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Poirot Investigates

Page 9

by Agatha Christie


  “Harper, I think, but I cannot be sure. He had not been with Mr. Bleibner very long, I know. He was a very pleasant young fellow.”

  “Thank you, Lady Willard.”

  “If there is anything else—”

  “For the moment, nothing. Leave it now in my hands, and be assured that I will do all that is humanly possible to protect your son.”

  They were not exactly reassuring words, and I observed Lady Willard wince as he uttered them. Yet, at the same time, the fact that he had not pooh-poohed her fears seemed in itself to be a relief to her.

  For my part I had never before suspected that Poirot had so deep a vein of superstition in his nature. I tackled him on the subject as we went homewards. His manner was grave and earnest.

  “But yes, Hastings. I believe in these things. You must not underrate the force of superstition.”

  “What are we going to do about it?”

  “Toujours pratique, the good Hastings! Eh bien, to begin with we are going to cable to New York for fuller details of young Mr. Bleibner’s death.”

  He duly sent off his cable. The reply was full and precise. Young Rupert Bleibner had been in low water for several years. He had been a beachcomber and a remittance man in several South Sea islands, but had returned to New York two years ago, where he had rapidly sunk lower and lower. The most significant thing, to my mind, was that he had recently managed to borrow enough money to take him to Egypt. “I’ve a good friend there I can borrow from,” he had declared. Here, however, his plans had gone awry. He had returned to New York cursing his skinflint of an uncle who cared more for the bones of dead and gone kings than his own flesh and blood. It was during his sojourn in Egypt that the death of Sir John Willard had occurred. Rupert had plunged once more into his life of dissipation in New York, and then, without warning, he had committed suicide, leaving behind him a letter which contained some curious phrases. It seemed written in a sudden fit of remorse. He referred to himself as a leper and an outcast, and the letter ended by declaring that such as he were better dead.

  A shadowy theory leapt into my brain. I had never really believed in the vengeance of a long dead Egyptian king. I saw here a more modern crime. Supposing this young man had decided to do away with his uncle—preferably by poison. By mistake, Sir John Willard receives the fatal dose. The young man returns to New York, haunted by his crime. The news of his uncle’s death reaches him. He realizes how unnecessary his crime has been, and stricken with remorse takes his own life.

  I outlined my solution to Poirot. He was interested.

  “It is ingenious what you have thought of there—decidedly it is ingenious. It may even be true. But you leave out of count the fatal influence of the Tomb.”

  I shrugged my shoulders.

  “You still think that has something to do with it?”

  “So much so, mon ami, that we start for Egypt tomorrow.”

  “What?” I cried, astonished.

  “I have said it.” An expression of conscious heroism spread over Poirot’s face. Then he groaned. “But oh,” he lamented, “the sea! The hateful sea!”

  II

  It was a week later. Beneath our feet was the golden sand of the desert. The hot sun poured down overhead. Poirot, the picture of misery, wilted by my side. The little man was not a good traveller. Our four days’ voyage from Marseilles had been one long agony to him. He had landed at Alexandria the wraith of his former self, even his usual neatness had deserted him. We had arrived in Cairo and had driven out at once to the Mena House Hotel, right in the shadow of the Pyramids.

  The charm of Egypt had laid hold of me. Not so Poirot. Dressed precisely the same as in London, he carried a small clothes brush in his pocket and waged an unceasing war on the dust which accumulated on his dark apparel.

  “And my boots,” he wailed. “Regard them, Hastings. My boots, of the neat patent leather, usually so smart and shining. See, the sand is inside them, which is painful, and outside them, which outrages the eyesight. Also the heat, it causes my moustaches to become limp—but limp!”

  “Look at the Sphinx,” I urged. “Even I can feel the mystery and the charm it exhales.”

  Poirot looked at it discontentedly.

  “It has not the air happy,” he declared. “How could it, half-buried in sand in that untidy fashion. Ah, this cursed sand!”

  “Come, now, there’s a lot of sand in Belgium,” I reminded him, mindful of a holiday spent at Knocke-sur-mer in the midst of “Les dunes impeccables” as the guidebook had phrased it.

