Major Barry, retired officer, talks endlessly about India. Carrie Gardener, a garrulous American tourist. Love triangles! In "Triangle at Rhodes", Mrs Gold says of Valentine Chantry "in spite of her money and her good looks and all [...] she's not the sort of woman men really stick to. Find out below! Major Barry, Inspector Colgate, and Reverend Stephen Lane are excluded from the story while Rosamund Darnley is renamed Daphne Castle acting as a former co-star of Arlena's and a hotel proprietor who has sympathy for Kenneth and Linda due to Arlena's treatment. Drug dealers! In "Triangle at Rhodes" the murder is by poison and it is thought that Chantry and her lover attempted to murder her husband and that the plot went wrong. While Christine was with Linda, she set Linda's watch forward twenty minutes, asked for the time to set her alibi, then returned the watch to the correct time. In both stories, the key twist is that the appearance of the seductress' power deflects attention from the reality of the situation. Are any of these actually relevant to the main crime? In "Triangle at Rhodes", Poirot again witnesses an apparent liaison between two married people. Linda Marshall is changed to a son called Lionel. At a cave within Pixy Cove, Poirot notes smelling perfume that Arlena used within a cave, while police arrest Blatt for smuggling heroin upon finding the drug hidden inside. Yet despite knowing whodunnit I actually found Evil Under the Sun a compelling mystery chock full of misdirection and red herrings while not throwing anything too obscuring into the mix (the above mentioned drug dealer plot can be dismissed almost as soon as it’s introduced and mostly serves as a handy solution for the local police to latch onto). Linda Marshall does not attempt murder, is not suspected of the murder, and does not attempt suicide. She had recalled Christine waving to her from the edge of a cliff. Poirot is involved in the investigation of her murder, through her insurance company that Blatt also uses, but while finding nothing, he retains the paperwork. Emily Brewster, athletic spinster, rows daily. 1941, Collins Crime Club (London), June 1941, Hardback, 256 pp, 1941, Dodd Mead and Company (New York), October 1941, Hardback, 260 pp. Once Arlena was gone, Christine impersonated the dead body to fool Brewster, and once he had left to get help while Patrick remained behind, Christine rushed back to the hotel to remove the makeup. "[3], In The New York Times Book Review of 19 October 1941, Isaac Anderson wrote, "The murder is an elaborately planned affair – a little too much so for credibility, in view of the many possibilities of a slip-up somewhere along the way – but Poirot's reasoning is flawless, as it always is.