Twenty Years After: Project Gutenberg License
Twenty Years After: Project Gutenberg License
Twenty Years After: Project Gutenberg License
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Language: English
CONTENTS
. e Rencontre.
. Skirmishing.
. e Monk.
. e Absolution.
. In whi it is proved that first Impulses are oentimes the best.
. e Riot.
. e Interview.
. e Flight.
. e Scotman.
. e Avenger.
. Noble Natures never lose Courage, nor good Stomas their Appetites.
. London.
. e Trial.
. Whitehall.
. e Workmen.
. Remember!
vi
I a splendid amber of the Palais Royal, formerly styled the Palais Cardinal, a
man was siing in deep reverie, his head supported on his hands, leaning over a
gilt and inlaid table whi was covered with leers and papers. Behind this figure
glowed a vast fireplace alive with leaping flames; great logs of oak blazed and cra-
led on the polished brass andirons whose flier shone upon the superb habiliments
of the lonely tenant of the room, whi was illumined grandly by twin candelabra
ri with wax-lights.
Any one who happened at that moment to contemplate that red simar--the
gorgeous robe of office--and the ri lace, or who gazed on that pale brow, bent
in anxious meditation, might, in the solitude of that apartment, combined with
the silence of the ante-ambers and the measured paces of the guards upon the
landing-place, have fancied that the shade of Cardinal Rielieu lingered still in his
accustomed haunt.
It was, alas! the ghost of former greatness. France enfeebled, the authority
of her sovereign contemned, her nobles returning to their former turbulence and
insolence, her enemies within her frontiers--all proved the great Rielieu no longer
in existence.
In truth, that the red simar whi occupied the wonted place was his no longer,
was still more strikingly obvious from the isolation whi seemed, as we have ob-
served, more appropriate to a phantom than a living creature--from the corridors
deserted by courtiers, and courts crowded with guards--from that spirit of bier
ridicule, whi, arising from the streets below, penetrated through the very case-
ments of the room, whi resounded with the murmurs of a whole city leagued
against the minister; as well as from the distant and incessant sounds of guns firing-
-let off, happily, without other end or aim, except to show to the guards, the Swiss
troops and the military who surrounded the Palais Royal, that the people were pos-
sessed of arms.
viii
e shade of Rielieu was Mazarin. Now Mazarin was alone and defenceless,
as he well knew.
"Foreigner!" he ejaculated, "Italian! that is their mean yet mighty byword of
reproa--the watword with whi they assassinated, hanged, and made away
with Concini; and if I gave them their way they would assassinate, hang, and make
away with me in the same manner, although they have nothing to complain of
except a tax or two now and then. Idiots! ignorant of their real enemies, they do
not perceive that it is not the Italian who speaks Fren badly, but those who can
say fine things to them in the purest Parisian accent, who are their real foes.
"Yes, yes," Mazarin continued, whilst his wonted smile, full of subtlety, lent a
strange expression to his pale lips; "yes, these noises prove to me, indeed, that the
destiny of favorites is precarious; but ye shall know I am no ordinary favorite. No!
e Earl of Essex, 'tis true, wore a splendid ring, set with diamonds, given him by his
royal mistress, whilst I--I have nothing but a simple circlet of gold, with a cipher on
it and a date; but that ring has been blessed in the apel of the Palais Royal, * so they
will never ruin me, as they long to do, and whilst they shout, 'Down with Mazarin!'
I, unknown, and unperceived by them, incite them to cry out, 'Long live the Duke de
Beaufort' one day; another, 'Long live the Prince de Conde;' and again, 'Long live the
parliament!'" And at this word the smile on the cardinal's lips assumed an expression
of hatred, of whi his mild countenance seemed incapable. "e parliament! We
shall soon see how to dispose," he continued, "of the parliament! Both Orleans and
Montargis are ours. It will be a work of time, but those who have begun by crying
out: Down with Mazarin! will finish by shouting out, Down with all the people I
have mentioned, ea in his turn.
"Rielieu, whom they hated during his lifetime and whom they now praise aer
his death, was even less popular than I am. Oen he was driven away, oener still
had he a dread of being sent away. e queen will never banish me, and even were
I obliged to yield to the populace she would yield with me; if I fly, she will fly; and
then we shall see how the rebels will get on without either king or queen.
"Oh, were I not a foreigner! were I but a Frenman! were I but of gentle
birth!"
e position of the cardinal was indeed critical, and recent events had added to
his difficulties. Discontent had long pervaded the lower ranks of society in France.
Crushed and impoverished by taxation--imposed by Mazarin, whose avarice im-
pelled him to grind them down to the very dust--the people, as the Advocate-
ix
General Talon described it, had nothing le to them except their souls; and as those
could not be sold by auction, they began to murmur. Patience had in vain been
recommended to them by reports of brilliant victories gained by France; laurels,
however, were not meat and drink, and the people had for some time been in a state
of discontent.
Had this been all, it might not, perhaps, have greatly signified; for when the
lower classes alone complained, the court of France, separated as it was from the
poor by the intervening classes of the gentry and the bourgeoisie, seldom listened
to their voice; but unluily, Mazarin had had the imprudence to aa the mag-
istrates and had sold no less than twelve appointments in the Court of Requests,
at a high price; and as the officers of that court paid very dearly for their places,
and as the addition of twelve new colleagues would necessarily lower the value of
ea place, the old functionaries formed a union amongst themselves, and, enraged,
swore on the Bible not to allow of this addition to their number, but to resist all the
persecutions whi might ensue; and should any one of them ance to forfeit his
post by this resistance, to combine to indemnify him for his loss.
Now the following occurrences had taken place between the two contending
parties.
On the seventh of January between seven and eight hundred tradesmen had
assembled in Paris to discuss a new tax whi was to be levied on house property.
ey deputed ten of their number to wait upon the Duke of Orleans, who, according
to his custom, affected popularity. e duke received them and they informed him
that they were resolved not to pay this tax, even if they were obliged to defend
themselves against its collectors by force of arms. ey were listened to with great
politeness by the duke, who held out hopes of easier measures, promised to speak
in their behalf to the queen, and dismissed them with the ordinary expression of
royalty, "We will see what we can do."
Two days aerward these same magistrates appeared before the cardinal and
their spokesman addressed Mazarin with so mu fearlessness and determination
that the minister was astounded and sent the deputation away with the same answer
as it had received from the Duke of Orleans--that he would see what could be done;
and in accordance with that intention a council of state was assembled and the
superintendent of finance was summoned.
is man, named Emery, was the object of popular detestation, in the first
place because he was superintendent of finance, and every superintendent of finance
deserved to be hated; in the second place, because he rather deserved the odium
whi he had incurred.
He was the son of a banker at Lyons named Particelli, who, aer becom-
ing a bankrupt, ose to ange his name to Emery; and Cardinal Rielieu having
discovered in him great financial aptitude, had introduced him with a strong rec-
x
ommendation to Louis XIII. under his assumed name, in order that he might be
appointed to the post he subsequently held.
"You surprise me!" exclaimed the monar. "I am rejoiced to hear you speak
of Monsieur d'Emery as calculated for a post whi requires a man of probity. I was
really afraid that you were going to force that villain Particelli upon me."
"Sire," replied Rielieu, "rest assured that Particelli, the man to whom your
majesty refers, has been hanged."
"Ah; so mu the beer!" exclaimed the king. "It is not for nothing that I am
styled Louis the Just," and he signed Emery's appointment.
is was the same Emery who became eventually superintendent of finance.
He was sent for by the ministers and he came before them pale and trembling,
declaring that his son had very nearly been assassinated the day before, near the
palace. e mob had insulted him on account of the ostentatious luxury of his wife,
whose house was hung with red velvet edged with gold fringe. is lady was the
daughter of Niolas de Camus, who arrived in Paris with twenty francs in his
poet, became secretary of state, and accumulated wealth enough to divide nine
millions of francs among his ildren and to keep an income of forty thousand for
himself.
e fact was that Emery's son had run a great ance of being suffocated,
one of the rioters having proposed to squeeze him until he gave up all the gold he
had swallowed. Nothing, therefore, was seled that day, as Emery's head was not
steady enough for business aer su an occurrence.
On the next day Mathieu Mole, the ief president, whose courage at this
crisis, says the Cardinal de Retz, was equal to that of the Duc de Beaufort and
the Prince de Conde--in other words, of the two men who were considered the
bravest in France--had been aaed in his turn. e people threatened to hold him
responsible for the evils that hung over them. But the ief president had replied
with his habitual coolness, without betraying either disturbance or surprise, that
should the agitators refuse obedience to the king's wishes he would have gallows
erected in the public squares and proceed at once to hang the most active among
them. To whi the others had responded that they would be glad to see the gallows
erected; they would serve for the hanging of those detestable judges who purased
favor at court at the price of the people's misery.
Nor was this all. On the eleventh the queen in going to mass at Notre Dame,
as she always did on Saturdays, was followed by more than two hundred women
demanding justice. ese poor creatures had no bad intentions. ey wished only
to be allowed to fall on their knees before their sovereign, and that they might
move her to compassion; but they were prevented by the royal guard and the queen
proceeded on her way, haughtily disdainful of their entreaties.
At length parliament was convoked; the authority of the king was to be main-
xi
tained.
One day--it was the morning of the day my story begins--the king, Louis
XIV., then ten years of age, went in state, under pretext of returning thanks for his
recovery from the small-pox, to Notre Dame. He took the opportunity of calling out
his guard, the Swiss troops and the musketeers, and he had planted them round the
Palais Royal, on the quays, and on the Pont Neuf. Aer mass the young monar
drove to the Parliament House, where, upon the throne, he hastily confirmed not
only su edicts as he had already passed, but issued new ones, ea one, according
to Cardinal de Retz, more ruinous than the others--a proceeding whi drew forth a
strong remonstrance from the ief president, Mole--whilst President Blancmesnil
and Councillor Broussel raised their voices in indignation against fresh taxes.
e king returned amidst the silence of a vast multitude to the Palais Royal.
All minds were uneasy, most were foreboding, many of the people used threatening
language.
At first, indeed, they were doubtful whether the king's visit to the parliament
had been in order to lighten or increase their burdens; but scarcely was it known
that the taxes were to be still further increased, when cries of "Down with Mazarin!"
"Long live Broussel!" "Long live Blancmesnil!" resounded through the city. For the
people had learned that Broussel and Blancmesnil had made speees in their behalf,
and, although the eloquence of these deputies had been without avail, it had none
the less won for them the people's good-will. All aempts to disperse the groups
collected in the streets, or silence their exclamations, were in vain. Orders had just
been given to the royal guards and the Swiss guards, not only to stand firm, but to
send out patrols to the streets of Saint Denis and Saint Martin, where the people
thronged and where they were the most vociferous, when the mayor of Paris was
announced at the Palais Royal.
He was shown in directly; he came to say that if these offensive precautions
were not discontinued, in two hours Paris would be under arms.
Deliberations were being held when a lieutenant in the guards, named Com-
minges, made his appearance, with his clothes all torn, his face streaming with
blood. e queen on seeing him uered a cry of surprise and asked him what was
going on.
As the mayor had foreseen, the sight of the guards had exasperated the mob.
e tocsin was sounded. Comminges had arrested one of the ringleaders and had
ordered him to be hanged near the cross of Du Trahoir; but in aempting to exe-
cute this command the soldiery were aaed in the market-place with stones and
halberds; the delinquent had escaped to the Rue des Lombards and rushed into a
house. ey broke open the doors and seared the dwelling, but in vain. Com-
minges, wounded by a stone whi had stru him on the forehead, had le a piet
in the street and returned to the Palais Royal, followed by a menacing crowd, to tell
xii
his story.
is account confirmed that of the mayor. e authorities were not in a condi-
tion to cope with serious revolt. Mazarin endeavored to circulate among the people
a report that troops had only been stationed on the quays and on the Pont Neuf,
on account of the ceremonial of the day, and that they would soon withdraw. In
fact, about four o'clo they were all concentrated about the Palais Royal, the courts
and ground floors of whi were filled with musketeers and Swiss guards, and there
awaited the outcome of all this disturbance.
Su was the state of affairs at the very moment we introduced our readers
to the study of Cardinal Mazarin--once that of Cardinal Rielieu. We have seen in
what state of mind he listened to the murmurs from below, whi even reaed him
in his seclusion, and to the guns, the firing of whi resounded through that room.
All at once he raised his head; his brow slightly contracted like that of a man who
has formed a resolution; he fixed his eyes upon an enormous clo that was about
to strike ten, and taking up a whistle of silver gilt that stood upon the table near
him, he shrilled it twice.
A door hidden in the tapestry opened noiselessly and a man in bla silently
advanced and stood behind the air on whi Mazarin sat.
"Bernouin," said the cardinal, not turning round, for having whistled, he knew
that it was his valet-de-ambre who was behind him; "what musketeers are now
within the palace?"
"e Bla Musketeers, my lord."
"What company?"
"Treville's company."
"Is there any officer belonging to this company in the ante-amber?"
"Lieutenant d'Artagnan."
"A man on whom we can depend, I hope."
"Yes, my lord."
"Give me a uniform of one of these musketeers and help me to put it on."
e valet went out as silently as he had entered and appeared in a few minutes
bringing the dress demanded.
e cardinal, in deep thought and in silence, began to take off the robes of
state he had assumed in order to be present at the siing of parliament, and to aire
himself in the military coat, whi he wore with a certain degree of easy grace,
owing to his former campaigns in Italy. When he was completely dressed he said:
"Send hither Monsieur d'Artagnan."
e valet went out of the room, this time by the centre door, but still as silently
as before; one might have fancied him an apparition.
When he was le alone the cardinal looked at himself in the glass with a
feeling of self-satisfaction. Still young--for he was scarcely forty-six years of age--he
xiii
possessed great elegance of form and was above the middle height; his complexion
was brilliant and beautiful; his glance full of expression; his nose, though large, was
well proportioned; his forehead broad and majestic; his hair, of a estnut color, was
curled slightly; his beard, whi was darker than his hair, was turned carefully with
a curling iron, a practice that greatly improved it. Aer a short time the cardinal
arranged his shoulder belt, then looked with great complacency at his hands, whi
were most elegant and of whi he took the greatest care; and throwing on one side
the large kid gloves tried on at first, as belonging to the uniform, he put on others
of silk only. At this instant the door opened.
"Monsieur d'Artagnan," said the valet-de-ambre.
An officer, as he spoke, entered the apartment. He was a man between thirty-
nine and forty years of age, of medium height but a very well proportioned figure;
with an intellectual and animated physiognomy; his beard bla, and his hair turn-
ing gray, as oen happens when people have found life either too gay or too sad,
more especially when they happen to be of swart complexion.
D'Artagnan advanced a few steps into the apartment.
How perfectly he remembered his former entrance into that very room! See-
ing, however, no one there except a musketeer of his own troop, he fixed his eyes
upon the supposed soldier, in whose dress, nevertheless, he recognized at the first
glance the cardinal.
e lieutenant remained standing in a dignified but respectful posture, su
as became a man of good birth, who had in the course of his life been frequently in
the society of the highest nobles.
e cardinal looked at him with a cunning rather than serious glance, yet he
examined his countenance with aention and aer a momentary silence said:
"You are Monsieur d'Artagnan?"
"I am that individual," replied the officer.
Mazarin gazed once more at a countenance full of intelligence, the play of
whi had been, nevertheless, subdued by age and experience; and D'Artagnan re-
ceived the penetrating glance like one who had formerly sustained many a searing
look, very different, indeed, from those whi were inquiringly directed on him at
that instant.
"Sir," resumed the cardinal, "you are to come with me, or rather, I am to go
with you."
"I am at your command, my lord," returned D'Artagnan.
"I wish to visit in person the outposts whi surround the Palais Royal; do you
suppose that there is any danger in so doing?"
"Danger, my lord!" exclaimed D'Artagnan with a look of astonishment, "what
danger?"
"I am told that there is a general insurrection."
xiv
"e uniform of the king's musketeers carries a certain respect with it, and
even if that were not the case I would engage with four of my men to put to flight
a hundred of these clowns."
"Did you witness the injury sustained by Comminges?"
"Monsieur de Comminges is in the guards and not in the musketeers----"
"Whi means, I suppose, that the musketeers are beer soldiers than the
guards." e cardinal smiled as he spoke.
"Every one likes his own uniform best, my lord."
"Myself excepted," and again Mazarin smiled; "for you perceive that I have
le off mine and put on yours."
"Lord bless us! this is modesty indeed!" cried D'Artagnan. "Had I su a
uniform as your eminence possesses, I protest I should be mightily content, and I
would take an oath never to wear any other costume----"
"Yes, but for to-night's adventure I don't suppose my dress would have been
a very safe one. Give me my felt hat, Bernouin."
e valet instantly brought to his master a regimental hat with a wide brim.
e cardinal put it on in military style.
"Your horses are ready saddled in their stables, are they not?" he said, turning
to D'Artagnan.
"Yes, my lord."
"Well, let us set out."
"How many men does your eminence wish to escort you?"
"You say that with four men you will undertake to disperse a hundred low
fellows; as it may happen that we shall have to encounter two hundred, take eight-
---"
"As many as my lord wishes."
"I will follow you. is way--light us downstairs Bernouin."
e valet held a wax-light; the cardinal took a key from his bureau and open-
ing the door of a secret stair descended into the court of the Palais Royal.
. A Nightly Patrol.
I ten minutes Mazarin and his party were traversing the street "Les Bons Enfants"
behind the theatre built by Rielieu expressly for the play of "Mirame," and in
whi Mazarin, who was an amateur of music, but not of literature, had introduced
into France the first opera that was ever acted in that country.
e appearance of the town denoted the greatest agitation. Numberless
groups paraded the streets and, whatever D'Artagnan might think of it, it was ob-
vious that the citizens had for the night laid aside their usual forbearance, in order
to assume a warlike aspect. From time to time noises came in the direction of the
public markets. e report of firearms was heard near the Rue Saint Denis and
occasionally ur bells began to ring indiscriminately and at the caprice of the
populace. D'Artagnan, meantime, pursued his way with the indifference of a man
upon whom su acts of folly made no impression. When he approaed a group in
the middle of the street he urged his horse upon it without a word of warning; and
the members of the group, whether rebels or not, as if they knew with what sort of
a man they had to deal, at once gave place to the patrol. e cardinal envied that
composure, whi he aributed to the habit of meeting danger; but none the less he
conceived for the officer under whose orders he had for the moment placed himself,
that consideration whi even prudence pays to careless courage. On approaing
an outpost near the Barriere des Sergens, the sentinel cried out, "Who's there?" and
D'Artagnan answered--having first asked the word of the cardinal--"Louis and Ro-
croy." Aer whi he inquired if Lieutenant Comminges were not the commanding
officer at the outpost. e soldier replied by pointing out to him an officer who was
conversing, on foot, his hand upon the ne of a horse on whi the individual to
whom he was talking sat. Here was the officer D'Artagnan was seeking.
"Here is Monsieur Comminges," said D'Artagnan, returning to the cardinal.
He instantly retired, from a feeling of respectful delicacy; it was, however, evi-
dent that the cardinal was recognized by both Comminges and the other officers on
horseba.
xvi
"Well done, Guitant," cried the cardinal to the equestrian; "I see plainly that,
notwithstanding the sixty-four years that have passed over your head, you are still
the same man, active and zealous. What were you saying to this youngster?"
"My lord," replied Guitant, "I was observing that we live in troublous times
and that to-day's events are very like those in the days of the Ligue, of whi I heard
so mu in my youth. Are you aware that the mob have even suggested throwing
up barricades in the Rue Saint Denis and the Rue Saint Antoine?"
"And what was Comminges saying to you in reply, my good Guitant?"
"My lord," said Comminges, "I answered that to compose a Ligue only one
ingredient was wanting--in my opinion an essential one--a Duc de Guise; moreover,
no generation ever does the same thing twice."
"No, but they mean to make a Fronde, as they call it," said Guitant.
"And what is a Fronde?" inquired Mazarin.
"My lord, Fronde is the name the discontented give to their party."
"And what is the origin of this name?"
"It seems that some days since Councillor Baaumont remarked at the palace
that rebels and agitators reminded him of soolboys slinging--qui frondent--stones
from the moats round Paris, young urins who run off the moment the constable
appears, only to return to their diversion the instant his ba is turned. So they have
pied up the word and the insurrectionists are called 'Frondeurs,' and yesterday
every article sold was 'a la Fronde;' bread 'a la Fronde,' hats 'a la Fronde,' to say
nothing of gloves, poet-handkeriefs, and fans; but listen----"
At that moment a window opened and a man began to sing:
nothing except the mass, so everything went to destruction. Come, Guitant, come
along, and let's see if they keep wat at the inze-Vingts as at the Barriere des
Sergens."
And waving his hand to Comminges he rejoined D'Artagnan, who instantly
put himself at the head of his troop, followed by the cardinal, Guitant and the rest
of the escort.
"Just so," muered Comminges, looking aer Mazarin. "True, I forgot; pro-
vided he can get money out of the people, that is all he wants."
e street of Saint Honore, when the cardinal and his party passed through
it, was crowded by an assemblage who, standing in groups, discussed the edicts of
that memorable day. ey pitied the young king, who was unconsciously ruining
his country, and threw all the odium of his proceedings on Mazarin. Addresses
to the Duke of Orleans and to Conde were suggested. Blancmesnil and Broussel
seemed in the highest favor.
D'Artagnan passed through the very midst of this discontented mob just as if
his horse and he had been made of iron. Mazarin and Guitant conversed together in
whispers. e musketeers, who had already discovered who Mazarin was, followed
in profound silence. In the street of Saint omas-du-Louvre they stopped at the
barrier distinguished by the name of inze-Vingts. Here Guitant spoke to one of
the subalterns, asking how maers were progressing.
"Ah, captain!" said the officer, "everything is quiet hereabout--if I did not know
that something is going on in yonder house!"
And he pointed to a magnificent hotel situated on the very spot whereon the
Vaudeville now stands.
"In that hotel? it is the Hotel Rambouillet," cried Guitant.
"I really don't know what hotel it is; all I do know is that I observed some
suspicious looking people go in there----"
"Nonsense!" exclaimed Guitant, with a burst of laughter; "those men must be
poets."
"Come, Guitant, speak, if you please, respectfully of these gentlemen," said
Mazarin; "don't you know that I was in my youth a poet? I wrote verses in the style
of Benserade----"
"You, my lord?"
"Yes, I; shall I repeat to you some of my verses?"
"Just as you please, my lord. I do not understand Italian."
"Yes, but you understand Fren," and Mazarin laid his hand upon Guitant's
shoulder. "My good, my brave Guitant, whatsoever command I may give you in
that language--in Fren--whatever I may order you to do, will you not perform
it?"
"Certainly. I have already answered that question in the affirmative; but that
xviii
Possessed by this idea, the cardinal resolved to know all about D'Artagnan imme-
diately; of course he could not inquire from D'Artagnan himself who he was and
what had been his career; he remarked, however, in the course of conversation that
the lieutenant of musketeers spoke with a Gascon accent. Now the Italians and the
Gascons are too mu alike and know ea other too well ever to trust what any one
of them may say of himself; so in reaing the walls whi surrounded the Palais
Royal, the cardinal knoed at a lile door, and aer thanking D'Artagnan and re-
questing him to wait in the court of the Palais Royal, he made a sign to Guitant to
follow him.
ey both dismounted, consigned their horses to the laey who had opened
the door, and disappeared in the garden.
"My dear friend," said the cardinal, leaning, as they walked through the gar-
xx
den, on his friend's arm, "you told me just now that you had been twenty years in
the queen's service."
"Yes, it's true. I have," returned Guitant.
"Now, my dear Guitant, I have oen remarked that in addition to your
courage, whi is indisputable, and your fidelity, whi is invincible, you possess
an admirable memory."
"You have found that out, have you, my lord? Deuce take it--all the worse for
me!"
"How?"
"ere is no doubt but that one of the ief accomplishments of a courtier is
to know when to forget."
"But you, Guitant, are not a courtier. You are a brave soldier, one of the few
remaining veterans of the days of Henry IV. Alas! how few to-day exist!"
"Plague on't, my lord, have you brought me here to get my horoscope out of
me?"
"No; I only brought you here to ask you," returned Mazarin, smiling, "if you
have taken any particular notice of our lieutenant of musketeers?"
"Monsieur d'Artagnan? I have had no occasion to notice him particularly; he's
an old acquaintance. He's a Gascon. De Treville knows him and esteems him very
highly, and De Treville, as you know, is one of the queen's greatest friends. As a
soldier the man ranks well; he did his whole duty and even more, at the siege of
Roelle--as at Suze and Perpignan."
"But you know, Guitant, we poor ministers oen want men with other qual-
ities besides courage; we want men of talent. Pray, was not Monsieur d'Artagnan,
in the time of the cardinal, mixed up in some intrigue from whi he came out,
according to report, quite cleverly?"
"My lord, as to the report you allude to"--Guitant perceived that the cardinal
wished to make him speak out--"I know nothing but what the public knows. I never
meddle in intrigues, and if I occasionally become a confidant of the intrigues of
others I am sure your eminence will approve of my keeping them secret."
Mazarin shook his head.
"Ah!" he said; "some ministers are fortunate and find out all that they wish to
know."
"My lord," replied Guitant, "su ministers do not weigh men in the same bal-
ance; they get their information on war from warriors; on intrigues, from intriguers.
Consult some politician of the period of whi you speak, and if you pay well for it
you will certainly get to know all you want."
"Eh, pardieu!" said Mazarin, with a grimace whi he always made when
spoken to about money. "ey will be paid, if there is no way of geing out of it."
"Does my lord seriously wish me to name any one who was mixed up in the
xxi
D 'A arrived at the Bastile just as it was striking half-past eight. His
visit was announced to the governor, who, on hearing that he came from the
cardinal, went to meet him and received him at the top of the great flight of steps
outside the door. e governor of the Bastile was Monsieur du Tremblay, the brother
of the famous Capuin, Joseph, that fearful favorite of Rielieu's, who went by the
name of the Gray Cardinal.
During the period that the Duc de Bassompierre passed in the Bastile--where
he remained for twelve long years--when his companions, in their dreams of liberty,
said to ea other: "As for me, I shall go out of the prison at su a time," and another,
at su and su a time, the duke used to answer, "As for me, gentlemen, I shall leave
only when Monsieur du Tremblay leaves;" meaning that at the death of the cardinal
Du Tremblay would certainly lose his place at the Bastile and De Bassompierre
regain his at court.
His prediction was nearly fulfilled, but in a very different way from that whi
De Bassompierre supposed; for aer the death of Rielieu everything went on,
contrary to expectation, in the same way as before; and Bassompierre had lile
ance of leaving his prison.
Monsieur du Tremblay received D'Artagnan with extreme politeness and in-
vited him to sit down with him to supper, of whi he was himself about to partake.
"I should be delighted to do so," was the reply; "but if I am not mistaken, the
words 'In haste,' are wrien on the envelope of the leer whi I brought."
"You are right," said Du Tremblay. "Halloo, major! tell them to order Number
to come downstairs."
e unhappy wret who entered the Bastile ceased, as he crossed the thresh-
old, to be a man--he became a number.
D'Artagnan shuddered at the noise of the keys; he remained on horseba,
feeling no inclination to dismount, and sat looking at the bars, at the buressed
windows and the immense walls he had hitherto only seen from the other side of
the moat, but by whi he had for twenty years been awe-stru.
xxiii
A bell resounded.
"I must leave you," said Du Tremblay; "I am sent for to sign the release of a
prisoner. I shall be happy to meet you again, sir."
"May the devil annihilate me if I return thy wish!" murmured D'Artagnan,
smiling as he pronounced the imprecation; "I declare I feel quite ill aer only being
five minutes in the courtyard. Go to! go to! I would rather die on straw than hoard
up a thousand a year by being governor of the Bastile."
He had scarcely finished this soliloquy before the prisoner arrived. On seeing
him D'Artagnan could hardly suppress an exclamation of surprise. e prisoner got
into the carriage without seeming to recognize the musketeer.
"Gentlemen," thus D'Artagnan addressed the four musketeers, "I am ordered
to exercise the greatest possible care in guarding the prisoner, and since there are
no los to the carriage, I shall sit beside him. Monsieur de Lillebonne, lead my
horse by the bridle, if you please." As he spoke he dismounted, gave the bridle of
his horse to the musketeer and placing himself by the side of the prisoner said, in a
voice perfectly composed, "To the Palais Royal, at full trot."
e carriage drove on and D'Artagnan, availing himself of the darkness in
the arway under whi they were passing, threw himself into the arms of the
prisoner.
"Roefort!" he exclaimed; "you! is it you, indeed? I am not mistaken?"
"D'Artagnan!" cried Roefort.
"Ah! my poor friend!" resumed D'Artagnan, "not having seen you for four or
five years I concluded you were dead."
"I'faith," said Roefort, "there's no great difference, I think, between a dead
man and one who has been buried alive; now I have been buried alive, or very
nearly so."
"And for what crime are you imprisoned in the Bastile."
"Do you wish me to speak the truth?"
"Yes."
"Well, then, I don't know."
"Have you any suspicion of me, Roefort?"
"No! on the honor of a gentleman; but I cannot be imprisoned for the reason
alleged; it is impossible."
"What reason?" asked D'Artagnan.
"For stealing."
"For stealing! you, Roefort! you are laughing at me."
"I understand. You mean that this demands explanation, do you not?"
"I admit it."
"Well, this is what actually took place: One evening aer an orgy in Reinard's
apartment at the Tuileries with the Duc d'Harcourt, Fontrailles, De Rieux and others,
xxiv
the Duc d'Harcourt proposed that we should go and pull cloaks on the Pont Neuf;
that is, you know, a diversion whi the Duc d'Orleans made quite the fashion."
"Were you crazy, Roefort? at your age!"
"No, I was drunk. And yet, since the amusement seemed to me rather tame, I
proposed to Chevalier de Rieux that we should be spectators instead of actors, and,
in order to see to advantage, that we should mount the bronze horse. No sooner
said than done. anks to the spurs, whi served as stirrups, in a moment we were
pered upon the croupe; we were well placed and saw everything. Four or five
cloaks had already been lied, with a dexterity without parallel, and not one of
the victims had dared to say a word, when some fool of a fellow, less patient than
the others, took it into his head to cry out, 'Guard!' and drew upon us a patrol of
arers. Duc d'Harcourt, Fontrailles, and the others escaped; De Rieux was inclined
to do likewise, but I told him they wouldn't look for us where we were. He wouldn't
listen, put his foot on the spur to get down, the spur broke, he fell with a broken
leg, and, instead of keeping quiet, took to crying out like a gallows-bird. I then was
ready to dismount, but it was too late; I descended into the arms of the arers.
ey conducted me to the Chatelet, where I slept soundly, being very sure that on
the next day I should go forth free. e next day came and passed, the day aer, a
week; I then wrote to the cardinal. e same day they came for me and took me to
the Bastile. at was five years ago. Do you believe it was because I commied the
sacrilege of mounting en croupe behind Henry IV.?"
"No; you are right, my dear Roefort, it couldn't be for that; but you will
probably learn the reason soon."
"Ah, indeed! I forgot to ask you--where are you taking me?"
"To the cardinal."
"What does he want with me?"
"I do not know. I did not even know that you were the person I was sent to
fet."
"Impossible--you--a favorite of the minister!"
"A favorite! no, indeed!" cried D'Artagnan. "Ah, my poor friend! I am just
as poor a Gascon as when I saw you at Meung, twenty-two years ago, you know;
alas!" and he concluded his spee with a deep sigh.
"Nevertheless, you come as one in authority."
"Because I happened to be in the ante-amber when the cardinal called me,
by the merest ance. I am still a lieutenant in the musketeers and have been so
these twenty years."
"en no misfortune has happened to you?"
"And what misfortune could happen to me? To quote some Latin verses I have
forgoen, or rather, never knew well, 'the thunderbolt never falls on the valleys,' and
I am a valley, dear Roefort,--one of the lowliest of the low."
xxv
"Almost."
"What has become of them?"
"I don't know; we separated, as you know. ey are alive, that's all that I can
say about them; from time to time I hear of them indirectly, but in what part of the
world they are, devil take me if I know, No, on my honor, I have not a friend in the
world but you, Roefort."
"And the illustrious--what's the name of the lad whom I made a sergeant in
Piedmont's regiment?"
"Planet!"
"e illustrious Planet. What has become of him?"
"I shouldn't wonder if he were at the head of the mob at this very moment.
He married a woman who keeps a confectioner's shop in the Rue des Lombards, for
he's a lad who was always fond of sweetmeats; he's now a citizen of Paris. You'll
see that that queer fellow will be a sheriff before I shall be a captain."
"Come, dear D'Artagnan, look up a lile! Courage! It is when one is lowest on
the wheel of fortune that the merry-go-round wheels and rewards us. is evening
your destiny begins to ange."
"Amen!" exclaimed D'Artagnan, stopping the carriage.
"What are you doing?" asked Roefort.
"We are almost there and I want no one to see me geing out of your carriage;
we are supposed not to know ea other."
"You are right. Adieu."
"Au revoir. Remember your promise."
In five minutes the party entered the courtyard and D'Artagnan led the pris-
oner up the great staircase and across the corridor and ante-amber.
As they stopped at the door of the cardinal's study, D'Artagnan was about to
be announced when Roefort slapped him on his shoulder.
"D'Artagnan, let me confess to you what I've been thinking about during the
whole of my drive, as I looked out upon the parties of citizens who perpetually
crossed our path and looked at you and your four men with fiery eyes."
"Speak out," answered D'Artagnan.
"I had only to cry out 'Help!' for you and for your companions to be cut to
pieces, and then I should have been free."
"Why didn't you do it?" asked the lieutenant.
"Come, come!" cried Roefort. "Did we not swear friendship? Ah! had any
one but you been there, I don't say----"
D'Artagnan bowed. "Is it possible that Roefort has become a beer man
than I am?" he said to himself. And he caused himself to be announced to the
minister.
"Let M. de Roefort enter," said Mazarin, eagerly, on hearing their names
xxvii
pronounced; "and beg M. d'Artagnan to wait; I shall have further need of him."
ese words gave great joy to D'Artagnan. As he had said, it had been a long
time since any one had needed him; and that demand for his services on the part of
Mazarin seemed to him an auspicious sign.
Roefort, rendered suspicious and cautious by these words, entered the
apartment, where he found Mazarin siing at the table, dressed in his ordinary
garb and as one of the prelates of the Chur, his costume being similar to that of
the abbes in that day, excepting that his scarf and stoings were violet.
As the door was closed Roefort cast a glance toward Mazarin, whi was
answered by one, equally furtive, from the minister.
ere was lile ange in the cardinal; still dressed with sedulous care, his
hair well arranged and curled, his person perfumed, he looked, owing to his extreme
taste in dress, only half his age. But Roefort, who had passed five years in prison,
had become old in the lapse of a few years; the dark los of this estimable friend of
the defunct Cardinal Rielieu were now white; the deep bronze of his complexion
had been succeeded by a mortal pallor whi betokened debility. As he gazed at
him Mazarin shook his head slightly, as mu as to say, "is is a man who does not
appear to me fit for mu."
Aer a pause, whi appeared an age to Roefort, Mazarin took from a bun-
dle of papers a leer, and showing it to the count, he said:
"I find here a leer in whi you sue for liberty, Monsieur de Roefort. You
are in prison, then?"
Roefort trembled in every limb at this question. "But I thought," he said,
"that your eminence knew that circumstance beer than any one----"
"I? Oh no! ere is a congestion of prisoners in the Bastile, who were cooped
up in the time of Monsieur de Rielieu; I don't even know their names."
"Yes, but in regard to myself, my lord, it cannot be so, for I was removed from
the Chatelet to the Bastile owing to an order from your eminence."
"You think you were."
"I am certain of it."
"Ah, stay! I fancy I remember it. Did you not once refuse to undertake a
journey to Brussels for the queen?"
"Ah! ah!" exclaimed Roefort. "ere is the true reason! Idiot that I am,
though I have been trying to find it out for five years, I never found it out."
"But I do not say it was the cause of your imprisonment. I merely ask you,
did you not refuse to go to Brussels for the queen, whilst you had consented to go
there to do some service for the late cardinal?"
"at is the very reason I refused to go ba to Brussels. I was there at a fearful
moment. I was sent there to intercept a correspondence between Chalais and the
arduke, and even then, when I was discovered I was nearly torn to pieces. How
xxviii
could I, then, return to Brussels? I should injure the queen instead of serving her."
"Well, since the best motives are liable to misconstruction, the queen saw in
your refusal nothing but a refusal--a distinct refusal she had also mu to complain
of you during the lifetime of the late cardinal; yes, her majesty the queen----"
Roefort smiled contemptuously.
"Since I was a faithful servant, my lord, to Cardinal Rielieu during his life,
it stands to reason that now, aer his death, I should serve you well, in defiance of
the whole world."
"With regard to myself, Monsieur de Roefort," replied Mazarin, "I am not,
like Monsieur de Rielieu, all-powerful. I am but a minister, who wants no ser-
vants, being myself nothing but a servant of the queen's. Now, the queen is of a
sensitive nature. Hearing of your refusal to obey her she looked upon it as a decla-
ration of war, and as she considers you a man of superior talent, and consequently
dangerous, she desired me to make sure of you; that is the reason of your being
shut up in the Bastile. But your release can be managed. You are one of those men
who can comprehend certain maers and having understood them, can act with
energy----"
"Su was Cardinal Rielieu's opinion, my lord."
"e cardinal," interrupted Mazarin, "was a great politician and therein shone
his vast superiority over me. I am a straightforward, simple man; that's my great
disadvantage. I am of a frankness of aracter quite Fren."
Roefort bit his lips in order to prevent a smile.
"Now to the point. I want friends; I want faithful servants. When I say I
want, I mean the queen wants them. I do nothing without her commands--pray
understand that; not like Monsieur de Rielieu, who went on just as he pleased. So
I shall never be a great man, as he was, but to compensate for that, I shall be a good
man, Monsieur de Roefort, and I hope to prove it to you."
Roefort knew well the tones of that so voice, in whi sounded sometimes
a sort of gentle lisp, like the hissing of young vipers.
"I am disposed to believe your eminence," he replied; "though I have had but
lile evidence of that good-nature of whi your eminence speaks. Do not forget
that I have been five years in the Bastile and that no medium of viewing things is
so deceptive as the grating of a prison."
"Ah, Monsieur de Roefort! have I not told you already that I had nothing
to do with that? e queen--cannot you make allowances for the peishness of
a queen and a princess? But that has passed away as suddenly as it came, and is
forgoen."
"I can easily suppose, sir, that her majesty has forgoen it amid the fetes and
the courtiers of the Palais Royal, but I who have passed those years in the Bastile----"
"Ah! mon Dieu! my dear Monsieur de Roefort! do you absolutely think
xxix
that the Palais Royal is the abode of gayety? No. We have had great annoyances
there. As for me, I play my game squarely, fairly, and above board, as I always do.
Let us come to some conclusion. Are you one of us, Monsieur de Roefort?"
"I am very desirous of being so, my lord, but I am totally in the dark about
everything. In the Bastile one talks politics only with soldiers and jailers, and you
have not an idea, my lord, how lile is known of what is going on by people of that
sort; I am of Monsieur de Bassompierre's party. Is he still one of the seventeen peers
of France?"
"He is dead, sir; a great loss. His devotion to the queen was boundless; men
of loyalty are scarce."
"I think so, forsooth," said Roefort, "and when you find any of them, you
mar them off to the Bastile. However, there are plenty in the world, but you don't
look in the right direction for them, my lord."
"Indeed! explain to me. Ah! my dear Monsieur de Roefort, how mu you
must have learned during your intimacy with the late cardinal! Ah! he was a great
man."
"Will your eminence be angry if I read you a lesson?"
"I! never! you know you may say anything to me. I try to be beloved, not
feared."
"Well, there is on the wall of my cell, scrated with a nail, a proverb, whi
says, 'Like master, like servant.'"
"Pray, what does that mean?"
"It means that Monsieur de Rielieu was able to find trusty servants, dozens
and dozens of them."
"He! the point aimed at by every poniard! Rielieu, who passed his life in
warding off blows whi were forever aimed at him!"
"But he did ward them off," said De Roefort, "and the reason was, that
though he had bier enemies he possessed also true friends. I have known persons,"
he continued--for he thought he might avail himself of the opportunity of speaking
of D'Artagnan--"who by their sagacity and address have deceived the penetration
of Cardinal Rielieu; who by their valor have got the beer of his guards and spies;
persons without money, without support, without credit, yet who have preserved
to the crowned head its crown and made the cardinal crave pardon."
"But those men you speak of," said Mazarin, smiling inwardly on seeing
Roefort approa the point to whi he was leading him, "those men were not
devoted to the cardinal, for they contended against him."
"No; in that case they would have met with more fiing reward. ey had the
misfortune to be devoted to that very queen for whom just now you were seeking
servants."
"But how is it that you know so mu of these maers?"
xxx
"I know them because the men of whom I speak were at that time my enemies;
because they fought against me; because I did them all the harm I could and they
returned it to the best of their ability; because one of them, with whom I had most
to do, gave me a prey sword-thrust, now about seven years ago, the third that I
received from the same hand; it closed an old account."
"Ah!" said Mazarin, with admirable suavity, "could I but find su men!"
"My lord, there has stood for six years at your very door a man su as I
describe, and during those six years he has been unappreciated and unemployed by
you."
"Who is it?"
"It is Monsieur d'Artagnan."
"at Gascon!" cried Mazarin, with well acted surprise.
"'at Gascon' has saved a queen and made Monsieur de Rielieu confess
that in point of talent, address and political skill, to him he was only a tyro."
"Really?"
"It is as I have the honor of telling it to your excellency."
"Tell me a lile about it, my dear Monsieur de Roefort."
"at is somewhat difficult, my lord," said Roefort, with a smile.
"en he will tell it me himself."
"I doubt it, my lord."
"Why do you doubt it?"
"Because the secret does not belong to him; because, as I have told you, it has
to do with a great queen."
"And he was alone in aieving an enterprise like that?"
"No, my lord, he had three colleagues, three brave men, men su as you were
wishing for just now."
"And were these four men aaed to ea other, true in heart, really united?"
"As if they had been one man--as if their four hearts had pulsated in one
breast."
"You pique my curiosity, dear Roefort; pray tell me the whole story."
"at is impossible; but I will tell you a true story, my lord."
"Pray do so, I delight in stories," cried the cardinal.
"Listen, then," returned Roefort, as he spoke endeavoring to read in that
subtle countenance the cardinal's motive. "Once upon a time there lived a queen--a
powerful monar--who reigned over one of the greatest kingdoms of the universe;
and a minister; and this minister wished mu to injure the queen, whom once
he had loved too well. (Do not try, my lord, you cannot guess who it is; all this
happened long before you came into the country where this queen reigned.) ere
came to the court an ambassador so brave, so magnificent, so elegant, that every
woman lost her heart to him; and the queen had even the indiscretion to give him
xxxi
certain ornaments so rare that they could never be replaced by any like them.
"As these ornaments were given by the king the minister persuaded his
majesty to insist upon the queen's appearing in them as part of her jewels at a
ball whi was soon to take place. ere is no occasion to tell you, my lord, that the
minister knew for a fact that these ornaments had sailed away with the ambassador,
who was far away, beyond seas. is illustrious queen had fallen low as the least
of her subjects--fallen from her high estate."
"Indeed!"
"Well, my lord, four men resolved to save her. ese four men were not
princes, neither were they dukes, neither were they men in power; they were not
even ri. ey were four honest soldiers, ea with a good heart, a good arm and
a sword at the service of those who wanted it. ey set out. e minister knew of
their departure and had planted people on the road to prevent them ever reaing
their destination. ree of them were overwhelmed and disabled by numerous as-
sailants; one of them alone arrived at the port, having either killed or wounded those
who wished to stop him. He crossed the sea and brought ba the set of ornaments
to the great queen, who was able to wear them on her shoulder on the appointed
day; and this very nearly ruined the minister. What do you think of that exploit,
my lord?"
"It is magnificent!" said Mazarin, thoughtfully.
"Well, I know of ten su men."
Mazarin made no reply; he reflected.
Five or six minutes elapsed.
"You have nothing more to ask of me, my lord?" said Roefort.
"Yes. And you say that Monsieur d'Artagnan was one of those four men?"
"He led the enterprise."
"And who were the others?"
"I leave it to Monsieur d'Artagnan to name them, my lord. ey were his
friends and not mine. He alone would have any influence with them; I do not even
know them under their true names."
"You suspect me, Monsieur de Roefort; I want him and you and all to aid
me."
"Begin with me, my lord; for aer five or six years of imprisonment it is nat-
ural to feel some curiosity as to one's destination."
"You, my dear Monsieur de Roefort, shall have the post of confidence; you
shall go to Vincennes, where Monsieur de Beaufort is confined; you will guard him
well for me. Well, what is the maer?"
"e maer is that you have proposed to me what is impossible," said
Roefort, shaking his head with an air of disappointment.
"What! impossible? And why is it impossible?"
xxxii
W le alone with Bernouin, Mazarin was for some minutes lost in thought.
He had gained mu information, but not enough. Mazarin was a eat at
the card-table. is is a detail preserved to us by Brienne. He called it using his
advantages. He now determined not to begin the game with D'Artagnan till he
knew completely all his adversary's cards.
"My lord, have you any commands?" asked Bernouin.
"Yes, yes," replied Mazarin. "Light me; I am going to the queen."
Bernouin took up a candlesti and led the way.
ere was a secret communication between the cardinal's apartments and
those of the queen; and through this corridor* Mazarin passed whenever he wished
to visit Anne of Austria.
"Sire!" interposed Laporte, in order to turn the subject, "to whom does your
majesty wish me to give the candle?"
"To any one, Laporte," the ild said; and then added in a loud voice, "to any
one except Mancini."
Now Mancini was a nephew of Mazarin's and was as mu hated by Louis as
the cardinal himself, although placed near his person by the minister.
And the king went out of the room without either embracing his mother or
even bowing to the cardinal.
"Good," said Mazarin, "I am glad to see that his majesty has been brought up
with a hatred of dissimulation."
"Why do you say that?" asked the queen, almost timidly.
"Why, it seems to me that the way in whi he le us needs no explanation.
Besides, his majesty takes no pains to conceal how lile affection he has for me.
at, however, does not hinder me from being entirely devoted to his service, as I
am to that of your majesty."
"I ask your pardon for him, cardinal," said the queen; "he is a ild, not yet
able to understand his obligations to you."
e cardinal smiled.
"But," continued the queen, "you have doubtless come for some important
purpose. What is it, then?"
Mazarin sank into a air with the deepest melanoly painted on his coun-
tenance.
"It is likely," he replied, "that we shall soon be obliged to separate, unless you
love me well enough to follow me to Italy."
"Why," cried the queen; "how is that?"
"Because, as they say in the opera of 'isbe,' 'e whole world conspires to
break our bonds.'"
"You jest, sir!" answered the queen, endeavoring to assume something of her
former dignity.
"Alas! I do not, madame," rejoined Mazarin. "Mark well what I say. e whole
world conspires to break our bonds. Now as you are one of the whole world, I mean
to say that you also are deserting me."
"Cardinal!"
"Heavens! did I not see you the other day smile on the Duke of Orleans? or
rather at what he said?"
"And what was he saying?"
"He said this, madame: 'Mazarin is a stumbling-blo. Send him away and
all will then be well.'"
"What do you wish me to do?"
"Oh, madame! you are the queen!"
xxxvii
but he is the least dangerous among them. ere is the Prince de Conde----"
"e hero of Rocroy. Do you think of him?"
"Yes, madame, oen and oen, but pazienza, as we say in Italy; next, aer
Monsieur de Conde, comes the Duke of Orleans."
"What are you saying? e first prince of the blood, the king's uncle!"
"No! not the first prince of the blood, not the king's uncle, but the base con-
spirator, the soul of every cabal, who pretends to lead the brave people who are
weak enough to believe in the honor of a prince of the blood--not the prince nearest
to the throne, not the king's uncle, I repeat, but the murderer of Chalais, of Mont-
morency and of Cinq-Mars, who is playing now the same game he played long ago
and who thinks that he will win the game because he has a new adversary--instead
of a man who threatened, a man who smiles. But he is mistaken; I shall not leave
so near the queen that source of discord with whi the deceased cardinal so oen
caused the anger of the king to rage above the boiling point."
Anne blushed and buried her face in her hands.
"What am I to do?" she said, bowed down beneath the voice of her tyrant.
"Endeavor to remember the names of those faithful servants who crossed the
Channel, in spite of Monsieur de Rielieu, traing the roads along whi they
passed by their blood, to bring ba to your majesty certain jewels given by you to
Buingham."
Anne arose, full of majesty, and as if toued by a spring, and looking at the
cardinal with the haughty dignity whi in the days of her youth had made her so
powerful: "You are insulting me!" she said.
"I wish," continued Mazarin, finishing, as it were, the spee this sudden
movement of the queen had cut; "I wish, in fact, that you should now do for your
husband what you formerly did for your lover."
"Again that accusation!" cried the queen. "I thought that calumny was stifled
or extinct; you have spared me till now, but since you speak of it, once for all, I tell
you----"
"Madame, I do not ask you to tell me," said Mazarin, astounded by this return-
ing courage.
"I will tell you all," replied Anne. "Listen: there were in truth, at that epo,
four devoted hearts, four loyal spirits, four faithful swords, who saved more than
my life--my honor----"
"Ah! you confess it!" exclaimed Mazarin.
"Is it only the guilty whose honor is at the sport of others, sir? and cannot
women be dishonored by appearances? Yes, appearances were against me and I was
about to suffer dishonor. However, I swear I was not guilty, I swear it by----"
e queen looked around her for some sacred object by whi she could swear,
and taking out of a cupboard hidden in the tapestry, a small coffer of rosewood set
xl
him, but it belongs to D'Artagnan. Give it ba to him, sir, and since you have su
a man in your service, make him useful."
"ank you, madame," said Mazarin. "I will profit by the advice."
"And now," added the queen, her voice broken by her emotion, "have you any
other question to ask me?"
"Nothing,"--the cardinal spoke in his most conciliatory manner--"except to beg
of you to forgive my unworthy suspicions. I love you so tenderly that I cannot help
being jealous, even of the past."
A smile, whi was indefinable, passed over the lips of the queen.
"Since you have no further interrogations to make, leave me, I besee you,"
she said. "I wish, aer su a scene, to be alone."
Mazarin bent low before her.
"I will retire, madame. Do you permit me to return?"
"Yes, to-morrow."
e cardinal took the queen's hand and pressed it with an air of gallantry to
his lips.
Scarcely had he le her when the queen went into her son's room, and in-
quired from Laporte if the king was in bed. Laporte pointed to the ild, who was
asleep.
Anne ascended the steps side of the bed and soly kissed the placid forehead
of her son; then she retired as silently as she had come, merely saying to Laporte:
"Try, my dear Laporte, to make the king more courteous to Monsieur le Car-
dinal, to whom both he and I are under su important obligations."
. e Gascon and the Italian.
M the cardinal returned to his own room; and aer asking Bernouin,
who stood at the door, whether anything had occurred during his absence,
and being answered in the negative, he desired that he might be le alone.
When he was alone he opened the door of the corridor and then that of the
ante-amber. ere D'Artagnan was asleep upon a ben.
e cardinal went up to him and toued his shoulder. D'Artagnan started,
awakened himself, and as he awoke, stood up exactly like a soldier under arms.
"Here I am," said he. "Who calls me?"
"I," said Mazarin, with his most smiling expression.
"I ask pardon of your eminence," said D'Artagnan, "but I was so fatigued----"
"Don't ask my pardon, monsieur," said Mazarin, "for you fatigued yourself in
my service."
D'Artagnan admired Mazarin's gracious manner. "Ah," said he, between his
teeth, "is there truth in the proverb that fortune comes while one sleeps?"
"Follow me, monsieur," said Mazarin.
"Come, come," murmured D'Artagnan, "Roefort has kept his promise, but
where in the devil is he?" And he seared the cabinet even to the smallest recesses,
but there was no sign of Roefort.
"Monsieur d'Artagnan," said the cardinal, siing down on a fauteuil, "you have
always seemed to me to be a brave and honorable man."
"Possibly," thought D'Artagnan, "but he has taken a long time to let me know
his thoughts;" nevertheless, he bowed to the very ground in gratitude for Mazarin's
compliment.
"Well," continued Mazarin, "the time has come to put to use your talents and
your valor."
ere was a sudden gleam of joy in the officer's eyes, whi vanished imme-
diately, for he knew nothing of Mazarin's purpose.
"Order, my lord," he said; "I am ready to obey your eminence."
xliii
recognized the ring so gracefully given to him by the queen on the night of the ball
at the Hotel de Ville and whi she had repurased from Monsieur des Essarts.
"'Tis true. I remember well that diamond, whi belonged to the queen."
"You see, then, that I speak to you in the queen's name. Answer me without
acting as if you were on the stage; your interests are concerned in your so doing."
"Faith, my lord, it is very necessary for me to make my fortune, your eminence
has so long forgoen me."
"We need only a week to amend all that. Come, you are accounted for, you
are here, but where are your friends?"
"I do not know, my lord. We have parted company this long time; all three
have le the service."
"Where can you find them, then?"
"Wherever they are, that's my business."
"Well, now, what are your conditions, if I employ you?"
"Money, my lord, as mu money as what you wish me to undertake will
require. I remember too well how sometimes we were stopped for want of money,
and but for that diamond, whi I was obliged to sell, we should have remained on
the road."
"e devil he does! Money! and a large sum!" said Mazarin. "Pray, are you
aware that the king has no money in his treasury?"
"Do then as I did, my lord. Sell the crown diamonds. Trust me, don't let us
try to do things eaply. Great undertakings come poorly off with paltry means."
"Well," returned Mazarin, "we will satisfy you."
"Rielieu," thought D'Artagnan, "would have given me five hundred pistoles
in advance."
"You will then be at my service?" asked Mazarin.
"Yes, if my friends agree."
"But if they refuse can I count on you?"
"I have never accomplished anything alone," said D'Artagnan, shaking his
head.
"Go, then, and find them."
"What shall I say to them by way of inducement to serve your eminence?"
"You know them beer than I. Adapt your promises to their respective ar-
acters."
"What shall I promise?"
"at if they serve me as well as they served the queen my gratitude shall be
magnificent."
"But what are we to do?"
"Make your mind easy; when the time for action comes you shall be put in
full possession of what I require from you; wait till that time arrives and find out
xlv
your friends."
"My lord, perhaps they are not in Paris. It is even probable that I shall have
to make a journey. I am only a lieutenant of musketeers, very poor, and journeys
cost money.
"My intention," said Mazarin, "is not that you go with a great following; my
plans require secrecy, and would be jeopardized by a too extravagant equipment."
"Still, my lord, I can't travel on my pay, for it is now three months behind; and I
can't travel on my savings, for in my twenty-two years of service I have accumulated
nothing but debts."
Mazarin remained some moments in deep thought, as if he were fighting with
himself; then, going to a large cupboard closed with a triple lo, he took from it a
bag of silver, and weighing it twice in his hands before he gave it to D'Artagnan:
"Take this," he said with a sigh, "'tis merely for your journey."
"If these are Spanish doubloons, or even gold crowns," thought D'Artagnan,
"we shall yet be able to do business together." He saluted the cardinal and plunged
the bag into the depths of an immense poet.
"Well, then, all is seled; you are to set off," said the cardinal.
"Yes, my lord."
"Apropos, what are the names of your friends?"
"e Count de la Fere, formerly styled Athos; Monsieur du Vallon, whom we
used to call Porthos; the Chevalier d'Herblay, now the Abbe d'Herblay, whom we
styled Aramis----"
e cardinal smiled.
"Younger sons," he said, "who enlisted in the musketeers under feigned names
in order not to lower their family names. Long swords but light purses. Was that
it?"
"If, God willing, these swords should be devoted to the service of your emi-
nence," said D'Artagnan, "I shall venture to express a wish, whi is, that in its turn
the purse of your eminence may become light and theirs heavy--for with these three
men your eminence may rouse all Europe if you like."
"ese Gascons," said the cardinal, laughing, "almost beat the Italians in ef-
frontery."
"At all events," answered D'Artagnan, with a smile almost as cray as the
cardinal's, "they beat them when they draw their swords."
He then withdrew, and as he passed into the courtyard he stopped near a lamp
and dived eagerly into the bag of money.
"Crown pieces only--silver pieces! I suspected it. Ah! Mazarin! Mazarin!
thou hast no confidence in me! so mu the worse for thee, for harm may come of
it!"
Meanwhile the cardinal was rubbing his hands in great satisfaction.
xlvi
"A hundred pistoles! a hundred pistoles! for a hundred pistoles I have discov-
ered a secret for whi Rielieu would have paid twenty thousand crowns; without
reoning the value of that diamond"--he cast a complacent look at the ring, whi
he had kept, instead of restoring to D'Artagnan--"whi is worth, at least, ten thou-
sand francs."
He returned to his room, and aer depositing the ring in a casket filled with
brilliants of every sort, for the cardinal was a connoisseur in precious stones, he
called to Bernouin to undress him, regardless of the noises of gun-fire that, though
it was now near midnight, continued to resound through Paris.
In the meantime D'Artagnan took his way toward the Rue Tiquetonne, where
he lived at the Hotel de la Chevree.
We will explain in a few words how D'Artagnan had been led to oose that
place of residence.
. D'Artagnan in his Fortieth
Year.
Y have elapsed, many events have happened, alas! since, in our romance
of "e ree Musketeers," we took leave of D'Artagnan at No. Rue des
Fossoyeurs. D'Artagnan had not failed in his career, but circumstances had been
adverse to him. So long as he was surrounded by his friends he retained his youth
and the poetry of his aracter. He was one of those fine, ingenuous natures whi
assimilate themselves easily to the dispositions of others. Athos imparted to him his
greatness of soul, Porthos his enthusiasm, Aramis his elegance. Had D'Artagnan
continued his intimacy with these three men he would have become a superior
aracter. Athos was the first to leave him, in order that he might retire to a lile
property he had inherited near Blois; Porthos, the second, to marry an aorney's
wife; and lastly, Aramis, the third, to take orders and become an abbe. From that day
D'Artagnan felt lonely and powerless, without courage to pursue a career in whi
he could only distinguish himself on condition that ea of his three companions
should endow him with one of the gis ea had received from Heaven.
Notwithstanding his commission in the musketeers, D'Artagnan felt com-
pletely solitary. For a time the delightful remembrance of Madame Bonancieux
le on his aracter a certain poetic tinge, perishable indeed; for like all other rec-
ollections in this world, these impressions were, by degrees, effaced. A garrison life
is fatal even to the most aristocratic organization; and imperceptibly, D'Artagnan,
always in the camp, always on horseba, always in garrison, became (I know not
how in the present age one would express it) a typical trooper. His early refinement
of aracter was not only not lost, it grew even greater than ever; but it was now
applied to the lile, instead of to the great things of life--to the martial condition of
the soldier--comprised under the head of a good lodging, a ri table, a congenial
hostess. ese important advantages D'Artagnan found to his own taste in the Rue
Tiquetonne at the sign of the Roe.
xlviii
From the time D'Artagnan took quarters in that hotel, the mistress of the
house, a prey and fresh looking Flemish woman, twenty-five or twenty-six years
old, had been singularly interested in him; and aer certain love passages, mu
obstructed by an inconvenient husband to whom a dozen times D'Artagnan had
made a pretence of passing a sword through his body, that husband had disappeared
one fine morning, aer furtively selling certain oice lots of wine, carrying away
with him money and jewels. He was thought to be dead; his wife, especially, who
erished the pleasing idea that she was a widow, stoutly maintained that death
had taken him. erefore, aer the connection had continued three years, carefully
fostered by D'Artagnan, who found his bed and his mistress more agreeable every
year, ea doing credit to the other, the mistress conceived the extraordinary desire
of becoming a wife and proposed to D'Artagnan that he should marry her.
"Ah, fie!" D'Artagnan replied. "Bigamy, my dear! Come now, you don't really
wish it?"
"But he is dead; I am sure of it."
"He was a very contrary fellow and might come ba on purpose to have us
hanged."
"All right; if he comes ba you will kill him, you are so skillful and so brave."
"Peste! my darling! another way of geing hanged."
"So you refuse my request?"
"To be sure I do--furiously!"
e prey landlady was desolate. She would have taken D'Artagnan not only
as her husband, but as her God, he was so handsome and had so fierce a mustae.
en along toward the fourth year came the expedition of Frane-Comte.
D'Artagnan was assigned to it and made his preparations to depart. ere were
then great griefs, tears without end and solemn promises to remain faithful--all of
course on the part of the hostess. D'Artagnan was too grand to promise anything;
he purposed only to do all that he could to increase the glory of his name.
As to that, we know D'Artagnan's courage; he exposed himself freely to dan-
ger and while arging at the head of his company he received a ball through the
est whi laid him prostrate on the field of bale. He had been seen falling from
his horse and had not been seen to rise; every one, therefore, believed him to be
dead, especially those to whom his death would give promotion. One believes read-
ily what he wishes to believe. Now in the army, from the division-generals who
desire the death of the general-in-ief, to the soldiers who desire the death of the
corporals, all desire some one's death.
But D'Artagnan was not a man to let himself be killed like that. Aer he had
remained through the heat of the day unconscious on the bale-field, the cool fresh-
ness of the night brought him to himself. He gained a village, knoed at the door
of the finest house and was received as the wounded are always and everywhere
xlix
received in France. He was peed, tended, cured; and one fine morning, in beer
health than ever before, he set out for France. Once in France he turned his course
toward Paris, and reaing Paris went straight to Rue Tiquetonne.
But D'Artagnan found in his amber the personal equipment of a man, com-
plete, except for the sword, arranged along the wall.
"He has returned," said he. "So mu the worse, and so mu the beer!"
It need not be said that D'Artagnan was still thinking of the husband. He
made inquiries and discovered that the servants were new and that the mistress
had gone for a walk.
"Alone?" asked D'Artagnan.
"With monsieur."
"Monsieur has returned, then?"
"Of course," naively replied the servant.
"If I had any money," said D'Artagnan to himself, "I would go away; but I have
none. I must stay and follow the advice of my hostess, while thwarting the conjugal
designs of this inopportune apparition."
He had just completed this monologue--whi proves that in momentous cir-
cumstances nothing is more natural than the monologue--when the servant-maid,
wating at the door, suddenly cried out:
"Ah! see! here is madame returning with monsieur."
D'Artagnan looked out and at the corner of Rue Montmartre saw the hostess
coming along hanging to the arm of an enormous Swiss, who tiptoed in his walk
with a magnificent air whi pleasantly reminded him of his old friend Porthos.
"Is that monsieur?" said D'Artagnan to himself. "Oh! oh! he has grown a good
deal, it seems to me." And he sat down in the hall, oosing a conspicuous place.
e hostess, as she entered, saw D'Artagnan and uered a lile cry, where-
upon D'Artagnan, judging that he had been recognized, rose, ran to her and em-
braced her tenderly. e Swiss, with an air of stupefaction, looked at the hostess,
who turned pale.
"Ah, it is you, monsieur! What do you want of me?" she asked, in great dis-
tress.
"Is monsieur your cousin? Is monsieur your brother?" said D'Artagnan, not in
the slightest degree embarrassed in the role he was playing. And without waiting
for her reply he threw himself into the arms of the Helvetian, who received him
with great coldness.
"Who is that man?" he asked.
e hostess replied only by gasps.
"Who is that Swiss?" asked D'Artagnan.
"Monsieur is going to marry me," replied the hostess, between two gasps.
"Your husband, then, is at last dead?"
l
my fault, and it is you who have osen it." With these words he drew in his turn
and crossed swords with his adversary.
He had to contend against a strong wrist, but his agility was superior to all
force. e Swiss received two wounds and was not aware of it, by reason of the
cold; but suddenly feebleness, occasioned by loss of blood, obliged him to sit down.
"ere!" said D'Artagnan, "what did I tell you? Fortunately, you won't be laid
up more than a fortnight. Remain here and I will send you your clothes by the boy.
Good-by! Oh, by the way, you'd beer take lodging in the Rue Montorgueil at the
Chat i Pelote. You will be well fed there, if the hostess remains the same. Adieu."
ereupon he returned in a lively mood to his room and sent to the Swiss the
things that belonged to him. e boy found him siing where D'Artagnan had le
him, still overwhelmed by the coolness of his adversary.
e boy, the hostess, and all the house had the same regard for D'Artagnan
that one would have for Hercules should he return to earth to repeat his twelve
labors.
But when he was alone with the hostess he said: "Now, prey Madeleine, you
know the difference between a Swiss and a gentleman. As for you, you have acted
like a barmaid. So mu the worse for you, for by su conduct you have lost my
esteem and my patronage. I have driven away the Swiss to humiliate you, but I
shall lodge here no longer. I will not sleep where I must scorn. Ho, there, boy! Have
my valise carried to the Muid d'Amour, Rue des Bourdonnais. Adieu, madame."
In saying these words D'Artagnan appeared at the same time majestic and
grieved. e hostess threw herself at his feet, asked his pardon and held him ba
with a sweet violence. What more need be said? e spit turned, the stove roared,
the prey Madeleine wept; D'Artagnan felt himself invaded by hunger, cold and
love. He pardoned, and having pardoned he remained.
And this explains how D'Artagnan had quarters in the Rue Tiquetonne, at the
Hotel de la Chevree.
D'Artagnan then returned home in thoughtful mood, finding a somewhat
lively pleasure in carrying Mazarin's bag of money and thinking of that fine dia-
mond whi he had once called his own and whi he had seen on the minister's
finger that night.
"Should that diamond ever fall into my hands again," he reflected, "I would
turn it at once into money; I would buy with the proceeds certain lands around
my father's ateau, whi is a prey place, well enough, but with no land to it
at all, except a garden about the size of the Cemetery des Innocents; and I should
wait in all my glory till some ri heiress, aracted by my good looks, rode along to
marry me. en I should like to have three sons; I should make the first a nobleman,
like Athos; the second a good soldier, like Porthos; the third an excellent abbe, like
Aramis. Faith! that would be a far beer life than I lead now; but Monsieur Mazarin
lii
followed me there. I had le Bearn when it arrived and I never received it until
the month of April, ; and as the invitation was for September, , I couldn't
accept it. Let me look for this leer; it must be with my title deeds."
D'Artagnan opened an old casket whi stood in a corner of the room, and
whi was full of parments referring to an estate during a period of two hundred
years lost to his family. He uered an exclamation of delight, for the large hand-
writing of Porthos was discernible, and underneath some lines traced by his worthy
spouse.
D'Artagnan eagerly seared for the heading of this leer; it was dated from
the Chateau du Vallon.
Porthos had forgoen that any other address was necessary; in his pride he
fancied that every one must know the Chateau du Vallon.
"Devil take the vain fellow," said D'Artagnan. "However, I had beer find him
out first, since he can't want money. Athos must have become an idiot by this time
from drinking. Aramis must have worn himself to a shadow of his former self by
constant genuflexion."
