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    Chapter 8 - Page 2

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    shuddered all over with horror; "My God!" he whispered in despair: "what's the matter with me? Is that hidden? Is that the way to hide things?"

    He had not reckoned on having trinkets to hide. He had only thought of money, and so had not prepared a hiding-place.

    "But now, now, what am I glad of?" he thought, "Is that hiding things? My reason's deserting me--simply!"

    He sat down on the sofa in exhaustion and was at once shaken by another unbearable fit of shivering. Mechanically he drew from a chair beside him his old student's winter coat, which was still warm though almost in rags, covered himself up with it and once more sank into drowsiness and delirium. He lost consciousness.

    Not more than five minutes had passed when he jumped up a second time, and at once pounced in a frenzy on his clothes again.

    "How could I go to sleep again with nothing done? Yes, yes; I have not taken the loop off the armhole! I forgot it, forgot a thing like that! Such a piece of evidence!"

    He pulled off the noose, hurriedly cut it to pieces and threw the bits among his linen under the pillow.

    "Pieces of torn linen couldn't rouse suspicion, whatever happened; I think not, I think not, any way!" he repeated, standing in the middle of the room, and with painful concentration he fell to gazing about him again, at the floor and everywhere, trying to make sure he had not forgotten anything. The conviction that all his faculties, even memory, and the simplest power of reflection were failing him, began to be an insufferable torture.

    "Surely it isn't beginning already! Surely it isn't my punishment coming upon me? It is!"

    The frayed rags he had cut off his trousers were actually lying on the floor in the middle of the room, where anyone coming in would see them!

    "What is the matter with me!" he cried again, like one distraught.

    Then a strange idea entered his head; that, perhaps, all his clothes were covered with blood, that, perhaps, there were a great many stains, but that he did not see them, did not notice them because his perceptions were failing, were going to pieces . . . his reason was clouded. . . . Suddenly he remembered that there had been blood on the purse too. "Ah! Then there must be blood on the pocket too, for I put the wet purse in my pocket!"

    In a flash he had turned the pocket inside out and, yes!--there were traces, stains on the lining of the pocket!

    "So my reason has not quite deserted me, so I still have some sense and memory, since I guessed it of myself," he thought triumphantly, with a deep sigh of relief; "it's simply the weakness of fever, a moment's delirium," and he tore the whole lining out of the left pocket of his trousers. At that instant the sunlight fell on his left boot; on the sock which poked out from the boot, he fancied there were traces! He flung off his boots; "traces indeed! The tip of the
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