but you’ve got to believe one thing, if speaking the
- truth would have made things better for Ralph, I would have spoken out.
- But I’ve seen all along that it wouldn’t be better for Ralph—it makes
- the case against him blacker than ever. I was not doing him any harm by
- sticking to my lie.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">234</span></p>
-
- <p>“Ralph,” said Blunt. “I see—always Ralph.”</p>
-
- <p>“You don’t understand,” said Flora hopelessly. “You never will.”</p>
-
- <p>She turned to the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>“I admit everything; I was at my wit’s end for money. I never saw my
- uncle that evening after he left the dinner-table. As to the money, you
- can take what steps you please. Nothing could be worse than it is now!”</p>
-
- <p>Suddenly she broke down again, hid her face in her hands, and rushed
- from the room.</p>
-
- <p>“Well,” said the inspector in a flat tone, “so that’s that.”</p>
-
- <p>He seemed rather at a loss what to do next.</p>
-
- <p>Blunt came forward.</p>
-
- <p>“Inspector Raglan,” he said quietly, “that money was given to me by Mr.
- Ackroyd for a special purpose. Miss Ackroyd never touched it. When she
- says she did, she is lying with the idea of shielding Captain Paton.
- The truth is as I said, and I am prepared to go into the witness box
- and swear to it.”</p>
-
- <p>He made a kind of jerky bow, then turning abruptly, he left the room.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot was after him in a flash. He caught the other up in the hall.</p>
-
- <p>“Monsieur—a moment, I beg of you, if you will be so good.”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, sir?”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt was obviously impatient. He stood frowning down on Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“It is this,” said Poirot rapidly: “I am not deceived by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">235</span> your little
- fantasy. No, indeed. It was truly Miss Flora who took the money. All
- the same it is well imagined what you say—it pleases me. It is very
- good what you have done there. You are a man quick to think and to act.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m not in the least anxious for your opinion, thank you,” said Blunt
- coldly.</p>
-
- <p>He made once more as though to pass on, but Poirot, not at all
- offended, laid a detaining hand on his arm.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! but you are to listen to me. I have more to say. The other day I
- spoke of concealments. Very well, all along have I seen what you are
- concealing. Mademoiselle Flora, you love her with all your heart. From
- the first moment you saw her, is it not so? Oh! let us not mind saying
- these things—why must one in England think it necessary to mention
- love as though it were some disgraceful secret? You love Mademoiselle
- Flora. You seek to conceal that fact from all the world. That is very
- good—that is as it should be. But take the advice of Hercule Poirot—do
- not conceal it from mademoiselle herself.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt had shown several signs of restlessness whilst Poirot was
- speaking, but the closing words seemed to rivet his attention.</p>
-
- <p>“What d’you mean by that?” he said sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“You think that she loves the Capitaine Ralph Paton—but I, Hercule
- Poirot, tell you that that is not so. Mademoiselle Flora accepted
- Captain Paton to please her uncle, and because she saw in the marriage
- a way of escape from her life here which was becoming frankly
- insupportable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">236</span> to her. She liked him, and there was much sympathy
- and understanding between them. But love—no! It is not Captain Paton
- Mademoiselle Flora loves.”</p>
-
- <p>“What the devil do you mean?” asked Blunt.</p>
-
- <p>I saw the dark flush under his tan.</p>
-
- <p>“You have been blind, monsieur. Blind! She is loyal, the little one.
- Ralph Paton is under a cloud, she is bound in honor to stick by him.”</p>
-
- <p>I felt it was time I put in a word to help on the good work.</p>
-
- <p>“My sister told me the other night,” I said encouragingly, “that Flora
- had never cared a penny piece for Ralph Paton, and never would. My
- sister is always right about these things.”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt ignored my well-meant efforts. He spoke to Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“D’you really think——” he began, and stopped.</p>
-
- <p>He is one of those inarticulate men who find it hard to put things into
- words.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot knows no such disability.</p>
-
- <p>“If you doubt me, ask her yourself, monsieur. But perhaps you no longer
- care to—the affair of the money——”</p>
-
- <p>Blunt gave a sound like an angry laugh.</p>
-
- <p>“Think I’d hold that against her? Roger was always a queer chap about
- money. She got in a mess and didn’t dare tell him. Poor kid. Poor
- lonely kid.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot looked thoughtfully at the side door.</p>
-
- <p>“Mademoiselle Flora went into the garden, I think,” he murmured.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">237</span></p>
-
- <p>“I’ve been every kind of a fool,” said Blunt abruptly. “Rum
- conversation we’ve been having. Like one of those Danish plays. But
- you’re a sound fellow, M. Poirot. Thank you.”</p>
-
- <p>He took Poirot’s hand and gave it a grip which caused the other to
- wince in anguish. Then he strode to the side door and passed out into
- the garden.</p>
-
- <p>“Not every kind of a fool,” murmured Poirot, tenderly nursing the
- injured member. “Only one kind—the fool in love.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">238</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">MISS RUSSELL</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Inspector Raglan</span> had received a bad jolt. He was not deceived by
- Blunt’s valiant lie any more than we had been. Our way back to the
- village was punctuated by his complaints.</p>
-
- <p>“This alters everything, this does. I don’t know whether you’ve
- realized it, Monsieur Poirot?”</p>
-
- <p>“I think so, yes, I think so,” said Poirot. “You see, me, I have been
- familiar with the idea for some time.”</p>
-
- <p>Inspector Raglan, who had only had the idea presented to him a short
- half-hour ago, looked at Poirot unhappily, and went on with his
- discoveries.</p>
-
- <p>“Those alibis now. Worthless! Absolutely worthless. Got to start
- again. Find out what every one was doing from nine-thirty onwards.
- Nine-thirty—that’s the time we’ve got to hang on to. You were quite
- right about the man Kent—we don’t release <em>him</em> yet awhile. Let
- me see now—nine-forty-five at the Dog and Whistle. He might have got
- there in a quarter of an hour if he ran. It’s just possible that it was
- <em>his</em> voice Mr. Raymond heard talking to Mr. Ackroyd—asking for
- money which Mr. Ackroyd refused. But one thing’s clear—it wasn’t he who
- sent the telephone message. The station is half a mile in the other
- direction—over a mile and a half from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">239</span> the Dog and Whistle, and he was
- at the Dog and Whistle until about ten minutes past ten. Dang that
- telephone call! We always come up against it.”</p>
-
- <p>“We do indeed,” agreed Poirot. “It is curious.”</p>
-
- <p>“It’s just possible that if Captain Paton climbed into his uncle’s room
- and found him there murdered, <em>he</em> may have sent it. Got the wind
- up, thought he’d be accused, and cleared out. That’s possible, isn’t
- it?”</p>
-
- <p>“Why should he have telephoned?”</p>
-
- <p>“May have had doubts if the old man was really dead. Thought he’d
- get the doctor up there as soon as possible, but didn’t want to give
- himself away. Yes, I say now, how’s that for a theory? Something in
- that, I should say.”</p>
-
- <p>The inspector swelled his chest out importantly. He was so plainly
- delighted with himself that any words of ours would have been quite
- superfluous.</p>
-
- <p>We arrived back at my house at this minute, and I hurried in to my
- surgery patients, who had all been waiting a considerable time, leaving
- Poirot to walk to the police station with the inspector.</p>
-
- <p>Having dismissed the last patient, I strolled into the little room at
- the back of the house which I call my workshop—I am rather proud of the
- home-made wireless set I turned out. Caroline hates my workroom. I keep
- my tools there, and Annie is not allowed to wreak havoc with a dustpan
- and brush. I was just adjusting the interior of an alarm clock which
- had been denounced as wholly unreliable by the household, when the door
- opened and Caroline put her head in.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">240</span></p>
-
- <p>“Oh! there you are, James,” she said, with deep disapproval. “M. Poirot
- wants to see you.”</p>
-
- <p>“Well,” I said, rather irritably, for her sudden entrance had startled
- me and I had let go of a piece of delicate mechanism, “if he wants to
- see me, he can come in here.”</p>
-
- <p>“In here?” said Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“That’s what I said—in here.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline gave a sniff of disapproval and retired. She returned in a
- moment or two, ushering in Poirot, and then retired again, shutting the
- door with a bang.</p>
-
- <p>“Aha! my friend,” said Poirot, coming forward and rubbing his hands.
- “You have not got rid of me so easily, you see!”</p>
-
- <p>“Finished with the inspector?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“For the moment, yes. And you, you have seen all the patients?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot sat down and looked at me, tilting his egg-shaped head on one
- side, with the air of one who savors a very delicious joke.</p>
-
- <p>“You are in error,” he said at last. “You have still one patient to
- see.”</p>
-
- <p>“Not you?” I exclaimed in surprise.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah, not me, <i lang="fr">bien entendu</i>. Me, I have the health magnificent.
- No, to tell you the truth, it is a little <i lang="fr">complot</i> of mine. There
- is some one I wish to see, you understand—and at the same time it is
- not necessary that the whole village should intrigue itself about the
- matter—which is what would happen if the lady were seen to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">241</span> come to my
- house—for it is a lady. But to you she has already come as a patient
- before.”</p>
-
- <p>“Miss Russell!” I exclaimed.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Précisément.</i> I wish much to speak with her, so I send her the
- little note and make the appointment in your surgery. You are not
- annoyed with me?”</p>
-
- <p>“On the contrary,” I said. “That is, presuming I am allowed to be
- present at the interview?”</p>
-
- <p>“But naturally! In your own surgery!”</p>
-
- <p>“You know,” I said, throwing down the pincers I was holding, “it’s
- extraordinarily intriguing, the whole thing. Every new development that
- arises is like the shake you give to a kaleidoscope—the thing changes
- entirely in aspect. Now, why are you so anxious to see Miss Russell?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot raised his eyebrows.</p>
-
- <p>“Surely it is obvious?” he murmured.</p>
-
- <p>“There you go again,” I grumbled. “According to you everything is
- obvious. But you leave me walking about in a fog.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot shook his head genially at me.</p>
-
- <p>“You mock yourself at me. Take the matter of Mademoiselle Flora. The
- inspector was surprised—but you—you were not.”</p>
-
- <p>“I never dreamed of her being the thief,” I expostulated.</p>
-
- <p>“That—perhaps no. But I was watching your face and you were not—like
- Inspector Raglan—startled and incredulous.”</p>
-
- <p>I thought for a minute or two.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">242</span></p>
-
- <p>“Perhaps you are right,” I said at last. “All along I’ve felt that
- Flora was keeping back something—so the truth, when it came, was
- subconsciously expected. It upset Inspector Raglan very much indeed,
- poor man.”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! <i lang="fr">pour ça, oui</i>! The poor man must rearrange all his ideas.
- I profited by his state of mental chaos to induce him to grant me a
- little favor.”</p>
-
- <p>“What was that?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot took a sheet of notepaper from his pocket. Some words were
- written on it, and he read them aloud.</p>
-
- <p>“The police have, for some days, been seeking for Captain Ralph Paton,
- the nephew of Mr. Ackroyd of Fernly Park, whose death occurred under
- such tragic circumstances last Friday. Captain Paton has been found at
- Liverpool, where he was on the point of embarking for America.”</p>
-
- <p>He folded up the piece of paper again.</p>
-
- <p>“That, my friend, will be in the newspapers to-morrow morning.”</p>
-
- <p>I stared at him, dumbfounded.</p>
-
- <p>“But—but it isn’t true! He’s not at Liverpool!”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot beamed on me.</p>
-
- <p>“You have the intelligence so quick! No, he has not been found at
- Liverpool. Inspector Raglan was very loath to let me send this
- paragraph to the press, especially as I could not take him into my
- confidence. But I assured him most solemnly that very interesting
- results would follow its appearance in print, so he gave in, after
- stipulating that he was, on no account, to bear the responsibility.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">243</span></p>
-
- <p>I stared at Poirot. He smiled back at me.</p>
-
- <p>“It beats me,” I said at last, “what you expect to get out of that.”</p>
-
- <p>“You should employ your little gray cells,” said Poirot gravely.</p>
-
- <p>He rose and came across to the bench.</p>
-
- <p>“It is that you have really the love of the machinery,” he said, after
- inspecting the débris of my labors.</p>
-
- <p>Every man has his hobby. I immediately drew Poirot’s attention to my
- home-made wireless. Finding him sympathetic, I showed him one or two
- little inventions of my own—trifling things, but useful in the house.</p>
-
- <p>“Decidedly,” said Poirot, “you should be an inventor by trade, not a
- doctor. But I hear the bell—that is your patient. Let us go into the
- surgery.”</p>
-
- <p>Once before I had been struck by the remnants of beauty in the
- housekeeper’s face. This morning I was struck anew. Very simply dressed
- in black, tall, upright and independent as ever, with her big dark eyes
- and an unwonted flush of color in her usually pale cheeks, I realized
- that as a girl she must have been startlingly handsome.</p>
-
- <p>“Good-morning, mademoiselle,” said Poirot. “Will you be seated? Dr.
