Evil Under the Sun

Chapter 6
Colonel Weston was poring over the hotel register.

He read aloud:

'Major and Mrs Cowan,

Miss Pamela Cowan,

Master Robert Cowan,

Master Evan Cowan,

Rydal's Mount, Leatherhead.

Mr and Mrs Masterman,

Mr Edward Masterman,

Miss Jennifer Masterman,

Mr Roy Masterman,

Master Frederick Masterman,

5 Marlborough Avenue, London, N.W.

Mr and Mrs Gardener,

New York.

Mr and Mrs Redfern,

Crossgates, Seldon, Princes Risborough.

Major Barry,

18 Cardon St., St James, London, S.W.1.

Mr Horace Blatt,

5 Pickersgill Street, London, E.C.2.

M. Hercule Poirot,

Whitehaven Mansions, London, W.1.

Miss Rosamund Darnley,

8 Cardigan Court, W.1.

Miss Emily Brewster,

Southgates, Sunbury-on-Thames.

Rev. Stephen Lane,

London.

Captain and Mrs Marshall,

Miss Linda Marshall,

73 Upcott Mansions, London, S.W.7.'

He stopped.

Inspector Colgate said:

'I think, sir, that we can wash out the first two entries. Mrs Castle tells me that the Mastermans and the Cowans come here regularly every summer with their children. This morning they went off on an all-day excursion sailing, taking lunch with them. They left just after nine o'clock. A man called Andrew Baston took them. We can check up from him, but I think we can put them right out of it.'

Weston nodded.

'I agree. Let's eliminate everyone we can. Can you give us a pointer on any of the rest of them, Poirot?'

Poirot said:

'Superficially, that is easy. The Gardeners are a middle-aged married couple, pleasant, travelled. All the talking is done by the lady. The husband is acquiescent. He plays tennis and golf and has a form of dry humour that is attractive when one gets him to oneself.'

'Sounds quite O.K.'

'Next - the Redferns. Mr Redfern is young, attractive to women, a magnificent swimmer, a good tennis player and accomplished dancer. His wife I have already spoken of to you. She is quiet, pretty in a washed-out way. She is, I think, devoted to her husband. She has something that Arlena Marshall did not have.'

'What is that?'

'Brains.'

Inspector Colgate sighed. He said:

'Brains don't count for much when it comes to an infatuation, sir.'

'Perhaps not. And yet I do truly believe that in spite of his infatuation for Mrs Marshall, Patrick Redfern really cares for his wife.'

'That may be, sir. It wouldn't be the first time that's happened.'

Poirot murmured.

'That is the pity of it! It is always the thing women find hardest to believe.'

He went on:

'Major Barry. Retired Indian Army. An admirer of women. A teller of long and boring stories.'

Inspector Colgate sighed.

'You needn't go on. I've met a few, sir.'

'Mr Horace Blatt. He is, apparently, a rich man. He talks a good deal - about Mr Blatt. He wants to be everybody's friend. It is sad. For nobody likes him very much. And there is something else. Mr Blatt last night asked me a good many questions. Mr Blatt was uneasy. Yes, there is something not quite right about Mr Blatt.'

He paused and went on with a change of voice:

'Next comes Miss Rosamund Darnley. Her business name is Rose Mond Ltd. She is a celebrated dressmaker. What can I say of her? She has brains and charm and chic. She is very pleasing to look at.' He paused and added. 'And she is a very old friend of Captain Marshall's.'

Weston sat up in his chair.

'Oh, she is, is she?'

'Yes. They had not met for some years.'

Weston asked:

'Did she know he was going to be down here?'

'She says not.'

Poirot paused and then went on.

'Who comes next? Miss Brewster. I find her just a little alarming.' He shook his head. 'She has a voice like a man's. She is gruff and what you call hearty. She rows boats and has a handicap of four at golf.' He paused. 'I think, though, that she has a good heart.'

Weston said:

'That leaves only the Reverend Stephen Lane. Who's the Reverend Stephen Lane?'

'I can only tell you one thing. He is a man who is in a condition of great nervous tension. Also he is, I think, a fanatic.'

Inspector Colgate said:

'Oh, that kind of person.'

