Seven
MORNING ON THE BEACH
I
It was mid-morning on the beach below the hotel.
Evelyn Hillingdon came out of the water and dropped on the warm
golden sand. She took off her bathing cap and shook her dark head vigor-
ously. The beach was not a very big one. People tended to congregate
there in the mornings and about 11:30 there was always something of a
social reunion. To Evelyn’s left in one of the exotic-looking modern basket
chairs lay Señora de Caspearo, a handsome woman from Venezuela. Next
to her was old Mr. Rafiel who was by now the doyen of the Golden Palm
Hotel and held the sway that only an elderly invalid of great wealth could
attain. Esther Walters was in attendance on him. She usually had her
shorthand notebook and pencil with her in case Mr. Rafiel should sud-
denly think of urgent business cables which must be got off at once. Mr.
Rafiel in beach attire was incredibly desiccated, his bones draped with fes-
toons of dry skin. Though looking like a man on the point of death, he had
looked exactly the same for at least the last eight years—or so it was said
in the islands. Sharp blue eyes peered out of his wrinkled cheeks, and his
principal pleasure in life was denying robustly anything that anyone else
said.
Miss Marple was also present. As usual she sat and knitted and listened
to what went on, and very occasionally joined in the conversation. When
she did so, everyone was surprised because they had usually forgotten
that she was there! Evelyn Hillingdon looked at her indulgently, and
thought that she was a nice old pussy.
Señora de Caspearo rubbed some more oil on her long beautiful legs
and hummed to herself. She was not a woman who spoke much. She
looked discontentedly at the flask of sun oil.
“This is not so good as Frangipanio,” she said, sadly. “One cannot get it
here. A pity.” Her eyelids drooped again.
“Are you going in for your dip now, Mr. Rafiel?” asked Esther Walters.
“I’ll go in when I’m ready,” said Mr. Rafiel, snappishly.
“It’s half past eleven,” said Mrs. Walters.
“What of it?” said Mr. Rafiel. “Think I’m the kind of man to be tied by
the clock? Do this at the hour, do this at twenty minutes past, do that at
twenty to—bah!”
Mrs. Walters had been in attendance on Mr. Rafiel long enough to have
adopted her own formula for dealing with him. She knew that he liked a
good space of time in which to recover from the exertion of bathing and
she had therefore reminded him of the time, allowing a good ten minutes
for him to rebut her suggestion and then be able to adopt it without seem-
ing to do so.
“I don’t like these espadrilles,” said Mr. Rafiel raising a foot and looking
at it. “I told that fool Jackson so. The man never pays attention to a word I
say.”
“I’ll fetch you some others, shall I, Mr. Rafiel?”
“No, you won’t, you’ll sit here and keep quiet. I hate people rushing
about like clucking hens.”
Evelyn shifted slightly in the warm sand, stretching out her arms.
Miss Marple, intent on her knitting—or so it seemed—stretched out a
foot, then hastily she apologized.
“I’m so sorry, so very sorry, Mrs. Hillingdon. I’m afraid I kicked you.”
“Oh, it’s quite all right,” said Evelyn. “This beach gets rather crowded.”
“Oh, please don’t move. Please. I’ll move my chair a little back so that I
won’t do it again.”
As Miss Marple resettled herself, she went on talking in a childish and
garrulous manner.
“It still seems so wonderful to be here! I’ve never been to the West Indies
before, you know. I thought it was the kind of place I never should come
to and here I am. All by the kindness of my dear nephew. I suppose you
know this part of the world very well, don’t you, Mrs. Hillingdon?”
“I have been in this island once or twice before and of course in most of
the others.”
“Oh yes. Butterflies isn’t it, and wild flowers? You and your — your
friends—or are they relations?”
“Friends. Nothing more.”
“And I suppose you go about together a great deal because of your in-
terests being the same?”
“Yes. We’ve travelled together for some years now.”
“I suppose you must have had some rather exciting adventures some-
times?”
“I don’t think so,” said Evelyn. Her voice was unaccentuated, slightly
bored. “Adventures always seem to happen to other people.” She yawned.
“No dangerous encounters with snakes or with wild animals or with
natives gone berserk?”
(“What a fool I sound,” thought Miss Marple.)
“Nothing worse than insect bites,” Evelyn assured her.
“Poor Major Palgrave, you know, was bitten by a snake once,” said Miss
Marple, making a purely fictitious statement.
