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Count of Monte Cristo, The
Chapter 3 - The Catalans
Alexandre Dumas
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       _ Beyond a bare, weather-worn wall, about a hundred paces from
       the spot where the two friends sat looking and listening as
       they drank their wine, was the village of the Catalans. Long
       ago this mysterious colony quitted Spain, and settled on the
       tongue of land on which it is to this day. Whence it came no
       one knew, and it spoke an unknown tongue. One of its chiefs,
       who understood Provencal, begged the commune of Marseilles
       to give them this bare and barren promontory, where, like
       the sailors of old, they had run their boats ashore. The
       request was granted; and three months afterwards, around the
       twelve or fifteen small vessels which had brought these
       gypsies of the sea, a small village sprang up. This village,
       constructed in a singular and picturesque manner, half
       Moorish, half Spanish, still remains, and is inhabited by
       descendants of the first comers, who speak the language of
       their fathers. For three or four centuries they have
       remained upon this small promontory, on which they had
       settled like a flight of seabirds, without mixing with the
       Marseillaise population, intermarrying, and preserving their
       original customs and the costume of their mother-country as
       they have preserved its language.
       Our readers will follow us along the only street of this
       little village, and enter with us one of the houses, which
       is sunburned to the beautiful dead-leaf color peculiar to
       the buildings of the country, and within coated with
       whitewash, like a Spanish posada. A young and beautiful
       girl, with hair as black as jet, her eyes as velvety as the
       gazelle's, was leaning with her back against the wainscot,
       rubbing in her slender delicately moulded fingers a bunch of
       heath blossoms, the flowers of which she was picking off and
       strewing on the floor; her arms, bare to the elbow, brown,
       and modelled after those of the Arlesian Venus, moved with a
       kind of restless impatience, and she tapped the earth with
       her arched and supple foot, so as to display the pure and
       full shape of her well-turned leg, in its red cotton, gray
       and blue clocked, stocking. At three paces from her, seated
       in a chair which he balanced on two legs, leaning his elbow
       on an old worm-eaten table, was a tall young man of twenty,
       or two-and-twenty, who was looking at her with an air in
       which vexation and uneasiness were mingled. He questioned
       her with his eyes, but the firm and steady gaze of the young
       girl controlled his look.
       "You see, Mercedes," said the young man, "here is Easter
       come round again; tell me, is this the moment for a
       wedding?"
       "I have answered you a hundred times, Fernand, and really
       you must be very stupid to ask me again."
       "Well, repeat it, -- repeat it, I beg of you, that I may at
       last believe it! Tell me for the hundredth time that you
       refuse my love, which had your mother's sanction. Make me
       understand once for all that you are trifling with my
       happiness, that my life or death are nothing to you. Ah, to
       have dreamed for ten years of being your husband, Mercedes,
       and to lose that hope, which was the only stay of my
       existence!"
       "At least it was not I who ever encouraged you in that hope,
       Fernand," replied Mercedes; "you cannot reproach me with the
       slightest coquetry. I have always said to you, `I love you
       as a brother; but do not ask from me more than sisterly
       affection, for my heart is another's.' Is not this true,
       Fernand?"
       "Yes, that is very true, Mercedes," replied the young man,
       "Yes, you have been cruelly frank with me; but do you forget
       that it is among the Catalans a sacred law to intermarry?"
       "You mistake, Fernand; it is not a law, but merely a custom,
       and, I pray of you, do not cite this custom in your favor.
       You are included in the conscription, Fernand, and are only
       at liberty on sufferance, liable at any moment to be called
       upon to take up arms. Once a soldier, what would you do with
       me, a poor orphan, forlorn, without fortune, with nothing
       but a half-ruined hut and a few ragged nets, the miserable
       inheritance left by my father to my mother, and by my mother
       to me? She has been dead a year, and you know, Fernand, I
       have subsisted almost entirely on public charity. Sometimes
       you pretend I am useful to you, and that is an excuse to
       share with me the produce of your fishing, and I accept it,
       Fernand, because you are the son of my father's brother,
       because we were brought up together, and still more because
       it would give you so much pain if I refuse. But I feel very
       deeply that this fish which I go and sell, and with the
       produce of which I buy the flax I spin, -- I feel very
       keenly, Fernand, that this is charity."
