Home Random Page


CATEGORIES:

BiologyChemistryConstructionCultureEcologyEconomyElectronicsFinanceGeographyHistoryInformaticsLawMathematicsMechanicsMedicineOtherPedagogyPhilosophyPhysicsPolicyPsychologySociologySportTourism






Quot;PLEASE BRING MRS. BUTLER 5 page

"I suppose the family claimed thia at the balance of her mind had been distuirbed, that there had been undue influence?" "I think probably it might have come to that," said Spence.

"But the lawyers, as I say, got on to the forgery sharply. Kt was not a very convincing forgery, apparently.

They spotted it almost at once."

"Things came to light to show tbiaat the opera girl could have done it quite eaasily," said Elspeth.

"You see, she wrote a great many of Mrs. Llewellyn-Smythe's lietters for her and it seems Mrs. LlewcellynSmythe had a great dislike of typed Idetters being sent to friends or anything like; that.

If it wasn't a business letter, she'd all ways say 'write it in handwriting and makee it as much like mine as you can and sign itt with my name'. Mrs. Minden, the clesaning woman, heard her say that one day, sand I suppose the girl got used to doing it it and copying her employer's handwriting^ and then it came to her suddenly that she c could do this and get away with it. And t that's how it all came about. But as I say, the lawyers were too sharp and spotted it."

"Mrs. Llewellyn-Smythe's own lawyers?"

"Yes. Fullerton, Harrison and Leadbetter.

Very respectable firm in Medchester.

They'd always done all her legal business for her. Anyway, they got experts on to it and questions were asked and the girl was asked questions and got the wind up. Just walked out one day leaving half her things behind her. They were preparing to take proceedings against her, but she didn't wait for that. She just got out. It's not so difficult, really, to get out of this country, if you do it in time.

Why, you can go on day trips on the Continent without a passport, and if you've got a little arrangement with someone on the other side, things can be arranged long before there is any real hue and cry. She's probably gone back to her own country or changed her name or gone to friends."

"But everyone thought that Mrs.

Llewellyn-Smythe died a natural death?" asked Poirot.

"Yes, I don't think there was ever any question of that. I only say it's possible because, as I say, these things have happened before where the doctor has no suspicion. Supposing that girl Joyce had heard something, had heard the au pair girl giving medicines to Mrs.

LlewellynSmythe, and the old lady saying 'this medicine tastes different to the usual one'.

Or "this has got a bitter taste' or "it's peculiar'."

"Anyone would think you'd been there listening to things yourself, Elspeth," said Superintendent Spence.

"This is all your imagination."

"When did she die?" said Poirot.

"Morning, evening, indoors, out of doors, at home or away from home?"

"Oh, at home. She'd come up from doing things in the garden one day, breathing rather heavily. She said she was very tired and she went to lie down on her bed. And to put it in one sentence, she never woke up.



Which is all very natural, it seems, medically speaking."

Poirot took out a little notebook. The page was already headed "Victims".

Under, he wrote.

"No. 1. suggested, Mrs.

Llewellyn-Smythe." On the next pages of his book he wrote down the other names that Spence had given him. He said, inquiringly:

"Charlotte Benfield?"

Spence replied promptly.

"Sixteenyear-old shop assistant. Multiple head injuries. Found on a footpath near the Quarry Wood. Two young men came under suspicion.

Both had walked out with her from time to time. No evidence."

"They assisted the police in their inquiries?" asked Poirot.

"As you say. It's the usual phrase. They didn't assist much. They were frightened.

Told a few lies, contradicted themselves.

They didn't carry conviction as likely murderers. But either of them might have been."

"What were they like?"

"Peter Gordon, twenty-one. Unemployed.

Had had one or two jobs but never kept them. Lazy. Quite good-looking. Had been on probation once or twice for minor pilferings, things of that kind. No record before of violence. Was in with a rather nasty lot of likely young criminals, but usually managed to keep out of serious trouble."

"And the other one?"