Weston said:

'And that's the lot!' He looked at Poirot. 'You seem very lost in thought, my friend?'

Poirot said:

'Yes. Because, you see, when Mrs Marshall went off this morning and asked me not to tell anyone I had seen her. I jumped at once in my own mind to a certain conclusion. I thought that her friendship with Patrick Redfern had made trouble between her and her husband. I thought that she was going to meet Patrick Redfern somewhere, and that she did not want her husband to know where she was.'

He paused.

'But that, you see, was where I was wrong. Because, although her husband appeared almost immediately on the beach and asked if I had seen her, Patrick Redfern arrived also - and was most patently and obviously looking for her! And therefore, my friends, I am asking myself, who was it that Arlena Marshall went off to meet?'

Inspector Colgate said:

'That fits in with my idea. A man from London or somewhere.'

Hercule Poirot shook his head. He said:

'But, my friend, according to your theory, Arlena Marshall had broken with this mythical man. Why, then, should she take such trouble and pains to meet him?'

Inspector Colgate shook his head. He said:

'Who do you think it was?'

'That is just what I cannot imagine. We have just read through the list of hotel guests. They are all middle-aged - dull. Which of them would Arlena Marshall prefer to Patrick Redfern? No, that is impossible. And yet, all the same, she did go to meet someone - and that someone was not Patrick Redfern.'

Weston murmured:

'You don't think she just went off by herself?'

Poirot shook his head.

'Mon cher,' he said. 'It is very evident that you never met the dead woman. Somebody once wrote a learned treatise on the difference that solitary confinement would mean to Beau Brummel or to a man like Newton. Arlena Marshall, my dear friend, would practically not exist in solitude. She only lived in the light of a man's admiration. No, Arlena Marshall went to meet someone this morning. Who was it?'

II

Colonel Weston sighed, shook his head and said:

'Well, we can go into theories later. Got to get through these interviews now. Got to get it down in black and white where everyone was. I suppose we'd better see the Marshall girl now. She might be able to tell us something useful.'

Linda Marshall came into the room clumsily, knocking against the doorpost. She was breathing quickly and the pupils of her eyes were dilated. She looked like a startled young colt. Colonel Weston felt a kindly impulse towards her.

He thought:

'Poor kid - she's nothing but a kid after all. This must have been a pretty bad shock to her.'

He drew up a chair and said in a reassuring voice.

'Sorry to put you through this, Miss - Linda, isn't it?'

'Yes, Linda.'

Her voice had that indrawn breathy quality that is often characteristic of schoolgirls. Her hands rested helplessly on the table in front of him - pathetic hands, big and red, with large bones and long wrists. Weston thought:

'A kid oughtn't to be mixed up in this sort of thing.'

He said reassuringly.

'There's nothing very alarming about all this. We just want you to tell us anything you know that might be useful, that's all.'

Linda said:

'You mean - about Arlena?'

'Yes. Did you see her this morning at all?'

The girl shook her head.

'No. Arlena always gets down rather late. She has breakfast in bed.'

Hercule Poirot said:

'And you, Mademoiselle?'

'Oh, I get up. Breakfast in bed's so stuffy.'

Weston said:

'Will you tell us what you did this morning?'

'Well, I had a bathe first and then breakfast, and then I went with Mrs Redfern to Gull Cove.'

Weston said:

'What time did you and Mrs Redfern start?'

'She said she'd be waiting for me in the hall at half-past ten. I was afraid I was going to be late, but it was all right. We started off at about three minutes to the half-hour.'

Poirot said:

'And what did you do at Gull Cove?'

'Oh, I oiled myself and sunbathed and Mrs Redfern sketched. Then, later, I went into the sea and Christine went back to the hotel to get changed for tennis.'

Weston said, keeping his voice quite casual:

'Do you remember what time that was?'

'When Mrs Redfern went back to the hotel? Quarter to twelve.'

'Sure of that time - quarter to twelve?'

Linda, opening her eyes wide, said:

'Oh yes. I looked at my watch.'

'The watch you have on now?'

Linda glanced down at her wrist.

'Yes.'

Weston said:

'Mind if I see?'