- Sheppard is so kind as to permit me the use of his surgery for a little
- conversation I am anxious to have with you.”</p>
-
- <p>Miss Russell sat down with her usual composure. If she felt any inward
- agitation, it did not display itself in any outward manifestation.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">244</span></p>
-
- <p>“It seems a queer way of doing things, if you’ll allow me to say so,”
- she remarked.</p>
-
- <p>“Miss Russell—I have news to give you.”</p>
-
- <p>“Indeed!”</p>
-
- <p>“Charles Kent has been arrested at Liverpool.”</p>
-
- <p>Not a muscle of her face moved. She merely opened her eyes a trifle
- wider, and asked, with a tinge of defiance:</p>
-
- <p>“Well, what of it?”</p>
-
- <p>But at that moment it came to me—the resemblance that had haunted me
- all along, something familiar in the defiance of Charles Kent’s manner.
- The two voices, one rough and coarse, the other painfully ladylike—were
- strangely the same in timbre. It was of Miss Russell that I had been
- reminded that night outside the gates of Fernly Park.</p>
-
- <p>I looked at Poirot, full of my discovery, and he gave me an
- imperceptible nod.</p>
-
- <p>In answer to Miss Russell’s question, he threw out his hands in a
- thoroughly French gesture.</p>
-
- <p>“I thought you might be interested, that is all,” he said mildly.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, I’m not particularly,” said Miss Russell. “Who is this Charles
- Kent anyway?”</p>
-
- <p>“He is a man, mademoiselle, who was at Fernly on the night of the
- murder.”</p>
-
- <p>“Really?”</p>
-
- <p>“Fortunately for him, he has an alibi. At a quarter to ten he was at a
- public-house a mile from here.”</p>
-
- <p>“Lucky for him,” commented Miss Russell.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">245</span></p>
-
- <p>“But we still do not know what he was doing at Fernly—who it was he
- went to meet, for instance.”</p>
-
- <p>“I’m afraid I can’t help you at all,” said the housekeeper politely.
- “Nothing came to <em>my</em> ears. If that is all——”</p>
-
- <p>She made a tentative movement as though to rise. Poirot stopped her.</p>
-
- <p>“It is not quite all,” he said smoothly. “This morning fresh
- developments have arisen. It seems now that Mr. Ackroyd was murdered,
- not at a quarter to ten, but <em>before</em>. Between ten minutes to
- nine, when Dr. Sheppard left, and a quarter to ten.”</p>
-
- <p>I saw the color drain from the housekeeper’s face, leaving it dead
- white. She leaned forward, her figure swaying.</p>
-
- <p>“But Miss Ackroyd said—Miss Ackroyd said——”</p>
-
- <p>“Miss Ackroyd has admitted that she was lying. She was never in the
- study at all that evening.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then——?”</p>
-
- <p>“Then it would seem that in this Charles Kent we have the man we are
- looking for. He came to Fernly, can give no account of what he was
- doing there——”</p>
-
- <p>“I can tell you what he was doing there. He never touched a hair of old
- Ackroyd’s head—he never went near the study. He didn’t do it, I tell
- you.”</p>
-
- <p>She was leaning forward. That iron self-control was broken through at
- last. Terror and desperation were in her face.</p>
-
- <p>“M. Poirot! M. Poirot! Oh, do believe me.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">246</span></p>
-
- <p>Poirot got up and came to her. He patted her reassuringly on the
- shoulder.</p>
-
- <p>“But yes—but yes, I will believe. I had to make you speak, you know.”</p>
-
- <p>For an instant suspicion flared up in her.</p>
-
- <p>“Is what you said true?”</p>
-
- <p>“That Charles Kent is suspected of the crime? Yes, that is true. You
- alone can save him, by telling the reason for his being at Fernly.”</p>
-
- <p>“He came to see me.” She spoke in a low, hurried voice. “I went out to
- meet him——”</p>
-
- <p>“In the summer-house, yes, I know.”</p>
-
- <p>“How do you know?”</p>
-
- <p>“Mademoiselle, it is the business of Hercule Poirot to know things. I
- know that you went out earlier in the evening, that you left a message
- in the summer-house to say what time you would be there.”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, I did. I had heard from him—saying he was coming. I dared not
- let him come to the house. I wrote to the address he gave me and said
- I would meet him in the summer-house, and described it to him so that
- he would be able to find it. Then I was afraid he might not wait there
- patiently, and I ran out and left a piece of paper to say I would be
- there about ten minutes past nine. I didn’t want the servants to see
- me, so I slipped out through the drawing-room window. As I came back, I
- met Dr. Sheppard, and I fancied that he would think it queer. I was out
- of breath, for I had been running. I had no idea that he was expected
- to dinner that night.”</p>
-
- <p>She paused.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">247</span></p>
-
- <p>“Go on,” said Poirot. “You went out to meet him at ten minutes past
- nine. What did you say to each other?”</p>
-
- <p>“It’s difficult. You see——”</p>
-
- <p>“Mademoiselle,” said Poirot, interrupting her, “in this matter I must
- have the whole truth. What you tell us need never go beyond these four
- walls. Dr. Sheppard will be discreet, and so shall I. See, I will help
- you. This Charles Kent, he is your son, is he not?”</p>
-
- <p>She nodded. The color had flamed into her cheeks.</p>
-
- <p>“No one has ever known. It was long ago—long ago—down in Kent. I was
- not married....”</p>
-
- <p>“So you took the name of the county as a surname for him. I understand.”</p>
-
- <p>“I got work. I managed to pay for his board and lodging. I never told
- him that I was his mother. But he turned out badly, he drank, then took
- to drugs. I managed to pay his passage out to Canada. I didn’t hear of
- him for a year or two. Then, somehow or other, he found out that I was
- his mother. He wrote asking me for money. Finally, I heard from him
- back in this country again. He was coming to see me at Fernly, he said.
- I dared not let him come to the house. I have always been considered
- so—so very respectable. If any one got an inkling—it would have been
- all up with my post as housekeeper. So I wrote to him in the way I have
- just told you.”</p>
-
- <p>“And in the morning you came to see Dr. Sheppard?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. I wondered if something could be done. He was not a bad
- boy—before he took to drugs.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">248</span></p>
-
- <p>“I see,” said Poirot. “Now let us go on with the story. He came that
- night to the summer-house?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, he was waiting for me when I got there. He was very rough and
- abusive. I had brought with me all the money I had, and I gave it to
- him. We talked a little, and then he went away.”</p>
-
- <p>“What time was that?”</p>
-
- <p>“It must have been between twenty and twenty-five minutes past nine. It
- was not yet half-past when I got back to the house.”</p>
-
- <p>“Which way did he go?”</p>
-
- <p>“Straight out the same way he came, by the path that joined the drive
- just inside the lodge gates.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“And you, what did you do?”</p>
-
- <p>“I went back to the house. Major Blunt was walking up and down the
- terrace smoking, so I made a detour to get round to the side door. It
- was then just on half-past nine, as I tell you.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded again. He made a note or two in a microscopic pocket-book.</p>
-
- <p>“I think that is all,” he said thoughtfully.</p>
-
- <p>“Ought I——” she hesitated. “Ought I to tell all this to Inspector
- Raglan?”</p>
-
- <p>“It may come to that. But let us not be in a hurry. Let us proceed
- slowly, with due order and method. Charles Kent is not yet formally
- charged with murder. Circumstances may arise which will render your
- story unnecessary.”</p>
-
- <p>Miss Russell rose.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">249</span></p>
-
- <p>“Thank you very much, M. Poirot,” she said. “You have been very
- kind—very kind indeed. You—you do believe me, don’t you? That Charles
- had nothing to do with this wicked murder!”</p>
-
- <p>“There seems no doubt that the man who was talking to Mr. Ackroyd in
- the library at nine-thirty could not possibly have been your son. Be of
- good courage, mademoiselle. All will yet be well.”</p>
-
- <p>Miss Russell departed. Poirot and I were left together.</p>
-
- <p>“So that’s that,” I said. “Every time we come back to Ralph Paton. How
- did you manage to spot Miss Russell as the person Charles Kent came to
- meet? Did you notice the resemblance?”</p>
-
- <p>“I had connected her with the unknown man long before we actually
- came face to face with him. As soon as we found that quill. The quill
- suggested dope, and I remembered your account of Miss Russell’s visit
- to you. Then I found the article on cocaine in that morning’s paper. It
- all seemed very clear. She had heard from some one that morning—some
- one addicted to drugs, she read the article in the paper, and she came
- to you to ask a few tentative questions. She mentioned cocaine, since
- the article in question was on cocaine. Then, when you seemed too
- interested, she switched hurriedly to the subject of detective stories
- and untraceable poisons. I suspected a son or a brother, or some other
- undesirable male relation. Ah! but I must go. It is the time of the
- lunch.”</p>
-
- <p>“Stay and lunch with us,” I suggested.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">250</span></p>
-
- <p>Poirot shook his head. A faint twinkle came into his eye.</p>
-
- <p>“Not again to-day. I should not like to force Mademoiselle Caroline to
- adopt a vegetarian diet two days in succession.”</p>
-
- <p>It occurred to me that there was not much which escaped Hercule Poirot.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">251</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">THE PARAGRAPH IN THE PAPER</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Caroline</span>, of course, had not failed to see Miss Russell come
- to the surgery door. I had anticipated this, and had ready an
- elaborate account of the lady’s bad knee. But Caroline was not in a
- cross-questioning mood. Her point of view was that she knew what Miss
- Russell had really come for and that <em>I</em> didn’t.</p>
-
- <p>“Pumping you, James,” said Caroline. “Pumping you in the most shameless
- manner, I’ve not a doubt. It’s no good interrupting. I dare say you
- hadn’t the least idea she was doing it even. Men <em>are</em> so simple.
- She knows that you are in M. Poirot’s confidence, and she wants to find
- out things. Do you know what I think, James?”</p>
-
- <p>“I couldn’t begin to imagine. You think so many extraordinary things.”</p>
-
- <p>“It’s no good being sarcastic. I think Miss Russell knows more about
- Mr. Ackroyd’s death than she is prepared to admit.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline leaned back triumphantly in her chair.</p>
-
- <p>“Do you really think so?” I said absently.</p>
-
- <p>“You are very dull to-day, James. No animation about you. It’s that
- liver of yours.”</p>
-
- <p>Our conversation then dealt with purely personal matters.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">252</span></p>
-
- <p>The paragraph inspired by Poirot duly appeared in our daily paper the
- next morning. I was in the dark as to its purpose, but its effect on
- Caroline was immense.</p>
-
- <p>She began by stating, most untruly, that she had said as much all
- along. I raised my eyebrows, but did not argue. Caroline, however, must
- have felt a prick of conscience, for she went on:—</p>
-
- <p>“I mayn’t have actually mentioned Liverpool, but I knew he’d try to get
- away to America. That’s what Crippen did.”</p>
-
- <p>“Without much success,” I reminded her.</p>
-
- <p>“Poor boy, and so they’ve caught him. I consider, James, that it’s your
- duty to see that he isn’t hung.”</p>
-
- <p>“What do you expect me to do?”</p>
-
- <p>“Why, you’re a medical man, aren’t you? You’ve known him from a boy
- upwards. Not mentally responsible. That’s the line to take, clearly. I
- read only the other day that they’re very happy in Broadmoor—it’s quite
- like a high-class club.”</p>
-
- <p>But Caroline’s words had reminded me of something.</p>
-
- <p>“I never knew that Poirot had an imbecile nephew?” I said curiously.</p>
-
- <p>“Didn’t you? Oh, he told me all about it. Poor lad. It’s a great grief
- to all the family. They’ve kept him at home so far, but it’s getting
- to such a pitch that they’re afraid he’ll have to go into some kind of
- institution.”</p>
-
- <p>“I suppose you know pretty well everything there is to know about
- Poirot’s family by this time,” I said, exasperated.</p>
-
- <p>“Pretty well,” said Caroline complacently. “It’s a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">253</span> great relief to
- people to be able to tell all their troubles to some one.”</p>
-
- <p>“It might be,” I said, “if they were ever allowed to do so
- spontaneously. Whether they enjoy having confidences screwed out of
- them by force is another matter.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline merely looked at me with the air of a Christian martyr
- enjoying martyrdom.</p>
-
- <p>“You are so self-contained, James,” she said. “You hate speaking out,
- or parting with any information yourself, and you think everybody else
- must be just like you. I should hope that I never screw confidences out
- of anybody. For instance, if M. Poirot comes in this afternoon, as he
- said he might do, I shall not dream of asking him who it was arrived at
- his house early this morning.”</p>
-
- <p>“Early this morning?” I queried.</p>
-
- <p>“Very early,” said Caroline. “Before the milk came. I just happened
- to be looking out of the window—the blind was flapping. It was a man.
