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The Complete Miss Marple Collection

Page 59

by Agatha Christie


  “He took the family to tea there that afternoon and as he came from the office with his attaché case, he could easily bring the tornout book pages to hide under the stairs and clinch the case. Hiding them under the stairs was a neat touch. It recalled the disposal of Agnes’s body, and, from the practical point of view, it was very easy for him. When he followed Aimée and the police, just a minute or two in the hall passing through would be enough.”

  “All the same,” I said, “there’s one thing I can’t forgive you for, Miss Marple—roping in Megan.”

  Miss Marple put down her crochet which she had resumed. She looked at me over her spectacles and her eyes were stern.

  “My dear young man, something had to be done. There was no evidence against this very clever and unscrupulous man. I needed someone to help me, someone of high courage and good brains. I found the person I needed.”

  “It was very dangerous for her.”

  “Yes, it was dangerous, but we are not put into this world, Mr. Burton, to avoid danger when an innocent fellow-creature’s life is at stake. You understand me?”

  I understood.

  Fifteen

  I

  Morning in the High Street.

  Miss Emily Barton comes out of the grocer’s with her shopping bag. Her cheeks are pink and her eyes are excited.

  “Oh, dear, Mr. Burton, I really am in such a flutter. To think I really am going on a cruise at last!”

  “I hope you’ll enjoy it.”

  “Oh, I’m sure I shall. I should never have dared to go by myself. It does seem so providential the way everything has turned out. For a long time I’ve felt that I ought to part with Little Furze, that my means were really too straitened but I couldn’t bear the idea of strangers there. But now that you have bought it and are going to live there with Megan—it is quite different. And then dear Aimée, after her terrible ordeal, not quite knowing what to do with herself, and her brother getting married (how nice to think you have both settled down with us!) and agreeing to come with me. We mean to be away quite a long time. We might even”—Miss Emily dropped her voice—“go round the world! And Aimée is so splendid and so practical. I really do think, don’t you, that everything turns out for the best?”

  Just for a fleeting moment I thought of Mrs. Symmington and Agnes Woddell in their graves in the churchyard and wondered if they would agree, and then I remembered that Agnes’s boy hadn’t been very fond of her and that Mrs. Symmington hadn’t been very nice to Megan and, what the hell? we’ve all got to die some time! And I agreed with happy Miss Emily that everything was for the best in the best of possible worlds.

  I went along the High Street and in at the Symmingtons’ gate and Megan came out to meet me.

  It was not a romantic meeting because an out-size Old English sheepdog came out with Megan and nearly knocked me over with his ill-timed exuberance.

  “Isn’t he adorable?” said Megan.

  “A little overwhelming. Is he ours?”

  “Yes, he’s a wedding present from Joanna. We have had nice wedding presents, haven’t we? That fluffy woolly thing that we don’t know what it’s for from Miss Marple, and the lovely Crown Derby tea set from Mr. Pye, and Elsie has sent me a toast-rack—”

  “How typical,” I interjected.

  “And she’s got a post with a dentist and is very happy. And—where was I?”

  “Enumerating wedding presents. Don’t forget if you change your mind you’ll have to send them all back.”

  “I shan’t change my mind. What else have we got? Oh, yes, Mrs. Dane Calthrop has sent an Egyptian scarab.”

  “Original woman,” I said.

  “Oh! Oh! but you don’t know the best. Partridge has actually sent me a present. It’s the most hideous teacloth you’ve ever seen. But I think she must like me now because she says she embroidered it all with her own hands.”

  “In a design of sour grapes and thistles, I suppose?”

  “No, true lovers’ knots.”

  “Dear, dear,” I said, “Partridge is coming on.”

  Megan had dragged me into the house.

  She said:

  “There’s just one thing I can’t make out. Besides the dog’s own collar and lead, Joanna has sent an extra collar and lead. What do you think that’s for?”

  “That,” I said, “is Joanna’s little joke.”