       "And if it were, Mercedes, poor and lone as you are, you
       suit me as well as the daughter of the first shipowner or
       the richest banker of Marseilles! What do such as we desire
       but a good wife and careful housekeeper, and where can I
       look for these better than in you?"
       "Fernand," answered Mercedes, shaking her head, "a woman
       becomes a bad manager, and who shall say she will remain an
       honest woman, when she loves another man better than her
       husband? Rest content with my friendship, for I say once
       more that is all I can promise, and I will promise no more
       than I can bestow."
       "I understand," replied Fernand, "you can endure your own
       wretchedness patiently, but you are afraid to share mine.
       Well, Mercedes, beloved by you, I would tempt fortune; you
       would bring me good luck, and I should become rich. I could
       extend my occupation as a fisherman, might get a place as
       clerk in a warehouse, and become in time a dealer myself."
       "You could do no such thing, Fernand; you are a soldier, and
       if you remain at the Catalans it is because there is no war;
       so remain a fisherman, and contented with my friendship, as
       I cannot give you more."
       "Well, I will do better, Mercedes. I will be a sailor;
       instead of the costume of our fathers, which you despise, I
       will wear a varnished hat, a striped shirt, and a blue
       jacket, with an anchor on the buttons. Would not that dress
       please you?"
       "What do you mean?" asked Mercedes, with an angry glance, --
       "what do you mean? I do not understand you?"
       "I mean, Mercedes, that you are thus harsh and cruel with
       me, because you are expecting some one who is thus attired;
       but perhaps he whom you await is inconstant, or if he is
       not, the sea is so to him."
       "Fernand," cried Mercedes, "I believed you were
       good-hearted, and I was mistaken! Fernand, you are wicked to
       call to your aid jealousy and the anger of God! Yes, I will
       not deny it, I do await, and I do love him of whom you
       speak; and, if he does not return, instead of accusing him
       of the inconstancy which you insinuate, I will tell you that
       he died loving me and me only." The young girl made a
       gesture of rage. "I understand you, Fernand; you would be
       revenged on him because I do not love you; you would cross
       your Catalan knife with his dirk. What end would that
       answer? To lose you my friendship if he were conquered, and
       see that friendship changed into hate if you were victor.
       Believe me, to seek a quarrel with a man is a bad method of
       pleasing the woman who loves that man. No, Fernand, you will
       not thus give way to evil thoughts. Unable to have me for
       your wife, you will content yourself with having me for your
       friend and sister; and besides," she added, her eyes
       troubled and moistened with tears, "wait, wait, Fernand; you
       said just now that the sea was treacherous, and he has been
       gone four months, and during these four months there have
       been some terrible storms."
       Fernand made no reply, nor did he attempt to check the tears
       which flowed down the cheeks of Mercedes, although for each
       of these tears he would have shed his heart's blood; but
       these tears flowed for another. He arose, paced a while up
       and down the hut, and then, suddenly stopping before
       Mercedes, with his eyes glowing and his hands clinched, --
       "Say, Mercedes," he said, "once for all, is this your final
       determination?"
       "I love Edmond Dantes," the young girl calmly replied, "and
       none but Edmond shall ever be my husband."
       "And you will always love him?"
       "As long as I live."
       Fernand let fall his head like a defeated man, heaved a sigh
       that was like a groan, and then suddenly looking her full in
       the face, with clinched teeth and expanded nostrils, said,
       -- "But if he is dead" --
       "If he is dead, I shall die too."
       "If he has forgotten you" --
       "Mercedes!" called a joyous voice from without, --
       "Mercedes!"
       "Ah," exclaimed the young girl, blushing with delight, and
       fairly leaping in excess of love, "you see he has not
       forgotten me, for here he is!" And rushing towards the door,
       she opened it, saying, "Here, Edmond, here I am!"
       Fernand, pale and trembling, drew back, like a traveller at
       the sight of a serpent, and fell into a chair beside him.
       Edmond and Mercedes were clasped in each other's arms. The
       burning Marseilles sun, which shot into the room through the
       open door, covered them with a flood of light. At first they
       saw nothing around them. Their intense happiness isolated
       them from all the rest of the world, and they only spoke in
       broken words, which are the tokens of a joy so extreme that
       they seem rather the expression of sorrow. Suddenly Edmond
       saw the gloomy, pale, and threatening countenance of
       Fernand, as it was defined in the shadow. By a movement for
       which he could scarcely account to himself, the young
       Catalan placed his hand on the knife at his belt.
