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Alexandre Dumas: The Count of Monte CristoChapter 96: The Contract. (continued)"I see no objection to that; my scruples do not go thus far." "Well, since you will grant me no more, I must be content with what you give me. But one word more, count." "What is it?" "Advice." "Be careful; advice is worse than a service." "Oh, you can give me this without compromising yourself." "Tell me what it is." "Is my wife's fortune five hundred thousand livres?" "That is the sum M. Danglars himself announced." "Must I receive it, or leave it in the hands of the notary?" "This is the way such affairs are generally arranged when it is wished to do them stylishly: Your two solicitors appoint a meeting, when the contract is signed, for the next or the following day; then they exchange the two portions, for which they each give a receipt; then, when the marriage is celebrated, they place the amount at your disposal as the chief member of the alliance." "Because," said Andrea, with a certain ill-concealed uneasiness, "I thought I heard my father-in-law say that he intended embarking our property in that famous railway affair of which you spoke just now." "Well," replied Monte Cristo, "it will be the way, everybody says, of trebling your fortune in twelve months. Baron Danglars is a good father, and knows how to calculate." "In that case," said Andrea, "everything is all right, excepting your refusal, which quite grieves me." "You must attribute it only to natural scruples under similar circumstances." "Well," said Andrea, "let it be as you wish. This evening, then, at nine o'clock." This is page 1165 of 1374. [Mark this Page] Mark any page to add this title to Your Bookshelf. (0 / 10 books on shelf) Buy a copy of The Count of Monte Cristo at Amazon.com
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