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[ Insects and birds chirping ]
[ Indistinct talking ]
MAN: Lord Boynton!
Lord Boynton! Hey!
[ Shouting in Arabic ]
Quoi?
Lord Boynton! [ Shouting in Arabic ]
[ People speaking Arabic ]
[ Voices echoing ]
[ Horse neighing ]
[ Indistinct talking ]
-I -- -Don't...
-Don't speak. -Why not?
You've got sunstroke.
You need to just stay where you are, be quite still.
Oh, actually what I need to do is sit up
and drink a lot of water.
Shukran.
I'm dehydrated.
RAYMOND: I've sent for a doctor.
Already got one. Sarah King, M.D.
You're the fellow who's gonna get sunstroke,
walking around without a hat.
I just introduced myself.
LADY BOYNTON: Raymond.
Ah, my -- my mother needs me.
Well, if you can't introduce yourself,
perhaps you might introduce me to your mother?
Unlikely.
Thé au citron, s'il vous plaît.
-Oui, monsieur. -Et chaud. Très chaud.
Oui.
Alas, madame, I am desolate.
You have no newspapers of any description?!
I am so sorry.
LADY BOYNTON: You don't know what sorry is.
[ Smack ]
Got you, you double-distilled blighter!
Colonel Carbury. Mon vieux.
Poirot.
All these years traveling,
you'd think I'd be used to creepy-crawlies by now.
Not a bit of it.
I did not know that you were the enthusiast pour l'antiquité.
For what, old boy?
No, but you are come also for the exploration of Lord Boynton?
Ah, no, no, no. Passing through.
Oh, vraiment. To where do you pass, Colonel?
Here and there.
You know, here, and then, you know...
There?
Or thereabouts.
Absolutely.
[ Door opens ]
-Can I help you? -Oh!
Agnieszka, you are such a fool.
I am looking for number nine?
-Oh, this is six. -Ah.
So sorry, my dear, for my intrusion.
You are come to follow the labors of Lord Boynton?
Yes. He's my stepfather.
Truly God has smiled upon you.
Your stepfather does a great thing, I think.
A great man.
[ Indistinct talking, shouting ]
[ Horn honking ]
Oh!
So I may remain assured of your very best services.
Thank you very much. Too kind, sir.
Americans.
Do know how to arrive, eh?
MAN: Utterly outrageous. Silly little man!
Sir, what about the fare? Please.
Look here. Do you know who I am?
[ Speaking Arabic ]
I am the son of Lord Boynton.
MAN: Son of lord, you pay.
Please.
Thank you, sir.
The son.
Bloody shambles!
Typical. If you...
-[ Snores ] -[ Sighs ]
[ Man chanting in Arabic ]
-[ Thudding ] -[ Child screaming, sobbing ]
[ Woman screams, sobs ]
Hey, Jinny.
It's all right, honey.
It's all right now.
I was being drowned.
It was a dream, baby. It was just a dream.
It was a memory.
I can't go on like this.
[ Knock on door ]
12 minutes.
-You allowed me to oversleep... -Mother --
-...by 12 minutes. -I'm so sorry
Fetch my stick.
Stick!
[ Indistinct talking, piano music playing ]
Ah. Excellent. There you are.
It's Leonard.
Boynton. Your stepson.
How good of you to come, Mr. Boynton.
Carol, my vitamins.
-Now, Mother? -Clearly.
Jinny, you look like you're suffering from consumption.
It's drawing attention to yourself
in a most unattractive way.
Go to your room and apply color.
Raymond. Don't sit there. Sit here.
Nanny. Go somewhere else.
You look tired, dear.
We need to discuss your attitude.
Sulking is like shyness.
It is unacceptable. It is showing off.
I'm not sulking, Mother.
I merely question the wisdom of traveling
when the market is so jittery.
Wall Street knows better than to breathe without consulting me,
wherever I may be, at whatever juncture.
I forgot my book. Fetch my book, Raymond.
You think they're a rum crew?
Wait till you meet the archaeologist husband.
Although he's not actually psychotic.
More just old-fashioned bonkers.
Theodore Gerard. We have met.
Bonce doctor.
I advised on a case in Edinburgh.
-Used to have a beard. -Oh! Yes, of course.
The bonce doctor.
I recognize you, monsieur.
Of course, it's all a sham.
The real object of the exercise...
...is a reconciliation of his offspring and hers.
Happy families among the tombs.
There is disharmony?
Where Lady Boynton is, the music of the spheres
is curiously like nails down a blackboard.
Now, you must excuse me. My personal disorder.
Can't help sticking my stupid face down the lion's throat.
Do you mind if I join you for a moment?
[ Door closes ]
[ Sighs ]
I can't find these wretched pills.
Oh, God, Raymond.
She has them.
What?
She has them already. They're in her bag.
[ Exhales sharply ]
The book she sent me to find, she didn't even bring to Syria.
Carol, we know these games.
One day, Raymond...
-I swear to God. -I know.
No, I will take a hammer, and I swear...
Maybe we should talk about that.
-Don't joke with me, Ray. -I'm your brother.
I never joke.
[ Man chanting in Arabic ]
RAYMOND: The way we let that woman steal them from us.
-CAROL: Oh, God, Raymond. -I know.
CAROL: Well, then, we have no choice.
RAYMOND: She has to die.
[ Indistinct talking, shouting ]
[ Man speaking Arabic ]
Hurry up! Hurry!
[ Speaking Arabic ]
Now. We're going now.
Please, please.
Yes, sir. Please. Please, please.
Tickety-boo. Please. This way.
Okay, okay.
[ Speaking Arabic ]
Whew!