  “Not in Brussels,” declared Poirot. He gazed at the Pyramids thoughtfully. “It is true that they, at least, are of a shape solid and geometrical, but their surface is of an unevenness most unpleasing. And the palm trees I like them not. Not even do they plant them in rows!”

  I cut short his lamentations, by suggesting that we should start for the camp. We were to ride there on camels, and the beasts were patiently kneeling, waiting for us to mount, in charge of several picturesque boys headed by a voluble dragoman.

  I pass over the spectacle of Poirot on a camel. He started by groans and lamentations and ended by shrieks, gesticulations and invocations to the Virgin Mary and every Saint in the calendar. In the end, he descended ignominiously and finished the journey on a diminutive donkey. I must admit that a trotting camel is no joke for the amateur. I was stiff for several days.

  At last we neared the scene of the excavations. A sunburnt man with a grey beard, in white clothes and wearing a helmet, came to meet us.

  “Monsieur Poirot and Captain Hastings? We received your cable. I’m sorry that there was no one to meet you in Cairo. An unforeseen event occurred which completely disorganized our plans.”

  Poirot paled. His hand, which had stolen to his clothes brush, stayed its course.

  “Not another death?” he breathed.

  “Yes.”

  “Sir Guy Willard?” I cried.

  “No, Captain Hastings. My American colleague, Mr.

  Schneider.”

  “And the cause?” demanded Poirot.

  “Tetanus.”

  I blanched. All around me I seemed to feel an atmosphere of evil, subtle and menacing. A horrible thought flashed across me. Supposing I were next?

  “Mon Dieu,” said Poirot, in a very low voice, “I do not understand this. It is horrible. Tell me, monsieur, there is no doubt that it was tetanus?”

  “I believe not. But Dr. Ames will tell you more than I can do.”

  “Ah, of course, you are not the doctor.”

  “My name is Tosswill.”

  This, then, was the British expert described by Lady Willard as being a minor official at the British Museum. There was something at once grave and steadfast about him that took my fancy.

  “If you will come with me,” continued Dr. Tosswill. “I will take you to Sir Guy Willard. He was most anxious to be informed as soon as you should arrive.”

  We were taken across the camp to a large tent. Dr. Tosswill lifted up the flap and we entered. Three men were sitting inside.

  “Monsieur Poirot and Captain Hastings have arrived, Sir Guy,” said Tosswill.

  The youngest of the three men jumped up and came forward to greet us. There was a certain impulsiveness in his manner which reminded me of his mother. He was not nearly so sunburnt as the others, and that fact, coupled with a certain haggardness round the eyes, made him look older than his twenty-two years. He was clearly endeavouring to bear up under a severe mental strain.

  He introduced his two companions, Dr. Ames, a capable-looking man of thirty-odd, with a touch of greying hair at the temples, and Mr. Harper, the secretary, a pleasant lean young man wearing the national insignia of horn-rimmed spectacles.

  After a few minutes’ desultory conversation the latter went out, and Dr. Tosswill followed him. We were left alone with Sir Guy and Dr. Ames.

  “Please ask any questions you want to ask, Monsieur Poirot,” said Willard. “We are utterly dumbfounded at this strange se
ries of disasters, but it isn’t—it can’t be, anything but coincidence.”

  There was a nervousness about his manner which rather belied the words. I saw that Poirot was studying him keenly.

  “Your heart is really in this work, Sir Guy?”

  “Rather. No matter what happens, or what comes of it, the work is going on. Make up your mind to that.”

  Poirot wheeled round on the other.

  “What have you to say to that, monsieur le docteur?”

  “Well,” drawled the doctor, “I’m not for quitting myself.”

  Poirot made one of those expressive grimaces of his.

  “Then, évidemment, we must find out just how we stand. When did Mr. Schneider’s death take place?”

  “Three days ago.”

  “You are sure it was tetanus?”

  “Dead sure.”

  “It couldn’t have been a case of strychnine poisoning, for instance?”

  “No, Monsieur Poirot, I see what you are getting at. But it was a clear case of tetanus.”

  “Did you not inject antiserum?”

  “Certainly we did,” said the doctor dryly. “Every conceivable thing that could be done was tried.”

  “Had you the antiserum with you?”

