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ewash or repainted in poor imitation of granite; there was the same old church tower, its clock with transparent face still marking the hours; there, too, were the old Chinese shops, with their dirty curtains and iron rods, one of which remained unrepaired as he himself had bent it when a boy. "Things go slowly here!" he muttered and continued up the street past the vestry. As they dished up flavored ices, the street vendors were still crying "sorbettes." The same little cocoanut oil lamps furnished light for the stands where native women and Chinese disposed of their sweetmeats and fruit. "It is marvellous," he exclaimed. "There is the same Chinaman who was at that stand seven years ago. There is that same old woman whom I remember so well. Why, one might think my seven years in Europe but a night's sleep. And, by heavens, they have not yet repaired this broken place in the pavement!" Indeed, the stone which had been torn out of the pavement before he left Manila had not yet been replaced. While he was meditating upon the wonderful stability of things in so unstable a country, some one placed a hand upon his shoulder. With a start he looked up, and his eyes met those of the old lieutenant, who also had left the Captain's house. A smile had displaced the officer's usual harsh expression and characteristic frown. "Be careful, young man!" said he. "Remember what happened to your father!" "I beg your pardon. You seem to have esteemed my father very highly. Can you tell me what has been his fate?" asked Ibarra, gazing intently into the lieutenant's eyes. "Do you not know?" said the officer. "I asked Don Santiago, but he said that he would tell me nothing until to-morrow. Have you no information regarding him?" "Why, yes; everybody knows about him. He died in prison." The young man stepped back and stared wildly at the officer. "In prison! Who died in prison?" he asked in astonishment. "Why, your father, who had been arrested," answered the officer somewhat surprised. "What! My father in prison! Arrested and imprisoned! Man, what are you talking about? Do you know who my father was? Are you----?" asked the young man, nervously grasping the officer's arm. "I don't think that I am mistaken: Don Rafael Ibarra." "Yes. Don Rafael Ibarra," repeated the young man, scarcely able to utter the words. "I thought that you knew it," said the officer, in a sympathetic voice, as he saw the emotion his w
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