[An Historical Mystery by Honore de Balzac]@TWC D-Link book
An Historical Mystery

CHAPTER IX
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At this moment she was all glorious, especially to the priest, who was sometimes distressed by the virility of her character, and who now caught a glimpse of the infinite tenderness of her woman's nature.

But such feelings lay in her soul like a treasure hidden at a great depth beneath a block of granite.
Just then a gendarme entered the salon to ask if he might bring in Michu's son, sent by his father to speak to the gentlemen from Paris.
Corentin gave an affirmative nod.

Francois Michu, a sly little chip of the old block, was in the courtyard, where Gothard, now at liberty, got a chance to speak to him for an instant under the eyes of a gendarme.
The little fellow managed to slip something into Gothard's hand without being detected, and the latter glided into the salon after him till he reached his mistress, to whom he stealthily conveyed both halves of the wedding-ring, a sure sign, she knew, that Michu had met the four gentlemen and put them in safety.
"My papa wants to know what he's to do with the corporal, who ain't doing well," said Francois.
"What's the matter with him ?" asked Peyrade.
"It's his head--he pitched down hard on the ground," replied the boy.
"For a gindarme who knows how to ride it was bad luck--I suppose the horse stumbled.

He's got a hole--my! as big as your fist--in the back of his head.

Seems as if he must have hit some big stone, poor man! He may be a gindarme, but he suffers all the same--you'd pity him." The captain of the gendarmerie now arrived and dismounted in the courtyard.


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