Read The Monogram Murders Online
Authors: Sophie Hannah
mistaken conclusion? And we must forget about
Jennie for the same reason?”
“Well, no, I wouldn’t say that’s the right course of
action. I’m not suggesting we
forget
anything, only
that—”
“I will tell you the right action! You must go to
Great Holling. Harriet Sippel, Ida Gransbury and
Richard Negus, they are not simply three pieces of a
puzzle. They are not merely objects we move around
in an attempt to fit them into a pattern. Before their
deaths, they were people with lives and emotions: the
foolish predispositions, perhaps the moments of great
wisdom and insight. You must go to the village where
they all lived and find out who they
are,
Catchpool.”
“Me? You mean us?”
“
Non, mon ami.
Poirot, he will stay in London. I
need only to move my mind, not my body, in order to
make progress. No, you will go, and you will bring
back to me the fullest account of your travels. That
will be sufficient. Take with you two lists of names:
guests at the Bloxham Hotel on Wednesday and
Thursday nights, and employees of the Bloxham
Hotel. Find out if anyone in this cursed village
recognizes any of the names. Ask about Jennie and
PIJ. Make sure not to return until you have discovered
the story about this vicar and his wife and their tragic
deaths in 1913.”
“Poirot, you’ve got to come with me,” I said rather
desperately. “I’m out of my depth with this Bloxham
business. I am relying on you.”
“You may continue to do so,
mon ami.
We will go
to the house of Mrs. Blanche Unsworth and there we
will assemble our thoughts so that you do not arrive in
Great Holling unprepared.”
He always called it “the house of Mrs. Blanche
Unsworth.” Every time he did, it reminded me that I
too had once thought of it in those terms, before I
started to call it “home.”
“ASSEMBLING OUR THOUGHTS” TURNED out to mean
Poirot standing by the fire in the excessively
lavender-fringed drawing room and dictating to me,
while I sat in a chair nearby and wrote down every
word he said. I have never, before or since, heard
anyone speak in such a perfectly orderly way. I tried
to protest that he was making me write down many
things of which I was already fully aware, and I got
the benefit of his long and earnest disquisition on the
subject of “the importance of the method.” Apparently
my pincushion brain cannot be expected to remember
anything, so I need a written record to refer to.
After dictating a list of everything we knew, Poirot
followed the same procedure for everything we didn’t
know but were hoping to find out. (I considered
reproducing these two lists here, but I do not wish to
bore or infuriate others as I was bored and
infuriated.)
To be fair to Poirot, once I had scribbled it all
down and looked over what I had written, I did feel
that I had a clearer view of things: clear, and
inordinately discouraging. I put down my pen and said
with a sigh, “I’m not sure I want to carry around with
me an endless list of questions I can’t answer and
probably have no hope of ever answering.”
“You lack the confidence, Catchpool.”
“Yes. What does one do about that?”
“I do not know. It is not a problem that I suffer
from. I do not worry that I will meet a problem for
which I will be unable to find the solution.”
“Do you think you’ll be able to find the solution
for this one?”
Poirot smiled. “You wish me to encourage you to
have confidence in me, since you have none in
yourself?
Mon ami,
you know more than you are
aware of knowing. Do you remember you made a
joke, at the hotel, about all three victims arriving on
Wednesday, the day before the murders? You said,
‘It’s almost as if they had an invitation to present
themselves for slaughter, one that said, “Please come
to the day before, so that Thursday can be devoted
entirely to your getting murdered.’ ”
“Well, what about it?”
“Your joke relied on the idea that getting murdered
is more than enough activity for one day—to travel
across the country by train and get murdered
on the
same day,
that would be too much for anyone! And the
killer does not want his victims to have to exert
themselves unduly! This is funny!”
Poirot smoothed his mustache, as if he imagined
that laughing might have shaken it out of shape.
“Your words made me wonder, my friend: since
getting murdered is really no effort for the victim, and
since no killer is so considerate of those he intends to
poison,
why does he not kill the three victims on the
Wednesday night
?”
“He might have been busy on Wednesday night,” I
said.
“Then why not arrange for the three victims to
arrive at the hotel on Thursday morning and afternoon
instead of Wednesday morning and afternoon? The
killer would still have been able to kill them when he
did,
n’est-ce pas
? On Thursday evening, between a
quarter past seven and ten past eight?”
I did my best to look patient. “You’re
overcomplicating things, Poirot. If the victims all
knew each other, which we know they did, maybe
they had a reason for all being in London for two
nights, a reason that had nothing to do with the killer.
He chose to kill them on the second night because it
was more convenient for him. He didn’t invite them to
the Bloxham; he simply knew that they would be
there, and when. Also. . .” I stopped. “No, never
mind. It’s silly.”