       "Ah, your pardon," said Dantes, frowning in his turn; "I did
       not perceive that there were three of us." Then, turning to
       Mercedes, he inquired, "Who is this gentleman?"
       "One who will be your best friend, Dantes, for he is my
       friend, my cousin, my brother; it is Fernand -- the man
       whom, after you, Edmond, I love the best in the world. Do
       you not remember him?"
       "Yes!" said Dantes, and without relinquishing Mercedes hand
       clasped in one of his own, he extended the other to the
       Catalan with a cordial air. But Fernand, instead of
       responding to this amiable gesture, remained mute and
       trembling. Edmond then cast his eyes scrutinizingly at the
       agitated and embarrassed Mercedes, and then again on the
       gloomy and menacing Fernand. This look told him all, and his
       anger waxed hot.
       "I did not know, when I came with such haste to you, that I
       was to meet an enemy here."
       "An enemy!" cried Mercedes, with an angry look at her
       cousin. "An enemy in my house, do you say, Edmond! If I
       believed that, I would place my arm under yours and go with
       you to Marseilles, leaving the house to return to it no
       more."
       Fernand's eye darted lightning. "And should any misfortune
       occur to you, dear Edmond," she continued with the same
       calmness which proved to Fernand that the young girl had
       read the very innermost depths of his sinister thought, "if
       misfortune should occur to you, I would ascend the highest
       point of the Cape de Morgion and cast myself headlong from
       it."
       Fernand became deadly pale. "But you are deceived, Edmond,"
       she continued. "You have no enemy here -- there is no one
       but Fernand, my brother, who will grasp your hand as a
       devoted friend."
       And at these words the young girl fixed her imperious look
       on the Catalan, who, as if fascinated by it, came slowly
       towards Edmond, and offered him his hand. His hatred, like a
       powerless though furious wave, was broken against the strong
       ascendancy which Mercedes exercised over him. Scarcely,
       however, had he touched Edmond's hand than he felt he had
       done all he could do, and rushed hastily out of the house.
       "Oh," he exclaimed, running furiously and tearing his hair
       -- "Oh, who will deliver me from this man? Wretched --
       wretched that I am!"
       "Hallo, Catalan! Hallo, Fernand! where are you running to?"
       exclaimed a voice.
       The young man stopped suddenly, looked around him, and
       perceived Caderousse sitting at table with Danglars, under
       an arbor.
       "Well", said Caderousse, "why don't you come? Are you really
       in such a hurry that you have no time to pass the time of
       day with your friends?"
       "Particularly when they have still a full bottle before
       them," added Danglars. Fernand looked at them both with a
       stupefied air, but did not say a word.
       "He seems besotted," said Danglars, pushing Caderousse with
       his knee. "Are we mistaken, and is Dantes triumphant in
       spite of all we have believed?"
       "Why, we must inquire into that," was Caderousse's reply;
       and turning towards the young man, said, "Well, Catalan,
       can't you make up your mind?"
       Fernand wiped away the perspiration steaming from his brow,
       and slowly entered the arbor, whose shade seemed to restore
       somewhat of calmness to his senses, and whose coolness
       somewhat of refreshment to his exhausted body.
       "Good-day," said he. "You called me, didn't you?" And he
       fell, rather than sat down, on one of the seats which
       surrounded the table.
       "I called you because you were running like a madman, and I
       was afraid you would throw yourself into the sea," said
       Caderousse, laughing. "Why, when a man has friends, they are
       not only to offer him a glass of wine, but, moreover, to
       prevent his swallowing three or four pints of water
       unnecessarily!"
       Fernand gave a groan, which resembled a sob, and dropped his
       head into his hands, his elbows leaning on the table.
       "Well, Fernand, I must say," said Caderousse, beginning the
       conversation, with that brutality of the common people in
       which curiosity destroys all diplomacy, "you look uncommonly
       like a rejected lover;" and he burst into a hoarse laugh.
       "Bah!" said Danglars, "a lad of his make was not born to be
       unhappy in love. You are laughing at him, Caderousse."
       "No," he replied, "only hark how he sighs! Come, come,
       Fernand," said Caderousse, "hold up your head, and answer
       us. It's not polite not to reply to friends who ask news of
       your health."