"Thomas Hudd. Twenty. Stammered.

Shy. Neurotic. Wanted to be a teacher, but couldn't make the grade.

Mother a widow. The doting mother type. Didn't encourage girl friends. Kept him as close to her apron-strings as she could. He had a job in a stationer's. Nothing criminal known against him, but a possibility psychologically, so it seems. The girl played him up a good deal. Jealousy a possible motive, but no evidence that we could prosecute on. Both of them had alibis. Hudd's was his mother's. She would have sworn to kingdom come that he was indoors with her all that evening, and nobody can say he wasn't or had seen him elsewhere or in the neighbourhood of the murder. Young Gordon was given an alibi by some of his less reputable friends.

Not worth much, but you couldn't disprove it."

"This happened when?"

"Eighteen months ago."

"And where?"

"In a footpath in a field not far from Woodleigh Common."

"Three quarters of a mile," said Elspeth.

"Near Joyce's house-the Reynolds' house?"

"No, it was on the other side of the village."

"It seems unlikely to have been the murder Joyce was talking about," said Poirot thoughtfully.

"If you see a girl being bashed on the head by a young man you'd be likely to think of murder straight away. Not to wait for a year before you began to think it was murder."

Poirot read another name.

"Lesley Ferrier."

Spence spoke again.

"Lawyer's clerk, twenty-eight, employed by Messrs.

Fullerton, Harrison and Leadbetter of Market Street, Medchester."

"Those were Mrs. LlewellynSmythe's solicitors, I think you said."

"Yes. Same ones."

"And what happened to Lesley Ferrier?"

"He was stabbed in the back. Not far from the Green Swan Pub. He was said to have been having an affair with the wife of the landlord. Harry Griffin. Handsome piece, she was, indeed still is. Getting perhaps a bit long in the tooth. Five or six years older than he was, but she liked them young."

"The weapon?"

"The knife wasn't found. Les was said to have broken with her and taken up with some other girl, but what girl was never satisfactorily discovered."

"Ah. And who was suspected in this case? The landlord or the wife?"

"Quite right," said Spence.

"Might have been either. The wife seemed the more likely. She was half gypsy and a temperamental piece. But there were other possibilities. Our Lesley hadn't led a blameless life. Got into trouble in his early twenties, falsifying his accounts somewhere.

With a spot of forgery. Was said to have come from a broken home and all the rest of it. Employers spoke up for him.

He got a short sentence and was taken on by Fullerton, Harrison and Leadbetter when he came out of prison."

"And after that he'd gone straight?"

"Well, nothing proved. He appeared to do so as far as his employers were concerned, but he had been mixed up in a few questionable transactions with his friends. He's what you might call a wrong 'un but a careful one."

"So the alternative was?"

"That he might have been stabbed by one of his less reputable associates. When you're in with a nasty crowd you've got it coming to you with a knife if you let them down."

"Anything else?"

"Well, he had a good lot of money in his bank account. Paid in in cash, it had been. Nothing to show where it came from. That was suspicious in itself."

"Possibly pinched from Fullerton, Harrison and Leadbetter?" suggested Poirot.

"They say not. They had a chartered accountant to work on it and look into things."

"And the police had no idea where else it might have come from?"

"No."

"Again," said Poirot, "not Joyce's murder, I should think."

He read the last name, "Janet White."

"Found strangled on a footpath which was a short cut from the schoolhouse to her home. She shared a flat there with another teacher, Nora Ambrose.

According to Nora Ambrose, Janet White had occasionally spoken of being nervous about some man with whom she'd broken off relations a year ago, but who had frequently sent her threatening letters.

Nothing was ever found out about this man. Nora Ambrose didn't know his name, didn't know exactly where he lived."

"Aha," said Poirot, "I like this better."

He made a good, thick black tick against Janet White's name.

"For what reason?" asked Spence.

