Authors: Dorothy L. Sayers
‘That’s true, sir; and as sure as I’m sitting here, he must ha’ kiled himself, for
there was nobody come a-nigh him – barring the young lady, of course. Unless
it might be while we was taking them pots up. I won’t say but what we might a-
missed summat then. We finished that job round about two o’clock – I couldn’t
say just when it were, not to the minute, but the tide had turned nigh on three-
quarters of an hour, and that’s when I looks at this felow again and I says to
Grandad, “Grandad,” I says, “that chap there on the rock looks queer-like,” I
says, “I wonder if there’s summat wrong.” So we brings the boat in-shore a bit,
and then, al of a sudden, out comes the young lady from behind them rocks
and starts caperin’ about. And Grandad, he says, “Let un bide,” he says, “let un
bide. Us have no cal to be meddlin’ wi’ they,” he says. And so we puts about
again. Because, you see, sir, if we’d gone a-meddling and it was to come out as
we was thereabouts with the boat ful of Tom Gurney’s lobsters, Tom Gurney’d
a-had summat to say about it.’
‘Your grandfather said you saw Alexis first at about 1.45.’
‘It ’ud be before that, sir. But I’l not say as we kept our eyes on un al the
time, like.’
‘Suppose someone had come along, say, between 1.45 and two o’clock,
would you have seen him?’
‘Reckon so. No, sir; that poor gentleman made away with himself, there’s no
doubt of it. Just cut his throat quiet-like as he sat there. There’s no manner of
doubt about that.’
Wimsey was puzzled. If this was lying, it was done with a surprising
appearance of sincerity. But if it was truth, it made the theory of murder stil
harder to substantiate than before. Every fragment of evidence there was
pointed to the conclusion that Alexis had died alone upon his rock and by his
own hand.
And yet – why wouldn’t the bay mare go near the Flat-Iron? Was it possible
– Wimsey was no friend to superstition, but he had known such things happen
before – was it possible that the uneasy spirit of Paul Alexis stil hung about the
Flat-Iron, perceptible to the brute though not to self-conscious man? He had
known another horse that refused to pass the scene of an age-old crime.
He suddenly thought of another point that he might incidentaly verify.
‘Wil anybody be up and about at your home, Jem?’
‘Oh, yes, sir. Mother’s sure to be waiting up for me.’
‘I’d like to see her.’
Jem offered no objection, and Wimsey went in with him to Polock’s
cottage. Mrs Polock, stirring soup for Jem in a saucepan, received him politely,
but shook her head at his question.
‘No, sir. We heard no horse on the beach this afternoon.’
That settled that, then. If Wimsey could ride past the cottages unnoticed, so
could any other man.
‘The wind’s off-shore today,’ added Mrs Polock.
‘And you’re stil sure you heard nothing of the sort last Thursday week?’
‘Ah!’ Mrs Polock removed the saucepan. ‘Not in the afternoon, what the
police was asking about. But Susie have caled to mind as she did hear
something like a trampling round about dinner-time. Happen it might be twelve
o’clock. But being at her work, she didn’t run out to look.’
‘Twelve o’clock?’
‘Thereabout, sir. It come back to her al of a sudden, when we was talkin’
over what that young Ormond wur askin’ about.’
Wimsey left the cottage with his ideas al in disorder. If someone had been
riding on the shore at twelve o’clock it accounted for the horseshoe, but it did
not account for the murder. Had he, after al, been quite wrong in attaching so
much importance to the horseshoe? Might not some mischievous lad, finding the
bay mare at large, have ridden her along the beach for a lark? Might she not
even have strayed away on her own account?
But that brought him back to her strange behaviour of that afternoon, and to
the problem of the ring-bolt. Had the ring-bolt been used for some other
purpose? Or suppose the murderer had come to the rock on horseback at
twelve o’clock and remained talking there with Alexis til two o’clock? But Jem
said that there had been only the one figure on the Flat-Iron. Had the murderer
lurked hidden in the rocky cleft til the time came to strike the blow? But why?
