Agatha Christie – Why Didn’t They Ask Evans?

She could complain of no lack of interest on the part of her listener. Roger seemed quite fascinated by the story.

‘Is this really true?’ he demanded. ‘All this about the fellow Jones being poisoned and all that?’ ‘Absolute gospel truth, my dear.’ ‘Sorry for my incredulity – but the facts do take a bit of swallowing, don’t they?’ He was silent a minute, frowning.

‘Look here,’ he said at last. ‘Fantastic as the whole thing sounds, I think you must be right in your first deduction. This man, Alex Pritchard, or Alan Carstairs, must have been murdered. If he wasn’t there seems no point in the attack upon Jones. Whether the key word to the situation is the phrase “Why didn’t they ask Evans?” or not doesn’t seem to me to matter much since you’ve no clue to who Evans is or as to what he was to have been asked. Let’s put it that the murderer or murderers assumed that Jones was in possession of some knowledge, whether he knew it himself or not, which was dangerous to them. So, accordingly, they tried to eliminate him, and probably would try again if they got on his track. So far that seems sense – but I don’t see by what process of reasoning you fix on Nicholson as the criminal.’ ‘He’s such a sinister man, and he’s got a dark-blue Talbot and he was away from here on the day that Bobby was poisoned.’ ‘That’s all pretty thin as evidence.’ ‘There are all the things Mrs Nicholson told Bobby.’ She recited them, and once again they sounded melodramatic and unsubstantial repeated aloud against the background of the peaceful English landscape.

Roger shrugged his shoulders.

‘She thinks he supplies Henry with the drug – but that’s pure conjecture, she’s not a particle of evidence that he does so.

She thinks he wants to get Henry to the Grange as a patient well, that’s a very natural wish for a doctor to have. A doctor wants as many patients as he can get. She thinks he’s in love with Sylvia. Well, as to that, of course, I can’t say.’ ‘If she thinks so, she’s probably right,’ interrupted Frankie.

‘A woman would know all right about her own husband.’ ‘Well, granting that that’s the case, it doesn’t necessarily mean that the man’s a dangerous criminal. Lots of respectable citizens fall in love with other people’s wives.’ ‘There’s her belief that he wants to murder her,’ urged Frankie.

Roger looked at her quizzically.

‘You take that seriously?’ ‘She believes it, anyhow.’ Roger nodded and lit a cigarette.

‘The question is, how much attention to pay that belief of hers,’ he said. ‘It’s a creepy sort of place, the Grange, full of queer customers. Living there would be inclined to upset a woman’s balance, especially if she were of the timid nervous type.’ ‘Then you don’t think it’s true?’ ‘I don’t say that. She probably believes quite honestly that he is trying to kill her – but is there any foundation in fact for that belief? There doesn’t seem to be.’ Frankie remembered with curious clearness Moira saying, ‘It’s just nerves.’ And somehow the mere fact that she had said that seemed to Frankie to point to the fact that it was not nerves, but she found it difficult to know how to explain her point of view to Roger.

Meanwhile the young man was going on: ‘Mind you, if you could show that Nicholson had been in Marchbolt on the day of the cliff tragedy that would be very different, or if we could find any definite motive linking him with Carstairs, but it seems to me you’re ignoring the real suspects.’ ‘What real suspects?’ ‘The – what did you call them – Haymans?’ ‘Caymans.’ ‘That’s it. Now, they are undoubtedly in it up to the hilt.

First, there’s the false identification of the body. Then there’s their insistence on the point of whether the poor fellow said anything before he died. And I think it’s logical to assume, as you did, that the Buenos Aires offer came from, or was arranged for, by them.’ ‘It’s a bit annoying,’ said Frankie, ‘to have the most strenuous efforts made to get you out of the way because you know something – and not to know yourself what the something you know is. Bother – what a mess one gets into with words.’ ‘Yes,’ said Roger grimly, ‘that was a mistake on their part. A mistake that it’s going to take them all their rime to remedy.’ ‘Oh!’ cried Frankie. ‘I’ve just thought of something. Up to now, you see, I’ve been assuming that the photograph of Mrs Cayman was substituted for the one of Moira Nicholson.’ ‘I can assure you,’ said Roger gravely, ‘that I have never treasured the likeness of a Mrs Cayman against my heart. She sounds a most repulsive creature.’ ‘Well, she was handsome in a way,’ admitted Frankie. ‘A sort of bold, coarse, vampish way. But the point is this: Carstairs must have had her photograph on him as well as Mrs Nicholson’s.’ Roger nodded.

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