X

A POCKET FULL OF RYE BY AGATHA CHRISTIE

its own pot during the war when things were

scarce, and it’s gone on like that ever since.”

Neele murmured:

“That made it easier, of course.”

“What’s more,” said Sergeant Hay, “Mr.

Fortescue was the only one that took

marmalade for breakfast (and Mr. Percival

when he was at home). The others had jam or

honey.”

Neele nodded.

“Yes,” he said. “That made it very simple,

didn’t it?”

After a slight gap the moving picture went

on in his mind. It was the breakfast table

now. Rex Fortescue stretching out his hand

for the marmalade pot, taking out a spoonful

of marmalade and spreading it on his toast

and butter. Easier, far easier that way than

the risk and difficulty of insinuating it into

his coffee cup. A foolproof method of administering

the poison! And afterwards?

162

Another gap and a picture that was not quite

so clear. The replacing of that pot of marmalade

by another with exactly the same

amount taken from it. And then an open

window. A hand and an arm flinging out that

pot into the shrubbery. Whose hand and

arm?

Inspector Neele said in a businesslike voice:

“Well, we’ll have of course to get this

analysed. See if there are any traces oftaxine.

We can’t jump to conclusions.”

“No, sir. There may be fingerprints too.”

“Probably not the ones we want,” said

Inspector Neele gloomily. “There’ll be

Gladys’s of course, and Crump’s and Fortescue’s

own. Then probably Mrs. Crump’s, the grocer’s assistant and a few others! If

anyone put taxine in here they’d take care not

to go playing about with their own fingers all

over the pot. Anyway, as I say, we mustn’t

jump to conclusions. How do they order

marmalade and where is it kept?”

The industrious Sergeant Hay had his

answers pat for all these questions.

“Marmalade and jams come in in batches

of six at a time. A new pot would be taken

into the pantry when the old one was getting

low.”

163

“That means,” said Neele, “that it could

have been tampered with several days before

it was actually brought on to the breakfast table. And anyone who was in the house or

had access to the house could have tampered

with it.”

The term “access to the house” puzzled

Sergeant Hay slightly. He did not see in what way his superior’s mind was working.

But Neele was postulating what seemed to

him a logical assumption.

If the marmalade had been tampered with beforehand–then surely that ruled out those

persons who were actually at the breakfast table

on the fatal morning.

Which opened up some interesting new

possibilities.

He planned in his mind interviews with

various people–this time with rather a different

angle of approach.

He’d keep an open mind. . . .

He’d even consider seriously that old Miss

Whatshername’s suggestions about the

nursery rhyme. Because there was no doubt

that that nursery rhyme fitted in a rather

startling way. It fitted with a point that had

worried him from the beginning. The pocketful

of rye.

164

“Blackbirds?” murmured Inspector Neele

to himself.

Sergeant Hay stared.

“It’s not blackberry jelly, sir,” he said.

“It’s marmalade.^

II

Inspector Neele went in search of Mary

Dove.

He found her in one of the bedrooms on the

first floor superintending Ellen, who was

denuding the bed of what seemed to be clean

sheets. A little pile of clean towels lay on a

chair.

Inspector Neele looked puzzled.

“Somebody coming to stay?” he asked.

Mary Dove smiled at him. In contrast to

Ellen, who looked grim and truculent, Mary

was her usual imperturbable self.

“Actually,” she said, “the opposite is the

case.”

Neele looked inquiringly at her.

“This is the guest room we had prepared

for Mr. Gerald Wright.”

“Gerald Wright? Who is he?”

“He’s a friend of Miss Elaine Fortescue’s.”

165

Mary’s voice was carefully devoid of inflection.

“He was coming here–when?”

“I believe he arrived at the Golf Hotel the

day after Mr. Fortescue’s death.”

“The day after”

“So Miss Fortescue said.” Mary’s voice

was still impersonal: “She told me she

wanted him to come and stay in the

house–so I had a room prepared. Now–after

these other two–tragedies–it seems more

Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85

Categories: Christie, Agatha
curiosity: