The Chess Problem

The Chess Problem is a short story by Agatha Christie which was first published in issue 1620 of The Sketch on 13 February 1924. It was the seventh of a series of connected stories to be published in the magazine under the series title "The Man who was Number Four: Further Adventures of M. Poirot". In January 1927, the stories in the series were woven together with minor changes and some additional connecting paragraphs and then published in novel form as The Big Four. Later the same year, in September 1927, the story was published in The Blue Book Magazine.

The short story formed the basis for chapter 11 of The Big Four (with the slightly different title of "A Chess Problem").

In the Sketch series, this story is preceded by The Yellow Jasmine Mystery and followed by The Baited Trap.

Synopsis
A month after the events in The Yellow Jasmine Mystery, Japp tries to interest Poirot in a strange case of a chess master who dies in the middle of a chess game. Japp means it as a diversion from Poirot's obsession with the Big Four but it turns out to be nothing of the sort.

Plot summary
(may contain spoilers - click on expand to read) A month after the case, Japp informs Poirot of another mysterious death- the chess grandmasters Gilmour Wilson and Doctor Savaronoff were playing chess when shortly into the game Gilmour Wilson collapsed dead due to heart failure. Japp suspects he was poisoned, and Poirot is called in. Japp suspects that the poison was intended for Savaronoff, a former Revolutionist in Russia who just escaped from the Bolsheviks. He refused several times to play a game of chess with Wilson but eventually gave in. The match took place in Savaronoff's flat, with at least a dozen people watching the game. Wilson's body had a small burn mark on his left hand and was also clutching a white bishop when he died, part of Savaronoff's set. As Poirot and Hastings enter the Doctor's flat, Poirot notices that the antique Persian rug has had a nail driven through it. After the proceedings in the flat, Poirot and Hastings return home and Poirot takes out a second white bishop. He weighed the one he took with the one Wilson was holding and discovered that the one he was holding was heavier. He explains that the bishop has a metal rod inside it, so that the current passing through the recently refurbished flat below is powered through the nail, into the also tampered table and into the bishop. The bishop was chosen because of Wilson's predictable first few moves, and Poirot suspects the servant of the flat and Savaronoff's niece of working for the big Four. However, when they arrive at the flat Savaronoff's niece is gagged and unconscious and Ivan and the Doctor are nowhere to be seen. Poirot explains that Savaronoff did die in Russia and that number Four impersonated him as a cover. He killed Wilson because if Savaronoff was the second greatest chess master in the world, people would soon realise that number Four was nothing like the chess player Savaronoff was. With number Four gone, the two are back to square one again.

Characters

 * Hercule Poirot
 * Captain Hastings
 * Inspector Japp
 * Gilmour Wilson
 * Dr Savaronoff
 * Sonia Daviloff
 * Madame Gospoja
 * Ivan
 * Sir Charles Kingwell

Comparison between the original story and the version in the novel

 * The text of chapter 11 in the novel is the same as that of the original story except for a few additional paragraphs at the end. In them, Hastings tells Poirot that he finds it difficult to believe that Number Four would kill a man "just to sustain a role". There were easier ways. And why would he take a risk he could so easily avoid? In answer, Poirot explains that it was a matter of psychology. Number Four did not see that avoiding a killing was simpler. It probably appealed to his mind to be able to foresee events and plan the operation so that Wilson ended up as his own executioner.

Publication history

 * 1924: The Sketch, Issue 1620 (London), 13 February 1924
 * 1927: The Big Four, William Collins and Sons (London), 27 January 1927, Hardcover, 282 pp
 * 1927: The Big Four, Dodd Mead and Company (New York), 1927, Hardcover, 276 pp
 * 1927 The Blue Book Magazine, Vol. 45 No. 5 (Chicago), September 1927.
 * 1947: The Great Detectives, Hennel Locke Ltd., 1947.
 * 1968: Modern Short Story Classics of Suspense, Reader’s Digest, 1968.
 * 1972: Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, vol. 60 no. 2, whole no. 345, Aug 1972.