[An Historical Mystery by Honore de Balzac]@TWC D-Link bookAn Historical Mystery CHAPTER V 18/19
Well, if I were she, if I were as young and pretty, I'd make a straight line for Germany! Poor darling, perhaps she is thinking of the frontier, and that may be the reason why she rides so far towards it." "You are rather giddy, Mademoiselle Goujet," said the abbe, smiling. "Not at all," she replied.
"I see you all uneasy about the goings on of a young girl, and I am explaining them to you." "Her cousins will submit and return soon; they will all be rich, and she will end by calming down," said old d'Hauteserre. "God grant it!" said his wife, taking out a gold snuff-box which had again seen the light under the Consulate. "There is something stirring in the neighborhood," remarked Monsieur d'Hauteserre to the abbe.
"Malin has been two days at Gondreville." "Malin!" cried Laurence, roused by the name, though her sleep was sound. "Yes," replied the abbe, "but he leaves to-night; everybody is conjecturing the motive of this hasty visit." "That man," said Laurence, "is the evil genius of our two houses." The countess had been dreaming of her cousins and the young Hauteserres; she saw them in peril.
Her beautiful eyes grew fixed and glassy as her mind thus warned dwelled on the dangers they were about to incur in Paris.
She rose suddenly and went to her bedroom without speaking.
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