Read The Monogram Murders Online
Authors: Sophie Hannah
people . . .” Poirot turned back to the crowd. “Ladies
and gentlemen, we have heard that Richard Negus,
Harriet Sippel and Ida Gransbury were friends, and
that their food was delivered to Room 317 at fifteen
minutes past seven. Yet at half past seven, Mr.
Brignell saw Richard Negus on
this
floor of the hotel,
walking toward the lift. Mr. Negus must have been
returning,
n’est-ce pas,
either to his own room, 238,
or to Room 317 to join his two friends? But returning
from where? His sandwiches and cakes were
delivered only fifteen minutes earlier! Did he
abandon them immediately and set off somewhere? Or
did he eat his share of the food in only three or four
minutes before rushing off? And to where did he rush?
What was the important errand for which he left
Room 317? Was it to ensure that the food should not
end up on the bill of Harriet Sippel or Ida Gransbury?
He could not wait twenty or thirty minutes, or an hour,
before setting off to attend to this matter?”
A sturdily built woman with curly brown hair and
severe eyebrows sprang to her feet at the back of the
room. “You keep asking all these questions as if I
might know the answer, as if we all might know the
answers, and we don’t know nothing!” Her eyes
darted around the room as she spoke, settling on one
person after another, though her words were
addressed to Poirot. “I want to go home, Mr.
Lazzari,” she wailed. “I want to look in on my kiddies
and see that they’re safe!”
A younger woman sitting beside her put a hand on
her arm and tried to calm her. “Sit down, Tessie,” she
said. “The gentleman’s only trying to help. Your
bairns won’t have come to any harm, not if they’ve
been nowhere near the Bloxham.”
At this remark, intended as a comfort, both Luca
Lazzari and Sturdy Tessie made anguished noises.
“We won’t keep you much longer, madam,” I said.
“And I’m sure Mr. Lazzari will allow you to pay a
visit to your children afterward, if that is what you
feel you need to do.”
Lazzari indicated that this would be permissible,
and Tessie sat down, slightly mollified.
I turned to Poirot and said, “Richard Negus did not
leave Room 317 in order to clear up the matter of the
bill. He ran into Thomas Brignell on his way
back
from somewhere, so he had already done whatever it
was that he set out to do by that point. He then
happened to spot Mr. Brignell and decided to clear up
the matter of the bill.” I hoped, with this little speech,
to demonstrate to all present that we had answers as
well as questions. Perhaps not
all
the answers yet, but
some, and some was better than none.
“Monsieur Brignell, did you have the impression
that Mr. Negus
happened
to see you and take his
opportunity, as Mr. Catchpool describes? He was not
looking for you? It was you who attended to him when
he arrived at the hotel on Wednesday, yes?
“That’s right, sir. No, he wasn’t looking for me.”
Brignell seemed happier about speaking while seated.
“He chanced upon me and thought, ‘Oh, there’s that
chap again,’ if you know what I mean, sir.”
“Indeed. Ladies and gentlemen,” Poirot raised his
voice. “After committing three murders in this hotel
yesterday evening, the killer, or somebody who
knows the identity of the killer and conspired with
him, left a note on the front desk: ‘MAY THEY
NEVER REST IN PEACE. 121. 238. 317.’ Did
anybody happen to observe the leaving of this note
that I show to you now?” Poirot produced the small
white card from his pocket and held it up in the air. “It
was found by the clerk, Mr. John Goode, at ten
minutes past eight. Did any of you, perhaps, notice a
person or persons near the desk who seemed to be
conducting themselves in an unusual way? Think hard!
Someone must have seen something!”
Stout Tessie had screwed her eyes shut and was
leaning against her friend. The room had filled with
whispers and gasps, but it was only the shock and
excitement of seeing the handwriting of a killer—a
souvenir that made the three deaths seem more vividly
real.
Nobody had anything more to tell us. It turned out
that if you asked a hundred people, you were likely to
be disappointed.
HALF AN HOUR LATER, Poirot and I sat drinking coffee
in front of a roaring fire in what Lazzari had called
“our hidden lounge,” a room that was behind the
dining room and not accessible from any public
corridor. The walls were covered with portraits that I
tried to ignore. Give me a sunny landscape any day of
the week, or even a cloudy one. It’s the eyes that
bother me when people are depicted; it doesn’t seem
to matter who the artist is. I’ve yet to see a portrait
and not be convinced that its subject is regarding me
with searing scorn.
After his exuberant performance as master of
ceremonies in the dining room, Poirot had lapsed
once more into quiet gloom. “You’re fretting about
Jennie again, aren’t you?” I asked him.
He admitted that he was. “I do not want to hear that
she has been found with a cufflink in her mouth, with
the monogram PIJ. That is the news I dread.”
“Since there is nothing you can do about Jennie for
the time being, I suggest you think about something
else,” I advised.
“How practical you are, Catchpool. Very well. Let
us think about teacups.”
“Teacups?”
“Yes. What do you make of them?”