Looks like Lord Boynton's
expedition has created quite a stir.
So apart from the family on a three-line whip,
Dr. King joins us, I suspect,
because she stuck a pin in a map of the world.
Mr. Jefferson Cope may actually be a little bit dull.
He might possibly like old bits of bone and pot and whatnot.
The honorable Leonard, saddled with
running his father's house in Dorset on no income
while said father swans around the Middle East
looking for the head of John the Baptist.
As for the Polish nun,
she gives me the heeby-jeebies, personally.
[ Shouting in Arabic ]
No problem. No, no. No problem.
Don't be afraid. No problem.
[ Shouting in Arabic ]
Abdullah! Muhammad!
No problem. No problem.
[ Speaks Arabic ]
[ Camel grunts ]
COPE: Hm.
What have we here, I wonder?
A mobile tollbooth?
Dame Celia Westholme.
WESTHOLME: Sorry to hold up the bus, everybody.
Camel was on loan. Had to go back.
Has Boynton made any significant progress, does anybody know?
Have you read any of her books, monsieur?
Oui.
It's her fault I'm here.
She makes travel sound so thrilling.
-Ah. -[ Laughs ]
[ Shouting in Arabic ]
Welcome, welcome, welcome!
Did you have a nice journey?
I know. It's ghastly, isn't it?
Hello, little blossoms.
Hot showers and cold beer for everyone.
Even you, Nanny, you raving old dipsomaniac.
-Leonard. Dear boy. -Father.
LORD BOYNTON: Ah.
-My child bride. -[ Chuckles ]
Dinner's in the pavilion at 8:00.
Everyone's invited. Come along.
Raymond.
Utter bonanza of crippled personalities.
I'd have paid extra for this.
[ Indistinct talking, slow music playing ]
[ Donkey braying ]
[ Man shouting in Arabic ]
Making yourself useful, Leonard? Good man.
Coming along.
LORD BOYNTON: That blind chap down in the Arab camp --
Every night I hear him tell a variation on the same story.
I've heard it all over Syria.
The daughter of Herodias
brought John the Baptist's severed head to this land.
She buried it where the river meets the mountain.
Now, I've been every damn place in Syria
where any river meets anything
that could possibly be construed as a mountain,
from Krak to Aleppo.
This is the only place left. It has to be here.
Come along, then. Chop-chop.
Oh, mon Dieu.
And these words -- Do they speak of John?
LORD BOYNTON: No.
It tells a different story.
A man is sitting in a tavern in Damascus.
He looks up from his wine
and sees Death staring at him across the room.
He cries out -- "But this cannot be my time!"
He flees Damascus.
He rides his horse fast,
right across the desert to Samarra.
When he arrives, he is thirsty.
Standing before him at the well is Death.
Hm.
LORD BOYNTON: You're nodding.
Upon seeing Death for the second time,
the man, he cries out --
"This cannot be! For I escaped you in Damascus."
And Death, he lays his hand
upon the shoulder of the man and says,
"I also was surprised to see --"
[ Dirt falling ]
"...to see you in Damascus.
For my appointment with you,
it was always to be here in Samarra."
Try as one might,
one cannot escape one's rightful destiny.
Oui.
I know you're here, Johnny.
[ Sniffs ]
I can almost smell you.
Sugar, Raymond?
To put sugar in one's tea is indicative of weak character.
Raymond doesn't take sugar.
Good morning. You look dreadful.
Thank you. I feel dreadful.
You should see a doctor.
DR. GERARD: I just did. He told me I had malaria.
DR. KING: Oh, Lord.
I've dosed myself up, inasmuch as it makes a difference.
DR. KING: Well, you shan't come on the expedition today.
If I have an attack on the way to the river,
I'll most probably die.
The obvious solution is to remain here all day
with Lady Boynton.
-You'd better come with us. -Not a difficult decision.
The sun is up.
I shall spend today observing from the platform.
Good idea, poppet. Cracking view of the casbah.
You can keep a beady one on Leonard and myself.
You assist with the digging, monsieur?
Oh, I would assist with digging the drains
if the alternative were enforced social intercourse
with my father's ghastly 10-ton wife.
You won't come down to the river, Lady Boynton?
By all accounts, the vista of the casbah is very fine.
Did the boy bring my Times yet?
No, Mother.
Dismiss him.
[ Insect buzzes ]
Sorry. Might have been stung.
Ah! I am stung!
Yes, there's the *** there.
Oh, goodness. Let me look at you.
Do not touch me.
Never touch me.
You're always looking at me.
-Golly, am I? -All the time.
I turn 'round and you're just looking at me.
Why?
Perhaps I like the shape of your face.
It's a very pretty face.
Do you mind?
I certainly shan't do it if you mind.
I don't mind.
POIROT: S'il vous plaît, M. Cope.
Do not allow Poirot to detain you.
Oh, I'm in no hurry.
The place has been there a few years.
It's not going anywhere.
You are acquainted with the family Boynton?
One can't live in New York
and fail to be acquainted with the Boyntons.
Lady B. is a pretty big financial noise.
I like her.
If I may say so, monsieur,
it would appear that your amity it is not reciprocated.
Oh, she hates everybody. Everybody knows that.
She just doesn't give a damn.
I think it's quite stylish.
You have the outlook most benevolent, monsieur.
I'm easily pleased.
Out in the sun yet again without a hat.
Some people never learn.
Raymond, let me read you what Mr. Baedeker has to say --
"The monumental edifice known as..."
Excuse me. Thank you so much.
I thought that, free from the appalling mother,
I might be permitted the smallest amount
of anodyne conversation with Raymond.
But no.
Evidently the family has decided that I'm a gold digger
and all overtures of friendship must be stamped on.
