Ordeal by Innocence - Agatha Christie [28]
“Well,” said the doctor, after a moment’s pause. “There you are. Mrs. Argyle was what you might call a wonderful mother. But she overdid the beneficence. No doubt of that. Or wanted to. Or definitely tried to do so.”
“They weren’t her own children,” Calgary pointed out.
“No,” said MacMaster. “That’s just where the trouble came in, I imagine. You’ve only got to look at any normal mother cat. She has her kittens, she’s passionately protective of them, she’ll scratch anyone who goes near them. And then, in a week or so, she starts resuming her own life. She goes out, hunts a bit, takes a rest from her young. She’ll still protect them if anyone attacks them, but she is no longer obsessed by them, all the time. She’ll play with them a bit; then when they’re a bit too rough, she’ll turn on them and give them a spank and tell them she wants to be let alone for a bit. She’s reverting, you see, to nature. And as they grow up she cares less and less about them, and her thoughts go more and more to the attractive Toms in the neighbourhood. That’s what you might call the normal pattern of female life. I’ve seen many girls and women, with strong maternal instincts, keen on getting married but mainly, though they mayn’t quite know it themselves—because of their urge to motherhood. And the babies come; they’re happy and satisfied. Life goes back into proportion for them. They can take an interest in their husbands and in the local affairs and in the gossip that’s going round, and of course in their children. But it’s all in proportion. The maternal instinct, in a purely physical sense, is satisfied, you see.
“Well, with Mrs. Argyle the maternal instinct was very strong, but the physical satisfaction of bearing a child or children, never came. And so her maternal obsession never really slackened. She wanted children, lots of children. She couldn’t have enough of them. Her whole mind, night and day, was on those children. Her husband didn’t count any more. He was just a pleasant abstraction in the background. No, everything was the children. Their feeding, their clothing, their playing, everything to do with them. Far too much was done for them. The thing she didn’t give them and that they needed, was a little plain, honest-to-goodness neglect. They weren’t just turned out into the garden to play like ordinary children in the country. No, they had to have every kind of gadget, artificial climbing things and stepping stones, a house built in the trees, sand brought and a little beach made on the river. Their food wasn’t plain, ordinary food. Why, those kids even had their vegetables sieved, up to nearly five years old, and their milk sterilized and the water tested and their calories weighed and their vitamins computed! Mind you, I’m not being unprofessional in talking to you like this. Mrs. Argyle was never my patient. If she needed a doctor she went to one in Harley Street. Not that she often went. She was a very robust and healthy woman.
“But I was the local doctor who was called in to see the children, though she was inclined to think I was a bit casual over them. I told her to let ’em eat a few blackberries from the hedges. I told her it wouldn’t hurt them to get their feet wet and have an occasional cold in the head, and that there’s nothing much wrong with a child who’s got a temperature of 99. No need to fuss till it’s over 101. Those children were pampered and spoon-fed and fussed over and loved and in many ways it didn’t do them any good.”
“You mean,” said Calgary, “it didn’t do Jacko any good?”
“Well, I wasn’t really only thinking of Jacko. Jacko to my mind was a liability from the start. The modern label for him is ‘a crazy mixed-up kid.’ It’s just as good as any other label. The