Surely the sole reason for riding thither could only have been the establishment
of an alibi, and an alibi is thrown away if one lingers for two hours before taking
advantage of it. And how had the mare got home? She was not on the shore
between one o’clock and two o’clock if – again – Jem was to be trusted.
Wimsey played for a few moments with the idea of two men riding on one
horse – one to do the murder and one to take the animal back, but the thing
seemed far-fetched and absurd.
Then an entirely new thought struck him. In al the discussions about the
crime, it had been taken for granted that Alexis had walked along the coast-
road to the Flat-Iron; but had this been proved? He had never thought to ask.
Why might not Alexis have been the rider?
In that case, the time of the mare’s passing might be explained, but other
problems bristled up thick as thorns in a rose-garden. At what point had he
taken horse? He had been seen to leave Darley Halt by road in the direction of
Lesston Hoe. Had he subsequently returned and fetched the mare from the
field, and so ridden? If not, who had brought her and to what rendezvous? And
again, how had she returned?
He determined to hunt out Inspector Umpelty and face him with these
problems.
The Inspector was just going to bed, and his welcome was not a hearty one,
but he showed signs of animation on hearing Wimsey’s fresh information.
‘Them Polocks and Moggeridges are the biggest liars in creation,’ he
observed, ‘and if there’s been murder done, it’s good proof that they’re al
concerned in it,’ said he. ‘But as to how Alexis got there, you can set your mind
at rest. We’ve found six witnesses who saw him at various points along the
road between 10.15 and 11.45, and unless there’s some other felow been
going about in a black beard, you can take it as proved that he went by the
coast-road and no other way.’
‘Did none of the witnesses know him personaly?’
‘Wel, no,’ the Inspector admitted, ‘but it isn’t likely there’d be more than
one young felow in a blue suit and a beard going about at that time, unless
somebody was deliberately disguised as him, and where’d be the point of that?
I mean to say, the only reasons for anybody impersonating him would be to
make out either that he was in that neighbourhood at that particular time when
he was realy elsewhere, or that he was realy alive some time after he was
supposed to be kiled. Now, we know that he was in that neighbourhood al
right, so that disposes of number one; and we know that he realy was kiled at
two o’clock and not earlier, and that disposes of number two. Unless, of
course,’ said the Inspector, slowly, ‘the real Alexis was up to some funny
business between 10.15 and two o’clock, and this other felow was making an
alibi for him. I hadn’t thought of that.’
‘I suppose,’ said Wimsey, ‘that it realy
was
Alexis who was kiled. His face
was gone, you know, and we’ve only the clothes and a photograph to go
upon.’
‘Wel, it was somebody else with a real beard, anyhow,’ said the Inspector.
‘And who would Alexis be wanting to kil, do you suppose?’
‘Bolsheviks,’ suggested Wimsey, lightly. ‘He might make an appointment
with a Bolshevik who meant to murder him, then murder the Bolshevik.’
‘So he might – but that doesn’t make things any easier. Whoever it was did
the murder, he had to get away from the Flat-Iron. And how could he have
managed to change clothes with the victim? There wasn’t time.’
‘Not after the murder, certainly.’
‘Then where are you? It’s only making things more complicated. If you ask
me, I think your notion of the mare having been ridden down there at some
other time by some mischievous young felow is a good one. There’s nothing
against it except that ring-bolt, and that might quite wel have been put there for
a quite different purpose. That washes the mare out of the thing altogether and
makes it al a lot easier. Then we can say that either Alexis did away with
himself or else he was murdered by some person we don’t know of yet, who
just walked along the coast on his two feet. It doesn’t matter that those
Polocks didn’t see him. He could have been hiding under the rock, like you
said. The only trouble is, who was he? It wasn’t Weldon, it wasn’t Bright, and
it wasn’t Perkins. But they’re not the only people in the world.’
