We have changed our privacy policy. In addition, we use cookies on our website for various purposes. By continuing on our website, you consent to our use of cookies. You can learn about our practices by reading our privacy policy.

And Then There Were None Epilogue Summary

  • In the epilogue, the police just cannot crack the mystery of Soldier Island.
  • Even when they take into account that Vera was the last to die, she couldn’t have been the killer: after she hanged herself, someone put away the chair that she kicked out from underneath her.
  • The police are just as baffled as anyone else.
  • Later on, a fishing boat picks up a note in a bottle and sends it to the police.
  • It’s from Justice Wargrave, and in it, he confesses to all the murders on Soldier Island.
  • You see, Justice Wargrave is a man who craves justice but also finds great pleasure in killing, which, sorry, sounds a little like a first world problem to us.
  • He comes up with the idea of collecting a group of people who have committed murders but, you know, haven’t really committed murder.
  • He explains exactly how he carried out the murders, and how he used Dr. Armstrong to fake his death because the man didn’t suspect him of anything.
  • In the end, Wargave says that he wanted to create an unsolvable mystery, but that he still wants credit for it.
  • #firstworldproblems