  Agatha Christie

  A Murder Is Announced

  A Miss Marple Mystery

  To Ralph and Anne Newman

  at whose house I first tasted

  “Delicious Death!”

  Contents

  Dedication

  1. A Murder Is Announced

  2. Breakfast at Little Paddocks

  3. At 6:30 p.m.

  4. The Royal Spa Hotel

  5. Miss Blacklock and Miss Bunner

  6. Julia, Mitzi and Patrick

  7. Among Those Present

  8. Enter Miss Marple

  9. Concerning a Door

  10. Pip and Emma

  11. Miss Marple Comes to Tea

  12. Morning Activities in Chipping Cleghorn

  13. Morning Activities in Chipping Cleghorn (continued)

  14. Excursion into the Past

  15. Delicious Death

  16. Inspector Craddock Returns

  17. The Album

  18. The Letters

  19. Reconstruction of the Crime

  20. Miss Marple Is Missing

  21. Three Women

  22. The Truth

  23. Evening at the Vicarage

  Epilogue

  Credits

  One

  A MURDER IS ANNOUNCED

  I

  Between 7:30 and 8:30 every morning except Sundays, Johnnie Butt made the round of the village of Chipping Cleghorn on his bicycle, whistling vociferously through his teeth, and alighting at each house or cottage to shove through the letterbox such morning papers as had been ordered by the occupants of the house in question from Mr. Totman, stationer, of the High Street. Thus, at Colonel and Mrs. Easterbrook’s he delivered The Times and the Daily Graphic; at Mrs. Swettenham’s he left The Times and the Daily Worker; at Miss Hinchcliffe and Miss Murgatroyd’s he left the Daily Telegraph and the New Chronicle; at Miss Blacklock’s he left the Telegraph, The Times and the Daily Mail.

  At all these houses, and indeed at practically every house in Chipping Cleghorn, he delivered every Friday a copy of the North Benham News and Chipping Cleghorn Gazette, known locally simply as “the Gazette.”

  Thus, on Friday mornings, after a hurried glance at the headlines in the daily paper

  (International situation critical! U.N.O. meets today! Bloodhounds seek blonde typist’s killer! Three collieries idle. Twenty-three die of food poisoning in Seaside Hotel, etc.)

  most of the inhabitants of Chipping Cleghorn eagerly opened the Gazette and plunged into the local news. After a cursory glance at Correspondence (in which the passionate hates and feuds of rural life found full play) nine out of ten subscribers then turned to the PERSONAL column. Here were grouped together higgledy-piggledy articles for Sale or Wanted, frenzied appeals for Domestic Help, innumerable insertions regarding dogs, announcements concerning poultry and garden equipment; and various other items of an interesting nature to those living in the small community of Chipping Cleghorn.

  This particular Friday, October 29th—was no exception to the rule—

  II

  Mrs. Swettenham, pushing back the pretty little grey curls from her forehead, opened The Times, looked with a lacklustre eye at the left-hand centre page, decided that, as usual, if there was any exciting news The Times had succeeded in camouflaging it in an impeccable manner; took a look at the Births, Marriages and Deaths, particularly the latter; then, her duty done, she put aside The Times and eagerly seized the Chipping Cleghorn Gazette.

  When her son Edmund entered the room a moment later, she was already deep in the Personal Column.

  “Good morning, dear,” said M
rs. Swettenham. “The Smedleys are selling their Daimler. 1935—that’s rather a long time ago, isn’t it?”

  Her son grunted, poured himself out a cup of coffee, helped himself to a couple of kippers, sat down at the table and opened the Daily Worker which he propped up against the toast rack.

