As he resumed his seat Poirot seemed to have forgotten Tim's question.
He murmured vaguely,
"I wonder if all young ladies with valuable jewels were as careless as Madame Doyle was?"
"It is true, then, that they were stolen?" asked Mrs Allerton.
"Who told you so, Madame?"
"Ferguson said so," Tim volunteered.
Poirot nodded gravely.
"It is quite true."
"I suppose," said Mrs Allerton nervously, "that this will mean a lot of unpleasantness for all of us.
Tim says it will."
Tim seemed upset by this comment and Poirot asked:
"Ah, you have had previous experience, perhaps?
You have been in a house where there was a robbery?"
"Never," said Tim.
"Oh, yes, darling, you were at the Portarlingtons' that time - when that awful woman's diamonds were stolen."
"You always get things hopelessly wrong, Mother.
I was there when it was discovered that the diamonds she was wearing round her fat neck were only paste!
The actual substitution was probably done months earlier.
As a matter of fact, a lot of people said she'd had it done herself!"
"Joanna said so, I expect."
"Joanna wasn't there."
"But she knew them quite well. And it's very like her to make that kind of suggestion."
"You're always down on Joanna, Mother."
Poirot hastily changed the subject.
He had it in mind to make a really big purchase at one of the Assuan shops.
Some very attractive purple and gold material at one of the Indian merchants.
There would, of course, be the duty to pay, but-
"They tell me that they can - how do you say? - expedite it for me.
And that the charges will not be too high.
How think you, will it arrive all right?"
Mrs Allerton said that many people, so she had heard, had had things sent straight to England from the shops in question and that everything had arrived safely.
"Bien.
Then I will do that.
But the trouble one has, when one is abroad, if a parcel comes out from England!
Have you had experience of that?
Have you had any parcels arrive since you have been on your travels?"
"I don't think we have, have we, Tim?
You get books sometimes, but of course there is never any trouble about them."
"Ah, no, books are different."
Dessert had been served.
Now, without any previous warning, Colonel Race stood up and made his speech.
He touched on the circumstances of the crime and announced the theft of the pearls.
A search of the boat was about to be instituted, and he would be obliged if all the passengers would remain in the saloon until this was completed.
Then, after that, if the passengers agreed, as he was sure they would, they themselves would be kind enough to submit to a search.
Poirot slipped nimbly along to his side.
There was a little buzz and Poirot reached Race's side and murmured something in his ear just as the latter was about to leave the dining-saloon.
Race listened, nodded assent, and beckoned a steward.
He said a few brief words to him; then, together with Poirot, he passed out onto the deck, closing the door behind him.
They stood for a minute or two by the rail.
Race lit a cigarette.