Dead Man's Folly - Agatha Christie [51]
‘Of course. You have to talk to the Chief Constable about bloodhounds.’
Mrs Masterton gave a sudden deep bay of laughter. ‘Used to breed ’em at one time,’ she said. ‘People tell me I’m a bit like a bloodhound myself.’
Poirot was slightly taken aback and she was quick enough to see it.
‘I bet you’ve been thinking so, M. Poirot,’ she said.
Chapter 13
After Mrs Masterton had left, Poirot went out and strolled through the woods. His nerves were not quite what they should be. He felt an irresistible desire to look behind every bush and to consider every thicket of rhododendron as a possible hiding-place for a body. He came at last to the Folly and, going inside it, he sat down on the stone bench there, to rest his feet which were, as was his custom, enclosed in tight, pointed patent-leather shoes.
Through the trees he could catch faint glimmers of the river and of the wooded banks on the opposite side. He found himself agreeing with the young architect that this was no place to put an architectural fantasy of this kind. Gaps could be cut in the trees, of course, but even then there would be no proper view. Whereas, as Michael Weyman had said, on the grassy bank near the house a Folly could have been erected with a delightful vista right down the river to Helmmouth. Poirot’s thoughts flew off at a tangent. Helmmouth, the yacht Espérance, and Etienne de Sousa. The whole thing must tie up in some kind of pattern, but what the pattern was he could not visualize. Tempting strands of it showed here and there but that was all.
Something that glittered caught his eye and he bent to pick it up. It had come to rest in a small crack of the concrete base to the temple. He held it in the palm of his hand and looked at it with a faint stirring of recognition. It was a little gold aeroplane charm. As he frowned at it, a picture came into his mind. A bracelet. A gold bracelet hung over with dangling charms. He was sitting once more in the tent and the voice of Madame Zuleika, alias Sally Legge, was talking of dark women and journeys across the sea and good fortune in a letter. Yes, she had had on a bracelet from which depended a multiplicity of small gold objects. One of these modern fashions which repeated the fashions of Poirot’s early days. Probably that was why it had made an impression on him. Some time or other, presumably, Mrs Legge had sat here in the Folly, and one of the charms had fallen from her bracelet. Perhaps she had not even noticed it. It might have been yesterday afternoon.
Poirot considered that latter point. Then he heard footsteps outside and looked up sharply. A figure came round to the front of the Folly and stopped, startled, at the sight of Poirot. Poirot looked with a considering eye on the slim, fair young man wearing a shirt on which a variety of tortoise and turtle was depicted. The shirt was unmistakable. He had observed it closely yesterday when its wearer was throwing coconuts.
He noticed that the young man was almost unusually perturbed. He said quickly in a foreign accent:
‘I beg your pardon – I did not know –’
Poirot smiled gently at him but with a reproving air.
‘I am afraid,’ he said, ‘that you are trespassing.’
‘Yes, I am sorry.’
‘You come from the hostel?’
‘Yes. Yes, I do. I thought perhaps one could get through the woods this way and so to the quay.’
‘I am afraid,’ said Poirot gently, ‘that you will have to go back the way you came. There is no through road.’
The young man said again, showing all his teeth in a would-be agreeable smile:
‘I am sorry. I am very sorry.’
He bowed and turned away.
Poirot came out of the Folly and back on to the path, watching the boy retreat. When he got