  “Bull mastiff puppies,” read out Mrs. Swettenham. “I really don’t know how people manage to feed big dogs nowadays—I really don’t … H’m, Selina Lawrence is advertising for a cook again. I could tell her it’s just a waste of time advertising in these days. She hasn’t put her address, only a box number—that’s quite fatal—I could have told her so—servants simply insist on knowing where they are going. They like a good address … False teeth—I can’t think why false teeth are so popular. Best prices paid … Beautiful bulbs. Our special selection. They sound rather cheap … Here’s a girl wants an ‘Interesting post—Would travel.’ I dare say! Who wouldn’t?… Dachshunds… I’ve never really cared for dachshunds myself—I don’t mean because they’re German, because we’ve got over all that—I just don’t care for them, that’s all.—Yes, Mrs. Finch?”

  The door had opened to admit the head and torso of a grim-looking female in an aged velvet beret.

  “Good morning, Mum,” said Mrs. Finch. “Can I clear?”

  “Not yet. We haven’t finished,” said Mrs. Swettenham. “Not quite finished,” she added ingratiatingly.

  Casting a look at Edmund and his paper, Mrs. Finch sniffed, and withdrew.

  “I’ve only just begun,” said Edmund, just as his mother remarked:

  “I do wish you wouldn’t read that horrid paper, Edmund. Mrs. Finch doesn’t like it at all.”

  “I don’t see what my political views have to do with Mrs. Finch.”

  “And it isn’t,” pursued Mrs. Swettenham, “as though you were a worker. You don’t do any work at all.”

  “That’s not in the least true,” said Edmund indignantly. “I’m writing a book.”

  “I meant real work,” said Mrs. Swettenham. “And Mrs. Finch does matter. If she takes a dislike to us and won’t come, who else could we get?”

  “Advertise in the Gazette,” said Edmund, grinning.

  “I’ve just told you that’s no use. Oh dear me, nowadays unless one has an old Nannie in the family, who will go into the kitchen and do everything, one is simply sunk.”

  “Well, why haven’t we an old Nannie? How remiss of you not to have provided me with one. What were you thinking about?”

  “You had an ayah, dear.”

  “No foresight,” murmured Edmund.

  Mrs. Swettenham was once more deep in the Personal Column.

  “Second hand Motor Mower for sale. Now I wonder … Goodness, what a price!… More dachshunds … ‘Do write or communicate desperate Woggles.’ What silly nicknames people have … Cocker Spaniels… Do you remember darling Susie, Edmund? She really was human. Understood every word you said to her … Sheraton sideboard for sale. Genuine family antique. Mrs. Lucas, Dayas Hall … What a liar that woman is! Sheraton indeed …!”

  Mrs. Swettenham sniffed and then continued her reading:

  “All a mistake, darling. Undying love. Friday as usual.—J … I suppose they’ve had a lovers’ quarrel—or do you think it’s a code for burglars?… More dachshunds! Really, I do think people have gone a little crazy about breeding dachshunds. I mean, there are other dogs. Your Uncle Simon used to breed Manchester Terriers. Such graceful little things. I do like dogs with legs … Lady going abroad will sell her navy two piece suiting … no measurements or price given … A marriage is announced—no, a murder. What? Well, I never! Edmund, Edmund, listen to this….

  A murder is announced and will take place on Friday, October 29th, at Little Paddocks at 6:30 p.m. Friends please accept this, the only intimation.

  What an extraordinary thing! Edmund!”

  “What’s that?” Edmund looked up from his newspaper.

  “Friday, October 29th … Why, that’s today.”

  “Let me see.” Her son took the paper from her.

  “But what does it mean?” Mrs. Swettenham asked with lively curiosity.

  Edmund Swettenham rubbed his nose doubtfully.

  “Some sort of party, I suppose. The Murder Game—That kind of thing.”

  “Oh,” said Mrs. Swettenham doubtfully. “It seems a very odd way of doing it. Just sticking it in the advertisements like that. Not at all like Letitia Blacklock who always seems to me such a sensible woman.”

  “Probably got up by the bright young things she has in the house.”

  “It’s very short notice. Today. Do you think we’re just supposed to go?”

  “It says ‘Friends, please accept this, the only intimation,’” her son pointed out.

  “Well, I think these newfangled ways of giving invitations are very tiresome,” said Mrs. Swettenham decidedly.

