Read The Monogram Murders Online
Authors: Sophie Hannah
—then I wanted to hear what she had to say while
there was still time.
“Of course,” said Ambrose Flowerday. “She
would be furious with me for keeping you from her.”
Poirot, the nurse and I followed him up a flight of
uncarpeted wooden stairs and into one of the
bedrooms. I tried not to show my shock when I saw
bandages, blood, and the purple and blue welts and
lumps that covered Margaret Ernst’s face. Tears came
to my eyes.
“Are they here, Ambrose?” she asked.
“Yes.”
“
Bonjour,
Madame Ernst. I am Hercule Poirot.
Words cannot express how sorry I am—”
“Please call me Margaret. Is Mr. Catchpool with
you?”
“Yes, I’m here,” I managed to say. How any man or
men could inflict such injury upon a woman was quite
beyond me. It was not the act of human beings but of
beasts. Monsters.
“Are you both striving for polite expressions that
won’t alarm me?” Margaret asked. “My eyes are
swollen shut, so I can’t see your faces. I expect
Ambrose has told you I’m about to die?”
“
Non, madame.
He has said no such thing.”
“Hasn’t he? Well, it’s what he believes.”
“Margaret, dear—”
“He is wrong. I am far too angry to die.”
“You have something that you wish to tell us?”
Poirot asked.
A peculiar noise emerged from Margaret’s throat.
It had a derisory quality. “Yes, I do, but I wish you
wouldn’t ask me so soon and so urgently, as if there’s
a scrambling hurry about it all—as if my next breath
might be my last! Ambrose has given you quite the
wrong impression if that is what you believe. Now, I
need to rest. I shall no doubt have to defend myself
many more times today against unwarranted
accusations of dying! Ambrose, you’ll tell them what
they need to know, won’t you?” Her eyelids flickered.
“Yes. If that’s what you would prefer.” His eyes
widened in alarm and he grabbed her hand.
“Margaret? Margaret!”
“Leave her,” the nurse said, speaking for the first
time. “Let her sleep.”
“Sleep,” Dr. Flowerday repeated, looking
confused. “Yes, of course. She needs to sleep.”
“What is it that she wishes you to tell us, Doctor?”
Poirot asked.
“You might like to take your visitors to the drawing
room?” suggested the nurse.
“No,” said Flowerday. “I won’t leave her. And I
need to speak to these gentleman in private, so if you
would be kind enough to give us a few moments,
Nurse?”
The young woman nodded and left the room.
Flowerday addressed me. “She told you most of it,
I dare say? What this hell-pit of a village did to
Patrick and Frances?”
“We know, perhaps, more of the story than you
think,” said Poirot. “I have spoken to both Nancy
Ducane and Jennie Hobbs. They tell me that the
inquest found Patrick and Frances Ive’s deaths to be
accidental. Yet Margaret Ernst told Catchpool that
they swallowed poison deliberately to end their lives:
she first, and he second. A poison called abrin.”
Flowerday nodded. “That’s the truth. Frances and
Patrick both left notes: their last words to the world. I
told the authorities that in my opinion the deaths were
accidental. I lied.”
“Why?” Poirot asked.
“Suicide is a sin in the eyes of the Church. After
the battering that Patrick’s good name had taken, I
could not bear for there to be another mark against
him. And poor Frances, who had done nothing wrong
and was a good Christian . . .”
“
Oui. Je comprends.
”
“I knew several people who would have reveled
in their achievement if told their actions had driven
the Ives to suicide. I was unwilling to afford them that
satisfaction. Harriet Sippel in particular.”
Poirot said, “May I ask you something, Dr.
Flowerday? If I were to say to you that Harriet Sippel
came to regret her despicable treatment of Patrick Ive,
would you believe that to be possible?”
“Regret
it?”
Ambrose
Flowerday
laughed
mirthlessly. “Why, Monsieur Poirot, I should think
you had taken leave of your senses. Harriet regretted
nothing
that she had done. Neither do I, if you must
know. I am glad that I lied sixteen years ago. I would
do the same again. Let me tell you: the mob led by
Harriet Sippel and Ida Gransbury against Patrick Ive
was evil. There is no other word for it. I imagine that,
as a cultured man you are familiar with
The Tempest
?
‘Hell is empty’?”
“‘And all the devils are here,’” Poirot completed
the quotation.
“Quite so.” Dr. Flowerday turned then to me. “This
is why Margaret did not want you to speak to me, Mr.
Catchpool. She too is proud that we lied for Patrick
and Frances’s sake, but she is more cautious than I
am. She feared that I would boast to you of my defiant
act, as I just have.” He smiled sadly. “I know that I
must now face the consequences. I will lose my
medical practice and possibly my liberty, and perhaps
I deserve to. The lie I told killed Charles.”
“Margaret’s late husband?” I said.
The doctor nodded. “Margaret and I didn’t care if
people whispered ‘Liar!’ after us in the street, but
Charles minded dreadfully. His health deteriorated. If
I had been less determined to fight the evil in the
village, Charles might still be alive today.”
“Where are the Ives’ suicide notes now?” Poirot
asked.
“I don’t know. I gave them to Margaret sixteen
years ago. I haven’t asked her about them since.”
“I burned them.”
“Margaret.” Ambrose Flowerday hurried to her
side. “You’re awake.”
“I remember every word of both of them. It seemed
important to remember, so I made sure I did.”
“Margaret, you must rest. Talking is tiring for you.”
