Read The Monogram Murders Online
Authors: Sophie Hannah
of hate.”
As if determined to prove her right, Harriet Sippel
rose to her feet and, after a swift dismissal of Nancy
as a lying harlot, began to denounce Patrick Ive more
vociferously than ever before: not only did he profit
from selling fraudulent encounters with the souls of
the dead, but he also consorted with women of loose
morals while his wife was away. He was a heretic
and an adulterer! He was even worse than she,
Harriet, had suspected! It was an outrage, she said,
that a man so steeped in sin should be allowed to call
himself vicar of Great Holling.
Nancy Ducane left the King’s Head halfway
through Harriet’s rousing speech, unable to bear it. A
few seconds later, the Ives’ servant girl ran for the
door, red-faced and in floods of tears.
Most of the villagers did not know what to think.
They were confused by what they had heard. And then
Ida Gransbury spoke up in support of Harriet. Though
it was unclear what was rumor and what was true, she
said, it was surely beyond doubt that Patrick Ive was
a sinner of some description and that he could not be
allowed to remain in his post as vicar of Great
Holling.
Yes, agreed most of the villagers. Yes, that was
true.
Richard Negus said nothing, even when called
upon to speak by Ida, his fiancée. He told Dr.
Ambrose Flowerday later that day that he was
worried by the turn events had taken. “A sinner of
some description,” while apparently good enough for
Ida, was not, he said, good enough for him. He
declared himself disgusted by Harriet Sippel’s
opportunistic attempt to portray Patrick Ive as guilty
twice over, of two sins instead of one. She had taken
Nancy Ducane’s “not this but that” and turned it into
“this
and
that” without evidence or justification.
Ida had used the words “beyond doubt” at the
King’s Head; what now seemed to Richard Negus to
be beyond doubt, he told Ambrose Flowerday, was
that people (including himself, to his shame) had been
telling lies about Patrick Ive. What if Nancy Ducane
had also lied? What if her love for Patrick Ive was
unrequited, and he had met her in secret at her
insistence, only to try to explain to her that she must
desist from harboring these feelings for him?
Dr. Flowerday agreed: no one knew for certain
that Patrick Ive had done anything wrong, which had
been his opinion of the matter from the start. He was
the only person the Ives would admit to the vicarage,
and on his next visit, he told Patrick what Nancy
Ducane had said at the King’s Head. Patrick simply
shook his head. He made no comment on the truth or
falsehood of Nancy’s story. Frances Ive, meanwhile,
was physically and mentally deteriorating.
Richard Negus failed to persuade Ida Gransbury to
see things the way he saw them, and relations
between them became strained. The villagers, led by
Harriet, continued to persecute Patrick and Frances
Ive, shouting accusations outside the vicarage all day
and night. Ida continued to petition the Church to
remove the Ives from the vicarage, the church and the
village of Great Holling, for their own sakes.
And then tragedy struck: Frances Ive, unable to
bear the ignominy any longer, swallowed poison and
put an end to her unhappy life. Her husband found her
and knew straight away that it was too late. There
was no point summoning Dr. Flowerday; Frances
could not be saved. Patrick Ive knew, also, that he
could not live with the guilt and the pain, and so he
too took his own life.
Ida Gransbury advised the villagers to pray for
mercy for the sinful souls of Patrick and Frances Ive,
however unlikely it was that the Lord would forgive
them.
Harriet Sippel saw no need to allow the Lord any
discretion in the matter; the Ives would burn in hell
for ever, she told her flock of righteous persecutors,
and it would be no more than they deserved.
Within a few months of the Ives’ deaths, Richard
Negus had ended his engagement to Ida Gransbury
and left Great Holling. Nancy Ducane left for London,
and the servant girl who told the horrible lie was
never seen again in the village.
In the meantime, Charles and Margaret Ernst had
arrived and taken over at the vicarage. They quickly
became friendly with Dr. Ambrose Flowerday, who
forced himself to relate the whole tragic tale. He told
them that Patrick Ive, whether or not he had made the
mistake of harboring a secret passion for Nancy
Ducane, had been one of the most generous and
benign men he had ever known, and the least
deserving of slander.
It was his mention of slander that gave Margaret
Ernst the idea for the poem on the gravestone. Charles
Ernst was against the idea, not wishing to provoke the
villagers, but Margaret stood her ground, determined
that Holy Saints Church should display its support for
Patrick and Frances Ive. “I would like to do
considerably more to Harriet Sippel and Ida
Gransbury than provoke them,” she said. And yes,
when she uttered those words, murder was what she
had in mind, though only as a fantasy, not as a crime
she intended to commit.
AFTER SHE HAD TOLD me the story, Margaret Ernst fell
silent. It was a while before either of us spoke.
Finally I said, “I can see why you gave me the
name of Nancy Ducane when I asked you who might
have a motive. Would she have murdered Richard
Negus, though? He withdrew his support for Harriet
Sippel and Ida Gransbury as soon as doubt was cast
upon the servant girl’s lie.”
“I can only tell you how I would feel if I were
Nancy,” said Margaret. “Would I forgive Richard
Negus? No, I would not. Without his early
endorsement of the lies told by Harriet and that
wretched servant girl, Ida Gransbury might not have
believed the nonsense they were spouting. Three
people drummed up hostility towards Patrick Ive in
Great Holling. Those three people were Harriet
Sippel, Ida Gransbury and Richard Negus.”