She held out her wrist. He compared the watch with his own and with the hotel clock on the wall.

He said, smiling:

'Correct to a second. And after that you had a bathe?'

'Yes.'

'And you got back to the hotel - when?'

'Just about one o'clock. And - and then - I heard - about Arlena...'

Her voice changed.

Colonel Weston said:

'Did you - er - get on with your stepmother all right?'

She looked at him for a minute without replying. Then she said:

'Oh yes.'

Poirot asked:

'Did you like her, Mademoiselle?'

Linda said again:

'Oh yes.' She added: 'Arlena was quite kind to me.'

Weston said with rather uneasy facetiousness.

'Not the cruel stepmother, eh?'

Linda shook her head without smiling.

Weston said:

'That's good. That's good. Sometimes, you know, there's a bit of difficulty in families - jealousy - all that. Girl and her father great pals and then she resents it a bit when he's all wrapped up in the new wife. You didn't feel like that, eh?'

Linda stared at him. She said with obvious sincerity:

'Oh no.'

Weston said:

'I suppose your father was - er - very wrapped up in her?'

Linda said simply:

'I don't know.'

Weston went on:

'All sorts of difficulties, as I say, arise in families. Quarrels - rows - that sort of thing. If husband and wife get ratty with each other, that's a bit awkward for a daughter too. Anything of that sort?'

Linda said clearly:

'Do you mean, did Father and Arlena quarrel?'

'Well - yes.'

Weston thought to himself:

'Rotten business - questioning a child about her father. Why is one a policeman? Damn it all, it's got to be done, though.'

Linda said positively:

'Oh no.' She added: 'Father doesn't quarrel with people. He's not like that at all.'

Weston said:

'Now, Miss Linda, I want you to think very carefully. Have you any idea at all who might have killed your stepmother? Is there anything you've ever heard or anything you know that could help us on that point?'

Linda was silent a minute. She seemed to be giving the question a serious unhurried consideration. She said at last.

'No, I don't know who could have wanted to kill Arlena.' She added: 'Except, of course, Mrs Redfern.'

Weston said:

'You think Mrs Redfern wanted to kill her? Why?'

Linda said:

'Because her husband was in love with Arlena. But I don't think she would really want to kill her. I mean she'd just feel that she wished she was dead - and that isn't the same thing at all, is it?'

Poirot said gently:

'No, it is not at all the same.'

Linda nodded. A queer sort of spasm passed across her face. She said:

'And anyway, Mrs Redfern could never do a thing like that - kill anybody. She isn't - she isn't violent, if you know what I mean.'

Weston and Poirot nodded. The latter said:

'I know exactly what you mean, my child, and I agree with you. Mrs Redfern is not of those who, as your saying goes, "sees red". She would not be' - he leaned back half closing his eyes, picking his words with care - 'shaken by a storm of feeling - seeing life narrowing in front of her - seeing a hated face - a hated white neck - feeling her hands clench - longing to feel them press into flesh - '

He stopped.

Linda moved jerkily back from the table. She said in a trembling voice:

'Can I go now? Is that all?'

Colonel Weston said:

'Yes, yes, that's all. Thank you, Miss Linda.'

He got up to open the door for her. Then came back to the table and lit a cigarette.

'Phew,' he said. 'Not a nice job, ours. I can tell you I felt a bit of a cad questioning that child about the relations between her father and her stepmother. More or less inviting a daughter to put a rope round her father's neck. All the same, it had to be done. Murder is murder. And she's the person most likely to know the truth of things. I'm rather thankful, though, that she'd nothing to tell us in that line.'

Poirot said:

'Yes, I thought you were.'

Weston said with an embarrassed cough:

'By the way, Poirot, you went a bit far, I thought at the end. All that hands sinking into flesh business! Not quite the sort of idea to put into a kid's head.'

Hercule Poirot looked at him with thoughtful eyes. He said:

'So you thought I put ideas into her head?'

'Well, didn't you? Come now.'

Poirot shook his head.

Weston sheered away from the point. He said:

'On the whole we got very little useful stuff out of her. Except a more or less complete alibi for the Redfern woman. If they were together from half-past ten to a quarter to twelve that lets Christine Redfern out of it. Exit the jealous wife suspect.'

