Death on the Nile

Death on the Nile

by Agatha Christie

Jacqueline De Bellefort Character Analysis

Jacqueline is one of the primary antagonists of the novel, originally a friend to Linnet and the fiancé lover of Simon. All that changes, however, when Linnet offers Simon a job (at Jacqueline’s request), then decides she’d rather marry him herself. As Jacqueline later tells Hercule Poirot, she vowed revenge, first considering violent options but ultimately deciding that she gets more satisfaction from stalking Linnet on her honeymoon, following the couple all the way to Egypt. Poirot, however, first encounters Jacqueline well before the Nile excursion that makes up most of the book—she and Simon are dancing at the London restaurant Chez Ma Tante, and Poirot notes to himself that she clearly cares about Simon too much. As it turns out, Poirot is (of course) right in his assessment of Jacqueline. However, while it initially seems that Jacqueline’s too strong love of Simon is now being expressed through her relentless stalking of the new couple, as it turns out Jacqueline’s overwhelming love for Simon actually led her to mastermind the plot against Linnet, and to turn murderer herself in order to protect Simon. Like many of the characters in the story, Jacqueline is a victim of her own desires, although despite being a murderer and an experienced liar, she is portrayed relatively sympathetically, since her main motivation was always just to please Simon.

Jacqueline De Bellefort Quotes in Death on the Nile

The Death on the Nile quotes below are all either spoken by Jacqueline De Bellefort or refer to Jacqueline De Bellefort. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
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Chapter One Quotes

“She cares too much, that little one,” he said to himself. It is not safe. No, it is not safe.”

Related Characters: Hercule Poirot (speaker), Simon Doyle , Jacqueline De Bellefort
Page Number and Citation: 15
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Four  Quotes

“No, Madame.” His tone was firm. “I will not accept a commission from you. I will do what I can in the interests of humanity.”

Related Characters: Hercule Poirot (speaker), Linnet Doyle, Jacqueline De Bellefort, Colonel Race
Page Number and Citation: 62-63
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Five  Quotes

“It is deeper than that. Do not open your heart to evil.”

Related Characters: Hercule Poirot (speaker), Jacqueline De Bellefort, Simon Doyle , Linnet Doyle
Page Number and Citation: 69
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Six  Quotes

“My dear Monsieur Poirot—how can I put it? It’s like the moon when the sun comes out. You don’t know it’s there anymore. When once I’d met Linnet—Jackie didn’t exist.”

Related Characters: Simon Doyle (speaker), Jacqueline De Bellefort, Linnet Doyle, Hercule Poirot
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number and Citation: 73
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Seven  Quotes

“Monsieur Poirot, I’m afraid—I’m afraid of everything. I’ve never felt like this before. All these wild rocks and the awful grimness and starkness. Where are we going? What’s going to happen? I’m afraid, I tell you. Everyone hates me. I’ve never felt like that before. I’ve always been nice to people—I’ve done things for them—and they hate me—lots of people hate me. Except for Simon, I’m surrounded by enemies . . . It’s terrible to feel—that there are people who hate you. . . .”

Related Characters: Linnet Doyle (speaker), Jacqueline De Bellefort, Simon Doyle , Hercule Poirot
Related Symbols: The Nile
Page Number and Citation: 93
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Ten  Quotes

Simon’s eyes were open. They too held contentment. What a fool he’d been to be rattled that first night . . . There was nothing to be rattled about. . . Everything was all right . . . After all, one could trust Jackie—

There was a shout-people running towards him waving their arms-shouting. . . .

Simon stared stupidly for a moment. Then he sprang to his feet and dragged Linnet with him.

Not a minute too soon. A big boulder hurtling down the cliff crashed past them. If Linnet had remained where she was she would have been crushed to atoms.

Related Characters: Simon Doyle , Linnet Doyle, Jacqueline De Bellefort
Page Number and Citation: 120
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Twelve  Quotes

Jacqueline hummed a little tune to herself. When the drink came, she picked it up, said: “Well, here’s to crime,” drank it off and ordered another.

Related Characters: Jacqueline De Bellefort (speaker), Linnet Doyle, Simon Doyle
Page Number and Citation: 137
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Eighteen  Quotes

Poirot picked up the handkerchief and examined it.

“A man’s handkerchief-but not a gentleman’s handkerchief. Ce cher Woolworth, I imagine. Threepence at most.”

