Hercule Poirot found Jacqueline de Bellefort sitting on the rocks directly overlooking the Nile. She did not turn her head or look round at the sound of his approach.
“Mademoiselle de Bellefort?” asked Poirot. “You permit that I speak to you for a little moment?”
Jacqueline turned her head slightly. A faint smile played round her lips.[108]
“Certainly,” she said. “You are Monsieur Hercule Poirot, I think? Shall I make a guess? You are acting for Mrs Doyle, who has promised you a large fee if you succeed in your mission.”
Poirot sat down on the bench near her.
“You're partially right,” he said, smiling. “I have just come from Madame Doyle, but I am not getting any fee from her and I am not acting for her.”
“Oh!”
Jacqueline studied him attentively.
“Then why have you come?” she asked abruptly.
Hercule Poirot's reply was in the form of another question.
“Have you ever seen me before, Mademoiselle?”
She shook her head.
“No, I do not think so.”
“Yet I have seen you. I sat next to you once at Chez Ma Tante. You were there with Monsieur Simon Doyle.”
A strange mask-like expression came over the girl's face. She said, “I remember that evening.”
“Since then,” said Poirot, “many things have occurred.”
“As you say, many things have occurred.”
“Mademoiselle, I speak as a friend. Bury your dead![109]”
She looked startled.
“What do you mean?”
“Give up the past! Turn to the future! What is done is done. Bitterness will not undo it.”
“I'm sure that that would suit dear Linnet admirably.”
Poirot made a gesture.
“I am not thinking of her at this moment! I am thinking of you. You have suffered – yes – but what you are doing now will only prolong that suffering.”
She shook her head.
“You're wrong. There are times when I almost enjoy myself.”
“And that, Mademoiselle, is the worst of all.”
She looked up swiftly.
“Go home, Mademoiselle. You are young; you have brains; the world is before you.”
Jacqueline shook her head slowly.
“You don't understand – or you won't. Simon is my world.”
“Love is not everything, Mademoiselle,” Poirot said gently. “It is only when we are young that we think it is.”
But the girl still shook her head.
“You don't understand.” She shot him a quick look. “You know all about it, of course? You've talked to Linnet? And you were in the restaurant that night. Simon and I loved each other.”
“I know that you loved him.”
“We loved each other. And I loved Linnet. I trusted her. She was my best friend. All her life Linnet has been able to buy everything she wanted. When she saw Simon she wanted him – and she just took him.”
“And he allowed himself to be – bought?”
Jacqueline shook her dark head slowly.
“No, it's not quite like that. If it were, I shouldn't be here now. You're suggesting that Simon isn't worth caring for.! But he didn't marry her for her money. It's more complicated than that. There's such a thing as glamour, Monsieur Poirot. And money helps that. Linnet had an 'atmosphere,' you see. She was the queen of a kingdom. She had the world at her feet, the richest men in England wanting to marry her. And she stoops instead to some Simon Doyle. Of course, it went to his head.”
She paused and then went on: “Simon was weak, perhaps; but then he's a very simple person. He would have loved me and me only if Linnet hadn't come along and snatched him. And I know perfectly that he wouldn't ever have fallen in love with her if she hadn't made him.”
“That is what you think – yes.”
“I know it. He loved me – he will always love me.”
Poirot said, “Even now?”
A quick answer seemed to rise to her lips but she looked away and her head dropped down. She said in a low voice:
“Yes, I know. He hates me now. Yes, hates me. He'd better be careful![110]”
With a quick gesture she took a little silk bag that lay on the seat. Then she held out her hand. On the palm of it was a small pearl-handled pistol looking like a dainty toy[111].
“Nice little thing, isn't it?” she said. “One of those bullets would kill a man or a woman. And I'm a good shot.” She smiled a faraway smile. “My grandfather taught me to shoot. He believed in shooting – especially where honour was concerned[112]. So you see, Monsieur Poirot – ” she met his eyes squarely[113] – “I've hot blood in me! I bought this when it first happened. I meant to kill one or other of them – the trouble was I couldn't decide which. And then I thought I'd – wait! That appealed to me more and more. After all, I could do it any time; it would be more fun to wait and – think about it! And then this idea came to my mind – to follow them! Whenever they arrived at some faraway spot and were together and happy, they should see me! And it worked! It got right under Linnet's skin.[114] That was when I began to enjoy myself. And there's nothing she can do about it! I'm always perfectly pleasant and polite! It's poisoning everything – everything – for them.”
Her laugh rang out, clear and silvery.
Poirot grasped her arm.
“Be quiet. Quiet, I tell you.” Jacqueline looked at him.
“Well?” she asked. Her smile was definitely challenging.
“Mademoiselle, I ask you, do not do what you are doing.” “Leave dear Linnet alone, you mean?”
“It is deeper than that. Do not open your heart to evil.”