Poirot said:

'There are better reasons than that for leaving Mrs Redfern out of it. It would, I am convinced, be physically impossible and mentally impossible for her to strangle anyone. She is cold rather than warm blooded, capable of deep devotion and unswerving constancy, but not of hot blooded passion or rage. Moreover, her hands are far too small and delicate.'

Colgate said:

'I agree with M. Poirot. She's out of it. Dr Neasden says it was a full-sized pair of hands that throttled that dame.'

Weston said:

'Well, I suppose we'd better see the Redferns next. I expect he's recovered a bit from the shock now.'

III

Patrick Redfern had recovered full composure by now. He looked pale and haggard and suddenly very young, but his manner was quite composed.

'You are Mr Patrick Redfern of Crossgates, Seldon, Princes Risborough?'

'Yes.'

'How long had you known Mrs Marshall?'

Patrick Redfern hesitated, then said:

'Three months.'

Weston went on:

'Captain Marshall has told us that you and she met casually at a cocktail party. Is that right?'

'Yes, that's how it came about.'

Weston said:

'Captain Marshall has implied that until you both met down here you did not know each other well. Is that the truth, Mr Redfern?'

Again Patrick Redfern hesitated a minute. Then he said:

'Well - not exactly. As a matter of fact I saw a fair amount of her one way and another.'

'Without Captain Marshall's knowledge?'

Redfern flushed slightly. He said:

'I don't know whether he knew about it or not.'

Hercule Poirot spoke. He murmured:

'And was it also without your wife's knowledge, Mr Redfern?'

'I believe I mentioned to my wife that I had met the famous Arlena Stuart.'

Poirot persisted.

'But she did not know how often you were seeing her?'

'Well, perhaps not.'

Weston said:

'Did you and Mrs Marshall arrange to meet down here?'

Redfern was silent a minute or two. Then he shrugged his shoulders.

'Oh well,' he said, 'I suppose it's bound to come out now. It's no good my fencing with you. I was crazy about the woman - mad - infatuated - anything you like. She wanted me to come down here. I demurred a bit and then I agreed. I - I - well, I would have agreed to do any mortal thing she liked. She had that kind of effect on people.'

Hercule Poirot murmured:

'You paint a very clear picture of her. She was the eternal Circe. Just that!'

Patrick Redfern said bitterly:

'She turned men into swine all right!' He went on: 'I'm being frank with you, gentlemen. I'm not going to hide anything. What's the use? As I say, I was infatuated with her. Whether she cared for me or not, I don't know. She pretended to, but I think she was one of those women who lose interest in a man once they've got him body and soul. She knew she'd got me all right. This morning, when I found her there on the beach, dead, it was as though' - he paused - 'as though something had hit me straight between the eyes. I was dazed - knocked out!'

Poirot leaned forward. 'And now?'

Patrick Redfern met his eyes squarely.

He said:

'I've told you the truth. What I want to ask is this - how much of it has got to be made public? It's not as though it could have any bearing on her death. And if it all comes out, it's going to be pretty rough on my wife.'

'Oh, I know,' he went on quickly. 'You think I haven't thought much about her up to now? Perhaps that's true. But, though I may sound the worst kind of hypocrite, the real truth is that I care for my wife - care for her very deeply. The other' - he twitched his shoulders - 'it was a madness - the kind of idiotic fool thing men do - but Christine is different. She's real. Badly as I've treated her, I've known all along, deep down, that she was the person who really counted.' He paused - sighed - and said rather pathetically: 'I wish I could make you believe that.'

Hercule Poirot leant forward. He said:

'But I do believe it. Yes, yes, I do believe it!'

Patrick Redfern looked at him gratefully. He said:

'Thank you.'

Colonel Weston cleared his throat. He said:

'You may take it, Mr Redfern, that we shall not go into irrelevancies. If your infatuation for Mrs Marshall played no part in the murder then there will be no point in dragging it into the case. But what you don't seem to realize is that that - er - intimacy - may have a very direct bearing on the murder. It might establish, you understand, a motive for the crime.'

Patrick Redfern said:

'Motive?'