- He came in a closed car, and he was all muffled up. I couldn’t get a
- glimpse of his face. But I will tell you <em>my</em> idea, and you’ll see
- that I’m right.”</p>
-
- <p>“What’s your idea?”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline dropped her voice mysteriously.</p>
-
- <p>“A Home Office expert,” she breathed.</p>
-
- <p>“A Home Office expert,” I said, amazed. “My dear Caroline!”</p>
-
- <p>“Mark my words, James, you’ll see that I’m right. That Russell woman
- was here that morning after your poisons. Roger Ackroyd might easily
- have been poisoned in his food that night.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">254</span></p>
-
- <p>I laughed out loud.</p>
-
- <p>“Nonsense,” I cried. “He was stabbed in the neck. You know that as well
- as I do.”</p>
-
- <p>“After death, James,” said Caroline; “to make a false clew.”</p>
-
- <p>“My good woman,” I said, “I examined the body, and I know what I’m
- talking about. That wound wasn’t inflicted after death—it was the cause
- of death, and you need make no mistake about it.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline merely continued to look omniscient, which so annoyed me that
- I went on:—</p>
-
- <p>“Perhaps you will tell me, Caroline, if I have a medical degree or if I
- have not?”</p>
-
- <p>“You have the medical degree, I dare say, James—at least, I mean I know
- you have. But you’ve no imagination whatever.”</p>
-
- <p>“Having endowed you with a treble portion, there was none left over for
- me,” I said dryly.</p>
-
- <p>I was amused to notice Caroline’s maneuvers that afternoon when Poirot
- duly arrived. My sister, without asking a direct question, skirted the
- subject of the mysterious guest in every way imaginable. By the twinkle
- in Poirot’s eyes, I saw that he realized her object. He remained
- blandly impervious, and blocked her bowling so successfully that she
- herself was at a loss how to proceed.</p>
-
- <p>Having, I suspect, quietly enjoyed the little game, he rose to his feet
- and suggested a walk.</p>
-
- <p>“It is that I need to reduce the figure a little,” he explained.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">255</span> “You
- will come with me, doctor? And perhaps later Miss Caroline will give us
- some tea.”</p>
-
- <p>“Delighted,” said Caroline. “Won’t your—er—guest come in also?”</p>
-
- <p>“You are too kind,” said Poirot. “But no, my friend reposes himself.
- Soon you must make his acquaintance.”</p>
-
- <p>“Quite an old friend of yours, so somebody told me,” said Caroline,
- making one last valiant effort.</p>
-
- <p>“Did they?” murmured Poirot “Well, we must start.”</p>
-
- <p>Our tramp took us in the direction of Fernly. I had guessed beforehand
- that it might do so. I was beginning to understand Poirot’s methods.
- Every little irrelevancy had a bearing upon the whole.</p>
-
- <p>“I have a commission for you, my friend,” he said at last. “To-night,
- at my house, I desire to have a little conference. You will attend,
- will you not?”</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“Good. I need also all those in the house—that is to say: Mrs. Ackroyd,
- Mademoiselle Flora, Major Blunt, M. Raymond. I want you to be my
- ambassador. This little reunion is fixed for nine o’clock. You will ask
- them—yes?”</p>
-
- <p>“With pleasure; but why not ask them yourself?”</p>
-
- <p>“Because they will then put the questions: Why? What for? They will
- demand what my idea is. And, as you know, my friend, I much dislike to
- have to explain my little ideas until the time comes.”</p>
-
- <p>I smiled a little.</p>
-
- <p>“My friend Hastings, he of whom I told you, used to say of me that I
- was the human oyster. But he was unjust.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">256</span> Of facts, I keep nothing to
- myself. But to every one his own interpretation of them.”</p>
-
- <p>“When do you want me to do this?”</p>
-
- <p>“Now, if you will. We are close to the house.”</p>
-
- <p>“Aren’t you coming in?”</p>
-
- <p>“No, me, I will promenade myself in the grounds. I will rejoin you by
- the lodge gates in a quarter of an hour’s time.”</p>
-
- <p>I nodded, and set off on my task. The only member of the family at home
- proved to be Mrs. Ackroyd, who was sipping an early cup of tea. She
- received me very graciously.</p>
-
- <p>“So grateful to you, doctor,” she murmured, “for clearing up that
- little matter with M. Poirot. But life is one trouble after another.
- You have heard about Flora, of course?”</p>
-
- <p>“What exactly?” I asked cautiously.</p>
-
- <p>“This new engagement. Flora and Hector Blunt. Of course not such a good
- match as Ralph would have been. But after all, happiness comes first.
- What dear Flora needs is an older man—some one steady and reliable, and
- then Hector is really a very distinguished man in his way. You saw the
- news of Ralph’s arrest in the paper this morning?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes,” I said, “I did.”</p>
-
- <p>“Horrible.” Mrs. Ackroyd closed her eyes and shuddered. “Geoffrey
- Raymond was in a terrible way. Rang up Liverpool. But they wouldn’t
- tell him anything at the police station there. In fact, they said
- they hadn’t arrested Ralph at all. Mr. Raymond insists that it’s all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">257</span>
- a mistake—a—what do they call it?—<em>canard</em> of the newspaper’s.
- I’ve forbidden it to be mentioned before the servants. Such a terrible
- disgrace. Fancy if Flora had actually been married to him.”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd shut her eyes in anguish. I began to wonder how soon I
- should be able to deliver Poirot’s invitation.</p>
-
- <p>Before I had time to speak, Mrs. Ackroyd was off again.</p>
-
- <p>“You were here yesterday, weren’t you, with that dreadful Inspector
- Raglan? Brute of a man—he terrified Flora into saying she took that
- money from poor Roger’s room. And the matter was so simple, really. The
- dear child wanted to borrow a few pounds, didn’t like to disturb her
- uncle since he’d given strict orders against it, but knowing where he
- kept his notes she went there and took what she needed.”</p>
-
- <p>“Is that Flora’s account of the matter?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“My dear doctor, you know what girls are nowadays. So easily acted on
- by suggestion. You, of course, know all about hypnosis and that sort of
- thing. The inspector shouts at her, says the word ‘steal’ over and over
- again, until the poor child gets an inhibition—or is it a complex?—I
- always mix up those two words—and actually thinks herself that she has
- stolen the money. I saw at once how it was. But I can’t be too thankful
- for the whole misunderstanding in one way—it seems to have brought
- those two together—Hector and Flora, I mean. And I assure you that I
- have been very much worried about Flora in the past: why, at one time
- I actually<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">258</span> thought there was going to be some kind of understanding
- between her and young Raymond. Just think of it!” Mrs. Ackroyd’s voice
- rose in shrill horror. “A private secretary—with practically no means
- of his own.”</p>
-
- <p>“It would have been a severe blow to you,” I said. “Now, Mrs. Ackroyd,
- I’ve got a message for you from M. Hercule Poirot.”</p>
-
- <p>“For me?”</p>
-
- <p>Mrs. Ackroyd looked quite alarmed.</p>
-
- <p>I hastened to reassure her, and I explained what Poirot wanted.</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly,” said Mrs. Ackroyd rather doubtfully, “I suppose we must
- come if M. Poirot says so. But what is it all about? I like to know
- beforehand.”</p>
-
- <p>I assured the lady truthfully that I myself did not know any more than
- she did.</p>
-
- <p>“Very well,” said Mrs. Ackroyd at last, rather grudgingly, “I will tell
- the others, and we will be there at nine o’clock.”</p>
-
- <p>Thereupon I took my leave, and joined Poirot at the agreed
- meeting-place.</p>
-
- <p>“I’ve been longer than a quarter of an hour, I’m afraid,” I remarked.
- “But once that good lady starts talking it’s a matter of the utmost
- difficulty to get a word in edgeways.”</p>
-
- <p>“It is of no matter,” said Poirot. “Me, I have been well amused. This
- park is magnificent.”</p>
-
- <p>We set off homewards. When we arrived, to our great surprise Caroline,
- who had evidently been watching for us, herself opened the door.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">259</span></p>
-
- <p>She put her fingers to her lips. Her face was full of importance and
- excitement.</p>
-
- <p>“Ursula Bourne,” she said, “the parlormaid from Fernly. She’s here!
- I’ve put her in the dining-room. She’s in a terrible way, poor thing.
- Says she must see M. Poirot at once. I’ve done all I could. Taken her a
- cup of hot tea. It really goes to one’s heart to see any one in such a
- state.”</p>
-
- <p>“In the dining-room?” asked Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“This way,” I said, and flung open the door.</p>
-
- <p>Ursula Bourne was sitting by the table. Her arms were spread out in
- front of her, and she had evidently just lifted her head from where it
- had been buried. Her eyes were red with weeping.</p>
-
- <p>“Ursula Bourne,” I murmured.</p>
-
- <p>But Poirot went past me with outstretched hands.</p>
-
- <p>“No,” he said, “that is not quite right, I think. It is not Ursula
- Bourne, is it, my child—but Ursula Paton? Mrs. Ralph Paton.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">260</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">URSULA’S STORY</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">For</span> a moment or two the girl looked mutely at Poirot. Then, her reserve
- breaking down completely, she nodded her head once, and burst into an
- outburst of sobs.</p>
-
- <p>Caroline pushed past me, and putting her arm round the girl, patted her
- on the shoulder.</p>
-
- <p>“There, there, my dear,” she said soothingly, “it will be all right.
- You’ll see—everything will be all right.”</p>
-
- <p>Buried under curiosity and scandal-mongering there is a lot of kindness
- in Caroline. For the moment, even the interest of Poirot’s revelation
- was lost in the sight of the girl’s distress.</p>
-
- <p>Presently Ursula sat up and wiped her eyes.</p>
-
- <p>“This is very weak and silly of me,” she said.</p>
-
- <p>“No, no, my child,” said Poirot kindly. “We can all realize the strain
- of this last week.”</p>
-
- <p>“It must have been a terrible ordeal,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“And then to find that you knew,” continued Ursula. “How did you know?
- Was it Ralph who told you?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“You know what brought me to you to-night,” went on the girl.
- “<em>This</em>——”</p>
-
- <p>She held out a crumpled piece of newspaper, and I recognized the
- paragraph that Poirot had had inserted.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">261</span></p>
-
- <p>“It says that Ralph has been arrested. So everything is useless. I need
- not pretend any longer.”</p>
-
- <p>“Newspaper paragraphs are not always true, mademoiselle,” murmured
- Poirot, having the grace to look ashamed of himself. “All the same, I
- think you will do well to make a clean breast of things. The truth is
- what we need now.”</p>
-
- <p>The girl hesitated, looking at him doubtfully.</p>
-
- <p>“You do not trust me,” said Poirot gently. “Yet all the same you came
- here to find me, did you not? Why was that?”</p>
-
- <p>“Because I don’t believe that Ralph did it,” said the girl in a very
- low voice. “And I think that you are clever, and will find out the
- truth. And also——”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes?”</p>
-
- <p>“I think you are kind.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded his head several times.</p>
-
- <p>“It is very good that—yes, it is very good. Listen, I do in verity
- believe that this husband of yours is innocent—but the affair marches
- badly. If I am to save him, I must know all there is to know—even if it
- should seem to make the case against him blacker than before.”</p>
-
- <p>“How well you understand,” said Ursula.</p>
-
- <p>“So you will tell me the whole story, will you not? From the beginning.”</p>
-
- <p>“You’re not going to send <em>me</em> away, I hope,” said Caroline,
- settling herself comfortably in an arm-chair. “What I want to know,”
- she continued, “is why this child was masquerading as a parlormaid?”</p>
-
- <p>“Masquerading?” I queried.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">262</span></p>
-
- <p>“That’s what I said. Why did you do it, child? For a wager?”</p>
-
- <p>“For a living,” said Ursula dryly.</p>
-
- <p>And encouraged, she began the story which I reproduce here in my own
- words.</p>
-
- <p>Ursula Bourne, it seemed, was one of a family of seven—impoverished
- Irish gentlefolk. On the death of her father, most of the girls were
- cast out into the world to earn their own living. Ursula’s eldest
- sister was married to Captain Folliott. It was she whom I had seen
- that Sunday, and the cause of her embarrassment was clear enough now.
- Determined to earn her living and not attracted to the idea of being a
- nursery governess—the one profession open to an untrained girl, Ursula
- preferred the job of parlormaid. She scorned to label herself a “lady
- parlormaid.” She would be the real thing, her reference being supplied
- by her sister. At Fernly, despite an aloofness which, as has been seen,
- caused some comment, she was a success at her job—quick, competent, and
- thorough.</p>
-
- <p>“I enjoyed the work,” she explained. “And I had plenty of time to
- myself.”</p>
-
- <p>And then came her meeting with Ralph Paton, and the love affair which
- culminated in a secret marriage. Ralph had persuaded her into that,
- somewhat against her will. He had declared that his stepfather would
- not hear of his marrying a penniless girl. Better to be married
- secretly, and break the news to him at some later and more favorable
- minute.</p>
-
- <p>And so the deed was done, and Ursula Bourne became<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">263</span> Ursula Paton.
