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Short Stories Page 67

by Agatha Christie


  'Did it seem to have upset her?' asked Miss Marple.

  The doctor hesitated.

  'Well, I don't know that it affected her appearance at all,' he said cautiously.

  'She didn't, for instance, grow fatter?' asked Miss Marple.

  'Do you know - it's a curious thing your saying that. Now I come to think back, I believe you're right. She - yes, she did seem, if anything, to be putting on weight.'

  'How horrible,' said Jane Helier with a shudder. 'It's like - it's like fattening on your victim's blood.'

  'And yet, in another way, I may be doing her an injustice,' went on Dr Lloyd. 'She certainly said something before she left, which pointed in an entirely different direction. There may be, I think there are, consciences which work very slowly - which take some time to awaken to the enormity of the deed committed.

  'It was the evening before her departure from the Canaries. She had asked me to go and see her, and had thanked me very warmly for all I had done to help her. I, of course, made light of the matter, said I had only done what was natural under the circumstances, and so on. There was a pause after that, and then she suddenly asked me a question.

  '"Do you think," she asked, "that one is ever justified in taking the law into one's own hands?"

  'I replied that that was rather a difficult question, but that on the whole, I thought not. The law was the law, and we had to abide by it.

  '"Even when it is powerless?"

  '"I don't quite understand."

  '"It's difficult to explain; but one might do something that is considered definitely wrong - that is considered a crime, even, for a good and sufficient reason."

  'I replied drily that possibly several criminals had thought that in their time, and she shrank back.

  '"But that's horrible," she murmured. "Horrible."

  'And then with a change of tone she asked me to give her something to make her sleep. She had not been able to sleep properly since - she hesitated - since that terrible shock.

  '"You're sure it is that? There is nothing worrying you? Nothing on your mind?"

  '"On my mind? What should be on my mind?"

  'She spoke fiercely and suspiciously.

  '"Worry is a cause of sleeplessness sometimes,' I said lightly.

  'She seemed to brood for a moment.

  '"Do you mean worrying over the future, or worrying over the past, which can't be altered?"

  '"Either."

  '"Only it wouldn't be any good worrying over the past. You couldn't bring back - Oh! what's the use! One mustn't think. One must not think."

  'I prescribed her a mild sleeping draught and made my adieu. As I went away I wondered not a little over the words she had spoken.

  "You couldn't bring back - " What? Or who?

  'I think that last interview prepared me in a way for what was to come. I didn't expect it, of course, but when it happened, I wasn't surprised. Because, you see, Mary Barton struck me all along as a conscientious woman - not a weak sinner, but a woman with convictions, who would act up to them, and who would not relent as long as she still believed in them. I fancied that in the last conversation we had she was beginning to doubt her own convictions. I know her words suggested to me that she was feeling the first faint beginnings of that terrible soul-searcher remorse.

  'The thing happened in Cornwall, in a small watering-place, rather deserted at that season of the year. It must have been - let me see - late March. I read about it in the papers. A lady had been staying at a small hotel there - a Miss Barton. She had been very odd and peculiar in her manner. That had been noticed by all. At night she would walk up and down her room, muttering to herself, and not allowing the people on either side of her to sleep. She had called on the vicar one day and had told him that she had a communication of the gravest importance to make to him. She had, she said, committed a crime. Then, instead of proceeding, she had stood up abruptly and said she would call another day.

  The vicar put her down as being slightly mental, and did not take her self-accusation seriously.

  'The very next morning she was found to be missing from her room. A note was left addressed to the coroner. It ran as follows:

  'I tried to speak to the vicar yesterday, to confess all, but was not allowed. She would not let me. I can make amends only one way a life for a life; and my life must go the same way as hers did. I, too, must drown in the deep sea. I believed I was justified. I see now that that was not so. If I desire Amy's forgiveness I must go to her. Let no one be blamed for my death -

  Mary Barton 'Her clothes were found lying on the beach in a secluded cove nearby, and it seemed clear that she had undressed there and swum resolutely out to sea where the current was known to be dangerous, sweeping one down the coast.

