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e still wore mourning for Agostino, and around her neck was the famous string of pearl beads--it was a sacred treasure to Chiquita, and she was never seen without it. She attended to her duties quickly and deftly--evidently taking great delight in waiting upon the mistress she adored--and kissed her hand passionately, as she never failed to do, when all was finished and she bade her good-night. When, an hour later, de Sigognac entered the room in which he had spent so many weary, lonely nights--listening to the wind as it shrieked and moaned round the outside of the desolate chateau, and wailed along the corridors-feeling that life was a hard and bitter thing, and fancying that it would never bring anything but trials and misery to him--he saw, by the subdued light from the shaded lamp, the face to him most beautiful in all the world smiling lovingly to greet him from under the green and white silken curtains that hung round his own bed, where it lay resting upon the pillow he had so often kissed, and moistened with his tears. His eyes were moist now--but from excess of happiness, not sorrow--as he saw before him the blessed, blissful realization of his vision. Towards morning Beelzebub, who had been excessively uneasy and restless all night, managed, with great difficulty, to clamber up on the bed, where he rubbed his nose against his master's hand--trying at the same time to purr in the old way, but failing lamentably. The baron woke instantly, and saw poor Beelzebub looking at him appealingly, with his great green eyes unnaturally dilated, and momentarily growing dim; he was trembling violently, and as his master's kind hand was stretched out to stroke his head, fell over on his side, and with one half-stifled cry, one convulsive shudder, breathed his last. "Poor Beelzebub!" softly said Isabelle, who had been roused from her sweet slumber by his dying groan, "he has lived through all the misery of the old time, but will not be here to share and enjoy the prosperity of the new." Beelzebub, it must be confessed, fell a victim to his own intemperance--a severe fit of indigestion, consequent upon the enormous supper he had eaten, was the cause of his death--his long-famished stomach was not accustomed to, nor proof against, such excesses. This death, even though it was only that of a dumb beast, touched de Sigognac deeply; for poor Beelzebub had been his faithful companion, night and day, through many long, weary
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