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ne knows every thing, he alone can judge. I, of course, am bound to respect his will more than anybody else." But the old gentleman did not think himself bound to respect it; and, exasperated as he was by this resignation of his grandchild, he was on the point of telling her his mind fully, when she got up with some effort, and said, in an almost inaudible voice,-- "I am broken to pieces! Excuse me, grandpapa, if I go to my room." She left the parlor. M. de Chandore accompanied her to the door, remained there till he had seen her get up stairs, where her maid was waiting for her, and then came back to M. Folgat. "They are going to kill me, sir!" he cried, with an explosion of wrath and despair which was almost frightful in a man of his age. "She had in her eyes the same look that her mother had when she told me, after her husband's death, 'I shall not survive him.' And she did not survive my poor son. And then I, old man, was left alone with that child; and who knows but she may have in her the germ of the same disease which killed her mother? Alone! And for these twenty years I have held my breath to listen if she is still breathing as naturally and regularly"-- "You are needlessly alarmed," began the advocate. But Grandpapa Chandore shook his head, and said,-- "No, no. I fear my child has been hurt in her heart's heart. Did you not see how white she looked, and how faint her voice was? Great God! wilt thou leave me all alone here upon earth? O God! for which of my sins dost thou punish me in my children? For mercy's sake, call me home before she also leaves me, who is the joy of my life. And I can do nothing to turn aside this fatality--stupid inane old man that I am! And this Jacques de Boiscoran--if he were guilty, after all? Ah the wretch! I would hang him with my own hands!" Deeply moved, M. Folgat had watched the old gentleman's grief. Now he said,-- "Do not blame M. de Boiscoran, sir, now that every thing is against him! Of all of us, he suffers, after all, most; for he is innocent." "Do you still think so?" "More than ever. Little as he has said, he has told Miss Dionysia enough to confirm me in my conjecture, and to prove to me that I have guessed right." "When?" "The day we went to Boiscoran." The baron tried to remember. "I do not recollect," he said. "Don't you remember," said the lawyer, "that you left us, so as to permit Anthony to answer my questions more freely?" "To
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