Frankly, it's rather insulting.
But I'm not having it.
Ladies and gentlemen.
Now we may rest.
We are arrived.
[ Speaking Arabic ]
God is good. God is glorious.
If you want my professional opinion --
which you don't, but you should,
so I'm gonna give it to you anyway --
Your family would do well to hear
what Herr Freud said to me at a conference last year.
"To be American is bad enough," he said,
"but to put money...
and to..."
-Take a little... -Oh, oh.
-Okay, let me look at you. -I'll be fine.
Mahmoud, this gentleman needs to return to camp immediately.
Get your hands off me. I'll be fine.
Ruddy paws off me.
Doctors. Think you know everything.
-You don't have to carry me. -RAYMOND: I want the exercise.
-Jinny! -That's my name.
DR. GERARD: Just need a drink of water.
I can hear the gears grinding in the old cerebellum.
Not really.
I was just wondering how Lady Boynton
managed to negotiate that ladder affair.
It's pretty vertiginous.
Would it kill you to call her "mother"?
For me?
"Stepmother" would do.
God, it's hot.
Yes, it is.
Perhaps you would be kind enough
to take the lady in question a glass of water.
Father, look, I'm sorry.
But are you genuinely blind
to the way she treats... everyone?
Except you?
Now.
I say.
Would you like a drink?
Can we get you anything at all?
To drink?
Like a bucket of strychnine?
Get these buggers away from me.
Perfectly well.
Lie down.
Doctor, what do we do?
What was that? What did he say?
-He said *** off. -Oh. [ Chuckles ]
Right you are. Can do.
Not you.
You stay.
-No, Jinny. -Oh, God.
-I thought... -Yeah.
I thought you wanted my company.
I do. Yes. That's -- That's exactly what I want.
Listen to me.
It's not you.
It's not about the conquest.
[ Sighs ]
For me, denial is a very particular pleasure.
It's not...
[ Sighs ]
[ Slow big-band music playing ]
People say travel broadens the mind.
Mainly because people like me insist on it in their books.
But I have to say I doubt that it is true.
On the contrary, I suspect travel narrows the mind.
One becomes so blasé about the wonders of the world.
The more I travel, the more clearly I understand that...
...all that ever matters is the people.
Not the places.
Those Arabs telling stories over couscous in the camp.
They fascinate me.
This, it's pretty enough, but...
...show me the humans every time.
I don't much care for her.
The way she hangs around the younger Boynton girl.
They sniff out weakness -- nuns -- and misery,
and they gorge on it.
Bloody vampires in drag, quite frankly.
Poirot.
How did you find the river?
-Oh, I -- -Good, good.
We haven't turned up any glories yet.
But we live in hope.
"Nil carborundum" and all that.
And Lady Boynton, she has enjoyed her day?
Oh, yes, monsieur.
Well, she always does.
The word "boredom" simply not in the vocab.
Darling?
I -- I think it's time you climbed down from your perch
for a martini.
Poppet?
Shall we say about 10 minutes?
[ Chuckling ] Little minx.
[ Breathing heavily ]
LORD BOYNTON: Help! Help!
Et alors.
Ça commence.
[ Indistinct talking ]
LORD BOYNTON: Help!
Help!
-You the girl who's a doctor? -Yes.
Then you've met death. So have I.
Come on.
Shut her eyes.
Shut them.
I-I'm afraid it's true.
She's dead.
Your appointment with death, madame.
It was always to be here.
Et maintenant, mon colonel, you are arrived?
This is an event for which you were prepared, non?
No. This is something else.
Later. Show me the dead woman.
What happened here?
Excusez-moi, but do you commission me
to examine this case?
I do.
You two getting married or something?
Mind if I have a gander at your patient, Doc?
-You recovered, Doctor? -I'll manage.
Juicy big hole where there shouldn't be one.
-Somebody stuck her. -A knife.
No. Bigger than a knife. Fatter blade.
A chisel?
Chisel fits the bill.
Whatever the implement, it was wielded with authority.
It was one blow in,
then vigorously churned about to create maximum damage.
She can't have been dead for more than an hour.
Yes, I don't know why that should be there.
It is wax.
Well, one thing's for certain.
She can't stay here in this heat.
I'll make arrangements for the body to be transported.
Un moment, s'il vous plaît, mon colonel.
Excusez-moi.
Yes.
Already there is so much about this case that is wrong.
You yourself are wrong. You are not what you appear.
You are not a policeman,
yet you know a crime it has been committed
before it had been reported.
You bear the rank of colonel,
yet where is it, mon ami, that you serve?
So enough of these crypticities.
Explain yourself to Poirot or he cannot accept this case.
Point!
-Crypticities? -Oui.
Poirot, you're a foreigner.
But I judge you to be a good egg and therefore trustworthy.
Now, what I'm about to deal you
is a card you must keep very close to your chest.
Is that understood?
Oui.
You continue with the digging, monsieur?
I am given to understand
it's what Lady Boynton would have wanted.
You were, I think -- please to forgive me --
somewhere in this area this afternoon?
Yes, Poirot, do you think you could postpone
your interrogation of the obvious *** suspect
so he can arrange some necessities
for his distressed father?
Thank you so much.
Oh.
I understand you're looking for a chisel, yes?
Fill your boots.
WESTHOLME: [ Speaking Arabic ]
Dame Celia. Lord Boynton.
What is it that you read?
I'm cheering the bereaved with judicious extracts
from "The Perfumed Garden."
Are people saying that I killed my wife?
Non. Non, monsieur.
We are all united in our desire to comfort you.
I was always glad that I was older than Leonora.
I thought, "At least I'll die first.
