Read The Monogram Murders Online
Authors: Sophie Hannah
your dinner. I’ll be out in two shakes of a lamb’s tail.”
She withdrew abruptly, closing the door in his face.
Poirot proceeded back to his seat. Perhaps he
would take Fee Spring’s advice and make a further
effort with the beef chop. How heartening it was to
speak to somebody who observed details. Hercule
Poirot did not encounter many such people.
Fee reappeared promptly with a cup in her hand,
no saucer. She took a slurp from it as she sat down on
the chair that Jennie had vacated. Poirot managed not
to wince at the sound.
“I don’t know a lot about Jennie,” she said. “Just
what I’ve picked up from odd things she’s said. She
works for a lady with a big house. Lives in. That’s
why she comes here regular, to collect Her
Ladyship’s coffee and cakes, for her fancy dinners
and parties and the like. Comes right across town—
she said that once. Plenty of our regulars come quite a
way. Jennie always stays for a drink. ‘My usual,
please,’ she says when she arrives, like she’s a lady
herself. That voice is her playing at being grand, I
reckon. It’s not the one she was born with. Could be
why she doesn’t say much, if she knows she can’t
keep it up.”
“Pardon me,” said Poirot, “but how do you know
that Mademoiselle Jennie has not always spoken in
this way?”
“You ever heard a domestic talk all proper like
that? Can’t say as I have.”
“
Oui, mais
. . . So it is the speculation and nothing
more?”
Fee Spring grudgingly admitted that she did not
know for certain. For as long as she had known her,
Jennie had spoken “like a proper lady.”
“I’ll say this for Jennie: she’s a tea girl, so she’s
got some sense in her head at least.”
“A tea girl?”
“That’s right.” Fee sniffed at Poirot’s coffee cup.
“All you that drinks coffee when you could be
drinking tea want your brains looking at, if you ask
me.”
“You do not know the name of the lady for whom
Jennie works, or the address of the big house?” Poirot
asked.
“No. Don’t know Jennie’s last name neither. I
know she had a terrible heartbreak years and years
ago. She said so once.”
“Heartbreak? Did she tell you of what kind?”
“S’only one sort,” said Fee decisively. “The sort
that does a heart right in.”
“What I mean to say is that there are many
causes
of the heartbreak: love that is unreturned, the loss of a
loved one at a tragically young age—”
“Oh, we never got the story,” said Fee with a trace
of bitterness in her voice. “Never will, neither. One
word, heartbreak, was all she’d part with. See, the
thing about Jennie is, she don’t talk. You wouldn’t be
able to help her none if she still sat here in this chair,
no more than you can now with her run off. She’s all
shut up in herself, that’s Jennie’s trouble. Likes to
wallow in it, whatever it is.”
All shut up in herself
. . .
The words sparked a
memory in Poirot—of a Thursday evening at
Pleasant’s several weeks ago, and Fee talking about a
customer.
He said, “She asks no questions,
n’est-ce pas
? She
is not interested in the social exchanges or the
conversation? She does not care to find out what is
the latest news in the life of anybody else?”
“Too true!” Fee looked impressed. “There’s not a
scrap of curiosity in her. I’ve never known anyone
more wrapped up in her own cares. Just doesn’t see
the world or the rest of us in it. She never asks you
how you’re rubbing along, or what you’ve been doing
with yourself.” Fee tilted her head to one side.
“You’re quick to catch on, aren’t you?”
“I know what I know only from listening to you
speak to the other waitresses, mademoiselle.”
Fee’s face turned red. “I’m surprised you’d go to
the bother of listening.”
Poirot had no wish to embarrass her further, so he
did not tell her that he greatly looked forward to her
descriptions of the individuals he had come to think
of, collectively, as “The Coffee-House Characters”—
Mr. Not Quite, for instance, who, each time he came
in, would order his food and then, immediately
afterward, cancel the order because he had decided it
was not quite what he wanted.
Now was not the appropriate time to enquire if
Fee had a name of the same order as Mr. Not Quite
for Hercule Poirot that she used in his absence—
perhaps one that made reference to his exquisite
mustache.
“So Mademoiselle Jennie does not wish to know
the business of other people,” Poirot said thoughtfully,
“but unlike many who take no interest in the lives and
ideas of those around them, and who talk only about
themselves at great length, she does not do this either
—is that not so?”
Fee raised her eyebrows. “Powerful memory
you’ve got there. Dead right again. No, Jennie’s not
one to talk about herself. She’ll answer a question,
but she won’t linger on it. Doesn’t want to be kept too
long from what’s in her head, whatever it is. Her
hidden treasure—except it don’t make her happy,
whatever she’s dwelling on. I’ve long since given up
trying to fathom her.”
“She dwells on the heartbreak,” Poirot murmured.
“And the danger.”
“Did she say she was in danger?”
