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you?" "You know very well." "Have you had any note for me?" "Nothing at all." "What has become of the valet de place?" "I paid him, and sent him away immediately after your arrest." "I should like to have him with me as far as Perpignan." "You are right, and I think the best thing you can do is to leave Spain altogether, for you will find no justice in it." "What do they say about my assassination?" "Why, they say you fired the shot that people heard yourself, and that you made your own sword bloody, for no one was found there, either dead or wounded." "That's an amusing theory. Where did my hat come from?" "It was brought to me three days after." "What a confusion! But was it known that I was imprisoned in the tower?" "Everybody knew it, and two good reasons were given, the one in public, and the other in private." "What are these reasons?" "The public reason was that you had forged your passports; the private one, which was only whispered at the ear, was that you spent all your nights with Nina." "You might have sworn that I never slept out of your inn." "I told everyone as much, but no matter; you did go to her house, and for a certain nobleman that's a crime. I am glad you did not fly as I advised you, for as it is your character is cleared before everybody." "I should like to go to the opera this evening; take me a box." "It shall be done; but do not have anything more to do with Nina, I entreat you." "No, my good friend, I have made up my mind to see her no more." Just as I was sitting down to dinner, a banker's clerk brought me a letter which pleased me very much. It contained the bills of exchange I had drawn in Genoa, in favour of M. Augustin Grimaldi. He now sent them back, with these words: "Passano has been vainly endeavouring to persuade me to send these bills to Barcelona, so that they may be protested, and you arrested. I now send them to you to convince you that I am not one of those who delight in trampling down the victims of bad fortune. "--Genoa, November 30th, 1768." For the fourth time a Genoese had behaved most generously to me. I was almost persuaded that I ought to forgive the infamous Passano for the sake of his four excellent fellow-countrymen. But this virtue was a little beyond me. I concluded that the best thing I could do would be to rid the Genoese name of the opprobrium which this rascal was always bringing on it, but I could neve
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