andrew pennington displayed all the conventional reactions of grief and shock. he was, as usual,
carefully dressed. he had changed into a black tie. his long clean-shaven face bore a bewildered
expression.
"gentlemen," he said sadly, "this business has got me right down! little linnet - why, i remember
her as the cutest little thing you can imagine. how proud of her melhuish ridgeway used to be,
too! well, there's no point in going into that. just tell me what i can do; that's all i ask."
race said, "to begin with, mr pennington, did you hear anything last night?"
"no, sir, i can't say i did. i have the cabin right next to dr bessner's, number forty - forty-one, and
i heard a certain commotion going on in there round about midnight or so. of course i didn't know
what it was at the time."
"you heard nothing else? no shots?"
andrew pennington shook his head.
"nothing whatever of that kind."
"and you went to bed at what time?"
"must have been some time after eleven."
he leant forward.
"i don't suppose it's news to you to know that there's plenty of rumours going about the boat. that
half french girl - jacqueline de bellefort - there was something fishy there, you know. linnet
didn't tell me anything, but naturally i wasn't born blind and deaf. there'd been some affair
between her and simon, some time, hadn't there? cherchez la femme - that's a pretty good sound
rule, and i should say you wouldn't have to cherchez far."
"you mean that in your belief jacqueline de bellefort shot madame doyle?" poirot asked.
"that's what it looks like to me. of course i don't know anything..."
"unfortunately we do know something!"
"eh?" mr pennington looked startled.
"we know that it is quite impossible for mademoiselle de bellefort to have shot madame doyle."
he explained carefully the circumstances. pennington seemed reluctant to accept them.
"i agree it looks all right on the face of it - but this hospital nurse woman, i'll bet she didn't stay
awake all night. she dozed off and the girl slipped out and in again."
"hardly likely, monsieur pennington. she had administered a strong opiate, remember. and
anyway a nurse is in the habit of sleeping lightly and waking when her patient wakes."
"it all sounds rather fishy to me," declared pennington.
race said, in a gently authoritative manner: "i think you must take it from me, mr pennington, that
we have examined all the possibilities very carefully. the result is quite definite - jacqueline de
bellefort did not shoot mrs doyle. so we are forced to look elsewhere. that is where we hope you
may be able to help us."
"i?" pennington gave a nervous start.
"yes. you were an intimate friend of the dead woman's. you know the circumstances of her life, in
all probability, much better than her husband does, since he only made her acquaintance a few
months ago. you would know, for instance, of anyone who had a grudge against her. you would
know, perhaps, whether there was anyone who had a motive for desiring her death."
andrew pennington passed his tongue over rather dry looking lips.
"i assure you, i have no idea... you see linnet was brought up in england. i know very little of her
surroundings and associations."
"and yet," mused poirot, "there was someone on board who was interested in madame doyle's
removal. she had a near escape before, you remember, at this very place, when that boulder
crashed down. ah! but you were not there, perhaps?"
"no. i was inside the temple at the time. i heard about it afterward, of course. a very near escape.
but possibly an accident, don't you think?"
poirot shrugged his shoulders.
"one thought so at the time. now - one wonders."
"yes - yes, of course." pennington wiped his face with a fine silk handkerchief.
colonel race went on: "mrs doyle happened to mention someone being on board who bore a
grudge - not against her personally, but against her family. do you know who that could be?"
pennington looked genuinely astonished.
"no, i've no idea."
"she didn't mention the matter to you?"
"no."
"you were an intimate friend of her father's - you cannot remember any business operations of his
that might have resulted in ruin for some business opponent?"
pennington shook his head helplessly.
"no outstanding case. such operations were frequent, of course, but i can't recall anyone who
uttered threats - nothing of that kind."
"in short, mr pennington, you cannot help us?"
"it seems so. i deplore my inadequacy, gentlemen."
race interchanged a glance with poirot, then he said: "i'm sorry too. we'd had hopes."
he got up as a sign the interview was at an end.
andrew pennington said: "as doyle's laid up, i expect he'd like me to see to things. pardon me,
colonel, but what exactly are the arrangements?"