After some consideration, I said, “I believe I have
no opinions whatever on the subject of teacups.”
Poirot made an impatient noise. “Three teacups are
brought to Ida Gransbury’s room by the waiter Rafal
Bobak. Three teacups for three people, as one would
expect. But when the bodies of the three are found,
there are only two teacups in the room.”
“The other one is in Harriet Sippel’s room with
Harriet Sippel’s dead body,” I said.
“
Exactement.
And this is most curious, is it not?
Did Mrs. Sippel carry her teacup and saucer back to
her room before or after the poison was put into it? In
either scenario, who would carry a cup of tea along a
hotel corridor, and then take it into a lift or walk
down two flights of stairs with it in their hands?
Either it is full and there is a risk of spillage, or it is
half full or almost empty, and hardly worth
transporting. Usually one drinks a cup of tea in the
room in which one pours the cup of tea,
n’est-ce
pas
?”
“Usually, yes. This killer strikes me as being as far
from usual as it’s possible to be,” I said with some
vehemence.
“And his victims? Are they not ordinary people?
What about their behavior? Do you ask me to believe
that Harriet Sippel carries her tea down to her room,
sits in a chair to drink it, and then almost immediately
the murderer knocks on her door and finds an
opportunity to put cyanide in her drink? And Richard
Negus, remember, has also left Ida Gransbury’s room
for some unknown reason, but he arranges to be back
in his own room soon afterward, with a glass of
sherry that nobody at the hotel gave him.”
“I suppose when you put it like that . . .” I said.
Poirot carried on as if I had not just conceded the
point. “Ah, yes, Richard Negus too, he is sitting alone
with his drink when the killer pays him a visit. He too
says, ‘By all means, drop your poison into my sherry.’
And Ida Gransbury, she is all the while waiting
patiently in Room 317, alone, for the murderer to
come calling? She sips her tea
very slowly
. It would
be inconsiderate of her to finish it before the killer
arrives, of course—how then would he poison her?
Where would he put his cyanide?”
“Damn it, Poirot—what do you want me to say? I
don’t understand it any more than you do! Look, it
seems to me that the three murder victims must have
had some kind of altercation. Why else would they
plan to dine together and then all go their separate
ways?”
“I do not think a woman leaving a room in anger
would take a half-finished cup of tea with her,” said
Poirot. “Would it not in any case be cold by the time it
reached Room 121?”
“I often drink tea cold,” I said. “I quite like it.”
Poirot raised his eyebrows. “If I did not know you
to be an honest man, I should not believe it possible.
Cold tea!
Dégueulasse!
”
“Well, I should say I’ve
grown
to like it,” I added
in my defense. “There’s no hurry, with cold tea. You
can drink it at a time to suit you, and nothing bad’s
going to happen to it if you take a while. There’s no
time constraint and no pressure. That counts for a lot,
in my book.”
There was a knock at the door. “That will be
Lazzari, coming to check that no one has disturbed us
during our important conversation,” I said.
“Enter, please,” Poirot called out.
It was not Luca Lazzari but Thomas Brignell, the
junior clerk who had spoken up about having seen
Richard Negus by the lift at half past seven. “Ah,
Monsieur Brignell,” said Poirot. “Do join us. Your
account of yesterday evening was most helpful. Mr.
Catchpool and I are grateful.”
“Yes, very much so,” I said heartily. I’d have said
almost anything to make it easier for Brignell to cough
up whatever was bothering him. It was obvious that
something was. The poor chap looked no more
confident now than he had in the dining room. He
rubbed the palms of his hands together, sliding them
up and down. I could see sweat on his forehead, and
he looked paler than he had before.
“I’ve let you down,” he said. “I’ve let Mr. Lazzari
down, and he’s been so good to me, he has. I didn’t
. . . in the dining room before, I didn’t . . .” He broke
off and rubbed his palms together some more.
“You did not tell us the truth?” Poirot suggested.
“Every word I spoke was the truth, sir!” said
Thomas Brignell indignantly. “I’d be no better than
the murderer myself if I lied to the police on a matter
as important as this.”
“I do not think that you would be quite as guilty as
him, monsieur.”
“There were two things I neglected to mention. I
can’t tell you how sorry I am, sir. You see, speaking
in front of a room full of people isn’t something as
comes easy to me. I’ve always been that way. And
what made it harder in there, before”—he nodded in
the direction of the dining room—“was that I’d have
been reluctant to say the other thing Mr. Negus said to
me because he paid me a compliment.
“What compliment?”
“It wasn’t one I’d done anything to deserve, sir,
I’m sure. I’m just an ordinary man. There’s nothing
notable about me at all. I do my job, as I’m paid to,
and I try to do my best, but there’s no reason for
anyone to single me out for special praise.”
“And Mr. Negus did this?” asked Poirot. “He
singled you out for praise?”
Brignell winced. “Yes, sir. Like I said: I didn’t ask
for it and I’m sure I’d done nothing to earn it. But
when I saw him and he saw me, he said, ‘Ah, Mr.