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The Regatta Mystery and Other Stories (Hercule Poirot 21)

Page 220

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slavery. He wanted to be free before it was too

late .... Yes, I'm sure that's how it was ....

When did you guessmthat it was he?"

"His self-control was too perfect," said Poirot

simply. "No matter how galling his wife's con-duct,

it never seemed to touch him. That meant

either that he was so used to it that it no longer

214

Agatha Christie

stung him, or else--eh bien--I decided on the

latter alternative .... And I was right ....

"And then there was his insistence on his con-juring

ability--the evening before the crime. He

pretended to give himself away. But a man like

Clapperton doesn't give himself away. There must

be a reason. So long as people thought he had

been a conjuror they weren't likely to think of his

having been a ventriloquist."

"And the voice we heard--Mrs. Clapperton's

voice?"

"One of the stewardesses had a voice not unlike

hers. I induced her to hide behind the stage and

taught her the words to say."

"It was a trick--a cruel trick," cried out Ellie.

"I do not approve of murder," said Hercule

Poirot.

"One of the most Imaginative and fertile

plot creators of all time!"-Ellery Queen



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