“What about the servant?”
“Ambrose Flowerday doesn’t believe that she
meant to start what she started. She was clearly
unhappy as soon as the bad feeling toward the Ives
took hold in the village.”
I frowned, dissatisfied. “But from a murderous
Nancy Ducane’s point of view—purely for the sake of
argument—if she can’t forgive Richard Negus who
later saw the error of his ways, why would she
forgive the girl who told the lie in the first place?”
“Perhaps she didn’t,” said Margaret. “Perhaps she
has murdered her too. I don’t know where the servant
ended up, but Nancy Ducane might have known. She
could have hunted her down and killed her too.
What’s the matter? Your face has turned rather gray.”
“What . . . what was the name of the servant girl
who told the lie?” I stammered, fearing I knew the
answer. “No, no, it can’t be,” said a voice in my head,
“and yet how can it
not
be?”
“Jennie Hobbs. Mr. Catchpool, are you all right?
You don’t look at all well.”
“He was right! She
is
in danger.”
“Who is ‘He?’ ”
“Hercule Poirot. He’s always right. How is that
possible?”
“Why do you sound cross? Did you want him to be
wrong?”
“No. No, I suppose not.” I sighed. “Although I am
now worried that Jennie Hobbs is not safe, assuming
she’s still alive.”
“I see. How strange.”
“What is strange?”
Margaret sighed. “In spite of everything I have
said, it’s hard for me to think of anyone being in
danger from Nancy. Motive or no motive, I don’t see
her committing murder. This will sound peculiar but
. . . one cannot kill without immersing oneself in
horror and unpleasantness—wouldn’t you say?”
I nodded.
“Nancy liked fun and beauty and pleasure and
love. All the happy things. She would want nothing to
do with a business as ugly as murder.”
“So if not Nancy Ducane, then who?” I asked.
“What about drunk old Walter Stoakley? As Frances
Ive’s father, he has a powerful motive. If he laid off
the drink for a day or so, it might not be beyond him to
kill three people.”
“It would be quite impossible for Walter to lay off
the drink even for an hour. I can assure you, Mr.
Catchpool, Walter Stoakley is not the man you’re
looking for. You see, unlike Nancy Ducane, he never
blamed Harriet, Ida and Richard for what happened to
Frances. He blamed himself.”
“Hence the drinking?”
“Yes. It is Walter Stoakley that Walter Stoakley set
out to kill after he lost his daughter, and he shall very
soon succeed, I imagine.”
“In what possible way could Frances’s suicide
have been his fault?”
“Walter didn’t always live in Great Holling. He
moved here to be closer to Patrick and Frances’s
resting place. You will find this difficult to believe,
having seen him as he is now, but until Frances’s
death, Walter Stoakley was an eminent Classicist, and
Master of the University of Cambridge’s Saviour
College. That is where Patrick Ive trained for the
priesthood. Patrick had no parents. He was orphaned
at a young age, and Walter made a sort of protégé of
him. Jennie Hobbs, then only seventeen years old,
was a bed-maker at the college. She was the best
bedder Saviour had, and so Walter Stoakley arranged
for her to look after Patrick Ive’s rooms. Then Patrick
married Frances Stoakley, Walter’s daughter, and
when they moved to Holy Saints Vicarage in Great
Holling, Jennie went with them. Do you see?”
I nodded. “Walter Stoakley blames himself for
putting Patrick Ive and Jennie Hobbs together. If
Patrick and Frances had not taken Jennie with them to
Great Holling, she would not have been in a position
to tell the terrible lie that led to their deaths.”
“And I would not have to spend my life watching a
gravestone to make sure nobody desecrates it.”
“Who would do such a thing?” I asked. “Harriet
Sippel? Before she was killed, I mean.”
“Oh, no, Harriet’s weapon was her toxic tongue,
not her hands. She would never defile a grave. No,
it’s the rowdy young men of the village who would do
that, given half a chance. They were children when
Patrick and Frances died, but they’ve heard their
parents’ stories. If you ask anyone around here,
besides me and Ambrose Flowerday, they will tell
you that Patrick Ive was a wicked man—that he and
his wife practiced black magic. I think most of them
believe it more strongly as time goes on. They have
to, don’t they? It’s either that or dislike themselves as
heartily as I dislike them.”
There was something I wanted to clarify. “Did
Richard Negus sever ties with Ida Gransbury because
she continued to denounce Patrick Ive after Richard
had come to his senses? Was it following Nancy’s
announcement at the King’s Head that he ended their
engagement?”
A peculiar expression passed across Margaret’s
face. She started to say, “That day at the King’s Head
was the beginning of . . . ,” then stopped and changed
course. “Yes. He found her irrational insistence upon
the virtue of her and Harriet’s cause too galling to
bear.”
Margaret’s face had a shut-down look about it all
of a sudden. I had the impression that there was
something important she had chosen not to tell me.
“You mentioned that Frances Ive swallowed
poison,” I said. “How? Where did she get it from?
And how did Patrick Ive die?”
“The same way: poison. I don’t suppose you’ve
heard of abrin?”
“I can’t say I have.”
“It comes from a plant called the rosary pea,
common in the tropics. Frances Ive obtained several
vials of the stuff from somewhere.”
“Forgive me, but if they both took the same poison
and were found together, how was it established that
Frances killed herself first and that Patrick only did