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From one of the drawers in the desk Trefusis produced a small box, and Poirot professed himself highly delighted with it.
He hurried upstairs with his treasure trove; meeting George on the landing, he handed the box to him.
"There is something of great importance inside," he explained. "Place it, my good George, in the second drawer of my dressing table, beside the jewel case that contains my pearl studs."
"Very good, sir," said George.
"Do not break it," said Poirot. "Be very careful. Inside that box is something that will hang a criminal."
"You don't say, sir," said George.
Poirot hurried down the stairs again and, seizing his hat, departed from the house at a brisk run.
His return was more unostentatious. The faithful George, according to orders, admitted him by the side door.
"They are all in the Tower room?" inquired Poirot.
"Yes, sir."
There was a murmured interchange of a few words, and then Poirot mounted with the triumphant step of the victor to that room where the murder had taken place less than a month ago. His eyes swept around the room. They were all there, Lady Astwell, Victor Astwell, Lily Margrave, the secretary, and Parsons, the butler. The latter was hovering by the door uncertainly.
"George, sir, said I should be needed here," said Parsons as Poirot made his appearance. "I don't know if that is right, sir?"
"Quite right," said Poirot. "Remain, I pray of you."
He advanced to the middle of the room.
"This has been a case of great interest," he said in a slow, reflective voice. "It is interesting because anyone might have murdered Sir Reuben Astwell. Who inherits his money? Charles Leverson and Lady Astwell. Who was with him last that night? Lady Astwell. Who quarrelled with him violently? Again Lady Astwell."
"What are you talking about?" cried Lady Astwell. "I don't understand, I-"
"But someone else quarrelled with Sir Reuben," continued Poirot in a pensive voice. "Someone else left him that night white with rage. Supposing Lady Astwell left her husband alive at a quarter to twelve that night, there would be ten minutes before Mr. Charles Leverson returned, ten minutes in which it would be possible for someone from the second floor to steal down and do the deed, and then return to his room again."
Victor Astwell sprang up with a cry.
"What the h.e.l.l-?" He stopped, choking with rage.
"In a rage, Mr. Astwell, you once killed a man in West Africa."
"I don't believe it," cried Lily Margrave.
She came forward, her hands clenched, two bright spots of colour in her cheeks.
"I don't believe it," repeated the girl. She came close to Victor Astwell's side.
"It's true, Lily," said Astwell, "but there are things this man doesn't know. The fellow I killed was a witchdoctor who had just ma.s.sacred fifteen children. I consider that I was justified."
Lily came up to Poirot.
"M. Poirot," she said earnestly, "you are wrong. Because a man has a sharp temper, because he breaks out and says all kinds of things, that is not any reason why he should do a murder. I know-I know, I tell you-that Mr. Astwell is incapable of such a thing."
Poirot looked at her, a very curious smile on his face. Then he took her hand in his and patted it gently.
"You see, Mademoiselle," he said gently, "you also have your intuitions. So you believe in Mr. Astwell, do you?"
Lily spoke quietly.
"Mr. Astwell is a good man," she said, "and he is honest. He had nothing to do with the inside work of the Mpala Gold Fields. He is good through and through, and-I have promised to marry him."
Victor Astwell came to her side and took her other hand.
"Before G.o.d, M. Poirot," he said, "I didn't kill my brother."
"I know you did not," said Poirot.
His eyes swept around the room.
"Listen, my friends. In a hypnotic trance, Lady Astwell mentioned having seen a bulge in the curtain that night."
Everyone's eyes swept to the window.
"You mean there was a burglar concealed there?" exclaimed Victor Astwell. "What a splendid solution!"
"Ah," said Poirot gently. "But it was not that curtain."
He wheeled around and pointed to the curtain that masked the little staircase.
