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"
Then
all
three
windows
will
have
yellow
draperies
.
"
"
And
then
?
"
"
And
then
,
my
good
fellow
,
use
your
daggers
in
any
way
you
please
,
and
I
further
promise
you
to
be
there
as
a
spectator
of
your
prowess
.
"
Отключить рекламу
"
We
understand
each
other
perfectly
,
then
.
Adieu
,
your
excellency
;
depend
upon
me
as
firmly
as
I
do
upon
you
.
"
Saying
these
words
,
the
Transteverin
disappeared
down
the
staircase
,
while
his
companion
,
muffling
his
features
more
closely
than
before
in
the
folds
of
his
mantle
,
passed
almost
close
to
Franz
,
and
descended
to
the
arena
by
an
outward
flight
of
steps
.
The
next
minute
Franz
heard
himself
called
by
Albert
,
who
made
the
lofty
building
re-echo
with
the
sound
of
his
friend
's
name
.
Franz
,
however
,
did
not
obey
the
summons
till
he
had
satisfied
himself
that
the
two
men
whose
conversation
he
had
overheard
were
at
a
sufficient
distance
to
prevent
his
encountering
them
in
his
descent
.
In
ten
minutes
after
the
strangers
had
departed
,
Franz
was
on
the
road
to
the
Piazza
de
Spagni
,
listening
with
studied
indifference
to
the
learned
dissertation
delivered
by
Albert
,
after
the
manner
of
Pliny
and
Calpurnius
,
touching
the
iron-pointed
nets
used
to
prevent
the
ferocious
beasts
from
springing
on
the
spectators
.
Franz
let
him
proceed
without
interruption
,
and
,
in
fact
,
did
not
hear
what
was
said
;
he
longed
to
be
alone
,
and
free
to
ponder
over
all
that
had
occurred
.
One
of
the
two
men
,
whose
mysterious
meeting
in
the
Colosseum
he
had
so
unintentionally
witnessed
,
was
an
entire
stranger
to
him
,
but
not
so
the
other
;
and
though
Franz
had
been
unable
to
distinguish
his
features
,
from
his
being
either
wrapped
in
his
mantle
or
obscured
by
the
shadow
,
the
tones
of
his
voice
had
made
too
powerful
an
impression
on
him
the
first
time
he
had
heard
them
for
him
ever
again
to
forget
them
,
hear
them
when
or
where
he
might
.
It
was
more
especially
when
this
man
was
speaking
in
a
manner
half
jesting
,
half
bitter
,
that
Franz
's
ear
recalled
most
vividly
the
deep
sonorous
,
yet
well-pitched
voice
that
had
addressed
him
in
the
grotto
of
Monte
Cristo
,
and
which
he
heard
for
the
second
time
amid
the
darkness
and
ruined
grandeur
of
the
Colosseum
.
And
the
more
he
thought
,
the
more
entire
was
his
conviction
,
that
the
person
who
wore
the
mantle
was
no
other
than
his
former
host
and
entertainer
,
"
Sinbad
the
Sailor
.
"
Отключить рекламу
Under
any
other
circumstances
,
Franz
would
have
found
it
impossible
to
resist
his
extreme
curiosity
to
know
more
of
so
singular
a
personage
,
and
with
that
intent
have
sought
to
renew
their
short
acquaintance
;
but
in
the
present
instance
,
the
confidential
nature
of
the
conversation
he
had
overheard
made
him
,
with
propriety
,
judge
that
his
appearance
at
such
a
time
would
be
anything
but
agreeable
.
As
we
have
seen
,
therefore
,
he
permitted
his
former
host
to
retire
without
attempting
a
recognition
,
but
fully
promising
himself
a
rich
indemnity
for
his
present
forbearance
should
chance
afford
him
another
opportunity
.
In
vain
did
Franz
endeavor
to
forget
the
many
perplexing
thoughts
which
assailed
him
;
in
vain
did
he
court
the
refreshment
of
sleep
.
Slumber
refused
to
visit
his
eyelids
and
the
night
was
passed
in
feverish
contemplation
of
the
chain
of
circumstances
tending
to
prove
the
identity
of
the
mysterious
visitant
to
the
Colosseum
with
the
inhabitant
of
the
grotto
of
Monte
Cristo
;
and
the
more
he
thought
,
the
firmer
grew
his
opinion
on
the
subject
.
Worn
out
at
length
,
he
fell
asleep
at
daybreak
,
and
did
not
awake
till
late
.
Like
a
genuine
Frenchman
,
Albert
had
employed
his
time
in
arranging
for
the
evening
's
diversion
;
he
had
sent
to
engage
a
box
at
the
Teatro
Argentino
;
and
Franz
,
having
a
number
of
letters
to
write
,
relinquished
the
carriage
to
Albert
for
the
whole
of
the
day
.
At
five
o'clock
Albert
returned
,
delighted
with
his
day
's
work
;
he
had
been
occupied
in
leaving
his
letters
of
introduction
,
and
had
received
in
return
more
invitations
to
balls
and
routs
than
it
would
be
possible
for
him
to
accept
;
besides
this
,
he
had
seen
(
as
he
called
it
)
all
the
remarkable
sights
at
Rome
.
Yes
,
in
a
single
day
he
had
accomplished
what
his
more
serious-minded
companion
would
have
taken
weeks
to
effect
.
Neither
had
he
neglected
to
ascertain
the
name
of
the
piece
to
be
played
that
night
at
the
Teatro
Argentino
,
and
also
what
performers
appeared
in
it
.
The
opera
of
"
Parisina
"
was
announced
for
representation
,
and
the
principal
actors
were
Coselli
,
Moriani
,
and
La
Specchia
.
The
young
men
,
therefore
,
had
reason
to
consider
themselves
fortunate
in
having
the
opportunity
of
hearing
one
of
the
best
works
by
the
composer
of
"
Lucia
di
Lammermoor
,
"
supported
by
three
of
the
most
renowned
vocalists
of
Italy
.
Albert
had
never
been
able
to
endure
the
Italian
theatres
,
with
their
orchestras
from
which
it
is
impossible
to
see
,
and
the
absence
of
balconies
,
or
open
boxes
;
all
these
defects
pressed
hard
on
a
man
who
had
had
his
stall
at
the
Bouffes
,
and
had
shared
a
lower
box
at
the
Opera
.