Page 1306 - les-miserables
P. 1306

quarter! Isn’t he a fool! So he will come at six o’clock! That’s
         the  hour  when  our  neighbor  goes  to  his  dinner.  Mother
         Bougon is off washing dishes in the city. There’s not a soul
         in the house. The neighbor never comes home until eleven
         o’clock. The children shall stand on watch. You shall help
         us. He will give in.’
            ‘And what if he does not give in?’ demanded his wife.
            Jondrette made a sinister gesture, and said:—
            ‘We’ll fix him.’
            And he burst out laughing.
            This was the first time Marius had seen him laugh. The
         laugh was cold and sweet, and provoked a shudder.
            Jondrette  opened  a  cupboard  near  the  fireplace,  and
         drew from it an old cap, which he placed on his head, after
         brushing it with his sleeve.
            ‘Now,’ said he, ‘I’m going out. I have some more people
         that I must see. Good ones. You’ll see how well the whole
         thing will work. I shall be away as short a time as possible,
         it’s a fine stroke of business, do you look after the house.’
            And with both fists thrust into the pockets of his trousers,
         he stood for a moment in thought, then exclaimed:—
            ‘Do you know, it’s mighty lucky, by the way, that he didn’t
         recognize me! If he had recognized me on his side, he would
         not have come back again. He would have slipped through
         our fingers! It was my beard that saved us! my romantic
         beard! my pretty little romantic beard!’
            And again he broke into a laugh.
            He stepped to the window. The snow was still falling, and
         streaking the gray of the sky.

         1306                                  Les Miserables
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