He cast his eyes again on the leer. ere was a postscript:
"I write by the same courier to our worthy friend Aramis in his convent."
"In his convent! What convent? ere are about two hundred in Paris and
three thousand in France; and then, perhaps, on entering the convent he anged
his name. Ah! if I were but learned in theology I should recollect what it was he
used to dispute about with the curate of Montdidier and the superior of the Jesuits,
when we were at Crevecoeur; I should know what doctrine he leans to and I should
glean from that what saint he has adopted as his patron.
"Well, suppose I go ba to the cardinal and ask him for a passport into all
the convents one can find, even into the nunneries? It would be a curious idea,
and maybe I should find my friend under the name of Ailles. But, no! I should
lose myself in the cardinal's opinion. Great people only thank you for doing the
impossible; what's possible, they say, they can effect themselves, and they are right.
But let us wait a lile and reflect. I received a leer from him, the dear fellow, in
whi he even asked me for some small service, whi, in fact, I rendered him. Yes,
yes; but now what did I do with that leer?"
D'Artagnan thought a moment and then went to the wardrobe in whi hung
his old clothes. He looked for his doublet of the year and as he had orderly
habits, he found it hanging on its nail. He felt in the poet and drew from it a
paper; it was the leer of Aramis:
"Monsieur D'Artagnan: You know that I have had a quarrel with a certain
gentleman, who has given me an appointment for this evening in the Place Royale.
As I am of the ur, and the affair might injure me if I should share it with any
other than a sure friend like you, I write to beg that you will serve me as second.
liv
"You will enter by the Rue Neuve Sainte Catherine; under the second lamp on
the right you will find your adversary. I shall be with mine under the third.
"Wholly yours,
"Aramis."
D'Artagnan tried to recall his remembrances. He had gone to the rendezvous,
had encountered there the adversary indicated, whose name he had never known,
had given him a prey sword-stroke on the arm, then had gone toward Aramis,
who at the same time came to meet him, having already finished his affair. "It is
over," Aramis had said. "I think I have killed the insolent fellow. But, dear friend, if
you ever need me you know that I am entirely devoted to you." ereupon Aramis
had given him a clasp of the hand and had disappeared under the arcades.
So, then, he no more knew where Aramis was than where Athos and Porthos
were, and the affair was becoming a maer of great perplexity, when he fancied he
heard a pane of glass break in his room window. He thought directly of his bag and
rushed from the inner room where he was sleeping. He was not mistaken; as he
entered his bedroom a man was geing in by the window.
"Ah! you scoundrel!" cried D'Artagnan, taking the man for a thief and seizing
his sword.
"Sir!" cried the man, "in the name of Heaven put your sword ba into the
sheath and don't kill me unheard. I'm no thief, but an honest citizen, well off in
the world, with a house of my own. My name is--ah! but surely you are Monsieur
d'Artagnan?"
"And thou--Planet!" cried the lieutenant.
"At your service, sir," said Planet, overwhelmed with joy; "if I were still
capable of serving you."
"Perhaps so," replied D'Artagnan. "But why the devil dost thou run about the
tops of houses at seven o'clo of the morning in the month of January?"
"Sir," said Planet, "you must know; but, perhaps you ought not to know----"
"Tell us what," returned D'Artagnan, "but first put a napkin against the win-
dow and draw the curtains."
"Sir," said the prudent Planet, "in the first place, are you on good terms with
Monsieur de Roefort?"
"Perfectly; one of my dearest friends."
"Ah! so mu the beer!"
"But what has De Roefort to do with this manner you have of invading my
room?"
"Ah, sir! I must first tell you that Monsieur de Roefort is----"
Planet hesitated.
"Egad, I know where he is," said D'Artagnan. "He's in the Bastile."
"at is to say, he was there," replied Planet. "But in returning thither last
lv
night, when fortunately you did not accompany him, as his carriage was crossing
the Rue de la Ferronnerie his guards insulted the people, who began to abuse them.
e prisoner thought this a good opportunity for escape; he called out his name
and cried for help. I was there. I heard the name of Roefort. I remembered him
well. I said in a loud voice that he was a prisoner, a friend of the Duc de Beaufort,
who called for help. e people were infuriated; they stopped the horses and cut the
escort to pieces, whilst I opened the doors of the carriage and Monsieur de Roefort
jumped out and soon was lost amongst the crowd. At this moment a patrol passed
by. I was obliged to sound a retreat toward the Rue Tiquetonne; I was pursued and
took refuge in the house next to this, where I have been concealed between two
maresses. is morning I ventured to run along the guers and----"
"Well," interrupted D'Artagnan, "I am delighted that De Roefort is free, but
as for thee, if thou shouldst fall into the hands of the king's servants they will hang
thee without mercy. Nevertheless, I promise thee thou shalt be hidden here, though
I risk by concealing thee neither more nor less than my lieutenancy, if it was found
out that I gave one rebel an asylum."
"Ah! sir, you know well I would risk my life for you."
"ou mayst add that thou hast risked it, Planet. I have not forgoen all I
owe thee. Sit down there and eat in security. I see thee cast expressive glances at
the remains of my supper."
"Yes, sir; for all I've had since yesterday was a slice of bread and buer, with
preserves on it. Although I don't despise sweet things in proper time and place, I
found the supper rather light."
"Poor fellow!" said D'Artagnan. "Well, come; set to."
"Ah, sir, you are going to save my life a second time!" cried Planet.
And he seated himself at the table and ate as he did in the merry days of the
Rue des Fossoyeurs, whilst D'Artagnan walked to and fro and thought how he could
make use of Planet under present circumstances. While he turned this over in his
mind Planet did his best to make up for lost time at table. At last he uered a sigh
of satisfaction and paused, as if he had partially appeased his hunger.
"Come," said D'Artagnan, who thought that it was now a convenient time to
begin his interrogations, "dost thou know where Athos is?"
"No, sir," replied Planet.
"e devil thou dost not! Dost know where Porthos is?"
"No--not at all."
"And Aramis?"
"Not in the least."
"e devil! the devil! the devil!"
"But, sir," said Planet, with a look of shrewdness, "I know where Bazin is."
"Where is he?"
lvi
e officiating priest was just finishing mass whilst D'Artagnan was look-
ing at Bazin; he pronounced the words of the holy Sacrament and retired, giving
the benediction, whi was received by the kneeling communicants, to the aston-
ishment of D'Artagnan, who recognized in the priest the coadjutor* himself, the
famous Jean Francois Gondy, who at that time, having a presentiment of the part
he was to play, was beginning to court popularity by almsgiving. It was to this end
that he performed from time to time some of those early masses whi the common
people, generally, alone aended.
* A sacerdotal officer.
D'Artagnan knelt as well as the rest, received his share of the benediction and made
the sign of the cross; but when Bazin passed in his turn, with his eyes raised to
Heaven and walking, in all humility, the very last, D'Artagnan pulled him by the
hem of his robe.
Bazin looked down and started, as if he had seen a serpent.
"Monsieur d'Artagnan!" he cried; "Vade retro Satanas!"
"So, my dear Bazin!" said the officer, laughing, "this is the way you receive an
old friend."
"Sir," replied Bazin, "the true friends of a Christian are those who aid him in
working out his salvation, not those who hinder him in doing so."
"I don't understand you, Bazin; nor can I see how I can be a stumbling-blo
in the way of your salvation," said D'Artagnan.
"You forget, sir, that you very nearly ruined forever that of my master; and that
it was owing to you that he was very nearly being damned eternally for remaining
a musketeer, whilst all the time his true vocation was the ur."
"My dear Bazin, you ought to perceive," said D'Artagnan, "from the place in
whi you find me, that I am greatly anged in everything. Age produces good
sense, and, as I doubt not but that your master is on the road to salvation, I want
you to tell me where he is, that he may help me to mine."
"Rather say, to take him ba with you into the world. Fortunately, I don't
know where he is."
"How!" cried D'Artagnan; "you don't know where Aramis is?"
"Formerly," replied Bazin, "Aramis was his name of perdition. By Aramis is
meant Simara, whi is the name of a demon. Happily for him he has ceased to bear
that name."
"And therefore," said D'Artagnan, resolved to be patient to the end, "it is not
Aramis I seek, but the Abbe d'Herblay. Come, my dear Bazin, tell me where he is."
"Didn't you hear me tell you, Monsieur d'Artagnan, that I don't know where
he is?"
lix
"at is true."
"Unfortunately, I have no idea where they are."
"And you have no way to get news of them? Wait a week and I myself will
give you some."
"A week is too long. I must find them within three days."
"ree days are a short time and France is large."
"No maer; you know the word must; with that word great things are done."
"And when do you set out?"
"I am now on my road."
"Good lu to you."
"And to you--a good journey."
"Perhaps we shall meet on our road."
"at is not probable."
"Who knows? Chance is so capricious. Adieu, till we meet again! Apropos,
should Mazarin speak to you about me, tell him that I should have requested you to
acquaint him that in a short time he will see whether I am, as he says, too old for
action."
And Roefort went away with one of those diabolical smiles whi used for-
merly to make D'Artagnan shudder, but D'Artagnan could now see it without alarm,
and smiling in his turn, with an expression of melanoly whi the recollections
called up by that smile could, perhaps, alone give to his countenance, he said:
"Go, demon, do what thou wilt! It maers lile now to me. ere's no second
Constance in the world."
On his return to the cathedral, D'Artagnan saw Bazin, who was conversing
with the sacristan. Bazin was making, with his spare lile short arms, ridiculous
gestures. D'Artagnan perceived that he was enforcing prudence with respect to
himself.
D'Artagnan slipped out of the cathedral and placed himself in ambuscade at
the corner of the Rue des Canees; it was impossible that Bazin should go out of
the cathedral without his seeing him.
In five minutes Bazin made his appearance, looking in every direction to see
if he were observed, but he saw no one. Calmed by appearances he ventured to
walk on through the Rue Notre Dame. en D'Artagnan rushed out of his hiding
place and arrived in time to see Bazin turn down the Rue de la Juiverie and enter,
in the Rue de la Calandre, a respectable looking house; and this D'Artagnan felt no
doubt was the habitation of the worthy beadle. Afraid of making any inquiries at
this house, D'Artagnan entered a small tavern at the corner of the street and asked
for a cup of hypocras. is beverage required a good half-hour to prepare. And
D'Artagnan had time, therefore, to wat Bazin unsuspected.
He perceived in the tavern a pert boy between twelve and fieen years of age
lxi
whom he fancied he had seen not twenty minutes before under the guise of a o-
rister. He questioned him, and as the boy had no interest in deceiving, D'Artagnan
learned that he exercised, from six o'clo in the morning until nine, the office of
orister, and from nine o'clo till midnight that of a waiter in the tavern.
Whilst he was talking to this lad a horse was brought to the door of Bazin's
house. It was saddled and bridled. Almost immediately Bazin came downstairs.
"Look!" said the boy, "there's our beadle, who is going a journey."
"And where is he going?" asked D'Artagnan.
"Forsooth, I don't know."
"Half a pistole if you can find out," said D'Artagnan.
"For me?" cried the boy, his eyes sparkling with joy, "if I can find out where
Bazin is going? at is not difficult. You are not joking, are you?"
"No, on the honor of an officer; there is the half-pistole;" and he showed him
the seductive coin, but did not give it him.
"I shall ask him."
"Just the very way not to know. Wait till he is set out and then, marry, come
up, ask, and find out. e half-pistole is ready," and he put it ba again into his
poet.
"I understand," said the ild, with that jeering smile whi marks especially
the "gamin de Paris." "Well, we must wait."
ey had not long to wait. Five minutes aerward Bazin set off on a full trot,
urging on his horse by the blows of a parapluie, whi he was in the habit of using
instead of a riding whip.
Scarcely had he turned the corner of the Rue de la Juiverie when the boy
rushed aer him like a bloodhound on full scent.
Before ten minutes had elapsed the ild returned.
"Well!" said D'Artagnan.
"Well!" answered the boy, "the thing is done."
"Where is he gone?"
"e half-pistole is for me?"
"Doubtless, answer me."
"I want to see it. Give it me, that I may see it is not false."
"ere it is."
e ild put the piece of money into his poet.
"And now, where is he gone?" inquired D'Artagnan.
"He is gone to Noisy."
"How dost thou know?"
"Ah, faith! there was no great cunning necessary. I knew the horse he rode; it
belonged to the buter, who lets it out now and then to M. Bazin. Now I thought
that the buter would not let his horse out like that without knowing where it was
lxii
going. And he answered 'that Monsieur Bazin went to Noisy.' 'Tis his custom. He
goes two or three times a week."
"Dost thou know Noisy well?"
"I think so, truly; my nurse lives there."
"Is there a convent at Noisy?"
"Isn't there a great and grand one--the convent of Jesuits?"
"What is thy name?"
"Friquet."
D'Artagnan wrote the ild's name in his tablets.
"Please, sir," said the boy, "do you think I can gain any more half-pistoles in
any way?"
"Perhaps," replied D'Artagnan.
And having got out all he wanted, he paid for the hypocras, whi he did not
drink, and went quily ba to the Rue Tiquetonne.
. D'Artagnan, Going to a
Distance to discover Aramis.
O entering the hotel D'Artagnan saw a man siing in a corner by the fire. It
was Planet, but so completely transformed, thanks to the old clothes that the
departing husband had le behind, that D'Artagnan himself could hardly recognize
him. Madeleine introduced him in presence of all the servants. Planet addressed
the officer with a fine Flemish phrase; the officer replied in words that belonged
to no language at all, and the bargain was concluded; Madeleine's brother entered
D'Artagnan's service.
e plan adopted by D'Artagnan was soon perfected. He resolved not to rea
Noisy in the day, for fear of being recognized; he had therefore plenty of time before
him, for Noisy is only three or four leagues from Paris, on the road to Meaux.
He began his day by breakfasting substantially--a bad beginning when one
wants to employ the head, but an excellent precaution when one wants to work
the body; and about two o'clo he had his two horses saddled, and followed by
Planet he quied Paris by the Barriere de la Villete. A most active sear was still
prosecuted in the house near the Hotel de la Chevree for the discovery of Planet.
At about a league and a half from the city, D'Artagnan, finding that in his
impatience he had set out too soon, stopped to give the horses breathing time. e
inn was full of disreputable looking people, who seemed as if they were on the point
of commencing some nightly expedition. A man, wrapped in a cloak, appeared at
the door, but seeing a stranger he beoned to his companions, and two men who
were drinking in the inn went out to speak to him.
D'Artagnan, on his side, went up to the landlady, praised her wine--whi
was a horrible production from the country of Montreuil--and heard from her that
there were only two houses of importance in the village; one of these belonged to
the Arbishop of Paris, and was at that time the abode of his niece the Duess
of Longueville; the other was a convent of Jesuits and was the property--a by no
means unusual circumstance--of these worthy fathers.
lxiv
"'Yes, my prince.'"
"My prince!" interrupted D'Artagnan.
"Yes, 'my prince;' but listen. 'If he is here'--this is what the other man said--
'let's see decidedly what to do with him.'
"'What to do with him?' answered the prince.
"'Yes, he's not a man to allow himself to be taken anyhow; he'll defend himself.'
"'Well, we must try to take him alive. Have you cords to bind him with and a
gag to stop his mouth?'
"'We have.'
"'Remember that he will most likely be disguised as a horseman.'
"'Yes, yes, my lord; don't be uneasy.'
"'Besides, I shall be there.'
"'You will assure us that justice----'
"'Yes, yes! I answer for all that,' the prince said.
"'Well, then, we'll do our best.' Having said that, they went out of the stable."
"Well, what maers all that to us?" said D'Artagnan. "is is one of those
aempts that happen every day."
"Are you sure that we are not its objects?"
"We? Why?"
"Just remember what they said. 'I have seen his servant,' said one, and that
applies very well to me."
"Well?"
"'He must certainly be at Noisy, or be coming there this evening,' said the
other; and that applies very well to you."
"What else?"
"en the prince said: 'Take notice that in all probability he will be disguised
as a cavalier;' whi seems to me to leave no room for doubt, since you are dressed
as a cavalier and not as an officer of musketeers. Now then, what do you say to
that?"
"Alas! my dear Planet," said D'Artagnan, sighing, "we are unfortunately no
longer in those times in whi princes would care to assassinate me. ose were
good old days; never fear--these people owe us no grudge."
"Is your honor sure?"
"I can answer for it they do not."
"Well, we won't speak of it any more, then;" and Planet took his place in
D'Artagnan's suite with that sublime confidence he had always had in his master,
whi even fieen years of separation had not destroyed.
ey had traveled onward about half a mile when Planet came close up to
D'Artagnan.
"Stop, sir, look yonder," he whispered; "don't you see in the darkness some-
lxvi
the neighborhood."
"Rascal!"
"Eh! monsieur!" said D'Artagnan, "I beg you will have a care what you say;
for if you uer another word like that, be you marquis, duke, prince or king, I will
thrust it down your throat! do you hear?"
"Well, well," rejoined the leader, "there's no doubt 'tis a Gascon who is speak-
ing, and therefore not the man we are looking for. Our blow has failed for to-night;
let us withdraw. We shall meet again, Master d'Artagnan," continued the leader,
raising his voice.
"Yes, but never with the same advantages," said D'Artagnan, in a tone of
raillery; "for when you meet me again you will perhaps be alone and there will
be daylight."
"Very good, very good," said the voice. "En route, gentlemen."
And the troop, grumbling angrily, disappeared in the darkness and took the
road to Paris. D'Artagnan and Planet remained for some moments still on the
defensive; then, as the noise of the horsemen became more and more distant, they
sheathed their swords.
"ou seest, simpleton," said D'Artagnan to his servant, "that they wished no
harm to us."
"But to whom, then?"
"I'faith! I neither know nor care. What I do care for now, is to make my way
into the Jesuits' convent; so to horse and let us kno at their door. Happen what
will, the devil take them, they can't eat us."
And he mounted his horse. Planet had just done the same when an unex-
pected weight fell upon the ba of the horse, whi sank down.
"Hey! your honor!" cried Planet, "I've a man behind me."
D'Artagnan turned around and plainly saw two human forms on Planet's
horse.
"'Tis then the devil that pursues!" he cried; drawing his sword and preparing
to aa the new foe.
"No, no, dear D'Artagnan," said the figure, "'tis not the devil, 'tis Aramis; gallop
fast, Planet, and when you come to the end of the village turn swily to the le."
And Planet, with Aramis behind him, set off at full gallop, followed by
D'Artagnan, who began to think he was in the merry maze of some fantastic dream.
. e Abbe D'Herblay.
A the extremity of the village Planet turned to the le in obedience to the
orders of Aramis, and stopped underneath the window whi had light in it.
Aramis alighted and clapped his hands three times. Immediately the window was
opened and a ladder of rope was let down from it.
"My friend," said Aramis, "if you like to ascend I shall be delighted to receive
you."
"Ah," said D'Artagnan, "is that the way you return to your apartment?"
"Aer nine at night, pardieu!" said Aramis, "the rule of the convent is very
severe."
"Pardon me, my dear friend," said D'Artagnan, "I think you said 'pardieu!'"
"Do you think so?" said Aramis, smiling; "it is possible. You have no idea,
my dear fellow, how one acquires bad habits in these cursed convents, or what evil
ways all these men of the ur have, with whom I am obliged to live. But will
you not go up?"
"Pass on before me, I beg of you."
"As the late cardinal used to say to the late king, 'only to show you the way,
sire.'" And Aramis ascended the ladder quily and reaed the window in an in-
stant.
D'Artagnan followed, but less nimbly, showing plainly that this mode of as-
cent was not one to whi he was accustomed.
"I beg your pardon," said Aramis, noticing his awkwardness; "if I had known
that I was to have the honor of your visit I should have procured the gardener's
ladder; but for me alone this is good enough."
"Sir," said Planet when he saw D'Artagnan on the summit of the ladder, "this
way is easy for Monsieur Aramis and even for you; in case of necessity I might also
climb up, but my two horses cannot mount the ladder."
"Take them to yonder shed, my friend," said Aramis, pointing to a low building
on the plain; "there you will find hay and straw for them; then come ba here and
lxx
clap your hands three times, and we will give you wine and food. Marry, forsooth,
people don't die of hunger here."
And Aramis, drawing in the ladder, closed the window. D'Artagnan then
looked around aentively.
Never was there an apartment at the same time more warlike and more ele-
gant. At ea corner were arranged trophies, presenting to view swords of all sorts,
and on the walls hung four great pictures representing in their ordinary military
costume the Cardinal de Lorraine, the Cardinal de Rielieu, the Cardinal de la
Valee, and the Arbishop of Bordeaux. Exteriorly, nothing in the room showed
that it was the habitation of an abbe. e hangings were of damask, the carpets from
Alencon, and the bed, especially, had more the look of a fine lady's cou, with its
trimmings of fine lace and its embroidered counterpane, than that of a man who had
made a vow that he would endeavor to gain Heaven by fasting and mortification.
"You are examining my den," said Aramis. "Ah, my dear fellow, excuse me; I
am lodged like a Chartreux. But what are you looking for?"
"I am looking for the person who let down the ladder. I see no one and yet
the ladder didn't come down of itself."
"No, it is Bazin."
"Ah! ah!" said D'Artagnan.
"But," continued Aramis, "Bazin is a well trained servant, and seeing that I
was not alone he discreetly retired. Sit down, my dear friend, and let us talk." And
Aramis pushed forward a large easy-air, in whi D'Artagnan streted himself
out.
"In the first place, you will sup with me, will you not?" asked Aramis.
"Yes, if you really wish it," said D'Artagnan, "and even with great pleasure, I
confess; the journey has given me a devil of an appetite."
"Ah, my poor friend!" said Aramis, "you will find meagre fare; you were not
expected."
"Am I then threatened with the omelet of Crevecoeur?"
"Oh, let us hope," said Aramis, "that with the help of God and of Bazin we shall
find something beer than that in the larder of the worthy Jesuit fathers. Bazin, my
friend, come here."
e door opened and Bazin entered; on perceiving the musketeer he uered
an exclamation that was almost a cry of despair.
"My dear Bazin," said D'Artagnan, "I am delighted to see with what wonderful
composure you can tell a lie even in ur!"
"Sir," replied Bazin, "I have been taught by the good Jesuit fathers that it is
permied to tell a falsehood when it is told in a good cause."
"So far well," said Aramis; "we are dying of hunger. Serve us up the best supper
you can, and especially give us some good wine."
lxxi
and spend all your time reading your breviary. But I give you warning that if in
polishing your apel utensils you forget how to brighten up my sword, I will make
a great fire of your blessed images and will see that you are roasted on it."
Bazin, scandalized, made a sign of the cross with the bole in his hand.
D'Artagnan, more surprised than ever at the tone and manners of the Abbe
d'Herblay, whi contrasted so strongly with those of the Musketeer Aramis, re-
mained staring with wide-open eyes at the face of his friend.
Bazin quily covered the table with a damask cloth and arranged upon it so
many things, gilded, perfumed, appetizing, that D'Artagnan was quite overcome.
"But you expected some one then?" asked the officer.
"Oh," said Aramis, "I always try to be prepared; and then I knew you were
seeking me."
"From whom?"
"From Master Bazin, to be sure; he took you for the devil, my dear fellow, and
hastened to warn me of the danger that threatened my soul if I should meet again
a companion so wied as an officer of musketeers."
"Oh, monsieur!" said Bazin, clasping his hands supplicatingly.
"Come, no hypocrisy! you know that I don't like it. You will do mu beer to
open the window and let down some bread, a ien and a bole of wine to your
friend Planet, who has been this last hour killing himself clapping his hands."
Planet, in fact, had bedded and fed his horses, and then coming ba under
the window had repeated two or three times the signal agreed upon.
Bazin obeyed, fastened to the end of a cord the three articles designated and
let them down to Planet, who then went satisfied to his shed.
"Now to supper," said Aramis.
e two friends sat down and Aramis began to cut up fowls, partridges and
hams with admirable skill.
"e deuce!" cried D'Artagnan; "do you live in this way always?"
"Yes, prey well. e coadjutor has given me dispensations from fasting on
the jours maigres, on account of my health; then I have engaged as my cook the cook
who lived with Lafollone--you know the man I mean?--the friend of the cardinal,
and the famous epicure whose grace aer dinner used to be, 'Good Lord, do me the
favor to cause me to digest what I have eaten.'"
"Nevertheless he died of indigestion, in spite of his grace," said D'Artagnan.
"What can you expect?" replied Aramis, in a tone of resignation. "Every man
that's born must fulfil his destiny."
"If it be not an indelicate question," resumed D'Artagnan, "have you grown
ri?"
"Oh, Heaven! no. I make about twelve thousand francs a year, without count-
ing a lile benefice of a thousand crowns the prince gave me."
lxxiv
"And how do you make your twelve thousand francs? By your poems?"
"No, I have given up poetry, except now and then to write a drinking song,
some gay sonnet or some innocent epigram; I compose sermons, my friend."
"What! sermons? Do you prea them?"
"No; I sell them to those of my cloth who wish to become great orators."
"Ah, indeed! and you have not been tempted by the hopes of reputation your-
self?"
"I should, my dear D'Artagnan, have been so, but nature said 'No.' When I am
in the pulpit, if by ance a prey woman looks at me, I look at her again: if she
smiles, I smile too. en I speak at random; instead of preaing about the torments
of hell I talk of the joys of Paradise. An event took place in the Chur of St. Louis
au Marais. A gentleman laughed in my face. I stopped short to tell him that he was
a fool; the congregation went out to get stones to stone me with, but whilst they
were away I found means to conciliate the priests who were present, so that my
foe was pelted instead of me. 'Tis true that he came the next morning to my house,
thinking that he had to do with an abbe--like all other abbes."
"And what was the end of the affair?"
"We met in the Place Royale--Egad! you know about it."
"Was I not your second?" cried D'Artagnan.
"You were; you know how I seled the maer."
"Did he die?"
"I don't know. But, at all events, I gave him absolution in articulo mortis. 'Tis
enough to kill the body, without killing the soul."
Bazin made a despairing sign whi meant that while perhaps he approved
the moral he altogether disapproved the tone in whi it was uered.
"Bazin, my friend," said Aramis, "you don't seem to be aware that I can see
you in that mirror, and you forget that once for all I have forbidden all signs of
approbation or disapprobation. You will do me the favor to bring us some Spanish
wine and then to withdraw. Besides, my friend D'Artagnan has something to say
to me privately, have you not, D'Artagnan?"
D'Artagnan nodded his head and Bazin retired, aer placing on the table the
Spanish wine.
e two friends, le alone, remained silent, face to face. Aramis seemed to
await a comfortable digestion; D'Artagnan, to be preparing his exordium. Ea of
them, when the other was not looking, hazarded a sly glance. It was Aramis who
broke the silence.
"What are you thinking of, D'Artagnan?" he began.
"I was thinking, my dear old friend, that when you were a musketeer you
turned your thoughts incessantly to the ur, and now that you are an abbe you
are perpetually longing to be once more a musketeer."
lxxv
"'Tis true; man, as you know," said Aramis, "is a strange animal, made up of
contradictions. Since I became an abbe I dream of nothing but bales."
"at is apparent in your surroundings; you have rapiers here of every form
and to suit the most exacting taste. Do you still fence well?"
"I--I fence as well as you did in the old time--beer still, perhaps; I do nothing
else all day."
"And with whom?"
"With an excellent master-at-arms that we have here."
"What! here?"
"Yes, here, in this convent, my dear fellow. ere is everything in a Jesuit
convent."
"en you would have killed Monsieur de Marsillac if he had come alone to
aa you, instead of at the head of twenty men?"
"Undoubtedly," said Aramis, "and even at the head of his twenty men, if I
could have drawn without being recognized."
"God pardon me!" said D'Artagnan to himself, "I believe he has become more
Gascon than I am!" en aloud: "Well, my dear Aramis, do you ask me why I came
to seek you?"
"No, I have not asked you that," said Aramis, with his subtle manner; "but I
have expected you to tell me."
"Well, I sought you for the single purpose of offering you a ance to kill
Monsieur de Marsillac whenever you please, prince though he is."
"Hold on! wait!" said Aramis; "that is an idea!"
"Of whi I invite you to take advantage, my friend. Let us see; with your
thousand crowns from the abbey and the twelve thousand francs you make by sell-
ing sermons, are you ri? Answer frankly."
"I? I am as poor as Job, and were you to sear my poets and my boxes I
don't believe you would find a hundred pistoles."
"Peste! a hundred pistoles!" said D'Artagnan to himself; "he calls that being
as poor as Job! If I had them I should think myself as ri as Croesus." en aloud:
"Are you ambitious?"
"As Enceladus."
"Well, my friend, I bring you the means of becoming ri, powerful, and free
to do whatever you wish."
e shadow of a cloud passed over Aramis's face as quily as that whi
in August passes over the field of grain; but qui as it was, it did not escape
D'Artagnan's observation.
"Speak on," said Aramis.
"One question first. Do you take any interest in politics?"
A gleam of light shone in Aramis's eyes, as brief as the shadow that had passed
lxxvi
over his face, but not so brief but that it was seen by D'Artagnan.
"No," Aramis replied.
"en proposals from any quarter will be agreeable to you, since for the mo-
ment you have no master but God?"
"It is possible."
"Have you, my dear Aramis, thought sometimes of those happy, happy, happy
days of youth we passed laughing, drinking, and fighting ea other for play?"
"Certainly, and more than once regreed them; it was indeed a glorious time."
"Well, those splendidly wild days may ance to come again; I am commis-
sioned to find out my companions and I began by you, who were the very soul of
our society."
Aramis bowed, rather with respect than pleasure at the compliment.
"To meddle in politics," he exclaimed, in a languid voice, leaning ba in his
easy-air. "Ah! dear D'Artagnan! see how regularly I live and how easy I am here.
We have experienced the ingratitude of 'the great,' as you well know."
"'Tis true," replied D'Artagnan. "Yet the great sometimes repent of their in-
gratitude."
"In that case it would be quite another thing. Come! let's be merciful to every
sinner! Besides, you are right in another respect, whi is in thinking that if we
were to meddle in politics there could not be a beer time than the present."
"How can you know that? You who never interest yourself in politics?"
"Ah! without caring about them myself, I live among those who are mu
occupied in them. Poet as I am, I am intimate with Sarazin, who is devoted to
the Prince de Conti, and with Monsieur de Bois-Robert, who, since the death of
Cardinal Rielieu, is of all parties or any party; so that political discussions have
not altogether been uninteresting to me."
"I have no doubt of it," said D'Artagnan.
"Now, my dear friend, look upon all I tell you as merely the statement of a
monk--of a man who resembles an eo--repeating simply what he hears. I under-
stand that Mazarin is at this very moment extremely uneasy as to the state of affairs;
that his orders are not respected like those of our former bugbear, the deceased car-
dinal, whose portrait as you see hangs yonder--for whatever may be thought of him,
it must be allowed that Rielieu was great."
"I will not contradict you there," said D'Artagnan.
"My first impressions were favorable to the minister; I said to myself that a
minister is never loved, but that with the genius this one was said to have he would
eventually triumph over his enemies and would make himself feared, whi in my
opinion is mu more to be desired than to be loved----"
D'Artagnan made a sign with his head whi indicated that he entirely ap-
proved that doubtful maxim.
lxxvii
"is, then," continued Aramis, "was my first opinion; but as I am very igno-
rant in maers of this kind and as the humility whi I profess obliges me not to
rest on my own judgment, but to ask the opinion of others, I have inquired--Eh!--my
friend----"
Aramis paused.
"Well? what?" asked his friend.
"Well, I must mortify myself. I must confess that I was mistaken. Monsieur
de Mazarin is not a man of genius, as I thought, he is a man of no origin--once a
servant of Cardinal Bentivoglio, and he got on by intrigue. He is an upstart, a man
of no name, who will only be the tool of a party in France. He will amass wealth, he
will injure the king's revenue and pay to himself the pensions whi Rielieu paid
to others. He is neither a gentleman in manner nor in feeling, but a sort of buffoon,
a puninello, a pantaloon. Do you know him? I do not."
"Hem!" said D'Artagnan, "there is some truth in what you say."
"Ah! it fills me with pride to find that, thanks to a common sort of penetration
with whi I am endowed, I am approved by a man like you, fresh from the court."
"But you speak of him, not of his party, his resources."
"It is true--the queen is for him."
"Something in his favor."
"But he will never have the king."
"A mere ild."
"A ild who will be of age in four years. en he has neither the parliament
nor the people with him--they represent the wealth of the country; nor the nobles
nor the princes, who are the military power of France."
D'Artagnan scrated his ear. He was forced to confess to himself that this
reasoning was not only comprehensive, but just.
"You see, my poor friend, that I am sometimes bere of my ordinary thought-
fulness; perhaps I am wrong in speaking thus to you, who have evidently a leaning
to Mazarin."
"I!" cried D'Artagnan, "not in the least."
"You spoke of a mission."
"Did I? I was wrong then, no, I said what you say--there is a crisis at hand.
Well! let's fly the feather before the wind; let us join with that side to whi the wind
will carry it and resume our adventurous life. We were once four valiant knights--
four hearts fondly united; let us unite again, not our hearts, whi have never been
severed, but our courage and our fortunes. Here's a good opportunity for geing
something beer than a diamond."
"You are right, D'Artagnan; I held a similar project, but as I had not nor ever
shall have your fruitful, vigorous imagination, the idea was suggested to me. Every
one nowadays wants auxiliaries; propositions have been made to me and I confess
lxxviii
Bazin streted his arms, rubbed his eyes, and tried to go to sleep again.
"Come, come, sleepy head; qui, the ladder!"
"But," said Bazin, yawning portentously, "the ladder is still at the window."
"e other one, the gardener's. Didn't you see that Monsieur d'Artagnan
mounted with difficulty? It will be even more difficult to descend."
D'Artagnan was about to assure Aramis that he could descend easily, when
an idea came into his head whi silenced him.
Bazin uered a profound sigh and went out to look for the ladder. Presently
a good, solid, wooden ladder was placed against the window.
"Now then," said D'Artagnan, "this is something like; this is a means of com-
munication. A woman could go up a ladder like that."
Aramis's searing look seemed to seek his friend's thought even at the bot-
tom of his heart, but D'Artagnan sustained the inquisition with an air of admirable
simplicity. Besides, at that moment he put his foot on the first step of the ladder
and began his descent. In a moment he was on the ground. Bazin remained at the
window.
"Stay there," said Aramis; "I shall return immediately."
e two friends went toward the shed. At their approa Planet came out
leading the two horses.
"at is good to see," said Aramis. "ere is a servant active and vigilant, not
like that lazy fellow Bazin, who is no longer good for anything since he became
connected with the ur. Follow us, Planet; we shall continue our conversation
to the end of the village."
ey traversed the width of the village, talking of indifferent things, then as
they reaed the last houses:
"Go, then, dear friend," said Aramis, "follow your own career. Fortune lavishes
her smiles upon you; do not let her flee from your embrace. As for me, I remain in
my humility and indolence. Adieu!"
"us 'tis quite decided," said D'Artagnan, "that what I have to offer to you
does not tempt you?"
"On the contrary, it would tempt me were I any other man," rejoined Aramis;
"but I repeat, I am made up of contradictions. What I hate to-day I adore to-morrow,
and vice versa. You see that I cannot, like you, for instance, sele on any fixed plan."
"ou liest, subtile one," said D'Artagnan to himself. "ou alone, on the con-
trary, knowest how to oose thy object and to gain it stealthily."
e friends embraced. ey descended into the plain by the ladder. Planet
met them hard by the shed. D'Artagnan jumped into the saddle, then the old com-
panions in arms again shook hands. D'Artagnan and Planet spurred their steeds
and took the road to Paris.
But aer he had gone about two hundred steps D'Artagnan stopped short,
lxxxi
alighted, threw the bridle of his horse over the arm of Planet and took the pistols
from his saddle-bow to fasten them to his girdle.
"What's the maer?" asked Planet.
"is is the maer: be he ever so cunning he shall never say I was his dupe.
Stand here, don't stir, turn your ba to the road and wait for me."
Having thus spoken, D'Artagnan cleared the dit by the roadside and crossed
the plain so as to wind around the village. He had observed between the house that
Madame de Longueville inhabited and the convent of the Jesuits, an open space
surrounded by a hedge.
e moon had now risen and he could see well enough to retrace his road.
He reaed the hedge and hid himself behind it; in passing by the house where
the scene whi we have related took place, he remarked that the window was
again lighted up and he was convinced that Aramis had not yet returned to his own
apartment and that when he did it would not be alone.
In truth, in a few minutes he heard steps approaing and low whispers.
Close to the hedge the steps stopped.
D'Artagnan knelt down near the thiest part of the hedge.
Two men, to the astonishment of D'Artagnan, appeared shortly; soon, how-
ever, his surprise vanished, for he heard the murmurs of a so, harmonious voice;
one of these two men was a woman disguised as a cavalier.
"Calm yourself, dear Rene," said the so voice, "the same thing will never
happen again. I have discovered a sort of subterranean passage whi runs beneath
the street and we shall only have to raise one of the marble slabs before the door to
open you an entrance and an outlet."
"Oh!" answered another voice, whi D'Artagnan instantly recognized as that
of Aramis. "I swear to you, princess, that if your reputation did not depend on
precautions and if my life alone were jeopardized----"
"Yes, yes! I know you are as brave and venturesome as any man in the world,
but you do not belong to me alone; you belong to all our party. Be prudent! sensible!"
"I always obey, madame, when I am commanded by so gentle a voice."
He kissed her hand tenderly.
"Ah!" exclaimed the cavalier with a so voice.
"What's the maer?" asked Aramis.
"Do you not see that the wind has blown off my hat?"
Aramis rushed aer the fugitive hat. D'Artagnan took advantage of the cir-
cumstance to find a place in the hedge not so thi, where his glance could pene-
trate to the supposed cavalier. At that instant, the moon, inquisitive, perhaps, like
D'Artagnan, came from behind a cloud and by her light D'Artagnan recognized the
large blue eyes, the golden hair and the classic head of the Duess de Longueville.
Aramis returned, laughing, one hat on his head and the other in his hand; and
lxxxii
T to what Aramis had told him, D'Artagnan, who knew already that
Porthos called himself Du Vallon, was now aware that he styled himself, from
his estate, De Bracieux; and that he was, on account of this estate, engaged in a
lawsuit with the Bishop of Noyon. It was, then, in the neighborhood of Noyon that
he must seek that estate. His itinerary was promptly determined: he would go to
Dammartin, from whi place two roads diverge, one toward Soissons, the other
toward Compiegne; there he would inquire concerning the Bracieux estate and go
to the right or to the le according to the information obtained.
Planet, who was still a lile concerned for his safety aer his recent es-
capade, declared that he would follow D'Artagnan even to the end of the world,
either by the road to the right or by that to the le; only he begged his former mas-
ter to set out in the evening, for greater security to himself. D'Artagnan suggested
that he should send word to his wife, so that she might not be anxious about him,
but Planet replied with mu sagacity that he was very sure his wife would not
die of anxiety through not knowing where he was, while he, Planet, remembering
her incontinence of tongue, would die of anxiety if she did know.
is reasoning seemed to D'Artagnan so satisfactory that he no further in-
sisted; and about eight o'clo in the evening, the time when the vapors of night
begin to thien in the streets, he le the Hotel de la Chevree, and followed by
Planet set forth from the capital by way of the Saint Denis gate.
At midnight the two travelers were at Dammartin, but it was then too late to
make inquiries--the host of the Cygne de la Croix had gone to bed.
e next morning D'Artagnan summoned the host, one of those sly Normans
who say neither yes nor no and fear to commit themselves by giving a direct answer.
D'Artagnan, however, gathered from his equivocal replies that the road to the right
was the one he ought to take, and on that uncertain information he resumed his
lxxxiv
journey. At nine in the morning he reaed Nanteuil and stopped for breakfast.
His host here was a good fellow from Picardy, who gave him all the information he
needed. e Bracieux estate was a few leagues from Villars-Coerets.
D'Artagnan was acquainted with Villars-Coerets, having gone thither with
the court on several occasions; for at that time Villars-Coerets was a royal res-
idence. He therefore shaped his course toward that place and dismounted at the
Dauphin d'Or. ere he ascertained that the Bracieux estate was four leagues dis-
tant, but that Porthos was not at Bracieux. Porthos had, in fact, been involved in
a dispute with the Bishop of Noyon in regard to the Pierrefonds property, whi
adjoined his own, and weary at length of a legal controversy whi was beyond
his comprehension, he put an end to it by purasing Pierrefonds and added that
name to his others. He now called himself Du Vallon de Bracieux de Pierrefonds,
and resided on his new estate.
e travelers were therefore obliged to stay at the hotel until the next day;
the horses had done ten leagues that day and needed rest. It is true they might have
taken others, but there was a great forest to pass through and Planet, as we have
seen, had no liking for forests aer dark.
ere was another thing that Planet had no liking for and that was starting
on a journey with a hungry stoma. Accordingly, D'Artagnan, on awaking, found
his breakfast waiting for him. It need not be said that Planet in resuming his
former functions resumed also his former humility and was not ashamed to make
his breakfast on what was le by D'Artagnan.
It was nearly eight o'clo when they set out again. eir course was clearly
defined: they were to follow the road toward Compiegne and on emerging from the
forest turn to the right.
e morning was beautiful, and in this early springtime the birds sang on
the trees and the sunbeams shone through the misty glades, like curtains of golden
gauze.
In other parts of the forest the light could scarcely penetrate through the fo-
liage, and the stems of two old oak trees, the refuge of the squirrel, startled by the
travelers, were in deep shadow.
ere came up from all nature in the dawn of day a perfume of herbs, flowers
and leaves, whi delighted the heart. D'Artagnan, si of the closeness of Paris,
thought that when a man had three names of his different estates joined one to
another, he ought to be very happy in su a paradise; then he shook his head,
saying, "If I were Porthos and D'Artagnan came to make me su a proposition as I
am going to make to him, I know what I should say to it."
As to Planet, he thought of lile or nothing, but was happy as a hunting-
hound in his old master's company.
At the extremity of the wood D'Artagnan perceived the road that had been
lxxxv
described to him, and at the end of the road he saw the towers of an immense feudal
castle.
"Oh! oh!" he said, "I fancied this castle belonged to the ancient bran of
Orleans. Can Porthos have negotiated for it with the Duc de Longueville?"
"Faith!" exclaimed Planet, "here's land in good condition; if it belongs to
Monsieur Porthos I wish him joy."
"Zounds!" cried D'Artagnan, "don't call him Porthos, nor even Vallon; call
him De Bracieux or De Pierrefonds; thou wilt knell out damnation to my mission
otherwise."
As he approaed the castle whi had first aracted his eye, D'Artagnan was
convinced that it could not be there that his friend dwelt; the towers, though solid
and as if built yesterday, were open and broken. One might have fancied that some
giant had cleaved them with blows from a hatet.
On arriving at the extremity of the castle D'Artagnan found himself overlook-
ing a beautiful valley, in whi, at the foot of a arming lile lake, stood several
scaered houses, whi, humble in their aspect, and covered, some with tiles, oth-
ers with that, seemed to anowledge as their sovereign lord a prey ateau,
built about the beginning of the reign of Henry IV., and surmounted by four stately,
gilded weather-cos. D'Artagnan no longer doubted that this was Porthos's pleas-
ant dwelling place.
e road led straight up to the ateau whi, compared to its ancestor on the
hill, was exactly what a fop of the coterie of the Duc d'Enghein would have been
beside a knight in steel armor in the time of Charles VII. D'Artagnan spurred his
horse on and pursued his road, followed by Planet at the same pace.
In ten minutes D'Artagnan reaed the end of an alley regularly planted with
fine poplars and terminating in an iron gate, the points and crossed bars of whi
were gilt. In the midst of this avenue was a nobleman, dressed in green and with as
mu gilding about him as the iron gate, riding on a tall horse. On his right hand
and his le were two footmen, with the seams of their dresses laced. A considerable
number of clowns were assembled and rendered homage to their lord.
"Ah!" said D'Artagnan to himself, "can this be the Seigneur du Vallon de Bra-
cieux de Pierrefonds? Well-a-day! how he has shrunk since he gave up the name of
Porthos!"
"is cannot be Monsieur Porthos," observed Planet replying, as it were, to
his master's thoughts. "Monsieur Porthos was six feet high; this man is scarcely
five."
"Nevertheless," said D'Artagnan, "the people are bowing very low to this per-
son."
As he spoke, he rode toward the tall horse--to the man of importance and his
valets. As he approaed he seemed to recognize the features of this individual.
lxxxvi
D 'A passed through the iron gate and arrived in front of the ateau.
He alighted as he saw a species of giant on the steps. Let us do justice to
D'Artagnan. Independently of every selfish wish, his heart palpitated with joy when
he saw that tall form and martial demeanor, whi recalled to him a good and brave
man.
He ran to Porthos and threw himself into his arms; the whole body of servants,
arranged in a semi-circle at a respectful distance, looked on with humble curiosity.
Mousqueton, at the head of them, wiped his eyes. Porthos linked his arm in that of
his friend.
"Ah! how delightful to see you again, dear friend!" he cried, in a voice whi
was now anged from a baritone into a bass, "you've not then forgoen me?"
"Forget you! oh! dear Du Vallon, does one forget the happiest days of flowery
youth, one's dearest friends, the dangers we have dared together? On the contrary,
there is not an hour we have passed together that is not present to my memory."
"Yes, yes," said Porthos, trying to give to his mustae a curl whi it had lost
whilst he had been alone. "Yes, we did some fine things in our time and we gave
that poor cardinal a few threads to unravel."
And he heaved a sigh.
"Under any circumstances," he resumed, "you are welcome, my dear friend;
you will help me to recover my spirits; to-morrow we will hunt the hare on my
plain, whi is a superb tract of land, or pursue the deer in my woods, whi are
magnificent. I have four harriers whi are considered the swiest in the county,
and a pa of hounds whi are unequalled for twenty leagues around."
And Porthos heaved another sigh.
"But, first," interposed D'Artagnan, "you must present me to Madame du Val-
lon."
lxxxix
"So he's called Mouston," thought D'Artagnan; "'tis too long a word to pro-
nounce 'Mousqueton.'"
"Well," he said aloud, "let us resume our conversation later, your people may
suspect something; there may be spies about. You can suppose, Porthos, that what
I have to say relates to most important maers."
"Devil take them; let us walk in the park," answered Porthos, "for the sake of
digestion."
"Egad," said D'Artagnan, "the park is like everything else and there are as many
fish in your pond as rabbits in your warren; you are a happy man, my friend since
you have not only retained your love of the ase, but acquired that of fishing."
"My friend," replied Porthos, "I leave fishing to Mousqueton,--it is a vulgar
pleasure,--but I shoot sometimes; that is to say, when I am dull, and I sit on one
of those marble seats, have my gun brought to me, my favorite dog, and I shoot
rabbits."
"Really, how very amusing!"
"Yes," replied Porthos, with a sigh, "it is amusing."
D'Artagnan now no longer counted the sighs. ey were innumerable.
"However, what had you to say to me?" he resumed; "let us return to that
subject."
"With pleasure," replied D'Artagnan; "I must, however, first frankly tell you
that you must ange your mode of life."
"How?"
"Go into harness again, gird on your sword, run aer adventures, and leave
as in old times a lile of your fat on the roadside."
"Ah! hang it!" said Porthos.
"I see you are spoiled, dear friend; you are corpulent, your arm has no longer
that movement of whi the late cardinal's guards have so many proofs."
"Ah! my fist is strong enough I swear," cried Porthos, extending a hand like a
shoulder of muon.
"So mu the beer."
"Are we then to go to war?"
"By my troth, yes."
"Against whom?"
"Are you a politician, friend?"
"Not in the least."
"Are you for Mazarin or for the princes?"
"I am for no one."
"at is to say, you are for us. Well, I tell you that I come to you from the
cardinal."
is spee was heard by Porthos in the same sense as if it had still been in
xcii
to make our profits; this, however, doesn't concern you, with your forty thousand
francs income, the happiest man in the world, it seems to me."
Porthos sighed.
"At the same time," continued D'Artagnan, "notwithstanding your forty thou-
sand francs a year, and perhaps even for the very reason that you have forty thou-
sand francs a year, it seems to me that a lile coronet would do well on your carriage,
hey?"
"Yes indeed," said Porthos.
"Well, my dear friend, win it--it is at the point of your sword. We shall not
interfere with ea other--your object is a title; mine, money. If I can get enough
to rebuild Artagnan, whi my ancestors, impoverished by the Crusades, allowed
to fall into ruins, and to buy thirty acres of land about it, that is all I wish. I shall
retire and die tranquilly--at home."
"For my part," said Porthos, "I desire to be made a baron."
"You shall be one."
"And have you not seen any of our other friends?"
"Yes, I have seen Aramis."
"And what does he wish? To be a bishop?"
"Aramis," answered D'Artagnan, who did not wish to undeceive Porthos,
"Aramis, fancy, has become a monk and a Jesuit, and lives like a bear. My offers
did not arouse him,--did not even tempt him."
"So mu the worse! He was a clever man. And Athos?"
"I have not yet seen him. Do you know where I shall find him?"
"Near Blois. He is called Bragelonne. Only imagine, my dear friend. Athos,
who was of as high birth as the emperor and who inherits one estate whi gives
him the title of comte, what is he to do with all those dignities--the Comte de la
Fere, Comte de Bragelonne?"
"And he has no ildren with all these titles?"
"Ah!" said Porthos, "I have heard that he had adopted a young man who re-
sembles him greatly."
"What, Athos? Our Athos, who was as virtuous as Scipio? Have you seen
him?
"No."
"Well, I shall see him to-morrow and tell him about you; but I'm afraid, entre
nous, that his liking for wine has aged and degraded him."
"Yes, he used to drink a great deal," replied Porthos.
"And then he was older than any of us," added D'Artagnan.
"Some years only. His gravity made him look older than he was."
"Well then, if we can get Athos, all will be well. If we cannot, we will do
without him. We two are worth a dozen."
xciv
"Yes," said Porthos, smiling at the remembrance of his former exploits; "but we
four, altogether, would be equal to thirty-six, more especially as you say the work
will not be ild's play. Will it last long?"
"By'r Lady! two or three years perhaps."
"So mu the beer," cried Porthos. "You have no idea, my friend, how my
bones ae since I came here. Sometimes on a Sunday, I take a ride in the fields and
on the property of my neighbours, in order to pi up a nice lile quarrel, whi
I am really in want of, but nothing happens. Either they respect or they fear me,
whi is more likely, but they let me trample down the clover with my dogs, insult
and obstruct every one, and I come ba still more weary and low-spirited, that's
all. At any rate, tell me: there's more ance of fighting in Paris, is there not?"
"In that respect, my dear friend, it's delightful. No more edicts, no more of the
cardinal's guards, no more De Jussacs, nor other bloodhounds. I'Gad! underneath
a lamp in an inn, anywhere, they ask 'Are you one of the Fronde?' ey unsheathe,
and that's all that is said. e Duke de Guise killed Monsieur de Coligny in the Place
Royale and nothing was said of it."
"Ah, things go on gaily, then," said Porthos.
"Besides whi, in a short time," resumed D'Artagnan, "We shall have set bat-
tles, cannonades, conflagrations and there will be great variety."
"Well, then, I decide."
"I have your word, then?"
"Yes, 'tis given. I shall fight heart and soul for Mazarin; but----"
"But?"
"But he must make me a baron."
"Zounds!" said D'Artagnan, "that's seled already; I will be responsible for the
barony."
On this promise being given, Porthos, who had never doubted his friend's
assurance, turned ba with him toward the castle.
. Porthos was Discontented
with his Condition.
A they returned toward the castle, D'Artagnan thought of the miseries of poor
human nature, always dissatisfied with what it has, ever desirous of what it
has not.
In the position of Porthos, D'Artagnan would have been perfectly happy; and
to make Porthos contented there was wanting--what? five leers to put before his
three names, a tiny coronet to paint upon the panels of his carriage!
"I shall pass all my life," thought D'Artagnan, "in seeking for a man who is
really contented with his lot."
Whilst making this reflection, ance seemed, as it were, to give him the lie di-
rect. When Porthos had le him to give some orders he saw Mousqueton approa-
ing. e face of the steward, despite one slight shade of care, light as a summer
cloud, seemed a physiognomy of absolute felicity.
"Here is what I am looking for," thought D'Artagnan; "but alas! the poor fellow
does not know the purpose for whi I am here."
He then made a sign for Mousqueton to come to him.
"Sir," said the servant, "I have a favour to ask you."
"Speak out, my friend."
"I am afraid to do so. Perhaps you will think, sir, that prosperity has spoiled
me?"
"Art thou happy, friend?" asked D'Artagnan.
"As happy as possible; and yet, sir, you may make me even happier than I am."
"Well, speak, if it depends on me."
"Oh, sir! it depends on you only."
"I listen--I am waiting to hear."
"Sir, the favor I have to ask of you is, not to call me 'Mousqueton' but 'Mouston.'
Since I have had the honor of being my lord's steward I have taken the last name as
xcvi
more dignified and calculated to make my inferiors respect me. You, sir, know how
necessary subordination is in any large establishment of servants."
D'Artagnan smiled; Porthos wanted to lengthen out his names, Mousqueton
to cut his short.
"Well, my dear Mouston," he said, "rest satisfied. I will call thee Mouston; and
if it makes thee happy I will not 'tutoyer' you any longer."
"Oh!" cried Mousqueton, reddening with joy; "if you do me, sir, su honor, I
shall be grateful all my life; it is too mu to ask."
"Alas!" thought D'Artagnan, "it is very lile to offset the unexpected tribula-
tions I am bringing to this poor devil who has so warmly welcomed me."
"Will monsieur remain long with us?" asked Mousqueton, with a serene and
glowing countenance.
"I go to-morrow, my friend," replied D'Artagnan.
"Ah, monsieur," said Mousqueton, "then you have come here only to awaken
our regrets."
"I fear that is true," said D'Artagnan, in a low tone.
D'Artagnan was secretly toued with remorse, not at inducing Porthos to
enter into semes in whi his life and fortune would be in jeopardy, for Porthos,
in the title of baron, had his object and reward; but poor Mousqueton, whose only
wish was to be called Mouston--was it not cruel to snat him from the delightful
state of peace and plenty in whi he was?
He was thinking of these maers when Porthos summoned him to dinner.
"What! to dinner?" said D'Artagnan. "What time is it, then?"
"Eh! why, it is aer one o'clo."
"Your home is a paradise, Porthos; one takes no note of time. I follow you,
though I am not hungry."
"Come, if one can't always eat, one can always drink--a maxim of poor Athos,
the truth of whi I have discovered since I began to be lonely."
D'Artagnan, who as a Gascon, was inclined to sobriety, seemed not so sure
as his friend of the truth of Athos's maxim, but he did his best to keep up with his
host. Meanwhile his misgivings in regard to Mousqueton recurred to his mind and
with greater force because Mousqueton, though he did not himself wait on the table,
whi would have been beneath him in his new position, appeared at the door from
time to time and evinced his gratitude to D'Artagnan by the quality of the wine he
directed to be served. erefore, when, at dessert, upon a sign from D'Artagnan,
Porthos had sent away his servants and the two friends were alone:
"Porthos," said D'Artagnan, "who will aend you in your campaigns?"
"Why," replied Porthos, "Mouston, of course."
is was a blow to D'Artagnan. He could already see the intendant's beaming
smile ange to a contortion of grief. "But," he said, "Mouston is not so young as he
xcvii
was, my dear fellow; besides, he has grown fat and perhaps has lost his fitness for
active service."
"at may be true," replied Porthos; "but I am used to him, and besides, he
wouldn't be willing to let me go without him, he loves me so mu."
"Oh, blind self-love!" thought D'Artagnan.
"And you," asked Porthos, "haven't you still in your service your old laey,
that good, that brave, that intelligent---what, then, is his name?"
"Planet--yes, I have found him again, but he is laey no longer."
"What is he, then?"
"With his sixteen hundred francs--you remember, the sixteen hundred francs
he earned at the siege of La Roelle by carrying a leer to Lord de Winter--he has
set up a lile shop in the Rue des Lombards and is now a confectioner."
"Ah, he is a confectioner in the Rue des Lombards! How does it happen, then,
that he is in your service?"
"He has been guilty of certain escapades and fears he may be disturbed." And
the musketeer narrated to his friend Planet's adventure.
"Well," said Porthos, "if any one had told you in the old times that the day
would come when Planet would rescue Roefort and that you would protect
him in it----"
"I should not have believed him; but men are anged by events."
"ere is nothing truer than that," said Porthos; "but what does not ange, or
anges for the beer, is wine. Taste of this; it is a Spanish wine whi our friend
Athos thought mu of."
At that moment the steward came in to consult his master upon the proceed-
ings of the next day and also with regard to the shooting party whi had been
proposed.
"Tell me, Mouston," said Porthos, "are my arms in good condition?"
"Your arms, my lord--what arms?"
"Zounds! my weapons."
"What weapons?"
"My military weapons."
"Yes, my lord; at any rate, I think so."
"Make sure of it, and if they want it, have them burnished up. Whi is my
best cavalry horse?"
"Vulcan."
"And the best ha?"
"Bayard."
"What horse dost thou oose for thyself?"
"I like Rustaud, my lord; a good animal, whose paces suit me."
"Strong, thinkest thou?"
xcviii
T road was long, but the horses upon whi D'Artagnan and Planet rode
had been refreshed in the well supplied stables of the Lord of Bracieux; the
master and servant rode side by side, conversing as they went, for D'Artagnan had
by degrees thrown off the master and Planet had entirely ceased to assume the
manners of a servant. He had been raised by circumstances to the rank of a confidant
to his master. It was many years since D'Artagnan had opened his heart to any one;
it happened, however, that these two men, on meeting again, assimilated perfectly.
Planet was in truth no vulgar companion in these new adventures; he was a man
of uncommonly sound sense. Without courting danger he never shrank from an
encounter; in short, he had been a soldier and arms ennoble a man; it was, therefore,
on the footing of friends that D'Artagnan and Planet arrived in the neighborhood
of Blois.
Going along, D'Artagnan, shaking his head, said:
"I know that my going to Athos is useless and absurd; but still I owe this
courtesy to my old friend, a man who had in him material for the most noble and
generous of aracters."
"Oh, Monsieur Athos was a noble gentleman," said Planet, "was he not?
Scaering money round about him as Heaven sprinkles rain. Do you remember,
sir, that duel with the Englishman in the inclosure des Carmes? Ah! how loy,
how magnificent Monsieur Athos was that day, when he said to his adversary: 'You
have insisted on knowing my name, sir; so mu the worse for you, since I shall be
obliged to kill you.' I was near him, those were his exact words, when he stabbed
his foe as he said he would, and his adversary fell without saying, 'Oh!' 'Tis a noble
gentleman--Monsieur Athos."
"Yes, true as Gospel," said D'Artagnan; "but one single fault has swallowed up
all these fine qualities."
"I remember well," said Planet, "he was fond of drinking--in truth, he drank,
but not as other men drink. One seemed, as he raised the wine to his lips, to hear
him say, 'Come, juice of the grape, and ase away my sorrows.' And how he used
ci
to break the stem of a glass or the ne of a bole! ere was no one like him for
that."
"And now," replied D'Artagnan, "behold the sad spectacle that awaits us. is
noble gentleman with his loy glance, this handsome cavalier, so brilliant in feats of
arms that every one was surprised that he held in his hand a sword only instead of
a baton of command! Alas! we shall find him anged into a broken down old man,
with garnet nose and eyes that slobber; we shall find him extended on some lawn,
whence he will look at us with a languid eye and peradventure will not recognize
us. God knows, Planet, that I should fly from a sight so sad if I did not wish to
show my respect for the illustrious shadow of what was once the Comte de la Fere,
whom we loved so mu."
Planet shook his head and said nothing. It was evident that he shared his
master's apprehensions.
"And then," resumed D'Artagnan, "to this decrepitude is probably added
poverty, for he must have neglected the lile that he had, and the dirty scoundrel,
Grimaud, more taciturn than ever and still more drunken than his master--stay,
Planet, it breaks my heart to merely think of it."
"I fancy myself there and that I see him staggering and hear him stammering,"
said Planet, in a piteous tone, "but at all events we shall soon know the real state
of things, for I imagine that those loy walls, now turning ruby in the seing sun,
are the walls of Blois."
"Probably; and those steeples, pointed and sculptured, that we cat a glimpse
of yonder, are similar to those that I have heard described at Chambord."
At this moment one of those heavy wagons, drawn by bullos, whi carry
the wood cut in the fine forests of the country to the ports of the Loire, came out of
a byroad full of ruts and turned on that whi the two horsemen were following. A
man carrying a long swit with a nail at the end of it, with whi he urged on his
slow team, was walking with the cart.
"Ho! friend," cried Planet.
"What's your pleasure, gentlemen?" replied the peasant, with a purity of ac-
cent peculiar to the people of that district and whi might have put to shame the
cultured denizens of the Sorbonne and the Rue de l'Universite.
"We are looking for the house of Monsieur de la Fere," said D'Artagnan.
e peasant took off his hat on hearing this revered name.
"Gentlemen," he said, "the wood that I am carting is his; I cut it in his copse
and I am taking it to the ateau."
D'Artagnan determined not to question this man; he did not wish to hear from
another what he had himself said to Planet.
"e ateau!" he said to himself, "what ateau? Ah, I understand! Athos is
not a man to be thwarted; he, like Porthos, has obliged his peasantry to call him 'my
cii
lord,' and to dignify his peifogging place by the name of ateau. He had a heavy
hand--dear old Athos--aer drinking."
D'Artagnan, aer asking the man the right way, continued his route, agitated
in spite of himself at the idea of seeing once more that singular man whom he
had so truly loved and who had contributed so mu by advice and example to his
education as a gentleman. He eed by degrees the speed of his horse and went
on, his head drooping as if in deep thought.
Soon, as the road turned, the Chateau de la Valliere appeared in view; then, a
quarter of a mile beyond, a white house, encircled in sycamores, was visible at the
farther end of a group of trees, whi spring had powdered with a snow of flowers.
On beholding this house, D'Artagnan, calm as he was in general, felt an un-
usual disturbance within his heart--so powerful during the whole course of life are
the recollections of youth. He proceeded, nevertheless, and came opposite to an iron
gate, ornamented in the taste of the period.
rough the gate was seen kiten-gardens, carefully aended to, a spacious
courtyard, in whi neighed several horses held by valets in various liveries, and a
carriage, drawn by two horses of the country.
"We are mistaken," said D'Artagnan. "is cannot be the establishment of
Athos. Good heavens! suppose he is dead and that this property now belongs to
some one who bears his name. Alight, Planet, and inquire, for I confess that I
have scarcely courage so to do."
Planet alighted.
"ou must add," said D'Artagnan, "that a gentleman who is passing by wishes
to have the honor of paying his respects to the Comte de la Fere, and if thou art
satisfied with what thou hearest, then mention my name!"
Planet, leading his horse by the bridle, drew near to the gate and rang the
bell, and immediately a servant-man with white hair and of erect stature, notwith-
standing his age, presented himself.
"Does Monsieur le Comte de la Fere live here?" asked Planet.
"Yes, monsieur, it is here he lives," the servant replied to Planet, who was
not in livery.
"A nobleman retired from service, is he not?"
"Yes."
"And who had a laey named Grimaud?" persisted Planet, who had pru-
dently considered that he couldn't have too mu information.
"Monsieur Grimaud is absent from the ateau for the time being," said the
servitor, who, lile used as he was to su inquiries, began to examine Planet
from head to foot.
"en," cried Planet joyously, "I see well that it is the same Comte de la Fere
whom we seek. Be good enough to open to me, for I wish to announce to monsieur
ciii
le comte that my master, one of his friends, is here, and wishes to greet him."
"Why didn't you say so?" said the servitor, opening the gate. "But where is
your master?"
"He is following me."
e servitor opened the gate and walked before Planet, who made a sign to
D'Artagnan. e laer, his heart palpitating more than ever, entered the courtyard
without dismounting.
Whilst Planet was standing on the steps before the house he heard a voice
say:
"Well, where is this gentleman and why do they not bring him here?"
is voice, the sound of whi reaed D'Artagnan, reawakened in his heart
a thousand sentiments, a thousand recollections that he had forgoen. He vaulted
hastily from his horse, whilst Planet, with a smile on his lips, advanced toward
the master of the house.
"But I know you, my lad," said Athos, appearing on the threshold.
"Oh, yes, monsieur le comte, you know me and I know you. I am Planet--
Planet, whom you know well." But the honest servant could say no more, so mu
was he overcome by this unexpected interview.
"What, Planet, is Monsieur d'Artagnan here?"
"Here I am, my friend, dear Athos!" cried D'Artagnan, in a faltering voice and
almost staggering from agitation.
At these words a visible emotion was expressed on the beautiful countenance
and calm features of Athos. He rushed toward D'Artagnan with eyes fixed upon
him and clasped him in his arms. D'Artagnan, equally moved, pressed him also
closely to him, whilst tears stood in his eyes. Athos then took him by the hand and
led him into the drawing-room, where there were several people. Every one arose.
"I present to you," he said, "Monsieur le Chevalier D'Artagnan, lieutenant of
his majesty's musketeers, a devoted friend and one of the most excellent, brave
gentlemen that I have ever known."
D'Artagnan received the compliments of those who were present in his own
way, and whilst the conversation became general he looked earnestly at Athos.
Strange! Athos was scarcely aged at all! His fine eyes, no longer surrounded
by that dark line whi nights of dissipation pencil too infallibly, seemed larger,
more liquid than ever. His face, a lile elongated, had gained in calm dignity what it
had lost in feverish excitement. His hand, always wonderfully beautiful and strong,
was set off by a ruffle of lace, like certain hands by Titian and Vandy. He was less
stiff than formerly. His long, dark hair, soly powdered here and there with silver
tendrils, fell elegantly over his shoulders in wavy curls; his voice was still youthful,
as if belonging to a Hercules of twenty-five, and his magnificent teeth, whi he
had preserved white and sound, gave an indescribable arm to his smile.
civ
Meanwhile the guests, seeing that the two friends were longing to be alone,
prepared to depart, when a noise of dogs barking resounded through the courtyard
and many persons said at the same moment:
"Ah! 'tis Raoul, who is come home."
Athos, as the name of Raoul was pronounced, looked inquisitively at
D'Artagnan, in order to see if any curiosity was painted on his face. But D'Artagnan
was still in confusion and turned around almost meanically when a fine young
man of fieen years of age, dressed simply, but in perfect taste, entered the room,
raising, as he came, his hat, adorned with a long plume of scarlet feathers.
Nevertheless, D'Artagnan was stru by the appearance of this new personage.
It seemed to explain to him the ange in Athos; a resemblance between the boy and
the man explained the mystery of this regenerated existence. He remained listening
and gazing.
"Here you are, home again, Raoul," said the comte.
"Yes, sir," replied the youth, with deep respect, "and I have performed the
commission that you gave me."
