A POCKET FULL OF RYE

manner of someone explaining the simple

facts of arithmetic to a small child, outlined

her theory.

“He’s always been like that, you see. I

mean, he’s always been bad. Bad all through,

although with it he’s always been attractive.

Especially attractive to women. He’s got a

brilliant mind and he’ll take risks. He’s

always taken risks and because of his charm

people have always believed the best and not

the worst about him. He came home in the

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summer to see his father. I don’t believe for a

moment that his father wrote to him or sent

for him–unless, of course, you’ve got actual

evidence to that effect.” She paused inquiringly.

Neele shook his head. “No,” he said, “I’ve

no evidence of his father sending for him.

I’ve got a letter that Lance is supposed to

have written to him after being here. But

Lance could quite easily have slipped that

among his father’s papers in the study here

the day he arrived.”

“Sharp of him,” said Miss Marple, nodding

her head. “Well, as I say, he probably

flew over here and attempted a reconciliation

with his father, but Mr. Fortescue wouldn’t

have it. You see. Lance had recently got

married and the small pittance he was living

on and which he had doubtless been

supplementing in various dishonest ways,

was not enough for him any more. He was

very much in love with Pat (who is a dear,

sweet girl) and he wanted a respectable, settled life with her–nothing shifty. And

that, from his point of view, meant having a

lot of money. When he was at Yewtree Lodge

he must have heard about these blackbirds.

Perhaps his father mentioned them. Perhaps

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Adele did. He jumped to the conclusion that

MacKenzie’s daughter was established in the

house and it occurred to him that she would

make a very good scapegoat for murder.

Because, you see, when he realised that he

couldn’t get his father to do what he wanted,

he must have cold-bloodedly decided that

murder it would have to be. He may have

realised that his father wasn’t—er, very

well—and have feared that by the time his

father died there would have been a complete

crash.”

“He knew about his father’s health all

right,” said the Inspector.

“Ah—that explains a good deal. Perhaps

the coincidence of his father’s Christian name

being Rex together with the blackbird

incident suggested the idea of the nursery

rhyme. Make a crazy business of the whole

thing—and tie it up with that old revenge

threat of the MacKenzies. Then, you see, he

could dispose of Adele, too, and that hundred

thousand pounds going out of the firm. But

there would have to be a third character,

the ‘maid in the garden hanging out the

clothes’—and I suppose that suggested the

whole wicked plan to him. An innocent

accomplice whom he could silence before she

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could talk. And that would give him what he

wanted—a genuine alibi for the first murder.

The rest was easy. He arrived here from the

station just before five o’clock, which was the

time when Gladys brought the second tray

into the hall. He came to the side door, saw

her and beckoned to her. Strangling her and

carrying her body round the house to where

the clothes lines were would only have taken

three or four minutes. Then he rang the

front-door bell, was admitted to the house,

and joined the family for tea. After tea he

went up to see Miss Ramsbottom. When he

came down, he slipped into the drawingroom,

found Adele alone there drinking a last

cup of tea and sat down by her on the sofa,

and while he was talking to her, he managed

to slip the cyanide into her tea. It wouldn’t be

difficult, you know. A little piece of white

stuff, like sugar. He might have stretched out

his hand to the sugar basin and taken a lump

and apparently dropped it into her cup. He’d

laugh and say ‘Look, I’ve dropped more

sugar into your tea.’ She’d say she didn’t

mind, stir it and drink it. It would be as easy

and audacious as that. Yes, he’s an audacious

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