I won't have the agony of trying to live without her."
Nevertheless it must be admitted the death of Lady B.
is hardly detrimental to the community.
But it is not well, monsieur,
that a human being should die before her time it is come.
En plus, the nanny, Mme. Taylor,
has the great distress.
All right, all right. Keep your hair on.
For heaven's sake, I was just trying to lighten the mood.
How did you achieve your newspaper, M. Cope?
Came with me.
Many thanks.
I'm just lousy at being intrepid.
Always so hungry for news of home.
Back at the hotel you couldn't get a paper for love nor money.
DR. GERARD: I know.
[ Bird screeching ]
This may help you in times of stress.
Mon colonel?
Your men -- When is it that they arrive?
Midnight, I should think.
Oh.
Then you must have them search this area at dawn.
The search most diligent. All around.
Looking for what?
In the first place, mon ami, a syringe.
It is instrumental in the *** of Lady Boynton.
Right. Good grief.
-It will be done. -Bon.
You see, mon ami,
the voices of the little gray cells,
they have begun to sing to Poirot.
[ Flies buzzing ]
Slit throat.
Je ne comprends pas.
It is not the custom du pays
to waste life and the food in this manner?
Barbarous.
-Monsieur. -Merci.
-Monsieur. -Merci.
Look, Poirot, sorry to be so standoffish.
Bit grim seeing one's father cry.
Oui. Je vous en prie, monsieur.
What do you want to know?
I should like, monsieur, for you to tell me
if you spoke to your stepmother yesterday afternoon,
and if so, when?
We spoke. About 1:00.
-Hottest part of the day. -Bon.
She'd been perched up there like some evil great pudding
ever since you lot set off.
I say we spoke.
I spoke.
She ignored me.
Nothing unusual about that.
Can we get you anything at all?
To drink?
You know how it was.
One mustn't disturb her when she was taking the sun, but...
God help you if you neglected to do so.
-[ Clears throat ] Monsieur. -Oui?
-We found this syringe. -Ah!
Where was this discovered?
In the tent occupied by the old lady.
The nanny.
Merci.
AGNIESZKA: "And the Lord said unto the servant,
'Go out into the highways
and compel them to come in to my feast...'"
"That my house may be filled."
It's a beautiful parable.
AGNIESZKA: The word King James renders as "compel"
is in the Greek "anagkazo."
It means "compel with violence."
The Spanish knew this.
They used this single word
to justify every atrocity of their Inquisition.
For it is God's own command
that those unwilling to enter his kingdom
should be persuaded in with pain.
That's terrible.
Mm.
Compulsion of any kind, my dear,
it can be terrible.
JINNY: I overheard my stepfather
telling the story that was written here --
of Death following the man across the desert.
Something has followed me here to this place.
Something evil.
God is here to guard you, Jinny.
He lives in every grain of sand.
[ Man speaking Arabic ]
[ Men chant in Arabic ]
-[ Water sloshing ] -[ Child choking ]
[ Slow operatic music playing ]
[ Needle skipping ]
What is it now?
[ Music stops ]
Sorry, gentlemen. Sand in the grooves.
Quite. Well, the Arabs are all accounted for.
Oui.
This case it is most unsatisfactory.
Still plenty of suspects, old boy.
Yes, but almost all of them were outside of the camp
at the time that the *** it was committed.
And this is corroborated by a witness who is impeccable.
Me.
They were with Poirot all of the time.
Raymond wasn't. He came back.
Bien sûr. Cela je connais bien. Oui.
CARBURY: Also Lord Boynton and his son.
Yes, yes. And tomorrow we begin the further interrogations.
CARBURY: Mm-hmm.
That's a *** one.
Without doubt there is more to M. Cope
than he wishes to be known.
But in that desire and in this company
he is not unique.
[ Indistinct talking ]
[ Woman screaming ]
CARBURY: Hold on. Over here. Quickly.
Off in this direction.
[ Indistinct talking, shouting ]
-COPE: Where did it come from? -CAROL: Is anyone out there?
Close all those gates down there.
-COPE: What the hell was that? -CAROL: I don't know.
CARBURY: You see anyone moving?
COPE: No. Where did it come from?
It's got to be something.
[ Panting ]
Over there.
CARBURY: Oh, dear.
Get her inside. Quickly.
You men, over here.
[ Men speaking Arabic ]
Don't let anyone leave.
Sister Agnieszka!
[ Groans softly ]
What happened? It's okay.
It's okay. Shh. It's okay.
Everything's going to be okay.
Can I help?
[ Speaking indistinctly ]
Be useful to know what she's trying to tell us.
She's not trying to tell us anything.
She's talking to God.
POIROT: You have Polish, monsieur?
DR. GERARD: You don't need Polish to spot
a woman at her prayers.
Very pretty needlework, Doc.
Shouldn't we be getting her back to the hotel?
Ask Dr. King.
You're the senior physician here.
Yeah, but you're much prettier
and you're handier with the cutlery.
Besides, the nun's your patient.
I've got my hands full with the loony nanny.
Well, this, what I've done, it's only temporary.
-So, yes, we should. -Ça fait du bien.
It would be helpful to Poirot for all of us to return.
Ei veniam dare.
Ei veniam dare. That's Latin.
"Forgive him"?
Poirot has little Latin,
but it can also be, I think, "Forgive her."
-My men can track -- -Non, non. Non.
There is no need to dispatch your men, Colonel.
The assailant of Sister Agnieszka has not fled.
There was a man.
He followed me across the desert.
I woke up and...
...he was putting a bag over my head.
Slaver. Bound to be.
People think the slave trade is finished. It's not.
I've seen the waiting caves on the beach at Mangapwani.
