The A.B.C. Murders hp-12 Read online

Page 10


  Hoping I am not troubling you,

  Yours respectfully,

  MARY DROWER.

  "Mary Drower," said Poirot, "is a very intelligent girl."

  He picked up another letter. "Read this."

  It was a line from Franklin Clarke, saying that he was coming to London and would call upon Poirot the following day if not inconvenient.

  "Do not despair, mon ami," said Poirot. "Action is about to begin."

  XVIII. Poirot Makes a Speech

  Franklin Clarke arrived at three o'clock on the following afternoon and came straight to the point without beating about the bush.

  "M. Poirot," he said, "I'm not satisfied."

  "No, Mr. Clarke?"

  "I've no doubt that Crome is a very efficient officer, but frankly, he puts my back up. That air of his of knowing best! I hinted something of what I had in mind to your friend here when he was down at Churston, but I've had all my brother's affairs to settle up and I haven't been free until now. My idea is, M. Poirot, that we oughtn't to let the grass grow under our feet—"

  "Just what Hastings is always saying!"

  "—but go right ahead. We've got to get ready for the next crime."

  "So you think there will be a next crime?"

  "Don't you?"

  "Certainly."

  "Very well, then. I want to get organized."

  "Tell me your idea exactly."

  "I propose, M. Poirot, a kind of special legion to work under your orders—composed of the friends and relatives of the murdered people.''

  "Une bonne idée."

  "I'm glad you approve. By putting our heads together I feel we might get at something. Also, when the next warning comes, by being on the spot, one of us might—I don't say it's probable—but we might recognize some person as having been near the scene of a previous crime."

  "I see your idea, and I approve, but you must remember, Mr. Franklin, the relations and friends of the other victims are hardly in your sphere of life. They are employed persons and though they might be given a short vacation—"

  Franklin Clarke interrupted. "That's just it. I'm the only person in a position to foot the bill. Not that I'm particularly well off myself, but my brother died a rich man and it will eventually come to me. I propose, as I say, to enroll a special legion, the members to be paid for their services at the same rate as they get habitually, with, of course, the additional expenses."

  "Who do you propose should form this legion?"

  "I've been into that. As a matter of fact, I wrote to Miss Megan Barnard—indeed, this is partly her idea. I suggest myself, Miss Barnard, Mr. Donald Fraser, who was engaged to the dead girl. Then there is a niece of the Andover woman—Miss Barnard knows her address. I don't think the husband would be of any use to us—I hear he's usually drunk. I also think the Barnards—the father and mother—are a bit old for active campaigning."

  "Nobody else?"

  "Well—er—Miss Grey."

  He flushed slightly as he spoke the name.

  "Oh! Miss Grey?"

  Nobody in the world could put a gentle nuance of irony into a couple of words better than Poirot. About thirty-five years fell away from Franklin Clarke. He looked suddenly like a shy schoolboy.

  "Yes. You see, Miss Grey was with my brother for over two years. She knows the countryside and the people round, and everything. I've been away for a year and a half."

  Poirot took pity on him and turned the conversation. "You have been in the East? In China?"

  "Yes. I had a kind of roving commission to purchase things for my brother."

  "Very interesting it must have been. Eh bien, Mr. Clarke, I approve very highly of your idea. I was saying to Hastings only yesterday that a rapprochement of the people concerned was needed. It is necessary to pool reminiscences, to compare notes—enfin to talk the thing over—to talk—to talk—and again to talk. Out of some innocent phrase may come enlightenment."

  A few days later the "Special Legion" met at Poirot's rooms.

  As they sat round looking obediently towards Poirot, who had his place, like the chairman at a Board meeting, at the head of the table, I myself passed them, as it were, in review, confirming or revising my first impressions of them.

  The three girls were all of them striking-looking—the extraordinary fair beauty of Thora Grey, the dark intensity of Megan Barnard, with her strange Red Indian immobility of face—Mary Drower, neatly dressed in a black coat and skirt, with her pretty, intelligent face. Of the two men, Franklin Clarke, big, bronzed and talkative, Donald Fraser, self-contained and quiet, made an interesting contrast to each other.

