Read The Monogram Murders Online
Authors: Sophie Hannah
so after finding her dead?”
Margaret looked wary. “You will repeat what I tell
you to no one in Great Holling? Only to Scotland
Yard people in London?”
“Yes.” I decided that, for present purposes,
Hercule Poirot counted as a Scotland Yard person.
“Frances Ive wrote a note to her husband before
she took her own life,” said Margaret. “It was plain
that she expected him to survive her. Patrick also left
a note that . . .” She stopped.
I waited.
Eventually she said, “The two notes told us the
sequence of events.”
“What became of the notes?”
“I destroyed them. Ambrose Flowerday gave them
to me, and I threw them on the fire.”
This struck me as most curious. “Why on earth did
you do that?” I asked.
“I . . .” Margaret sniffed and turned away. “I don’t
know,” she said firmly.
She certainly did know, I thought to myself. It was
clear from her clamped-shut mouth that she intended
to say no more on the matter. Further interrogation
from me would only consolidate her determination to
withhold.
I stood to stretch my legs, which had grown stiff.
“You’re right about one thing,” I said. “Now that I
know the story of Patrick and Frances Ive, I
do
want
to speak to Dr. Ambrose Flowerday. He was here in
the village when it all happened. However faithful
your account—”
“No. You made me a promise.”
“I should very much like to ask him about Jennie
Hobbs, for example.”
“I can tell you about Jennie. What would you like
to know? Both Patrick and Frances Ive seemed to
think that she was indispensible. They were very fond
of her. Everyone else found her to be quiet, polite—
harmless enough, until she told a dangerous lie.
Personally, I don’t believe that someone who could
produce a lie of that sort from thin air can be harmless
the rest of the time. And she had ideas above her
station. Her way of speaking changed.”
“How?”
“Ambrose said it was very sudden. One day she
spoke as you would expect a domestic servant to
speak. The next day she had a new, far more polished
voice and was speaking very correctly.”
And using correct grammatical constructions, I
thought to myself.
Oh, please let no one open their
mouths.
Three mouths, each one with a monogrammed
cufflink
inside
it:
grammatically
satisfactory.
Confound it all, Poirot had probably been right about
that too.
“Ambrose said that Jennie altered her voice in
imitation of Patrick and Frances Ive. They were both
educated, and spoke very well.”
“Margaret, please tell me the truth: why are you so
determined that I should not speak to Ambrose
Flowerday? Are you afraid of his telling me
something you would rather I didn’t know?”
“It would be of no help to you to speak to
Ambrose, and it would be a great hindrance to him,”
Margaret said firmly. “You have my permission to
terrify the life out of any other villagers you come
across.” She smiled but her eyes were hard. “They
are scared already—the guilty are being picked off
one by one, and deep down they must know they are
all guilty—but they would be even more afraid if they
heard you say that, in your expert opinion, the killer
will not be content until all who helped to destroy
Patrick and Frances Ive have been dispatched to the
fiery pits of hell.”
“That’s rather extreme,” I said.
“I have an unorthodox sense of humor. Charles
used to complain about it. I never told him this, but I
don’t believe in heaven and hell. Oh, I believe in
God, but not the God we hear so much about.”
I must have looked nervous. I did not want to
discuss theology; I wanted to return to London as soon
as I could and tell Poirot what I had found out.
Margaret continued: “There is only one God, of
course, but I don’t believe for a moment that he wants
us to follow rules without questioning them, or be
unkind to anybody who falls short.” She smiled then
with more warmth and said, “I think that God sees the
world in the way that
I
see it, and not at all in the way
that Ida Gransbury saw it. Would you agree?”
I gave a noncommittal grunt.
“The Church teaches that only God can judge,”
said Margaret. “Why didn’t pious Ida Gransbury point
that out to Harriet Sippel and her baying flock? Why
did she reserve all of her condemnation for Patrick
Ive? If one is going to present oneself as a model of
Christianity, one should strive to get the basic
teachings right.”
“I see you are still angry about it.”
“I will be angry until my dying day, Mr. Catchpool.
Greater sinners persecuting lesser sinners in the name
of morality—that’s something worth raging about.”
“Hypocrisy is an ugly thing,” I concurred.
“Besides, one could argue that it cannot be wrong
to be with the person you truly love.”
“I’m not sure about that. If a person is married—”
“Oh, fiddlesticks to marriage!” Margaret looked
up at the paintings on the parlor wall, then addressed
them directly: “I’m sorry, Charles, dear, but if two
people love one another, then however inconvenient it
is for the Church and however against the rules it
might be . . . well, love is love, isn’t it? I know you
don’t like it when I say that.”
I can’t say I liked it much either. “Love can cause a
whole heap of trouble,” I said. “If Nancy Ducane had
not loved Patrick Ive, I would not now have three
murders to investigate.”
