Sad Cypress (Hercule Poirot 22)
“If anybody had come up to the house—up to the pantry window—you wouldn’t have seen them?”
“No, I wouldn’t, sir.”
Peter Lord said:
“When did you go to your dinner?”
“One o’clock, sir.”
“And you didn’t see anything—any man hanging about—or a car outside—anything like that?”
The man’s eyebrows rose in slight surprise.
“Outside the back gate, sir? There was your car there—nobody else’s.”
Peter Lord cried:
“My car: It wasn’t my car! I was over Withenbury direction that morning. Didn’t get back till after two.”
Horlick looked puzzled.
“I made sure it was your car, sir,” he said doubtfully.
Peter Lord said quickly:
“Oh, well, it doesn’t matter. Good morning, Horlick.”
He and Poirot moved on. Horlick stared after them for a minute or two, then slowly resumed his progress with the wheelbarrow.
Peter Lord said softly—but with great excitement:
“Something—at last. Whose car was it standing in the lane that morning?”
Poirot said:
“What make is your car, my friend?”
“A Ford ten—sea-green. They’re pretty common, of course.”
“And you are sure that it was not yours? You haven’t mistaken the day?”
“Absolutely certain. I was over at Withenbury, came back late, snatched a bit of lunch, and then the call came through about Mary Gerrard and I rushed over.”
Poirot said softly:
“Then it would seem, my friend, that we have come upon something tangible at last.”
Peter Lord said:
“Someone was here that morning…someone who was not Elinor Carlisle, nor Mary Gerrard, nor Nurse Hopkins….”
Poirot said:
“This is very interesting. Come, let us make our investigations. Let us see, for instance, supposing a man (or woman) were to wish to approach the house unseen, how they would set about it.”
Halfway along the drive a path branched off through some shrubbery. They took this and at a certain turn in it Peter Lord clutched Poirot’s arm, pointing to a window.
He said: