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Murder on the Orient Express

Agatha Christie


  “You do not say, ‘No, I have no such thing.’ You say, ‘That is not mine’—meaning that such a thing does belong to someone else.”

  She nodded.

  “Somebody else on this train?”

  “Yes.”

  “Whose is it?”

  “I told you just now. I don’t know. I woke up this morning about five o’clock with the feeling that the train had been standing still for a long time. I opened the door and looked out into the corridor, thinking we might be at a station. I saw someone in a scarlet kimono some way down the corridor.”

  “And you don’t know who it was? Was she fair or dark or grey-haired?”

  “I can’t say. She had on a shingle cap and I only saw the back of her head.”

  “And in build?”

  “Tallish and slim, I should judge, but it’s difficult to say. The kimono was embroidered with dragons.”

  “Yes, yes that is right, dragons.”

  He was silent a minute. He murmured to himself:

  “I cannot understand. I cannot understand. None of this makes sense.”

  Then, looking up, he said:

  “I need not keep you further, Mademoiselle.”

  “Oh!” she seemed rather taken aback, but rose promptly. In the doorway, however, she hesitated a minute and then came back.

  “The Swedish lady—Miss Ohlsson, is it?—seems rather worried. She says you told her she was the last person to see this man alive. She thinks, I believe, that you suspect her on that account. Can’t I tell her that she has made a mistake? Really, you know, she is the kind of creature who wouldn’t hurt a fly.”

  She smiled a little as she spoke.

  “What time was it that she went to fetch the aspirin from Mrs. Hubbard?”

  “Just after half-past ten.”

  “She was away—how long?”

  “About five minutes.”

  “Did she leave the compartment again during the night?”

  “No.”

  Poirot turned to the doctor.

  “Could Ratchett have been killed as early as that?”

  The doctor shook his head.

  “Then I think you can reassure your friend, Mademoiselle.”

  “Thank you.” She smiled suddenly at him, a smile that invited sympathy. “She’s like a sheep, you know. She gets anxious and bleats.”

  She turned and went out.

  Twelve

  THE EVIDENCE OF THE GERMAN LADY’S MAID

  M. Bouc was looking at his friend curiously.

  “I do not quite understand you, mon vieux. You were trying to do—what?”

  “I was searching for a flaw, my friend.”

  “A flaw?”

  “Yes—in the armour of a young lady’s self-possession. I wished to shake her sangfroid. Did I succeed? I do not know. But I know this—she did not expect me to tackle the matter as I did.”

  “You suspect her,” said M. Bouc slowly. “But why? She seems a very charming young lady—the last person in the world to be mixed up in a crime of this kind.”

  “I agree,” said Constantine. “She is cold. She has not emotions. She would not stab a man; she would sue him in the law courts.”

  Poirot sighed “You must, both of you, get rid of your obsession that this is an unpremeditated and sudden crime. As for the reason why I suspect Miss Debenham, there are two. One is because of something that I overheard, and that you do not as yet know.”

  He retailed to them the curious interchange of phrases he had overheard on the journey from Aleppo.

  “That is curious, certainly,” said M. Bouc when he had finished. “It needs explaining. If it means what you suspect it means, then they are both of them in it together—she and the stiff Englishman.”

  Poirot nodded.

  “And that is just what is not borne out by the facts,” he said. “See you, if they were both in this together, what should we expect to find—that each of them would provide an alibi for the other. Is not that so? But no—that does not happen. Miss Debenham’s alibi is provided by a Swedish woman whom she has never seen before, and Colonel Arbuthnot’s alibi is vouched for by MacQueen, the dead man’s secretary. No, that solution of the puzzle is too easy.”

  “You said there was another reason for your suspicions of her,” M. Bouc reminded him.

  Poirot smiled.

  “Ah! but that is only psychological. I ask myself, is it possible for Miss Debenham to have planned this crime? Behind this business, I am convinced, there is a cool, intelligent, resourceful brain. Miss Debenham answers to that description.”

