Read The Monogram Murders Online
Authors: Sophie Hannah
not. Any person who chooses to stay at the Bloxham
Hotel must have a character of the utmost virtue and
integrity!”
I coughed and inclined my head toward the door.
Poirot turned. Lazzari had let himself into the room
and was standing in the doorway. He could hardly
have looked happier. “So true, so true, Monsieur
Poirot,” he said.
“Every single person who was in this hotel on
Thursday must speak to Mr. Catchpool and account
for their movements,” Poirot told him sternly. “Every
guest, everyone who was here to work. All of them.”
“With the greatest pleasure, you may speak to
whomsoever you wish, Mr. Catchpool.” Lazzari
bowed in deference. “And our dining room will soon
be at your disposal, once we have cleared away the
breakfast—ah, how do you say?—
paraphernalia,
and
gathered everybody together.”
“
Merci.
Meanwhile, I will conduct a thorough
examination of the three rooms,” said Poirot. This
came as a surprise to me. I thought that was what we
had just done. “Catchpool, find out the addresses of
Harriet Sippel, Ida Gransbury and Richard Negus.
Find out who in the hotel took their reservations, what
food and drinks they each requested to be delivered to
their rooms, and when. And from whom.”
I started to edge toward the door, fearing that
Poirot would never stop dreaming up more tasks to
add to the list.
He called after me, “Find out if anyone by the
name of Jennie is staying in the hotel, or working
here.”
“There is not a Jennie employed at the Bloxham,
Monsieur Poirot,” said Lazzari. “Instead of asking
Mr. Catchpool you should ask
me.
Everybody here is
well known to me. We are a very large happy family
here at the Bloxham Hotel!”
SOMETIMES, REMEMBERING SOMETHING A person said
months or even years ago still makes you chuckle, and
this, for me, is true of what Poirot said to me at some
point later on that day: “It is hard for even the most
ingenious detective to know what to do if his desire is
to be free of Signor Lazzari. If one’s praise of his
hotel is insufficient, he stays by one’s side and
supplements it with his own; if one’s praise is
fulsome and lengthy, he stays to listen.”
Poirot’s efforts were eventually successful, and he
finally managed to persuade Lazzari to leave him to
his own devices in Room 238. He walked over to the
door that the hotel manager had left open, closed it,
and sighed with relief. How much easier it was to
think clearly when there was no babble of voices.
He made straight for the window. An open
window, he thought as he stared out of it. The
murderer might have opened it to escape after killing
Richard Negus. He could have climbed down a tree.
Why escape thus? Why not simply leave the room
in the expected way, using the corridor? Perhaps the
killer heard voices outside Negus’s room and did not
want to risk being seen. Yes, that was a possibility.
And yet when he strolled up to the front desk to leave
his note announcing his three murders, he risked being
seen. More than seen—he risked being caught in the
act of leaving incriminating evidence.
Poirot looked down at the body on the floor. No
gleam of metal between the lips. Richard Negus alone
of the three victims had the cufflink right at the back
of his mouth. It was an anomaly. Too many things
about this room were anomalous. For this reason,
Poirot decided he would search Room 238 first. He
was . . . Yes, there was no virtue in denying it—he
was
suspicious
of this room. Of the three, it was his
least favorite. There was something disorganized
about it, something a little unruly.
Poirot stood beside Negus’s body and frowned.
Even by his exacting standards, one open window
was not enough to render a room chaotic, so what was
it that was giving him this impression? He looked
around, turning in a slow circle. No, he must be
mistaken. Hercule Poirot was not often wrong, but it
did happen very occasionally, and this must be one
such instance, because 238 was an undeniably tidy
room. There was no mess or muddle. It was as tidy as
Harriet Sippel’s room and Ida Gransbury’s.
“I shall shut the window and see if that makes a
difference,” said Poirot to himself. He did so and
surveyed the territory anew. Something was still not
right. He did not like Room 238. He would not have
felt comfortable if he had arrived at the Bloxham
Hotel and been shown to this . . .
Suddenly the problem leapt out at him, putting an
abrupt end to his meditations. The fireplace! One of
the tiles was not aligned correctly. It was not straight;
it jutted out. A loose tile; Poirot could not sleep in a
room with such a thing. He eyed the body of Richard
Negus. “If I were in the condition that you are in,
oui,
but not otherwise,” he said to it.
His only thought as he bent to touch the tile was
that he might straighten it and push it back in so that it
was flush with the others. To spare future guests the
torment of knowing that there was something amiss in
the room and being unable to work out what it was—
what a service that would be! And to Signor Lazzari
also!
When Poirot touched it, the tile fell clean out, and
something else fell with it: a key with a number on it:
238. “
Sacre tonnerre,
” Poirot whispered. “So the
thorough search was not so thorough after all.”
Poirot replaced the key where he had found it, then
set about inspecting the rest of the room, inch by inch.