"Sir Reuben used the bedroom the night prior to the crime. He breakfasted in bed, and he had Mr. Trefusis up there to give him instructions. I don't know what it was that Mr. Trefusis left in that bedroom, but there was something. When he said good night to Sir Reuben and Lady Astwell, he remembered this thing and ran up the stairs to fetch it. I don't think either the husband or wife noticed him, for they had already begun a violent discussion. They were in the middle of this quarrel when Mr. Trefusis came down the stairs again.
"The things they were saying to each other were of so intimate and personal a nature that Mr. Trefusis was placed in a very awkward position. It was clear to him that they imagined he had left the room some time ago. Fearing to arouse Sir Reuben's anger against himself, he decided to remain where he was and slip out later. He stayed there behind the curtain, and as Lady Astwell left the room she subconsciously noticed the outline of his form there.
"When Lady Astwell had left the room, Trefusis tried to steal out un.o.bserved, but Sir Reuben happened to turn his head, and became aware of the secretary's presence. Already in a bad temper, Sir Reuben hurled abuse at his secretary, and accused him of deliberately eavesdropping and spying.
"Messieurs and Mesdames, I am a student of psychology. All through this case I have looked, not for the bad-tempered man or woman, for bad temper is its own safety valve. He who can bark does not bite. No, I have looked for the good-tempered man, for the man who is patient and self-controlled, for the man who for nine years has played the part of the under dog. There is no strain so great as that which has endured for years, there is no resentment like that which acc.u.mulates slowly.
"For nine years Sir Reuben has bullied and browbeaten his secretary, and for nine years that man has endured in silence. But there comes a day when at last the strain reaches its breaking point. Something snaps! It was so that night. Sir Reuben sat down at his desk again, but the secretary, instead of turning humbly and meekly to the door, picks up the heavy wooden club, and strikes down the man who had bullied him once too often."
He turned to Trefusis, who was staring at him as though turned to stone.
"It was so simple, your alibi. Mr. Astwell thought you were in your room, but no one saw you go there. You were just stealing out after striking down Sir Reuben when you heard a sound, and you hastened back to cover, behind the curtain. You were behind there when Charles Leverson entered the room, you were there when Lily Margrave came. It was not till long after that that you crept up through a silent house to your bedroom. Do you deny it?"
Trefusis began to stammer.
"I-I never-"
"Ah! Let us finish this. For two weeks now I have played the comedy. I have showed you the net closing slowly around you. The fingerprints, footprints, the search of your room with the things artistically replaced. I have struck terror into you with all of this; you have lain awake at night fearing and wondering; did you leave a fingerprint in the room or a footprint somewhere?
"Again and again you have gone over the events of that night wondering what you have done or left undone, and so I brought you to the state where you made a slip. I saw the fear leap into your eyes today when I picked up something from the stairs where you had stood hidden that night. Then I made a great parade, the little box, the entrusting of it to George, and I go out."
Poirot turned towards the door.
"George?"
"I am here, sir."
The valet came forward.
"Will you tell these ladies and gentlemen what my instructions were?"
"I was to remain concealed in the wardrobe in your room, sir, having placed the cardboard box where you told me to. At half past three this afternoon, sir, Mr. Trefusis entered the room; he went to the drawer and took out the box in question."
"And in that box," continued Poirot, "was a common pin. Me, I speak always the truth. I did pick up something on the stairs this morning. That is your English saying, is it not? 'See a pin and pick it up, all the day you'll have good luck.' Me, I have had good luck, I have found the murderer."
He turned to the secretary.
"You see?" he said gently. "You betrayed yourself."
Suddenly Trefusis broke down. He sank into a chair sobbing, his face buried in his hands.
"I was mad," he groaned. "I was mad. But, oh, my G.o.d, he badgered and bullied me beyond bearing. For years I had hated and loathed him."
"I knew!" cried Lady Astwell.
She sprang forward, her face irradiated with savage triumph.
"I knew that man had done it."
She stood there, savage and triumphant.
"And you were right," said Poirot. "One may call things by different names, but the fact remains. Your 'intuition,' Lady Astwell, proved correct. I felicitate you."
Two.
THE PLYMOUTH EXPRESS.
