Read The Monogram Murders Online
Authors: Sophie Hannah
so she canceled her wedding and went with him.”
“Could it not have been Frances Ive to whom she
was so attached?” Poirot asked. “Or to both of the
Ives? It might have been loyalty and not romantic love
that she felt.”
“I don’t believe many women would put loyalty to
their employers above their own marriage prospects,
do you?” said Nancy.
“Assuredly not, madame. But what you tell me
does not quite fit. If Jennie were inclined toward
jealousy, why was she moved to tell this terrible lie
only when Patrick Ive fell in love with you? Why did
his marriage to Frances Ive, long before then, not
provoke her envy?”
“How do you know that it did not? Patrick lived in
Cambridge when he and Frances met and married.
Jennie Hobbs was his servant then too. Perhaps she
whispered something malicious about him in a
friend’s ear and that friend, not being Harriet Sippel,
chose to spread the malice no further.”
Poirot nodded. “You are right. It is a possibility.”
“Most people prefer not to spread ill will, and
thank goodness for that,” said Nancy. “Perhaps in
Cambridge there is nobody as malevolent as the
person Harriet Sippel turned into, and nobody as
eager as Ida Gransbury to lead a pious moral
crusade.”
“I notice you do not mention Richard Negus.”
Nancy looked troubled. “Richard was a good man.
He came to regret his contribution to the whole awful
business. Oh, he regretted it deeply once he
understood that Jennie had told a despicable lie, and
once he saw Ida for the pitiless creature she was. He
wrote to me a few years ago, from Devon, to say that
the matter had been preying on his mind. Patrick and I
were quite wrong to conduct ourselves as we did, he
said, and he would never change his mind about that
—marriage vows were marriage vows—but he had
come to believe that punishment was not always the
right path to follow, even when one knows that an
offense has taken place.”
“That is what he wrote to you?” Poirot raised his
eyebrows.
“Yes. I expect you disagree.”
“These affairs are complicated, madame.”
“What if, in punishing somebody for the sin of
falling in love with the wrong person, one only brings
greater sin into the world? And more evil: two deaths
—one, of a person who has committed
no
sin.”
“
Oui.
This is precisely the sort of dilemma that
creates the complication.”
“In his letter to me, Richard wrote that, Christian
as he was, he could not bring himself to believe that
God would wish him to persecute a sweet-natured
man like Patrick.”
“Punishment and persecution are two separate
things,” said Poirot. “There is also the question: has a
rule or law been broken? Falling in love . . .
enfin,
we cannot help how we feel, but we can choose
whether or not to act upon those feelings. If a crime
has been committed, one must ensure that the criminal
is dealt with by the law in an appropriate fashion, but
always without personal venom and spite—always
without the lust for vengeance, which contaminates
everything and is indeed evil.”
“Lust for vengeance,” Nancy Ducane repeated with
a shudder. “That was it exactly. Harriet Sippel was
filled with it. It was sickening.”
“And yet, in telling the story, you have not once
spoken angrily of Harriet Sippel,” I said. “You
describe her behavior as sickening, as if it saddens
you. You do not seem angry with her as you are with
Jennie Hobbs.”
“I suppose that’s true.” Nancy sighed. “I used to be
devoted to Harriet. When my husband William and I
moved to Great Holling, Harriet and George Sippel
were our dearest friends. Then George died, and
Harriet became a monster. But once you have been
very fond of a person, it’s difficult to condemn them,
don’t you find?”
“It is either impossible, or irresistible,” said
Poirot.
“Impossible, I should say. You imagine that their
worst behavior is a symptom of an ailment and not
their true self. I couldn’t forgive Harriet’s treatment of
Patrick. I couldn’t persuade myself to try. At the same
time, I felt that it must have been as horrible for her as
it was for anybody else—to have turned into
that
.”
“You saw her as a victim?”
“Of the tragedy of losing a beloved husband, yes—
and so young! One can be both victim and villain, I
think.”
“It was something that you and Harriet had in
common,” said Poirot. “The loss of a husband when
you were far too young.”
“This will sound heartless, but there is really no
comparison,” said Nancy. “George Sippel was
everything to Harriet, her whole world. I married
William because he was wise and safe, and I needed
to escape from my father’s home.”
“Ah, yes. Albinus Johnson,” said Poirot. “It came
back to me after I left your house that I do indeed
know the name. Your father was one of a circle of
English and Russian agitators in London at the end of
the last century. He spent a period of time in prison.”
“He was a dangerous man,” said Nancy. “I
couldn’t bear to speak to him about his . . . ideas, but I
know that he believed it was acceptable to murder
any number of people if those people were delaying
the cause of making the world a better place—better
only according to
his
definition! How in the name of
heaven can anything ever be made better by
bloodshed and mass slaughter? How can any
improvement be brought about by men who wish only
to smash and destroy, who cannot speak of their hopes
and dreams without their faces twisting in hatred and
anger?”
“I agree with you absolutely, madame. A
movement driven by fury and resentment will not
change any of our lives for the better.
Ce n’est pas
possible.
It is corrupt at the source.”
I nearly said that I too agreed, but I stopped
myself. Nobody was interested in my ideas.