- Ralph had declared that he meant to pay off his debts, find a job, and
- then, when he was in a position to support her, and independent of his
- adopted father, they would break the news to him.</p>
-
- <p>But to people like Ralph Paton, turning over a new leaf is easier in
- theory than in practice. He hoped that his stepfather, whilst still
- in ignorance of the marriage, might be persuaded to pay his debts and
- put him on his feet again. But the revelation of the amount of Ralph’s
- liabilities merely enraged Roger Ackroyd, and he refused to do anything
- at all. Some months passed, and then Ralph was bidden once more to
- Fernly. Roger Ackroyd did not beat about the bush. It was the desire of
- his heart that Ralph should marry Flora, and he put the matter plainly
- before the young man.</p>
-
- <p>And here it was that the innate weakness of Ralph Paton showed itself.
- As always, he grasped at the easy, the immediate solution. As far
- as I could make out, neither Flora nor Ralph made any pretence of
- love. It was, on both sides, a business arrangement. Roger Ackroyd
- dictated his wishes—they agreed to them. Flora accepted a chance of
- liberty, money, and an enlarged horizon, Ralph, of course, was playing
- a different game. But he was in a very awkward hole financially. He
- seized at the chance. His debts would be paid. He could start again
- with a clean sheet. His was not a nature to envisage the future, but
- I gather that he saw vaguely the engagement with Flora being broken
- off after a decent interval had elapsed. Both Flora and he stipulated
- that it should be kept a secret for the present. He was anxious to
- conceal it from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">264</span> Ursula. He felt instinctively that her nature, strong
- and resolute, with an inherent distaste for duplicity, was not one to
- welcome such a course.</p>
-
- <p>Then came the crucial moment when Roger Ackroyd, always high-handed,
- decided to announce the engagement. He said no word of his intention
- to Ralph—only to Flora, and Flora, apathetic, raised no objection. On
- Ursula, the news fell like a bombshell. Summoned by her, Ralph came
- hurriedly down from town. They met in the wood, where part of their
- conversation was overheard by my sister. Ralph implored her to keep
- silent for a little while longer, Ursula was equally determined to have
- done with concealments. She would tell Mr. Ackroyd the truth without
- any further delay. Husband and wife parted acrimoniously.</p>
-
- <p>Ursula, steadfast in her purpose, sought an interview with Roger
- Ackroyd that very afternoon, and revealed the truth to him. Their
- interview was a stormy one—it might have been even more stormy had not
- Roger Ackroyd been already obsessed with his own troubles. It was bad
- enough, however. Ackroyd was not the kind of man to forgive the deceit
- that had been practiced upon him. His rancor was mainly directed to
- Ralph, but Ursula came in for her share, since he regarded her as a
- girl who had deliberately tried to “entrap” the adopted son of a very
- wealthy man. Unforgivable things were said on both sides.</p>
-
- <p>That same evening Ursula met Ralph by appointment in the small
- summer-house, stealing out from the house by the side door in order to
- do so. Their interview was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">265</span> made up of reproaches on both sides. Ralph
- charged Ursula with having irretrievably ruined his prospects by her
- ill-timed revelation. Ursula reproached Ralph with his duplicity.</p>
-
- <p>They parted at last. A little over half an hour later came the
- discovery of Roger Ackroyd’s body. Since that night Ursula had neither
- seen nor heard from Ralph.</p>
-
- <p>As the story unfolded itself, I realized more and more what a damning
- series of facts it was. Alive, Ackroyd could hardly have failed to
- alter his will—I knew him well enough to realize that to do so would
- be his first thought. His death came in the nick of time for Ralph and
- Ursula Paton. Small wonder the girl had held her tongue, and played her
- part so consistently.</p>
-
- <p>My meditations were interrupted. It was Poirot’s voice speaking, and I
- knew from the gravity of his tone that he, too, was fully alive to the
- implications of the position.</p>
-
- <p>“Mademoiselle, I must ask you one question, and you must answer it
- truthfully, for on it everything may hang: What time was it when you
- parted from Captain Ralph Paton in the summer-house? Now, take a little
- minute so that your answer may be very exact.”</p>
-
- <p>The girl gave a half laugh, bitter enough in all conscience.</p>
-
- <p>“Do you think I haven’t gone over that again and again in my own mind?
- It was just half-past nine when I went out to meet him. Major Blunt
- was walking up and down the terrace, so I had to go round through the
- bushes to avoid him. It must have been about twenty-seven minutes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">266</span> to
- ten when I reached the summer-house. Ralph was waiting for me. I was
- with him ten minutes—not longer, for it was just a quarter to ten when
- I got back to the house.”</p>
-
- <p>I saw now the insistence of her question the other day. If only Ackroyd
- could have been proved to have been killed before a quarter to ten, and
- not after.</p>
-
- <p>I saw the reflection of that thought in Poirot’s next question.</p>
-
- <p>“Who left the summer-house first?”</p>
-
- <p>“I did.”</p>
-
- <p>“Leaving Ralph Paton in the summer-house?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes—but you don’t think——”</p>
-
- <p>“Mademoiselle, it is of no importance what I think. What did you do
- when you got back to the house?”</p>
-
- <p>“I went up to my room.”</p>
-
- <p>“And stayed there until when?”</p>
-
- <p>“Until about ten o’clock.”</p>
-
- <p>“Is there any one who can prove that?”</p>
-
- <p>“Prove? That I was in my room, you mean? Oh! no. But surely—oh! I see,
- they might think—they might think——”</p>
-
- <p>I saw the dawning horror in her eyes.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot finished the sentence for her.</p>
-
- <p>“That it was <em>you</em> who entered by the window and stabbed Mr.
- Ackroyd as he sat in his chair? Yes, they might think just that.”</p>
-
- <p>“Nobody but a fool would think any such thing,” said Caroline
- indignantly.</p>
-
- <p>She patted Ursula on the shoulder.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">267</span></p>
-
- <p>The girl had her face hidden in her hands.</p>
-
- <p>“Horrible,” she was murmuring. “Horrible.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline gave her a friendly shake.</p>
-
- <p>“Don’t worry, my dear,” she said. “M. Poirot doesn’t think that really.
- As for that husband of yours, I don’t think much of him, and I tell you
- so candidly. Running away and leaving you to face the music.”</p>
-
- <p>But Ursula shook her head energetically.</p>
-
- <p>“Oh, no,” she cried. “It wasn’t like that at all. Ralph would not run
- away on his own account. I see now. If he heard of his stepfather’s
- murder, he might think himself that I had done it.”</p>
-
- <p>“He wouldn’t think any such thing,” said Caroline.</p>
-
- <p>“I was so cruel to him that night—so hard and bitter. I wouldn’t listen
- to what he was trying to say—wouldn’t believe that he really cared.
- I just stood there telling him what I thought of him, and saying the
- coldest, cruelest things that came into my mind—trying my best to hurt
- him.”</p>
-
- <p>“Do him no harm,” said Caroline. “Never worry about what you say to a
- man. They’re so conceited that they never believe you mean it if it’s
- unflattering.”</p>
-
- <p>Ursula went on, nervously twisting and untwisting her hands.</p>
-
- <p>“When the murder was discovered and he didn’t come forward, I was
- terribly upset. Just for a moment I wondered—but then I knew he
- couldn’t—he couldn’t.... But I wished he would come forward and say
- openly that he’d had nothing to do with it. I knew that he was very
- fond of Dr. Sheppard, and I fancied that perhaps Dr. Sheppard might
- know where he was hiding.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">268</span></p>
-
- <p>She turned to me.</p>
-
- <p>“That’s why I said what I did to you that day. I thought, if you knew
- where he was, you might pass on the message to him.”</p>
-
- <p>“I?” I exclaimed.</p>
-
- <p>“Why should James know where he was?” demanded Caroline sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“It was very unlikely, I know,” admitted Ursula, “but Ralph had often
- spoken of Dr. Sheppard, and I knew that he would be likely to consider
- him as his best friend in King’s Abbot.”</p>
-
- <p>“My dear child,” I said, “I have not the least idea where Ralph Paton
- is at the present moment.”</p>
-
- <p>“That is true enough,” said Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>“But——” Ursula held out the newspaper cutting in a puzzled fashion.</p>
-
- <p>“Ah! that,” said Poirot, slightly embarrassed; “a <i lang="fr">bagatelle</i>,
- mademoiselle. A <i lang="fr">rien du tout</i>. Not for a moment do I believe that
- Ralph Paton has been arrested.”</p>
-
- <p>“But then——” began the girl slowly.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot went on quickly:—</p>
-
- <p>“There is one thing I should like to know—did Captain Paton wear shoes
- or boots that night?”</p>
-
- <p>Ursula shook her head.</p>
-
- <p>“I can’t remember.”</p>
-
- <p>“A pity! But how should you? Now, madame,” he smiled at her, his head
- on one side, his forefinger wagging eloquently, “no questions. And
- do not torment yourself. Be of good courage, and place your faith in
- Hercule Poirot.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">269</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">POIROT’S LITTLE REUNION</div>
-
- <p class="noindent">“<span class="smcap">And</span> now,” said Caroline, rising, “that child is coming upstairs to lie
- down. Don’t you worry, my dear. M. Poirot will do everything he can for
- you—be sure of that.”</p>
-
- <p>“I ought to go back to Fernly,” said Ursula uncertainly.</p>
-
- <p>But Caroline silenced her protests with a firm hand.</p>
-
- <p>“Nonsense. You’re in my hands for the time being. You’ll stay here for
- the present, anyway—eh, M. Poirot?”</p>
-
- <p>“It will be the best plan,” agreed the little Belgian. “This evening I
- shall want mademoiselle—I beg her pardon, madame—to attend my little
- reunion. Nine o’clock at my house. It is most necessary that she should
- be there.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline nodded, and went with Ursula out of the room. The door shut
- behind them. Poirot dropped down into a chair again.</p>
-
- <p>“So far, so good,” he said. “Things are straightening themselves out.”</p>
-
- <p>“They’re getting to look blacker and blacker against Ralph Paton,” I
- observed gloomily.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">270</span></p>
-
- <p>“Yes, that is so. But it was to be expected, was it not?”</p>
-
- <p>I looked at him, slightly puzzled by the remark. He was leaning back in
- the chair, his eyes half closed, the tips of his fingers just touching
- each other. Suddenly he sighed and shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“What is it?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>“It is that there are moments when a great longing for my friend
- Hastings comes over me. That is the friend of whom I spoke to you—the
- one who resides now in the Argentine. Always, when I have had a big
- case, he has been by my side. And he has helped me—yes, often he has
- helped me. For he had a knack, that one, of stumbling over the truth
- unawares—without noticing it himself, <i lang="fr">bien entendu</i>. At times he
- has said something particularly foolish, and behold that foolish remark
- has revealed the truth to me! And then, too, it was his practice to
- keep a written record of the cases that proved interesting.”</p>
-
- <p>I gave a slight embarrassed cough.</p>
-
- <p>“As far as that goes,” I began, and then stopped.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot sat upright in his chair. His eyes sparkled.</p>
-
- <p>“But yes? What is it that you would say?”</p>
-
- <p>“Well, as a matter of fact, I’ve read some of Captain Hastings’s
- narratives, and I thought, why not try my hand at something of the same
- kind? Seemed a pity not to—unique opportunity—probably the only time
- I’ll be mixed up with anything of this kind.”</p>
-
- <p>I felt myself getting hotter and hotter, and more and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">271</span> more incoherent,
- as I floundered through the above speech.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot sprang from his chair. I had a moment’s terror that he was going
- to embrace me French fashion, but mercifully he refrained.</p>
-
- <p>“But this is magnificent—you have then written down your impressions of
- the case as you went along?”</p>
-
- <p>I nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Epatant!</i>” cried Poirot. “Let me see them—this instant.”</p>
-
- <p>I was not quite prepared for such a sudden demand. I racked my brains
- to remember certain details.</p>
-
- <p>“I hope you won’t mind,” I stammered. “I may have been a
- little—er—<em>personal</em> now and then.”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh! I comprehend perfectly; you have referred to me as comic—as,
- perhaps, ridiculous now and then? It matters not at all. Hastings,
- he also was not always polite. Me, I have the mind above such
- trivialities.”</p>
-
- <p>Still somewhat doubtful, I rummaged in the drawers of my desk and
- produced an untidy pile of manuscript which I handed over to him. With
- an eye on possible publication in the future, I had divided the work
- into chapters, and the night before I had brought it up to date with an
- account of Miss Russell’s visit. Poirot had therefore twenty chapters.</p>
-
- <p>I left him with them.</p>
-
- <p>I was obliged to go out to a case at some distance away, and it was
- past eight o’clock when I got back, to be greeted with a plate of hot
- dinner on a tray, and the announcement that Poirot and my sister had
- supped together<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">272</span> at half-past seven, and that the former had then gone
- to my workshop to finish his reading of the manuscript.</p>
-
- <p>“I hope, James,” said my sister, “that you’ve been careful in what you
- say about me in it?”</p>
-
- <p>My jaw dropped. I had not been careful at all.</p>
-
- <p>“Not that it matters very much,” said Caroline, reading my expression
- correctly. “M. Poirot will know what to think. He understands me much
- better than you do.”</p>
-
- <p>I went into the workshop. Poirot was sitting by the window. The
- manuscript lay neatly piled on a chair beside him. He laid his hand on
- it and spoke.</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Eh bien</i>,” he said, “I congratulate you—on your modesty!”</p>
-
- <p>“Oh!” I said, rather taken aback.</p>
-
- <p>“And on your reticence,” he added.</p>
-
- <p>I said “Oh!” again.</p>
-
- <p>“Not so did Hastings write,” continued my friend. “On every page, many,
- many times was the word ‘I.’ What <em>he</em> thought—what <em>he</em> did.
