egg-shaped head and fierce upstanding moustaches. Young people were not what they were, reflected Miss Endicott. In olden days there would have been a mute, respectful circle, listening to the pearls of wisdom dropped by their elders. Instead of which there was all this nonsensical chatter, most of it utterly incomprehensible. All the same, they were dear children! Her eyes softened as she passed them in reviewâtall, freckled Jean; little Nancy Cardell, with her dark, gipsy beauty; the two younger boys home from school, Johnnie and Eric, and their friend, Charlie Pease; and fair, beautiful Evelyn Haworthâ¦At thought of the last, her brow contracted a little, and her eyes wandered to where her eldest nephew, Roger, sat morosely silent, taking no part in the fun, with his eyes fixed on the exquisite Northern fairness of the young girl.
âIsnât the snow ripping?â cried Johnnie, approaching the window. âReal Christmas weather. I say, letâs have a snowball fight. Thereâs lots of time before dinner, isnât there, Aunt Emily?â
âYes, my dear. We have it at two oâclock. That reminds me, I had better see to the table.â
She hurried out of the room.
âI tell you what. Weâll make a snowman!â screamed Jean.
âYes, what fun! I know; weâll do a snow statue of M. Poirot. Do you hear, M. Poirot? The great detective, Hercule Poirot, modelled in snow, by six celebrated artists!â
The little man in the chair bowed his acknowledgements with a twinkling eye.
âMake him very handsome, my children,â he urged. âI insist on that.â
âRa-ther!â
The troop disappeared like a whirlwind, colliding in the doorway with a stately butler who was entering with a note on a salver. The butler, his calm re-established, advanced towards Poirot.
Poirot took the note and tore it open. The butler departed. Twice the little man read the note through, then he folded it up and put it in his pocket. Not a muscle of his face had moved, and yet the contents of the note were sufficiently surprising. Scrawled inan illiterate hand were the words: â Donât eat any plum-pudding .â
âVery interesting,â murmured M. Poirot to himself. âAnd quite unexpected.â
He looked across to the fireplace. Evelyn Haworth had not gone out with the rest. She was sitting staring at the fire, absorbed in thought, nervously twisting a ring on the third finger of her left hand round and round.
âYou are lost in a dream, Mademoiselle,â said the little man at last. âAnd the dream is not a happy one, eh?â
She started, and looked across at him uncertainly. He nodded reassuringly.
âIt is my business to know things. No, you are not happy. Me, too, I am not very happy. Shall we confide in each other? See you, I have the big sorrow because a friend of mine, a friend of many years, has gone away across the sea to the South America. Sometimes, when we were together, this friend made me impatient, his stupidity enraged me; but now that he is gone, I can remember only his good qualities. That is the way of life, is it not? And now, Mademoiselle, what is your trouble? You are not like me, old and aloneâyou are young and beautiful; and the man you love loves youâoh yes, it is so: I have been watching him for the last half-hour.â
The girlâs colour rose.
âYou mean Roger Endicott? Oh, but you have made a mistake; it is not Roger I am engaged to.â
âNo, you are engaged to Mr Oscar Levering. I know that perfectly. But why are you engaged to him, since you love another man?â
The girl did not seem to resent his words; indeed, there was something in his manner which made that impossible. He spoke with a mixture of kindliness and authority that was irresistible.
âTell me all about it,â said Poirot gently; and he added the phrase he had used before, the sound of which was oddly comforting
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