London. Sheâs been communicated with. And thereâs a young manâin fact, the girl was supposed to be out with him last night, I gather.â
âAny help from the A B C guide?â asked Crome.
âItâs there,â the superintendent nodded towards the table. âNo fingerprints. Open at the page for Bexhill. A new copy, I should sayâdoesnât seem to have been opened much. Not bought anywhere round here. Iâve tried all the likely stationers.â
âWho discovered the body, sir?â
âOne of these fresh-air, early-morning colonels. Colonel Jerome. He was out with his dog about 6 am. Went along the front in the direction of Cooden, and down on to the beach. Dog went off and sniffed at something. Colonel called it. Dog didnât come. Colonel had a look and thought something queer was up. Went over and looked. Behaved very properly. Didnât touch her at all and rang us up immediately.â
âAnd the time of death was round about midnight last night?â
âBetween midnight and 1 amâthatâs pretty certain. Our homicidal joker is a man of his word. If he says the 25th, it is the 25thâthough it may have been only by a few minutes.â
Crome nodded.
âYes, thatâs his mentality all right. Thereâs nothing else? Nobody saw anything helpful?â
âNot as far as we know. But itâs early yet. Everyone who saw agirl in white walking with a man last night will be along to tell us about it soon, and as I imagine there were about four or five hundred girls in white walking with young men last night, it ought to be a nice business.â
âWell, sir, Iâd better get down to it,â said Crome. âThereâs the café and thereâs the girlâs home. Iâd better go to both of them. Kelsey can come with me.â
âAnd Mr. Poirot?â asked the superintendent.
âI will accompany you,â said Poirot to Crome with a little bow.
Crome, I thought, looked slightly annoyed. Kelsey, who had not seen Poirot before, grinned broadly.
It was an unfortunate circumstance that the first time people saw my friend they were always disposed to consider him as a joke of the first water.
âWhat about this belt she was strangled with?â asked Crome. âMr. Poirot is inclined to think itâs a valuable clue. I expect heâd like to see it.â
âDu tout,â said Poirot quickly. âYou misunderstood me.â
âYouâll get nothing from that,â said Carter. âIt wasnât a leather beltâmight have got fingerprints if it had been. Just a thick sort of knitted silkâideal for the purpose.â
I gave a shiver.
âWell,â said Crome, âweâd better be getting along.â
We set out forthwith.
Our first visit was to the Ginger Cat. Situated on the sea front, this was the usual type of small tearoom. It had little tables covered with orange-checked cloths and basket-work chairs of exceeding discomfort with orange cushions on them. It was the kind of place that specialized in morning coffee, five different kinds of teas (Devonshire, Farmhouse, Fruit, Carlton and Plain), and a few sparing lunch dishes for females such as scrambled eggs and shrimps and macaroni au gratin.
The morning coffees were just getting under way. The manageress ushered us hastily into a very untidy back sanctum.
âMissâehâMerrion?â inquired Crome.
Miss Merrion bleated out in a high, distressed-gentlewoman voice:
âThat is my name. This is a most distressing business. Most distressing. How it will affect our business I really cannot think! â
Miss Merrion was a very thin woman of forty with wispy orange hair (indeed she was astonishingly like a ginger cat herself). She played nervously with various fichus and frills that were part of her official costume.
âYouâll have a boom,â said Inspector Kelsey encouragingly.
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