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"Certainly, M. Poirot."
Very correct, very urbane, Holmes answered the bell.
"You rang, madam?"
Mrs Farley indicated Poirot with a gesture.
Holmes turned politely. "Yes, sir?"
"What were your instructions, Holmes, on the Thursday night when I came here?"
Holmes cleared his throat, then said: "After dinner Mr Cornworthy told me that Mr Farley expected a Mr Hercule Poirot at 9:30. I was to ascertain the gentleman's name, and I was to verify the information by glancing at a letter. Then I was to show him up to Mr Cornworthy's room."
"Were you also told to knock on the door?"
An expression of distaste crossed the butler's countenance.
"That was one of Mr Farley's orders. I was always to knock when introducing visitors - business visitors, that is," he added.
"Ah, that puzzled me! Were you given any other instructions concerning me?"
"No, sir. When Mr Cornworthy had told me what I have just repeated to you he went out."
"What time was that?"
"Ten minutes to nine, sir."
"Did you see Mr Farley after that?"
"Yes, sir, I took him up a gla.s.s of hot water as usual at nine o'clock."
"Was he then in his own room or in Mr Cornworthy's?"
"He was in his own room, sir."
"You noticed nothing unusual about that room?"
"Unusual? No, sir."
"Where were Mrs Farley and Miss Farley?"
"They had gone to the theater, sir."
"Thank you, Holmes, that will do."
Holmes bowed and left the room. Poirot turned to the millionaire's widow.
"One more question, Mrs Farley. Had your husband good sight?"
"No. Not without his gla.s.ses."
"He was very shortsighted?"
"Oh, yes, he was quite helpless without his spectacles."
"He had several pairs of gla.s.ses?"
"Yes."
"Ah," said Poirot. He leaned back. "I think that that concludes the case..."
There was silence in the room. They were all looking at the little man who sat there complacently stroking his mustache. On the inspector's face was perplexity, Dr Stillingfleet was frowning, Cornworthy merely stared uncomprehendingly, Mrs Farley gazed in blank astonishment, Joanna Farley looked eager.
Mrs Farley broke the silence.
"I don't understand, M. Poirot." Her voice was fretful. "The dream -"
"Yes," said Poirot. "That dream was very important."
Mrs Farley shivered. She said: "I've never believed in anything supernatural before - but now - to dream it night after night beforehand -"
"It's extraordinary," said Stillingfieet. "Extraordinary! If we hadn't got your word for it, Poirot, and if you hadn't had it straight from the horse's mouth -" he coughed in embarra.s.sment, and readopting his professional manner, "I beg your pardon, Mrs Farley. If Mr Farley himself had not told that story -"
"Exactly," said Poirot. His eyes, which had been half-closed, opened suddenly. They were very green. "If Benedict Farley hadn't told me -"
He paused a minute, looking round at a circle of blank faces.
"There are certain things, you comprehend, that happened that evening which I was quite at a loss to explain. First, why make such a point of my bringing that letter with me?"
"Identification," suggested Cornworthy.
"No, no, my dear young man. Really that idea is too ridiculous. There must be some much more valid reason. For not only did Mr Farley require to see that letter produced, but he definitely demanded that I should leave it behind me. And moreover even then he did not destroy it! It was found among his papers this afternoon. Why did he keep it?"
Joanna Farley's voice broke in. "He wanted, in case anything happened to him, that the facts of his strange dream should be made known."
Poirot nodded approvingly.
"You are astute, Mademoiselle. That must be - that can only be - the point of the keeping of the letter. When Mr Farley was dead, the story of that strange dream was to be told! That dream was very important. That dream, Mademoiselle, was vital!
"I will come now," he went on, "to the second point. After hearing his story I ask Mr Farley to show me the desk and the revolver. He seems about to get up to do so, then suddenly refuses. Why did he refuse?"
This time no one advanced an answer.
"I will put that question differently. What was there in that next room that Mr Farley did not want me to see?"
There was still silence.
"Yes," said Poirot, "it is difficult, that. And yet there was some reason - some urgent reason why Mr Farley received me in his secretary's room and refused point blank to take me into his own room. There was something in that room he could not afford to have me see.