  'The body was not recovered, but after a time leave was given to presume death. She was a rich woman, her estate being proved at a hundred thousand pounds. Since she died intestate it all went to her next of kin - a family of cousins in Australia. The papers made discreet references to the tragedy in the Canary Islands, putting forward the theory that the death of Miss Durrant had unhinged her friend's brain. At the inquest the usual verdict of Suicide whilst temporarily insane was returned.

  'And so the curtain falls on the tragedy of Amy Durrant and Mary Barton.'

  There was a long pause and then Jane Helier gave a great gasp.

  'Oh, but you mustn't stop there - just at the most interesting part.

  Go on.'

  'But you see, Miss Helier, this isn't a serial story. This is real life; and real life stops just where it chooses.'

  'But I don't want it to,' said Jane. 'I want to know.'

  'This is where we use our brains, Miss Helier,' explained Sir Henry. 'Why did Mary Barton kill her companion? That's the problem Dr Lloyd has set us.'

  'Oh, well,' said Miss Helier, 'she might have killed her for lots of reasons. I mean - oh, I don't know. She might have got on her nerves, or else she got jealous, although Dr Lloyd doesn't mention any men, but still on the boat out - well, you know what everyone says about boats and sea voyages.'

  Miss Helier paused, slightly out of breath, and it was borne in upon her audience that the outside of Jane's charming head was distinctly superior to the inside.

  'I would like to have a lot of guesses,' said Mrs Bantry. 'But I suppose I must confine myself to one. Well, I think that Miss Barton's father made all his money out of ruining Amy Durrant's father, so Amy determined to have her revenge. Oh, no, that's the wrong way round. How tiresome! Why does the rich employer kill the humble companion? I've got it! Miss Barton had a young brother who shot himself for love of Amy Durrant. Miss Barton waits her time. Amy comes down in the world. Miss B. engages her as companion and takes her to the Canaries and accomplishes her revenge. How's that?'

  'Excellent,' said Sir Henry. 'Only we don't know that Miss Barton ever had a young brother.'

  'We deduce that,' said Mrs Bantry. 'Unless she had a young brother there's no motive. So she must have had a young brother.

  Do you see, Watson?'

  'That's all very fine, Dolly,' said her husband. 'But it's only a guess.'

  'Of course it is,' said Mrs Bantry. 'That's all we can do - guess. We haven't got any clues. Go on, dear, have a guess yourself.'

  'Upon my word, I don't know what to say. But I think there's something in Miss Heller's suggestion that they fell out about a man. Look here, Dolly, it was probably some high church parson.

  They both embroidered him a cope or something, and he wore the Durrant woman's first. Depend upon it, it was something like that. Look how she went off to a parson at the end. These women all lose their heads over a good-looking clergyman. You hear of it over and over again.'

  'I think I must try to make my explanation a little more subtle,' said Sir Henry, 'though I admit it's only a guess. I suggest that Miss Barton was always mentally unhinged. There are more cases like that than you would imagine. Her mania grew stronger and she began to believe it her duty to rid t
he world of certain persons possibly what is termed unfortunate females. Nothing much is known about Miss Durrant's past. So very possibly she had a past - an "unfortunate" one. Miss Barton learns of this and decides on extermination. Later, the righteousness of her act begins to trouble her and she is overcome by remorse. Her end shows her to be completely unhinged. Now, do say you agree with me, Miss Marple.'

  'I'm afraid I don't, Sir Henry,' said Miss Marple, smiling apologetically. 'I think her end shows her to have been a very clever and resourceful woman.'

  Jane Helier interrupted with a little scream.

  'Oh! I've been so stupid. May I guess again? Of course it must have been that Blackmail! The companion woman was blackmailing her. Only I don't see why Miss Marple says it was clever of her to kill herself. I can't see that at all.'

  'Ah!' said Sir Henry. 'You see, Miss Marple knew a case just like it in St Mary Mead.'

  'You always laugh at me, Sir Henry,' said Miss Marple reproachfully. 'I must confess it does remind me, just a little, of old Mrs Trout. She drew the old age pension, you know, for three old women who were dead, in different parishes.'

