"Madam, believe me, it was but by chance--"
"It is useless," she interrupted; "I know it all, and it is frightful!"
Then, in a heartrending appealing voice, she cried--
"My father is not a guilty man!"
I shuddered, and with hands outstretched cried--
"Madam, I know it; I know that the life of your father has been one of
the noblest and loveliest."
Odile had half-risen from her seat, as if to protest, by anticipation,
against any supposition that might be injurious to her father. Hearing me
myself taking up his defence, she sank back again, and covering her face
with her hands, the tears began to flow.
"God bless you, sir!" she exclaimed. "I should have died with the very
thought that a breath of suspicion was harboured against him."
"Ah! madam, who could possibly attach any reality to the action of a
somnambulist?"
"That is quite true, sir; I had had that thought myself, but
appearances--pardon me--yet I feared--still I knew Doctor Fritz was a man
of honour."
"Pray, madam, be calm."
"No," she cried, "let me weep on. It is such a relief; for ten years I
have suffered in secret. Oh, how I suffered! That secret, so long shut up
in my breast, was killing me.
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