table, “Hand him this,” he added. “Let him leave this very night. The police may have been notified. There is a train for Brussels at five minutes past eleven.” And, having bowed, he withdrew, no one addressing him a single word, so great was the astonishment of all the guests of this house, heretofore so peaceful. Overcome with stupor, Maxence had dropped upon his chair. Mlle. Gilberte alone retained some presence of mind. “It is a shame,” she exclaimed, “for us to give up thus! That man is an impostor, a wretch; he lies! Father, father!” M. Favoral had not waited to be called, and was standing up against the parlor-door, pale as death, and yet calm. “Why attempt any explanations?” he said. “The money is gone; and appearances are against me.” His wife had drawn near to him, and taken his hand. “The misfortune is immense,” she said, “but not irreparable. We will sell everything we have.” “Have you not friends? Are we not here,” insisted the others,—M. Desclavettes, M. Desormeaux, and M. Chapelain. Gently he pushed his wife aside, and coldly. “All we had,” he said, “would be as a grain of sand in an ocean. But we have no longer anything; we are ruined.” “Ruined!” exclaimed M. Desormeaux,—“ruined! And where are the forty-five thousand francs I placed into your hands?” He made no reply. “And our hundred and twenty thousand francs?” groaned M. and Mme. Desclavettes. “And my sixty thousand francs?” shouted M. Chapelain, with a blasphemous oath. The cashier shrugged his shoulders. “Lost,” he said, “irrevocably lost!” Then their rage exceeded all bounds. Then they forgot that this unfortunate man had been their friend for twenty years, that they were his guests; and they commenced heaping upon him threats and insults without name.