Related Characters: Hercule Poirot (speaker), Simon Doyle , Miss Marie Van Schuyler, Linnet Doyle, Fleetwood, Colonel Race, Jacqueline De Bellefort
Related Symbols: The Nile
Page Number and Citation: 209
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Nineteen  Quotes

“People think I’m awful. Stuck-up and cross and bad-tempered. I can’t help it. I’ve forgotten how to be-to be nice.”

“That is what I said to you; you have carried your burden by yourself too long.”

Related Characters: Rosalie Otterbourne (speaker), Hercule Poirot (speaker), Jacqueline De Bellefort, Simon Doyle , Signor Richetti, Mrs. Salome Otterbourne
Page Number and Citation: 217
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Twenty-Three  Quotes

The body of the dead woman, who in life had been Louise Bourget, lay on the floor of her cabin. The two men bent over it.

Race straightened himself first.

“Been dead close on an hour, I should say. We’ll get Bessner on to it. Stabbed to the heart. Death pretty well instantaneous, I should imagine. She doesn’t look pretty, does she?”

“No.”

Poirot shook his head with a slight shudder.

The dark feline face was convulsed, as though with surprise and fury, the lips drawn back from the teeth.

Poirot bent again gently and picked up the right hand. Something just showed within the fingers. He detached it and held it out to Race, a little sliver of flimsy paper coloured a pale mauvish pink.

“You see what it is?”

“Money,” said Race.

“The corner of a thousand-franc note, I fancy.”

Related Characters: Hercule Poirot (speaker), Colonel Race (speaker), Jacqueline De Bellefort, Louise Bourget, Dr. Bessner, Linnet Doyle, Simon Doyle , Rosalie Otterbourne, Tim Allerton, Mrs. Salome Otterbourne
Related Symbols: Pearls
Page Number and Citation: 246
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Twenty-Four  Quotes

Mrs. Otterbourne continued: “The arrangement was that I should go round to the stern on the deck below this, and there I should find the man waiting for me. As I went along the deck a cabin door opened and somebody looked out. It was this girl-Louise Bourget, or whatever her name is. She seemed to be expecting someone. When she saw it was me, she looked disappointed and went abruptly inside again. I didn’t think anything of it, of course. I went along just as I had said I would and got the-the stuff from the man. I paid him and-er-just had a word with him. Then I started back. Just as I came around the corner I saw someone knock on the maid’s door and go into the cabin.”

Race said, “And that person was—?"

Bang!

The noise of the explosion filled the cabin. There was an acrid sour smell of smoke. Mrs. Otterbourne turned slowly sideways, as though in supreme inquiry, then her body slumped forward and she fell to the ground with a crash. From just behind her ear the blood flowed from a round neat hole.

Related Characters: Mrs. Salome Otterbourne (speaker), Colonel Race (speaker), Hercule Poirot, Dr. Bessner, Jacqueline De Bellefort, Simon Doyle , Louise Bourget
Page Number and Citation: 263
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Twenty-Six  Quotes

“Perhaps not, but the custom, it still remains. The Old School Tie is the Old School Tie, and there are certain things (I know this from experience) that the Old School Tie does not do! One of those things, Monsieur Fanthorp, is to butt into a private conversation unasked when one does not know the people who are conducting it.”

Related Characters: Hercule Poirot (speaker), James Fanthorp, Linnet Doyle, Andrew Pennington, Jacqueline De Bellefort, Simon Doyle
Page Number and Citation: 280
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Twenty-Nine  Quotes

Poirot was silent. But it was not a modest silence. His eyes seemed to be saying: “You are wrong. They didn’t allow for Hercule Poirot.”

Aloud he said, “And now, Doctor we will go and have a word with your patient.”

Related Characters: Hercule Poirot (speaker), Jacqueline De Bellefort, Simon Doyle , Dr. Bessner, Cornelia Robson
Page Number and Citation: 321
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Thirty  Quotes

“Yes,” she said “it’s rather horrible isn’t it? I can’t believe that I—did that! I know now what you meant by opening your heart to evil . . . You know pretty well how it happened. Louise made it clear to Simon that she knew. Simon got you to bring me to him. As soon as we were alone together he told me what had happened. He told me what I’d got to do. I wasn’t even horrified. I was so afraid—so deadly afraid . . . That’s what murder does to you. Simon and I were safe—quite safe—except for this miserable blackmailing French girl. I took her all the money we could get hold of. I pretended to grovel. And then, when she was counting the money, I—did it! It was quite easy. That’s what’s so horribly, horribly frightening about it . . . It’s so terribly easy. . . .”

