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AgathaChristie-HalloweenParty

Page 14

by Hallowe'en Party (lit)

said Poirot sententiously.

  He offered her the notebook.

  "Do you wish to see what I have

  written?"

  "Of course I do. I daresay it won't mean

  anything to me. The things you think

  important to write down, I never do."

  He held out the small black notebook.

  "Deaths: e.g. Mrs. LlewellynSmythe

  (Wealthy). Janet White (Schoolteacher).

  Lawyer's clerk--Knifed, Former prosecution

  for forgery."

  Below it was written "Opera girl

  disappears."

  "What opera girl?"

  "It is the word my friend, Spence's

  sister, uses for what you and I call au pair girl."

  "Why should she disappear?"

  "Because she was possibly about to get

  into some form of legal trouble."

  Poirofs finger went down to the next

  entry. The word was simply "Forgery", with two question marks after it.

  187

  "Forgery?" said Mrs. Oliver. "Why

  forgery?"

  "liat is what I asked. Why forgery?"

  "^at kind of forgery?"

  "^Will was forged, or rather a codicil

  to a. ^ill. A codicil in the au pair girl's

  favour."

  "Undue influence?" suggested Mrs.

  Oliver.

  "Forgery is something rather more

  serious than undue influence," said Poirot.

  "I don't see what that's got to do with

  the murder of poor Joyce."

  ":hor do I," said Poirot. "But, therefore:, it is interesting."

  "'What is the next word? I can't read

  it."

  "Ilephants."

  "I don't see what that's got to do with

  anything."

  " It might have," said Poirot, "believe

  me,. it might have."

  He rose.

  "I must leave you now," he said.

  "Apologise, please, to my hostess for my

  not saying good-bye to her. I much

  enjoyed meeting her and her lovely and

  188

  unusual daughter. Tell her to take care of

  that child."

  " 'My mother said I never should, play

  with the children in the wood,"9 quoted

  Mrs. Oliver. "Well, good-bye. If you like

  to be mysterious, I suppose you will go on

  being mysterious. You don't even say what

  you're going to do next."

  "I have made an appointment for

  to-morrow morning with Messrs. Fullerton, Harrison and Leadbetter in

  Medchester."

  "Why?"

  "To talk about forgery and other

  matters."

  "And after that?"

  "I want to talk to certain people who

  were also present."

  "At the party?"

  "No--at the preparations for the

  party."

  189

  12

  THE premises of Fullerton, Harrison

  and Leadbetter were typical of an

  old-fashioned firm of the utmost

  respectability. The hand of time had made

  itself felt. There were no more Harrisons

  and no more Leadbetters. There was a Mr.

  Atkinson and a young Mr. Cole, and there

  was still Mr. Jeremy Fullerton, senior

  partner.

  T

  A lean, elderly man, Mr. Fullerton, with an impassive face, a dry, legal voice, and eyes that were unexpectedly shrewd.

  Beneath his hand rested a sheet of notepaper,

  the few words on which he had just

  read. He read them once again, assessing

  their meaning very exactly. Then he

  looked at the man whom the note introduced

  to him.

  "Monsieur Hercule Poirot?" He made

  his own assessment of the visitor. An

  elderly man, a foreigner, very dapper in

  his dress, unsuitably attired as to the feet

  in patent leather shoes which were, so Mr.

  190

  Fullerton guessed shrewdly, too tight for

  him. Faint lines of pain were already

  etching themselves round the corners of

  his eyes. A dandy, a fop, a foreigner and

  recommended to him by, of all people,

  Inspector Henry Raglan, CID, and also

  vouched for by Superintendent Spence

  (retired), formerly of Scotland Yard.

  "Superintendent Spence, eh?" said Mr.

  Fullerton.

  Fullerton knew Spence. A man who had

  done good work in his time, had been

  highly thought of by his superiors. Faint

  memories flashed across his mind. Rather

  a celebrated case, more celebrated actually

  than it had showed any signs of being, a

  case that had seemed cut and dried. Of

  course! It came to him that his nephew

  Robert had been connected with it, had

  been Junior Counsel. A psychopathic

  killer, it had seemed, a man who had

  hardly bothered to try and defend himself,

  a man whom you might have thought

  really wanted to be hanged (because it had

  meant hanging at that time). No fifteen

  years, or indefinite number of years in

  prison. No. You paid the full penalty—

  and more's the pity they've given it up, so

  191

  Mr. Fullerton thought in his dry mind.

  The young thugs nowadays thought they

  didn't risk much by prolonging assault to

  the point where it became mortal. Once

  your man was dead, there'd be no witness

  to identify you.

