vigorously.
âHullo-ullo-ullo,â said Mr. Blatt cheerfully.
He was a large man with a red face and a fringe of reddish hair round a shining bald spot.
It was Mr. Blattâs apparent ambition to be the life and soul of any place he happened to be in. The Jolly Roger Hotel, in his opinion, given somewhat loudly, needed brightening up. He was puzzled at the way people seemed to melt and disappear when he himself arrived on the scene.
âNearly made you into strawberry jam, didnât I?â said Mr. Blatt gaily.
Christine Redfern said:
âYes, you did.â
âJump in,â said Mr. Blatt.
âOh, thanksâI think Iâll walk.â
âNonsense,â said Mr. Blatt. âWhatâs a car for?â
Yielding to necessity Christine Redfern got in.
Mr. Blatt restarted the engine which had stopped owing to the suddenness with which he had previously pulled up.
Mr. Blatt inquired:
âAnd what are you doing walking about all alone? Thatâs all wrong, a nice looking girl like you.â
Christine said hurriedly:
âOh! I like being alone.â
Mr. Blatt gave her a terrific dig with his elbow, nearly sending the car into the hedge at the same time.
âGirls always say that,â he said. âThey donât mean it. You know, that place, the Jolly Roger, wants a bit of livening up. Nothing jolly about it. No life in it. Of course thereâs a good amount of duds staying there. A lot of kids, to begin with and a lot of old fogeys too. Thereâs that old Anglo-Indian bore and that athletic parson and those yapping Americans and that foreigner with the moustacheâmakes me laugh that moustache of his! I should say heâs a hairdresser, something of that sort.â
Christine shook her head.
âOh no, heâs a detective.â
Mr. Blatt nearly let the car go into the hedge again.
âA detective? Dâyou mean heâs in disguise? â
Christine smiled faintly.
She said:
âOh no, he really is like that. Heâs Hercule Poirot. You must have heard of him.â
Mr. Blatt said:
âDidnât catch his name properly. Oh yes, Iâve heard of him. But I thought he was dead. Dash it, he ought to be dead. Whatâs he after down here?â
âHeâs not after anythingâheâs just on a holiday.â
âWell, I suppose that might be so,â Mr. Blatt seemed doubtful about it. âLooks a bit of a bounder, doesnât he?â
âWell,â said Christine and hesitated. âPerhaps a little peculiar.â
âWhat I say is,â said Mr. Blatt, âwhatâs wrong with Scotland Yard? Buy British every time for me.â
He reached the bottom of the hill and with a triumphant fanfare of the horn ran the car into the Jolly Rogerâs garage which was situated, for tidal reasons, on the mainland opposite the hotel.
III
Linda Marshall was in the small shop which catered for the wants of visitors to Leathercombe Bay. One side of it was devoted to shelves on which were books which could be borrowed for the sum of twopence. The newest of them was ten years old, some were twenty years old and others older still.
Linda took first one and then another doubtfully from the shelf and glanced into it. She decided that she couldnât possibly read The Four Feathers or Vice Versa. She took out a small squat volume in brown calf.
The time passedâ¦.
With a start Linda shoved the book back in the shelf as Christine Redfernâs voice said:
âWhat are you reading, Linda?â
Linda said hurriedly:
âNothing. Iâm looking for a book.â
She pulled out The Marriage of William Ashe at random and advanced to the counter fumbling for twopence.
Christine said:
âMr. Blatt just drove me homeâafter nearly running over mefirst. I really felt I couldnât walk all across the causeway with him, so I said I had to buy some things.â
Linda said:
âHeâs
Lynn Vincent, Sarah Palin