The Man in the Brown Suit by Agatha Christie (romantic story to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Agatha Christie
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We both sat silent for a minute or two, then Suzanne started off on another tack.
âCould there have been anything hidden in the cabin?â
âThat seems more probable,â I agreed. âIt would explain my things being ransacked the next morning. But there was nothing hidden there, Iâm sure of it.â
âThe young man couldnât have slipped something into a drawer the night before?â
I shook my head.
âI should have seen him.â
âCould it have been your precious piece of paper they were looking for?â
âIt might have been, but it seems rather senseless. It was only a time and a dateâand they were both past by then.â
Suzanne nodded.
âThatâs so of course. No, it wasnât the paper. By the way, have you got it with you? Iâd rather like to see it.â
I had brought the paper with me as Exhibit A, and I handed it over to her. She scrutinized it, frowning.
âThereâs a dot after the 17. Why isnât there a dot after the 1 too?â
âThereâs a space,â I pointed out.
âYes, thereâs a space, butâââ
Suddenly she rose and peered at the paper, holding it as close under the light as possible. There was a repressed excitement in her manner.
âAnne, that isnât a dot! Thatâs a flaw in the paper! A flaw in the paper, you see? So youâve got to ignore it, and just go by the spacesâthe spaces!â
I had risen and was standing by her. I read out the figures as I now saw them.
â1 71 22.â
âYou see,â said Suzanne, âitâs the same, but not quite. Itâs one oâclock still, and the 22ndâbut itâs Cabin 71! My cabin, Anne!â
We stood staring at each other, so pleased with our new discovery and so rapt with excitement that you might have thought we had solved the whole mystery. Then I fell to earth with a bump.
âBut, Suzanne, nothing happened here at one oâclock on the 22nd?â
Her face fell also. âNoâit didnât.â
Another idea struck me.
âThis isnât your own cabin, is it, Suzanne? I mean not the one you originally booked?â
âNo, the purser changed me into it.â
âI wonder if it was booked before sailing for some oneâsome one who didnât turn up. I suppose we could find out.â
âWe donât need to find out, Gipsy girl,â cried Suzanne. âI know! The purser was telling me about it. The cabin was booked in the name of Mrs. Greyâbut it seems that Mrs. Grey was merely a pseudonym for the famous Madame Nadina. Sheâs a celebrated Russian dancer, you know. Sheâs never appeared in London, but Paris has been quite mad about her. She had a terrific success there all through the War. A thoroughly bad lot, I believe, but most attractive. The purser expressed his regrets that she wasnât on board in a most heart-felt fashion when he gave me her cabin, and then Colonel Race told me a lot about her. It seems there were very queer stories afloat in Paris. She was suspected of espionage, but they couldnât prove anything. I rather fancy Colonel Race was over there simply on that account. Heâs told me some very interesting things. There was a regular organized gang, not German in origin at all. In fact the head of it, a man always referred to as âthe Colonelâ was thought to be an Englishman, but they never got any clue as to his identity. But there is no doubt that he controlled a considerable organization of international crooks. Robberies, espionages, assaults, he undertook them allâand usually provided an innocent scapegoat to pay the penalty. Diabolically clever, he must have been! This woman was supposed to be one of his agents, but they couldnât get hold of anything to go upon. Yes, Anne, weâre on the right tack. Nadina is just the woman to be mixed up in this business. The appointment on the morning of the 22nd was with her in this cabin. But where is she? Why didnât she sail?â
A light flashed upon me.
âShe meant to sail,â I said slowly.
âThen why didnât she?â
âBecause she was dead. Suzanne, Nadina was the woman murdered at Marlow!â
My mind went back to the bare room in the empty house, and there swept over me again that indefinable sensation of menace and evil. With it came the memory of the falling pencil and the discovery of the roll of films. A roll of filmsâthat struck a more recent note. Where had I heard of a roll of films? And why did I connect that thought with Mrs. Blair?
Suddenly I flew at her and almost shook her in my excitement.
âYour films! The ones that were passed to you through the ventilator? Wasnât that on the 22nd?â
âThe ones I lost?â
âHow do you know they were the same? Why would any one return them to you that wayâin the middle of the night? Itâs a mad idea. Noâthey were a message, the films had been taken out of the yellow tin case, and something else put inside. Have you got it still?â
âI may have used it. No, here it is. I remember I tossed it into the rack at the side of the bunk.â
She held it out to me.
It was an ordinary round tin cylinder, such as films are packed in for the tropics. I took it with trembling hand, but even as I did so my heart leapt. It was noticeably heavier than it should have been.
With shaking fingers I peeled off the strip of adhesive plaster that kept it air-tight. I pulled off the lid, and a stream of dull glassy pebbles rolled onto the bed.
âPebbles,â I said, keenly disappointed.
âPebbles?â cried Suzanne.
The ring in her voice excited me.
âPebbles? No, Anne, not pebbles! Diamonds!â
Diamonds!
I stared, fascinated, at the glassy heap on the bunk. I picked up one which, but for the weight, might have been a fragment of broken bottle.
âAre you sure, Suzanne?â
âOh, yes, my dear. Iâve seen rough diamonds too often to have any doubts. Theyâre beauties too, Anneâand some of them are unique, I should say. Thereâs a history behind these.â
âThe history we heard to-night,â I cried.
âYou meanââ?â
âColonel Raceâs story. It canât be a coincidence. He told it for a purpose.â
âTo see its effect, you mean?â
I nodded.
âIts effect on Sir Eustace?â
âYes.â
But, even as I said it, a doubt assailed me. Was it Sir Eustace who had been subjected to a test, or had the story been told for my benefit? I remembered the impression I had received on that former night of having been deliberately âpumped.â For some reason or other, Colonel Race was suspicious. But where did he come in? What possible connection could he have with the affair?
