Whew!
Why didn't somebody murder her?"
"It may yet happen," Poirot consoled him.
"There might be some sense in that.
Whom have we got left?
Pennington - we'll keep him for the end, I think.
Richetti - Ferguson."
Signor Richetti was very voluble, very agitated.
"But what a horror, what an infamy - a woman so young and so beautiful - indeed an inhuman crime!"
Signor Richetti's hands flew expressively up in the air.
His answers were prompt.
He had gone to bed early - very early.
In fact immediately after dinner.
He had read for a while - a very interesting pamphlet lately published - PrГhistorische Forschung in Kleinasien - throwing an entirely new light on the painted pottery of the Anatolian foothills.
He had put out his light some time before eleven.
No, he had not heard any shot.
Nor any sound like the pop of a cork.
The only thing he had heard - but that was later, in the middle of the night - was a splash, a big splash, just near his porthole.
"Your cabin is on the lower deck, on the starboard side, is it not?"
"Yes, yes, that is so.
And I hear the big splash." His arms flew up once more to describe the bigness of the splash.
"Can you tell me at all what time that was?"
Signor Richetti reflected.
"It was one, two, three hours after I go to sleep.
Perhaps two hours."
"About ten minutes past one, for instance?"
"It might very well be, yes.
Ah! but what a terrible crime - how inhuman... So charming a woman..."
Exit Signor Richetti, still gesticulating freely.
Race looked at Poirot.
Poirot raised his eyebrows expressively, then shrugged his shoulders.
They passed on to Mr Ferguson.
Ferguson was difficult. He sprawled insolently in a chair.
"Grand to-do about this business!" he sneered. "What's it really matter?
Lot of superfluous women in the world!"
Race said coldly,
"Can we have an account of your movements last night, Mr Ferguson?"
"Don't see why you should, but I don't mind.
I mooched around a good bit.
Went ashore with Miss Robson.
When she went back to the boat I mooched around by myself for a while.
Came back and turned in round about midnight."
"Your cabin is on the lower deck, starboard side?"
"Yes.
I'm not up among the nobs."
"Did you hear a shot?
It might only have sounded like the popping of a cork."
Ferguson considered.
"Yes, I think I did hear something like a cork... Can't remember when - before I went to sleep.
But there were still a lot of people about then - commotion, running about on the deck above."