Read The Monogram Murders Online
Authors: Sophie Hannah
“Yes, she is,” said Jennie. “I stabbed her in the
heart. Right in the heart.”
I LEARNED THAT DAY that I am not afraid of death. It is
a state that contains no energy; it exerts no force. I see
dead bodies in the course of my work, and it has
never bothered me unduly. No, the thing I dread above
all else is
proximity to death in the living
: the sound
of Jennie Hobbs’s voice when the desire to kill has
consumed her; the state of mind of a murderer who
would, with cold calculation, put three monogrammed
cufflinks in his victims’ mouths and take the trouble to
lay them out: straightening their limbs and their
fingers, placing their lifeless hands palms downward
on the floor.
“Hold his hand, Edward.”
How can the living hold the hands of the dying and
not fear being pulled toward death themselves?
If I had my way, no person, while alive and vital,
would have any involvement with death at all. I
accept that this is an unrealistic hope.
After she had stabbed Nancy, I did not wish to be
near Jennie Hobbs. I was not curious to learn why she
had done it; I simply wanted to go home, sit by one of
Blanche Unsworth’s roaring fires, work on my
crossword puzzle and forget all about the Bloxham
Hotel Murders or Monogram Murders or whatever
anybody wanted to call them.
Poirot, however, had enough curiosity for both of
us, and his will was stronger than mine. He insisted
that I stay. This was my case, he said—I had to tie it
up neatly. He made a gesture with his hands that
suggested meticulous wrapping, as if a murder
investigation were a parcel.
So it was that several hours later, he and I were
seated in a small, square room at Scotland Yard, with
Jennie Hobbs across the table from us. Samuel Kidd
had also been arrested and was being questioned by
Stanley Beer. I would have given anything to tackle
Kidd instead, who was a crook and a rotten egg for
sure, but in whose voice I had never heard the
extinction of all hope.
On the subject of voices, I was surprised by the
gentleness of Poirot’s as he spoke. “Why did you do
it, mademoiselle? Why kill Nancy Ducane, when the
two of you have been friends and allies for so long?”
“Nancy and Patrick were lovers in every sense of
the word. I did not know that until I heard her say so
today. I always thought she and I were the same: we
both loved Patrick, but knew we could not be with
him in that way—
had not
been with him in that way.
All these years, I have believed that their love was
chaste, but that was a lie. If Nancy had really loved
Patrick, she would not have made an adulterer of him
and sullied his moral character.”
Jennie wiped away a tear. “I believe I did her a
favor. You heard her express the desire to be reunited
with Patrick. I helped her with that, didn’t I?”
“Catchpool,” said Poirot. “Do you recall that I
said to you, after we found the blood in the Room 402
of the Bloxham Hotel, that it was too late for me to
save Mademoiselle Jennie?”
“Yes.”
“You thought I meant that she was dead, but you
misunderstood me. You see, I knew even then that
Jennie was beyond help. She had already done things
so terrible that her own death was guaranteed, I
feared. That was my meaning.”
“In every way that counts, I have been dead since
Patrick died,” Jennie said in that same tone of
unending hopelessness.
I knew there was only one way that I could get
through this ordeal, and that was by concentrating all
my attention on questions of logic. Had Poirot solved
the puzzle? He seemed to think he had, but I was still
in the dark. Who, for instance, had killed Harriet
Sippel, Ida Gransbury and Richard Negus, and why
had they done so? I asked these questions of Poirot.
“Ah,” he said, smiling fondly, as if I had reminded
him of a joke we had once shared. “I see your
dilemma,
mon ami.
You listen to Poirot declaim at
great length and then, a few minutes before the
conclusion, there is the interruption of another murder,
and you do not, after all, hear the answers that you
have been waiting for.
Dommage.
”
“Please tell me at once, and let the
dommage
end
here,” I said as forcefully as I could.
“It is quite simple. Jennie Hobbs and Nancy
Ducane, with the help of Samuel Kidd, conspired to
murder Harriet Sippel, Ida Gransbury and Richard
Negus. However, while collaborating with Nancy,
Jennie
pretended to be part of a quite different
conspiracy
. She allowed Richard Negus to believe
that
he
was the one with whom she conspired.”
“That does not sound ‘quite simple’ to me,” I said.
“It sounds inordinately complicated.”
“No, no, my friend.
Vraiment,
it is not at all. You
are having trouble reconciling the different versions
of the story that you have heard, but you must forget
all that Jennie told us when we visited her at Samuel
Kidd’s house—banish it from your mind completely.
It was a lie from start to finish, though I do not doubt
that it contained some elements of veracity. The best
lies always do. In a moment, Jennie will tell us the
whole truth, now that she has nothing to lose, but first,
my friend, I must pay you the compliment that you
deserve. It was
you,
in the end, who helped me to see
clearly with your suggestion in the graveyard of Holy
Saints Church.”
