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‘You read this, Mademoiselle?’ he asked, suddenly.

‘The St Loo Herald? Not seriously. I opened it to see the tides. It gives them every week.’

‘I see. By the way, Mademoiselle, have you ever made a will?’

‘Yes, I did. About six months ago. Just before my op.’

‘Qu’est ce que vous dites? Your op?’

‘Operation. For appendicitis. Someone said I ought to make a will, so I did. It made me feel quite important.’

‘And the terms of that will?’

‘I left End House to Charles. I hadn’t much else to leave, but what there was I left to Freddie. I should think probably the—what do you call them—liabilities would have exceeded the assets, really.’

Poirot nodded absently.

‘I will take my leave now. Au revoir, Mademoiselle. Be careful.’

‘What of?’ asked Nick.

‘You are intelligent. Yes, that is the weak point—in which direction are you to be careful? Who can say? But have confidence, Mademoiselle. In a few days I shall have discovered the truth.’

‘Until then beware of poison, bombs, revolver shots, motor accidents and arrows dipped in the secret poison of the South American Indians,’ finished Nick glibly.

‘Do not mock yourself, Mademoiselle,’ said Poirot gravely.

He paused as he reached the door.

‘By the way,’ he said. ‘What price did M. Lazarus offer you for the portrait of your grandfather?’

‘Fifty pounds.’

‘Ah!’ said Poirot.

He looked earnestly back at the dark saturnine face above the mantelpiece.

‘But, as I told you, I don’t want to sell the old boy.’

‘No,’ said Poirot, thoughtfully. ‘No, I understand.’

Chapter 4

There Must Be Something!

‘Poirot,’ I said, as soon as we were out upon the road. ‘There is one thing I think you ought to know.’

‘And what is that, mon ami?’

I told him of Mrs Rice’s version of the trouble with the motor.

‘Tiens! C’est intéressant, ça. There is, of course, a type, vain, hysterical, that seeks to make itself interesting by having marvellous escapes from death and which will recount to you surprising histories that never happened! Yes, it is well known, that type there. Such people will even do themselves grave bodily injury to sustain the fiction.’

‘You don’t think that—’

‘That Mademoiselle Nick is of that type? No, indeed. You observed, Hastings, that we had great difficulty in convincing her of her danger. And right to the end she kept up the farce of a half-mocking disbelief. She is of her generation, that little one. All the same, it is interesting—what Madame Rice said. Why should she say it? Why say it even if it were true? It was unnecessary—almost gauche.’

‘Yes,’ I said. ‘That’s true. She dragged it into the conversation neck and crop—for no earthly reason that I could see.’

‘That is curious. Yes, that is curious. The little facts that are curious, I like to see them appear. They are significant. They point the way.’

‘The way—where?’

‘You put your finger on the weak spot, my excellent Hastings. Where? Where indeed! Alas, we shall not know till we get there.’

‘Tell me, Poirot,’ I said. ‘Why did you insist on her getting this cousin to stay?’

Poirot stopped and waved an excited forefinger at me.

‘Consider,’ he cried. ‘Consider for one little moment, Hastings. How we are handicapped! How are our hands tied! To hunt down a murderer after a crime has been committed—c’est tout simple! Or at least it is simple to one of my ability. The murderer has, so to speak, signed his name by committing the crime. But here there is no crime—and what is more we do not want a crime. To detect a crime before it has been committed—that is indeed of a rare difficulty.

‘What is our first aim? The safety of Mademoiselle. And that is not easy. No, it is not easy, Hastings. We cannot watch over her day and night—we cannot even send a policeman in big boots to watch over her. We cannot pass the night in a young lady’s sleeping chamber. The affair bristles with difficulties.

‘But we can do one thing. We can make it more difficult for our assassin. We can put Mademoiselle upon her guard and we can introduce a perfectly impartial witness. It will take a very clever man to get round those two circumstances.’

He paused, and then said in an entirely different tone of voice:

‘But what I am afraid of, Hastings—’

‘Yes?’

‘What I am afraid of is—that he is a very clever man. And I am not easy in my mind. No, I am not easy at all.’

‘Poirot,’ I said. ‘You’re making me feel quite nervous.’

‘So am I nervous. Listen, my friend, that paper, the St Loo Weekly Herald. It was open and folded back at—where do you think? A little paragraph which said, “Among the guests staying at the Majestic Hotel are M. Hercule Poirot and Captain Hastings.” Supposing—just supposing that someone had read that paragraph. They know my name—everyone knows my name—’

‘Miss Buckley didn’t,’ I said, with a grin.

