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The Secret Adversary | Agatha Christie | |
V Mr. Julius P. Hersheimmer |
Page 3 of 4 |
"Your cousin?" "Sure thing. Jane Finn." "Is she your cousin?" "My father and her mother were brother and sister," explained Mr. Hersheimmer meticulously. "Oh!" cried Tuppence. "Then you know where she is?" "No!" Mr. Hersheimmer brought down his fist with a bang on the table. "I'm darned if I do! Don't you?" "We advertised to receive information, not to give it," said Tuppence severely. "I guess I know that. I can read. But I thought maybe it was her back history you were after, and that you'd know where she was now?" "Well, we wouldn't mind hearing her back history," said Tuppence guardedly. But Mr. Hersheimmer seemed to grow suddenly suspicious. "See here," he declared. "This isn't Sicily! No demanding ransom or threatening to crop her ears if I refuse. These are the British Isles, so quit the funny business, or I'll just sing out for that beautiful big British policeman I see out there in Piccadilly." Tommy hastened to explain. "We haven't kidnapped your cousin. On the contrary, we're trying to find her. We're employed to do so." Mr. Hersheimmer leant back in his chair. "Put me wise," he said succinctly. Tommy fell in with this demand in so far as he gave him a guarded version of the disappearance of Jane Finn, and of the possibility of her having been mixed up unawares in "some political show." He alluded to Tuppence and himself as "private inquiry agents" commissioned to find her, and added that they would therefore be glad of any details Mr. Hersheimmer could give them. That gentleman nodded approval. |
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