The Regatta Mystery and Other Stories (Hercule Poirot 21)
Page 220
slavery. He wanted to be free before it was too
late .... Yes, I'm sure that's how it was ....
When did you guessmthat it was he?"
"His self-control was too perfect," said Poirot
simply. "No matter how galling his wife's con-duct,
it never seemed to touch him. That meant
either that he was so used to it that it no longer
214
Agatha Christie
stung him, or else--eh bien--I decided on the
latter alternative .... And I was right ....
"And then there was his insistence on his con-juring
ability--the evening before the crime. He
pretended to give himself away. But a man like
Clapperton doesn't give himself away. There must
be a reason. So long as people thought he had
been a conjuror they weren't likely to think of his
having been a ventriloquist."
"And the voice we heard--Mrs. Clapperton's
voice?"
"One of the stewardesses had a voice not unlike
hers. I induced her to hide behind the stage and
taught her the words to say."
"It was a trick--a cruel trick," cried out Ellie.
"I do not approve of murder," said Hercule
Poirot.
"One of the most Imaginative and fertile
plot creators of all time!"-Ellery Queen