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Five Little Pigs - Agatha Christie [55]

By Root 450 0
upon him. He went crimson and started blustering. He turned on Elsa and asked her why the devil she couldn’t have held her tongue?

Caroline said: “Then it is true?”

He didn’t say anything, just stood there passing his finger round inside the neck of his shirt. He used to do that as a kid when he got into a jam of any kind. He said—and he tried to make the words sound dignified and authoritative—and of course couldn’t manage it, poor devil:

“I don’t want to discuss it.”

Caroline said: “But we’re going to discuss it!”

Elsa chipped in and said:

“I think it’s only fair to Caroline that she should be told.”

Caroline said, very quietly:

“Is it true, Amyas?”

He looked a bit ashamed of himself. Men do when women pin them down in a corner.

She said:

“Answer me, please. I’ve got to know.”

He flung up his head then—rather the way a bull does in the bullring. He snapped out:

“It’s true enough—but I don’t want to discuss it now.”

And he turned and strode out of the room. I went after him. I didn’t want to be left with the women. I caught up with him on the terrace. He was swearing. I never knew a man swear more heartily. Then he raved:

“Why couldn’t she hold her tongue? Why the devil couldn’t she hold her tongue? Now the fat’s in the fire. And I’ve got to finish that picture—do you hear, Phil? It’s the best thing I’ve done. The best thing I’ve ever done in my life. And a couple of damn’ fool women want to muck it up between them!”

Then he calmed down a little and said women had no sense of proportion.

I couldn’t help smiling a little. I said:

“Well, dash it all, old boy, you have brought this on yourself.”

“Don’t I know it,” he said, and groaned. Then he added: “But you must admit, Phil, that a man couldn’t be blamed for losing his head about her. Even Caroline ought to understand that.”

I asked him what would happen if Caroline got her back up and refused to give him a divorce.

But by now he had gone off into a fit of abstraction. I repeated the remark and he said absently:

“Caroline would never be vindictive. You don’t understand, old boy.”

“There’s the child,” I pointed out.

He took me by the arm.

“Phil, old boy, you mean well—but don’t go on croaking like a raven. I can manage my affairs. Everything will turn out all right. You’ll see if it doesn’t.”

That was Amyas all over—an absolutely unjustified optimist. He said now, cheerfully:

“To hell with the whole pack of them!”

I don’t know whether we would have said anything more, but a few minutes later Caroline swept out on the terrace. She’d got a hat on, a queer, flopping, dark-brown hat, rather attractive.

She said in an absolutely ordinary, everyday voice:

“Take off that paint-stained coat, Amyas. We’re going over to Meredith’s to tea—don’t you remember?”

He stared, stammered a bit as he said:

“Oh, I’d forgotten. Yes, of c-c-course we are.”

She said:

“Then go and try and make yourself look less like a rag-and-bone man.”

Although her voice was quite natural, she didn’t look at him. She moved over towards a bed of dahlias and began picking off some of the overblown flowers.

Amyas turned round slowly and went into the house.

Caroline talked to me. She talked a good deal. About the chances of the weather lasting. And whether there might be mackerel about, and if so Amyas and Angela and I might like to go fishing. She was really amazing. I’ve got to hand it to her.

But I think, myself, that that showed the sort of woman she was. She had enormous strength of will and complete command over herself. I don’t know whether she’d made up her mind to kill him then—but I shouldn’t be surprised. And she was capable of making her plans carefully and unemotionally, with an absolutely clear and ruthless mind.

Caroline Crale was a very dangerous woman. I ought to have realized then that she wasn’t prepared to take this thing lying down. But like a fool I thought that she had made up her mind to accept the inevitable—or else possibly she thought that if she carried on exactly as usual Amyas might change his mind.

Presently the others came out. Elsa looking defiant

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