Appointment with death: a Hercule Poirot Mystery – Agatha Christie 2/183 | Previous page | Next page |

Appointment with death: a Hercule Poirot Mystery – Agatha Christie


As he pulled the curtains neatly over the window and walked to his bed, he smiled tolerantly to himself. “You do see, don’t you, that she’s got to be killed?” Curious words for one Hercule Poirot, detective, to overhear on his first night in Jerusalem.

“Decidedly, wherever I go, there is something to remind me of crime!” he murmured to himself. His smile continued as he remembered a story he had once heard concerning Anthony Trollope, the novelist.

Trollope was crossing the Atlantic at the time and had overheard two fellow passengers discussing the last published installment of one of his novels.

“Very good,” one man had declared. “But he ought to kill off that tiresome old woman.”

With a broad smile the novelist had addressed them: “Gentlemen, I am much obliged to you! I will go and kill her immediately!”

Hercule Poirot wondered what had occasioned the words he had just overheard. A collaboration, perhaps, over a play or a book. He thought, still smiling: “Those words might be remembered one day, and be given a more sinister meaning.”

There had been, he now recollected, a curious nervous intensity in the voicea tremor that spoke of some intense emotional strain. A man’s voiceor a boy’s . . .

Hercule Poirot thought to himself as he turned out the light by his bed: “I should know that voice again. . . .”

Their elbows on the windowsill, their heads close together, Raymond and Carol Boynton gazed out into the blue depths of the night. Nervously, Raymond repeated his former words: “You do see, don’t you, that she’s got to be killed?”

Carol Boynton stirred slightly. She said, her voice deep and hoarse: “It’s horrible. . . .”

“It’s not more horrible than this!”

“I suppose not. . . .”

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