He discovered nothing else of interest, so he
proceeded to Room 317 and then to Room 121, which
was where I found him when I returned from my
errands with exciting news of my own.
Poirot being Poirot, he insisted on telling me his
news first, about his finding of the key. All I can say
is, in Belgium it is evidently not considered unseemly
to gloat. He was quite puffed up with pride. “Do you
see what this means,
mon ami
? The open window
was not opened by Richard Negus, it was opened
after his death! Having locked the door of Room 238
from the
inside
, the murderer needed to escape. He
did so using the tree outside Mr. Negus’s window,
after he had hidden the key behind a tile in the
fireplace that had come loose. He perhaps loosened it
himself.”
“Why not conceal it in his clothing, take it with
him and leave the room in the customary way?” I
asked.
“That is a question I have been asking myself—one
that, for now, I am unable to answer,” Poirot said. “I
have satisfied myself that there is no hidden key in
this room, 121. Nor is there a key anywhere in Room
317. The killer must have taken two keys with him
when he left the Bloxham Hotel, so why not the third?
Why is the treatment of Richard Negus different?”
“I haven’t the faintest idea,” I said. “Listen, I’ve
been talking to John Goode, the clerk—”
“The most dependable clerk,” Poirot amended
with a twinkle in his eye.
“Yes, well . . . dependable or not, he’s certainly
come up trumps for us on the information front. You
were right: the three victims
are
connected. I’ve seen
their addresses. Harriet Sippel and Ida Gransbury
both lived in a place called Great Holling, in the
Culver Valley.”
“
Bon.
And Richard Negus?”
“No, he lives in Devon—place called Beaworthy.
But he’s connected too. He booked all three hotel
rooms—Ida’s, Harriet’s and his own—and he paid
for them ahead of time.”
“Did he indeed? This I find very interesting . . .”
Poirot murmured, stroking his mustache.
“Bit puzzling, if you ask me,” I said. “The main
puzzle being: why, if they were coming from the same
village on the same day, did Harriet Sippel and Ida
Gransbury not travel together? Why did they not
arrive together? I went over it several times with John
Goode and he is adamant: Harriet arrived two hours
before Ida on Wednesday—two full hours.”
“And Richard Negus?”
I resolved henceforth to include all details relating
to Negus at the earliest opportunity, if only so that I
wouldn’t have to hear Poirot say, “And Richard
Negus?” over and over again.
“He turned up an hour
before
Harriet Sippel. He
was the first of the three to arrive, but it wasn’t John
Goode who dealt with him. It was a junior clerk, a
Mr. Thomas Brignell. I also found out that all three of
our murder victims traveled to London by train, not
car. I’m not sure if you wanted to know that, but—”
“I must know everything,” said Poirot.
His obvious desire to be in charge and make the
investigation his own both irritated and reassured me.
“The Bloxham has some cars that it sends out to fetch
guests from the station,” I told him. “It’s not cheap,
but they’re happy to sort it out for you. Three weeks
ago, Richard Negus made arrangements with John
Goode for the hotel’s cars to meet him, Harriet Sippel
and Ida Gransbury. Separately; a car each. All of it—
the rooms, the cars—it was all paid for in advance,
by Negus.”
“I wonder if he was a wealthy man,” Poirot mused
aloud. “So often, murder turns out to be about money.
What are your thoughts, Catchpool, now that we know
a little more?”
“Well . . .” I decided to throw myself into it, since
he’d asked. Imagining what was possible was a good
thing in Poirot’s book, so I would allow myself to
concoct a theory, using the facts as a starting point.
“Richard Negus must have known about all three
arrivals, since he reserved and paid for the rooms, but
perhaps Harriet Sippel didn’t know that Ida
Gransbury was also coming to the Bloxham. And
perhaps Ida didn’t know that Harriet was.”
“
Oui, c’est possible.
”
Encouraged, I went on: “Maybe it was essential to
the murderer’s plan that neither Ida nor Harriet should
know about the presence of the other one. But if that’s
so, and if Richard Negus, meanwhile, knew that he
and both women would be guests at the Bloxham . . .”
My well of ideas ran dry at that point.
Poirot took over: “Our trains of thought proceed
along similar tracks, my friend. Was Richard Negus
an unwitting accomplice in his own murder? Perhaps
the killer persuaded him to entice the victims to the
Bloxham Hotel supposedly for another reason, when
all along he planned to murder all three of them. The
question is this:
was it vital for some reason that Ida
and Harriet should each be ignorant of the presence
of the other in the hotel?
And if so, was it important
to Richard Negus, to the murderer, or to both?”
“Perhaps Richard Negus had one plan, and the
murderer had another?”
“Quite so,” said Poirot. “The next thing is to find
out all that we can about Harriet Sippel, Richard
Negus and Ida Gransbury. Who were they when they
were alive? What were their hopes, their grievances,
their secrets? The village, Great Holling—this is