"And now I come to the third inexplicable thing that happened on that evening. Mr Farley, just as I was leaving, requested me to hand him the letter I had received. By inadvertence I handed him a communication from my laundress. He glanced at it and laid it down beside him. Just before I left the room I discovered my error - and rectified it! After that I left the house and - I admit it - I was completely at sea! The whole affair and especially that last incident seemed to me quite inexplicable."
He looked round from one to the other.
"You do not see?"
Stillingfleet said, "I don't really see how your laundress comes into it, Poirot."
"My laundress," said Poirot, "was very important. That miserable woman who ruins my collars, was, for the first time in her life, useful to somebody. Surely you see - it is so obvious. Mr Farley glanced at that communication - one glance would have told him that it was the wrong letter - and yet he knew nothing. Why? Because he could not see it properly!"
Inspector Barnett said sharply, "Didn't he have his gla.s.ses on?"
Hercule Poirot smiled. "Yes," he said. "He had his gla.s.ses on. That is what makes it so very interesting."
He leaned forward.
"Mr Farley's dream was very important. He dreamed, you see, that he committed suicide. And a little later on, he did commit suicide. That is to say he was alone in a room and was found there with a revolver by him, and no one entered or left the room at the time that he was shot. What does that mean? It means, does it not, that it must be suicide!"
"Yes," said Stillingfleet.
Hercule Poirot shook his head.
"On the contrary," he said. "It was murder. An unusual and a very cleverly planned murder."
Again he leaned forward, tapping the table, his eyes green and shining.
"Why did Mr Farley not allow me to go into his own room that evening? What was there in there that I must not be allowed to see? I think, my friends, that there was - Benedict Farley himself!"
He smiled at the blank faces.
"Yes, yes, it is not nonsense what I say. Why could the Mr Farley to whom I had been talking not realize the difference between two totally dissimilar letters? Because, mes amis, he was a man of normal sight wearing a pair of very powerful gla.s.ses. Those gla.s.ses would render a man of normal eyesight practically blind. Isn't that so, doctor?"
Stillingfleet murmured, "That's so - of course."
"Why did I feel that in talking to Mr Farley I was talking to a mountebank, to an actor playing a part? Because he was playing a part! Consider the setting. The dim room, the green shaded light turned blindingly away from the figure in the chair. What did I see - the famous patchwork dressing-gown, the beaked nose (faked with that useful substance, nose putty), the white crest of hair, the powerful lenses concealing the eyes. What evidence is there that Mr Farley ever had a dream? Only the story I was told and the evidence of Mrs Farley. What evidence is there that Benedict Farley kept a revolver in his desk? Again only the story told me and the word of Mrs Farley. Two people carried this fraud through - Mrs Farley and Hugo Cornworthy. Cornworthy wrote the letter to me, gave instructions to the butler, went out ostensibly to the cinema, but let himself in again immediately with a key, went to his room, made himself up, and played the part of Benedict Farley.
"And so we come to this afternoon. The opportunity for which Mr Cornworthy has been waiting arrives. There are two witnesses on the landing to swear that no one goes in or out of Benedict Farley's room. Cornworthy waits until a particularly heavy batch of traffic is about to pa.s.s. Then he leans out of his window, and with the lazytongs which he has purloined from the desk next door he holds an object against the window of that room. Benedict Farley comes to the window. Cornworthy s.n.a.t.c.hes back the tongs and as Farley leans out, and the lorries are pa.s.sing outside, Cornworthy shoots him with the revolver that he has ready. There is a blank wall opposite, remember. There can be no witness of the crime. Cornworthy waits for over half an hour, then gathers up some papers, conceals the lazytongs and the revolver between them, and goes out on to the landing and into the next room. He replaces the tongs on the desk, lays down the revolver after pressing the dead man's fingers on it, and hurries out with the news of Mr Farley's 'suicide.'