‘She is a scatterbrain—she does not count. A serious man—a criminal—would know my name. And he would be afraid! He would wonder! He would ask himself questions. Three times he has attempted the life of Mademoiselle and now Hercule Poirot arrives in the neighbourhood. ‘Is that coincidence?” he would ask himself. And he would fear that it might not be coincidence. What would he do then?’

‘Lie low and hide his tracks,’ I suggested.

‘Yes—yes—or else—if he had real audacity, he would strike quickly—without loss of time. Before I had time to make inquiries—pouf, Mademoiselle is dead. That is what a man of audacity would do.’

‘But why do you think that somebody read that paragraph other than Miss Buckley?’

‘It was not Miss Buckley who read that paragraph. When I mentioned my name it meant nothing to her. It was not even familiar. Her face did not change. Besides she told us—she opened the paper to look at the tides—nothing else. Well, there was no tide table on that page.’

‘You think someone in the house—’

‘Someone in the house or who has access to it. And that last is easy—the window stands open. Without doubt Miss Buckley’s friends pass in and out.’

‘Have you any idea? Any suspicion?’

Poirot flung out his hands.

‘Nothing. Whatever the motive, it is, as I predicted, not an obvious one. That is the would-be murderer’s security—that is why he could act so daringly this morning. On the face of it, no one seems to have any reason for desiring the little Nick’s death. The property? End House? That passes to the cousin—but does he particularly want a heavily mortgaged and very dilapidated old house? It is not even a family place so far as he is concerned. He is not a Buckley, remember. We must see this Charles Vyse, certainly, but the idea seems fantastic.

‘Then there is Madame—the bosom friend—with her strange eyes and her air of a lost Madonna—’

‘You felt that too? I asked, startled.

‘What is her concern in the business? She tells you that her friend is a liar. C’est gentil, ça! Why does she tell you? Is she afraid of something that Nick may say? Is that something connected with the car? Or did she use that as an instance, and was her real fear of something else? Did anyone tamper with the car, and if so, who? And does she know about it?

‘Then the handsome blond, M. Lazarus. Where does he fit in? With his marvellous automobile and his money. Can he possibly be concerned in any way? Commander Challenger—’

‘He’s all right,’ I put in quickly. ‘I’m sure of that. A real pukka sahib.’

‘Doubtless he has been to what you consider the right school. Happily, being a foreigner, I am free from these prejudices, and can make investigations unhampered by them. But I will admit that I find it hard to connect Commander Challen

ger with the case. In fact, I do not see that he can be connected.’

‘Of course he can’t,’ I said warmly.

Poirot looked at me meditatively.

‘You have an extraordinary effect on me, Hastings. You have so strongly the flair in the wrong direction that I am almost tempted to go by it! You are that wholly admirable type of man, honest, credulous, honourable, who is invariably taken in by any scoundrel. You are the type of man who invests in doubtful oil fields, and non-existent gold mines. From hundreds like you, the swindler makes his daily bread. Ah, well—I shall study this Commander Challenger. You have awakened my doubts.’

‘My dear Poirot,’ I cried, angrily. ‘You are perfectly absurd. A man who has knocked about the world like I have—’

‘Never learns,’ said Poirot, sadly. ‘It is amazing—but there it is.’

‘Do you suppose I’d have made a success of my ranch out in the Argentine if I were the kind of credulous fool you make out?’

‘Do not enrage yourself, mon ami. You have made a great success of it—you and your wife.’

‘Bella,’ I said, ‘always goes by my judgement.’

‘She is as wise as she is charming,’ said Poirot. ‘Let us not quarrel my friend. See, there ahead of us, it says Mott’s Garage. That, I think, is the garage mentioned by Mademoiselle Buckley. A few inquiries will soon give us the truth of that little matter.’

We duly entered the place and Poirot introduced himself by explaining that he had been recommended there by Miss Buckley. He made some inquiries about hiring a car for some afternoon drives and from there slid easily into the topic of the damage sustained by Miss Buckley’s car not long ago.

Immediately the garage proprietor waxed voluble. Most extraordinary thing he’d ever seen. He proceeded to be technical. I, alas, am not mechanically minded. Poirot, I should imagine, is even less so. But certain facts did emerge unmistakably. The car had been tampered with. And the damage had been something quite easily done, occupying very little time.

‘So that is that,’ said Poirot, as we strolled away. ‘The little Nick was right, and the rich M. Lazarus was wrong. Hastings, my friend, all this is very interesting.’

‘What do we do now?’

‘We visit the post office and send off a telegram if it is not too late.’

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