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Convinced that Mary Gerrard, a childhood playmate of Elinor's, is attempting to ingratiate herself with her aunt for financial gain, the pair travel to the family home to investigate. They find no evidence but Roddy falls desperately in love with the beautiful Mary, little realising that beneath Elinor's restrained and unemotional exterior lies an almost obsessive passion for him.
Elinor obeys her aunt's deathbed wish despite her heartbreak, and gives Mary a large bequest from the estate. But when Mary is found poisoned, the evidence against Elinor is damning. It's up to Hercule Poirot to find out if the case is as simple as it seems...
189 pages, Paperback
First published March 1, 1940






"What letter?"Wow - just WOW!
"That, mon ami, is one side of the question. Now we will proceed to stage two. We will dismiss all those considerations from our mind and we will approach the matter from the opposite angle."A good deal of the grist for Poirot's mill will stem from the number of lies he is told - whether told out of cultural politeness or resorted to when certain incidents are seen as not connected to the murder:
"For lies, Mademoiselle, tell a listener just as much as truth can. Sometimes they tell more."This time out, Poirot's skill is singularly diplomatic, as he senses just how lightly he must tread to get what he needs. Some of these people may be of the country, but they can be made of stern stuff.