‘Well, when we got there—he asked for all of us—he was speaking into the telephone—to his lawyers about his will. And then he told Alfred he was looking very glum. I think that was because of Harry coming home to live. Alfred was very upset about that, I believe. You see, Harry did something quite dreadful. And then he said something about his wife—she’s dead long ago—but she had the brains of a louse, he said, and David sprang up and looked as though he’d like to murder him—Oh!’ She stopped suddenly, her eyes alarmed. ‘I didn’t mean that—I didn’t mean it at all!’
Colonel Johnson said soothingly:
‘Quite—quite, figure of speech, that was all.’
‘Hilda, that’s David’s wife, quieted him down and— well, I think that’s all. Mr Lee said he didn’t want to see anyone again that evening. So we all went away.’
‘And that was the last time you saw him?’
‘Yes. Until—until—’
She shivered.
Colonel Johnson said:
‘Yes, quite so. Now, where were you at the time of the crime?’
‘Oh—let me see, I think I was in the drawing-room.’
‘Aren’t you sure?’
Magdalene’s eyes flickered a little, the lids drooped over them.
She said:
‘Of course! How stupid of me…I’d gone to telephone. One gets so mixed up.’
‘You were telephoning, you say. In this room?’
‘Yes, that’s the only telephone except the one upstairs in my father-in-law’s room.’
Superintendent Sugden said:
‘Was anybody else in the room with you?’
Her eyes widened.
‘Oh, no, I was quite alone.’
‘Had you been here long?’
‘Well—a little time. It takes some time to put a call through in the evening.’
‘It was a trunk call, then?’
‘Yes—to Westeringham.’
‘I see.’
‘And then?’
‘And then there was that awful scream—and everybody running—and the door being locked and having to break it down. Oh! It was like a nightmare! I shall always remember it!’
‘No, no,’ Colonel Johnson’s tone was mechanically kind. He went on:
‘Did you know that your father-in-law kept a quantity of valuable diamonds in his safe?’
‘No, did he?’ Her tone was quite frankly thrilled. ‘Real diamonds?’
Hercule Poirot said:
‘Diamonds worth about ten thousand pounds.’
‘Oh!’ It was a soft gasping sound—holding in it the essence of feminine cupidity.
‘Well,’ said Colonel Johnson, ‘I think that’s all for the present. We needn’t bother you any further, Mrs Lee.’
‘Oh, thank you.’
She stood up—smiled from Johnson to Poirot—the smile of a grateful little girl, then she went out walking with her head held high and her palms a little turned outwards.
Colonel Johnson called:
‘Will you ask your brother-in-law, Mr David Lee, to come here?’ Closing the door after her, he came back to the table.
‘Well,’ he said, ‘what do you think? We’re getting at some of it now! You notice one thing: George Lee was telephoning when he heard the scream! His wife was telephoning when she heard it! That doesn’t fit—it doesn’t fit at all.’
He added:
‘What do you think, Sugden?’
The superintendent said slowly:
‘I don’t want to speak offensively of the lady, but I should say that though she’s the kind who would be first class at getting money out a gentleman, I don’t think she’s the kind who’d cut a gentleman’s throat. That wouldn’t be her line at all.’
‘Ah, but one never knows, mon vieux,’ murmured Poirot.
The chief constable turned round on him.
‘And you, Poirot, what do you think?’
Hercule Poirot leaned forward. He straightened the blotter in front of him and flicked a minute speck of dust from a candlestick. He answered:
‘I would say that the character of the late Mr Simeon Lee begins to emerge for us. It is there, I think, that the whole importance of the case lies…in the character of the dead man.’
Superintendent Sugden turned a puzzled face to him.
‘I don’t quite get you, Mr Poirot,’ he said. ‘What exactly has the character of the deceased got to do with his murder?’
Poirot said dreamily:
‘The character of the victim has always something to do with his or her murder. The frank and unsuspicious mind of Desdemona was the direct cause of her death. A more suspicious woman would have seen Iago’s machinations and circumvented them much earlier. The uncleanness of Marat directly invited his end in a bath. From the temper of Mercutio’s mind came his death at the sword’s point.’
Colonel Johnson pulled his moustache.
‘What exactly are you getting at, Poirot?’
‘I am telling you that because Simeon Lee was a certain kind of man, he set in motion certain forces, which forces in the end brought about his death.’
‘You don’t think the diamonds had anything to do with it, then?’
Poirot smiled at the honest perplexity in Johnson’s face.
