Hamlyn, London, 1971
SBN 6007 66 209
beletria, detektívky
544 s., angličtina
hmotnosť: 591 g
tvrdá väzba s prebalom
stav: dobrý, na niektorých miestach jemné vpisy ceruzou
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*kamag*
The Clocks
The typing agency had sent Sheila Webb with instructions to let herself into the house, which would not be locked, if Miss Pebmarsh had not returned home by the three o’clock appointment time. Miss Pebmarsh was not back by three o'clock so Sheila went in. There was something odd about the room in which she had been told to wait; there seemed to be a profusion of clocks; and a glance was enough to show that some of them were wildly in error — by the same amount of time. Even more strange, the room was not, after all, quite unoccupied. Sprawled on the floor beyond the sofa was the figure of a man. He turned out to be quite as dead as the dark moist patch on the front of his suit suggested he might be. . . .
Third Girl
Hercule Poirot was relatively immune to surprise at the strange behaviour of his fellows. Nevertheless, he confessed to mild astonishment when a young lady called in the hope of consulting him . . . about a murder she might have committed.
In every other murder case in which Poirot had been involved the murderer had been the person least in doubt concerning the identity of the perpetrator. But more outrageous than the hour of his visitor's intrusion was her behaviour. After a brief and hesitant attempt to explain her reasons she changed her mind about discussing the matter and blundered from the room. “You're too old,” she told Poirot.
Inevitably Poirot felt challenged to get to the bottom of this strange business. His quest led him into a new and sometimes baffling world in which not only the women dressed colourfully and wore their hair long.
Murder in the Mews
Although many people must have heard the shot that killed Mrs. Allen, there were far too many explosions that night for a single shot from a small pistol to attract much attention. So it was not until November the sixth that the suicide was discovered. Or was it suicide? No suicide note was to be found — and the fatal wound was at odds with the position in which the pistol was found; and, if the door had really been locked from the inside, where was the key of the room? Strangely, although a possible motive for suicide emerges there seems to be none for Mrs. Allen's murder. Fortunately, Hercule Poirot is at Japp’s elbow to ensure that the jumbled facts become sorted out to establish the pattern of events as they really occurred on the fatal night. Admirers of Poirot will find here three other examples of the master’s technique in the short cases which complete this volume:
The Incredible Theft. The disappearance of important State papers, whose loss could imperil the country's security, presents a problem made more delicate by the strange circumstances of the case. The theft occurs at the home of a Cabinet Minister who could be the next P.M.; and a lady who is widely known as an almost-certain professional free-lance spy is his house-guest at the time.
Dead Man's Mirror. A closed room mystery of a different sort, and with the kind of unexpected solution that has made Hercule Poirot and his creator famous.
Triangle at Rhodes.
Poirot at his most streamlined: a murder is committed, but in the presence of seven others — one of whom must be the murderer. Since oné of them happens to be Poirot himself the eventual separation of innocent and guilty is just as certain ... as their identities turn out to be surprising.