awfully sorry really. We shouldnât have done it. Beastly bad taste. I apologize, I really do.â
âYou need not apologize,â said the other in a peculiar voice.
Johnnie turned.
âI say, Nancy, get up!â he cried. âDonât lie there all day.â
But the figure on the ground did not move.
âGet up,â cried Johnnie again.
Still Nancy did not move, and suddenly a feelingof nameless dread came over the boy. He turned to Poirot.
âWhatâwhatâs the matter? Why doesnât she get up?â
âCome with me,â said Poirot curtly.
He strode over the snow. He had waved the others back, and he was careful not to infringe on the other footmarks. The boy followed him, frightened and unbelieving. Poirot knelt down by the girl, then he signed to Johnnie.
âFeel her hand and pulse.â
Wondering, the boy bent down, then started back with a cry. The hand and arm were stiff and cold, and no vestige of a pulse was to be found.
âSheâs dead!â he gasped. âBut how? Why?â
M. Poirot passed over the first part of the question.
âWhy?â he said musingly. âI wonder.â Then, suddenly leaning across the dead girlâs body, he unclasped her other hand, which was tightly clenched over something. Both he and the boy uttered an exclamation. In the palm of Nancyâs hand was a red stone that winked and flashed forth fire.
âAha!â cried M. Poirot. Swift as a flash his hand flew to his pocket, and came away empty.
âThe cracker ruby,â said Johnnie wonderingly. Then, as his companion bent to examine the dagger, and the stained snow, he cried out: âSurely it canât be blood, M. Poirot. Itâs paint. Itâs only paint.â
Poirot straightened himself.
âYes,â he said quietly. âYou are right. Itâs only paint.â
âThen howââ The boy broke off. Poirot finished the sentence for him.
âHow was she killed? That we must find out. Did she eat or drink anything this morning?â
He was retracing his steps to the path where the others waited as he spoke. Johnnie was close behind him.
âShe had a cup of tea,â said the boy. âMr Levering made it for her. Heâs got a spirit-lamp in his room.â
Johnnieâs voice was loud and clear. Levering heard the words.
âAlways take a spirit-lamp about with me,â he declared. âMost handy thing in the world. My sisterâs been glad enough of it this visitânot liking to worry the servants all the time you know.â
M. Poirotâs eyes fell, almost apologetically as it seemed, to Mr Leveringâs feet, which were encased in carpet slippers.
âYou have changed your boots, I see,â he murmured gently.
Levering stared at him.
âBut, M. Poirot,â cried Jean, âwhat are we to do?â
âThere is only one thing to be done, as I said just now, Mademoiselle. Send for the police.â
âIâll go,â cried Levering. âIt wonât take me a minuteto put on my boots. You people had better not stay out here in the cold.â
He disappeared into the house.
âHe is so thoughtful, that Mr Levering,â murmured Poirot softly. âShall we take his advice?â
âWhat about waking father andâand everybody?â
âNo,â said M. Poirot sharply. âIt is quite unnecessary. Until the police come, nothing must be touched out here; so shall we go inside? To the library? I have a little history to recount to you which may distract your minds from this sad tragedy.â
He led the way, and they followed him.
âThe story is about a ruby,â said M. Poirot, ensconcing himself in a comfortable arm-chair. âA very celebrated ruby which belonged to a very celebrated man. I will not tell you his nameâbut he is one of the great ones of the earth. Eh bien , this great man, he arrived in London, incognito. And