Elephants Can Remember

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Book: Read Elephants Can Remember for Free Online
Authors: Agatha Christie
Everything.' Great-aunt Alice's great standby. Miss Sedgwick had been just as good as Aunt Alice's book.”
    Miss Livingstone was not at all the same thing. Miss Livingstone stood there always, very long-faced, with a sallow skin, looking purposefully efficient. Every line of her face said, “I am very efficient.” But she wasn't really, Mrs. Oliver thought. She only knew all the places where former literary employers of hers had kept things and where she clearly considered Mrs. Oliver ought to keep them.
    “What I want,” said Mrs. Oliver with firmness and the determination of a spoiled child, “is my nineteen seventy address book. And I think nineteen sixty-nine as well. Please look for it as quick as you can, will you?”
    “Of course, of course,” said Miss Livingstone.
    She looked around her with the rather vacant expression of someone who is looking for something she has never heard of before but which efficiency may be able to produce by some unexpected turn of luck.
    If I don't get Sedgwick back, I shall go mad, thought Mrs. Oliver to herself. I can't deal with this thing if I don't have Sedgwick.
    Miss Livingstone started pulling open various drawers in the furniture in Mrs. Oliver's so-called study and writing room.
    “Here is last year's,” said Miss Livingstone happily. “That will be much more up-to-date, won't it? Nineteen seventy-one.”
    “I don't want nineteen seventy-one,” said Mrs. Oliver.
    Vague thoughts and memories came to her.
    “Look in that tea caddy table,” she said.
    Miss Livingstone looked round, looking worried.
    “That table,” said Mrs. Oliver, pointing.
    “A desk book wouldn't be likely to be in a tea caddy,” said Miss Livingstone, pointing out to her employer the general facts of life.
    “Yes, it could,” said Mrs. Oliver. “I seem to remember.”
    Edging Miss Livingstone aside, she went to the tea caddy table, raised the lid, looked at the attractive inlaid work inside. “And it is here,” said Mrs. Oliver, raising the lid of a papier-mâché round canister, devised to contain Lapsang Souchong as opposed to Indian tea, and taking out a curled-up, small brown notebook.
    “Here it is,” she said.
    “That's only nineteen sixty-eight, Mrs. Oliver. Four years ago.”
    “That's about right,” said Mrs. Oliver, seizing it and taking it back to the desk. “That's all for the present, Miss Livingstone, but you might see if you can find my birthday book somewhere.”
    “I didn't know...”
    “I don't use it now,” said Mrs. Oliver, “but I used to have one once. Quite a big one, you know. Started when I was a child. Goes on for years. I expect it'll be in the attic upstairs. You know, the one we use as a spare room sometimes when it's only boys coming for holidays, or people who don't mind. The sort of chest or bureau thing next to the bed.”
    “Oh. Shall I look and see?”
    “That's the idea,” said Mrs. Oliver.
    She cheered up a little as Miss Livingstone went out of the room. Mrs. Oliver shut the door firmly behind her, went back to the desk and started looking down the addresses written in faded ink and smelling of tea.
    “Ravenscroft. Celia Ravenscroft. Yes. Fourteen Fishacre Mews, S.W. Three. That's the Chelsea address. She was living there then. But there was another one after that. Somewhere like Strand-on-the-Green near Kew Bridge.”
    She turned a few more pages.
    “Oh, yes, this seems to be a later one. Mardyke Grove. That's off Fulham Road, I think. Somewhere like that. Has she got a telephone number? It's very rubbed out, but I think - yes, I think that's right - Flaxman... Anyway, I'll try it.”
    She went across to the telephone. The door opened and Miss Livingstone looked in.
    “Do you think that perhaps -”
    “I found the address I want,” said Mrs. Oliver. “Go on looking for that birthday book. It's important.”
    “Do you think you could have left it when you were in Sealy House?”
    “No, I don't,” said Mrs. Oliver. “Go on

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