100 souls crammed into a space hardly bigger than this tent.
I threw myself on the floor to get away.
When I looked up, I saw...
You saw Sister Agnieszka was struggling with your attacker?
And, well, you tried to help her.
And you struck at the man with what?
A rock.
POIROT: Well...
And in your terror, and in the dark,
accidentally you struck your friend and protector.
Now, you try to get some sleep, if you can.
Because tomorrow we face the rigors
of the return journey, hein?
Come close, Jinny.
Let me tell you a story.
This is the legend of Gilgamesh.
-Oh. Shukran. -Madame.
Will she be all right?
The nun?
Oh, God knows.
Will you?
-I'm not wounded. -That's debatable.
Seems to be consensus that you killed your mother.
[ Chuckles ] Is that your view, Sarah?
Heavens.
Five consecutive words
culminating in my Christian name.
If you're going to be as garrulous as this, Mr. Boynton,
I shall have to ask you to be less familiar.
-Do you think I killed her? -No.
No, but what I think is irrelevant.
He's the one you need to convince.
You're the authority on stories.
Tell me...
What was it that got loose when Pandora opened the box?
-All the evils of the world -That's it.
Mm.
Madness. Greed. Shame.
Those guys.
My stepfather did pretty much the same thing...
...when he took the cork out of that *** tomb.
And here you are, Poirot,
kicking the contents all over town.
Did Lady Boynton harm you physically?
My mother had little recourse to violence.
She was too smart for that.
Instead, she just prized open the top of our skulls
and raked her poisonous tongue through our brains.
No place to hide, Poirot.
Even in your own head.
Ever.
Carol, um...
Carol grew up petrified.
Did her best to ingratiate herself, you know,
to win approval, which she never got.
Jinny just was terrified to the point of madness.
Possibly beyond.
-[ Child coughing, choking ] -[ Water sloshing ]
Did you *** your mother, monsieur?
No.
But only because I lacked the moral courage.
She was a monster, Poirot.
It was her pleasure, always, to watch us suffer.
Why was she driven to be so cruel?
To punish us, I guess.
For what offense?
For being someone else's kids.
CAROL: It's true. We were adopted.
All of us.
It is no crime against God or nature to be an orphan.
Oh, but it is, monsieur.
It is a hideous crime.
Lady Boynton --
Mrs. Pierce as she was then -- she...
She wanted to have children so badly.
But between her and Mr. Pierce, they couldn't make it happen.
No, for Mom, adoption was the only route.
But once she'd assembled her family,
of which there were many candidates...
RAYMOND: [ Sniffling ]
Don't! It was an accident.
...and rejected a great number...
-[ Thudding ] -[ Child crying ]
Oh, yes, monsieur, there were many children who were
presented to us as new siblings,
only to be removed a day later.
One child stayed longer than the others,
but the beatings went on until she also disappeared.
So there we were, we lucky few --
Raymond, Carol, and Jinny.
Je ne comprends pas.
Mlle. Jinny, she was not even born.
Who was this other child?
I don't know.
I can't remember.
Who was that little girl?
Unacceptable goods.
-[ Thudding ] -[ Child screaming ]
[ Knock on door ]
Merci.
Who was the child that you beat, madame?
Can you tell it to Poirot?
Lesley.
Yes. Lesley.
Can you tell to me about Lesley, madame?
You had to beat her?
She needed to be punished?
I did what was required of me.
[ Child screaming ]
I don't think we're sufficiently sorry.
Not by a long chalk.
Again, Nanny.
[ Screaming continues ]
God, she was an evil woman.
And Lesley, madame? What became of her?
She is alive?
Fa-- Fa-- Father?
I'm not your father, my dear.
But I'll do my best --
-Can you get me that bag? -Oui.
I'll do my best to make you comfortable.
All right?
Thank you.
Bog-standard sedative. Check it if you want, Poirot.
Come on.
There's a good girl. Come on.
[ Coughing ]
Oh. M. Cope.
-Monsieur, do you have a moment? -But of course.
I, uh...
I-I don't know if this has any relevance
to, uh, what's been going on,
but it seems I've lost quite a lot of money.
M. Cope, je suis désolé.
No, no. That's okay.
What's of interest is that the stock that's gone down the pan
is the Pierce Holding Company.
-Non. -Yes.
Lady Boynton's outfit.
Fireproof. Bombproof.
The safest bet on Wall Street.
I myself invested substantially.
Seems that while we've been away
there's been this rumor about the true value of the company.
These things, they come and go.
Lady Boynton'd generally get up on her hind legs,
tell everyone to shut up and sit up straight
and it'd all calm down.
But she wasn't there.
The rumor became a panic,
then a stampede to get out.
The whole outfit's bust to hell.
Shares are worthless.
[ Indistinct talking ]
LORD BOYNTON: Oh, God.
Here comes that ghastly little Belgian,
wringing his hands like the cowman
come to collect his Christmas box.
He's being respectful, Father.
He's being a damned nuisance.
Monsieur.
Come for a nightcap among the bereaved?
Non, merci, Lord Boynton.
Quand même.
Oh, for God's sake, sit down, Poirot.
You're giving me indigestion hovering like that.
Merci.
I suppose it is quite proper that I should be questioned.
I was on the spot at the time.
And I imagine I inherit my wife's estate, so...
And the estate of Lady Boynton --
Of what does this principally consist?
Well, God knows. I never had charge of the money.
And Leonora just subbed the digging as it went along.
Do you know, Leonard?
Raymond would have a clearer idea of value.
But it must add up to a few quid. [ Chuckles ]
You disagree, monsieur?
Since we have been in Syria,
there has been the financial collapse catastrophique.
