Authors: Dorothy L. Sayers
contradicted by the evidence of Wiliam Bright and Mrs Lefranc.
In short, here was a man of Russian birth and temperament, troubled by
emotional entanglements and by the receipt of mysterious letters, and obviously
in an unstable condition of mind. He had wound up his worldly affairs and
procured a razor. He had been found in a lonely spot, to which he had
obviously proceeded unaccompanied, and had been found dead, with the fatal
weapon lying close under his hand. There were no footprints upon the sand but
his own, and the person who had discovered the body had come upon it so
closely after the time of the death as to preclude the possibility of any murderer
having escaped from the scene of the crime by way of the shore. The witness
Polock had sworn that he was out in deep water at the time when the death
occurred, and had seen no other boat in the neighbourhood, and his evidence
was supported by that of Miss Vane. Further, there was no evidence that
anybody had the slightest motive for doing away with the deceased, unless the
jury chose to pay attention to the vague suggestions about blackmailers and
Bolsheviks, which there was not an atom of testimony to support.
Wimsey grinned at Umpelty over this convenient summary, with its useful
suppressions and assumptions. No mention of clefts in the rock or of
horseshoes or of the disposal of Mrs Weldon’s money. The jury whispered
together. There was a pause. Harriet looked at Henry Weldon. He was
frowning heavily and paying no attention to his mother, who was talking
excitedly into his ear.
Presently the foreman rose to his feet – a stout person, who looked like a
farmer.
‘We’re al agreed, for certain sure,’ he said, ‘as deceased come to his death
by cutting of his throat, and most of us thinks he took his own life; but there’s
some’ (he glared at the Empire Free-Trader) ‘who wil have it as it was
Bolsheviks.’
‘A majority verdict is sufficient,’ said the coroner, ‘Am I to understand that
the majority is for suicide?’
‘Yes, sir. I told you so, Jim Cobbley,’ added the foreman, in a penetrating
whisper.
‘Then your verdict is that deceased came to his end by cutting his own
throat.’
‘Yes, sir.’ (A further consultation.) ‘We should like to add as we think the
police regulations about foreigners did ought to be tightened up, like, deceased
being a foreigner and suicides and murders being unpleasant in a place where
so many visitors come in the summer.’
‘I can’t take that,’ objected the harassed coroner. ‘Deceased was a
naturalised Englishman.’
‘That don’t make no difference,’ said the juror, sturdily. ‘We do think as the
regulations ought to be tightened up none the more for that, and that’s what we
al say. Put it down, sir, as that’s our opinion.’
‘There you are,’ said Wimsey, ‘that’s the breed that made the Empire. When
empire comes in at the door, logic goes out at the window. Wel, I suppose
that’s al. I say, Inspector.’
‘My lord?’
‘What are you doing with that scrap of paper?’
‘I don’t quite know, my lord. Do you think there’s anything to be made of
it?’
‘Yes; send it up to Scotland Yard and ask them to get the photographic
experts on to it. You can do a lot with coloured screens. Get hold of Chief
Inspector Parker – he’l see that it’s put into the right hands.’
The Inspector nodded.
‘We’l do that. It’s my belief there’s something for us in that bit of paper, if
we could only get at it. I don’t know when I’ve seen a queerer business than
this. It looks just about as clear a case of suicide as you could wish, if it wasn’t
for one or two things. And yet, when you look into those things separately, they
seem to melt away, like. There’s that Bright. I thought we’d got him on one
point, anyhow. But there! I’ve noticed that these landsmen, nine times out of
ten, haven’t the least notion whether the tide’s in or out or where it is. I think he
was lying; so do you – but you couldn’t expect a jury to hang a man for murder
on the ground that he didn’t know High Water from Low Water. We’l try to
keep an eye on the felow, but I don’t see how we’re going to detain him. The
verdict’s suicide (which suits us wel enough in a way), and if Bright wants to
move on, we can’t stop him. Not unless we offer to pay for his board and
lodging for an indefinite period, and
that
wouldn’t suit the rate-payers. He’s got
no settled address, and seeing what his business is, we can’t hardly expect it.
