He read the letter we had brought and then looked at us across the top of his desk. It was a shrewd look and a somewhat searching one.
"I know you by name, of course, M. Poirot," he said politely. "Miss Arundell and her brother have, I gather, engaged your services in this matter, but exactly in what capacity you propose to be of use to them I am at a loss to imagine."
"Shall we say, Mr Purvis, a fuller investigation of all the circumstances?"
The lawyer said drily:
"Miss Arundell and her brother have already had my opinion as to the legal position. The circumstances were perfectly clear and admit of no misrepresentation."
"Perfectly, perfectly," said Poirot quickly. "But you will not, I am sure, object to just repeating them so that I can envisage the situation clearly."
The lawyer bowed his head.
"I am at your service."
Poirot began:
"Miss Arundell wrote to you giving you instructions on the seventeenth of April, I believe?"
Mr Purvis consulted some papers on the table before him.
"Yes, that is correct."
"Can you tell me what she said?"
"She asked me to draw up a will. There were to be legacies to two servants and to three or four charities. The rest of her estate was to pass to Wilhelmina Lawson absolutely."
"You will pardon me, Mr Purvis, but you were surprised?"
"I will admit that – yes, I was surprised."
"Miss Arundell had made a will previously?"
"Yes, she had made a will five years ago."
"That will, after certain small legacies, left her property to her nephew and nieces?"
"The bulk of her estate was to be divided equally between the children of her brother Thomas and the daughter of Arabella Biggs, her sister."
"What has happened to that will?"
"At Miss Arundell's request I brought it with me when I visited her at Littlegreen House on April 21st."
"I should be much obliged to you, Mr Purvis, if you would give me a full description of everything that occurred on that occasion."
The lawyer paused for a minute or two.
Then he said, very precisely:
"I arrived at Littlegreen House at three o'clock in the afternoon. One of my clerks accompanied me. Miss Arundell received me in the drawing-room."
"How did she look to you?"
"She seemed to me in good health in spite of the fact that she was walking with a stick. That, I understand, was on account of a fall she had recently. Her general health, as I say, seemed good. She struck me as slightly nervous and over-excited in manner."
"Was Miss Lawson with her?"
"She was with her when I arrived. But she left us immediately."
"And then?"
"Miss Arundell asked me if I had done what she had asked me to do, and if I had brought the new will with me for her to sign.
"I said I had done so. I – er -" He hesitated for a minute or two, then went on stiffly: "I may as well say that, as far as it was proper for me to do so, I remonstrated with Miss Arundell. I pointed out to her that this new will might be regarded as grossly unfair to her family who were, after all, her own flesh and blood."
"And her answer?"
"She asked me if the money was or was not her own to do with as she liked. I replied that certainly that was the case. 'Very well then,' she said. I reminded her that she had known this Miss Lawson a very short time, and I asked her if she was quite sure that the injustice she was doing to her own family was legitimate. Her reply was, 'My dear friend, I know perfectly what I am doing.'"
"Her manner was excited, you say."
"I think I can definitely say that it was, but understand me, M. Poirot, she was in full possession of her faculties. She was in every sense of the word fully competent to manage her own affairs. Though my sympathies are entirely with Miss Arundell's family, I should be obliged to maintain that in any court of law."
"That is quite understood. Proceed, I pray of you."
"Miss Arundell read through her existing will. Then she stretched out her hand for the one I had had drawn up. I may say that I would have preferred to submit a draft first, but she had impressed upon me that the will must be brought her ready to sign. That presented no difficulties as its provisions were so simple. She read it through, nodded her head, and said she would sign it straightaway. I felt it my duty to enter one last protest. She heard me out quite patiently, but said that her mind was quite made up. I called in my clerk and he and the gardener acted as witnesses to her signature. The servants, of course, were ineligible owing to the fact that they were beneficiaries under the will."
"And afterwards, did she entrust the will to you for safekeeping?"
"No, she placed it in a drawer of her desk, which drawer she locked."
"What was done with the original will? Did she destroy it?"
"No, she locked it away with the other."
"After her death, where was the will found?"
"In that same drawer. As executor I had her keys and went through her papers and business documents."
"Were both wills in the drawer?"
"Yes, exactly as she had placed them there."
"Did you question her at all as to the motive for this rather surprising action?"
"I did. But I got no satisfactory answer. She merely assured me that 'she knew what she was doing.'"
"Nevertheless you were surprised at the proceeding?"
"Very surprised. Miss Arundell, I should say, had always shown herself to have a strong sense of family feeling."
Poirot was silent a minute, then he asked:
"You did not, I suppose, have any conversation with Miss Lawson on the subject?"
"Certainly not. Such a proceeding would have been highly improper."
Mr Purvis looked scandalized at the mere suggestion.
"Did Miss Arundell say anything to indicate that Miss Lawson knew that a will was being drawn in her favour?"
"On the contrary. I asked her if Miss Lawson was aware of what was being done, and Miss Arundell snapped out that she knew nothing about it.
"It was advisable, I thought, that Miss Lawson should not be aware of what had happened. I endeavoured to hint as much and Miss Arundell seemed quite of my opinion."
