right, Sonia, thatâs right,â said Sir Roderick. âLet meintroduce you,â he said, âto my charming little secretary here. Makes a great difference to me. Helps me, you know, files all my work. Donât know how I ever got on without her.â
Poirot bowed politely. â Enchanté, mademoiselle,â he murmured.
The girl murmured something in rejoinder. She was a small creature with black bobbed hair. She looked shy. Her dark blue eyes were usually modestly cast down, but she smiled up sweetly and shyly at her employer. He patted her on the shoulder.
âDonât know what I should do without her,â he said. âI donât really.â
âOh, no,â the girl protested. âI am not much good really. I cannot type very fast.â
âYou type quite fast enough, my dear. Youâre my memory, too. My eyes and my ears and a great many other things.â
She smiled again at him.
âOne remembers,â murmured Poirot, âsome of the excellent stories that used to go the round. I donât know if they were exaggerated or not. Now, for instance, the day that someone stole your car andââ he proceeded to follow up the tale.
Sir Roderick was delighted. âHa, ha, of course now. Yes, indeed, well, bit of exaggeration, I expect. But on the whole, thatâs how it was. Yes, yes, well, fancy your remembering that, after all this long time. But I could tell you a better one than that now.â He launched forth into another tale. Poirot listened, applauded. Finally he glanced at his watch and rose to his feet.
âBut I must detain you no longer,â he said. âYou are engaged, I can see, in important work. It was just that being in this neighbourhood I could not help paying my respects. Years pass, but you, I see, have lost none of your vigour, of your enjoyment of life.â
âWell, well, perhaps you may say so. Anyway, you mustnât pay me too many complimentsâbut surely youâll stay and have tea. Iâm sure Mary will give you some tea.â He looked round. âOh, sheâs gone away. Nice girl.â
âYes, indeed, and very handsome. I expect she has been a great comfort to you for many years.â
âOh! Theyâve only married recently. Sheâs my nephewâs second wife. Iâll be frank with you. Iâve never cared very much for this nephew of mine, Andrewânot a steady chap. Always restless. His elder brother Simon was my favourite. Not that I knew him well, either. As for Andrew, he behaved very badly to his first wife. Went off, you know. Left her high and dry. Went off with a thoroughly bad lot. Everybody knew about her. But he was infatuated with her. The whole thing broke up in a year or two: silly fellow. The girl heâs married seems all right. Nothing wrong with her as far as I know. Now Simon was a steady chapâdamned dull, though. I canât say I liked it when my sister married into that family. Marrying into trade, you know. Rich, of course, but money isnât everythingâweâve usually married into the Services. I never saw much of the Restarick lot.â
âThey have, I believe, a daughter. A friend of mine met her last week.â
âOh, Norma. Silly girl. Goes about in dreadful clothes and has picked up with a dreadful young man. Ah well, theyâre all alike nowadays. Long-haired young fellows, beatniks, Beatles, all sorts of names theyâve got. I canât keep up with them. Practically talk a foreign language. Still, nobody cares to hear an old manâs criticisms, so there we are. Even MaryâI always thought she was a good, sensible sort, but as far as I can see she can be thoroughly hysterical in somewaysâmainly about her health. Some fuss about going to hospital for observation or something. What about a drink? Whisky? No? Sure you wonât stop and have a drop of tea?â
âThank you, but I am staying with
Shauna Rice-Schober[thriller]