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es for other people. But the work on this batch shall be a parting gift of my goodwill to Fischelowitz, who is an honest fellow and has understood my painful situation all along. To-morrow at this time, I shall be far away. Thirty-three." The Count drew a long breath of relief in the anticipation of his release from captivity and hard labour. Vjera dropped her glass tube and her little pieces of paper and looked sadly at him, while he was speaking. "By the by," observed the Cossack, "to-day is Tuesday. I had quite forgotten. So you really leave us to-morrow." "Yes. It is all settled at last, and I have had letters. It is to-morrow--and this is my last hundred." "At what time?" inquired Dumnoff, with a rough laugh. "Is it to be in the morning or in the afternoon?" "I do not know," answered the Count, quietly and with an air of conviction. "It will certainly be before night." "Provided you get the news in time to ask us to the feast," jeered the other, "we shall all be as happy as you yourself." "Thirty-four," said the Count, who had rolled the last cigarette very slowly and thoughtfully. Vjera cast an imploring look on Dumnoff, as though beseeching him not to continue his jesting. The rough man, who might have sat for the type of the Russian mujik, noticed the glance and was silent. "Who is incredulous enough to disbelieve this time?" asked the Cossack, gravely. "Besides, the Count says that he has had letters, so it is certain, at last." "Love-letters, he means," giggled the insignificant girl, who rejoiced in the name of Anna Schmigjelskova. Then she looked at Vjera as though afraid of her displeasure. But Vjera took no notice of the silly speech and sat idle for some minutes, gazing at the Count with an expression in which love, admiration and pity were very oddly mingled. Pale and ill as she looked, there was a ray of light and a movement of life in her face during those few moments. Then she took again her glass tube and her bits of paper and resumed her task of making shells, with a little heave of her thin chest that betrayed the suppression of a sigh. The Count finished his second thousand, and arranged the last hundreds neatly with the others, laying them in little heaps and patting the ends with his fingers so that they should present an absolutely symmetrical appearance. Dumnoff plodded on, in his peculiar way, doing the work well and then carelessly tossing it into a basket by his si
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