"
"Schmucke never could have told you to go to the theatre without
speaking to me about it--"
"And must I wake him, poor dear, when he is sleeping like one of the
blest, and call him in as a witness?"
"No, no!" cried Pons. "If my kind and loving Schmucke made the
resolution, perhaps I am worse than I thought." His eyes wandered
round the room, dwelling on the beautiful things in it with a
melancholy look painful to see.
"So I must say good-bye to my dear pictures, to all the things that
have come to be like so many friends to me . . . and to my divine
friend Schmucke? . . . Oh! can it be true?"
La Cibot, acting her heartless comedy, held her handkerchief to her
eyes; and at that mute response the sufferer fell to dark musing--so
sorely stricken was he by the double stab dealt to health and his
interests by the loss of his post and the near prospect of death, that
he had no strength left for anger. He lay, ghastly and wan, like a
consumptive patient after a wrestling bout with the Destroyer.
"In M. Schmucke's interests, you see, you would do well to send for M.
Trognon; he is the notary of the quarter and a very good man," said La
Cibot, seeing that her victim was completely exhausted.
"You are always talking about this Trognon--"
"Oh! he or another, it is all one to me, for anything you will leave
me."
She tossed her head to signify that she despised riches. There was
silence in the room.
A moment later Schmucke came in.
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