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Carmen by Prosper Mérimée
page 70 of 82 (85%)
"'I've always thought you would kill me. The very first time I saw you I
had just met a priest at the door of my house. And to-night, as we were
going out of Cordova, didn't you see anything? A hare ran across the
road between your horse's feet. It is fate.'

"'Carmencita,' I asked, 'don't you love me any more?'

"She gave me no answer, she was sitting cross-legged on a mat, making
marks on the ground with her finger.

"'Let us change our life, Carmen,' said I imploringly. 'Let us go away
and live somewhere we shall never be parted. You know we have a hundred
and twenty gold ounces buried under an oak not far from here, and then
we have more money with Ben-Joseph the Jew.'

"She began to smile, and then she said, 'Me first, and then you. I know
it will happen like that.'

"'Think about it,' said I. 'I've come to the end of my patience and my
courage. Make up your mind--or else I must make up mine.'

"I left her alone and walked toward the hermitage. I found the hermit
praying. I waited till his prayer was finished. I longed to pray myself,
but I couldn't. When he rose up from his knees I went to him.

"'Father,' I said, 'will you pray for some one who is in great danger?'

"'I pray for every one who is afflicted,' he replied.

"'Can you say a mass for a soul which is perhaps about to go into the
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