“
Oui, mademoiselle.
I regret that I was not quick
enough to stop her from leaving. If something should
happen to her . . .” Poirot shook his head and wished
he could recover the settled feeling with which he had
arrived. He slapped the tabletop with the flat of his
hand as he made his decision. “I will return here
demain matin
. You say she is here often,
n’est-ce
pas
? I will find her before the danger does. This time,
Hercule Poirot, he will be quicker!”
“Fast or slow, don’t matter,” said Fee. “No one
can find Jennie, not even with her right in front of
their noses, and no one can help her.” She stood and
picked up Poirot’s plate. “There’s no point letting
good food go cold over it,” she concluded.
THAT WAS HOW IT started, on the evening of Thursday,
February 7, 1929, with Hercule Poirot, and Jennie,
and Fee Spring; amid the crooked, teapot-huddled
shelves of Pleasant’s Coffee House.
Or, I should say, that was how it appeared to start.
I’m not convinced that stories from real life have
beginnings and ends, as a matter of fact. Approach
them from any vantage point and you’ll see that they
stretch endlessly back into the past and spread
inexorably forward into the future. One is never quite
able to say “That’s that, then,” and draw a line.
Luckily, true stories do have heroes and heroines.
Not being one myself, having no hope of ever being
one, I am all too aware that they are real.
I wasn’t present that Thursday evening at the
coffee house. My name was mentioned—Edward
Catchpool, Poirot’s policeman friend from Scotland
Yard, not much older than thirty (thirty-two, to be
precise)—but I was not there. I have, nevertheless,
decided to try to fill the gaps in my own experience in
order make a written record of the Jennie story.
Fortunately, I have the testimony of Hercule Poirot to
help me, and there is no better witness.
I am writing this for the benefit of nobody but
myself. Once my account is complete, I shall read and
reread it until I am able to cast my eyes over the
words without feeling the shock that I feel now as I
write them—until “How can this have happened?”
gives way to “Yes, this is what happened.”
At some point I shall have to think of something
better to call it than “The Jennie Story.” It’s not much
of a title.
I first met Hercule Poirot six weeks before the
Thursday evening I have described, when he took a
room in a London lodging house that belongs to Mrs.
Blanche Unsworth. It is a spacious, impeccably clean
building with a rather severe square façade and an
interior that could not be more feminine; there are
flounces and frills and trims everywhere. I sometimes
fear that I will leave for work one day and find that a
lavender-colored fringe from some item in the
drawing room has somehow attached itself to my
elbow or my shoe.
Unlike me, Poirot is not a permanent fixture in the
house but a temporary visitor. “I will enjoy one month
at least of restful inactivity,” he told me on the first
night that he appeared. He said it with great resolve,
as if he imagined I might try to stop him. “My mind, it
grows too busy,” he explained. “The rushing of the
many thoughts . . . Here I believe they will slow
down.”
I asked where he lived, expecting the answer
“France”; I found out a little later that he is Belgian,
not French. In response to my question, he walked
over to the window, pulled the lace curtain to one
side and pointed at a wide, elegant building that was
at most three hundred yards away. “You live
there
?” I
said. I thought it must be a joke.
“
Oui.
I do not wish to be far from my home,”
Poirot explained. “It is most pleasing to me that I am
able to see it: the beautiful view!” He gazed at the
apartment house with pride, and for a few moments I
wondered if he had forgotten I was there. Then he
said, “Travel is a wonderful thing. It is stimulating,
but not restful. Yet if I do not take myself away
somewhere, there will be no
vacances
for the mind of
Poirot! Disturbance will arrive in one form or
another. At home one is too easily found. A friend or a
stranger will come with a matter of great importance
comme toujours
—it is always of the greatest
importance!—and the little gray cells will once more
be busy and unable to conserve their energy. So,
Poirot, he is said to have left London for a while, and
meanwhile he takes his rest in a place he knows well,
protected from the interruption.”
He said all this, and I nodded along as if it made
perfect sense, wondering if people grow ever more
peculiar as they age.
Mrs. Unsworth never cooks dinner on a Thursday
evening—that’s her night for visiting her late
husband’s sister—and this was how Poirot came to
discover Pleasant’s Coffee House. He told me he
could not risk being seen in any of his usual haunts
while he was supposed to be out of town, and asked if
I could recommend “a place where a person like you
might go,
mon ami—
but where the food is excellent.”
I told him about Pleasant’s: cramped, a little
eccentric, but most people who tried it once went
back again and again.
On this particular Thursday evening—the night of
Poirot’s encounter with Jennie—he arrived home at
ten past ten, much later than usual. I was in the
drawing room, sitting close to the fire but unable to
warm myself up. I heard Blanche Unsworth
whispering to Poirot seconds after I heard the front
door open and shut; she must have been waiting for
him in the hall.
I couldn’t hear what she was saying, but I could