âWho is Colonel Race?â I asked.
âThatâs rather a question,â said Suzanne. âHeâs pretty well known as a big-game hunter, and, as you heard him say to-night, he was a distant cousin of Sir Laurence Eardsley. Iâve never actually met him until this trip. He journeys to and from Africa a good deal. Thereâs a general idea that he does Secret Service work. I donât know whether itâs true or not. Heâs certainly rather a mysterious creature.â
âI suppose he came into a lot of money as Sir Laurence Eardsleyâs heir?â
âMy dear Anne, he must be rolling. You know, heâd be a splendid match for you.â
âI canât have a good go at him with you aboard the ship,â I said, laughing. âOh, these married women!â
âWe do have a pull,â murmured Suzanne complacently. âAnd everybody knows that I am absolutely devoted to Clarenceâmy husband, you know. Itâs so safe and pleasant to make love to a devoted wife.â
âIt must be very nice for Clarence to be married to some one like you.â
âWell, Iâm wearing to live with! Still, he can always escape to the Foreign Office, where he fixes his eyeglass in his eye, and goes to sleep in a big arm-chair. We might cable him to tell us all he knows about Race. I love sending cables. And they annoy Clarence so. He always says a letter would have done as well. I donât suppose heâd tell us anything, though. He is so frightfully discreet. Thatâs what makes him so hard to live with for long on end. But let us go on with our matchmaking. Iâm sure Colonel Race is very attracted to you, Anne. Give him a couple of glances from those wicked eyes of yours, and the deed is done. Every one gets engaged on board ship. Thereâs nothing else to do.â
âI donât want to get married.â
âDonât you?â said Suzanne. âWhy not? I love being marriedâeven to Clarence!â
I disdained her flippancy.
âWhat I want to know is,â I said with determination, âwhat has Colonel Race got to do with this? Heâs in it somewhere.â
âYou donât think it was mere chance, his telling that story?â
âNo, I donât,â I said decidedly. âHe was watching us all narrowly. You remember, some of the diamonds were recovered, not all. Perhaps these are the missing onesâor perhapsâââ
âPerhaps what?â
I did not answer directly.
âI should like to know,â I said, âwhat became of the other young man. Not Eardsley butâwhat was his name?âLucas!â
âWeâre getting some light on the thing, anyway. Itâs the diamonds all these people are after. It must have been to obtain possession of the diamonds that âThe Man in the Brown Suitâ killed Nadina.â
âHe didnât kill her,â I said sharply.
âOf course he killed her. Who else could have done so?â
âI donât know. But Iâm sure he didnât kill her.â
âHe went into that house three minutes after her and came out as white as a sheet.â
âBecause he found her dead.â
âBut nobody else went in.â
âThen the murderer was in the house already, or else he got in some other way. Thereâs no need for him to pass the lodge, he could have climbed over the wall.â
Suzanne glanced at me sharply.
ââThe Man in the Brown Suit,ââ she mused. âWho was he, I wonder? Anyway, he was identical with the âdoctorâ in the Tube. He would have had time to remove his make-up and follow the woman to Marlow. She and Carton were to have met there, they both had an order to view the same house, and if they took such elaborate precautions to make their meeting appear accidental they must have suspected they were being followed. All the same, Carton did not know that his shadower was the âMan in the Brown Suit.â When he recognized him, the shock was so great that he lost his head completely and stepped back onto the line. That all seems pretty clear, donât you think so, Anne?â
I did not reply.
âYes, thatâs how it was. He took the paper from the dead man, and in his hurry to get away he dropped it. Then he followed the woman to Marlow. What did he do when he left there, when he had killed herâor, according to you, found her dead. Where did he go?â
Still I said nothing.
âI wonder, now,â said Suzanne musingly. âIs it possible that he induced Sir Eustace Pedler to bring him on board as his secretary? It would be a unique chance of getting safely out of England, and dodging the hue and cry. But how did he square Sir Eustace? It looks as though he had some hold over him.â
âOr over Pagett,â I suggested in spite of myself.
âYou donât seem to like Pagett, Anne. Sir Eustace says heâs a most capable and hard-working young man. And, really, he may be for all we know against him. Well, to continue my surmises. Rayburn is the âMan in the Brown Suit.â He had read the paper he dropped. Therefore, misled by the dot as you were, he attempts to reach Cabin 17 at one oâclock on the 22nd, having previously tried to get possession of the cabin through Pagett. On the way there somebody knifes himâââ
âWho?â I interpolated.
âChichester. Yes, it all fits in. Cable to Lord Nasby that you have found âThe Man in the Brown Suit,â and your fortuneâs made, Anne!â
âThere are several things youâve overlooked.â
âWhat things? Rayburnâs got a scar, I knowâbut a scar can be faked easily enough. Heâs the right height and build. Whatâs the description of a head with which you pulverized them at Scotland Yard?â
I trembled. Suzanne was a well-educated, well-read woman, but I prayed that she might not be conversant with technical terms of anthropology.
âDolichocephalic,â I said lightly.
Suzanne looked doubtful.
âWas that it?â
âYes. Long-headed, you know. A head whose width is less than 75 per cent. of its length,â I explained fluently.
There was a pause. I was just beginning to breathe freely when Suzanne said suddenly:
âWhatâs the opposite?â
âWhat do you meanâthe opposite?â
âWell, there must be an opposite. What do you call the heads whose breadth is more than 75 per cent. of their length.â
âBrachycephalic,â I murmured unwillingly.
âThatâs it. I thought that was what you said.â
âDid I? It was a slip of the tongue. I meant dolichocephalic,â I said with all the assurance I could muster.
Suzanne looked at me searchingly. Then she laughed.
âYou lie very well, Gipsy girl. But it will save time and
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