And Then There Were None - Agatha Christie [30]
They came at last, skirting the water’s edge, to where General Macarthur sat looking out to sea. It was very peaceful here with the lap of the waves breaking over the rocks. The old man sat very upright, his eyes fixed on the horizon.
He paid no attention to the approach of the searchers. His oblivion of them made one at least faintly uncomfortable.
Blore thought to himself:
“ ’Tisn’t natural—looks as though he’d gone into a trance or something.”
He cleared his throat and said in a would-be conversational tone:
“Nice peaceful spot you’ve found for yourself, sir.”
The General frowned. He cast a quick look over his shoulder. He said:
“There is so little time—so little time. I really must insist that no one disturbs me.”
Blore said genially:
“We won’t disturb you. We’re just making a tour of the island so to speak. Just wondered, you know, if someone might be hiding on it.”
The General frowned and said:
“You don’t understand—you don’t understand at all. Please go away.”
Blore retreated. He said, as he joined the other two:
“He’s crazy … It’s no good talking to him.”
Lombard asked with some curiosity:
“What did he say?”
Blore shrugged his shoulders.
“Something about there being no time and that he didn’t want to be disturbed.”
Dr. Armstrong frowned.
He murmured:
“I wonder now….”
III
The search of the island was practically completed. The three men stood on the highest point looking over towards the mainland. There were no boats out. The wind was freshening.
Lombard said:
“No fishing boats out. There’s a storm coming. Damned nuisance you can’t see the village from here. We could signal or do something.”
Blore said:
“We might light a bonfire tonight.”
Lombard said, frowning:
“The devil of it is that that’s all probably been provided for.”
“In what way, sir?”
“How do I know? Practical joke, perhaps. We’re to be marooned here, no attention is to be paid to signals, etc. Possibly the village has been told there’s a wager on. Some damn’ fool story anyway.”
Blore said dubiously:
“Think they’d swallow that?”
Lombard said dryly:
“It’s easier of belief than the truth! If the village were told that the island was to be isolated until Mr. Unknown Owen had quietly murdered all his guests—do you think they’d believe that?”
Dr. Armstrong said:
“There are moments when I can’t believe it myself. And yet—”
Philip Lombard, his lips curling back from his teeth said:
“And yet—that’s just it! You’ve said it, doctor!”
Blore was gazing down into the water.
He said:
“Nobody could have clambered down here, I suppose?”
Armstrong shook his head.
“I doubt it. It’s pretty sheer. And where could he hide?”
Blore said:
“There might be a hole in the cliff. If we had a boat now, we could row round the island.”
Lombard said:
“If we had a boat, we’d all be halfway to the mainland by now!”
“True enough, sir.”
Lombard said suddenly:
“We can make sure of this cliff. There’s only one place where there could be a recess—just a little to the right below here. If you fellows can get hold of a rope, you can let me down to make sure.”
Blore said:
“Might as well be sure. Though it seems absurd—on the face of it! I’ll see if I can get hold of something.”
He started off briskly down to the house.
Lombard stared up at the sky. The clouds were beginning to mass themselves together. The wind was increasing.
He shot a sideways look at Armstrong. He said:
“You’re very silent, doctor. What are you thinking?”
Armstrong said slowly:
“I was wondering exactly how mad old Macarthur was….”
IV
Vera had been restless all the morning. She had avoided Emily Brent with a kind of shuddering aversion.
Miss Brent herself had taken a chair just round the corner of the house so as to be out of the wind. She sat there knitting.
Every time Vera thought of her she seemed to see a pale drowned face with seaweed entangled in the hair … A face that had once been pretty—impudently pretty perhaps—and which was now beyond the reach of pity or terror.
And Emily Brent, placid and righteous, sat knitting.
On the