Poirot. âNot at all. As to that, I give you my word of honour.â
âBut you are not police, are you? You didnât say you were.â
âI am not police, no.â
Her suspicion and defiance broke down.
âI donât know what to do,â she said.
âI am not urging you to employ me,â said Poirot. âFor that you have said already that I am too old. Possibly you are right. But since I know who you are and something about you, there is no reason we should not discuss together in a friendly fashion the troubles that afflict you. The old, you must remember, though considered incapable of action, have nevertheless a good fund of experience on which to draw.â
Norma continued to look at him doubtfully, that wide-eyed stare that had disquieted Poirot before. But she was in a sense trapped, and she had at this particular moment, or so Poirot judged, a wish to talk about things. For some reason, Poirot had always been a person it was easy to talk to.
âThey think Iâm crazy,â she said bluntly. âAndâand I rather think Iâm crazy, too. Mad.â
âThat is most interesting,â said Hercule Poirot, cheerfully. âThere are many different names for these things. Very grand names. Names rolled out happily by psychiatrists, psychologists and others. But when you say crazy, that describes very well what the general appearance may be to ordinary, everyday people. Eh bien, then, you are crazy, or you appear crazy or you think you are crazy, and possibly you may be crazy. But all the same that is not to say the condition is serious. It is a thing that people suffer from a good deal, and it is usually easily cured with the proper treatment. It comes about because people have had too much mental strain, too much worry, have studied too much for examinations, have dwelled too much perhaps on their emotions, have too much religion or have a lamentable lack of religion, or have good reasons for hating their fathers or their mothers! Or, of course, it can be as simple as having an unfortunate love affair.â
âIâve got a stepmother. I hate her and I rather think I hate my father too. That seems rather a lot, doesnât it?â
âIt is more usual to hate one or the other,â said Poirot. âYou were, I suppose, very fond of your own mother. Is she divorced or dead?â
âDead. She died two or three years ago.â
âAnd you cared for her very much?â
âYes. I suppose I did. I mean of course I did. She was an invalid, you know, and she had to go to nursing homes a good deal.â
âAnd your father?â
âFather had gone abroad a long time before that. He went to South Africa when I was about five or six. I think he wanted Mother to divorce him but she wouldnât. He went to South Africa and was mixed up with mines or something like that. Anyway, he used to write to me at Christmas, and send me a Christmas present or arrange for one to come to me. That was about all. So he didnât really seem very real to me. He came home about a year ago because he had to wind up my uncleâs affairs and all that sort of financial thing. And when he came home heâhe brought this new wife with him.â
âAnd you resented the fact?â
âYes, I did.â
âBut your mother was dead by then. It is not unusual, you know, for a man to marry again. Especially when he and his wife have been estranged for many years. This wife he brought, was she the same lady he had wished to marry previously, when he asked your mother for a divorce?â
âOh, no, this one is quite young. And sheâs very good-looking and she acts as though she just owns my father!â
She went on after a pauseâin a different, rather childish voice. âI thought perhaps when he came home this time he would be fond of me and take notice of me andâbut she wonât let him. Sheâs against me. Sheâs
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