Monsieur, Madame, and Bebe — Volume 03 by Gustave Droz
page 18 of 94 (19%)
page 18 of 94 (19%)
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"You are not hiding anything from me, my dear fellow?" "What a donkey you are, old fellow. I tell you that everything is going on well." And he resumed his song, jingling the money in his pockets. "All is going on well, but it will take some time," he went on. "Let me have one of your dressing-gowns. I shall be more comfortable for the night, and these ladies will excuse me, will they not?" "Excuse you, I should think so, you, the doctor, and my friend!" I felt devotedly attached to him that evening. "Well, then, if they will excuse me, you can very well let me have a pair of slippers." At this moment a cry came from the next room and we distinctly heard these words in a stifled voice: "Doctor . . . oh! mon Dieu! . . . doctor!" "It is frightful," murmured my aunts. "My dear friend," I exclaimed, seizing the doctor's arm," you are quite sure you are not concealing anything from me?" "If you have a very loose pair they will suit me best; I have not the foot of a young girl . . . . I am not concealing anything, I am not |
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