The Pierce Holding Company is utterly disintegrated.
It seems that the death of Lady Boynton
was not enough, hein?
It also seems that she has been obliterated from the earth.
It may surprise you to know, Mr. Poirot,
that I am not unaware
that Lady Boynton was not universally adored.
Like many women who know their own mind,
she found it all too easy to make enemies.
She did not make an enemy of me.
I loved her.
I am not ashamed to say so.
To you or to my son.
Was it necessary to air that observation in quite that way?
The methods of Poirot, monsieur, cannot always be agréable.
Mesdames.
Excusez-moi, Dame Celia.
Were you acquainted with Lady Boynton
before encountering her at the tomb?
Well, I'd seen her about.
And where had you seen her, madame?
Lady Boynton was pointed out to me by a man at a party
who then preceded to tell me rather a lot about her.
About the way, in particular, she treated her children.
I decided then and there I had no wish to further
acquaintance with the woman by introducing myself to her.
She sounded perfectly odious.
And who was this man that was so well informed?
I didn't catch his name.
I wanted her dead, too. Just in case you were wondering.
Well, she was clearly blocking my way.
Raymond couldn't even look me in the eye
with her still in existence.
So do you commend yourself to me as a suspect, mademoiselle?
I commend myself to you as one
who has recently invested a great deal of time
in a relationship that was always heading nowhere.
I now know that when I find something I want,
I must act to take it.
WESTHOLME: Bravo.
Sadly, all this resolution has taken your mind off the game.
It's a little trick I learnt the other day in Vienna.
You see, just when you least expect it,
the church comes storming back.
Checkmate.
I didn't know you smoked.
I don't.
I've given up.
Since you threw the cigarette away, you've given up?
Well, your determination is impressive.
All six seconds of it.
Well, keep talking. I could go 10.
If I hadn't spoken, would you just have kept watching me?
We'll never know.
You're a strange man.
Does that matter?
Not necessarily.
Raymond.
Yeah.
Now is the time to kiss me.
Yeah.
[ Speaks Arabic ]
Anybody in here who isn't dead?
AGNIESZKA: [ Speaking Polish ]
[ Speaking Polish ]
[ Dripping ]
Ei veniam dare.
Ei veniam dare.
Ei veniam dare.
LORD BOYNTON: They have him, by God.
They have found the head of John.
News that is astonishing, monsieur.
I must return to Ain Musa immediately.
Is there a problem?
Nanny Taylor has drowned herself in the bath.
-Suicide. -Oh, my God.
-That's awful news. -Oui.
Is somebody dealing with it?
Oui, monsieur.
Because I must -- I-I must get back to the dig.
I can't, you know...
Oui.
Moral of the story being, if you want your death
to attract the concern of your employer,
make sure you're 2,000 years old.
-Ah, oui. -Oh!
Keep meaning to give you something.
It's the details of the immigration you needed.
And on the back here is a list of employees.
Merci.
As requested, I've had a word with Mahmoud.
Some of his boys are privately saying
that there was some character
lurking about on the ladder that afternoon.
An Arab. Not one of them.
But that was a good hour or so before the time of death.
This case is a mess, Poirot.
Not so, mon ami.
This case,
when Poirot has almost given up
scrabbling for purchase on its shell of armor --
Boff.
It opens to him like a flower.
Good Lord.
So, what do we do?
We do what the murderer least expects Poirot to do.
We return to the dig.
All of us.
[ Indistinct talking ]
[ Clears throat ]
This case, mes amis,
it is full of the red...fish.
Herrings, possibly?
POIROT: Merci.
There are so many diversions, so many distractions.
Attend well to Poirot
as he peels them away like the skin of an onion.
Oh, herrings, onions.
Do get a wriggle on. There's a good fellow.
Lord Boynton.
Your wife, she funded your expeditions
as you went along, hein?
How much more efficient it would be
to have the money all at once, non?
-What? -There is no money.
Non, vraiment, monsieur.
For you, non, there never has been.
For the running of Boynton Hall, alors, is for you
always most arduous.
No, Lady Boynton, she was always most munificent to your father
but never towards his son.
You can stare at me significantly
as long as you like, monsieur.
I've done nothing wrong.
Tell to Poirot what was in the bag.
What bag?
What did you agree to purchase from the ragged Arab boy?
LEONARD: I remember the boy.
I don't remember what rubbish he was flogging.
Fortunately, Poirot, he does.
And from it...
...he extracted...
...this.
-Voilà. -Voilà what?
Well, it's a tooth.
POIROT: D'être precis,
it is a molar taken from the upper jaw of St. John.
You will observe that it bears the traces
of the filling of gold.
For this skull,
it was supposed to masquerade as the skull of John the Baptist.
But in fact it is, as you say, M. Leonard, rubbish.
What the devil are you talking about, man?
This wasn't purchased from a hawker and planted.
This is untouched.
This entire sample was exhumed e situ intacto.
Forgive me, Poirot, but you're driveling utter bilge.
Pompous little Belgian.
LEONARD: My father has explained this object
was discovered undisturbed.
It's a perfect fit.
Bon.
I don't understand.
All your life, Father...
...traipsing about the Middle East,
time after time finding absolutely nothing
of significance.
I wanted it to end.
You dear, deluded, stupid man.
I never expected your wife's bloody money.
I never wanted it.
I wanted you to be free of this need,
to find what you've been looking for.
You mind if I step out for a while?
-LEONARD: I'll come with you. -LORD BOYNTON: No, no.
I simply wish to be alone for a moment.
Is that permitted?
Je vous en prie, monsieur.
Now the three of you.
[ Sighs ]
The litany of cruelties you have endured, hein?
