The Best Detectives Murder Mysteries for Christmas Holidays. Эдгар Аллан По

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Название The Best Detectives Murder Mysteries for Christmas Holidays
Автор произведения Эдгар Аллан По
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spoke so gravely, and with such assurance, that I could not fail to be convinced. But I essayed one final objection:

      “And the match and cigarette end found near the body? What of them.”

      A light of pure enjoyment lit up Poirot’s face.

      “Planted! Deliberately planted there for Giraud or one of his tribe to find! Ah, he is smart, Giraud, he can do his tricks! So can a good retriever dog. He comes in so pleased with himself. For hours he has crawled on his stomach. ‘See what I have found,’ he says. And then again to me: ‘What do you see here?’ Me, I answer, with profound and deep truth, ‘Nothing.’ And Giraud, the great Giraud, he laughs, he thinks to himself, ‘Oh, that he is imbecile, this old one!’ But we shall see. …

      But my mind had reverted to the main facts.

      “Then all this story of the masked men—?”

      “Is false.”

      “What really happened?”

      Poirot shrugged his shoulders.

      “One person could tell us—Madame Renauld. But she will not speak. Threats and entreaties would not move her. A remarkable woman that, Hastings. I recognized as soon as I saw her that I had to deal with a woman of unusual character. At first, as I told you, I was inclined to suspect her of being concerned in the crime. Afterwards I altered my opinion.”

      “What made you do that?”

      “Her spontaneous and genuine grief at the sight of her husband’s body. I could swear that the agony in that cry of hers was genuine.”

      “Yes,” I said thoughtfully, “one cannot mistake these things.”

      “I beg your pardon, my friend—one can always be mistaken. Regard a great actress, does not her acting of grief carry you away and impress you with its reality? No, however strong my own impression and belief, I needed other evidence before I allowed myself to be satisfied. The great criminal can be a great actor. I base my certainty in this case, not upon my own impression, but upon the undeniable fact that Mrs. Renauld actually fainted. I turned up her eyelids and felt her pulse. There was no deception—the swoon was genuine. Therefore I was satisfied that her anguish was real and not assumed. Besides, a small additional point not without interest, it was unnecessary for Mrs. Renauld to exhibit unrestrained grief. She had had one paroxysm on learning of her husband’s death, and there would be no need for her to simulate another such a violent one on beholding his body. No, Mrs. Renauld was not her husband’s murderess. But why has she lied? She lied about the wrist watch, she lied about the masked men—she lied about a third thing. Tell me, Hastings, what is your explanation of the open door?”

      “Well,” I said, rather embarrassed, “I suppose it was an oversight. They forgot to shut it.”

      Poirot shook his head, and sighed.

      “That is the explanation of Giraud. It does not satisfy me. There is a meaning behind that open door which for a moment I cannot fathom.”

      “I have an idea,” I cried suddenly.

      “A la bonne heure! Let us hear it.”

      “Listen. We are agreed that Mrs. Renauld’s story is a fabrication. Is it not possible, then, that Mr. Renauld left the house to keep an appointment—possibly with the murderer—leaving the front door open for his return. But he did not return, and the next morning he is found, stabbed in the back.”

      “An admirable theory, Hastings, but for two facts which you have characteristically overlooked. In the first place, who gagged and bound Madame Renauld? And why on earth should they return to the house to do so? In the second place, no man on earth would go out to keep an appointment wearing his underclothes and an overcoat. There are circumstances in which a man might wear pajamas and an overcoat—but the other, never!”

      “True,” I said, rather crest-fallen.

      “No,” continued Poirot, “we must look elsewhere for a solution of the open door mystery. One thing I am fairly sure of—they did not leave through the door. They left by the window.”

      “What?”

      “Precisely.”

      “But there were no footmarks in the flower bed underneath.”

      “No—and there ought to have been. Listen, Hastings. The gardener, Auguste, as you heard him say, planted both those beds the preceding afternoon. In the one there are plentiful impressions of his big hobnailed boots—in the other, none! You see? Some one had passed that way, some one who, to obliterate their footprints, smoothed over the surface of the bed with a rake.”

      “Where did they get a rake?”

      “Where they got the spade and the gardening gloves,” said Poirot impatiently. “There is no difficulty about that.”

      “What makes you think that they left that way, though? Surely it is more probable that they entered by the window, and left by the door.”

      “That is possible of course. Yet I have a strong idea that they left by the window.”

      “I think you are wrong.”

      “Perhaps, mon ami.”

      I mused, thinking over the new field of conjecture that Poirot’s deductions had opened up to me. I recalled my wonder at his cryptic allusions to the flower bed and the wrist watch. His remarks had seemed so meaningless at the moment and now, for the first time, I realized how remarkably, from a few slight incidents, he had unravelled much of the mystery that surrounded the case. I paid a belated homage to my friend. As though he read my thoughts, he nodded sagely.

      “Method, you comprehend! Method! Arrange your facts. Arrange your ideas. And if some little fact will not fit in—do not reject it but consider it closely. Though its significance escapes you, be sure that it is significant.”

      “In the meantime,” I said, considering, “although we know a great deal more than we did, we are no nearer to solving the mystery of who killed Mr. Renauld.”

      “No,” said Poirot cheerfully. “In fact we are a great deal further off.”

      The fact seemed to afford him such peculiar satisfaction that I gazed at him in wonder. He met my eye and smiled.

      “But yes, it is better so. Before, there was at all events a clear theory as to how and by whose hands he met his death. Now that is all gone. We are in darkness. A hundred conflicting points confuse and worry us. That is well. That is excellent. Out of confusion comes forth order. But if you find order to start with, if a crime seems simple and above-board, eh bien, méfiez vous! It is, how do you say it?—cooked! The great criminal is simple—but very few criminals are great. In trying to cover up their tracks, they invariably betray themselves. Ah, mon ami, I would that some day I could meet a really great criminal—one who commits his crime, and then—does nothing! Even I, Hercule Poirot, might fail to catch such a one.”

      But I had not followed his words. A light had burst upon me.

      “Poirot! Mrs. Renauld! I see it now. She must be shielding somebody.”

      From the quietness with which Poirot received my remark, I could see that the idea had already occurred to him.

      “Yes,” he said thoughtfully. “Shielding some one—or screening some one. One of the two.”

      I saw very little difference between the two words, but I developed my theme with a good deal of earnestness. Poirot maintained a strictly non-committal attitude, repeating:

      “It may be—yes, it may be. But as yet I do not know! There is something very deep underneath all this. You will see. Something very deep.”

      Then, as we entered our hotel, he enjoined silence on me with a gesture.

      13.