Her lips fell apart; a look of bewilderment came into her eyes.
Poirot went on gravely: “Because – if you do – evil will come. It will enter in and make its home within you, and after a little while it will be impossible to drive it out.”
Jacqueline stared at him. Her glance seemed to waver. She said, “I – don't know – ” Then she cried out defiantly, “You can't stop me.”
“No,” said Hercule Poirot. “I cannot stop you.”
His voice was sad.
“Even if I were to – kill her, you couldn't stop me.”
“No – not if you were willing to pay the price.”
Jacqueline de Bellefort laughed.
“Oh, I'm not afraid of death! What have I got to live for, after all? I suppose you believe it's very wrong to kill a person who has injured you – even if they've taken away everything you had in the world?”
Poirot said steadily: “Yes, Mademoiselle. I believe it is the unforgivable offence – to kill.”
Jacqueline laughed again.
“Then you should approve of my present scheme of revenge; because, you see, as long as it works, I shan't use that pistol. But sometimes I want to hurt her – to stick a knife into her, to put my pistol close against her head and then – just press with my finger – Oh!” The exclamation startled him.
“What is it, Mademoiselle?”
She had turned her head and was staring into the shadows.
“Someone – standing over there. He's gone now.”
Hercule Poirot looked round sharply. The place seemed quite deserted.
“There seems no one here but ourselves, Mademoiselle.” He got up. “In any case I have said all I came to say. I wish you good-night.”
Jacqueline got up too. She said almost pleadingly, “You do understand – that I can't do what you ask me to do?”
Poirot shook his head.
She stood brooding for a moment; then she lifted her head defiantly.
“Good-night, Monsieur Poirot.”
He shook his head sadly and followed her up the path to the hotel.
On the following morning Simon Doyle joined Hercule Poirot leaving the hotel to walk to the town.
The two men walked side by side, passed the gateway and turned into the cool shade of the gardens. Then Simon removed his pipe from his mouth and said, “I understand, Monsieur Poirot, that my wife had a talk with you last night?”
“That is so.”
Simon Doyle was frowning a little.
“I'm glad of one thing,” he said. “You've made her realize that we're more or less powerless in the matter.”
Poirot agreed. There was a pause. Then Simon said suddenly, his face going very red as he spoke: “It's – it's infamous that she should be victimized like this! She's done nothing! If anyone likes to say I behaved like a cad, they're welcome to say so! I suppose I did. But Linnet had nothing to do with it.”
Poirot bowed his head gravely but said nothing.
“Have you – talked to Jackie – Miss de Bellefort?”
“Yes, I have spoken with her.”
“Did you get her to see sense?”
“I'm afraid not.”
Simon broke out irritably: “Can't she see what an ass she's making of herself? Doesn't she realize that no decent woman would behave as she is doing? Hasn't she got any pride or selfrespect?”
Poirot shrugged his shoulders.
“She has only a sense of – injury, shall we say?” he replied.
“Yes, but damn it all[115], decent girls don't behave like this! I admit I was entirely to blame. I treated her damned badly and all that. I should quite understand her being thoroughly fed up with me and never wishing to see me again. But this following me round – it's – it's indecent! Making a show of herself![116] What the devil does she hope to get out of it?[117]”
“Perhaps – revenge!”
“Idiotic! I'd really understand better if she'd tried to do something melodramatic – like taking a shot at me.”
“You think that would be more like her – yes?”
“Frankly I do. She's hot-blooded. I shouldn't be surprised at her doing anything like that. But this spying business – ” He shook his head.
“It is more subtle – yes! It is intelligent!”
Doyle stared at him.
“You don't understand. It's playing hell with Linnet's nerves.”
“And yours?”
Simon looked at him with surprise.
“Me? I'd like to wring the little devil's neck.[118]”
“There is nothing, then, of the old feeling left?”
“My dear Monsieur Poirot – how can I put it? When once I'd met Linnet – Jackie didn't exist.”
Again flushing, Simon said: “I suppose Jackie told you that I'd only married Linnet for her money? Well, that's a damned lie! I wouldn't marry any woman for money! What Jackie doesn't understand is that it's difficult for a fellow when – when – a woman cares for him as she cared for me.”
Poirot looked up sharply.
Simon went on, “It – it – sounds a caddish thing to say, but Jackie was too fond of me! You see, a man doesn't want to feel that a woman cares more for him than he does for her. He doesn't want to feel owned body and soul. This man is mine – he belongs to me! That's the sort of thing I can't stick[119] – no man could stick! He wants to own his woman; he doesn't want her to own him.”
He broke off, and with fingers that trembled slightly he lit a cigarette.
Poirot said, “And it is like that that you felt with Mademoiselle Jacqueline?”
