But with a little twitter of laughter, Leonie took herself off.
Poirot paced slowly up and down the room. His face became grave and anxious.
‘And now,’ he said at last, ‘for Lady Julia. What will she say, I wonder?’
Lady Julia came into the room with a quiet air of assurance. She bent her head graciously, accepted the chair that Poirot drew forward and spoke in a low, well-bred voice.
‘Lord Mayfield says that you wish to ask me some questions.’
‘Yes, madame. It is about last night.’
‘About last night, yes?’
‘What happened after you had finished your game of bridge?’
‘My husband thought it was too late to begin another. I went up to bed.’
‘And then?’
‘I went to sleep.’
‘That is all?’
‘Yes. I’m afraid I can’t tell you anything of much interest. When did this’—she hesitated—‘burglary occur?’
‘Very soon after you went upstairs.’
‘I see. And what exactly was taken?’
‘Some private papers, madame.’
‘Important papers?’
‘Very important.’
She frowned a little and then said:
‘They were—valuable?’
‘Yes, madame, they were worth a good deal of money.’
‘I see.’
There was a pause, and then Poirot said:
‘What about your book, madame?’
‘My book?’ She raised bewildered eyes to him.
‘Yes, I understand Mrs Vanderlyn to say that some time after you three ladies had retired you went down again to fetch a book.’
‘Yes, of course, so I did.’
‘So that, as a matter of fact, you did not go straight to bed when you went upstairs? You returned to the drawing-room?’
‘Yes, that is true. I had forgotten.’
‘While you were in the drawing-room, did you hear someone scream?’
‘No—yes—I don’t think so.’
‘Surely, madame. You could not have failed to hear it in the drawing-room.’
Lady Julia flung her head back and said firmly:
‘I heard nothing.’
Poirot raised his eyebrows, but did not reply.
The silence grew uncomfortable. Lady Julia asked abruptly:
‘What is being done?’
‘Being done? I do not understand you, madame.’
‘I mean about the robbery. Surely the police must be doing something.’
Poirot shook his head.
‘The police have not been called in. I am in charge.’
She stared at him, her restless haggard face sharpened and tense. Her eyes, dark and searching, sought to pierce his impassivity.
They fell at last—defeated.
‘You cannot tell me what is being done?’
‘I can only assure you, madame, that I am leaving no stone unturned.’
‘To catch the thief—or to—recover the papers?’
‘The recovery of the papers is the main thing, madame.’
Her manner changed. It became bored, listless.
‘Yes,’ she said indifferently. ‘I suppose it is.’
There was another pause.
‘Is there anything else, M. Poirot?’
‘No, madame. I will not detain you further.’
‘Thank you.’
He opened the door for her. She passed out without glancing at him.
Poirot went back to the fireplace and carefully rearranged the ornaments on the mantelpiece. He was still at it when Lord Mayfield came in through the window.
‘Well?’ said the latter.
‘Very well, I think. Events are shaping themselves as they should.’
Lord Mayfield said, staring at him:
‘You are pleased.’
‘No, I am not pleased. But I am content.’
‘Really, M. Poirot, I cannot make you out.’
‘I am not such a charlatan as you think.’
‘I never said—’
‘No, but you thought! No matter. I am not offended. It is sometimes necessary for me to adopt a certain pose.’
Lord Mayfield looked at him doubtfully with a certain amount of distrust. Hercule Poirot was a man he did not understand. He wanted to despise him, but something warned him that this ridiculous little man was not so futile as he appeared. Charles McLaughlin had always been able to recognize capability when he saw it.
‘Well,’ he said, ‘we are in your hands. What do you advise next?’
‘Can you get rid of your guests?’
‘I think it might be arranged… I could explain that I have to go to London over this affair. They will then probably offer to leave.’
‘Very good. Try and arrange it like that.’
Lord Mayfield hesitated.
‘You don’t think—?’
‘I am quite sure that that would be the wise course to take.’
