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ot surely forget that there can only be one winner." "No doubt. But who will that be? Can you tell?" said Madame, in despair. "You remind me that I had a dream last night; my dreams are always good,--I sleep so little." "What was your dream?--but are you suffering?" "No," said the queen, stifling with wonderful command the torture of a renewed attack of shooting pains in her bosom; "I dreamed that the king won the bracelets." "The king!" "You are going to ask me, I think, what the king could possibly do with the bracelets?" "Yes." "And you would not add, perhaps, that it would be very fortunate if the king were really to win, for he would be obliged to give the bracelets to some one else." "To restore them to you, for instance." "In which case I should immediately give them away; for you do not think, I suppose," said the queen, laughing, "that I have put these bracelets up to a lottery from necessity. My object was to give them without arousing any one's jealousy; but if Fortune will not get me out of my difficulty--well, I will teach Fortune a lesson--and I know very well to whom I intend to offer the bracelets." These words were accompanied by so expressive a smile, that Madame could not resist paying her by a grateful kiss. "But," added Anne of Austria, "do you not know, as well as I do, that if the king were to win the bracelets, he would not restore them to me?" "You mean he would give them to the queen?" "No; and for the very same reason that he would not give them back again to me; since, if I had wished to make the queen a present of them, I had no need of him for that purpose." Madame cast a side glance upon the bracelets, which, in their casket, were dazzlingly exposed to view upon a table close beside her. "How beautiful they are," she said, sighing. "But stay," Madame continued, "we are quite forgetting that your majesty's dream was nothing but a dream." "I should be very much surprised," returned Anne of Austria, "if my dream were to deceive me; that has happened to me very seldom." "We may look upon you as a prophetess, then." "I have already said, that I dream but very rarely; but the coincidence of my dream about this matter, with my own ideas, is extraordinary! it agrees so wonderfully with my own views and arrangements." "What arrangements do you allude to?" "That you will get the bracelets, for instance." "In that case, it will not be the king." "Oh
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