Read The Monogram Murders Online
Authors: Sophie Hannah
King’s Head Inn, and told the villagers of Great
Holling about her love affair with Patrick Ive, which
was not chaste, though she had pretended at the time
that it was. Her voice shook as she told of the tragic
deaths by poisoning of Patrick and Frances Ive. I
noted that that was all she said about the cause of
death: poisoning. She did not specify accident or
suicide. I wondered if Poirot had asked her not to, for
the sake of Ambrose Flowerday and Margaret Ernst.
Before sitting down, Nancy said, “I am as devoted
to Patrick now as I ever was. I will never stop loving
him. One day, he and I will be reunited.”
“Thank you, Madame Ducane.” Poirot bowed. “I
must now without delay tell you something that I have
recently discovered, for I believe it will be a comfort
to you. Before his death, Patrick wrote . . . a letter. In
it, he asked for you to be told that he loved you and
always would.”
“Oh!” Nancy clapped her hands over her mouth
and blinked many times. “Monsieur Poirot, you cannot
imagine how happy you have made me.”
“
Au contraire, madame.
I can imagine only too
well. The loving message, conveyed after the death of
the loved one . . . It is an echo, is it not, of the untrue
rumors about Patrick Ive: that he conveyed messages
from beyond the grave? And who, I ask you, would
not wish to receive such a message from one they
have loved very much and lost?”
Nancy Ducane made her way back to her chair and
sat down. Louisa Wallace patted her arm.
“And now,” said Poirot, “another woman who
knew and loved Patrick Ive will speak: his former
servant, Jennie Hobbs. Mademoiselle Hobbs?”
Jennie stood up and went to stand where Nancy
had stood. She too looked unsurprised to be asked. In
a shaking voice, she said. “I loved Patrick Ive as
much as Nancy did. But he did not reciprocate my
love. To him, I was no more than a loyal servant. It
was I who started the wicked rumors about him. I told
an unforgivable lie. I was jealous because he loved
Nancy and not me. Although I did not kill him with my
own hands, I believe that, in slandering him as I did, I
caused his death. I and three others: Harriet Sippel,
Richard Negus and Ida Gransbury, the three people
who were murdered at this hotel. All four of us later
came to regret what we had done. We regretted it
profoundly. And so we made a plan to put things
right.”
I watched the astonished faces of the Bloxham
Hotel staff as Jennie described the same plan that she
had described to Poirot and me at Samuel Kidd’s
house, as well as how and why it went wrong. Louisa
Wallace squealed in horror at the part about framing
Nancy Ducane for the three murders and making sure
she hanged. “Arranging for an innocent woman to be
put to death for three murders she didn’t commit is not
righting a wrong!” St. John Wallace called out. “That
is depravity!”
Nobody disagreed with him, at least not out loud.
Fee Spring, I noticed, did not look as shocked as most
people did. She seemed to be listening intently.
“I never wanted to frame Nancy,” said Jennie.
“Never! You may believe that or not, as you wish.”
“Mr. Negus,” said Poirot. “Mr.
Henry
Negus—do
you think it likely that your brother Richard would
make such a plan as you have heard?”
Henry Negus stood up. “I would not like to say,
Monsieur Poirot. The Richard I knew would not have
dreamed of killing anyone, of course, but the Richard
who came to live with me in Devon sixteen years ago
was not the Richard I knew.
Oh, the physicality of
him was the same, but he was not the same man on the
inside. I’m afraid to say that I never got to know the
man that he had become. I cannot, therefore, comment
on how likely he was to behave in a particular way.”
“Thank you, Mr. Negus. And thank you, Miss
Hobbs,” Poirot added with a marked absence of
enthusiasm. “You may now sit down.”
He turned to the crowd. “So you see, ladies and
gentlemen, that Miss Hobbs’s story, if true, leaves us
with no murderer to arrest and convict. Ida Gransbury
killed Harriet Sippel—with her permission. Richard
Negus killed Ida Gransbury—again, with her
permission—and then killed himself when Jennie
Hobbs did not arrive to kill him as she was supposed
to. He took his own life and made it look like murder
by first locking his door and hiding the key behind a
loose tile in the fireplace, and then opening the
window. The police were supposed to think that the
murderer—Nancy Ducane—took the key with her and
escaped through the open window and down a tree.
But there was no
murderer,
according to Jennie
Hobbs—nobody who killed without permission of the
victim!”
Poirot looked around the room. “No murderer,” he
repeated. “However, even if this were true, there
would still be two criminals who are alive and
deserving of punishment: Jennie Hobbs and Samuel
Kidd, who conspired to frame Nancy Ducane.”
“I hope you’re going to lock them both up,
Monsieur Poirot!” called out Louisa Wallace.
“I do not lock or unlock the prison gate, madame.
That is the job of my friend Catchpool and his
associates. I unlock only the secrets and the truth. Mr.
Samuel Kidd, please stand.”
Kidd, looking uncomfortable, rose to his feet.
