Poirot’s Early Cases. Агата Кристи

Poirot’s Early Cases - Агата Кристи


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       logo200 Copyright

      HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd.

      1 London Bridge Street

      London SE1 9GF

       www.harpercollins.co.uk

      First published in Great Britain by Collins 1974

      Copyright © 1974 Agatha Christie Limited (a Chorion company). All rights reserved.

       www.agathachristie.com

      Agatha Christie asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work

      A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

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      Source ISBN: 9780007121137

      Ebook Edition © OCTOBER 2010 ISBN: 9780007422722

      Version: 2017-05-03

      Contents

       Title Page

       The King of Clubs

       The Lemesurier Inheritance

       The Lost Mine

       The Plymouth Express

       The Chocolate Box

       The Submarine Plans

       The Third-Floor Flat

       Double Sin

       The Market Basing Mystery

       Wasps’ Nest

       The Veiled Lady

       Problem at Sea

       How Does Your Garden Grow?

       Keep Reading

       E-book Extra

       About Agatha Christie

       The Agatha Christie Collection

      About the Publisher

       The Affair at the Victory Ball

      I

      Pure chance led my friend Hercule Poirot, formerly chief of the Belgian force, to be connected with the Styles Case. His success brought him notoriety, and he decided to devote himself to the solving of problems in crime. Having been wounded on the Somme and invalided out of the Army, I finally took up my quarters with him in London. Since I have a first-hand knowledge of most of his cases, it has been suggested to me that I select some of the most interesting and place them on record. In doing so, I feel that I cannot do better than begin with that strange tangle which aroused such widespread public interest at the time. I refer to the affair at the Victory Ball.

      Although perhaps it is not so fully demonstrative of Poirot’s peculiar methods as some of the more obscure cases, its sensational features, the well-known people involved, and the tremendous publicity given it by the Press, make it stand out as a cause célèbre and I have long felt that it is only fitting that Poirot’s connection with the solution should be given to the world.

      It was a fine morning in spring, and we were sitting in Poirot’s rooms. My little friend, neat and dapper as ever, his egg-shaped head tilted on one side, was delicately applying a new pomade to his moustache. A certain harmless vanity was a characteristic of Poirot’s and fell into line with his general love of order and method. The Daily Newsmonger, which I had been reading, had slipped to the floor, and I was deep in a brown study when Poirot’s voice recalled me.

      ‘Of what are you thinking so deeply, mon ami?’

      ‘To tell you the truth,’ I replied, ‘I was puzzling over this unaccountable affair at the Victory Ball. The papers are full of it.’ I tapped the sheet with my finger as I spoke.

      ‘Yes?’

      ‘The more one reads of it, the more shrouded in mystery the whole thing becomes!’ I warmed to my subject. ‘Who killed Lord Cronshaw? Was Coco Courtenay’s death on the same night a mere coincidence? Was it an accident? Or did she deliberately take an overdose of cocaine?’ I stopped, and then added dramatically: ‘These are the questions I ask myself.’

      Poirot, somewhat to my annoyance, did not play up. He was peering into the glass, and merely murmured: ‘Decidedly, this new pomade, it is a marvel for the moustaches!’ Catching my eye, however, he added hastily: ‘Quite so—and how do you reply to your questions?’

      But before I could answer, the door opened, and our landlady announced Inspector Japp.

      The Scotland Yard man was an old friend of ours and we greeted him warmly.

      ‘Ah, my good Japp,’ cried Poirot, ‘and what brings you to see us?’

      ‘Well, Monsieur Poirot,’ said Japp, seating himself and nodding to me, ‘I’m on a case that strikes me as being very much in your line, and I came along to know whether you’d care to have a finger in the pie?’

      Poirot had a good opinion of Japp’s abilities, though deploring his lamentable lack of method, but I, for my part, considered that the detective’s highest talent lay in the gentle art of seeking favours under the guise of conferring them!

      ‘It’s the Victory Ball,’ said Japp persuasively. ‘Come, now, you’d like to have a hand in that.’

      Poirot smiled at me.

      ‘My friend Hastings would, at all events. He was just holding forth on the subject, n’est-ce pas, mon ami?’

      ‘Well, sir,’ said Japp condescendingly, ‘you shall be in it too. I can tell you, it’s something of a feather in your cap to have inside knowledge of a case like this. Well, here’s to business. You know the main facts of the case, I suppose, Monsieur Poirot?’

      ‘From the papers only—and the imagination of the journalist is sometimes


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