"What?" I cried. "In mid-ocean?"
"It seems a most mysterious affair, but that"s not my business. They"ve sent a young fellow aboard who is to take your place, and we are all sworn to secrecy. Will you get up and dress?"
Utterly unable to conceal my amazement I did as I was told. A boat was lowered, and I was conveyed aboard the destroyer. There I was received courteously, but got no further information. The commander"s instructions were to land me at a certain spot on the Belgian coast. There his knowledge and responsibility ended.
The whole thing was like a dream. The one idea I held to firmly was that all this must be part of Poirot"s plan.
I must simply go forward blindly, trusting in my dead friend.
I was duly landed at the spot indicated. There a motor was waiting, and soon I was rapidly whirling along across the flat Flemish plains. I slept that night at a small hotel in Brussels. The next day we went on again.
The country became wooded and hilly. I realised that we were penetrating into the Ardennes, and I suddenly remembered Poirot"s saying that he had a brother who lived at Spa.
But we did not go to Spa itself. We left the main road and wound into the leafy fastnesses of the hills, till we reached a little hamlet, and an isolated white villa high on the hill-side. Here the car stopped in front of the green door of the villa.
The door opened as I alighted. An elderly man-servant stood in the doorway bowing.
"M. Ie Capitaine Hastings?" he said in French.
"Monsieur Ie Capitaine is expected. If he will follow me."
He led the way across the hall, and flung open a door at the back, standing aside to let me pa.s.s in.
I blinked a little, for the room faced west and the afternoon sun was pouring in. Then my vision cleared and I saw a figure waiting to welcome me with outstretched hands.
It was--oh, impossible, it couldn"t be--but yes!
"Poirot!" I cried, and for once did not attempt to evade the embrace with which he overwhelmed me.
"But yes, but yes, it is indeed I! Not so easy to kill Hercule Poirot!"
"But Poirot-- whyf"
"A ruse de guerre, my friend, a ruse de guerre. All is now ready for our grand coup."
"But you might have told me!"
"No, Hastings, I could not. Never, never, in a thousand years, could you have acted the part at the funeral.
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As it was, it was perfect. It could not fail to carry conviction to the Big Four."
"But what I"ve been through--"
"Do not think me too unfeeling. I carried out the deception partly for your sake. I was willing to risk my own life, but I had qualms about continually risking yours. So, after the explosion, I have an idea of great brilliancy. The good Ridgeway, he enables me to carry it out. I am dead, you will return to South America. But, man ami, that is just what you would not do. In the end I have to arrange a solicitor"s letter, and a long rigmarole.
But, at all events, here you are--that is the great thing. And now we lie here--perdu-- till the moment comes for the last grand coup--the final overthrowing of the Big Four."
^^-^ ^^h I?
dumber Tour Wins a ^Trick From our quiet retreat in the Ardennes we watched the progress of affairs in the great world. We were plentifully supplied with newspapers, and every day Poirot received a bulky envelope, evidently containing some kind of report. He never showed these reports to me, but I could usually tell from his manner whether its contents had been satisfactory or otherwise. He never wavered in his belief that our present plan was the only one likely to be crowned by success.
"As a minor point, Hastings," he remarked one day, "I was in continual fear of your death lying at my door.
And that rendered me nervous--like a cat upon the jumps, as you say. But now I am well satisfied. Even if they discover that the Captain Hastings who landed in South America is an imposter (and I do not think they will discover it, they are not likely to send an agent out there who knows you personally), they will only believe 193 194 Agatha Christie that you are trying to circ.u.mvent them in some clever manner of your own, and will pay no serious attention to discovering your whereabouts. Of the one vital fact, my supposed death, they are thoroughly convinced.
They will go ahead and mature their plans."
"And then?" I asked eagerly.
"And then, mon ami, grand resurrection of Hercule Poirot! At the eleventh hour I reappear, throw all into confusion, and achieve the supreme victory in my own unique manner!"
I realised that Poirot"s vanity was of the casehardened variety which could withstand all attacks. I reminded him that once or twice the honours of the game had lain with our adversaries. But I might have known that it was impossible to diminish Hercule Poirot"s enthusiasm for his own methods.
"See you, Hastings, it is like the little trick that you play with the cards. You have seen it without doubt?
You take the four knaves, you divide them, one on top of the pack, one underneath, and so on--you cut and you shuffle, and there they are all together again. That is my object. So far I have been contending, now against one of the Big Four, now against another. But let me get them all together, like the four knaves in the pack of cards, and then, with one coup, I destroy them all!"
"And how do you propose to get them all together?"
I asked.
"By awaiting the supreme moment. By lying perdu until they are ready to strike."
"That may mean a long wait," I grumbled.
"Always impatient, the good Hastings! But no, it will not be so long. The one man they were afraid of--myself--is out of the way. I give them two or three months at most."
His speaking of some one being got out of the way
THE BIG FOUR 195
reminded me of Ingles and his tragic death, and I remembered that I had never told Poirot about the dying Chinaman in St. Giles" Hospital.