  'It sounds a most complicated and resourceful crime,' said Sir Henry. 'But it doesn't seem to me to throw any light upon our present problem.'

  'Of course not,' said Miss Marple. 'It wouldn't - to you. But some of the families were very poor, and the old age pension was a great boon to the children. I know it's difficult for anyone outside to understand. But what I really meant was that the whole thing hinged upon one old woman being so like any other old woman.'

  'Eh?' said Sir Henry, mystified.

  'I always explain things so badly. What I mean is that when Dr Lloyd described the two ladies first, he didn't know which was which, and I don't suppose anyone else in the hotel did. They would have, of course, after a day or so, but the very next day one of the two was drowned, and if the one who was left said she was Miss Barton, I don't suppose it would ever occur to anyone that she mightn't be.'

  'You think - Oh! I see,' said Sir Henry slowly.

  'It's the only natural way of thinking of it. Dear Mrs Bantry began that way just now. Why should the rich employer kill the humble companion? It's so much more likely to be the other way about I mean - that's the way things happen.'

  'Is it?' said Sir Henry. 'You shock me.'

  'But of course,' went on Miss Marple, 'she would have to wear Miss Barton's clothes, and they would probably be a little tight on her, so that her general appearance would look as though she had got a little fatter. That's why I asked that question. A gentleman would be sure to think it was the lady who had got fatter, and not the clothes that had got smaller - though that isn't quite the right way of putting it.'

  'But if Amy Durrant killed Miss Barton, what did she gain by it?' asked Mrs Bantry. 'She couldn't keep up the deception for ever.'

  'She only kept it up for another month or so,' pointed out Miss Marple. 'And during that time I expect she travelled, keeping away from anyone who might know her. That's what I meant by saying that one lady of a certain age looks so like another. I don't suppose the different photograph on her passport was ever noticed - you know what passports are. And then in March, she went down to this Cornish place and began to act queerly and draw attention to herself so that when people found her clothes on the beach and read her last letter they shouldn't think of the commonsense conclusion.'

  'Which was?' asked Sir Henry.

  'No body ,' said Miss Marple firmly. 'That's the thing that would stare you in the face, if there weren't such a lot of red herrings to draw you off the trail - including the suggestion of foul play and remorse. No body. That was the real significant fact.'

  'Do you mean - ' said Mrs Bantry - 'do you mean that there wasn't any remorse? That there wasn't - that she didn't drown herself?'

  'Not she!' said Miss Marple. 'It's just Mrs Trout over again. Mrs Trout was very good at red herrings, but she met her match in me. And I can see through your remorse-driven Miss Barton.

  Drown herself? Went off to Australia, if I'm any good at guessing.'

  'You are, Miss Marple,' said Dr Lloyd. 'Undoubtedly you are. Now it again took me quite by surprise. Why, you could have knocked me down with a feather that day in Melbourne.'

  'Was that what you spoke of as a final coincidence?'

  Dr Lloyd nodded.

  'Yes, it was rather rough luck on Miss Barton - or Miss Amy Durrant - whatever you like to call her. I became a ship's doctor for a while, and landing in Melbourne, the first person I saw as I walked down the street was the lady I thought had been drowned in Cornwall. She saw the game was up as far as I was concerned, and she did the bold thing - took me into her confidence. A curious woman, completely lacking, I suppose, in some moral sense. She was the eldest of a family of nine, all wretchedly poor.

  They had applied once for help to their rich cousin in England and been repulsed, Miss Barton having quarrelled with their father.

  Money was wanted desperately, for the three youngest children were delicate and wanted expensive medical treatment. Amy Barton then and there seems to have decided on her plan of coldblooded murder. She set out for England, working her passage over as a children's nurse. She obtained the situation of companion to Miss Barton, calling herself Amy Durrant. She engaged a room and put some furniture into it so as to create more of a personality for herself. The drowning plan was a sudden inspiration. She had been waiting for some opportunity to present itself. Then she staged the final scene of the drama and returned to Australia, and in due time she and her brothers and sisters inherited Miss Barton's money as next of kin.'

