Other People's Money by Émile Gaboriau
page 53 of 659 (08%)
page 53 of 659 (08%)
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houses where she had cooked. He absolutely required the man who was
to wait at the table to exhibit the dress-coat he was to wear. The great day having come, he did not stir from the house, going and coming from the kitchen to the dining-room, uneasy, agitated, unable to stay in one place. He breathed only when he had seen the table set and loaded with the new china he had purchased and the magnificent silver he had gone to hire in person. And when his young wife made her appearance, looking lovely in her new dress, and leading by the hands the two children, Maxence and Gilberte, in their new suits: "That's perfect," he exclaimed, highly delighted. "Nothing could be better. Now, let our four guests come!" They arrived a few minutes before seven, in two carriages, the magnificence of which astonished the Rue St. Gilles. And, the presentations over, Vincent Favoral had at last the ineffable satisfaction to see seated at his table the Baron and Baroness de Thaller, M. Saint Pavin, who called himself a financial editor, and M. Jules Jottras, of the house of Jottras & Brother. It was with an eager curiosity that Mme. Favoral observed these people whom her husband called his friends, and whom she saw herself for the first time. M. de Thaller, who could not then have been much over thirty, was already a man without any particular age. |
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