Wimsey nodded.
‘I’m feeling a bit depressed,’ he said. ‘I seem to have falen down a bit over
this case.’
‘It’s a nuisance,’ said Umpelty, ‘but there! We’ve only been at it a fortnight,
and what’s fortnight? We’l have to be patient, my lord, and wait for the
translation of that letter to come through. The explanation may be al in that.’
XXVIII
THE EVIDENCE OF THE CIPHER
‘I know not whether
I see your meaning: if I do, it lies
Upon the wordy wavelets of your voice,
Dim as an evening shadow in a brook.’
Fragment
Friday, 3 July
The letter from ‘Clumps’ at the Foreign Office did not arrive til the Friday, and
then was a disappointment. It ran:
‘Dear Wimbles,
‘Got your screed. Old Bungo is in China, dealing with the mess-up there, so have
posted enclosure off to him as per instructions. He may be up-country, but he’ll
probably get it in a few weeks. How’s things? Saw Trotters last week at the Carlton.
He has got himself into a bit of a mess with his old man, but seems to bear up. You
remember the Newton-Carberry business? Well, it’s settled, and Flops has departed
for the Continent. What-ho!
‘Yours ever,
‘Clumps.’
‘Young idiot!’ said Wimsey, wrathfuly. He threw the letter into the waste-
paper basket, put on his hat and went round to Mrs Lefranc’s. Here he found
Harriet industriously at work upon the cipher. She reported, however, total
failure.
‘I don’t think it’s a scrap of good going on with these marked words,’ said
Wimsey. ‘And Bungo has failed us. Let’s put our great brains to the business.
Now, look here. Here is a problem to start with. What is in this letter, and why
wasn’t it burnt with the rest?’
‘Now you mention it, that is rather odd.’
‘Very. This letter came on the Tuesday morning. On the Wednesday, bils
were settled up, and on the Wednesday night, papers were burned. On
Thursday morning, Alexis set out to catch his train. Is it too much to suppose
that the instructions to do al this were in the letter?’
‘It looks likely.’
‘It does. That means that this letter probably made the appointment for the
meeting at the Flat-Iron. Now why wasn’t this letter burnt with the rest?’
Harriet let her mind range over the field of detective fiction, with which she
was moderately wel acquainted.
‘In my own books,’ she remarked, ‘I usualy make the vilain end up by
saying “Bring this letter with you.” The idea is, from the vilain’s point of view,
that he can then make certain that the paper is destroyed. From
my
point of
view, of course, I put it in so that the vilain can leave a fragment of paper
clutched in the victim’s stiffened hand to assist Robert Templeton.’
‘Just so. Now, suppose our vilain didn’t quite grasp the duplicity of your
motives. Suppose he said to himself: “Harriet Vane and other celebrated writers
of mystery fiction always make the murderer tel the victim to bring the letter
with him. That is evidently the correct thing to do.” That would account for the
paper’s being here.’
‘He’d have to be rather an amateur vilain.’
‘Why shouldn’t he be? Unless this is realy the work of a trained Bolshevik
agent, he probably is. I suggest that somewhere in this letter, perhaps at the
end, we shal find the words “Bring this letter with you” – and that wil account
for its presence.’
‘I see. Then why do we find it tucked away in an inner pocket and not in the
victim’s hand as per schedule?’
‘Perhaps the victim didn’t play up?’
‘Then the murderer ought to have searched him and found the paper.’
‘He must have forgotten.’
‘How inefficient!’
‘I can’t help that. Here
is
the paper. And no doubt it’s ful of dangerous and
important information. If it made an appointment, it must be because it would
then almost amount to a proof that Alexis didn’t commit suicide but
was
murdered.’
‘Look here, though! Suppose the letter was brought simply because it
contained instructions for reaching the Flat-Iron and so on, which Alexis didn’t