  Poirot, unable, of course, to resist the occasion, made a little speech.

  "Mesdames and Messieurs, you know what we are here for. The police are doing their utmost to track down the criminal. I, too, in my different way. But it seems to me a reunion of those who have a personal interest in the matter—and also, I may say, a personal knowledge of the victims—might have results that an outside investigation cannot pretend to attain."

  "Here we have three murders—an old woman, a young girl, an elderly man. Only one thing links these three people together—the fact that the same person killed them. That means that the same person was present in three different localities and was seen necessarily by a large number of people. That he is a madman in an advanced stage of mania goes without saying. That his appearance and behaviour give no suggestion of such a fact is equally certain. This person—and though I say he, remember it may be a man or woman—has all the devilish cunning of insanity. He has succeeded so far in covering his traces completely."

  "The police have certain vague indications but nothing upon which they can act."

  "Nevertheless, there must exist indications which are not vague but certain. To take one particular point—this assassin he did not arrive at Bexhill at midnight and find conveniently on the beach a young lady whose name began with B—"

  "Must we go into that?"

  It was Donald Fraser who spoke—the words wrung from him, it seemed, by some inner anguish.

  "It is necessary to go into everything, Monsieur," said Poirot, turning to him. "You are here, not to save your feelings by refusing to think of details, but if necessary to harrow them by going into the matter au fond. As I say, it was not chance that provided A.B.C. with a victim in Betty Barnard. There must have been deliberate selection on his part—and therefore premeditation. That is to say, he must have reconnoitred the ground beforehand. There were facts of which he had informed himself—the best hour for the committing of the crime at Andover—the raise en [unclear] at Bexhill—the habits of Sir Carmichael Clarke at Churston. Me, for one, I refuse to believe that there is no indication—no slightest hint—that might help to establish his identity."

  "I make the assumption that one—or possibly all of you—knows something that they do not know they know."

  "Sooner or later, by reason of your association with one another, something will come to light, will take on a significance as yet undreamed of. It is like the jigsaw puzzle—each of you may have a piece apparently without meaning, but which when reunited may show a definite portion of the picture as a whole."

  "Words!" said Megan Barnard.

  "Eh?" Poirot looked at her inquiringly.

  "What you've been saying. It's just words. It doesn't mean anything."

  She spoke with that kind of desperate dark intensity that I had come to associate with her personality.

  "Words, mademoiselle, are only the outer clothing of ideas."

  "Well, I think it's sense," said Mary Drower. "I do really, miss. It's often when you're talking over things that you seem to see your way clear. Your mind gets made up for you sometimes without your knowing how it's happened. Talking leads to a lot of things one way or another."

  "If 'least said is soonest mended,' it's the converse we want here," said Franklin Clarke.

  "What do you say, Mr. Fraser?"

  "I rather doubt the practical applicabi
lity of what you say, M. Poirot."

  "What do you think, Thora?" asked Clarke.

  "I think the principle of talking things over is always sound."

  "Suppose," suggested Poirot, "that you all go over your own remembrances of the time preceding the murder. Perhaps you'll start, Mr. Clarke."

  "Let me see, on the morning of the day Car was killed I went off sailing. Caught eight mackerel. Lovely out there on the bay. Lunch at home. Irish stew, I remember. Slept in the hammock. Tea. Wrote some letters, missed the post, and drove into Paignton to post them. Then dinner and—I'm not ashamed to say it—I reread a book of E. Nesbit's that I used to love as a kid. Then the telephone rang—"

  "No further. Now reflect, Mr. Clarke, did you meet anyone on your way down to the sea in the morning?"

  "Lots of people."

  "Can you remember anything about them?"

  "Not a damned thing now."

  "Sure?"