  Spence had been in charge of the case, a quiet, dogged man who had insisted all

  along that they'd got the wrong man. And

  they had got the wrong man, and the

  person who found the evidence that they'd

  got the wrong man was some sort of an

  amateurish foreigner. Some retired detective

  chap from the Belgian police force. A

  good age then. And now--senile probably, thought Mr. Fullerton, but all the same

  he himself would take the prudent course.

  Information, that's what was wanted from

  him. Information which, after all, could

  not be a mistake to give, since he could

  not see that he was likely to have any

  information that could be useful in this

  particular matter. A case of child

  homicide.

  Mr. Fullerton might think he had a

  fairly shrewd idea of who had committed

  that homicide, but he was not so sure as

  he would like to be, because there were at

  192

  least three claimants in the matter. Any

  one of three young ne'er-do-wells might

  have done it. Words floated through his

  head. Mentally retarded. Psychiatrist's

  report. That's how the whole matter would

  end, no doubt. All the same, to drown a

  child during a party—that was rather a

  different cup of tea from one of the

  innumerable school children who did not

  arrive home and who had accepted a lift

  in a car after having been repeatedly

  warned not to do so, and who had been

  found in a nearby copse or gravel pit. A

  gravel pit now. When was that? Many,

  many years ago now.

  All this took about four minutes' time

  and Mr. Fullerton then cleared his throat

  in a slightly asthmatic f
ashion, and spoke.

  "Monsieur Hercule Poirot," he said

  again. "What can I do for you? I suppose

  it's the business of this young girl, Joyce

  Reynolds. Nasty business, very nasty

  business. I can't see actually where I can

  assist you. I know very little about it all."

  "But you are, I believe, the legal adviser

  to the Drake family?"

  "Oh yes, yes. Hugo Drake, poor chap.

  Very nice fellow. I've known them for

  193

  years, ever since they bought Apple Trees

  and came here to live. Sad thing, polio--

  he contracted it when they were holidaying

  abroad one year. Mentally, of course, his

  health was quite unimpaired. It's sad when

  it happens to a man who has been a good

  athlete all his life, a sportsman, good at

  games and all the rest of it. Yes. Sad

  business to know you're a cripple for life."

  "You were also, I believe, in charge

  of the legal affairs of Mrs.

  LlewellynSmythe?"

  "The aunt, yes. Remarkable woman

  really. She came here to live after her

  health broke down, so as to be near her

  nephew and his wife. Bought that White

  Elephant of a place. Quarry House. Paid

  far more than it was worth--but money

  was no object to her. She was very well

  off. She could have found a more attractive

  house, but it was the quarry itself that

  fascinated her. Got a landscape gardener

  on to it, fellow quite high up in his

  profession, I believe. One of those handsome, long-haired chaps, but he had

  ability all right. He did well for himself in

  this quarry garden work. Got himself quite

  a reputation over it, illustrated in Homes

  194

  and Gardens and all the rest of it. Yes, Mrs. Llewellyn-Smythe knew how to pick

  people. It wasn't just a question of a handsome

  young man as a protege. Some

  elderly women are foolish that way, but

  this chap had brains and was at the top of

  his profession. But I'm wandering on a bit. Mrs. Llewellyn-Smythe died nearly two

  years ago."

  "Quite suddenly."

  Fullerton looked at Poirot sharply.

  "Well, no, I wouldn't say that. She had

  a heart condition and doctors tried to keep

  her from doing too much, but she was the

  sort of woman that you couldn't dictate to.

  She wasn't a hypochondriac type." He

  coughed and said, "But I expect we are

  getting away from the subject about which

  you came to talk to me."

  "Not really," said Poirot, "although I

  would like, if I may, to ask you a few

  questions on a completely different matter.

  Some information about one of your employees, by name Lesley Ferrier."

  Mr. Fullerton looked somewhat surprised.

  "Lesley Ferrier?" he said. "Lesley

  Ferrier. Let me see. Really, you know, I'd

  195

  nearly forgotten his name. Yes, yes, of

  course. Got himself knifed, didn't he?"

  "That is the man I mean."

  "Well, I don't really know that I can tell

  you much about him. It took place some

  time ago. Knifed near the Green Swan one

  night. No arrest was ever made. I daresay

  the police had some idea who was responsible, but it was mainly, I think, a matter

  of getting evidence."

  "The motive was emotional?" inquired

  Poirot.

  "Oh yes, I should certainly think so.

  Jealousy, you know. He'd been going

  steady with a married woman. Her

  husband had a pub. The Green Swan at

  Woodleigh Common. Unpretentious place.

  Then it seems young Lesley started

  playing around with another young woman

  --or more than one, it was said. Quite a

  one for the girls, he was. There was a bit

  of trouble once or twice."