  “No. We procured it from Cairo.”

  “Have there been any other cases of tetanus in the camp?”

  “No, not one.”

  “Are you certain that the death of Mr. Bleibner was not due to tetanus?”

  “Absolutely plumb certain. He had a scratch upon his thumb which became poisoned, and septicaemia set in. It sounds pretty much the same to a layman, I dare say, but the two things are entirely different.”

  “Then we have four deaths—all totally dissimilar, one heart failure, one blood poisoning, one suicide and one tetanus.”

  “Exactly, Monsieur Poirot.”

  “Are you certain that there is nothing which might link the four together?”

  “I don’t quite understand you?”

  “I will put it plainly. Was any act committed by those four men which might seem to denote disrespect to the spirit of Men-her-Ra?”

  The doctor gazed at Poirot in astonishment.

  “You’re talking through your hat, Monsieur Poirot. Surely you’ve not been guyed into believing all that fool talk?”

  “Absolute nonsense,” muttered Willard angrily.

  Poirot remained placidly immovable, blinking a little out of his green cat’s eyes.

  “So you do not believe it, monsieur le docteur?”

  “No, sir, I do not,” declared the doctor emphatically. “I am a scientific man, and I believe only what science teaches.”

  “Was there no science then in Ancient Egypt?” asked Poirot softly. He did not wait for a reply, and indeed Dr. Ames seemed rather at a loss for the moment. “No, no, do not answer me, but tell me this. What do the native workmen think?”

  “I guess,” said Dr. Ames, “that, where white folk lose their heads, natives aren’t going to be far behind. I’ll admit that they’re getting what you might call scared—but they’ve no cause to be.”

  “I wonder,” said Poirot noncommittally.

  Sir Guy leant forward.

  “Surely,” he cried incredulously, “you cannot believe in—oh, but the thing’s absurd! You can know nothing of Ancient Egypt if you think that.”

  For answer Poirot produced a little book from his pocket—an ancient tattered volume. As he held it out I saw its title, The Magic of the Egyptians and Chaldeans. Then, wheeling round, he strode out of the tent. The doctor stared at me.

  “What is his little idea?”

  The phrase, so familiar on Poirot’s lips, made me smile as it came from another.

  “I don’t know exactly,” I confessed. “He’s got some plan of exorcizing the evil spirits, I believe.”

  I went in search of Poirot, and found him talking to the lean-faced young man who had been the late Mr. Bleibner’s secretary.

  “No,” Mr. Harper was saying, “I’ve only been six months with the expedition. Yes, I knew Mr. Bleibner’s affairs pretty well.”

  “Can you recount to me anything concerning his nephew?”

  “He turned up here one day, not a bad-looking fellow. I’d never met him before, but some of the others had—Ames, I think, and Schneider. The old man wasn’t at all pleased to see him. They were at it in no time, hammer and tongs. ‘Not a cent,’ the old man shouted. ‘Not one cent now or when I’m dead. I intend to leave my money to the furtherance of my life’s work. I’ve been talking it over with Mr. Schneider today.’ And a bit more of the same. Young Bleibner lit out for Cairo right away.”

  “Was he in perfectly good health at the time?”

  “The old man?”

  “No, the young one.”

  “I believe he did mention there was something wrong with him. But it couldn’t have been anything serious, or I should have remembered.”

  “One thing more, has Mr. Bleibner left a will?”

  “So far as we know, he has not.”

  “Are you remaining with the expedition, Mr. Harper?”

  “No, sir, I am not. I’m for New York as soon as I can square up things here. You may laugh if you like, but I’m not going to be this blasted Men-her-Ra’s next victim. He’ll get me if I stop here.”

  The young man wiped the perspiration from his brow.

  Poirot turned away. Over his shoulder he said with a peculiar smile:

  “Remember, he got one of his victims in New York.”

  “Oh, hell!” said Mr. Harper forcibly.

  “That young man is nervous,” said Poirot thoughtfully. “He is on the edge, but absolutely on the edge.”