  "Well—let's see—I remember a remarkably fat woman—she wore a striped silk dress and I wondered why—had a couple of kids with her . . . two young men with a fox terrier on the beach throwing stones for it— Oh yes, a girl with yellow hair squeaking as she bathed—funny how things come back—like a photograph developing."

  "You are a good subject. Now later in the day—the garden—going to the post—"

  "The gardener watering . . . Going to the post? Nearly ran down a bicyclist—silly woman wobbling and shouting to a friend. That's all, I'm afraid."

  Poirot turned to Thora Grey.

  "Miss Grey?"

  Thora Grey replied in her clear, positive voice: "I did correspondence with Sir Carmichael in the morning—saw the housekeeper. I wrote letters and did needlework in the afternoon, I fancy. It is difficult to remember. It was quite an ordinary day. I went to bed early."

  Rather to my surprise, Poirot asked no further. He said: "Miss Barnard—can you bring back your remembrances of the last time you saw your sister?"

  "It would be about a fortnight before her death. I was down for Saturday and Sunday. It was fine weather. We went to Hastings to the swimming pool."

  "What did you talk about most of the time?"

  "I gave her a piece of my mind," said Megan.

  "And what else? She conversed of what?"

  The girl frowned in an effort of memory. "She talked about being hard up—of a hat and a couple of summer frocks she'd just bought. And a little of Don . . . . She also said she disliked Milly Higley—that's the girl at the café—and we laughed about the Merrion woman who keeps the cafe . . . . I don't remember anything else . . . ."

  "She didn't mention any man—forgive me, Mr. Fraser—she might be meeting?"

  "She wouldn't to me," said Megan dryly.

  Poirot turned to the red-haired young man with the square jaw.

  "Mr. Fraser—I want you to cast your mind back. You went, you said, to the cafe on the fatal evening. Your first intention was to wait there and watch for Betty Barnard to come out. Can you remember anyone at all whom you noticed whilst you were waiting there?"

  "There were a large number of people walking along the front. I can't remember any of them."

  "Excuse me, but are you trying? However preoccupied the mind may be, the eye notices mechanically—unintelligently but accurately . . ."

  The young man repeated doggedly: "I don't remember anybody."

  Poirot sighed and turned to Mary Drower. "I suppose you got letters from your aunt?"

  "Oh, yes, sir."

  "When was the last?"

  Mary thought a minute. "Two days before the murder, sir."

  "What did it say?"

  "She said the old devil had been round and that she'd sent him off with a flea in the ear—excuse the expression, sir—said she expected me over on the Wednesday—that's my day out, sir—and she said we'd go to the pictures. It was going to be my birthday, sir."

  Something—the thought of the little festivity perhaps, suddenly brought tears to Mary's eyes. She gulped down a sob. Then apologized for it.

  "You must forgive me, sir. I don't want to be silly. Crying's no good. It was just the thought of her—and me—looking forward to our treat. It upset me somehow, sir."

  "I know just what you feel like," said Franklin Clarke. "It's always the little things that get one—and especially anything like a treat or a present—something jolly and natural. I remember seeing a woman run over once. She'd just bought some new shoes. I saw her lying there—and the burst parcel with the ridiculous little high-heeled slippers peeping out—it gave me a turn—they looked so pathetic."

  Megan said with a sudden eager warmth: "That's true—that's awfully true. The same thing happened after Betty died. Mum had bought some stockings for her as a present—bought them the very day it happened. Poor mum, she was all broken up. I found her crying over them. She kept saying: 'I bought them for Betty—I bought them for Betty—and she never even saw them.'"

  Her own voice quivered a little. She leaned forward, looking straight at Franklin Clarke. There was between them a sudden sympathy—a fraternity in trouble.

  "I know," he said. "I know exactly. Those are just the sort of things that are hell to remember."

  Donald Fraser stirred uneasily.

  Thora Grey diverted the conversation. "Aren't we going to make any plans—for the future?" she asked.

  "Of course." Franklin Clarke resumed his ordinary manner. "I think that when the moment comes—that is, when the fourth letter arrives—we ought to join forces. Until then, perhaps we might each try our luck on our own. I don't know whether there are any points M. Poirot thinks might repay investigation?"