  'A very bold and perfect crime,' said Sir Henry. 'Almost the perfect crime. If it had been Miss Barton who had died in the Canaries, suspicion might attach to Amy Durrant and her connection with the Barton family might have been discovered; but the change of identity and the double crime, as you may call it, effectually did away with that. Yes, almost the perfect crime.'

  'What happened to her?' asked Mrs Bantry. 'What did you do in the matter, Dr Lloyd?'

  'I was in a very curious position, Mrs Bantry. Of evidence as the law understands it, I still have very little. Also, there were certain signs, plain to me as a medical man, that though strong and vigorous in appearance, the lady was not long for this world. I went home with her and saw the rest of the family - a charming family, devoted to their eldest sister and without an idea in their heads that she might prove to have committed a crime. Why bring sorrow on them when I could prove nothing? The lady's admission to me was unheard by anyone else. I let Nature take its course. Miss Amy Barton died six months after my meeting with her. I have often wondered if she was cheerful and unrepentant up to the last.'

  'Surely not,' said Mrs Bantry.

  'I expect so,' said Miss Marple. 'Mrs Trout was.'

  Jane Helier gave herself a little shake.

  'Well,' she said. 'It's very, very thrilling. I don't quite understand now who drowned which. And how does this Mrs Trout come into it?'

  'She doesn't, my dear.' said Miss Marple. 'She was only a person not a very nice person - in the village.'

  'Oh!' said Jane. 'In the village. But nothing ever happens in a village, does it?' She sighed. 'I'm sure I shouldn't have any brains at all if I lived in a village.'

  The Four Suspects

  The conversation hovered round undiscovered and unpunished crimes. Everyone in turn vouchsafed their opinion: Colonel Bantry, his plump amiable wife, Jane Helier, Dr Lloyd, and even old Miss Marple. The one person who did not speak was the one best fitted in most people's opinion to do so. Sir Henry Clithering, ex-Commissioner of Scotland Yard, sat silent, twisting his moustache - or rather stroking it - and half smiling, as though at some inward thought that amused him. 'Sir Henry,' said Mrs Bantry at last. 'If you don't say something I shall scream. Are there a lot of crimes that go unpunished, or are there not?'

  'You're thinking of newspaper headlines, Mrs Bantry. SCOTLAND YARD AT FAULT AGAIN. And a list of unsol
ved mysteries to follow.'

  'Which really, I suppose, form a very small percentage of the whole?' said Dr Lloyd.

  'Yes; that is so. The hundreds of crimes that are solved and the perpetrators punished are seldom heralded and sung. But that isn't quite the point at issue, is it? When you talk of undiscovered crimes and unsolved crimes, you are talking of two different things. In the first category come all the crimes that Scotland Yard never hears about, the crimes that no one even knows have been committed.'

  'But I suppose there aren't very many of those?' said Mrs Bantry.

  'Aren't there?'

  'Sir Henry! You don't mean there are?'

  'I should think,' said Miss Marple thoughtfully, 'that there must be a very large number.'

  The charming old lady, with her old-world unruffled air, made her statement in a tone of the utmost placidity.

  'My dear Miss Marple,' said Colonel Bantry.

  'Of course,' said Miss Marple, 'a lot of people are stupid. And stupid people get found out, whatever they do. But there are quite a number of people who aren't stupid, and one shudders to think of what they might accomplish unless they had very strongly rooted principles.'

  'Yes,' said Sir Henry, 'there are a lot of people who aren't stupid.

  How often does some crime come to light simply by reason of a bit of unmitigated bungling, and each time one asks oneself the question: If this hadn't been bungled, would anyone ever have known?'

  'But that's very serious, Clithering,' said Colonel Bantry. 'Very serious, indeed.'

  'Is it?'

  'What do you mean! It is! Of course it's serious.'

  'You say crime goes unpunished; but does it? Unpunished by the law perhaps; but cause and effect works outside the law. To say that every crime brings its own punishment is by way of being a platitude, and yet in my opinion nothing can be truer.'

  'Perhaps, perhaps,' said Colonel Bantry. 'But that doesn't alter the seriousness - the - er - seriousness - ' He paused, rather at a loss.

 

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