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Modeste Mignon by Honoré de Balzac
page 41 of 344 (11%)

"If you are right, my honor is lost! I may as well blow my brains
out," exclaimed Dumay.

"Why so, Dumay?" said the blind woman.

"Ah, madame, I could never meet my colonel's eye if he did not find
his daughter--now his only daughter--as pure and virtuous as she was
when he said to me on the vessel, 'Let no fear of the scaffold hinder
you, Dumay, if the honor of my Modeste is at stake.'"

"Ah! I recognize you both," said Madame Mignon in a voice of strong
emotion.

"I'll wager my salvation that Modeste is as pure as she was in her
cradle," exclaimed Madame Dumay.

"Well, I shall make certain of it," replied her husband, "if Madame la
Comtesse will allow me to employ certain means; for old troopers
understand strategy."

"I will allow you to do anything that shall enlighten us, provided it
does no injury to my last child."

"What are you going to do, Jean?" asked Madame Dumay; "how can you
discover a young girl's secret if she means to hide it?"

"Obey me, all!" cried the lieutenant, "I shall need every one of you."

If this rapid sketch were clearly developed it would give a whole
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