  "You were satisfied with him as an

  employee?"

  "I would rather describe it as not

  dissatisfied. He had his points. He handled

  clients well and was studying for his

  articles, and if only he'd paid more atten-

  196

  tion to his position and keeping up a good

  standard of behaviour, it would have been

  better instead of mixing himself up with

  one girl after another, most of whom I am

  apt in my old-fashioned way to consider as

  considerably beneath him in station. There

  was a row one night at the Green Swan,

  and Lesley Ferrier was knifed on his way

  home."

  "Was one of the girls responsible, or

  would it be Mrs. Green Swan, do you

  think?"

  "Really, it is not a case of knowing

  anything definite. I believe the police

  considered it was a case of jealousy—

  but—" He shrugged his shoulders.

  "But you are not sure?"

  "Oh, it happens," said Mrs. Fullerton.

  "'Hell hath no fury like a woman

  scorned.9 That is always being quoted in

  Court. Sometimes it's true."

  "But I think I discern that you yourself

  are not at all sure that that was the case

  here."

  "Well, I should have preferred rather

  more evidence, shall we say. The police

  would have preferred rather more evi-

  197

  dence, too. Public prosecutor threw it

  out, I believe."

  "It could have been something quite

  different?"

  "Oh yes. One could propound several

  theories. Not a very stable character,

  young Ferrier. Well brought up. Nice

  mother--a widow. Father not so satisfactory.

  Got himself out of several scrapes by

  the skin of his teeth. Hard luck on his

  wife. Our young man in some ways

  resembled his father. He was associated

  once or twice with rather a doubtful

  crowd. I gave him the benefit of the doubt.

  He was young still. But I warned him that

  he was getting himself mixed up with the

  wrong lot. Too closely connected with

  fiddling transactions outside the law.

  Frankly, but for his mother, I wouldn't

  have kept him. He was young, and he had

  ability; I gave him a warning or two which

  I hoped might do the trick. But there's a

  lot of corruption about these days. It's

  been on the increase for the last ten

  years."

  "Someone might have had it in for him, you think?"

  "Quite possible. These associations--

  198

  gangs is a rather melodramatic word—but

  you run a certain danger when you get

  tangled up with them. Any idea that you

  may split on them, and a knife between

  your shoulder blades isn't an uncommon

  thing to happen."

  "Nobody saw it happen?"

  "No. Nobody saw it happen. They

  wouldn't, of course. Whoever took the job

  on would have all the arrangements nicely

  made. Alibi at the proper place and time,

  and so on and so on."

  "Yet somebody might have seen it
/>
  happen. Somebody quite unlikely. A child,

  for instance."

  "Late at night? In the neighbourhood of

  the Green Swan? Hardly a very credible

  idea. Monsieur Poirot."

  "A child," persisted Poirot, "who might

  remember. A child coming home from a

  friend's house. At some short distance,

  perhaps, from her own home. She might

  have been coming by a footpath or seen

  something from behind a hedge."

  "Really, Monsieur Poirot, what an

  imagination you have got. What you are

  saying seems to me most unlikely."

  "It does not seem so unlikely to me,"

  199

  said Poirot. "Children do see things. They

  are so often, you see, not expected to be

  where they are."

  "But surely when they go home and

  relate what they have seen?"

  "They might not," said Poirot. "They

  might not, you see, be sure what they had seen. Especially if what they had seen had

  been faintly frightening to them. Children

  do not always go home and report a street

  accident they have seen, or some unexpected

  violence. Children keep their

  secrets very well. Keep them and think

  about them. Sometimes they like to feel

  that they know a secret, a secret which

  they are keeping for themselves."

  "They'd tell their mothers," said Mr.

  Fullerton.

  "I am not so sure of that," said Poirot.

  "In my experience the things that children

  do not tell their mothers are quite

  numerous."

  "What interests you so much, may I

  know, about this case of Lesley Ferrier?

  The regrettable death of a young man by

  a violence which is so lamentably often

  amongst us nowadays?"

  "I know nothing about him. But I

  200

  wanted to know something about him

  because his is a violent death that occurred

  not many years ago. That might be

  important to me."

  "You know, Mr. Poirot," said Mr.

  Fullerton, with some slight acerbity, "I

  really cannot quite make out why you have

  come to me, and in what you are really

  interested. You cannot surely suspect any

  tie-up between the death of Joyce Reynolds

  and the death of a young man of

  promise but slightly criminal activities who

  has been dead for some years?"

  "One can suspect anything," said

  Poirot. "One has to find out more."

  "Excuse me, what one has to have in all

  matters dealing with crime, is evidence."

 

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