Related Characters: Jacqueline De Bellefort (speaker), Hercule Poirot, Simon Doyle , Louise Bourget, Linnet Doyle, Mrs. Allerton
Page Number and Citation: 327
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter Thirty-One  Quotes

Mrs. Allerton shivered. “Love can be a very frightening thing.”

“That is why most great love stories are tragedies.”

Mrs. Allerton’s eyes rested upon Tim and Rosalie, standing side by side in the sunlight, and she said suddenly and passionately: “But thank God, there is happiness in the world.”

Related Characters: Hercule Poirot (speaker), Mrs. Allerton (speaker), Rosalie Otterbourne, Tim Allerton, Jacqueline De Bellefort, Simon Doyle
Page Number and Citation: 333
Explanation and Analysis:

Lastly the body of Linnet Doyle was brought ashore, and all over the world wires began to hum, telling the public that Linnet Doyle, who had been Linnet Ridgeway, the famous, the beautiful, the wealthy Linnet Doyle was dead.

Sir George Wode read about it in his London club, and Sterndale Rockford in New York, and Joanna Southwood in Switzerland, and it was discussed in the bar of the Three Crowns in Malton-under-Wode.

And Mr. Burnaby said acutely: “Well, it doesn’t seem to have done her much good, poor lass.”

But after a while they stopped talking about her and discussed instead who was going to win the Grand National. For, as Mr. Ferguson was saying at that minute in Luxor, it is not the past that matters but the future.

Related Characters: Mr. Burnaby (speaker), Linnet Doyle, Sir George Wode, Sterndale Rockford, Joanna Southwood , Mr. Ferguson (Lord Dawlish), Simon Doyle , Jacqueline De Bellefort, Andrew Pennington, James Fanthorp, Tim Allerton, Louise Bourget
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number and Citation: 333
Explanation and Analysis:
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Jacqueline De Bellefort Character Timeline in Death on the Nile

