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my troops, my treasures? I have not even Belle-Isle." "Bah! necessity is the mother of invention, and when you think all is lost, something will be discovered which will retrieve everything." "Who will discover this wonderful something?" "Yourself." "I! I resign my office of inventor." "Then I will." "Be it so. But set to work without delay." "Oh! we have time enough!" "You kill me, D'Herblay, with your calmness," said the superintendent, passing his handkerchief over his face. "Do you not remember that I one day told you not to make yourself uneasy, if you possessed courage? Have you any?" "I believe so." "Then don't make yourself uneasy." "It is decided, then, that, at the last moment, you will come to my assistance." "It will only be the repayment of a debt I owe you." "It is the vocation of financiers to anticipate the wants of men such as yourself, D'Herblay." "If obligingness is the vocation of financiers, charity is the virtue of the clergy. Only, on this occasion, do you act, monsieur. You are not yet sufficiently reduced, and at the last moment we will see what is to be done." "We shall see, then, in a very short time." "Very well. However, permit me to tell you that, personally, I regret exceedingly that you are at present so short of money, because I was myself about to ask you for some." "For yourself?" "For myself, or some of my people, for mine or for ours." "How much do you want?" "Be easy on that score; a roundish sum, it is true, but not too exorbitant." "Tell me the amount." "Fifty thousand francs." "Oh! a mere nothing. Of course one has always fifty thousand francs. Why the deuce cannot that knave Colbert be as easily satisfied as you are--and I should give myself far less trouble than I do. When do you need this sum?" "To-morrow morning; but you wish to know its destination." "Nay, nay, chevalier, I need no explanation." "To-morrow is the first of June." "Well?" "One of our bonds becomes due." "I did not know we had any bond." "Certainly, to-morrow we pay our last third instalment." "What third?" "Of the one hundred and fifty thousand francs to Baisemeaux." "Baisemeaux? Who is he?" "The governor of the Bastile." "Yes, I remember. On what grounds am I to pay one hundred and fifty thousand francs for that man?" "On account of the appointment which he, or rather we, purchased from Louviere and Tremblay." "I hav
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