Read The Monogram Murders Online
Authors: Sophie Hannah
should be laid out in the way that they were—
respectfully and with dignity.
Ceremonially
—that
was Richard’s word.
Since two of the victims, Ida and Harriet, would
have given their home addresses to the hotel as Great
Holling, we knew that it would not take the police
long to go to the village, ask around, and begin to
suspect Nancy. Who else was so obvious a suspect?
Sammy could pretend to have seen her running out of
the hotel after the third murder, and dropping the three
room keys on the ground. That’s right:
three
room
keys. Richard’s key was part of the plan too, you see.
Ida was supposed to take Harriet’s key to her own
room after killing Harriet and locking Harriet’s door.
Richard was supposed to do the same: take Harriet’s
and
Ida’s keys with him when he left and locked Ida’s
room after killing Ida. Then I would kill Richard, lock
his door, take all three keys, meet Sammy outside the
Bloxham and give the keys to him. Sammy would then
sneak them somehow into Nancy Ducane’s home, or,
as it turned out, her coat pocket one day on the street,
in order to incriminate her.
I don’t suppose this matters, but Patrick Ive never
wore monogrammed cufflinks. He didn’t own a pair
as far as I ever knew. Richard Negus ordered all the
cufflinks to be specially made, to set the police on the
right track. The leaving of the blood and my hat inside
the fourth hotel room was also part of our plan,
designed to make you believe I had been murdered in
that room—that Nancy Ducane had avenged her dead
love by killing all four of us. Richard was happy to
leave it to Sammy to provide the blood. It came from
a stray cat, if you want to know. It was also Sammy’s
job to leave the note on the hotel’s front desk on the
night of the killings: “MAY THEY NEVER REST IN
PEACE” and then the three room numbers. He was to
place it on the reception desk when no one was
looking, shortly after eight o’clock. My task,
meanwhile, was to stay alive and make sure that
Nancy Ducane hanged for the three murders, and
possibly four if the police believed that I too was
dead.
How was I to accomplish this? Well, as the fourth
person that Nancy would wish to kill—the fourth
person responsible for what happened to Patrick—I
was to let the police know that I feared for my life.
This I did at Pleasant’s Coffee House, and you were
my audience, Monsieur Poirot. You are quite right: I
deceived you. You are right too that I had heard the
waitresses at Pleasant’s discussing the detective from
the Continent who comes in every Thursday evening
at precisely half past seven, and who sometimes dines
with his much younger friend from Scotland Yard. As
soon as I heard the girls talking about you, I knew you
would be perfect.
But Monsieur Poirot, one of the conclusions you
have drawn is incorrect. You said that my saying,
“Once
I
am dead, justice will have been done,
finally” meant that I knew the other three were
already dead, but I absolutely did not know whether
Richard, Harriet and Ida were dead or alive, because
by then I had ruined everything. I was merely thinking,
when I spoke those words, that according to the plan
Richard and I made, I would outlive them. So you see,
they might well still have been alive when I uttered
those words.
I should make it clear: there were two plans—one
that Harriet and Ida agreed to, and a quite different
one known only to Richard and me. As far as Harriet
and Ida were concerned it would go like this: Ida
would kill Harriet, Richard would kill Ida, I would
kill Richard. Then I would fake my own murder, at the
Bloxham, using the blood that Sammy would get hold
of. I would live only as long as it took to see Nancy
Ducane hanged, and then I would take my own life. If
by some chance Nancy did not hang, I was to kill her
and then take my own life. I had to be the last to die,
because of the acting involved. I am a good actress
when I want to be. When I contrived to meet you at
the coffee house, Monsieur Poirot . . . Harriet Sippel
could not have produced such a performance. Neither
could Ida, or Richard. So you see, I had to be the one
to stay alive.
The plan that Harriet and Ida were party to was not
Richard’s true plan. When he came to see me alone,
two weeks after our first meeting in London with
Harriet and Ida, he told me that the question of
whether Nancy ought to die had been concerning him
greatly. Like me, he did not believe Nancy had
admitted to Harriet that she had spoken up at the
King’s Head for any reason apart from to defend
Patrick against lies.
On the other hand, Richard could see Harriet’s
point. Patrick and Frances Ive’s deaths had been
caused by the ill-judged behavior of several people,
and it was hard not to count Nancy Ducane among
those responsible.
I could not have been more surprised, or
frightened, when Richard confessed that he had been
unable to reach a decision in the matter of Nancy, and
that therefore he had decided to leave it up to me.
After he, Harriet and Ida were dead, he said, I was
free to choose: either to do my best to ensure that
Nancy hanged, or to take my own life and leave a
different note for the hotel staff to find—not “MAY
THEY NEVER REST IN PEACE,” but a note
containing the truth about our deaths.
