"Well, my news is good and bad," said Adolphe. "But I must warn you that it's more bad than good: no doubt they have invented a good many stories about you; but the truth is bad enough for anything."
"Your information is correct?" said Theophrastus with a sigh.
"I went to the source, the original documents," said Adolphe. "I 'll tell you what I learned; and you can set me right if I go wrong."
"Go on," said Theophrastus in a tone of patient resignation. "I must make the best of it."
"In the first place you were born in the month of October, 1693, and you are named Louis-Dominique Cartouche—"
"There's no point in calling me Cartouche," interrupted Theophrastus, pulling a minnow out of the bait-can. "There's no reason anyone should know it. You know what these country people are: they'd laugh at the idea. Call me the Child: I prefer it."
"You agree that Cartouche is your real name and not a nickname?" persisted Adolphe.
"Cut it out! Cut it out! It's a vile name!" said Theophrastus impatiently.
"They relate that you were well educated