The timeline below shows where the character Jacqueline De Bellefort appears in Death on the Nile. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter One
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Linnet gets a call from her old friend Jacqueline de Bellefort, whose family recently lost all their money. She’s coming to visit Linnet that... (full context)
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V. At four in the afternoon, Miss Jacqueline de Bellefort arrives at Linnet’s home, when Windlesham is also visiting. Linnet introduces Jacqueline to... (full context)
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After more talk, Jacqueline reveals that she’s actually come to ask for an important favor. She doesn’t want money.... (full context)
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VII. Later, Joanna and Linnet gossip about Jacqueline’s engagement to Simon. Joanna suggests Simon must be “a terrible tough,” but Linnet says she... (full context)
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Linnet thinks about Jacqueline and how in love with Simon she seems to be. Linnet thinks it would be... (full context)
Chapter Two
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Suddenly, Poirot hears voices from above. Linnet and Simon are walking down the path. Jacqueline greets them, and they both react with shock and dismay. Simon looks as if he’s... (full context)
Chapter Three 
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...into the hotel, with Simon following close behind. The narrator reveals that the girl is Jacqueline, who lights her cigarette and stares out at the Nile, still smiling to herself. (full context)
Chapter Four 
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Linnet describes her problem to Poirot: her new husband, Simon, used to be engaged to Jacqueline de Bellefort. Jacqueline, in Linnet’s telling, “took it rather hard” when that engagement was broken... (full context)
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Linnet wonders to Poirot what Jacqueline could possibly want to achieve by following her and Simon everywhere. Poirot muses that “It... (full context)
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Poirot asks Linnet to elaborate on why Jacqueline’s presence is bothering her so much. He begins recounting the story of what he overheard... (full context)
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...ewe lamb. Linnet gets angry and claims Poirot is accusing her of stealing Simon from Jacqueline. She argues that this wasn’t the case—that Simon loved Jacqueline less intensely than she loved... (full context)
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Linnet tells Poirot that Simon was second-guessing his engagement to Jacqueline before he even met Linnet, and once he did meet Linnet, he realized that she... (full context)
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Poirot asks Linnet if perhaps the reason why she finds Jacqueline’s presence so unbearable is because it stirs feelings of guilt in her. Linnet is indignant,... (full context)
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Ultimately, Linnet asks Poirot if he could speak to Jacqueline on behalf of her and Simon, who, Linnet notes, is “simply furious” over the whole... (full context)
Chapter Five 
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Poirot figures that Jacqueline has probably not gone to bed yet, so he goes looking and comes upon her... (full context)
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Jacqueline asks what, then, Poirot is doing talking to her. He dodges the question by asking... (full context)
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Jacqueline acknowledges that Poirot’s intentions are probably good but insists he doesn’t understand. “Simon is my... (full context)
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Poirot asks Jacqueline how Simon allowed himself to be taken in by Linnet. Jacqueline says it’s complicated—that Simon... (full context)
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After hearing Jacqueline’s explanation, Poirot observes, “That is what you think—yes,” causing Jacqueline to insist that Simon will... (full context)
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Jacqueline reminisces to Poirot about her childhood in South Carolina, where her grandfather taught her how... (full context)
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Poirot insists that Jacqueline must give up on what she is doing. “Do not open your heart to evil,”... (full context)
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Jacqueline asks Poirot if he believes killing someone who hurt you is always wrong. Poirot responds... (full context)
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Jacqueline turns her head and stares into the shadows. She tells Poirot that she thought she... (full context)
Chapter Six 
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...least that Poirot helped Linnet realize there isn’t any legal action they can take against Jacqueline. Simon notes that because of her wealthy upbringing, Linnet believes everything can be solved by... (full context)
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Simon vents to Poirot about how “indecent” Jacqueline’s stalking behavior has been. He says he’d understand her revenge better if she took real... (full context)
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Looking embarrassed, Simon asks Poirot if Jacqueline told him that he married Linnet solely to get his hands on her fortune. He... (full context)
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Simon asks Poirot why Jacqueline can’t just take his rejection of her “like a man.” Poirot smiles and notes that... (full context)
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Simon tells Poirot that his real concern is how Linnet will cope with Jacqueline’s stalking. He talks about an elaborate plan they have to skip town using fake names... (full context)
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Poirot notices that the thought of Jacqueline being penniless seems to make Simon uncomfortable. Aloud, Poirot admits that Simon’s plan to escape... (full context)
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...Karnak (the same Nile steamer that Linnet and Simon will be using to hopefully escape Jacqueline). Poirot insists, however, that this coincidence has nothing to do with Simon, Linnet, or Jacqueline—that... (full context)
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...Simon and Linnet. It’s been a relief, since Pennington helps Linnet keep her mind off Jacqueline by talking about unrelated things. Poirot asks if Linnet has confided anything in Pennington, and... (full context)
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...nothing seriously but playing games! He does not grow up.” Poirot believes that Linnet and Jacqueline are taking this matter seriously, but that Simon is acting with “nothing but male impatience... (full context)