‘Mon cher,’ he said. ‘It was because of Simeon Lee’s peculiar character that he kept ten thousand pounds worth of uncut diamonds in his safe! You have not there the action of every man.’
‘That’s very true, Mr Poirot,’ said Superintendent Sugden, nodding his head with the air of a man who at last sees what a fellow-conversationalist is driving at. ‘He was a queer one, Mr Lee was. He kept those stones there so he could take them out and handle them and get the feeling of the past back. Depend upon it, that’s why he never had them cut.’
Poirot nodded energetically.
‘Precisely—precisely. I see you have great acumen, Superintendent.’
The superintendent looked a little doubtful at the compliment, but Colonel Johnson cut in:
‘There’s something else, Poirot. I don’t know whether it has struck you—’
‘Mais oui,’ said Poirot. ‘I know what you mean. Mrs George Lee, she let the cat out of the bag more than she knew! She gave us a pretty impression of that last family meeting. She indicates—oh! so naïvely—that Alfred was angry with his father—and that David looked as “though he could murder him”. Both those statements I think were true. But from them we can draw our own reconstruction. What did Simeon Lee assemble his family for? Why should they have arrived in time to hear him telephoning to his lawyer? Parbleu, it was no error, that. He wanted them to hear it! The poor old one, he sits in his chair and he has lost the diversions of his younger days. So he invents a new diversion for himself. He amuses himself by playing upon the cupidity and the greed of human nature—yes, and on its emotions and its passions, too! But from that arises one further deduction. In his game of rousing the greed and emotion of his children, he would not omit anyone. He must, logically and necessarily, have had his dig at Mr George Lee as well as at the others! His wife is carefully silent about that. At her, too, he may have shot a poisoned arrow or two. We shall find out, I think, from others, what Simeon Lee had to say to George Lee and George Lee’s wife—’
He broke off. The door opened and David Lee came in.
XII
David Lee had himself well in hand. His demeanour was calm—almost unnaturally so. He came up to them, drew a chair forward and sat down, looking with grave interrogation at Colonel Johnson.
The electric light touched the fair peak of hair that grew on his forehead and showed up the sensitive modelling of the cheek bones. He looked absurdly young to be the son of that shrivelled old man who lay dead upstairs.
‘Yes, gentlemen,’ he said, ‘what can I tell you?’
Colonel Johnson said:
‘I understand, Mr Lee, that there was a kind of family meeting held in your father’s room this afternoon?’
‘Th
ere was. But it was quite informal. I mean, it was not a family council or anything of that kind.’
‘What took place there?’
David Lee answered calmly:
‘My father was in a difficult mood. He was an old man and an invalid, of course, one had to make allowances for him. He seemed to have assembled us there in order to—well—vent his spite upon us.’
‘Can you remember what he said?’
David said quietly:
‘It was really all rather foolish. He said we were no use—any of us—that there wasn’t a single man in the family! He said Pilar (that is my Spanish niece) was worth two of any of us. He said—’ David stopped.
Poirot said:
‘Please, Mr Lee, the exact words, if you can.’
David said reluctantly:
‘He spoke rather coarsely—said he hoped that somewhere in the world he had better sons—even if they were born the wrong side of the blanket…’
His sensitive face showed distaste for the words he was repeating. Superintendent Sugden looked up, suddenly alert. Leaning forward, he said:
‘Did your father say anything in particular to your brother, Mr George Lee?’
‘To George? I don’t remember. Oh, yes, I believe he told him he would have to cut down expenses in future; he’d have to reduce his allowance. George was very upset, got as red as a turkey cock. He spluttered and said he couldn’t possibly manage with less. My father said quite coolly that he’d have to. He said he’d better get his wife to help him economize. Rather a nasty dig, that—George has always been the economical one—saves and stints on every penny. Magdalene, I fancy, is a bit of a spender—she has extravagant tastes.’
Poirot said:
‘So that she, too, was annoyed?’
‘Yes. Besides, my father worded something else rather crudely—mentioned her as having lived with a naval officer. Of course he really meant her father, but it sounded rather dubious. Magdalene went scarlet. I don’t blame her.’
Poirot said:
‘Did your father mention his late wife, your mother?’
The red blood ran in waves up David’s temples. His hands clenched themselves on the table in front of him, trembling slightly.
He said in a low choked voice:
‘Yes, he did. He insulted her.’
Colonel Johnson said:
‘What did he say?’
David said abruptly:
‘I don’t remember. Just some slighting reference.’