Weston said:

'Yes, Mr Redfern, motive! Captain Marshall, perhaps, was unaware of the affair. Suppose that he suddenly found out?'

Redfern said:

'Oh God! You mean he got wise and - and killed her?'

The Chief Constable said rather dryly:

'That solution had not occurred to you?'

Redfern shook his head. He said:

'No - funny. I never thought of it. You see, Marshall's such a quiet chap. I - oh, it doesn't seem likely.'

Weston asked:

'What was Mrs Marshall's attitude to her husband in all this? Was she - well, uneasy - in case it should come to his ears? Or was she indifferent?'

Redfern said slowly:

'She was - a bit nervous. She didn't want him to suspect anything.'

'Did she seem afraid of him?'

'Afraid. No, I wouldn't say that.'

Poirot murmured:

'Excuse me, M. Redfern, there was not, at any time, the question of a divorce?'

Patrick Redfern shook his head decisively.

'Oh no, there was no question of anything like that. There was Christine, you see. And Arlena, I am sure, never thought of such a thing. She was perfectly satisfied married to Marshall. He's - well, rather a big bug in his way - ' He smiled suddenly. 'County - all that sort of thing, and quite well off. She never thought of me as a possible husband. No, I was just one of a succession of poor mutts - just something to pass the time with. I knew that all along, and yet, queerly enough, it didn't alter my feeling towards her...'

His voice trailed off. He sat there thinking.

Weston recalled him to the needs of the moment.

'Now, Mr Redfern, had you any particular appointment with Mrs Marshall this morning?'

Patrick Redfern looked slightly puzzled.

He said:

'Not a particular appointment, no. We usually met every morning on the beach. We used to paddle about on floats.'

'Were you surprised not to find Mrs Marshall there this morning?'

'Yes, I was. Very surprised. I couldn't understand it at all.'

'What did you think?'

'Well, I didn't know what to think. I mean, all the time I thought she would be coming.'

'If she were keeping an appointment elsewhere you had no idea with whom that appointment might be?'

Patrick Redfern merely stared and shook his head.

'When you had a rendezvous with Mrs Marshall, where did you meet?'

'Well, sometimes I'd meet her in the afternoon down at Gull Cove. You see the sun is off Gull Cove in the afternoon and so there aren't usually many people there. We met there once or twice.'

'Never on the other cove?' Pixy Cove?'

'No. You see Pixy Cove faces west and people go round there in boats or on floats in the afternoon. We never tried to meet in the morning. It would have been too noticeable. In the afternoon people go and have a sleep or mouch around and nobody knows much where any one else is.'

Weston nodded:

Patrick Redfern went on:

'After dinner, of course, on the fine nights, we used to go off for a stroll together to different parts of the island.'

Hercule Poirot murmured:

'Ah, yes!' and Patrick Redfern shot him an inquiring glance.

Weston said:

'Then you can give us no help whatsoever as to the cause that took Mrs Marshall to Pixy Cove this morning?'

Redfern shook his head. He said, and his voice sounded honestly bewildered:

'I haven't the faintest idea! It wasn't like Arlena.'

Weston said:

'Had she any friends down here staying in the neighbourhood?'

'Not that I know of. Oh, I'm sure she hadn't.'

'Now, Mr Redfern, I want you to think very carefully. You knew Mrs Marshall in London. You must be acquainted with various members of her circle. Is there anyone you know of who could have had a grudge against her? Someone, for instance, whom you may have supplanted in her fancy?'

Patrick Redfern thought for some minutes. Then he shook his head.

'Honestly,' he said. 'I can't think of anyone.'

Colonel Weston drummed with his fingers on the table.

He said at last:

'Well, that's that. We seem to be left with three possibilities. That of an unknown killer - some mono-maniac - who happened to be in the neighbourhood - and that's a pretty tall order - '

Redfern said, interrupting:

'And yet surely, it's by far the most likely explanation.'

Weston shook his head. He said:

'This isn't one of the "lonely copse" murders. This cove place was pretty inaccessible. Either the man would have to come up from the causeway past the hotel, over the top of the island and down by that ladder contraption, or else he came there by boat. Either way is unlikely for a casual killing.'

Patrick Redfern said:

'You said there were three possibilities.'