  M. Bouc shook his head.

  “I think you are wrong, my friend. I do not see that young English girl as a criminal.”

  “Ah, well,” said Poirot, picking up the last passport, “to the final name on our list. Hildegarde Schmidt, lady’s maid.”

  Summoned by the attendant, Hildegarde Schmidt came into the restaurant car and stood waiting respectfully.

  Poirot motioned her to sit down.

  She did so, folding her hands and waiting placidly till he questioned her. She seemed a placid creature altogether—eminently respectable—perhaps not over intelligent.

  Poirot’s methods with Hildegarde Schmidt were a complete contrast to his handling of Mary Debenham.

  He was at his kindest and most genial, setting the woman at her ease. Then, having got her to write down her name and address, he slid gently into his questions.

  The interview took place in German.

  “We want to know as much as possible about what happened last night,” he said. “We know that you cannot give us much information bearing on the crime itself, but you may have seen or heard something that, while conveying nothing to you, may be valuable to us. You understand?”

  She did not seem to. Her broad, kindly face remained set in its expression of placid stupidity as she answered:

  “I do not know anything, Monsieur.”

  “Well, for instance, you know that your mistress sent for you last night?”

  “That, yes.”

  “Do you remember the time?”

  “I do not, Monsieur. I was asleep, you see, when the attendant came and told me.”

  “Yes, yes. Was it usual for you to be sent for in this way?”

  “It was not unusual, Monsieur. The gracious lady often required attention at night. She did not sleep well.”

  “Eh bien, then, you received the summons and you got up. Did you put on a dressing gown?”

  “No, Monsieur, I put on a few clothes. I would not like to go in to her Excellency in my dressing gown.”

  “And yet it is a very nice dressing gown—scarlet, is it not?”

  She stared at him.

  “It is a dark-blue flannel dressing gown, Monsieur.”

  “Ah! continue. A little pleasantry on my part, that is all. So you went along to Madame la Princesse. And what did you do when you got there?”

  “I gave her massage, Monsieur, and then I read aloud. I do not read aloud very well, but her Excellency says that is all the better. So it sends her better to sleep. When she became sleepy, Monsieur, she told me to go, so I closed the book and I returned to my own compartment.”

  “Do you know what time that was?”

  “No, Monsieur.”

  “Well, how long had you been with Madame la Princesse?”

  “About half an hour, Monsieur.”

  “Good, continue.”

  “First, I fetched her Excellency an extra rug from my compartment. It was very cold in spite of the heating. I arranged the rug over her and she wished me good night. I poured her out some mineral water. Then I turned out the light and left her.”

  “And then?”

  “There is nothing more, Monsieur. I returned to my carriage and went to sleep.”

  “And you met no one in the corridor?”

  “No, Monsieur.”

  “You did not, for instance, see a lady in a scarlet kimono with dragons on it?”

  Her mild
eyes bulged at him.

  “No, indeed, Monsieur. There was nobody about except the attendant. Everyone was asleep.”

  “But you did see the conductor?”

  “Yes, Monsieur.”

  “What was he doing?”

  “He came out of one of the compartments, Monsieur.”

  “What?” M. Bouc leaned forward. “Which one?”

  Hildegarde Schmidt looked frightened again and Poirot cast a reproachful glance at his friend.

  “Naturally,” he said. “The conductor often has to answer bells at night. Do you remember which compartment it was?”

  “It was about the middle of the coach, Monsieur. Two or three doors from Madame la Princesse.”

  “Ah! tell us, if you please, exactly where this was and what happened.”

  “He nearly ran into me, Monsieur. It was when I was returning from my compartment to that of the Princess with the rug.”

  “And he came out of a compartment and almost collided with you? In which direction was he going?”

  “Towards me, Monsieur. He apologized and passed on down the corridor towards the dining car. A bell began ringing, but I do not think he answered it.”

  She paused and then said:

  “I do not understand. How is it—?”

  Poirot spoke reassuringly.

