‘You tried everything that could possibly have done any good,’ he said. And though I was pretty sure I had done so, it was a relief to have my belief confirmed.
‘Did you know exactly what she had taken?’ Captain Maitland asked.
‘No—but I could see, of course, that it was a corrosive acid.’
Captain Maitland asked gravely: ‘Is it your opinion, nurse, that Miss Johnson deliberately administered this stuff to herself?’
‘Oh, no,’ I exclaimed. ‘I never thought of such a thing!’
I don’t know why I was so sure. Partly, I think, because of M. Poirot’s hints. His ‘murder is a habit’ had impressed itself on my mind. And then one doesn’t readily believe that anyone’s going to commit suicide in such a terribly painful way.
I said as much and Captain Maitland nodded thoughtfully. ‘I agree that it isn’t what one would choose,’ he said. ‘But if anyone were in great distress of mind and this stuff were easily obtainable it might be taken for that reason.’
‘Was she in great distress of mind?’ I asked doubtfully.
‘Mrs Mercado says so. She says that Miss Johnson was quite unlike herself at dinner last night—that she hardly replied to anything that was said to her. Mrs Mercado is quite sure that Miss Johnson was in terrible distress over something and that the idea of making away with herself had already occurred to her.’
‘Well, I don’t believe it for a moment,’ I said bluntly.
Mrs Mercado indeed! Nasty slinking little cat!
‘Then what do you think?’
‘I think she was murdered,’ I said bluntly.
He rapped out his next question sharply. I felt rather that I was in the orderly room.
‘Any reasons?’
‘It seems to me by far and away the most possible solution.’
‘That’s just your private opinion. There was no reason why the lady should be murdered?’
‘Excuse me,’ I said, ‘there was. She found out something.’
‘Found out something? What did she find out?’
I repeated our conversation on the roof word for word.
‘She refused to tell you what her discovery was?’
‘Yes. She said she must have time to think it over.’
‘But she was very excited by it?’
‘Yes.’
‘A way of getting in from outside.’ Captain Maitland puzzled over it, his brows knit. ‘Had you no idea at all of what she was driving at?’
‘Not in the least. I puzzled and puzzled over it but I couldn’t even get a glimmering.’
Captain Maitland said: ‘What do you think, M. Poirot?’
Poirot said: ‘I think you have there a possible motive.’
‘For murder?’
‘For murder.’
Captain Maitland frowned.
‘She wasn’t able to speak before she died?’
‘Yes, she just managed to get out two words.’
‘What were they?’
‘The window…’
‘The window?’ repeated Captain Maitland. ‘Did you understand to what she was referring?’
I shook my head.
‘How many windows were there in her bedroom?’
‘Just the one.’
‘Giving on the courtyard?’
‘Yes.’
‘Was it open or shut? Open, I seem to remember. But perhaps one of you opened it?’
‘No, it was open all the time. I wondered—’
I stopped.
‘Go on, nurse.’
‘I examined the window, of course, but I couldn’t see anything unusual about it. I wondered whether, perhaps, somebody changed the glasses that way.’
‘Changed the glasses?’
‘Yes. You see, Miss Johnson always takes a glass of water to bed with her. I think that glass must have been tampered with and a glass of acid put in its place.’
‘What do you say, Reilly?’
‘If it’s murder, that was probably the way it was done,’ said Dr Reilly promptly. ‘No ordinary moderately observant human being would drink a glass of acid in mistake for one of water—if they were in full possession of their waking faculties. But if anyone’s accustomed to drinking off a glass of water in the middle of the night, that person might easily stretch out an arm, find the glass in the accustomed place, and still half asleep, toss off enough of the stuff to be fatal before realizing what had happened.’
Captain Maitland reflected a minute.
‘I’ll have to go back and look at that window. How far is it from the head of the bed?’