And Then There Were None
By: Anna • Essay • 314 Words • May 19, 2010 • 1,762 Views
And Then There Were None
The outcome of the mystery was not predictable. Agatha Christie had made sure it was not obvious who was the murderer. Justice Wargrave was trying hard to find out who the murderer was and he wanted the gun to be locked up. He was like the leader trying to figure out who the killer was and was also the first person in the group to say that someone in the group was a maniac murderer. He lead group meetings at the island and acted in a way like a judge. The detective in the mystery was him, and no one really suspected him. He acted just like all of them, he was suspicious of all of them, and he played the act of not trusting anyone. He was also the one that suggests that no one should be alone during the day so that the killer can not strike. He plots all this out and to make it even better, he creates a fake death. He fakes his death by making the doctor tell them that he was shot. No one really went and checked, they were just