尼罗河上的惨案_[英]阿加莎·克里斯蒂【完结】(49)

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  "And therefore the thief shot her? But she was shot whilst she slept."

  "So that too does not make sense... You know, I have a little idea about those pearls - and yet - no - it is impossible. Because if my idea was right the pearls would not have disappeared. Tell me, what did you think of the maid?"

  "I wondered," said Race slowly, "if she knew more than she said."

  "Ah, you too had that impression."

  "Definitely not a nice girl," said Race.

  Hercule Poirot nodded. "Yes, I would not trust her, that one."

  "You think she had something to do with the murder?"

  "No, I would not say that."

  "With the theft of the pearls, then?"

  "That is more probable. She had only been with Madame Doyle a very short time. She may be a member of a gang that specializes in jewel robberies. In such a case there is often a maid with excellent references. Unfortunately we are not in a position to seek information on these points. And yet that explanation does not quite satisfy me... Those pearls - ah, sacré, my little idea ought to be right. And yet nobody would be so imbecile -" He broke off.

  "What about the man Fleetwood?"

  "We must question him. It may be that we have there the solution. If Louise Bourget's story is true, he had a definite motive for revenge. He could have overheard the scene between Jacqueline and Monsieur Doyle, and when they have left the saloon he could have darted in and secured the gun. Yes, it is all quite possible. And that letter J scrawled in blood. That, too, would accord with a simple, rather crude nature."

  "In fact, he's just the person we are looking for?"

  "Yes - only -" Poirot rubbed his nose. He said with a slight grimace: "See you, I recognize my own weaknesses. It has been said of me that I like to make a case difficult. This solution that you put to me - it is too simple, too easy. I cannot feel that it really happened. And yet, that may be sheer prejudice on my part."

  "Well, we'd better have the fellow here."

  Race rang the bell and gave the order. Then he asked, "Any other - possibilities?"

  "Plenty, my friend. There is, for example, the American trustee."

  "Pennington?"

  "Yes, Pennington. There was a curious little scene in here the other day." He narrated the happenings to Race. "You see - it is significant. Madame, she wanted to read all the papers before signing. So he makes the excuse of another day. And then, the husband, he makes a very significant remark."

  "What was that?"

  "He says - 'I never read anything. I sign where I am told to sign.' You perceive the significance of that. Pennington did. I saw it in his eye. He looked at Doyle as though an entirely new idea had come into his head. Just imagine, my friend, that you have been left trustee to the daughter of an intensely wealthy man. You use, perhaps, that money to speculate with. I know it is so in all detective novels - but you read of it too in the newspapers. It happens, my friend, it happens."

  "I don't dispute it," said Race.

  "There is, perhaps, still time to make good by speculating wildly. Your ward is not yet of age. And then - she marries! The control passes from your hands into hers at a moment's notice! A disaster! But there is still a chance. She is on a honeymoon. She will perhaps be careless about business. A casual paper, slipped in among others, signed without reading... But Linnet Doyle was not like that. Honeymoon or no honeymoon, she was a business woman. And then her husband makes a remark, and a new idea comes to that desperate man who is seeking a way out from ruin. If Linnet Doyle were to die, her fortune would pass to her husband - and he would be easy to deal with; he would be a child in the hands of an astute man like Andrew Pennington. Mon cher Colonel, I tell you I saw the thought pass through Andrew Pennington's head. 'If only it were Doyle I had got to deal with.' That is what he was thinking."

  "Quite possible, I daresay," said Race drily, "but you've no evidence."

  "Alas, no."

  "Then there's young Ferguson," said Race. "He talks bitterly enough. Not that I go by talk. Still, he might be the fellow whose father was ruined by old Ridgeway. It's a little far-fetched - but it's possible. People do brood over bygone wrongs sometimes."

  He paused a minute and then said, "And there's my fellow."

  "Yes, there is 'your fellow' as you call him."

  "He's a killer," said Race. "We know that. On the other hand, I can't see any way in which he could have come up against Linnet Doyle. Their orbits don't touch." Poirot said slowly, "Unless, accidentally, she had become possessed of evidence showing his identity."

  "That's possible, but it seems highly unlikely." There was a knock at the door. "Ah, here's our would-be bigamist."

  Fleetwood was a big, truculent looking man. He looked suspiciously from one to the other of them as he entered the room. Poirot recognized him as the man he had seen talking to Louise Bourget.

  Fleetwood asked suspiciously, "You wanted to see me?"

  "We did," said Race. "You probably know that a murder was committed on this boat last night?"

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