Lord Mayfield shrugged his shoulders.
‘Well, if you say so.’
He went out.
Chapter 8
The guests left after lunch. Mrs Vanderlyn and Mrs Macatta went by train, the Carringtons had their car. Poirot was standing in the hall as Mrs Vanderlyn bade her host a charming farewell.
‘So terribly sorry for you having this bother and anxiety. I do hope it will turn out all right for you. I shan’t breathe a word of anything.’
She pressed his hand and went out to where the Rolls was waiting to take her to the station. Mrs Macatta was already inside. Her adieu had been curt and unsympathetic.
Suddenly Leonie, who had been getting in front with the chauffeur, came running back into the hall.
‘The dressing-case of madame, it is not in the car,’ she exclaimed.
There was a hurried search. At last Lord Mayfield discovered it where it had been put down in the shadow of an old oak chest. Leonie uttered a glad little cry as she seized the elegant affair of green morocco, and hurried out with it.
Then Mrs Vanderlyn leaned out of the car.
‘Lord Mayfield, Lord Mayfield.’ She handed him a letter. ‘Would you mind putting this in your post-bag? If I keep it meaning to post it in town, I’m sure to forget. Letters just stay in my bag for days.’
Sir George Carrington was fidgeting with his watch, opening and shutting it. He was a maniac for punctuality.
‘They’re cutting it fine,’ he murmured. ‘Very fine. Unless they’re careful, they’ll miss the train—’
His wife said irritably:
‘Oh, don’t fuss, George. After all, it’s their train, not ours!’
He looked at her reproachfully.
The Rolls drove off.
Reggie drew up at the front door in the Carringtons’ Morris.
‘All ready, Father,’ he said.
The servants began bringing out the Carringtons’ luggage. Reggie supervised its disposal in the dickey.
Poirot moved out of the front door, watching the proceedings.
Suddenly he felt a hand on his arm. Lady Julia’s voice spoke in an agitated whisper.
‘M. Poirot. I must speak to you—at once.’
He yielded to her insistent hand. She drew him into a small morning-room and closed the door. She came close to him.
‘Is it true what you said—that the discovery of the papers is what matters most to Lord Mayfield?’
Poirot looked at her curiously.
‘It is quite true, madame.’
‘If—if those papers were returned to you, would you undertake that they should be given back to Lord Mayfield, and no question asked?’
‘I am not sure that I understand you.’
‘You must! I am sure that you do! I am suggesting that the—the thief should remain anonymous if the papers are returned.’
Poirot asked:
‘How soon would that be, madame?’
‘Definitely within twelve hours.’
�
�You can promise that?’
‘I can promise it.’
As he did not answer, she repeated urgently:
‘Will you guarantee that there will be no publicity?’
He answered then—very gravely:
‘Yes, madame, I will guarantee that.’
‘Then everything can be arranged.’
She passed abruptly from the room. A moment later Poirot heard the car drive away.
He crossed the hall and went along the passage to the study. Lord Mayfield was there. He looked up as Poirot entered.
‘Well?’ he said.
Poirot spread out his hands.
‘The case is ended, Lord Mayfield.’
‘What?’
Poirot repeated word for word the scene between himself and Lady Julia.
Lord Mayfield looked at him with as tupefied expression.
‘But what does it mean? I don’t understand.’
‘It is very clear, is it not? Lady Julia knows who stole the plans.’
‘You don’t mean she took them herself?’
‘Certainly not. Lady Julia may be a gambler. She is not a thief. But if she offers to return the plans, it means that they were taken by her husband or her son. Now Sir George Carrington was out on the terrace with you. That leaves us the son. I think I can reconstruct the happenings of last night fairly accurately. Lady Julia went to her son’s room last night and found it empty. She came downstairs to look for him, but did not find him. This morning she hears of the theft, and she also hears that her son declares that he went straight to his room and never left it. That, she knows, is not true. And she knows something else about her son. She knows that he is weak, that he is desperately hard-up for money. She has observed his infatuation for Mrs Vanderlyn. The whole thing is clear to her. Mrs Vanderlyn has persuaded Reggie to steal the plans. But she determines to play her part also. She will tackle Reggie, get hold of the papers and return them.’
