'Did you leave that door open?'
'Yes, sir. I was doing a little clearing up. Then I heard -the shot, sir.'
'Do you know any reason why Mr. Enstone should have shot himself?'
'On the contrary, sir—I understood that his recent speculations had been highly successful.'
Teal nodded.
'Where is his wife?'
'Mrs. Enstone and the children have been in Madeira, sir. We are expecting them home tomorrow.'
'What was in that parcel, Fowler?' ventured the Saint.
The valet glanced at the table.
'I don't know, sir. I believe it must have been left by one of Mr. Enstone's guests. I noticed it on the dining-table when I brought in their coats, and Mr. Enstone came back for it on his return and took it into the bedroom with him.'
'You didn't hear anything said about it?'
'No, sir. I was not present after coffee had been served—I understood that the gentlemen had private business to discuss.'
'What are you getting at?' Mr. Teal asked seriously.
The Saint smiled apologetically; and being nearest the door, went out to open it as a second knocking disturbed the silence, and let in a grey-haired man with a black bag. While the police surgeon was making his preliminary examination, he drifted into the sitting-room. The relics of a convivial dinner were all there—cigar-butts in the coffee cups, stains of spilt wine on the cloth, crumbs and ash everywhere, the stale smell of food and smoke hanging in the air—but those things did not interest him. He was not quite sure what would have interested him; but he wandered rather vacantly round the room, gazing introspectively at the prints of character which a long tenancy leaves even on anything so characterless as an hotel apartment. There were pictures on the walls and the side tables, mostly enlarged snapshots revealing Lewis Enstone relaxing in the bosom of his family, which amused Simon for some time. On one of the side tables he found a curious object. It was a small wooden plate on which half a dozen wooden fowls stood in a circle. Their necks were pivoted at the base, and underneath the plate were six short strings joined to the necks and knotted together some distance further down where they were all attached at the same point to a wooden ball. It was these strings, and the weight of the ball at their lower ends, which kept the birds' heads raised; and Simon discovered that when he moved the plate so that the ball swung round in a circle underneath, thus tightening and slackening each string in turn, the fowls mounted on the plate pecked vigorously in rotation at an invisible and apparently inexhaustible supply of corn, in a most ingenious mechanical display of gluttony.
He was still playing thoughtfully with the toy when he discovered Mr. Teal standing beside him. The detective's round pink face wore a look of almost comical incredulity.
'Is that how you spend your spare time?' he demanded.
'I think it's rather clever,' said the Saint soberly. He put the toy down, and blinked at Fowler. 'Does it belong to one of the children?'
'Mr. Enstone brought it home with him this evening, sir, to give to Miss Annabel tomorrow,' said the valet. 'He was always picking up things like that. He was a very devoted father, sir.'
Mr. Teal chewed for ,a moment; and then he said: 'Have you finished? I'm going home.'
Simon nodded pacifically, and accompanied him to the lift. As they went down he asked: 'Did you find anything?'