Part 32 (1/2)

the master had, and the doctor had been surprised. But what business was it of some foreign doctor coming along and nosing around ? All very well for Mrs. Leo to say: ”Please answer Monsieur Pontarlier's questions. He has a good reason for asking.”

Questions. Always questions. Sheets of them sometimes to fill in as best you could--and what did the Government or anyone else want to know about your private affairs for ?

Asking your age at that censusclownright impertinent and she hadn't told them, either l Cut off five years she had.

Why not ? If she only felt fifty-four, she'd call herself fifty-four I At any rate Monsieur Pontarlier hadn't wanted to know her age. He'd had some decency. Just questions about the medicines the master had taken, and where they were kept, and if, perhaps, he might have taken too much of them if he was feeling not quite the thing--or if he'd been forgetful. As though she could remember all that rubbish--the master knew what he was doing I And asking if any of the medicines he took were still in the house. Naturally they'd all been thrown away. Heart condition--and some long word he'd used.

Always thinking of something new they were, these doctors.

Look at them telling old Rogers he had a disc or some such in his spine. Plain lumbago, that was all that was the matter with him. Her father had been a gardener and he'd suffered from lumbago. Doctors I The self-appointed medical man sighed and went downstairs in search of Lans...o...b... He had not got very much out of Janet but he had hardly expected to do so. All he had really wanted to do was to check such information as could unwill~ ingly be extracted from her with that given him by Helen Abernethie and which had been obtained from the same source--but with much less difficulty, since Janet was ready to admit that Mrs. Leo had a perfect right to ask such questions and indeed Janet herself had enjoyed dwelling at length on the last few weeks of her master's life. Illness and death were congenial subjects to her.

Yes, Poirot thought, he could have relied on the information that Helen had got for him. He had done so really. But by nature and long habit he trusted n.o.body until he himself had tried and proved them.

In any case the evidence was slight and unsatisfactory. It boiled down to the fact that Richard Abernethie had been prescribed vitamin oil capsules. That these had been in a large bottle which had been nearly finished at the time of

III

his death. Anybody who had wanted to, could have operated on one or more of those capsules with a hypodermic syringe and could have rearranged the bottle so that the fatal dose would only be taken some weeks after that somebody had left the house. Or someone might have slipped into the house on the day before Richard Abernethie died and have doctored a capsule then-or, which was more likely--have subst.i.tuted something else for a sleeping tablet in the little bottle that stood beside the bed. Or again might have quite simply tampered with the food or drink.

Hercule Poirot had made his own experiments. The front door was kept locked, but there was a side door giving on the garden which was not locked until evening. At about quarter-past one, when the gardeners had gone to lunch and when the household was in the dining-room, Poirot had entered the grounds, come to the side door, and mounted the stairs to Richard Abernethie's bedroom without meeting anybody. As a variant he had pushed through a baize door and slipped into the larder. He had heard voices from the kitchen at the end of the pa.s.sage but no one had seen him.

Yes, it could have been done. But had it been done ?

There was nothing to indicate that that was so. Not that Poirot was really looking for evidence--he wanted only to satisfy himself as to possibilities. The murder of Richard Abernethie could only be a hypothesis. It was Cora Lansquenet's murder for which evidence was needed. What he wanted was to study the people who had been a.s.sembled for the funeral that day, and to form his own conclusions about them. He already had his plan, but first he wanted a few more words with old Lans...o...b...

Lans...o...b.. was courteous but distant. Less resentful than Janet, he nevertheless regarded this upstart foreigner as the materialisation of the Writing on the Wall. This was What We are Coming to I He put down the leather with which he was lovingly polis.h.i.+ng the Georgian teapot and straightened his back.

”Yes, sir ? ”he said politely.

Poirot sat down gingerly on a pantry stool.

”Mrs. Abernethie tells me that you hoped to reside in the lodge by the north gate when you retired from service here ?”

”That is so, sir. Nat,u, rally all that is changed now. When the property is sold-- Poirot interrupted deftly: ”It might still be possible. There are cottages for the gardeners. The lodge is not needed for the guests or their 112

attendants. It might be possible to make an arrangement of

some kind.”

”Well, thank you, sir, for the suggestion. But I hardly

thinkThe majority of the--guests would be foreigners,

I presume ?”

”Yes, they will be foreigners. Amongst those who fled from Europe to this country are several who are old and infirm.

There can be no future for them if they return to their own countries, for these persons, you understand, are those whose relatives there have perished. They cannot earn their living here as an able-bodied man or woman can do. Funds have been raised and are being administered by the organisation which I represent to endow various country homes for them.

This place is, I think, eminently suitable.

The matter is

practically settled.”

Lans...o...b.. sighed.

”You'll understand, sir, that it's sad for me to think that this won't be a private dwelling-house any longer. But I know how things are nowadays. None of the family could afford to live here--and I don't think the young ladies and gentlemen would even want to cio so. Domestic help is too difficult to obtain these days, and even if obtained is expensive and unsat-isfactory.