watch.
âWith great haste, my friend, we might manage to catch the 7:2. Let us despatch ourselves quickly.â
Eight
T HE S ECOND L ETTER
âW ell?â I demanded eagerly.
We were seated in a first-class carriage which we had to ourselves. The train, an express, had just drawn out of Andover.
âThe crime,â said Poirot, âwas committed by a man of medium height with red hair and a cast in the left eye. He limps slightly on the right foot and has a mole just below the shoulder blade.â
âPoirot?â I cried.
For the moment I was completely taken in. Then the twinkle in my friendâs eye undeceived me.
âPoirot!â I said again, this time in reproach.
â Mon ami, what will you? You fix upon me a look of dog-like devotion and demand of me a pronouncement à la Sherlock Holmes! Now for the truthâ I do not know what the murderer looks like, nor where he lives, nor how to set hands upon him. â
âIf only he had left some clue,â I murmured.
âYes, the clueâit is always the clue that attracts you. Alas that he did not smoke the cigarette and leave the ash, and then step init with a shoe that has nails of a curious pattern. Noâhe is not so obliging. But at least, my friend, you have the railway guide . The A B C, that is a clue for you!â
âDo you think he left it by mistake then?â
âOf course not. He left it on purpose. The fingerprints tell us that.â
âBut there werenât any on it.â
âThat is what I mean. What was yesterday evening? A warm June night. Does a man stroll about on such an evening in gloves? Such a man would certainly have attracted attention. Therefore since there are no fingerprints on the A B C, it must have been carefully wiped. An innocent man would have left printsâa guilty man would not. So our murderer left it there for a purposeâbut for all that it is none the less a clue. That A B C was bought by someoneâit was carried by someoneâthere is a possibility there.â
âYou think we may learn something that way?â
âFrankly, Hastings, I am not particularly hopeful. This man, this unknown X, obviously prides himself on his abilities. He is not likely to blaze a trail that can be followed straight away.â
âSo that really the A B C isnât helpful at all.â
âNot in the sense you mean.â
âIn any sense?â
Poirot did not answer at once. Then he said slowly:
âThe answer to that is yes. We are confronted here by an unknown personage. He is in the dark and seeks to remain in the dark. But in the very nature of things he cannot help throwing light upon himself . In one sense we know nothing about himâin another sense we know already a good deal. I see his figure dimly taking shapeâa man who prints clearly and wellâwho buys good-quality paperâwho is at great needs to express his personality. I see him as a child possibly ignored and passed overâI see him growing up with an inward sense of inferiorityâwarring with a sense of injusticeâ¦I see that inner urgeâto assert himselfâto focus attention on himself ever becoming stronger, and events, circumstancesâcrushing it downâheaping, perhaps, more humiliations on him. And inwardly the match is set to the powder trainâ¦.â
âThatâs all pure conjecture,â I objected. âIt doesnât give you any practical help.â
âYou prefer the match end, the cigarette ash, the nailed boots! You always have. But at least we can ask ourselves some practical questions. Why the A B C? Why Mrs. Ascher? Why Andover?â
âThe womanâs past life seems simple enough,â I mused. âThe interviews with those two men were disappointing. They couldnât tell us anything more than we knew already.â
âTo tell the truth, I did not expect much in that line. But we could not neglect