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vastly better. She looked at me with a curious air, almost with reverence, as it seemed to me. She said, in a purring voice: "Ach, so! I did not understand. The gentleman must excuse me." And she purred again: "So!" It was then I noticed that her eyes were fastened upon my chest. I followed their direction. They rested on the silver badge I had stuck in my braces. I understood and held my peace. Silence was my only trump until I knew how the land lay. If I left this woman alone, she would tell me all I wanted to know. In fact, she began to speak again. "I expected _you_," she said, "but not... _this_. Who is it this time? A Frenchman, eh?" I shook my head. "An Englishman," I said curtly. Her eyes opened in wonder. "Ach, nein!" she cried--and you would have said her voice vibrated with pleasure--"An Englishman! Ei, ei!" If ever a human being licked its chops, that woman did. She wagged her head and repeated to herself: "Ei, ei !" adding, as if to explain her surprise, "he is the first we have had. "You brought him here, eh! But why up here? Or did der Stelze send him?" She fired this string of questions at me without pausing for a reply. She continued: "I was out, but Karl told me. There was another came, too: Franz sent him." "This is he," I said. "I caught him prying in my room and he died." "Ach!" she ejaculated ... and in her voice was all the world of admiration that a German woman feels for brute man.... "The Herr Englander came into your room and he died. So, so! But one must speak to Franz. The man drinks too much. He is always drunk. He makes mistakes. It will not do. I will...." "I wish you to do nothing against Franz," I said. "This Englishman spoke German well: Karl will tell you." "As the gentleman wishes," was the woman's reply in a voice so silky and so servile that I felt my gorge rise. "She looks like a slug!" I said to myself, as she stood there, fat and sleek and horrible. "Here are his passport and other papers," I said, bending down and taking them from the dead man's pocket. "He was an English officer, you see?" And I unfolded the little black book stamped with the Royal Arms. She leant forward and I was all but stifled with the stale odour of the patchouli with which her faded body was drenched. Then, making a sheaf of passport and permit, I held them in the flame of the candle. "But we always keep them!" expostulated the hotel-keeper.
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