were very valuable, and these had disappeared. That, of course, looked like assault and robbery; but there were all sortsof difficulties in the way of that solution. The old fellow had two people in the house; Betsy Andrews, who is a Hoppaton woman, and a rough kind of manservant, Robert Grant. Grant had gone to the farm to fetch the milk, which he does every day, and Betsy had stepped out to have a chat with a neighbour. She was only away twenty minutesâbetween ten and half pastâand the crime must have been done then. Grant returned to the house first. He went in by the back door, which was openâno one locks up doors round hereânot in broad daylight, at all eventsâput the milk in the larder, and went into his own room to read the paper and have a smoke. He had no idea anything unusual had occurredâat least, thatâs what he says. Then Betsy comes in, goes into the living room, sees whatâs happened, and lets out a screech to wake the dead. Thatâs all fair and square. Someone got in whilst those two were out, and did the poor old man in. But it struck me at once that he must be a pretty cool customer. Heâd have to come right up the village street, or creep through someoneâs back yard. Granite Bungalow has got houses all round it, as you can see. How was it that no one had seen him?â
The Inspector paused with a flourish.
âAha, I perceive your point,â said Poirot. âTo continue?â
âWell, sir, fishy, I said to myselfâfishy. And I began to look about me. Those jade figures, now. Would a common tramp ever suspect that they were valuable? Anyway, it was madness to try such a thing in broad daylight. Suppose the old man had yelled for help?â
âI suppose, Inspector,â said Mr. Ingles, âthat the bruise on the head was inflicted before death?â
âQuite right, sir. First knocked him silly, the murderer did, andthen cut his throat. Thatâs clear enough. But how the dickens did he come or go? They notice strangers quick enough in a little place like this. It came to me all at onceânobody did come. I took a good look round. It had rained the night before, and there were footprints clear enough going in and out of the kitchen. In the living room there were two sets of footprints only (Betsy Andrewsâs stopped at the door)âMr. Whalleyâs (he was wearing carpet slippers) and another manâs. The other man had stepped in the bloodstains, and I traced his bloody footprintsâI beg your pardon, sir.â
âNot at all,â said Mr. Ingles, with a faint smile; âthe adjective is perfectly understood.â
âI traced them to the kitchenâbut not beyond. Point Number One. On the lintel of Robert Grantâs door was a faint smearâa smear of blood. Thatâs point Number Two. Point Number Three was when I got hold of Grantâs bootsâwhich he had taken offâand fitted them to the marks. That settled it. It was an inside job. I warned Grant and took him into custody; and what do you think I found packed away in his portmanteau? The little jade figures and a ticket-of-leave. Robert Grant was also Abraham Biggs, convicted for felony and housebreaking five years ago.â
The Inspector paused triumphantly.
âWhat do you think of that, gentlemen?â
âI think,â said Poirot, âthat it appears a very clear caseâof a surprising clearness, in fact. This Biggs, or Grant, he must be a man very foolish and uneducated, eh?â
âOh, he is thatâa rough, common sort of fellow. No idea of what a footprint may mean.â
âClearly he reads not the detective fiction! Well, Inspector, I congratulate you. We may look at the scene of the crime. Yes?â
âIâll take you there myself this minute. Iâd like you to see those footprints.â
âI, too, should like to see them. Yes, yes, very interesting, very
Janwillem van de Wetering