[The Man With The Broken Ear by Edmond About]@TWC D-Link bookThe Man With The Broken Ear CHAPTER XVII 23/32
They joined hands, and the fat man exclaimed: "Spirit! I confess my misdeeds, and I am ready to make reparation for them.
I have sinned against you; I have violated my uncle's commands. What do you wish? What do you command? A tomb? A magnificent monument? Prayers? Endless prayers ?" "Idiot!" said Fougas, spurning him with his foot; "I am no spirit, and I want nothing but the money you've robbed me of!" Meiser kept rolling on the floor; but his scrawny wife was already on her feet, her fists on her hips, and facing Fougas. "Money!" cried she, "But we don't owe you any! Have you any documents? Just show us our signature! Where would one be, Just God! if we had to give money to all the adventurers who present themselves? And in the first place, by what right did you thrust yourself into our dwelling, if you're not a spirit? Ah! you're a man just the same as other people! Ha! ha! So you're not a ghost! Very well, sir; there are judges in Berlin; there are some in the country, too, and we'll soon see whether you're going to finger our money! Get up there, you great booby; it's only a man! And do you, Mister Ghost, get out of here! Off with you!" The Colonel did not budge more than a rock. "The devil's in women's tongues! Sit down, old lady, and take your hands away from my eyes--they bother me.
And as for you, swell-head, get on to your chair, and listen to me.
There will be time enough to go to law if we can't come to an understanding.
But stamped paper stinks in my nostrils; and therefore I'd rather settle peaceably." Herr and Frau Meiser repressed their first emotion.
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