  “It is just a question of times,” he said. “All a matter of routine. This poor conductor, he seems to have had a busy night—first waking you and then answering bells.”

  “It was not the same conductor who woke me, Monsieur. It was another one.”

  “Ah, another one! Had you seen him before?”

  “No. Monsieur.”

  “Ah! Do you think you would recognize him if you saw him?”

  “I think so, Monsieur.”

  Poirot murmured something in M. Bouc’s ear. The latter got up and went to the door to give an order.

  Poirot was continuing his questions in an easy friendly manner.

  “Have you ever been to America, Frau Schmidt?”

  “Never, Monsieur. It must be a fine country.”

  “You have heard, perhaps, of who this man who was killed really was—that he was responsible for the death of a little child.”

  “Yes, I have heard, Monsieur. It was abominable—wicked. The good God should not allow such things. We are not so wicked as that in Germany.”

  Tears had come into the woman’s eyes. Her strong motherly soul was moved.

  “It was an abominable crime,” said Poirot gravely.

  He drew a scrap of cambric from his pocket and handed it to her.

  “Is this your handkerchief, Frau Schmidt?”

  There was a moment’s silence as the woman examined it. She looked up after a minute. The colour had mounted a little in her face.

  “Ah! no, indeed. It is not mine, Monsieur.”

  “It has the initial H, you see. That is why I thought it was yours.”

  “Ah! Monsieur, it is a lady’s handkerchief, that. A very expensive handkerchief. Embroidered by hand. It comes from Paris, I should say.”

  “It is not yours and you do not know whose it is?”

  “I? Oh, no, Monsieur.”

  Of the three listening, only Poirot caught the nuance of hesitation in the reply.

  M. Bouc whispered in his ear. Poirot nodded and said to the woman:

  “The three sleeping car attendants are coming in. Will you be so kind as to tell me which is the one you met last night as you were going with the rug to the Princess?”

  The three men entered. Pierre Michel, the big blond conductor of the Athens-Paris coach, and the stout burly conductor of the Bucharest one.

  Hildegarde Schmidt looked at them and immediately shook her head.

  “No, Monsieur,” she said. “None of these is the man I saw last night.”

  “But these are the only conductors on the train. You must be mistaken.”

  “I am quite sure, Monsieur. These are all tall, big men. The one I saw was small and dark. He had a little moustache. His voice when he said ‘Pardon’ was weak like a woman’s. Indeed, I remember him very well, Monsieur.”

  Thirteen

  SUMMARY OF THE PASSENGERS’ EVIDENCE

  “A small dark man with a womanish voice,” said M. Bouc.

  The three conductors and Hildegarde Schmidt had been dismissed.

  “But I understand nothing—but nothing of all this! The enemy that this Ratchett spoke of, he was then on the train after all? But where is he now? How can he have vanished into thin air? My head, it whirls. Say something, then, my friend, I implore you. Show me how the impossible can be possible!”

  “It is a good phrase that,” said Poirot. “The impossible cannot have happened, therefore the impossible must be possible in spite of appearances.”

  “Explain to me then, quickly, what actually happened on the train last night.”

  “I am not a magician, mon cher. I am, like you, a very puzzled man. This affair advances in a very strange manner.”

  “It does not advance at all. It stays where it was.”

  Poirot shook his head.

  “No, that is not true. We are more advanced. We know certain things. We have heard the evidence of the passengers.”

  “And what has that told us? Nothing at all.”

  “I would not say that, my friend.”

  “I exaggerate, perhaps. The American, Hardman, and the German maid—yes, they have added something to our knowledge. That is to say, they have made the whole business more unintelligible than it was.”

  “No, no, no,” said Poirot soothingly. M. Bouc turned upon him.

  “Speak, then, let us hear the wisdom of Hercule Poirot.”

  “Did I not tell you that I was, like you, a very puzzled man? But at least we can face our problem. We can arrange such facts as we have with order and method.”

  “Pray continue, Monsieur,” said Dr. Constantine.