'Um - yes,' said the Chief Constable. 'That's to say, there were two people on this island who had a motive for killing her. Her husband, for one, and your wife for another.'

Redfern stared at him. He looked dumbfounded. He said:

'My wife? Christine? D'you mean that Christine had anything to do with this?'

He got up and stood there stammering slightly in his incoherent haste to get the words out.

'You're mad - quite mad - Christine? Why, it's impossible. It's laughable!'

Weston said:

'All the same, Mr Redfern, jealousy is a very powerful motive. Women who are jealous lose control of themselves completely.'

Redfern said earnestly.

'Not Christine. She's - oh she's not like that. She was unhappy, yes. But she's not the kind of person to - Oh, there's no violence in her.'

Hercule Poirot nodded thoughtfully. Violence. The same word that Linda Marshall had used. As before, he agreed with the sentiment.

'Besides,' went on Redfern confidently. 'It would be absurd. Arlena was twice as strong physically as Christine. I doubt if Christine could strangle a kitten - certainly not a strong wiry creature like Arlena. And then Christine could never have got down that ladder to the beach. She has no head for that sort of thing. And - oh, the whole thing is fantastic!'

Colonel Weston scratched his ear tentatively.

'Well,' he said. 'Put like that it doesn't seem likely. I grant you that. But motive's the first thing we've got to look for.' He added: 'Motive and opportunity.'

IV

When Redfern had left the room, the Chief Constable observed with a slight smile:

'Didn't think it necessary to tell the fellow his wife had got an alibi. Wanted to hear what he'd have to say to the idea. Shook him up a bit, didn't it?'

Hercule Poirot murmured:

'The arguments he advanced were quite as strong as any alibi.'

'Yes. Oh! she didn't do it! She couldn't have done it - physically impossible as you said. Marshall could have done it - but apparently he didn't.'

Inspector Colgate coughed. He said:

'Excuse me, sir, I've been thinking about that alibi. It's possible, you know, if he'd thought this thing out, that those letters were got ready beforehand.'

Weston said:

'That's a good idea. We must look into - '

He broke off as Christine Redfern entered the room.

She was, as always, calm and a little precise in manner. She was wearing a white tennis frock and a pale blue pullover. It accentuated her fair, rather anaemic prettiness. Yet, Hercule Poirot thought to himself, it was neither a silly face nor a weak one. It had plenty of resolution, courage and good sense. He nodded appreciatively.

Colonel Weston thought:

'Nice little woman. Bit wishy-washy, perhaps. A lot too good for that philandering young ass of a husband of hers. Oh well, the boy's young. Women usually make a fool of you once!'

He said:

'Sit down, Mrs Redfern. We've got to go through a certain amount of routine, you see. Asking everybody for an account of their movements this morning. Just for our records.'

Christine Redfern nodded.

She said in her quiet precise voice.

'Oh yes, I quite understand. Where do you want me to begin?'

Hercule Poirot said:

'As early as possible, Madame. What did you do when you first got up this morning?'

Christine said:

'Let me see. On my way down to breakfast I went into Linda Marshall's room and fixed up with her to go to Gull Cove this morning. We agreed to meet in the lounge at half-past ten.'

Poirot asked:

'You did not bathe before breakfast, Madame?'

'No. I very seldom do.' She smiled. 'I like the sea well warmed before I get into it. I'm rather a chilly person.'

'But your husband bathes then?'

'Oh, yes. Nearly always.'

'And Mrs Marshall, she also?'

A change came over Christine's voice. It became cold and almost acrid.

She said:

'Oh no, Mrs Marshall was the sort of person who never made an appearance before the middle of the morning.'

With an air of confusion, Hercule Poirot said:

'Pardon, Madame, I interrupted you. You were saying that you went to Miss Linda Marshall's room. What time was that?'

'Let me see - half-past eight - no, a little later.'

'And was Miss Marshall up then?'

'Oh yes, she had been out.'

'Out?'

'Yes, she said she'd been bathing.'

There was a faint - a very faint note of embarrassment in Christine's voice. It puzzled Hercule Poirot.

Weston said:

'And then?'

'Then I went down to breakfast.'