"But what's the maer, Raoul?" said Athos, very anxiously. "You are pale and
agitated."
"Sir," replied the young man, "it is on account of an accident whi has hap-
pened to our lile neighbor."
"To Mademoiselle de la Valliere?" asked Athos, quily.
"What is it?" cried many persons present.
"She was walking with her nurse Marceline, in the place where the woodmen
cut the wood, when, passing on horseba, I stopped. She saw me also and in trying
to jump from the end of a pile of wood on whi she had mounted, the poor ild
fell and was not able to rise again. I fear that she has badly sprained her ankle."
"Oh, heavens!" cried Athos. "And her mother, Madame de Saint-Remy, have
they yet told her of it?"
"No, sir, Madame de Saint-Remy is at Blois with the Duess of Orleans. I am
afraid that what was first done was unskillful, if not worse than useless. I am come,
sir, to ask your advice."
"Send directly to Blois, Raoul; or, rather, take horse and ride immediately
yourself."
Raoul bowed.
"But where is Louise?" asked the comte.
"I have brought her here, sir, and I have deposited her in arge of Charloe,
who, till beer advice comes, has bathed the foot in cold well-water."
e guests now all took leave of Athos, excepting the old Duc de Barbe, who,
as an old friend of the family of La Valliere, went to see lile Louise and offered to
take her to Blois in his carriage.
cv
"You are right, sir," said Athos. "She will be the sooner with her mother. As
for you, Raoul, I am sure it is your fault, some giddiness or folly."
"No, sir, I assure you," muered Raoul, "it is not."
"Oh, no, no, I declare it is not!" cried the young girl, while Raoul turned pale
at the idea of his being perhaps the cause of her disaster.
"Nevertheless, Raoul, you must go to Blois and you must make your excuses
and mine to Madame de Saint-Remy."
e youth looked pleased. He again took in his strong arms the lile girl,
whose prey golden head and smiling face rested on his shoulder, and placed her
gently in the carriage; then jumping on his horse with the elegance of a first-rate
esquire, aer bowing to Athos and D'Artagnan, he went off close by the door of the
carriage, on somebody inside of whi his eyes were riveted.
. e Castle of Bragelonne.
W this scene was going on, D'Artagnan remained with open mouth and
a confused gaze. Everything had turned out so differently from what he
expected that he was stupefied with wonder.
Athos, who had been observing him and guessing his thoughts, took his arm
and led him into the garden.
"Whilst supper is being prepared," he said, smiling, "you will not, my friend,
be sorry to have the mystery whi so puzzles you cleared up."
"True, monsieur le comte," replied D'Artagnan, who felt that by degrees Athos
was resuming that great influence whi aristocracy had over him.
Athos smiled.
"First and foremost, dear D'Artagnan, we have no title su as count here.
When I call you 'evalier,' it is in presenting you to my guests, that they may know
who you are. But to you, D'Artagnan, I am, I hope, still dear Athos, your comrade,
your friend. Do you intend to stand on ceremony because you are less aaed to
me than you were?"
"Oh! God forbid!"
"en let us be as we used to be; let us be open with ea other. You are
surprised at what you see here?"
"Extremely."
"But above all things, I am a marvel to you?"
"I confess it."
"I am still young, am I not? Should you not have known me again, in spite of
my eight-and-forty years of age?"
"On the contrary, I do not find you the same person at all."
"I understand," cried Athos, with a gentle blush. "Everything, D'Artagnan,
even folly, has its limit."
"en your means, it appears, are improved; you have a capital house--your
own, I presume? You have a park, and horses, servants."
Athos smiled.
cvii
"Yes, I inherited this lile property when I quied the army, as I told you. e
park is twenty acres--twenty, comprising kiten-gardens and a common. I have
two horses,--I do not count my servant's bobtailed nag. My sporting dogs consist
of two pointers, two harriers and two seers. But then all this extravagance is not
for myself," added Athos, laughing.
"Yes, I see, for the young man Raoul," said D'Artagnan.
"You guess aright, my friend; this youth is an orphan, deserted by his mother,
who le him in the house of a poor country priest. I have brought him up. It is
Raoul who has worked in me the ange you see; I was dried up like a miserable
tree, isolated, aaed to nothing on earth; it was only a deep affection that could
make me take root again and drag me ba to life. is ild has caused me to
recover what I had lost. I had no longer any wish to live for myself, I have lived for
him. I have corrected the vices that I had; I have assumed the virtues that I had not.
Precept something, but example more. I may be mistaken, but I believe that Raoul
will be as accomplished a gentleman as our degenerate age could display."
e remembrance of Milady recurred to D'Artagnan.
"And you are happy?" he said to his friend.
"As happy as it is allowed to one of God's creatures to be on this earth; but
say out all you think, D'Artagnan, for you have not yet done so."
"You are too bad, Athos; one can hide nothing from you," answered
D'Artagnan. "I wished to ask you if you ever feel any emotions of terror resembling-
---"
"Remorse! I finish your phrase. Yes and no. I do not feel remorse, because that
woman, I profoundly hold, deserved her punishment. Had she one redeeming trait?
I doubt it. I do not feel remorse, because had we allowed her to live she would have
persisted in her work of destruction. But I do not mean, my friend that we were
right in what we did. Perhaps all blood demands some expiation. Hers had been
accomplished; it remains, possibly, for us to accomplish ours."
"I have sometimes thought as you do, Athos."
"She had a son, that unhappy woman?"
"Yes."
"Have you ever heard of him?"
"Never."
"He must be about twenty-three years of age," said Athos, in a low tone. "I
oen think of that young man, D'Artagnan."
"Strange! for I had forgoen him," said the lieutenant.
Athos smiled; the smile was melanoly.
"And Lord de Winter--do you know anything about him?"
"I know that he is in high favor with Charles I."
"e fortunes of that monar now are at low water. He shed the blood
cviii
of Strafford; that confirms what I said just now--blood will have blood. And the
queen?"
"What queen?"
"Madame Henriea of England, daughter of Henry IV."
"She is at the Louvre, as you know."
"Yes, and I hear in bier poverty. Her daughter, during the severest cold, was
obliged for want of fire to remain in bed. Do you grasp that?" said Athos, shrugging
his shoulders; "the daughter of Henry IV. shivering for want of a fagot! Why did
she not ask from any one of us a home instead of from Mazarin? She should have
wanted nothing."
"Have you ever seen the queen of England?" inquired D'Artagnan.
"No; but my mother, as a ild, saw her. Did I ever tell you that my mother
was lady of honor to Marie de Medici?"
"Never. You know, Athos, you never spoke mu of su maers."
"Ah, mon Dieu, yes, you are right," Athos replied; "but then there must be
some occasion for speaking."
"Porthos wouldn't have waited for it so patiently," said D'Artagnan, with a
smile.
"Every one according to his nature, my dear D'Artagnan. Porthos, in spite of
a tou of vanity, has many excellent qualities. Have you seen him?"
"I le him five days ago," said D'Artagnan, and he portrayed with Gascon wit
and sprightliness the magnificence of Porthos in his Chateau of Pierrefonds; nor did
he neglect to laun a few arrows of wit at the excellent Monsieur Mouston.
"I sometimes wonder," replied Athos, smiling at that gayety whi recalled
the good old days, "that we could form an association of men who would be, aer
twenty years of separation, still so closely bound together. Friendship throws out
deep roots in honest hearts, D'Artagnan. Believe me, it is only the evil-minded who
deny friendship; they cannot understand it. And Aramis?"
"I have seen him also," said D'Artagnan; "but he seemed to me cold."
"Ah, you have seen Aramis?" said Athos, turning on D'Artagnan a searing
look. "Why, it is a veritable pilgrimage, my dear friend, that you are making to the
Temple of Friendship, as the poets would say."
"Why, yes," replied D'Artagnan, with embarrassment.
"Aramis, you know," continued Athos, "is naturally cold, and then he is always
involved in intrigues with women."
"I believe he is at this moment in a very complicated one," said D'Artagnan.
Athos made no reply.
"He is not curious," thought D'Artagnan.
Athos not only failed to reply, he even anged the subject of conversation.
"You see," said he, calling D'Artagnan's aention to the fact that they had come
cix
ba to the ateau aer an hour's walk, "we have made a tour of my domains."
"All is arming and everything savors of nobility," replied D'Artagnan.
At this instant they heard the sound of horses' feet.
"'Tis Raoul who has come ba," said Athos; "and we can now hear how the
poor ild is."
In fact, the young man appeared at the gate, covered with dust, entered the
courtyard, leaped from his horse, whi he consigned to the arge of a groom, and
then went to greet the count and D'Artagnan.
"Monsieur," said Athos, placing his hand on D'Artagnan's shoulder, "monsieur
is the Chevalier D'Artagnan of whom you have oen heard me speak, Raoul."
"Monsieur," said the young man, saluting again and more profoundly, "mon-
sieur le comte has pronounced your name before me as an example whenever he
wished to speak of an intrepid and generous gentleman."
at lile compliment could not fail to move D'Artagnan. He extended a hand
to Raoul and said:
"My young friend, all the praises that are given me should be passed on to the
count here; for he has educated me in everything and it is not his fault that his pupil
profited so lile from his instructions. But he will make it up in you I am sure. I
like your manner, Raoul, and your politeness has toued me."
Athos was more delighted than can be told. He looked at D'Artagnan with an
expression of gratitude and then bestowed on Raoul one of those strange smiles, of
whi ildren are so proud when they receive them.
"Now," said D'Artagnan to himself, noticing that silent play of countenance,
"I am sure of it."
"I hope the accident has been of no consequence?"
"ey don't yet know, sir, on account of the swelling; but the doctor is afraid
some tendon has been injured."
At this moment a lile boy, half peasant, half foot-boy, came to announce
supper.
Athos led his guest into a dining-room of moderate size, the windows of whi
opened on one side on a garden, on the other on a hot-house full of magnificent
flowers.
D'Artagnan glanced at the dinner service. e plate was magnificent, old, and
appertaining to the family. D'Artagnan stopped to look at a sideboard on whi was
a superb ewer of silver.
"at workmanship is divine!" he exclaimed.
"Yes, a ef d'oeuvre of the great Florentine sculptor, Benvenuto Cellini,"
replied Athos.
"What bale does it represent?"
"at of Marignan, just at the point where one of my forefathers is offering his
cx
sword to Francis I., who has broken his. It was on that occasion that my ancestor,
Enguerrand de la Fere, was made a knight of the Order of St. Miael; besides whi,
the king, fieen years aerward, gave him also this ewer and a sword whi you
may have seen formerly in my house, also a lovely specimen of workmanship. Men
were giants in those times," said Athos; "now we are pigmies in comparison. Let us
sit down to supper. Call Charles," he added, addressing the boy who waited.
"My good Charles, I particularly recommend to your care Planet, the laquais
of Monsieur D'Artagnan. He likes good wine; now you have the key of the cellar.
He has slept a long time on a hard bed, so he won't object to a so one; take every
care of him, I beg of you." Charles bowed and retired.
"You think of everything," said D'Artagnan; "and I thank you for Planet, my
dear Athos."
Raoul stared on hearing this name and looked at the count to be quite sure
that it was he whom the lieutenant thus addressed.
"at name sounds strange to you," said Athos, smiling; "it was my nom de
guerre when Monsieur D'Artagnan, two other gallant friends and myself performed
some feats of arms at the siege of La Roelle, under the deceased cardinal and
Monsieur de Bassompierre. My friend is still so kind as to address me by that old
and well beloved appellation, whi makes my heart glad when I hear it."
"'Tis an illustrious name," said the lieutenant, "and had one day triumphal
honors paid to it."
"What do you mean, sir?" inquired Raoul.
"You have not forgoen St. Gervais, Athos, and the napkin whi was con-
verted into a banner?" and he then related to Raoul the story of the bastion, and
Raoul fancied he was listening to one of those deeds of arms belonging to days of
ivalry, so gloriously recounted by Tasso and Ariosto.
"D'Artagnan does not tell you, Raoul," said Athos, in his turn, "that he was
reoned one of the finest swordsmen of his time--a knule of iron, a wrist of steel,
a sure eye and a glance of fire; that's what his adversary met with. He was eighteen,
only three years older than you are, Raoul, when I saw him set to work, pied
against tried men."
"And did Monsieur D'Artagnan come off the conqueror?" asked the young
man, with glistening eye.
"I killed one man, if I recollect rightly," replied D'Artagnan, with a look of in-
quiry directed to Athos; "another I disarmed or wounded, I don't remember whi."
"Wounded!" said Athos; "it was a phenomenon of skill."
e young man would willingly have prolonged this conversation far into the
night, but Athos pointed out to him that his guest must need repose. D'Artagnan
would fain have declared that he was not fatigued, but Athos insisted on his retiring
to his amber, conducted thither by Raoul.
. Athos as a Diplomatist.
D 'A retired to bed--not to sleep, but to think over all he had heard that
evening. Being naturally goodhearted, and having had once a liking for Athos,
whi had grown into a sincere friendship, he was delighted at thus meeting a man
full of intelligence and moral strength, instead of a drunkard. He admied without
annoyance the continued superiority of Athos over himself, devoid as he was of that
jealousy whi might have saddened a less generous disposition; he was delighted
also that the high qualities of Athos appeared to promise favorably for his mission.
Nevertheless, it seemed to him that Athos was not in all respects sincere and frank.
Who was the youth he had adopted and who bore so striking a resemblance to him?
What could explain Athos's having re-entered the world and the extreme sobriety
he had observed at table? e absence of Grimaud, whose name had never once
been uered by Athos, gave D'Artagnan uneasiness. It was evident either that he
no longer possessed the confidence of his friend, or that Athos was bound by some
invisible ain, or that he had been forewarned of the lieutenant's visit.
He could not help thinking of M. Roefort, whom he had seen in Notre Dame;
could De Roefort have forestalled him with Athos? Again, the moderate fortune
whi Athos possessed, concealed as it was, so skillfully, seemed to show a regard
for appearances and to betray a latent ambition whi might be easily aroused. e
clear and vigorous intellect of Athos would render him more open to conviction
than a less able man would be. He would enter into the minister's semes with the
more ardor, because his natural activity would be doubled by necessity.
Resolved to seek an explanation on all these points on the following day,
D'Artagnan, in spite of his fatigue, prepared for an aa and determined that it
should take place aer breakfast. He determined to cultivate the good-will of the
youth Raoul and, either whilst fencing with him or when out shooting, to extract
from his simplicity some information whi would connect the Athos of old times
with the Athos of the present. But D'Artagnan at the same time, being a man of
extreme caution, was quite aware what injury he should do himself, if by any in-
discretion or awkwardness he should betray has manoeuvering to the experienced
cxii
eye of Athos. Besides, to tell truth, whilst D'Artagnan was quite disposed to adopt
a subtle course against the cunning of Aramis or the vanity of Porthos, he was
ashamed to equivocate with Athos, true-hearted, open Athos. It seemed to him that
if Porthos and Aramis deemed him superior to them in the arts of diplomacy, they
would like him all the beer for it; but that Athos, on the contrary, would despise
him.
"Ah! why is not Grimaud, the taciturn Grimaud, here?" thought D'Artagnan,
"there are so many things his silence would have told me; with Grimaud silence was
another form of eloquence!"
ere reigned a perfect stillness in the house. D'Artagnan had heard the door
shut and the shuers barred; the dogs became in their turn silent. At last a nightin-
gale, lost in a thiet of shrubs, in the midst of its most melodious cadences had
fluted low and lower into stillness and fallen asleep. Not a sound was heard in the
castle, except of a footstep up and down, in the amber above--as he supposed, the
bedroom of Athos.
"He is walking about and thinking," thought D'Artagnan; "but of what? It is
impossible to know; everything else might be guessed, but not that."
At length Athos went to bed, apparently, for the noise ceased.
Silence and fatigue together overcame D'Artagnan and sleep overtook him
also. He was not, however, a good sleeper. Scarcely had dawn gilded his window
curtains when he sprang out of bed and opened the windows. Somebody, he per-
ceived, was in the courtyard, moving stealthily. True to his custom of never passing
anything over that it was within his power to know, D'Artagnan looked out of the
window and perceived the close red coat and brown hair of Raoul.
e young man was opening the door of the stable. He then, with noiseless
haste, took out the horse that he had ridden on the previous evening, saddled and
bridled it himself and led the animal into the alley to the right of the kiten-garden,
opened a side door whi conducted him to a bridle road, shut it aer him, and
D'Artagnan saw him pass by like a dart, bending, as he went, beneath the pendent
flowery branes of maple and acacia. e road, as D'Artagnan had observed, was
the way to Blois.
"So!" thought the Gascon "here's a young blade who has already his love affair,
who doesn't at all agree with Athos in his hatred to the fair sex. He's not going to
hunt, for he has neither dogs nor arms; he's not going on a message, for he goes
secretly. Why does he go in secret? Is he afraid of me or of his father? for I am sure
the count is his father. By Jove! I shall know about that soon, for I shall soon speak
out to Athos."
Day was now advanced; all the noises that had ceased the night before
reawakened, one aer the other. e bird on the bran, the dog in his kennel,
the sheep in the field, the boats moored in the Loire, even, became alive and vocal.
cxiii
e laer, leaving the shore, abandoned themselves gaily to the current. e Gas-
con gave a last twirl to his mustae, a last turn to his hair, brushed, from habit, the
brim of his hat with the sleeve of his doublet, and went downstairs. Scarcely had
he descended the last step of the threshold when he saw Athos bent down toward
the ground, as if he were looking for a crown-piece in the dust.
"Good-morning, my dear host," cried D'Artagnan.
"Good-day to you; have you slept well?"
"Excellently, Athos, but what are you looking for? You are perhaps a tulip
fancier?"
"My dear friend, if I am, you must not laugh at me for being so. In the country
people alter; one gets to like, without knowing it, all those beautiful objects that God
causes to spring from the earth, whi are despised in cities. I was looking anxiously
for some iris roots I planted here, close to this reservoir, and whi some one has
trampled upon this morning. ese gardeners are the most careless people in the
world; in bringing the horse out to the water they've allowed him to walk over the
border."
D'Artagnan began to smile.
"Ah! you think so, do you?"
And he took his friend along the alley, where a number of tras like those
whi had trampled down the flowerbeds, were visible.
"Here are the horse's hoofs again, it seems, Athos," he said carelessly.
"Yes, indeed, the marks are recent."
"ite so," replied the lieutenant.
"Who went out this morning?" Athos asked, uneasily. "Has any horse got
loose?"
"Not likely," answered the Gascon; "these marks are regular."
"Where is Raoul?" asked Athos; "how is it that I have not seen him?"
"Hush!" exclaimed D'Artagnan, puing his finger on his lips; and he related
what he had seen, wating Athos all the while.
"Ah, he's gone to Blois; the poor boy----"
"Wherefore?"
"Ah, to inquire aer the lile La Valliere; she has sprained her foot, you know."
"You think he has?"
"I am sure of it," said Athos; "don't you see that Raoul is in love?"
"Indeed! with whom--with a ild seven years old?"
"Dear friend, at Raoul's age the heart is so expansive that it must encircle one
object or another, fancied or real. Well, his love is half real, half fanciful. She is the
preiest lile creature in the world, with flaxen hair, blue eyes,--at once saucy and
languishing."
"But what say you to Raoul's fancy?"
cxiv
"Nothing--I laugh at Raoul; but this first desire of the heart is imperious. I
remember, just at his age, how deep in love I was with a Grecian statue whi our
good king, then Henry IV., gave my father, insomu that I was mad with grief when
they told me that the story of Pygmalion was nothing but a fable."
"It is mere want of occupation. You do not make Raoul work, so he takes his
own way of employing himself."
"Exactly; therefore I think of sending him away from here."
"You will be wise to do so."
"No doubt of it; but it will break his heart. So long as three or four years ago
he used to adorn and adore his lile idol, whom he will some day fall in love with
in right earnest if he remains here. e parents of lile La Valliere have for a long
time perceived and been amused at it; now they begin to look concerned."
"Nonsense! However, Raoul must be diverted from this fancy. Send him away
or you will never make a man of him."
"I think I shall send him to Paris."
"So!" thought D'Artagnan, and it seemed to him that the moment for aa
had arrived.
"Suppose," he said, "we roughly alk out a career for this young man. I wish
to consult you about some thing."
"Do so."
"Do you think it is time for us to enter the service?"
"But are you not still in the service--you, D'Artagnan?"
"I mean active service. Our former life, has it still no aractions for you?
would you not be happy to begin anew in my society and in that of Porthos, the
exploits of our youth?"
"Do you propose to me to do so, D'Artagnan?"
"Decidedly and honestly."
"On whose side?" asked Athos, fixing his clear, benevolent glance on the coun-
tenance of the Gascon.
"Ah, devil take it, you speak in earnest----"
"And must have a definite answer. Listen, D'Artagnan. ere is but one per-
son, or rather, one cause, to whom a man like me can be useful--that of the king."
"Exactly," answered the musketeer.
"Yes, but let us understand ea other," returned Athos, seriously. "If by the
cause of the king you mean that of Monsieur de Mazarin, we do not understand
ea other."
"I don't say exactly," answered the Gascon, confused.
"Come, D'Artagnan, don't let us play a sidelong game; your hesitation, your
evasion, tells me at once on whose side you are; for that party no one dares openly
to recruit, and when people recruit for it, it is with averted eyes and humble voice."
cxv
"Ah, sir!" replied Raoul, "her fall is a very serious one, and without any osten-
sible injury, the physician fears she will be lame for life."
"is is terrible," said Athos.
"And what makes me all the more wreted, sir, is, that I was the cause of this
misfortune."
"How so?" asked Athos.
"It was to run to meet me that she leaped from that pile of wood."
"ere's only one remedy, dear Raoul--that is, to marry her as a compensa-
tion." remarked D'Artagnan.
"Ah, sir!" answered Raoul, "you joke about a real misfortune; that is cruel,
indeed."
e good understanding between the two friends was not in the least altered
by the morning's skirmish. ey breakfasted with a good appetite, looking now and
then at poor Raoul, who with moist eyes and a full heart, scarcely ate at all.
Aer breakfast two leers arrived for Athos, who read them with profound
aention, whilst D'Artagnan could not restrain himself from jumping up several
times on seeing him read these epistles, in one of whi, there being at the time
a very strong light, he perceived the fine writing of Aramis. e other was in a
feminine hand, long, and crossed.
"Come," said D'Artagnan to Raoul, seeing that Athos wished to be alone,
"come, let us take a turn in the fencing gallery; that will amuse you."
And they both went into a low room where there were foils, gloves, masks,
breastplates, and all the accessories for a fencing mat.
In a quarter of an hour Athos joined them and at the same moment Charles
brought in a leer for D'Artagnan, whi a messenger had just desired might be
instantly delivered.
It was now Athos's turn to take a sly look.
D'Artagnan read the leer with apparent calmness and said, shaking his head:
"See, dear friend, what it is to belong to the army. Faith, you are indeed right
not to return to it. Monsieur de Treville is ill, so my company can't do without me;
there! my leave is at an end!"
"Do you return to Paris?" asked Athos, quily.
"Egad! yes; but why don't you come there also?"
Athos colored a lile and answered:
"Should I go, I shall be delighted to see you there."
"Halloo, Planet!" cried the Gascon from the door, "we must set out in ten
minutes; give the horses some hay."
en turning to Athos he added:
"I seem to miss something here. I am really sorry to go away without having
seen Grimaud."
cxvii
"Grimaud!" replied Athos. "I'm surprised you have never so mu as asked
aer him. I have lent him to a friend----"
"Who will understand the signs he makes?" returned D'Artagnan.
"I hope so."
e friends embraced cordially; D'Artagnan pressed Raoul's hand.
"Will you not come with me?" he said; "I shall pass by Blois."
Raoul turned toward Athos, who showed him by a secret sign that he did not
wish him to go.
"No, monsieur," replied the young man; "I will remain with monsieur le comte."
"Adieu, then, to both, my good friends," said D'Artagnan; "may God preserve
you! as we used to say when we said good-bye to ea other in the late cardinal's
time."
Athos waved his hand, Raoul bowed, and D'Artagnan and Planet set out.
e count followed them with his eyes, his hands resting on the shoulders of
the youth, whose height was almost equal to his own; but as soon as they were out
of sight he said:
"Raoul, we set out to-night for Paris."
"Eh?" cried the young man, turning pale.
"You may go and offer your adieux and mine to Madame de Saint-Remy. I
shall wait for you here till seven."
e young man bent low, with an expression of sorrow and gratitude mingled,
and retired in order to saddle his horse.
As to D'Artagnan, scarcely, on his side, was he out of sight when he drew
from his poet a leer, whi he read over again:
"Return immediately to Paris.--J. M----."
"e epistle is laconic," said D'Artagnan; "and if there had not been a
postscript, probably I should not have understood it; but happily there is a
postscript."
And he read that welcome postscript, whi made him forget the abruptness
of the leer.
"P. S.--Go to the king's treasurer, at Blois; tell him your name and show him
this leer; you will receive two hundred pistoles."
"Assuredly," said D'Artagnan, "I admire this piece of prose. e cardinal writes
beer than I thought. Come, Planet, let us pay a visit to the king's treasurer and
then set off."
"Toward Paris, sir?"
"Toward Paris."
And they set out at as hard a canter as their horses could maintain.
. e Duc de Beaufort.
men can escape their destiny? If it is wrien yonder, in Heaven, that the Duc de
Beaufort is to escape, he will escape; and all the precautions of the cardinal will not
prevent it."
Mazarin started. He was an Italian and therefore superstitious. He walked
straight into the midst of the guards, who on seeing him were silent.
"What were you saying?" he asked with his flaering manner; "that Monsieur
de Beaufort had escaped, were you not?"
"Oh, no, my lord!" said the incredulous soldier. "He's well guarded now; we
only said he would escape."
"Who said so?"
"Repeat your story, Saint Laurent," replied the man, turning to the originator
of the tale.
"My lord," said the guard, "I have simply mentioned the prophecy I heard from
a man named Coysel, who believes that, be he ever so closely wated and guarded,
the Duke of Beaufort will escape before Whitsuntide."
"Coysel is a madman!" returned the cardinal.
"No," replied the soldier, tenacious in his credulity; "he has foretold many
things whi have come to pass; for instance, that the queen would have a son; that
Monsieur Coligny would be killed in a duel with the Duc de Guise; and finally, that
the coadjutor would be made cardinal. Well! the queen has not only one son, but
two; then, Monsieur de Coligny was killed, and----"
"Yes," said Mazarin, "but the coadjutor is not yet made cardinal!"
"No, my lord, but he will be," answered the guard.
Mazarin made a grimace, as if he meant to say, "But he does not wear the
cardinal's cap;" then he added:
"So, my friend, it's your opinion that Monsieur de Beaufort will escape?"
"at's my idea, my lord; and if your eminence were to offer to make me at this
moment governor of the castle of Vincennes, I should refuse it. Aer Whitsuntide
it would be another thing."
ere is nothing so convincing as a firm conviction. It has its own effect upon
the most incredulous; and far from being incredulous, Mazarin was superstitious.
He went away thoughtful and anxious and returned to his own room, where he
summoned Bernouin and desired him to fet thither in the morning the special
guard he had placed over Monsieur de Beaufort and to awaken him whenever he
should arrive.
e guard had, in fact, toued the cardinal in the tenderest point. During
the whole five years in whi the Duc de Beaufort had been in prison not a day
had passed in whi the cardinal had not felt a secret dread of his escape. It was
not possible, as he knew well, to confine for the whole of his life the grandson of
Henry IV., especially when this young prince was scarcely thirty years of age. But
cxx
however and whensoever he did escape, what hatred he must erish against him
to whom he owed his long imprisonment; who had taken him, ri, brave, glorious,
beloved by women, feared by men, to cut off his life's best, happiest years; for it is not
life, it is merely existence, in prison! Meantime, Mazarin redoubled his surveillance
over the duke. But like the miser in the fable, he could not sleep for thinking of
his treasure. Oen he awoke in the night, suddenly, dreaming that he had been
robbed of Monsieur de Beaufort. en he inquired about him and had the vexation
of hearing that the prisoner played, drank, sang, but that whilst playing, drinking,
singing, he oen stopped short to vow that Mazarin should pay dear for all the
amusements he had forced him to enter into at Vincennes.
So mu did this one idea haunt the cardinal even in his sleep, that when at
seven in the morning Bernouin came to arouse him, his first words were: "Well,
what's the maer? Has Monsieur de Beaufort escaped from Vincennes?"
"I do not think so, my lord," said Bernouin; "but you will hear about him, for
La Ramee is here and awaits the commands of your eminence."
"Tell him to come in," said Mazarin, arranging his pillows, so that he might
receive the visitor siing up in bed.
e officer entered, a large fat man, with an open physiognomy. His air of
perfect serenity made Mazarin uneasy.
"Approa, sir," said the cardinal.
e officer obeyed.
"Do you know what they are saying here?"
"No, your eminence."
"Well, they say that Monsieur de Beaufort is going to escape from Vincennes,
if he has not done so already."
e officer's face expressed complete stupefaction. He opened at once his lile
eyes and his great mouth, to inhale beer the joke his eminence deigned to address
to him, and ended by a burst of laughter, so violent that his great limbs shook in
hilarity as they would have done in an ague.
"Escape! my lord--escape! Your eminence does not then know where Mon-
sieur de Beaufort is?"
"Yes, I do, sir; in the donjon of Vincennes."
"Yes, sir; in a room, the walls of whi are seven feet thi, with grated win-
dows, ea bar as thi as my arm."
"Sir," replied Mazarin, "with perseverance one may penetrate through a wall;
with a wat-spring one may saw through an iron bar."
"en my lord does not know that there are eight guards about him, four in
his amber, four in the anteamber, and that they never leave him."
"But he leaves his room, he plays at tennis at the Mall?"
"Sir, those amusements are allowed; but if your eminence wishes it, we will
cxxi
thankful keeper and we will shut our eyes upon his rural misdeeds and put on his
ba a uniform to make him respectable, and in the poets of that uniform some
pistoles to drink to the king's health."
Mazarin was large in promises,--quite unlike the virtuous Monsieur Grimaud
so bepraised by La Ramee; for he said nothing and did mu.
It was now nine o'clo. e cardinal, therefore, got up, perfumed himself,
dressed, and went to the queen to tell her what had detained him. e queen, who
was scarcely less afraid of Monsieur de Beaufort than the cardinal himself, and
who was almost as superstitious as he was, made him repeat word for word all La
Ramee's praises of his deputy. en, when the cardinal had ended:
"Alas, sir! why have we not a Grimaud near every prince?"
"Patience!" replied Mazarin, with his Italian smile; "that may happen one day;
but in the meantime----"
"Well, in the meantime?"
"I shall still take precautions."
And he wrote to D'Artagnan to hasten his return.
. Duc de Beaufort amused his
Leisure Hours in the Donjon of
Vincennes.
T captive who was the source of so mu alarm to the cardinal and whose
means of escape disturbed the repose of the whole court, was wholly uncon-
scious of the terror he caused at the Palais Royal.
He had found himself so strictly guarded that he soon perceived the fruitless-
ness of any aempt at escape. His vengeance, therefore, consisted in coining curses
on the head of Mazarin; he even tried to make some verses on him, but soon gave
up the aempt, for Monsieur de Beaufort had not only not received from Heaven
the gi of versifying, he had the greatest difficulty in expressing himself in prose.
e duke was the grandson of Henry VI. and Gabrielle d'Estrees--as good-
natured, as brave, as proud, and above all, as Gascon as his ancestor, but less elab-
orately educated. Aer having been for some time aer the death of Louis XIII.
the favorite, the confidant, the first man, in short, at the court, he had been obliged
to yield his place to Mazarin and so became the second in influence and favor; and
eventually, as he was stupid enough to be vexed at this ange of position, the queen
had had him arrested and sent to Vincennes in arge of Guitant, who made his ap-
pearance in these pages in the beginning of this history and whom we shall see
again. It is understood, of course, that when we say "the queen," Mazarin is meant.
During the five years of this seclusion, whi would have improved and ma-
tured the intellect of any other man, M. de Beaufort, had he not affected to brave
the cardinal, despise princes, and walk alone without adherents or disciples, would
either have regained his liberty or made partisans. But these considerations never
occurred to the duke and every day the cardinal received fresh accounts of him
whi were as unpleasant as possible to the minister.
cxxiv
with a bit of plaster he had taken out of the wall of his room, had traced a long white
line, representing a cord, on the floor. Pistae, on a signal from his master, placed
himself on this line, raised himself on his hind paws, and holding in his front paws
a wand with whi clothes used to be beaten, he began to dance upon the line with
as many contortions as a rope-dancer. Having been several times up and down it,
he gave the wand ba to his master and began without hesitation to perform the
same evolutions over again.
e intelligent creature was received with loud applause.
e first part of the entertainment being concluded Pistae was desired to
say what o'clo it was; he was shown Monsieur de Chavigny's wat; it was then
half-past six; the dog raised and dropped his paw six times; the seventh he let it
remain upraised. Nothing could be beer done; a sun-dial could not have shown
the hour with greater precision.
en the question was put to him who was the best jailer in all the prisons in
France.
e dog performed three evolutions around the circle and laid himself, with
the deepest respect, at the feet of Monsieur de Chavigny, who at first seemed in-
clined to like the joke and laughed long and loud, but a frown succeeded, and he bit
his lips with vexation.
en the duke put to Pistae this difficult question, who was the greatest
thief in the world?
Pistae went again around the circle, but stopped at no one, and at last went
to the door and began to scrat and bark.
"See, gentlemen," said M. de Beaufort, "this wonderful animal, not finding here
what I ask for, seeks it out of doors; you shall, however, have his answer. Pistae,
my friend, come here. Is not the greatest thief in the world, Monsieur (the king's
secretary) Le Camus, who came to Paris with twenty francs in his poet and who
now possesses ten millions?"
e dog shook his head.
"en is it not," resumed the duke, "the Superintendent Emery, who gave his
son, when he was married, three hundred thousand francs and a house, compared
to whi the Tuileries are a heap of ruins and the Louvre a paltry building?"
e dog again shook his head as if to say "no."
"en," said the prisoner, "let's think who it can be. Can it be, can it possibly
be, the 'Illustrious Coxcomb, Mazarin de Piscina,' hey?"
Pistae made violent signs that it was, by raising and lowering his head eight
or ten times successively.
"Gentlemen, you see," said the duke to those present, who dared not even
smile, "that it is the 'Illustrious Coxcomb' who is the greatest thief in the world; at
least, according to Pistae."
cxxvi
Prior de Vendome had died was worth its weight in arsenic--a bon mot whi had
great success. So it was ordered the prisoner was henceforth to eat nothing that had
not previously been tasted, and La Ramee was in consequence placed near him as
taster.
Every kind of revenge was practiced upon the duke by the governor in return
for the insults of the innocent Pistae. De Chavigny, who, according to report,
was a son of Rielieu's, and had been a creature of the late cardinal's, understood
tyranny. He took from the duke all the steel knives and silver forks and replaced
them with silver knives and wooden forks, pretending that as he had been informed
that the duke was to pass all his life at Vincennes, he was afraid of his prisoner
aempting suicide. A fortnight aerward the duke, going to the tennis court, found
two rows of trees about the size of his lile finger planted by the roadside; he asked
what they were for and was told that they were to shade him from the sun on some
future day. One morning the gardener went to him and told him, as if to please him,
that he was going to plant a bed of asparagus for his especial use. Now, since, as
every one knows, asparagus takes four years in coming to perfection, this civility
infuriated Monsieur de Beaufort.
At last his patience was exhausted. He assembled his keepers, and notwith-
standing his well-known difficulty of uerance, addressed them as follows:
"Gentlemen! will you permit a grandson of Henry IV. to be overwhelmed with
insults and ignominy?
"Odds fish! as my grandfather used to say, I once reigned in Paris! do you
know that? I had the king and Monsieur the whole of one day in my care. e
queen at that time liked me and called me the most honest man in the kingdom.
Gentlemen and citizens, set me free; I shall go to the Louvre and strangle Mazarin.
You shall be my body-guard. I will make you all captains, with good pensions! Odds
fish! On! mar forward!"
But eloquent as he might be, the eloquence of the grandson of Henry IV. did
not tou those hearts of stone; not one man stirred, so Monsieur de Beaufort was
obliged to be satisfied with calling them all kinds of rascals underneath the sun.
Sometimes, when Monsieur de Chavigny paid him a visit, the duke used to
ask him what he should think if he saw an army of Parisians, all fully armed, appear
at Vincennes to deliver him from prison.
"My lord," answered De Chavigny, with a low bow, "I have on the ramparts
twenty pieces of artillery and in my casemates thirty thousand guns. I should bom-
bard the troops till not one grain of gunpowder was unexploded."
"Yes, but aer you had fired off your thirty thousand guns they would take
the donjon; the donjon being taken, I should be obliged to let them hang you--at
whi I should be most unhappy, certainly."
And in his turn the duke bowed low to Monsieur de Chavigny.
cxxviii
"For myself, on the other hand, my lord," returned the governor, "when the
first rebel should pass the threshold of my postern doors I should be obliged to kill
you with my own hand, since you were confided peculiarly to my care and as I am
obliged to give you up, dead or alive."
And once more he bowed low before his highness.
ese bier-sweet pleasantries lasted ten minutes, sometimes longer, but al-
ways finished thus:
Monsieur de Chavigny, turning toward the door, used to call out: "Halloo! La
Ramee!"
La Ramee came into the room.
"La Ramee, I recommend Monsieur le Duc to you, particularly; treat him as
a man of his rank and family ought to be treated; that is, never leave him alone an
instant."
La Ramee became, therefore, the duke's dinner guest by compulsion--an eter-
nal keeper, the shadow of his person; but La Ramee--gay, frank, convivial, fond of
play, a great hand at tennis, had one defect in the duke's eyes--his incorruptibility.
Now, although La Ramee appreciated, as of a certain value, the honor of being
shut up with a prisoner of so great importance, still the pleasure of living in intimacy
with the grandson of Henry IV. hardly compensated for the loss of that whi he
had experienced in going from time to time to visit his family.
One may be a jailer or a keeper and at the same time a good father and hus-
band. La Ramee adored his wife and ildren, whom now he could only cat a
glimpse of from the top of the wall, when in order to please him they used to walk
on the opposite side of the moat. 'Twas too brief an enjoyment, and La Ramee felt
that the gayety of heart he had regarded as the cause of health (of whi it was
perhaps rather the result) would not long survive su a mode of life.
He accepted, therefore, with delight, an offer made to him by his friend the
steward of the Duc de Grammont, to give him a substitute; he also spoke of it to
Monsieur de Chavigny, who promised that he would not oppose it in any way--that
is, if he approved of the person proposed.
We consider it useless to draw a physical or moral portrait of Grimaud; if, as
we hope, our readers have not wholly forgoen the first part of this work, they must
have preserved a clear idea of that estimable individual, who is wholly unanged,
except that he is twenty years older, an advance in life that has made him only more
silent; although, since the ange that had been working in himself, Athos had given
Grimaud permission to speak.
But Grimaud had for twelve or fieen years preserved habitual silence, and a
habit of fieen or twenty years' duration becomes second nature.
. Grimaud begins his
Functions.
G thereupon presented himself with his smooth exterior at the donjon
of Vincennes. Now Monsieur de Chavigny piqued himself on his infallible
penetration; for that whi almost proved that he was the son of Rielieu was his
everlasting pretension; he examined aentively the countenance of the applicant for
place and fancied that the contracted eyebrows, thin lips, hooked nose, and promi-
nent eek-bones of Grimaud were favorable signs. He addressed about twelve
words to him; Grimaud answered in four.
"Here's a promising fellow and it is I who have found out his merits," said
Monsieur de Chavigny. "Go," he added, "and make yourself agreeable to Monsieur
la Ramee, and tell him that you suit me in all respects."
Grimaud had every quality that could aract a man on duty who wishes to
have a deputy. So, aer a thousand questions whi met with only a word in re-
ply, La Ramee, fascinated by this sobriety in spee, rubbed his hands and engaged
Grimaud.
"My orders?" asked Grimaud.
"ey are these; never to leave the prisoner alone; to keep away from him
every pointed or cuing instrument, and to prevent his conversing any length of
time with the keepers."
"ose are all?" asked Grimaud.
"All now," replied La Ramee.
"Good," answered Grimaud; and he went right to the prisoner.
e duke was in the act of combing his beard, whi he had allowed to grow,
as well as his hair, in order to reproa Mazarin with his wreted appearance
and condition. But having some days previously seen from the top of the don-
jon Madame de Montbazon pass in her carriage, and still erishing an affection
for that beautiful woman, he did not wish to be to her what he wished to be to
cxxx
Mazarin, and in the hope of seeing her again, had asked for a leaden comb, whi
was allowed him. e comb was to be a leaden one, because his beard, like that of
most fair people, was rather red; he therefore dyed it thus whilst combing it.
As Grimaud entered he saw this comb on the tea-table; he took it up, and as
he took it he made a low bow.
e duke looked at this strange figure with surprise. e figure put the comb
in its poet.
"Ho! hey! what's that?" cried the duke. "Who is this creature?"
Grimaud did not answer, but bowed a second time.
"Art thou dumb?" cried the duke.
Grimaud made a sign that he was not.
"What art thou, then? Answer! I command thee!" said the duke.
"A keeper," replied Grimaud.
"A keeper!" reiterated the duke; "there was nothing wanting in my collection,
except this gallows-bird. Halloo! La Ramee! some one!"
La Ramee ran in haste to obey the call.
"Who is this wret who takes my comb and puts it in his poet?" asked the
duke.
"One of your guards, my prince; a man of talent and merit, whom you will
like, as I and Monsieur de Chavigny do, I am sure."
"Why does he take my comb?"
"Why do you take my lord's comb?" asked La Ramee.
Grimaud drew the comb from his poet and passing his fingers over the
largest teeth, pronounced this one word, "Pointed."
"True," said La Ramee.
"What does the animal say?" asked the duke.
"at the king has forbidden your lordship to have any pointed instrument."
"Are you mad, La Ramee? You yourself gave me this comb."
"I was very wrong, my lord, for in giving it to you I acted in opposition to my
orders."
e duke looked furiously at Grimaud.
"I perceive that this creature will be my particular aversion," he muered.
Grimaud, nevertheless, was resolved for certain reasons not at once to come
to a full rupture with the prisoner; he wanted to inspire, not a sudden repugnance,
but a good, sound, steady hatred; he retired, therefore, and gave place to four guards,
who, having breakfasted, could aend on the prisoner.
A fresh practical joke now occurred to the duke. He had asked for crawfish
for his breakfast on the following morning; he intended to pass the day in making a
small gallows and hang one of the finest of these fish in the middle of his room--the
red color evidently conveying an allusion to the cardinal--so that he might have
cxxxi
the pleasure of hanging Mazarin in effigy without being accused of having hung
anything more significant than a crawfish.
e day was employed in preparations for the execution. Every one grows
ildish in prison, but the aracter of Monsieur de Beaufort was particularly dis-
posed to become so. In the course of his morning's walk he collected two or three
small branes from a tree and found a small piece of broken glass, a discovery that
quite delighted him. When he came home he formed his handkerief into a loop.
Nothing of all this escaped Grimaud, but La Ramee looked on with the curios-
ity of a father who thinks that he may perhaps get a eap idea concerning a new
toy for his ildren. e guards looked on it with indifference. When everything
was ready, the gallows hung in the middle of the room, the loop made, and when
the duke had cast a glance upon the plate of crawfish, in order to select the finest
specimen among them, he looked around for his piece of glass; it had disappeared.
"Who has taken my piece of glass?" asked the duke, frowning. Grimaud made
a sign to denote that he had done so.
"What! thou again! Why didst thou take it?"
"Yes--why?" asked La Ramee.
Grimaud, who held the piece of glass in his hand, said: "Sharp."
"True, my lord!" exclaimed La Ramee. "Ah! deuce take it! we have a precious
fellow here!"
"Monsieur Grimaud!" said the duke, "for your sake I beg of you, never come
within the rea of my fist!"
"Hush! hush!" cried La Ramee, "give me your gibbet, my lord. I will shape it
out for you with my knife."
And he took the gibbet and shaped it out as neatly as possible.
"at's it," said the duke, "now make me a lile hole in the floor whilst I go
and fet the culprit."
La Ramee knelt down and made a hole in the floor; meanwhile the duke hung
the crawfish up by a thread. en he placed the gibbet in the middle of the room,
bursting with laughter.
La Ramee laughed also and the guards laughed in orus; Grimaud, however,
did not even smile. He approaed La Ramee and showing him the crawfish hung
up by the thread:
"Cardinal," he said.
"Hung by order of his Highness the Duc de Beaufort!" cried the prisoner,
laughing violently, "and by Master Jacques Chrysostom La Ramee, the king's com-
missioner."
La Ramee uered a cry of horror and rushed toward the gibbet, whi he
broke at once and threw the pieces out of the window. He was going to throw the
crawfish out also, when Grimaud snated it from his hands.
cxxxii
"What! speak!"
"'Tis this: when we escape together, that I shall go everywhere and be always
first; for if my lord should be overtaken and caught, there's every ance of his
being brought ba to prison, whereas if I am caught the least that can befall me is
to be--hung."
"True, on my honor as a gentleman it shall be as thou dost suggest."
"Now," resumed Grimaud, "I've only one thing more to ask--that your highness
will continue to detest me."
"I'll try," said the duke.
At this moment La Ramee, aer the interview we have described with the
cardinal, entered the room. e duke had thrown himself, as he was wont to do
in moments of dullness and vexation, on his bed. La Ramee cast an inquiring look
around him and observing the same signs of antipathy between the prisoner and his
guardian he smiled in token of his inward satisfaction. en turning to Grimaud:
"Very good, my friend, very good. You have been spoken of in a promising
quarter and you will soon, I hope, have news that will be agreeable to you."
Grimaud saluted in his politest manner and withdrew, as was his custom on
the entrance of his superior.
"Well, my lord," said La Ramee, with his rude laugh, "you still set yourself
against this poor fellow?"
"So! 'tis you, La Ramee; in faith, 'tis time you came ba again. I threw myself
on the bed and turned my nose to the wall, that I mightn't break my promise and
strangle Grimaud."
"I doubt, however," said La Ramee, in sprightly allusion to the silence of his
subordinate, "if he has said anything disagreeable to your highness."
"Pardieu! you are right--a mute from the East! I swear it was time for you to
come ba, La Ramee, and I was eager to see you again."
"Monseigneur is too good," said La Ramee, flaered by the compliment.
"Yes," continued the duke, "really, I feel bored today beyond the power of
description."
"en let us have a mat in the tennis court," exclaimed La Ramee.
"If you wish it."
"I am at your service, my lord."
"I protest, my dear La Ramee," said the duke, "that you are a arming fellow
and that I would stay forever at Vincennes to have the pleasure of your society."
"My lord," replied La Ramee, "I think if it depended on the cardinal your wishes
would be fulfilled."
"What do you mean? Have you seen him lately?"
"He sent for me to-day."
"Really! to speak to you about me?"
cxxxv
"Of what else do you imagine he would speak to me? Really, my lord, you are
his nightmare."
e duke smiled with bierness.
"Ah, La Ramee! if you would but accept my offers! I would make your for-
tune."
"How? you would no sooner have le prison than your goods would be con-
fiscated."
"I shall no sooner be out of prison than I shall be master of Paris."
"Pshaw! pshaw! I cannot hear su things said as that; this is a fine conver-
sation with an officer of the king! I see, my lord, I shall be obliged to fet a second
Grimaud!"
"Very well, let us say no more about it. So you and the cardinal have been
talking about me? La Ramee, some day when he sends for you, you must let me put
on your clothes; I will go in your stead; I will strangle him, and upon my honor, if
that is made a condition I will return to prison."
"Monseigneur, I see well that I must call Grimaud."
"Well, I am wrong. And what did the cuistre [peifogger] say about me?"
"I admit the word, monseigneur, because it rhymes with ministre [minister].
What did he say to me? He told me to wat you."
"And why so? why wat me?" asked the duke uneasily.
"Because an astrologer had predicted that you would escape."
"Ah! an astrologer predicted that?" said the duke, starting in spite of himself.
"Oh, mon Dieu! yes! those imbeciles of magicians can only imagine things to
torment honest people."
"And what did you reply to his most illustrious eminence?"
"at if the astrologer in question made almanacs I would advise him not to
buy one."
"Why not?"
"Because before you could escape you would have to be turned into a bird."
"Unfortunately, that is true. Let us go and have a game at tennis, La Ramee."
"My lord--I beg your highness's pardon--but I must beg for half an hour's
leave of absence."
"Why?"
"Because Monseigneur Mazarin is a prouder man than his highness, though
not of su high birth: he forgot to ask me to breakfast."
"Well, shall I send for some breakfast here?"
"No, my lord; I must tell you that the confectioner who lived opposite the
castle--Daddy Marteau, as they called him----"
"Well?"
"Well, he sold his business a week ago to a confectioner from Paris, an invalid,
cxxxvi
I half an hour La Ramee returned, full of glee, like most men who have eaten,
and more especially drank to their heart's content. e pates were excellent, the
wine delicious.
e weather was fine and the game at tennis took place in the open air.
At two o'clo the tennis balls began, according to Grimaud's directions, to
take the direction of the moat, mu to the joy of La Ramee, who marked fieen
whenever the duke sent a ball into the moat; and very soon balls were wanting, so
many had gone over. La Ramee then proposed to send some one to pi them up, but
the duke remarked that it would be losing time; and going near the rampart himself
and looking over, he saw a man working in one of the numerous lile gardens
cleared out by the peasants on the opposite side of the moat.
"Hey, friend!" cried the duke.
e man raised his head and the duke was about to uer a cry of surprise.
e peasant, the gardener, was Roefort, whom he believed to be in the Bastile.
"Well? Who's up there?" said the man.
"Be so good as to collect and throw us ba our balls," said the duke.
e gardener nodded and began to fling up the balls, whi were pied up
by La Ramee and the guard. One, however, fell at the duke's feet, and seeing that it
was intended for him, he put it into his poet.
La Ramee was in ecstasies at having beaten a prince of the blood.
e duke went indoors and retired to bed, where he spent, indeed, the greater
part of every day, as they had taken his books away. La Ramee carried off all his
clothes, in order to be certain that the duke would not stir. However, the duke
contrived to hide the ball under his bolster and as soon as the door was closed he
cxxxviii
tore off the cover of the ball with his teeth and found underneath the following
leer:
My Lord,--Your friends are wating over you and the hour of your deliver-
ance is at hand. Ask day aer to-morrow to have a pie supplied you by the new
confectioner opposite the castle, and who is no other than Noirmont, your former
maitre d'hotel. Do not open the pie till you are alone. I hope you will be satisfied
with its contents.
"Your highness's most devoted servant,
"In the Bastile, as elsewhere,
"Comte de Roefort."
e duke, who had laerly been allowed a fire, burned the leer, but kept the
ball, and went to bed, hiding the ball under his bolster. La Ramee entered; he smiled
kindly on the prisoner, for he was an excellent man and had taken a great liking for
the captive prince. He endeavored to eer him up in his solitude.
"Ah, my friend!" cried the duke, "you are so good; if I could but do as you do,
and eat pates and drink Burgundy at the house of Father Marteau's successor."
"'Tis true, my lord," answered La Ramee, "that his pates are famous and his
wine magnificent."
"In any case," said the duke, "his cellar and kiten might easily excel those of
Monsieur de Chavigny."
"Well, my lord," said La Ramee, falling into the trap, "what is there to prevent
your trying them? Besides, I have promised him your patronage."
"You are right," said the duke. "If I am to remain here permanently, as Mon-
sieur Mazarin has kindly given me to understand, I must provide myself with a
diversion for my old age, I must turn gourmand."
"My lord," said La Ramee, "if you will take a bit of good advice, don't put that
off till you are old."
"Good!" said the Duc de Beaufort to himself, "every man in order that he may
lose his heart and soul, must receive from celestial bounty one of the seven capital
sins, perhaps two; it seems that Master La Ramee's is gluony. Let us then take
advantage of it." en, aloud:
"Well, my dear La Ramee! the day aer to-morrow is a holiday."
"Yes, my lord--Pentecost."
"Will you give me a lesson the day aer to-morrow?"
"In what?"
"In gastronomy?"
"Willingly, my lord."
"But tete-a-tete. Send the guards to take their meal in the canteen of Monsieur
de Chavigny; we'll have a supper here under your direction."
"Hum!" said La Ramee.
cxxxix
e proposal was seductive, but La Ramee was an old stager, acquainted with
all the traps a prisoner was likely to set. Monsieur de Beaufort had said that he
had forty ways of geing out of prison. Did this proposed breakfast cover some
stratagem? He reflected, but he remembered that he himself would have arge
of the food and the wine and therefore that no powder could be mixed with the
food, no drug with the wine. As to geing him drunk, the duke couldn't hope to
do that, and he laughed at the mere thought of it. en an idea came to him whi
harmonized everything.
e duke had followed with anxiety La Ramee's unspoken soliloquy, read-
ing it from point to point upon his face. But presently the exempt's face suddenly
brightened.
"Well," he asked, "that will do, will it not?"
"Yes, my lord, on one condition."
"What?"
"at Grimaud shall wait on us at table."
Nothing could be more agreeable to the duke, however, he had presence of
mind enough to exclaim:
"To the devil with your Grimaud! He will spoil the feast."
"I will direct him to stand behind your air, and since he doesn't speak, your
highness will neither see nor hear him and with a lile effort can imagine him a
hundred miles away."
"Do you know, my friend, I find one thing very evident in all this, you distrust
me."
"My lord, the day aer to-morrow is Pentecost."
"Well, what is Pentecost to me? Are you afraid that the Holy Spirit will come
as a tongue of fire to open the doors of my prison?"
"No, my lord; but I have already told you what that damned magician pre-
dicted."
"And what was it?"
"at the day of Pentecost would not pass without your highness being out
of Vincennes."
"You believe in sorcerers, then, you fool?"
"I---I mind them no more than that----" and he snapped his fingers; "but it is
my Lord Giulio who cares about them; as an Italian he is superstitious."
e duke shrugged his shoulders.
"Well, then," with well acted good-humor, "I allow Grimaud, but no one else;
you must manage it all. Order whatever you like for supper--the only thing I specify
is one of those pies; and tell the confectioner that I will promise him my custom if
he excels this time in his pies--not only now, but when I leave my prison."
"en you think you will some day leave it?" said La Ramee.
cxl
"e devil!" replied the prince; "surely, at the death of Mazarin. I am fieen
years younger than he is. At Vincennes, 'tis true, one lives faster----"
"My lord," replied La Ramee, "my lord----"
"Or dies sooner, for it comes to the same thing."
La Ramee was going out. He stopped, however, at the door for an instant.
"Whom does your highness wish me to send to you?"
"Any one, except Grimaud."
"e officer of the guard, then, with his essboard?"
"Yes."
Five minutes aerward the officer entered and the duke seemed to be im-
mersed in the sublime combinations of ess.
A strange thing is the mind, and it is wonderful what revolutions may be
wrought in it by a sign, a word, a hope. e duke had been five years in prison, and
now to him, looking ba upon them, those five years, whi had passed so slowly,
seemed not so long a time as were the two days, the forty-eight hours, whi still
parted him from the time fixed for his escape. Besides, there was one thing that
engaged his most anxious thought--in what way was the escape to be effected?
ey had told him to hope for it, but had not told him what was to be hidden in
the mysterious pate. And what friends awaited him without? He had friends, then,
aer five years in prison? If that were so he was indeed a highly favored prince.
He forgot that besides his friends of his own sex, a woman, strange to say, had
remembered him. It is true that she had not, perhaps, been scrupulously faithful to
him, but she had remembered him; that was something.
So the duke had more than enough to think about; accordingly he fared at
ess as he had fared at tennis; he made blunder upon blunder and the officer with
whom he played found him easy game.
But his successive defeats did service to the duke in one way--they killed
time for him till eight o'clo in the evening; then would come night, and with
night, sleep. So, at least, the duke believed; but sleep is a capricious fairy, and it is
precisely when one invokes her presence that she is most likely to keep him waiting.
e duke waited until midnight, turning on his maress like St. Laurence on his
gridiron. Finally he slept.
But at daybreak he awoke. Wild dreams had disturbed his repose. He dreamed
that he was endowed with wings--he wished to fly away. For a time these wings
supported him, but when he reaed a certain height this new aid failed him. His
wings were broken and he seemed to sink into a boomless abyss, whence he awoke,
bathed in perspiration and nearly as mu overcome as if he had really fallen. He
fell asleep again and another vision appeared. He was in a subterranean passage
by whi he was to leave Vincennes. Grimaud was walking before him with a
lantern. By degrees the passage narrowed, yet the duke continued his course. At
cxli
last it became so narrow that the fugitive tried in vain to proceed. e sides of the
walls seem to close in, even to press against him. He made fruitless efforts to go
on; it was impossible. Nevertheless, he still saw Grimaud with his lantern in front,
advancing. He wished to call out to him but could not uer a word. en at the
other extremity he heard the footsteps of those who were pursuing him. ese steps
came on, came fast. He was discovered; all hope of flight was gone. Still the walls
seemed to be closing on him; they appeared to be in concert with his enemies. At
last he heard the voice of La Ramee. La Ramee took his hand and laughed aloud.
He was captured again, and conducted to the low and vaulted amber, in whi
Ornano, Puylaurens, and his uncle had died. eir three graves were there, rising
above the ground, and a fourth was also there, yawning for its ghastly tenant.
e duke was obliged to make as many efforts to awake as he had done to go
to sleep; and La Ramee found him so pale and fatigued that he inquired whether he
was ill.
"In fact," said one of the guards who had remained in the amber and had
been kept awake by a toothae, brought on by the dampness of the atmosphere,
"my lord has had a very restless night and two or three times, while dreaming, he
called for help."
"What is the maer with your highness?" asked La Ramee.
"'Tis your fault, you simpleton," answered the duke. "With your idle nonsense
yesterday about escaping, you worried me so that I dreamed that I was trying to
escape and broke my ne in doing so."
La Ramee laughed.
"Come," he said, "'tis a warning from Heaven. Never commit su an impru-
dence as to try to escape, except in your dreams."
"And you are right, my dear La Ramee," said the duke, wiping away the sweat
that stood on his brow, wide awake though he was; "aer this I will think of nothing
but eating and drinking."
"Hush!" said La Ramee; and one by one he sent away the guards, on various
pretexts.
"Well?" asked the duke when they were alone.
"Well!" replied La Ramee, "your supper is ordered."
"Ah! and what is it to be? Monsieur, my majordomo, will there be a pie?"
"I should think so, indeed--almost as high as a tower."
"You told him it was for me?"
"Yes, and he said he would do his best to please your highness."
"Good!" exclaimed the duke, rubbing his hands.
"Devil take it, my lord! what a gourmand you are growing; I haven't seen you
with so eerful a face these five years."
e duke saw that he had not controlled himself as he ought, but at that mo-
cxlii
ment, as if he had listened at the door and comprehended the urgent need of divert-
ing La Ramee's ideas, Grimaud entered and made a sign to La Ramee that he had
something to say to him.
La Ramee drew near to Grimaud, who spoke to him in a low voice.
e duke meanwhile recovered his self-control.
"I have already forbidden that man," he said, "to come in here without my
permission."
"You must pardon him, my lord," said La Ramee, "for I directed him to come."
"And why did you so direct when you know that he displeases me?"
"My lord will remember that it was agreed between us that he should wait
upon us at that famous supper. My lord has forgoen the supper."
"No, but I have forgoen Monsieur Grimaud."
"My lord understands that there can be no supper unless he is allowed to be
present."
"Go on, then; have it your own way."
"Come here, my lad," said La Ramee, "and hear what I have to say."
Grimaud approaed, with a very sullen expression on his face.
La Ramee continued: "My lord has done me the honor to invite me to a supper
to-morrow en tete-a-tete."
Grimaud made a sign whi meant that he didn't see what that had to do with
him.
"Yes, yes," said La Ramee, "the maer concerns you, for you will have the
honor to serve us; and besides, however good an appetite we may have and however
great our thirst, there will be something le on the plates and in the boles, and that
something will be yours."
Grimaud bowed in thanks.
"And now," said La Ramee, "I must ask your highness's pardon, but it seems
that Monsieur de Chavigny is to be away for a few days and he has sent me word
that he has certain directions to give me before his departure."
e duke tried to exange a glance with Grimaud, but there was no glance
in Grimaud's eyes.
"Go, then," said the duke, "and return as soon as possible."
"Does your highness wish to take revenge for the game of tennis yesterday?"
Grimaud intimated by a scarcely perceptible nod that he should consent.
"Yes," said the duke, "but take care, my dear La Ramee, for I propose to beat
you badly."
La Ramee went out. Grimaud looked aer him, and when the door was closed
he drew out of his poet a pencil and a sheet of paper.
"Write, my lord," he said.
"And what?"
cxliii
Grimaud dictated.
"All is ready for to-morrow evening. Keep wat from seven to nine. Have
two riding horses ready. We shall descend by the first window in the gallery."
"What next?"
"Sign your name, my lord."
e duke signed.
"Now, my lord, give me, if you have not lost it, the ball--that whi contained
the leer."
e duke took it from under his pillow and gave it to Grimaud. Grimaud gave
a grim smile.
"Well?" asked the duke.
"Well, my lord, I sew up the paper in the ball and you, in your game of tennis,
will send the ball into the dit."
"But will it not be lost?"
"Oh no; there will be some one at hand to pi it up."
"A gardener?"
Grimaud nodded.
"e same as yesterday?"
Another nod on the part of Grimaud.
"e Count de Roefort?"
Grimaud nodded the third time.
"Come, now," said the duke, "give some particulars of the plan for our escape."
"at is forbidden me," said Grimaud, "until the last moment."
"Who will be waiting for me beyond the dit?"
"I know nothing about it, my lord."
"But at least, if you don't want to see me turn crazy, tell what that famous
pate will contain."
"Two poniards, a knoed rope and a poire d'angoisse." *
"Yes, I understand."
"My lord observes that there will be enough to go around."
"We shall take to ourselves the poniards and the rope," replied the duke.
"And make La Ramee eat the pear," answered Grimaud.
"My dear Grimaud, thou speakest seldom, but when thou dost, one must do
thee justice--thy words are words of gold."
. One of Marie Mion's
Adventures.
W these projects were being formed by the Duc de Beaufort and Grimaud,
the Comte de la Fere and the Vicomte de Bragelonne were entering Paris by
the Rue du Faubourg Saint Marcel.
ey stopped at the sign of the Fox, in the Rue du Vieux Colombier, a tavern
known for many years by Athos, and asked for two bedrooms.
"You must dress yourself, Raoul," said Athos, "I am going to present you to
some one."
"To-day, monsieur?" asked the young man.
"In half an hour."
e young man bowed. Perhaps, not being endowed with the endurance of
Athos, who seemed to be made of iron, he would have preferred a bath in the river
Seine of whi he had heard so mu, and aerward his bed; but the Comte de la
Fere had spoken and he had no thought but to obey.
"By the way," said Athos, "take some pains with your toilet, Raoul; I want you
to be approved."
"I hope, sir," replied the youth, smiling, "that there's no idea of a marriage for
me; you know of my engagement to Louise?"
Athos, in his turn, smiled also.
"No, don't be alarmed, although it is to a lady that I am going to present you,
and I am anxious that you should love her----"
e young man looked at the count with a certain uneasiness, but at a smile
from Athos he was quily reassured.
"How old is she?" inquired the Vicomte de Bragelonne.
"My dear Raoul, learn, once for all, that that is a question whi is never asked.
When you can find out a woman's age by her face, it is useless to ask it; when you
cannot do so, it is indiscreet."
"Is she beautiful?"
cxlv
"Sixteen years ago she was deemed not only the preiest, but the most graceful
woman in France."
is reply reassured the vicomte. A woman who had been a reigning beauty
a year before he was born could not be the subject of any seme for him. He retired
to his toilet. When he reappeared, Athos received him with the same paternal smile
as that whi he had oen bestowed on D'Artagnan, but a more profound tenderness
for Raoul was now visibly impressed upon his face.
Athos cast a glance at his feet, hands and hair--those three marks of race. e
youth's dark hair was neatly parted and hung in curls, forming a sort of dark frame
around his face; su was the fashion of the day. Gloves of gray kid, mating the
hat, well displayed the form of a slender and elegant hand; whilst his boots, similar
in color to the hat and gloves, confined feet small as those of a boy twelve years old.
"Come," murmured Athos, "if she is not proud of him, she must be hard to
please."
It was three o'clo in the aernoon. e two travelers proceeded to the Rue
Saint Dominique and stopped at the door of a magnificent hotel, surmounted with
the arms of De Luynes.
"'Tis here," said Athos.
He entered the hotel and ascended the front steps, and addressing a footman
who waited there in a grand livery, asked if the Duess de Chevreuse was visible
and if she could receive the Comte de la Fere?
e servant returned with a message to say, that, though the duess had not
the honor of knowing Monsieur de la Fere, she would receive him.
Athos followed the footman, who led him through a long succession of apart-
ments and paused at length before a closed door. Athos made a sign to the Vicomte
de Bragelonne to remain where he was.
e footman opened the door and announced Monsieur le Comte de la Fere.
Madame de Chevreuse, whose name appears so oen in our story "e ree
Musketeers," without her actually having appeared in any scene, was still a beautiful
woman. Although about forty-four or forty-five years old, she might have passed
for thirty-five. She still had her ri fair hair; her large, animated, intelligent eyes,
so oen opened by intrigue, so oen closed by the blindness of love. She had still
her nymph-like form, so that when her ba was turned she still was not unlike the
girl who had jumped, with Anne of Austria, over the moat of the Tuileries in .
In all other respects she was the same mad creature who threw over her amours
su an air of originality as to make them proverbial for eccentricity in her family.
She was in a lile boudoir, hung with blue damask, adorned by red flowers,
with a foliage of gold, looking upon a garden; and reclined upon a sofa, her head
supported on the ri tapestry whi covered it. She held a book in her hand and
her arm was supported by a cushion.
cxlvi
At the footman's announcement she raised herself a lile and peeped out,
with some curiosity.
Athos appeared.
He was dressed in violet-tinted velvet, trimmed with silk of the same color.
His shoulder-knots were of burnished silver, his mantle had no gold nor embroidery
on it; a simple plume of violet feathers adorned his hat; his boots were of bla
leather, and at his girdle hung that sword with a magnificent hilt that Porthos had
so oen admired in the Rue Feron. Splendid lace adorned the falling collar of his
shirt, and lace fell also over the top of his boots.
In his whole person he bore su an impress of high degree, that Madame de
Chevreuse half rose from her seat when she saw him and made him a sign to sit
down near her.
Athos bowed and obeyed. e footman was withdrawing, but Athos stopped
him by a sign.
"Madame," he said to the duess, "I have had the boldness to present myself
at your hotel without being known to you; it has succeeded, since you deign to
receive me. I have now the boldness to ask you for an interview of half an hour."
"I grant it, monsieur," replied Madame de Chevreuse with her most gracious
smile.