I.
Alec Simpson, RN, stepped from the platform at Newton Abbot into a first-cla.s.s compartment of the Plymouth Express. A porter followed him with a heavy suitcase. He was about to swing it up to the rack, but the young sailor stopped him.
"No-leave it on the seat. I'll put it up later. Here you are."
"Thank you, sir." The porter, generously tipped, withdrew.
Doors banged; a stentorian voice shouted: "Plymouth only. Change for Torquay. Plymouth next stop." Then a whistle blew, and the train drew slowly out of the station.
Lieutenant Simpson had the carriage to himself. The December air was chilly, and he pulled up the window. Then he sniffed vaguely, and frowned. What a smell there was! Reminded him of that time in hospital, and the operation on his leg. Yes, chloroform; that was it!
He let the window down again, changing his seat to one with its back to the engine. He pulled a pipe out of his pocket and lit it. For a little time he sat inactive, looking out into the night and smoking.
At last he roused himself, and opening the suitcase, took out some papers and magazines, then closed the suitcase again and endeavoured to shove it under the opposite seat-without success. Some obstacle resisted it. He shoved harder with rising impatience, but it still stuck out halfway into the carriage.
"Why the devil won't it go in?" he muttered, and hauling it out completely, he stooped down and peered under the seat. . . .
A moment later a cry rang out into the night, and the great train came to an unwilling halt in obedience to the imperative jerking of the communication cord.
II.
"Mon ami," said Poirot, "you have, I know, been deeply interested in this mystery of the Plymouth Express. Read this."
I picked up the note he flicked across the table to me. It was brief and to the point.
Dear Sir, I shall be obliged if you will call upon me at your earliest convenience.
Yours faithfully, Ebenezer Halliday The connection was not clear to my mind, and I looked inquiringly at Poirot.
For answer he took up the newspaper and read aloud: " 'A sensational discovery was made last night. A young naval officer returning to Plymouth found under the seat of his compartment the body of a woman, stabbed through the heart. The officer at once pulled the communication cord, and the train was brought to a standstill. The woman, who was about thirty years of age, and richly dressed, has not yet been identified.'
"And later we have this: 'The woman found dead in the Plymouth Express has been identified as the Honourable Mrs. Rupert Carrington.' You see now, my friend? Or if you do not I will add this-Mrs. Rupert Carrington was, before her marriage, Flossie Halliday, daughter of old man Halliday, the steel king of America."
"And he has sent for you? Splendid!"
"I did him a little service in the past-an affair of bearer bonds. And once, when I was in Paris for a royal visit, I had Mademoiselle Flossie pointed out to me. La jolie pet.i.te pensionnaire! She had the joli dot too! It caused trouble. She nearly made a bad affair."
"How was that?"
"A certain Count de la Rochefour. Un bien mauvais sujet! A bad hat, as you would say. An adventurer pure and simple, who knew how to appeal to a romantic young girl. Luckily her father got wind of it in time. He took her back to America in haste. I heard of her marriage some years later, but I know nothing of her husband."
"H'm," I said. "The Honourable Rupert Carrington is no beauty, by all accounts. He'd pretty well run through his own money on the turf, and I should imagine old man Halliday's dollars came along in the nick of time. I should say that for a good-looking, well-mannered, utterly unscrupulous young scoundrel, it would be hard to find his mate!"
"Ah, the poor little lady! Elle n'est pas bien tombee!"
"I fancy he made it pretty obvious at once that it was her money, and not she, that had attacted him. I believe they drifted apart almost at once. I have heard rumours lately that there was to be a definite legal separation."
"Old man Halliday is no fool. He would tie up her money pretty tight."
"I dare say. Anyway, I know as a fact that the Honourable Rupert is said to be extremely hard up."
"Aha! I wonder-"
"You wonder what?"
"My good friend, do not jump down my throat like that. You are interested, I see. Suppose you accompany me to see Mr. Halliday. There is a taxi stand at the corner."