“I gave up thinking about it, and went to bed. Fate seemed to have taken charge and was guiding my steps. And so I would leave it to her.
“On Tuesday morning I drove to Wimpole Street.
“I took to Almack at once
â
a nice, sympathetic man. He was greatly upset, as was natural enough. He'd fallen for St Amant at once. The perfect patient, he called him.
“âTell me,' I said, âwho chose that nursing home?'
“âI did,' he said, âfor my sins. For two or three years I've sent my patients there. Of course it's very expensive: and then again they won't take everyone. But it seemed the very place for a man like that. When I mentioned its name
â
we call it Ne'er-do-well
â
he said,
Oh, I've heard of that. Somebody told me her aunt was the Mother Superior. Now who on earth can it have been? I have an idea she was French
. I said at once that the Mother Superior was English, as were they all.
That's funny
, he said.
I'm sure she was French, because I remember her laughing about the name. She said it was impossible to pronounce, impossible to spell, and that, if you contrived to do either, you found you were being rude
. Rather good that, you know.'
“âHe didn't say who it was?'
“âNo. He couldn't remember.'
“âNever mind. Of course you know Paterson.'
“âOh, very well. I should think he's been very helpful. A first-rate man.'
“âHe has been very helpful,' I said.
“âIt's an excellent job, and of course he's very well found and very well paid; but not everyone would stick it. I mean he has to conform. The Mother Superior rules with a rod of iron.'
“âI'd gathered that.'
“After a little more talk, I thanked him and said goodbye.
“I confess that I was excited
â
a thing which no detective should ever be. I had really got something now. You'll remember Dallas' words
â
âThe Marquise had an English mother.' I had no doubt that it was the Marquise de Ste. Hermine who was the woman's niece.
“When I got back to the Yard, I examined again the report which the French had sent. âFrench by birth⦠Born in Paris in 1902⦠Married in 1921⦠Three children⦠Remarks
â
of good report.'
“Then I drafted a further request. I asked for details of her movements since 1935. Also for full particulars of her mother: maiden and married names, movements since 1935 etc. I marked this VERY URGENT.
“Then came one of those trying periods of waiting. I saw the AC of course, and I put through a call to Rogers
â
really for something to do. All quiet at Ne'er-do-well. I didn't dare leave the Yard, in case the report came in.
“It arrived at four o'clock
â
and a great disappointment it was.
“First, except for her visit to the USA, 1939â1945, Madame Ste. Hermine had not been out of France since 1935.
“Secondly, her mother, the Comtesse de Jeige, had died in 1949 and her
dossier
had been destroyed.
“In some impatience, I sent another request: this for Madame de Jeige's maiden name. At least, they must be able to furnish that. Meanwhile, I had to get on. If France couldn't help me, I'd got to help myself. I enlisted the help of âRecords'.
“I spoke to the AC first and told him that the search to be made might keep them up half the night.
“âThat doesn't matter, Falcon. I'll speak to Burwash, myself.'
“Burwash was ready for me. But when I gave him the slip, he bit his lip.
Â
The Countess de Jeige. British Subject by birth. French by marriage. Presumably resident in France. Maiden name, not known. Died 1949.
INFORMATION REQUIRED: What visits, if any, were paid by the above to the British Isles between 1935 and 1949. Details.
Â
“âWe must work back,' Burwash said. âI'm afraid it may take some time. If she came in between 1938 and 1946, Ewing will have her down.
“âThat means that, between those dates, she was vouched for?'
“âYes
â
with or without her knowledge.'
“âThat's what I want.'
“âWe'll get on to it at once.'”
Falcon looked round.
“This urgency may surprise you. You may be wondering why it was so very important that I should receive this information as soon as ever I could. The answer is this. I dared not postpone my return to Ne'er-do-well. On Thursday morning at latest, I must be back. For I had people to see
â
and irons grow cold. Now when I went back, things might move very fast
â
as, in fact, they did. But unless I knew that the woman
could
have had Mafra, I should not dare act. And if I was held up like that
â
well, I don't say that things get out, but danger has a scent of its own. Quite a lot of people can smell it. I'm sure that both of you will bear out what I say.”
