The Man in the Brown Suit by Agatha Christie (romantic story to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Agatha Christie
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âThen it was you who tried to throw me overboard on the Kilmorden,â I said slowly. âIt was you that Pagett followed up on deck that night?â
He shrugged his shoulders.
âI apologize, my dear child, I really do. I always liked youâbut you were so confoundedly interfering. I couldnât have all my plans brought to naught by a chit of a girl.â
âI think your plan at the Falls was really the cleverest,â I said, endeavouring to look at the thing in a detached fashion. âI would have been ready to swear anywhere that you were in the hotel when I went out. Seeing is believing in future.â
âYes, Minks had one of his greatest successes as Miss Pettigrew, and he can imitate my voice quite creditably.â
âThere is one thing I should like to know.â
âYes?â
âHow did you induce Pagett to engage her?â
âOh, that was quite simple. She met Pagett in the doorway of the Trade Commissionerâs office or the Chamber of Mines, or wherever it was he wentâtold him I had phoned down in a hurry, and that she had been selected by the Government department in question. Pagett swallowed it like a lamb.â
âYouâre very frank,â I said, studying him.
âThereâs no earthly reason why I shouldnât be.â
I didnât quite like the sound of that. I hastened to put my own interpretation on it.
âYou believe in the success of this Revolution? Youâve burnt your boats.â
âFor an otherwise intelligent young woman, thatâs a singularly unintelligent remark. No, my dear child, I do not believe in this Revolution. I give it a couple of days longer and it will fizzle out ignominiously.â
âNot one of your successes, in fact?â I said nastily.
âLike all women, youâve no idea of business. The job I took on was to supply certain explosives and armsâheavily paid forâto foment feeling generally, and to incriminate certain people up to the hilt. Iâve carried out my contract with complete success, and I was careful to be paid in advance. I took special care over the whole thing, as I intended it to be my last contract before retiring from business. As for burning my boats, as you call it, I simply donât know what you mean. Iâm not the rebel chief, or anything of that kindâIâm a distinguished English visitor, who had the misfortune to go nosing into a certain curio-shopâand saw a little more than he was meant to, and so the poor fellow was kidnapped. To-morrow, or the day after, when circumstances permit, I shall be found tied up somewhere in a pitiable state of terror and starvation.â
âAh!â I said slowly. âBut what about me?â
âThatâs just it,â said Sir Eustace softly. âWhat about you? Iâve got you hereâI donât want to rub it in in any wayâbut Iâve got you here very neatly. The question is, what am I going to do with you? The simplest way of disposing of youâand, I may add, the pleasantest to myselfâis the way of marriage. Wives canât accuse their husbands, you know, and Iâd rather like a pretty young wife to hold my hand and glance at me out of liquid eyesâdonât flash them at me so! You quite frighten me. I see that the plan does not commend itself to you?â
âIt does not.â
Sir Eustace sighed.
âA pity! But I am no Adelphi villain. The usual trouble, I suppose. You love another, as the books say.â
âI love another.â
âI thought as muchâfirst I thought it was that long-legged, pompous ass, Race, but I suppose itâs the young hero who fished you out of the Falls that night. Women have no taste. Neither of those two have half the brains that I have. Iâm such an easy person to underestimate.â
I think he was right about that. Although I knew well enough the kind of man he was and must be, I could not bring myself to realize it. He had tried to kill me on more than one occasion, he had actually killed another woman, and he was responsible for endless other deeds of which I knew nothing, and yet I was quite unable to bring myself into the frame of mind for appreciating his deeds as they deserved. I could not think of him as other than our amusing, genial travelling companion. I could not even feel frightened of himâand yet I knew he was capable of having me murdered in cold blood if it struck him as necessary. The only parallel I can think of is the case of Stevensonâs Long John Silver. He must have been much the same kind of man.
âWell, well,â said this extraordinary person, leaning back in his chair. âItâs a pity that the idea of being Lady Pedler doesnât appeal to you. The other alternatives are rather crude.â
I felt a nasty feeling going up and down my spine. Of course I had known all along that I was taking a big risk, but the prize had seemed worth it. Would things turn out as I had calculated, or would they not?
âThe fact of the matter is,â Sir Eustace was continuing, âIâve a weakness for you. I really donât want to proceed to extremes. Suppose you tell me the whole story, from the very beginning, and letâs see what we can make of it. But no romancing, mindâI want the truth.â
I was not going to make any mistake over that. I had a great deal of respect for Sir Eustaceâs shrewdness. It was a moment for the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. I told him the whole story, omitting nothing, up to the moment of my rescue by Harry. When I had finished, he nodded his head in approval.
âWise girl. Youâve made a clean breast of the thing. And let me tell you I should soon have caught you out if you hadnât. A lot of people wouldnât believe your story, anyway, especially the beginning part, but I do. Youâre the kind of girl who would start off like thatâat a momentâs notice, on the slenderest of motives. Youâve had amazing luck, of course, but sooner or later the amateur runs up against the professional and then the result is a foregone conclusion. I am the professional. I started on this business when I was quite a youngster. All things considered, it seemed to me a good way of getting rich quickly. I always could think things out, and devise ingenious schemesâand I never made the mistake of trying to carry out my schemes myself. Always employ the expertâthat has been my motto. The one time I departed from it I came to griefâbut I couldnât trust any one to do that job for me. Nadina knew too much. Iâm an easy-going man, kind-hearted and good tempered so long as Iâm not thwarted. Nadina both thwarted me and threatened meâjust as I was at the apex of a successful career. Once she was dead and the diamonds were in my possession, I was safe. Iâve come to the conclusion now that I bungled the job. That idiot Pagett, with his wife and family! My faultâit tickled my sense of humour to employ the fellow, with his Cinquecento poisonerâs face and his mid-Victorian soul. A maxim for you, my dear Anne. Donât let your sense of humour carry you away. For years Iâve had an instinct that it would be wise to get rid of Pagett, but the fellow was so hard-working and conscientious that I honestly couldnât find an excuse for sacking him. So I left things drift.
