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nydus/The Big FourPublic

A famous detective must use all his little grey cells to stop an immensely powerful and ruthless organization from taking over the world.

Page 132 of 226
Table of Contents

XII

The Baited Trap

It was mid-January⁠—a typical English winter day in London, damp and dirty. Poirot and I were sitting in two chairs well drawn up to the fire. I was aware of my friend looking at me with a quizzical smile, the meaning of which I could not fathom.

“A penny for your thoughts,” I said lightly.

“I was thinking, my friend, that at midsummer, when you first arrived, you told me that you proposed to be in this country for a couple of months only.”

“Did I say that?” I asked, rather awkwardly. “I don’t remember.”

Poirot’s smile broadened.

“You did, mon ami . Since then, you have changed your plan, is it not so?”

“Er⁠—yes, I have.”

“And why is that?”

“Dash it all, Poirot, you don’t think I’m going to leave you all alone when you’re up against a thing like the ‘Big Four,’ do you?”

Poirot nodded gently.

“Just as I thought. You are a staunch friend, Hastings. It is to serve me that you remain on here. And your wife⁠—little Cinderella as you call her, what does she say?”

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