Nancy said, “When I met William Ducane, I did
not fall in love with him, but I liked him. I respected
him. He was calm and courteous; he never behaved or
spoke intemperately. If he failed to return a book to
the library when it was due to be returned, he would
suffer agonies of remorse.”
“A man with a conscience.”
“Yes, and a sense of proportion, and humility. If
something stood in his way, he would consider
moving himself before he would consider moving the
obstacle. I knew that he would not fill our home with
men intent on making the world uglier with their
violent acts. William appreciated art and beautiful
things. He was like me in that respect.”
“I understand, madame. But you did not love
William Ducane passionately, in the way that Harriet
Sippel loved her husband?”
“No. The man I loved passionately was Patrick
Ive. From the first moment I saw him, my heart
belonged to him alone. I would have laid down my
life for him. When I lost him, I finally understood how
Harriet had felt when she had lost George. One thinks
one can imagine, but one can’t. I remember thinking
Harriet morbid when she begged me, after George’s
funeral, to pray for her death so that she might be
quickly reunited with him. I refused to do as she
asked. The passing of time would ease her pain, I told
her, and one day she would find something else to live
for.”
Nancy stopped to compose herself before
continuing. “Regrettably, she did. She found a delight
in the suffering of others. Harriet the widow was a
joyless harridan.
That
was the woman who was
killed at the Bloxham Hotel in London recently. The
Harriet I knew and loved died with her husband
George.” She looked at me suddenly. “You observed
that I am angry with Jennie. I have no right to be. I am
as guilty as she is of letting Patrick down.” Nancy
started to cry and covered her face with her hands.
“Come, come, madame. Here.” Poirot passed her a
handkerchief. “How did you let down Patrick Ive?
You have told us that you would have sacrificed your
life for him.”
“I am as bad as Jennie: a disgusting coward! When
I stood up in the King’s Head Inn and confessed that
Patrick and I were in love and had been meeting in
secret, I did not tell the truth. Oh, the secret meetings
were real enough, and Patrick and I were desperately
in love—that was true too. But . . .” Nancy appeared
too distressed to continue. Her shoulders shook as she
wept into the handkerchief.
“I think I comprehend, madame. That day at the
King’s Head Inn, you told the villagers that your
relations with Patrick Ive had been chaste. That was
your lie. Poirot, he guesses correctly?”
Nancy let out a wail of despair. “I couldn’t bear
the rumors,” she cried. “All those whispered macabre
tales of encounters with the souls of the dead in
exchange for money; little children hissing in the
street about blasphemy . . . I was appalled! You
cannot imagine the horror of so many voices of
accusation and condemnation, all rounding on one
man, a
good
man!”
I could imagine. I could imagine it so vividly that I
wished she would stop talking about it.
“I had to
do
something, Monsieur Poirot. So I
thought, “I shall fight these lies with something pure
and good: the truth.” The truth was my love for
Patrick and his for me, but I was afraid, and I
tarnished our truth with lies! That was my mistake. In
my frenzy, I could not think clearly. I sullied the
beauty of my love for Patrick with faint-hearted
dishonesty. Relations between us were not chaste, but
I said that they were. I imagined that I had no choice
but to lie. That was craven of me. Despicable!”
“You are hard on yourself,” said Poirot.
“Unnecessarily so.”
Nancy dabbed at her eyes. “How I wish I could
believe you,” she said. “
Why
did I not tell the whole
truth? My defense of Patrick against those horrible
accusations should have been a noble thing, and I
ruined it. For that, I curse myself every day of my life.
Those braying, spittle-flecked sin-hunters at the
King’s Head, they all disapproved of me anyway—
thought I was a fallen woman, and Patrick the very
devil. What would it have mattered if they had
disapproved a little more? In point of fact, I’m not
sure there was a higher peak of opprobrium for them
to ascend to.”
“Why, then, did you not tell the truth?” Poirot
asked.
“I hoped to make the ordeal more bearable for
Frances, I suppose. To avoid a bigger scandal. But
then Frances and Patrick took their own lives, and all
hope of ever making anything better was lost. I know
they killed themselves, whatever anybody says,”
Nancy added as an apparent afterthought.
“Is this a fact that has been disputed?” asked
Poirot.
“According to the doctor and all official records,
their deaths were accidental, but nobody in Great
Holling believed that. Suicide is a sin in the eyes of
the Church. The village doctor wanted to protect
Patrick and Frances’s reputations from greater
damage, I think. He liked them very much and stood
up for them when no one else would. He’s a good egg,
Dr. Flowerday—one of very few in Great Holling. He
knew a wicked lie when he heard one.” Nancy
laughed through her tears. “A lie for a lie and a tooth
for a tooth.”
“Or a truth for a truth?” Poirot suggested.
“Oh. Yes, indeed.” Nancy looked surprised. “Oh,
dear, I’ve quite ruined your handkerchief.”
“It is not important. I have others. There is one
more question I should like to ask you, madame: is the
name Samuel Kidd familiar to you?”
“No. Should it be?”
“He did not live in Great Holling when you lived
there?”
“No, he did not. Lucky old him, whoever he is,”
said Nancy bitterly.