The Secret Adversary Agatha Christie (books to read to get smarter TXT) đ
- Author: Agatha Christie
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âI think I almost hypnotized myself. After a while, I almost forgot that I was really Jane Finn. I was so bent on playing the part of Janet Vandemeyer that my nerves began to play me tricks. I became really illâ âfor months I sank into a sort of stupor. I felt sure I should die soon, and that nothing really mattered. A sane person shut up in a lunatic asylum often ends by becoming insane, they say. I guess I was like that. Playing my part had become second nature to me. I wasnât even unhappy in the endâ âjust apathetic. Nothing seemed to matter. And the years went on.
âAnd then suddenly things seemed to change. Mrs. Vandemeyer came down from London. She and the doctor asked me questions, experimented with various treatments. There was some talk of sending me to a specialist in Paris. In the end, they did not dare risk it. I overheard something that seemed to show that other peopleâ âfriendsâ âwere looking for me. I learnt later that the nurse who had looked after me went to Paris, and consulted a specialist, representing herself to be me. He put her through some searching tests, and exposed her loss of memory to be fraudulent; but she had taken a note of his methods and reproduced them on me. I dare say I couldnât have deceived the specialist for a minuteâ âa man who has made a lifelong study of a thing is uniqueâ âbut I managed once again to hold my own with them. The fact that Iâd not thought of myself as Jane Finn for so long made it easier.
âOne night I was whisked off to London at a momentâs notice. They took me back to the house in Soho. Once I got away from the sanatorium I felt differentâ âas though something in me that had been buried for a long time was waking up again.
âThey sent me in to wait on Mr. Beresford. (Of course I didnât know his name then.) I was suspiciousâ âI thought it was another trap. But he looked so honest, I could hardly believe it. However, I was careful in all I said, for I knew we could be overheard. Thereâs a small hole, high up in the wall.
âBut on the Sunday afternoon a message was brought to the house. They were all very disturbed. Without their knowing, I listened. Word had come that he was to be killed. I neednât tell the next part, because you know it. I thought Iâd have time to rush up and get the papers from their hiding-place, but I was caught. So I screamed out that he was escaping, and I said I wanted to go back to Marguerite. I shouted the name three times very loud. I knew the others would think I meant Mrs. Vandemeyer, but I hoped it might make Mr. Beresford think of the picture. Heâd unhooked one the first dayâ âthatâs what made me hesitate to trust him.â
She paused.
âThen the papers,â said Sir James slowly, âare still at the back of the picture in that room.â
âYes.â The girl had sunk back on the sofa exhausted with the strain of the long story.
Sir James rose to his feet. He looked at his watch.
âCome,â he said, âwe must go at once.â
âTonight?â queried Tuppence, surprised.
âTomorrow may be too late,â said Sir James gravely. âBesides, by going tonight we have the chance of capturing that great man and super-criminalâ âMr. Brown!â
There was dead silence, and Sir James continued:
âYou have been followed hereâ ânot a doubt of it. When we leave the house we shall be followed again, but not molested, for it is Mr. Brownâs plan that we are to lead him. But the Soho house is under police supervision night and day. There are several men watching it. When we enter that house, Mr. Brown will not draw backâ âhe will risk all, on the chance of obtaining the spark to fire his mine. And he fancies the risk not greatâ âsince he will enter in the guise of a friend!â
Tuppence flushed, then opened her mouth impulsively.
âBut thereâs something you donât knowâ âthat we havenât told you.â Her eyes dwelt on Jane in perplexity.
âWhat is that?â asked the other sharply. âNo hesitations, Miss Tuppence. We need to be sure of our going.â
But Tuppence, for once, seemed tongue-tied.
âItâs so difficultâ âyou see, if Iâm wrongâ âoh, it would be dreadful.â She made a grimace at the unconscious Jane. âNever forgive me,â she observed cryptically.
âYou want me to help you out, eh?â
âYes, please. You know who Mr. Brown is, donât you?â
âYes,â said Sir James gravely. âAt last I do.â
âAt last?â queried Tuppence doubtfully. âOh, but I thoughtâ ââ She paused.
âYou thought correctly, Miss Tuppence. I have been morally certain of his identity for some timeâ âever since the night of Mrs. Vandemeyerâs mysterious death.â
âAh!â breathed Tuppence.
âFor there we are up against the logic of facts. There are only two solutions. Either the chloral was administered by her own hand, which theory I reject utterly, or elseâ ââ
âYes?â
âOr else it was administered in the brandy you gave her. Only three people touched that brandyâ âyou, Miss Tuppence, I myself, and one otherâ âMr. Julius Hersheimmer!â
Jane Finn stirred and sat up, regarding the speaker with wide astonished eyes.
âAt first, the thing seemed utterly impossible. Mr. Hersheimmer, as the son of a prominent millionaire, was a well-known figure in America. It seemed utterly impossible that he and Mr. Brown could be one and the same. But you cannot escape from the logic of facts. Since the thing was soâ âit must be accepted. Remember Mrs. Vandemeyerâs sudden and inexplicable agitation. Another proof, if proof was needed.
âI took an early opportunity of giving you a hint. From some words of Mr. Hersheimmerâs at Manchester, I gathered that you had understood and acted on that hint. Then I set to work to prove the impossible possible. Mr. Beresford rang me up and told me, what I had already suspected, that the photograph of Miss Jane Finn had never really been out of Mr. Hersheimmerâs possessionâ ââ
But the girl interrupted. Springing to
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