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??ne, 1804-1857

"Mysteries of Paris, V3"

I invite you."
"Whereabouts? To the Panier-Fleuri? to the Petit Ramponneau?"
"No, in the hall; the table is set on a bench. We have some ham, eggs, and
cheese--my treat."
"That suits me; but it is a pity to lose my ration, and still more that my
sister cannot profit by it. Neither she nor her children often see meat,
except at the butcher's door."
"Come, come quick, Skeleton is making a beast of himself; he is capable of
devouring the whole with Barbillon."
Nicholas and Pique-Vinaigre entered the hall; seated astride on the end of
the bench where the feast was spread, Skeleton swore and cursed while
waiting for the giver of the banquet.
"Here you are at last, snail, laggard!" cried the bandit, at the sight of
Pique-Vinaigre; "what have you been doing then?"
"He was chatting with Germain," said Nicholas, carving the ham.
"Oh! talking with Germain?" said Skeleton, looking attentively at
Pique-Vinaigre, without pausing in his mastication.
"Yes!" answered the patterer. "Oh! here is another who never invented
bootjacks and hard eggs (I say eggs, because I adore them). Isn't he a
fool! this Germain! I used to think that he was a spy, but he is too much
of a flat for that!"
"Oh! you think so?" said Skeleton, exchanging a rapid and significant
glance with Nicholas and Barbillon.
"I am as sure of it as that I see ham! And, then, how the devil would you
have him spy?--he is always alone; he speaks to no one, and no one speaks
to him; he runs away from us as if we had the cholera.


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