a stair led to two upstairs rooms. One was empty and unfurnished, the other had evidently been the dead womanâs bedroom. After being searched by the police it had been left as it was. A couple of old worn blankets on the bedâa little stock of well-darned underwear in a drawerâcookery recipes in anotherâa paper-backed novel entitled The Green Oasis âa pair of new stockingsâpathetic in their cheap shininessâa couple of china ornamentsâa Dresden shepherd much broken, and a blue and yellow spotted dogâa black raincoat and a woolly jumper hanging on pegsâsuch were the worldly possessions of the late Alice Ascher.
If there had been any personal papers, the police had taken them.
â Pauvre femme, â murmured Poirot. âCome, Hastings, there is nothing for us here.â
When we were once more in the street, he hesitated for a minute or two, then crossed the road. Almost exactly opposite Mrs. Ascherâs was a greengrocerâs shopâof the type that has most of its stock outside rather than inside.
In a low voice Poirot gave me certain instructions. Then he himself entered the shop. After waiting a minute or two I followed him in. He was at the moment negotiating for a lettuce. I myself bought a pound of strawberries.
Poirot was talking animatedly to the stout lady who was serving him.
âIt was just opposite you, was it not, that this murder occurred? What an affair! What a sensation it must have caused you!â
The stout lady was obviously tired of talking about the murder. She must have had a long day of it. She observed:
âIt would be as well if some of that gaping crowd cleared off. What is there to look at, Iâd like to know?â
âIt must have been very different last night,â said Poirot. âPossibly you even observed the murderer enter the shopâa tall, fair man with a beard, was he not? A Russian, so I have heard.â
âWhatâs that?â The woman looked up sharply. âA Russian did it, you say?â
âI understand that the police have arrested him.â
âDid you ever know?â The woman was excited, voluble. âA foreigner.â
â Mais oui. I thought perhaps you might have noticed him last night?â
âWell, I donât get much chance of noticing, and thatâs a fact. The eveningâs our busy time and thereâs always a fair few passing along and getting home after their work. A tall, fair man with a beardâno, I canât say I saw anyone of that description anywhere about.â
I broke in on my cue.
âExcuse me, sir,â I said to Poirot. âI think you have been misinformed. A short dark man I was told.â
An interested discussion intervened in which the stout lady, her lank husband and a hoarse-voiced shop-boy all participated. No less than four short dark men had been observed, and the hoarse boy had seen a tall fair one, âbut he hadnât got no beard,â he added regretfully.
Finally, our purchases made, we left the establishment, leaving our falsehoods uncorrected.
âAnd what was the point of all that, Poirot?â I demanded somewhat reproachfully.
â Parbleu, I wanted to estimate the chances of a stranger being noticed entering the shop opposite.â
âCouldnât you simply have askedâwithout all that tissue of lies?â
âNo, mon ami. If I had âsimply asked,â as you put it, I should have got no answer at all to my questions. You yourself are English and yet you do not seem to appreciate the quality of the English reaction to a direct question. It is invariably one of suspicion and the natural result is reticence. If I had asked those people for information they would have shut up like oysters. But by making a statement (and a somewhat out of the way and preposterous one) and by your contradiction of it, tongues are immediately loosened. We know also that that particular time
Elizabeth Amelia Barrington