Evil Under the Sun (Hercule Poirot 24)
She paused. Her smiled widened.
“Of course—I haven’t got a husband! I’ve failed there, haven’t I, M. Poirot?”
Poirot said gallantly:
“Mademoiselle, if you are not married, it is because none of my sex have been sufficiently eloquent. It is from choice, not necessity, that you remain single.”
Rosamund Darnley said:
“And yet, like all men, I’m sure you believe in your heart that no woman is content unless she is married and has children.”
Poirot shrugged his shoulders.
“To marry and have children, that is the common lot of women. Only one woman in a hundred—more, in a thousand, can make for herself a name and a position as you have done.”
Rosamund grinned at him.
“And yet, all the same, I’m nothing but a wretched old maid! That’s what I feel today, at any rate. I’d be happier with twopence a year and a big silent brute of a husband and a brood of brats running after me. That’s true, isn’t it?”
Poirot shrugged his shoulders.
“Since you say so, then, yes, Mademoiselle.”
Rosamund laughed, her equilibrium suddenly restored. She took out a cigarette and lit it.
She said:
“You certainly know how to deal with women, M. Poirot. I now feel like taking the opposite point of view and arguing with you in favour of careers for women. Of course I’m damned well-off as I am—and I know it!”
“Then everything in the garden—or shall we say at the seaside? is lovely, Mademoiselle.”
“Quite right.”
Poirot, in his turn, extracted his cigarette case and lit one of those tiny cigarettes which it was his affection to smoke.
Regarding the ascending haze with a quizzical eye, he murmured:
“So Mr.—no, Captain Marshall is an old friend of yours, Mademoiselle?”
Rosamund sat up. She said:
“Now how do you know that? Oh, I suppose Ken told you.”
Poirot shook his head.
“Nobody has told me anything. After all, Mademoiselle, I am a detective. It was the obvious conclusion to draw.”
Rosamund Darnley said: “I don’t see it.”
“But consider!” The little man’s hands were eloquent. “You have been here a week. You are lively, gay, without a care. Today, suddenly, you speak of ghosts, of old times. What has happened? For several days there have been no new arrivals until last night when Captain Marshall and his wife and daughter arrive. Today the change! It is obvious!”
Rosamund Darnley said:
“Well, it’s true enough. Kenneth Marshall and I were more or less children together. The Marshalls lived next door to us. Ken was always nice to me—although condescending, of course, since he was four years older. I’ve not seen anything of him for a long time. It must be—fifteen years at least.”
Poirot said thoughtfully:
“A long time.”