Page 2264 - les-miserables
P. 2264

escape from Montreuil-sur-Mer. The man seen one evening
         for the first time by Boulatruelle, was Jean Valjean. Later on,
         every time that Jean Valjean needed money, he went to get
         it in the Blaru-bottom. Hence the absences which we have
         mentioned. He had a pickaxe somewhere in the heather, in a
         hiding-place known to himself alone. When he beheld Mar-
         ius convalescent, feeling that the hour was at hand, when
         that money might prove of service, he had gone to get it; it
         was he again, whom Boulatruelle had seen in the woods, but
         on this occasion, in the morning instead of in the evening.
         Boulatreulle inherited his pickaxe.
            The actual sum was five hundred and eighty-four thou-
         sand, five hundred francs. Jean Valjean withdrew the five
         hundred  francs  for  himself.—‘We  shall  see  hereafter,’  he
         thought.
            The  difference  between  that  sum  and  the  six  hundred
         and thirty thousand francs withdrawn from Laffitte repre-
         sented his expenditure in ten years, from 1823 to 1833. The
         five years of his stay in the convent had cost only five thou-
         sand francs.
            Jean  Valjean  set  the  two  candlesticks  on  the  chim-
         ney-piece, where they glittered to the great admiration of
         Toussaint.
            Moreover, Jean Valjean knew that he was delivered from
         Javert. The story had been told in his presence, and he had
         verified  the  fact  in  the  Moniteur,  how  a  police  inspector
         named Javert had been found drowned under a boat be-
         longing to some laundresses, between the Pont au Change
         and the Pont-Neuf, and that a writing left by this man, oth-

         2264                                  Les Miserables
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