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The Murder at the Vicarage - Christie Agatha - Страница 45
"Because he was writing at the desk," I said.
"And that's what's all wrong. That was at twenty past six. We agreed that he wouldn't sit down to say he couldn't wait any longer until after half-past six - so, why was he sitting at the writing-table then?"
"I never thought of that," I said slowly.
"Let us, dear Mr. Clement, just go over it again. Mrs. Protheroe comes to the window and she thinks the room is empty - she must have thought so, because otherwise she would never have gone down to the studio to meet Mr. Redding. It wouldn't have been safe. The room must have been absolutely silent if she thought it was empty. And that leaves us three alternatives, doesn't it?"
"You mean -"
"Well, the first alternative would be that Colonel Protheroe was dead already - but I don't think that's the most likely one. To begin with he'd only been there about five minutes and she or I would have heard the shot, and secondly, the same difficulty remains about his being at the writing-table. The second alternative is, of course, that he was sitting at the writing-table writing a note, but in that case it must have been a different note altogether. It can't have been to say he couldn't wait. And the third -"
"Yes?" I said.
"Well, the third is, of course, that Mrs. Protheroe was right, and that the room was actually empty."
"You mean that, after he had been shown in, he went out again and came back later?"
"Yes."
"But why should he have done that?"
Miss Marple spread out her hands in a little gesture of hewilderment.
"That would mean looking at the case from an entirely different angle," I said.
"One so often has to do that - about everything. Don't you think so?"
I did not reply. I was going over carefully in my mind the three alternatives that Miss Marple had suggested.
With a slight sigh the old lady rose to her feet.
"I must be getting back. I am very glad to have had this little chat - though we haven't got very far, have we?"
"To tell you the truth," I said, as I fetched her shawl, "the whole thing seems to me a bewildering maze."
"Oh! I wouldn't say that. I think, on the whole, one theory fits nearly everything. That is, if you admit one coincidence and I think one coincidence is allowable. More than one, of course, is unlikely."
"Do you really think that? About the theory, I mean?" I asked, looking at her.
"I admit that there is one flaw in my theory - one fact that I can't get over. Oh! if only that note had been something quite different -"
She sighed and shook her head. She moved towards the window and absentmindedly reached up her hand and felt the rather depressed-looking plant that stood in a stand.
"You know, dear Mr. Clement, this should be watered oftener. Poor thing, it needs it badly. Your maid should water it every day. I suppose it is she who attends to it?"
"As much," I said, "as she attends to anything."
"A little raw at present," suggested Miss Marple.
"Yes," I said. "And Griselda steadily refuses to attempt to cook her. Her idea is that only a thoroughly undesirable maid will remain with us. However, Mary herself gave us notice the other day."
"Indeed. I always imagined she was very fond of you both."
"I haven't noticed it," I said. "But, as a matter of fact, it was Lettice Protheroe who upset her. Mary came back from the inquest in rather a temperamental state and found Lettice here and - well, they had words."
"Oh!" said Miss Marple. She was just about to step through the window when she stopped suddenly, and a bewildering series of changes passed over her face.
"Oh! dear," she muttered to herself. "I have been stupid. So that was it. Perfectly possible all the time."
"I beg your pardon?"
She turned a worried face upon me.
"Nothing. An idea that has just occurred to me. I must go home and think things out thoroughly. Do you know, I believe I have been extremely stupid - almost incredibly so."
"I find that hard to believe," I said gallantly.
I escorted her through the window and across the lawn.
"Can you tell me what it is that has occurred to you so suddenly?" I asked.
" I would rather not just at present. You see, there is still a possibility that I may be mistaken. But I do not think so. Here we are at my garden gate. Thank you so much. Please do not come any farther."
"Is the note still a stumbling block?" I asked, as she passed through the gate and latched it behind her.
She looked at me abstractedly.
"The note? Oh! of course that wasn't the real note. I never thought it was. Good night, Mr. Clement."
She went rapidly up the path to the house, leaving me staring after her.
I didn't know what to think.
Chapter XXVII
Griselda and Dennis had not yet returned. I realised that the most natural thing would have been for me to go up to the house with Miss Marple and fetch them home. Both she and I had been so entirely taken up with our preoccupation over the mystery that we had forgotten anybody existed in the world except ourselves.
I was just standing in the hall, wondering whether I would not even now go over and join them, when the door bell rang.
I crossed over to it. I saw there was a letter in the box, and presuming that this was the cause of the ring, I took it out.
As I did so, however, the bell rang again, and I shoved the letter hastily into my pocket and opened the front door.
It was Colonel Melchett.
"Hallo, Clement. I'm on my way home from town in the car. Thought I'd just look in and see if you could give me a drink."
"Delighted," I said. "Come into the study."
He pulled off the leather coat that he was wearing and followed me into the study. I fetched the whisky and soda and two glasses. Melchett was standing in front of the fireplace, legs wide apart, stroking his closely-cropped moustache.
"I've got one bit of news for you, Clement. Most astounding thing you've ever heard. But let that go for the minute. How are things going down here? Any more old ladies hot on the scent?"
"They're not doing so badly," I said. "One of them, at all events, thinks she's got there."
"Our friend, Miss Marple, eh?"
"Our friend, Miss Marple."
"Women like that always think they know everything," said Colonel Melchett.
He sipped his whisky and soda appreciatively.
"It's probably unnecessary interference on my part, asking," I said. "But I suppose somebody has questioned the fish boy. I mean, if the murderer left by the front door, there's a chance the boy may have seen him."
"Slack questioned him right enough," said Melchett. "But the boy says he didn't meet anybody. Hardly likely he would. The murderer wouldn't be exactly courting observation. Lots of cover by your front gate. He would have taken a look to see if the road was clear. The boy had to call at the Vicarage, at Haydock's, and at Mrs. Price Ridley's. Easy enough to dodge him."
"Yes," I said, "I suppose it would be."
"On the other hand," went on Melchett, "if by any chance that rascal Archer did the job, and young Fred Jackson saw him about the place, I doubt very much whether he'd let on. Archer is a cousin of his."
"Do you seriously suspect Archer?"
"Well, you know, old Protheroe had his knife into Archer pretty badly. Lots of bad blood between them. Leniency wasn't Protheroe's strong point."
"No," I said. "He was a very ruthless man."
"What I say is," said Melchett, "Live and let live. Of course the law's the law, but it never hurts to give a man the benefit of the doubt. That's what Protheroe never did."
"He prided himself on it," I said.
There was a pause, and then I asked:
"What is this 'astounding bit of news ' you promised me?"
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