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ââTeaâwhat the hellâyou put in the teaâget helpâquick get a doctorââ Miss Grosvenor fled from the room. She was no longer the supercilious blonde secretaryâshe was a thoroughly frightened woman who had lost her head.â
The punctuated dialogue, Rex Fortescueâs only speech while alive, emphasizes his anger and distress, signaling that the murder is in progress. Miss Grosvenor is transformed by fear. Her reaction may imply guilt, setting up one of the novelâs first red herrings.
âIt was only the faintest suspicion of a question mark but the young woman responded. âI know. Percival made an appointment twice for him, but he wouldnât keep it. He was quite unreasonableâtheyâve all been worriedââ She broke off and then resumed in her former assured manner.â
This first exchange of many between Miss Dove and Inspector Neele emphasizes his ability to ask subtle questions and her own intelligence. She confides the familyâs doubts about Rexâs health in short bursts, as if aware that she is betraying a confidence. This introduces the theme of family secrecy and Neeleâs role in uncovering it as he seeks to solve the crime.
ââLovely legs sheâs got,â said Constable Waite with a sigh. âAnd super nylonsââ âLegs are no help to me,â said Inspector Neele. âIâm left with what I had before. A pocketful of ryeâand no explanation of it.ââ
This exchange establishes Neeleâs character as unlike his constableâs: He is not distracted by aesthetics. The nylons in particular are a marker of the postwar contextânylon was rationed for years during the war and afterward, so new stockings were difficult to acquire. Neele, however, is focused on the deeper mystery, which will turn out to be key to the case.
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By Agatha Christie