Murder on the Orient Express - Agatha Christie [42]
‘Ah, but we have reason to believe that this crime is connected with the Armstrong case.’
Mr Hardman cocked an inquiring eye. Poirot did not respond. The American shook his head.
‘I can’t call to mind anybody answering that description in the Armstrong case,’ he said slowly. ‘But of course I wasn’t in it and didn’t know much about it.’
‘Well, continue your narrative, M. Hardman.’
‘There’s very little to tell. I got my sleep in the daytime and stayed awake on the watch at night. Nothing suspicious happened the first night. Last night was the same, as far as I was concerned. I had my door a little ajar and watched. No stranger passed.’
‘You are sure of that, M. Hardman?’
‘I’m plumb certain. Nobody got on that train from outside and nobody came along the train from the rear carriages. I’ll take my oath on that.’
‘Could you see the conductor from your position?’
‘Sure. He sits on that little seat almost flush with my door.’
‘Did he leave that seat at all after the train stopped at Vincovci?’
‘That was the last station? Why, yes, he answered a couple of bells—that would be just after the train came to a halt for good. Then, after that, he went past me into the rear coach—was there about a quarter of an hour. There was a bell ringing like mad and he came back running. I stepped out into the corridor to see what it was all about—felt a mite nervous, you understand—but it was only the American dame. She was raising hell about something or other. I grinned. Then he went on to another compartment and came back and got a bottle of mineral water for someone. After that he settled down in his seat till he went up to the far end to make somebody’s bed up. I don’t think he stirred after that until about five o’clock this morning.’
‘Did he doze off at all?’
‘That I can’t say. He may have done.’
Poirot nodded. Automatically his hands straightened the papers on the table. He picked up the official card once more.
‘Be so good as just to initial this,’ he said.
The other complied.
‘There is no one, I suppose, who can confirm your story of your identity, M. Hardman?’
‘On this train? Well, not exactly. Unless it might be young MacQueen. I know him well enough—seen him in his father’s office in New York—but that’s not to say he’ll remember me from a crowd of other operatives. No, Mr Poirot, you’ll have to wait and cable New York when the snow lets up. But it’s O.K. I’m not telling the tale. Well, so long, gentlemen. Pleased to have met you, Mr Poirot.’
Poirot proffered his cigarette case.
‘But perhaps you prefer a pipe?’
‘Not me.’
He helped himself, then strode briskly off.
The three men looked at each other.
‘You think he is genuine?’ asked Dr Constantine.
‘Yes, yes. I know the type. Besides, it is a story that would be very easily disproved.’
‘He has given us a piece of very interesting evidence,’ said M. Bouc.
‘Yes, indeed.’
‘A small man, dark, with a high-pitched voice,’ saidM. Bouc thoughtfully.
‘A description which applies to no one on the train,’ said Poirot.
Chapter 10
The Evidence of the Italian
‘And now,’ said Poirot with a twinkle in his eye, ‘we will delight the heart of M. Bouc and see the Italian.’
Antonio Foscarelli came into the dining-car with a swift, cat-like tread. His face beamed. It was a typical Italian face, sunny looking and swarthy.
He spoke French well and fluently, with only a slight accent.
‘Your name is Antonio Foscarelli?’
‘Yes, Monsieur.’
‘You are, I see, a naturalized American subject?’
The American grinned.
‘Yes, Monsieur. It is better for my business.’
‘You are an agent for Ford motor cars?’
‘Yes, you see—’
A voluble exposition followed. At the end of it, anything that the three men did not know about Foscarelli’s business methods, his journeys, his income, and his opinion of the