Read The Complete Tommy & Tuppence Collection Online
Authors: Agatha Christie
âNow who told you that?' said Mr Robinson. âAll nonsense.'
âI don't think it is,' said Tommy.
âWell,' said Mr Robinson, âsome get to the tops and some have the tops forced upon them. I would say the latter applies to me, more or less. I've had a few things of surpassing interest forced upon me.'
âThat business connected withâFrankfurt, wasn't it?'
âAh,
you
've heard rumours, have you? Ah well, don't think about them any more. They're not supposed to be known much. Don't think I'm going to rebuff you for coming here asking me questions. I probably can answer some of the things you want to know. If I said there was something that happened years ago that might result in something being known that would beâpossiblyâinteresting nowadays, sometimes that would give one a bit of information about things that might be going on nowadays, that might be true enough. I
wouldn't put it past anyone or anything. I don't know what I can suggest to you, though. It's a question of worry about, listen to people, find out what you can about bygone years. If anything comes along that you think might be interesting to me, just give me a ring or something. We'll find some code words, you know. Just to make ourselves feel excited again, feel as though we really mattered. Crab-apple jelly, how would that be? You know, you say your wife's made some jars of crab-apple jelly and would I like a pot. I'll know what you mean.'
âYou mean thatâthat I would have found out something about Mary Jordan. I don't see there's any point in going on with that. After all, she's dead.'
âYes. She's dead. Butâwell, you see, sometimes one has the wrong ideas about people because of what you've been told. Or because of what's been written.'
âYou mean we have wrong ideas about Mary Jordan. You mean, she wasn't important at all.'
âOh yes, she could have been very important.' Mr Robinson looked at his watch. âI have to push you off now. There's a chap coming in, in ten minutes. An awful bore, but he's high up in government circles, and you know what life is nowadays. Government, government, you've got to stand it everywhere. In the office, in the home, in the supermarkets, on the television. Private life. That's what we want more of nowadays.
Now this little fun and games that you and your wife are having, you're in private life and you can look at it from the background of private life. Who knows, you might find out something. Something that would be interesting. Yes. You may and you may not.
âI can't tell you anything more about it. I know some of the facts that probably nobody else can tell you and in due course I might be able to tell them to you. But as they're all dead and done with, that's not really practical.
âI'll tell you one thing that will help you perhaps in your investigations. You read about this case, the trial of Commander whatever-he-wasâI've forgotten his name nowâand he was tried for espionage, did a sentence for it and richly deserved it. He was a traitor to his country and that's that. But Mary Jordanâ'
âYes?'
âYou want to know something about Mary Jordan. Well, I'll tell you one thing that might, as I say, help your point of view. Mary Jordan wasâwell, you can call it a spy but she wasn't a German spy. She wasn't an enemy spy. Listen to this, my boy. I can't keep calling you “my boy”.'
Mr Robinson dropped his voice and leaned forward over his desk.
â
She was one of our lot.
'
âBut that alters everything,' said Tuppence.
âYes,' said Tommy. âYes. It wasâit was quite a shock.'
âWhy did he tell you?'
âI don't know,' said Tommy. âI thoughtâwell, two or three different things.'
âDid heâwhat's he like, Tommy? You haven't really told me.'
âWell, he's yellow,' said Tommy. âYellow and big and fat and very, very ordinary, but at the same time, if you know what I mean, he isn't ordinary at all. He'sâwell, he's what my friend said he was. He's one of the tops.'
âYou sound like someone talking about pop singers.'
âWell, one gets used to using these terms.'
âYes, but why? Surely that was revealing something that he wouldn't have wanted to reveal, you'd think.'
âIt was a long time ago,' said Tommy. âIt's all over, you see. I suppose none of it matters nowadays. I mean, look at all the things they're releasing now. Off the record. You know, not hushing up things any more. Letting it all come out, what really happened. What one person wrote and what another person said and what one row was about and how something else was all hushed up because of something you never heard about.'
âYou make me feel horribly confused,' said Tuppence, âwhen you say things like that. It makes everything wrong, too, doesn't it?'
âHow do you mean, makes everything wrong?'
âWell, I mean, the way we've been looking at it. I meanâwhat do I mean?'
âGo on,' said Tommy. âYou must know what you mean.'
âWell, what I said. It's all wrong. I mean, we found this thing in
The Black Arrow
, and it was all clear enough. Somebody had written it in there, probably this boy Alexander, and it meant that somebodyâone of them, he said, at least, one of usâI mean he put it that way but that's what he meantâone of the family or somebody in the house or something, had arranged to bring about the death of Mary Jordan, and we didn't know who Mary Jordan was, which was very baffling.'
âGoodness knows it's been baffling,' said Tommy.
âWell, it hasn't baffled you as much as me. It's baffled me a great deal. I haven't really found out anything about her. At leastâ'
âWhat you found out about her was that she had been apparently a German spy, isn't that what you mean? You found out that?'
