The Murder on the Links by Agatha Christie (read novel full TXT) đ
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âYes, monsieur.â
âLook at the prisoner. Do you recognize him as having been one of the passengers to alight?â
âYes, Monsieur le juge.â
âThere is no possibility of your being mistaken?â
âNo, monsieur. I knew M. Jack Renauld well.â
âNor of your being mistaken as to the date?â
âNo, monsieur. Because it was the following morning, June 8th, that we heard of the murder.â
Another railway official was brought in, and confirmed the first oneâs evidence. The magistrate looked at Jack Renauld.
âThese men have identified you positively. What have you to say?â
Jack shrugged his shoulders.
âNothing.â
M. Hautet exchanged a glance with the greffier, as the scratching of the latterâs pen recorded the answer.
âRenauld,â continued the magistrate, âdo you recognize this?â
He took something from the table by his side, and held it out to the prisoner. I shuddered as I recognized the aeroplane dagger.
âPardon,â cried MaĂźtre GrosĂer. âI demand to speak to my client before he answers that question.â
But Jack Renauld had no consideration for the feelings of the wretched GrosĂer. He waved him aside, and replied quietly:
âCertainly I recognize it. It is a present given by me to my mother, as a souvenir of the War.â
âIs there, as far as you know, any duplicate of that dagger in existence?â
Again MaĂźtre GrosĂer burst out, and again Jack overrode him.
âNot that I know of. The setting was my own design.â
Even the magistrate almost gasped at the boldness of the reply. It did, in very truth, seem as though Jack was rushing on his fate. I realized, of course, the vital necessity he was under of concealing, for Bellaâs sake, the fact that there was a duplicate dagger in the case. So long as there was supposed to be only one weapon, no suspicion was likely to attach to the girl who had had the second paper-knife in her possession. He was valiantly shielding the woman he had once lovedâbut at what a cost to himself! I began to realize the magnitude of the task I had so lightly set Poirot. It would not be easy to secure the acquittal of Jack Renauld, by anything short of the truth.
M. Hautet spoke again, with a peculiarly biting inflection:
âMadame Renauld told us that this dagger was on her dressing table on the night of the crime. But Madame Renauld is a mother! It will doubtless astonish you, Renauld, but I consider it highly likely that Madame Renauld was mistaken, and that, by inadvertence perhaps, you had taken it with you to Paris. Doubtless you will contradict meââ
I saw the ladâs handcuffed hands clench themselves. The perspiration stood out in beads upon his brow, as with a supreme effort he interrupted M. Hautet in a hoarse voice:
âI shall not contradict you. It is possible.â
It was a stupefying moment. MaĂźtre GrosĂer rose to his feet, protesting:
âMy client has undergone a considerable nervous strain. I should wish it put on record that I do not consider him answerable for what he says.â
The magistrate quelled him angrily. For a moment a doubt seemed to arise in his own mind. Jack Renauld had almost overdone his part. He leaned forward, and gazed at the prisoner searchingly.
âDo you fully understand, Renauld, that on the answers you have given me I shall have no alternative but to commit you for trial?â
Jackâs pale face flushed. He looked steadily back.
âM. Hautet, I swear that I did not kill my father.â
But the magistrateâs brief moment of doubt was over. He laughed a short, unpleasant laugh.
âWithout doubt, without doubtâthey are always innocent, our prisoners! By your own mouth you are condemned. You can offer no defence, no alibiâonly a mere assertion which would not deceive a babe!âthat you are not guilty. You killed your father, Renauldâcruel and cowardly murderâfor the sake of money which you believed would come to you at his death. Your mother was an accessory after the fact. Doubtless, in view of the fact that she acted as a mother, the courts will extend an indulgence to her that they will not accord to you. And rightly so! Your crime was a horrible oneâto be held in abhorrence by gods and men!â M. Hautet was enjoying himself, working up his period, steeped in the solemnity of the moment, and his own role as representative of justice. âYou killedâand you must pay the consequences of your action. I speak to you, not as a man, but as Justice, eternal Justice, whichââ
M. Hautet was interruptedâto his intense annoyance. The door was pushed open.
âM. le juge, M. le juge,â stammered the attendant, âthere is a lady who saysâwho saysââ
âWho says what?â cried the justly incensed magistrate. âThis is highly irregular. I forbid itâI absolutely forbid it.â
But a slender figure pushed the stammering gendarme aside. Dressed all in black, with a long veil that hid her face, she advanced into the room.
My heart gave a sickening throb. She had come then! All my efforts were in vain. Yet I could not but admire the courage that had led her to take this step so unfalteringly.
She raised her veilâand I gasped. For, though as like her as two peas, this girl was not Cinderella! On the other hand, now that I saw her without the fair wig she had worn on the stage, I recognized her as the girl of the photograph in Jack Renauldâs room.
âYou are the Juge dâInstruction, M. Hautet?â she queried.
âYes, but I forbidââ
âMy name is Bella Duveen. I wish to give myself up for the murder of Mr. Renauld.â
âMy Friend:
âYou will know all when you get this. Nothing that I can say will move Bella. She has gone out to give herself up. I am tired out with struggling.