Well, the ceaseless humiliations.
[ Child screaming ]
[ Thudding ]
You multiply these incidents by hundreds and thousands,
and the corrosion of the spirit,
it is inevitable and insupportable.
[ Child crying ]
No wonder you wished to see Lady Boynton dead.
Indeed, Poirot, he overheard you, Mlle. Carol,
and you, M. Raymond,
whispering that your mother, she must die.
And you, Dr. King.
By your own admission, you also wished to see her dead.
You are a woman who has wasted time
and is decided and determined to waste no more.
What do we know of you, M. Cope?
Me?
Will you show to me your passport?
Merci.
You choose to use your second Christian name
and not your first.
Yes.
Why have you elected to do so, I wonder?
My first given name is ambiguous in terms of gender.
The spelling is different, but it's also a girl's name.
As a child, I found that tiresome.
I would suggest that there are many things about your childhood
that you found tiresome,
M. Leslie...
...Jefferson Cope.
[ Child screaming ]
I don't think we're sufficiently sorry.
The child that was thrashed so brutally
on the orders of Lady Boynton was not a girl,
as misremembered by her daughter Carol, non,
but a boy by the name of Leslie.
If you know all that...
...you'll also know that I didn't kill her.
Merely to deprive her of her life, monsieur,
would afford for you satisfaction most scant.
No, you wanted to make her life unbearable,
to degrade her, to hurt the woman,
as -- as she hurt you.
Lady Boynton was a person preoccupied
with station and money,
and you decided to strip her of them both.
So I may remain assured of your very best services.
Of what service did you wish to remain assured?
You have no newspapers of any description?!
MAN: I am so sorry.
The withholding from Lady Boynton of the newspapers
that would keep her ignorant of the panic
that you yourself had inspired
to ensure the destruction of her empire.
I'm just lousy at being intrepid.
Back at the hotel, you couldn't get a paper for love nor money.
And like the confidence trickster so accomplished,
you invested in your own deceit.
You wrote off thousands of dollars of your own savings
merely to blow smoke in the face of Poirot.
Oh. M. Cope.
It seems I've lost quite a lot of money.
POIROT: Alors.
Poirot has one more red herring left to fry.
And it is a fish most substantial.
Le colonel, mes amis, he is not a policeman
but is retained by the Foreign Office.
His mission in Syria was to uncover and destroy
the trafficking of female slaves,
the abduction and sale of women for one purpose only.
-Pardonnez-moi, mesdames. -I knew it.
-Arab women? -Whatever the client ordered.
-White women? -Yes.
They wanted me.
Hélas, mademoiselle.
It is the opinion of Poirot...
...that there is a person who instructed his agent
to search for a young lady who is Caucasian
and resembled you exactement
with your skin that is pale and your hair
[Sighs] that is red.
Who is this agent, Poirot?
Is he here amongst us now?
Ah. Certainement.
Mlle. Jinny,
when you struck at your attacker that night, oh,
you hit your target, hein?
[ Panting ]
It's okay.
The woman who befriended you so assiduously,
it was she who was smothering your face!
Sister Agnieszka!
[ Groans softly ]
Rot in hell.
CARBURY: You, Sister, will face the consequences.
The key to the *** of Lady Boynton --
It is not who, it is when.
Dame Celia, do you have any children?
No, I do not.
I urge you to reconsider your answer, madame.
I cannot reconsider. I have no children.
Well, then...
...madame, you are a liar.
You have a daughter, and she is amongst us now.
That is a filthy lie. And in extremely poor taste.
So you disown her now as you did when she was a baby?
Reclaim her of your own volition!
You owe to her a debt of ungiven love.
I had no choice. No choice.
What was your position in the household of Lady Boynton,
in the days when she was Mrs. Pierce?
Huh?
-A junior maid. -Oui. C'est ça.
A servant of the lowest position whose duty it is to scrub.
Not to become pregnant by a guest of your employer.
The woman to whom you surrendered your child
on the day of its birth.
Is it me?
Non, Mlle. Carol.
It is not you.
Oh, my God.
I'm so sorry.
You gave birth to me
and delivered me up to that ***?
I came to save you.
How did you know this?
Mademoiselle, Poirot, he did not know for certain
until this very moment.
Non, non, mademoiselle.
Mon colonel, Poirot, he is much obliged to you for
the accounts of the household and the registry of immigration
which shows that three weeks after the baby, it was born,
Celia Westholme arrived on the coast of Ireland
to be taken care of by nuns.
Your child, she had been taken from you.
And so you were now to become invisible, to nurse your shame.
But you were not to be the outcast. Oh, no.
You were to recreate yourself as a free spirit.
A writer, a traveler. A success!
Dame Celia Westholme.
And every time you thought of your daughter,
you consoled yourself with the hope that she --
that she was happy.
But she had not begun life afresh.
She was not happy.
She remained as a prisoner in the household of Lady Boynton.
[ Water sloshing ]
[ Child coughing, choking ]
And your regret, it came flooding back,
to boil in your heart.
Let me tell you a story.
It's the legend of Gilgamesh.
Gilgamesh was the most beautiful man in all creation.
And so you went in search of the father of your child, hein?
To Vienna. So out of the way of your customary travels.
And together with this man, you agreed to investigate
to see whether the cruelties of Lady Boynton, they were true.
And you discovered that all of the children had been tormented.
It was not the hornet that stung Lady Boynton.
How could it?
Sorry. Might have been stung.
The hornet, it was already dead.
Ah!
You stung her...
...with this.
Ah!
Which you then returned to Dr. Gerard,
who had prepared it for you.
LADY BOYNTON: I am stung!
