Air date: 17/02/1991
Published: Second story in "The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding" (1960)
This lively story is another example of what has become a familiar feature: a story in which a murder originally told to Poirot in the past tense is adapted for television to occur
after Poirot has become involved.
On this occasion Poirot and Miss Lemon are discussing the newspaper report of the murder of Arnold Clayton at a party hosted by one Major Rich. Clayton's body was found the following morning (by Rich's butler) in a large Spanish chest. Although originally due to attend the party, he had absented himself for an alleged urgent business trip to Edinburgh. Rich has been arrested for the crime. Several pages are devoted to Poirot and Miss Lemon discussing this (somewhat ironically, Miss Lemon does not appear in the TV adaptation: usually it is the other way round!). There is greater emphasis in the original on Poirot's incredulity that Rich should have left the body in the chest, rather than disposing of it during the night.
Poirot is approached by a friend, Lady Chatterton, on behalf of Mrs Clayton, who does not believe Rich could have done it. There is clearly a mutual attraction between Rich and Mrs Clayton.
Poirot interviews the people who were at the party, Commander McLaren, Mr and Mrs Spence, Rich (in custody) and Burgess the butler.
Although it seems that only Rich or the butler were in a position to have killed him before the party, Poirot deduces - from a hole drilled in the chest - that Clayton was, in fact, hiding in the chest during the party and was stabbed in the neck later than originally assumed.
It turns out that McLaren had also been carrying a torch for Mrs Clayton, and had fuelled the fires of jealousy in Clayton, encouraging him to hide in the trunk to observe if anything was going on between his wife and Rich. He had, in fact, drugged Clayton, and, while other guests were enjoying dance music, had opened the trunk and stabbed Clayton in the neck.
The adaptation opens with a flashback to a duel (which we later discover was over Mrs Clayton). One man (who turns out to be McLaren - or Curtiss, as he now is) is cut on the cheek. As the character displays a scar throughout it doesn't take much to work out that he was one of the protagonists. Interestingly, in the original there
is reference to a past duel over Mrs Clayton, although there is no suggestion that McLaren was one of those involved.
Mrs Chatteron approaches Poirot before the party, worried that her friend might be in danger. Poirot attends the party, and so finds himself questioned by Japp (not in the original) the following day after the body has been found. There are a great deal more people at the party than in the original, although the Spences don't appear. Hastings (also not in the original) goes with Poirot to interview the butler (now called Burgoyne, for some reason) and they also arrive at Mrs Clayton's just as she attempts to commit suicide (wracked with a sense of guilt that she is to blame for her friend Rich killing her husband).
The freshly drilled hole in the trunk is, once again, the vital clue for Poirot. For a rather more dramatic TV finale, Poirot has Japp arrest Mrs Clayton, in order to flush out Curtiss, who confronts our Belgian sleuth at the mens' club gymnasium - only to be saved by Rich.
Rather gruesomely, we discover in the adaptation that Clayton was not drugged and then stabbed in the neck. He was stabbed through the eye as he observed the party through the drill hole!