The
moving finger
by Agatha Christie
After a flying accident, the pilot Jerry
Burton from London is rather badly injured. That's why his doctor Markus Kent
advises him to spend some time in the country in order to promote the healing
process. Jerry and his younger sister Joanna, who wants to accompany and look
after him, choose the villa Little Furze in Lymstock, a quiet little town. The
house belongs to Miss Emily Barton who will be staying at a friend's,
meanwhile. She leaves her servant Patridge behind, to work for Jerry and
Joanna. They soon get to know some inhabitants of the "village" as they call
Lymstock. There are Mr and Mrs Symmington, for example. Richard Symmington is the
solicitor of Lymstock. He and his wife have two sons, Brian and Colin, and Mrs
Symmington has another daughter from her first marriage, Megan Hunter. Even
though Megan is already twenty years of age she is quite childish and immature
and people even say she has got a low mind. Then there is Owen Griffith, the
local doctor, and his sister Aimie. Further village inhabitants are Elsie
Holland and Agnes Woddell, both maids at the Symmingtons', Mr Caleb Calthrop
the vicar, and his wife Dane as well as a rather odd man, Mr Pye. One week
after their arrival Jerry and Joanna get an anonymous letter saying nasty
things about them. Having found out that this anonymous letter writing has been
going on for some time, Jerry Burton gets more and more interested in trying to
find out who is responsible for them. While discovering local scandals and so
on, he gets to know Megan better. He realises that she is quite an intelligent
and nice girl, though hardly anyone- except Joanna- thinks the same. And then,
one day, Mrs Symmington is found dead in her bedroom, cause of death cyanide as
one knows from the inquest, holding as
scrap of paper in her hand,. saying "I
can't go on". Everybody thinks she has committed suicide due to an anonymous
letter which has been found right beside her body. So they are not searching
for a lunatic who writes anonymous letters, but for an- at least indirect- murderer. After this shock Jerry and
Joanna invite Megan to stay at theirs for some time in order to recover a bit.
After Mrs Symmington's death Jerry Burton gets even more interested in the
whole affair and often interferes with Superintendent Nash's investigations
with which one must say that he welcomes Jerry's help. Questioning a lot of
Lymstock's inhabitants he discovers that most of them accuse Mrs Cleat, the
witch of the village as they call her. Admittedly she is odd, but Jerry and
Superintendent Nash agree that she is very unlikely to be the one they are
after. The letter writer, however, doesn't stop his nasty business. Superintendent
Nash is quite sure it must be a woman because of certain clues. They still
don't have any concrete suspicions, when a week after Mrs Symmington's death
Megan returns home from Little Furze and on the next day she finds Agnes
Woddell's body in a cupboard below the stairs. Symmington's maid has rung
Patridge the day before and has told her she was worried about something and
would be coming round- but she never came. Another inspector arrives to
enlighten the crime. This inspector Graves and Superintendent Nash suppose that
Agnes Woddell had to die because she had seen the letter writer and therefore
the indirect murderer of Mrs Symmington. It was her day out and she went to see
her boyfriend, but they had a row and so she returned early. Sitting by the
window and waiting for her boyfriend to come and apologise she must have seen a
person putting a letter into the letterbox. That's why, a week later, getting
all this straight, she had to die before she could say anything. What follows
is a number of suspicions. But all this seems to have a good side as well:
Megan and Jerry get to know each other even better when he takes her for a trip
to London one (he has to see his doctor Marcus Kent). This trip changes Megan
in a very positive way. And, just as nobody expects it, Superintendent Nash
proclaims that they have got her. Aimie Griffith shall be the one they have
been after for so long. But is she really able to kill somebody? Miss Marple,
who is visiting the Calthrops at the moments, doubts it