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July 2019 - Miss Pym Disposes - SPOILER Thread
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message 51:
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Judy
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Oct 23, 2019 01:41PM

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Here's my take on the rosette dilemma. By showing that Miss Pym believed Beau to be the real killer, Tey drives home the point that she is better off teaching French after all, because Beau can't be the killer. I think Innes borrowed Beau's shoes and committed the crime while wearing them. She also happened to wear them at the cocoa gathering. Beau knew the rosette was missing but given she has many shoes, and hadn't been wearing this pair lately, was being honest when she said to Miss Pym that she couldn't remember when or where she lost the charm. Beau being the killer doesn't explain why Innes, with far, far more to lose than her former best friend a) knows exactly what Miss Pym is talking about, b) is filled with rage and terror and, more importantly, c) is aware that she could be executed for a crime she purportedly hasn't committed. And although I felt that the revelatory scene between Miss Pym and Innes was quite clumsily written, it logically pointed out how Innes was the one who designed Rouse's fall. It is simpler, neater to assume that Innes had borrowed the fateful pumps than it is to dismiss the entire conversation between her and Miss Pym simply because Beau owned the shoes, had hitherto unseen "brilliant, cold and shallow" blue eyes and had thrown a successful tantrum to get an unpopular Nanny fired. It seems like Tey was firing a parting shot at her protagonist as if saying, dabble in face-reading if you like but please, stop dabbling in psychology.

A rather chilling element of the bo..."
You have a point there, Judy. It seems a bit too convenient to give Rouse a distant uncle and aunt who are never invited into the narrative properly. Is it to help the reader feel the lack of sympathy for her family's loss, as Miss Pym did?