"But that is not all, madame. Oh, I am very presuming, I am aware. e
interview for whi I ask is of us two alone, and I very earnestly wish that it may
not be interrupted."
"I am not at home to any one," said the Duess de Chevreuse to the footman.
"You may go."
e footman went out
ere ensued a brief silence, during whi these two persons, who at first
sight recognized ea other so clearly as of noble race, examined ea other without
embarrassment on either side.
e duess was the first to speak.
"Well, sir, I am waiting with impatience to hear what you wish to say to me."
"And I, madame," replied Athos, "am looking with admiration."
"Sir," said Madame de Chevreuse, "you must excuse me, but I long to know to
whom I am talking. You belong to the court, doubtless, yet I have never seen you
at court. Have you, by any ance, been in the Bastile?"
"No, madame, I have not; but very likely I am on the road to it."
"Ah! then tell me who you are, and get along with you upon your journey,"
replied the duess, with the gayety whi made her so arming, "for I am suffi-
ciently in bad odor already, without compromising myself still more."
"Who I am, madame? My name has been mentioned to you--the Comte de
la Fere; you do not know that name. I once bore another, whi you knew, but you
cxlvii
"Oh, go on, monsieur, go on!" said Madame de Chevreuse eagerly; "you can't
imagine how mu this conversation interests me."
"You encourage me," said Athos, "I will continue, then. at cousin of Aramis,
that Marie Mion, that needlewoman, notwithstanding her low condition, had ac-
quaintances in the highest rank; she called the grandest ladies of the court her friend,
and the queen--proud as she is, in her double aracter as Austrian and as Spaniard-
-called her her sister."
"Alas!" said Madame de Chevreuse, with a slight sigh and a lile movement of
her eyebrows that was peculiarly her own, "since that time everything has anged."
"And the queen had reason for her affection, for Marie was devoted to her--
devoted to that degree that she served her as medium of intercourse with her brother,
the king of Spain."
"Whi," interrupted the duess, "is now brought up against her as a great
crime."
"And therefore," continued Athos, "the cardinal--the true cardinal, the other
one--determined one fine morning to arrest poor Marie Mion and send her to the
Chateau de Loes. Fortunately the affair was not managed so secretly but that
it became known to the queen. e case had been provided for: if Marie Mion
should be threatened with any danger the queen was to send her a prayer-book
bound in green velvet."
"at is true, monsieur, you are well informed."
"One morning the green book was brought to her by the Prince de Marsillac.
ere was no time to lose. Happily Marie and a follower of hers named Kiy could
disguise themselves admirably in men's clothes. e prince procured for Marie Mi-
on the dress of a cavalier and for Kiy that of a laey; he sent them two excellent
horses, and the fugitives went out hastily from Tours, shaping their course toward
Spain, trembling at the least noise, following unfrequented roads, and asking for
hospitality when they found themselves where there was no inn."
"Why, really, it was all exactly as you say!" cried Madame de Chevreuse, clap-
ping her hands. "It would indeed be strange if----" she eed herself.
"If I should follow the two fugitives to the end of their journey?" said Athos.
"No, madame, I will not thus waste your time. We will accompany them only to a
lile village in Limousin, lying between Tulle and Angouleme--a lile village called
Roe-l'Abeille."
Madame de Chevreuse uered a cry of surprise, and looked at Athos with an
expression of astonishment that made the old musketeer smile.
"Wait, madame," continued Athos, "what remains for me to tell you is even
more strange than what I have narrated."
"Monsieur," said Madame de Chevreuse, "I believe you are a sorcerer; I am
prepared for anything. But really--No maer, go on."
cxlix
"e journey of that day had been long and wearing; it was a cold day, the
eleventh of October, there was no inn or ateau in the village and the homes of the
peasants were poor and unaractive. Marie Mion was a very aristocratic person;
like her sister the queen, she had been accustomed to pleasing perfumes and fine
linen; she resolved, therefore, to seek hospitality of the priest."
Athos paused.
"Oh, continue!" said the duess. "I have told you that I am prepared for
anything."
"e two travelers knoed at the door. It was late; the priest, who had gone to
bed, cried out to them to come in. ey entered, for the door was not loed--there
is mu confidence among villagers. A lamp burned in the amber occupied by the
priest. Marie Mion, who made the most arming cavalier in the world, pushed
open the door, put her head in and asked for hospitality. 'Willingly, my young
cavalier,' said the priest, 'if you will be content with the remains of my supper and
with half my amber.'
"e two travelers consulted for a moment. e priest heard a burst of laugh-
ter and then the master, or rather, the mistress, replied: 'ank you, monsieur le
cure, I accept.' 'Sup, then, and make as lile noise as possible,' said the priest, 'for I,
too, have been on the go all day and shall not be sorry to sleep to-night.'"
Madame de Chevreuse evidently went from surprise to astonishment, and
from astonishment to stupefaction. Her face, as she looked at Athos, had taken on
an expression that cannot be described. It could be seen that she had wished to
speak, but she had remained silent through fear of losing one of her companion's
words.
"What happened then?" she asked.
"en?" said Athos. "Ah, I have come now to what is most difficult."
"Speak, speak! One can say anything to me. Besides, it doesn't concern me; it
relates to Mademoiselle Marie Mion."
"Ah, that is true," said Athos. "Well, then, Marie Mion had supper with her
follower, and then, in accordance with the permission given her, she entered the
amber of her host, Kiy meanwhile taking possession of an armair in the room
first entered, where they had taken their supper."
"Really, monsieur," said Madame de Chevreuse, "unless you are the devil in
person I don't know how you could become acquainted with all these details."
"A arming woman was that Marie Mion," resumed Athos, "one of those
wild creatures who are constantly conceiving the strangest ideas. Now, thinking
that her host was a priest, that coquee took it into her head that it would be a happy
souvenir for her old age, among the many happy souvenirs she already possessed,
if she could win that of having damned an abbe."
"Count," said the duess, "upon my word, you frighten me."
cl
"Alas!" continued Athos, "the poor abbe was not a St. Ambroise, and I repeat,
Marie Mion was an adorable creature."
"Monsieur!" cried the duess, seizing Athos's hands, "tell me this moment
how you know all these details, or I will send to the convent of the Vieux Augustins
for a monk to come and exorcise you."
Athos laughed. "Nothing is easier, madame. A cavalier, arged with an
important mission, had come an hour before your arrival, seeking hospitality, at the
very moment that the cure, summoned to the bedside of a dying person, le not
only his house but the village, for the entire night. e priest having all confidence
in his guest, who, besides, was a nobleman, had le to him his house, his supper
and his amber. And therefore Marie came seeking hospitality from the guest of
the good abbe and not from the good abbe himself."
"And that cavalier, that guest, that nobleman who arrived before she came?"
"It was I, the Comte de la Fere," said Athos, rising and bowing respectfully to
the Duess de Chevreuse.
e duess remained a moment stupefied; then, suddenly bursting into
laughter:
"Ah! upon my word," said she, "it is very droll, and that mad Marie Mion
fared beer than she expected. Sit down, dear count, and go on with your story."
"At this point I have to accuse myself of a fault, madame. I have told you that
I was traveling on an important mission. At daybreak I le the amber without
noise, leaving my arming companion asleep. In the front room the follower was
also still asleep, her head leaning ba on the air, in all respects worthy of her
mistress. Her prey face arrested my aention; I approaed and recognized that
lile Kiy whom our friend Aramis had placed with her. In that way I discovered
that the arming traveler was----"
"Marie Mion!" said Madame de Chevreuse, hastily.
"Marie Mion," continued Athos. "en I went out of the house; I proceeded
to the stable and found my horse saddled and my laey ready. We set forth on our
journey."
"And have you never revisited that village?" eagerly asked Madame de
Chevreuse.
"A year aer, madame."
"Well?"
"I wanted to see the good cure again. I found him mu preoccupied with
an event that he could not at all comprehend. A week before he had received, in a
cradle, a beautiful lile boy three months old, with a purse filled with gold and a
note containing these simple words: ' October, .'"
"It was the date of that strange adventure," interrupted Madame de Chevreuse.
"Yes, but he couldn't understand what it meant, for he had spent that night
cli
with a dying person and Marie Mion had le his house before his return."
"You must know, monsieur, that Marie Mion, when she returned to France
in , immediately sought for information about that ild; as a fugitive she could
not take care of it, but on her return she wished to have it near her."
"And what said the abbe?" asked Athos.
"at a nobleman whom he did not know had wished to take arge of it, had
answered for its future, and had taken it away."
"at was true."
"Ah! I see! at nobleman was you; it was his father!"
"Hush! do not speak so loud, madame; he is there."
"He is there! my son! the son of Marie Mion! But I must see him instantly."
"Take care, madame," said Athos, "for he knows neither his father nor his
mother."
"You have kept the secret! you have brought him to see me, thinking to make
me happy. Oh, thanks! sir, thanks!" cried Madame de Chevreuse, seizing his hand
and trying to put it to her lips; "you have a noble heart."
"I bring him to you, madame," said Athos, withdrawing his hand, "hoping
that in your turn you will do something for him; till now I have wated over his
education and I have made him, I hope, an accomplished gentleman; but I am now
obliged to return to the dangerous and wandering life of party faction. To-morrow
I plunge into an adventurous affair in whi I may be killed. en it will devolve
on you to push him on in that world where he is called on to occupy a place."
"Rest assured," cried the duess, "I shall do what I can. I have but lile in-
fluence now, but all that I have shall most assuredly be his. As to his title and
fortune----"
"As to that, madame, I have made over to him the estate of Bragelonne, my
inheritance, whi will give him ten thousand francs a year and the title of vicomte."
"Upon my soul, monsieur," said the duess, "you are a true nobleman! But I
am eager to see our young vicomte. Where is he?"
"ere, in the salon. I will have him come in, if you really wish it."
Athos moved toward the door; the duess held him ba.
"Is he handsome?" she asked.
Athos smiled.
"He resembles his mother."
So he opened the door and beoned the young man in.
e duess could not restrain a cry of joy on seeing so handsome a young
cavalier, so far surpassing all that her maternal pride had been able to conceive.
"Vicomte, come here," said Athos; "the duess permits you to kiss her hand."
e youth approaed with his arming smile and his head bare, and kneel-
ing down, kissed the hand of the Duess de Chevreuse.
clii
T was once in the Rue des Tournelles a house known by all the sedan air-
men and footmen of Paris, and yet, nevertheless, this house was neither that of
a great lord nor of a ri man. ere was neither dining, nor playing at cards, nor
dancing in that house. Nevertheless, it was the rendezvous of the great world and
all Paris went there. It was the abode of the lile Abbe Scarron.
In the home of the wiy abbe dwelt incessant laughter; there all the items of
the day had their source and were so quily transformed, misrepresented, meta-
morphosed, some into epigrams, some into falsehoods, that every one was anxious
to pass an hour with lile Scarron, listening to what he said, reporting it to others.
e diminutive Abbe Scarron, who, however, was an abbe only because he
owned an abbey, and not because he was in orders, had formerly been one of the
gayest prebendaries in the town of Mans, whi he inhabited. On a day of the carni-
val he had taken a notion to provide an unusual entertainment for that good town, of
whi he was the life and soul. He had made his valet cover him with honey; then,
opening a feather bed, he had rolled in it and had thus become the most grotesque
fowl it is possible to imagine. He then began to visit his friends of both sexes, in
that strange costume. At first he had been followed through astonishment, then
with derisive shouts, then the porters had insulted him, then ildren had thrown
stones at him, and finally he was obliged to run, to escape the missiles. As soon as
he took to flight every one pursued him, until, pressed on all sides, Scarron found no
way of escaping his escort, except by throwing himself into the river; but the water
was icy cold. Scarron was heated, the cold seized on him, and when he reaed the
farther bank he found himself crippled.
Every means had been employed in vain to restore the use of his limbs. He
had been subjected to a severe disciplinary course of medicine, at length he sent
away all his doctors, declaring that he preferred the disease to the treatment, and
came to Paris, where the fame of his wit had preceded him. ere he had a air
made on his own plan, and one day, visiting Anne of Austria in this air, she asked
him, armed as she was with his wit, if he did not wish for a title.
cliv
"Yes, your majesty, there is a title whi I covet mu," replied Scarron.
"And what is that?"
"at of being your invalid," answered Scarron.
So he was called the queen's invalid, with a pension of fieen hundred francs.
From that luy moment Scarron led a happy life, spending both income and
principal. One day, however, an emissary of the cardinal's gave him to understand
that he was wrong in receiving the coadjutor so oen.
"And why?" asked Scarron; "is he not a man of good birth?"
"Certainly."
"Agreeable?"
"Undeniably."
"Wiy?"
"He has, unfortunately, too mu wit."
"Well, then, why do you wish me to give up seeing su a man?"
"Because he is an enemy."
"Of whom?"
"Of the cardinal."
"What?" answered Scarron, "I continue to receive Monsieur Gilles Despreaux,
who thinks ill of me, and you wish me to give up seeing the coadjutor, because he
thinks ill of another man. Impossible!"
e conversation had rested there and Scarron, through sheer obstinacy, had
seen Monsieur de Gondy only the more frequently.
Now, the very morning of whi we speak was that of his quarter-day pay-
ment, and Scarron, as usual, had sent his servant to get his money at the pension-
office, but the man had returned and said that the government had no more money
to give Monsieur Scarron.
It was on ursday, the abbe's reception day; people went there in crowds.
e cardinal's refusal to pay the pension was known about the town in half an hour
and he was abused with wit and vehemence.
In the Rue Saint Honore Athos fell in with two gentlemen whom he did not
know, on horseba like himself, followed by a laey like himself, and going in the
same direction that he was. One of them, hat in hand, said to him:
"Would you believe it, monsieur? that contemptible Mazarin has stopped poor
Scarron's pension."
"at is unreasonable," said Athos, saluting in his turn the two cavaliers. And
they separated with courteous gestures.
"It happens well that we are going there this evening," said Athos to the vi-
comte; "we will pay our compliments to that poor man."
"What, then, is this Monsieur Scarron, who thus puts all Paris in commotion?
Is he some minister out of office?"
clv
"Oh, no, not at all, vicomte," Athos replied; "he is simply a gentleman of great
genius who has fallen into disgrace with the cardinal through having wrien certain
verses against him."
"Do gentlemen, then, make verses?" asked Raoul, naively, "I thought it was
derogatory."
"So it is, my dear vicomte," said Athos, laughing, "to make bad ones; but to
make good ones increases fame--witness Monsieur de Rotrou. Nevertheless," he
continued, in the tone of one who gives wholesome advice, "I think it is beer not
to make them."
"en," said Raoul, "this Monsieur Scarron is a poet?"
"Yes; you are warned, vicomte. Consider well what you do in that house. Talk
only by gestures, or rather always listen."
"Yes, monsieur," replied Raoul.
"You will see me talking with one of my friends, the Abbe d'Herblay, of whom
you have oen heard me speak."
"I remember him, monsieur."
"Come near to us from time to time, as if to speak; but do not speak, and do
not listen. at lile stratagem may serve to keep off interlopers."
"Very well, monsieur; I will obey you at all points."
Athos made two visits in Paris; at seven o'clo he and Raoul directed their
steps to the Rue des Tournelles; it was stopped by porters, horses and footmen. Athos
forced his way through and entered, followed by the young man. e first person
that stru him on his entrance was Aramis, planted near a great air on castors,
very large, covered with a canopy of tapestry, under whi there moved, enveloped
in a quilt of brocade, a lile face, youngish, very merry, somewhat pallid, whilst its
eyes never ceased to express a sentiment at once lively, intellectual, and amiable.
is was the Abbe Scarron, always laughing, joking, complimenting--yet suffering-
-and toying nervously with a small swit.
Around this kind of rolling tent pressed a crowd of gentlemen and ladies.
e room was neatly, comfortably furnished. Large valances of silk, embroidered
with flowers of gay colors, whi were rather faded, fell from the wide windows; the
fiings of the room were simple, but in excellent taste. Two well trained servingmen
were in aendance on the company. On perceiving Athos, Aramis advanced toward
him, took him by the hand and presented him to Scarron. Raoul remained silent,
for he was not prepared for the dignity of the bel esprit.
Aer some minutes the door opened and a footman announced Mademoiselle
Paulet.
Athos toued the shoulder of the vicomte.
"Look at this lady, Raoul, she is an historic personage; it was to visit her King
Henry IV. was going when he was assassinated."
clvi
Every one thronged around Mademoiselle Paulet, for she was always very
mu the fashion. She was a tall woman, with a slender figure and a forest of
golden curls, su as Raphael was fond of and Titian has painted all his Magdalens
with. is fawn-colored hair, or, perhaps the sort of ascendancy whi she had
over other women, gave her the name of "La Lionne." Mademoiselle Paulet took her
accustomed seat, but before siing down, she cast, in all her queen-like grandeur, a
look around the room, and her eyes rested on Raoul.
Athos smiled.
"Mademoiselle Paulet has observed you, vicomte; go and bow to her; don't try
to appear anything but what you are, a true country youth; on no account speak to
her of Henry IV."
"When shall we two walk together?" Athos then said to Aramis.
"Presently--there are not a sufficient number of people here yet; we shall be
remarked."
At this moment the door opened and in walked the coadjutor.
At this name every one looked around, for his was already a very celebrated
name. Athos did the same. He knew the Abbe de Gondy only by report.
He saw a lile dark man, ill made and awkward with his hands in everything-
-except drawing a sword and firing a pistol--with something haughty and contemp-
tuous in his face.
Scarron turned around toward him and came to meet him in his air.
"Well," said the coadjutor, on seeing him, "you are in disgrace, then, abbe?"
is was the orthodox phrase. It had been said that evening a hundred times-
-and Scarron was at his hundredth bon mot on the subject; he was very nearly at
the end of his humoristic tether, but one despairing effort saved him.
"Monsieur, the Cardinal Mazarin has been so kind as to think of me," he said.
"But how can you continue to receive us?" asked the coadjutor; "if your income
is lessened I shall be obliged to make you a canon of Notre Dame."
"Oh, no!" cried Scarron, "I should compromise you too mu."
"Perhaps you have resources of whi we are ignorant?"
"I shall borrow from the queen."
"But her majesty has no property," interposed Aramis.
At this moment the door opened and Madame de Chevreuse was announced.
Every one arose. Scarron turned his air toward the door, Raoul blushed, Athos
made a sign to Aramis, who went and hid himself in the enclosure of a window.
In the midst of all the compliments that awaited her on her entrance, the
duess seemed to be looking for some one; at last she found out Raoul and her
eyes sparkled; she perceived Athos and became thoughtful; she saw Aramis in the
seclusion of the window and gave a start of surprise behind her fan.
"Apropos," she said, as if to drive away thoughts that pursued her in spite of
clvii
Aramis he went to talk with Madame de Chevreuse, who was in the midst of a
large group.
Aramis affected a laugh, to divert the aention of certain curious listeners,
and perceiving that Athos had betaken himself to the embrasure of a window and
remained there, he proceeded to join him, throwing out a few words carelessly as
he moved through the room.
As soon as the two friends met they began a conversation whi was empha-
sized by frequent gesticulation.
Raoul then approaed them as Athos had directed him to do.
"'Tis a rondeau by Monsieur Voiture that monsieur l'abbe is repeating to me."
said Athos in a loud voice, "and I confess I think it incomparable."
Raoul stayed only a few minutes near them and then mingled with the group
round Madame de Chevreuse.
"Well, then?" asked Athos, in a low tone.
"It is to be to-morrow," said Aramis hastily.
"At what time?"
"Six o'clo."
"Where?"
"At Saint Mande."
"Who told you?"
"e Count de Roefort."
Some one drew near.
"And then philosophic ideas are wholly wanting in Voiture's works, but I am
of the same opinion as the coadjutor--he is a poet, a true poet." Aramis spoke so as
to be heard by everybody.
"And I, too," murmured the young lady with the velvet eyes. "I have the mis-
fortune also to admire his poetry exceedingly."
"Monsieur Scarron, do me the honor," said Raoul, blushing, "to tell me the
name of that young lady whose opinion seems so different from that of others of
the company."
"Ah! my young vicomte," replied Scarron, "I suppose you wish to propose to
her an alliance offensive and defensive."
Raoul blushed again.
"You asked the name of that young lady. She is called the fair Indian."
"Excuse me, sir," returned Raoul, blushing still more deeply, "I know no more
than I did before. Alas! I am from the country."
"Whi means that you know very lile about the nonsense whi here flows
down our streets. So mu the beer, young man! so mu the beer! Don't try to
understand it--you will only lose your time."
"You forgive me, then, sir," said Raoul, "and you will deign to tell me who is
clix
As she uered that bon mot, she arose and asked for her carriage. Mademoi-
selle Paulet had already gone; Mademoiselle de Scudery was going.
"Vicomte," said Athos to Raoul, "follow the duess; beg her to do you the
favor to take your arm in going downstairs, and thank her as you descend."
e fair Indian approaed Scarron.
"You are going already?" he said.
"One of the last, as you see; if you hear anything of Monsieur Voiture, be so
kind as to send me word to-morrow."
"Oh!" said Scarron, "he may die now."
"Why?" asked the young girl with the velvet eyes.
"Certainly; his panegyric has been uered."
ey parted, laughing, she turning ba to gaze at the poor paralytic man with
interest, he looking aer her with eyes of love.
One by one the several groups broke up. Scarron seemed not to observe that
certain of his guests had talked mysteriously, that leers had passed from hand to
hand and that the assembly had seemed to have a secret purpose quite apart from
the literary discussion carried on with so mu ostentation. What was all that to
Scarron? At his house rebellion could be planned with impunity, for, as we have
said, since that morning he had ceased to be "the queen's invalid."
As to Raoul, he had aended the duess to her carriage, where, as she took
her seat, she gave him her hand to kiss; then, by one of those wild caprices whi
made her so adorable and at the same time so dangerous, she had suddenly put her
arm around his ne and kissed his forehead, saying:
"Vicomte, may my good wishes and this kiss bring you good fortune!"
en she had pushed him away and directed the coaman to stop at the Hotel
de Luynes. e carriage had started, Madame de Chevreuse had made a parting
gesture to the young man, and Raoul had returned in a state of stupefaction.
Athos surmised what had taken place and smiled. "Come, vicomte," he said, "it
is time for you to go to bed; you will start in the morning for the army of monsieur
le prince. Sleep well your last night as citizen."
"I am to be a soldier then?" said the young man. "Oh, monsieur, I thank you
with all my heart."
"Adieu, count," said the Abbe d'Herblay; "I return to my convent."
"Adieu, abbe," said the coadjutor, "I am to prea to-morrow and have twenty
texts to examine this evening."
"Adieu, gentlemen," said the count; "I am going to sleep twenty-four hours; I
am just falling down with fatigue."
e three men saluted one another, whilst exanging a last look.
Scarron followed their movements with a glance from the corner of his eye.
"Not one of them will do as he says," he murmured, with his lile monkey
clxi
smile; "but they may do as they please, the brave gentlemen! Who knows if they
will not manage to restore to me my pension? ey can move their arms, they can,
and that is mu. Alas, I have only my tongue, but I will try to show that it is good
for something. Ho, there, Champenois! here, it is eleven o'clo. Come and roll me
to bed. Really, that Demoiselle d'Aubigne is very arming!"
So the invalid disappeared soon aerward and went into his sleeping-room;
and one by one the lights in the salon of the Rue des Tournelles were extinguished.
. Saint Denis.
T day had begun to break when Athos arose and dressed himself. It was plain,
by a paleness still greater than usual, and by those traces whi loss of sleep
leaves on the face, that he must have passed almost the whole of the night without
sleeping. Contrary to the custom of a man so firm and decided, there was this
morning in his personal appearance something tardy and irresolute.
He was occupied with the preparations for Raoul's departure and was seeking
to gain time. In the first place he himself furbished a sword, whi he drew from
its perfumed leather sheath; he examined it to see if its hilt was well guarded and if
the blade was firmly aaed to the hilt. en he placed at the boom of the valise
belonging to the young man a small bag of louis, called Olivain, the laey who
had followed him from Blois, and made him pa the valise under his own eyes,
watful to see that everything should be put in whi might be useful to a young
man entering on his first campaign.
At length, aer occupying about an hour in these preparations, he opened the
door of the room in whi the vicomte slept, and entered.
e sun, already high, penetrated into the room through the window, the
curtains of whi Raoul had neglected to close on the previous evening. He was
still sleeping, his head gracefully reposing on his arm.
Athos approaed and hung over the youth in an aitude full of tender melan-
oly; he looked long on this young man, whose smiling mouth and half closed eyes
bespoke so dreams and lightest slumber, as if his guardian angel wated over him
with solicitude and affection. By degrees Athos gave himself up to the arms of
his reverie in the proximity of youth, so pure, so fresh. His own youth seemed to
reappear, bringing with it all those savoury remembrances, whi are like perfumes
more than thoughts. Between the past and the present was an ineffable abyss. But
imagination has the wings of an angel of light and travels safely through or over the
seas where we have been almost shipwreed, the darkness in whi our illusions
are lost, the precipice whence our happiness has been hurled and swallowed up. He
remembered that all the first part of his life had been embiered by a woman and
clxiii
he thought with alarm of the influence love might assume over so fine, and at the
same time so vigorous an organization as that of Raoul.
In recalling all he had been through, he foresaw all that Raoul might suffer;
and the expression of the deep and tender compassion whi throbbed in his heart
was pictured in the moist eye with whi he gazed on the young man.
At this moment Raoul awoke, without a cloud on his face without weariness
or lassitude; his eyes were fixed on those of Athos and perhaps he comprehended
all that passed in the heart of the man who was awaiting his awakening as a lover
awaits the awakening of his mistress, for his glance, in return, had all the tenderness
of love.
"You are there, sir?" he said, respectfully.
"Yes, Raoul," replied the count.
"And you did not awaken me?"
"I wished to leave you still to enjoy some moments of sleep, my ild; you
must be fatigued from yesterday."
"Oh, sir, how good you are!"
Athos smiled.
"How do you feel this morning?" he inquired.
"Perfectly well; quite rested, sir."
"You are still growing," Athos continued, with that arming and paternal
interest felt by a grown man for a youth.
"Oh, sir, I beg your pardon!" exclaimed Raoul, ashamed of so mu aention;
"in an instant I shall be dressed."
Athos then called Olivain.
"Everything," said Olivain to Athos, "has been done according to your direc-
tions; the horses are waiting."
"And I was asleep," cried Raoul, "whilst you, sir, you had the kindness to aend
to all these details. Truly, sir, you overwhelm me with benefits!"
"erefore you love me a lile, I hope," replied Athos, in a tone of emotion.
"Oh, sir! God knows how mu I love, revere you."
"See that you forget nothing," said Athos, appearing to look about him, that
he might hide his emotion.
"No, indeed, sir," answered Raoul.
e servant then approaed Athos and said, hesitatingly:
"Monsieur le vicomte has no sword."
"'Tis well," said Athos, "I will take care of that."
ey went downstairs, Raoul looking every now and then at the count to see
if the moment of farewell was at hand, but Athos was silent. When they reaed
the steps Raoul saw three horses.
"Oh, sir! then you are going with me?"
clxiv
be trampled to death by the horses. At all events, should you be wounded, write
to me that very instant, or get some one at once to write to me. We are judges of
wounds, we old soldiers," Athos added, smiling.
"ank you, sir," answered the young man, mu moved.
ey arrived that very moment at the gate of the town, guarded by two sen-
tinels.
"Here comes a young gentleman," said one of them, "who seems as if he were
going to join the army."
"How do you make that out?" inquired Athos.
"By his manner, sir, and his age; he's the second to-day."
"Has a young man, su as I am, gone through this morning, then?" asked
Raoul.
"Faith, yes, with a haughty presence, a fine equipage; su as the son of a
noble house would have."
"He will be my companion on the journey, sir," cried Raoul. "Alas! he cannot
make me forget what I shall have lost!"
us talking, they traversed the streets, full of people on account of the fete,
and arrived opposite the old cathedral, where first mass was going on.
"Let us alight; Raoul," said Athos. "Olivain, take care of our horses and give
me my sword."
e two gentlemen then went into the ur. Athos gave Raoul some of the
holy water. A love as tender as that of a lover for his mistress dwells, undoubtedly,
in some paternal hearts toward a son.
Athos said a word to one of the vergers, who bowed and proceeded toward
the basement.
"Come, Raoul," he said, "let us follow this man."
e verger opened the iron grating that guarded the royal tombs and stood
on the topmost step, whilst Athos and Raoul descended. e sepulral depths of
the descent were dimly lighted by a silver lamp on the lowest step; and just below
this lamp there was laid, wrapped in a flowing mantle of violet velvet, worked with
fleurs-de-lis of gold, a catafalque resting on trestles of oak. e young man, prepared
for this scene by the state of his own feelings, whi were mournful, and by the
majesty of the cathedral whi he had passed through, descended in a slow and
solemn manner and stood with head uncovered before these mortal spoils of the
last king, who was not to be placed by the side of his forefathers until his successor
should take his place there; and who appeared to abide on that spot, that he might
thus address human pride, so sure to be exalted by the glories of a throne: "Dust of
the earth! Here I await thee!"
ere was profound silence.
en Athos raised his hand and pointing to the coffin:
clxvi
"is temporary sepulture is," he said, "that of a man who was of feeble mind,
yet one whose reign was full of great events; because over this king wated the
spirit of another man, even as this lamp keeps vigil over this coffin and illumines
it. He whose intellect was thus supreme, Raoul, was the actual sovereign; the other,
nothing but a phantom to whom he lent a soul; and yet, so powerful is majesty
amongst us, this man has not even the honor of a tomb at the feet of him in whose
service his life was worn away. Remember, Raoul, this! If Rielieu made the king,
by comparison, seem small, he made royalty great. e Palace of the Louvre con-
tains two things--the king, who must die, and royalty, whi never dies. e min-
ister, so feared, so hated by his master, has descended into the tomb, drawing aer
him the king, whom he would not leave alone on earth, lest his work should be
destroyed. So blind were his contemporaries that they regarded the cardinal's death
as a deliverance; and I, even I, opposed the designs of the great man who held the
destinies of France within the hollow of his hand. Raoul, learn how to distinguish
the king from royalty; the king is but a man; royalty is the gi of God. Whenever
you hesitate as to whom you ought to serve, abandon the exterior, the material ap-
pearance for the invisible principle, for the invisible principle is everything. Raoul,
I seem to read your future destiny as through a cloud. It will be happier, I think,
than ours has been. Different in your fate from us, you will have a king without a
minister, whom you may serve, love, respect. Should the king prove a tyrant, for
power begets tyranny, serve, love, respect royalty, that Divine right, that celestial
spark whi makes this dust still powerful and holy, so that we--gentlemen, never-
theless, of rank and condition--are as nothing in comparison with the cold corpse
there extended."
"I shall adore God, sir," said Raoul, "respect royalty and ever serve the king.
And if death be my lot, I hope to die for the king, for royalty and for God. Have I,
sir, comprehended your instructions?"
Athos smiled.
"Yours is a noble nature." he said; "here is your sword."
Raoul bent his knee to the ground.
"It was worn by my father, a loyal gentleman. I have worn it in my turn and
it has sometimes not been disgraced when the hilt was in my hand and the sheath
at my side. Should your hand still be too weak to use this sword, Raoul, so mu
the beer. You will have the more time to learn to draw it only when it ought to be
used."
"Sir," replied Raoul, puing the sword to his lips as he received it from the
count, "I owe you everything and yet this sword is the most precious gi you have
yet made me. I will wear it, I swear to you, as a grateful man should do."
"'Tis well; arise, vicomte, embrace me."
Raoul arose and threw himself with emotion into the count's arms.
clxvii
"Adieu," faltered the count, who felt his heart die away within him; "adieu,
and think of me."
"Oh! for ever and ever!" cried the youth; "oh! I swear to you, sir, should any
harm befall me, your name will be the last name that I shall uer, the remembrance
of you my last thought."
Athos hastened upstairs to conceal his emotion, and regained with hurried
steps the por where Olivain was waiting with the horses.
"Olivain," said Athos, showing the servant Raoul's shoulder-belt, "tighten the
bule of the sword, it falls too low. You will accompany monsieur le vicomte till
Grimaud rejoins you. You know, Raoul, Grimaud is an old and zealous servant; he
will follow you."
"Yes, sir," answered Raoul.
"Now to horse, that I may see you depart!"
Raoul obeyed.
"Adieu, Raoul," said the count; "adieu, my dearest boy!"
"Adieu, sir, adieu, my beloved protector."
Athos waved his hand--he dared not trust himself to speak: and Raoul went
away, his head uncovered. Athos remained motionless, looking aer him until he
turned the corner of the street.
en the count threw the bridle of his horse into the hands of a peasant, re-
mounted the steps, went into the cathedral, there to kneel down in the darkest corner
and pray.
. One of the Forty Methods
of Escape of the Duc de
Beaufort.
M time was passing on for the prisoner, as well as for those who were
preparing his escape; only for him it passed more slowly. Unlike other men,
who enter with ardor upon a perilous resolution and grow cold as the moment of
execution approaes, the Duc de Beaufort, whose buoyant courage had become a
proverb, seemed to push time before him and sought most eagerly to hasten the
hour of action. In his escape alone, apart from his plans for the future, whi, it
must be admied, were for the present sufficiently vague and uncertain, there was
a beginning of vengeance whi filled his heart. In the first place his escape would
be a serious misfortune to Monsieur de Chavigny, whom he hated for the pey
persecutions he owed to him. It would be a still worse affair for Mazarin, whom he
execrated for the greater offences he had commied. It may be observed that there
was a proper proportion in his sentiments toward the governor of the prison and
the minister--toward the subordinate and the master.
en Monsieur de Beaufort, who was so familiar with the interior of the Palais
Royal, though he did not know the relations existing between the queen and the car-
dinal, pictured to himself, in his prison, all that dramatic excitement whi would
ensue when the rumor should run from the minister's cabinet to the amber of
Anne of Austria: "Monsieur de Beaufort has escaped!" Whilst saying that to him-
self, Monsieur de Beaufort smiled pleasantly and imagined himself already outside,
breathing the air of the plains and the forests, pressing a strong horse between his
knees and crying out in a loud voice, "I am free!"
It is true that on coming to himself he found that he was still within four walls;
he saw La Ramee twirling his thumbs ten feet from him, and his guards laughing and
drinking in the ante-amber. e only thing that was pleasant to him in that odious
clxix
tableau--su is the instability of the human mind--was the sullen face of Grimaud,
for whom he had at first conceived su a hatred and who now was all his hope.
Grimaud seemed to him an Antinous. It is needless to say that this transformation
was visible only to the prisoner's feverish imagination. Grimaud was still the same,
and therefore he retained the entire confidence of his superior, La Ramee, who now
relied upon him more than he did upon himself, for, as we have said, La Ramee felt
at the boom of his heart a certain weakness for Monsieur de Beaufort.
And so the good La Ramee made a festivity of the lile supper with his pris-
oner. He had but one fault--he was a gourmand; he had found the pates good, the
wine excellent. Now the successor of Pere Marteau had promised him a pate of
pheasant instead of a pate of fowl, and Chambertin wine instead of Macon. All
this, set off by the presence of that excellent prince, who was so good-natured, who
invented so droll tris against Monsieur de Chavigny and so fine jokes against
Mazarin, made for La Ramee the approaing Pentecost one of the four great feasts
of the year. He therefore looked forward to six o'clo with as mu impatience as
the duke himself.
Since daybreak La Ramee had been occupied with the preparations, and trust-
ing no one but himself, he had visited personally the successor of Pere Marteau. e
laer had surpassed himself; he showed La Ramee a monstrous pate, ornamented
with Monsieur de Beaufort's coat-of-arms. It was empty as yet, but a pheasant and
two partridges were lying near it. La Ramee's mouth watered and he returned to the
duke's amber rubbing his hands. To crown his happiness, Monsieur de Chavigny
had started on a journey that morning and in his absence La Ramee was deputy-
governor of the ateau.
As for Grimaud, he seemed more sullen than ever.
In the course of the forenoon Monsieur de Beaufort had a game of tennis with
La Ramee; a sign from Grimaud put him on the alert. Grimaud, going in advance,
followed the course whi they were to take in the evening. e game was played
in an inclosure called the lile court of the ateau, a place quite deserted except
when Monsieur de Beaufort was playing; and even then the precaution seemed
superfluous, the wall was so high.
ere were three gates to open before reaing the inclosure, ea by a differ-
ent key. When they arrived Grimaud went carelessly and sat down by a loophole
in the wall, leing his legs dangle outside. It was evident that there the rope ladder
was to be aaed.
is manoeuvre, transparent to the Duc de Beaufort, was quite unintelligible
to La Ramee.
e game at tennis, whi, upon a sign from Grimaud, Monsieur de Beaufort
had consented to play, began in the aernoon. e duke was in full strength and
beat La Ramee completely.
clxx
Four of the guards, who were constantly near the prisoner, assisted in piing
up the tennis balls. When the game was over, the duke, laughing at La Ramee for
his bad play, offered these men two louis d'or to go and drink his health, with their
four other comrades.
e guards asked permission of La Ramee, who gave it to them, but not till
the evening, however; until then he had business and the prisoner was not to be le
alone.
Six o'clo came and, although they were not to sit down to table until seven
o'clo, dinner was ready and served up. Upon a sideboard appeared the colossal
pie with the duke's arms on it, and seemingly cooked to a turn, as far as one could
judge by the golden color whi illuminated the crust.
e rest of the dinner was to come.
Every one was impatient, La Ramee to sit down to table, the guards to go and
drink, the duke to escape.
Grimaud alone was calm as ever. One might have fancied that Athos had
educated him with the express forethought of su a great event.
ere were moments when, looking at Grimaud, the duke asked himself if he
was not dreaming and if that marble figure was really at his service and would grow
animated when the moment came for action.
La Ramee sent away the guards, desiring them to drink to the duke's health,
and as soon as they were gone shut all the doors, put the keys in his poet and
showed the table to the prince with an air that signified:
"Whenever my lord pleases."
e prince looked at Grimaud, Grimaud looked at the clo; it was hardly
a quarter-past six. e escape was fixed to take place at seven o'clo; there was
therefore three-quarters of an hour to wait.
e duke, in order to pass away another quarter of an hour, pretended to be
reading something that interested him and muered that he wished they would
allow him to finish his apter. La Ramee went up to him and looked over his
shoulder to see what sort of a book it was that had so singular an influence over the
prisoner as to make him put off taking his dinner.
It was "Caesar's Commentaries," whi La Ramee had lent him, contrary to
the orders of the governor; and La Ramee resolved never again to disobey these
injunctions.
Meantime he uncorked the boles and went to smell if the pie was good.
At half-past six the duke arose and said very gravely:
"Certainly, Caesar was the greatest man of ancient times."
"You think so, my lord?" answered La Ramee.
"Yes."
"Well, as for me, I prefer Hannibal."
clxxi
selves, pray tell me one of those forty ways invented by your highness."
"Willingly," answered the duke, "give me the pie!"
"I am listening," said La Ramee, leaning ba in his armair and raising his
glass of Madeira to his lips, and winking his eye that he might see the sun through
the ri liquid that he was about to taste.
e duke glanced at the clo. In ten minutes it would strike seven.
Grimaud placed the pie before the duke, who took a knife with a silver blade
to raise the upper crust; but La Ramee, who was afraid of any harm happening to
this fine work of art, passed his knife, whi had an iron blade, to the duke.
"ank you, La Ramee," said the prisoner.
"Well, my lord! this famous invention of yours?"
"Must I tell you," replied the duke, "on what I most reon and what I deter-
mine to try first?"
"Yes, that's the thing, my lord!" cried his custodian, gaily.
"Well, I should hope, in the first instance, to have for keeper an honest fellow
like you."
"And you have me, my lord. Well?"
"Having, then, a keeper like La Ramee, I should try also to have introduced to
him by some friend or other a man who would be devoted to me, who would assist
me in my flight."
"Come, come," said La Ramee, "that's not a bad idea."
"Capital, isn't it? for instance, the former servingman of some brave gentle-
man, an enemy himself to Mazarin, as every gentleman ought to be."
"Hush! don't let us talk politics, my lord."
"en my keeper would begin to trust this man and to depend upon him, and
I should have news from those without the prison walls."
"Ah, yes! but how can the news be brought to you?"
"Nothing easier; in a game of tennis, for example."
"In a game of tennis?" asked La Ramee, giving more serious aention to the
duke's words.
"Yes; see, I send a ball into the moat; a man is there who pis it up; the ball
contains a leer. Instead of returning the ball to me when I call for it from the top
of the wall, he throws me another; that other ball contains a leer. us we have
exanged ideas and no one has seen us do it."
"e devil it does! e devil it does!" said La Ramee, scrating his head; "you
are in the wrong to tell me that, my lord. I shall have to wat the men who pi
up balls."
e duke smiled.
"But," resumed La Ramee, "that is only a way of corresponding."
"And that is a great deal, it seems to me."
clxxiii
of the windows. e duke ran to the rampart and perceived on the other side of
the dit, three cavaliers with two riding horses. e duke exanged a signal with
them. It was indeed for him that they were there.
Grimaud, meantime, undid the means of escape.
is was not, however, a rope ladder, but a ball of silk cord, with a narrow
board whi was to pass between the legs, the ball to unwind itself by the weight
of the person who sat astride upon the board.
"Go!" said the duke.
"First, my lord?" inquired Grimaud.
"Certainly. If I am caught, I risk nothing but being taken ba again to prison.
If they cat thee, thou wilt be hung."
"True," replied Grimaud.
And instantly, Grimaud, siing upon the board as if on horseba, com-
menced his perilous descent.
e duke followed him with his eyes, with involuntary terror. He had gone
down about three-quarters of the length of the wall when the cord broke. Grimaud
fell--precipitated into the moat.
e duke uered a cry, but Grimaud did not give a single moan. He must
have been dreadfully hurt, for he did not stir from the place where he fell.
Immediately one of the men who were waiting slipped down into the moat,
tied under Grimaud's shoulders the end of a cord, and the remaining two, who held
the other end, drew Grimaud to them.
"Descend, my lord," said the man in the moat. "ere are only fieen feet
more from the top down here, and the grass is so."
e duke had already begun to descend. His task was the more difficult, as
there was no board to support him. He was obliged to let himself down by his hands
and from a height of fiy feet. But as we have said he was active, strong, and full
of presence of mind. In less than five minutes he arrived at the end of the cord. He
was then only fieen feet from the ground, as the gentlemen below had told him.
He let go the rope and fell upon his feet, without receiving any injury.
He instantly began to climb up the slope of the moat, on the top of whi he
met De Roefort. e other two gentlemen were unknown to him. Grimaud, in a
swoon, was tied securely to a horse.
"Gentlemen," said the duke, "I will thank you later; now we have not a moment
to lose. On, then! on! those who love me, follow me!"
And he jumped on his horse and set off at full gallop, snuffing the fresh air in
his triumph and shouting out, with an expression of face whi it would be impos-
sible to describe:
"Free! free! free!"
. e timely Arrival of
D'Artagnan in Paris.
A Blois, D'Artagnan received the money paid to him by Mazarin for any future
service he might render the cardinal.
From Blois to Paris was a journey of four days for ordinary travelers, but
D'Artagnan arrived on the third day at the Barriere Saint Denis. In turning the cor-
ner of the Rue Montmartre, in order to rea the Rue Tiquetonne and the Hotel de
la Chevree, where he had appointed Porthos to meet him, he saw at one of the
windows of the hotel, that friend himself dressed in a sky-blue waistcoat, embroi-
dered with silver, and gaping, till he showed every one of his white teeth; whilst
the people passing by admiringly gazed at this gentleman, so handsome and so ri,
who seemed to weary of his ries and his greatness.
D'Artagnan and Planet had hardly turned the corner when Porthos recog-
nized them.
"Eh! D'Artagnan!" he cried. "ank God you have come!"
"Eh! good-day, dear friend!" replied D'Artagnan.
Porthos came down at once to the threshold of the hotel.
"Ah, my dear friend!" he cried, "what bad stabling for my horses here."
"Indeed!" said D'Artagnan; "I am most unhappy to hear it, on account of those
fine animals."
"And I, also--I was also wretedly off," he answered, moving baward and
forward as he spoke; "and had it not been for the hostess," he added, with his air of
vulgar self-complacency, "who is very agreeable and understands a joke, I should
have got a lodging elsewhere."
e prey Madeleine, who had approaed during this colloquy, stepped ba
and turned pale as death on hearing Porthos's words, for she thought the scene with
the Swiss was about to be repeated. But to her great surprise D'Artagnan remained
perfectly calm, and instead of being angry he laughed, and said to Porthos:
clxxvii
"Yes, I understand, the air of La Rue Tiquetonne is not like that of Pierrefonds;
but console yourself, I will soon conduct you to one mu beer."
"When will you do that?"
"Immediately, I hope."
"Ah! so mu the beer!"
To that exclamation of Porthos's succeeded a groaning, low and profound,
whi seemed to come from behind a door. D'Artagnan, who had just dismounted,
then saw, outlined against the wall, the enormous stoma of Mousqueton, whose
down-drawn mouth emied sounds of distress.
"And you, too, my poor Monsieur Mouston, are out of place in this poor hotel,
are you not?" asked D'Artagnan, in that rallying tone whi may indicate either
compassion or moery.
"He finds the cooking detestable," replied Porthos.
"Why, then, doesn't he aend to it himself, as at Chantilly?"
"Ah, monsieur, I have not here, as I had there, the ponds of monsieur le prince,
where I could cat those beautiful carp, nor the forests of his highness to provide
me with partridges. As for the cellar, I have seared every part and poor stuff I
found."
"Monsieur Mouston," said D'Artagnan, "I should indeed condole with you had
I not at this moment something very pressing to aend to."
en taking Porthos aside:
"My dear Du Vallon," he said, "here you are in full dress most fortunately, for
I am going to take you to the cardinal's."
"Gracious me! really!" exclaimed Porthos, opening his great wondering eyes.
"Yes, my friend."
"A presentation? indeed!"
"Does that alarm you?"
"No, but it agitates me."
"Oh! don't be distressed; you have to deal with a cardinal of another kind.
is one will not oppress you by his dignity."
"'Tis the same thing--you understand me, D'Artagnan--a court."
"ere's no court now. Alas!"
"e queen!"
"I was going to say, there's no longer a queen. e queen! Rest assured, we
shall not see her."
"And you say that we are going from here to the Palais Royal?"
"Immediately. Only, that there may be no delay, I shall borrow one of your
horses."
"Certainly; all the four are at your service."
"Oh, I need only one of them for the time being."
clxxviii
"Ah! you, is it? Monsieur le lieutenant, you have been very prompt. 'Tis well.
Welcome to ye."
"anks, my lord. Here I am at your eminence's service, as well as Monsieur
du Vallon, one of my old friends, who used to conceal his nobility under the name
of Porthos."
Porthos bowed to the cardinal.
"A magnificent cavalier," remarked Mazarin.
Porthos turned his head to the right and to the le, and drew himself up with
a movement full of dignity.
"e best swordsman in the kingdom, my lord," said D'Artagnan.
Porthos bowed to his friend.
Mazarin was as fond of fine soldiers as, in later times, Frederi of Prussia
used to be. He admired the strong hands, the broad shoulders and the steady eye of
Porthos. He seemed to see before him the salvation of his administration and of the
kingdom, sculptured in flesh and bone. He remembered that the old association of
musketeers was composed of four persons.
"And your two other friends?" he asked.
Porthos opened his mouth, thinking it a good opportunity to put in a word in
his turn; D'Artagnan eed him by a glance from the corner of his eye.
"ey are prevented at this moment, but will join us later."
Mazarin coughed a lile.
"And this gentleman, being disengaged, takes to the service willingly?" he
asked.
"Yes, my lord, and from pure devotion to the cause, for Monsieur de Bracieux
is ri."
"Ri!" said Mazarin, whom that single word always inspired with a great
respect.
"Fiy thousand francs a year," said Porthos.
ese were the first words he had spoken.
"From pure zeal?" resumed Mazarin, with his artful smile; "from pure zeal and
devotion then?"
"My lord has, perhaps, no faith in those words?" said D'Artagnan.
"Have you, Monsieur le Gascon?" asked Mazarin, supporting his elbows on
his desk and his in on his hands.
"I," replied the Gascon, "I believe in devotion as a word at one's baptism, for
instance, whi naturally comes before one's proper name; every one is naturally
more or less devout, certainly; but there should be at the end of one's devotion
something to gain."
"And your friend, for instance; what does he expect to have at the end of his
devotion?"
clxxx
"e maer is, my lord, that the Duc de Beaufort has contrived to escape from
the Chateau of Vincennes."
Mazarin uered a cry and became paler than the man who had brought the
news. He fell ba, almost fainting, in his air.
"Escaped? Monsieur de Beaufort escaped?"
"My lord, I saw him run off from the top of the terrace."
"And you did not fire on him?"
"He was out of range."
"Monsieur de Chavigny--where was he?"
"Absent."
"And La Ramee?"
"Was found loed up in the prisoner's room, a gag in his mouth and a poniard
near him."
"But the man who was under him?"
"Was an accomplice of the duke's and escaped along with him."
Mazarin groaned.
"My lord," said D'Artagnan, advancing toward the cardinal, "it seems to me
that your eminence is losing precious time. It may still be possible to overtake the
prisoner. France is large; the nearest frontier is sixty leagues distant."
"And who is to pursue him?" cried Mazarin.
"I, pardieu!"
"And you would arrest him?"
"Why not?"
"You would arrest the Duc de Beaufort, armed, in the field?"
"If your eminence should order me to arrest the devil, I would seize him by
the horns and would bring him in."
"So would I," said Porthos.
"So would you!" said Mazarin, looking with astonishment at those two men.
"But the duke will not yield himself without a furious bale."
"Very well," said D'Artagnan, his eyes aflame, "bale! It is a long time since
we have had a bale, eh, Porthos?"
"Bale!" cried Porthos.
"And you think you can cat him?"
"Yes, if we are beer mounted than he."
"Go then, take what guards you find here, and pursue him."
"You command us, my lord, to do so?"
"And I sign my orders," said Mazarin, taking a piece of paper and writing some
lines; "Monsieur du Vallon, your barony is on the ba of the Duc de Beaufort's
horse; you have nothing to do but to overtake it. As for you, my dear lieutenant, I
promise you nothing; but if you bring him ba to me, dead or alive, you may ask
clxxxii
T musketeers rode the whole length of the Faubourg Saint Antoine and of the
road to Vincennes, and soon found themselves out of the town, then in a forest
and then within sight of a village.
e horses seemed to become more lively with ea successive step; their nos-
trils reddened like glowing furnaces. D'Artagnan, freely applying his spurs, was in
advance of Porthos two feet at the most; Mousqueton followed two lengths behind;
the guards were scaered according to the varying excellence of their respective
mounts.
From the top of an eminence D'Artagnan perceived a group of people collected
on the other side of the moat, in front of that part of the donjon whi looks toward
Saint Maur. He rode on, convinced that in this direction he would gain intelligence
of the fugitive. In five minutes he had arrived at the place, where the guards joined
him, coming up one by one.
e several members of that group were mu excited. ey looked at the
cord, still hanging from the loophole and broken at about twenty feet from the
ground. eir eyes measured the height and they exanged conjectures. On the
top of the wall sentinels went and came with a frightened air.
A few soldiers, commanded by a sergeant, drove away idlers from the place
where the duke had mounted his horse. D'Artagnan went straight to the sergeant.
"My officer," said the sergeant, "it is not permied to stop here."
"at prohibition is not for me," said D'Artagnan. "Have the fugitives been
pursued?"
"Yes, my officer; unfortunately, they are well mounted."
"How many are there?"
"Four, and a fih whom they carried away wounded."
"Four!" said D'Artagnan, looking at Porthos. "Do you hear, baron? ey are
only four!"
clxxxiv
At the end of another two hours the horses had gone twelve leagues without
stopping; their legs began to tremble, and the foam they shed whitened the doublets
of their masters.
"Let us rest here an instant to give these poor creatures breathing time," said
Porthos.
"Let us rather kill them! yes, kill them!" cried D'Artagnan; "I see fresh tras;
'tis not a quarter of an hour since they passed this place."
In fact, the road was trodden by horses' feet, visible even in the approaing
gloom of evening.
ey set out; aer a run of two leagues, Mousqueton's horse sank.
"Gracious me!" said Porthos, "there's Phoebus ruined."
"e cardinal will pay you a hundred pistoles."
"I'm above that."
"Let us set out again, at full gallop."
"Yes, if we can."
But at last the lieutenant's horse refused to go on; he could not breathe; one
last spur, instead of making him advance, made him fall.
"e devil!" exclaimed Porthos; "there's Vulcan foundered."
"Zounds!" cried D'Artagnan, "then we must stop! Give me your horse, Porthos.
What the devil are you doing?"
"By Jove, I am falling, or rather, Bayard is falling," answered Porthos.
All three then cried: "All's over."
"Hush!" said D'Artagnan.
"What is it?"
"I hear a horse."
"It belongs to one of our companions, who is overtaking us."
"No," said D'Artagnan, "it is in advance."
"at is another thing," said Porthos; and he listened toward the quarter indi-
cated by D'Artagnan.
"Monsieur," said Mousqueton, who, abandoning his horse on the high road,
had come on foot to rejoin his master, "Phoebus could no longer hold out and----"
"Silence!" said Porthos.
In fact, at that moment a second neighing was borne to them on the night
wind.
"It is five hundred feet from here, in advance," said D'Artagnan.
"True, monsieur," said Mousqueton; "and five hundred feet from here is a small
hunting-house."
"Mousqueton, thy pistols," said D'Artagnan.
"I have them at hand, monsieur."
"Porthos, take yours from your holsters."
clxxxvi
"Saddled?"
"Yes, saddled and bridled."
"en we are upon the fugitives."
"Courage, we have them!"
"But if they are numerous," observed Mousqueton, "'tis not we who have them,
but they who have us."
"Nonsense!" cried D'Artagnan, "they'll suppose us to be stronger than them-
selves, as we're in pursuit; they'll be afraid and will disperse."
"Certainly," remarked Porthos.
"Ah! do you see?" cried the lieutenant.
"e lights again! this time I, too, saw them," said Porthos.
"On! on! forward! forward!" cried D'Artagnan, in his stentorian voice; "we
shall laugh over all this in five minutes."
And they darted on anew. e horses, excited by pain and emulation, raced
over the dark road, in the midst of whi was now seen a moving mass, denser and
more obscure than the rest of the horizon.
. e Rencontre.
T rode on in this way for ten minutes. Suddenly two dark forms seemed to
separate from the mass, advanced, grew in size, and as they loomed up larger
and larger, assumed the appearance of two horsemen.
"Aha!" cried D'Artagnan, "they're coming toward us."
"So mu the worse for them," said Porthos.
"Who goes there?" cried a hoarse voice.
e three horsemen made no reply, stopped not, and all that was heard was
the noise of swords drawn from the scabbards and the coing of the pistols with
whi the two phantoms were armed.
"Bridle in mouth!" said D'Artagnan.
Porthos understood him and he and the lieutenant ea drew with the le
hand a pistol from their bolsters and coed it in their turn.
"Who goes there?" was asked a second time. "Not a step forward, or you're
dead men."
"Stuff!" cried Porthos, almost oked with dust and ewing his bridle as a
horse ews his bit. "Stuff and nonsense; we have seen plenty of dead men in our
time."
Hearing these words, the two shadows bloaded the road and by the light of
the stars might be seen the shining of their arms.
"Ba!" shouted D'Artagnan, "or you are dead!"
Two shots were the reply to this threat; but the assailants aaed their foes
with su velocity that in a moment they were upon them; a third pistol-shot was
heard, aimed by D'Artagnan, and one of his adversaries fell. As for Porthos, he
assaulted the foe with su violence that, although his sword was thrust aside, the
enemy was thrown off his horse and fell about ten steps from it.
"Finish, Mouston, finish the work!" cried Porthos. And he darted on beside
his friend, who had already begun a fresh pursuit.
"Well?" said Porthos.
"I've broken my man's skull," cried D'Artagnan. "And you----"
cxc
Porthos turned around like a lion, plunged on the dismounted cavalier, who
tried to draw his sword; but before it was out of the scabbard, Porthos, with the hilt
of his had stru him su a terrible blow on the head that he fell like an ox beneath
the buter's knife.
Mousqueton, groaning, slipped from his horse, his wound not allowing him
to keep the saddle.
On perceiving the cavaliers, D'Artagnan had stopped and arged his pistol
afresh; besides, his horse, he found, had a carbine on the bow of the saddle.
"Here I am!" exclaimed Porthos. "Shall we wait, or shall we arge?"
"Let us arge them," answered the Gascon.
"Charge!" cried Porthos.
ey spurred on their horses; the other cavaliers were only twenty steps from
them.
"For the king!" cried D'Artagnan.
"e king has no authority here!" answered a deep voice, whi seemed to
proceed from a cloud, so enveloped was the cavalier in a whirlwind of dust.
"'Tis well, we will see if the king's name is not a passport everywhere," replied
the Gascon.
"See!" answered the voice.
Two shots were fired at once, one by D'Artagnan, the other by the adversary
of Porthos. D'Artagnan's ball took off his enemy's hat. e ball fired by Porthos's
foe went through the throat of his horse, whi fell, groaning.
"For the last time, where are you going?"
"To the devil!" answered D'Artagnan.
"Good! you may be easy, then--you'll get there."
D'Artagnan then saw a musket-barrel leveled at him; he had no time to draw
from his holsters. He recalled a bit of advice whi Athos had once given him, and
made his horse rear.
e ball stru the animal full in front. D'Artagnan felt his horse giving way
under him and with his wonderful agility threw himself to one side.
"Ah! this," cried the voice, the tone of whi was at once polished and jeering,
"this is nothing but a butery of horses and not a combat between men. To the
sword, sir! the sword!"
And he jumped off his horse.
"To the swords! be it so!" replied D'Artagnan; "that is exactly what I want."
D'Artagnan, in two steps, was engaged with the foe, whom, according to cus-
tom, he aaed impetuously, but he met this time with a skill and a strength of
arm that gave him pause. Twice he was obliged to step ba; his opponent stirred
not one in. D'Artagnan returned and again aaed him.
Twice or thrice thrusts were aempted on both sides, without effect; sparks
cxcii
troop of horsemen.
"Hearing the noise of the fight," resumed the duke, "I fancied you had about
twenty men with you, so I came ba with those around me, tired of always running
away, and wishing to draw my sword in my own cause; but you are only two."
"Yes, my lord; but, as you have said, two that are a mat for twenty," said
Athos.
"Come, gentlemen, your swords," said the duke.
"Our swords!" cried D'Artagnan, raising his head and regaining his self-
possession. "Never!"
"Never!" added Porthos.
Some of the men moved toward them.
"One moment, my lord," whispered Athos, and he said something in a low
voice.
"As you will," replied the duke. "I am too mu indebted to you to refuse your
first request. Gentlemen," he said to his escort, "withdraw. Monsieur d'Artagnan,
Monsieur du Vallon, you are free."
e order was obeyed; D'Artagnan and Porthos then found themselves in the
centre of a large circle.
"Now, D'Herblay," said Athos, "dismount and come here."
Aramis dismounted and went to Porthos, whilst Athos approaed
D'Artagnan.
All four once more together.
"Friends!" said Athos, "do you regret you have not shed our blood?"
"No," replied D'Artagnan; "I regret to see that we, hitherto united, are opposed
to ea other. Ah! nothing will ever go well with us hereaer!"
"Oh, Heaven! No, all is over!" said Porthos.
"Well, be on our side now," resumed Aramis.
"Silence, D'Herblay!" cried Athos; "su proposals are not to be made to gen-
tlemen su as these. 'Tis a maer of conscience with them, as with us."
"Meantime, here we are, enemies!" said Porthos. "Gramercy! who would ever
have thought it?"
D'Artagnan only sighed.
Athos looked at them both and took their hands in his.
"Gentlemen," he said, "this is a serious business and my heart bleeds as if you
had pierced it through and through. Yes, we are severed; there is the great, the
distressing truth! But we have not as yet declared war; perhaps we shall have to
make certain conditions, therefore a solemn conference is indispensable."
"For my own part, I demand it," said Aramis.
"I accept it," interposed D'Artagnan, proudly.
Porthos bowed, as if in assent.
cxciv
e bole was brought with a promptness whi showed the degree of con-
sideration D'Artagnan enjoyed in the establishment. He continued:
"So I was going away, but he called me ba.
"'You have had three horses foundered or killed?' he asked me.
"'Yes, my lord.'
"'How mu were they worth?'"
"Why," said Porthos, "that was very good of him, it seems to me."
"'A thousand pistoles,' I said."
"A thousand pistoles!" Porthos exclaimed. "Oh! oh! that is a large sum. If he
knew anything about horses he would dispute the price."
"Faith! he was very mu inclined to do so, the contemptible fellow. He made
a great start and looked at me. I also looked at him; then he understood, and puing
his hand into a drawer, he took from it a quantity of notes on a bank in Lyons."
"For a thousand pistoles?"
"For a thousand pistoles--just that amount, the beggar; not one too many."
"And you have them?"
"ey are here."
"Upon my word, I think he acted very generously."
"Generously! to men who had risked their lives for him, and besides had done
him a great service?"
"A great service--what was that?"
"Why, it seems that I crushed for him a parliament councillor."
"What! that lile man in bla that you upset at the corner of Saint Jean
Cemetery?"
"at's the man, my dear fellow; he was an annoyance to the cardinal. Unfor-
tunately, I didn't crush him flat. It seems that he came to himself and that he will
continue to be an annoyance."
"See that, now!" said Porthos; "and I turned my horse aside from going plump
on to him! at will be for another time."
"He owed me for the councillor, the peifogger!"
"But," said Porthos, "if he was not crushed completely----"
"Ah! Monsieur de Rielieu would have said, 'Five hundred crowns for the
councillor.' Well, let's say no more about it. How mu were your animals worth,
Porthos?"
"Ah, if poor Mousqueton were here he could tell you to a fraction."
"No maer; you can tell within ten crowns."
"Why, Vulcan and Bayard cost me ea about two hundred pistoles, and
puing Phoebus at a hundred and fiy, we should be prey near the amount."
"ere will remain, then, four hundred and fiy pistoles," said D'Artagnan,
contentedly.
cxcviii
the truth; what is the use of going to-day to learn something else?"
"You really have some distrust, then?" said Porthos.
"Of Aramis, yes, since he has become an abbe. You can't imagine, my dear
fellow, the sort of man he is. He sees us on the road whi leads him to a bishopric,
and perhaps will not be sorry to get us out of his way."
"Ah, as regards Aramis, that is another thing," said Porthos, "and it wouldn't
surprise me at all."
"Perhaps Monsieur de Beaufort will try, in his turn, to lay hands on us."
"Nonsense! He had us in his power and he let us go. Besides we can be on our
guard; let us take arms, let Planet post himself behind us with his carbine."
"Planet is a Frondeur," answered D'Artagnan.
"Devil take these civil wars! one can no more now reon on one's friends than
on one's footmen," said Porthos. "Ah! if Mousqueton were here! there's a fellow who
will never desert me!"
"So long as you are ri! Ah! my friend! 'tis not civil war that disunites us.
It is that we are ea of us twenty years older; it is that the honest emotions of
youth have given place to suggestions of interest, whispers of ambition, counsels of
selfishness. Yes, you are right; let us go, Porthos, but let us go well armed; were we
not to keep the rendezvous, they would declare we were afraid. Halloo! Planet!
here! saddle our horses, take your carbine."
"Whom are we going to aa, sir?"
"No one; a mere maer of precaution," answered the Gascon.
"You know, sir, that they wished to murder that good councillor, Broussel, the
father of the people?"
"Really, did they?" said D'Artagnan.
"Yes, but he has been avenged. He was carried home in the arms of the peo-
ple. His house has been full ever since. He has received visits from the coadjutor,
from Madame de Longueville, and the Prince de Conti; Madame de Chevreuse and
Madame de Vendome have le their names at his door. And now, whenever he
wishes----"
"Well, whenever he wishes?"
Planet began to sing:
"Un vent de fronde S'est leve ce matin; Je crois qu'il gronde Contre le Mazarin.
Un vent de fronde S'est leve ce matin."
"It doesn't surprise me," said D'Artagnan, in a low tone to Porthos, "that
Mazarin would have been mu beer satisfied had I crushed the life out of his
councillor."
"You understand, then, monsieur," resumed Planet, "that if it were for some
enterprise like that undertaken against Monsieur Broussel that you should ask me
to take my carbine----"
cc
"No, don't be alarmed; but where did you get all these details?"
"From a good source, sir; I heard it from Friquet."
"From Friquet? I know that name----"
"A son of Monsieur de Broussel's servant, and a lad that, I promise you, in a
revolt will not give away his share to the dogs."
"Is he not a singing boy at Notre Dame?" asked D'Artagnan.
"Yes, that is the very boy; he's patronized by Bazin."
"Ah, yes, I know."
"Of what importance is this lile reptile to you?" asked Porthos.
"Gad!" replied D'Artagnan; "he has already given me good information and
he may do the same again."
Whilst all this was going on, Athos and Aramis were entering Paris by the
Faubourg St. Antoine. ey had taken some refreshment on the road and hastened
on, that they might not fail at the appointed place. Bazin was their only aendant,
for Grimaud had stayed behind to take care of Mousqueton. As they were passing
onward, Athos proposed that they should lay aside their arms and military costume,
and assume a dress more suited to the city.
"Oh, no, dear count!" cried Aramis, "is it not a warlike encounter that we are
going to?"
"What do you mean, Aramis?"
"at the Place Royale is the termination to the main road to Vendomois, and
nothing else."
"What! our friends?"
"Are become our most dangerous enemies, Athos. Let us be on our guard."
"Oh! my dear D'Herblay!"
"Who can say whether D'Artagnan may not have betrayed us to the cardinal?
who can tell whether Mazarin may not take advantage of this rendezvous to seize
us?"
"What! Aramis, you think that D'Artagnan, that Porthos, would lend their
hands to su an infamy?"
"Among friends, my dear Athos, no, you are right; but among enemies it
would be only a stratagem."
Athos crossed his arms and bowed his noble head.
"What can you expect, Athos? Men are so made; and we are not always
twenty years old. We have cruelly wounded, as you know, that personal pride by
whi D'Artagnan is blindly governed. He has been beaten. Did you not observe
his despair on the journey? As to Porthos, his barony was perhaps dependent on
that affair. Well, he found us on his road and will not be baron this time. Perhaps
that famous barony will have something to do with our interview this evening. Let
us take our precautions, Athos."
cci
T proceeded silently to the centre of the Place, but as at this very moment
the moon had just emerged from behind a cloud, they thought they might be
observed if they remained on that spot and therefore regained the shade of the lime-
trees.
ere were benes here and there; the four gentlemen stopped near them; at
a sign from Athos, Porthos and D'Artagnan sat down, the two others stood in front
of them.
Aer a few minutes of silent embarrassment, Athos spoke.
