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you can count like one o'clock, and read to beat the schoolmaster, who still believes himself a wise clerk. No, Pitou, the good God brings people to me, and once they are under my rooftree, they stick as long as He pleases."

      With this assurance Pitou returned to his new home. He had experienced a great change. He had lost trust in himself. And so he slept badly. He recalled Gilbert's book; it was principally against the privileged classes and their abuses, and the cowardice of those who submitted to them. Pitou fancied he began to understand these matters better and he made up his mind to read more of the work on the morrow.

      Rising early, he went down with it into the yard where he could have the light fall on the book through an open window with the additional advantage that he might see Catherine through it. She might be expected down at any moment.

      But when he glanced up from his reading at the intervention of an opaque body between him and the light, he was amazed at the disagreeable person who caused the eclipse.

      This was a man of middle age, longer and thinner than Pitou, clad in a coat as patched and thread-bare as his own – for Pitou had resumed his old clothes for the working day – while thrusting his head forward on a lank neck, he read the book with as much curiosity as the other felt relish – though it was upside down to him.

      Ange was greatly astonished. A kind smile adorned the stranger's mouth in which a few snags stuck up, a pair crossing another like boar's fangs.

      "The American edition," said the man snuffling up his nose, "In octavo, 'On the Freedom of Man and the Independence of Nations. Boston, 1788.'"

      Pitou opened his eyes in proportion to the progress of the unknown reader, so that when he had reached the end his eyes were at the utmost extent.

      "Just so, sir," said Pitou.

      "This is the treatise of Dr. Gilbert's?" said the man in black.

      "Yes, sir," rejoined the young man politely.

      He rose as he had been taught that he must not sit in a superior's presence and to simple Ange everybody was a superior. In rising something fair and rosy attracted his attention at the window: it was Catherine come down at last, who was making cautionary signs to him.

      "I do not want to be inquisitive, sir, but I should like to know whose book this is?" remarked the stranger pointing at the book without touching it as it was between Pitou's hands.

      Pitou was going to say it belonged to Billet, but the girl motioned that he ought to lay claim to it himself. So he majestically responded:

      "This book is mine."

      The man in black had seen nothing but the book and its reader and heard but these words. But he suspiciously glanced behind: swift as a bird, Catherine had vanished.

      "Your book?"

      "Yes; do you want to read it – 'Avidus legendi libri' or 'legendie historiae?'"

      "Hello! you appear much above the condition your clothes beseem," said the stranger: "'Non dives vestitu sed ingenio' – and it follows that I take you into custody."

      "Me, in custody?" gasped Pitou at the summit of stupefaction.

      At the order of the man in black, two sergeants of the Paris Police seemed to rise up out of the ground.

      "Let us draw up a report," said the man, while one of the constables bound Pitou's hands by a rope and took the book into his own possession, and the other secured the prisoner to a ring happening to be by the window.

      Pitou was going to bellow, but the same person who had already so influenced him seemed to hint he should submit.

      He submitted with a docility enchanting the policemen, and the man in a black suit in particular. Hence, without any distrust, they walked into the farmhouse where the two policemen took seats at a table while the other – we shall know what he was after presently.

      Scarcely had the trio gone in than Pitou heard the voice:

      "Hold up your hands."

      He raised them and his head as well, and saw Catherine's pale and frightened face: in her hand she held a knife.

      Pitou rose on tiptoe and she cut the rope round his wrists.

      "Take the knife," she said, "and cut yourself free from the ringbolt."

      Pitou did not wait for twice telling but found himself wholly free.

      "Here is a double-louis," went on the girl; "you have good legs. Make away. Go to Paris and warn the doctor."

      She could not conclude for the constables appeared again as the coin fell at Pitou's feet. He picked it up quickly. Indeed the armed constables stood on the sill for an instant, astounded to see the man free whom they had left bound. But as at the dog's least stir the hare bolts, at the first move of the police, Pitou made a prodigious leap and was on the other side of the hedge.

      They uttered a yell which brought out the corporal, who held a little casket under the arm. He lost no time in speech-making but darted after the escaped one. His men followed his example. But they were not able to jump the hedge and ditch, like Pitou, and were forced to go roundabout.

      But when they got over, they beheld the youth five hundred paces off on the meadow, tearing away directly to the woods, a quarter of a league distant, which he would gain in a short time.

      He turned at this nick, and perceiving the enemy take up the chase, though more for the name of the thing than any hope of overtaking him, he doubled his speed and soon dashed out of sight in the thicket.

      He had the wind as well as the swiftness of the buck, and he ran for ten minutes as he might for an hour. But judging that he was out of danger, by his instinct, he stopped to breathe, listen and make sure that he was quite alone.

      "It is incredible what a quantity of incidents have been crammed into three days," he mused.

      He looked alternately at his coin and the knife.

      "I must find time to change the gold and give Miss Catherine a penny for the knife, for fear it will cut our friendship. Never mind, since she bade me go to Paris, I shall go."

      On making out where he was, he struck a straight line over the heath to come out on the Paris highroad.

      CHAPTER V.

      WHY THE POLICE AGENT CAME WITH THE CONSTABLES

      About six that morning a police-agent from the capital, accompanied by two inferior policemen, had arrived at Villers Cotterets where they presented themselves to the police justice, and asked him to tell them where Farmer Billet dwelt.

      Five hundred paces from the farmhouse the corporal, as the exempt's rank was in the semi-military organization of the police of the era, perceived a peasant working in the field, of whom he inquired about his master.

      The man pointed to a horseman a quarter of a league off.

      "He won't be back till nine," he said; "there he is inspecting the work. He comes in for breakfast, then."

      "If you want to please your master, run and tell him a gentleman from town is waiting to see him."

      "Do you mean Dr. Gilbert?"

      "Run and tell him, all the same."

      No sooner was he notified than Billet galloped home but when he entered the room where he expected to see his landlord under the canopy of the large fireplace, none were there but his wife, sitting in the middle, plucking ducks with all the care such a task demands. Catherine was up in her room, preparing finery for Sunday, from the pleasure girls feel in getting ready for fun.

      "Who asked for me?" demanded Billet, stopping on the threshold and looking round.

      "Me," replied a flute-like voice behind him.

      "Turning, the yeoman beheld the police-agent and his two myrmidons.

      "How now? what do you want?" he snarled, making three steps backwards.

      "Next to nothing, dear Master Billet," replied the unctuous speaker: "we have to make a search in your premises, that is all."

      "A search,

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