We’l get out a general cal to have him kept under observation, but that’s about
al we
can
do. And of course, he’l change his name again.’
‘Isn’t he on the dole?’
‘No.’ The Inspector snorted. ‘Says he’s got an independent spirit. That’s a
suspicious circumstance in itself,
I
should say. Besides – he’l be claiming this
reward from the
Morning Star
and won’t need any dole for a bit. But we can’t
force him to stay in Wilvercombe at his own expense, reward or no reward.’
‘Get hold of Mr Hardy, and see if the paper can’t hold the reward up a bit.
Then, if he doesn’t turn up to claim it, we’l know for a certainty that there’s
something wrong with him. A contempt for money, Inspector, is the root – or at
any rate, the very definite sign – of al evil.’
The Inspector grinned.
‘You and me think alike, my lord. There’s something fishy about a bloke that
doesn’t take al he can get. Right you are. I’l speak to Mr Hardy. And I’l try
and fix up with Bright to hang on here a couple of days. If he’s up to anything
queer, he won’t try to bolt for fear of looking suspicious.’
‘It’l look much more suspicious if he consents to stay.’
‘Yes, my lord – but he won’t reason that way. He won’t want to make
trouble. He’l stay for a bit, I daresay. Fact is, I was thinking, if we could pul
him in over some other little matter . . . I don’t know, but he’s a slippery
looking customer, and I shouldn’t wonder but what we might find some excuse
or other to detain him on.’ He winked.
‘Framing him, Inspector?’
‘Good lord, no, my lord. Can’t do that, in this country. But there’s lots of
little things a man may do in the way of breaking the law. There’s street-betting,
and drunk and disorderly, and buying stuff after closing-hours and so on – little
odds-and-ends that come in handy at times.’
‘My conscience!’ said Wimsey. ‘First time I’ve heard a good word for
Dora! Wel, I must be getting along. Hulo, Weldon! I didn’t know you were
there.’
‘Funny business, al this.’ Mr Weldon waved his hand vaguely. ‘Lot of sily
stuff people do talk, eh? You’d think the whole thing was plain as pie, but
here’s my mother stil talking about Bolsheviks. Take more than a coroner’s
verdict to keep
her
quiet. Women! You can talk yourself black in the face
reasoning with ’em and al they do is to go on bleating the same sily nonsense.
You can’t take any account of what they say, can you?’
‘They’re not al alike.’
‘So they say. But that’s al part of this equality nonsense. Now, take Miss
Vane. Nice girl, and al that, and decent-looking when she takes the trouble to
put her clothes on –’
‘What about Miss Vane?’ demanded Wimsey, sharply. Then he thought:
‘Damn being in love! I’m losing my lightness of touch.’ Weldon merely grinned.
‘No offence,’ he said. ‘I only meant – take that evidence of hers. How’s a
girl like that to be expected to know about blood and al that – see what I
mean? Women always get that idea of blood running about al over the place.
Always reading novels. “Walowing in gore.” That kind of stuff. No good trying
to persuade ’em. They see what they think they ought to see. Get me?’
‘You seem to have studied feminine psychology,’ said Wimsey, gravely.
‘Oh, I know women pretty wel,’ said Mr Weldon, with solemn satisfaction.
‘You mean,’ went on Wimsey, ‘that they think in clichés.’
‘Eh?’
‘Formulae. “There’s nothing like a mother’s instinct.” “Dogs and children
always know.” “Kind hearts are more than coronets.” “Suffering refines the
character” – that sort of guff, despite al evidence to the contrary.’
‘Ye-es,’ replied Mr Weldon. ‘What I mean is, you know, they think a thing
ought to be so, and so they say it is so.’