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...gets it. He has now heard three separate accounts of the events (from Linnet, from Jacqueline, and from Simon) and muses to himself, “Which of them is nearest to the truth?” (full context)
Chapter Seven 
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...that they will ultimately go to Shellal to catch the Nile steamer boat the Karnak). Jacqueline, on the hotel balcony, watches them go. She does not, however, notice that a car... (full context)
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Mrs. Allerton then says that Tim told her that “that dark girl” (i.e., Jacqueline) was engaged to Simon Doyle and that it must be awkward for them to meet... (full context)
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...crime if given the right motivation. They discuss several hotel guests—Mrs. Allerton herself, Simon, Linnet, Jacqueline, Pennington, and Mrs. Otterbourne—and come to the conclusion that all of them could commit murder... (full context)
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...and the dark-haired young man all disembark. In the hall of the hotel, Poirot meets Jacqueline, who is on her way out to go donkey riding. Poirot warns her not to... (full context)
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...away to begin their seven-day trip on the Nile to the Second Cataract, they hear Jacqueline laughing. Instantly, they lose their good humor. Jacqueline claims it’s a surprise to see them,... (full context)
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...surrounded by enemies. She feels trapped, and Poirot is sympathetic. She says she’ll never escape Jacqueline, but Poirot suggests something she hasn’t considered yet: hiring out a private boat. Linnet says... (full context)
Chapter Eight
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...steamer and try to match the names to the people in the room. They see Jacqueline at a table with Rosalie and Mrs. Otterbourne, and identify a man named Dr. Bessner... (full context)
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...Mrs. Otterbourne talk about her writing. On the way back to his cabin, he finds Jacqueline at the deck railing, looking out at the Nile with a miserable expression. When he... (full context)
Chapter Ten 
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...they took this trip because Linnet has been much happier—he thinks being forced to face Jacqueline directly has done the trick. Just then, Linnet walks up and leads her husband away. (full context)
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...thinks to himself about how everything is fine and how “After all, one could trust Jackie—” Then there’s a lot of shouting as Simon springs up, taking Linnet with him. A... (full context)
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...He looks amazed, however, when the party gets back to the boat and they see Jacqueline walking off the boat and just coming ashore. Simon tells Poirot about his relief, and... (full context)
Chapter Eleven 
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Poirot then notices Jacqueline de Bellefort clutching the railing. She looks possessed and starts mumbling about how “They’ve got... (full context)
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After Jacqueline leaves, Poirot is surprised to feel a hand on his shoulder from Colonel Race, an... (full context)
Chapter Twelve 
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Poirot leaves the saloon for the deck and comes upon Jacqueline. Poirot admits to her that he’s been extremely tired lately. Jacqueline says it’s just been... (full context)
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...to the saloon with some needlework. Simon, Linnet, Race, and Pennington are still playing bridge. Jacqueline comes up to Cornelia and begins making conversation. Jacqueline calls the evening “A real honeymoon... (full context)
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Jacqueline asks Cornelia to talk about herself. Cornelia does so, although she’s more used to listening... (full context)
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Jacqueline tells Simon she’d rather kill him than see him with another woman. Suddenly, she pulls... (full context)
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Fanthorp pulls Jacqueline aside and tells her to pull herself together. Eventually, she does. Miss Bowers arrives and... (full context)
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Miss Bowers meets Fanthorp by Jacqueline’s cabin and says she just gave her a morphine injection. A few minutes later, Fanthorp... (full context)
Chapter Thirteen 
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...point-blank to the head while Linnet was asleep. Poirot finds this shocking because he suspects Jacqueline but feels that such an act does not fit her psychology. Poirot then notices that... (full context)
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...the previous night, and then afterward tells a hypothetical version of the murder in which Jacqueline murders Linnet. Dr. Bessner, however, claims this version of events is not possible. To begin... (full context)
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...saw Linnet alive at 11:20 p.m. Pennington left for bed a few minutes after, leaving Jacqueline, Simon, Fanthorp, and Cornelia in the saloon. They retell the story of Jacqueline shooting Simon,... (full context)
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Cornelia goes on to describe how Jacqueline dropped the pistol, then kicked it away under the settee, as if she hated it.... (full context)
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...that she just likes having a nurse around. Miss Bowers is able to confirm that Jacqueline was with her the whole night and didn’t leave her cabin. This seems to be... (full context)
Chapter Fourteen 
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Jacqueline now enters the smoking room and pleads that she didn’t kill Linnet last night. She... (full context)
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...Bessner comes in and says Simon would like to speak with Poirot. Dr. Bessner reassures Jacqueline that Simon won’t die. When Poirot arrives, Simon is propped up in Dr. Bessner’s cabin.... (full context)
Chapter Fifteen 
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...deck, Race tells Poirot about his theory that the splash Fanthorp heard may have been Jacqueline’s pistol being thrown overboard. Race suggests a search of the boat for the gun, but... (full context)
Chapter Sixteen 
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...handkerchief and a small pistol, which was retrieved from the Nile. Poirot identifies it as Jacqueline’s, and Race confirms that bullets are the right type and that two bullets have been... (full context)
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...Poirot points out an inconsistency: why, if the murderer seemed to leave evidence pointing to Jacqueline would the same murderer throw away the pistol, which is the most damning piece of... (full context)
