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"All well at home?" demanded the receiver, weighing the copper: "your mother and sister are in good health?"
"Yes, Micou."
"The children also?"
"The children also."
"And your nephew Andre, where is he?"
"Don't speak of it! he was in luck yesterday. Barbillon and the Big Cripple took him away; he only came back this morning; he is already gone on an errand to the post-office, Rue Jean Jacques Rousseau."
"And your brother Martial, is still savage?"
"I do not know anything about him."
"You don't know anything about him?"
"No," said Nicholas, affecting an indifferent manner; "for two days we have not seen him; perhaps he has returned to his old trade of a poacher--unless his boat, which was very old, has sunk in the river, and he with--"
"That don't give you much concern, good-for-nothing, for you can't feel it much!"
"It is true, one has his own ideas. How many pounds of copper are there?"
"You made a good guess--one hundred and forty-eight pounds, my boy."
"And you will owe me--"
"Exactly thirty francs."
"Thirty francs, when copper is a franc a pound? Thirty francs!"
"We will say thirty-five, and don't turn up your nose, or I will send you to the devil--you, copper, dog and cart."
"But, Micou you cheat me too much! there's no sense in it."
"Prove to me this copper belongs to you, and I will give you fifteen sous a pound for it."
"Always the same song. You are all alike; get out, you nest of thieves! Can one gouge a friend in such style? But this is not all. If I take your merchandise in exchange, you should give me good measure at least!"
"Just so! What do you want? chains or hooks for your boat?"
"No; I want four or five iron plates, very strong, such as would answer to line window-shutters with."
"I have just what you want--the third of an inch thick; a pistol ball could not go through."
"Just the thing!"
"What size?"
"In all, seven or eight feet square."
"Good! what else do you want?"
"Three iron bars, three to four feet long, and two inches square."
"I tore down the other day some grating from a window; that will suit you like a glove. What next?"
"Two strong hinges and a latch; to fix and shut at will, a wicket two feet square."
"A trap, you mean to say?"
"No; a wicket."
"I cannot comprehend what you can want with it?"
"That is possible, but I can."
"Very well, you have only to choose; there are the hinges. What else do you need?"
"That's all."
"It is not much."
"Get my goods ready at once, Daddy Micou, I will take them as I pa.s.s; I have some more errands to do."
"With your cart? I say, I saw a bale of goods in the bottom; is it something more that you have taken from everybody's cupboard, little glutton?"
"As you say, Daddy Micou: but you don't eat this; don't make me wait for my iron, for I must be back to the island by twelve o'clock."
"Don't be uneasy, it is eight o'clock; if you are not going far, in an hour you can return, all will be ready, Will you take a drop?"
"To be sure; you can well afford to pay it!"
Daddy Micou took out of an old chest a bottle of brandy, a cracked gla.s.s, a cup without a handle, and poured out the liquor.
"Your health, old 'un!"
"Yours, my boy, and the ladies' at home!"
"Thank you; and your lodgings come on well?"
"So, so. I have always some lodgers for whom I fear the visits of the grabs; but they pay more in consequence."
"Why?"
"How stupid you are! Sometimes I lodge as I buy; to such I no more ask for their pa.s.sports than I ask you for an invoice."
"Understood! but to those you let as dear as you buy of me cheap."