"Just why did you stress that point, Mr Purvis?"
The old gentleman returned his glance with dignity.
"Such things, in my opinion, are best undiscussed. Also it might have led to future disappointment."
"Ah!" Poirot drew a long breath. "I take it that you thought it probable that Miss Arundell might change her mind in the near future?"
The lawyer bowed his head.
"That is so. I fancied that Miss Arundell had had some violent altercation with her family. I thought if probable that when she cooled down she would repent of her rash decision."
"In which case she would have done – what?"
"She would have given me instructions to prepare a new will."
"She might have taken the simpler course of merely destroying the will lately made, in which case the older will would have been good?"
"That is a somewhat debatable point. All earlier wills, you understand, had been definitely revoked by the testator."
"But Miss Arundell would not have had the legal knowledge to appreciate that point. She may have thought that by destroying the later will, the earlier one would stand."
"It is quite possible."
"Actually, if she died intestate, her money would pass to her family?"
"Yes. One half to Mrs Tanios, one half divisible between Charles and Theresa Arundell. But the fact remains, however, that she did not change her mind! She died with her decision unchanged."
"But that," said Poirot, "is where I come in."
The lawyer looked at him inquiringly.
Poirot leaned forward.
"Supposing," he said, "that Miss Arundell, on her deathbed, wished to destroy that will. Supposing that she be
lieved that she had destroyed it – but that, in reality, she only destroyed the first will."
Mr Purvis shook his head.
"No, both wills were intact."
"Then supposing she destroyed a dummy will – under the impression that she was destroying the genuine document. She was very ill, remember; it would be easy to deceive her."
"You would have to bring evidence to that effect," said the lawyer sharply.
"Oh! undoubtedly – undoubtedly…"
"Is there – may I ask – is there any reason to believe something of the kind happened?"
Poirot drew back a little.
"I should not like to commit myself at this stage -"
"Naturally, naturally," said Mr Purvis, agreeing with a phrase that was familiar to him.
"But I may say, strictly in confidence, that there are some curious features about this business!"
"Really? You don't say so?"
Mr Purvis rubbed his hands together with a kind of pleasurable anticipation.
"What I wanted from you and what I have got," continued Poirot, "is your opinion that Miss Arundell would, sooner or later, have changed her mind and relented towards her family."
"That is only my personal opinion, of course," the lawyer pointed out.
"My dear sir, I quite understand. You do not, I believe, act for Miss Lawson?"
"I advised Miss Lawson to consult an independent solicitor," said Mr Purvis.
His tone was wooden.
Poirot shook hands with him, thanking him for his kindness and the information he had given us.
Chapter 20
SECOND VISIT TO LITTLEGREEN HOUSE
On our way from Harchester to Market Basing, a matter of some ten miles, we discussed the situation.
"Have you any grounds at all, Poirot, for that suggestion you threw out?"
"You mean that Miss Arundell may have believed that that particular will was destroyed? No, mon ami – frankly, no. But it was incumbent upon me – you must perceive that – to make some sort of suggestion! Mr Purvis is a shrewd man. Unless I threw out some hint of the kind I did, he would ask himself what I could be doing in this affair."
"Do you know what you remind me of, Poirot?" I said.
"No, mon ami."
"Of a juggler juggling with a lot of different-coloured balls! They are all in the air at once."
"The different-coloured balls are the different lies I tell – eh?"
"That's about the size of it."
"And some day, you think, there will come the grand crash?"
"You can't keep it up for ever," I pointed out.
"That is true. There will come the grand moment when I catch the balls one by one, make my bow, and walk off the stage."
"To the sound of thunderous applause from the audience."
Poirot looked at me rather suspiciously.
"That well may be, yes."
"We didn't learn very much from Mr Purvis," I remarked, edging away from the danger-point.
"No, except that it confirmed our general ideas."
"And it confirmed Miss Lawson's statement that she knew nothing about the will until after the old lady's death."
"Me, I do not see that it confirmed anything of the sort."
"Purvis advised Miss Arundell not to tell her, and Miss Arundell replied that she had no intention of doing so."
"Yes, that is all very nice and clear. But there are keyholes, my friend, and keys that unlock locked drawers."
"Do you really think that Miss Lawson would eavesdrop and poke and pry around?" I asked, rather shocked.
Poirot smiled.
"Miss Lawson – she is not an old school tie, mon cher. We know that she overheard one conversation which she was not supposed to have heard – I refer to the one in which Charles and his aunt discussed the question of bumping off miserly relatives."
I admitted the truth of that.
"So you see, Hastings, she may easily have overheard some of the conversation between Mr Purvis and Miss Arundell. He has a good, resonant voice. As for poking and prying," went on Poirot, "more people do it than you would suppose. Timid and easily frightened people such as Miss Lawson often acquire a number of mildly dishonourable habits which are a great solace and recreation to them."
"Really, Poirot!" I protested.
He nodded his head a good many times.
"But yes, it is so, it is so."
We arrived at The George and took a couple of rooms. Then we strolled off in the direction of Littlegreen House. When we rang the bell. Bob immediately answered the challenge. Dashing across the hall, barking furiously, he flung himself against the front door.
