Madame Giselle

Madame Giselle, named Madame Marie Giselle in Agatha Christie's Poirot, is a minor character and the primary victim of Dame Agatha Christie's 1935 Hercule Poirot novel, Death in the Clouds.

Despite this, she is soon revealed to be a villainous victim of some sort. She is a stiff, greedy and harsh moneylender who lends high amount of loans towards wealthy people. The point is, she will blackmail her debtors to ensure that they never miss their repayments, and her methods becomes Poirot's initial theory of her being killed during a flight.

She was portrayed by Eve Pearce in Agatha Christie's Poirot.

History
Madame Marie Giselle was a moneylender who will blackmail her debtors to fulfill their repayment. Her notable debtors include Cecile, Countess of Hubery (aka Lady Hubery). Lady Hubery could not fulfill the repayment, because she had been cut off from her husband's money. As a result, Lady Hubery showed contempt and fear when she noticed Lady Hubery near her twice, particularly when they were on the same flight, where Hercule Poirot was near them. Poirot's seat was set on the same row of Madamne Giselle's, only with the corridor between them.

During the flight, a mysterious individual had murdered Madame Giselle and pretended to be a wasp sting, but the murder weapon was soon discovered to be a poisonous dart, seemingly blown from a wooden blowpipe. However, the culprit had put the blowpipe in the seat of Poirot himself, who was sleeping all along during the flight, in order to frame the detective.

Nevertheless, it was soon revealed that the culprit, lurking upon the plane, never used the blowpipe. Instead, they went near Madame Giselle while in disguise and stung her with the dart, before using the corpse of a dead wasp he prepared long ago in order to drew the attention.

Madame Giselle was also revealed to be the mother Anne Morisot, the maid of Lady Hubert, who married the culprit and wished to inherit her mother's fortune through the way of killing the latter off.

Trivia

 * Madame Giselle's death is similar to Lady Boynton's death. Both of their murderers had poisoned them in a point-blank range and used a dead wasp as a distraction. In addition, both of these victims had been blackmailing certain individuals, though the death of Madame Giselle was not related to the said blackmailing.