I begged Richard not to force me to decide alone.
Why me? I demanded to know.
“Because, Jennie,” he said—and I shall never
forget this—“because you are the best of us. You
were never inflated with a sense of your own virtue.
Yes, you told a lie, but you realized your error as
soon as the words had left your mouth. I believed
your falsehood for an inexcusably long time when I
had no proof, and I helped to gather support for a
campaign against a good, innocent man. A flawed
man, yes—not a saint. But who among us is perfect?”
“All right,” I told Richard. “I will make the choice
that you have entrusted to me.” I was flattered to be so
praised, I suppose.
And so our plans were made. Now, would you like
me to tell you how it all went wrong?
“INDEED,” SAID POIROT. “TELL us. Catchpool and I, we
are agog.”
“It was my fault,” said Jennie, whose voice was
hoarse by now. “I am a coward. I was afraid to die.
Desolate as I was without Patrick, I had grown
comfortable in my unhappiness and I didn’t want my
life to end. Any sort of life, even one filled with
torment, is preferable to a state of nothingness! Please
don’t condemn me as unchristian for saying so, but
I’m not sure I believe in an afterlife. I grew more and
more afraid as the agreed date for the executions
came closer—afraid of having to kill. I thought about
what would be involved, imagined standing in a
locked room and watching Richard drink poison, and
I didn’t want to have to do it. But I had agreed! I had
promised.”
“The plan that seemed so easy months before
started to seem impossible,” said Poirot. “And of
course you could not speak of your fears to Richard
Negus, who esteemed you so highly. He might think
less of you if you admitted to serious doubts. You
perhaps were afraid he would take it upon himself to
execute you with or without your consent.”
“Yes! I was terrified that he would. You see, from
our discussions of the subject, I knew how important
it was to him that all four of us should die. He told me
on one occasion that if Harriet and Ida had not
allowed themselves to be persuaded, he would have
‘done what needed to be done without their consent.’
That was how he put it. Knowing that, how could I go
to him and tell him I had changed my mind, that I was
prepared neither to die nor to kill?”
“I imagine you chided yourself for your reluctance,
mademoiselle. You believed, did you not, that this
killing and dying was the right and honorable thing to
do?”
“With the rational part of my mind, yes, I did,”
said Jennie. “I hoped and prayed that I would
discover in myself an extra reserve of courage that
would enable me to go through with it.”
“What did you plan to do about Nancy Ducane?” I
asked her.
“I did not know. My panic on the night we first met
was genuine, Monsieur Poirot. I could not decide
what to do about anything! I allowed Sammy to go
forward with his story about the keys, and to identify
Nancy. I let all that happen, telling myself that at any
moment I could go to the authorities with the truth and
save her. But . . . I did not do so. Richard thought me a
better person than him, but he was wrong—so wrong!
“There is a part of me, still, that envies Nancy
because Patrick loved her, the same spiteful part that
started all the trouble in Great Holling. And . . . I
knew that if I admitted to conspiring in a plot to
convict an innocent woman of murder, I would surely
go to prison. I was scared.”
“Tell us please, mademoiselle: what did you do?
What happened on the day of these . . . executions at
the Bloxham Hotel?”
“I was supposed to arrive there at six o’clock.
That was when we had agreed to meet.”
“The four conspirators?”
“Yes, and Sammy. I spent the whole day watching
the clock tick its way toward the awful moment. When
it got close to five o’clock, I simply knew I couldn’t
do it. I just couldn’t! I did not go to the hotel at all.
Instead, I ran through the streets of London, crying
with fear. I had no notion of where to go or what to
do, so I ran and ran. I felt as if Richard Negus was
bound to be out looking for me, furious that I had let
him and the others down. I went to Pleasant’s Coffee
House at the agreed time, thinking that I could at least
keep that part of my promise, even if I couldn’t kill
Richard as I was supposed to.
“When I arrived at the coffee house, I
was
afraid
for my life. That was no act that you saw. I thought
Richard,
not Nancy, might kill me—and, what is
more, I was convinced that if he did, he would be
doing the right thing. I
did
deserve to die! I said
nothing to you that wasn’t true, Monsieur Poirot.
Please, recall now what I said:
That I was scared of being murdered? I was—by
Richard. That I had done something terrible in the
past? I had—and if Richard did catch up with me and
kill me, as I believed he one day would, I honestly
did not want him to be punished for it. I knew that I
had let him down. Can you understand that? Richard
might have wanted to die, but I wanted him to live.
Despite the harm he did to Patrick, he was a good
man.”
“
Oui, mademoiselle.
”
“I longed to tell you the truth that night, Monsieur
Poirot, but I lacked the courage.”
“So you believed that Richard Negus would find
you and kill you because you did not arrive at the
Bloxham Hotel to kill him?”