“Tell me the thing that is silly,” Poirot ordered.
“Well, it’s possible that if the murderer is a
meticulous planner by nature, he would not plan the
murders for the same day that he knew his victims
would be traveling to London, in case their trains
were delayed.”
“Perhaps the killer also had to travel to London,
from Great Holling or somewhere else. It is possible
that he—or she, for it might be a woman—did not
want to make a long, tiring journey and commit three
murders on the same day.”
“Even if that’s so, the victims could still have
arrived on the Thursday, couldn’t they?”
“They did not,” said Poirot simply. “We know that
they arrived the day before, on Wednesday. So, I
begin to wonder: did something need to happen that
involved the murderer and all three victims
before the
murders could be committed
? If so, then perhaps the
murderer did not travel from far to come here, but
lives here in London.”
“Could be,” I said. “All of which is a long-winded
way of saying that we have not the faintest idea of
what happened or why. I seem to remember that being
my original assessment of the situation. Oh, and
Poirot . . . ?”
“Yes,
mon ami
?”
“I haven’t had the heart to tell you before now, and
I know you’re not going to like it. The monogrammed
cufflinks . . .”
“
Oui
?”
“You asked Henry Negus about PIJ. I don’t think
those are the chap’s initials, whoever he is—the
owner of the cufflinks. I think his initials are PJI.
Look.” I reproduced the monogram on the back of one
of my pieces of paper. As closely as I could from
memory, I replicated the way the letters appeared on
the cufflinks. “Do you see that the ‘I’ is larger and the
‘P’ and the ‘J’ on either side are considerably
smaller? That’s a popular style of monogram. The
larger initial signifies the surname and is in the
middle.”
Poirot was frowning and shaking his head. “The
initials in the monogram are in
the wrong order,
deliberately? I have never heard of this. Who would
have such an idea? It is nonsensical!”
“Common practice, I’m afraid. Trust me on this
one. Chaps at work have monogrammed cufflinks of
this sort.”
“
Incroyable.
The English have no sense of the
proper order of things.”
“Yes, well, be that as it may . . . It’s PJI we’ll need
to be asking about when we go to Great Holling, not
PIJ.”
It was a feeble effort, and one that Poirot saw
through straight away. “
You
, my friend, will go to
Great Holling,” he said. “Poirot will stay in London.”
THE FOLLOWING MONDAY MORNING, I set off to Great
Holling as instructed. My impression upon arrival
was that it was similar to many other English villages
I had visited, and that there was not much more to say
about it than that. There is, I think, more difference
between cities than between villages, as well as more
to say about cities. I could certainly talk at length
about the intricacies of London. Perhaps it is simply
that I am not as finely attuned to places such as Great
Holling. They make me feel out of my element—if I
have an element, that is. I’m not convinced that I do.
I had been told that I could not fail to spot the
King’s Head Inn, where I would be staying, but fail I
did. Luckily, a bespectacled young man with a
boomerang-shaped scattering of freckles across the
bridge of his nose and a newspaper tucked under his
arm was on hand to help me. He appeared at first
behind me, startling me. “Lost, are you?” he said.
“I believe I am, yes. I’m looking for the King’s
Head.”
“Ah!” He grinned. “Thought so, with your case and
all. You’re not a native, then? King’s Head looks like
a house from the street, so you’d not notice it, not
unless you went along the lane there—see? Go down
there, turn right and you’ll see the sign and the way
in.”
I thanked him and was about to follow his advice
when he called me back with, “So where are you
from, then?”
I told him, and he said, “I’ve never been to
London. What brings you to our neck of the woods,
then?”
“Work,” I said. “Listen, I hope this doesn’t sound
rude, and I’d be glad to talk to you later, but I’d like
to get myself settled in first.”
“Well, don’t let me keep you, then,” he said. “What
kind of work is it you do? Oh—there I go again,
asking another question. Maybe I’ll ask you later.” He
waved and set off down the street.
I tried again to proceed to the King’s Head and he
shouted after me, “Down the lane and turn right!”
More jovial waving followed.
He was trying to be friendly and helpful, and I
should have been grateful. Normally I would have
been, except . . .
Well, I’ll admit it: I don’t like villages. I didn’t say
so to Poirot before I left, but I said it to myself many
times during the train journey, and then again when I
got off at the pretty little station. I didn’t like this
charming narrow street in which I stood, which
curved in the exact shape of a letter S and had tiny
cottages on both sides that looked more suitable for
whiskery woodland creatures than for human beings.
I didn’t like being asked presumptuous questions
by complete strangers on the street, though I was fully
aware of my own hypocrisy since I was here in Great
Holling to interrogate strangers myself.