       "My health is well enough," said Fernand, clinching his
       hands without raising his head.
       "Ah, you see, Danglars," said Caderousse, winking at his
       friend, "this is how it is; Fernand, whom you see here, is a
       good and brave Catalan, one of the best fishermen in
       Marseilles, and he is in love with a very fine girl, named
       Mercedes; but it appears, unfortunately, that the fine girl
       is in love with the mate of the Pharaon; and as the Pharaon
       arrived to-day -- why, you understand!"
       "No; I do not understand," said Danglars.
       "Poor Fernand has been dismissed," continued Caderousse.
       "Well, and what then?" said Fernand, lifting up his head,
       and looking at Caderousse like a man who looks for some one
       on whom to vent his anger; "Mercedes is not accountable to
       any person, is she? Is she not free to love whomsoever she
       will?"
       "Oh, if you take it in that sense," said Caderousse, "it is
       another thing. But I thought you were a Catalan, and they
       told me the Catalans were not men to allow themselves to be
       supplanted by a rival. It was even told me that Fernand,
       especially, was terrible in his vengeance."
       Fernand smiled piteously. "A lover is never terrible," he
       said.
       "Poor fellow!" remarked Danglars, affecting to pity the
       young man from the bottom of his heart. "Why, you see, he
       did not expect to see Dantes return so suddenly -- he
       thought he was dead, perhaps; or perchance faithless! These
       things always come on us more severely when they come
       suddenly."
       "Ah, ma foi, under any circumstances," said Caderousse, who
       drank as he spoke, and on whom the fumes of the wine began
       to take effect, -- "under any circumstances Fernand is not
       the only person put out by the fortunate arrival of Dantes;
       is he, Danglars?"
       "No, you are right -- and I should say that would bring him
       ill-luck."
       "Well, never mind," answered Caderousse, pouring out a glass
       of wine for Fernand, and filling his own for the eighth or
       ninth time, while Danglars had merely sipped his. "Never
       mind -- in the meantime he marries Mercedes -- the lovely
       Mercedes -- at least he returns to do that."
       During this time Danglars fixed his piercing glance on the
       young man, on whose heart Caderousse's words fell like
       molten lead.
       "And when is the wedding to be?" he asked.
       "Oh, it is not yet fixed!" murmured Fernand.
       "No, but it will be," said Caderousse, "as surely as Dantes
       will be captain of the Pharaon -- eh, Danglars?"
       Danglars shuddered at this unexpected attack, and turned to
       Caderousse, whose countenance he scrutinized, to try and
       detect whether the blow was premeditated; but he read
       nothing but envy in a countenance already rendered brutal
       and stupid by drunkenness.
       "Well," said he, filling the glasses, "let us drink to
       Captain Edmond Dantes, husband of the beautiful Catalane!"
       Caderousse raised his glass to his mouth with unsteady hand,
       and swallowed the contents at a gulp. Fernand dashed his on
       the ground.
       "Eh, eh, eh!" stammered Caderousse. "What do I see down
       there by the wall, in the direction of the Catalans? Look,
       Fernand, your eyes are better than mine. I believe I see
       double. You know wine is a deceiver; but I should say it was
       two lovers walking side by side, and hand in hand. Heaven
       forgive me, they do not know that we can see them, and they
       are actually embracing!"
       Danglars did not lose one pang that Fernand endured.
       "Do you know them, Fernand?" he said.
       "Yes," was the reply, in a low voice. "It is Edmond and
       Mercedes!"
       "Ah, see there, now!" said Caderousse; "and I did not
       recognize them! Hallo, Dantes! hello, lovely damsel! Come
       this way, and let us know when the wedding is to be, for
       Fernand here is so obstinate he will not tell us."
       "Hold your tongue, will you?" said Danglars, pretending to
       restrain Caderousse, who, with the tenacity of drunkards,
       leaned out of the arbor. "Try to stand upright, and let the
       lovers make love without interruption. See, look at Fernand,
       and follow his example; he is well-behaved!"
       Fernand, probably excited beyond bearing, pricked by
       Danglars, as the bull is by the bandilleros, was about to
       rush out; for he had risen from his seat, and seemed to be
       collecting himself to dash headlong upon his rival, when
       Mercedes, smiling and graceful, lifted up her lovely head,
       and looked at them with her clear and bright eyes. At this
       Fernand recollected her threat of dying if Edmond died, and
       dropped again heavily on his seat. Danglars looked at the
       two men, one after the other, the one brutalized by liquor,
       the other overwhelmed with love.
