[Bureaucracy by Honore de Balzac]@TWC D-Link book
Bureaucracy

CHAPTER VIII
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I've only just waked up, and he'd play the devil's tattoo on me if he knew the letter hadn't gone.

I know a famous secret, Antoine; but don't say anything about it to the clerks if I tell you; promise?
He would send me off if he knew I had said a single word; he told me so." "What's inside the letter ?" asked Antoine, eying it.
"Nothing; I looked this way--see." He made the letter gape open, and showed Antoine that there was nothing but blank paper to be seen.
"This is going to be a great day for you, Laurent," went on the secretary's man.

"You are to have a new director.

Economy must be the order of the day, for they are going to unite the two divisions under one director--you fellows will have to look out!" "Yes, nine clerks are put on the retired list," said Dutocq, who came in at the moment; "how did you hear that ?" Antoine gave him the letter, and he had no sooner opened it than he rushed headlong downstairs in the direction of the secretary's office.
The bureaus Rabourdin and Baudoyer, after idling and gossiping since the death of Monsieur de la Billardiere, were now recovering their usual official look and the dolce far niente habits of a government office.
Nevertheless, the approaching end of the year did cause rather more application among the clerks, just as porters and servants become at that season more unctuously civil.

They all came punctually, for one thing; more remained after four o'clock than was usual at other times.
It was not forgotten that fees and gratuities depend on the last impressions made upon the minds of masters.


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