This story is based on a real event. Agatha Christie did 'disappear' in 1926 and was later discovered in Harrogate. The main characters - Christie, her husband, his mistress and Bob Tappin - were all real but I have taken liberties with the events of those missing days.
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As the train struggled through the grey English countryside the woman continued to stare out of the window. The rain on the carriage window had replaced the tears that she had recently shed. She couldn't believe the last twenty-four hours. The argument with Archie had been so pointless; in fact, she couldn't remember now how it had started. The bombshell that followed had taken her breath away. He was leaving her. Worse, he was going to live with that bitch, Nancy Neele. He even told her that he had been sleeping with her for months. God, she hated her! To think, she had trusted that woman, had invited her into their lives.
What happened after that was still a bit of a blur. There was more screaming and shouting as Archie walked out the door. After that, she had spent the day feeling sorry for herself or bursting into angry tears. She went into Rosalind's room to kiss the sleeping seven year old. She knew that the nanny would look after the child when she awoke. Finally, she scribbled a note, threw some clothes in a case and jumped into the car. She remembered running out of petrol at some point and just leaving the car. It must have been near Guildford. At the back of her mind she thought she had been chasing Archie. Surely she wasn't going to beg him to come back? No, nothing so melodramatic.
She had certainly managed to get a lift to Guildford Station and then a train to Waterloo. She remembered struggling across London. Finding there were no trains until the morning, she had spent the night in a seedy hotel in the Euston Road before catching the early train from Kings Cross. She had booked to go to Edinburgh but knew she had no real intention of getting there. As for what she did intend, well, at the moment she had no idea. She watched as the towns rolled by. Peterborough, Grantham, Doncaster. Each name seemed less attractive than the one before. She wondered what her Belgian friend would say. Something about using her grey matter, she guessed.
She looked up as the compartment door opened. A young couple almost fell through the door, giggling. They sat in the seats opposite and seemed incapable of keeping their hands off each other. Trying to ignore them, Agatha stared out of the window. After a while their irritating noises seemed to tail off. Glancing around, she realised they were staring at her although they looked away quickly, embarrassed. The young girl seemed to be trying to pluck up courage to speak.
"Excuse me, do I know you? I seem to recognise your face."
Panic rushed over Agatha. She did not want to be found, did not want Archie to reach her. She stumbled for a reply.
"I...err... don't think so, my dear. I'm...Theresa, Theresa... Neele." She grabbed for the first name that came to her mind, that of her husband's slut. There was something satisfactory in using that name. The young girl looked disappointed but uncertain.
"Oh, I'm sorry. It's just that your face reminded me of someone."
Agatha forced a laugh.
"Don't worry, dear. Mine is a very common face."
The girl apologised again but still looked disappointed. Agatha knew she had to get off the train, get away from these inquisitive eyes. She felt the train slowing. The guard's voice echoed down the corridor.
"Harrogate. The next stop is Harrogate."
Agatha grabbed her case from the seat beside her and stood up quickly. As she pulled the compartment door open she heard the young girl say
"You know, you look very like..."
But who she looked like was washed away in the steam from the locomotive as she stepped onto the platform of Harrogate railway station.
The noise enveloped her immediately. Whistles, cries, the monstrous locomotive crawling from the station, huge wheels grasping at the metal rails. For a moment she was frozen. What on earth was she doing? Then panic gripped her and she ran. Crashing into passengers, through doors filthy with soot until finally emerging onto the street. She could hear shouts from taxis but was uncertain if they were directed at her. She fled from the noise down the street opposite, not knowing where she was heading. Shops passed in a blur, Christmas decorations glinting in some windows. Finally, she paused for breath. People were going about their business but no-one seemed to be paying her any attention. She cursed herself for her ridiculous panic. As she looked around, her gaze was taken by a large building. She drifted towards the imposing front door and, without knowing what she intended, entered. As the door closed behind her a hush descended and, with it, a sense of calm came over Agatha.
"Can I help you, madam?"
The voice to her left brought her back to reality.
"Ah, yes. A room, I would like a room, please." She was certain that she looked a dreadful mess after her flight through the town but the receptionist made no comment on her appearance. Instead, there was a simple question on how long she intended to stay. She responded with a garbled reply indicating uncertainty. A signature in a book evoked a smile as she once more used that hated name, a key was placed in her hand and Agatha found herself in a long corridor, outside a nondescript door. She unlocked it and entered. The bed looked so inviting. Within minutes she was asleep.
She was uncertain how long she slept but noises in the corridor brought her back to consciousness. A glance at her watch told her it was late in the evening; she was certain she had missed dinner. It did not matter, she did not feel hungry. Climbing off the bed, she sat at the desk and stared in the mirror. Despite her rather dishevelled appearance, for a woman of thirty-six she still looked fairly presentable. As she poked and prodded her skin she felt she was shedding her past life. Archie, Nancy - they were all part of that past that seemed to be leaving her and she became aware that she did not care. Almost mechanically, she grabbed the hotel's headed writing paper and started to write.
Her ideas were chaotic but they involved a train, a mistress and a woman fleeing her adulterous husband. She had no idea how long she wrote for but only paused when she had covered four sides with her notes. Carefully, she folded them and slipped them into the side pocket of her suitcase. As she did so, she realised that, finally, hunger had caught up with her. It had been nearly twenty four hours since she had eaten anything. Quickly, she washed her face, brushed her hair and stepped out of her room.