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ame back, and said, bowing: "What can I do for you, madame?" She could scarcely speak, but at last she managed to say: "I have come-for this." The manager looked at the object which she held out to him in mute astonishment. With trembling fingers she tried to undo the elastic, and succeeding, after several attempts, she hastily opened the damaged remains of the umbrella. "It looks to me to be in a very bad state of health," he said compassionately. "It cost me twenty francs," she said, with some hesitation. He seemed astonished. "Really! As much as that?" "Yes, it was a capital article, and I wanted you to see the condition it is in." "Yes, yes, I see; very well. But I really do not understand what it can have to do with me." She began to feel uncomfortable; perhaps this company did not pay for such small articles, and she said: "But--it is burned." He could not deny it. "I see that very well," he replied. She remained open-mouthed, not knowing what to say next; then, suddenly recollecting that she had left out the main thing, she said hastily: "I am Mme. Oreille; we are assured in La Maternelle, and I have come to claim the value of this damage." "I only want you to have it re-covered," she added quickly, fearing a positive refusal. The manager was rather embarrassed, and said: "But, really, madame, we do not sell umbrellas; we cannot undertake such kinds of repairs." The little woman felt her courage reviving; she was not going to give up without a struggle; she was not even afraid any more, and said: "I only want you to pay me the cost of repairing it; I can quite well get it done myself." The gentleman seemed rather confused. "Really, madame, it is such a very small matter! We are never asked to give compensation for such trivial losses. You must allow that we cannot make good pocket-handkerchiefs, gloves, brooms, slippers, all the small articles which are every day exposed to the chances of being burned." She got red in the face, and felt inclined to fly into a rage. "But, monsieur, last December one of our chimneys caught fire, and caused at least five hundred francs' damage; M. Oreille made no claim on the company, and so it is only just that it should pay for my umbrella now." The manager, guessing that she was telling a lie, said, with a smile: "You must acknowledge, madame, that it is very surprising that M. Oreille should have asked no compensation
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