"He arranges that the letter to me shall be found and that I shall arrive with my story - the story I heard from Mr Farley's own lips - of his extraordinary 'dream' - the strange compulsion he felt to kill himself! A few credulous people will discuss the hypnotism theory - but the main result will be to confirm without a doubt that the actual hand that held the revolver was Benedict Farley's own."
Hercule Poirot's eyes went to the widow's face - the dismay - the ashy pallor - the blind fear.
"And in due course," he finished gently, "the happy ending would have been achieved. A quarter of a million and two hearts that beat as one..."
John Stillingfleet, M.D., and Hercule Poirot walked along the side of Northway House. On their right was the towering wall of the factory. Above them, on their left, were the windows of Benedict Farley's and Hugo Cornworthy's rooms. Hercule Poirot stopped and picked up a small object - a black stuffed cat.
"Voila," he said. "That is what Cornworthy held in the lazytongs against Farley's window. You remember, he hated cats? Naturally he rushed to the window."
"Why on earth didn't Cornworthy come out and pick it up after he'd dropped it?"
"How could he? To do so would have been definitely suspicious. After all, if this object where found what would anyone think - that some child had wandered round here and dropped it."
"Yes," said Stillingfleet with a sigh. "That's probably what the ordinary person would have thought. But not good old Hercule! D'you know, old horse, up to the very last minute I thought you were leading up to some subtle theory of highfalutin' psychological 'suggested' murder? I bet those two thought so too! Nasty bit of goods, the Farley. Goodness, how she cracked! Cornworthy might have got away with it if she hadn't had hysterics and tried to spoil your beauty by going for you with her nails. I only got her off you just in time."
He paused a minute and then said: "I rather like the girl. Grit, you know, and brains. I suppose I'd be thought to be a fortune hunter if I had a shot at her...?"
"You are too late, my friend. There is already someone sur le tapis. Her father's death has opened the way to happiness."
"Take it all round, she had a pretty good motive for b.u.mping off the unpleasant parent."
"Motive and opportunity are not enough," said Poirot. "There must also be the criminal temperament!"
"I wonder if you'll ever commit a crime, Poirot?" said Stillingfleet. "I bet you could get away with it all right. As a matter of fact, it would be too easy for you - I mean the thing would be off as definitely too unsporting."
"That," said Poirot, "is a typically English idea."
GREENSHAW'S FOLLY.
The two men rounded the corner of the shrubbery.
"Well, there you are," said Raymond West. "That's it."
Horace Bindler took a deep, appreciative breath.
"How wonderful," he cried. His voice rose in a high screech of aesthetic delight, then deepened in reverent awe. "It's unbelievable. Out of this world! A period piece of the best."
"I thought you'd like it," said Raymond West complacently.
"Like it?" Words failed Horace. He unbuckled the strap of his camera and got busy. "This will be one of the gems of my collection," he said happily. "I do think, don't you, that it's rather amusing to have a collection of monstrosities? The idea came to me one night seven years ago in my bath. My last real gem was in the Campo Santo at Genoa, but I really think this beats it. What's it called?"
"I haven't the least idea," said Raymond.
"I suppose it's got a name?"
"It must have. But the fact is that it's never referred to round here as anything but Greenshaw's Folly."
"Greenshaw being the man who built it?"
"Yes. In eighteen sixty or seventy or thereabouts. The local success story of the time. Barefoot boy who had risen to immense prosperity. Local opinion is divided as to why he built this house, whether it was sheer exuberance of wealth or whether it was done to impress his creditors. If the latter, it didn't impress them. He either went bankrupt or the next thing to it. Hence the name, Greenshaw's Folly." Horace's camera clicked.
"There," he said in a satisfied voice. "Remind me to show you Number Three-ten in my collection. A really incredible marble mantelpiece in the Italian manner." He added, looking at the house, "I can't conceive of how Mr Greenshaw thought of it all."
"Rather obvious in some ways," said Raymond. "He had visited the chateaux of the Loire, don't you think? Those turrets. And then, rather unfortunately, he seems to have travelled in the Orient. The influence of the Taj Mahal is unmistakable. I rather like the Moorish wing," he added, "and the traces of a Venetian palace."