“What a nonsensical thing to say.” Margaret
wrinkled her nose at me. “It is hate that makes people
kill, Mr. Catchpool, not love. Never love. Please be
rational.”
“I have always believed that the hardest rules to
follow are the best tests of character,” I told her.
“Yes, but what aspect of our characters do they
test? Our credulity, perhaps. Our cloth-headed idiocy.
The Bible, with all its rules, is simply a book written
by a person or people. It ought to carry a disclaimer,
prominently displayed: ‘The word of God, distorted
and misrepresented by man.’ ”
“I must go,” I said, uncomfortable about the turn
our discussion had taken. “I have to get back to
London. Thank you for your time and your help. It has
been invaluable.”
“You must forgive me,” Margaret said as she
followed me to her front door. “I do not usually speak
my mind quite so bluntly, apart from when I am
speaking to Ambrose and Charles-on-the-wall.”
“I suppose I should feel honored, in that case,” I
said.
“I have spent my whole life following most of the
rules in the dusty old Book, Mr. Catchpool. That is
how I know it’s a foolish thing to do. Whenever
lovers throw caution to the wind and meet when they
ought not to . . . I admire them! And whoever
murdered Harriet Sippel, I admire that person too. I
can’t help it. That doesn’t mean that I condone
murder. I don’t. Now, go away before I become even
more outspoken.”
As I walked back to the King’s Head, I thought to
myself that a conversation was a strange thing that
could take you almost anywhere. Often you were left
stranded miles from where you had started, with no
idea about how to get back. Margaret Ernst’s words
rang in my ears as I walked:
However against the
rules it might be, love is love, isn’t it?
At the King’s Head, I strode past a snoring Walter
Stoakley and a pruriently peering Victor Meakin and
went upstairs to pack my things.
I caught the next train to London and bade a joyous
farewell to Great Holling as the train pulled out of the
station. As happy as I was to be leaving the village, I
wished I could have spoken to the doctor, Ambrose
Flowerday. What would Poirot say when I told him
about my promise to Margaret Ernst? He would
disapprove, for sure, and say something about the
English and their foolish sense of honor, and I would
no doubt hang my head and mumble apologetically
rather than voice my true opinion on the matter, which
is that one always manages to extract more
information from people in the end if one respects
their wishes. Let people think that you have no wish
to force them to tell you what they know, and it’s
surprising how often they approach you of their own
accord in due course with the very answers you were
looking for.
I knew Poirot would disapprove, and I decided not
to care. If Margaret Ernst could disagree with God,
then it was perfectly all right for me to disagree with
Hercule Poirot occasionally. If he wished to
interview Dr. Flowerday, he could go to Great
Holling and speak to the man himself.
I hoped that it would not be necessary. Nancy
Ducane was the person we needed to concentrate on.
That and saving the life of Jennie, assuming we were
not too late. I was full of remorse on account of
having dismissed the possible danger to her. If we did
manage to save her, the credit would be all Poirot’s.
If we solved the three Bloxham Hotel murders
satisfactorily, that would be down to Poirot too.
Officially, at Scotland Yard, it would be noted as one
of my successes, but everyone would know that it was
Poirot’s triumph and not mine. Indeed, it was thanks
to my bosses’ knowledge of Poirot’s involvement in
the case that they were content to leave me to my own
—or rather, to my Belgian friend’s—devices. It was
the famous Hercule Poirot they trusted to do as he
wished, not me.
I started to wonder if I might not prefer to fail
alone and entirely under my own steam than succeed
only thanks to Poirot’s involvement, and I fell asleep
before I had reached a conclusion.
I had a dream—my first on a train—about being
condemned by everybody I knew for something I
hadn’t done. In it, I saw my own gravestone clearly,
with my name instead of Patrick and Frances Ives’
carved on it, and the “slander’s mark” sonnet beneath.
In the earth beside the grave, there was a glint of
metal, and I knew somehow that it was a cufflink
bearing my initials that was partially buried there. I
woke as the train pulled into London, bathed in sweat,
my heart beating fit to burst from my chest.
I DIDN’T KNOW, OF course, that Poirot was already
aware of the probable involvement of Nancy Ducane
in our three murders. As I made my escape from Great
Holling by train, Poirot was busy making
arrangements, with the help of Scotland Yard, to visit
Mrs. Ducane in her London home.
This he managed to do later that same day, with
Constable Stanley Beer as his escort. A young maid in
a starched apron answered the door of the large white
stucco townhouse in Belgravia. Poirot was expecting
to be shown to a tasteful drawing room where he
would wait to be seen, and he was surprised to find
Nancy Ducane herself standing in the hall at the foot
of the stairs.
“Monsieur Poirot? Welcome. I see you have
brought a policeman with you. This all seems rather
unusual, I must say.”
Stanley Beer made a strange noise in his throat and