CHAPTER XV. FOUND Guiseppe Pallanza slept soundly all night, while I took snatches of sleep in the armchair by his bedside. At nine o'clock in the morning he awoke, feeling much stronger, and after I had given him something to eat I prepared to go out. "Where are you going, Signor?" asked Pallanza in an anxious tone. "I am going to send a doctor to see you, and then I am going to the Casa Angello." "And for what reason?" "To bring Signorina Bianca here!" "Do you know the Signorina Bianca?" "Very well, Signor Pallanza. I am the Englishman of whom you have no doubt heard her speak." "Signor Hugo! yes, I know," muttered Guiseppe; and then, after a pause, "I wish to speak to you, I wish to tell you something." "You shall tell me all shortly, but meanwhile lie down quietly, and when th

