Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Embezzler
The apartment, rented for sixty francs a year, was composed of four enormous rooms that it was impossible to heat. Madame Burle slept in the largest room; her son, the captain-treasurer, had taken the room over looking the street] near the dining-room; and little Charles, in his small iron bed, was lost in the depths of an immense draw ing-room with mildewed hangings, which was not used. The few articles of furniture belonging to Captain Burle and his mother, massive mahogany of the Empire period, that the frequent moving from one barrack to another had indented and robbed of their copper trimmings, were dwarfed beneath the high ceilings, from which seemed to fall a fine shadowy dust. The tiled ?oor, painted red, cold and hard, froze one's feet; and, in front of the chairs, there was nothing but small squares of worn-out carpet betokening.
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