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"
Did
she
stay
long
there
?
"
"
An
hour
and
a
half
.
"
"
Did
she
return
home
?
"
Отключить рекламу
"
Directly
.
"
"
Well
,
my
dear
Bertuccio
,
"
said
the
count
,
"
I
now
advise
you
to
go
in
quest
of
the
little
estate
I
spoke
to
you
of
in
Normandy
.
"
Bertuccio
bowed
,
and
as
his
wishes
were
in
perfect
harmony
with
the
order
he
had
received
,
he
started
the
same
evening
.
M.
de
Villefort
kept
the
promise
he
had
made
to
Madame
Danglars
,
to
endeavor
to
find
out
how
the
Count
of
Monte
Cristo
had
discovered
the
history
of
the
house
at
Auteuil
.
He
wrote
the
same
day
for
the
required
information
to
M.
de
Boville
,
who
,
from
having
been
an
inspector
of
prisons
,
was
promoted
to
a
high
office
in
the
police
;
and
the
latter
begged
for
two
days
time
to
ascertain
exactly
who
would
be
most
likely
to
give
him
full
particulars
.
At
the
end
of
the
second
day
M.
de
Villefort
received
the
following
note
:
--
"
The
person
called
the
Count
of
Monte
Cristo
is
an
intimate
acquaintance
of
Lord
Wilmore
,
a
rich
foreigner
,
who
is
sometimes
seen
in
Paris
and
who
is
there
at
this
moment
;
he
is
also
known
to
the
Abbe
Busoni
,
a
Sicilian
priest
,
of
high
repute
in
the
East
,
where
he
has
done
much
good
.
"
Отключить рекламу
M.
de
Villefort
replied
by
ordering
the
strictest
inquiries
to
be
made
respecting
these
two
persons
;
his
orders
were
executed
,
and
the
following
evening
he
received
these
details
:
--
"
The
abbe
,
who
was
in
Paris
only
for
a
month
,
inhabited
a
small
two-storied
house
behind
Saint
--
Sulpice
;
there
were
two
rooms
on
each
floor
and
he
was
the
only
tenant
.
The
two
lower
rooms
consisted
of
a
dining-room
,
with
a
table
,
chairs
,
and
side-board
of
walnut
--
and
a
wainscoted
parlor
,
without
ornaments
,
carpet
,
or
timepiece
.
It
was
evident
that
the
abbe
limited
himself
to
objects
of
strict
necessity
.
He
preferred
to
use
the
sitting-room
upstairs
,
which
was
more
library
than
parlor
,
and
was
furnished
with
theological
books
and
parchments
,
in
which
he
delighted
to
bury
himself
for
months
at
a
time
,
according
to
his
valet
de
chambre
.
His
valet
looked
at
the
visitors
through
a
sort
of
wicket
;
and
if
their
faces
were
unknown
to
him
or
displeased
him
,
he
replied
that
the
abbe
was
not
in
Paris
,
an
answer
which
satisfied
most
persons
,
because
the
abbe
was
known
to
be
a
great
traveller
.
Besides
,
whether
at
home
or
not
,
whether
in
Paris
or
Cairo
,
the
abbe
always
left
something
to
give
away
,
which
the
valet
distributed
through
this
wicket
in
his
master
's
name
.
The
other
room
near
the
library
was
a
bedroom
.
A
bed
without
curtains
,
four
arm-chairs
,
and
a
couch
,
covered
with
yellow
Utrecht
velvet
,
composed
,
with
a
prie-Dieu
,
all
its
furniture
.
Lord
Wilmore
resided
in
Rue
Fontaine
--
Saint-George
.
He
was
one
of
those
English
tourists
who
consume
a
large
fortune
in
travelling
.
He
hired
the
apartment
in
which
he
lived
furnished
,
passed
only
a
few
hours
in
the
day
there
,
and
rarely
slept
there
.
One
of
his
peculiarities
was
never
to
speak
a
word
of
French
,
which
he
however
wrote
with
great
facility
.
"