‘But the whole thing is quite impossible,’ cried Lord Mayfield.
‘Yes, it is impossible, but Lady Julia does not know that. She does not know what I, Hercule Poirot, know, that young Reggie Carrington was not stealing papers last night, but instead was philandering with Mrs Vanderlyn’s French maid.’
‘The whole thing is a mare’s nest!’
‘Exactly.’
‘And the case is not ended at all!’
‘Yes, it is ended. I, Hercule Poirot, know the truth. You do not believe me? You did not believe me yesterday when I said I knew where the plans were. But I did know. They were very close at hand.’
‘Where?’
‘They were in your pocket, my lord.’
There was a pause, then Lord Mayfield said:
‘Do you really know what you are saying, M. Poirot?’
‘Yes, I know. I know that I am speaking to a very clever man. From the first it worried me that you, who were admittedly short-sighted, should be so positive about the figure you had seen leaving the window. You wanted that solution—the convenient solution—to be accepted. Why? Later, one by one, I eliminated everyone else. Mrs Vanderlyn was upstairs, Sir George was with you on the terrace, Reggie Carrington was with the French girl on the stairs, Mrs Macatta was blamelessly in her bedroom. (It is next to the house-keeper’s room, and Mrs Macatta snores!) Lady Julia clearly believed her son guilty. So there remained only two possibilities. Either Carlile did not put the papers on the desk but into his own pocket (and that is not reasonable, because, as you pointed out, he could have taken a tracing of them), or else—or else the plans were there when you walked over to the desk, and the only place they could have gone was into your pocket. In that case everything was clear. Your insistence on the figure you had seen, your insistence on Carlile’s innocence, your disinclination to have me summoned.
‘One thing did puzzle me—the motive. You were, I was convinced, an honest man, a man of integrity. That showed in your anxiety that no innocent person should be suspected. It was also obvious that the theft of the plans might easily affect your career unfavourably. Why, then, this wholly unreasonable theft? And at last the answer came to me. The crisis in your career, some years ago, the assurances given to the world by the Prime Minister that you had had no negotiations with the power in question. Suppose that that was not strictly true, that there remained some record—a letter, perhaps—showing that in actual fact you had done what you had publicly denied. Such a denial was necessary in the interests of public policy. But it is doubtful if the man in the street would see it that way. It might mean that at the moment when supreme power might be given into your hands, some stupid echo from the past would undo everything.
‘I suspect that that letter has been preserved in the hands of a certain government, that that government offered to trade with you—the letter in exchange for the plans of the new bomber. Some men would have refused. You—did not! You agreed. Mrs Vanderlyn was the agent in the matter. She came here by arrangement to make the exchange. You gave yourself away when you admitted that you had formed no definite stratagem for entrapping her. That admission made your reason for inviting her here incredibly weak.
‘You arranged the robbery. Pretended to see the thief on the terrace—thereby clearing Carlile of suspicion. Even if he had not left the room, the desk was so near the window that a thief might have taken the plans while Carlile was busy at the safe with his back turned. You walked over to the desk, took the plans and kept them on your own person until the moment when, by prearranged plan, you slipped them into Mrs Vanderlyn’s dressing-case. In return she handed you the fatal letter disguised as an unposted letter of her own.’
Poirot stopped.
Lord Mayfield said:
‘Your knowledge is very complete, M. Poirot. You must think me an unutterable skunk.’
Poirot made a quick gesture.
