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The Son of Clemenceau by Alexandre Dumas fils
page 82 of 244 (33%)
mechanically--the image of despair; nothing more heartrending than the
anguish on his convulsed visage and the increasingly hopeless
expression.

Here was a double tragedy, but it was the major who, under the eyes of
Fraulein von Vieradlers, was to furnish the comedy of the incident. His
horse took the bit in its teeth and ran away with him along the bank of
the brook, threatening at any moment to lose footing and roll the two in
the water.

"Victory!" said the girl, with a joy-flushed cheek, alighting and
displaying no more compassion for the soldiers slain in doing their duty
than for the chaise horse--or the old woman beside its heaving carcass.

"She is dead," remarked Claudius. "But what did she say? She spoke in
Polish--I understand it--I caught the words, but they were not
intelligible."

"Were they not?" continued the girl, not displeased.

"She said, 'my child!'"

"Very well! I am her grandchild. That was not all, though--she
affectionately recommended you to me, as my cousin."

"Cousin? your cousin?" repeated Claudius, without contradicting the
speaker on his impression that Baboushka's face had not worn a soft
expression, in his eyes.

"It would appear that you do not know yourself as Felix Clemenceau?"
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