He listened with keen attention to my story.
"Ingles" servant, eh? And the few words he uttered were in Italian? Curious."
"That"s why I suspected it might have been a plant on the part of the Big Four."
"Your reasoning is at fault, Hastings. Employ the little gray cells. If your enemies wished to deceive you they would a.s.suredly have seen to it that the Chinaman spoke in intelligible pigeon English. No, the message was genuine. Tell me again all that you heard?"
"First of all he made a reference to Handel"s Largo, and then he said something that sounded like "carrozzo"--that"s a carriage, isn"t it?"
"Nothing else?"
"Well, just at the end he murmured something like "Cara" somebody or other--some woman"s name. Zia, I think. But I don"t suppose that that had any bearing on the rest of it."
"You would not suppose so, Hastings. Cara Zia is very important, very important indeed."
"I don"t see--"
"My dear friend, you never see--and anyway the English know no geography."
"Geography?" I cried. "What has geography got to do with it?"
"I dare say M. Thomas Cook would be more to the point."
As usual, Poirot refused to say anything more--a most irritating trick of his. But I noticed that his manner became extremely cheerful, as though he had scored some point or other.
The days went on, pleasant if a trifle monotonous.
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"For Italy, sir. As far as we can judge, they are both making for the resort you indicated--though how you knew that--"
"Ah, that is not the cap with the feather for me! That was the work of Hastings here. He conceals his intelligence, you comprehend, but it is profound for all that."
Harvey looked at me with due appreciation, and I felt rather uncomfortable.
"All is in train, then," said Poirot. He was pale now, and completely serious. "The time has come. The arrangements are all made?"
"Everything you ordered has been carried out. The governments of Italy, France and England are behind you, and are all working harmoniously together."
"It is, in fact, a new Entente," observed Poirot dryly.
"I am glad that Desjardeaux is convinced at last. Eh bien, then, we will start--or rather, I will start. You, Hastings, will remain here--yes, I pray of you. In verity, my friend. I am serious."
I believed him, but it was not likely that I should consent to being left behind in that fashion. Our argument was short but decisive.
It was not until we were in the train, speeding towards Paris that he admitted that he was secretly glad of my decision.
"For you have a part to play, Hastings. An important part! Without you, I might well fail. Nevertheless, I felt that it was my duty to urge you to remain behind."
"There is danger, then?"
"Mon ami, where there is the Big Four there is always danger."
On arrival in Paris, we drove across to the Gare de I"Est, and Poirot at last announced our destination. We were bound for Bolzano and Italian Tyrol.
198 Agatha Christie During Harvey"s absence from our carriage I took the opportunity of asking Poirot why he had said that the discovery of the rendezvous was my work.
"Because it was, my friend. How Ingles managed to get hold of the information I do not know, but he did, and he sent it to us by his servant. We are bound, mon ami, for Karersee, the new Italian name for which is Lago di Carezza. You see now where your "Cara Zia"
comes in and also your "Carrozza" and "Largo"--the Handel was supplied by your own imagination. Possibly some reference to the information coming from the hand" of M. Ingles started the train of a.s.sociation."
"Karersee?" I queried. "I never heard of it."
"I always tell you that the English know no geography.
But as a matter of fact it is a well-known and very beautiful summer resort, four thousand feet up, in the heart of the Dolomites." "And it is in this out of the way spot that the Big Four have their rendezvous?"
"Say rather their headquarters. The signal has been given, and it is their intention to disappear from the world and issue orders from their mountain fastness. I have made the inquiries--a lot of quarrying of stone and mineral deposits is done there, and the company, apparently a small Italian firm, is in reality controlled by Abe Ryland. I am prepared to swear that a vast subterranean dwelling has been hollowed out in the very heart of the mountain, secret and inaccessible. From there the leaders of the organisation will issue by wireless their orders to their followers who are numbered by thousands in every country. And from that crag in the Dolomites the dictators of the world will emerge. That is to say--they would emerge were it not for Hercule Poirot."
"Do you seriously believe all this, Poirot? What pounds pence:
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about the armies and general machinery of civilisation?"
"What about it in Russia, Hastings? This will be Russia on an infinitely larger scale--and with this additional menace--that Madame Olivier"s experiments have proceeded further than she has ever given out. I believe that she has, to a certain extent, succeeded in liberating atomic energy and harnessing it to her purpose.
Her experiments with the nitrogen of the air have been very remarkable, and she has also experimented in the concentration of wireless energy, so that a beam of great intensity can be focused upon some given spot.
Exactly how far she has progressed, n.o.body knows, but it is certain that it is much farther than has ever been given out. She is a genius, that woman--the Curies were as nothing to her. Add to her genius the powers of Ryland"s almost unlimited wealth, and, with the brain of Li Chang Yen, the finest criminal brain ever known, to direct and plan--eh bien, it will not be, as you say, all jam for civilisation."
His words made me very thoughtful. Although Poirot was given at times to exaggeration of language, he was not really an alarmist. For the first time I realised what a desperate struggle it was upon which we were engaged.