[Dross by Henry Seton Merriman]@TWC D-Link bookDross CHAPTER XII 10/14
I pity that poor Miste, you know--if you catch him." The same evening I spoke to my old patron, whom I found in the morning-room, where he sat alone and in meditation.
The doors of his own study were still locked, and no one was allowed to enter there. His manner was so feverish and unnatural that I almost abandoned my project of leaving the Rue des Palmiers. "Ah!" he said, "what a terrible day--and that poor Alphonse! How did you leave him ?" I thought of Alphonse as I had left him, smiling under his mourning hat-band, waving a black glove gaily to me in farewell. "Oh," I answered, "Alphonse will soon be himself again." "Ah, my friend," exclaimed the Vicomte, after a sorrowful pause.
"The surprises of life are all unpleasant.
Pfuit!" he spread out his hands suddenly as if indicating a quick flight, "and I lose a friend and four hundred thousand francs in the twinkling of an eye.
To think that a mere shock can kill a man as it killed the poor Baron." "He had no neck, and systematically ate too much," I said.
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