Agatha Christie Fullscreen Red signal (1924)

Pause

That was for something else.

He looked round the table and it struck him for the first time that it was rather an unusual little gathering.

His uncle, for instance, seldom dined out in this small, informal way.

It was not as though the Trents were old friends; until this evening Dermot had not been aware that he knew them at all.

To be sure, there was an excuse.

A rather notorious medium was coming after dinner to give a seance. Sir Alington professed to be mildly interested in spiritualism.

Yes, that was an excuse, certainly.

The word forced itself on his notice.

An excuse. Was the seance just an excuse to make the specialist's presence at dinner natural?

If so, what was the real object of his being here?

A host of details came rushing into Dermot's mind, trifles unnoticed at the time, or, as his uncle would have said, unnoticed by the conscious mind.

The great physician had looked oddly, very oddly, at Claire more than once.

He seemed to be watching her.

She was uneasy under his scrutiny.

She made little twitching motions with her hands.

She was nervous, horribly nervous, and was it, could it be, frightened?

Why was she frightened?With a jerk he came back to the conversation round the table.

Mrs Eversleigh had got the great man talking upon his own subject."My dear lady," he was saying, "what is madness?

I can assure you that the more we study the subject, the more difficult we find it to pronounce.

We all practice a certain amount of self-deception, and when we carry it so far as to believe we are the Czar of Russia, we are shut up or restrained.

But there is a long road before we reach that point.

At what particular spot on it shall we erect a post and say, 'On this side sanity, on the other madness'?

It can't be done, you know.

And I will tell you this: if the man suffering from a delusion happened to hold his tongue about it, in all probability we should never be able to distinguish him from a normal individual.

The extraordinary sanity of the insane is an interesting subject."Sir Alington sipped his wine with appreciation and beamed upon the company."I've always heard they are very cunning," remarked Mrs Eversleigh.

"Loonies, I mean."

"Remarkably so.

And suppression of one's particular delusion has a disastrous effect very often.

All suppressions are dangerous, as psychoanalysis has taught us.

The man who has a harmless eccentricity, and can indulge it as such, seldom goes over the border-line.

But the man -" he paused - "or woman who is to all appearance perfectly normal, may be in reality a poignant source of danger to the community."His gaze traveled gently down the table to Claire and then back again.

A horrible fear shook Dermot.

Was that what he meant?

Was that what he was driving at?

Impossible, but -"And all from suppressing oneself," sighed Mrs Eversleigh.

"I quite see that one should be very careful always to - to express one's personality. The dangers of the other are frightful."

"My dear Mrs Eversleigh," expostulated the physician, "you have quite misunderstood me.

The cause of the mischief is in the physical matter of the brain - sometimes arising from some outward agency such as a blow; sometimes, alas, congenital."

"Heredity is so sad," sighed the lady vaguely. "Consumption and all that."

"Tuberculosis is not hereditary," said Sir Alington drily."Isn't it?

I always thought it was.

But madness is!

How dreadful.

What else?"

"Gout," said Sir Alington, smiling. "And color blindness - the latter is rather interesting.

It is transmitted direct to males, but is latent in females.

So, while there are many color blind men, for a woman to be color blind, it must have been latent in her mother as well as present in her father - rather an unusual state of things to occur.

That is what is called sex limited heredity."

"How interesting.

But madness is not like that, is it?"