“Was he?”
“Did he never tell you about it?”
“Perhaps. I don’t remember.”
“I suppose you knew him quite well, didn’t you?”
“Major Palgrave? No, hardly at all.”
“He always had so many interesting stories to tell.”
“Ghastly old bore,” said Mr. Rafiel. “Silly fool, too. He needn’t have died
if he’d looked after himself properly.”
“Oh come now, Mr. Rafiel,” said Mrs. Walters.
“I know what I’m talking about. If you look after your health properly
you’re all right anywhere. Look at me. The doctors gave me up years ago.
All right, I said, I’ve got my own rules of health and I shall keep to them.
And here I am.”
He looked round proudly.
It did indeed seem rather a mistake that he should be there.
“Poor Major Palgrave had high blood pressure,” said Mrs. Walters.
“Nonsense,” said Mr. Rafiel.
“Oh, but he did,” said Evelyn Hillingdon. She spoke with sudden, unex-
pected authority.
“Who says so?” said Mr. Rafiel. “Did he tell you so?”
“Somebody said so.”
“He looked very red in the face,” Miss Marple contributed.
“Can’t go by that,” said Mr. Rafiel. “And anyway he didn’t have high
blood pressure because he told me so.”
“What do you mean, he told you so?” said Mrs. Walters. “I mean, you
can’t exactly tell people you haven’t got a thing.”
“Yes you can. I said to him once when he was downing all those Planters
Punches, and eating too much, I said, ‘You ought to watch your diet and
your drink. You’ve got to think of your blood pressure at your age.’ And he
said he’d nothing to look out for in that line, that his blood pressure was
very good for his age.”
“But he took some stuff for it, I believe,” said Miss Marple, entering the
conversation once more. “Some stuff called—oh, something like—was it
Serenite?”
“If you ask me,” said Evelyn Hillingdon, “I don’t think he ever liked to
admit that there could be anything the matter with him or that he could
be ill. I think he was one of those people who are afraid of illness and
therefore deny there’s ever anything wrong with them.”
It was a long speech for her. Miss Marple looked thoughtfully down at
the top of her dark head.
“The trouble is,” said Mr. Rafiel dictatorially, “everybody’s too fond of
knowing other people’s ailments. They think everybody over fifty is going
to die of hypertension or coronary thrombosis or one of those things—
poppycock! If a man says there’s nothing much wrong with him I don’t
suppose there is. A man ought to know about his own health. What’s the
time? Quarter to twelve? I ought to have had my dip long ago. Why can’t
you remind me about these things, Esther?”
Mrs. Walters made no protest. She rose to her feet and with some deft-
ness assisted Mr. Rafiel to his. Together they went down the beach, she
supporting him carefully. Together they stepped into the sea.
Señora de Caspearo opened her eyes and murmured: “How ugly are old
men! Oh how they are ugly! They should all be put to death at forty, or
perhaps thirty-five would be better. Yes?”
Edward Hillingdon and Gregory Dyson came crunching down the beach.
“What’s the water like, Evelyn?”
“Just the same as always.”
“Never much variation, is there? Where’s Lucky?”
“I don’t know,” said Evelyn.
Again Miss Marple looked down thoughtfully at the dark head.
“Well, now I give my imitation of a whale,” said Gregory. He threw off
his gaily patterned Bermuda shirt and tore down the beach, flinging him-
self, puffing and panting, into the sea, doing a fast crawl. Edward Hilling-
don sat down on the beach by his wife. Presently he asked, “Coming in
again?”
She smiled—put on her cap—and they went down the beach together in
a much less spectacular manner.
Señora de Caspearo opened her eyes again.
“I think at first those two they are on their honeymoon, he is so charm-
ing to her, but I hear they have been married eight—nine years. It is in-
credible, is it not?”
“I wonder where Mrs. Dyson is?” said Miss Marple.
“That Lucky? She is with some man.”
“You—you think so?”
“It is certain,” said Señora de Caspearo. “She is that type. But she is not
so young any longer—Her husband—already his eyes go elsewhere—He
makes passes—here, there, all the time. I know.”
“Yes,” said Miss Marple. “I expect you would know.”
Señora de Caspearo shot a surprised glance at her. It was clearly not
what she had expected from that quarter.
Miss Marple, however, was looking at the waves with an air of gentle in-
nocence.
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