Five Little Pigs - Agatha Christie [8]
“Not, perhaps, a very good defence to have chosen?”
Fogg shrugged his thin shoulders. He said:
“What else was there? Couldn’t sit back and plead that there was no case for the jury—that the prosecution had got to prove their case against the accused. There was a great deal too much proof. She’d handled the poison—admitted pinching it, in fact. There was means, motive, opportunity—everything.”
“One might have attempted to show that these things were artificially arranged?”
Fog said bluntly:
“She admitted most of them. And, in any case, it’s too farfetched. You’re implying, I presume, that somebody else murdered him and fixed it up to look as though she had done it.”
“You think that quite untenable?”
Fogg said slowly:
“I’m afraid I do. You’re suggesting the mysterious X. Where do we look for him?”
Poirot said:
“Obviously in a close circle. There were five people, were there not, who could have been concerned?”
“Five? Let me see. There was the old duffer who messed about with his herb brewing. A dangerous hobby—but an amiable creature. Vague sort of person. Don’t see him as X. There was the girl—she might have polished off Caroline, but certainly not Amyas. Then there was the stockbroker—Crale’s best friend. That’s popular in detective stories, but I don’t believe in it in real life. There’s no one else—oh yes, the kid sister, but one doesn’t seriously consider her. That’s four.”
Hercule Poirot said:
“You forget the governess.”
“Yes, that’s true. Wretched people, governesses, one never does remember them. I do recall her dimly though. Middle-aged, plain, competent. I suppose a psychologist would say that she had a guilty passion for Crale and therefore killed him. The repressed spinster! It’s no good—I just don’t believe it. As far as my dim remembrance goes she wasn’t the neurotic type.”
“It is a long time ago.”
“Fifteen or sixteen years, I suppose. Yes, quite that. You can’t expect my memories of the case to be very acute.”
Hercule Poirot said:
“But on the contrary, you remember it amazingly well. That astounds me. You can see it, can you not? When you talk the picture is there before your eyes.”
Fogg said slowly:
“Yes, you’re right—I do see it—quite plainly.”
Poirot said:
“It would interest me, my friend, very much, if you would tell me why?”
“Why?” Fogg considered the question. His thin intellectual face was alert—interested. “Yes, now why?”
Poirot asked:
“What do you see so plainly? The witnesses? The counsel? The judge? The accused standing in the dock?”
Fogg said quietly:
“That’s the reason, of course! You’ve put your finger on it. I shall always see her…Funny thing, romance. She had the quality of it. I don’t know if she was really beautiful…She wasn’t very young—tired looking—circles under her eyes. But it all centered round her. The interest—the drama. And yet, half the time, she wasn’t there. She’d gone away somewhere, quite far away—just left her body there, quiescent, attentive, with the little polite smile on her lips. She was all half tones, you know, lights and shades. And yet, with it all, she was more alive than the other—that girl with the perfect body, and the beautiful face, and the crude young strength. I admired Elsa Greer because she had guts, because she could fight, because she stood up to her