Poirot turned to Jennie. He said, “The lie you told
to Harriet Sippel: that Patrick Ive took money from
parishioners and, in return, conveyed to them
messages from their dead loved ones; that Nancy
Ducane had visited him in the vicarage at night for
that reason—in the hope of communicating with her
deceased husband, William. Ah, how often has Poirot
heard about this terrible, wicked lie? Many, many
times. You yourself admitted to us the other day, Miss
Hobbs, that you told the lie in a moment of weakness,
inspired by jealousy. But this was not the truth!
“Standing by Patrick and Frances Ive’s desecrated
grave, Catchpool said to me, ‘What if Jennie Hobbs
lied about Patrick Ive not to hurt him but to help him?’
Catchpool had realized the significance of something
that I had taken for granted—a fact that had never
been in dispute, and so I had failed to examine it:
Harriet Sippel’s passionate love for her late
husband, George, who died tragically young.
Had
Poirot not been told how much Harriet had loved
George? Or how the death of George had turned
Harriet from a happy, warm-hearted woman into a
bitter, spiteful monster? One can hardly imagine a
loss so terrible, so devastating, that it extinguishes all
joy and destroys all that is good in a person.
Oui,
bien sûr,
I knew that Harriet Sippel had suffered such
a loss. I knew it so surely that I thought no further
about it!
“I knew, also, that Jennie Hobbs loved Patrick Ive
enough to abandon Samuel Kidd, her fiancé, in order
to remain in the service of Reverend Ive and his wife.
This is a very self-sacrificing love: content to serve,
and receive little in return. Yet the story told to us by
both Jennie and Nancy offered Jennie’s jealousy as
her reason for telling the terrible lie that she told—
jealousy of Patrick’s love for Nancy. But this cannot
be true! It is not consistent! We must think not only of
the physical facts but of the psychological. Jennie did
nothing to punish Patrick Ive for his marriage to
Frances. She accepted with good grace that he
belonged to another woman. She continued as his
loyal servant and was a great help to him and his wife
at the vicarage, and they, in turn, were devoted to her.
Why then all of a sudden, after many years of self-
sacrificing love and service, would Patrick Ive’s love
for Nancy Ducane inspire Jennie to slander him, and
to set in motion a chain of events that would destroy
him? The answer is that it would not, and
did
not.
“It was not the eruption of envy and longing locked
inside for so long that prompted Jennie to tell her lie.
It was something altogether different. You were trying
—were you not, Miss Hobbs?—to help the man you
loved. To save him, even. As soon as I heard the
theory of my clever friend Catchpool, I knew it was
the truth. It was so obvious, and Poirot, he had been
imbécile
not to see!”
Jennie looked at me. “What theory?” she asked.
I opened my mouth to answer, but Poirot was too
quick for me. “When Harriet Sippel told you she had
seen Nancy Ducane visiting the vicarage late at night,
you were straight away alert to the danger. You knew
about these trysts—how could you not, when you
lived at the vicarage—and you were anxious to
protect Patrick Ive’s good name. How could this be
achieved? Harriet Sippel, once she had sniffed out a
scandal, would relish the opportunity to bring public
shame to a sinner. How could you explain the
presence of Nancy Ducane at the vicarage on nights
when Frances Ive was
not
there, except with the
truth? What other story would pass the muster? And
then, as if by magic, when you had almost given up
hope, you thought of something that might work. You
decided to use temptation and false hope to eliminate
the threat that Harriet represented.”
Jennie stared blankly ahead. She said nothing.
“Harriet Sippel and Nancy Ducane had something
in common,” Poirot went on. “They had both lost their
husbands to early tragic death. You told Harriet that,
with the help of Patrick Ive, Nancy had been able to
communicate with the deceased William Ducane—
that money had changed hands. Of course, it would
have to be kept secret from the Church and from
everybody in the village, but you suggested to Harriet
that, if she so wished, Patrick would be able to do for
her what he was doing for Nancy. She and George
could be . . . well, if not together again then at least
there could be communication of a kind between
them. Tell me, how did Harriet respond when you
said this to her?”
A long silence followed. Then Jennie said, “She
was foaming at the mouth for it to happen as soon as
possible. She would pay any price, she said, to be
able to speak to George again. You cannot imagine
how much she loved that man, Monsieur Poirot.
Watching her face as I spoke . . . it was like seeing a
dead woman come back to life. I tried to explain it all
to Patrick: that there had been a problem, but I had
solved it. I made the offer to Harriet without asking
him first, you see. Oh, I think I knew in my heart that
Patrick would never consent to it, but I was
desperate! I didn’t want to give him the chance to
forbid me. Can you understand that?”
“
Oui, mademoiselle.
”
“I hoped I would be able to persuade him to agree.
He was a principled man, but I knew he would want