Read The Monogram Murders Online
Authors: Sophie Hannah
“Yes. I assumed that he would not be content to die
without knowing why I didn’t come to the hotel as
planned.”
“Yet he was,” I said, thinking furiously.
Jennie nodded.
I could see now that it all made sense: the identical
positioning of the three dead bodies for one thing—in
a perfectly straight line, feet pointing toward the door,
between a small table and a chair. As Poirot had said,
Harriet Sippel, Ida Gransbury and Richard Negus
were unlikely all to have fallen naturally into that
exact position.
There was a suspicious amount of similarity
between the three murder scenes, and at last I thought
I understood why: the conspirators needed the police
to believe there was only one killer. In fact, any
detective worth his salt would have assumed this
purely from the cufflinks in the mouths and the fact of
all three bodies having turned up at the same hotel on
the same night, but the killers were in the grip of
paranoia.
They
knew they were more than one person,
and so they feared, as the guilty tend to, that the truth
might be apparent to others. So they went to great
lengths to create three murder scenes that were
more
similar to one another than they needed to be.
The laying out of the bodies, perfectly straight and
identical, was also consistent with the notion that the
killings at the Bloxham Hotel were not murders but
executions. There are procedures that one follows
after an execution—formalities and rituals. It would
have felt important, I thought, to do
something
with
the bodies rather than simply leave them lying exactly
as they fell, as a common or garden-variety murderer
would.
An image of a much younger Jennie Hobbs came to
my mind: at Cambridge University’s Saviour College,
moving from one room to another, making beds. She
would have made each one identically, following the
prescribed pattern . . . I shuddered, then wondered
why a vision of a young woman innocently making
beds in a college should give me such a chill.
Beds, and deathbeds . . .
Patterns, and the disruption of patterns . . .
“Richard Negus committed suicide,” I heard
myself declare. “He must have. He tried to make it
look like murder—the same pattern as the other two,
so that we would suspect the same killer—but he had
to lock his door from the
inside.
Then he hid the key
behind a fireplace tile to make it look as if the
murderer had taken it, and opened a window to its full
extent. If the hidden key was ever found, we would
have wondered, as we did, why the murderer chose to
lock the door from the inside, hide the key in the room
and escape via the window, but
we would still have
believed there was a murderer
. That was all that
mattered to Negus. Whereas if the window was shut
and by some chance the key was found, we would
draw the only possible conclusion: that Richard
Negus had taken his own life. He couldn’t risk our
arriving at that conclusion—do you see? If we did,
then the framing of Nancy Ducane for all three deaths
would fail. We would be more likely to assume that
Negus killed Harriet Sippel and Ida Gransbury before
killing himself.”
“Yes,” said Jennie. “I think you are right.”
“The different positioning of the cufflink . . .”
Poirot murmured before raising his eyebrows at me,
indicating that he wished me to continue.
I said, “The cufflink was close to Negus’s throat
because his death convulsions from the poison caused
his mouth to open. He had carefully positioned
himself in a straight line on the floor and placed the
cufflink between his lips, but it fell to the back of his
mouth. Unlike Harriet Sippel and Ida Gransbury,
Richard Negus did not have a killer present when he
died, and so the cufflink could not be carefully
positioned in the agreed place.”
“Mademoiselle Jennie, you believe that Mr. Negus
would swallow the poison, lie down and die without
first attempting to discover why you had failed to
arrive at the hotel?” Poirot asked her.
“I did not think he would, until I read of his death
in the newspaper.”
“Ah.” Poirot’s expression was unreadable.
“For so long, Richard had been expecting to die on
that Thursday night, looking forward to the end of his
guilt and torment after so many years,” said Jennie. “I
believe that all he wanted, once he arrived at the
Bloxham, was for it to be over for him, and so, when I
did not arrive to kill him as planned, he did it
himself.”
“Thank you, mademoiselle.” Poirot rose to his
feet. He wobbled a little to find his balance after so
long in a seated position.
“What will happen to me, Monsieur Poirot?”
“Please stay here in this house until I or Mr.
Catchpool return with more information. If you make
the mistake of running away a second time, things will
go very badly for you.”
“As they will if I stay put,” said Jennie. There was
a blank, faraway look in her eyes. “It’s all right, Mr.
Catchpool, you needn’t be sorry for me. I am
prepared.”
Her words, no doubt intended to reassure me,
filled me with dread. She had the manner of one who
had looked into the future and seen terrible events
contained within it. Whatever they were, I knew that I
was not prepared and did not wish to be.
APART FROM TELLING ME twice that we must go to
Great Holling without delay, Poirot remained silent
all the way home. He looked preoccupied, and it was
clear that he did not want to talk.
We arrived at the lodging house to find young
Stanley Beer waiting for us. “What is the matter?”
Poirot asked him. “Are you here about the work of art
I created?”
