The three Pakistan players alleged of spot-fixing left the team hotel to attend an internal investigation in London.
Test captain Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Aamer left the hotel by the front door before getting into a taxi to head to the capital.
As he made his exit, Butt was asked if he would be coming back. He replied: "Why not?"
The trio will be interviewed by Pakistan Cricket Board chairman Ijaz Butt and their country's high commissioner.
They will therefore play no part in the 50-over match against Somerset, the Pakistanis' warm-up fixture before two Twenty20s and five one-day internationals against England.
The PCB announced their intention to hold an internal investigation into newspaper allegations that the three players were involved in a conspiracy to defraud illegal bookmakers.
Croydon-based businessman Mazhar Majeed was arrested in connection with the allegations last weekend and interviewed at Scotland Yard for 24 hours before being released on police bail without charge.
Butt, Asif and Aamer were also interviewed at the team hotel in London on Saturday night after newspaper reports alleged a plot to bowl no-balls to order in the Lord's Test.
Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs also reported that three more arrests, again of people outside the Pakistan squad, had been made.
Amid widespread calls for the three players to somehow be kept out of the scheduled limited-overs matches against England, the International Cricket Council promised "prompt and decisive" action against anyone found guilty of match-fixing.
The PCB responded by announcing their own inquiry - and although its exact timing was initially unclear, it has been confirmed that the three players will be interviewed at the Pakistan High Commission.
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