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621
"
Come
!
"
said
Phileas
Fogg
to
his
servant
.
622
"
But
let
them
at
least
give
me
back
my
shoes
!
"
cried
Passepartout
angrily
.
623
"
Ah
,
these
are
pretty
dear
shoes
!
"
he
muttered
,
as
they
were
handed
to
him
.
"
More
than
a
thousand
pounds
apiece
;
besides
,
they
pinch
my
feet
.
"
Отключить рекламу
624
Mr.
Fogg
,
offering
his
arm
to
Aouda
,
then
departed
,
followed
by
the
crestfallen
Passepartout
.
Fix
still
nourished
hopes
that
the
robber
would
not
,
after
all
,
leave
the
two
thousand
pounds
behind
him
,
but
would
decide
to
serve
out
his
week
in
jail
,
and
issued
forth
on
Mr.
Fogg
's
traces
.
That
gentleman
took
a
carriage
,
and
the
party
were
soon
landed
on
one
of
the
quays
.
625
The
Rangoon
was
moored
half
a
mile
off
in
the
harbour
,
its
signal
of
departure
hoisted
at
the
mast-head
.
Eleven
o'clock
was
striking
;
Mr.
Fogg
was
an
hour
in
advance
of
time
.
Fix
saw
them
leave
the
carriage
and
push
off
in
a
boat
for
the
steamer
,
and
stamped
his
feet
with
disappointment
.
626
"
The
rascal
is
off
,
after
all
!
"
he
exclaimed
.
"
Two
thousand
pounds
sacrificed
!
He
's
as
prodigal
as
a
thief
!
I
'll
follow
him
to
the
end
of
the
world
if
necessary
;
but
,
at
the
rate
he
is
going
on
,
the
stolen
money
will
soon
be
exhausted
.
"
627
The
detective
was
not
far
wrong
in
making
this
conjecture
.
Since
leaving
London
,
what
with
travelling
expenses
,
bribes
,
the
purchase
of
the
elephant
,
bails
,
and
fines
,
Mr.
Fogg
had
already
spent
more
than
five
thousand
pounds
on
the
way
,
and
the
percentage
of
the
sum
recovered
from
the
bank
robber
promised
to
the
detectives
,
was
rapidly
diminishing
.
Отключить рекламу
628
The
Rangoon
--
one
of
the
Peninsular
and
Oriental
Company
's
boats
plying
in
the
Chinese
and
Japanese
seas
--
was
a
screw
steamer
,
built
of
iron
,
weighing
about
seventeen
hundred
and
seventy
tons
,
and
with
engines
of
four
hundred
horse-power
.
She
was
as
fast
,
but
not
as
well
fitted
up
,
as
the
Mongolia
,
and
Aouda
was
not
as
comfortably
provided
for
on
board
of
her
as
Phileas
Fogg
could
have
wished
.
However
,
the
trip
from
Calcutta
to
Hong
Kong
only
comprised
some
three
thousand
five
hundred
miles
,
occupying
from
ten
to
twelve
days
,
and
the
young
woman
was
not
difficult
to
please
.
629
During
the
first
days
of
the
journey
Aouda
became
better
acquainted
with
her
protector
,
and
constantly
gave
evidence
of
her
deep
gratitude
for
what
he
had
done
.
The
phlegmatic
gentleman
listened
to
her
,
apparently
at
least
,
with
coldness
,
neither
his
voice
nor
his
manner
betraying
the
slightest
emotion
;
but
he
seemed
to
be
always
on
the
watch
that
nothing
should
be
wanting
to
Aouda
's
comfort
.
He
visited
her
regularly
each
day
at
certain
hours
,
not
so
much
to
talk
himself
,
as
to
sit
and
hear
her
talk
.
He
treated
her
with
the
strictest
politeness
,
but
with
the
precision
of
an
automaton
,
the
movements
of
which
had
been
arranged
for
this
purpose
.
Aouda
did
not
quite
know
what
to
make
of
him
,
though
Passepartout
had
given
her
some
hints
of
his
master
's
eccentricity
,
and
made
her
smile
by
telling
her
of
the
wager
which
was
sending
him
round
the
world
.
After
all
,
she
owed
Phileas
Fogg
her
life
,
and
she
always
regarded
him
through
the
exalting
medium
of
her
gratitude
.
630
Aouda
confirmed
the
Parsee
guide
's
narrative
of
her
touching
history
.
She
did
,
indeed
,
belong
to
the
highest
of
the
native
races
of
India
.
Many
of
the
Parsee
merchants
have
made
great
fortunes
there
by
dealing
in
cotton
;
and
one
of
them
,
Sir
Jametsee
Jeejeebhoy
,
was
made
a
baronet
by
the
English
government
.
Aouda
was
a
relative
of
this
great
man
,
and
it
was
his
cousin
,
Jeejeeh
,
whom
she
hoped
to
join
at
Hong
Kong
.