- But you—you have kept your personality in the background; only once or
- twice does it obtrude—in scenes of home life, shall we say?”</p>
-
- <p>I blushed a little before the twinkle in his eye.</p>
-
- <p>“What do you really think of the stuff?” I asked nervously.</p>
-
- <p>“You want my candid opinion?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot laid his jesting manner aside.</p>
-
- <p>“A very meticulous and accurate account,” he said kindly. “You have
- recorded all the facts faithfully and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">273</span> exactly—though you have shown
- yourself becomingly reticent as to your own share in them.”</p>
-
- <p>“And it has helped you?”</p>
-
- <p>“Yes. I may say that it has helped me considerably. Come, we must go
- over to my house and set the stage for my little performance.”</p>
-
- <p>Caroline was in the hall. I think she hoped that she might be invited
- to accompany us. Poirot dealt with the situation tactfully.</p>
-
- <p>“I should much like to have had you present, mademoiselle,” he said
- regretfully, “but at this juncture it would not be wise. See you, all
- these people to-night are suspects. Amongst them, I shall find the
- person who killed Mr. Ackroyd.”</p>
-
- <p>“You really believe that?” I said incredulously.</p>
-
- <p>“I see that you do not,” said Poirot dryly. “Not yet do you appreciate
- Hercule Poirot at his true worth.”</p>
-
- <p>At that minute Ursula came down the staircase.</p>
-
- <p>“You are ready, my child?” said Poirot. “That is good. We will go to
- my house together. Mademoiselle Caroline, believe me, I do everything
- possible to render you service. Good-evening.”</p>
-
- <p>We went out, leaving Caroline, rather like a dog who has been refused a
- walk, standing on the front door step gazing after us.</p>
-
- <p>The sitting-room at The Larches had been got ready. On the table were
- various <em>sirops</em> and glasses. Also a plate of biscuits. Several
- chairs had been brought in from the other room.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot ran to and fro rearranging things. Pulling out<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">274</span> a chair here,
- altering the position of a lamp there, occasionally stooping to
- straighten one of the mats that covered the floor. He was specially
- fussy over the lighting. The lamps were arranged in such a way as to
- throw a clear light on the side of the room where the chairs were
- grouped, at the same time leaving the other end of the room, where I
- presumed Poirot himself would sit, in a dim twilight.</p>
-
- <p>Ursula and I watched him. Presently a bell was heard.</p>
-
- <p>“They arrive,” said Poirot. “Good, all is in readiness.”</p>
-
- <p>The door opened and the party from Fernly filed in. Poirot went forward
- and greeted Mrs. Ackroyd and Flora.</p>
-
- <p>“It is most good of you to come,” he said. “And Major Blunt and Mr.
- Raymond.”</p>
-
- <p>The secretary was debonair as ever.</p>
-
- <p>“What’s the great idea?” he said, laughing. “Some scientific machine?
- Do we have bands round our wrists which register guilty heart-beats?
- There is such an invention, isn’t there?”</p>
-
- <p>“I have read of it, yes,” admitted Poirot. “But me, I am old-fashioned.
- I use the old methods. I work only with the little gray cells. Now let
- us begin—but first I have an announcement to make to you all.”</p>
-
- <p>He took Ursula’s hand and drew her forward.</p>
-
- <p>“This lady is Mrs. Ralph Paton. She was married to Captain Paton last
- March.”</p>
-
- <p>A little shriek burst from Mrs. Ackroyd.</p>
-
- <p>“Ralph! Married! Last March! Oh! but it’s absurd. How could he be?”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">275</span></p>
-
- <p>She stared at Ursula as though she had never seen her before.</p>
-
- <p>“Married to Bourne?” she said. “Really, M. Poirot, I don’t believe you.”</p>
-
- <p>Ursula flushed and began to speak, but Flora forestalled her.</p>
-
- <p>Going quickly to the other girl’s side, she passed her hand through her
- arm.</p>
-
- <p>“You must not mind our being surprised,” she said. “You see, we had no
- idea of such a thing. You and Ralph have kept your secret very well. I
- am—very glad about it.”</p>
-
- <p>“You are very kind, Miss Ackroyd,” said Ursula in a low voice, “and
- you have every right to be exceedingly angry. Ralph behaved very
- badly—especially to you.”</p>
-
- <p>“You needn’t worry about that,” said Flora, giving her arm a consoling
- little pat. “Ralph was in a corner and took the only way out. I should
- probably have done the same in his place. I do think he might have
- trusted me with the secret, though. I wouldn’t have let him down.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot rapped gently on a table and cleared his throat significantly.</p>
-
- <p>“The board meeting’s going to begin,” said Flora. “M. Poirot hints that
- we mustn’t talk. But just tell me one thing. Where is Ralph? You must
- know if any one does.”</p>
-
- <p>“But I don’t,” cried Ursula, almost in a wail. “That’s just it, I
- don’t.”</p>
-
- <p>“Isn’t he detained at Liverpool?” asked Raymond. “It said so in the
- paper.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">276</span></p>
-
- <p>“He is not at Liverpool,” said Poirot shortly.</p>
-
- <p>“In fact,” I remarked, “no one knows where he is.”</p>
-
- <p>“Excepting Hercule Poirot, eh?” said Raymond.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot replied seriously to the other’s banter.</p>
-
- <p>“Me, I know everything. Remember that.”</p>
-
- <p>Geoffrey Raymond lifted his eyebrows.</p>
-
- <p>“Everything?” He whistled. “Whew! that’s a tall order.”</p>
-
- <p>“Do you mean to say you can really guess where Ralph Paton is hiding?”
- I asked incredulously.</p>
-
- <p>“You call it guessing. I call it knowing, my friend.”</p>
-
- <p>“In Cranchester?” I hazarded.</p>
-
- <p>“No,” replied Poirot gravely, “not in Cranchester.”</p>
-
- <p>He said no more, but at a gesture from him the assembled party took
- their seats. As they did so, the door opened once more and two other
- people came in and sat down near the door. They were Parker and the
- housekeeper.</p>
-
- <p>“The number is complete,” said Poirot. “Every one is here.”</p>
-
- <p>There was a ring of satisfaction in his tone. And with the sound of it
- I saw a ripple of something like uneasiness pass over all those faces
- grouped at the other end of the room. There was a suggestion in all
- this as of a trap—a trap that had closed.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot read from a list in an important manner.</p>
-
- <p>“Mrs. Ackroyd, Miss Flora Ackroyd, Major Blunt, Mr. Geoffrey Raymond,
- Mrs. Ralph Paton, John Parker, Elizabeth Russell.”</p>
-
- <p>He laid the paper down on the table.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">277</span></p>
-
- <p>“What’s the meaning of all this?” began Raymond.</p>
-
- <p>“The list I have just read,” said Poirot, “is a list of suspected
- persons. Every one of you present had the opportunity to kill Mr.
- Ackroyd——”</p>
-
- <p>With a cry Mrs. Ackroyd sprang up, her throat working.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t like it,” she wailed. “I don’t like it. I would much prefer to
- go home.”</p>
-
- <p>“You cannot go home, madame,” said Poirot sternly, “until you have
- heard what I have to say.”</p>
-
- <p>He paused a moment, then cleared his throat.</p>
-
- <p>“I will start at the beginning. When Miss Ackroyd asked me to
- investigate the case, I went up to Fernly Park with the good Dr.
- Sheppard. I walked with him along the terrace, where I was shown the
- footprints on the window-sill. From there Inspector Raglan took me
- along the path which leads to the drive. My eye was caught by a little
- summer-house, and I searched it thoroughly. I found two things—a scrap
- of starched cambric and an empty goose quill. The scrap of cambric
- immediately suggested to me a maid’s apron. When Inspector Raglan
- showed me his list of the people in the house, I noticed at once that
- one of the maids—Ursula Bourne, the parlormaid—had no real alibi.
- According to her own story, she was in her bedroom from nine-thirty
- until ten. But supposing that instead she was in the summer-house? If
- so, she must have gone there to meet some one. Now we know from Dr.
- Sheppard that some one from outside <em>did</em> come to the house that
- night—the stranger whom he met just by the gate. At a first glance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">278</span>
- it would seem that our problem was solved, and that the stranger went
- to the summer-house to meet Ursula Bourne. It was fairly certain that
- he <em>did</em> go to the summer-house because of the goose quill. That
- suggested at once to my mind a taker of drugs—and one who had acquired
- the habit on the other side of the Atlantic where sniffing ‘snow’ is
- more common than in this country. The man whom Dr. Sheppard met had an
- American accent, which fitted in with that supposition.</p>
-
- <p>“But I was held up by one point. <em>The times did not fit.</em> Ursula
- Bourne could certainly not have gone to the summer-house before
- nine-thirty, whereas the man must have got there by a few minutes past
- nine. I could, of course, assume that he waited there for half an hour.
- The only alternative supposition was that there had been two separate
- meetings in the summer-house that night. <i lang="fr">Eh bien</i>, as soon as
- I went into that alternative I found several significant facts. I
- discovered that Miss Russell, the housekeeper, had visited Dr. Sheppard
- that morning, and had displayed a good deal of interest in cures for
- victims of the drug habit. Taking that in conjunction with the goose
- quill, I assumed that the man in question came to Fernly to meet the
- housekeeper, and not Ursula Bourne. Who, then, did Ursula Bourne come
- to the rendezvous to meet? I was not long in doubt. First I found a
- ring—a wedding ring—with ‘From R.’ and a date inside it. Then I learnt
- that Ralph Paton had been seen coming up the path which led to the
- summer-house at twenty-five minutes past nine, and I also heard of
- a certain conversation which had taken place in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">279</span> the wood near the
- village that very afternoon—a conversation between Ralph Paton and
- some unknown girl. So I had my facts succeeding each other in a neat
- and orderly manner. A secret marriage, an engagement announced on the
- day of the tragedy, the stormy interview in the wood, and the meeting
- arranged for the summer-house that night.</p>
-
- <p>“Incidentally this proved to me one thing, that both Ralph Paton and
- Ursula Bourne (or Paton) had the strongest motives for wishing Mr.
- Ackroyd out of the way. And it also made one other point unexpectedly
- clear. It could not have been Ralph Paton who was with Mr. Ackroyd in
- the study at nine-thirty.</p>
-
- <p>“So we come to another and most interesting aspect of the crime. Who
- was it in the room with Mr. Ackroyd at nine-thirty? Not Ralph Paton,
- who was in the summer-house with his wife. Not Charles Kent, who
- had already left. Who, then? I posed my cleverest—my most audacious
- question: <em>Was any one with him?</em>”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot leaned forward and shot the last words triumphantly at us,
- drawing back afterwards with the air of one who has made a decided hit.</p>
-
- <p>Raymond, however, did not seem impressed, and lodged a mild protest.</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t know if you’re trying to make me out a liar, M. Poirot, but
- the matter does not rest on my evidence alone—except perhaps as to the
- exact words used. Remember, Major Blunt also heard Mr. Ackroyd talking
- to some one. He was on the terrace outside, and couldn’t<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">280</span> catch the
- words clearly, but he distinctly heard the voices.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“I have not forgotten,” he said quietly. “But Major Blunt was under the
- impression that it was <em>you</em> to whom Mr. Ackroyd was speaking.”</p>
-
- <p>For a moment Raymond seemed taken aback. Then he recovered himself.</p>
-
- <p>“Blunt knows now that he was mistaken,” he said.</p>
-
- <p>“Exactly,” agreed the other man.</p>
-
- <p>“Yet there must have been some reason for his thinking so,” mused
- Poirot. “Oh! no,” he held up his hand in protest, “I know the reason
- you will give—but it is not enough. We must seek elsewhere. I will put
- it this way. From the beginning of the case I have been struck by one
- thing—the nature of those words which Mr. Raymond overheard. It has
- been amazing to me that no one has commented on them—has seen anything
- odd about them.”</p>
-
- <p>He paused a minute, and then quoted softly:—</p>
-
- <p>“... <i>The calls on my purse have been so frequent of late that I fear
- it is impossible for me to accede to your request.</i> Does nothing
- strike you as odd about that?”</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t think so,” said Raymond. “He has frequently dictated letters
- to me, using almost exactly those same words.”</p>
-
- <p>“Exactly,” cried Poirot. “That is what I seek to arrive at. Would
- any man use such a phrase in <em>talking</em> to another? Impossible
- that that should be part of a real conversation. Now, if he had been
- dictating a letter——”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">281</span></p>
-
- <p>“You mean he was reading a letter aloud,” said Raymond slowly. “Even
- so, he must have been reading to some one.”</p>
-
- <p>“But why? We have no evidence that there was any one else in the room.