“Your part in the plan was to place a note on the
front desk of this hotel, was it not? ‘MAY THEY
NEVER REST IN PEACE. 121. 238. 317.’ ”
“Yes, sir. It was, like Jennie said.”
“You had been given the note by Jennie in good
time to do this?”
“Yes. She gave it to me earlier in the day. In the
morning.”
“And you were to put it on the desk when?”
“Shortly after eight o’clock in the evening, like
Jennie said. As soon as I could after eight, but first
making sure no one was close enough to see me put it
there.”
“You had this instruction from whom?” Poirot
asked.
“Jennie.”
“And also from Jennie you had the instruction to
plant the room keys in the pocket of Nancy Ducane?”
“That’s right,” said Kidd in a sullen voice. “I don’t
know why you’re asking me all this when she’s only
just now finished telling you.”
“I will explain.
Bon.
According to the original
plan, as we have all heard Jennie Hobbs say, the keys
to all three rooms—121, 238 and 317—would be
removed from Richard Negus’s room by Jennie after
she had killed him, and given to Samuel Kidd, who
would place them somewhere that would implicate
Nancy Ducane—her coat pocket, as it turned out.
But
Jennie Hobbs did not go to the Bloxham Hotel at all
on the night of the murders, according to her story.
She was not brave enough. I therefore ask you, Mr.
Kidd: how did you get hold of the keys to rooms 121
and 317?”
“How did I . . . how did I get hold of the two
keys?”
“Yes. That is the question I asked you. Please
answer it.”
“I . . . well, if you must know, I got hold of those
keys thanks to my own wits. I had a word in the ear of
a member of the hotel staff and asked if they’d be
good enough to let me have a master key. And they
did. I then returned it to them, once I’d used it. All
discreet, like.”
I was standing close enough to Poirot to hear the
noise of disapproval that he made. “Which member of
staff, monsieur? They are all here in this room. Point
to the person who gave you this master key.”
“I can’t remember who it was. A man—that’s all I
can tell you. I’ve a pitiful memory for faces.” As he
said this, Kidd rubbed the red scratches on his own
face with his thumb and forefinger.
“So, with this master key you let yourself into all
three rooms?”
“No, only Room 238. That’s where all the keys
ought to have ended up, waiting for Jennie to take
them, but I could only find two. As you’ve said, one
was hidden behind a tile in the fireplace. I didn’t like
to stay and search the room for the third key, what
with Mr. Negus’s body being there and all.”
“You are lying,” Poirot told him. “It does not
matter. You will discover, in due course, that you
cannot lie your way out of this predicament. But let us
move on. No, do not sit down. I have another question
—for you and Jennie Hobbs. It was part of the plan,
was it not, that Jennie should bring her tale of mortal
fear to me at Pleasant’s Coffee House at just after half
past seven on the night of the murders?”
“Yes,” said Jennie, looking not at Poirot but at
Samuel Kidd.
“Forgive me, then, but I do not understand
something important. You were too afraid to go
through with the plan, you say, and so you did not
arrive at the hotel at six o’clock. Yet the plan went
ahead without you, it seems. The only deviation was
that Richard Negus killed himself, yes? He put the
poison into his own drink, rather than having it put in
his drink by you. Is everything that I have said so far
correct, mademoiselle?”
“Yes, it is.”
“In that case, if the only altered detail was Richard
Negus killing himself instead of being killed, we can
assume that the deaths took place as planned: after the
ordering of the sandwiches and scones, between a
quarter past seven and eight o’clock. Yes, Miss
Hobbs?”
“That is right,” said Jennie. She did not sound
quite as certain as she had a moment ago.
“Then how, might I ask, can it ever have been part
of the plan for you to kill Richard Negus? You have
told us that you intended to find me at Pleasant’s
Coffee House shortly after half past seven on that
same night, knowing I would be there for my regular
Thursday evening dinner. It is impossible to get from
the Bloxham Hotel to Pleasant’s Coffee House in less
than half an hour. It cannot be done, no matter how
one travels. So, even if Ida Gransbury had killed
Harriet Sippel and Richard Negus had killed Ida
Gransbury as soon as was possible after a quarter
past seven, there would not have been time for you to
kill Richard Negus in Room 238 after that time, and
still arrive at Pleasant’s when you did. Are we
supposed to believe that, in all the meticulous
planning that you undertook, none of you thought of
this practical impossibility?”
Jennie’s face had turned white. I expect mine had
too, though I could not see it myself.
It was such an obvious flaw in her account that
Poirot had pointed out, and yet I had failed to spot it.
It simply had not occurred to me.
SAMUEL KIDD CHUCKLED, TURNING round so that more
people could see him. He said, “Mr. Poirot, for a man
who takes pride in his powers of detection, you’re not
the sharpest of instruments, are you? I’ve heard Jennie
talk about this more often than you have, I think I can
safely say. The plan was not for the killings to take
place after a quarter past seven. I don’t know where
you’ve caught hold of that idea. The plan was for
them to happen just after six o’clock. The ordering of