The Seven Dials Mystery - Agatha Christie [66]
They went out together through the window. Jimmy stared down at the lawn, frowning.
‘What’s the matter?’ asked Bundle.
Jimmy explained the circumstances of the pistol throwing.
‘I’m wondering,’ he ended, ‘what was in old Battle’s mind when he got Coote to throw the pistol. Something, I’ll swear. Anyhow, it landed up about ten yards farther than it should have done. You know, Bundle, Battle’s a deep one.’
‘He’s an extraordinary man,’ said Bundle. ‘I want to tell you about last night.’
She retailed her conversation with the Superintendent. Jimmy listened attentively.
‘So the Countess is No 1,’ he said thoughtfully. ‘It all hangs together very well. No 2–Bauer–comes over from Chimneys. He climbs up into O’Rourke’s room, knowing that O’Rourke has had a sleeping draught administered to him–by the Countess somehow or other. The arrangement is that he is to throw the papers to the Countess, who will be waiting below. Then she’ll nip back through the library and up to her room. If Bauer’s caught leaving the grounds, they’ll find nothing on him. Yes, it was a good plan–but it went wrong. No sooner is the Countess in the library than she hears me coming and has to jump behind the screen. Jolly awkward for her, because she can’t warn her accomplice. No 2 pinches the papers, looks out of the window, sees, as he thinks, the Countess waiting, pitches the papers down to her and proceeds to climb down the ivy, where he finds a nasty surprise in the shape of me waiting for him. Pretty nervy work for the Countess waiting behind her screen. All things considered, she told a pretty good story. Yes, it all hangs together very well.’
‘Too well,’ said Bundle decidedly.
‘Eh?’ said Jimmy surprised.
‘What about No 7–No 7, who never appears, but lives in the background. The Countess and Bauer? No, it’s not so simple as that. Bauer was here last night, yes. But he was only here in case things went wrong–as they have done. His part is the part of scapegoat; to draw all attention from No 7–the boss.’
‘I say, Bundle,’ said Jimmy anxiously, ‘you haven’t been reading too much sensational literature, have you?’
Bundle threw him a glance of dignified reproach.
‘Well,’ said Jimmy, ‘I’m not yet like the Red Queen. I can’t believe six impossible things before breakfast.’
‘It’s after breakfast,’ said Bundle.
‘Or even after breakfast. We’ve got a perfectly good hypothesis which fits the facts–and you won’t have it at any price, simply because, like the old riddle, you want to make things more difficult.’
‘I’m sorry,’ said Bundle, ‘but I cling passionately to a mysterious No 7 being a member of the house-party.’
‘What does Bill think?’
‘Bill,’ said Bundle coldly, ‘is impossible.’
‘Oh!’ said Jimmy. ‘I suppose you’ve told him about the Countess? He ought to be warned. Heaven knows what he’ll go blabbing about otherwise.’
‘He won’t hear a word against her,’ said Bundle. ‘He’s–oh, simply idiotic. I wish you’d drive it home to him about that mole.’
‘You forget I wasn’t in the cupboard,’ said Jimmy. ‘And anyway I’d rather not argue with Bill about his lady friend’s mole. But surely he can’t be such an ass as not to see that everything fits in?’
‘He’s every kind of ass,’ said Bundle bitterly. ‘You made the greatest mistake, Jimmy, in ever telling him at all.’
‘I’m sorry,’ said Jimmy. ‘I didn’t see it at the time–but I do now. I was a fool, but dash it all, old Bill–’
‘You know what foreign adventuresses are,’ said Bundle. ‘How they get hold of one.’
‘As a matter of fact, I don’t,’ said Jimmy. ‘One has never tried to get hold of me.’ And he sighed.
For a moment or two there was silence. Jimmy was turning things over in his mind. The more he thought about them the more unsatisfactory they seemed.
‘You say that Battle wants the Countess left alone,’ he said at last.
‘Yes.’
‘The idea being that through her he will get at someone else?’
Bundle nodded.
Jimmy frowned deeply as he tried to see where this led. Clearly Battle had some very definite idea in his mind.
‘Sir Stanley Digby went up to town early this morning, didn’t he,’ he said.