"Gentlemen," he said, "our presence here is the best proof of former friendship;
not one of us has failed the others at this rendezvous; not one has, therefore, to
reproa himself."
"Hear me, count," replied D'Artagnan; "instead of making compliments to ea
other, let us explain our conduct to ea other, like men of right and honest hearts."
"I wish for nothing more; have you any cause of complaint against me or
Monsieur d'Herblay? If so, speak out," answered Athos.
"I have," replied D'Artagnan. "When I saw you at your ateau at Bragelonne, I
made certain proposals to you whi you perfectly understood; instead of answering
me as a friend, you played with me as a ild; the friendship, therefore, that you
boast of was not broken yesterday by the sho of swords, but by your dissimulation
at your castle."
"D'Artagnan!" said Athos, reproafully.
"You asked for candor and you have it. You ask what I have against you; I tell
you. And I have the same sincerity to show you, if you wish, Monsieur d'Herblay;
I acted in a similar way to you and you also deceived me."
"Really, monsieur, you say strange things," said Aramis. "You came seeking
me to make to me certain proposals, but did you make them? No, you sounded me,
nothing more. Very well what did I say to you? that Mazarin was contemptible and
that I wouldn't serve Mazarin. But that is all. Did I tell you that I wouldn't serve
any other? On the contrary, I gave you to understand, I think, that I adhered to the
cciv
princes. We even joked very pleasantly, if I remember rightly, on the very probable
contingency of your being arged by the cardinal with my arrest. Were you a party
man? ere is no doubt of that. Well, why should not we, too, belong to a party?
You had your secret and we had ours; we didn't exange them. So mu the beer;
it proves that we know how to keep our secrets."
"I do not reproa you, monsieur," said D'Artagnan; "'tis only because Mon-
sieur de la Fere has spoken of friendship that I question your conduct."
"And what do you find in it that is worthy of blame?" asked Aramis, haughtily.
e blood mounted instantly to the temples of D'Artagnan, who arose, and
replied:
"I consider it worthy conduct of a pupil of Jesuits."
On seeing D'Artagnan rise, Porthos rose also; these four men were therefore
all standing at the same time, with a menacing aspect, opposite to ea other.
Upon hearing D'Artagnan's reply, Aramis seemed about to draw his sword,
when Athos prevented him.
"D'Artagnan," he said, "you are here to-night, still infuriated by yesterday's
adventure. I believed your heart noble enough to enable a friendship of twenty
years to overcome an affront of a quarter of an hour. Come, do you really think you
have anything to say against me? Say it then; if I am in fault I will avow the error."
e grave and harmonious tones of that beloved voice seemed to have still its
ancient influence, whilst that of Aramis, whi had become harsh and tuneless in
his moments of ill-humor, irritated him. He answered therefore:
"I think, monsieur le comte, that you had something to communicate to me at
your ateau of Bragelonne, and that gentleman"--he pointed to Aramis--"had also
something to tell me when I was in his convent. At that time I was not concerned
in the adventure, in the course of whi you have so successfully estopped me!
However, because I was prudent you must not take me for a fool. If I had wished
to widen the brea between those whom Monsieur d'Herblay ooses to receive
with a rope ladder and those whom he receives with a wooden ladder, I could have
spoken out."
"What are you meddling with?" cried Aramis, pale with anger, suspecting
that D'Artagnan had acted as a spy on him and had seen him with Madame de
Longueville.
"I never meddle save with what concerns me, and I know how to make believe
that I haven't seen what does not concern me; but I hate hypocrites, and among that
number I place musketeers who are abbes and abbes who are musketeers; and," he
added, turning to Porthos "here's a gentleman who's of the same opinion as myself."
Porthos, who had not spoken one word, answered merely by a word and a
gesture.
He said "yes" and he put his hand on his sword.
ccv
Aramis started ba and drew his. D'Artagnan bent forward, ready either to
aa or to stand on his defense.
Athos at that moment extended his hand with the air of supreme command
whi aracterized him alone, drew out his sword and the scabbard at the same
time, broke the blade in the sheath on his knee and threw the pieces to his right.
en turning to Aramis:
"Aramis," he said, "break your sword."
Aramis hesitated.
"It must be done," said Athos; then in a lower and more gentle voice, he added.
"I wish it."
en Aramis, paler than before, but subdued by these words, snapped the
serpent blade between his hands, and then folding his arms, stood trembling with
rage.
ese proceedings made D'Artagnan and Porthos draw ba. D'Artagnan did
not draw his sword; Porthos put his ba into the sheath.
"Never!" exclaimed Athos, raising his right hand to Heaven, "never! I swear
before God, who seeth us, and who, in the darkness of this night heareth us, never
shall my sword cross yours, never my eye express a glance of anger, nor my heart
a throb of hatred, at you. We lived together, we loved, we hated together; we shed,
we mingled our blood together, and too probably, I may still add, that there may be
yet a bond between us closer even than that of friendship; perhaps there may be the
bond of crime; for we four, we once did condemn, judge and slay a human being
whom we had not any right to cut off from this world, although apparently fier for
hell than for this life. D'Artagnan, I have always loved you as my son; Porthos, we
slept six years side by side; Aramis is your brother as well as mine, and Aramis has
once loved you, as I love you now and as I have ever loved you. What can Cardinal
Mazarin be to us, to four men who compelled su a man as Rielieu to act as we
pleased? What is su or su a prince to us, who fixed the diadem upon a great
queen's head? D'Artagnan, I ask your pardon for having yesterday crossed swords
with you; Aramis does the same to Porthos; now hate me if you can; but for my
own part, I shall ever, even if you do hate me, retain esteem and friendship for you.
I repeat my words, Aramis, and then, if you desire it, and if they desire it, let us
separate forever from our old friends."
ere was a solemn, though momentary silence, whi was broken by Aramis.
"I swear," he said, with a calm brow and kindly glance, but in a voice still
trembling with recent emotion, "I swear that I no longer bear animosity to those
who were once my friends. I regret that I ever crossed swords with you, Porthos;
I swear not only that it shall never again be pointed at your breast, but that in the
boom of my heart there will never in future be the slightest hostile sentiment; now,
Athos, come."
ccvi
"Well," resumed Athos, "swear on this cross, whi, in spite of its magnificent
material, is still a cross; swear to be united in spite of everything, and forever, and
may this oath bind us to ea other, and even, also, our descendants! Does this oath
satisfy you?"
"Yes," said they all, with one accord.
"Ah, traitor!" muered D'Artagnan, leaning toward Aramis and whispering
in his ear, "you have made us swear on the crucifix of a Frondeuse."
. e Ferry across the Oise.
W hope that the reader has not quite forgoen the young traveler whom we
le on the road to Flanders.
In losing sight of his guardian, whom he had quied, gazing aer him in front
of the royal basilican, Raoul spurred on his horse, in order not only to escape from
his own melanoly reflections, but also to hide from Olivain the emotion his face
might betray.
One hour's rapid progress, however, sufficed to disperse the gloomy fancies
that had clouded the young man's bright anticipations; and the hitherto unfelt plea-
sure of freedom--a pleasure whi is sweet even to those who have never known
dependence--seemed to Raoul to gild not only Heaven and earth, but especially that
blue but dim horizon of life we call the future.
Nevertheless, aer several aempts at conversation with Olivain he foresaw
that many days passed thus would prove exceedingly dull; and the count's agreeable
voice, his gentle and persuasive eloquence, recurred to his mind at the various towns
through whi they journeyed and about whi he had no longer any one to give
him those interesting details whi he would have drawn from Athos, the most
amusing and the best informed of guides. Another recollection contributed also to
sadden Raoul: on their arrival at Sonores he had perceived, hidden behind a screen
of poplars, a lile ateau whi so vividly recalled that of La Valliere to his mind
that he halted for nearly ten minutes to gaze at it, and resumed his journey with a
sigh too abstracted even to reply to Olivain's respectful inquiry about the cause of
so mu fixed aention. e aspect of external objects is oen a mysterious guide
communicating with the fibres of memory, whi in spite of us will arouse them
at times; this thread, like that of Ariadne, when once unraveled will conduct one
through a labyrinth of thought, in whi one loses one's self in endeavoring to follow
that phantom of the past whi is called recollection.
Now the sight of this ateau had taken Raoul ba fiy leagues westward
and had caused him to review his life from the moment when he had taken leave
of lile Louise to that in whi he had seen her for the first time; and every bran
ccix
of oak, every gilded weatherco on roof of slates, reminded him that, instead of
returning to the friends of his ildhood, every instant estranged him further and
that perhaps he had even le them forever.
With a full heart and burning head he desired Olivain to lead on the horses to
a wayside inn, whi he observed within gunshot range, a lile in advance of the
place they had reaed.
As for himself, he dismounted and remained under a beautiful group of est-
nuts in flower, amidst whi were murmuring a multitude of happy bees, and bade
Olivain send the host to him with writing paper and ink, to be placed on a table
whi he found there, conveniently ready. Olivain obeyed and continued on his
way, whilst Raoul remained siing, with his elbow leaning on the table, from time
to time gently shaking the flowers from his head, whi fell upon him like snow, and
gazing vaguely on the arming landscape spread out before him, doed over with
green fields and groups of trees. Raoul had been there about ten minutes, during five
of whi he was lost in reverie, when there appeared within the circle comprised in
his rolling gaze a man with a rubicund face, who, with a napkin around his body,
another under his arm, and a white cap upon his head, approaed him, holding
paper, pen and ink in hand.
"Ha! ha!" laughed the apparition, "every gentleman seems to have the same
fancy, for not a quarter of an hour ago a young lad, well mounted like you, as tall
as you and of about your age, halted before this clump of trees and had this table
and this air brought here, and dined here, with an old gentleman who seemed to
be his tutor, upon a pie, of whi they haven't le a mouthful, and two boles of
Macon wine, of whi they haven't le a drop, but fortunately we have still some
of the same wine and some of the same pies le, and if your worship will but give
your orders----"
"No, friend," replied Raoul, smiling, "I am obliged to you, but at this moment I
want nothing but the things for whi I have asked--only I shall be very glad if the
ink prove bla and the pen good; upon these conditions I will pay for the pen the
price of the bole, and for the ink the price of the pie."
"Very well, sir," said the host, "I'll give the pie and the bole of wine to your
servant, and in this way you will have the pen and ink into the bargain."
"Do as you like," said Raoul, who was beginning his apprenticeship with that
particular class of society, who, when there were robbers on the highroads, were
connected with them, and who, since highwaymen no longer exist, have advanta-
geously and aptly filled their vacant place.
e host, his mind at ease about his bill, placed pen, ink and paper upon the
table. By a luy ance the pen was tolerably good and Raoul began to write. e
host remained standing in front of him, looking with a kind of involuntary admi-
ration at his handsome face, combining both gravity and sweetness of expression.
ccx
young man who was preceding them; he had been observed to pass only three-
quarters of an hour previously, but he was well mounted, as the tavern-keeper had
already said, and rode at a rapid pace.
"Let us try and overtake this gentleman," said Raoul to Olivain; "like ourselves
he is on his way to join the army and may prove agreeable company."
It was about four o'clo in the aernoon when Raoul arrived at Compiegne;
there he dined heartily and again inquired about the young gentleman who was in
advance of them. He had stopped, like Raoul, at the Hotel of the Bell and Bole,
the best at Compiegne; and had started again on his journey, saying that he should
sleep at Noyon.
"Well, let us sleep at Noyon," said Raoul.
"Sir," replied Olivain, respectfully, "allow me to remark that we have already
mu fatigued the horses this morning. I think it would be well to sleep here and to
start again very early to-morrow. Eighteen leagues is enough for the first stage."
"e Comte de la Fere wished me to hasten on," replied Raoul, "that I might
rejoin the prince on the morning of the fourth day; let us push on, then, to Noyon;
it will be a stage similar to those we traveled from Blois to Paris. We shall arrive at
eight o'clo. e horses will have a long night's rest, and at five o'clo to-morrow
morning we can be again on the road."
Olivain dared offer no opposition to this determination but he followed his
master, grumbling.
"Go on, go on," said he, between his teeth, "expend your ardor the first day;
to-morrow, instead of journeying twenty leagues, you will travel ten, the day aer
to-morrow, five, and in three days you will be in bed. ere you must rest; young
people are su braggarts."
It was easy to see that Olivain had not been taught in the sool of the
Planets and the Grimauds. Raoul really felt tired, but he was desirous of test-
ing his strength, and, brought up in the principles of Athos and certain of having
heard him speak a thousand times of stages of twenty-five leagues, he did not wish
to fall far short of his model. D'Artagnan, that man of iron, who seemed to be made
of nerve and muscle only, had stru him with admiration. erefore, in spite of
Olivain's remarks, he continued to urge his steed more and more, and following a
pleasant lile path, leading to a ferry, and whi he had been assured shortened
the journey by the distance of one league, he arrived at the summit of a hill and
perceived the river flowing before him. A lile troop of men on horseba were
waiting on the edge of the stream, ready to embark. Raoul did not doubt this was
the gentleman and his escort; he called out to him, but they were too distant to be
heard; then, in spite of the weariness of his beast, he made it gallop but the ris-
ing ground soon deprived him of all sight of the travelers, and when he had again
aained a new height, the ferryboat had le the shore and was making for the op-
ccxii
posite bank. Raoul, seeing that he could not arrive in time to cross the ferry with
the travelers, halted to wait for Olivain. At this moment a shriek was heard that
seemed to come from the river. Raoul turned toward the side whence the cry had
sounded, and shaded his eyes from the glare of the seing sun with his hand.
"Olivain!" he exclaimed, "what do I see below there?"
A second scream, more piercing than the first, now sounded.
"Oh, sir!" cried Olivain, "the rope whi holds the ferryboat has broken and
the boat is driing. But what do I see in the water--something struggling?"
"Oh, yes," exclaimed Raoul, fixing his glance on one point in the stream, splen-
didly illumined by the seing sun, "a horse, a rider!"
"ey are sinking!" cried Olivain in his turn.
It was true, and Raoul was convinced that some accident had happened and
that a man was drowning; he gave his horse its head, stru his spurs into its sides,
and the animal, urged by pain and feeling that he had space open before him,
bounded over a kind of paling whi inclosed the landing place, and fell into the
river, scaering to a distance waves of white froth.
"Ah, sir!" cried Olivain, "what are you doing? Good God!"
Raoul was directing his horse toward the unhappy man in danger. is was,
in fact, a custom familiar to him. Having been brought up on the banks of the Loire,
he might have been said to have been cradled on its waves; a hundred times he had
crossed it on horseba, a thousand times had swum across. Athos, foreseeing the
period when he should make a soldier of the viscount, had inured him to all kinds
of arduous undertakings.
"Oh, heavens!" continued Olivain, in despair, "what would the count say if he
only saw you now!"
"e count would do as I do," replied Raoul, urging his horse vigorously for-
ward.
"But I--but I," cried Olivain, pale and disconsolate rushing about on the shore,
"how shall I cross?"
"Leap, coward!" cried Raoul, swimming on; then addressing the traveler, who
was struggling twenty yards in front of him: "Courage, sir!" said he, "courage! we
are coming to your aid."
Olivain advanced, retired, then made his horse rear--turned it and then, stru
to the core by shame, leaped, as Raoul had done, only repeating:
"I am a dead man! we are lost!"
In the meantime, the ferryboat had floated away, carried down by the stream,
and the shrieks of those whom it contained resounded more and more. A man
with gray hair had thrown himself from the boat into the river and was swimming
vigorously toward the person who was drowning; but being obliged to go against the
current he advanced but slowly. Raoul continued his way and was visibly gaining
ccxiii
ground; but the horse and its rider, of whom he did not lose sight, were evidently
sinking. e nostrils of the horse were no longer above water, and the rider, who
had lost the reins in struggling, fell with his head ba and his arms extended. One
moment longer and all would disappear.
"Courage!" cried Raoul, "courage!"
"Too late!" murmured the young man, "too late!"
e water closed above his head and stifled his voice.
Raoul sprang from his horse, to whi he le the arge of its own preserva-
tion, and in three or four strokes was at the gentleman's side; he seized the horse
at once by the curb and raised its head above water; the animal began to breathe
again and, as if he comprehended that they had come to his aid, redoubled his ef-
forts. Raoul at the same time seized one of the young man's hands and placed it on
the mane, whi it grasped with the tenacity of a drowning man. us, sure that
the rider would not release his hold, Raoul now only directed his aention to the
horse, whi he guided to the opposite bank, helping it to cut through the water and
encouraging it with words.
All at once the horse stumbled against a ridge and then placed its foot on the
sand.
"Saved!" exclaimed the man with gray hair, who also toued boom.
"Saved!" meanically repeated the young gentleman, releasing the mane and
sliding from the saddle into Raoul's arms; Raoul was but ten yards from the shore;
there he bore the fainting man, and laying him down upon the grass, unfastened the
buons of his collar and unhooked his doublet. A moment later the gray-headed
man was beside him. Olivain managed in his turn to land, aer crossing himself
repeatedly; and the people in the ferryboat guided themselves as well as they were
able toward the bank, with the aid of a pole whi anced to be in the boat.
anks to the aentions of Raoul and the man who accompanied the young
gentleman, the color gradually returned to the pale eeks of the dying man, who
opened his eyes, at first entirely bewildered, but who soon fixed his gaze upon the
person who had saved him.
"Ah, sir," he exclaimed, "it was you! Without you I was a dead man--thrice
dead."
"But one recovers, sir, as you perceive," replied Raoul, "and we have but had
a lile bath."
"Oh! sir, what gratitude I feel!" exclaimed the man with gray hair.
"Ah, there you are, my good D'Arminges; I have given you a great fright, have
I not? but it is your own fault. You were my tutor, why did you not tea me to
swim?"
"Oh, monsieur le comte," replied the old man, "had any misfortune happened
to you, I should never have dared to show myself to the marshal again."
ccxiv
T halt at Noyon was but brief, every one there being wrapped in profound
sleep. Raoul had desired to be awakened should Grimaud arrive, but Grimaud
did not arrive. Doubtless, too, the horses on their part appreciated the eight hours
of repose and the abundant stabling whi was granted them. e Count de Guie
was awakened at five o'clo in the morning by Raoul, who came to wish him good-
day. ey breakfasted in haste, and at six o'clo had already gone ten miles.
e young count's conversation was most interesting to Raoul, therefore he
listened mu, whilst the count talked well and long. Brought up in Paris, where
Raoul had been but once; at the court, whi Raoul had never seen; his follies
as page; two duels, whi he had already found the means of fighting, in spite
of the edicts against them and, more especially, in spite of his tutor's vigilance-
-these things excited the greatest curiosity in Raoul. Raoul had only been at M.
Scarron's house; he named to Guie the people whom he had seen there. Guie
knew everybody--Madame de Neuillan, Mademoiselle d'Aubigne, Mademoiselle de
Scudery, Mademoiselle Paulet, Madame de Chevreuse. He criticised everybody
humorously. Raoul trembled, lest he should laugh among the rest at Madame de
Chevreuse, for whom he entertained deep and genuine sympathy, but either in-
stinctively, or from affection for the duess, he said everything in her favor. His
praises increased Raoul's friendship twofold. en came the question of gallantry
and love affairs. Under this head, also, Bragelonne had mu more to hear than to
tell. He listened aentively and fancied that he discovered through three or four
rather frivolous adventures, that the count, like himself, had a secret to hide in the
depths of his heart.
De Guie, as we have said before, had been educated at the court, and the
intrigues of this court were not unknown to him. It was the same court of whi
Raoul had so oen heard the Comte de la Fere speak, except that its aspect had
mu anged since the period when Athos had himself been part of it; therefore
everything whi the Count de Guie related was new to his traveling companion.
ccxvi
e young count, wiy and caustic, passed all the world in review; the queen herself
was not spared, and Cardinal Mazarin came in for his share of ridicule.
e day passed away as rapidly as an hour. e count's tutor, a man of the
world and a bon vivant, up to his eyes in learning, as his pupil described him, oen
recalled the profound erudition, the wiy and caustic satire of Athos to Raoul; but
as regarded grace, delicacy, and nobility of external appearance, no one in these
points was to be compared to the Comte de la Fere.
e horses, whi were more kindly used than on the previous day, stopped at
Arras at four o'clo in the evening. ey were approaing the scene of war; and as
bands of Spaniards sometimes took advantage of the night to make expeditions even
as far as the neighborhood of Arras, they determined to remain in the town until
the morrow. e Fren army held all between Pont-a-Marc as far as Valenciennes,
falling ba upon Douai. e prince was said to be in person at Bethune.
e enemy's army extended from Cassel to Courtray; and as there was no
species of violence or pillage it did not commit, the poor people on the frontier
quied their isolated dwellings and fled for refuge into the strong cities whi held
out a shelter to them. Arras was encumbered with fugitives. An approaing bale
was mu spoken of, the prince having manoeuvred, until that movement, only in
order to await a reinforcement that had just reaed him.
e young men congratulated themselves on having arrived so opportunely.
e evening was employed in discussing the war; the grooms polished their arms;
the young men loaded the pistols in case of a skirmish, and they awoke in despair,
having both dreamed that they had arrived too late to participate in the bale. In
the morning it was rumored that Prince de Conde had evacuated Bethune and fallen
ba on Carvin, leaving, however, a strong garrison in the former city.
But as there was nothing positively certain in this report, the young warriors
decided to continue their way toward Bethune, free on the road to diverge to the
right and mar to Carvin if necessary.
e count's tutor was well acquainted with the country; he consequently pro-
posed to take a crossroad, whi lay between that of Lens and that of Bethune. ey
obtained information at Ablain, and a statement of their route was le for Grimaud.
About seven o'clo in the morning they set out. De Guie, who was young and
impulsive, said to Raoul, "Here we are, three masters and three servants. Our valets
are well armed and yours seems to be tough enough."
"I have never seen him put to the test," replied Raoul, "but he is a Breton, whi
promises something."
"Yes, yes," resumed De Guie; "I am sure he can fire a musket when required.
On my side I have two sure men, who have been in action with my father. We
therefore represent six fighting men; if we should meet a lile troop of enemies,
equal or even superior in number to our own, shall we arge them, Raoul?"
ccxvii
both that neither had any wish to go ba, and as the tutor had already turned his
horse's head, they both spurred forward, Raoul crying: "Follow me, Olivain!" and
the Count de Guie: "Follow, Urban and Planet!" And before the tutor could
recover from his surprise they had both disappeared into the forest. Whilst they
spurred their steeds they held their pistols ready also. In five minutes they arrived
at the spot whence the noise had proceeded, and then restraining their horses, they
advanced cautiously.
"Hush," whispered De Guie, "these are cavaliers."
"Yes, three on horseba and three who have dismounted."
"Can you see what they are doing?"
"Yes, they appear to be searing a wounded or dead man."
"It is some cowardly assassination," said De Guie.
"ey are soldiers, though," resumed De Bragelonne.
"Yes, skirmishers; that is to say, highway robbers."
"At them!" cried Raoul. "At them!" eoed De Guie.
"Oh! gentlemen! gentlemen! in the name of Heaven!" cried the poor tutor.
But he was not listened to, and his cries only served to arouse the aention
of the Spaniards.
e men on horseba at once rushed at the two youths, leaving the three
others to complete the plunder of the dead or wounded travelers; for on approaing
nearer, instead of one extended figure, the young men discovered two. De Guie
fired the first shot at ten paces and missed his man; and the Spaniard, who had
advanced to meet Raoul, aimed in his turn, and Raoul felt a pain in the le arm,
similar to that of a blow from a whip. He let off his fire at but four paces. Stru
in the breast and extending his arms, the Spaniard fell ba on the crupper, and the
terrified horse, turning around, carried him off.
Raoul at this moment perceived the muzzle of a gun pointed at him, and re-
membering the recommendation of Athos, he, with the rapidity of lightning, made
his horse rear as the shot was fired. His horse bounded to one side, losing its foot-
ing, and fell, entangling Raoul's leg under its body. e Spaniard sprang forward
and seized the gun by its muzzle, in order to strike Raoul on the head with the bu.
In the position in whi Raoul lay, unfortunately, he could neither draw his sword
from the scabbard, nor his pistols from their holsters. e bu end of the musket
hovered over his head, and he could scarcely restrain himself from closing his eyes,
when with one bound Guie reaed the Spaniard and placed a pistol at his throat.
"Yield!" he cried, "or you are a dead man!" e musket fell from the soldier's hands,
who yielded on the instant. Guie summoned one of his grooms, and delivering the
prisoner into his arge, with orders to shoot him through the head if he aempted
to escape, he leaped from his horse and approaed Raoul.
"Faith, sir," said Raoul, smiling, although his pallor betrayed the excitement
ccxix
consequent on a first affair, "you are in a great hurry to pay your debts and have not
been long under any obligation to me. Without your aid," continued he, repeating
the count's words "I should have been a dead man--thrice dead."
"My antagonist took flight," replied De Guie "and le me at liberty to come
to your assistance. But are you seriously wounded? I see you are covered with
blood!"
"I believe," said Raoul, "that I have got something like a scrat on the arm. If
you will help me to drag myself from under my horse I hope nothing need prevent
us continuing our journey."
Monsieur d'Arminges and Olivain had already dismounted and were aempt-
ing to raise the struggling horse. At last Raoul succeeded in drawing his foot from
the stirrup and his leg from under the animal, and in a second he was on his feet
again.
"Nothing broken?" asked De Guie.
"Faith, no, thank Heaven!" replied Raoul; "but what has become of the poor
wretes whom these scoundrels were murdering?"
"I fear we arrived too late. ey have killed them, I think, and taken flight,
carrying off their booty. My servants are examining the bodies."
"Let us go and see whether they are quite dead, or if they can still be helped,"
suggested Raoul. "Olivain, we have come into possession of two horses, but I have
lost my own. Take for yourself the beer of the two and give me yours."
ey approaed the spot where the unfortunate victims lay.
. e Monk.
T men lay prone upon the ground, one bathed in blood and motionless, with
his face toward the earth; this one was dead. e other leaned against a tree,
supported there by the two valets, and was praying fervently, with clasped hands
and eyes raised to Heaven. He had received a ball in his thigh, whi had broken
the bone. e young men first approaed the dead man.
"He is a priest," said Bragelonne, "he has worn the tonsure. Oh, the scoundrels!
to li their hands against a minister of God."
"Come here, sir," said Urban, an old soldier who had served under the cardinal
duke in all his campaigns; "come here, there is nothing to be done with him, whilst
we may perhaps be able to save the other."
e wounded man smiled sadly. "Save me! Oh, no!" said he, "but help me to
die, if you can."
"Are you a priest?" asked Raoul.
"No sir."
"I ask, as your unfortunate companion appeared to me to belong to the ur."
"He is the curate of Bethune, sir, and was carrying the holy vessels belonging
to his ur, and the treasure of the apter, to a safe place, the prince having
abandoned our town yesterday; and as it was known that bands of the enemy were
prowling about the country, no one dared to accompany the good man, so I offered
to do so.
"And, sir," continued the wounded man, "I suffer mu and would like, if pos-
sible, to be carried to some house."
"Where you can be relieved?" asked De Guie.
"No, where I can confess."
"But perhaps you are not so dangerously wounded as you think," said Raoul.
"Sir," replied the wounded man, "believe me, there is no time to lose; the ball
has broken the thigh bone and entered the intestines."
"Are you a surgeon?" asked De Guie.
ccxxi
"No, but I know a lile about wounds, and mine, I know, is mortal. Try,
therefore, either to carry me to some place where I may see a priest or take the
trouble to send one to me here. It is my soul that must be saved; as for my body, it
is lost."
"To die whilst doing a good deed! It is impossible. God will help you."
"Gentlemen, in the name of Heaven!" said the wounded man, collecting all his
forces, as if to get up, "let us not lose time in useless words. Either help me to gain
the nearest village or swear to me on your salvation that you will send me the first
monk, the first cure, the first priest you may meet. But," he added in a despairing
tone, "perhaps no one will dare to come for it is known that the Spaniards are ranging
through the country, and I shall die without absolution. My God! my God! Good
God! good God!" added the wounded man, in an accent of terror whi made the
young men shudder; "you will not allow that? that would be too terrible!"
"Calm yourself, sir," replied De Guie. "I swear to you, you shall receive the
consolation that you ask. Only tell us where we shall find a house at whi we can
demand aid and a village from whi we can fet a priest."
"ank you, and God reward you! About half a mile from this, on the same
road, there is an inn, and about a mile further on, aer leaving the inn, you will
rea the village of Greney. ere you must find the curate, or if he is not at home,
go to the convent of the Augustines, whi is the last house on the right, and bring
me one of the brothers. Monk or priest, it maers not, provided only that he has
received from holy ur the power of absolving in articulo mortis."
"Monsieur d'Arminges," said De Guie, "remain beside this unfortunate man
and see that he is removed as gently as possible. e vicomte and myself will go
and find a priest."
"Go, sir," replied the tutor; "but in Heaven's name do not expose yourself to
danger!"
"Do not fear. Besides, we are safe for to-day; you know the axiom, 'Non bis
in idem.'"
"Courage, sir," said Raoul to the wounded man. "We are going to execute your
wishes."
"May Heaven prosper you!" replied the dying man, with an accent of gratitude
impossible to describe.
e two young men galloped off in the direction mentioned and in ten minutes
reaed the inn. Raoul, without dismounting, called to the host and announced
that a wounded man was about to be brought to his house and begged him in the
meantime to prepare everything needful. He desired him also, should he know in
the neighborhood any doctor or irurgeon, to fet him, taking on himself the
payment of the messenger.
e host, who saw two young noblemen, rily clad, promised everything
ccxxii
they required, and our two cavaliers, aer seeing that preparations for the reception
were actually begun, started off again and proceeded rapidly toward Greney.
ey had gone rather more than a league and had begun to descry the first
houses of the village, the red-tiled roofs of whi stood out from the green trees
whi surrounded them, when, coming toward them mounted on a mule, they per-
ceived a poor monk, whose large hat and gray worsted dress made them take him for
an Augustine brother. Chance for once seemed to favor them in sending what they
were so assiduously seeking. He was a man about twenty-two or twenty-three years
old, but who appeared mu older from ascetic exercises. His complexion was pale,
not of that deadly pallor whi is a kind of neutral beauty, but of a bilious, yellow
hue; his colorless hair was short and scarcely extended beyond the circle formed by
the hat around his head, and his light blue eyes seemed destitute of any expression.
"Sir," began Raoul, with his usual politeness, "are you an ecclesiastic?"
"Why do you ask me that?" replied the stranger, with a coolness whi was
barely civil.
"Because we want to know," said De Guie, haughtily.
e stranger toued his mule with his heel and continued his way.
In a second De Guie had sprung before him and barred his passage. "An-
swer, sir," exclaimed he; "you have been asked politely, and every question is worth
an answer."
"I suppose I am free to say or not to say who I am to two strangers who take
a fancy to ask me."
It was with difficulty that De Guie restrained the intense desire he had of
breaking the monk's bones.
"In the first place," he said, making an effort to control himself, "we are not
people who may be treated anyhow; my friend there is the Viscount of Bragelonne
and I am the Count de Guie. Nor was it from caprice we asked the question, for
there is a wounded and dying man who demands the succor of the ur. If you
be a priest, I conjure you in the name of humanity to follow me to aid this man; if
you be not, it is a different maer, and I warn you in the name of courtesy, of whi
you appear profoundly ignorant, that I shall astise you for your insolence."
e pale face of the monk became so livid and his smile so strange, that Raoul,
whose eyes were still fixed upon him, felt as if this smile had stru to his heart like
an insult.
"He is some Spanish or Flemish spy," said he, puing his hand to his pistol. A
glance, threatening and transient as lightning, replied to Raoul.
"Well, sir," said De Guie, "are you going to reply?"
"I am a priest," said the young man.
"en, father," said Raoul, forcing himself to convey a respect by spee that
did not come from his heart, "if you are a priest you have an opportunity, as my
ccxxiii
friend has told you, of exercising your vocation. At the next inn you will find a
wounded man, now being aended by our servants, who has asked the assistance
of a minister of God."
"I will go," said the monk.
And he toued his mule.
"If you do not go, sir," said De Guie, "remember that we have two steeds
able to cat your mule and the power of having you seized wherever you may be;
and then I swear your trial will be summary; one can always find a tree and a cord."
e monk's eye again flashed, but that was all; he merely repeated his phrase,
"I will go,"--and he went.
"Let us follow him," said De Guie; "it will be the surest plan."
"I was about to propose so doing," answered De Bragelonne.
In the space of five minutes the monk turned around to ascertain whether he
was followed or not.
"You see," said Raoul, "we have done wisely."
"What a horrible face that monk has," said De Guie.
"Horrible!" replied Raoul, "especially in expression."
"Yes, yes," said De Guie, "a strange face; but these monks are subject to su
degrading practices; their fasts make them pale, the blows of the discipline make
them hypocrites, and their eyes become inflamed through weeping for the good
things of this life we common folk enjoy, but they have lost."
"Well," said Raoul, "the poor man will get his priest, but, by Heaven, the pen-
itent appears to me to have a beer conscience than the confessor. I confess I am
accustomed to priests of a very different appearance."
"Ah!" exclaimed De Guie, "you must understand that this is one of those
wandering brothers, who go begging on the high road until some day a benefice falls
down from Heaven on them; they are mostly foreigners--Scot, Irish or Danish. I
have seen them before."
"As ugly?"
"No, but reasonably hideous."
"What a misfortune for the wounded man to die under the hands of su a
friar!"
"Pshaw!" said De Guie. "Absolution comes not from him who administers
it, but from God. However, for my part, I would rather die unshriven than have any-
thing to say to su a confessor. You are of my opinion, are you not, viscount? and
I see you playing with the pommel of your sword, as if you had a great inclination
to break the holy father's head."
"Yes, count, it is a strange thing and one whi might astonish you, but I feel
an indescribable horror at the sight of yonder man. Have you ever seen a snake rise
up on your path?"
ccxxiv
who makes inquiries about a young man on a estnut horse followed by a servant,
to tell him, in fact, that you have seen me, but that I have continued my journey and
intend to dine at Mazingarbe and to stop at Cambrin. is cavalier is my aendant."
"Would it not be safer and more certain if I should ask him his name and tell
him yours?" demanded the host.
"ere is no harm in over-precaution. I am the Viscount de Bragelonne and
he is called Grimaud."
At this moment the wounded man arrived from one direction and the monk
from the other, the laer dismounting from his mule and desiring that it should be
taken to the stables without being unharnessed.
"Sir monk," said De Guie, "confess well that brave man; and be not con-
cerned for your expenses or for those of your mule; all is paid."
"anks, monsieur," said the monk, with one of those smiles that made
Bragelonne shudder.
"Come, count," said Raoul, who seemed instinctively to dislike the vicinity of
the Augustine; "come, I feel ill here," and the two young men spurred on.
e lier, borne by two servants, now entered the house. e host and his
wife were standing on the steps, whilst the unhappy man seemed to suffer dreadful
pain and yet to be concerned only to know if he was followed by the monk. At sight
of this pale, bleeding man, the wife grasped her husband's arm.
"Well, what's the maer?" asked the laer, "are you going to be ill just now?"
"No, but look," replied the hostess, pointing to the wounded man; "I ask you
if you recognize him?"
"at man--wait a bit."
"Ah! I see you know him," exclaimed the wife; "for you have become pale in
your turn."
"Truly," cried the host, "misfortune is coming on our house; it is the former
executioner of Bethune."
"e former executioner of Bethune!" murmured the young monk, shrinking
ba and showing on his countenance the feeling of repugnance whi his penitent
inspired.
Monsieur d'Arminges, who was at the door, perceived his hesitation.
"Sir monk," said he, "whether he is now or has been an executioner, this un-
fortunate being is none the less a man. Render to him, then, the last service he can
by any possibility ask of you, and your work will be all the more meritorious."
e monk made no reply, but silently wended his way to the room where the
two valets had deposited the dying man on a bed. D'Arminges and Olivain and
the two grooms then mounted their horses, and all four started off at a qui trot
to rejoin Raoul and his companion. Just as the tutor and his escort disappeared in
their turn, a new traveler stopped on the threshold of the inn.
ccxxvi
"What does your worship want?" demanded the host, pale and trembling from
the discovery he had just made.
e traveler made a sign as if he wished to drink, and then pointed to his
horse and gesticulated like a man who is brushing something.
"Ah, diable!" said the host to himself; "this man seems dumb. And where will
your worship drink?"
"ere," answered the traveler, pointing to the table.
"I was mistaken," said the host, "he's not quite dumb. And what else does your
worship wish for?"
"To know if you have seen a young man pass, fieen years of age, mounted
on a estnut horse and followed by a groom?"
"e Viscount de Bragelonne?
"Just so."
"en you are called Monsieur Grimaud?"
e traveler made a sign of assent.
"Well, then," said the host, "your young master was here a quarter of an hour
ago; he will dine at Mazingarbe and sleep at Cambrin."
"How far is Mazingarbe?"
"Two miles and a half."
"ank you."
Grimaud was drinking his wine silently and had just placed his glass on the
table to be filled a second time, when a terrific scream resounded from the room
occupied by the monk and the dying man. Grimaud sprang up.
"What is that?" said he; "whence comes that cry?"
"From the wounded man's room," replied the host.
"What wounded man?"
"e former executioner of Bethune, who has just been brought in here, as-
sassinated by Spaniards, and who is now being confessed by an Augustine friar."
"e old executioner of Bethune," muered Grimaud; "a man between fiy-
five and sixty, tall, strong, swarthy, bla hair and beard?"
"at is he, except that his beard has turned gray and his hair is white; do you
know him?" asked the host.
"I have seen him once," replied Grimaud, a cloud darkening his countenance
at the picture so suddenly summoned to the bar of recollection.
At this instant a second cry, less piercing than the first, but followed by pro-
longed groaning, was heard.
e three listeners looked at one another in alarm.
"We must see what it is," said Grimaud.
"It sounds like the cry of one who is being murdered," murmured the host.
"Mon Dieu!" said the woman, crossing herself.
ccxxvii
If Grimaud was slow in speaking, we know that he was qui to act; he sprang
to the door and shook it violently, but it was bolted on the other side.
"Open the door!" cried the host; "open it instantly, sir monk!"
No reply.
"Unfasten it, or I will break it in!" said Grimaud.
e same silence, and then, ere the host could oppose his design, Grimaud
seized a pair of pincers he perceived in a corner and forced the bolt. e room was
inundated with blood, dripping from the maresses upon whi lay the wounded
man, speeless; the monk had disappeared.
"e monk!" cried the host; "where is the monk?"
Grimaud sprang toward an open window whi looked into the courtyard.
"He has escaped by this means," exclaimed he.
"Do you think so?" said the host, bewildered; "boy, see if the mule belonging
to the monk is still in the stable."
"ere is no mule," cried he to whom this question was addressed.
e host clasped his hands and looked around him suspiciously, whilst Gri-
maud knit his brows and approaed the wounded man, whose worn, hard features
awoke in his mind su awful recollections of the past.
"ere can be no longer any doubt but that it is himself," said he.
"Does he still live?" inquired the innkeeper.
Making no reply, Grimaud opened the poor man's jaet to feel if the heart
beat, whilst the host approaed in his turn; but in a moment they both fell ba, the
host uering a cry of horror and Grimaud becoming pallid. e blade of a dagger
was buried up to the hilt in the le side of the executioner.
"Run! run for help!" cried Grimaud, "and I will remain beside him here."
e host quied the room in agitation, and as for his wife, she had fled at the
sound of her husband's cries.
. e Absolution.
T is what had taken place: We have seen that it was not of his own free will,
but, on the contrary, very reluctantly, that the monk aended the wounded
man who had been recommended to him in so strange a manner. Perhaps he would
have sought to escape by flight had he seen any possibility of doing so. He was
restrained by the threats of the two gentlemen and by the presence of their aen-
dants, who doubtless had received their instructions. And besides, he considered it
most expedient, without exhibiting too mu ill-will, to follow to the end his role
as confessor.
e monk entered the amber and approaed the bed of the wounded man.
e executioner seared his face with the qui glance peculiar to those who are
about to die and have no time to lose. He made a movement of surprise and said:
"Father, you are very young."
"Men who bear my robe have no age," replied the monk, dryly.
"Alas, speak to me more gently, father; in my last moments I need a friend."
"Do you suffer mu?" asked the monk.
"Yes, but in my soul mu more than in my body."
"We will save your soul," said the young man; "but are you really the execu-
tioner of Bethune, as these people say?"
"at is to say," eagerly replied the wounded man, who doubtless feared that
the name of executioner would take from him the last help that he could claim--
"that is to say, I was, but am no longer; it is fieen years since I gave up the office.
I still assist at executions, but no longer strike the blow myself--no, indeed."
"You have, then, a repugnance to your profession?"
"So long as I stru in the name of the law and of justice my profession allowed
me to sleep quietly, sheltered as I was by justice and law; but since that terrible night
when I became an instrument of private vengeance and when with personal hatred
I raised the sword over one of God's creatures--since that day----"
e executioner paused and shook his head with an expression of despair.
ccxxix
"Tell me about it," said the monk, who, siing on the foot of the bed, began to
be interested in a story so strangely introduced.
"Ah!" cried the dying man, with all the effusiveness of a grief declared aer
long suppression, "ah! I have sought to stifle remorse by twenty years of good deeds;
I have assuaged the natural ferocity of those who shed blood; on every occasion I
have exposed my life to save those who were in danger, and I have preserved lives
in exange for that I took away. at is not all; the money gained in the exercise
of my profession I have distributed to the poor; I have been assiduous in aending
ur and those who formerly fled from me have become accustomed to seeing
me. All have forgiven me, some have even loved me; but I think that God has not
pardoned me, for the memory of that execution pursues me constantly and every
night I see that woman's ghost rising before me."
"A woman! You have assassinated a woman, then?" cried the monk.
"You also!" exclaimed the executioner, "you use that word whi sounds ever
in my ears--'assassinated!' I have assassinated, then, and not executed! I am an
assassin, then, and not an officer of justice!" and he closed his eyes with a groan.
e monk doubtless feared that he would die without saying more, for he
exclaimed eagerly:
"Go on, I know nothing, as yet; when you have finished your story, God and
I will judge."
"Oh, father," continued the executioner, without opening his eyes, as if he
feared on opening them to see some frightful object, "it is especially when night
comes on and when I have to cross a river, that this terror whi I have been unable
to conquer comes upon me; it then seems as if my hand grew heavy, as if the cutlass
was still in its grasp, as if the water had the color of blood, and all the voices of
nature--the whispering of the trees, the murmur of the wind, the lapping of the
wave--united in a voice tearful, despairing, terrible, crying to me, 'Place for the
justice of God!'"
"Delirium!" murmured the monk, shaking his head.
e executioner opened his eyes, turned toward the young man and grasped
his arm.
"'Delirium,'" he repeated; "'delirium,' do you say? Oh, no! I remember too
well. It was evening; I had thrown the body into the river and those words whi
my remorse repeats to me are those whi I in my pride pronounced. Aer being
the instrument of human justice I aspired to be that of the justice of God."
"But let me see, how was it done? Speak," said the monk.
"It was at night. A man came to me and showed me an order and I followed
him. Four other noblemen awaited me. ey led me away masked. I reserved the
right of refusing if the office they required of me should seem unjust. We traveled
five or six leagues, serious, silent, and almost without speaking. At length, through
ccxxx
the window of a lile hut, they showed me a woman siing, leaning on a table, and
said, 'there is the person to be executed.'"
"Horrible!" said the monk. "And you obeyed?"
"Father, that woman was a monster. It was said that she had poisoned her
second husband; she had tried to assassinate her brother-in-law; she had just poi-
soned a young woman who was her rival, and before leaving England she had, it
was believed, caused the favorite of the king to be murdered."
"Buingham?" cried the monk.
"Yes, Buingham."
"e woman was English, then?"
"No, she was Fren, but she had married in England."
e monk turned pale, wiped his brow and went and bolted the door. e
executioner thought that he had abandoned him and fell ba, groaning, upon his
bed.
"No, no; I am here," said the monk, quily coming ba to him. "Go on; who
were those men?"
"One of them was a foreigner, English, I think. e four others were Fren
and wore the uniform of musketeers."
"eir names?" asked the monk.
"I don't know them, but the four other noblemen called the Englishman 'my
lord.'"
"Was the woman handsome?"
"Young and beautiful. Oh, yes, especially beautiful. I see her now, as on her
knees at my feet, with her head thrown ba, she begged for life. I have never
understood how I could have laid low a head so beautiful, with a face so pale."
e monk seemed agitated by a strange emotion; he trembled all over; he
seemed eager to put a question whi yet he dared not ask. At length, with a violent
effort at self-control:
"e name of that woman?" he said.
"I don't know what it was. As I have said, she was twice married, once in
France, the second time in England."
"She was young, you say?"
"Twenty-five years old."
"Beautiful?"
"Ravishingly."
"Blond?"
"Yes."
"Abundance of hair--falling over her shoulders?"
"Yes."
"Eyes of an admirable expression?"
ccxxxi
G was le alone with the executioner, who in a few moments opened his
eyes.
"Help, help," he murmured; "oh, God! have I not a single friend in the world
who will aid me either to live or to die?"
"Take courage," said Grimaud; "they are gone to find assistance."
"Who are you?" asked the wounded man, fixing his half opened eyes on Gri-
maud.
"An old acquaintance," replied Grimaud.
"You?" and the wounded man sought to recall the features of the person now
before him.
"Under what circumstances did we meet?" he asked again.
"One night, twenty years ago, my master feted you from Bethune and con-
ducted you to Armentieres."
"I know you well now," said the executioner; "you were one of the four
grooms."
"Just so."
"Where do you come from now?"
"I was passing by and drew up at this inn to rest my horse. ey told me
the executioner of Bethune was here and wounded, when you uered two piercing
cries. At the first we ran to the door and at the second forced it open."
"And the monk?" exclaimed the executioner, "did you see the monk?"
"What monk?"
"e monk that was shut in with me."
"No, he was no longer here; he appears to have fled by the window. Was he
the man that stabbed you?"
"Yes," said the executioner.
Grimaud moved as if to leave the room.
"What are you going to do?" asked the wounded man.
"He must be apprehended."
ccxxxiv
"Do not aempt it; he has revenged himself and has done well. Now I may
hope that God will forgive me, since my crime is expiated."
"Explain yourself." said Grimaud.
"e woman whom you and your masters commanded me to kill----"
"Milady?"
"Yes, Milady; it is true you called her thus."
"What has the monk to do with this Milady?"
"She was his mother."
Grimaud trembled and stared at the dying man in a dull and leaden manner.
"His mother!" he repeated.
"Yes, his mother."
"But does he know this secret, then?"
"I mistook him for a monk and revealed it to him in confession."
"Unhappy man!" cried Grimaud, whose face was covered with sweat at the
bare idea of the evil results su a revelation might cause; "unhappy man, you named
no one, I hope?"
"I pronounced no name, for I knew none, except his mother's, as a young girl,
and it was by this name that he recognized her, but he knows that his uncle was
among her judges."
us speaking, he fell ba exhausted. Grimaud, wishing to relieve him, ad-
vanced his hand toward the hilt of the dagger.
"Tou me not!" said the executioner; "if this dagger is withdrawn I shall die."
Grimaud remained with his hand extended; then, striking his forehead, he
exclaimed:
"Oh! if this man should ever discover the names of the others, my master is
lost."
"Haste! haste to him and warn him," cried the wounded man, "if he still lives;
warn his friends, too. My death, believe me, will not be the end of this atrocious
misadventure."
"Where was the monk going?" asked Grimaud.
"Toward Paris."
"Who stopped him?"
"Two young gentlemen, who were on their way to join the army and the name
of one of whom I heard his companion mention--the Viscount de Bragelonne."
"And it was this young man who brought the monk to you? en it was the
will of God that it should be so and this it is whi makes it all so awful," continued
Grimaud. "And yet that woman deserved her fate; do you not think so?"
"On one's death-bed the crimes of others appear very small in comparison
with one's own," said the executioner; and falling ba exhausted he closed his eyes.
Grimaud was reluctant to leave the man alone and yet he perceived the neces-
ccxxxv
sity of starting at once to bear these tidings to the Comte de la Fere. Whilst he thus
hesitated the host re-entered the room, followed not only by a surgeon, but by many
other persons, whom curiosity had aracted to the spot. e surgeon approaed
the dying man, who seemed to have fainted.
"We must first extract the steel from the side," said he, shaking his head in a
significant manner.
e prophecy whi the wounded man had just uered recurred to Grimaud,
who turned away his head. e weapon, as we have already stated, was plunged
into the body to the hilt, and as the surgeon, taking it by the end, drew it forth, the
wounded man opened his eyes and fixed them on him in a manner truly frightful.
When at last the blade had been entirely withdrawn, a red froth issued from the
mouth of the wounded man and a stream of blood spouted afresh from the wound
when he at length drew breath; then, fixing his eyes upon Grimaud with a singular
expression, the dying man uered the last death-rale and expired.
en Grimaud, liing the dagger from the pool of blood whi was gliding
along the room, to the horror of all present, made a sign to the host to follow him,
paid him with a generosity worthy of his master and again mounted his horse.
Grimaud's first intention had been to return to Paris, but he remembered the anxiety
whi his prolonged absence might occasion Raoul, and reflecting that there were
now only two miles between the vicomte and himself and a quarter of an hour's
riding would unite them, and that the going, returning and explanation would not
occupy an hour, he put spurs to his horse and a few minutes aer had reaed the
only inn of Mazingarbe.
Raoul was seated at table with the Count de Guie and his tutor, when all
at once the door opened and Grimaud presented himself, travel-stained, dirty, and
sprinkled with the blood of the unhappy executioner.
"Grimaud, my good Grimaud!" exclaimed Raoul "here you are at last! Excuse
me, sirs, this is not a servant, but a friend. How did you leave the count?" continued
he. "Does he regret me a lile? Have you seen him since I le him? Answer, for I
have many things to tell you, too; indeed, the last three days some odd adventures
have happened--but what is the maer? how pale you are! and blood, too! What is
this?"
"It is the blood of the unfortunate man whom you le at the inn and who died
in my arms."
"In your arms?--that man! but know you who he was?"
"He used to be the headsman of Bethune."
"You knew him? and he is dead?"
"Yes."
"Well, sir," said D'Arminges, "it is the common lot; even an executioner is not
exempted. I had a bad opinion of him the moment I saw his wound, and since he
ccxxxvi
asked for a monk you know that it was his opinion, too, that death would follow."
At the mention of the monk, Grimaud became pale.
"Come, come," continued D'Arminges, "to dinner;" for like most men of his age
and generation he did not allow sentiment or sensibility to interfere with a repast.
"You are right, sir," said Raoul. "Come, Grimaud, order dinner for yourself
and when you have rested a lile we can talk."
"No, sir, no," said Grimaud. "I cannot stop a moment; I must start for Paris
again immediately."
"What? You start for Paris? You are mistaken; it is Olivain who leaves me;
you are to remain."
"On the contrary, Olivain is to stay and I am to go. I have come for nothing
else but to tell you so."
"But what is the meaning of this ange?"
"I cannot tell you."
"Explain yourself."
"I cannot explain myself."
"Come, tell me, what is the joke?"
"Monsieur le vicomte knows that I never joke."
"Yes, but I know also that Monsieur le Comte de la Fere arranged that you
were to remain with me and that Olivain should return to Paris. I shall follow the
count's directions."
"Not under present circumstances, monsieur."
"Perhaps you mean to disobey me?"
"Yes, monsieur, I must."
"You persist, then?"
"Yes, I am going; may you be happy, monsieur," and Grimaud saluted and
turned toward the door to go out.
Raoul, angry and at the same time uneasy, ran aer him and seized him by
the arm. "Grimaud!" he cried; "remain; I wish it."
"en," replied Grimaud, "you wish me to allow monsieur le comte to be
killed." He saluted and made a movement to depart.
"Grimaud, my friend," said the viscount, "will you leave me thus, in su anx-
iety? Speak, speak, in Heaven's name!" And Raoul fell ba trembling upon his
air.
"I can tell you but one thing, sir, for the secret you wish to know is not my
own. You met a monk, did you not?"
"Yes."
e young men looked at ea other with an expression of fear.
"You conducted him to the wounded man and you had time to observe him,
and perhaps you would know him again were you to meet him."
ccxxxvii
R was aroused from his sombre reflections by his host, who rushed into the
apartment crying out, "e Spaniards! the Spaniards!"
at cry was of su importance as to overcome all preoccupation. e young
men made inquiries and ascertained that the enemy was advancing by way of
Houdin and Bethune.
While Monsieur d'Arminges gave orders for the horses to be made ready for
departure, the two young men ascended to the upper windows of the house and saw
in the direction of Marsin and of Lens a large body of infantry and cavalry. is time
it was not a wandering troop of partisans; it was an entire army. ere was therefore
nothing for them to do but to follow the prudent advice of Monsieur d'Arminges and
beat a retreat. ey quily went downstairs. Monsieur d'Arminges was already
mounted. Olivain had ready the horses of the young men, and the laeys of the
Count de Guie guarded carefully between them the Spanish prisoner, mounted on
a pony whi had been bought for his use. As a further precaution they had bound
his hands.
e lile company started off at a trot on the road to Cambrin, where they
expected to find the prince. But he was no longer there, having withdrawn on the
previous evening to La Bassee, misled by false intelligence of the enemy's move-
ments. Deceived by this intelligence he had concentrated his forces between Vieille-
Chapelle and La Venthie; and aer a reconnoissance along the entire line, in com-
pany with Marshal de Grammont, he had returned and seated himself before a table,
with his officers around him. He questioned them as to the news they had ea been
arged to obtain, but nothing positive had been learned. e hostile army had dis-
appeared two days before and seemed to have gone out of existence.
Now an enemy is never so near and consequently so threatening, as when
he has completely disappeared. e prince was, therefore, contrary to his custom,
gloomy and anxious, when an officer entered and announced to Marshal de Gram-
mont that some one wished to see him.
e Duc de Grammont received permission from the prince by a glance and
ccxxxix
went out. e prince followed him with his eyes and continued looking at the door;
no one ventured to speak, for fear of disturbing him.
Suddenly a dull and heavy noise was heard. e prince leaped to his feet,
extending his hand in the direction whence came the sound, there was no mistaking
it--it was the noise of cannon. Every one stood up.
At that moment the door opened.
"Monseigneur," said Marshal de Grammont, with a radiant face, "will your
highness permit my son, Count de Guie, and his traveling companion, Viscount
de Bragelonne, to come in and give news of the enemy, whom they have found
while we were looking for him?"
"What!" eagerly replied the prince, "will I permit? I not only permit, I desire;
let them come in."
e marshal introduced the two young men and placed them face to face with
the prince.
"Speak, gentlemen," said the prince, saluting them; "first speak; we shall have
time aerward for the usual compliments. e most urgent thing now is to learn
where the enemy is and what he is doing."
It fell naturally to the Count de Guie to make reply; not only was he the
elder, but he had been presented to the prince by his father. Besides, he had long
known the prince, whilst Raoul now saw him for the first time. He therefore nar-
rated to the prince what they had seen from the inn at Mazingarbe.
Meanwhile Raoul closely observed the young general, already made so fa-
mous by the bales of Rocroy, Fribourg, and Nordlingen.
Louis de Bourbon, Prince de Conde, who, since the death of his father, Henri
de Bourbon, was called, in accordance with the custom of that period, Monsieur le
Prince, was a young man, not more than twenty-six or twenty-seven years old, with
the eye of an eagle--agl' oci grifani, as Dante says--aquiline nose, long, waving
hair, of medium height, well formed, possessed of all the qualities essential to the
successful soldier--that is to say, the rapid glance, qui decision, fabulous courage.
At the same time he was a man of elegant manners and strong mind, so that in addi-
tion to the revolution he had made in war, by his new contributions to its methods,
he had also made a revolution at Paris, among the young noblemen of the court,
whose natural ief he was and who, in distinction from the social leaders of the
ancient court, modeled aer Bassompierre, Bellegarde and the Duke d'Angouleme,
were called the petits-maitres.
At the first words of the Count de Guie, the prince, having in mind the di-
rection whence came the sound of cannon, had understood everything. e enemy
was maring upon Lens, with the intention, doubtless, of securing possession of
that town and separating from France the army of France. But in what force was
the enemy? Was it a corps sent out to make a diversion? Was it an entire army? To
ccxl
interpreter?"
"I can, my lord," said Raoul.
"Ah, you speak Spanish?"
"Enough, I think, to fulfill your highness's wishes on this occasion."
Meanwhile the prisoner had remained impassive and as if he had no under-
standing of what was taking place.
"My lord asks of what country you are," said the young man, in the purest
Castilian.
"I bin ein Deutser," replied the prisoner.
"What in the devil does he say?" asked the prince. "What new gibberish is
that?"
"He says he is German, my lord," replied Raoul; "but I doubt it, for his accent
is bad and his pronunciation defective."
"en you speak German, also?" asked the prince.
"Yes, my lord."
"Well enough to question him in that language?"
"Yes, my lord."
"estion him, then."
Raoul began the examination, but the result justified his opinion. e prisoner
did not understand, or seemed not to understand, what Raoul said to him; and Raoul
could hardly understand his replies, containing a mixture of Flemish and Alsatian.
However, amidst all the prisoner's efforts to elude a systematic examination, Raoul
had recognized his natural accent.
"Non siete Spagnuolo," he said; "non siete Tedesco; siete Italiano."
e prisoner started and bit his lips.
"Ah, that," said the prince, "I understand that language thoroughly; and since
he is Italian I will myself continue the examination. ank you, viscount," continued
the prince, laughing, "and I appoint you from this moment my interpreter."
But the prisoner was not less unwilling to respond in Italian than in the other
languages; his aim was to elude the examination. erefore, he knew nothing either
of the enemy's numbers, or of those in command, or of the purpose of the army.
"Very good," said the prince, understanding the reason of that ignorance; "the
man was caught in the act of assassination and robbery; he might have purased
his life by speaking; he doesn't wish to speak. Take him out and shoot him."
e prisoner turned pale. e two soldiers who had brought him in took him,
ea by one arm, and led him toward the door, whilst the prince, turning to Marshal
de Grammont, seemed to have already forgoen the order he had given.
When he reaed the threshold of the door the prisoner stopped. e soldiers,
who knew only their orders, aempted to force him along.
"One moment," said the prisoner, in Fren. "I am ready to speak, my lord."
ccxlii
"Ah! ah!" said the prince, laughing, "I thought we should come to that. I have
a sure method of limbering tongues. Young men, take advantage of it against the
time when you may be in command."
"But on condition," continued the prisoner, "that your highness will swear that
my life shall be safe."
"Upon my honor," said the prince.
"estion, then, my lord."
"Where did the army cross the Lys?"
"Between Saint-Venant and Aire."
"By whom is it commanded?"
"By Count de Fuonsaldagna, General Be and the arduke."
"Of how many does it consist?"
"Eighteen thousand men and thirty-six cannon."
"And its aim is?"
"Lens."
"You see; gentlemen!" said the prince, turning with a triumphant air toward
Marshal de Grammont and the other officers.
"Yes, my lord," said the marshal, "you have divined all that was possible to
human genius."
"Recall Le Plessis, Bellievre, Villequier and D'Erlac," said the prince, "recall all
the troops that are on this side of the Lys. Let them hold themselves in readiness to
mar to-night. To-morrow, according to all probability, we shall aa the enemy."
"But, my lord," said Marshal de Grammont, "consider that when we have col-
lected all our forces we shall have hardly thirteen thousand men."
"Monsieur le mareal," said the prince, with that wonderful glance that was
peculiar to him, "it is with small armies that great bales are won."
en turning toward the prisoner, "Take away that man," he said, "and keep
him carefully in sight. His life is dependent on the information he has given us; if
it is true, he shall be free; if false, let him be shot."
e prisoner was led away.
"Count de Guie," said the prince, "it is a long time since you saw your father,
remain here with him. Monsieur," he continued, addressing Raoul, "if you are not
too tired, follow me."
"To the end of the world, my lord!" cried Raoul, feeling an unknown enthusi-
asm for that young general, who seemed to him so worthy of his renown.
e prince smiled; he despised flaerers, but he appreciated enthusiasts.
"Come, monsieur," he said, "you are good in council, as we have already dis-
covered; to-morrow we shall know if you are good in action."
"And I," said the marshal, "what am I to do?"
"Wait here to receive the troops. I shall either return for them myself or shall
ccxliii
send a courier directing you to bring them to me. Twenty guards, well mounted,
are all that I shall need for my escort."
"at is very few," said the marshal.
"It is enough," replied the prince. "Have you a good horse, Monsieur de
Bragelonne?"
"My horse was killed this morning, my lord, and I am mounted provisionally
on my laey's."
"Choose for yourself in my stables the horse you like best. No false modesty;
take the best horse you can find. You will need it this evening, perhaps; you will
certainly need it to-morrow."
Raoul didn't wait to be told twice; he knew that with superiors, especially
when those superiors are princes, the highest politeness is to obey without delay
or argument; he went down to the stables, pied out a pie-bald Andalusian horse,
saddled and bridled it himself, for Athos had advised him to trust no one with those
important offices at a time of danger, and went to rejoin the prince, who at that
moment mounted his horse.
"Now, monsieur," he said to Raoul, "will you give me the leer you have
brought?"
Raoul handed the leer to the prince.
"Keep near me," said the laer.
e prince threw his bridle over the pommel of the saddle, as he was wont
to do when he wished to have both hands free, unsealed the leer of Madame de
Longueville and started at a gallop on the road to Lens, aended by Raoul and his
small escort, whilst messengers sent to recall the troops set out with a loose rein in
other directions. e prince read as he hastened on.
"Monsieur," he said, aer a moment, "they tell me great things of you. I have
only to say, aer the lile that I have seen and heard, that I think even beer of you
than I have been told."
Raoul bowed.
Meanwhile, as the lile troop drew nearer to Lens, the noise of the cannon
sounded louder. e prince kept his gaze fixed in the direction of the sound with the
steadfastness of a bird of prey. One would have said that his gaze could pierce the
branes of trees whi limited his horizon. From time to time his nostrils dilated
as if eager for the smell of powder, and he panted like a horse.
At length they heard the cannon so near that it was evident they were within
a league of the field of bale, and at a turn of the road they perceived the lile
village of Aunay.
e peasants were in great commotion. e report of Spanish cruelty had
gone out and every one was frightened. e women had already fled, taking refuge
in Vitry; only a few men remained. On seeing the prince they hastened to meet him.
ccxliv
the available cavalry and infantry and took the road to Vendin, leaving the Duc de
Chatillon to await and bring on the rest. All the artillery was ready to move, and
started off at a moment's notice.
It was seven o'clo in the evening when the marshal arrived at the appointed
place. e prince awaited him there. As he had foreseen, Lens had fallen into the
hands of the enemy immediately aer Raoul's departure. e event was announced
by the cessation of the firing.
As the shadows of night deepened the troops summoned by the prince arrived
in successive detaments. Orders were given that no drum should be beaten, no
trumpet sounded.
At nine o'clo the night had fully come. Still a last ray of twilight lighted the
plain. e army mared silently, the prince at the head of the column. Presently
the army came in sight of Lens; two or three houses were in flames and a dull noise
was heard whi indicated what suffering was endured by a town taken by assault.
e prince assigned to every one his post. Marshal de Grammont was to hold
the extreme le, resting on Mericourt. e Duc de Chatillon commanded the centre.
Finally, the prince led the right wing, resting on Aunay. e order of bale on the
morrow was to be that of the positions taken in the evening. Ea one, on awaking,
would find himself on the field of bale.
e movement was executed in silence and with precision. At ten o'clo
every one was in his appointed position; at half-past ten the prince visited the posts
and gave his final orders for the following day.
ree things were especially urged upon the officers, who were to see that
the soldiers observed them scrupulously: the first, that the different corps should
so mar that cavalry and infantry should be on the same line and that ea body
should protect its gaps; the second, to go to the arge no faster than a walk; the
third, to let the enemy fire first.
e prince assigned the Count de Guie to his father and kept Bragelonne
near his own person; but the two young men sought the privilege of passing the
night together and it was accorded them. A tent was erected for them near that of
the marshal.
Although the day had been fatiguing, neither of them was inclined to sleep.
And besides, even for old soldiers the evening before a bale is a serious time; it was
so with greater reason to two young men who were about to witness for the first
time that terrible spectacle. On the evening before a bale one thinks of a thousand
things forgoen till then; those who are indifferent to one another become friends
and those who are friends become brothers. It need not be said that if in the depths
of the heart there is a sentiment more tender, it reaes then, quite naturally, the
highest exaltation of whi it is capable. Some sentiment of this kind must have been
erished by ea one of these two friends, for ea of them almost immediately sat
ccxlvi
T second interview between the former musketeers was not so formal and
threatening as the first. Athos, with his superior understanding, wisely deemed
that the supper table would be the most complete and satisfactory point of reunion,
and at the moment when his friends, in deference to his deportment and sobri-
ety, dared scarcely speak of some of their former good dinners, he was the first to
propose that they should all assemble around some well spread table and abandon
themselves unreservedly to their own natural aracter and manners--a freedom
whi had formerly contributed so mu to that good understanding between them
whi gave them the name of the inseparables. For different reasons this was an
agreeable proposition to them all, and it was therefore agreed that ea should leave
a very exact address and that upon the request of any of the associates a meeting
should be convoked at a famous eating house in the Rue de la Monnaie, of the sign
of the Hermitage. e first rendezvous was fixed for the following Wednesday, at
eight o'clo in the evening precisely.
On that day, in fact, the four friends arrived punctually at the hour, ea from
his own abode or occupation. Porthos had been trying a new horse; D'Artagnan
was on guard at the Louvre; Aramis had been to visit one of his penitents in the
neighborhood; and Athos, whose domicile was established in the Rue Guenegaud,
found himself close at hand. ey were, therefore, somewhat surprised to meet
altogether at the door of the Hermitage, Athos starting out from the Pont Neuf,
Porthos by the Rue de la Roule, D'Artagnan by the Rue des Fosse Saint Germain
l'Auxerrois, and Aramis by the Rue de Bethisy.
e first words exanged between the four friends, on account of the cere-
mony whi ea of them mingled with their demonstration, were somewhat forced
and even the repast began with a kind of stiffness. Athos perceived this embar-
rassment, and by way of supplying an effectual remedy, called for four boles of
ampagne.
At this order, given in Athos's habitually calm manner, the face of the Gascon
relaxed and Porthos's brow grew smooth. Aramis was astonished. He knew that
ccxlviii
Athos not only never drank, but more, that he had a kind of repugnance to wine.
is astonishment was doubled when Aramis saw Athos fill a bumper and toss it
off with all his former enthusiasm. His companions followed his example. In a very
few minutes the four boles were empty and this excellent specific succeeded in
dissipating even the slightest cloud that might have rested on their spirits. Now the
four friends began to speak loud, scarcely waiting till one had finished before an-
other began, and ea assumed his favorite aitude on or at the table. Soon--strange
fact--Aramis undid two buons of his doublet, seeing whi, Porthos unfastened his
entirely.
