"
"The package of gold certificates!" I cried. "She has burned
them?"
"No," he replied, "Madame Barras has favored your Treasury in her
destructive process. These are five-pound notes, of the Bank of
England."
I was astonished and I expressed it.
"But why should Madame Barras destroy notes of the Bank of
England?"
"I imagine," he answered, "that they were some which she had, by
chance, failed to give you for exchange."
"But why should she destroy them?" I went on.
"I conclude," he drawled, "that she was not wholly certain that
she would escape."
"Escape!" I cried. "You have been assuring me all along that
Madame Barras is making no effort to escape."
"Oh, no," he replied, "she is making every effort."
I was annoyed and puzzled.
"What is it," I said, "precisely, that Madame Barras did here;
can you tell me in plain words?"
"Surely," he replied, "she sat here while something was decided,
and while she sat here she smoked the cigarette, and while she
smoked the cigarette, she destroyed the money. But," he added,
"before she had quite finished, a decision was made and she
hastily thrust the remaining bits of the torn notes into the
crevice between these stones.
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