- No other voice but Mr. Ackroyd’s was heard, remember.”</p>
-
- <p>“Surely a man wouldn’t read letters of that type aloud to himself—not
- unless he was—well—going balmy.”</p>
-
- <p>“You have all forgotten one thing,” said Poirot softly: “the stranger
- who called at the house the preceding Wednesday.”</p>
-
- <p>They all stared at him.</p>
-
- <p>“But yes,” said Poirot, nodding encouragingly, “on Wednesday. The
- young man was not of himself important. But the firm he represented
- interested me very much.”</p>
-
- <p>“The Dictaphone Company,” gasped Raymond. “I see it now. A dictaphone.
- That’s what you think?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“Mr. Ackroyd had promised to invest in a dictaphone, you remember.
- Me, I had the curiosity to inquire of the company in question. Their
- reply is that Mr. Ackroyd <em>did</em> purchase a dictaphone from their
- representative. Why he concealed the matter from you, I do not know.”</p>
-
- <p>“He must have meant to surprise me with it,” murmured Raymond. “He had
- quite a childish love of surprising people. Meant to keep it up his
- sleeve for a day or so. Probably was playing with it like a new toy.
- Yes, it fits in. You’re quite right—no one would use quite those words
- in casual conversation.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">282</span></p>
-
- <p>“It explains, too,” said Poirot, “why Major Blunt thought it was you
- who were in the study. Such scraps as came to him were fragments of
- dictation, and so his subconscious mind deduced that you were with him.
- His conscious mind was occupied with something quite different—the
- white figure he had caught a glimpse of. He fancied it was Miss
- Ackroyd. Really, of course, it was Ursula Bourne’s white apron he saw
- as she was stealing down to the summer-house.”</p>
-
- <p>Raymond had recovered from his first surprise.</p>
-
- <p>“All the same,” he remarked, “this discovery of yours, brilliant though
- it is (I’m quite sure I should never have thought of it), leaves the
- essential position unchanged. Mr. Ackroyd was alive at nine-thirty,
- since he was speaking into the dictaphone. It seems clear that the man
- Charles Kent was really off the premises by then. As to Ralph Paton——?”</p>
-
- <p>He hesitated, glancing at Ursula.</p>
-
- <p>Her color flared up, but she answered steadily enough.</p>
-
- <p>“Ralph and I parted just before a quarter to ten. He never went near
- the house, I am sure of that. He had no intention of doing so. The last
- thing on earth he wanted was to face his stepfather. He would have
- funked it badly.”</p>
-
- <p>“It isn’t that I doubt your story for a moment,” explained Raymond.
- “I’ve always been quite sure Captain Paton was innocent. But one has to
- think of a court of law—and the questions that would be asked. He is in
- a most unfortunate position, but if he were to come forward——”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">283</span></p>
-
- <p>Poirot interrupted.</p>
-
- <p>“That is your advice, yes? That he should come forward?”</p>
-
- <p>“Certainly. If you know where he is——”</p>
-
- <p>“I perceive that you do not believe that I do know. And yet I have told
- you just now that I know everything. The truth of the telephone call,
- of the footprints on the window-sill, of the hiding-place of Ralph
- Paton——”</p>
-
- <p>“Where is he?” said Blunt sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“Not very far away,” said Poirot, smiling.</p>
-
- <p>“In Cranchester?” I asked.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot turned towards me.</p>
-
- <p>“Always you ask me that. The idea of Cranchester it is with you an
- <i lang="fr">idée fixe</i>. No, he is not in Cranchester. He is—<i>there</i>!”</p>
-
- <p>He pointed a dramatic forefinger. Every one’s head turned.</p>
-
- <p>Ralph Paton was standing in the doorway.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">284</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">RALPH PATON’S STORY</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">It</span> was a very uncomfortable minute for <em>me</em>. I hardly took in what
- happened next, but there were exclamations and cries of surprise! When
- I was sufficiently master of myself to be able to realize what was
- going on, Ralph Paton was standing by his wife, her hand in his, and he
- was smiling across the room at me.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot, too, was smiling, and at the same time shaking an eloquent
- finger at me.</p>
-
- <p>“Have I not told you at least thirty-six times that it is useless to
- conceal things from Hercule Poirot?” he demanded. “That in such a case
- he finds out?”</p>
-
- <p>He turned to the others.</p>
-
- <p>“One day, you remember, we held a little séance about a table—just
- the six of us. I accused the other five persons present of concealing
- something from me. Four of them gave up their secret. Dr. Sheppard did
- not give up his. But all along I have had my suspicions. Dr. Sheppard
- went to the Three Boars that night hoping to find Ralph. He did not
- find him there; but supposing, I said to myself, that he met him in the
- street on his way home? Dr. Sheppard was a friend of Captain Paton’s,
- and he had come straight from the scene of the crime. He must know that
- things looked very black against him. Perhaps he knew more than the
- general public did——”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">285</span></p>
-
- <p>“I did,” I said ruefully. “I suppose I might as well make a clean
- breast of things now. I went to see Ralph that afternoon. At first he
- refused to take me into his confidence, but later he told me about his
- marriage, and the hole he was in. As soon as the murder was discovered,
- I realized that once the facts were known, suspicion could not fail to
- attach to Ralph—or, if not to him, to the girl he loved. That night I
- put the facts plainly before him. The thought of having possibly to
- give evidence which might incriminate his wife made him resolve at all
- costs to—to——”</p>
-
- <p>I hesitated, and Ralph filled up the gap.</p>
-
- <p>“To do a bunk,” he said graphically. “You see, Ursula left me to go
- back to the house. I thought it possible that she might have attempted
- to have another interview with my stepfather. He had already been very
- rude to her that afternoon. It occurred to me that he might have so
- insulted her—in such an unforgivable manner—that without knowing what
- she was doing——”</p>
-
- <p>He stopped. Ursula released her hand from his, and stepped back.</p>
-
- <p>“You thought that, Ralph! You actually thought that I might have done
- it?”</p>
-
- <p>“Let us get back to the culpable conduct of Dr. Sheppard,” said Poirot
- dryly. “Dr. Sheppard consented to do what he could to help him. He was
- successful in hiding Captain Paton from the police.”</p>
-
- <p>“Where?” asked Raymond. “In his own house?”</p>
-
- <p>“Ah, no, indeed,” said Poirot. “You should ask yourself the question
- that I did. If the good doctor is concealing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">286</span> the young man, what place
- would he choose? It must necessarily be somewhere near at hand. I think
- of Cranchester. A hotel? No. Lodgings? Even more emphatically, no.
- Where, then? Ah! I have it. A nursing home. A home for the mentally
- unfit. I test my theory. I invent a nephew with mental trouble. I
- consult Mademoiselle Sheppard as to suitable homes. She gives me the
- names of two near Cranchester to which her brother has sent patients. I
- make inquiries. Yes, at one of them a patient was brought there by the
- doctor himself early on Saturday morning. That patient, though known
- by another name, I had no difficulty in identifying as Captain Paton.
- After certain necessary formalities, I was allowed to bring him away.
- He arrived at my house in the early hours of yesterday morning.”</p>
-
- <p>I looked at him ruefully.</p>
-
- <p>“Caroline’s Home Office expert,” I murmured. “And to think I never
- guessed!”</p>
-
- <p>“You see now why I drew attention to the reticence of your manuscript,”
- murmured Poirot. “It was strictly truthful as far as it went—but it did
- not go very far, eh, my friend?”</p>
-
- <p>I was too abashed to argue.</p>
-
- <p>“Dr. Sheppard has been very loyal,” said Ralph. “He has stood by me
- through thick and thin. He did what he thought was the best. I see now,
- from what M. Poirot has told me, that it was not really the best. I
- should have come forward and faced the music. You see, in the home, we
- never saw a newspaper. I knew nothing of what was going on.”</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">287</span></p>
-
- <p>“Dr. Sheppard has been a model of discretion,” said Poirot dryly. “But
- me, I discover all the little secrets. It is my business.”</p>
-
- <p>“Now we can have your story of what happened that night,” said Raymond
- impatiently.</p>
-
- <p>“You know it already,” said Ralph. “There’s very little for me to add.
- I left the summer-house about nine-forty-five, and tramped about the
- lanes, trying to make up my mind as to what to do next—what line to
- take. I’m bound to admit that I’ve not the shadow of an alibi, but I
- give you my solemn word that I never went to the study, that I never
- saw my stepfather alive—or dead. Whatever the world thinks, I’d like
- all of you to believe me.”</p>
-
- <p>“No alibi,” murmured Raymond. “That’s bad. I believe you, of course,
- but—it’s a bad business.”</p>
-
- <p>“It makes things very simple, though,” said Poirot, in a cheerful
- voice. “Very simple indeed.”</p>
-
- <p>We all stared at him.</p>
-
- <p>“You see what I mean? No? Just this—to save Captain Paton the real
- criminal must confess.”</p>
-
- <p>He beamed round at us all.</p>
-
- <p>“But yes—I mean what I say. See now, I did not invite Inspector Raglan
- to be present. That was for a reason. I did not want to tell him all
- that I knew—at least I did not want to tell him to-night.”</p>
-
- <p>He leaned forward, and suddenly his voice and his whole personality
- changed. He suddenly became dangerous.</p>
-
- <p>“I who speak to you—I know the murderer of Mr.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">288</span> Ackroyd is in this room
- now. It is to the murderer I speak. <em>To-morrow the truth goes to
- Inspector Raglan.</em> You understand?”</p>
-
- <p>There was a tense silence. Into the midst of it came the old Breton
- woman with a telegram on a salver. Poirot tore it open.</p>
-
- <p>Blunt’s voice rose abrupt and resonant.</p>
-
- <p>“The murderer is amongst us, you say? You know—which?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot had read the message. He crumpled it up in his hand.</p>
-
- <p>“I know—now.”</p>
-
- <p>He tapped the crumpled ball of paper.</p>
-
- <p>“What is that?” said Raymond sharply.</p>
-
- <p>“A wireless message—from a steamer now on her way to the United States.”</p>
-
- <p>There was a dead silence. Poirot rose to his feet bowing.</p>
-
- <p>“Messieurs et Mesdames, this reunion of mine is at an end.
- Remember—<em>the truth goes to Inspector Raglan in the morning</em>.”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">289</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">THE WHOLE TRUTH</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">A slight</span> gesture from Poirot enjoined me to stay behind the rest. I
- obeyed, going over to the fire and thoughtfully stirring the big logs
- on it with the toe of my boot.</p>
-
- <p>I was puzzled. For the first time I was absolutely at sea as to
- Poirot’s meaning. For a moment I was inclined to think that the scene
- I had just witnessed was a gigantic piece of bombast—that he had been
- what he called “playing the comedy” with a view to making himself
- interesting and important. But, in spite of myself, I was forced to
- believe in an underlying reality. There had been real menace in his
- words—a certain indisputable sincerity. But I still believed him to be
- on entirely the wrong tack.</p>
-
- <p>When the door shut behind the last of the party he came over to the
- fire.</p>
-
- <p>“Well, my friend,” he said quietly, “and what do you think of it all?”</p>
-
- <p>“I don’t know what to think,” I said frankly. “What was the point? Why
- not go straight to Inspector Raglan with the truth instead of giving
- the guilty person this elaborate warning?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot sat down and drew out his case of tiny Russian<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">290</span> cigarettes. He
- smoked for a minute or two in silence. Then:—</p>
-
- <p>“Use your little gray cells,” he said. “There is always a reason behind
- my actions.”</p>
-
- <p>I hesitated for a moment, and then I said slowly:</p>
-
- <p>“The first one that occurs to me is that you yourself do not know who
- the guilty person is, but that you are sure that he is to be found
- amongst the people here to-night. Therefore your words were intended to
- force a confession from the unknown murderer?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded approvingly.</p>
-
- <p>“A clever idea, but not the truth.”</p>
-
- <p>“I thought, perhaps, that by making him believe you knew, you might
- force him out into the open—not necessarily by confession. He might try
- to silence you as he formerly silenced Mr. Ackroyd—before you could act
- to-morrow morning.”</p>
-
- <p>“A trap with myself as the bait! <i lang="fr">Merci, mon ami</i>, but I am not
- sufficiently heroic for that.”</p>
-
- <p>“Then I fail to understand you. Surely you are running the risk of
- letting the murderer escape by thus putting him on his guard?”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot shook his head.</p>
-
- <p>“He cannot escape,” he said gravely. “There is only one way out—and
- that way does not lead to freedom.”</p>
-
- <p>“You really believe that one of those people here to-night committed
- the murder?” I asked incredulously.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, my friend.”</p>
-
- <p>“Which one?”</p>
-
- <p>There was a silence for some minutes. Then Poirot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">291</span> tossed the stump of
- his cigarette into the grate and began to speak in a quiet, reflective
- tone.</p>
-
- <p>“I will take you the way that I have traveled myself. Step by step
- you shall accompany me, and see for yourself that all the facts point
- indisputably to one person. Now, to begin with, there were two facts
- and one little discrepancy in time which especially attracted my
- attention. The first fact was the telephone call. If Ralph Paton were
- indeed the murderer, the telephone call became meaningless and absurd.