Bales, long journeys, blows given and received, sufficed for the first themes
of conversation, whi turned upon the silent struggles sustained against him who
was now called the great cardinal.
"Faith," said Aramis, laughing, "we have praised the dead enough, let us revile
the living a lile; I should like to say something evil of Mazarin; is it permissible?"
"Go on, go on," replied D'Artagnan, laughing heartily; "relate your story and
I will applaud it if it is a good one."
"A great prince," said Aramis, "with whom Mazarin sought an alliance, was
invited by him to send him a list of the conditions on whi he would do him the
honor to negotiate with him. e prince, who had a great repugnance to treat with
su an ill-bred fellow, made out a list, against the grain, and sent it. In this list
there were three conditions whi displeased Mazarin and he offered the prince ten
thousand crowns to renounce them."
"Ah, ha, ha!" laughed the three friends, "not a bad bargain; and there was no
fear of being taken at his word; what did the prince do then?"
"e prince immediately sent fiy thousand francs to Mazarin, begging him
never to write to him again, and offered twenty thousand francs more, on condition
that he would never speak to him. What did Mazarin do?"
"Stormed!" suggested Athos.
"Beat the messenger!" cried Porthos.
"Accepted the money!" said D'Artagnan.
"You have guessed it," answered Aramis; and they all laughed so heartily that
the host appeared in order to inquire whether the gentlemen wanted anything; he
thought they were fighting.
At last their hilarity calmed down and:
"Faith!" exclaimed D'Artagnan to the two friends, "you may well wish ill to
Mazarin; for I assure you, on his side he wishes you no good."
"Pooh! really?" asked Athos. "If I thought the fellow knew me by my name I
would be rebaptized, for fear it might be thought I knew him."
"He knows you beer by your actions than your name; he is quite aware that
there are two gentlemen who greatly aided the escape of Monsieur de Beaufort, and
ccxlix
he has instigated an active sear for them, I can answer for it."
"By whom?"
"By me; and this morning he sent for me to ask me if I had obtained any
information."
"And what did you reply?"
"at I had none as yet; but that I was to dine to-day with two gentlemen,
who would be able to give me some."
"You told him that?" said Porthos, a broad smile spreading over his honest
face. "Bravo! and you are not afraid of that, Athos?"
"No," replied Athos, "it is not the sear of Mazarin that I fear."
"Now," said Aramis, "tell me a lile what you do fear."
"Nothing for the present; at least, nothing in good earnest."
"And with regard to the past?" asked Porthos.
"Oh! the past is another thing," said Athos, sighing; "the past and the future."
"Are you afraid for your young Raoul?" asked Aramis.
"Well," said D'Artagnan, "one is never killed in a first engagement."
"Nor in the second," said Aramis
"Nor in the third," returned Porthos; "and even when one is killed, one rises
again, the proof of whi is, that here we are!"
"No," said Athos, "it is not Raoul about whom I am anxious, for I trust he will
conduct himself like a gentleman; and if he is killed--well, he will die bravely; but
hold--should su a misfortune happen--well--" Athos passed his hand across his
pale brow.
"Well?" asked Aramis.
"Well, I shall look upon it as an expiation."
"Ah!" said D'Artagnan; "I know what you mean."
"And I, too," added Aramis; "but you must not think of that, Athos; what is
past, is past."
"I don't understand," said Porthos.
"e affair at Armentieres," whispered D'Artagnan.
"e affair at Armentieres?" asked he again.
"Milady."
"Oh, yes!" said Porthos; "true, I had forgoen it!"
Athos looked at him intently.
"You have forgoen it, Porthos?" said he.
"Faith! yes, it is so long ago," answered Porthos.
"is affair does not, then, weigh upon your conscience?"
"Faith, no."
"And you, D'Artagnan?"
"I--I own that when my mind returns to that terrible period I have no rec-
ccl
ollection of anything but the rigid corpse of poor Madame Bonancieux. Yes, yes,"
murmured he, "I have oen felt regret for the victim, but never the very slightest
remorse for the assassin."
Athos shook his dead doubtfully.
"Consider," said Aramis, "if you admit divine justice and its participation in
the things of this world, that woman was punished by the will of heaven. We were
but the instruments, that is all."
"But as to free will, Aramis?"
"How acts the judge? He has a free will, yet he fearlessly condemns. What
does the executioner? He is master of his arm, yet he strikes without remorse."
"e executioner!" muered Athos, as if arrested by some recollection.
"I know that it is terrible," said D'Artagnan; "but when I reflect that we have
killed English, Roellais, Spaniards, nay, even Fren, who never did us any other
harm but to aim at and to miss us, whose only fault was to cross swords with us
and to be unable to ward off our blows--I can, on my honor, find an excuse for my
share in the murder of that woman."
"As for me," said Porthos, "now that you have reminded me of it, Athos, I
have the scene again before me, as if I now were there. Milady was there, as it
were, where you sit." (Athos anged color.) "I--I was where D'Artagnan stands. I
wore a long sword whi cut like a Damascus--you remember it, Aramis for you
always called it Balizarde. Well, I swear to you, all three, that had the executioner of
Bethune--was he not of Bethune?--yes, egad! of Bethune!--not been there, I would
have cut off the head of that infamous being without thinking of it, or even aer
thinking of it. She was a most atrocious woman."
"And then," said Aramis, with the tone of philosophical indifference whi
he had assumed since he had belonged to the ur and in whi there was more
atheism than confidence in God, "what is the use of thinking of it all? At the last
hour we must confess this action and God knows beer than we can whether it is a
crime, a fault, or a meritorious deed. I repent of it? Egad! no. Upon my honor and
by the holy cross; I only regret it because she was a woman."
"e most satisfactory part of the maer," said D'Artagnan, "is that there re-
mains no trace of it."
"She had a son," observed Athos.
"Oh! yes, I know that," said D'Artagnan, "and you mentioned it to me; but
who knows what has become of him? If the serpent be dead, why not its brood?
Do you think his uncle De Winter would have brought up that young viper? De
Winter probably condemned the son as he had done the mother."
"en," said Athos, "woe to De Winter, for the ild had done no harm."
"May the devil take me, if the ild be not dead," said Porthos. "ere is so
mu fog in that detestable country, at least so D'Artagnan declares."
ccli
Just as the quaint conclusion reaed by Porthos was about to bring ba
hilarity to faces now more or less clouded, hasty footsteps were heard upon the
stair and some one knoed at the door.
"Come in," cried Athos.
"Please your honors," said the host, "a person in a great hurry wishes to speak
to one of you."
"To whi of us?" asked all the four friends.
"To him who is called the Comte de la Fere."
"It is I," said Athos, "and what is the name of the person?"
"Grimaud."
"Ah!" exclaimed Athos, turning pale. "Ba already! What can have happened,
then, to Bragelonne?"
"Let him enter," cried D'Artagnan; "let him come up."
But Grimaud had already mounted the staircase and was waiting on the last
step; so springing into the room he motioned the host to leave it. e door being
closed, the four friends waited in expectation. Grimaud's agitation, his pallor, the
sweat whi covered his face, the dust whi soiled his clothes, all indicated that he
was the messenger of some important and terrible news.
"Your honors," said he, "that woman had a ild; that ild has become a man;
the tigress had a lile one, the tiger has roused himself; he is ready to spring upon
you--beware!"
Athos glanced around at his friends with a melanoly smile. Porthos turned
to look at his sword, whi was hanging on the wall; Aramis seized his knife;
D'Artagnan arose.
"What do you mean, Grimaud?" he exclaimed.
"at Milady's son has le England, that he is in France, on his road to Paris,
if he be not here already."
"e devil he is!" said Porthos. "Are you sure of it?"
"Certain," replied Grimaud.
is announcement was received in silence. Grimaud was so breathless, so
exhausted, that he had fallen ba upon a air. Athos filled a beaker with am-
pagne and gave it to him.
"Well, aer all," said D'Artagnan, "supposing that he lives, that he comes to
Paris; we have seen many other su. Let him come."
"Yes," eoed Porthos, glancing affectionately at his sword, still hanging on
the wall; "we can wait for him; let him come."
"Moreover, he is but a ild," said Aramis.
Grimaud rose.
"A ild!" he exclaimed. "Do you know what he has done, this ild? Dis-
guised as a monk he discovered the whole history in confession from the execu-
cclii
tioner of Bethune, and having confessed him, aer having learned everything from
him, he gave him absolution by planting this dagger into his heart. See, it is on fire
yet with his hot blood, for it is not thirty hours since it was drawn from the wound."
And Grimaud threw the dagger on the table.
D'Artagnan, Porthos and Aramis rose and in one spontaneous motion rushed
to their swords. Athos alone remained seated, calm and thoughtful.
"And you say he is dressed as a monk, Grimaud?"
"Yes, as an Augustine monk."
"What sized man is he?"
"About my height; thin, pale, with light blue eyes and tawny flaxen hair."
"And he did not see Raoul?" asked Athos.
"Yes, on the contrary, they met, and it was the viscount himself who conducted
him to the bed of the dying man."
Athos, in his turn, rising without speaking, went and unhooked his sword.
"Heigh, sir," said D'Artagnan, trying to laugh, "do you know we look very
mu like a flo of silly, mouse-evading women! How is it that we, four men who
have faced armies without blinking, begin to tremble at the mention of a ild?"
"It is true," said Athos, "but this ild comes in the name of Heaven."
And very soon they le the inn.
. A Letter from Charles the
First.
T reader must now cross the Seine with us and follow us to the door of the
Carmelite Convent in the Rue Saint Jacques. It is eleven o'clo in the morning
and the pious sisters have just finished saying mass for the success of the armies of
King Charles I. Leaving the ur, a woman and a young girl dressed in bla, the
one as a widow and the other as an orphan, have re-entered their cell.
e woman kneels on a prie-dieu of painted wood and at a short distance
from her stands the young girl, leaning against a air, weeping.
e woman must have once been handsome, but traces of sorrow have aged
her. e young girl is lovely and her tears only embellish her; the lady appears to
be about forty years of age, the girl about fourteen.
"Oh, God!" prayed the kneeling suppliant, "protect my husband, guard my
son, and take my wreted life instead!"
"Oh, God!" murmured the girl, "leave me my mother!"
"Your mother can be of no use to you in this world, Henriea," said the lady,
turning around. "Your mother has no longer either throne or husband; she has
neither son, money nor friends; the whole world, my poor ild, has abandoned
your mother!" And she fell ba, weeping, into her daughter's arms.
"Courage, take courage, my dear mother!" said the girl.
"Ah! 'tis an unfortunate year for kings," said the mother. "And no one thinks
of us in this country, for ea must think about his own affairs. As long as your
brother was with me he kept me up; but he is gone and can no longer send us news
of himself, either to me or to your father. I have pledged my last jewels, sold your
clothes and my own to pay his servants, who refused to accompany him unless I
made this sacrifice. We are now reduced to live at the expense of these daughters
of Heaven; we are the poor, succored by God."
"But why not address yourself to your sister, the queen?" asked the girl.
ccliv
Charles! Wherefore did you not apply, then, madame, to the first person you saw
from us?"
"Su is the hospitality shown to a queen by the minister from whom a king
demands it."
"But I heard that a marriage between the Prince of Wales and Mademoiselle
d'Orleans was spoken of," said De Winter.
"Yes, for an instant I hoped it was so. e young people felt a mutual esteem;
but the queen, who at first sanctioned their affection, anged her mind, and Mon-
sieur, the Duc d'Orleans, who had encouraged the familiarity between them, has
forbidden his daughter to think any more about the union. Oh, my lord!" continued
the queen, without restraining her tears, "it is beer to fight as the king has done,
and to die, as perhaps he will, than live in beggary like me."
"Courage, madame! courage! Do not despair! e interests of the Fren
crown, endangered at this moment, are to discountenance rebellion in a neighboring
nation. Mazarin, as a statesman, will understand the politic necessity."
"Are you sure," said the queen doubtfully, "that you have not been forestalled?"
"By whom?"
"By the Joices, the Prinns, the Cromwells?"
"By a tailor, a coamaker, a brewer! Ah! I hope, madame, that the cardinal
will not enter into negotiations with su men!"
"Ah! what is he himself?" asked Madame Henriea.
"But for the honor of the king--of the queen."
"Well, let us hope he will do something for the sake of their honor," said the
queen. "A true friend's eloquence is so powerful, my lord, that you have reassured
me. Give me your hand and let us go to the minister; and yet," she added, "suppose
he should refuse and that the king loses the bale?"
"His majesty will then take refuge in Holland, where I hear his highness the
Prince of Wales now is."
"And can his majesty count upon many su subjects as yourself for his
flight?"
"Alas! no, madame," answered De Winter; "but the case is provided for and I
am come to France to seek allies."
"Allies!" said the queen, shaking her head.
"Madame," replied De Winter, "provided I can find some of my good old
friends of former times I will answer for anything."
"Come then, my lord," said the queen, with the painful doubt that is felt by
those who have suffered mu; "come, and may Heaven hear you."
. Cromwell's Letter.
A the very moment when the queen quied the convent to go to the Palais
Royal, a young man dismounted at the gate of this royal abode and announced
to the guards that he had something of importance to communicate to Cardinal
Mazarin. Although the cardinal was oen tormented by fear, he was more oen in
need of counsel and information, and he was therefore sufficiently accessible. e
true difficulty of being admied was not to be found at the first door, and even the
second was passed easily enough; but at the third wated, besides the guard and
the doorkeepers, the faithful Bernouin, a Cerberus whom no spee could soen,
no wand, even of gold, could arm.
It was therefore at the third door that those who solicited or were bidden to
an audience underwent their formal interrogatory.
e young man having le his horse tied to the gate in the court, mounted
the great staircase and addressed the guard in the first amber.
"Cardinal Mazarin?" said he.
"Pass on," replied the guard.
e cavalier entered the second hall, whi was guarded by the musketeers
and doorkeepers.
"Have you a leer of audience?" asked a porter, advancing to the new arrival.
"I have one, but not one from Cardinal Mazarin."
"Enter, and ask for Monsieur Bernouin," said the porter, opening the door of
the third room. Whether he only held his usual post or whether it was by accident,
Monsieur Bernouin was found standing behind the door and must have heard all
that had passed.
"You seek me, sir," said he. "From whom may the leer be you bear to his
eminence?"
"From General Oliver Cromwell," said the new comer. "Be so good as to men-
tion this name to his eminence and to bring me word whether he will receive me--
yes or no."
Saying whi, he resumed the proud and sombre bearing peculiar at that time
cclviii
to Puritans. Bernouin cast an inquisitorial glance at the person of the young man
and entered the cabinet of the cardinal, to whom he transmied the messenger's
words.
"A man bringing a leer from Oliver Cromwell?" said Mazarin. "And what
kind of a man?"
"A genuine Englishman, your eminence. Hair sandy-red--more red than
sandy; gray-blue eyes--more gray than blue; and for the rest, stiff and proud."
"Let him give in his leer."
"His eminence asks for the leer," said Bernouin, passing ba into the ante-
amber.
"His eminence cannot see the leer without the bearer of it," replied the young
man; "but to convince you that I am really the bearer of a leer, see, here it is;
and kindly add," continued he, "that I am not a simple messenger, but an envoy
extraordinary."
Bernouin re-entered the cabinet, returning in a few seconds. "Enter, sir," said
he.
e young man appeared on the threshold of the minister's closet, in one hand
holding his hat, in the other the leer. Mazarin rose. "Have you, sir," asked he, "a
leer accrediting you to me?"
"ere it is, my lord," said the young man.
Mazarin took the leer and read it thus:
"Mr. Mordaunt, one of my secretaries, will remit this leer of introduction
to His Eminence, the Cardinal Mazarin, in Paris. He is also the bearer of a second
confidential epistle for his eminence.
"Oliver Cromwell."
"Very well, Monsieur Mordaunt," said Mazarin, "give me this second leer
and sit down."
e young man drew from his poet a second leer, presented it to the car-
dinal, and took his seat. e cardinal, however, did not unseal the leer at once, but
continued to turn it again and again in his hand; then, in accordance with his usual
custom and judging from experience that few people could hide anything from him
when he began to question them, fixing his eyes upon them at the same time, he
thus addressed the messenger:
"You are very young, Monsieur Mordaunt, for this difficult task of ambassador,
in whi the oldest diplomatists oen fail."
"My lord, I am twenty-three years of age; but your eminence is mistaken in
saying that I am young. I am older than your eminence, although I possess not your
wisdom. Years of suffering, in my opinion, count double, and I have suffered for
twenty years."
"Ah, yes, I understand," said Mazarin; "want of fortune, perhaps. You are
cclix
poor, are you not?" en he added to himself: "ese English Revolutionists are all
beggars and ill-bred."
"My lord, I ought to have a fortune of six millions, but it has been taken from
me."
"You are not, then, a man of the people?" said Mazarin, astonished.
"If I bore my proper title I should be a lord. If I bore my name you would have
heard one of the most illustrious names of England."
"What is your name, then?" asked Mazarin.
"My name is Mordaunt," replied the young man, bowing.
Mazarin now understood that Cromwell's envoy desired to retain his incog-
nito. He was silent for an instant, and during that time he scanned the young man
even more aentively than he had done at first. e messenger was unmoved.
"Devil take these Puritans," said Mazarin aside; "they are carved from granite."
en he added aloud, "But you have relations le you?"
"I have one remaining. ree times I presented myself to ask his support and
three times he ordered his servants to turn me away."
"Oh, mon Dieu! my dear Mr. Mordaunt," said Mazarin, hoping by a display
of affected pity to cat the young man in a snare, "how extremely your history
interests me! You know not, then, anything of your birth--you have never seen
your mother?"
"Yes, my lord; she came three times, whilst I was a ild, to my nurse's house;
I remember the last time she came as well as if it were to-day."
"You have a good memory," said Mazarin.
"Oh! yes, my lord," said the young man, with su peculiar emphasis that the
cardinal felt a shudder run through every vein.
"And who brought you up?" he asked again.
"A Fren nurse, who sent me away when I was five years old because no
one paid her for me, telling me the name of a relation of whom she had heard my
mother oen speak."
"What became of you?"
"As I was weeping and begging on the high road, a minister from Kingston
took me in, instructed me in the Calvinistic faith, taught me all he knew himself
and aided me in my researes aer my family."
"And these researes?"
"Were fruitless; ance did everything."
"You discovered what had become of your mother?"
"I learned that she had been assassinated by my relation, aided by four friends,
but I was already aware that I had been robbed of my wealth and degraded from
my nobility by King Charles I."
"Oh! I now understand why you are in the service of Cromwell; you hate the
cclx
king."
"Yes, my lord, I hate him!" said the young man.
Mazarin marked with surprise the diabolical expression with whi the young
man uered these words. Just as, ordinarily, faces are colored by blood, his face
seemed dyed by hatred and became livid.
"Your history is a terrible one, Mr. Mordaunt, and toues me keenly; but
happily for you, you serve an all-powerful master; he ought to aid you in your
sear; we have so many means of gaining information."
"My lord, to a well-bred dog it is only necessary to show one end of a tra;
he is certain to rea the other."
"But this relation you mentioned--do you wish me to speak to him?" said
Mazarin, who was anxious to make a friend about Cromwell's person.
"anks, my lord, I will speak to him myself. He will treat me beer the next
time I see him."
"You have the means, then, of touing him?"
"I have the means of making myself feared."
Mazarin looked at the young man, but at the fire whi shot from his glance
he bent his head; then, embarrassed how to continue su a conversation, he opened
Cromwell's leer.
e young man's eyes gradually resumed their dull and glassy appearance
and he fell into a profound reverie. Aer reading the first lines of the leer Mazarin
gave a side glance at him to see if he was wating the expression of his face as he
read. Observing his indifference, he shrugged his shoulders, saying:
"Send on your business those who do theirs at the same time! Let us see what
this leer contains."
We here present the leer verbatim:
"To his Eminence, Monseigneur le Cardinal Mazarini:
"I have wished, monseigneur, to learn your intentions relating to the existing
state of affairs in England. e two kingdoms are so near that France must be inter-
ested in our situation, as we are interested in that of France. e English are almost
of one mind in contending against the tyranny of Charles and his adherents. Placed
by popular confidence at the head of that movement, I can appreciate beer than
any other its significance and its probable results. I am at present in the midst of
war, and am about to deliver a decisive bale against King Charles. I shall gain it,
for the hope of the nation and the Spirit of the Lord are with me. is bale won by
me, the king will have no further resources in England or in Scotland; and if he is
not captured or killed, he will endeavor to pass over into France to recruit soldiers
and to refurnish himself with arms and money. France has already received een
Henriea, and, unintentionally, doubtless, has maintained a centre of inextinguish-
able civil war in my country. But Madame Henriea is a daughter of France and
cclxi
was entitled to the hospitality of France. As to King Charles, the question must
be viewed differently; in receiving and aiding him, France will censure the acts of
the English nation, and thus so essentially harm England, and especially the well-
being of the government, that su a proceeding will be equivalent to pronounced
hostilities."
At this moment Mazarin became very uneasy at the turn whi the leer was
taking and paused to glance under his eyes at the young man. e laer continued
in thought. Mazarin resumed his reading:
"It is important, therefore, monseigneur, that I should be informed as to the
intentions of France. e interests of that kingdom and those of England, though
taking now diverse directions, are very nearly the same. England needs tranquillity
at home, in order to consummate the expulsion of her king; France needs tranquillity
to establish on solid foundations the throne of her young monar. You need, as
mu as we do, that interior condition of repose whi, thanks to the energy of our
government, we are about to aain.
"Your quarrels with the parliament, your noisy dissensions with the princes,
who fight for you to-day and to-morrow will fight against you, the popular follow-
ing directed by the coadjutor, President Blancmesnil, and Councillor Broussel--all
that disorder, in short, whi pervades the several departments of the state, must
lead you to view with uneasiness the possibility of a foreign war; for in that event
England, exalted by the enthusiasm of new ideas, will ally herself with Spain, al-
ready seeking that alliance. I have therefore believed, monseigneur, knowing your
prudence and your personal relation to the events of the present time, that you will
oose to hold your forces concentrated in the interior of the Fren kingdom and
leave to her own the new government of England. at neutrality consists simply in
excluding King Charles from the territory of France and in refraining from helping
him--a stranger to your country--with arms, with money or with troops.
"My leer is private and confidential, and for that reason I send it to you by
a man who shares my most intimate counsels. It anticipates, through a sentiment
whi your eminence will appreciate, measures to be taken aer the events. Oliver
Cromwell considered it more expedient to declare himself to a mind as intelligent
as Mazarin's than to a queen admirable for firmness, without doubt, but too mu
guided by vain prejudices of birth and of divine right.
"Farewell, monseigneur; should I not receive a reply in the space of fieen
days, I shall presume my leer will have miscarried.
"Oliver Cromwell."
"Mr. Mordaunt," said the cardinal, raising his voice, as if to arouse the
dreamer, "my reply to this leer will be more satisfactory to General Cromwell
if I am convinced that all are ignorant of my having given one; go, therefore, and
await it at Boulogne-sur-Mer, and promise me to set out to-morrow morning."
cclxii
"I promise, my lord," replied Mordaunt; "but how many days does your emi-
nence expect me to await your reply?"
"If you do not receive it in ten days you can leave."
Mordaunt bowed.
"at is not all, sir," continued Mazarin; "your private adventures have toued
me to the qui; besides, the leer from Mr. Cromwell makes you an important
person as ambassador; come, tell me, what can I do for you?"
Mordaunt reflected a moment and, aer some hesitation, was about to speak,
when Bernouin entered hastily and bending down to the ear of the cardinal, whis-
pered:
"My lord, the een Henriea Maria, accompanied by an English noble, is
entering the Palais Royal at this moment."
Mazarin made a bound from his air, whi did not escape the aention of
the young man and suppressed the confidence he was about to make.
"Sir," said the cardinal, "you have heard me? I fix on Boulogne because I
presume that every town in France is indifferent to you; if you prefer another, name
it; but you can easily conceive that, surrounded as I am by influences I can only
muzzle by discretion, I desire your presence in Paris to be unknown."
"I go, sir," said Mordaunt, advancing a few steps to the door by whi he had
entered.
"No, not that way, I beg, sir," quily exclaimed the cardinal, "be so good as to
pass by yonder gallery, by whi you can regain the hall. I do not wish you to be
seen leaving; our interview must be kept secret."
Mordaunt followed Bernouin, who led him through the adjacent amber and
le him with a doorkeeper, showing him the way out.
. Henrietta Maria and
Mazarin.
nal, raising his hands clasped toward her, exclaimed, "Ah, madame, madame, how
lile you know me, mon Dieu!"
But een Henriea, without even turning toward him who made these hyp-
ocritical pretensions, crossed the cabinet, opened the door for herself and passing
through the midst of the cardinal's numerous guards, courtiers eager to pay homage,
the luxurious show of a competing royalty, she went and took the hand of De Win-
ter, who stood apart in isolation. Poor queen, already fallen! ough all bowed
before her, as etiquee required, she had now but a single arm on whi she could
lean.
"It signifies lile," said Mazarin, when he was alone. "It gave me pain and it
was an ungracious part to play, but I have said nothing either to the one or to the
other. Bernouin!"
Bernouin entered.
"See if the young man with the bla doublet and the short hair, who was
with me just now, is still in the palace."
Bernouin went out and soon returned with Comminges, who was on guard.
"Your eminence," said Comminges, "as I was re-conducting the young man
for whom you have asked, he approaed the glass door of the gallery, and gazed
intently upon some object, doubtless the picture by Raphael, whi is opposite the
door. He reflected for a second and then descended the stairs. I believe I saw him
mount a gray horse and leave the palace court. But is not your eminence going to
the queen?"
"For what purpose?"
"Monsieur de Guitant, my uncle, has just told me that her majesty had re-
ceived news of the army."
"It is well; I will go."
Comminges had seen rightly, and Mordaunt had really acted as he had related.
In crossing the gallery parallel to the large glass gallery, he perceived De Winter,
who was waiting until the queen had finished her negotiation.
At this sight the young man stopped short, not in admiration of Raphael's
picture, but as if fascinated at the sight of some terrible object. His eyes dilated
and a shudder ran through his body. One would have said that he longed to break
through the wall of glass whi separated him from his enemy; for if Comminges
had seen with what an expression of hatred the eyes of this young man were fixed
upon De Winter, he would not have doubted for an instant that the Englishman was
his eternal foe.
But he stopped, doubtless to reflect; for instead of allowing his first impulse,
whi had been to go straight to Lord de Winter, to carry him away, he leisurely
descended the staircase, le the palace with his head down, mounted his horse,
whi he reined in at the corner of the Rue Rielieu, and with his eyes fixed on the
cclxvii
gate, waited until the queen's carriage had le the court.
He had not long to wait, for the queen scarcely remained a quarter of an
hour with Mazarin, but this quarter of an hour of expectation appeared a century
to him. At last the heavy maine, whi was called a ariot in those days, came
out, rumbling against the gates, and De Winter, still on horseba, bent again to the
door to converse with her majesty.
e horses started on a trot and took the road to the Louvre, whi they
entered. Before leaving the convent of the Carmelites, Henriea had desired her
daughter to aend her at the palace, whi she had inhabited for a long time and
whi she had only le because their poverty seemed to them more difficult to bear
in gilded ambers.
Mordaunt followed the carriage, and when he had wated it drive beneath
the sombre ares he went and stationed himself under a wall over whi the
shadow was extended, and remained motionless, amidst the moldings of Jean Gou-
jon, like a bas-relievo, representing an equestrian statue.
. How, sometimes, the
Unhappy mistake Chance for
Providence.
W , madame," said De Winter, when the queen had dismissed her aendants.
"Well, my lord, what I foresaw has come to pass."
"What? does the cardinal refuse to receive the king? France refuse hospitality
to an unfortunate prince? Ay, but it is for the first time, madame!"
"I did not say France, my lord; I said the cardinal, and the cardinal is not even
a Frenman."
"But did you see the queen?"
"It is useless," replied Henriea, "the queen will not say yes when the cardinal
says no. Are you not aware that this Italian directs everything, both indoors and
out? And moreover, I should not be surprised had we been forestalled by Cromwell.
He was embarrassed whilst speaking to me and yet quite firm in his determination
to refuse. en did you not observe the agitation in the Palais Royal, the passing to
and fro of busy people? Can they have received any news, my lord?"
"Not from England, madame. I made su haste that I am certain of not having
been forestalled. I set out three days ago, passing miraculously through the Puritan
army, and I took post horses with my servant Tony; the horses upon whi we were
mounted were bought in Paris. Besides, the king, I am certain, awaits your majesty's
reply before risking anything."
"You will tell him, my lord," resumed the queen, despairingly, "that I can do
nothing; that I have suffered as mu as himself--more than he has--obliged as I am
to eat the bread of exile and to ask hospitality from false friends who smile at my
tears; and as regards his royal person, he must sacrifice it generously and die like a
king. I shall go and die by his side."
cclxix
to you it is because the queen has forgoen them, who ought to have made them
the first noblemen of the realm."
"Well, then, my lord, they must be found; but what can four men, or rather
three men do--for I tell you, you must not count on Monsieur d'Artagnan."
"It will be one valiant sword the less, but there will remain still three, without
reoning my own; now four devoted men around the king to protect him from his
enemies, to be at his side in bale, to aid him with counsel, to escort him in flight,
are sufficient, not to make the king a conqueror, but to save him if conquered; and
whatever Mazarin may say, once on the shores of France your royal husband may
find as many retreats and asylums as the seabird finds in a storm."
"Seek, then, my lord, seek these gentlemen; and if they will consent to go with
you to England, I will give to ea a duy the day that we reascend the throne,
besides as mu gold as would pave Whitehall. Seek them, my lord, and find them,
I conjure you."
"I will sear for them, madame," said De Winter "and doubtless I shall find
them; but time fails me. Has your majesty forgoen that the king expects your reply
and awaits it in agony?"
"en indeed we are lost!" cried the queen, in the fullness of a broken heart.
At this moment the door opened and the young Henriea appeared; then the
queen, with that wonderful strength whi is the privilege of parents, repressed her
tears and motioned to De Winter to ange the subject.
But that act of self-control, effective as it was, did not escape the eyes of the
young princess. She stopped on the threshold, breathed a sigh, and addressing the
queen:
"Why, then, do you always weep, mother, when I am away from you?" she
said.
e queen smiled, but instead of answering:
"See, De Winter," she said, "I have at least gained one thing in being only half
a queen; and that is that my ildren call me 'mother' instead of 'madame.'"
en turning toward her daughter:
"What do you want, Henriea?" she demanded.
"My mother," replied the young princess, "a cavalier has just entered the Lou-
vre and wishes to present his respects to your majesty; he arrives from the army
and has, he says, a leer to remit to you, on the part of the Mareal de Grammont,
I think."
"Ah!" said the queen to De Winter, "he is one of my faithful adherents; but
do you not observe, my dear lord, that we are so poorly served that it is le to my
daughter to fill the office of doorkeeper?"
"Madame, have pity on me," exclaimed De Winter; "you wring my heart!"
"And who is this cavalier, Henriea?" asked the queen.
cclxxi
"I saw him from the window, madame; he is a young man that appears scarce
sixteen years of age, and is called the Viscount de Bragelonne."
e queen, smiling, made a sign with her head; the young princess opened
the door and Raoul appeared on the threshold.
Advancing a few steps toward the queen, he knelt down.
"Madame," said he, "I bear to your majesty a leer from my friend the Count
de Guie, who told me he had the honor of being your servant; this leer contains
important news and the expression of his respect."
At the name of the Count de Guie a blush spread over the eeks of the
young princess and the queen glanced at her with some degree of severity.
"You told me that the leer was from the Mareal de Grammont, Henriea!"
said the queen.
"I thought so, madame," stammered the young girl.
"It is my fault, madame," said Raoul. "I did announce myself, in truth, as
coming on the part of the Mareal de Grammont; but being wounded in the right
arm he was unable to write and therefore the Count de Guie acted as his secretary."
"ere has been fighting, then?" asked the queen, motioning to Raoul to rise.
"Yes, madame," said the young man.
At this announcement of a bale having taken place, the princess opened her
mouth as though to ask a question of interest; but her lips closed again without
articulating a word, while the color gradually faded from her eeks.
e queen saw this, and doubtless her maternal heart translated the emotion,
for addressing Raoul again:
"And no evil has happened to the young Count de Guie?" she asked; "for
not only is he our servant, as you say, sir, but more--he is one of our friends."
"No, madame," replied Raoul; "on the contrary, he gained great glory and had
the honor of being embraced by his highness, the prince, on the field of bale."
e young princess clapped her hands; and then, ashamed of having been
betrayed into su a demonstration of joy, she half turned away and bent over a
vase of roses, as if to inhale their odor.
"Let us see," said the queen, "what the count says." And she opened the leer
and read:
"Madame,--Being unable to have the honor of writing to you myself, by rea-
son of a wound I have received in my right hand, I have commanded my son, the
Count de Guie, who, with his father, is equally your humble servant, to write
to tell you that we have just gained the bale of Lens, and that this victory can-
not fail to give great power to Cardinal Mazarin and to the queen over the affairs
of Europe. If her majesty will have faith in my counsels she ought to profit by this
event to address at this moment, in favor of her august husband, the court of France.
e Vicomte de Bragelonne, who will have the honor of remiing this leer to your
cclxxii
majesty, is the friend of my son, who owes to him his life; he is a gentleman in whom
your majesty may confide entirely, in case your majesty may have some verbal or
wrien order to remit to me.
"I have the honor to be, with respect, etc.,
"Mareal de Grammont."
At the moment mention occurred of his having rendered a service to the
count, Raoul could not help turning his glance toward the young princess, and then
he saw in her eyes an expression of infinite gratitude to the young man; he no longer
doubted that the daughter of King Charles I. loved his friend.
"e bale of Lens gained!" said the queen; "they are luy here indeed; they
can gain bales! Yes, the Mareal de Grammont is right; this will ange the aspect
of Fren affairs, but I mu fear it will do nothing for English, even if it does not
harm them. is is recent news, sir," continued she, "and I thank you for having
made su haste to bring it to me; without this leer I should not have heard till
to-morrow, perhaps aer to-morrow--the last of all Paris."
"Madame," said Raoul, "the Louvre is but the second palace this news has
reaed; it is as yet unknown to all, and I had sworn to the Count de Guie to
remit this leer to your majesty before even I should embrace my guardian."
"Your guardian! is he, too, a Bragelonne?" asked Lord de Winter. "I once knew
a Bragelonne--is he still alive?"
"No, sir, he is dead; and I believe it is from him my guardian, whose near
relation he was, inherited the estate from whi I take my name."
"And your guardian, sir," asked the queen, who could not help feeling some
interest in the handsome young man before her, "what is his name?"
"e Comte de la Fere, madame," replied the young man, bowing.
De Winter made a gesture of surprise and the queen turned to him with a
start of joy.
"e Comte de la Fere!" she cried. "Have you not mentioned that name to
me?"
As for De Winter he could scarcely believe that he had heard aright. "e
Comte de la Fere!" he cried in his turn. "Oh, sir, reply, I entreat you--is not the
Comte de la Fere a noble whom I remember, handsome and brave, a musketeer
under Louis XIII., who must be now about forty-seven or forty-eight years of age?"
"Yes, sir, you are right in every particular!"
"And who served under an assumed name?"
"Under the name of Athos. Laerly I heard his friend, Monsieur d'Artagnan,
give him that name."
"at is it, madame, that is the same. God be praised! And he is in Paris?" con-
tinued he, addressing Raoul; then turning to the queen: "We may still hope. Provi-
dence has declared for us, since I have found this brave man again in so miraculous
cclxxiii
T horse and servant belonging to De Winter were waiting for him at the door;
he proceeded toward his abode very thoughtfully, looking behind him from
time to him to contemplate the dark and silent frontage of the Louvre. It was then
that he saw a horseman, as it were, deta himself from the wall and follow him
at a lile distance. In leaving the Palais Royal he remembered to have observed a
similar shadow.
"Tony," he said, motioning to his groom to approa.
"Here I am, my lord."
"Did you remark that man who is following us?"
"Yes, my lord."
"Who is he?"
"I do not know, only he has followed your grace from the Palais Royal, stopped
at the Louvre to wait for you, and now leaves the Louvre with you."
"Some spy of the cardinal," said De Winter to him, aside. "Let us pretend not
to notice that he is wating us."
And spurring on he plunged into the labyrinth of streets whi led to his hotel,
situated near the Marais, for having for so long a time lived near the Place Royale,
Lord de Winter naturally returned to lodge near his ancient dwelling.
e unknown spurred his horse to a gallop.
De Winter dismounted at his hotel and went up into his apartment, intending
to wat the spy; but as he was about to place his gloves and hat on a table, he
saw reflected in a glass opposite to him a figure whi stood on the threshold of the
room. He turned around and Mordaunt stood before him.
ere was a moment of frozen silence between these two.
"Sir," said De Winter, "I thought I had already made you aware that I am weary
of this persecution; withdraw, then, or I shall call and have you turned out as you
were in London. I am not your uncle, I know you not."
"My uncle," replied Mordaunt, with his harsh and bantering tone, "you are
mistaken; you will not have me turned out this time as you did in London--you
cclxxv
dare not. As for denying that I am your nephew, you will think twice about it, now
that I have learned some things of whi I was ignorant a year ago."
"And how does it concern me what you have learned?" said De Winter.
"Oh, it concerns you very closely, my uncle, I am sure, and you will soon
be of my opinion," added he, with a smile whi sent a shudder through the veins
of him he thus addressed. "When I presented myself before you for the first time
in London, it was to ask you what had become of my fortune; the second time it
was to demand who had sullied my name; and this time I come before you to ask
a question far more terrible than any other, to say to you as God said to the first
murderer: 'Cain, what hast thou done to thy brother Abel?' My lord, what have
you done with your sister--your sister, who was my mother?"
De Winter shrank ba from the fire of those scoring eyes.
"Your mother?" he said.
"Yes, my lord, my mother," replied the young man, advancing into the room
until he was face to face with Lord de Winter, and crossing his arms. "I have asked
the headsman of Bethune," he said, his voice hoarse and his face livid with passion
and grief. "And the headsman of Bethune gave me a reply."
De Winter fell ba in a air as though stru by a thunderbolt and in vain
aempted a reply.
"Yes," continued the young man; "all is now explained; with this key I open the
abyss. My mother inherited an estate from her husband, you have assassinated her;
my name would have secured me the paternal estate, you have deprived me of it;
you have despoiled me of my fortune. I am no longer astonished that you knew me
not. I am not surprised that you refused to recognize me. When a man is a robber
it is hard to call him nephew whom he has impoverished; when one is a murderer,
to recognize the man whom one has made an orphan."
ese words produced a contrary effect to that whi Mordaunt had antici-
pated. De Winter remembered the monster that Milady had been; he rose, dignified
and calm, restraining by the severity of his look the wild glance of the young man.
"You desire to fathom this horrible secret?" said De Winter; "well, then, so
be it. Know, then, what manner of woman it was for whom to-day you call me
to account. at woman had, in all probability, poisoned my brother, and in order
to inherit from me she was about to assassinate me in my turn. I have proof of it.
What say you to that?"
"I say that she was my mother."
"She caused the unfortunate Duke of Buingham to be stabbed by a man who
was, ere that, honest, good and pure. What say you to that crime, of whi I have
the proof?"
"She was my mother."
"On our return to France she had a young woman who was aaed to one of
cclxxvi
her opponents poisoned in the convent of the Augustines at Bethune. Will this crime
persuade you of the justice of her punishment--for of all this I have the proofs?"
"She was my mother!" cried the young man, who uered these three succes-
sive exclamations with constantly increasing force.
"At last, arged with murders, with debauery, hated by every one and yet
threatening still, like a panther thirsting for blood, she fell under the blows of men
whom she had rendered desperate, though they had never done her the least injury;
she met with judges whom her hideous crimes had evoked; and that executioner
you saw--that executioner who you say told you everything--that executioner, if
he told you everything, told you that he leaped with joy in avenging on her his
brother's shame and suicide. Depraved as a girl, adulterous as a wife, an unnatural
sister, homicide, poisoner, execrated by all who knew her, by every nation that had
been visited by her, she died accursed by Heaven and earth."
A sob whi Mordaunt could not repress burst from his throat and his livid
face became suffused with blood; he clened his fists, sweat covered his face, his
hair, like Hamlet's, stood on end, and raed with fury he cried out:
"Silence, sir! she was my mother! Her crimes, I know them not; her disorders,
I know them not; her vices, I know them not. But this I know, that I had a mother,
that five men leagued against one woman, murdered her clandestinely by night--
silently--like cowards. I know that you were one of them, my uncle, and that you
cried louder than the others: 'She must die.' erefore I warn you, and listen well
to my words, that they may be engraved upon your memory, never to be forgoen:
this murder, whi has robbed me of everything--this murder, whi has deprived
me of my name--this murder, whi has impoverished me--this murder, whi has
made me corrupt, wied, implacable--I shall summon you to account for it first
and then those who were your accomplices, when I discover them!"
With hatred in his eyes, foaming at his mouth, and his fist extended, Mordaunt
had advanced one more step, a threatening, terrible step, toward De Winter. e
laer put his hand to his sword, and said, with the smile of a man who for thirty
years has jested with death:
"Would you assassinate me, sir? en I shall recognize you as my nephew,
for you would be a worthy son of su a mother."
"No," replied Mordaunt, forcing his features and the muscles of his body to
resume their usual places and be calm; "no, I shall not kill you; at least not at this
moment, for without you I could not discover the others. But when I have found
them, then tremble, sir. I stabbed to the heart the headsman of Bethune, without
mercy or pity, and he was the least guilty of you all."
With these words the young man went out and descended the stairs with
sufficient calmness to pass unobserved; then upon the lowest landing place he passed
Tony, leaning over the balustrade, waiting only for a call from his master to mount
cclxxvii
to his room.
But De Winter did not call; crushed, enfeebled, he remained standing and
with listening ear; then only when he had heard the step of the horse going away
he fell ba on a air, saying:
"My God, I thank ee that he knows me only."
. Paternal Affection.
W this terrible scene was passing at Lord de Winter's, Athos, seated near
his window, his elbow on the table and his head supported on his hand, was
listening intently to Raoul's account of the adventures he met with on his journey
and the details of the bale.
Listening to the relation of those emotions so fresh and pure, the fine, noble
face of Athos betrayed indescribable pleasure; he inhaled the tones of that young
voice, as harmonious music. He forgot all that was dark in the past and that was
cloudy in the future. It almost seemed as if the return of this mu loved boy had
anged his fears to hopes. Athos was happy--happy as he had never been before.
"And you assisted and took part in this great bale, Bragelonne!" cried the
former musketeer.
"Yes, sir."
"And it was a fierce one?"
"His highness the prince arged eleven times in person."
"He is a great commander, Bragelonne."
"He is a hero, sir. I did not lose sight of him for an instant. Oh! how fine it is
to be called Conde and to be so worthy of su a name!"
"He was calm and radiant, was he not?"
"As calm as at parade, radiant as at a fete. When we went up to the enemy
it was slowly; we were forbidden to draw first and we were maring toward the
Spaniards, who were on a height with lowered muskets. When we arrived about
thirty paces from them the prince turned around to the soldiers: 'Comrades,' he said,
'you are about to suffer a furious disarge; but aer that you will make short work
with those fellows.' ere was su dead silence that friends and enemies could
have heard these words; then raising his sword, 'Sound trumpets!' he cried."
"Well, very good; you will do as mu when the opportunity occurs, will you,
Raoul?"
"I know not, sir, but I thought it really very fine and grand!"
"Were you afraid, Raoul?" asked the count.
cclxxix
"Yes, sir," replied the young man naively; "I felt a great ill at my heart, and
at the word 'fire,' whi resounded in Spanish from the enemy's ranks, I closed my
eyes and thought of you."
"In honest truth, Raoul?" said Athos, pressing his hand.
"Yes, sir; at that instant there was su a rataplan of musketry that one might
have imagined the infernal regions had opened. ose who were not killed felt
the heat of the flames. I opened my eyes, astonished to find myself alive and even
unhurt; a third of the squadron were lying on the ground, wounded, dead or dying.
At that moment I encountered the eye of the prince. I had but one thought and that
was that he was observing me. I spurred on and found myself in the enemy's ranks."
"And the prince was pleased with you?"
"He told me so, at least, sir, when he desired me to return to Paris with Mon-
sieur de Chatillon, who was arged to carry the news to the queen and to bring
the colors we had taken. 'Go,' said he; 'the enemy will not rally for fieen days and
until that time I have no need of your service. Go and see those whom you love
and who love you, and tell my sister De Longueville that I thank her for the present
that she made me of you.' And I came, sir," added Raoul, gazing at the count with a
smile of real affection, "for I thought you would be glad to see me again."
Athos drew the young man toward him and pressed his lips to his brow, as
he would have done to a young daughter.
"And now, Raoul," said he, "you are launed; you have dukes for friends, a
marshal of France for godfather, a prince of the blood as commander, and on the day
of your return you have been received by two queens; it is not so bad for a novice."
"Oh sir," said Raoul, suddenly, "you recall something, whi, in my haste to
relate my exploits, I had forgoen; it is that there was with Her Majesty the een of
England, a gentleman who, when I pronounced your name, uered a cry of surprise
and joy; he said he was a friend of yours, asked your address, and is coming to see
you."
"What is his name?"
"I did not venture to ask, sir; he spoke elegantly, although I thought from his
accent he was an Englishman."
"Ah!" said Athos, leaning down his head as if to remember who it could be.
en, when he raised it again, he was stru by the presence of a man who was
standing at the open door and was gazing at him with a compassionate air.
"Lord de Winter!" exclaimed the count.
"Athos, my friend!"
And the two gentlemen were for an instant loed in ea other's arms; then
Athos, looking into his friend's face and taking him by both hands, said:
"What ails you, my lord? you appear as unhappy as I am the reverse."
"Yes, truly, dear friend; and I may even say the sight of you increases my
cclxxx
dismay."
And De Winter glancing around him, Raoul quily understood that the two
friends wished to be alone and he therefore le the room unaffectedly.
"Come, now that we are alone," said Athos, "let us talk of yourself."
"Whilst we are alone let us speak of ourselves," replied De Winter. "He is here."
"Who?"
"Milady's son."
Athos, again stru by this name, whi seemed to pursue him like an eo,
hesitated for a moment, then slightly kniing his brows, he calmly said:
"I know it, Grimaud met him between Bethune and Arras and then came here
to warn me of his presence."
"Does Grimaud know him, then?"
"No; but he was present at the deathbed of a man who knew him."
"e headsman of Bethune?" exclaimed De Winter.
"You know about that?" cried Athos, astonished.
"He has just le me," replied De Winter, "aer telling me all. Ah! my friend!
what a horrible scene! Why did we not destroy the ild with the mother?"
"What need you fear?" said Athos, recovering from the instinctive fear he had
at first experienced, by the aid of reason; "are we not men accustomed to defend
ourselves? Is this young man an assassin by profession--a murderer in cold blood?
He has killed the executioner of Bethune in an access of passion, but now his fury
is assuaged."
De Winter smiled sorrowfully and shook his head.
"Do you not know the race?" said he.
"Pooh!" said Athos, trying to smile in his turn. "It must have lost its ferocity in
the second generation. Besides, my friend, Providence has warned us, that we may
be on our guard. All we can now do is to wait. Let us wait; and, as I said before, let
us speak of yourself. What brings you to Paris?"
"Affairs of importance whi you shall know later. But what is this that I hear
from Her Majesty the een of England? Monsieur d'Artagnan sides with Mazarin!
Pardon my frankness, dear friend. I neither hate nor blame the cardinal, and your
opinions will be held ever sacred by me. But do you happen to belong to him?"
"Monsieur d'Artagnan," replied Athos, "is in the service; he is a soldier and
obeys all constitutional authority. Monsieur d'Artagnan is not ri and has need of
his position as lieutenant to enable him to live. Millionaires like yourself, my lord,
are rare in France."
"Alas!" said De Winter, "I am at this moment as poor as he is, if not poorer.
But to return to our subject."
"Well, then, you wish to know if I am of Mazarin's party? No. Pardon my
frankness, too, my lord."
cclxxxi
"I am obliged to you, count, for this pleasing intelligence! You make me young
and happy again by it. Ah! so you are not a Mazarinist? Delightful! Indeed, you
could not belong to him. But pardon me, are you free? I mean to ask if you are
married?"
"Ah! as to that, no," replied Athos, laughing.
"Because that young man, so handsome, so elegant, so polished----"
"Is a ild I have adopted and who does not even know who was his father."
"Very well; you are always the same, Athos, great and generous. Are you still
friends with Monsieur Porthos and Monsieur Aramis?"
"Add Monsieur d'Artagnan, my lord. We still remain four friends devoted to
ea other; but when it becomes a question of serving the cardinal or of fighting
him, of being Mazarinists or Frondists, then we are only two."
"Is Monsieur Aramis with D'Artagnan?" asked Lord de Winter.
"No," said Athos; "Monsieur Aramis does me the honor to share my opinions."
"Could you put me in communication with your wiy and agreeable friend?
Is he mu anged?"
"He has become an abbe, that is all."
"You alarm me; his profession must have made him renounce any great un-
dertakings."
"On the contrary," said Athos, smiling, "he has never been so mu a muske-
teer as since he became an abbe, and you will find him a veritable soldier."
"Could you engage to bring him to me to-morrow morning at ten o'clo, on
the Pont du Louvre?"
"Oh, oh!" exclaimed Athos, smiling, "you have a duel in prospect."
"Yes, count, and a splendid duel, too; a duel in whi I hope you will take your
part."
"Where are we to go, my lord?"
"To Her Majesty the een of England, who has desired me to present you to
her."
"is is an enigma," said Athos, "but it maers not; since you know the solu-
tion of it I ask no further. Will your lordship do me the honor to sup with me?"
"anks, count, no," replied De Winter. "I own to you that that young man's
visit has subdued my appetite and probably will rob me of my sleep. What under-
taking can have brought him to Paris? It was not to meet me that he came, for he
was ignorant of my journey. is young man terrifies me, my lord; there lies in him
a sanguinary predisposition."
"What occupies him in England?"
"He is one of Cromwell's most enthusiastic disciples."
"But what aaed him to the cause? His father and mother were Catholics,
I believe?"
cclxxxii
"His hatred of the king, who deprived him of his estates and forbade him to
bear the name of De Winter."
"And what name does he now bear?"
"Mordaunt."
"A Puritan, yet disguised as a monk he travels alone in France."
"Do you say as a monk?"
"It was thus, and by mere accident--may God pardon me if I blaspheme--that
he heard the confession of the executioner of Bethune."
"en I understand it all! he has been sent by Cromwell to Mazarin, and the
queen guessed rightly; we have been forestalled. Everything is clear to me now.
Adieu, count, till to-morrow."
"But the night is dark," said Athos, perceiving that Lord de Winter seemed
more uneasy than he wished to appear; "and you have no servant."
"I have Tony, a safe if simple youth."
"Halloo, there, Grimaud, Olivain, and Blaisois! call the viscount and take the
musket with you."
Blaisois was the tall youth, half groom, half peasant, whom we saw at the
Chateau de Bragelonne, whom Athos had ristened by the name of his province.
"Viscount," said Athos to Raoul, as he entered, "you will conduct my lord as
far as his hotel and permit no one to approa him."
"Oh! count," said De Winter, "for whom do you take me?"
"For a stranger who does not know Paris," said Athos, "and to whom the vis-
count will show the way."
De Winter shook him by the hand.
"Grimaud," said Athos, "put yourself at the head of the troop and beware of
the monk."
Grimaud shuddered, and nodding, awaited the departure, regarding the bu
of his musket with silent eloquence. en obeying the orders given him by Athos,
he headed the small procession, bearing the tor in one hand and the musket in the
other, until it reaed De Winter's inn, when pounding on the portal with his fist,
he bowed to my lord and faced about without a word.
e same order was followed in returning, nor did Grimaud's searing glance
discover anything of a suspicious appearance, save a dark shadow, as it were, in
ambuscade, at the corner of the Rue Guenegaud and of the ai. He fancied, also,
that in going he had already observed the street water who had aracted his
aention. He pushed on toward him, but before he could rea it the shadow had
disappeared into an alley, into whi Grimaud deemed it scarcely prudent to pursue
it.
e next day, on awaking, the count perceived Raoul by his bedside. e
young man was already dressed and was reading a new book by M. Chapelain.
cclxxxiii
wating Raoul mount, a groom rode up from the Duess de Chevreuse. He was
arged to tell the Comte de la Fere, that she had learned of the return of her youth-
ful protege, and also the manner he had conducted himself on the field, and she
added that she should be very glad to offer him her congratulations.
"Tell her grace," replied Athos, "that the viscount has just mounted his horse
to proceed to the Hotel de Luynes."
en, with renewed instructions to Grimaud, Athos signified to Raoul that he
could set out, and ended by reflecting that it was perhaps beer that Raoul should
be away from Paris at that moment.
. Another een in Want of
Help.
A had not failed to send early to Aramis and had given his leer to Blaisois,
the only serving-man whom he had le. Blaisois found Bazin donning his
beadle's gown, his services being required that day at Notre Dame.
Athos had desired Blaisois to try to speak to Aramis himself. Blaisois, a tall,
simple youth, who understood nothing but what he was expressly told, asked, there-
fore for the Abbe d'Herblay, and in spite of Bazin's assurances that his master was
not at home, he persisted in su a manner as to put Bazin into a passion. Blaisois
seeing Bazin in clerical guise, was a lile discomposed at his denials and wanted to
pass at all risks, believing too, that the man with whom he had to do was endowed
with the virtues of his cloth, namely, patience and Christian arity.
But Bazin, still the servant of a musketeer, when once the blood mounted to
his fat eeks, seized a broomsti and began belaboring Blaisois, saying:
"You have insulted the ur, my friend, you have insulted the ur!"
At this moment Aramis, aroused by this unusual disturbance, cautiously
opened the door of his room; and Blaisois, looking reproafully at the Cerberus,
drew the leer from his poet and presented it to Aramis.
"From the Comte de la Fere," said Aramis. "All right." And he retired into his
room without even asking the cause of so mu noise.
Blaisois returned disconsolate to the Hotel of the Grand Roi Charlemagne and
when Athos inquired if his commission was executed, he related his adventure.
"You foolish fellow!" said Athos, laughing. "And you did not tell him that you
came from me?"
"No, sir."
At ten o'clo Athos, with his habitual exactitude, was waiting on the Pont
du Louvre and was almost immediately joined by Lord de Winter.
ey waited ten minutes and then his lordship began to fear Aramis was not
coming to join them.
cclxxxvi
"Patience," said Athos, whose eyes were fixed in the direction of the Rue du
Bac, "patience; I see an abbe cuffing a man, then bowing to a woman; it must be
Aramis."
It was indeed Aramis. Having run against a young shopkeeper who was gap-
ing at the crows and who had splashed him, Aramis with one blow of his fist had
distanced him ten paces.
At this moment one of his penitents passed, and as she was young and prey
Aramis took off his cap to her with his most gracious smile.
A most affectionate greeting, as one can well believe took place between him
and Lord de Winter.
"Where are we going?" inquired Aramis; "are we going to fight, perance? I
carry no sword this morning and cannot return home to procure one."
"No," said Lord de Winter, "we are going to pay a visit to Her Majesty the
een of England."
"Oh, very well," replied Aramis; then bending his face down to Athos's ear,
"what is the object of this visit?" continued he.
"Nay, I know not; some evidence required from us, perhaps."
"May it not be about that cursed affair?" asked Aramis, "in whi case I do
not greatly care to go, for it will be to poet a lecture; and since it is my function
to give them to others I am rather averse to receiving them myself."
"If it were so," answered Athos, "we should not be taken there by Lord de
Winter, for he would come in for his share; he was one of us."
"You're right; yes, let us go."
On arriving at the Louvre Lord de Winter entered first; indeed, there was but
one porter there to receive them at the gate.
It was impossible in daylight for the impoverished state of the habitation
grudging arity had conceded to an unfortunate queen to pass unnoticed by Athos,
Aramis, and even the Englishman. Large rooms, completely stripped of furniture,
bare walls upon whi, here and there, shone the old gold moldings whi had
resisted time and neglect, windows with broken panes (impossible to close), no car-
pets, neither guards nor servants: this is what first met the eyes of Athos, to whi
he, touing his companion's elbow, directed his aention by his glances.
"Mazarin is beer lodged," said Aramis.
"Mazarin is almost king," answered Athos; "Madame Henriea is almost no
longer queen."
"If you would condescend to be clever, Athos," observed Aramis, "I really do
think you would be wiier than poor Monsieur de Voiture."
Athos smiled.
e queen appeared to be impatiently expecting them, for at the first slight
noise she heard in the hall leading to her room she came herself to the door to receive
cclxxxvii
be accorded him.
"Well?" asked Athos, when he had closed the leer.
"Well," said the queen, "it has been refused."
e two friends exanged a smile of contempt.
"And now," said Athos, "what is to be done? I have the honor to inquire from
your majesty what you desire Monsieur d'Herblay and myself to do in your service.
We are ready."
"Ah, sir, you have a noble heart!" exclaimed the queen, with a burst of grat-
itude; whilst Lord de Winter turned to her with a glance whi said, "Did I not
answer for them?"
"But you, sir?" said the queen to Aramis.
"I, madame," replied he, "follow Monsieur de la Fere wherever he leads, even
were it on to death, without demanding wherefore; but when it concerns your
majesty's service, then," added he, looking at the queen with all the grace of for-
mer days, "I precede the count."
"Well, then, gentlemen," said the queen, "since it is thus, and since you are
willing to devote yourselves to the service of a poor princess whom the whole world
has abandoned, this is what is required to be done for me. e king is alone with a
few gentlemen, whom he fears to lose every day; surrounded by the Scot, whom
he distrusts, although he be himself a Scotman. Since Lord de Winter le him
I am distracted, sirs. I ask mu, too mu, perhaps, for I have no title to request
it. Go to England, join the king, be his friends, protectors, mar to bale at his
side, and be near him in his house, where conspiracies, more dangerous than the
perils of war, are hating every day. And in exange for the sacrifice that you
make, gentlemen, I promise--not to reward you, I believe that word would offend
you--but to love you as a sister, to prefer you, next to my husband and my ildren,
to every one. I swear it before Heaven."
And the queen raised her eyes solemnly upward.
"Madame," said Athos, "when must we set out?"
"You consent then?" exclaimed the queen, joyfully.
"Yes, madame; only it seems to me that your majesty goes too far in engaging
to load us with a friendship so far above our merit. We render service to God,
madame, in serving a prince so unfortunate, a queen so virtuous. Madame, we are
yours, body and soul."
"Oh, sirs," said the queen, moved even to tears, "this is the first time for five
years I have felt the least approa to joy or hope. God, who can read my heart, all
the gratitude I feel, will reward you! Save my husband! Save the king, and although
you care not for the price that is placed upon a good action in this world, leave me
the hope that we shall meet again, when I may be able to thank you myself. In
the meantime, I remain here. Have you anything to ask of me? From this moment
cclxxxix
I become your friend, and since you are engaged in my affairs I ought to occupy
myself in yours."
"Madame," replied Athos, "I have only to ask your majesty's prayers."
"And I," said Aramis, "I am alone in the world and have only your majesty to
serve."
e queen held out her hand, whi they kissed, and she said in a low tone to
De Winter:
"If you need money, my lord, separate the jewels I have given you; deta
the diamonds and sell them to some Jew. You will receive for them fiy or sixty
thousand francs; spend them if necessary, but let these gentlemen be treated as they
deserve, that is to say, like kings."
e queen had two leers ready, one wrien by herself, the other by her
daughter, the Princess Henriea. Both were addressed to King Charles. She gave
the first to Athos and the other to Aramis, so that should they be separated by ance
they might make themselves known to the king; aer whi they withdrew.
At the foot of the staircase De Winter stopped.
"Not to arouse suspicions, gentlemen," said he, "go your way and I will go
mine, and this evening at nine o'clo we will assemble again at the Gate Saint
Denis. We will travel on horseba as far as our horses can go and aerward we
can take the post. Once more, let me thank you, my good friends, both in my own
name and the queen's."
e three gentlemen then shook hands, Lord de Winter taking the Rue Saint
Honore, and Athos and Aramis remaining together.
"Well," said Aramis, when they were alone, "what do you think of this busi-
ness, my dear count?"
"Bad," replied Athos, "very bad."
"But you received it with enthusiasm."
"As I shall ever receive the defense of a great principle, my dear D'Herblay.
Monars are only strong by the assistance of the aristocracy, but aristocracy cannot
survive without the countenance of monars. Let us, then, support monary, in
order to support ourselves.
"We shall be murdered there," said Aramis. "I hate the English--they are
coarse, like every nation that swills beer."
"Would it be beer to remain here," said Athos, "and take a turn in the Bastile
or the dungeon of Vincennes for having favored the escape of Monsieur de Beaufort?
I'faith, Aramis, believe me, there is lile le to regret. We avoid imprisonment and
we play the part of heroes; the oice is easy."
"It is true; but in everything, friend, one must always return to the same
question--a stupid one, I admit, but very necessary--have you any money?"
"Something like a hundred pistoles, that my farmer sent to me the day before
ccxc
I le Bragelonne; but out of that sum I ought to leave fiy for Raoul--a young man
must live respectably. I have then about fiy pistoles. And you?"
"As for me, I am quite sure that aer turning out all my poets and emptying
my drawers I shall not find ten louis at home. Fortunately Lord de Winter is ri."
"Lord de Winter is ruined for the moment; Oliver Cromwell has annexed his
income resources."
"Now is the time when Baron Porthos would be useful."
"Now it is that I regret D'Artagnan."
"Let us entice them away."
"is secret, Aramis, does not belong to us; take my advice, then, and let no
one into our confidence. And moreover, in taking su a step we should appear to
be doubtful of ourselves. Let us regret their absence to ourselves for our own sakes,
but not speak of it."
"You are right; but what are you going to do until this evening? I have two
things to postpone."
"And what are they?"
"First, a thrust with the coadjutor, whom I met last night at Madame de Ram-
bouillet's and whom I found particular in his remarks respecting me."
"Oh, fie--a quarrel between priests, a duel between allies!"
"What can I do, friend? he is a bully and so am I; his casso is a burden to
him and I imagine I have had enough of mine; in fact, there is so mu resemblance
between us that I sometimes believe he is Aramis and I am the coadjutor. is kind
of life fatigues and oppresses me; besides, he is a turbulent fellow, who will ruin our
party. I am convinced that if I gave him a box on the ear, su as I gave this morning
to the lile citizen who splashed me, it would ange the appearance of things."
"And I, my dear Aramis," quietly replied Athos, "I think it would only ange
Monsieur de Retz's appearance. Take my advice, leave things just as they are; be-
sides, you are neither of you now your own masters; he belongs to the Fronde and
you to the queen of England. So, if the second maer whi you regret being unable
to aend to is not more important than the first----"
"Oh! that is of the first importance."
"Aend to it, then, at once."
"Unfortunately, it is a thing that I can't perform at any time I oose. It was
arranged for the evening and no other time will serve."
"I understand," said Athos smiling, "midnight."
"About that time."
"But, my dear fellow, those are things that bear postponement and you must
put it off, especially with so good an excuse to give on your return----"
"Yes, if I return."
"If you do not return, how does it concern you? Be reasonable. Come, you
ccxci
"Wait," said Bazin, striking a flint, and seing afire a twisted wax-light, with
whi he started the ur candles. us illumined, Aramis read the following
epistle:
"My dear D'Herblay,--I learned from D'Artagnan who has embraced me on
the part of the Comte de la Fere and yourself, that you are seing out on a journey
whi may perhaps last two or three months; as I know that you do not like to ask
money of your friends I offer you some of my own accord. Here are two hundred
pistoles, whi you can dispose of as you wish and return to me when opportunity
occurs. Do not fear that you put me to inconvenience; if I want money I can send
for some to any of my ateaux; at Bracieux alone, I have twenty thousand francs
in gold. So, if I do not send you more it is because I fear you would not accept a
larger sum.
"I address you, because you know, that although I esteem him from my heart
I am a lile awed by the Comte de la Fere; but it is understood that what I offer you
I offer him at the same time.
"I am, as I trust you do not doubt, your devoted
"Du Vallon de Bracieux de Pierrefonds."
"Well," said Aramis, "what do you say to that?"
"I say, my dear D'Herblay, that it is almost sacrilege to distrust Providence
when one has su friends, and therefore we will divide the pistoles from Porthos,
as we divided the louis sent by D'Artagnan."
e division being made by the light of Bazin's taper, the two friends contin-
ued their road and a quarter of an hour later they had joined De Winter at the Porte
Saint Denis.
. In whi it is proved that
first Impulses are oentimes
the best.
T three gentlemen took the road to Picardy, a road so well known to them and
whi recalled to Athos and Aramis some of the most picturesque adventures
of their youth.
"If Mousqueton were with us," observed Athos, on reaing the spot where
they had had a dispute with the paviers, "how he would tremble at passing this! Do
you remember, Aramis, that it was here he received that famous bullet wound?"
"By my faith, 'twould be excusable in him to tremble," replied Aramis, "for
even I feel a shudder at the recollection; hold, just above that tree is the lile spot
where I thought I was killed."
It was soon time for Grimaud to recall the past. Arriving before the inn at
whi his master and himself had made su an enormous repast, he approaed
Athos and said, showing him the airhole of the cellar:
"Sausages!"
Athos began to laugh, for this juvenile escapade of his appeared to be as amus-
ing as if some one had related it of another person.
At last, aer traveling two days and a night, they arrived at Boulogne toward
the evening, favored by magnificent weather. Boulogne was a strong position, then
almost a deserted town, built entirely on the heights; what is now called the lower
town did not then exist.
"Gentlemen," said De Winter, on reaing the gate of the town, "let us do here
as at Paris--let us separate to avoid suspicion. I know an inn, lile frequented, but
of whi the host is entirely devoted to me. I will go there, where I expect to find
leers, and you go to the first tavern in the town, to L'Epee du Grand Henri for
ccxcv
instance, refresh yourselves, and in two hours be upon the jey; our boat is waiting
for us there."
e maer being thus decided, the two friends found, about two hundred
paces further, the tavern indicated. eir horses were fed, but not unsaddled; the
grooms supped, for it was already late, and their two masters, impatient to return,
appointed a place of meeting with them on the jey and desired them on no account
to exange a word with any one. It is needless to say that this caution concerned
Blaisois alone--long enough since it had been a useless one to Grimaud.
Athos and Aramis walked down toward the port. From their dress, covered
with dust, and from a certain easy manner by means of whi a man accustomed to
travel is always recognizable, the two friends excited the aention of a few prom-
enaders. ere was more especially one upon whom their arrival had produced a
decided impression. is man, whom they had noticed from the first for the same
reason they had themselves been remarked by others, was walking in a listless way
up and down the jey. From the moment he perceived them he did not cease to
look at them and seemed to burn with the wish to speak to them.