“Patrick’s note said to tell Nancy that he loved her
and always would. I didn’t tell her. How could I,
without revealing that Ambrose had lied about cause
of death at the inquest? But . . . now that the truth is
out, you must tell her, Ambrose. Tell her what Patrick
wrote.”
“I will. Don’t worry, Margaret. I will take care of
everything.”
“I
do
worry. You have not told Monsieur Poirot
and Mr. Catchpool about Harriet’s threats, after
Patrick and Frances were buried. Tell them now.” Her
eyes closed. Seconds later, she was fast asleep again.
“What were these threats, Doctor?” Poirot asked.
“Harriet Sippel arrived at the vicarage one day,
trailing a mob of ten or twenty behind her, and
announced that the people of Great Holling intended
to dig up the bodies of Patrick and Frances Ive. As
suicides, she said, they had no right to be buried in
consecrated ground—it was God’s law. Margaret
came to the door and told her that she was speaking
nonsense: it used to be the law of the Christian
Church, but it wasn’t any longer. It had not been since
the 1880s, and this was 1913. Once dead, a person’s
soul is entrusted to the mercy of God, and that person
is beyond earthly judgement. Harriet’s pious little
helper Ida Gransbury insisted that if it was wrong for
a suicide to be buried in a churchyard before 1880,
then it must still be wrong. God does not change his
mind about what constitutes acceptable behavior, she
said. When he heard about this unconscionable
outburst from his fiancée, Richard Negus ended his
engagement to the pitiless harridan and left for Devon.
It was the best decision he ever made.”
“Where did Frances and Patrick Ive find the abrin
that they used to kill themselves?” Poirot asked.
Ambrose Flowerday looked surprised. “That’s a
question I wasn’t expecting. Why do you ask?”
“Because I wonder if it originated with you?”
“It did.” The doctor flinched, as if in pain.
“Frances stole it from my house. I spent some years
working in the tropics and I brought two vials of the
poison back with me. I was a young man then, but I
planned to use it later in life if I needed to—in the
event of a painful illness from which I would not
recover. Having observed the agonies endured by
some of my patients, I wanted to be able to spare
myself that sort of ordeal. I didn’t know that Frances
knew I had two vials of lethal poison in my cupboard,
but she must have searched it one day, looking for
something that would serve her purpose. As I said
before, perhaps I do deserve to be punished.
Whatever Margaret says, I have always felt that
Frances’s killer was not Frances but me.”
“
Non.
You must not blame yourself,” said Poirot.
“If she was determined to take her own life, she
would have found a way to do so with or without your
vial of abrin.”
I waited for Poirot to move on to a question about
cyanide, since a doctor with access to one poison
might well have access to two, but instead he said,
“Dr. Flowerday, I do not intend to tell anybody that
the deaths of Patrick and Frances Ive were not
accidental. You will remain at liberty and able to
continue in your medical practice.”
“What?” Flowerday looked from Poirot to me in
astonishment. I nodded my consent, while resenting
Poirot’s failure to ask my opinion. I, after all, was the
one whose job it was to uphold the law of the land.
Had he consulted me, I would have urged him not
to expose the lie that Ambrose Flowerday had told.
“Thank you. You are a fair-minded and generous-
spirited man.”
“
Pas du tout.
” Poirot fended off Flowerday’s
gratitude. “I have one more question for you, Doctor:
are you married?”
“No.”
“If you will permit me to say so, I think you ought
to be.”
I breathed in sharply.
“You are a bachelor, are you not? And Margaret
Ernst has been a widow for some years. It is evident
that you love her very much, and I believe that she
returns your affection. Why do you not ask her to be
your wife?”
Dr. Flowerday seemed to be trying to blink away
his surprise, poor chap. Finally he said, “Margaret
and I agreed long ago that we would never marry. It
wouldn’t have been right. After what we did—
necessary as we both felt it was—and after what
happened to poor Charles . . . well, it would have
been improper for us to allow ourselves to be happy
in that way. As happy as we would have been
together. There has been too much suffering.”
I was watching Margaret, and saw her eyelids
flutter open.
“Enough suffering,” she said in a weak voice.
Flowerday covered his mouth with his clenched
fist. “Oh, Margaret,” he said. “Without you, what is
the point?”
Poirot stood up. “Doctor,” he said in his most
stringent voice. “Mrs. Ernst is of the opinion that she
will survive. It would be a great shame if your foolish
resolve to eschew the possibility of true happiness
were to survive also. Two good people who love
each other should not be apart when there is no need
to be.”
With that, he marched from the room.
I WANTED TO MAKE A SWIFT escape back to London, but
Poirot said that first he needed to see Patrick and
Frances Ive’s grave. “I would like to lay some
flowers,
mon ami.
”
“It’s February, old chap. Where are you going to
find flowers?”
This prompted a lengthy grumble about the English
climate.
The gravestone lay on its side, covered in mud
smears. There were several overlapping footprints in
the mud, suggesting that those two feral brutes
Frederick and Tobias Clutton had jumped up and
down on the stone after digging it out of the ground
with their spade.
Poirot took off his gloves. He bent down and,
using the forefinger of his right hand, drew the outline
of a large flower—like a child’s drawing—in the
earth. “
Voilà,
” he said. “A flower in February, in
spite of the appalling English weather.”
“Poirot, you’ve got mud on your finger!”
“
Oui.
Why do you sound surprised? Even the