  I glanced at Poirot curiously, but his enigmatical smile told me nothing. In company with Sir Guy Willard and Dr. Tosswill we were taken round the excavations. The principal finds had been removed to Cairo, but some of the tomb furniture was extremely interesting. The enthusiasm of the young baronet was obvious, but I fancied that I detected a shade of nervousness in his manner as though he could not quite escape from the feeling of menace in the air. As we entered the tent which had been assigned to us, for a wash before joining the evening meal, a tall dark figure in white robes stood aside to let us pass with a graceful gesture and a murmured greeting in Arabic. Poirot stopped.

  “You are Hassan, the late Sir John Willard’s servant?”

  “I served my Lord Sir John, now I serve his son.” He took a step nearer to us and lowered his voice. “You are a wise one, they say, learned in dealing with evil spirits. Let the young master depart from here. There is evil in the air around us.”

  And with an abrupt gesture, not waiting for a reply, he strode away.

  “Evil in the air,” muttered Poirot. “Yes, I feel it.”

  Our meal was hardly a cheerful one. The floor was left to Dr. Tosswill, who discoursed at length upon Egyptian antiquities. Just as we were preparing to retire to rest, Sir Guy caught Poirot by the arm and pointed. A shadowy figure was moving amidst the tents. It was no human one: I recognized distinctly the dog-headed figure I had seen carved on the walls of the tomb.

  My blood froze at the sight.

  “Mon Dieu! ” murmured Poirot, crossing himself vigorously. “Anubis, the jackal-headed, the god of departing souls.”

  “Someone is hoaxing us,” cried Dr. Tosswill, rising indignantly to his feet.

  “It went into your tent, Harper,” muttered Sir Guy, his face dreadfully pale.

  “No,” said Poirot, shaking his head, “into that of Dr. Ames.”

  The doctor stared at him incredulously; then, repeating Dr. Tosswill’s words, he cried:

  “Someone is hoaxing us. Come, we’ll soon catch the fellow.”

  He dashed energetically in pursuit of the shadowy apparition. I followed him, but, search as we would, we could find no trace of any living soul having passed that way. We returned, somewhat disturbed in mind, to find Poirot taking energetic measures, in his own way, to en
sure his personal safety. He was busily surrounding our tent with various diagrams and inscriptions which he was drawing in the sand. I recognized the five-pointed star or Pentagon many times repeated. As was his wont, Poirot was at the same time delivering an impromptu lecture on witchcraft and magic in general, White magic as opposed to Black, with various references to the Ka and the Book of the Dead thrown in.

  It appeared to excite the liveliest contempt in Dr. Tosswill, who drew me aside, literally snorting with rage.

  “Balderdash, sir,” he exclaimed angrily. “Pure balderdash. The man’s an imposter. He doesn’t know the difference between the superstitions of the Middle Ages and the beliefs of Ancient Egypt. Never have I heard such a hotchpotch of ignorance and

  credulity.”

  I calmed the excited expert, and joined Poirot in the tent. My little friend was beaming cheerfully.

  “We can now sleep in peace,” he declared happily. “And I can do with some sleep. My head, it aches abominably. Ah, for a good tisane! ”

  As though in answer to prayer, the flap of the tent was lifted and Hassan appeared, bearing a steaming cup which he offered to Poirot. It proved to be camomile tea, a beverage of which he is inordinately fond. Having thanked Hassan and refused his offer of another cup for myself, we were left alone once more. I stood at the door of the tent some time after undressing, looking out over the desert.

  “A wonderful place,” I said aloud, “and a wonderful work. I can feel the fascination. This desert life, this probing into the heart of a vanished civilization. Surely, Poirot, you, too, must feel the charm?”

  I got no answer, and I turned, a little annoyed. My annoyance was quickly changed to concern. Poirot was lying back across the rude couch, his face horribly convulsed. Beside him was the empty cup. I rushed to his side, then dashed out and across the camp to Dr. Ames’s tent.

  “Dr. Ames!” I cried. “Come at once.”

  “What’s the matter?” said the doctor, appearing in pyjamas.

  “My friend. He’s ill. Dying. The camomile tea. Don’t let Hassan leave the camp.”

  Like a flash the doctor ran to our tent. Poirot was lying as I left him.

  “Extraordinary,” cried Ames. “Looks like a seizure—or—what did you say about something he drank?” He picked up the empty cup.

 

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