“Do you think that was how it was done?” I asked him, as we were seated in the train.
“No, my friend, that was not how it was done.
It was cleverer than that.”
“Won’t you tell me?”
“Not yet.
You know—it is my weakness—I like to keep my little secrets till the end.”
“Is the end going to be soon?”
“Very soon now.”
We arrived in Ebermouth a little after six and Poirot drove at once to the shop which bore the name “Elizabeth Penn.”
The establishment was closed, but Poirot rang the bell, and presently Mary herself opened the door, and expressed surprise and delight at seeing us.
“Please come in and see my aunt,” she said.
She led us into a back room.
An elderly lady came forward to meet us; she had white hair and looked rather like a miniature herself with her pink-and-white skin and her blue eyes.
Round her rather bent shoulders she wore a cape of priceless old lace.
“Is this the great Monsieur Poirot?” she asked in a low charming voice. “Mary has been telling me. I could hardly believe it.
And you will really help us in our trouble.
You will advise us?”
Poirot looked at her for a moment, then bowed.
“Mademoiselle Penn—the effect is charming.
But you should really grow a moustache.”
Miss Penn gave a gasp and drew back.
“You were absent from business yesterday, were you not?”
“I was here in the morning.
Later I had a bad headache and went directly home.”
“Not home, mademoiselle.
For your headache you tried the change of air, did you not?
The air of Charlock Bay is very bracing, I believe.”
He took me by the arm and drew me towards the door.
He paused there and spoke over his shoulder.
“You comprehend, I know everything.
This little—farce—it must cease.”
There was a menace in his tone.
Miss Penn, her face ghastly white, nodded mutely.
Poirot turned to the girl.
“Mademoiselle,” he said gently, “you are young and charming.
But participating in these little affairs will lead to that youth and charm being hidden behind prison walls—and I, Hercule Poirot, tell you that that will be a pity.”
Then he stepped out into the street and I followed him, bewildered.
“From the first, mon ami, I was interested.
When that young man booked his place as far as Monkhampton only, I saw the girl’s attention suddenly riveted on him.
Now why?
He was not of the type to make a woman look at him for himself alone.
When we started on the coach, I had a feeling that something would happen.
Who saw the young man tampering with the luggage?
Mademoiselle and mademoiselle only, and remember she chose that seat—a seat facing the window—a most unfeminine choice.
“And then she comes to us with the tale of robbery—the despatch box forced which makes not the common sense, as I told you at the time.
“And what is the result of it all?
Mr. Baker Wood has paid over good money for stolen goods.
The miniatures will be returned to Miss Penn.
She will sell them and will have made a thousand pounds instead of five hundred.
I make the discreet inquiries and learn that her business is in a bad state—touch and go.