On reaing the jey Athos and Aramis stopped to look at a lile boat made
fast to a pile and ready rigged as if waiting to start.
"at is doubtless our boat," said Athos.
"Yes," replied Aramis, "and the sloop out there making ready to sail must be
that whi is to take us to our destination; now," continued he, "if only De Winter
does not keep us waiting. It is not at all amusing here; there is not a single woman
passing."
"Hush!" said Athos, "we are overheard."
In truth, the walker, who, during the observations of the two friends, had
passed and repassed behind them several times, stopped at the name of De Winter;
but as his face betrayed no emotion at mention of this name, it might have been by
ance he stood so still.
"Gentlemen," said the man, who was young and pale, bowing with ease and
courtesy, "pardon my curiosity, but I see you come from Paris, or at least that you
are strangers at Boulogne."
"We come from Paris, yes," replied Athos, with the same courtesy; "what is
there we can do for you?"
"Sir," said the young man, "will you be so good as to tell me if it be true that
Cardinal Mazarin is no longer minister?"
"at is a strange question," said Aramis.
"He is and he is not," replied Athos; "that is to say, he is dismissed by one-half
of France, but by intrigues and promises he makes the other half sustain him; you
will perceive that this may last a long time."
"However, sir," said the stranger, "he has neither fled nor is in prison?"
ccxcvi
the sun had le a single golden cloud, whi, dipping into the ocean, appeared by
degrees to be extinguished.
"Probably," said Athos.
"Diable!" resumed Aramis, "I have lile fancy for the sea by day, still less at
night; the sounds of wind and wave, the frightful movements of the vessel; I confess
I prefer the convent of Noisy."
Athos smiled sadly, for it was evident that he was thinking of other things as
he listened to his friend and moved toward De Winter.
"What ails our friend?" said Aramis, "he resembles one of Dante's damned,
whose ne Apollyon has dislocated and who are ever looking at their heels. What
the devil makes him glower thus behind him?"
When De Winter perceived them, in his turn he advanced toward them with
surprising rapidity.
"What is the maer, my lord?" said Athos, "and what puts you out of breath
thus?"
"Nothing," replied De Winter; "nothing; and yet in passing the heights it
seemed to me----" and he again turned round.
Athos glanced at Aramis.
"But let us go," continued De Winter; "let us be off; the boat must be waiting
for us and there is our sloop at anor--do you see it there? I wish I were on board
already," and he looked ba again.
"He has seen him," said Athos, in a low tone, to Aramis.
ey had reaed the ladder whi led to the boat. De Winter made the
grooms who carried the arms and the porters with the luggage descend first and
was about to follow them.
At this moment Athos perceived a man walking on the seashore parallel to the
jey, and hastening his steps, as if to rea the other side of the port, scarcely twenty
steps from the place of embarking. He fancied in the darkness that he recognized
the young man who had questioned him. Athos now descended the ladder in his
turn, without losing sight of the young man. e laer, to make a short cut, had
appeared on a sluice.
"He certainly bodes us no good," said Athos; "but let us embark; once out at
sea, let him come."
And Athos sprang into the boat, whi was immediately pushed off and whi
soon sped seawards under the efforts of four stalwart rowers.
But the young man had begun to follow, or rather to advance before the boat.
She was obliged to pass between the point of the jey, surmounted by a beacon just
lighted, and a ro whi jued out. ey saw him in the distance climbing the ro
in order to look down upon the boat as it passed.
"Ay, but," said Aramis, "that young fellow is decidedly a spy."
ccxcviii
T bustle whi had been observed by Henriea Maria and for whi she had
vainly sought to discover a reason, was occasioned by the bale of Lens, an-
nounced by the prince's messenger, the Duc de Chatillon, who had taken su a
noble part in the engagement; he was, besides, arged to hang five and twenty
flags, taken from the Lorraine party, as well as from the Spaniards, upon the ares
of Notre Dame.
Su news was decisive; it destroyed, in favor of the court, the struggle com-
menced with parliament. e motive given for all the taxes summarily imposed
and to whi the parliament had made opposition, was the necessity of sustaining
the honor of France and the uncertain hope of beating the enemy. Now, since the
affair of Nordlingen, they had experienced nothing but reverses; the parliament had
a plea for calling Mazarin to account for imaginary victories, always promised, ever
deferred; but this time there really had been fighting, a triumph and a complete
one. And this all knew so well that it was a double victory for the court, a victory
at home and abroad; so that even when the young king learned the news he ex-
claimed, "Ah, gentlemen of the parliament, we shall see what you will say now!"
Upon whi the queen had pressed the royal ild to her heart, whose haughty and
unruly sentiments were in su harmony with her own. A council was called on
the same evening, but nothing transpired of what had been decided on. It was only
known that on the following Sunday a Te Deum would be sung at Notre Dame in
honor of the victory of Lens.
e following Sunday, then, the Parisians arose with joy; at that period a Te
Deum was a grand affair; this kind of ceremony had not then been abused and it
produced a great effect. e shops were deserted, houses closed; every one wished
to see the young king with his mother, and the famous Cardinal Mazarin whom
they hated so mu that no one wished to be deprived of his presence. Moreover,
ccci
great liberty prevailed throughout the immense crowd; every opinion was openly
expressed and orused, so to speak, of coming insurrection, as the thousand bells
of all the Paris ures rang out the Te Deum. e police belonging to the city
being formed by the city itself, nothing threatening presented itself to disturb this
concert of universal hatred or freeze the frequent scoffs of slanderous lips.
Nevertheless, at eight o'clo in the morning the regiment of the queen's
guards, commanded by Guitant, under whom was his nephew Comminges, mared
publicly, preceded by drums and trumpets, filing off from the Palais Royal as far as
Notre Dame, a manoeuvre whi the Parisians witnessed tranquilly, delighted as
they were with military music and brilliant uniforms.
Friquet had put on his Sunday clothes, under the pretext of having a swollen
face whi he had managed to simulate by introducing a handful of erry kernels
into one side of his mouth, and had procured a whole holiday from Bazin. On
leaving Bazin, Friquet started off to the Palais Royal, where he arrived at the moment
of the turning out of the regiment of guards; and as he had only gone there for the
enjoyment of seeing it and hearing the music, he took his place at their head, beating
the drum on two pieces of slate and passing from that exercise to that of the trumpet,
whi he counterfeited quite naturally with his mouth in a manner whi had more
than once called forth the praises of amateurs of imitative harmony.
is amusement lasted from the Barriere des Sergens to the place of Notre
Dame, and Friquet found in it very real enjoyment; but when at last the regiment
separated, penetrated the heart of the city and placed itself at the extremity of the
Rue Saint Christophe, near the Rue Cocatrix, in whi Broussel lived, then Friquet
remembered that he had not had breakfast; and aer thinking in whi direction
he had beer turn his steps in order to accomplish this important act of the day, he
reflected deeply and decided that Councillor Broussel should bear the cost of this
repast.
In consequence he took to his heels, arrived breathlessly at the councillor's
door, and knoed violently.
His mother, the councillor's old servant, opened it.
"What doest thou here, good-for-nothing?" she said, "and why art thou not at
Notre Dame?"
"I have been there, mother," said Friquet, "but I saw things happen of whi
Master Broussel ought to be warned, and so with Monsieur Bazin's permission--you
know, mother, Monsieur Bazin, the verger--I came to speak to Monsieur Broussel."
"And what hast thou to say, boy, to Monsieur Broussel?"
"I wish to tell him," replied Friquet, screaming with all his might, "that there
is a whole regiment of guards coming this way. And as I hear everywhere that at
the court they are ill-disposed to him, I wish to warn him, that he may be on his
guard."
cccii
Broussel heard the scream of the young oddity, and, enanted with this ex-
cess of zeal, came down to the first floor, for he was, in truth, working in his room
on the second.
"Well," said he, "friend, what maers the regiment of guards to us, and art
thou not mad to make su a disturbance? Knowest thou not that it is the custom
of these soldiers to act thus and that it is usual for the regiment to form themselves
into two solid walls when the king goes by?"
Friquet counterfeited surprise, and twisting his new cap around in his fingers,
said:
"It is not astonishing for you to know it, Monsieur Broussel, who knows ev-
erything; but as for me, by holy truth, I did not know it and I thought I would give
you good advice; you must not be angry with me for that, Monsieur Broussel."
"On the contrary, my boy, on the contrary, I am pleased with your zeal. Dame
Nanee, look for those apricots whi Madame de Longueville sent to us yesterday
from Noisy and give half a dozen of them to your son, with a crust of new bread."
"Oh, thank you, sir, thank you, Monsieur Broussel," said Friquet; "I am so fond
of apricots!"
Broussel then proceeded to his wife's room and asked for breakfast; it was
nine o'clo. e councillor placed himself at the window; the street was completely
deserted, but in the distance was heard, like the noise of the tide rushing in, the deep
hum of the populous waves increasing now around Notre Dame.
is noise redoubled when D'Artagnan, with a company of musketeers, placed
himself at the gates of Notre Dame to secure the service of the ur. He had
instructed Porthos to profit by this opportunity to see the ceremony; and Porthos,
in full dress, mounted his finest horse, taking the part of supernumerary musketeer,
as D'Artagnan had so oen done formerly. e sergeant of this company, a veteran
of the Spanish wars, had recognized Porthos, his old companion, and very soon all
those who served under him were placed in possession of startling facts concerning
the honor of the ancient musketeers of Treville. Porthos had not only been well
received by the company, but he was moreover looked on with great admiration.
At ten o'clo the guns of the Louvre announced the departure of the king, and
then a movement, similar to that of trees in a stormy wind that bend and writhe
with agitated tops, ran though the multitude, whi was compressed behind the
immovable muskets of the guard. At last the king appeared with the queen in a
gilded ariot. Ten other carriages followed, containing the ladies of honor, the
officers of the royal household, and the court.
"God save the king!" was the cry in every direction; the young monar
gravely put his head out of the window, looked sufficiently grateful and even bowed;
at whi the cries of the multitude were renewed.
Just as the court was seling down in the cathedral, a carriage, bearing the
ccciii
arms of Comminges, quied the line of the court carriages and proceeded slowly
to the end of the Rue Saint Christophe, now entirely deserted. When it arrived
there, four guards and a police officer, who accompanied it, mounted into the heavy
maine and closed the shuers; then through an opening cautiously made, the
policeman began to wat the length of the Rue Cocatrix, as if he was waiting for
some one.
All the world was occupied with the ceremony, so that neither the ariot
nor the precautions taken by those who were within it had been observed. Friquet,
whose eye, ever on the alert, could alone have discovered them, had gone to devour
his apricots upon the entablature of a house in the square of Notre Dame. ence
he saw the king, the queen and Monsieur Mazarin, and heard the mass as well as if
he had been on duty.
Toward the end of the service, the queen, seeing Comminges standing near
her, waiting for a confirmation of the order she had given him before quiing the
Louvre, said in a whisper:
"Go, Comminges, and may God aid you!"
Comminges immediately le the ur and entered the Rue Saint Christophe.
Friquet, seeing this fine officer thus walk away, followed by two guards, amused
himself by pursuing them and did this so mu the more gladly as the ceremony
ended at that instant and the king remounted his carriage.
Hardly had the police officer observed Comminges at the end of the Rue Co-
catrix when he said one word to the coaman, who at once put his vehicle into
motion and drove up before Broussel's door. Comminges knoed at the door at the
same moment, and Friquet was waiting behind Comminges until the door should
be opened.
"What dost thou there, rascal?" asked Comminges.
"I want to go into Master Broussel's house, captain," replied Friquet, in that
wheedling way the "gamins" of Paris know so well how to assume when necessary.
"And on what floor does he live?" asked Comminges.
"In the whole house," said Friquet; "the house belongs to him; he occupies the
second floor when he works and descends to the first to take his meals; he must be
at dinner now; it is noon."
"Good," said Comminges.
At this moment the door was opened, and having questioned the servant the
officer learned that Master Broussel was at home and at dinner.
Broussel was seated at the table with his family, having his wife opposite to
him, his two daughters by his side, and his son, Louvieres, whom we have already
seen when the accident happened to the councillor--an accident from whi he had
quite recovered--at the boom of the table. e worthy man, restored to perfect
health, was tasting the fine fruit whi Madame de Longueville had sent to him.
ccciv
At sight of the officer Broussel was somewhat moved, but seeing him bow
politely he rose and bowed also. Still, in spite of this reciprocal politeness, the coun-
tenances of the women betrayed a certain amount of uneasiness; Louvieres became
very pale and waited impatiently for the officer to explain himself.
"Sir," said Comminges, "I am the bearer of an order from the king."
"Very well, sir," replied Broussel, "what is this order?" And he held out his
hand.
"I am commissioned to seize your person, sir," said Comminges, in the same
tone and with the same politeness; "and if you will believe me you had beer spare
yourself the trouble of reading that long leer and follow me."
A thunderbolt falling in the midst of these good people, so peacefully assem-
bled there, would not have produced a more appalling effect. It was a horrible thing
at that period to be imprisoned by the enmity of the king. Louvieres sprang for-
ward to snat his sword, whi stood against a air in a corner of the room; but a
glance from the worthy Broussel, who in the midst of it all did not lose his presence
of mind, eed this foolhardy action of despair. Madame Broussel, separated by
the width of the table from her husband, burst into tears, and the young girls clung
to their father's arms.
"Come, sir," said Comminges, "make haste; you must obey the king."
"Sir," said Broussel, "I am in bad health and cannot give myself up a prisoner
in this state; I must have time."
"It is impossible," said Comminges; "the order is strict and must be put into
execution this instant."
"Impossible!" said Louvieres; "sir, beware of driving us to despair."
"Impossible!" cried a shrill voice from the end of the room.
Comminges turned and saw Dame Nanee, her eyes flashing with anger and
a broom in her hand.
"My good Nanee, be quiet, I besee you," said Broussel.
"Me! keep quiet while my master is being arrested! he, the support, the lib-
erator, the father of the people! Ah! well, yes; you have to know me yet. Are you
going?" added she to Comminges.
e laer smiled.
"Come, sir," said he, addressing Broussel, "silence that woman and follow me."
"Silence me! me! me!" said Nanee. "Ah! yet one wants some one besides you
for that, my fine king's coatoo! You shall see." And Dame Nanee sprang to the
window, threw it open, and in su a piercing voice that it might have been heard
in the square of Notre Dame:
"Help!" she screamed, "my master is being arrested; the Councillor Broussel
is being arrested! Help!"
"Sir," said Comminges, "declare yourself at once; will you obey or do you
cccv
pected help to the guards. is gentleman was a young man, scarcely sixteen years
of age, now white with anger. He leaped from his arger, placed his ba against
the sha of the carriage, making a rampart of his horse, drew his pistols from their
holsters and fastened them to his belt, and began to fight with the ba sword, like
a man accustomed to the handling of his weapon.
During ten minutes he alone kept the crowd at bay; at last Comminges ap-
peared, pushing Broussel before him.
"Let us break the carriage!" cried the people.
"In the king's name!" cried Comminges.
"e first who advances is a dead man!" cried Raoul, for it was in fact he, who,
feeling himself pressed and almost crushed by a gigantic citizen, pried him with
the point of his sword and sent him howling ba.
Comminges, so to speak, threw Broussel into the carriage and sprang in aer
him. At this moment a shot was fired and a ball passed through the hat of Com-
minges and broke the arm of one of the guards. Comminges looked up and saw
amidst the smoke the threatening face of Louvieres appearing at the window of the
second floor.
"Very well, sir," said Comminges, "you shall hear of this anon."
"And you of me, sir," said Louvieres; "and we shall see then who can speak the
loudest."
Friquet and Nanee continued to shout; the cries, the noise of the shot and
the intoxicating smell of powder produced their usual maddening effects.
"Down with the officer! down with him!" was the cry.
"One step nearer," said Comminges, puing down the sashes, that the interior
of the carriage might be well seen, and placing his sword on his prisoner's breast,
"one step nearer, and I kill the prisoner; my orders were to carry him off alive or
dead. I will take him dead, that's all."
A terrible cry was heard, and the wife and daughters of Broussel held up their
hands in supplication to the people; the laer knew that this officer, who was so pale,
but who appeared so determined, would keep his word; they continued to threaten,
but they began to disperse.
"Drive to the palace," said Comminges to the coaman, who was by then
more dead than alive.
e man whipped his animals, whi cleared a way through the crowd; but on
arriving on the ai they were obliged to stop; the carriage was upset, the horses
carried off, stifled, mangled by the crowd. Raoul, on foot, for he had not time to
mount his horse again, tired, like the guards, of distributing blows with the flat of
his sword, had recourse to its point. But this last and dreaded resource served only
to exasperate the multitude. From time to time a shot from a musket or the blade
of a rapier flashed among the crowd; projectiles continued to hail down from the
cccvii
windows and some shots were heard, the eo of whi, though they were probably
fired in the air, made all hearts vibrate. Voices, unheard except on days of revolution,
were distinguished; faces were seen that only appeared on days of bloodshed. Cries
of "Death! death to the guards! to the Seine with the officer!" were heard above all
the noise, deafening as it was. Raoul, his hat in ribbons, his face bleeding, felt not
only his strength but also his reason going; a red mist covered his sight, and through
this mist he saw a hundred threatening arms streted over him, ready to seize upon
him when he fell. e guards were unable to help any one--ea one was occupied
with his self-preservation. All was over; carriages, horses, guards, and perhaps even
the prisoner were about to be torn to shreds, when all at once a voice well known to
Raoul was heard, and suddenly a great sword gliered in the air; at the same time
the crowd opened, upset, trodden down, and an officer of the musketeers, striking
and cuing right and le, rushed up to Raoul and took him in his arms just as he
was about to fall.
"God's blood!" cried the officer, "have they killed him? Woe to them if it be
so!"
And he turned around, so stern with anger, strength and threat, that the most
excited rebels hustled ba on one another, in order to escape, and some of them
even rolled into the Seine.
"Monsieur d'Artagnan!" murmured Raoul.
"Yes, 'sdeath! in person, and fortunately it seems for you, my young friend.
Come on, here, you others," he continued, rising in his stirrups, raising his sword,
and addressing those musketeers who had not been able to follow his rapid on-
slaught. "Come, sweep away all that for me! Shoulder muskets! Present arms!
Aim----"
At this command the mountain of populace thinned so suddenly that
D'Artagnan could not repress a burst of Homeric laughter.
"ank you, D'Artagnan," said Comminges, showing half of his body through
the window of the broken vehicle, "thanks, my young friend; your name--that I may
mention it to the queen."
Raoul was about to reply when D'Artagnan bent down to his ear.
"Hold your tongue," said he, "and let me answer. Do not lose time, Com-
minges," he continued; "get out of the carriage if you can and make another draw
up; be qui, or in five minutes the mob will be on us again with swords and muskets
and you will be killed. Hold! there's a carriage coming over yonder."
en bending again to Raoul, he whispered: "Above all things do not divulge
your name."
"at's right. I will go," said Comminges; "and if they come ba, fire!"
"Not at all--not at all," replied D'Artagnan; "let no one move. On the contrary,
one shot at this moment would be paid for dearly to-morrow."
cccviii
Comminges took his four guards and as many musketeers and ran to the car-
riage, from whi he made the people inside dismount, and brought them to the
vehicle whi had upset. But when it was necessary to convey the prisoner from
one carriage to the other, the people, cating sight of him whom they called their
liberator, uered every imaginable cry and knoed themselves once more around
the vehicle.
"Start, start!" said D'Artagnan. "ere are ten men to accompany you. I will
keep twenty to hold in e the mob; go, and lose not a moment. Ten men for
Monsieur de Comminges."
As the carriage started off the cries were redoubled and more than ten thou-
sand people thronged the ai and overflowed the Pont Neuf and adjacent streets.
A few shots were fired and one musketeer was wounded.
"Forward!" cried D'Artagnan, driven to extremities, biting his moustae; and
then he arged with his twenty men and dispersed them in fear. One man alone
remained in his place, gun in hand.
"Ah!" he exclaimed, "it is thou who wouldst have him assassinated? Wait an
instant." And he pointed his gun at D'Artagnan, who was riding toward him at full
speed. D'Artagnan bent down to his horse's ne, the young man fired, and the ball
severed the feathers from the hat. e horse started, brushed against the imprudent
man, who thought by his strength alone to stay the tempest, and he fell against
the wall. D'Artagnan pulled up his horse, and whilst his musketeers continued to
arge, he returned and bent with drawn sword over the man he had knoed down.
"Oh, sir!" exclaimed Raoul, recognizing the young man as having seen him in
the Rue Cocatrix, "spare him! it is his son!"
D'Artagnan's arm dropped to his side. "Ah, you are his son!" he said; "that is
a different thing."
"Sir, I surrender," said Louvieres, presenting his unloaded musket to the officer.
"Eh, no! do not surrender, egad! On the contrary, be off, and quily. If I take
you, you will be hung!"
e young man did not wait to be told twice, but passing under the horse's
head disappeared at the corner of the Rue Guenegaud.
"I'faith!" said D'Artagnan to Raoul, "you were just in time to stay my hand. He
was a dead man; and on my honor, if I had discovered that it was his son, I should
have regreed having killed him."
"Ah! sir!" said Raoul, "allow me, aer thanking you for that poor fellow's life,
to thank you on my own account. I too, sir, was almost dead when you arrived."
"Wait, wait, young man; do not fatigue yourself with speaking. We can talk
of it aerward."
en seeing that the musketeers had cleared the ai from the Pont Neuf to
the ai Saint Miael, he raised his sword for them to double their speed. e
cccix
musketeers troed up, and at the same time the ten men whom D'Artagnan had
given to Comminges appeared.
"Halloo!" cried D'Artagnan; "has something fresh happened?"
"Eh, sir!" replied the sergeant, "their vehicle has broken down a second time;
it really must be doomed."
"ey are bad managers," said D'Artagnan, shrugging his shoulders. "When a
carriage is osen, it ought to be strong. e carriage in whi a Broussel is to be
arrested ought to be able to bear ten thousand men."
"What are your commands, lieutenant?"
"Take the detament and conduct him to his place."
"But you will be le alone?"
"Certainly. So you suppose I have need of an escort? Go."
e musketeers set off and D'Artagnan was le alone with Raoul.
"Now," he said, "are you in pain?"
"Yes; my head is not only swimming but burning."
"What's the maer with this head?" said D'Artagnan, raising the baered hat.
"Ah! ah! a bruise."
"Yes, I think I received a flower-pot upon my head."
"Brutes!" said D'Artagnan. "But were you not on horseba? you have spurs."
"Yes, but I got down to defend Monsieur de Comminges and my horse was
taken away. Here it is, I see."
At this very moment Friquet passed, mounted on Raoul's horse, waving his
parti-colored cap and crying, "Broussel! Broussel!"
"Halloo! stop, rascal!" cried D'Artagnan. "Bring hither that horse."
Friquet heard perfectly, but he pretended not to do so and tried to continue
his road. D'Artagnan felt inclined for an instant to pursue Master Friquet, but not
wishing to leave Raoul alone he contented himself with taking a pistol from the
holster and coing it.
Friquet had a qui eye and a fine ear. He saw D'Artagnan's movement, heard
the sound of the cli, and stopped at once.
"Ah! it is you, your honor," he said, advancing toward D'Artagnan; "and I am
truly pleased to meet you."
D'Artagnan looked aentively at Friquet and recognized the lile orister of
the Rue de la Calandre.
"Ah! 'tis thou, rascal!" said he, "come here: so thou hast anged thy trade;
thou art no longer a oir boy nor a tavern boy; thou hast become a horse stealer?"
"Ah, your honor, how can you say so?" exclaimed Friquet. "I was seeking
the gentleman to whom this horse belongs--an officer, brave and handsome as a
youthful Caesar;" then, pretending to see Raoul for the first time:
"Ah! but if I mistake not," continued he, "here he is; you won't forget the boy,
cccx
sir."
Raoul put his hand in his poet.
"What are you about?" asked D'Artagnan.
"To give ten francs to this honest fellow," replied Raoul, taking a pistole from
his poet.
"Ten kis on his ba!" said D'Artagnan; "be off, you lile villain, and forget
not that I have your address."
Friquet, who did not expect to be let off so eaply, bounded off like a gazelle
up the ai a la Rue Dauphine, and disappeared. Raoul mounted his horse, and
both leisurely took their way to the Rue Tiquetonne.
D'Artagnan wated over the youth as if he had been his own son.
ey arrived without accident at the Hotel de la Chevree.
e handsome Madeleine announced to D'Artagnan that Planet had re-
turned, bringing Mousqueton with him, who had heroically borne the extraction
of the ball and was as well as his state would permit.
D'Artagnan desired Planet to be summoned, but he had disappeared.
"en bring some wine," said D'Artagnan. "You are mu pleased with your-
self," said he to Raoul when they were alone, "are you not?"
"Well, yes," replied Raoul. "It seems to me I did my duty. I defended the king."
"And who told you to defend the king?"
"e Comte de la Fere himself."
"Yes, the king; but to-day you have not fought for the king, you have fought
for Mazarin; whi is not quite the same thing."
"But you yourself?"
"Oh, for me; that is another maer. I obey my captain's orders. As for you,
your captain is the prince, understand that rightly; you have no other. But has
one ever seen su a wild fellow," continued he, "making himself a Mazarinist and
helping to arrest Broussel! Breathe not a word of that, or the Comte de la Fere will
be furious."
"You think the count will be angry with me?"
"ink it? I'm certain of it; were it not for that, I should thank you, for you
have worked for us. However, I scold you instead of him, and in his place; the storm
will blow over more easily, believe me. And moreover, my dear ild," continued
D'Artagnan, "I am making use of the privilege conceded to me by your guardian."
"I do not understand you, sir," said Raoul.
D'Artagnan rose, and taking a leer from his writing-desk, presented it to
Raoul. e face of the laer became serious when he had cast his eyes upon the
paper.
"Oh, mon Dieu!" he said, raising his fine eyes to D'Artagnan, moist with tears,
"the count has le Paris without seeing me?"
cccxi
D 'A had calculated that in not going at once to the Palais Royal he would
give Comminges time to arrive before him, and consequently to make the
cardinal acquainted with the eminent services whi he, D'Artagnan, and his friend
had rendered to the queen's party in the morning.
ey were indeed admirably received by Mazarin, who paid them numerous
compliments, and announced that they were more than half on their way to obtain
what they desired, namely, D'Artagnan his captaincy, Porthos his barony.
D'Artagnan would have preferred money in hand to all that fine talk, for he
knew well that to Mazarin it was easy to promise and hard to perform. But, though
he held the cardinal's promises as of lile worth, he affected to be completely satis-
fied, for he was unwilling to discourage Porthos.
Whilst the two friends were with the cardinal, the queen sent for him.
Mazarin, thinking that it would be the means of increasing the zeal of his two de-
fenders if he procured them personal thanks from the queen, motioned them to
follow him. D'Artagnan and Porthos pointed to their dusty and torn dresses, but
the cardinal shook his head.
"ose costumes," he said, "are of more worth than most of those whi you
will see on the bas of the queen's courtiers; they are costumes of bale."
D'Artagnan and Porthos obeyed. e court of Anne of Austria was full of
gayety and animation; for, aer having gained a victory over the Spaniard, it had
just gained another over the people. Broussel had been conducted out of Paris with-
out further resistance, and was at this time in the prison of Saint Germain; while
Blancmesnil, who was arrested at the same time, but whose arrest had been made
without difficulty or noise, was safe in the Castle of Vincennes.
Comminges was near the queen, who was questioning him upon the details
of his expedition, and every one was listening to his account, when D'Artagnan and
Porthos were perceived at the door, behind the cardinal.
"Ah, madame," said Comminges, hastening to D'Artagnan, "here is one who
can tell you beer than myself, for he was my protector. Without him I should
cccxiii
probably at this moment be a dead fish in the nets at Saint Cloud, for it was a
question of nothing less than throwing me into the river. Speak, D'Artagnan, speak."
D'Artagnan had been a hundred times in the same room with the queen since
he had become lieutenant of the musketeers, but her majesty had never once spoken
to him.
"Well, sir," at last said Anne of Austria, "you are silent, aer rendering su a
service?"
"Madame," replied D'Artagnan, "I have nought to say, save that my life is ever
at your majesty's service, and that I shall only be happy the day I lose it for you."
"I know that, sir; I have known that," said the queen, "a long time; therefore I
am delighted to be able thus publicly to mark my gratitude and my esteem."
"Permit me, madame," said D'Artagnan, "to reserve a portion for my friend;
like myself" (he laid an emphasis on these words) "an ancient musketeer of the
company of Treville; he has done wonders."
"His name?" asked the queen.
"In the regiment," said D'Artagnan, "he is called Porthos" (the queen started),
"but his true name is the Chevalier du Vallon."
"De Bracieux de Pierrefonds," added Porthos.
"ese names are too numerous for me to remember them all, and I will
content myself with the first," said the queen, graciously. Porthos bowed. At this
moment the coadjutor was announced; a cry of surprise ran through the royal as-
semblage. Although the coadjutor had preaed that same morning it was well
known that he leaned mu to the side of the Fronde; and Mazarin, in requesting
the arbishop of Paris to make his nephew prea, had evidently had the intention
of administering to Monsieur de Retz one of those Italian kis he so mu enjoyed
giving.
e fact was, in leaving Notre Dame the coadjutor had learned the event of
the day. Although almost engaged to the leaders of the Fronde he had not gone so far
but that retreat was possible should the court offer him the advantages for whi he
was ambitious and to whi the coadjutorship was but a stepping-stone. Monsieur
de Retz wished to become arbishop in his uncle's place, and cardinal, like Mazarin;
and the popular party could with difficulty accord him favors so entirely royal. He
therefore hastened to the palace to congratulate the queen on the bale of Lens,
determined beforehand to act with or against the court, as his congratulations were
well or ill received.
e coadjutor possessed, perhaps, as mu wit as all those put together who
were assembled at the court to laugh at him. His spee, therefore, was so well
turned, that in spite of the great wish felt by the courtiers to laugh, they could find
no point on whi to vent their ridicule. He concluded by saying that he placed his
feeble influence at her majesty's command.
cccxiv
During the whole time he was speaking, the queen appeared to be well pleased
with the coadjutor's harangue; but terminating as it did with su a phrase, the only
one whi could be caught at by the jokers, Anne turned around and directed a
glance toward her favorites, whi announced that she delivered up the coadjutor to
their tender mercies. Immediately the wits of the court plunged into satire. Nogent-
Beautin, the fool of the court, exclaimed that "the queen was very happy to have
the succor of religion at su a moment." is caused a universal burst of laughter.
e Count de Villeroy said that "he did not know how any fear could be entertained
for a moment, when the court had, to defend itself against the parliament and the
citizens of Paris, his holiness the coadjutor, who by a signal could raise an army of
curates, ur porters and vergers."
e Mareal de la Meilleraie added that in case the coadjutor should appear
on the field of bale it would be a pity that he should not be distinguished in the
melee by wearing a red hat, as Henry IV. had been distinguished by his white plume
at the bale of Ivry.
During this storm, Gondy, who had it in his power to make it most unpleasant
for the jesters, remained calm and stern. e queen at last asked him if he had
anything to add to the fine discourse he had just made to her.
"Yes, madame," replied the coadjutor; "I have to beg you to reflect twice ere
you cause a civil war in the kingdom."
e queen turned her ba and the laughing recommenced.
e coadjutor bowed and le the palace, casting upon the cardinal su a
glance as is best understood by mortal foes. at glance was so sharp that it
penetrated the heart of Mazarin, who, reading in it a declaration of war, seized
D'Artagnan by the arm and said:
"If occasion requires, monsieur, you will remember that man who has just
gone out, will you not?"
"Yes, my lord," he replied. en, turning toward Porthos, "e devil!" said he,
"this has a bad look. I dislike these quarrels among men of the ur."
Gondy withdrew, distributing benedictions on his way, and finding a mali-
cious satisfaction in causing the adherents of his foes to prostrate themselves at his
feet.
"Oh!" he murmured, as he le the threshold of the palace: "ungrateful court!
faithless court! cowardly court! I will tea you how to laugh to-morrow--but in
another manner."
But whilst they were indulging in extravagant joy at the Palais Royal, to in-
crease the hilarity of the queen, Mazarin, a man of sense, and whose fear, moreover,
gave him foresight, lost no time in making idle and dangerous jokes; he went out
aer the coadjutor, seled his account, loed up his gold, and had confidential
workmen to contrive hiding places in his walls.
cccxv
On his return home the coadjutor was informed that a young man had come
in aer his departure and was waiting for him; he started with delight when, on
demanding the name of this young man, he learned that it was Louvieres. He has-
tened to his cabinet. Broussel's son was there, still furious, and still bearing bloody
marks of his struggle with the king's officers. e only precaution he had taken in
coming to the arbishopric was to leave his arquebuse in the hands of a friend.
e coadjutor went to him and held out his hand. e young man gazed at
him as if he would have read the secret of his heart.
"My dear Monsieur Louvieres," said the coadjutor, "believe me, I am truly
concerned for the misfortune whi has happened to you."
"Is that true, and do you speak seriously?" asked Louvieres.
"From the depth of my heart," said Gondy.
"In that case, my lord, the time for words has passed and the hour for action
is at hand; my lord, in three days, if you wish it, my father will be out of prison and
in six months you may be cardinal."
e coadjutor started.
"Oh! let us speak frankly," continued Louvieres, "and act in a straightforward
manner. irty thousand crowns in alms is not given, as you have done for the
last six months, out of pure Christian arity; that would be too grand. You are
ambitious--it is natural; you are a man of genius and you know your worth. As
for me, I hate the court and have but one desire at this moment--vengeance. Give
us the clergy and the people, of whom you can dispose, and I will bring you the
citizens and the parliament; with these four elements Paris is ours in a week; and
believe me, monsieur coadjutor, the court will give from fear what it will not give
from good-will."
It was now the coadjutor's turn to fix his piercing eyes on Louvieres.
"But, Monsieur Louvieres, are you aware that it is simply civil war you are
proposing to me?"
"You have been preparing long enough, my lord, for it to be welcome to you
now."
"Never mind," said the coadjutor; "you must be well aware that this requires
reflection."
"And how many hours of reflection do you ask?"
"Twelve hours, sir; is it too long?"
"It is now noon; at midnight I will be at your house."
"If I should not be in, wait for me."
"Good! at midnight, my lord."
"At midnight, my dear Monsieur Louvieres."
When once more alone Gondy sent to summon all the curates with whom
he had any connection to his house. Two hours later, thirty officiating ministers
cccxvi
from the most populous, and consequently the most disturbed parishes of Paris had
assembled there. Gondy related to them the insults he had received at the Palais
Royal and retailed the jests of Beautin, the Count de Villeroy and Mareal de la
Meilleraie. e curates asked him what was to be done.
"Simply this," said the coadjutor. "You are the directors of all consciences.
Well, undermine in them the miserable prejudice of respect and fear of kings; tea
your flos that the queen is a tyrant; and repeat oen and loudly, so that all may
know it, that the misfortunes of France are caused by Mazarin, her lover and her
destroyer; begin this work to-day, this instant even, and in three days I shall expect
the result. For the rest, if any one of you have further or beer counsel to expound,
I will listen to him with the greatest pleasure."
ree curates remained--those of St. Merri, St. Sulpice and St. Eustae. e
others withdrew.
"You think, then, that you can help me more efficaciously than your brothers?"
said Gondy.
"We hope so," answered the curates.
"Let us hear. Monsieur de St. Merri, you begin."
"My lord, I have in my parish a man who might be of the greatest use to you."
"Who and what is this man?"
"A shopkeeper in the Rue des Lombards, who has great influence upon the
commerce of his quarter."
"What is his name?"
"He is named Planet, who himself also caused a rising about six weeks ago;
but as he was seared for aer this emeute he disappeared."
"And can you find him?"
"I hope so. I think he has not been arrested, and as I am his wife's confessor,
if she knows where he is I shall know it too."
"Very well, sir, find this man, and when you have found him bring him to me."
"We will be with you at six o'clo, my lord."
"Go, my dear curate, and may God assist you!"
"And you, sir?" continued Gondy, turning to the curate of St. Sulpice.
"I, my lord," said the laer, "I know a man who has rendered great services to
a very popular prince and who would make an excellent leader of revolt. Him I can
place at your disposal; it is Count de Roefort."
"I know him also, but unfortunately he is not in Paris."
"My lord, he has been for three days at the Rue Cassee."
"And wherefore has he not been to see me?"
"He was told--my lord will pardon me----"
"Certainly, speak."
"at your lordship was about to treat with the court."
cccxvii
the arbishopric and the St. Eustae Chur, wating carefully to ascertain the
popular feeling. e people were in an excited mood, but, like a swarm of frightened
bees, seemed not to know at what point to concentrate; and it was very evident that
if leaders of the people were not provided all this agitation would pass off in idle
buzzing.
On arriving at the Rue des Prouvaires, the curate pointed toward the square
before the ur.
"Stop!" he said, "there he is at his post."
Gondy looked at the spot indicated and perceived a beggar seated in a air
and leaning against one of the moldings; a lile basin was near him and he held a
holy water brush in his hand.
"Is it by permission that he remains there?" asked Gondy.
"No, my lord; these places are bought. I believe this man paid his predecessor
a hundred pistoles for his."
"e rascal is ri, then?"
"Some of those men sometimes die worth twenty thousand and twenty-five
and thirty thousand francs and sometimes more."
"Hum!" said Gondy, laughing; "I was not aware my alms were so well in-
vested."
In the meantime they were advancing toward the square, and the moment the
coadjutor and the curate put their feet on the first ur step the mendicant arose
and proffered his brush.
He was a man between sixty-six and sixty-eight years of age, lile, rather
stout, with gray hair and light eyes. His countenance denoted the struggle between
two opposite principles--a wied nature, subdued by determination, perhaps by
repentance.
He started on seeing the cavalier with the curate. e laer and the coadjutor
toued the brush with the tips of their fingers and made the sign of the cross; the
coadjutor threw a piece of money into the hat, whi was on the ground.
"Maillard," began the curate, "this gentleman and I have come to talk with you
a lile."
"With me!" said the mendicant; "it is a great honor for a poor distributor of
holy water."
ere was an ironical tone in his voice whi he could not quite disguise and
whi astonished the coadjutor.
"Yes," continued the curate, apparently accustomed to this tone, "yes, we wish
to know your opinion of the events of to-day and what you have heard said by
people going in and out of the ur."
e mendicant shook his head.
"ese are melanoly doings, your reverence, whi always fall again upon
cccxix
"Shall I give you a line for the vicar of St. Jacques de la Bouerie? he will let
you into the rooms in his tower," said the curate.
"Capital," answered the mendicant.
"en," said the coadjutor, "this evening, at ten o'clo, and if I am pleased
with you another bag of five hundred pistoles will be at your disposal."
e eyes of the mendicant dashed with cupidity, but he quily suppressed
his emotion.
"is evening, sir," he replied, "all will be ready."
. e Tower of St. Jacques de
la Bouerie.
"For the barricades. When you leave this you will behold my men at work.
Only take care you do not break your legs in stumbling over some ain or your
ne by falling in a hole."
"Good! there is your money, the same sum as that you have received already.
Now remember that you are a general and do not go and drink."
"For twenty years I have tasted nothing but water."
e man took the bag from the hands of the coadjutor, who heard the sound
of his fingers counting and handling the gold pieces.
"Ah! ah!" said the coadjutor, "you are avaricious, my good fellow."
e mendicant sighed and threw down the bag.
"Must I always be the same?" said he, "and shall I never succeed in overcoming
the old leaven? Oh, misery, oh, vanity!"
"You take it, however."
"Yes, but I make hereby a vow in your presence, to employ all that remains to
me in pious works."
His face was pale and drawn, like that of a man who had just undergone some
inward struggle.
"Singular man!" muered Gondy, taking his hat to go away; but on turning
around he saw the beggar between him and the door. His first idea was that this
man intended to do him some harm, but on the contrary he saw him fall on his
knees before him with his hands clasped.
"Your blessing, your holiness, before you go, I besee you!" he cried.
"Your holiness!" said Gondy; "my friend, you take me for some one else."
"No, your holiness, I take you for what you are, that is to say, the coadjutor; I
recognized you at the first glance."
Gondy smiled. "And you want my blessing?" he said.
"Yes, I have need of it."
e mendicant uered these words in a tone of su humility, su earnest
repentance, that Gondy placed his hand upon him and gave him his benediction
with all the unction of whi he was capable.
"Now," said Gondy, "there is a communion between us. I have blessed you and
you are sacred to me. Come, have you commied some crime, pursued by human
justice, from whi I can protect you?"
e beggar shook his head. "e crime whi I have commied, my lord, has
no call upon human justice, and you can only deliver me from it by blessing me
frequently, as you have just done."
"Come, be candid," said the coadjutor, "you have not all your life followed the
trade whi you do now?"
"No, my lord. I have pursued it for six years only."
"And previously, where were you?"
cccxxvi
I was about eleven o'clo at night. Gondy had not walked a hundred steps ere
he perceived the strange ange whi had been made in the streets of Paris.
e whole city seemed peopled with fantastic beings; silent shadows were
seen unpaving the streets and others dragging and upseing great wagons, whilst
others again dug dites large enough to ingulf whole regiments of horsemen. ese
active beings flied here and there like so many demons completing some unknown
labor; these were the beggars of the Court of Miracles--the agents of the giver of holy
water in the Square of Saint Eustae, preparing barricades for the morrow.
Gondy gazed on these deeds of darkness, on these nocturnal laborers, with a
kind of fear; he asked himself, if, aer having called forth these foul creatures from
their dens, he should have the power of making them retire again. He felt almost
inclined to cross himself when one of these beings happened to approa him. He
reaed the Rue Saint Honore and went up it toward the Rue de la Ferronnerie; there
the aspect anged; here it was the tradesmen who were running from shop to shop;
their doors seemed closed like their shuers, but they were only pushed to in su
a manner as to open and allow the men, who seemed fearful of showing what they
carried, to enter, closing immediately. ese men were shopkeepers, who had arms
to lend to those who had none.
One individual went from door to door, bending under the weight of swords,
guns, muskets and every kind of weapon, whi he deposited as fast as he could.
By the light of a lantern the coadjutor recognized Planet.
e coadjutor proceeded onward to the quay by way of the Rue de la Monnaie;
there he found groups of bourgeois clad in bla cloaks or gray, according as they
belonged to the upper or lower bourgeoisie. ey were standing motionless, while
single men passed from one group to another. All these cloaks, gray or bla, were
raised behind by the point of a sword, or before by the barrel of an arquebuse or a
musket.
On reaing the Pont Neuf the coadjutor found it strictly guarded and a man
approaed him.
cccxxviii
"Who are you?" asked the man. "I do not know you for one of us."
"en it is because you do not know your friends, my dear Monsieur Lou-
vieres," said the coadjutor, raising his hat.
Louvieres recognized him and bowed.
Gondy continued his way and went as far as the Tour de Nesle. ere he
saw a lengthy ain of people gliding under the walls. ey might be said to be a
procession of ghosts, for they were all wrapped in white cloaks. When they reaed
a certain spot these men appeared to be annihilated, one aer the other, as if the
earth had opened under their feet. Gondy, edged into a corner, saw them vanish
from the first until the last but one. e last raised his eyes, to ascertain, doubtless,
that neither his companions nor himself had been wated, and, in spite of the
darkness, he perceived Gondy. He walked straight up to him and placed a pistol to
his throat.
"Halloo! Monsieur de Roefort," said Gondy, laughing, "are you a boy to play
with firearms?"
Roefort recognized the voice.
"Ah, it is you, my lord!" said he.
"e very same. What people are you leading thus into the bowels of the
earth?"
"My fiy recruits from the Chevalier d'Humieres, who are destined to enter
the light cavalry and who have only received as yet for their equipment their white
cloaks."
"And where are you going?"
"To the house of one of my friends, a sculptor, only we enter by the trap
through whi he lets down his marble."
"Very good," said Gondy, shaking Roefort by the hand, who descended in
his turn and closed the trap aer him.
It was now one o'clo in the morning and the coadjutor returned home. He
opened a window and leaned out to listen. A strange, incomprehensible, unearthly
sound seemed to pervade the whole city; one felt that something unusual and terri-
ble was happening in all the streets, now dark as ocean's most unfathomable caves.
From time to time a dull sound was heard, like that of a rising tempest or a billow
of the sea; but nothing clear, nothing distinct, nothing intelligible; it was like those
mysterious subterraneous noises that precede an earthquake.
e work of revolt continued the whole night thus. e next morning, on
awaking, Paris seemed to be startled at her own appearance. It was like a besieged
town. Armed men, shouldering muskets, wated over the barricades with menac-
ing looks; words of command, patrols, arrests, executions, even, were encountered
at every step. ose bearing plumed hats and gold swords were stopped and made
to cry, "Long live Broussel!" "Down with Mazarin!" and whoever refused to comply
cccxxix
with this ceremony was hooted at, spat upon and even beaten. ey had not yet
begun to slay, but it was well felt that the inclination to do so was not wanting.
e barricades had been pushed as far as the Palais Royal. From the Rue de
Bons Enfants to that of the Ferronnerie, from the Rue Saint omas-du-Louvre to
the Pont Neuf, from the Rue Rielieu to the Porte Saint Honore, there were more
than ten thousand armed men; those who were at the front hurled defiance at the
impassive sentinels of the regiment of guards posted around the Palais Royal, the
gates of whi were closed behind them, a precaution whi made their situation
precarious. Among these thousands moved, in bands numbering from one hundred
to two hundred, pale and haggard men, clothed in rags, who bore a sort of standard
on whi was inscribed these words: "Behold the misery of the people!" Wherever
these men passed, frenzied cries were heard; and there were so many of these bands
that the cries were to be heard in all directions.
e astonishment of Mazarin and of Anne of Austria was great when it was
announced to them that the city, whi the previous evening they had le entirely
tranquil, had awakened to su feverish commotion; nor would either the one or the
other believe the reports that were brought to them, declaring they would rather rely
on the evidence of their own eyes and ears. en a window was opened and when
they saw and heard they were convinced.
Mazarin shrugged his shoulders and pretended to despise the populace; but he
turned visibly pale and ran to his closet, trembling all over, loed up his gold and
jewels in his caskets and put his finest diamonds on his fingers. As for the queen,
furious, and le to her own guidance, she went for the Mareal de la Meilleraie
and desired him to take as many men as he pleased and to go and see what was the
meaning of this pleasantry.
e marshal was ordinarily very adventurous and was wont to hesitate at
nothing; and he had that loy contempt for the populace whi army officers usually
profess. He took a hundred and fiy men and aempted to go out by the Pont du
Louvre, but there he met Roefort and his fiy horsemen, aended by more than
five hundred men. e marshal made no aempt to force that barrier and returned
up the quay. But at Pont Neuf he found Louvieres and his bourgeois. is time the
marshal arged, but he was welcomed by musket shots, while stones fell like hail
from all the windows. He le there three men.
He beat a retreat toward the market, but there he met Planet with his hal-
berdiers; their halberds were leveled at him threateningly. He aempted to ride
over those gray cloaks, but the gray cloaks held their ground and the marshal re-
tired toward the Rue Saint Honore, leaving four of his guards dead on the field of
bale.
e marshal then entered the Rue Saint Honore, but there he was opposed by
the barricades of the mendicant of Saint Eustae. ey were guarded, not only by
cccxxx
armed men, but even by women and ildren. Master Friquet, the owner of a pistol
and of a sword whi Louvieres had given him, had organized a company of rogues
like himself and was making a tremendous raet.
e marshal thought this barrier not so well fortified as the others and de-
termined to break through it. He dismounted twenty men to make a brea in the
barricade, whilst he and others, remaining on their horses, were to protect the as-
sailants. e twenty men mared straight toward the barrier, but from behind the
beams, from among the wagon-wheels and from the heights of the ros a terrible
fusillade burst forth and at the same time Planet's halberdiers appeared at the
corner of the Cemetery of the Innocents, and Louvieres's bourgeois at the corner of
the Rue de la Monnaie.
e Mareal de la Meilleraie was caught between two fires, but he was brave
and made up his mind to die where he was. He returned blow for blow and cries of
pain began to be heard in the crowd. e guards, more skillful, did greater execution;
but the bourgeois, more numerous, overwhelmed them with a veritable hurricane of
iron. Men fell around him as they had fallen at Rocroy or at Lerida. Fontrailles, his
aide-de-camp, had an arm broken; his horse had received a bullet in his ne and he
had difficulty in controlling him, maddened by pain. In short, he had reaed that
supreme moment when the bravest feel a shudder in their veins, when suddenly,
in the direction of the Rue de l'Arbre-Sec, the crowd opened, crying: "Long live
the coadjutor!" and Gondy, in surplice and cloak, appeared, moving tranquilly in
the midst of the fusillade and bestowing his benedictions to the right and le, as
undisturbed as if he were leading a procession of the Fete Dieu.
All fell to their knees. e marshal recognized him and hastened to meet him.
"Get me out of this, in Heaven's name!" he said, "or I shall leave my carcass
here and those of all my men."
A great tumult arose, in the midst of whi even the noise of thunder could
not have been heard. Gondy raised his hand and demanded silence. All were still.
"My ildren," he said, "this is the Mareal de la Meilleraie, as to whose inten-
tions you have been deceived and who pledges himself, on returning to the Louvre,
to demand of the queen, in your name, our Broussel's release. You pledge yourself
to that, marshal?" added Gondy, turning to La Meilleraie.
"Morbleu!" cried the laer, "I should say that I do pledge myself to it! I had
no hope of geing off so easily."
"He gives you his word of honor," said Gondy.
e marshal raised his hand in token of assent.
"Long live the coadjutor!" cried the crowd. Some voices even added: "Long
live the marshal!" But all took up the cry in orus: "Down with Mazarin!"
e crowd gave place, the barricade was opened, and the marshal, with the
remnant of his company, retreated, preceded by Friquet and his bandits, some of
cccxxxi
them making a presence of beating drums and others imitating the sound of the
trumpet. It was almost a triumphal procession; only, behind the guards the barri-
cades were closed again. e marshal bit his fingers.
In the meantime, as we have said, Mazarin was in his closet, puing his affairs
in order. He called for D'Artagnan, but in the midst of su tumult he lile expected
to see him, D'Artagnan not being on service. In about ten minutes D'Artagnan
appeared at the door, followed by the inseparable Porthos.
"Ah, come in, come in, Monsieur d'Artagnan!" cried the cardinal, "and wel-
come your friend too. But what is going on in this accursed Paris?"
"What is going on, my lord? nothing good," replied D'Artagnan, shaking his
head. "e town is in open revolt, and just now, as I was crossing the Rue Mon-
torgueil with Monsieur du Vallon, who is here, and is your humble servant, they
wanted in spite of my uniform, or perhaps because of my uniform, to make us cry
'Long live Broussel!' and must I tell you, my lord what they wished us to cry as
well?"
"Speak, speak."
"'Down with Mazarin!' I'faith, the treasonable word is out."
Mazarin smiled, but became very pale.
"And you did cry?" he asked.
"I'faith, no," said D'Artagnan; "I was not in voice; Monsieur du Vallon has a
cold and did not cry either. en, my lord----"
"en what?" asked Mazarin.
"Look at my hat and cloak."
And D'Artagnan displayed four gunshot holes in his cloak and two in his
beaver. As for Porthos's coat, a blow from a halberd had cut it open on the flank
and a pistol shot had cut his feather in two.
"Diavolo!" said the cardinal, pensively gazing at the two friends with lively
admiration; "I should have cried, I should."
At this moment the tumult was heard nearer.
Mazarin wiped his forehead and looked around him. He had a great desire to
go to the window, but he dared not.
"See what is going on, Monsieur D'Artagnan," said he.
D'Artagnan went to the window with his habitual composure. "Oho!" said
he, "what is this? Mareal de la Meilleraie returning without a hat--Fontrailles
with his arm in a sling--wounded guards--horses bleeding; eh, then, what are the
sentinels about? ey are aiming--they are going to fire!"
"ey have received orders to fire on the people if the people approa the
Palais Royal!" exclaimed Mazarin.
"But if they fire, all is lost!" cried D'Artagnan.
"We have the gates."
cccxxxii
"e gates! to hold for five minutes--the gates, they will be torn down, twisted
into iron wire, ground to powder! God's death, don't fire!" screamed D'Artagnan,
throwing open the window.
In spite of this recommendation, whi, owing to the noise, could scarcely
have been heard, two or three musket shots resounded, succeeded by a terrible dis-
arge. e balls might be heard peppering the facade of the Palais Royal, and one
of them, passing under D'Artagnan's arm, entered and broke a mirror, in whi
Porthos was complacently admiring himself.
"Ala! ala!" cried the cardinal, "a Venetian glass!"
"Oh, my lord," said D'Artagnan, quietly shuing the window, "it is not worth
while weeping yet, for probably an hour hence there will not be one of your mirrors
remaining in the Palais Royal, whether they be Venetian or Parisian."
"But what do you advise, then?" asked Mazarin, trembling.
"Eh, egad, to give up Broussel as they demand! What the devil do you want
with a member of the parliament? He is of no earthly use to anybody."
"And you, Monsieur du Vallon, is that your advice? What would you do?"
"I should give up Broussel," said Porthos.
"Come, come with me, gentlemen!" exclaimed Mazarin. "I will go and discuss
the maer with the queen."
He stopped at the end of the corridor and said:
"I can count upon you, gentlemen, can I not?"
"We do not give ourselves twice over," said D'Artagnan; "we have given our-
selves to you; command, we shall obey."
"Very well, then," said Mazarin; "enter this cabinet and wait till I come ba."
And turning off he entered the drawing-room by another door.
. e Riot becomes a
Revolution.
T closet into whi D'Artagnan and Porthos had been ushered was separated
from the drawing-room where the queen was by tapestried curtains only, and
this thin partition enabled them to hear all that passed in the adjoining room, whilst
the aperture between the two hangings, small as it was, permied them to see.
e queen was standing in the room, pale with anger; her self-control, how-
ever, was so great that it might have been imagined that she was calm. Comminges,
Villequier and Guitant were behind her and the women again were behind the men.
e Chancellor Sequier, who twenty years previously had persecuted her so ruth-
lessly, stood before her, relating how his carriage had been smashed, how he had
been pursued and had rushed into the Hotel d'O----, that the hotel was immedi-
ately invaded, pillaged and devastated; happily he had time to rea a closet hid-
den behind tapestry, in whi he was secreted by an old woman, together with his
brother, the Bishop of Meaux. en the danger was so imminent, the rioters came
so near, uering su threats, that the ancellor thought his last hour had come
and confessed himself to his brother priest, so as to be all ready to die in case he
was discovered. Fortunately, however, he had not been taken; the people, believing
that he had escaped by some ba entrance, retired and le him at liberty to retreat.
en, disguised in he clothes of the Marquis d'O----, he had le the hotel, stumbling
over the bodies of an officer and two guards who had been killed whilst defending
the street door.
During the recital Mazarin entered and glided noiselessly up to the queen to
listen.
"Well," said the queen, when the ancellor had finished speaking; "what do
you think of it all?"
"I think that maers look very gloomy, madame."
"But what step would you propose to me?"
cccxxxiv
however threatening your smile, than face those demons who accompanied me
hither and who sprung from I know not whence, unless from deepest hell."
("Bravo," said D'Artagnan in a whisper to Porthos; "well answered.")
"Well," said the queen, biting her lips, whilst her courtiers looked at ea other
with surprise, "what is the desire of my people?"
"at Broussel shall be given up to them, madame."
"Never!" said the queen, "never!"
"Your majesty is mistress," said La Meilleraie, retreating a few steps.
"Where are you going, mareal?" asked the queen.
"To give your majesty's reply to those who await it."
"Stay, mareal; I will not appear to parley with rebels."
"Madame, I have pledged my word, and unless you order me to be arrested I
shall be forced to return."
Anne of Austria's eyes shot glances of fire.
"Oh! that is no impediment, sir," said she; "I have had greater men than you
arrested--Guitant!"
Mazarin sprang forward.
"Madame," said he, "if I dared in my turn advise----"
"Would it be to give up Broussel, sir? If so, you can spare yourself the trouble."
"No," said Mazarin; "although, perhaps, that counsel is as good as any other."
"en what may it be?"
"To call for monsieur le coadjuteur."
"e coadjutor!" cried the queen, "that dreadful misief maker! It is he who
has raised all this revolt."
"e more reason," said Mazarin; "if he has raised it he can put it down."
"And hold, madame," suggested Comminges, who was near a window, out of
whi he could see; "hold, the moment is a happy one, for there he is now, giving
his blessing in the square of the Palais Royal."
e queen sprang to the window.
"It is true," she said, "the ar hypocrite--see!"
"I see," said Mazarin, "that everybody kneels before him, although he be but
coadjutor, whilst I, were I in his place, though I am cardinal, should be torn to pieces.
I persist, then, madame, in my wish" (he laid an emphasis on the word), "that your
majesty should receive the coadjutor."
"And wherefore do you not say, like the rest, your will?" replied the queen, in
a low voice.
Mazarin bowed.
"Monsieur le mareal," said the queen, aer a moment's reflection, "go and
find the coadjutor and bring him to me."
"And what shall I say to the people?"
cccxxxvi
calm manner, "I reply that I hold monsieur le mareal's opinion in every respect."
e color mounted to the queen's face; her fine blue eyes seemed to start out of
her head and her carmine lips, compared by all the poets of the day to a pomegranate
in flower, were trembling with anger. Mazarin himself, who was well accustomed
to the domestic outbreaks of this disturbed household, was alarmed.
"Give up Broussel!" she cried; "fine counsel, indeed. Upon my word! one can
easily see it comes from a priest."
Gondy remained firm, and the abuse of the day seemed to glide over his head
as the sarcasms of the evening before had done; but hatred and revenge were accu-
mulating in his heart silently and drop by drop. He looked coldly at the queen, who
nudged Mazarin to make him say something in his turn.
Mazarin, according to his custom, was thinking mu and saying lile.
"Ho! ho!" said he, "good advice, advice of a friend. I, too, would give up that
good Monsieur Broussel, dead or alive, and all would be at an end."
"If you yield him dead, all will indeed be at an end, my lord, but quite other-
wise than you mean."
"Did I say 'dead or alive?'" replied Mazarin. "It was only a way of speak-
ing. You know I am not familiar with the Fren language, whi you, monsieur le
coadjuteur, both speak and write so well."
("is is a council of state," D'Artagnan remarked to Porthos; "but we held
beer ones at La Roelle, with Athos and Aramis."
"At the Saint Gervais bastion," said Porthos.
"ere and elsewhere.")
e coadjutor let the storm pass over his head and resumed, still with the
same tranquillity:
"Madame, if the opinion I have submied to you does not please you it is
doubtless because you have beer counsels to follow. I know too well the wisdom
of the queen and that of her advisers to suppose that they will leave the capital long
in trouble that may lead to a revolution."
"us, then, it is your opinion," said Anne of Austria, with a sneer and biting
her lips with rage, "that yesterday's riot, whi to-day is already a rebellion, to-
morrow may become a revolution?"
"Yes, madame," replied the coadjutor, gravely.
"But if I am to believe you, sir, the people seem to have thrown off all restraint."
"It is a bad year for kings," said Gondy, shaking his head; "look at England,
madame."
"Yes; but fortunately we have no Oliver Cromwell in France," replied the
queen.
"Who knows?" said Gondy; "su men are like thunderbolts--one recognizes
them only when they have stru."
cccxxxviii
Every one shuddered and there was a moment of silence, during whi the
queen pressed her hand to her side, evidently to still the beatings of her heart.
("Porthos," murmured D'Artagnan, "look well at that priest."
"Yes," said Porthos, "I see him. What then?"
"Well, he is a man."
Porthos looked at D'Artagnan in astonishment. Evidently he did not under-
stand his meaning.)
"Your majesty," continued the coadjutor, pitilessly, "is about to take su mea-
sures as seem good to you, but I foresee that they will be violent and su as will
still further exasperate the rioters."
"In that case, you, monsieur le coadjuteur, who have su power over them
and are at the same time friendly to us," said the queen, ironically, "will quiet them
by bestowing your blessing upon them."
"Perhaps it will be too late," said Gondy, still unmoved; "perhaps I shall have
lost all influence; while by giving up Broussel your majesty will strike at the root of
the sedition and will gain the right to punish severely any revival of the revolt."
"Have I not, then, that right?" cried the queen.
"If you have it, use it," replied Gondy.
("Peste!" said D'Artagnan to Porthos. "ere is a man aer my own heart. Oh!
if he were minister and I were his D'Artagnan, instead of belonging to that beast of
a Mazarin, mordieu! what fine things we would do together!"
"Yes," said Porthos.)
e queen made a sign for every one, except Mazarin, to quit the room; and
Gondy bowed, as if to leave with the rest.
"Stay, sir," said Anne to him.
"Good," thought Gondy, "she is going to yield."
("She is going to have him killed," said D'Artagnan to Porthos, "but at all events
it shall not be by me. I swear to Heaven, on the contrary, that if they fall upon him
I will fall upon them."
"And I, too," said Porthos.)
"Good," muered Mazarin, siing down, "we shall soon see something
startling."
e queen's eyes followed the retreating figures and when the last had closed
the door she turned away. It was evident that she was making unnatural efforts
to subdue her anger; she fanned herself, smelled at her vinaigree and walked up
and down. Gondy, who began to feel uneasy, examined the tapestry with his eyes,
toued the coat of mail whi he wore under his long gown and felt from time
to time to see if the handle of a good Spanish dagger, whi was hidden under his
cloak, was well within rea.
"And now," at last said the queen, "now that we are alone, repeat your counsel,
cccxxxix
monsieur le coadjuteur."
"It is this, madame: that you should appear to have reflected, and publicly
anowledge an error, whi constitutes the extra strength of a strong government;
release Broussel from prison and give him ba to the people."
"Oh!" cried Anne, "to humble myself thus! Am I, or am I not, the queen?
is screaming mob, are they, or are they not, my subjects? Have I friends? Have
I guards? Ah! by Notre Dame! as een Catherine used to say," continued she,
excited by her own words, "rather than give up this infamous Broussel to them I
will strangle him with my own hands!"
And she sprang toward Gondy, whom assuredly at that moment she hated
more than Broussel, with outstreted arms. e coadjutor remained immovable
and not a muscle of his face was discomposed; only his glance flashed like a sword
in returning the furious looks of the queen.
("He were a dead man" said the Gascon, "if there were still a Vitry at the court
and if Vitry entered at this moment; but for my part, before he could rea the good
prelate I would kill Vitry at once; the cardinal would be infinitely pleased with me."
"Hush!" said Porthos; "listen.")
"Madame," cried the cardinal, seizing hold of Anne and drawing her ba,
"Madame, what are you about?"
en he added in Spanish, "Anne, are you mad? You, a queen to quarrel
like a washerwoman! And do you not perceive that in the person of this priest is
represented the whole people of Paris and that it is dangerous to insult him at this
moment, and if this priest wished it, in an hour you would be without a crown?
Come, then, on another occasion you can be firm and strong; but to-day is not the
proper time; to-day, flaer and caress, or you are only a common woman."
(At the first words of this address D'Artagnan had seized Porthos's arm, whi
he pressed with gradually increasing force. When Mazarin ceased speaking he said
to Porthos in a low tone:
"Never tell Mazarin that I understand Spanish, or I am a lost man and you are
also."
"All right," said Porthos.)
is rough appeal, marked by the eloquence whi aracterized Mazarin
when he spoke in Italian or Spanish and whi he lost entirely in speaking Fren,
was uered with su impenetrable expression that Gondy, clever physiognomist
as he was, had no suspicion of its being more than a simple warning to be more
subdued.
e queen, on her part, thus ided, soened immediately and sat down, and
in an almost weeping voice, leing her arms fall by her side, said:
"Pardon me, sir, and aribute this violence to what I suffer. A woman, and
consequently subject to the weaknesses of my sex, I am alarmed at the idea of civil
cccxl
"Place a hundred around the king and with the remainder sweep away this
mob for me."
"Madame," cried Mazarin, "what are you about?"
"Go!" said the queen.
Comminges went out with a soldier's passive obedience.
At this moment a monstrous baering was heard. One of the gates began to
yield.
"Oh! madame," cried Mazarin, "you have ruined us all--the king, yourself and
me."
At this cry from the soul of the frightened cardinal, Anne became alarmed in
her turn and would have recalled Comminges.
"It is too late," said Mazarin, tearing his hair, "too late!"
e gale had given way. Hoarse shouts were heard from the excited mob.
D'Artagnan put his hand to his sword, motioning to Porthos to follow his example.
"Save the queen!" cried Mazarin to the coadjutor.
Gondy sprang to the window and threw it open; he recognized Louvieres at
the head of a troop of about three or four thousand men.
"Not a step further," he shouted, "the queen is signing!"
"What are you saying?" asked the queen.
"e truth, madame," said Mazarin, placing a pen and a paper before her, "you
must;" then he added: "Sign, Anne, I implore you--I command you."
e queen fell into a air, took the pen and signed.
e people, kept ba by Louvieres, had not made another step forward; but
the awful murmuring, whi indicates an angry people, continued.
e queen had wrien, "e keeper of the prison at Saint Germain will set
Councillor Broussel at liberty;" and she had signed it.
e coadjutor, whose eyes devoured her slightest movements, seized the paper
immediately the signature had been affixed to it, returned to the window and waved
it in his hand.
"is is the order," he said.
All Paris seemed to shout with joy, and then the air resounded with the cries
of "Long live Broussel!" "Long live the coadjutor!"
"Long live the queen!" cried De Gondy; but the cries whi replied to his were
poor and few, and perhaps he had but uered it to make Anne of Austria sensible
of her weakness.
"And now that you have obtained what you want, go," said she, "Monsieur de
Gondy."
"Whenever her majesty has need of me," replied the coadjutor, bowing, "her
majesty knows I am at her command."
"Ah, cursed priest!" cried Anne, when he had retired, streting out her arm
cccxlii
to the scarcely closed door, "one day I will make you drink the dregs of the atrocious
gall you have poured out on me to-day."
Mazarin wished to approa her. "Leave me!" she exclaimed; "you are not a
man!" and she went out of the room.
"It is you who are not a woman," muered Mazarin.
en, aer a moment of reverie, he remembered where he had le D'Artagnan
and Porthos and that they must have overheard everything. He knit his brows and
went direct to the tapestry, whi he pushed aside. e closet was empty.
At the queen's last word, D'Artagnan had dragged Porthos into the gallery.
ither Mazarin went in his turn and found the two friends walking up and down.
"Why did you leave the closet, Monsieur d'Artagnan?" asked the cardinal.
"Because," replied D'Artagnan, "the queen desired every one to leave and I
thought that this command was intended for us as well as for the rest."
"And you have been here since----"
"About a quarter of an hour," said D'Artagnan, motioning to Porthos not to
contradict him.
Mazarin saw the sign and remained convinced that D'Artagnan had seen and
heard everything; but he was pleased with his falsehood.