âYes, that is what was believed about her, and I supposed it was true. Only nowâ'
âYes,' said Tommy, âonly now we know that it wasn't true. She was the opposite to a German spy.'
âShe was a sort of English spy.'
âWell, she must have been in the English espionage or security whatever it was called. And she came here in some capacity to find out something. To find out something aboutâaboutâwhat's his name now? I wish I could remember names better. I mean the naval officer or the Army officer or whatever he was. The one who sold the secret of the submarine or something like that. Yes, I suppose there was a little cluster of German agents here, rather like in N or M all over again, all busy preparing things.'
âIt would seem so, yes.'
âAnd she was sent here in that case, presumably, to find out all about it.'
âI see.'
âSo “one of us” didn't mean what we thought it
meant. “One of us” meantâwell, it had to be someone who was in this neighbourhood. And somebody who had something to do with this house, or was in this house for a special occasion. And so, when she died, her death wasn't a natural one, because somebody got wise to what she was doing. And Alexander found out about it.'
âShe was pretending to spy, perhaps,' said Tuppence, âfor Germany. Making friends with Commanderâwhoever it was.'
âCall him Commander X,' said Tommy, âif you can't remember.'
âAll right, all right. Commander X. She was getting friendly with him.'
âThere was also,' said Tommy, âan enemy agent living down here. The head of a big organization. He lived in a cottage somewhere, down near the quay I think it was, and he wrote a lot of propaganda, and used to say that really our best plan would be to join in with Germany and get together with themâand things like that.'
âIt is all so confusing,' said Tuppence. âAll these thingsâplans, and secret papers and plots and espionageâhave been so confusing. Well, anyway, we've probably been looking in all the wrong places.'
âNot really,' said Tommy, âI don't think so.'
âWhy don't you think so?'
âWell, because if she, Mary Jordan, was here to find out something, and if she did find out something, then perhaps when
they
âI mean Commander X or other peopleâthere must have been other people too in itâwhen
they
found out that she'd found out somethingâ'
âNow don't get me muddled again,' said Tuppence. âIf you say things like that, it's very muddling. Yes. Go on.'
âAll right. Well, when they found out that she'd found out a lot of things, well, then they had toâ'
âTo silence her,' said Tuppence.
âYou make it sound like Phillips Oppenheim now,' said Tommy. âAnd he was before 1914, surely.'
âWell, anyway, they had to silence Mary before she could report what she'd found out.'
âThere must be a little more to it than that,' said Tommy. âPerhaps she'd got hold of something important. Some kind of papers or written document. Letters that might have been sent or passed to someone.'
âYes. I see what you mean. We've got to look among a different lot of people. But if she was one of the ones to die because of a mistake that had been made about the vegetables, then I don't see quite how it could be what Alexander called “one of us”. It presumably wasn't one of
his
family.'
âIt could have been like this,' said Tommy. âIt needn't
have been actually someone in the house. It's very easy to pick wrong leaves looking alike, bunch 'em all up together and take them into the kitchen; you wouldn't, I think, make them reallyâI mean, not
really
âtoo lethal. Just the people at one particular meal would get rather ill after it and they'd send for a doctor and the doctor would get the food analysed and he'd realize somebody'd made a mistake over vegetables. He wouldn't think anyone had done it on purpose.'
âBut then everybody at that meal would have died,' said Tuppence. âOr everybody would have been ill but
not
died.'
âNot necessarily,' said Tommy. âSuppose they wanted a certain personâMary J.âto die, and they were going to give a dose of poison to her, oh, in a cocktail
before
the lunch or dinner or whatever it was or in coffee or something after the mealâactual digitalin, or aconite or whatever it is in foxglovesâ'
âAconite's in monkshood, I think,' said Tuppence.
âDon't be so knowledgeable,' said Tommy. âThe point is everyone gets a mild dose by what is clearly a mistake, so everyone gets mildly illâbut one person dies. Don't you see, if most people were taken ill after whatever it wasâdinner or lunch one day and it was looked into, and they found out about the mistake, well, things
do
happen like that. You know, people eat fungus instead of mushrooms, and deadly nightshade
berries children eat by mistake because the berries look like fruit. Just a mistake and people are ill, but they don't usually all die. Just one of them does, and the one that did die would be assumed to have been particularly allergic to whatever it was and so
she
had died but the others
hadn't
. You see, it would pass off as really due to the mistake and they wouldn't have looked to see or even suspected there was some other way in which it happenedâ'
âShe might have got a little ill like the others and then the real dose might have been put in her early tea the next morning,' said Tuppence.
âI'm sure, Tuppence, that you've lots of ideas.'
