leonardo da vinci mona lisa
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Elspeth Mrs. McGillicuddy doesn't imagine things," said Miss Marple. "That's why I'm relying on what she said. If it had been Dorothy Cartwright, now – it would have been quite a different matter. Dorothy always has a good story, and quite often believes it herself, and there is usually a kind of basis of truth but certainly no more. But Elspeth is kind of woman who finds it very hard to make herself believe that anything at all extraordinary or out of the way could happen. She's most unsuggestible, rather like granite."
"I see," said Lucy thoughtfully, "Well, let's accept it all. Where do I come in?"
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"I was very much impressed by you," said Miss Marple, "and you see, I haven't got the physical strength nowadays to get about and do things.""You want me to make inquiries? That sort of thing? But won't the police have done all that? Or do you think they have been just slack?""Oh, no," said Miss Marple. "They haven't been slack. It's just that I've got a theory about the woman's body. It's got to be somewhere. If it wasn't found in the train, then it must have been pushed or thrown out of the train - but it hasn't been discovered anywhere on the line. So I travelled down the same way to see if there was anywhere where the body could have been thrown off the train and yet wouldn't have been found on the line – and there was. The railway line makes a big curve before getting into Brackhampton, on the edge of a high embankment. If a body were thrown out there, when the train was leaning at an angle, I think it would pitch right down the embankment."
Sunday, December 23, 2007
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leonardo da vinci mona lisa
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