  "I could make some suggestions," said Poirot.

  "Good. I'll take them down." He produced a notebook. "Go ahead, M. Poirot. A—?"

  "I consider it just possible that the waitress, Milly Higley, might know something useful."

  "A—Milly Higley," wrote down Franklin Clarke.

  "I suggest two methods of approach. You, Miss Barnard, might try what I call the offensive approach."

  "I suppose you think that suits my style?" said Megan dryly.

  "Pick a quarrel with the girl—say you knew she never liked your sister—and that your sister had told you all about her. If I do not err, that will provoke a flood of recrimination. She will tell you just what she thought of your sister! Some useful fact may emerge."

  "And the second method?"

  "May I suggest, Mr. Fraser, that you should show signs of interest in the girl?"

  "Is that necessary?"

  "No, it is not necessary. It is just a possible line of exploration."

  "Shall I try my hand?" asked Franklin. "I've—er—a pretty wide experience, M. Poirot. Let me see what I can do with the young lady."

  "You've got your own part of the world to attend to," said Thora Grey rather sharply.

  Franklin's face fell just a little. "Yes," he said. "I have."

  "Tout de [garbled], I do not think there is much you can do down there for the present," said Poirot. "Mademoiselle Grey now, she is far more fitted—"

  Thora Grey interrupted him. "But you see, M. Poirot, I have left Devon for good."

  "Ah? I did not understand."

  "Miss Grey very kindly stayed on to help me clear up things," said Franklin. "But naturally she prefers a post in London."

  Poirot directed a sharp glance from one to the other.

  "How is Lady Clarke?" he demanded.

  I was admiring the faint colour in Thora Grey's cheeks and almost missed Clarke's reply.

  "Pretty bad. By the way, M. Poirot, I wonder if you could see your way to running down to Devon and paying her a visit? She expressed a desire to see you before I left. Of course, she often can't see people for a couple of days at a time, but if you would risk that—at my expense, of course."

  "Certainly, Mr. Clarke. Shall we say, the day after tomorrow?"

  "Good. I'll let nurse know and she'll arrange the dope accordingly."

  "For you,
my child," said Poirot, turning to Mary, "I think you might perhaps do good work in Andover. Try the children."

  "The children?"

  "Yes. Children will not chat readily to outsiders. But you are known in the street where your aunt lived. There were a good many children playing about. They may have noticed who went in and out of your aunt's shop."

  "What about Miss Grey and myself?" asked Clarke. "That is, if I'm not to go to Bexhill."

  "M. Poirot," said Thora Grey. "What was the postmark on the third letter?"

  "Putney, mademoiselle."

  She said thoughtfully: "S.W.15, Putney, that is right, is it not?"

  "For a wonder, the newspapers printed it correctly."

  "That seems to point to A.B.C. being a Londoner."

  "On the face of it, yes."

  "One ought to be able to draw him," said Clarke. "M. Poirot, how would it be if I inserted an advertisement—something after these lines: A.B.C.. Urgent. H.P. close on your track. A hundred for my silence. X.Y.Z.. Nothing quite so crude as that—but you see the idea. It might draw him."

  "It is a possibility, yes."

  "Might induce him to try and have a shot at me."

  "I think it's very dangerous and silly," said Thora Grey sharply.

  "What about it, M. Poirot?"

  "It can do no harm to try. I think myself that A.B.C. will be too cunning to reply." Poirot smiled a little. "I see, Mr. Clarke, that you are—if I may say so without being offensive—still a boy at heart."

  Franklin Clarke looked a little abashed. "Well," he said, consulting his notebook, "we're making a start:

  A.—Miss Barnard and Milly Higley.

  B.—Mr. Fraser and Miss Higley.

  C.—Children in Andover.

  D.—Advertisement.

  I don't feel any of it is much good, but it will be something to do whilst waiting."

  He got up and a few minutes later the meeting had dispersed.

 

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