In the short story, “Invitation to Murder” by Josh Pachter, was about a man as well as several of his former colleagues being invited to an event to watch a woman, by the name of Mrs. Abbott, murder her vegetable-of-a-husband, Mr. Abbott. This story takes place in present day in the Abbott household. Their house is located in New York City. Inspector Abbott took advantage of the invitation, not knowing how dangerous this event would be. Arriving in a elegantly dark-rimmed envelope, the invitation looked harmless. This is an example of situational irony; the gentlemen that are asked to witness, actually witness a murder, but not one that you would expect.
Investigator Branigan arrived to the house; answering the door was a butler. He let Branigan enter. Branigan had walked further into a bland room, saw a deathly …show more content…
Abbott had stood up, heading towards the table. Two men had stopped her but grasping her sides. She had willingly sat back down. Ten minutes later, she had attempted, to do the same exact thing, she was stopped again. This was a routine every ten minutes. Fifty eight minutes later, the men gathered around Mr. Abbott, witnessed him pass away as well as breathe his last breath. All confused, Mrs. Abbott explained to them that the amber bottle was medicine used to speed Mr. Abbott’s heart rate to a normal speed; she additionally included that if take by a person with a regular heart, it would be extremely fatal, therefore there was a skull with crossbones labeled on the bottle. She technically had the right to accuse them of murdering her husband. In the climax section of the story, there were examples of situational irony as in the fact that Mrs. Abbott intended to accuse the men of murdering her husband, by not using one of those weapons they provoked, not prevented. Lastly, the death of Mr. Abbott, the amber bottle of medicine was poisonous to others, but not to Mr. Abbott, for him kept him