‘No, no, Lord Mayfield. I think, as I said, that you are a very clever man. It came to me suddenly as we talked here last night. You are a first-class engineer. There will be, I think, some subtle alterations in the specifications of that bomber, alterations done so skilfully that it will be difficult to grasp why the machine is not the success it ought to be. A certain foreign power will find the type a failure… It will be a disappointment to them, I am sure…’
Again there was a silence—then Lord Mayfield said:
‘You are much too clever, M. Poirot. I will only ask you to believe one thing. I have faith in myself. I believe that I am the man to guide England through the days of crisis that I see coming. If I did not honestly believe that I am needed by my country to steer the ship of state, I would not have done what I have done—made the best of both worlds—saved myself from disaster by a clever trick.’
‘My lord,’ said Poirot, ‘if you could not make the best of both worlds, you could not be a politician!’
Dead Man’s Mirror
Chapter 1
I
The flat was a modern one. The furnishings of the room were modern, too. The armchairs were squarely built, the upright chairs were angular. A modern writing-table was set squarely in front of the window, and at it sat a small, elderly man. His head was practically the only thing in the room that was not square. It was egg-shaped.
M. Hercule Poirot was reading a letter:
Station: Whimperley. Hamborough Close, Telegrams: Hamborough St Mary Hamborough St. John. Westshire. September 24th, 1936.
M. Hercule Poirot. Dear Sir,—A matter has arisen which requires handling with great delicacy and discretion. I have heard good accounts of you, and have decided to entrust the matter to you. I have reason to believe that I am the victim of fraud, but for family reasons I do not wish to call in the police. I am taking certain measures of my own to deal with the business, but you must be prepared to come down here immediately on receipt of a telegram. I should be obliged if you will not answer this letter. Yours faithfully, Gervase Chevenix-Gore.
The eyebrows of M. Hercule Poirot climbed slowly up his forehead until they nearly d
isappeared into his hair.
‘And who, then,’ he demanded of space, ‘is this Gervase Chevenix-Gore?’
He crossed to a bookcase and took out a large, fat book.
He found what he wanted easily enough.
Chevenix-Gore, Sir Gervase Francis Xavier, 10th Bt. cr. 1694; formerly Captain 17th Lancers; b. 18th May, 1878; e.s. of Sir Guy Chevenix-Gore, 9th Bt., and Lady Claudia Bretherton, 2nd. d. of 8th Earl of Wallingford. S. father, 1911; m. 1912, Vanda Elizabeth, e.d. of Colonel Frederick Arbuthnot, q.v.; educ. Eton. Served European War, 1914–18. Recreations: travelling, big-game hunting. Address: Hamborough St Mary, Westshire, and 218 Lowndes Square, S.W.1. Clubs: Cavalry. Travellers.
Poirot shook his head in a slightly dissatisfied manner. For a moment or two he remained lost in thought, then he went to the desk, pulled open a drawer and took out a little pile of invitation cards.
His face brightened.
‘A la bonne heure! Exactly my affair! He will certainly be there.’
II
A duchess greeted M. Hercule Poirot in fulsome tones.
‘So you could manage to come after all, M. Poirot! Why, that’s splendid.’
‘The pleasure is mine, madame,’ murmured Poirot, bowing.
He escaped from several important and splendid beings—a famous diplomat, an equally famous actress and a well-known sporting peer—and found at last the person he had come to seek, that invariably ‘also present’ guest, Mr Satterthwaite.
Mr Satterthwaite twittered amiably.
‘The dear duchess—I always enjoy her parties… Such a personality, if you know what I mean. I saw a lot of her in Corsica some years ago…’
Mr Satterthwaite’s conversation was apt to be unduly burdened by mentions of his titled acquaintances. It is possible that he may sometimes have found pleasure in the company of Messrs. Jones, Brown or Robinson, but, if so, he did not mention the fact. And yet, to describe Mr Satterthwaite as a mere snob and leave it at that would have been to do him an injustice. He was a keen observer of human nature, and if it is true that the looker-on knows most of the game, Mr Satterthwaite knew a good deal.
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