âIt always comes out the same, a journey, a wicked man, somebodyâs treachery, a deathbed, a letter, unexpected news. I think itâs all nonsense. Shatushka, what do you think? If people can tell lies why shouldnât a card?â She suddenly threw the cards together again. âI said the same thing to Mother Praskovya, sheâs a very venerable woman, she used to run to my cell to tell her fortune on the cards, without letting the Mother Superior know. Yes, and she wasnât the only one who came to me. They sigh, and shake their heads at me, they talk it over while I laugh. âWhere are you going to get a letter from, Mother Praskovya,â I say, âwhen you havenât had one for twelve years?â Her daughter had been taken away to Turkey by her husband, and for twelve years there had been no sight nor sound of her. Only I was sitting the next evening at tea with the Mother Superior (she was a princess by birth), there was some lady there too, a visitor, a great dreamer, and a little monk from Athos was sitting there too, a rather absurd man to my thinking. What do you think, Shatushka, that monk from Athos had brought Mother Praskovya a letter from her daughter in Turkey, that morningâ âso much for the knave of diamondsâ âunexpected news!
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