       "I shall get nothing from these fools," he muttered; "and I
       am very much afraid of being here between a drunkard and a
       coward. Here's an envious fellow making himself boozy on
       wine when he ought to be nursing his wrath, and here is a
       fool who sees the woman he loves stolen from under his nose
       and takes on like a big baby. Yet this Catalan has eyes that
       glisten like those of the vengeful Spaniards, Sicilians, and
       Calabrians, and the other has fists big enough to crush an
       ox at one blow. Unquestionably, Edmond's star is in the
       ascendant, and he will marry the splendid girl -- he will be
       captain, too, and laugh at us all, unless" -- a sinister
       smile passed over Danglars' lips -- "unless I take a hand in
       the affair," he added.
       "Hallo!" continued Caderousse, half-rising, and with his
       fist on the table, "hallo, Edmond! do you not see your
       friends, or are you too proud to speak to them?"
       "No, my dear fellow!" replied Dantes, "I am not proud, but I
       am happy, and happiness blinds, I think, more than pride."
       "Ah, very well, that's an explanation!" said Caderousse.
       "How do you do, Madame Dantes?"
       Mercedes courtesied gravely, and said -- "That is not my
       name, and in my country it bodes ill fortune, they say, to
       call a young girl by the name of her betrothed before he
       becomes her husband. So call me Mercedes, if you please."
       "We must excuse our worthy neighbor, Caderousse," said
       Dantes, "he is so easily mistaken."
       "So, then, the wedding is to take place immediately, M.
       Dantes," said Danglars, bowing to the young couple.
       "As soon as possible, M. Danglars; to-day all preliminaries
       will be arranged at my father's, and to-morrow, or next day
       at latest, the wedding festival here at La Reserve. My
       friends will be there, I hope; that is to say, you are
       invited, M. Danglars, and you, Caderousse."
       "And Fernand," said Caderousse with a chuckle; "Fernand,
       too, is invited!"
       "My wife's brother is my brother," said Edmond; "and we,
       Mercedes and I, should be very sorry if he were absent at
       such a time."
       Fernand opened his mouth to reply, but his voice died on his
       lips, and he could not utter a word.
       "To-day the preliminaries, to-morrow or next day the
       ceremony! You are in a hurry, captain!"
       "Danglars," said Edmond, smiling, "I will say to you as
       Mercedes said just now to Caderousse, `Do not give me a
       title which does not belong to me'; that may bring me bad
       luck."
       "Your pardon," replied Danglars, "I merely said you seemed
       in a hurry, and we have lots of time; the Pharaon cannot be
       under weigh again in less than three months."
       "We are always in a hurry to be happy, M. Danglars; for when
       we have suffered a long time, we have great difficulty in
       believing in good fortune. But it is not selfishness alone
       that makes me thus in haste; I must go to Paris."
       "Ah, really? -- to Paris! and will it be the first time you
       have ever been there, Dantes?"
       "Yes."
       "Have you business there?"
       "Not of my own; the last commission of poor Captain Leclere;
       you know to what I allude, Danglars -- it is sacred.
       Besides, I shall only take the time to go and return."
       "Yes, yes, I understand," said Danglars, and then in a low
       tone, he added, "To Paris, no doubt to deliver the letter
       which the grand marshal gave him. Ah, this letter gives me
       an idea -- a capital idea! Ah; Dantes, my friend, you are
       not yet registered number one on board the good ship
       Pharaon;" then turning towards Edmond, who was walking away,
       "A pleasant journey," he cried.
