much as you are now; Mademoiselle; a little thinner; a little paler; a little more serious。 Sixteen years old and fresh from your pension。 Not quite the petite pensionnaire; not quite a woman。 You were very delicious; very charming; Mademoiselle Zia; others thought so too; without doubt。〃
〃At sixteen;〃 said Zia; 〃one is simple and a little fool。〃
〃That may be;〃 said Poirot; 〃yes; that well may be。 At sixteen one is credulous; is one not? One believes what one is told。〃
If he saw the quick sideways glance that the girl shot at him; he pretended not to have done so。 He continued dreamily: 〃It was a curious affair that; altogether。 Your father; Mademoiselle; has never understood the true inwardness of it。〃
〃No?〃
〃When he asked me for details; for explanations; I said to him thus: 'Without scandal; I have got back for you that which was lost。 You must ask no questions。' Do you know; Mademoiselle; why I said these things?〃
〃I have no idea;〃 said the girl coldly。
〃It was because I had a soft spot in my heart for a little pensionnaire; so pale; so thin; so serious。〃
〃I don't understand what you are talking about;〃 cried Zia angrily。
〃Do you not; Mademoiselle? Have you forgotten Antonio Pirezzio?〃
He heard the quick intake of her breath … almost a gasp。
〃He came to work as an assistant in the shop; but not thus could he have got hold of what he wanted。 An assistant can lift his eyes to his master's daughter; can he not? If he is young and handsome with a glib tongue。 And since they cannot make love all the time; they must occasionally talk of things that interest them both … such as that very interesting thing which was temporarily in M。 Papopolous' possession。 And since; as you say; Mademoiselle; the