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He folded it up and tossed it back. ‘So you’re the fellow, are you?’

      With a little wave of his hand Poirot said:

      ‘I assure you there is no deception!’

      Benedict Farley chuckled suddenly.

      ‘That’s what the conjurer says before he takes the goldfish out of the hat! Saying that is part of the trick, you know!’

      Poirot did not reply. Farley said suddenly:

      ‘Think I’m a suspicious old man, hey? So I am. Don’t trust anybody! That’s my motto. Can’t trust anybody when you’re rich. No, no, it doesn’t do.’

      ‘You wished,’ Poirot hinted gently, ‘to consult me?’

      The old man nodded.

      ‘Go to the expert and don’t count the cost. You’ll notice, M. Poirot, I haven’t asked you your fee. I’m not going to! Send me in the bill later – I shan’t cut up rough over it. Damned fools at the dairy thought they could charge me two and nine for eggs when two and seven’s the market price – lot of swindlers! I won’t be swindled. But the man at the top’s different. He’s worth the money. I’m at the top myself – I know.’

      Hercule Poirot made no reply. He listened attentively, his head poised a little on one side.

      Behind his impassive exterior he was conscious of a feeling of disappointment. He could not exactly put his finger on it. So far Benedict Farley had run true to type – that is, he had conformed to the popular idea of himself; and yet – Poirot was disappointed.

      ‘The man,’ he said disgustedly to himself, ‘is a mountebank – nothing but a mountebank!’

      He had known other millionaires, eccentric men too, but in nearly every case he had been conscious of a certain force, an inner energy that had commanded his respect. If they had worn a patchwork dressing-gown, it would have been because they liked wearing such a dressing-gown. But the dressing-gown of Benedict Farley, or so it seemed to Poirot, was essentially a stage property. And the man himself was essentially stagy. Every word he spoke was uttered, so Poirot felt assured, sheerly for effect.

      He repeated again unemotionally, ‘You wished to consult me, Mr Farley?’

      Abruptly the millionaire’s manner changed.

      He leaned forward. His voice dropped to a croak.

      ‘Yes. Yes … I want to hear what you’ve got to say – what you think … Go to the top! That’s my way! The best doctor – the best detective – it’s between the two of them.’

      ‘As yet, Monsieur, I do not understand.’

      ‘Naturally,’ snapped Farley. ‘I haven’t begun to tell you.’

      He leaned forward once more and shot out an abrupt question.

      ‘What do you know, M. Poirot, about dreams?’

      The little man’s eyebrows rose. Whatever he had expected, it was not this.

      ‘For that, M. Farley, I should recommend Napoleon’s Book of Dreams – or the latest practising psychologist from Harley Street.’

      Benedict Farley said soberly, ‘I’ve tried both …’

      There was a pause, then the millionaire spoke, at first almost in a whisper, then with a voice growing higher and higher.

      ‘It’s the same dream – night after night. And I’m afraid, I tell you – I’m afraid … It’s always the same. I’m sitting in my room next door to this. Sitting at my desk, writing. There’s a clock there and I glance at it and see the time – exactly twenty-eight minutes past three. Always the same time, you understand.

      ‘And when I see the time, M. Poirot, I know I’ve got to do it. I don’t want to do it – I loathe doing it – but I’ve got to …’

      His voice had risen shrilly.

      Unperturbed, Poirot said, ‘And what is it that you have to do?’

      ‘At twenty-eight minutes past three,’ Benedict Farley said hoarsely, ‘I open the second drawer down on the right of my desk, take out the revolver that I keep there, load it and walk over to the window. And then – and then –’

      ‘Yes?’

      Benedict Farley said in a whisper:

      ‘Then I shoot myself …’

      There was silence.

      Then Poirot said, ‘That is your dream?’

      ‘Yes.’

      ‘The same every night?’

      ‘Yes.’

      ‘What happens after you shoot yourself ?’

      ‘I wake up.’

      Poirot nodded his head slowly and thoughtfully. ‘As a matter of interest, do you keep a revolver in that particular drawer?’

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