oach and following Murphy (for it was he) with his eyes.
"What a pace that stout man goes! Did you see him?"
"_Ma foi!_ he passed so very quickly," said the Schoolmaster, "that I
did not remark him."
Rodolph calmly concealed his satisfaction; Murphy had, doubtless,
deciphered the almost hieroglyphic characters of the note which he had
dropped, and which had escaped the vigilance of the Schoolmaster.
Certain that the coach was not followed, he had become more assured, and
desirous of imitating the Chouette, who slept, or rather pretended to
sleep, he said to Rodolph:
"Excuse me, young man, but the motion of the coach always produces a
singular effect on me,--it sends me off to sleep like a child."
The ruffian, under the guise of assumed sleep, thought to examine
whether the physiognomy of his companion betrayed any emotion; but
Rodolph was on his guard, and replied:
"I rose so early that I feel sleepy, and will have a nap, too."
He shut his eyes, and very soon the hard breathing of the Schoolmaster
and the Chouette, who snored in chorus, so completely deceived Rodolph,
that, thinking his companions sound asleep, he half opened his eyes. The
Schoolmaster and the Chouette, in spite of their loud snoring, had their
eyes open, and were exchanging some mysterious signs by means of their
fingers curiously placed or bent in the palms of their hands. In an
instant this mute language ceased. The brigand no doubt perceived, by
some almost imperceptible sign, that Rodolph was not asleep, and said,
in a laughing tone:
"Ah, ah, comrade! what, you were trying your friends, were you?"
"That can't astonish you, who sleep with your eyes open."
"I, who--That's different, young man; I am a somnambulist."
The hackney-coach stopped in the Place de la Madelaine. The rain had
ceased for a moment, but the clouds, driven by the violence of the wind,
were so dark and so low, that it was almost night in appearance.
Rodolph, the Chouette, and the Schoolmaster went towards the Cours la
Reine.
"Young man, I have an idea, which is not a bad one," said the robber.
"What is it?"
"To ascertain if all that you have told us respecting the interior of
the house in the Allee des Veuves is true."
"You surely will not go there now, under any circumstances? It would
awaken suspicion."
"I am not such a flat as that, young fellow; but why have I a wife whose
name is Finette?"
The Chouette drew up her head.
"Do you see her, y
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