"It is a more likely murder for a girl of Joyce's age to have witnessed. She could have recognised the victim, a schoolteacher whom she knew and who perhaps taught her. Possibly she did not know the attacker. She might have seen a struggle, heard a quarrel between a girl whom she knew and a strange man. But thought no more of it than that at that time. When was Janet White killed?"

"Two and a half years ago."

"That again," said Poirot, "is about the right time. Both for not realising that the man she may have seen with his hands round Janet White's neck was not merely necking her, but might have been killing her. But then as she grew more mature, the proper explanation came to her."

He looked at Elspeth.

"You agree with my reasoning?"

"I see what you mean," said Elspeth.

"But aren't you going at all this the wrong way round? Looking for a victim of a past murder instead of looking for a man who killed a child here in Woodleigh Common not more than three days ago?"

"We go from the past to the future," said Poirot.

"We arrive, shall we say, from two and a half years ago to three days ago.

And, therefore, we have to consider what you, no doubt, have already considered who was there in Woodleigh Common amongst the people who were at the party who might have been connected with an older crime?"

"One can narrow it down a bit more than that now," said Spence.

"That is if we are right in accepting your assumption that Joyce was killed because of what she claimed earlier in the day about seeing murder committed. She said those words during the time the preparations for the party were going on. Mind you, we may be wrong in believing that that was the motive for killing, but I don't think we are wrong. So let us say she claimed to have seen murder, and someone who was present during the preparations for the party that afternoon could have heard her and acted as soon as possible."

"Who was present?" said Poirot.

"You know, I presume."

"Yes, I have the list for you here."

"You have checked it carefully?"

"Yes, I've checked and re-checked, but it's been quite a job. Here are the eighteen names."

List of people present during preparation for Hallowe'en Party Mrs.

Drake (owner of house) Mrs. Butler Mrs. Oliver Miss Whittaker (schoolteacher) Rev. Charles Cotterell (Vicar) Simon Lampton (Curate) Miss Lee (Dr. Ferguson's dispenser) Arm Reynolds Joyce Reynolds Leopold Reynolds Nicholas Ransom Desmond Holland Beatrice Ardley Cathie Grant Diana Brent Mrs. Garlton (household help) Mrs. Minden (cleaning woman) Mrs.

Goodbody (helper) "You are sure these are all?"

"No," said Spence.

"I'm not sure. I can't really be sure. Nobody can. You see, odd people brought things. Somebody brought some coloured light bulbs.

Somebody else supplied some mirrors. There were some extra plates.

Someone lent a plastic pail. People brought things, exchanged a word or two and went away again. They didn't remain to help. Therefore such a person could have been overlooked and not remembered as being present. But that somebody, even if they had only just deposited a bucket in the hall, could have overheard what Joyce was saying in the sitting-room. She was shouting, you know. We can't really limit it to this list, but it's the best we can do.

Here you are. Take a look at it. I've made a brief descriptive note against the names."

"I thank you. Just one question. You must have interrogated some of these people, those for instance who were also at the party. Did anyone, anyone at all, mention what Joyce had said about seeing a murder?"

"I think not. There is no record of it officially. The first I heard of it is what you told me."

"Interesting," said Poirot.

"One might also say remarkable."

"Obviously no-one took it seriously," said Spence.

Poirot nodded thoughtfully.

"I must go now to keep my appointment with Dr. Ferguson, after his surgery," he said.

He folded up Spence's list and put it in his pocket.

DR. FERGUSON was a man of sixty, of Scottish extraction with a brusque manner. He looked Poirot up and down, with shrewd eyes under bristling eyebrows, and said:

"Well, what's all this about? Sit down.

Mind that chair leg. The castor's loose."

"I should perhaps explain " said Poirot.

"You needn't explain," said Dr.

Ferguson.

"Everybody knows everything in a place like this. That authoress woman brought you down here as God's greatest detective to puzzle police officers. That's more or less right, isn't it?"

"In part," said Poirot.

"I came here to visit an old friend, ex-Superintendent Spence, who lives with his sister here."