'And after breakfast?'

'I went upstairs, collected my sketching box and sketching book and we started out.'

'You and Miss Linda Marshall?'

'Yes.'

'What time was that?'

'I think it was just on half-past ten.'

'And what did you do?'

'We went to Gull Cove. You know, the cove on the east side of the island. We settled ourselves there. I did a sketch and Linda sunbathed.'

'What time did you leave the cove?'

'At a quarter to twelve. I was playing tennis at twelve and had to change.'

'You had your watch with you?'

'No, as a matter of fact I hadn't. I asked Linda the time.'

'I see. And then?'

'I packed up my sketching things and went back to the hotel.'

Poirot said:

'And Mademoiselle Linda?'

'Linda?' Oh, Linda went into the sea.'

Poirot said:

'Were you far from the sea where you were sitting?'

'Well, we were well above high-water mark. Just under the cliff - so that I could be a little in the shade and Linda in the sun.'

Poirot said:

'Did Linda Marshall actually enter the sea before you left the beach?'

Christine frowned a little in the effort to remember. She said:

'Let me see. She ran down the beach - I fastened my box - Yes, I heard her splashing in the waves as I was on the path up the cliff.'

'You are sure of that, Madame? That she really entered the sea?'

'Oh yes.'

She stared at him in surprise.

Colonel Weston also stared at him.

Then he said:

'Go on, Mrs Redfern.'

'I went back to the hotel, changed, and went to the tennis courts where I met the others.'

'Who were?'

'Captain Marshall, Mr Gardener and Miss Darnley. We played two sets. We were just going in again when the news came about - about Mrs Marshall.'

Hercule Poirot leant forward. He said:

'And what did you think, Madame, when you heard that news?'

'What did I think?'

Her face showed a faint distaste for the question.

'Yes.'

Christine Redfern said slowly:

'It was - a horrible thing to happen.'

'Ah, yes, your fastidiousness was revolted. I understand that. But what did it mean to you - personally?'

She gave him a quick look - a look of appeal. He responded to it. He said in a matter-of-fact voice.

'I am appealing to you, Madame, as a woman of intelligence with plenty of good sense and judgment. You had doubtless during your stay here formed an opinion of Mrs Marshall, of the kind of woman she was?'

Christine said cautiously:

'I suppose one always does that more or less when one is staying in hotels.'

'Certainly, it is the natural thing to do. So I ask you, Madame, were you really very surprised at the manner of her death?'

Christine said slowly:

'I think I see what you mean. No, I was not, perhaps, surprised. Shocked, yes. But she was the kind of woman - '

Poirot finished the sentence for her.

'She was the kind of woman to whom such a thing might happen...Yes, Madame, that is the truest and most significant thing that has been said in this room this morning. Laying all - er (he stressed it carefully) personal feeling aside, what did you really think of the late Mrs Marshall?'

Christine Redfern said calmly:

'Is it really worth while going into all that now?'

'I think it might be, yes.'

'Well, what shall I say?' Her fair skin was suddenly suffused with colour. The careful poise of her manner was relaxed. For a short space the natural raw woman looked out. 'She's the kind of woman that to my mind is absolutely worthless! She did nothing to justify her existence. She had no mind - no brains. She thought of nothing but men and clothes and admiration. Useless, a parasite! She was attractive to men, I suppose - Oh, of course, she was. And she lived for that kind of life. And so, I suppose, I wasn't really surprised at her coming to a sticky end. She was the sort of woman who would be mixed up with everything sordid - blackmail - jealousy - violence - every kind of crude emotion. She - she appealed to the worst in people.'

She stopped, panting a little. Her rather short top lip lifted itself in a kind of fastidious disgust. It occured to Colonel Weston that you could not have found a more complete contrast to Arlena Stuart than Christine Redfern. It also occurred to him that if you were married to Christine Redfern, the atmosphere might be so rarefied that the Arlena Stuarts of this world would hold a particular attraction for you.

And then, immediately following on these thoughts, a single word out of the words she had spoken fastened on his attention with particular intensity.

He leaned forward and said:

'Mrs Redfern, why, in speaking of her, did you mention the word blackmail?'

Agatha Christie's books