  “All right, Mother, you needn’t go.”

  “No,” agreed Mrs. Swettenham.

  There was a pause.

  “Do you really want that last piece of toast, Edmund?”

  “I should have thought my being properly nourished mattered more than letting that old hag clear the table.”

  “Sh, dear, she’ll hear you … Edmund, what happens at a Murder Game?”

  “I don’t know, exactly … They pin pieces of paper upon you, or something … No, I think you draw them out of a hat. And somebody’s the victim and somebody else is a detective—and then they turn the lights out and somebody taps you on the shoulder and then you scream and lie down and sham dead.”

  “It sounds quite exciting.”

  “Probably a beastly bore. I’m not going.”

  “Nonsense, Edmund,” said Mrs. Swettenham resolutely. “I’m going and you’re coming with me. That’s settled!”

  III

  “Archie,” said Mrs. Easterbrook to her husband, “listen to this.”

  Colonel Easterbrook paid no attention, because he was already snorting with impatience over an article in The Times.

  “Trouble with these fellows is,” he said, “that none of them knows the first thing about India! Not the first thing!”

  “I know, dear, I know.”

  “If they did, they wouldn’t write such piffle.”

  “Yes, I know. Archie, do listen.

  A murder is announced and will take place on Friday, October 29th (that’s today), at Little Paddocks at 6:30 p.m. Friends please accept this, the only intimation.”

  She paused triumphantly. Colonel Easterbrook looked at her indulgently but without much interest.

  “Murder Game,” he said.

  “Oh.”

  “That’s all it is. Mind you,” he unbent a little, “it can be very good fun if it’s well done. But it needs good organizing by someone who knows the ropes. You draw lots. One person’s the murderer, nobody knows who. Lights out. Murderer chooses his victim. The victim has to count twenty before he screams. Then the person who’s chosen to be the detective takes charge. Questions everybody. Where they were, what they were doing, tries to trip the real fellow up. Yes, it’s a good game—if the detective—er—knows something about police work.”

  “Like you, Archie. You had all those interesting cases to try in your district.”

  Colonel Easterbrook smiled indulgently and gave his moustache a complacent twirl.

  “Yes, Laura,” he said. “I dare say I could give them a hint or two.”

  And he straightened his shoulders.

  “Miss Blacklock ought to have asked you to help her in getting the thing up.”

  The Colonel snorted.

  “Oh, well, she’s got that young cub staying with her. Expect this is his idea. Nephew or something. Funny idea, though, sticking it in the paper.”

  “It was in the Personal Column. We might never have seen it. I suppose it is an invitation, Archie?”

  “Funny kind of invitation. I can tell you one thing. They can count me out.”

  “Oh, Archie,” Mrs. E
asterbrook’s voice rose in a shrill wail.

  “Short notice. For all they know I might be busy.”

  “But you’re not, are you, darling?” Mrs. Easterbrook lowered her voice persuasively. “And I do think, Archie, that you really ought to go—just to help poor Miss Blacklock out. I’m sure she’s counting on you to make the thing a success. I mean, you know so much about police work and procedure. The whole thing will fall flat if you don’t go and help to make it a success. After all, one must be neighbourly.”

  Mrs. Easterbrook put her synthetic blonde head on one side and opened her blue eyes very wide.

  “Of course, if you put it like that, Laura …” Colonel Easterbrook twirled his grey moustache again, importantly, and looked with indulgence on his fluffy little wife. Mrs. Easterbrook was at least thirty years younger than her husband.

  “If you put it like that, Laura,” he said.

  “I really do think it’s your duty, Archie,” said Mrs. Easterbrook solemnly.

  IV

  The Chipping Cleghorn Gazette had also been delivered at Boulders, the picturesque three cottages knocked into one inhabited by Miss Hinchcliffe and Miss Murgatroyd.

  “Hinch?”

  “What is it, Murgatroyd?”

  “Where are you?”

 

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