"Spence? Hm. Good type, Spence.

Bull-dog breed. Good honest police officer of the old type. No graft.

No violence. Not stupid either. Straight as a die."

"You appraise him correctly."

"Well," said Ferguson, "what did you tell him and what did he tell you?"

"Both he and Inspector Raglan have been exceedingly kind to me. I hope you will likewise."

"I've nothing to be kind about," said Ferguson.

"I don't know what happened.

Child gets her head shoved in a bucket and is drowned in the middle of a party. Nasty business. Mind you, doing in a child isn't anything to be startled about nowadays.

I've been called out to look at too many murdered children in the last seven to ten years far too many. A lot of people who ought to be under mental restraint aren't under mental restraint. No room in the asylums. They go about, nicely spoken, nicely got up and looking like everybody else, looking for somebody they can do in.

And enjoy themselves. Don't usually do it at a party, though. Too much chance of getting caught, I suppose, but novelty appeals even to a mentally disturbed killer."

"Have you any idea who killed her?"

"Do you really suppose that's a question I can answer just like that?

I'd have to have some evidence, wouldn't I? I'd have to be sure."

"You could guess," said Poirot.

"Anyone can guess. If I'm called in to a case I have to guess whether the chap's going to have measles or whether it's a case of an allergy to shell-fish or to feather pillows. I have to ask questions to find out what they've been eating, or drinking, or sleeping on, or what other children they've been meeting. Whether they've been in a crowded bus with Mrs. Smith's or Mrs.

Robinson's children who've all got the measles, and a few other things.

Then I advance a tentative opinion as to which it is of the various possibilities, and that, let me tell you, is what's called diagnosis.

You don't do it in a hurry and you make sure."

"Did you know this child?"

"Of course. She was one of my patients.

There are two of us here. Myself and Worrall. I happen to be the Reynolds' doctor. She was quite a healthy child, Joyce. Had the usual small childish ailments. Nothing peculiar or out of the way. Ate too much, talked too much.

Talking too much hadn't done her any harm. Eating too much gave her what used to be called in the old days a bilious attack from time to time. She'd had mumps and chicken pox. Nothing else."

"But she had perhaps talked too much on one occasion, as you suggest she might be liable to do."

"So that's the tack you're on? I heard some rumour of that. On the lines of 'what the butler saw'-only tragedy instead of comedy. Is that it?"

"It could form a motive, a reason."

"Oh yes. Grant you that. But there are other reasons. Mentally disturbed seems the usual answer nowadays. At any rate, it does always in the Magistrates' courts.

Nobody gained by her death, nobody hated her. But it seems to me with children nowadays you don't need to look for the reason. The reason's in another place.

The reason's in the killer's mind. His disturbed mind or his evil mind or his kinky mind. Any kind of mind you like to call it. I'm not a psychiatrist. There are times when I get tired of hearing those words:

"Remanded for a psychiatrist's report," after a lad has broken in somewhere, smashed the looking-glasses, pinched bottles of whisky, stolen the silver 5 knocked an old woman on the head.

Doesn't much matter what it is now.

Remand them for the psychiatrists report."

"And who would you favour, in this case, to remand for a psychiatrist's report?"

"You mean of those there at the ^o' the other night?"

"Yes."

"The murderer would have had to be there, wouldn't he? Otherwise there wouldn't have been a murder. Right? He was among the guests, he was among the helpers or he walked in through the window with malice aforethought. Probably he knew the fastenings of that house.

Might have been in there before, looking round. Take your man or boy.

He wants to kill someone. Not at all unusual. Over in Medchester we had a case of that. Came to light after about six or seven years. Boy of thirteen. Wanted to kill someone, so he killed a child of nine, pinched a car, drove it seven or eight miles into a copse, burned her there, went away, and as far as we know led a blameless life until he was twenty-one or two. Mind you, we have only his word for that, he may have gone on doing it. Probably did. Found he liked killing people. Don't suppose he's killed too many, or some police force would have been on to him before now. But every now and then he felt the urge. Psychiatrist's report. Committed murder while mentally disturbed. I'm trying to say myself that that's what happened here.

