Cards on the Table - Agatha Christie [41]
‘So you think that he frightened Miss Meredith that way,’ said Poirot slowly.
‘Miss Meredith?’ Despard stared. ‘I wasn’t thinking of her. She isn’t the kind to be afraid of a man like Shaitana.’
‘Pardon. You meant Mrs Lorrimer.’
‘No, no, no. You misunderstand me. I was speaking generally. It wouldn’t be easy to frighten Mrs Lorrimer. And she’s not the kind of woman who you can imagine having a guilty secret. No, I was not thinking of anyone in particular.’
‘It was the general method to which you referred?’
‘Exactly.’
‘There is no doubt,’ said Poirot slowly, ‘that what you call a Dago often has a very clever understanding of women. He knows how to approach them. He worms secrets out of them—’
He paused.
Despard broke in impatiently:
‘It’s absurd. The man was a mountebank—nothing really dangerous about him. And yet women were afraid of him. Ridiculously so.’
He started up suddenly.
‘Hallo, I’ve overshot the mark. Got too interested in what we were discussing. Goodbye, M. Poirot. Look down and you’ll see my faithful shadow leave the bus when I do.’
He hurried to the back and down the steps. The conductor’s bell jangled. But a double pull sounded before it had time to stop.
Looking down to the street below, Poirot noticed Despard striding back along the pavement. He did not trouble to pick out the following figure. Something else was interesting him.
‘No one in particular,’ he murmured to himself. ‘Now, I wonder.’
Chapter 16
The Evidence of Elsie Batt
Sergeant O’Connor was unkindly nicknamed by his colleagues at the Yard: ‘The Maidservant’s Prayer.’
There was no doubt that he was an extremely handsome man. Tall, erect, broad-shouldered, it was less the regularity of his features than the roguish and daredevil spark in his eye which made him so irresistible to the fair sex. It was indubitable that Sergeant O’Connor got results, and got them quickly.
So rapid was he, that only four days after the murder of Mr Shaitana, Sergeant O’Connor was sitting in the three-and-sixpenny seats at the Willy Nilly Revue side by side with Miss Elsie Batt, late parlourmaid to Mrs Craddock of 117 North Audley Street.
Having laid his line of approach carefully, Sergeant O’Connor was just launching the great offensive.
‘—Reminds me,’ he was saying, ‘of the way one of my old governors used to carry on. Name of Craddock. He was an old cuss, if you like.’
‘Craddock,’ said Elsie. ‘I was with some Craddocks once.’
‘Well, that’s funny. Wonder whether they were the same?’
‘Lived in North Audley Street, they did,’ said Elsie.
‘My lot were going to London when I left them,’ said O’Connor promptly. ‘Yes, I believe it was North Audley Street. Mrs Craddock was rather a one for the gents.’
Elsie tossed her head.
‘I’d no patience with her. Always finding fault and grumbling. Nothing you did right.’
‘Her husband got some of it, too, didn’t he?’
‘She was always complaining he neglected her—that he didn’t understand her. And she was always saying how bad her health was and gasping and groaning. Not ill at all, if you ask me.’
O’Connor slapped his knee.
‘Got it. Wasn’t there something about her and some doctor? A bit too thick or something?’
‘You mean Dr Roberts? He was a nice gentleman, he was.’
‘You girls, you’re all alike,’ said Sergeant O’Connor. ‘The moment a man’s a bad lot, all the girls stick up for him. I know his kind.’
‘No, you don’t, and you’re all wrong about him. There wasn’t anything of that kind about him. Wasn’t his fault, was it, if Mrs Craddock was always sending for him? What’s a doctor to do? If you ask me, he didn’t think nothing of her at all, except as a patient. It was all her doing. Wouldn’t leave him alone, she wouldn’t.’
‘That’s all very well, Elsie. Don’t mind me calling you Elsie, do you? Feel as