âAbout that part of it, yes,' said Tuppence. âBut what about the other things? I mean who and what and why? Who was the “one of us”â“one of them” as we'd better say nowâwho had the opportunity? Someone staying down here, friends of other people perhaps? People who brought a letter, forged perhaps, from a friend saying “Do be kind to my friend, Mr or Mrs Murray Wilson, or some name, who is down here. She is so anxious to see your pretty garden,” or something. All that would be easy enough.'
âYes, I think it would.'
âIn that case,' said Tuppence, âthere's perhaps something still here in the house that would explain what happened to me today and yesterday, too.'
âWhat happened to you yesterday, Tuppence?'
âThe wheels came off that beastly little cart and horse I was going down the hill in the other day, and so I came a terrible cropper right down behind the monkey puzzle and into it. And I very nearlyâwell, I might have had a serious accident. That silly old man Isaac ought to have seen that the thing was safe. He said he
did
look at it. He told me it was quite all right before I started.'
âAnd it wasn't?'
âNo. He said afterwards that he thought someone had been playing about with it, tampering with the wheels or something, so that they came off.'
âTuppence,' said Tommy, âdo you think that's the second or third thing that's happened here to us? You know that other thing that nearly came down on the top of me in the book-room?'
âYou mean somebody wants to get rid of
us
? But that would meanâ'
âThat would mean,' said Tommy, âthat there must be
something
. Something that's
here
âin the house.'
Tommy looked at Tuppence and Tuppence looked at Tommy. It was the moment for consideration. Tuppence opened her mouth three times but checked herself each time, frowning, as she considered. It was Tommy who spoke at last.
âWhat did he think? What did he say about Truelove? Old Isaac, I mean.'
âThat it was only to be expected, that the thing was pretty rotten anyway.'
âBut he said somebody had been monkeying about with it?'
âYes,' said Tuppence, âvery definitely. “Ah,” he said, “these youngsters have been in tryin' it out, you know. Enjoy pulling wheels off things, they do, young monkeys.” Not that I've seen anyone about. But then I suppose they'd be sure that I didn't catch them at it. They'd wait till I'm away from home, I expect.
âI asked him if he thought it was justâjust something mischievous,' said Tuppence.
âWhat did he say to that?' said Tommy.
âHe didn't really know what to say.'
âIt could have been mischief, I suppose,' said Tommy. âPeople do do those things.'
âAre you trying to say you think that it was meant in some way so that I should go on playing the fool with the cart and that the wheel would come off and the thing would fall to piecesâoh, but that is nonsense, Tommy.'
âWell, it sounds like nonsense,' said Tommy, âbut things aren't nonsense sometimes. It depends where and how they happen and why.'
âI don't see what “why” there could be.'
âOne might make a guessâabout the most likely thing,' said Tommy.
âNow what do you mean by the most likely?'
âI mean perhaps people want us to go away from here.'
âWhy should they? If somebody wants the house for themselves, they could make us an offer for it.'
âYes, they could.'
âWell, I wonderedâNobody else has wanted this house as far as we know. I mean, there was nobody else looking at it when we were. It seemed to be generally regarded as if it had come into the market rather cheap but not for any other reason, except that it was out of date and needed a lot doing to it.'
âI can't believe they wanted to do away with us, maybe it's because you've been nosing about, asking too many questions, copying things out of books.'
âYou mean that I'm stirring up things that somebody doesn't want to be stirred up?'
âThat sort of thing,' said Tommy. âI mean, if we suddenly were meant to feel that we didn't like living here, and put the house up for sale and went away, that would be quite all right. They'd be satisfied with that. I don't think that theyâ'
âWho do you mean by “they”?'
âI've no idea,' said Tommy. âWe must get to “they” later. Just
they
. There's
We
and there's
They
. We must keep them apart in our minds.'
âWhat about Isaac?'
âWhat do you mean, what about Isaac?'
âI don't know. I just wondered if he was mixed up in this.'
âHe's a very old man, he's been here a long time and he knows a few things. If somebody slipped him a five pound note or something, do you think he'd tamper with Truelove's wheels?'
âNo, I don't,' said Tuppence. âHe hasn't got the brains to.'
âHe wouldn't need brains for it,' said Tommy. âHe'd only need the brains to take the five pound note and to take out a few screws or break off a bit of wood here or there and just make it so thatâwell, it would come to grief next time you went down the hill in it.'
âI think what you are imagining is nonsense,' said Tuppence.
âWell, you've been imagining a few things that are nonsense already.'
âYes, but they fitted in,' said Tuppence. âThey fitted in with the things we've heard.'
âWell,' said Tommy, âas a result of my investigations or researches, whatever you like to call them, it seems that we haven't learnt quite the right things.'
âYou mean what I said just now, that this turns things upside down. I mean now we know that Mary Jordan wasn't an enemy agent, instead she was a
British
agent. She was here for a purpose. Perhaps she had accomplished her purpose.'