That sort of thing, anyway. I'm not a psychiatrist myself, thank goodness. I have a few psychiatrist friends. Some of them are sensible chaps. Some of them-well, I'll go as far as saying they ought to be remanded for a psychiatrist's report themselves.

This chap who killed Joyce probably had nice parents, ordinary manners, good appearance. Nobody'd dream anything was wrong with him. Ever had a bite at a nice red juicy apple and there, down by the core, something rather nasty rears itself up and wags its head at you?

Plenty of human beings about like that.

More than there used to be I'd say nowadays."

"And you've no suspicion of your own?"

"I can't stick my neck out and diagnose a murderer without some evidence."

"Still, you admit it must have been someone at the party. You cannot have a murder without a murderer."

"You can easily in some detective stories that are written. Probably your pet authoress writes them like that. But in this case I agree.

The murderer must have been there. A guest, a domestic help, someone who walked in through the window. Easily done if he'd studied the catch of the window beforehand. It might have struck some crazy brain that it would be a novel idea and a bit of fun to have a murder at a Hallowe'en party. That's all you've got to start off with, isn't it?

Just someone who was at the party."

Under bushy brows a pair of eyes twinkled at Poirot.

"I was there myself," he said.

"Came in late, just to see what was doing."

He nodded his head vigorously.

"Yes, that's the problem, isn't it? Like a social announcement in the papers:

"Amongst those present was A Murderer?" 20POIROT looked up at The Elms and approved of it.

He was admitted and taken promptly by what he judged to be a secretary to the head-mistress's study.

Miss Ernlyn rose from her desk to greet him.

"I am delighted to meet you, Mr.

Poirot. I've heard about you."

"You are too kind," said Poirot.

"From a very old friend of mine. Miss Bulstrode. Former head-mistress of Meadowbank. You remember Miss Bulstrode, perhaps?"

"One would not be likely to forget her.

A great personality."

"Yes," said Miss Emiyn.

"She made Meadowbank the school it is." She sighed slightly and said,

"It has changed a little nowadays. Different aims, different methods, but it still holds its own as a school of distinction, of progress, and also of tradition. Ah well, we must not live too much in the past.

You have come to see me, no doubt, about the death of Joyce Reynolds. I don't know if you have any particular interest in her case. It's out of your usual run of things, I imagine. You knew her personally, or her family perhaps?"

"No," said Poirot.

"I came at the request of an old friend, Mrs. Ariadne Oliver, who was staying down here and was present at the party."

"She writes delightful books," said Miss Emiyn.

"I have met her once or twice.

Well, that makes the whole thing easier, I think, to discuss. So long as no personal feelings are involved, one can go straight ahead. It was a horrifying thing to happen.

If I may say so, it was an unlikely thing to happen. The children involved seem neither old enough nor young enough for it to fall into any special class. A psychological crime is indicated. Do you agree?"

"No," said Poirot.

"I think it was a murder, like most murders, committed for a motive, possibly a sordid one."

"Indeed. And the reason?"

"The reason was a remark made by Joyce; not actually at the party, I under132 stand, but earlier in the day when preparations were being made by some of the older children and other helpers. She announced that she had once seen a murder committed."

"Was she believed?"

"On the whole, I think she was not believed."

"That seems the most likely response.

Joyce-I speak plainly to you. Monsieur Poirot, because we do not want unnecessary sentiment to cloud mental faculties-she was a rather mediocre child, neither stupid nor particularly intellectual.

She was, quite frankly, a compulsive liar.

And by that I do not mean that she was specially deceitful. She was not trying to avoid retribution or to avoid being found out in some peccadillo. She boasted. She boasted of things that had not happened, but that would impress her friends who were listening to her. As a result, of course, they inclined not to believe the tall stories she told."