"when we leave here we shall make a non-stop run to shellвl, arriving there tomorrow morning."
"and the body?"
"will be removed to one of the cold storage chambers."
andrew pennington bowed his head. then he left the room.
poirot and race again interchanged a glance.
"mr pennington," said race, lighting a cigarette, "was not at all comfortable."
poirot nodded.
"and," he said, "mr pennington was sufficiently perturbed to tell a rather stupid lie. he was not in
the temple of abu simbel when that boulder fell. i - moi qui vous parle - can swear to that. i had
just come from there."
"a very stupid lie," said race, "and a very revealing one."
again poirot nodded.
"but for the moment," he said, and smiled, "we handle him with the gloves of kid, is it not so?"
"that was the idea," agreed race.
"my friend, you and i understand each other to a marvel."
there was a faint grinding noise, a stir beneath their feet. the karnak had started on her homeward
journey to shellвl.
"the pearls," said race. "that is the next thing to be cleared up."
"you have a plan?"
"yes." he glanced at his watch. "it will be lunch time in half an hour. at the end of the meal i
propose to make an announcement - just state the fact that the pearls have been stolen, and that i
must request everyone to stay in the dining-saloon while a search is conducted."
poirot nodded approvingly.
"it is well imagined. whoever took the pearls still has them. by giving no warning beforehand,
there will be no chance of their being thrown overboard in a panic."
race drew some sheets of paper toward him. he murmured apologetically: "i like to make a brief
précis of the facts as i go along. it keeps one's mind free of confusion."
"you do well. method and order, they are everything," replied poirot.
race wrote for some minutes in his small neat script. finally he pushed the result of his labours
toward poirot.
"anything you don't agree with there?"
poirot took up the sheets. they were headed:
'murder of mrs linnet doyle'
mrs doyle was last seen alive by her maid, louise bourget. time: 11.30 (approx). from 11.30-
12.20 following have alibis: cornelia robson, james fanthorp, simon doyle, jacqueline de
bellefort - nobody else - but crime almost certainly committed after that time, since it is practically
certain that pistol used was jacqueline de bellefort's, which was then in her handbag.
that her pistol was used is not absolutely certain until after post-mortem and expert evidence re
bullet - but it may be taken as overwhelmingly probable.
probable course of events: x (murderer) was witness of scene between jacqueline and simon
doyle in observation saloon and noted where pistol went under settee. after the saloon was vacant,
x procured pistol - his or her idea being that jacqueline de bellefort would be thought guilty of
crime. on this theory certain people are automatically cleared of suspicion:
cornelia robson, since she had no opportunity to take pistol before james fanthorp returned to
search for it.
miss bowers - same.
dr bessner - same.
n.b. - fanthorp is not definitely excluded from suspicion, since he could actually have pocketed
pistol while declaring himself unable to find it.
any other person could have taken the pistol during that ten minutes' interval. possible motives for
the murder:
andrew pennington. this is on the assumption that he has been guilty of fraudulent practices.
there is a certain amount of evidence in favour of that assumption, but not enough to justify
making out a case against him. if it was he who rolled down the boulder, he is a man who can seize
a chance when it presents itself. the crime, clearly, was not premeditated except in a general way.
last night's shooting scene was an ideal opportunity.
objections to the theory of pennington's guilt: why did he throw the pistol overboard, since it
constituted a valuable clue against j.b.?
fleetwood. motive, revenge. fleetwood considered himself injured by linnet doyle. might have
overheard scene and noted position of pistol. he may have taken pistol because it was a handy
weapon, rather than with the idea of throwing guilt on jacqueline. this would fit in with throwing
it overboard. but if that were the case, why did he write j in blood on the wall?
n.b. - cheap handkerchief found with pistol more likely to have belonged to a man like fleetwood
than to one of the well-to-do passengers.
rosalie otterbourne. are we to accept miss van schuyler's evidence or rosalie's denial?