“I will, indeed,” said Mansel. “I think it's instinct, Falcon. More than once that instinct has saved my life.”
Falcon nodded.
“In a guilty person, that instinct can be very strong. Because their senses are tuned to the particular wavelength on which the whisper of danger can be heard.
“Well, I went back to my room. There I sat down, read through all my reports and made a very full note. In this I set down every tiny detail that could be construed as bearing out my belief that the Mother Superior had taken St Amant's life. Of course, there were serious gaps. Whether those would be closed, I could not tell.
“At half past seven I went back to talk to Burwashâ¦
“Ewing and Burwash found it at a quarter past eight. Exactly what I wanted
â
much more than I had hoped.
Â
28th June 1940. Entry at Liverpool. Victoria Mary, Countess de Jeige. French by marriage, British Subject by birth. References: â Sir Evelyn Scrope, Fennings, Broadway, Friend: The Mother Superior, The Nursing Home, Ne'er-do-well, Sister.
Â
“I caught the AC as he was leaving his room.
“âEvelyn Scrope,' he said. âYes, he's all right. I think Lady Scrope is dead. He's getting on: he must be nearly eighty. A very nice, gentle, man. Are you going to ring him up?'
“âI want to,' I said. âI want to ask him to see me tomorrow at ten o'clock.'
“âI'll do it for you, Falcon.'
“âIt's very good of you, sir.'
“Twenty minutes later my telephone rang.
“âAC speaking, Falcon. Scrope will be happy to see you, between eleven and twelve.'
“âI shall be at his gates, sir, sharp at eleven o'clock.'
“âI thought you would. Some things won't wait. And then you'll go on to Wiltshire. Well, here's the best of luck.'
“âThank you, sir.'
“âGoodbye.'
“I enjoyed the ride down to Broadway. In a police car, it doesn't take so long.
“Sir Evelyn was perfectly charming.
“âYou may command me, Superintendent. Ask whatever you please. I knew Lord St Amant's father very well.'
“âThank you,' I said. âAnd now I'll go straight to the point. I want some information about the Comtesse de Jeige.'
“He raised his eyebrows and smiled.
“âAbout Vicky?' he said. âYou couldn't help liking Vicky. You know she's dead?'
“âIn 1949.'
“â'48 or '49. You're probably right. She was a very old friend
â
at school with my wife. I must have met her first in the early nineteen-twenties.'
“âI assume that she lived in Paris.'
“âThat's quite right. I think it was in Paris that I met her first. But she was often in England. You know, of course, that she was an English girl.'
“âYes.'
“He smiled.
“âThe strange thing is that no one would ever have dreamed that she wasn't clean-bred French. I heard a Lord Chancellor once congratulate her on her beautiful English. She gave him a bewitching look. Then she broke into Cockney. You ought to have seen his face.'
“We laughed together.
“âIt's clear,' said I, âthat she was full of fun.'
“âShe was, indeed. And very, very pretty. Altogether most attractive and excellent company. But she was very French.'
“âWhat exactly d'you mean by that?'
“âOh, nothing to her discredit. But she had that careless elegance of manner which only the well-bred Frenchwoman seems to possess. Then, again, she was a realist.'
“âYou knew her well, Sir Evelyn.'
“âOh, yes, very well. She stayed with us more than once. I never cared for her husband. I thought him rather spineless. But I was wrong.'
“âWhy d'you say that?'
“âWhen France surrendered, he forced her out of the country against her will. He drove her to port after port, to get her on board some ship
â
without success. At last he got to, I think, St Jean-de-Luz. And there he found a ship: and on that, being British by birth, she was taken aboard. Then he turned round, dismissed his chauffeur and drove back the way he had come. He was never heard of again. I think he knew how to die.'