‘Yes; I grasped that that was what you meant.’ Wimsey thought that if ever
human being had the air of repeating a formula without a clear idea of its
meaning, Mr Weldon was that human being; yet he pronounced the magic
words with a kind of pride, taking credit to himself for a discovery.
‘What you realy mean,’ went on Wimsey, ‘is, I take it, that we can’t rely on
Miss Vane’s evidence at al? You say: She hears a shriek, she finds a man with
his throat cut and a razor beside him; it looks as though he’d that moment
committed suicide, therefore she takes it for granted that he
has
that moment
committed suicide. In that case the blood ought to be stil flowing. Therefore
she persuades herself that it
was
stil flowing. Is that it?’
‘That’s it,’ said Mr Weldon.
‘Therefore the jury bring in a verdict of suicide. But you and I, who know al
about women, know that the evidence about the blood was probably wrong,
and that therefore it may quite wel have been murder. Is
that
it?’
‘Oh, no – I don’t mean that,’ protested Mr Weldon. ‘I feel perfectly certain
it was suicide.’
‘Then what are you grumbling at? It seems so obvious. If the man was
murdered after two o’clock, Miss Vane would have seen the murderer. She
didn’t see the murderer. Therefore it was suicide. The proof of the suicide realy
depends on Miss Vane’s evidence, which shows that the man died after two
o’clock. Doesn’t it?’
Mr Weldon grappled for some moments with this surprising piece of logic,
but failed to detect either the
petitio elenchi
, the undistributed middle or the
inaccurate major premiss which is contrived to combine. His face cleared.
‘Of course,’ he said. ‘Yes. I see that. Obviously it must have been suicide,
and Miss Vane’s evidence proves that it was. So she must be right after al.’
This was a sylogistic monstrosity even worse than the last, thought Wimsey.
A man who could reason like that could not reason at al. He constructed a new
sylogism for himself.
The man who committed this murder was not a fool
.
Weldon is a fool
.
Therefore Weldon did not commit this murder
.
That appeared to be sound, so far as it went. But what was Weldon
bothering about, in that case? One could only suppose that he was worried
over having no perfect alibi for two o’clock. And indeed that was worrying
Wimsey himself. Al the best murderers have alibis for the time of the murder.
Then, suddenly, ilumination came flooding, stabbing across the dark places
of his mind like a searchlight. And, good God! if this was the true solution,
Weldon was anything but a fool. He was one of the subtlest criminals a
detective had ever encountered. Wimsey studied Weldon’s obstinate profile –
was it possible? Yes, it was possible – and the scheme might quite wel have
been successful, if only Harriet Vane had not turned up with her evidence.
Work it out this way; see how it looked. Weldon had murdered Alexis at the
Flat-Iron at two o’clock. He had had the mare tethered ready somewhere, and,
after leaving the Feathers at 1.30, he had gone down the Lane and got to horse
without a moment’s delay. Then he must have ridden hel-for-leather. Suppose
he had somehow managed to do four miles in twenty-five minutes. That would
leave him half a mile from the Flat-Iron at two o’clock. No, that would not do.
Strain it a little farther. Let him start from Hinks’s Lane at 1.32 and let him
walop a steady nine miles an hour out of the mare – that would almost do it.
Let him, in any case, be within five minutes’ quick walk of the rock at 1.55.
Then what?
He sends the mare home
. Five minutes before Harriet woke, he
could send the bay mare galoping back along the sands. Then he walks. He
reaches the Flat-Iron at two o’clock. He kils. He hears Harriet coming. He
hides in the cleft of the rock. And meanwhile, the bay mare has either run home,
or, possibly, has reached the lane by the cottages and run up it, or –
Never mind the mare; she got back to her own field and stream somehow.
The times were tight; the whole thing seemed absurdly elaborate, but it was not
an absolute impossibility as he had thought at first. Suppose it had been so.
Now, if Harriet had not been there, what would have happened? In a few hours
the tide would have covered the body. Pause there, Morocco. If Weldon was