  Poirot cleared his throat and straightened a piece of blotting-paper.

  “Let us review the case as it stands at this moment. First, there are certain indisputable facts. This man Ratchett, or Cassetti, was stabbed in twelve places and died last night. That is fact one.”

  “I grant it to you—I grant it, mon vieux,” said M. Bouc with a gesture of irony.

  Hercule Poirot was not at all put out. He continued calmly.

  “I will pass over for the moment certain rather peculiar appearances which Dr. Constantine and I have already discussed together. I will come to them presently. The next fact of importance, to my mind, is the time of the crime.”

  “That, again, is one of the few things we do know,” said M. Bouc. “The crime was committed at a quarter past one this morning. Everything goes to show that was so.”

  “Not everything. You exaggerate. There is, certainly, a fair amount of evidence to support that view.”

  “I am glad you admit that at least.”

  Poirot went on calmly, unperturbed by the interruption.

  “We have before us three possibilities:

  “One: That the crime was committed, as you say, at a quarter past one. This is supported by the evidence of the German woman, Hildegarde Schmidt. It agrees with the evidence of Dr. Constantine.

  “Possibility two: The crime was committed later and the evidence of the watch was deliberately faked.

  “Possibility three: The crime was committed earlier and the evidence faked for the same reason as above.

  “Now, if we accept possibility one as the most likely to have occurred and the one supported by most evidence, we must also accept certain facts arising from it. To begin with, if the crime was committed at a quarter past one, the murderer cannot have left the train, and the question arises: Where is he? And who is he?

  “To begin with, let us examine the evidence carefully. We first hear of the existence of this man—the small dark man with a womanish voice—from the man Hardman. He says that Ratchett told him of this person and employed him to watch out for t
he man. There is no evidence to support this—we have only Hardman’s word for it. Let us next examine the question: Is Hardman the person he pretends to be—an operative of a New York Detective Agency?

  “What to my mind is so interesting in this case is that we have none of the facilities afforded to the police. We cannot investigate the bona fides of any of these people. We have to rely solely on deduction. That, to me, makes the matter very much more interesting. There is no routine work. It is a matter of the intellect. I ask myself, ‘Can we accept Hardman’s account of himself?’ I make my decision and I answer, ‘Yes.’ I am of the opinion that we can accept Hardman’s account of himself.”

  “You rely on the intuition—what the Americans call the hunch?” said Dr. Constantine.

  “Not at all. I regard the probabilities. Hardman is travelling with a false passport—that will at once make him an object of suspicion. The first thing that the police will do when they do arrive upon the scene is to detain Hardman and cable as to whether his account of himself is true. In the case of many of the passengers, to establish their bona fides will be difficult; in most cases it will probably not be attempted, especially since there seems nothing in the way of suspicion attaching to them. But in Hardman’s case it is simple. Either he is the person he represents himself to be or he is not. Therefore I say that all will prove to be in order.”

  “You acquit him of suspicion?”

  “Not at all. You misunderstand me. For all I know, any American detective might have his own private reasons for wishing to murder Ratchett. No, what I am saying is that I think we can accept Hardman’s own account of himself. This story, then, that he tells of Ratchett’s seeking him out and employing him, is not unlikely and is most probably, though not of course certainly, true. If we are going to accept it as true, we must see if there is any confirmation of it. We find it in rather an unlikely place—in the evidence of Hildegarde Schmidt. Her description of the man she saw in Wagon Lit uniform tallies exactly. Is there any further confirmation of these two stories? There is. There is the button found in her compartment by Mrs. Hubbard. And there is also another corroborating statement which you may not have noticed.”

  “What is that?”

  “The fact that both Colonel Arbuthnot and Hector MacQueen mention that the conductor passed their carriage. They attached no importance to the fact, but Messieurs, Pierre Michel has declared that he did not leave his seat except on certain specified occasions, none of which would take him down to the far end of the coach past the compartment in which Arbuthnot and MacQueen were sitting.