Cat Among the Pigeons

II

“The idea is,” said the chief constable, “that we try to pool our ideas and information. We are very glad to have you with us, M. Poirot,” he added. “Inspector Kelsey remembers you well.”

“It's a great many years ago,” said Inspector Kelsey. “Chief Inspector Warrender was in charge of the case. I was a fairly raw sergeant knowing my place.”

“The gentleman called, for convenience's sake by us, Mr. Adam Goodman, is not known to you, M. Poirot, but I believe you do know his - his - er - chief. Special Branch,” he added.

“Colonel Pikeaway?” said Hercule Poirot thoughtfully. “Ah, yes, it is some time since I have seen him. Is he still as sleepy as ever?” he asked Adam.

Adam laughed. “I see you know him all right, M. Poirot. I've never seen him wide awake. When I do, I'll know that for once he isn't paying attention to what goes on.”

“You have something there, my friend. It is well observed.”

“Now,” said the chief constable, “let's get down to things. I shan't push myself forward or urge my own opinions. I'm here to listen to what the men who are actually working on the case know and think. There are a great many sides to all this, and one thing perhaps I ought to mention first of all. I'm saying this as a result of representations that have been made to me from - er - various quarters high up.” He looked at Poirot. “Let's say,” he said, “that a little girl - a schoolgirl - came to you with a pretty tale of something she'd found in the hollowed-out handle of a tennis racquet. Very exciting for her. A collection, shall we say, of coloured stones, paste, good imitation - something of that kind - or even semiprecious stones which often look as attractive as the other kind. Anyway let's say something that a child would be excited to find. She might even have exaggerated ideas of its value. That's quite possible, don't you think?” He looked very hard at Hercule Poirot.

“It seems to me eminently possible,” said Hercule Poirot.

“Good,” said the chief constable. "Since the person who brought these - er - coloured stones into the country did so quite unknowingly and innocently, we don't want any question of illicit smuggling to arise.

“Then there is the question of our foreign policy,” he went on. “Things, I am led to understand, are rather - delicate just at present. When it comes to large interests in oil, mineral deposits, all that sort of thing, we have to deal with whatever government's in power. We don't want any awkward questions to arise. You can't keep murder out of the press, and murder hasn't been kept out of the press. But there's been no mention of anything like jewels in connection with it. For the present, at any rate, there needn't be.”

“I agree,” said Poirot. “One must always consider international complications.”

“Exactly,” said the chief constable. “I think I'm right in saying that the late ruler of Ramat was regarded as a friend of this country, and that the powers that be would like his wishes in respect of any property of his that might be in this country to be carried out. What that amounts to, I gather, nobody knows at present. If the new government of Ramat is claiming certain property which they allege belongs to them, it will be much better if we know nothing about such property being in this country. A plain refusal would be tactless.”

“One does not give plain refusals in diplomacy,” said Hercule Poirot. “One says instead that such a matter shall receive the utmost attention but that at the moment nothing definite is known about any little - nest egg, say - that the late ruler of Ramat may have possessed. It may still be in Ramat, it may be in the keeping of a faithful friend of the late Prince Ali Yusuf, it may have been taken out of the country by half a dozen people, it may be hidden somewhere in the city of Ramat itself.” He shrugged his shoulders. “One simply does not know.”

The chief constable heaved a sigh. “Thank you,” he said. “That's just what I mean.” He went on, “M. Poirot, you have friends in very high quarters in this country. They put much trust in you. Unofficially they would like to leave a certain article in your hands if you do not object.”

“I do not object,” said Poirot. “Let us leave it at that. We have more serious things to consider, have we not?” He looked round at them. “Or perhaps you do not think so? But after all, what is three quarters of a million or some such sum in comparison with human life?”

“You're right, M. Poirot,” said the chief constable.

“You're right every time,” said Inspector Kelsey. “What we want is a murderer. We shall be glad to have your opinion, M. Poirot,” he added, “because it's largely a question of guess and guess again and your guess is as good as the next man's and sometimes better. The whole thing's like a snarl of tangled wool.”

“That is excellently put,” said Poirot, “one has to take up that snarl of wool and pull out the one colour that we seek, the colour of a murderer. Is that right?”

“That's right.”

“Then tell me, if it is not too tedious for you to indulge in repetition, all that is known so far.”

He settled down to listen.

He listened to Inspector Kelsey, and he listened to Adam Goodman. He listened to the brief summing up of the chief constable. Then he leaned back, closed his eyes, and slowly nodded his head.

“Two murders,” he said, “committed in the same place and roughly under the same conditions. One kidnapping. The kidnapping of a girl who might be the central figure of the plot. Let us ascertain first why she was kidnapped.”

“I can tell you what she said herself,” said Kelsey.

He did so, and Poirot listened.

“It does not make sense,” he complained.

“That's what I thought at the time. As a matter of fact I thought she was just making herself important...”

“But the fact remains that she was kidnapped. Why?”

“There have been ransom demands,” said Kelsey slowly, “but...” He paused.

“But they have been, you think, phoney? They have been sent merely to bolster up the kidnapping theory?”

“That's right. The appointments made weren't kept.”

“Shaista, then, was kidnapped for some other reason. What reason?”

“So that she could be made to tell where the - er - valuables were hidden?” suggested Adam doubtfully.

Poirot shook his head.

“She did not know where they were hidden,” he pointed out. “That at least, is clear. No, there must be something...”

His voice trailed off. He was silent, frowning, for a moment or two. Then he sat up, and asked a question.

“Her knees,” he said. “Did you ever notice her knees?” Adam stared at him in astonishment.

“No,” he said. “Why should I?”

“There are many reasons why a man notices a girl's knees,” said Poirot severely. “Unfortunately, you did not.”

“Was there something odd about her knees? A scar? Something of that kind? I wouldn't know. They all wear stockings most of the time, and their skirts are just below knee length.”

“In the swimming pool, perhaps?” suggested Poirot hopefully.

“Never saw her go in,” said Adam. “Too chilly for her, I expect. She was used to a warm climate. What are you getting at? A scar? Something of that kind?”

“No, no, that is not it at all. Ah well, a pity.”

He turned to the chief constable.

“With your permission, I will communicate with my old friend, the Préfet, at Geneva. I think he may be able to help us.”

“About something that happened when she was at school there?”

“It is possible, yes. You do permit? Good. It is just a little idea of mine.” He paused and went on: “By the way, there has been nothing in the papers about the kidnapping?”

“The Emir Ibrahim was most insistent.”

“But I did notice a little remark in a gossip column. About a certain foreign young lady who had departed from school very suddenly. A budding romance, the columnist suggested. To be nipped in the bud if possible!”

“That was my idea,” said Adam. “It seemed a good line to take.”

“Admirable. So now we pass from kidnapping to something more serious. Murder. Two murders at Meadowbank.”

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