“Eh?” Simon stared and then admitted: “Er – yes – well, yes, as a matter of fact I did. And it's not the sort of thing I could ever tell her. But I was feeling restless – and then I met Linnet, and she just swept me off my feet![120] I'd never seen anything so lovely. It was all so amazing. Everyone kowtowing to her – and then her singling out a poor chump like me.[121]” His tone held boyish awe and astonishment.
“I see,” said Poirot. He nodded thoughtfully. “Yes – I see.”
“The fault's all mine, I admit. But there it is! If you no longer care for a girl, it's simply madness to marry her. And, now that I see what Jackie's really like and the lengths she is likely to go to, I feel I've had rather a lucky escape.[122]”
“The lengths she is likely to go to,” Poirot repeated thoughtfully. “Have you an idea, Monsieur Doyle, what those lengths are?”
Simon frowned, then shook his head.
“What do you mean?”
“You know she carries a pistol about with her.”
Simon looked at him, rather startled.
“I don't believe she'll use that – now. She might have done so earlier. She's just spiteful now – trying to take it out of us both.[123]”
Poirot shrugged his shoulders.
“It may be so,” he said doubtfully.
“It's Linnet I'm worrying about,” declared Simon, somewhat unnecessarily.
“I quite realize that,” said Poirot.
“I'm not really afraid of Jackie doing any shooting, but this spying and following business has absolutely got Linnet on the raw[124]. I'll tell you the plan I've made. To begin with, I've announced openly that we're going to stay here ten days. But tomorrow the steamer Karnak starts from Shellal to Wadi Halfa. I propose to book passages on that under an assumed name[125]. Tomorrow we'll go on an excursion to Philae[126]. Linnet's maid can take the luggage. We'll join the Karnak at Shellal. When Jackie finds we don't come back, it will be too late – we shall be well on our way. She'll assume we have given her the slip[127] and gone back to Cairo. In fact I might even bribe the porter to say so. What do you think of my plan?”
“It is well imagined, yes. And suppose she waits here till you return?”
“We may not return. We could go on to other places. She can't follow us all over the globe. She just can't afford it.”
“I think it may work, yes. But remember, Mademoiselle de Bellefort has brains.” Then Poirot added: “I, too, shall be on the Karnak. It is part of my itinerary.”
“Oh!” Simon hesitated, then said, choosing his words with some embarrassment: “That isn't – isn't – er – on our account in any way?[128]”
Poirot convinced him quickly.
“Not at all. It was all arranged before I left London. I always make my plans well in advance[129]. To succeed in life every detail should be arranged well beforehand.”
Simon laughed and said, “That is how the more skilful murderer behaves, I suppose.”
“Yes – though I must admit that the most brilliant crime I remember and one of the most difficult to solve was committed on the spur of the moment[130].”
Simon said boyishly, “You must tell us something about your cases on board the Karnak.”
“No, no; that would be to talk the shop[131]. By the way, the third member of your party, the tall grey-haired man —”
“Pennington?”
“Yes. He is travelling with you?”
Simon said grimly: “Not very usual on a honeymoon, you were thinking? Pennington is Linnet's American trustee. We ran across him by chance in Cairo.”
“Ah vraiment[132]! You permit a question? She is of age, Madame your wife?[133]” Simon looked amused.
“She isn't actually twenty-one yet – but she hadn't got to ask anyone's consent before marrying me. It was the greatest surprise to Pennington. He left New York on the Carmanic[134] two days before Linnet's letter got there telling him of our marriage, so he knew nothing about it.”
“The Carmanic —” murmured Poirot.
“It was the greatest surprise to him when we ran into him at Shepheard's[135] in Cairo.”
“That was indeed the coincidence!”
“Yes, and we found that he was coming on this Nile trip. Besides that, it's been – well, a relief in some ways.” He looked embarrassed again. “You see, Linnet's been all strung up[136] – expecting Jackie to turn up anywhere and everywhere. Andrew Pennington's a help that way; we have to talk of outside matters.”
“Your wife has not told Mr Pennington?”
“No.” Simon looked aggressive. “It's nothing to do with anyone else. Besides, when we started on this Nile trip we thought we'd seen the end of the business.[137]”
Poirot shook his head.
“You have not seen the end of it yet. No – the end is not yet at hand.[138] I am very sure of that.”
“I say, Monsieur Poirot, you're not very encouraging.”
Poirot looked at him with a slight feeling of irritation.
Linnet Doyle – Jacqueline de Bellefort – both of them took the business seriously enough. But in Simon's attitude he could find nothing but male impatience and annoyance. He said: “You will permit me an impertinent question? Was it your idea to come to Egypt for your honeymoon?”
Simon flushed.
“No, of course not. As a matter of fact I'd rather have gone anywhere else, but Linnet was absolutely set upon it.”
Poirot thought to himself: “I have now heard three separate accounts of the affair – Linnet Doyle's, Jacqueline de Bellefort's, Simon Doyle's. Which of them is nearest to the truth?”
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