quite leaves you. I could have a tip-top yacht if I liked, but somehow I donât really fancy it. I like mucking about in that little yawl of mine. Redfernâs keen on sailing, too. Heâs been out with me once or twice. Canât get hold of him nowâalways hanging round that red-haired wife of Marshallâs.â
He paused, then lowering his voice, he went on:
âMostly a dried up lot of sticks in this hotel! Mrs. Marshallâs about the only lively spot! I should think Marshallâs got his hands full looking after her. All sorts of stories about her in her stage daysâ and after! Men go crazy about her. Youâll see, thereâll be a spot of trouble one of these days.â
Poirot asked: âWhat kind of trouble?â
Horace Blatt replied:
âThat depends. Iâd say, looking at Marshall, that heâs a man with a funny kind of temper. As a matter of fact, I know he is. Heard something about him. Iâve met that quiet sort. Never know where you are with that kind. Redfern had better look outââ
He broke off, as the subject of his words came into the bar. He went on speaking loudly and self-consciously.
âAnd, as I say, sailing round this coast is good fun. Hullo, Redfern, have one with me? Whatâll you have? Dry Martini? Right. What about you, M. Poirot?â
Poirot shook his head.
Patrick Redfern sat down and said:
âSailing? Itâs the best fun in the world. Wish I could do more of it. Used to spend most of my time as a boy in a sailing dinghy round this coast.â
Poirot said:
âThen you know this part of the world well?â
âRather! I knew this place before there was a hotel on it. There were just a few fishermenâs cottages at Leathercombe Bay and a tumbledown old house, all shut up, on the island.â
âThere was a house here?â
âOh, yes, but it hadnât been lived in for years. Was practically falling down. There used to be all sorts of stories of secret passages from the house to Pixyâs Cave. We were always looking for that secret passage, I remember.â
Horace Blatt spilt his drink. He cursed, mopped himself and asked:
âWhat is this Pixyâs Cave?â
Patrick said:
âOh, donât you know it? Itâs on Pixy Cove. You canât find the entrance to it easily. Itâs among a lot of piled up boulders at one end. Just a long thin crack. You can just squeeze through it. Inside it widens out into quite a big cave. You can imagine what fun it was to a boy! An old fisherman showed it to me. Nowadays, even the fishermen donât know about it. I asked one the other day why the place was called Pixy Cove and he couldnât tell me.â
Hercule Poirot said:
âBut I still do not understand. What is this pixy?â
Patrick Redfern said:
âOh! thatâs typically Devonshire. Thereâs the pixyâs cave at Sheepstor on the Moor. Youâre supposed to leave a pin, you know, as a present for the pixy. A pixy is a kind of moor spirit.â
Hercule Poirot said:
âAh! but it is interesting, that.â
Patrick Redfern went on.
âThereâs a lot of pixy lore on Dartmoor still. There are torsthat are said to pixy-ridden, and I expect that farmers coming home after a thick night still complain of being pixy-led.â
Horace Blatt said:
âYou mean when theyâve had a couple?â
Patrick Redfern said with a smile:
âThatâs certainly the commonsense explanation!â
Blatt looked at his watch. He said:
âIâm going in to dinner. On the whole, Redfern, pirates are my favourites, not pixies.â
Patrick Redfern said with a laugh as the other went out:
âFaith, Iâd like to see the old boy pixy-led himself!â
Poirot observed meditatively:
âFor a hard-bitten business man, M. Blatt seems to have a very romantic imagination.â
Patrick Redfern said:
âThatâs because heâs