âBut weâre wandering from the point. The question is what to do with you. Your narrative was admirably clear, but there is one thing that still escapes me. Where are the diamonds now?â
âHarry Rayburn has them,â I said, watching him.
His face did not change, it retained its expression of sardonic good-humour.
âHâm. I want those diamonds.â
âI donât see much chance of your getting them,â I replied.
âDonât you? Now I do. I donât want to be unpleasant, but I should like you to reflect that a dead girl or so found in this quarter of the city will occasion no surprise. Thereâs a man downstairs who does those sort of jobs very neatly. Now, youâre a sensible young woman. What I propose is this: you will sit down and write to Harry Rayburn, telling him to join you here and bring the diamonds with himâââ
âI wonât do anything of the kind.â
âDonât interrupt your elders. I propose to make a bargain with you. The diamonds in exchange for your life. And donât make any mistake about it, your life is absolutely in my power.â
âAnd Harry?â
âIâm far too tender-hearted to part two young lovers. He shall go free tooâon the understanding, of course, that neither of you will interfere with me in future.â
âAnd what guarantee have I that you will keep your side of the bargain?â
âNone whatever, my dear girl. Youâll have to trust me and hope for the best. Of course, if youâre in an heroic mood and prefer annihilation, thatâs another matter.â
This was what I had been playing for. I was careful not to jump at the bait. Gradually I allowed myself to be bullied and cajoled into yielding. I wrote at Sir Eustaceâs dictation:
Dear Harry,
I think I see a chance of establishing your innocence beyond any possible doubt. Please follow my instructions minutely. Go to Agrasatoâs curio-shop. Ask to see something âout of the ordinary,â âfor a special occasion.â The man will then ask you to âcome into the back room.â Go with him. You will find a messenger who will bring you to me. Do exactly as he tells you. Be sure and bring the diamonds with you. Not a word to any one.
Sir Eustace stopped. âI leave the fancy touches to your own imagination,â he remarked. âBut be careful to make no mistakes.â
ââYours for ever and ever, Anne,â will be sufficient,â I remarked.
I wrote in the words. Sir Eustace stretched out his hand for the letter and read it through.
âThat seems all right. Now the address.â
I gave it him. It was that of a small shop which received letters and telegrams for a consideration.
He struck the bell upon the table with his hand. Chichester-Pettigrew, alias Minks, answered the summons.
âThis letter is to go immediatelyâthe usual route.â
âVery well, Colonel.â
He looked at the name on the envelope. Sir Eustace was watching him keenly.
âA friend of yours, I think?â
âOf mine?â
The man seemed startled.
âYou had a prolonged conversation with him in Johannesburg yesterday.â
âA man came up and questioned me about your movements and those of Colonel Race. I gave him misleading information.â
âExcellent, my dear fellow, excellent,â said Sir Eustace genially. âMy mistake.â
I chanced to look at Chichester-Pettigrew as he left the room. He was white to the lips, as though in deadly terror. No sooner was he outside than Sir Eustace picked up a speaking-tube that rested by his elbow and spoke down it.
âThat you, Schwart? Watch Minks. Heâs not to leave the house without orders.â
He put the speaking-tube down again and frowned, slightly tapping the table with his hand.
âMay I ask you a few questions, Sir Eustace,â I said, after a minute or two of silence.
âCertainly. What excellent nerves you have, Anne. You are capable of taking an intelligent interest in things when most girls would be sniffling and wringing their hands.â
âWhy did you take Harry as your secretary instead of giving him up to the police?â
âI wanted those cursed diamonds. Nadina, the little devil, was playing off your Harry against me. Unless I gave her the price she wanted, she threatened to sell them back to him. That was another mistake I madeâI thought sheâd have them with her that day. But she was too clever for that. Carton, her husband, was dead tooâIâd no clue whatsoever as to where the diamonds were hidden. Then I managed to get a copy of a wireless message sent to Nadina by some one on board the Kilmordenâeither Carton or Rayburn, I didnât know which. It was a duplicate of that piece of paper you picked up. âSeventeen one twenty two,â it ran. I took it to be an appointment with Rayburn, and when he was so desperate to get aboard the Kilmorden I was convinced that I was right. So I pretended to swallow his statements, and let him come. I kept a pretty sharp watch upon him and hoped that I should learn more. Then I found Minks trying to play a lone hand and interfering with me. I soon stopped that. He came to heel all right. It was annoying not getting Cabin 17, and it worried me not being able to place you. Were you the innocent young girl you seemed, or were you not? When Rayburn set out to keep the appointment that night, Minks was told off to intercept him. Minks muffed it of course.â
âBut why did the wireless message say âseventeenâ instead of âseventy-oneâ?â
âIâve thought that out. Carton must have given that wireless operator his own memorandum to copy off on to a form, and he never read the copy through. The operator made the
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