“Pardon, sir? Oh, your crest? No, that was
perfectly all right, sir. As a matter of fact . . .” Beer
reached into his pocket and handed over an envelope.
“You’ll find your answer in there.”
“Thank you, Constable. But then it must be that
something else is wrong? You are anxious,
non?
”
“Yes, sir. We’ve had word at Scotland Yard from
an Ambrose Flowerday, the Great Holling village
doctor. He’s asked for Mr. Catchpool to go there
immediately. He says he’s needed.”
Poirot looked at me, then turned back to Stanley
Beer. “It was our intention to go there immediately.
Do you know what has provoked Dr. Flowerday to
request Catchpool’s presence?”
“I’m afraid I do. It’s not a happy business, sir. A
woman by the name of Margaret Ernst has been
attacked. She is likely to die—”
“Oh, no,” I murmured.
“—and she says she needs to see Mr. Catchpool
before she does. After speaking to Dr. Flowerday, I
would advise you to hurry, sir. There’s a car waiting
outside to take you to the station.”
Thinking of Poirot’s methodical nature and his
dislike of any hectic activity, I said, “Might we take
half an hour to ready ourselves?”
Beer looked at his watch. “Five, ten minutes at a
stretch, but no longer, sir—not if you want to catch the
next train.”
I must admit with some shame that, in the event,
Poirot was downstairs with his suitcase before I was.
“Hurry,
mon ami,
” he urged.
In the car, I decided that I needed to speak, even if
Poirot was not feeling talkative. “If I had only stayed
away from that infernal village, Margaret Ernst would
not have been attacked,” I said grimly. “Someone
must have seen me go to her cottage and noticed how
long I stayed.”
“You stayed long enough for her to tell you
everything, or nearly everything. What is achieved by
trying to kill her when she has already shared her
knowledge with the police?”
“Revenge. Punishment. Though, frankly, it makes
no sense. If Nancy Ducane is innocent, and Jennie
Hobbs and Samuel Kidd are behind everything—I
mean, if they’re the only ones still alive who were
behind everything—well, why should Jennie and
Kidd want to kill Margaret Ernst? She said nothing to
me to incriminate either of them, and she never
harmed Patrick or Frances Ive.”
“I agree. Jennie Hobbs and Samuel Kidd would
not wish to murder Margaret Ernst as far as I can
see.”
Rain lashed at the windows of our car. It made it
harder both to hear and to concentrate. “Then who
did?” I asked. “There we were, thinking we had all
the answers—”
“You surely did not think any such thing,
Catchpool?”
“Yes, I did. I expect you’re about to tell me I’m
wrong, but it all seemed to add up, didn’t it? All
pretty straightforward, until we heard about Margaret
Ernst being attacked.”
“He tells me it is straightforward!” Poirot smirked
at the rain-spattered car window.
“Well, it looked simple enough to me. All the
killers were dead. Ida killed Harriet, with Harriet’s
consent, and was then killed by Richard Negus—
again, with her full consent. Then Negus, when Jennie
didn’t arrive to kill him as planned, took his own life.
Jennie Hobbs and Samuel Kidd have killed nobody.
Of course, they conspired to bring about three deaths,
but those deaths were not really murders, as I see it.
They were—”
“Executions by consent?”
“Exactly.”
“It was a very neat plan they made, was it not?
Harriet Sippel, Ida Gransbury, Richard Negus and
Jennie Hobbs. Let us call them A, B, C and D for the
moment, and we will see the neatness of their plan
more clearly.”
“Why should we not call them by their names?” I
asked.
Poirot ignored me. “A, B, C and D—all plagued
by guilt and seeking the redemption of the soul. They
agree that they must pay for a past sin with their own
lives, and so they plan to kill one another: B kills A,
then C kills B, then D kills C.”
“Except that D
didn’t
kill C, did she? D is Jennie
Hobbs, and she didn’t kill Richard Negus.”
“Perhaps not, but she was supposed to. That was
the plan. Also that D would stay alive to see E—
Nancy Ducane—hang for the murders of A, B, and C.
Only then could D . . .” Poirot stopped. “D,” he
repeated. “Demise. That is the correct word.”
“What?”
“For your crossword puzzle. A word that means
death and has six letters. Do you recall? I suggested
‘murder’ and you said that would only work if murder
began . . .” He fell silent, shaking his head.
“If murder began with a D. Yes, I remember.
Poirot, are you all right?” His eyes had that strange
green glow about them that they sometimes acquire.
“
Comment? Mais bien évidemment!
If murder
began with a D! Of course! That is it!
Mon ami,
you
do not know how you have helped me. Now I think
. . . yes, that is it. That must be it. The younger man
and the older woman—ah, but it is so clear to me
now!”
“Please explain.”
“Yes, yes. When I am ready.”
“Why are you not ready
now
? What are you
waiting for?”
“You must allow me more than twenty seconds to
compose and arrange my ideas, Catchpool. That is