- Therefore, I said to myself, Ralph Paton is not the murderer.</p>
-
- <p>“I satisfied myself that the call could not have been sent by any one
- in the house, yet I was convinced that it was amongst those present
- on the fatal evening that I had to look for my criminal. Therefore I
- concluded that the telephone call must have been sent by an accomplice.
- I was not quite pleased with that deduction, but I let it stand for the
- minute.</p>
-
- <p>“I next examined the <em>motive</em> for the call. That was difficult.
- I could only get at it by judging its <em>result</em>. Which was—that
- the murder was discovered that night instead of—in all probability—the
- following morning. You agree with that?”</p>
-
- <p>“Ye-es,” I admitted. “Yes. As you say, Mr. Ackroyd, having given orders
- that he was not to be disturbed, nobody would have been likely to go to
- the study that night.”</p>
-
- <p>“<i lang="fr">Très bien.</i> The affair marches, does it not? But matters were
- still obscure. What was the advantage of having the crime discovered
- that night in preference to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">292</span> the following morning? The only idea I
- could get hold of was that the murderer, knowing the crime was to be
- discovered at a certain time, could make sure of being present when the
- door was broken in—or at any rate immediately afterwards. And now we
- come to the second fact—the chair pulled out from the wall. Inspector
- Raglan dismissed that as of no importance. I, on the contrary, have
- always regarded it as of supreme importance.</p>
-
- <p>“In your manuscript you have drawn a neat little plan of the study.
- If you had it with you this minute you would see that—the chair being
- drawn out in the position indicated by Parker—it would stand in a
- direct line between the door and the window.”</p>
-
- <p>“The window!” I said quickly.</p>
-
- <p>“You, too, have my first idea. I imagined that the chair was drawn
- out so that something connected with the window should not be seen
- by any one entering through the door. But I soon abandoned that
- supposition, for though the chair was a grandfather with a high back,
- it obscured very little of the window—only the part between the sash
- and the ground. No, <i lang="fr">mon ami</i>—but remember that just in front of
- the window there stood a table with books and magazines upon it. Now
- that table <em>was</em> completely hidden by the drawn-out chair—and
- immediately I had my first shadowy suspicion of the truth.</p>
-
- <p>“Supposing that there had been something on that table not intended
- to be seen? Something placed there by the murderer? As yet I had no
- inkling of what that something might be. But I knew certain very
- interesting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">293</span> facts about it. For instance, it was something that the
- murderer had not been able to take away with him at the time that he
- committed the crime. At the same time it was vital that it should be
- removed as soon as possible after the crime had been discovered. And
- so—the telephone message, and the opportunity for the murderer to be on
- the spot when the body was discovered.</p>
-
- <p>“Now four people were on the scene before the police arrived. Yourself,
- Parker, Major Blunt, and Mr. Raymond. Parker I eliminated at once,
- since at whatever time the crime was discovered, he was the one
- person certain to be on the spot. Also it was he who told me of the
- pulled-out chair. Parker, then, was cleared (of the murder, that is. I
- still thought it possible that he had been blackmailing Mrs. Ferrars).
- Raymond and Blunt, however, remained under suspicion since, if the
- crime had been discovered in the early hours of the morning, it was
- quite possible that they might have arrived on the scene too late to
- prevent the object on the round table being discovered.</p>
-
- <p>“Now what was that object? You heard my arguments to-night in reference
- to the scrap of conversation overheard? As soon as I learned that
- a representative of a dictaphone company had called, the idea of a
- dictaphone took root in my mind. You heard what I said in this room not
- half an hour ago? They all agreed with my theory—but one vital fact
- seems to have escaped them. Granted that a dictaphone was being used by
- Mr. Ackroyd that night—why was no dictaphone found?”</p>
-
- <p>“I never thought of that,” I said.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">294</span></p>
-
- <p>“We know that a dictaphone was supplied to Mr. Ackroyd. But no
- dictaphone has been found amongst his effects. So, if something was
- taken from that table—why should not that something be the dictaphone?
- But there were certain difficulties in the way. The attention of every
- one was, of course, focused on the murdered man. I think any one could
- have gone to the table unnoticed by the other people in the room. But
- a dictaphone has a certain bulk—it cannot be slipped casually into
- a pocket. There must have been a receptacle of some kind capable of
- holding it.</p>
-
- <p>“You see where I am arriving? The figure of the murderer is taking
- shape. A person who was on the scene straightway, but who might not
- have been if the crime had been discovered the following morning.
- A person carrying a receptacle into which the dictaphone might be
- fitted——”</p>
-
- <p>I interrupted.</p>
-
- <p>“But why remove the dictaphone? What was the point?”</p>
-
- <p>“You are like Mr. Raymond. You take it for granted that what was heard
- at nine-thirty was Mr. Ackroyd’s voice speaking into a dictaphone. But
- consider this useful invention for a little minute. You dictate into
- it, do you not? And at some later time a secretary or a typist turns it
- on, and the voice speaks again.”</p>
-
- <p>“You mean——” I gasped.</p>
-
- <p>Poirot nodded.</p>
-
- <p>“Yes, I mean that. <em>At nine-thirty Mr. Ackroyd was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">295</span> already dead.</em>
- It was the dictaphone speaking—not the man.”</p>
-
- <p>“And the murderer switched it on. Then he must have been in the room at
- that minute?”</p>
-
- <p>“Possibly. But we must not exclude the likelihood of some mechanical
- device having been applied—something after the nature of a time lock,
- or even of a simple alarm clock. But in that case we must add two
- qualifications to our imaginary portrait of the murderer. It must be
- some one who knew of Mr. Ackroyd’s purchase of the dictaphone and also
- some one with the necessary mechanical knowledge.</p>
-
- <p>“I had got thus far in my own mind when we came to the footprints on
- the window ledge. Here there were three conclusions open to me. (1)
- They might really have been made by Ralph Paton. He had been at Fernly
- that night, and might have climbed into the study and found his uncle
- dead there. That was one hypothesis. (2) There was the possibility that
- the footmarks might have been made by somebody else who happened to
- have the same kind of studs in his shoes. But the inmates of the house
- had shoes soled with crepe rubber, and I declined to believe in the
- coincidence of some one from outside having the same kind of shoes as
- Ralph Paton wore. Charles Kent, as we know from the barmaid of the Dog
- and Whistle, had on a pair of boots ‘clean dropping off him.’ (3) Those
- prints were made by some one deliberately trying to throw suspicion
- on Ralph Paton. To test this last conclusion, it was necessary to
- ascertain certain facts. One pair of Ralph’s shoes had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">296</span> obtained
- from the Three Boars by the police. Neither Ralph nor any one else
- could have worn them that evening, since they were downstairs being
- cleaned. According to the police theory, Ralph was wearing another pair
- of the same kind, and I found out that it was true that he had two
- pairs. Now for my theory to be proved correct it was necessary for the
- murderer to have worn Ralph’s shoes that evening—in which case Ralph
- must have been wearing yet a <em>third</em> pair of footwear of some
- kind. I could hardly suppose that he would bring three pairs of shoes
- all alike—the third pair of footwear were more likely to be boots. I
- got your sister to make inquiries on this point—laying some stress on
- the color, in order—I admit it frankly—to obscure the real reason for
- my asking.</p>
-
- <p>“You know the result of her investigations. Ralph Paton <em>had</em> had
- a pair of boots with him. The first question I asked him when he came
- to my house yesterday morning was what he was wearing on his feet on
- the fatal night. He replied at once that he had worn <em>boots</em>—he
- was still wearing them, in fact—having nothing else to put on.</p>
-
- <p>“So we get a step further in our description of the murderer—a person
- who had the opportunity to take these shoes of Ralph Paton’s from the
- Three Boars that day.”</p>
-
- <p>He paused, and then said, with a slightly raised voice:—</p>
-
- <p>“There is one further point. The murderer must have been a person who
- had the opportunity to purloin that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">297</span> dagger from the silver table. You
- might argue that any one in the house might have done so, but I will
- recall to you that Miss Ackroyd was very positive that the dagger was
- not there when she examined the silver table.”</p>
-
- <p>He paused again.</p>
-
- <p>“Let us recapitulate—now that all is clear. A person who was at the
- Three Boars earlier that day, a person who knew Ackroyd well enough
- to know that he had purchased a dictaphone, a person who was of a
- mechanical turn of mind, who had the opportunity to take the dagger
- from the silver table before Miss Flora arrived, who had with him a
- receptacle suitable for hiding the dictaphone—such as a black bag, and
- who had the study to himself for a few minutes after the crime was
- discovered while Parker was telephoning for the police. In fact—<em>Dr. Sheppard!</em>”</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">298</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">AND NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">There</span> was a dead silence for a minute and a half.</p>
-
- <p>Then I laughed.</p>
-
- <p>“You’re mad,” I said.</p>
-
- <p>“No,” said Poirot placidly. “I am not mad. It was the little
- discrepancy in time that first drew my attention to you—right at the
- beginning.”</p>
-
- <p>“Discrepancy in time?” I queried, puzzled.</p>
-
- <p>“But yes. You will remember that every one agreed—you yourself
- included—that it took five minutes to walk from the lodge to the
- house—less if you took the short cut to the terrace. But you left the
- house at ten minutes to nine—both by your own statement and that of
- Parker, and yet it was nine o’clock as you passed through the lodge
- gates. It was a chilly night—not an evening a man would be inclined
- to dawdle; why had you taken ten minutes to do a five-minutes’ walk?
- All along I realized that we had only your statement for it that the
- study window was ever fastened. Ackroyd asked you if you had done
- so—he never looked to see. Supposing, then, that the study window was
- unfastened? Would there be time in that ten minutes for you to run
- round the outside of the house, change your shoes, climb in through
- the window, kill Ackroyd, and get to the gate by nine<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">299</span> o’clock? I
- decided against that theory since in all probability a man as nervous
- as Ackroyd was that night would hear you climbing in, and then there
- would have been a struggle. But supposing that you killed Ackroyd
- <em>before</em> you left—as you were standing beside his chair? Then you
- go out of the front door, run round to the summer-house, take Ralph
- Paton’s shoes out of the bag you brought up with you that night, slip
- them on, walk through the mud in them, and leave prints on the window
- ledge, you climb in, lock the study door on the inside, run back to the
- summer-house, change back into your own shoes, and race down to the
- gate. (I went through similar actions the other day, when you were with
- Mrs. Ackroyd—it took ten minutes exactly.) Then home—and an alibi—since
- you had timed the dictaphone for half-past nine.”</p>
-
- <p>“My dear Poirot,” I said in a voice that sounded strange and forced to
- my own ears, “you’ve been brooding over this case too long. What on
- earth had I to gain by murdering Ackroyd?”</p>
-
- <p>“Safety. It was you who blackmailed Mrs. Ferrars. Who could have had
- a better knowledge of what killed Mr. Ferrars than the doctor who was
- attending him? When you spoke to me that first day in the garden,
- you mentioned a legacy received about a year ago. I have been unable
- to discover any trace of a legacy. You had to invent some way of
- accounting for Mrs. Ferrars’s twenty thousand pounds. It has not done
- you much good. You lost most of it in speculation—then you put the
- screw on too hard, and Mrs. Ferrars took a way out<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">300</span> that you had not
- expected. If Ackroyd had learnt the truth he would have had no mercy on
- you—you were ruined for ever.”</p>
-
- <p>“And the telephone call?” I asked, trying to rally. “You have a
- plausible explanation of that also, I suppose?”</p>
-
- <p>“I will confess to you that it was my greatest stumbling block when
- I found that a call had actually been put through to you from King’s
- Abbot station. I at first believed that you had simply invented the
- story. It was a very clever touch, that. You must have some excuse for
- arriving at Fernly, finding the body, and so getting the chance to
- remove the dictaphone on which your alibi depended. I had a very vague
- notion of how it was worked when I came to see your sister that first
- day and inquired as to what patients you had seen on Friday morning. I
- had no thought of Miss Russell in my mind at that time. Her visit was a
- lucky coincidence, since it distracted your mind from the real object
- of my questions. I found what I was looking for. Among your patients
- that morning was the steward of an American liner. Who more suitable
- than he to be leaving for Liverpool by the train that evening? And
- afterwards he would be on the high seas, well out of the way. I noted
- that the <cite>Orion</cite> sailed on Saturday, and having obtained the name
- of the steward I sent him a wireless message asking a certain question.