"You think that she boasted of having seen a murder committed in order to make herself important, to intrigue someone-?"

"Yes. And I would suggest that Ariadne Oliver was doubtless the person whom she wanted to impress…"

"So you don't think Joyce saw a murder committed at all?"

"I should doubt it very much."

"You are of the opinion that she made the whole thing up?"

"I would not say that. She did witness, perhaps, a car accident, or someone perhaps who was hit with a ball on the golf links and injured-something that she could work up into an impressive happening that might, just conceivably, pass as an attempted murder."

"So the only assumption we can make with any certainty is that there was a murderer present at the Hallowe'en party."

"Certainly," said Miss Ernlyn, without turning a grey hair.

"Certainly. That follows on logically, does it not?"

"Would you have any idea who that murderer might be?"

"That is certainly a sensible question," said Miss Emiyn.

"After all, the majority of the children at the party were aged between nine and fifteen, and I suppose nearly all of them had been or were pupils at my school. I ought to know something about them. Something, too, about their families and their backgrounds."

"I believe that one of your own teachers, a year or two ago, was strangled by an unknown killer."

"You are referring to Janet White?

About twenty-four years of age. An emotional girl. As far as is known, she was out walking alone. She may, of course, have arranged to meet some young man.

She was a girl who was quite attractive to men in a modest sort of way.

Her killer has not been discovered. The police questioned various young men or asked them to assist them in their inquiries, as the technique goes, but they were not able to find sufficient evidence to bring a case against anyone. An unsatisfactory business from their point of view. And, I may say, from mine."

"You and I have a principle in common.

We do not approve of murder."

Miss Ernlyn looked at him for a moment or two. Her expression did not change, but Poirot had an idea that he was being sized up with a great deal of care.

"I like the way you put it," she said.

"From what you read and hear nowadays, it seems that murder under certain aspects is slowly but surely being made acceptable to a large section of the community."

She was silent for a few minutes, and Poirot also did not speak. She was, he thought, considering a plan of action.

She rose and touched a bell.

"I think," she said, "that you had better talk to Miss Whittaker."

Some five minutes passed after Miss Ernlyn had left the room and then the door opened and a woman of about forty entered. She had russet-coloured hair, cut short, and came in with a brisk step.

"Monsieur Poirot?" she said.

"Can I help you? Miss Ernlyn seems to think that that might be so."

"If Miss Ernlyn thinks so, then it is almost a certainty that you can.

I would take her word for it."

"You know her?"

"I have only met her this afternoon."

"But you have made up your mind quickly about her."

"I hope you are going to tell me that I am right."

Elizabeth Whittaker gave a short, quick sigh.

"Oh yes, you're right. I presume that this is about the death of Joyce Reynolds.

I don't know exactly how you come into it.

Through the police?" She shook her head slightly in a dissatisfied manner.

"No, not through the police. Privately, through a friend."

She took a chair, pushing it back a little so as to face him.

"Yes. What do you want to know?"

"I don't think there is any need to tell you. No need to waste time asking questions that may be of no importance. Something happened that evening at the party which perhaps it is well that I should know about.

Is that it?"

"Yes."

"You were at the party?"

"I was at the party." She reflected a minute or two.

"It was a very good party.

Well run. Well arranged. About thirty-odd people were there, that is, counting helpers of different kinds. Children-teenagers-grownups-and a few cleaning and domestic helpers in the background."

"Did you take part in the arrangements which were made, I believe, earlier that afternoon or that morning?"

"There was nothing really to do. Mrs.

Drake was fully competent to deal with all the various preparations with a small number of people to help her. It was more domestic preparations that were needed."

"I see. But you came to the party as one of the guests?"


Date: 2016-01-14; view: 556


<== previous page | next page ==>
Quot;PLEASE BRING MRS. BUTLER 4 page | Quot;PLEASE BRING MRS. BUTLER 6 page
doclecture.net - lectures - 2014-2024 year. Copyright infringement or personal data (0.023 sec.)