“âDid you see her when she arrived?'
“âShe came straight to us
â
and stayed for three or four months. She arrived in some General's car. That was Vicky. Landed at Liverpool. Nothing but what she stood up in, and not one penny in her purse. But a General's car. How she did it, I've no idea. She was well over fifty then, but she had this amazing charm.'
“âHow did she react to the fall of France?'
“âShe was greatly upset, of course. She'd never expected France to go as she did. But she'd always been sure they'd be beaten. And she was entirely convinced that England would be overwhelmed. She knew we should never surrender, but she was perfectly certain that Hitler would have his way.
She had poison all ready to take, when the Germans arrived. She pressed some upon my wife
: but she only laughed and told her to wait and see.'”
There was a little silence.
Then Falcon went on.
“âYou say that she stayed with you for three or four months.'
“âYes. Then she took a flat in London
â
Hampstead, I think. You see, her father was rich, and all her private fortune was in the hands of Trustees
â
in England, of course.'
“âI see. Did you see her again?'
“âOh, yes. Several times. She used to come down for a week. But she had a lot of friends.'
“âDid she go to see her sister?'
“âAt Ne'er-do-well? Not very often, I think. They had very little in common. I know she went once. That was soon after she got here.'
“âWhile she was staying with you.'
“âYes. Some time in July, 1940. Petrol was difficult, but we managed to get her there. I think she felt it was her duty. You see, she was then convinced that the German onslaught was only a matter of days, and she felt that, once it had come, she would never see her sister again.'
“âI don't suppose you went with her.'
“âAs a matter of fact, I did. I didn't go in, of course. I sat in the car outside.'
“âShe wasn't long.'
“âNot very long. Three quarters of an hour, perhaps. I think, you know, she was glad to get it over. I remember that when we were leaving, she heaved a sigh of relief.
En voilà pour un an !
she said.
If we are still alive. At least, I have done my duty
. That was her way, you know. She would leap between English and French in a most attractive way.'
“âNo love lost there.'
“âI don't think there was. Her sister was older than her by five or six years. I remember her saying once, âBlood may be thicker than water,
mais elle n'a pas de sang dans les veines. She has one use for my visits â and only one. She loves to air her French
.'
“âDid you ever meet her sister?'
“Sir Evelyn shook his head.
“âNo.' He got to his feet, moved to one of the windows and stood looking out. âMy dear wife died in that home. A major operation. I don't think she could have survived. She was there because she and Vicky had been such very close friends. And she had known the sister, when she was young. The sister, the Mother Superior, never came near her once. If she had been herself, she would have laughed it off. But, being so ill, she felt it. It was unkind, you know.'
“âIt was brutal,' I said.
“âThat's how I saw it. Ah, well. It's all over now.'
“âShe knew who she was.'
“âOh, yes. I'd written to her. We didn't expect special treatment, but it was such a smack in the face. Only a harsh and unconscionable woman could have done such an unkind thing.'
“After a moment or two, he turned and came back to his seat.
“âTell me this, Sir Evelyn. Why was Madame de Jeige so sure that the Germans would win?'
“He shrugged his shoulders.
“âShe'd adopted the French outlook. She felt that nothing could stand against the mighty machine which Hitler had made. She'd a good deal to go on, you know. If they could have crossed The Channel, it wouldn't have been too good.'
“âAnd she had poison all ready?'
“âYes, indeed. She didn't trust the Boche.'
“âBut where had she got it from?'
“âSome doctor in Paris, I believe. He supplied it for that very purpose. I imagine he picked his patients
â
I hope he did. She assured my wife it was painless and very swift.'
“âShe didn't say what it was called.'
“âI don't think so. My wife was rather shocked at her having such stuff. And she begged her to keep it locked up. I remember her telling me that.'