He then cleaned it and discarded it in the tent of Nanny Taylor
to implicate her.
T-This is colossal.
What -- What... What was in the syringe?
A concoction of your own devising, Doctor,
probably based on morphia.
You can't kill a woman the size of La Boynton
with a thimbleful of morphia.
As you well know.
Doctor, you affect to know little
of the administering of drugs,
when, en effet, you are the expert.
You greet Poirot
and ask him if he remembers you, hein, from Edinburgh --
the bonce doctor with the beard?
Poirot, he remembers everything.
For when you took the witness stand in Edinburgh
to speak on the life of the mind,
the clerk of the court, he read out your qualifications.
And anesthesia, Doctor, was your discipline
long before psychiatry.
No, of course you cannot kill Lady Boynton with such a dose.
But you can remove from her control of the nervous system.
The power over her movement. The power over her speech.
And Lady Boynton, who professed herself a lover of the sun,
was now roasting to death...
...and could say nothing.
Ingenious, monsieur.
And commendably grotesque.
But Lady Boynton did not roast to death.
She was stabbed!
Your prestidigitation with drugs, Doctor, was not over yet.
You injected yourself
to simulate the symptoms of malaria --
symptoms so authentic that you fooled even Dr. King.
-Let me look at you. -I'll be fine.
This gentleman needs to return to camp.
Mlle. Jinny, she attended you.
And how did you repay her for her kindness?
By giving to her another sedative of your own invention.
To consolidate your alibi.
Earlier, you had killed a goat
and trapped a quantity of its blood in a ball of wax.
This object you secreted
in the folds of the clothes of your victim,
where in due course it would melt in the heat of the sun.
One can never have enough sun, huh?
-[ Speaking indistinctly ] -What?
You could have killed her then.
But you wanted her to suffer for as long as possible.
-[ Moaning softly ] -Speak up, dear.
I can't help you if you don't speak up.
You used the ball of wax to confuse the time of death.
And it was this wax that Poirot,
he discovered on the dress of Lady Boynton
and on the floorboards
and the little piece of pottery beneath her chair.
Wax which told to Poirot
that there was an accomplice to the ***.
Et puis you waited patiently.
The wax, it melted.
The blood of the goat, it began to flow,
suggesting to the naked eye that she had already been stabbed.
And at last, the cry, it went up to tell the world...
LORD BOYNTON: Help!
...that Lady Boynton was dead.
But she was not dead.
No. Not yet.
-You the girl who's a doctor? -Yes.
Then you've met death. So have I.
Come on.
Only now was death to meet its victim.
And in the sight of everyone --
ah, in the sight of Hercule Poirot himself --
...you, Dame Celia,
murdered Lady Boynton with your own hands,
as prescribed by Dr. Gerard to quench your rage.
It took but a few seconds.
And even Dr. King was deceived into believing
that Lady Boynton had died earlier that day.
If you please to empty the contents of your handbag.
Ah, oui.
And Dr. Gerard,
he encouraged Poirot to seek for the chisel, hein?
Chisel fits the bill.
Whereas the *** weapon,
it was in your hand all of the day.
DR. GERARD: Goodness.
We did go to considerable trouble.
One question.
What makes you think any of this
has any basis whatsoever in the truth?
Nanny Taylor.
[ Scoffs ] Dear God!
Did I kill her as well? Or was she one of yours?
POIROT: You disordered her mind
with a solution of mescaline so strong
that the very speck of it made the head of Poirot to spin.
You wanted to promote in her hallucinations,
to make her susceptible to suggestion.
You burdened her mind with so much shame and guilt
that, given the opportunity,
you knew that she would do harm to herself.
You know you can't go on.
After everything that you did.
Think what you helped her to do to little Jinny.
-[ Water sloshing ] -[ Child coughing, choking ]
What did Nanny Taylor say to you?
Fa-- Fa-- Father?
This was not the ravings of a nervous breakdown.
For you yourself had told to her
that you were the father of Mlle. Jinny.
Portrait of Mum and Dad.
You'll appreciate now why I declined
your particular offer of affection.
[ Sighs ] Well, well.
This is a pickle.
Set out to save you. Destroyed everything.
Thank you, Theo.
It's all part of the service.
No extra charge.
I never stopped loving you, you know?
Be careful with this one, Poirot.
Digitalis.
The action, as you will appreciate, is irreversible.
I'm so sorry.
We hoped it wouldn't come to this.
There, there. There, there.
There, there. There.
[ Gasps ]
No, D-Doctor. [ Groans ]
[ Grunts ]
Look to the living.
They pay their bills quicker.
And they make better...
...conversation.
JINNY: [ Sobbing ]
Monsieur.
Ah.
I've just been chatting to Lord Boynton.
And, um, he pronounces himself cured of archaeology.
Chatting.
Oui.
M. Raymond, in the matter of Pandora,
you will recall that after all the evils had escaped the box
there was one other creature --
very small, very frail --
that followed them into the world.
Hope.
Au revoir, la jeunesse.
-M. Poirot. -Mademoiselle.
Carol and I are going to Egypt to see the Sphinx.
Oh.
It's not much of an adventure, but we're doing it on our own.
It's a start.
It was actually my idea.
Lady Boynton would have said I was constitutionally too feeble,
that my skin was too fair.
But I think it's probably time
I showed my feeble skin who's boss.
C'est bien, mademoiselle.
Before he leaves,
you will permit an old man to pontificate?
Alors, mademoiselle,
there is nothing in the world so damaged
that it cannot be repaired by the hand of Almighty God.
I encourage you to know this, because without this certainty,
we should all of us be mad.
Je vous salue, mademoiselle.
Au revoir.
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