âYou will know now that I deceived you, that where you gave me trust I repaid you with lies. It will seem, perhaps, indefensible to you, but I should like, before I go out of your life for ever, to show you just how it all came about. If I knew that you forgave me, it would make life easier for me. It wasnât for myself I did itâthatâs the only thing I can put forward to say for myself.
âIâll begin from the day I met you in the boat train from Paris. I was uneasy then about Bella. She was just desperate about Jack Renauld, sheâd have lain down on the ground for him to walk on, and when he began to change, and to stop writing so often, she began getting in a state. She got it into her head that he was keen on another girlâand of course, as it turned out afterwards, she was quite right there. Sheâd made up her mind to go to their Villa at Merlinville, and try and see Jack. She knew I was against it, and tried to give me the slip. I found she was not on the train at Calais, and determined I would not go on to England without her. Iâd an uneasy feeling that something awful was going to happen if I couldnât prevent it.
âI met the next train from Paris. She was on it, and set upon going out then and there to Merlinville. I argued with her for all I was worth, but it wasnât any good. She was all strung up and set upon having her own way. Well, I washed my hands of it. Iâd done all I could! It was getting late. I went to an hotel, and Bella started for Merlinville. I still couldnât shake off my feeling of what the books call âimpending disaster.â
âThe next day cameâbut no Bella. Sheâd made a date with me to meet at the hotel, but she didnât keep it. No sign of her all day. I got more and more anxious. Then came an evening paper with the news.
âIt was awful! I couldnât be sure, of courseâbut I was terribly afraid. I figured it out that Bella had met Papa Renauld and told him about her and Jack, and that heâd insulted her or something like that. Weâve both got terribly quick tempers.
âThen all the masked foreigner business came out, and I began to feel more at ease. But it still worried me that Bella hadnât kept her date with me.
âBy the next morning, I was so rattled that Iâd just got to go and see what I could. First thing, I ran up against you. You know all thatâ⊠When I saw the dead man, looking so like Jack, and wearing Jackâs fancy overcoat, I knew! And there was the identical paper-knifeâwicked little thing!âthat Jack had given Bella! Ten to one it had her finger-marks on it. I canât hope to explain to you the sort of helpless horror of that moment. I only saw one thing clearlyâI must get hold of that dagger, and get right away with it before they found out it was gone. I pretended to faint, and whilst you were away getting water I took the thing and hid it away in my dress.
âI told you that I was staying at the HĂŽtel du Phare, but of course really I made a bee line back to Calais, and then on to England by the first boat. When we were in mid-Channel, I dropped that little devil of a dagger into the sea. Then I felt I could breathe again.
âBella was at our digs in London. She looked like nothing on Godâs earth. I told her what Iâd done, and that she was pretty safe for the time being. She stared at me, and then began laughingâ⊠laughingâ⊠laughingâ⊠it was horrible to hear her! I felt that the best thing to do was to keep busy. Sheâd go mad if she had time to brood on what sheâd done. Luckily we got an engagement at once.
âAnd then, I saw you and your friend, watching us that nightâ⊠I was frantic. You must suspect, or you wouldnât have tracked us down. I had to know the worst, so I followed you. I was desperate. And then, before Iâd had time to say anything, I tumbled to it that it was me you suspected, not Bella! Or at least that you thought I was Bella since Iâd stolen the dagger.
âI wish, honey, that you could see back into my mind at that momentâ⊠youâd forgive me, perhapsâ⊠I was so frightened, and muddled, and desperate.â⊠All I could get clearly was that you would try and save me. I didnât know whether youâd be willing to save herâ⊠I thought very likely notâit wasnât the same thing! And I couldnât risk it! Bellaâs my twinâIâd got to do the best for her. So I went on lying.â⊠I felt meanâI feel mean still.â⊠Thatâs allâenough too, youâll say, I expect. I ought to have trusted you.â⊠If I hadâ
âAs soon as the news was in the paper that Jack Renauld had been arrested, it was all up. Bella wouldnât even wait to see how things went.ââŠ
âIâm very tired.â⊠I canât write any more.ââŠâ
She had begun to sign herself Cinderella, but had crossed that out and written instead âDulcie Duveen.â
It was an ill-written, blurred epistle but I have kept it to this day.
Poirot was with me when I read it. The sheets fell from my hand, and I looked across at him.
âDid you know all the time that it wasâthe other?â
âYes, my friend.â
âWhy did you not tell me?â
âTo begin with, I could hardly believe it conceivable that you could make such a mistake. You had seen the photograph. The sisters are very alike, but by no means incapable of distinguishment.â
âBut the fair hair?â
âA wig, worn for the sake of a piquant contrast on the stage. Is it conceivable that with twins one should be fair and one dark?â
âWhy didnât you tell me that night at the hotel in Coventry?â
âYou were rather high-handed in your methods, mon ami,â said Poirot dryly. âYou did not give me a chance.â
âBut afterwards?â
âAh, afterwards! Well, to begin
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