Poirot said softly:
‘Your mother has been dead some years?’
David said shortly:
‘She died when I was a boy.’
‘She was not—perhaps—very happy in her life here?’
David gave a scornful laugh:
‘Who could be happy with a man like my father? My mother was a saint. She died a broken-hearted woman.’
Poirot went on:
‘Your father was, perhaps, distressed by her death?’
David said abruptly:
‘I don’t know. I left home.’
He paused and then said:
‘Perhaps you may not be aware of the fact that when I came on this visit I had not seen my father for nearly twenty years. So you see I can’t tell you very much about his habits or his enemies or what went on here.’
Colonel Johnson asked:
‘Did you know that your father kept a lot of valuable diamonds in the safe in his bedroom?’
David said indifferently:
‘Did he? Seems a foolish sort of thing to do.’
Johnson said:
‘Will you describe briefly your own movements last night?’
‘Mine? Oh, I went away from the dinner-table fairly quickly. It bores me, this sitting round over port. Besides, I could see that Alfred and Harry were working up for a quarrel. I hate rows. I slipped away and went to the music-room and played the piano.’
Poirot asked:
‘The music-room, it is next to the drawing-room, is it not?’
‘Yes. I played there for some time—till—till the thing happened.’
‘What did you hear exactly?’
‘Oh! A far-off noise of furniture being overturned somewhere upstairs. And then a pretty ghastly cry.’ He clenched his hands again. ‘Like a soul in hell. God, it was awful!’
Johnson said:
‘Were you alone in the music-room?’
‘Eh? No, my wife, Hilda, was there. She’d come in from the drawing-room. We—we went up with the others.’
He added quickly and nervously:
‘You don’t want me, do you, to describe what—what I saw there?’
Colonel Johnson said:
‘No, quite unnecessary. Thank you, Mr Lee, there’s nothing more. You can’t imagine, I suppose, who would be likely to want to murder your father?’
David Lee said recklessly:
‘I should think—quite a lot of people! I don’t know of anyone definite.’
He went out rapidly, shutting the door loudly behind him.
XIII
Colonel Johnson had had no time to do more than clear his throat when the door opened again and Hilda Lee came in.
Hercule Poirot looked at her with interest. He had to admit to himself that the wives these Lees had married were an interesting study. The swift intelligence and greyhound grace of Lydia, the meretricious airs and graces of Magdalene, and now, the solid comfortable strength of Hilda. She was, he saw, younger than her rather dowdy style of hair-dressing and unfashionable clothes made her appear. Her mouse-brown hair was unflecked with grey and her steady hazel eyes set in the rather podgy face shone out like beacons of kindliness. She was, he thought, a nice woman.
Colonel Johnson was talking in his kindliest tone.
‘…A great strain on all of you,’ he was saying. ‘I gather from your husband, Mrs Lee, that this is the first time you have been to Gorston Hall?’
She bowed her head.
‘Were you previously acquainted with your father-in-law, Mr Lee?’
Hilda replied in her pleasant voice:
‘No. We were married soon after David left home. He always wanted to have nothing to do with his family. Until now we have not seen any of them.’
‘How, then, did this visit come about?’
‘My father-in-law wrote to David. He stressed his age and his desire that all his children should be with him this Christmas.’
‘And your husband responded to this appeal?’
Hilda said:
‘His acceptance was, I am afraid, all my doing—I misunderstood the situation.’
Poirot interposed. He said:
‘Will you be so kind as to explain yourself a little more clearly, madame? I think what you can tell us may be of value.’
She turned to him immediately.
She said:
‘At that time I had never seen my father-in-law. I had no idea what his real motive was. I assumed that he was old and lonely and that he really wanted to be reconciled to all his children.’
‘And what was his real motive, in your opinion, madame?’
Hilda hesitated a moment. Then she said slowly:
‘I have no doubt—no doubt at all—that what my father-in-law really wanted was not to promote peace but to stir up strife.’
‘In what way?’
Hilda said in a low voice:
‘It amused him to—to appeal to the worst instincts in human nature. There was—how can I put it?—a kind of diabolical impishness about him. He wished to set every member of the family at loggerheads with one another.’
Johnson said sharply: ‘And did he succeed?’
‘Oh, yes,’ said Hilda Lee. ‘He succeeded.’
Poirot said:
‘We have been told, madame, of a scene that took place this afternoon. It was, I think, rather a violent scene.’
She bowed her head.
‘Will you describe it to us—as truthfully as possible, if you please.’
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