something was thrown overboard at that time and that something was presumably the pistol
wrapped up in the velvet stole. points to be noted. had rosalie any motive? she may have disliked
linnet doyle and even been envious of her - but as a motive for murder that seems grossly
inadequate. the evidence against her can be convincing only if we discover an adequate motive.
as far as we know, there is no previous knowledge or link between rosalie otterbourne and
linnet doyle.
miss van schuyler. the velvet stole in which pistol was wrapped belongs to miss van schuyler.
according to her own statement she last saw it in the observation saloon. she drew attention to its
loss during the evening, and a search was made for it without success.
how did the stole come into the possession of x? did x purloin it some time early in the evening?
but if so, why? nobody could tell, in advance, that there was going to be a scene between
jacqueline and simon. did x find the stole in the saloon when he went to get the pistol from under
the settee? but if so, why was it not found when the search for it was made? did it never leave
miss van schuyler's possession? that is to say: did miss van schuyler murder linnet doyle? is
her accusation of rosalie otterbourne a deliberate lie? if she did murder her, what was her motive?
other possibilities:
robbery as a motive. possible, since the pearls have disappeared, and linnet doyle was certainly
wearing them last night.
someone with a grudge against the ridgeway family. possibly - again no evidence. we know that
there is a dangerous man on board - a killer. here we have a killer and a death. may not the two be
connected? but we should have to show that linnet doyle possessed dangerous knowledge
concerning this man.
conclusions: we can group the persons on board into two classes - those who had a possible
motive or against whom there is definite evidence, and those who, as far as we know, are free of
suspicion.
group i
andrew pennington
fleetwood
rosalie otterbourne
miss van schuyler
louise bourget (robbery?)
ferguson (political?)
group ii
mrs allerton
tim allerton
cornelia robson
miss bowers
mrs otterbourne
james fanthorp
dr bessner
signor richetti
poirot pushed the paper back.
"it is very just, very exact, what you have written there."
"you agree with it?"
"yes."
"and now what is your contribution?"
poirot drew himself up in an important manner.
"me, i pose to myself one question: 'why was the pistol thrown overboard?'"
"that's all?"
"at the moment, yes. until i can arrive at a satisfactory answer to that question, there is no sense
anywhere. that is - that must be the starting point. you will notice, my friend, that, in your
summary of where we stand, you have not attempted to answer that point."
race shrugged his shoulders.
"panic."
poirot shook his head perplexedly. he picked up the sodden velvet wrap and smoothed it out, wet
and limp, on the table. his finger traced the scorched marks and the burnt holes.
"tell me, my friend," he said suddenly. "you are more conversant with firearms than i am. would
such a thing as this, wrapped round a pistol, make much difference in muffling the sound?"
"no, it wouldn't. not like a silencer, for instance."
poirot nodded. he went on: "a man - certainly a man who had had much handling of firearms -
would know that. but a woman - a woman would not know."
race looked at him curiously. "probably not."
"no. she would have read the detective stories where they are not always very exact as to details."
race flicked the little pearl-handled pistol with his finger.
"this little fellow wouldn't make much noise anyway," he said. "just a pop, that's all. with any
other noise around, ten to one you wouldn't notice it."
"yes, i have reflected as to that."
poirot picked up the handkerchief and examined it.
"a man's handkerchief - but not a gentleman's handkerchief. ce cher woolworth, i imagine.
threepence at most."
"the sort of handkerchief a man like fleetwood would own."
"yes. andrew pennington, i notice, carries a very fine silk handkerchief."
"ferguson?" suggested race.
"possibly. as a gesture. but then it ought to be a bandana."
"used it instead of a glove, i suppose, to hold the pistol and obviate fingerprints." race added,
with slight facetiousness, "'the clue of the blushing handkerchief.'"
"ah, yes. quite a jeune fille colour, is it not?" he laid it down and returned to the stole, once more
examining the powder marks.
"all the same," he murmured, "it is odd..."
"what's that?"
poirot said gently: "cette pauvre madame doyle. lying there so peacefully... with the little hole in
her head. you remember how she looked?"
race looked at him curiously.
"you know," he said, "i've got an idea you're trying to tell me something - but i haven't the faintest
idea what it is."