"I'll have your liver and your lights!" he snarled. "I'll tear you limb from limb! I'll teach you to try and get into this house! Just wait until I get my teeth into you."
A soothing murmur added itself to the clamour.
"Now then, boy. Now then, there's a good doggie. Come in here."
Bob, dragged by the collar, was immured in the morning-room much against his will.
"Always spoiling a fellow's sport," he grumbled. "First chance I've had of giving any one a really good fright for ever so long. Just aching to get my teeth into a trouser leg. You be careful of yourself without me to protect you."
The door of the morning-room was shut on him, and Ellen drew back bolts and bars and opened the front door.
"Oh, it's you, sir," she exclaimed.
She drew the door right back. A look of highly pleasurable excitement spread over her face.
"Come in, sir, if you please, sir." We entered the hall. From beneath the door on the left, loud snuffling sounds proceeded, interspersed with growls. Bob was endeavouring to "place" us correctly.
"You can let him out," I suggested.
"I will, sir. He's quite all right, really, but he makes such a noise and rushes at people so it frightens them. He's a splendid watchdog though."
She opened the morning-room door, and Bob shot through like a suddenly projected cannonball.
"Who is it? Where are they? Oh, there you are. Dear me, don't I seem to remember -" Sniff – sniff – sniff – prolonged snort. "Of course! We have met!"
"Hullo, old man," I said. "How goes it?"
Bob wagged his tail perfunctorily.
"Nicely, thank you. Let me just see -"
He resumed his researches. "Been talking to a spaniel lately, I smell. Foolish dogs, I think. What's this? A cat? That is interesting. Wish we had her here. We'd have a rare sport. H'm – not a bad bullterrier."
Having correctly diagnosed a visit I had lately paid to some doggy friends, he transfered his attentions to Poirot, inhaled a noseful of benzine and walked away reproachfully.
"Bob," I called.
He threw me a look over his shoulder.
"It's all right. I know what I'm doing. I'll be back in a jiffy."
"The house is all shut up. I hope you'll excuse -" Ellen hurried into the morning-room and began to unfasten the shutters.
"Excellent, this is excellent," said Poirot, following her in and sitting down. As I was about to join him. Bob reappeared from some mysterious region, ball in mouth. He dashed up the stairs and sprawled himself on the top step, his ball between his paws. His tail wagged slowly.
"Come on," he said. "Come on. Let's have a game."
My interest in detection momentarily eclipsed, we played for some minutes, then with a feeling of guilt I hurried into the morning-room.
Poirot and Ellen seemed to be well away on the subject of illness and medicines.
"Some little white pills, sir, that's all she used to take. Two or three after every meal. That was Dr Grainger's orders. Oh, yes, she was very good about it. Tiny little things they were. And then there was some stuff Miss Lawson swore by. Capsules, they were, Dr Loughbarrow's Liver Capsules. You can see advertisements of them on all the boardings."
"She took those too?"
"Yes. Miss Lawson got her them to begin with, and she thought they did her goo
d."
"Did Dr Grainger know?"
"Oh, sir, he didn't mind. 'You take 'em if you think they do you good,' he'd say to her. And she said, 'Well, you may laugh, but they do do me good. A lot better than any of your physic.' And Dr Grainger, he laughed, and said faith was worth all the drugs ever invented."
"She didn't take anything else?"
"No. Miss Bella's husband, the foreign doctor, he went out and got her a bottle of something, but although she thanked him very politely she poured it away and that I know for a fact! And I think she was right. You don't know where you are with these foreign things."
"Mrs Tanios saw her pouring it away, didn't she?"
"Yes, and I'm afraid she was rather hurt about it, poor lady. I'm sorry, too, for no doubt it was kindly meant on the doctor's part."
"No doubt. No doubt. I suppose any medicines that were left in the house were thrown away when Miss Arundell died?"
Ellen looked a little surprised at the question.
"Oh, yes, sir. The nurse threw away some and Miss Lawson got rid of all the old lot in the medicine-cupboard in the bathroom."
"Is that where the – er – Dr Loughbarrow's Liver Capsules were kept?"
"No, they were kept in the corner-cupboard in the dining-room so as to be handy for taking after meals as directed."
"What nurse attended Miss Arundell? Can you give me her name and address?"
Ellen could supply that at once and did.
Poirot continued to ask questions about Miss Arundell's last illness.
Ellen gave details with relish, describing the sickness, the pain, the onset of jaundice, and the final delirium. I don't know whether Poirot got any satisfaction out of the catalogue. He listened patiently enough and occasionally interpolated some pertinent little question, usually about Miss Lawson and the amount of time she spent in the sickroom. He was also exceedingly interested in the diet administered to the ill woman, comparing it with that administered to some dead relative (non-existent) of his own.
Seeing that they were enjoying themselves so much, I stole out in the hall again. Bob had gone to sleep on the landing, his ball lying under his chin.
I whistled to him and he sprang up, alert at once. This time, however, doubtless out of offended dignity, he made a protracted business of despatching the ball down to me, several times catching it back at the last minute.
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