place is very like another. I wish we could go right away.”
“And this morning,” went on Mrs Otterbourne, “the manager actually had the impertinence to tell me that all the rooms had been booked in advance and that he would require ours in two days' time.”
“So we've got to go somewhere.”
“Not at all. I'm quite prepared to fight for my rights.”
Rosalie murmured: “I suppose we might as well go on to Egypt. It doesn't make any difference.”
“It's certainly not a matter of life or death,” agreed Mrs Otterbourne.
But there she was quite wrong - for a matter of life and death was exactly what it was.
Death on the Nile
Part II - EGYPT
Death on the Nile
Chapter 1
“That's Hercule Poirot, the detective,” said Mrs Allerton.
She and her son were sitting in brightly painted scarlet basket chairs outside the Cataract Hotel at Assuan. They were watching the retreating figures of two people - a short man dressed in a white silk suit and a tall slim girl. Tim Allerton sat up in an unusually alert fashion.
“That funny little man?” he asked incredulously.
“That funny little man!”
“What on earth's he doing out here?” Tim asked.
His mother laughed. “Darling, you sound quite excited. Why do men enjoy crime so much? I hate detective stories and never read them. But I don't think Monsieur Poirot is here with any ulterior motive. He's made a good deal of money and he's seeing life, I fancy.”
“Seems to have an eye for the best looking girl in the place.”
Mrs Allerton tilted her head a little on one side as she considered the retreating backs of M. Poirot and his companion.
The girl by his side over-topped him by some three inches. She walked well, neither stiffly nor slouchingly.
“I suppose she is quite good-looking,” said Mrs Allerton.
She shot a little glance sideways at Tim. Somewhat to her amusement the fish rose at once.
“She's more than quite. Pity she looks so bad-tempered and sulky.”
“Perhaps that's just expression, dear.”
“Unpleasant young devil, I think. But she's pretty enough.”
The subject of these remarks was walking slowly by Poirot's side. Rosalie Otterbourne was twirling an unopened parasol, and her expression certainly bore out what Tim had just said. She looked both sulky and bad-tempered. Her eyebrows were drawn together in a frown and the scarlet line of her mouth was drawn downward.
They turned to the left out of the hotel gate and entered the cool shade of the public gardens.
Hercule Poirot was prattling gently, his expression that of beatific good humour. He wore a white silk suit, carefully pressed, and a panama hat and carried a highly ornamental fly whisk with a sham amber handle.
“- it enchants me,” he was saying. “The black rocks of Elephantine, and the sun, and the little boats on the river. Yes, it is good to be alive.” He paused and then added, “You do not find it so, Mademoiselle?”
Rosalie Otterbourne said shortly: “It's all right, I suppose. I think Assuan's a gloomy sort of place. The hotel's half empty, and everyone's about a hundred -”
She stopped - biting her lip.
Hercule Poirot's eyes twinkled.
“It is true, yes, I have one leg in the grave.”
“I - I wasn't thinking of you,” said the girl. “I'm sorry. That sounded rude.”
“Not at all. It is natural you should wish for companions of your own age. Ah, well, there is one young man, at least.”
“The one who sits with his mother all the time? I like her - but I think he looks dreadful - so conceited!”
Poirot sniffed.
“And I - am I conceited?”
“Oh, I don't think so.”
She was obviously uninterested - but the fact did not seem to annoy Poirot. He merely remarked with placid satisfaction, “My best friend says that I am very conceited.”
“Oh, well,” said Rosalie vaguely, “I suppose you have something to be conceited about. Unfortunately crime doesn't interest me in the least.”
Poirot said solemnly, “I am delighted to