[Ursula by Honore de Balzac]@TWC D-Link book
Ursula

CHAPTER XV
5/22

Above all, close the iron gate and don't let any one leave the house." The women, who felt the justice of this remark, ran to Ursula's bedroom, where they found the noble girl, so cruelly suspected, on her knees before God, her face covered with tears.

Minoret, suspecting that the women would not long remain with Ursula, went at once to the library, found the volume, opened it, took the three certificates, and found in the other volume about thirty bank notes.

In spite of his brutal nature the colossus felt as though a peal of bells were ringing in each ear.
The blood whistled in his temples as he committed the theft; cold as the weather was, his shirt was wet on his back; his legs gave way under him and he fell into a chair in the salon as if an axe had fallen on his head.
"How the inheritance of money loosens a man's tongue! Did you hear Minoret ?" said Massin to Cremiere as they hurried through the town.

"'Go here, go there,' just as if he knew everything." "Yes, for a dull beast like him he had a certain air of--" "Stop!" said Massin, alarmed at a sudden thought.

"His wife is there; they've got some plan! Do you do both errands; I'll go back." Just as the post master fell into the chair he saw at the gate the heated face of the clerk of the court who returned to the house of death with the celerity of a weasel.
"Well, what is it now ?" asked the post master, unlocking the gate for his co-heir.
"Nothing; I have come back to be present at the sealing," answered Massin, giving him a savage look.
"I wish those seals were already on, so that we could go home," said Minoret.
"We shall have to put a watcher over them," said Massin.


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