Chapter Eighteen 
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...on. He went to bed after 11:00 p.m. and didn’t hear any shots. Pennington believes Jacqueline is the murderer and is reluctant to accept Poirot and Race’s evidence about her alibi.... (full context)
Chapter Nineteen 
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...is still recuperating, Simon asks Poirot if it would be okay for him to see Jacqueline. Poirot agrees to get her. When Poirot finds Jacqueline in the observation saloon, she’s surprised... (full context)
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Back in Dr. Bessner’s cabin, Jacqueline pleads to Simon that she didn’t kill Linnet and that she wants his forgiveness for... (full context)
Chapter Twenty 
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...Simon and how he’s recovering. Poirot talks about Simon’s strange psychology: he was bothered by Jacqueline stalking them, up until the point when he got shot, when suddenly all his anger... (full context)
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...that he’s been following Joanna in the news. Tim asks why—but before Poirot can answer, Jacqueline walks in, and Poirot stands to greet her. As Poirot sits again, he murmurs to... (full context)
Chapter Twenty-Two 
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After leaving Pennington’s cabin, Poirot suggests Race search Jacqueline’s cabin, Cornelia’s cabin, and two empty cabins while Poirot goes back to speak to Simon.... (full context)
Chapter Twenty-Three 
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Poirot hears Jacqueline and Rosalie talking in Rosalie’s cabin, with the door open. He asks them if they’re... (full context)
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Cornelia comes upon the group and cries out to Jacqueline that another terrible thing has happened. As those two talk, Poirot and Rosalie move out... (full context)
Chapter Twenty-Four 
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When Miss Bowers comes out of Dr. Bessner’s cabin, Jacqueline stops talking with Cornelia and demands that Miss Bowers tell her how Simon is doing.... (full context)
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In tears, Jacqueline finds Poirot and sobs that Simon will die and she’s killed him. She says she... (full context)
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...one else on his way over. Poirot heads back, where a small crowd has gathered: Jacqueline, Rosalie, Cornelia, Ferguson, Fanthorp, and Mrs. Allerton. (full context)
Chapter Twenty-Five 
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...Poirot how the culprit could’ve possibly gotten away. Poirot mentions three distinct escape routes, and Jacqueline notes that the murderer could have swung over the railing onto the deck below. Tim... (full context)
Chapter Twenty-Eight 
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...how clever he is. He begins telling them what happened. His main “stumbling block” was Jacqueline’s pistol and why it hadn’t been left at the scene of the crime. Ultimately, Poirot... (full context)
Chapter Twenty-Nine 
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...directly against her head—but there were such burn marks. Since the stole wasn’t used when Jacqueline shot Simon’s leg and it wasn’t used to murder Linnet, Poirot concludes a third shot... (full context)
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...the saloon alone. Before then, there was only visual evidence of Simon’s wound. Cornelia saw Jacqueline fire her pistol, saw Simon fall, and saw his handkerchief stain red. But soon after,... (full context)
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...of it, which he is. In fact, the whole crime was cleverly thought out by Jacqueline. The two were a perfect criminal pair: the resourceful planner and the man of action. (full context)
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Poirot continues his explanation. The important thing to realize is that Jacqueline and Simon aren’t ex-lovers but current lovers who hoped to get their hands on Linnet’s... (full context)
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...how the whole scene in the dining saloon was a carefully orchestrated performance to give Jacqueline and Simon alibis from reliable witnesses who weren’t themselves privy to the scheme—Cornelia and Fanthorp.... (full context)
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Despite their efforts, Simon and Jacqueline still had a problem with their plan: Mrs. Otterbourne saw Jacqueline go into Louise’s cabin.... (full context)
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Race asks about Jacqueline’s first shot (which appeared to hit Simon in the leg but in fact didn’t). Poirot... (full context)
Chapter Thirty 
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...conversation with Simon), Poirot knocks on a cabin door. A voice tells him to come in—Jacqueline is sitting with a stewardess. Jacqueline asks if the stewardess can be dismissed, and Poirot... (full context)
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Then Jacqueline says “Well, it is all over! You were too clever for us, Monsieur Poirot.’” Poirot... (full context)
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Jacqueline asks Poirot if he knew what she was plotting during their earlier conversation in Assuan... (full context)
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Jacqueline begins by simply saying she and Simon were in love. Poirot asks if that was... (full context)
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Jacqueline says that Linnet really was her best friend, even as she envied her. At first,... (full context)
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Jacqueline says Simon didn’t really like Linnet because he didn’t like bossy women, but he did... (full context)
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Jacqueline details her efforts to work out the plan. She worked out the details so that... (full context)
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Jacqueline tells Poirot that what happened with Louise is pretty much exactly what he’d expect. Jacqueline... (full context)
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Jacqueline tells Poirot not to worry about her. If the plan had gone off perfectly, she... (full context)
Chapter Thirty-One 
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...off the boat. Soon after is brought a defeated-looking Simon on a stretcher. Then comes Jacqueline, pale but otherwise normal-looking. She greets Simon, who gets a little of his old spirit... (full context)
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Mrs. Allerton quietly asks Poirot if he knew about the pistol. He did—he realized Jacqueline had a pair ever since a similar gun was found in Rosalie’s handbag. Jacqueline was... (full context)