Hercule Poirot's Christmas

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Book: Read Hercule Poirot's Christmas for Free Online
Authors: Agatha Christie
with the old man? He used not to give a damn for sentiment. Don’t remember his caring much for his family, either. He must have changed!’
    ‘Perhaps.’ Lydia’s voice was dry.
    Pilar was staring, her big eyes wide and interested.
    Harry said:
    ‘How’s old George? Still the same skinflint? How he used to howl if he had to part with a halfpenny of his pocket-money!’
    Lydia said:
    ‘George is in Parliament. He’s member for Westeringham.’
    ‘What? Popeye in Parliament? Lord, that’s good.’
    Harry threw back his head and laughed.
    It was rich stentorian laughter—it sounded uncontrolled and brutal in the confined space of the room. Pilar drew in her breath with a gasp. Lydia flinched a little.
    Then, at a movement behind him, Harry broke off his laugh and turned sharply. He had not heard anyone coming in, but Alfred was standing there quietly. He was looking at Harry with an odd expression on his face.
    Harry stood a minute, then a slow smile crept to his lips. He advanced a step.
    ‘Why,’ he said, ‘it’s Alfred!’
    Alfred nodded.
    ‘Hallo, Harry,’ he said.
    They stood staring at each other. Lydia caught her breath. She thought:
    ‘How absurd! Like two dogs—looking at each other…’
    Pilar’s gaze widened even further. She thought to herself:
    ‘How silly they look standing there…Why do they not embrace? No, of course the English do not do that. But they might say something. Why do they just look?’
    Harry said at last:
    ‘Well, well. Feels funny to be here again!’
    ‘I expect so—yes. A good many years since you—got out.’
    Harry threw up his head. He drew his finger along the line of his jaw. It was a gesture that was habitual with him. It expressed belligerence.
    ‘Yes,’ he said. ‘I’m glad I have come’—he paused to bring out the word with greater significance—‘home…’
    II
    ‘I’ve been, I suppose, a very wicked man,’ said Simeon Lee.
    He was leaning back in his chair. His chin was raised and with one finger he was stroking his jaw reflectively. In front of him a big fire glowed and danced. Beside it sat Pilar, a little screen of papier-mâché held in her hand. With it she shielded her face from the blaze. Occasionally she fanned herself with it, using her wrist in a supple gesture. Simeon looked at her with satisfaction.
    He went on talking, perhaps more to himself than to the girl, and stimulated by the fact of her presence.
    ‘Yes,’ he said. ‘I’ve been a wicked man. What do you say to that, Pilar?’
    Pilar shrugged her shoulders. She said:
    ‘All men are wicked. The nuns say so. That is why one has to pray for them.’
    ‘Ah, but I’ve been more wicked than most.’ Simeon laughed. ‘I don’t regret it, you know. No, I don’t regret anything. I’ve enjoyed myself…every minute! They say you repent when you get old. That’s bunkum. I don’t repent. And as I tell you, I’ve done most things…all the good old sins! I’ve cheated and stolen and lied…lord, yes! And women—always women! Someone told me the other day of an Arab chief who had a bodyguard of forty of his sons—all roughly the same age! Aha! Forty! I don’t know about forty, but I bet I could produce a very fair bodyguard if I went about looking for the brats! Hey, Pilar, what do you think of that? Shocked?’
    Pilar stared.
    ‘No, why should I be shocked? Men always desire women. My father, too. That is why wives are so often unhappy and why they go to church and pray.’
    Old Simeon was frowning.
    ‘I made Adelaide unhappy,’ he said. He spoke almost under his breath, to himself. ‘Lord, what a woman! Pink and white and pretty as they make ’em when I married her! And afterwards? Always wailing and weeping. It rouses the devil in a man when his wife is always crying…She’d no guts, that’s what was the matter with Adelaide. If she’d stood up to me! But she never did—not once. I believed when I married her that I was going to be able to settle down, raise a

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