       "Thank you," said Edmond with a friendly nod, and the two
       lovers continued on their way, as calm and joyous as if they
       were the very elect of heaven. _
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本书目录

Chapter 1 Marseilles - The Arrival
Chapter 2 - Father and Son
Chapter 3 - The Catalans
Chapter 4 - Conspiracy
Chapter 5 - The Marriage-Feast
Chapter 6 - The Deputy Procureur du Roi
Chapter 7 - The Examination
Chapter 8 - The Chateau D'If
Chapter 9 - The Evening of the Betrothal
Chapter 10 - The King's Closet at the Tuileries
Chapter 11 - The Corsican Ogre
Chapter 12 - Father and Son
Chapter 13 - The Hundred Days
Chapter 14 - The Two Prisoners
Chapter 15 - Number 34 and Number 27
Chapter 16 - A Learned Italian
Chapter 17 - The Abbe's Chamber
Chapter 18 - The Treasure
Chapter 19 - The Third Attack
Chapter 20 - The Cemetery of the Chateau D'If
Chapter 21 - The Island of Tiboulen
Chapter 22 - The Smugglers
Chapter 23 - The Island of Monte Cristo
Chapter 24 - The Secret Cave
Chapter 25 - The Unknown
Chapter 26 - The Pont du Gard Inn
Chapter 27 - The Story
Chapter 28 - The Prison Register
Chapter 29 - The House of Morrel & Son
Chapter 30 - The Fifth of September
Chapter 31 - Italy: Sinbad the Sailor
Chapter 32 - The Waking
Chapter 33 - Roman Bandits
Chapter 34 - The Colosseum
Chapter 35 - La Mazzolata
Chapter 36 - The Carnival at Rome
Chapter 37 - The Catacombs of Saint Sebastian
Chapter 38 - The Compact
Chapter 39 - The Guests
Chapter 40 - The Breakfast
Chapter 41 - The Presentation
Chapter 42 - Monsieur Bertuccio
Chapter 43 - The House at Auteuil
Chapter 44 - The Vendetta
Chapter 45 - The Rain of Blood
Chapter 46 - Unlimited Credit
Chapter 47 - The Dappled Grays
Chapter 48 - Ideology
Chapter 49 - Haidee
Chapter 50 - The Morrel Family
Chapter 51 - Pyramus and Thisbe
Chapter 52 - Toxicology
Chapter 53 - Robert le Diable
Chapter 54 - A Flurry in Stocks
Chapter 55 - Major Cavalcanti
Chapter 56 - Andrea Cavalcanti
Chapter 57 - In the Lucerne Patch
Chapter 58 - M Noirtier de Villefort
Chapter 59 - The Will
Chapter 60 - The Telegraph
Chapter 61 - How a Gardener may get rid of the Dormice that eat His Peaches
Chapter 62 - Ghosts
Chapter 63 - The Dinner
Chapter 64 - The Beggar
Chapter 65 - A Conjugal Scene
Chapter 66 - Matrimonial Projects
Chapter 67 - At the Office of the King's Attorney
Chapter 68 - A Summer Ball
Chapter 69 - The Inquiry
Chapter 70 - The Ball
Chapter 71 - Bread and Salt
Chapter 72 - Madame de Saint-Meran
Chapter 73 - The Promise
Chapter 74 - The Villefort Family Vault
Chapter 75 - A Signed Statement
Chapter 76 - Progress of Cavalcanti the Younger
Chapter 77 - Haidee
Chapter 78 - We hear From Yanina
Chapter 79 - The Lemonade
Chapter 80 - The Accusation
Chapter 81 - The Room of the Retired Baker
Chapter 82 - The Burglary
Chapter 83 - The Hand of God
Chapter 84 - Beauchamp
Chapter 85 - The Journey
Chapter 86 - The Trial
Chapter 87 - The Challenge
Chapter 88 - The Insult
Chapter 89 - A Nocturnal Interview
Chapter 90 - The Meeting
Chapter 91 - Mother and Son
Chapter 92 - The Suicide
Chapter 93 - Valentine
Chapter 94 - Maximilian's Avowal
Chapter 95 - Father and Daughter
Chapter 96 - The Contract
Chapter 97 - The Departure for Belgium
Chapter 98 - The Bell and Bottle Tavern
Chapter 99 - The Law
Chapter 100 - The Apparition
Chapter 101 - Locusta
Chapter 102 - Valentine
Chapter 103 - Maximilian
Chapter 104 - Danglars Signature
Chapter 105 - The Cemetery of Pere-la-Chaise
Chapter 106 - Dividing the Proceeds
Chapter 107 - The Lions' Den
Chapter 108 - The Judge
Chapter 109 - The Assizes
Chapter 110 - The Indictment
Chapter 111 - Expiation
Chapter 112 - The Departure
Chapter 113 - The Past
Chapter 114 - Peppino
Chapter 115 - Luigi Vampa's Bill of Fare
Chapter 116 - The Pardon
Chapter 117 - The Fifth of October