

Spark notea radio golf trial#
When alone, Poirot tells Hastings that his investigations in Paris have borne fruit and that Madame Daubreuil is in fact a Madame Beroldy who was put on trial twenty years previously for the death of her elderly husband. Poirot sees foam on his lips and the doctor realises the man died of an epileptic fit and was then stabbed after death. He examines the new corpse with the doctor. Poirot returns from Paris and, without being told details beforehand, staggers Hastings by correctly guessing the age of the man, place of death, and manner of death, despite having been clearly shocked when Hastings originally told him of this new development.

The strangest thing is that the man has been dead for forty-eight hours and thus died before Monsieur Renauld's murder. No one recognises the man who by his hands could be a tramp but is dressed in finer clothes. Whilst he is away another body is found in a shed on the golf course. Poirot suspects that Marthe Daubreuil is the girl in question and feels that the answer to the problem lies in Paris. Jack admits to rowing with his father over who he wanted to marry, hence the change of will. Soon after, Jack Renauld arrives back his trip to Santiago was delayed enabling him to return when he heard of his father's murder. Having now met Madame Daubreuil for the first time, Poirot tells Hastings that he recognises her from a murder case going back some twenty years. The local Examining Magistrate, Monsieur Hautet, is more helpful and tells Poirot that he has found out that the Renaulds' neighbour at the Villa Marguerite, Madame Daubreuil, has paid two hundred thousand francs into her bank account in recent weeks: was she Monsieur Renauld's mistress? They visit the lady who is furious when the suggestion is put to her and throws them out. Poirot is puzzled by some of these findings-why is the watch running fast? Why did the servants hear nothing? Why was the body found somewhere where it was bound to be quickly discovered? Why is there a piece of lead piping near the body? Poirot is hampered in his investigations by the attitude of Monsieur Giraud of the Sûreté who plainly believes the elderly Belgian is too set in his old-fashioned ways to solve the mystery. She loses her composure and collapses with grief at the sight of her dead husband. The widow inspects the body to identify it. There is a smashed watch at the scene of the kidnap which is still running but has somehow gained two hours. The dead man changed his will just two weeks before, leaving almost everything to his wife and nothing to his son. The eldest of the three servants tells Poirot and the police that quite often, after Madame Renauld has retired to bed for the night, her husband has been visited by a neighbour, Madame Daubreuil, who is the mother of the girl with the "anxious eyes", Marthe Daubreuil. The Renaulds' son, Jack, had just been sent away on business to South America and Renauld also gave the chauffeur an unexpected holiday leaving just three female servants in the house who heard nothing. His body was found stabbed in a newly dug open grave on the edge of a nearby golf course which is under construction and next to the placing of a bunker which was due to be dug that day. They appear to have got in to the house through the open front door with no sign of forced entry. Madame Renauld was tied up and her husband taken away by the men wanting to know "the secret".

He and his wife were attacked in their rooms at 2.00 in the night by two masked men. Asking for directions near the Villa Genevieve, they are watched by a young girl outside another smaller villa who has "anxious eyes".Īrriving at Renauld's house, they find they are too late: Renauld is dead. Poirot decides to investigate and he takes Hastings to France and the Villa Genevieve in Merlinville-sur-Mer on the northern French coast where Renauld wrote from. Then he finds an extraordinary letter from the south of France: "For God's sake, come!" writes Monsieur Paul Renauld. But Poirot is busy sorting his mail, impatiently tossing aside bills and banal requests "recovering lost lap dogs for fashionable ladies". Captain Hastings arrives in the flat that he now shares with Poirot in London, eager to tell the Belgian detective about a woman with whom he has fallen hopelessly in love on the train from Paris to Calais.
