The Hound of Death - Agatha Christie [65]
The day passed with an uneventfulness that reminded me of the calm before a storm. And I had a strange feeling that the problem was near solution. I was groping about in the dark, but soon I should see. The facts were all there, ready, waiting for the little flash of illumination that should weld them together and show out their significance.
And come it did! In the strangest way!
It was when we were all sitting together in the green drawing-room as usual after dinner. We had been very silent. So noiseless indeed was the room that a little mouse ran across the floor–and in an instant the thing happened.
With one long spring Arthur Carmichael leapt from his chair. His quivering body was swift as an arrow on the mouse’s track. It had disappeared behind the wainscoting, and there he crouched–watchful–his body still trembling with eagerness.
It was horrible! I have never known such a paralysing moment. I was no longer puzzled as to that something that Arthur Carmichael reminded me of with his stealthy feet and watching eyes. And in a flash an explanation, wild, incredible, unbelievable, swept into my mind. I rejected it as impossible–unthinkable! But I could not dismiss it from my thoughts.
I hardly remember what happened next. The whole thing seemed blurred and unreal. I know that somehow we got upstairs and said our good nights briefly, almost with a dread of meeting each other’s eyes, lest we should see there some confirmation of our own fears.
Settle established himself outside Lady Carmichael’s door to take the first watch, arranging to call me at 3 a.m. I had no special fears for Lady Carmichael; I was too taken up with my fantastic impossible theory. I told myself it was impossible–but my mind returned to it, fascinated.
And then suddenly the stillness of the night was disturbed. Settle’s voice rose in a shout, calling me. I rushed out to the corridor.
He was hammering and pounding with all his might on Lady Carmichael’s door.
‘Devil take the woman!’ he cried. ‘She’s locked it!’
‘But–’
‘It’s in there, man! In with her! Can’t you hear it?’
From behind the locked door a long-drawn cat yowl sounded fiercely. And then following it a horrible scream–and another…I recognized Lady Carmichael’s voice.
‘The door!’ I yelled. ‘We must break it in. In another minute we shall be too late.’
We set our shoulders against it, and heaved with all our might. It gave with a crash–and we almost fell into the room.
Lady Carmichael lay on the bed bathed in blood. I have seldom seen a more horrible sight. Her heart was still beating, but her injuries were terrible, for the skin of the throat was all ripped and torn…Shuddering, I whispered: ‘The Claws…’ A thrill of superstitious horror ranover me.
I dressed and bandaged the wounds carefully and suggested to Settle that the exact nature of the injuries had better be kept secret, especially from Miss Patterson. I wrote out a telegram for a hospital nurse, to be despatched as soon as the telegraph office was open.
The dawn was now stealing in at the window. I looked out on the lawn below.
‘Get dressed and come out,’ I said abruptly to Settle. ‘Lady Carmichael will be all right now.’
He was soon ready, and we went out into the garden together.
‘What are you going to do?’
‘Dig up the cat’s body,’ I said briefly. ‘I must be sure–’
I found a spade in a toolshed and we set to work beneath the large copper beech tree. At last our digging was rewarded. It was not a pleasant job. The animal had been dead a week. But I saw what I wanted to see.
‘That’s the cat,’ I said. ‘The identical cat I saw the first day I came here.’
Settle sniffed. An odour of bitter almonds was still perceptible.
‘Prussic acid,’ he said.
I nodded.
‘What are you thinking?’ he asked curiously.
‘What you think too!’
My surmise was no new one to him–it had passed through his brain also, I could see.