- This is his reply you saw me receive just now.”</p>
-
- <p>He held out the message to me. It ran as follows—</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">301</span></p>
-
- <p>“Quite correct. Dr. Sheppard asked me to leave a note at a patient’s
- house. I was to ring him up from the station with the reply. Reply was
- ‘No answer.’”</p>
-
- <div class="center">*<span class="col3">*</span>
- <span class="col3">*</span><span class="col3">*</span><span class="col3">*</span></div>
-
- <p>“It was a clever idea,” said Poirot. “The call was genuine. Your sister
- saw you take it. But there was only one man’s word as to what was
- actually said—your own!”</p>
-
- <p>I yawned.</p>
-
- <p>“All this,” I said, “is very interesting—but hardly in the sphere of
- practical politics.”</p>
-
- <p>“You think not? Remember what I said—the truth goes to Inspector Raglan
- in the morning. But, for the sake of your good sister, I am willing to
- give you the chance of another way out. There might be, for instance,
- an overdose of a sleeping draught. You comprehend me? But Captain Ralph
- Paton must be cleared—<i lang="fr">ça va sans dire</i>. I should suggest that you
- finish that very interesting manuscript of yours—but abandoning your
- former reticence.”</p>
-
- <p>“You seem to be very prolific of suggestions,” I remarked. “Are you
- sure you’ve quite finished.”</p>
-
- <p>“Now that you remind me of the fact, it is true that there is one thing
- more. It would be most unwise on your part to attempt to silence me as
- you silenced M. Ackroyd. That kind of business does not succeed against
- Hercule Poirot, you understand.”</p>
-
- <p>“My dear Poirot,” I said, smiling a little, “whatever else I may be, I
- am not a fool.”</p>
-
- <p>I rose to my feet.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">302</span></p>
-
- <p>“Well, well,” I said, with a slight yawn, “I must be off home. Thank
- you for a most interesting and instructive evening.”</p>
-
- <p>Poirot also rose and bowed with his accustomed politeness as I passed
- out of the room.</p>
-
- <hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
- <div class="chapter">
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">303</span>
- <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
- </div>
-
- <div class="subhead">APOLOGIA</div>
-
- <p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Five</span> a.m. I am very tired—but I have finished my task. My arm aches
- from writing.</p>
-
- <p>A strange end to my manuscript. I meant it to be published some day as
- the history of one of Poirot’s failures! Odd, how things pan out.</p>
-
- <p>All along I’ve had a premonition of disaster, from the moment I saw
- Ralph Paton and Mrs. Ferrars with their heads together. I thought
- then that she was confiding in him; as it happened I was quite wrong
- there, but the idea persisted even after I went into the study with
- Ackroyd that night, until he told me the truth.</p>
-
- <p>Poor old Ackroyd. I’m always glad that I gave him a chance. I urged him
- to read that letter before it was too late. Or let me be honest—didn’t
- I subconsciously realize that with a pig-headed chap like him, it was
- my best chance of getting him <em>not</em> to read it? His nervousness
- that night was interesting psychologically. He knew danger was close at
- hand. And yet he never suspected <em>me</em>.</p>
-
- <p>The dagger was an afterthought. I’d brought up a very handy little
- weapon of my own, but when I saw the dagger lying in the silver table,
- it occurred to me at once how much better it would be to use a weapon
- that couldn’t be traced to me.</p>
-
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">304</span></p>
-
- <p>I suppose I must have meant to murder him all along. As soon as I heard
- of Mrs. Ferrars’s death, I felt convinced that she would have told him
- everything before she died. When I met him and he seemed so agitated,
- I thought that perhaps he knew the truth, but that he couldn’t bring
- himself to believe it, and was going to give me the chance of refuting
- it.</p>
-
- <p>So I went home and took my precautions. If the trouble were after all
- only something to do with Ralph—well, no harm would have been done. The
- dictaphone he had given me two days before to adjust. Something had
- gone a little wrong with it, and I persuaded him to let me have a go at
- it, instead of sending it back. I did what I wanted to it, and took it
- up with me in my bag that evening.</p>
-
- <p>I am rather pleased with myself as a writer. What could be neater, for
- instance, than the following:—</p>
-
- <p>“<i>The letters were brought in at twenty minutes to nine. It was just
- on ten minutes to nine when I left him, the letter still unread. I
- hesitated with my hand on the door handle, looking back and wondering
- if there was anything I had left undone.</i>”</p>
-
- <p>All true, you see. But suppose I had put a row of stars after the first
- sentence! Would somebody then have wondered what exactly happened in
- that blank ten minutes?</p>
-
- <p>When I looked round the room from the door, I was quite satisfied.
- Nothing had been left undone. The dictaphone was on the table by the
- window, timed to go off<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">305</span> at nine-thirty (the mechanism of that little
- device was rather clever—based on the principle of an alarm clock), and
- the arm-chair was pulled out so as to hide it from the door.</p>
-
- <p>I must admit that it gave me rather a shock to run into Parker just
- outside the door. I have faithfully recorded that fact.</p>
-
- <p>Then later, when the body was discovered, and I had sent Parker to
- telephone for the police, what a judicious use of words: “<em>I did
- what little had to be done!</em>” It was quite little—just to shove
- the dictaphone into my bag and push back the chair against the wall
- in its proper place. I never dreamed that Parker would have noticed
- that chair. Logically, he ought to have been so agog over the body
- as to be blind to everything else. But I hadn’t reckoned with the
- trained-servant complex.</p>
-
- <p>I wish I could have known beforehand that Flora was going to say she’d
- seen her uncle alive at a quarter to ten. That puzzled me more than
- I can say. In fact, all through the case there have been things that
- puzzled me hopelessly. Every one seems to have taken a hand.</p>
-
- <p>My greatest fear all through has been Caroline. I have fancied she
- might guess. Curious the way she spoke that day of my “strain of
- weakness.”</p>
-
- <p>Well, she will never know the truth. There is, as Poirot said, one way
- out....</p>
-
- <p>I can trust him. He and Inspector Raglan will manage it between them. I
- should not like Caroline to know. She is fond of me, and then, too, she
- is proud....<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">306</span> My death will be a grief to her, but grief passes....</p>
-
- <p>When I have finished writing, I shall enclose this whole manuscript in
- an envelope and address it to Poirot.</p>
-
- <p>And then—what shall it be? Veronal? There would be a kind of poetic
- justice. Not that I take any responsibility for Mrs. Ferrars’s death.
- It was the direct consequence of her own actions. I feel no pity for her.</p>
-
- <p>I have no pity for myself either.</p>
-
- <p>So let it be veronal.</p>
-
- <p>But I wish Hercule Poirot had never retired from work and come here to
- grow vegetable marrows.</p>
-
- <div class="center mt10">THE END</div>
-
- <div class="bbox mt10" style="width: 100%;">
- <div style="margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 5%">
- <div class="center mt2 mb2">
- “<i>The Books You Like to Read<br />
- at the Price You Like to Pay</i>”</div>
-
- <hr />
- <div class="xlarge mt5"><i>There Are Two Sides to Everything</i>——</div>
-
- <p class="noindent mt2">—including the wrapper which covers every Grosset &amp; Dunlap book.
- When you feel in the mood for a good romance, refer to the carefully
- selected list of modern fiction comprising most of the successes by
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- Grosset &amp; Dunlap book wrapper.</p>
-
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- every mood and every taste and every pocket-book.</p>
-
- <p><i>Don’t forget the other side, but in case the wrapper is lost, write
- to the publishers for a complete catalog.</i></p>
-
- <hr class="mt5" />
- <div class="center mt2 mb2">
- <i>There is a Grosset &amp; Dunlap Book<br />
- for every mood and for every taste</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <hr class="double mt5" />
- <div class="center xxlarge bold">THE NOVELS OF VIDA HURST</div>
-
- <hr class="double" />
- <div class="center bold">May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset &amp; Dunlap’s list.</div>
- <hr class="double" />
-
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-
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-
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-
- <div class="xlarge u">DIANA</div>
-
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-
- <div class="xlarge u">THE GREATER LOVE</div>
-
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-
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-
- <div class="xlarge u">SEQUEL TO SONIA</div>
-
- <p>It continues the life story of Sonia Marsh, who left her small
- town to go to the city, where she falls in love with a Doctor and
- marries him.</p>
-
- <hr class="double" />
- <div class="center large bold">GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <i>Publishers,</i> NEW YORK</div>
- <hr class="double" />
-
- <hr class="double mt5" />
- <div class="center xlarge bold">RAFAEL SABATINI’S NOVELS</div>
-
- <hr class="double" />
- <div class="center bold">May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset &amp; Dunlap’s list.</div>
- <hr class="double" />
-
- <p class="noindent">JESI a diminutive city of the Italian Marches, was the birthplace of
- Rafael Sabatini.</p>
-
- <p>He first went to school in Switzerland and from there to Lycee of Oporto,
- Portugal, and has never attended an English school. But English is
- hardly an adopted language for him, as he learned it from his mother,
- an English woman.</p>
-
- <p>Today Rafael Sabatini is regarded as “The Alexandre Dumas of Modern
- Fiction.”</p>
-
- <ul class="u mt">
- <li> THE LION’S SKIN</li>
- <li> THE SHAME OF MOTLEY</li>
- <li> THE TRAMPLING OF THE LILIES</li>
- <li> THE GATES OF DOOM</li>
- <li> THE STROLLING SAINT</li>
- <li> THE BANNER OF THE BULL</li>
- <li> THE CAROLINIAN</li>
- <li> SAINT MARTIN’S SUMMER</li>
- <li> MISTRESS WILDING</li>
- <li> FORTUNE’S FOOL</li>
- <li> BARDELYS THE MAGNIFICENT</li>
- <li> THE SNARE</li>
- <li> CAPTAIN BLOOD</li>
- <li> THE SEA-HAWK</li>
- <li> SCARAMOUCHE</li>
- </ul>
-
- <hr class="double" />
- <div class="center large bold">GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <i>Publishers,</i> NEW YORK</div>
- <hr class="double" />
-
- <hr class="double mt5" />
- <div class="center xxlarge bold">ZANE GREY’S NOVELS</div>
-
- <hr class="double" />
- <div class="center bold">May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset &amp; Dunlap’s list.</div>
- <hr class="double" />
-
- <ul>
- <li> UNDER THE TONTO RIM</li>
- <li> TAPPAN’S BURRO</li>
- <li> THE VANISHING AMERICAN</li>
- <li> THE THUNDERING HERD</li>
- <li> THE CALL OF THE CANYON</li>
- <li> WANDERER OF THE WASTELAND</li>
- <li> TO THE LAST MAN</li>
- <li> THE MYSTERIOUS RIDER</li>
- <li> THE MAN OF THE FOREST</li>
- <li> THE DESERT OF WHEAT</li>
- <li> THE U. P. TRAIL</li>
- <li> WILDFIRE</li>
- <li> THE BORDER LEGION</li>
- <li> THE RAINBOW TRAIL</li>
- <li> THE HERITAGE OF THE DESERT</li>
- <li> RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE</li>
- <li> THE LIGHT OF WESTERN STARS</li>
- <li> THE LAST OF THE PLAINSMEN</li>
- <li> THE LONE STAR RANGER</li>
- <li> DESERT GOLD</li>
- <li> BETTY ZANE</li>
- <li> THE DAY OF THE BEAST</li>
- </ul>
-
- <div class="center">*<span class="col2">*</span>
- <span class="col2">*</span><span class="col2">*</span><span class="col2">*</span>
- <span class="col2">*</span><span class="col2">*</span></div>
-
- <div>LAST OF THE GREAT SCOUTS</div>
-
- <p>The life story of “Buffalo Bill” by his sister Helen Cody Wetmore, with
- Foreword and conclusion by Zane Grey.</p>
-
- <div class="xlarge center mt3">ZANE GREY’S BOOKS FOR BOYS</div>
-
- <ul>
- <li> ROPING LIONS IN THE GRAND CANYON</li>
- <li> KEN WARD IN THE JUNGLE</li>
- <li> THE YOUNG LION HUNTER</li>
- <li> THE YOUNG FORESTER</li>
- <li> THE YOUNG PITCHER</li>
- <li> THE SHORT STOP</li>
- <li> THE RED-HEADED OUTFIELD AND OTHER BASEBALL STORIES</li>
- </ul>
-
- <hr class="double" />
- <div class="center large bold">GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <i>Publishers,</i> NEW YORK</div>
- <hr class="double" />
-
- <div class="transnote mt5">
- <div class="large center"><b>Transcriber’s Notes:</b></div>
- <ul class="spaced small">
- <li>Blank pages have been removed.</li>
- <li>Obvious typographical errors have been silently corrected.</li>
- </ul>
- </div>
-
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