"Decidedly, Monsieur d'Artagnan, you are the man I have been seeking. You
may reon upon me and so may your friend." en bowing to the two musketeers
with his most gracious smile, he re-entered his closet more calmly, for on the de-
parture of De Gondy the uproar had ceased as though by enantment.
. Misfortune refreshes the
Memory.
In fact, the evening aer this conversation the report was circulated that the
Prince de Conde had arrived. It was a very simple, natural circumstance and yet it
created a profound sensation. It was said that Madame de Longueville, for whom
the prince had more than a brother's affection and in whom he had confided, had
been indiscreet. His confidence had unveiled the sinister project of the queen.
Even on the night of the prince's return, some citizens, bolder than the rest,
su as the sheriffs, captains and the quartermaster, went from house to house
among their friends, saying:
"Why do we not take the king and place him in the Hotel de Ville? It is a shame
to leave him to be educated by our enemies, who will give him evil counsel; whereas,
brought up by the coadjutor, for instance, he would imbibe national principles and
love his people."
at night the question was secretly agitated and on the morrow the gray
and bla cloaks, the patrols of armed shop-people, and the bands of mendicants
reappeared.
e queen had passed the night in lonely conference with the prince, who had
entered the oratory at midnight and did not leave till five o'clo in the morning.
At five o'clo Anne went to the cardinal's room. If she had not yet taken
any repose, he at least was already up. Six days had already passed out of the ten
he had asked from Mordaunt; he was therefore occupied in revising his reply to
Cromwell, when some one knoed gently at the door of communication with the
queen's apartments. Anne of Austria alone was permied to enter by that door. e
cardinal therefore rose to open it.
e queen was in a morning gown, but it became her still; for, like Diana
of Poictiers and Ninon, Anne of Austria enjoyed the privilege of remaining ever
beautiful; nevertheless, this morning she looked handsomer than usual, for her eyes
had all the sparkle inward satisfaction adds to expression.
"What is the maer, madame?" said Mazarin, uneasily. "You seem secretly
elated."
"Yes, Giulio," she said, "proud and happy; for I have found the means of stran-
gling this hydra."
"You are a great politician, my queen," said Mazarin; "let us hear the means."
And he hid what he had wrien by sliding the leer under a folio of blank paper.
"You know," said the queen, "that they want to take the king away from me?"
"Alas! yes, and to hang me."
"ey shall not have the king."
"Nor hang me."
"Listen. I want to carry off my son from them, with yourself. I wish that this
event, whi on the day it is known will completely ange the aspect of affairs,
should be accomplished without the knowledge of any others but yourself, myself,
cccxlvi
rupted.
Anne, trembling with anger and scarlet with humiliation, le the room, shut-
ting the door violently aer her. Mazarin did not even turn around. When once
more in her own apartment Anne fell into a air and wept; then suddenly stru
with an idea:
"I am saved!" she exclaimed, rising; "oh, yes! yes! I know a man who will
find the means of taking me from Paris, a man I have too long forgoen." en
falling into a reverie, she added, however, with an expression of joy, "Ungrateful
woman that I am, for twenty years I have forgoen this man, whom I ought to have
made a mareal of France. My mother-in-law expended gold, caresses, dignities
on Concini, who ruined her; the king made Vitry mareal of France for an assassi-
nation: while I have le in obscurity, in poverty, the noble D'Artagnan, who saved
me!"
And running to a table, on whi were paper, pens and ink, she hastily began
to write.
. e Interview.
I had been D'Artagnan's practice, ever since the riots, to sleep in the same room as
Porthos, and on this eventful morning he was still there, sleeping, and dreaming
that a yellow cloud had overspread the sky and was raining gold pieces into his
hat, whi he held out till it was overflowing with pistoles. As for Porthos, he
dreamed that the panels of his carriage were not capacious enough to contain the
armorial bearings he had ordered to be painted on them. ey were both aroused
at seven o'clo by the entrance of an unliveried servant, who brought a leer for
D'Artagnan.
"From whom?" asked the Gascon.
"From the queen," replied the servant.
"Ho!" said Porthos, raising himself in his bed; "what does she say?"
D'Artagnan requested the servant to wait in the next room and when the door
was closed he sprang up from his bed and read rapidly, whilst Porthos looked at him
with starting eyes, not daring to ask a single question.
"Friend Porthos," said D'Artagnan, handing the leer to him, "this time, at
least, you are sure of your title of baron, and I of my captaincy. Read for yourself
and judge."
Porthos took the leer and with a trembling voice read the following words:
"e queen wishes to speak to Monsieur d'Artagnan, who must follow the
bearer."
"Well!" exclaimed Porthos; "I see nothing in that very extraordinary."
"But I see mu that is very extraordinary in it," replied D'Artagnan. "It is
evident, by their sending for me, that maers are becoming complicated. Just reflect
a lile what an agitation the queen's mind must be in for her to have remembered
me aer twenty years."
"It is true," said Porthos.
"Sharpen your sword, baron, load your pistols, and give some corn to the
horses, for I will answer for it, something lightning-like will happen ere to-morrow."
cccl
"But, stop; do you think it can be a trap that they are laying for us?" suggested
Porthos, incessantly thinking how his greatness must be irksome to inferior people.
"If it is a snare," replied D'Artagnan, "I shall scent it out, be assured. If Mazarin
is an Italian, I am a Gascon."
And D'Artagnan dressed himself in an instant.
Whilst Porthos, still in bed, was hooking on his cloak for him, a second kno
at the door was heard.
"Come in," exclaimed D'Artagnan; and another servant entered.
"From His Eminence, Cardinal Mazarin," presenting a leer.
D'Artagnan looked at Porthos.
"A complicated affair," said Porthos; "where will you begin?"
"It is arranged capitally; his eminence expects me in half an hour."
"Good."
"My friend," said D'Artagnan, turning to the servant, "tell his eminence that
in half an hour I shall be at his command."
"It is very fortunate," resumed the Gascon, when the valet had retired, "that
he did not meet the other one."
"Do you not think that they have sent for you, both for the same thing?"
"I do not think it, I am certain of it."
"i, qui, D'Artagnan. Remember that the queen awaits you, and aer
the queen, the cardinal, and aer the cardinal, myself."
D'Artagnan summoned Anne of Austria's servant and signified that he was
ready to follow him into the queen's presence.
e servant conducted him by the Rue des Petits Champs and turning to the
le entered the lile garden gate leading into the Rue Rielieu; then they gained the
private staircase and D'Artagnan was ushered into the oratory. A certain emotion,
for whi he could not account, made the lieutenant's heart beat: he had no longer
the assurance of youth; experience had taught him the importance of past events.
Formerly he would have approaed the queen as a young man who bends before a
woman; but now it was a different thing; he answered her summons as an humble
soldier obeys an illustrious general.
e silence of the oratory was at last disturbed by the slight rustling of silk,
and D'Artagnan started when he perceived the tapestry raised by a white hand,
whi, by its form, its color and its beauty he recognized as that royal hand whi
had one day been presented to him to kiss. e queen entered.
"It is you, Monsieur d'Artagnan," she said, fixing a gaze full of melanoly
interest on the countenance of the officer, "and I know you well. Look at me well in
your turn. I am the queen; do you recognize me?"
"No, madame," replied D'Artagnan.
"But are you no longer aware," continued Anne, giving that sweet expression
cccli
to her voice whi she could do at will, "that in former days the queen had once
need of a young, brave and devoted cavalier--that she found this cavalier--and that,
although he might have thought that she had forgoen him, she had kept a place
for him in the depths of her heart?"
"No, madame, I was ignorant of that," said the musketeer.
"So mu the worse, sir," said Anne of Austria; "so mu the worse, at least
for the queen, for to-day she has need of the same courage and the same devotion."
"What!" exclaimed D'Artagnan, "does the queen, surrounded as she is by su
devoted servants, su wise counselors, men, in short, so great by merit or position-
-does she deign to cast her eyes on an obscure soldier?"
Anne understood this covert reproa and was more moved than irritated by
it. She had many a time felt humiliated by the self-sacrifice and disinterestedness
shown by the Gascon gentleman. She had allowed herself to be exceeded in gen-
erosity.
"All that you tell me of those by whom I am surrounded, Monsieur d'Artagnan,
is doubtless true," said the queen, "but I have confidence in you alone. I know that
you belong to the cardinal, but belong to me as well, and I will take upon myself the
making of your fortune. Come, will you do to-day what formerly the gentleman
you do not know did for the queen?"
"I will do everything your majesty commands," replied D'Artagnan.
e queen reflected for a moment and then, seeing the cautious demeanor of
the musketeer:
"Perhaps you like repose?" she said.
"I do not know, for I have never had it, madame."
"Have you any friends?"
"I had three, two of whom have le Paris, to go I know not where. One alone
is le to me, but he is one of those known, I believe, to the cavalier of whom your
majesty did me the honor to speak."
"Very good," said the queen; "you and your friend are worth an army."
"What am I to do, madame?"
"Return at five o'clo and I will tell you; but do not breathe to a living soul,
sir, the rendezvous whi I give you."
"No, madame."
"Swear it upon the cross."
"Madame, I have never been false to my word; when I say I will not do a thing,
I mean it."
e queen, although astonished at this language, to whi she was not ac-
customed from her courtiers, argued from it a happy omen of the zeal with whi
D'Artagnan would serve her in the accomplishment of her project. It was one of
the Gascon's artifices to hide his deep cunning occasionally under an appearance of
ccclii
rough loyalty.
"Has the queen any further commands for me now?" asked D'Artagnan.
"No, sir," replied Anne of Austria, "and you may retire until the time that I
mentioned to you."
D'Artagnan bowed and went out.
"Diable!" he exclaimed when the door was shut, "they seem to have the great-
est need of me just now."
en, as the half hour had already glided by, he crossed the gallery and
knoed at the cardinal's door.
Bernouin introduced him.
"I come for your commands, my lord," he said.
And according to his custom D'Artagnan glanced rapidly around and re-
marked that Mazarin had a sealed leer before him. But it was so placed on the
desk that he could not see to whom it was addressed.
"You come from the queen?" said Mazarin, looking fixedly at D'Artagnan.
"I! my lord--who told you that?"
"Nobody, but I know it."
"I regret infinitely to tell you, my lord, that you are mistaken," replied the
Gascon, impudently, firm to the promise he had just made to Anne of Austria.
"I opened the door of the ante-room myself and I saw you enter at the end of
the corridor."
"Because I was shown up the private stairs."
"How so?"
"I know not; it must have been a mistake."
Mazarin was aware that it was not easy to make D'Artagnan reveal anything
he was desirous of hiding, so he gave up, for the time, the discovery of the mystery
the Gascon was concealing.
"Let us speak of my affairs," said Mazarin, "since you will tell me naught of
yours. Are you fond of traveling?"
"My life has been passed on the high road."
"Would anything retain you particularly in Paris?"
"Nothing but an order from a superior would retain me in Paris."
"Very well. Here is a leer, whi must be taken to its address."
"To its address, my lord? But it has none."
In fact, the side of the leer opposite the seal was blank.
"I must tell you," resumed Mazarin, "that it is in a double envelope."
"I understand; and I am to take off the first one when I have reaed a certain
place?"
"Just so, take it and go. You have a friend, Monsieur du Vallon, whom I like
mu; let him accompany you."
cccliii
"e devil!" said D'Artagnan to himself. "He knows that we overheard his
conversation yesterday and he wants to get us away from Paris."
"Do you hesitate?" asked Mazarin.
"No, my lord, and I will set out at once. ere is one thing only whi I must
request."
"What is it? Speak."
"at your eminence will go at once to the queen."
"What for?"
"Merely to say these words: 'I am going to send Monsieur d'Artagnan away
and I wish him to set out directly.'"
"I told you," said Mazarin, "that you had seen the queen."
"I had the honor of saying to your eminence that there had been some mistake."
"What is the meaning of that?"
"May I venture to repeat my prayer to your eminence?"
"Very well; I will go. Wait here for me." And looking aentively around him,
to see if he had le any of his keys in his closets, Mazarin went out. Ten min-
utes elapsed, during whi D'Artagnan made every effort to read through the first
envelope what was wrien on the second. But he did not succeed.
Mazarin returned, pale, and evidently thoughtful. He seated himself at his
desk and D'Artagnan proceeded to examine his face, as he had just examined the
leer he held, but the envelope whi covered his countenance appeared as impen-
etrable as that whi covered the leer.
"Ah!" thought the Gascon; "he looks displeased. Can it be with me? He med-
itates. Is it about sending me to the Bastile? All very fine, my lord, but at the very
first hint you give of su a thing I will strangle you and become Frondist. I should
be carried home in triumph like Monsieur Broussel and Athos would proclaim me
the Fren Brutus. It would be exceedingly droll."
e Gascon, with his vivid imagination, had already seen the advantage to be
derived from his situation. Mazarin gave, however, no order of the kind, but on the
contrary began to be insinuating.
"You were right," he said, "my dear Monsieur d'Artagnan, and you cannot set
out yet. I beg you to return me that dispat."
D'Artagnan obeyed, and Mazarin ascertained that the seal was intact.
"I shall want you this evening," he said "Return in two hours."
"My lord," said D'Artagnan, "I have an appointment in two hours whi I
cannot miss."
"Do not be uneasy," said Mazarin; "it is the same."
"Good!" thought D'Artagnan; "I fancied it was so."
"Return, then, at five o'clo and bring that worthy Monsieur du Vallon with
you. Only, leave him in the ante-room, as I wish to speak to you alone."
cccliv
D'Artagnan bowed, and thought: "Both at the same hour; both commands
alike; both at the Palais Royal. Monsieur de Gondy would pay a hundred thousand
francs for su a secret!"
"You are thoughtful," said Mazarin, uneasily.
"Yes, I was thinking whether we ought to come armed or not."
"Armed to the teeth!" replied Mazarin.
"Very well, my lord; it shall be so."
D'Artagnan saluted, went out and hastened to repeat to his friend Mazarin's
flaering promises, whi gave Porthos an indescribable happiness.
. e Flight.
midnight."
And D'Artagnan retired, but as he passed out he glanced at the curtain through
whi the queen had entered and at the boom of the tapestry he remarked the tip
of a velvet slipper.
"Good," thought he; "Mazarin has been listening to discover whether I be-
trayed him. In truth, that Italian puppet does not deserve the services of an honest
man."
D'Artagnan was not less exact to his appointment and at half-past nine o'clo
he entered the ante-room.
He found the cardinal dressed as an officer, and he looked very well in that
costume, whi, as we have already said, he wore elegantly; only he was very pale
and trembled slightly.
"ite alone?" he asked.
"Yes, my lord."
"And that worthy Monsieur du Vallon, are we not to enjoy his society?"
"Certainly, my lord; he is waiting in his carriage at the gate of the garden of
the Palais Royal."
"And we start in his carriage, then?"
"Yes, my lord."
"And with us no other escort but you two?"
"Is it not enough? One of us would suffice."
"Really, my dear Monsieur d'Artagnan," said the cardinal, "your coolness star-
tles me."
"I should have thought, on the contrary, that it ought to have inspired you
with confidence."
"And Bernouin--do I not take him with me?"
"ere is no room for him, he will rejoin your eminence."
"Let us go," said Mazarin, "since everything must be done as you wish."
"My lord, there is time to draw ba," said D'Artagnan, "and your eminence
is perfectly free."
"Not at all, not at all," said Mazarin; "let us be off."
And so they descended the private stair, Mazarin leaning on the arm of
D'Artagnan a hand the musketeer felt trembling. At last, aer crossing the courts of
the Palais Royal, where there still remained some of the conveyances of late guests,
they entered the garden and reaed the lile gate. Mazarin aempted to open it
by a key whi he took from his poet, but with su shaking fingers that he could
not find the keyhole.
"Give it to me," said D'Artagnan, who when the gate was open deposited the
key in his poet, reoning upon returning by that gate.
e steps were already down and the door open. Mousqueton stood at the
ccclxi
"Yes, but when once they are hamstrung, our nes will be strung next."
"If one of them comes to my side," asked Porthos, "must I kill him?"
"Yes, by a blow of your fist, if you can; we will not fire but at the last extremity."
"I can do it," said Porthos.
"Come and open, then!" cried D'Artagnan to the man with the scythe, taking
one of the pistols up by the muzzle and preparing to strike with the handle. And
as the man approaed, D'Artagnan, in order to have more freedom for his actions,
leaned half out of the door; his eyes were fixed upon those of the mendicant, whi
were lighted up by a lantern. Without doubt he recognized D'Artagnan, for he
became deadly pale; doubtless the musketeer knew him, for his hair stood up on his
head.
"Monsieur d'Artagnan!" he cried, falling ba a step; "it is Monsieur
d'Artagnan! let him pass."
D'Artagnan was perhaps about to reply, when a blow, similar to that of a
mallet falling on the head of an ox, was heard. e noise was caused by Porthos,
who had just knoed down his man.
D'Artagnan turned around and saw the unfortunate man upon his ba about
four paces off.
"'Sdeath!" cried he to the coaman. "Spur your horses! whip! get on!"
e coaman bestowed a heavy blow of the whip upon his horses; the noble
animals bounded forward; then cries of men who were knoed down were heard;
then a double concussion was felt, and two of the wheels seemed to pass over a
round and flexible body. ere was a moment's silence, then the carriage cleared
the gate.
"To Cours la Reine!" cried D'Artagnan to the coaman; then turning to
Mazarin he said, "Now, my lord, you can say five paters and five aves, in thanks
to Heaven for your deliverance. You are safe--you are free."
Mazarin replied only by a groan; he could not believe in su a miracle. Five
minutes later the carriage stopped, having reaed Cours la Reine.
"Is my lord pleased with his escort?" asked D'Artagnan.
"Enanted, monsieur," said Mazarin, venturing his head out of one of the
windows; "and now do as mu for the queen."
"It will not be so difficult," replied D'Artagnan, springing to the ground. "Mon-
sieur du Vallon, I commend his eminence to your care."
"Be quite at ease," said Porthos, holding out his hand, whi D'Artagnan took
and shook in his.
"Oh!" cried Porthos, as if in pain.
D'Artagnan looked with surprise at his friend.
"What is the maer, then?" he asked.
"I think I have sprained my wrist,' said Porthos.
ccclxiv
I of returning, then, by the Saint Honore gate, D'Artagnan, who had time
before him, walked around and re-entered by the Porte Rielieu. He was ap-
proaed to be examined, and when it was discovered by his plumed hat and his
laced coat, that he was an officer of the musketeers, he was surrounded, with the
intention of making him cry, "Down with Mazarin!" e demonstration did not fail
to make him uneasy at first; but when he discovered what it meant, he shouted it in
su a voice that even the most exacting were satisfied. He walked down the Rue
Rielieu, meditating how he should carry off the queen in her turn, for to take her
in a carriage bearing the arms of France was not to be thought of, when he perceived
an equipage standing at the door of the hotel belonging to Madame de Guemenee.
He was stru by a sudden idea.
"Ah, pardieu!" he exclaimed; "that would be fair play."
And approaing the carriage, he examined the arms on the panels and the
livery of the coaman on his box. is scrutiny was so mu the more easy, the
coaman being sound asleep.
"It is, in truth, monsieur le coadjuteur's carriage," said D'Artagnan; "upon my
honor I begin to think that Heaven favors us."
He mounted noiselessly into the ariot and pulled the silk cord whi was
aaed to the coaman's lile finger.
"To the Palais Royal," he called out.
e coaman awoke with a start and drove off in the direction he was desired,
never doubting but that the order had come from his master. e porter at the
palace was about to close the gates, but seeing su a handsome equipage he fancied
that it was some visit of importance and the carriage was allowed to pass and to
stop beneath the por. It was then only the coaman perceived the grooms were
not behind the vehicle; he fancied monsieur le coadjuteur had sent them ba, and
ccclxvi
without dropping the reins he sprang from his box to open the door. D'Artagnan, in
his turn, sprang to the ground, and just at the moment when the coaman, alarmed
at not seeing his master, fell ba a step, he seized him by his collar with the le,
whilst with the right hand he placed the muzzle of a pistol at his breast.
"Pronounce one single word," muered D'Artagnan, "and you are a dead man."
e coaman perceived at once, by the expression of the man who thus ad-
dressed him, that he had fallen into a trap, and he remained with his mouth wide
open and his eyes portentously staring.
Two musketeers were pacing the court, to whom D'Artagnan called by their
names.
"Monsieur de Belliere," said he to one of them, "do me the favor to take the
reins from the hands of this worthy man, mount upon the box and drive to the door
of the private stair, and wait for me there; it is an affair of importance on the service
of the king."
e musketeer, who knew that his lieutenant was incapable of jesting with
regard to the service, obeyed without a word, although he thought the order strange.
en turning toward the second musketeer, D'Artagnan said:
"Monsieur du Verger, help me to place this man in a place of safety."
e musketeer, thinking that his lieutenant had just arrested some prince in
disguise, bowed, and drawing his sword, signified that he was ready. D'Artagnan
mounted the staircase, followed by his prisoner, who in his turn was followed by the
soldier, and entered Mazarin's ante-room. Bernouin was waiting there, impatient
for news of his master.
"Well, sir?" he said.
"Everything goes on capitally, my dear Monsieur Bernouin, but here is a man
whom I must beg you to put in a safe place."
"Where, then, sir?"
"Where you like, provided that the place whi you shall oose has iron
shuers secured by padlos and a door that can be loed."
"We have that, sir," replied Bernouin; and the poor coaman was conducted
to a closet, the windows of whi were barred and whi looked very mu like a
prison.
"And now, my good friend," said D'Artagnan to him, "I must invite you to
deprive yourself, for my sake, of your hat and cloak."
e coaman, as we can well understand, made no resistance; in fact, he
was so astonished at what had happened to him that he stammered and reeled like
a drunken man; D'Artagnan deposited his clothes under the arm of one of the valets.
"And now, Monsieur du Verger," he said, "shut yourself up with this man until
Monsieur Bernouin returns to open the door. e duty will be tolerably long and
not very amusing, I know; but," added he, seriously, "you understand, it is on the
ccclxvii
king's service."
"At your command, lieutenant," replied the musketeer, who saw the business
was a serious one.
"By-the-bye," continued D'Artagnan, "should this man aempt to fly or to call
out, pass your sword through his body."
e musketeer signified by a nod that these commands should be obeyed to
the leer, and D'Artagnan went out, followed by Bernouin. Midnight stru.
"Lead me into the queen's oratory," said D'Artagnan, "announce to her I am
here, and put this parcel, with a well-loaded musket, under the seat of the carriage
whi is waiting at the foot of the private stair."
Bernouin conducted D'Artagnan to the oratory, where he sat down pensively.
Everything had gone on as usual at the Palais Royal. As we said before, by ten
o'clo almost all the guests had dispersed; those who were to fly with the court
had the word of command and they were ea severally desired to be from twelve
o'clo to one at Cours la Reine.
At ten o'clo Anne of Austria had entered the king's room. Monsieur had just
retired, and the youthful Louis, remaining the last, was amusing himself by placing
some lead soldiers in a line of bale, a game whi delighted him mu. Two royal
pages were playing with him.
"Laporte," said the queen, "it is time for his majesty to go to bed."
e king asked to remain up, having, he said, no wish to sleep; but the queen
was firm.
"Are you not going to-morrow morning at six o'clo, Louis, to bathe at Con-
flans? I think you wished to do so of your own accord?"
"You are right, madame," said the king, "and I am ready to retire to my room
when you have kissed me. Laporte, give the light to Monsieur the Chevalier de
Coislin."
e queen toued with her lips the white, smooth brow the royal ild pre-
sented to her with a gravity whi already partook of etiquee.
"Go to sleep soon, Louis," said the queen, "for you must be awakened very
early."
"I will do my best to obey you, madame," said the youthful king, "but I have
no inclination to sleep."
"Laporte," said Anne of Austria, in an undertone, "find some very dull book to
read to his majesty, but do not undress yourself."
e king went out, accompanied by the Chevalier de Coislin, bearing the can-
dlesti, and then the queen returned to her own apartment. Her ladies--that is to
say Madame de Bregy, Mademoiselle de Beaumont, Madame de Moeville, and
Socratine, her sister, so called on account of her sense--had just brought into her
dressing-room the remains of the dinner, on whi, according to her usual custom,
ccclxviii
she supped. e queen then gave her orders, spoke of a banquet whi the Marquis
de Villequier was to give to her on the day aer the morrow, indicated the persons
she would admit to the honor of partaking of it, announced another visit on the fol-
lowing day to Val-de-Grace, where she intended to pay her devotions, and gave her
commands to her senior valet to accompany her. When the ladies had finished their
supper the queen feigned extreme fatigue and passed into her bedroom. Madame
de Moeville, who was on especial duty that evening, followed to aid and undress
her. e queen then began to read, and aer conversing with her affectionately for
a few minutes, dismissed her.
It was at this moment D'Artagnan entered the courtyard of the palace, in the
coadjutor's carriage, and a few seconds later the carriages of the ladies-in-waiting
drove out and the gates were shut aer them.
A few minutes aer twelve o'clo Bernouin knoed at the queen's bedroom
door, having come by the cardinal's secret corridor. Anne of Austria opened the
door to him herself. She was dressed, that is to say, in dishabille, wrapped in a long,
warm dressing-gown.
"It is you, Bernouin," she said. "Is Monsieur d'Artagnan there?"
"Yes, madame, in your oratory. He is waiting till your majesty is ready."
"I am. Go and tell Laporte to wake and dress the king, and then pass on to the
Mareal de Villeroy and summon him to me."
Bernouin bowed and retired.
e queen entered her oratory, whi was lighted by a single lamp of Venetian
crystal, She saw D'Artagnan, who stood expecting her.
"Is it you?" she said.
"Yes, madame."
"Are you ready?"
"I am."
"And his eminence, the cardinal?"
"Has got off without any accident. He is awaiting your majesty at Cours la
Reine."
"But in what carriage do we start?"
"I have provided for everything; a carriage below is waiting for your majesty."
"Let us go to the king."
D'Artagnan bowed and followed the queen. e young Louis was already
dressed, with the exception of his shoes and doublet; he had allowed himself to be
dressed, in great astonishment, overwhelming Laporte with questions, who replied
only in these words, "Sire, it is by the queen's commands."
e bedclothes were thrown ba, exposing the king's bed linen, whi was so
worn that here and there holes could be seen. It was one of the results of Mazarin's
niggardliness.
ccclxix
mean?"
"It means, madame, that the report has spread that the queen has le the
Palais Royal, carrying off the king, and the people ask to have proof to the contrary,
or threaten to demolish the Palais Royal."
"Oh, this time it is too mu!" exclaimed the queen, "and I will prove to them
I have not le."
D'Artagnan saw from the expression of the queen's face that she was about
to issue some violent command. He approaed her and said in a low voice:
"Has your majesty still confidence in me?"
is voice startled her. "Yes, sir," she replied, "every confidence; speak."
"Will the queen deign to follow my advice?"
"Speak."
"Let your majesty dismiss M. de Comminges and desire him to shut himself
up with his men in the guardhouse and in the stables."
Comminges glanced at D'Artagnan with the envious look with whi every
courtier sees a new favorite spring up.
"You hear, Comminges?" said the queen.
D'Artagnan went up to him; with his usual quiness he caught the anxious
glance.
"Monsieur de Comminges," he said, "pardon me; we both are servants of the
queen, are we not? It is my turn to be of use to her; do not envy me this happiness."
Comminges bowed and le.
"Come," said D'Artagnan to himself, "I have got one more enemy."
"And now," said the queen, addressing D'Artagnan, "what is to be done? for
you hear that, instead of becoming calmer, the noise increases."
"Madame," said D'Artagnan, "the people want to see the king and they must
see him."
"What! must see him! Where--on the balcony?"
"Not at all, madame, but here, sleeping in his bed."
"Oh, your majesty," exclaimed Laporte, "Monsieur d'Artagnan is right."
e queen became thoughtful and smiled, like a woman to whom duplicity is
no stranger.
"Without doubt," she murmured.
"Monsieur Laporte," said D'Artagnan, "go and announce to the people through
the grating that they are going to be satisfied and that in five minutes they shall not
only see the king, but they shall see him in bed; add that the king sleeps and that
the queen begs that they will keep silence, so as not to awaken him."
"But not every one; a deputation of two or four people."
"Every one, madame."
"But reflect, they will keep us here till daybreak."
ccclxxi
"It shall take but a quarter of an hour, I answer for everything, madame; be-
lieve me, I know the people; they are like a great ild, who only wants humoring.
Before the sleeping king they will be mute, gentle and timid as lambs."
"Go, Laporte," said the queen.
e young king approaed his mother and said, "Why do as these people
ask?"
"It must be so, my son," said Anne of Austria.
"But if they say, 'it must be' to me, am I no longer king?"
e queen remained silent.
"Sire," said D'Artagnan, "will your majesty permit me to ask you a question?"
Louis XIV. turned around, astonished that any one should dare to address
him. But the queen pressed the ild's hand.
"Yes, sir." he said.
"Does your majesty remember, when playing in the park of Fontainebleau, or
in the palace courts at Versailles, ever to have seen the sky grow suddenly dark and
heard the sound of thunder?"
"Yes, certainly."
"Well, then, this noise of thunder, however mu your majesty may have
wished to continue playing, has said, 'go in, sire. You must do so.'"
"Certainly, sir; but they tell me that the noise of thunder is the voice of God."
"Well then, sire," continued D'Artagnan, "listen to the noise of the people; you
will perceive that it resembles that of thunder."
In truth at that moment a terrible murmur was waed to them by the night
breeze; then all at once it ceased.
"Hold, sire," said D'Artagnan, "they have just told the people that you are
asleep; you see, you still are king."
e queen looked with surprise at this strange man, whose brilliant courage
made him the equal of the bravest, and who was, by his fine and qui intelligence,
the equal of the most astute.
Laporte entered.
"Well, Laporte?" asked the queen.
"Madame," he replied, "Monsieur d'Artagnan's prediction has been accom-
plished; they are calm, as if by enantment. e doors are about to be opened
and in five minutes they will be here."
"Laporte," said the queen, "suppose you put one of your sons in the king's
place; we might be off during the time."
"If your majesty desires it," said Laporte, "my sons, like myself, are at the
queen's service."
"Not at all," said D'Artagnan; "should one of them know his majesty and dis-
cover but a substitute, all would be lost."
ccclxxii
"You are right, sir, always right," said Anne of Austria. "Laporte, place the
king in bed."
Laporte placed the king, dressed as he was, in the bed and then covered him
as far as the shoulders with the sheet. e queen bent over him and kissed his brow.
"Pretend to sleep, Louis," said she.
"Yes," said the king, "but I do not wish to be toued by any of those men."
"Sire, I am here," said D'Artagnan, "and I give you my word, that if a single
man has the audacity, his life shall pay for it."
"And now what is to be done?" asked the queen, "for I hear them."
"Monsieur Laporte, go to them and again recommend silence. Madame, wait
at the door, whilst I shall be at the head of the king's bed, ready to die for him."
Laporte went out; the queen remained standing near the hangings, whilst
D'Artagnan glided behind the curtains.
en the heavy and collected steps of a multitude of men were heard, and the
queen herself raised the tapestry hangings and put her finger on her lips.
On seeing the queen, the men stopped short, respectfully.
"Enter, gentlemen, enter," said the queen.
ere was then amongst that crowd a moment's hesitation, whi looked like
shame. ey had expected resistance, they had expected to be thwarted, to have to
force the gates, to overturn the guards. e gates had opened of themselves, and
the king, ostensibly at least, had no other guard at his bed-head but his mother. e
foremost of them stammered and aempted to fall ba.
"Enter, gentlemen," said Laporte, "since the queen desires you so to do."
en one more bold than the rest ventured to pass the door and to advance
on tiptoe. is example was imitated by the rest, until the room filled silently, as if
these men had been the humblest, most devoted courtiers. Far beyond the door the
heads of those who were not able to enter could be seen, all craning to their utmost
height to try and see.
D'Artagnan saw it all through an opening he had made in the curtain, and in
the very first man who entered he recognized Planet.
"Sir," said the queen to him, thinking he was the leader of the band, "you
wished to see the king and therefore I determined to show him to you myself. Ap-
proa and look at him and say if we have the appearance of people who wish to
run away."
"No, certainly," replied Planet, rather astonished at the unexpected honor
conferred upon him.
"You will say, then, to my good and faithful Parisians," continued Anne, with
a smile, the expression of whi did not deceive D'Artagnan, "that you have seen
the king in bed, asleep, and the queen also ready to retire."
"I shall tell them, madame, and those who accompany me will say the same
ccclxxiii
thing; but----"
"But what?" asked Anne of Austria.
"Will your majesty pardon me," said Planet, "but is it really the king who is
lying there?"
Anne of Austria started. "If," she said, "there is one among you who knows
the king, let him approa and say whether it is really his majesty lying there."
A man wrapped in a cloak, in the folds of whi his face was hidden, ap-
proaed and leaned over the bed and looked.
For one second, D'Artagnan thought the man had some evil design and he put
his hand to his sword; but in the movement made by the man in stooping a portion
of his face was uncovered and D'Artagnan recognized the coadjutor.
"It is certainly the king," said the man, rising again. "God bless his majesty!"
"Yes," repeated the leader in a whisper, "God bless his majesty!" and all these
men, who had entered enraged, passed from anger to pity and blessed the royal
infant in their turn.
"Now," said Planet, "let us thank the queen. My friends, retire."
ey all bowed, and retired by degrees as noiselessly as they had entered.
Planet, who had been the first to enter, was the last to leave. e queen stopped
him.
"What is your name, my friend?" she said.
Planet, mu surprised at the inquiry, turned ba.
"Yes," continued the queen, "I think myself as mu honored to have received
you this evening as if you had been a prince, and I wish to know your name."
"Yes," thought Planet, "to treat me as a prince. No, thank you."
D'Artagnan trembled lest Planet, seduced, like the crow in the fable, should
tell his name, and that the queen, knowing his name, would discover that Planet
had belonged to him.
"Madame," replied Planet, respectfully, "I am called Dulaurier, at your ser-
vice."
"ank you, Monsieur Dulaurier," said the queen; "and what is your business?"
"Madame, I am a clothier in the Rue Bourdonnais."
"at is all I wished to know," said the queen. "Mu obliged to you, Monsieur
Dulaurier. You will hear again from me."
"Come, come," thought D'Artagnan, emerging from behind the curtain, "de-
cidedly Monsieur Planet is no fool; it is evident he has been brought up in a good
sool."
e different actors in this strange scene remained facing one another, without
uering a single word; the queen standing near the door, D'Artagnan half out of his
hiding place, the king raised on his elbow, ready to fall down on his bed again at
the slightest sound that would indicate the return of the multitude, but instead of
ccclxxiv
approaing, the noise became more and more distant and very soon it died entirely
away.
e queen breathed more freely. D'Artagnan wiped his damp forehead and
the king slid off his bed, saying, "Let us go."
At this moment Laporte reappeared.
"Well?" asked the queen
"Well, madame," replied the valet, "I followed them as far as the gates. ey
announced to all their comrades that they had seen the king and that the queen had
spoken to them; and, in fact, they went away quite proud and happy."
"Oh, the miserable wretes!" murmured the queen, "they shall pay dearly for
their boldness, and it is I who promise this."
en turning to D'Artagnan, she said:
"Sir, you have given me this evening the best advice I have ever received.
Continue, and say what we must do now."
"Monsieur Laporte," said D'Artagnan, "finish dressing his majesty."
"We may go, then?" asked the queen.
"Whenever your majesty pleases. You have only to descend by the private
stairs and you will find me at the door."
"Go, sir," said the queen; "I will follow you."
D'Artagnan went down and found the carriage at its post and the musketeer
on the box. D'Artagnan took out the parcel whi he had desired Bernouin to place
under the seat. It may be remembered that it was the hat and cloak belonging to
Monsieur de Gondy's coaman.
He placed the cloak on his shoulders and the hat on his head, whilst the mus-
keteer got off the box.
"Sir," said D'Artagnan, "you will go and release your companion, who is guard-
ing the coaman. You must mount your horse and proceed to the Rue Tiquetonne,
Hotel de la Chevree, whence you will take my horse and that of Monsieur du Val-
lon, whi you must saddle and equip as if for war, and then you will leave Paris,
bringing them with you to Cours la Reine. If, when you arrive at Cours la Reine,
you find no one, you must go on to Saint Germain. On the king's service."
e musketeer toued his cap and went away to execute the orders thus
received.
D'Artagnan mounted the box, having a pair of pistols in his belt, a musket
under his feet and a naked sword behind him.
e queen appeared, and was followed by the king and the Duke d'Anjou, his
brother.
"Monsieur the coadjutor's carriage!" she exclaimed, falling ba.
"Yes, madame," said D'Artagnan; "but get in fearlessly, for I myself will drive
you."
ccclxxv
e queen uered a cry of surprise and entered the carriage, and the king and
monsieur took their places at her side.
"Come, Laporte," said the queen.
"How, madame!" said the valet, "in the same carriage as your majesties?"
"It is not a maer of royal etiquee this evening, but of the king's safety. Get
in, Laporte."
Laporte obeyed.
"Pull down the blinds," said D'Artagnan.
"But will that not excite suspicion, sir?" asked the queen.
"Your majesty's mind may be quite at ease," replied the officer; "I have my
answer ready."
e blinds were pulled down and they started at a gallop by the Rue Rielieu.
On reaing the gate the captain of the post advanced at the head of a dozen men,
holding a lantern in his hand.
D'Artagnan signed to them to draw near.
"Do you recognize the carriage?" he asked the sergeant.
"No," replied the laer.
"Look at the arms."
e sergeant put the lantern near the panel.
"ey are those of monsieur le coadjuteur," he said.
"Hush; he is enjoying a ride with Madame de Guemenee."
e sergeant began to laugh.
"Open the gate," he cried. "I know who it is!" en puing his face to the
lowered blinds, he said:
"I wish you joy, my lord!"
"Impudent fellow!" cried D'Artagnan, "you will get me turned off."
e gate groaned on its hinges, and D'Artagnan, seeing the way clear, whipped
his horses, who started at a canter, and five minutes later they had rejoined the
cardinal.
"Mousqueton!" exclaimed D'Artagnan, "draw up the blinds of his majesty's
carriage."
"It is he!" cried Porthos.
"Disguised as a coaman!" exclaimed Mazarin.
"And driving the coadjutor's carriage!" said the queen.
"Corpo di Dio! Monsieur d'Artagnan!" said Mazarin, "you are worth your
weight in gold."
. How D'Artagnan and
Porthos earned by selling
Straw.
M was desirous of seing out instantly for Saint Germain, but the queen
declared that she should wait for the people whom she had appointed to meet
her. However, she offered the cardinal Laporte's place, whi he accepted and went
from one carriage to the other.
It was not without foundation that a report of the king's intention to leave
Paris by night had been circulated. Ten or twelve persons had been in the secret
since six o'clo, and howsoever great their prudence might be, they could not issue
the necessary orders for the departure without suspicion being generated. Besides,
ea individual had one or two others for whom he was interested; and as there
could be no doubt but that the queen was leaving Paris full of terrible projects of
vengeance, every one had warned parents and friends of what was about to tran-
spire; so that the news of the approaing exit ran like a train of lighted gunpowder
along the streets.
e first carriage whi arrived aer that of the queen was that of the Prince
de Conde, with the princess and dowager princess. Both these ladies had been awak-
ened in the middle of the night and did not know what it all was about. e second
contained the Duke and Duess of Orleans, the tall young Mademoiselle and the
Abbe de la Riviere; and the third, the Duke de Longueville and the Prince de Conti,
brother and brother-in-law of Conde. ey all alighted and hastened to pay their
respects to the king and queen in their coa. e queen fixed her eyes upon the
carriage they had le, and seeing that it was empty, she said:
"But where is Madame de Longueville?"
"Ah, yes, where is my sister?" asked the prince.
ccclxxvii
"Madame de Longueville is ill," said the duke, "and she desired me to excuse
her to your majesty."
Anne gave a qui glance to Mazarin, who answered by an almost impercep-
tible shake of his head.
"What do you say of this?" asked the queen.
"I say that she is a hostage for the Parisians," answered the cardinal.
"Why is she not come?" asked the prince in a low voice, addressing his brother.
"Silence," whispered the duke, "she has her reasons."
"She will ruin us!" returned the prince.
"She will save us," said Conti.
Carriages now arrived in crowds; those of the Mareal de Villeroy, Guitant,
Villequier and Comminges came into the line. e two musketeers arrived in their
turn, holding the horses of D'Artagnan and Porthos in their hands. ese two in-
stantly mounted, the coaman of the laer replacing D'Artagnan on the coa-box
of the royal coa. Mousqueton took the place of the coaman, and drove standing,
for reasons known to himself, like Automedon of antiquity.
e queen, though occupied by a thousand details, tried to cat the Gascon's
eye; but he, with his wonted prudence, had mingled with the crowd.
"Let us be the avant guard," said he to Porthos, "and find good quarters at Saint
Germain; nobody will think of us, and for my part I am greatly fatigued."
"As for me," replied Porthos, "I am falling asleep, whi is strange, considering
we have not had any fighting; truly the Parisians are idiots."
"Or rather, we are very clever," said D'Artagnan.
"Perhaps."
"And how is your wrist?"
"Beer; but do you think that we've got them this time?"
"Got what?"
"You your command, and I my title?"
"I'faith! yes--I should expect so; besides, if they forget, I shall take the liberty
of reminding them."
"e queen's voice! she is speaking," said Porthos; "I think she wants to ride
on horseba."
"Oh, she would like it, but----"
"But what?"
"e cardinal won't allow it. Gentlemen," he said, addressing the two muske-
teers, "accompany the royal carriage, we are going forward to look for lodgings."
D'Artagnan started off for Saint Germain, followed by Porthos.
"We will go on, gentlemen," said the queen.
And the royal carriage drove on, followed by the other coaes and about fiy
horsemen.
ccclxxviii
ey reaed Saint German without any accident; on descending, the queen
found the prince awaiting her, bare-headed, to offer her his hand.
"What an awakening for the Parisians!" said the queen, radiant.
"It is war," said the prince.
"Well, then, let it be war! Have we not on our side the conqueror of Rocroy,
of Nordlingen, of Lens?"
e prince bowed low.
It was then three o'clo in the morning. e queen walked first, every one
followed her. About two hundred persons had accompanied her in her flight.
"Gentlemen," said the queen, laughing, "pray take up your abode in the
ateau; it is large, and there will be no want of room for you all; but, as we never
thought of coming here, I am informed that there are, in all, only three beds in the
whole establishment, one for the king, one for me----"
"And one for the cardinal," muered the prince.
"Am I--am I, then, to sleep on the floor?" asked Gaston d'Orleans, with a forced
smile.
"No, my prince," replied Mazarin, "the third bed is intended for your highness."
"But your eminence?" replied the prince.
"I," answered Mazarin, "I shall not sleep at all; I have work to do."
Gaston desired that he should be shown into the room wherein he was to
sleep, without in the least concerning himself as to where his wife and daughter
were to repose.
"Well, for my part, I shall go to bed," said D'Artagnan; "come, Porthos."
Porthos followed the lieutenant with that profound confidence he ever had in
the wisdom of his friend. ey walked from one end of the ateau to the other,
Porthos looking with wondering eyes at D'Artagnan, who was counting on his fin-
gers.
"Four hundred, at a pistole ea, four hundred pistoles."
"Yes," interposed Porthos, "four hundred pistoles; but who is to make four
hundred pistoles?"
"A pistole is not enough," said D'Artagnan, "'tis worth a louis."
"What is worth a louis?"
"Four hundred, at a louis ea, make four hundred louis."
"Four hundred?" said Porthos.
"Yes, there are two hundred of them, and ea of them will need two, whi
will make four hundred."
"But four hundred what?"
"Listen!" cried D'Artagnan.
But as there were all kinds of people about, who were in a state of stupefaction
at the unexpected arrival of the court, he whispered in his friend's ear.
ccclxxix
"His eminence is not gone to bed and will not go to bed, and wants you in-
stantly."
"e devil take Mazarin, who does not know when to sleep at the proper time.
What does he want with me? Is it to make me a captain? In that case I will forgive
him."
And the musketeer rose, grumbling, took his sword, hat, pistols, and cloak,
and followed the officer, whilst Porthos, alone and sole possessor of the bed, en-
deavored to follow the good example of falling asleep, whi his predecessor had
set him.
"Monsieur d'Artagnan," said the cardinal, on perceiving him, "I have not for-
goen with what zeal you have served me. I am going to prove to you that I have
not."
"Good," thought the Gascon, "this is a promising beginning."
"Monsieur d'Artagnan," he resumed, "do you wish to become a captain?"
"Yes, my lord."
"And your friend still longs to be made a baron?"
"At this very moment, my lord, he no doubt dreams that he is one already."
"en," said Mazarin, taking from his portfolio the leer whi he had already
shown D'Artagnan, "take this dispat and carry it to England."
D'Artagnan looked at the envelope; there was no address on it.
"Am I not to know to whom to present it?"
"You will know when you rea London; at London you may tear off the outer
envelope."
"And what are my instructions?"
"To obey in every particular the man to whom this leer is addressed. You
must set out for Boulogne. At the Royal Arms of England you will find a young
gentleman named Mordaunt."
"Yes, my lord; and what am I to do with this young gentleman?"
"Follow wherever he leads you."
D'Artagnan looked at the cardinal with a stupefied air.
"ere are your instructions," said Mazarin; "go!"
"Go! 'tis easy to say so, but that requires money, and I haven't any."
"Ah!" replied Mazarin, "so you have no money?"
"None, my lord."
"But the diamond I gave you yesterday?"
"I wish to keep it in remembrance of your eminence."
Mazarin sighed.
"'Tis very dear living in England, my lord, especially as envoy extraordinary."
"Zounds!" replied Mazarin, "the people there are very sedate, and their habits,
since the revolution, simple; but no maer."
ccclxxxii
D 'A went straight to the stables; day was just dawning. He found his
horse and that of Porthos fastened to the manger, but to an empty manger. He
took pity on these poor animals and went to a corner of the stable, where he saw a
lile straw, but in doing so he stru his foot against a human body, whi uered
a cry and arose on its knees, rubbing its eyes. It was Mousqueton, who, having no
straw to lie upon, had helped himself to that of the horses.
"Mousqueton," cried D'Artagnan, "let us be off! Let us set off."
Mousqueton, recognizing the voice of his master's friend, got up suddenly,
and in doing so let fall some louis whi he had appropriated to himself illegally
during the night.
"Ho! ho!" exclaimed D'Artagnan, piing up a louis and displaying it; "here's
a louis that smells confoundedly of straw."
Mousqueton blushed so confusedly that the Gascon began to laugh at him
and said:
"Porthos would be angry, my dear Monsieur Mousqueton, but I pardon you,
only let us remember that this gold must serve us as a joke, so be gay--come along."
Mousqueton instantly assumed a jovial countenance, saddled the horses
quily and mounted his own without making faces over it.
Whilst this went on, Porthos arrived with a very cross look on his face, and
was astonished to find the lieutenant resigned and Mousqueton almost merry.
"Ah, that's it!" he cried, "you have your promotion and I my barony."
"We are going to fet our brevets," said D'Artagnan, "and when we come
ba, Master Mazarin will sign them."
"And where are we going?" asked Porthos.
"To Paris first; I have affairs to sele."
And they both set out for Paris.
ccclxxxiv
On arriving at its gates they were astounded to see the threatening aspect of
the capital. Around a broken-down carriage the people were uering imprecations,
whilst the persons who had aempted to escape were made prisoners--that is to say,
an old man and two women. On the other hand, as the two friends approaed to
enter, they showed them every kind of civility, thinking them deserters from the
royal party and wishing to bind them to their own.
"What is the king doing?" they asked.
"He is asleep."
"And the Spanish woman?"
"Dreaming."
"And the cursed Italian?"
"He is awake, so keep on the wat, as they are gone away; it's for some pur-
pose, rely on it. But as you are the strongest, aer all," continued D'Artagnan, "don't
be furious with old men and women, and keep your wrath for more appropriate
occasions."
e people listened to these words and let go the ladies, who thanked
D'Artagnan with an eloquent look.
"Now! onward!" cried the Gascon.
And they continued their way, crossing the barricades, geing the ains
about their legs, pushed about, questioning and questioned.
In the place of the Palais Royal D'Artagnan saw a sergeant, who was drilling
six or seven hundred citizens. It was Planet, who brought into play profitably the
recollections of the regiment of Piedmont.
In passing before D'Artagnan he recognized his former master.
"Good-day, Monsieur d'Artagnan," said Planet proudly.
"Good-day, Monsieur Dulaurier," replied D'Artagnan.
Planet stopped short, staring at D'Artagnan. e first row, seeing their
sergeant stop, stopped in their turn, and so on to the very last.
"ese citizens are dreadfully ridiculous," observed D'Artagnan to Porthos and
went on his way.
Five minutes aerward he entered the hotel of La Chevree, where prey
Madeleine, the hostess, came to him.
"My dear Mistress Turquaine," said the Gascon, "if you happen to have any
money, lo it up quily; if you happen to have any jewels, hide them directly; if
you happen to have any debtors, make them pay you, or any creditors, don't pay
them."
"Why, prithee?" asked Madeleine.
"Because Paris is going to be reduced to dust and ashes like Babylon, of whi
you have no doubt heard tell."
"And are you going to leave me at su a time?"
ccclxxxv
"Oh, is it you, dear friends? Did you come here to fet me? Will you take
me away with you? Do you bring me tidings of my guardian?"
"Have you not received any?" said D'Artagnan to the youth.
"Alas! sir, no, and I do not know what has become of him; so that I am really
so unhappy that I weep."
In fact, tears rolled down his eeks.
Porthos turned aside, in order not to show by his honest round face what was
passing in his mind.
"Deuce take it!" cried D'Artagnan, more moved than he had been for a long
time, "don't despair, my friend, if you have not received any leers from the count,
we have received one."
"Oh, really!" cried Raoul.
"And a comforting one, too," added D'Artagnan, seeing the delight that his
intelligence gave the young man.
"Have you it?" asked Raoul
"Yes--that is, I had it," repined the Gascon, making believe to find it. "Wait, it
ought to be there in my poet; it speaks of his return, does it not, Porthos?"
All Gascon as he was, D'Artagnan could not bear alone the weight of that
falsehood.
"Yes," replied Porthos, coughing.
"Eh, give it to me!" said the young man.
"Eh! I read it a lile while since. Can I have lost it? Ah! confound it! yes, my
poet has a hole in it."
"Oh, yes, Monsieur Raoul!" said Mousqueton, "the leer was very consoling.
ese gentlemen read it to me and I wept for joy."
"But at any rate, you know where he is, Monsieur d'Artagnan?" asked Raoul,
somewhat comforted.
"Ah! that's the thing!" replied the Gascon. "Undoubtedly I know it, but it is a
mystery."
"Not to me, I hope?"
"No, not to you, so I am going to tell you where he is."
Porthos devoured D'Artagnan with wondering eyes.
"Where the devil shall I say that he is, so that he cannot try to rejoin him?"
thought D'Artagnan.
"Well, where is he, sir?" asked Raoul, in a so and coaxing voice.
"He is at Constantinople."
"Among the Turks!" exclaimed Raoul, alarmed. "Good heavens! how can you
tell me that?"
"Does that alarm you?" cried D'Artagnan. "Pooh! what are the Turks to su
men as the Comte de la Fere and the Abbe d'Herblay?"
ccclxxxviii
"Ah, his friend is with him?" said Raoul. "at comforts me a lile."
"Has he wit or not--this demon D'Artagnan?" said Porthos, astonished at his
friend's deception.
"Now, sir," said D'Artagnan, wishing to ange the conversation, "here are
fiy pistoles that the count has sent you by the same courier. I suppose you have
no more money and that they will be welcome."
"I have still twenty pistoles, sir."
"Well, take them; that makes seventy."
"And if you wish for more," said Porthos, puing his hand to his poet----
"ank you, sir," replied Raoul, blushing; "thank you a thousand times."
At this moment Olivain appeared. "Apropos," said D'Artagnan, loud enough
for the servant to hear him, "are you satisfied with Olivain?"
"Yes, in some respects, tolerably well."
Olivain pretended to have heard nothing and entered the tent.
"What fault do you find with the fellow?"
"He is a gluon."
"Oh, sir!" cried Olivain, reappearing at this accusation.
"And a lile bit of a thief."
"Oh, sir! oh!"
"And, more especially, a notorious coward."
"Oh, oh! sir! you really vilify me!" cried Olivain.
"e deuce!" cried D'Artagnan. "Pray learn, Monsieur Olivain, that people
like us are not to be served by cowards. Rob your master, eat his sweetmeats, and
drink his wine; but, by Jove! don't be a coward, or I shall cut off your ears. Look
at Monsieur Mouston, see the honorable wounds he has received, observe how his
habitual valor has given dignity to his countenance."
Mousqueton was in the third heaven and would have embraced D'Artagnan
had he dared; meanwhile he resolved to sacrifice his life for him on the next occasion
that presented itself.
"Send away that fellow, Raoul," said the Gascon; "for if he's a coward he will
disgrace thee some day."
"Monsieur says I am coward," cried Olivain, "because he wanted the other day
to fight a cornet in Grammont's regiment and I refused to accompany him."
"Monsieur Olivain, a laey ought never to disobey," said D'Artagnan, sternly;
then taking him aside, he whispered to him: "ou hast done right; thy master was
in the wrong; here's a crown for thee, but should he ever be insulted and thou dost
not let thyself be cut in quarters for him, I will cut out thy tongue. Remember that."
Olivain bowed and slipped the crown into his poet.
"And now, Raoul," said the Gascon, "Monsieur du Vallon and I are going
away as ambassadors, where, I know not; but should you want anything, write to
ccclxxxix
Madame Turquaine, at La Chevree, Rue Tiquetonne and draw upon her purse as
on a banker--with economy; for it is not so well filled as that of Monsieur d'Emery."
And having, meantime, embraced his ward, he passed him into the robust
arms of Porthos, who lied him up from the ground and held him a moment sus-
pended near the noble heart of the formidable giant.
"Come," said D'Artagnan, "let us go."
And they set out for Boulogne, where toward evening they arrived, their
horses fleed with foam and dark with perspiration.
At ten steps from the place where they halted was a young man in bla, who
seemed waiting for some one, and who, from the moment he saw them enter the
town, never took his eyes off them.
D'Artagnan approaed him, and seeing him stare so fixedly, said:
"Well, friend! I don't like people to quiz me!"
"Sir," said the young man, "do you not come from Paris, if you please?"
D'Artagnan thought it was some gossip who wanted news from the capital.
"Yes, sir," he said, in a soened tone.
"Are you not going to put up at the 'Arms of England'?"
"Yes, sir."
"Are you not arged with a mission from his eminence, Cardinal Mazarin?"
"Yes, sir."
"In that case, I am the man you have to do with. I am M. Mordaunt."
"Ah!" thought D'Artagnan, "the man I am warned against by Athos."
"Ah!" thought Porthos, "the man Aramis wants me to strangle."
ey both looked searingly at the young man, who misunderstood the
meaning of that inquisition.
"Do you doubt my word?" he said. "In that case I can give you proofs."
"No, sir," said D'Artagnan; "and we place ourselves at your orders."
"Well, gentlemen," resumed Mordaunt, "we must set out without delay, to-
day is the last day granted me by the cardinal. My ship is ready, and had you not
come I must have set off without you, for General Cromwell expects my return
impatiently."
"So!" thought the lieutenant, "'tis to General Cromwell that our dispates are
addressed."
"Have you no leer for him?" asked the young man.
"I have one, the seal of whi I am not to break till I rea London; but since
you tell me to whom it is addressed, 'tis useless to wait till then."
D'Artagnan tore open the envelope of the leer. It was directed to "Monsieur
Oliver Cromwell, General of the Army of the English Nation."
"Ah!" said D'Artagnan; "a singular commission."
"Who is this Monsieur Oliver Cromwell?" inquired Porthos.
cccxc
"It is singular," said D'Artagnan, whilst the boat was taking them to the Stan-
dard, "it is astonishing how that young man resembles some one I must have known,
but who it was I cannot yet remember."
A few minutes later they were on board, but the embarkation of the horses
was a longer maer than that of the men, and it was eight o'clo before they raised
anor.
e young man stamped impatiently and ordered all sail to be spread.
Porthos, completely used up by three nights without sleep and a journey of
seventy leagues on horseba, retired to his cabin and went to sleep.
D'Artagnan, overcoming his repugnance to Mordaunt, walked with him upon
the de and invented a hundred stories to make him talk.
Mousqueton was seasi.
. e Scotman.
A now our readers must leave the Standard to sail peaceably, not toward Lon-
don, where D'Artagnan and Porthos believed they were going, but to Durham,
whither Mordaunt had been ordered to repair by the leer he had received during
his sojourn at Boulogne, and accompany us to the royalist camp, on this side of the
Tyne, near Newcastle.
ere, placed between two rivers on the borders of Scotland, but still on En-
glish soil, the tents of a lile army extended. It was midnight. Some Highlanders
were listlessly keeping wat. e moon, whi was partially obscured by heavy
clouds, now and then lit up the muskets of the sentinels, or silvered the walls, the
roofs, and the spires of the town that Charles I. had just surrendered to the parlia-
mentary troops, whilst Oxford and Newark still held out for him in the hopes of
coming to some arrangement.
At one of the extremities of the camp, near an immense tent, in whi the
Scoish officers were holding a kind of council, presided over by Lord Leven, their
commander, a man aired as a cavalier lay sleeping on the turf, his right hand
extended over his sword.
About fiy paces off, another man, also appareled as a cavalier, was talking to
a Scot sentinel, and, though a foreigner, he seemed to understand without mu
difficulty the answers given in the broad Perthshire dialect.
As the town clo of Newcastle stru one the sleeper awoke, and with all the
gestures of a man rousing himself out of deep sleep he looked aentively about him;
perceiving that he was alone he rose and making a lile circuit passed close to the
cavalier who was speaking to the sentinel. e former had no doubt finished his
questions, for a moment later he said good-night and carelessly followed the same
path taken by the first cavalier.
In the shadow of a tent the former was awaiting him.
"Well, my dear friend?" said he, in as pure Fren as has ever been uered
between Rouen and Tours.
cccxciii
"Well, my friend, there is not a moment to lose; we must let the king know
immediately."
"Why, what is the maer?"
"It would take too long to tell you, besides, you will hear it all directly and
the least word dropped here might ruin all. We must go and find Lord Winter."
ey both set off to the other end of the camp, but as it did not cover more
than a surface of five hundred feet they quily arrived at the tent they were looking
for.
"Tony, is your master sleeping?" said one of the two cavaliers to a servant who
was lying in the outer compartment, whi served as a kind of ante-room.
"No, monsieur le comte," answered the servant, "I think not; or at least he has
not long been so, for he was pacing up and down for more than two hours aer
he le the king, and the sound of his footsteps has only ceased during the last ten
minutes. However, you may look and see," added the laey, raising the curtained
entrance of the tent.
Lord Winter was seated near an aperture, arranged as a window to let in the
night air, his eyes meanically following the course of the moon, intermiently
veiled, as we before observed, by heavy clouds. e two friends approaed Winter,
who, with his head on his hands, was gazing at the heavens; he did not hear them
enter and remained in the same aitude till he felt a hand upon his shoulder.
He turned around, recognized Athos and Aramis and held out his hand to
them.
"Have you observed," said he to them, "what a blood-red color the moon has
to-night?"
"No," replied Athos; "I thought it looked mu the same as usual."
"Look, again, evalier," returned Lord Winter.
"I must own," said Aramis, "I am like the Comte de la Fere--I can see nothing
remarkable about it."
"My lord," said Athos, "in a position so precarious as ours we must examine
the earth and not the heavens. Have you studied our Scot troops and have you
confidence in them?"
"e Scot?" inquired Winter. "What Scot?"
"Ours, egad!" exclaimed Athos. "ose in whom the king has confided--Lord
Leven's Highlanders."
"No," said Winter, then he paused; "but tell me, can you not perceive the russet
tint whi marks the heavens?"
"Not the least in the world," said Aramis and Athos at once.
"Tell me," continued Winter, always possessed by the same idea, "is there not
a tradition in France that Henry IV., the evening before the day he was assassinated,
when he was playing at ess with M. de Bassompiere, saw clots of blood upon the
cccxciv
essboard?"
"Yes," said Athos, "and the mareal has oen told me so himself."
"en it was so," murmured Winter, "and the next day Henry IV. was killed."
"But what has this vision of Henry IV. to do with you, my lord?" inquired
Aramis.
"Nothing; and indeed I am mad to trouble you with su things, when your
coming to my tent at su an hour announces that you are the bearers of important
news."
"Yes, my lord," said Athos, "I wish to speak to the king."
"To the king! but the king is asleep."
"I have something important to reveal to him."
"Can it not be put off till to-morrow?"
"He must know it this moment, and perhaps it is already too late."
"Come, then," said Lord Winter.
Lord Winter's tent was pited by the side of the royal marquee, a kind of
corridor communicating between the two. is corridor was guarded, not by a
sentinel, but by a confidential servant, through whom, in case of urgency, Charles
could communicate instantly with his faithful subject.
"ese gentlemen are with me," said Winter.
e laey bowed and let them pass. As he had said, on a camp bed, dressed
in his bla doublet, booted, unbelted, with his felt hat beside him, lay the king,
overcome by sleep and fatigue. ey advanced, and Athos, who was the first to
enter, gazed a moment in silence on that pale and noble face, framed in its long and
now untidy, maed hair, the blue veins showing through the transparent temples,
his eyes seemingly swollen by tears.
Athos sighed deeply; the sigh woke the king, so lightly did he sleep.
He opened his eyes.
"Ah!" said he, raising himself on his elbow, "is it you, Comte de la Fere?"
"Yes, sire," replied Athos.
"You wat while I sleep and you have come to bring me some news?"
"Alas, sire," answered Athos, "your majesty has guessed aright."
"It is bad news?"
"Yes, sire."
"Never mind; the messenger is welcome. You never come to me without con-
ferring pleasure. You whose devotion recognizes neither country nor misfortune,
you who are sent to me by Henriea; whatever news you bring, speak out."
"Sire, Cromwell has arrived this night at Newcastle."
"Ah!" exclaimed the king, "to fight?"
"No, sire, but to buy your majesty."
"What did you say?"
cccxcv
"I said, sire, that four hundred thousand pounds are owing to the Scoish
army."
"For unpaid wages; yes, I know it. For the last year my faithful Highlanders
have fought for honor alone."
Athos smiled.
"Well, sir, though honor is a fine thing, they are tired of fighting for it, and
to-night they have sold you for two hundred thousand pounds--that is to say, for
half what is owing them."
"Impossible!" cried the king, "the Scot sell their king for two hundred thou-
sand pounds! And who is the Judas who has concluded this infamous bargain?"
"Lord Leven."
"Are you certain of it, sir?"
"I heard it with my own ears."
e king sighed deeply, as if his heart would break, and then buried his face
in his hands.
"Oh! the Scot," he exclaimed, "the Scot I called 'my faithful,' to whom I
trusted myself when I could have fled to Oxford! the Scot, my brothers! But are
you well assured, sir?"
"Lying behind the tent of Lord Leven, I raised it and saw all, heard all!"
"And when is this to be consummated?"
"To-day--this morning; so your majesty must perceive there is no time to lose!"
"To do what? since you say I am sold."
"To cross the Tyne, rea Scotland and rejoin Lord Montrose, who will not
sell you."
"And what shall I do in Scotland? A war of partisans, unworthy of a king."
"e example of Robert Bruce will absolve you, sire."
"No, no! I have fought too long; they have sold me, they shall give me up, and
the eternal shame of treble treason shall fall on their heads."
"Sire," said Athos, "perhaps a king should act thus, but not a husband and a
father. I have come in the name of your wife and daughter and of the ildren you
have still in London, and I say to you, 'Live, sire,'--it is the will of Heaven."
e king raised himself, buled on his belt, and passing his handkerief over
his moist forehead, said:
"Well, what is to be done?"
"Sire, have you in the army one regiment on whi you can implicitly rely?"
"Winter," said the king, "do you believe in the fidelity of yours?"
"Sire, they are but men, and men are become both weak and wied. I will
not answer for them. I would confide my life to them, but I should hesitate ere I
trusted them with your majesty's."
"Well!" said Athos, "since you have not a regiment, we are three devoted men.
cccxcvi
It is enough. Let your majesty mount on horseba and place yourself in the midst
of us; we will cross the Tyne, rea Scotland, and you will be saved."
"Is this your counsel also, Winter?" inquired the king.
"Yes, sire."
"And yours, Monsieur d'Herblay?"
"Yes, sire."
"As you wish, then. Winter, give the necessary orders."
Winter then le the tent; in the meantime the king finished his toilet. e first
rays of daybreak penetrated the aperture of the tent as Winter re-entered it.
"All is ready, sire," said he.
"For us, also?" inquired Athos.
"Grimaud and Blaisois are holding your horses, ready saddled."
"In that case," exclaimed Athos, "let us not lose an instant, but set off."
"Come," added the king.
"Sire," said Aramis, "will not your majesty acquaint some of your friends of
this?"
"Friends!" answered Charles, sadly, "I have but three--one of twenty years,
who has never forgoen me, and two of a week's standing, whom I shall never
forget. Come, gentlemen, come!"
e king quied his tent and found his horse ready waiting for him. It was a
estnut that the king had ridden for three years and of whi he was very fond.
e horse neighed with pleasure at seeing him.
"Ah!" said the king, "I was unjust; here is a creature that loves me. You at least
will be faithful to me, Arthur."
e horse, as if it understood these words, bent its red nostrils toward the
king's face, and parting his lips displayed all its teeth, as if with pleasure.
"Yes, yes," said the king, caressing it with his hand, "yes, my Arthur, thou art
a fond and faithful creature."
Aer this lile scene Charles threw himself into the saddle, and turning to
Athos, Aramis and Winter, said:
"Now, gentlemen, I am at your service."
But Athos was standing with his eyes fixed on a bla line whi bordered
the banks of the Tyne and seemed to extend double the length of the camp.
"What is that line?" cried Athos, whose vision was still rather obscured by the
uncertain shades and demi-tints of daybreak. "What is that line? I did not observe
it yesterday."
"It must be the fog rising from the river," said the king.
"Sire, it is something more opaque than the fog."
"Indeed!" said Winter, "it appears to me like a bar of red color."
"It is the enemy, who have made a sortie from Newcastle and are surrounding
cccxcvii
e Scot ieains looked at ea other in their turn with frowning brows.
"Sire," murmured Lord Leven, crushed by shame, "sire, we are ready to give
you every proof of our fidelity."
"I ask but one," said the king; "put the army in bale array and face the enemy."
"at cannot be, sire," said the earl.
"How, cannot be? What hinders it?" exclaimed the king.
"Your majesty is well aware that there is a truce between us and the English
army."
"And if there is a truce the English army has broken it by quiing the town,
contrary to the agreement whi kept it there. Now, I tell you, you must pass with
me through this army across to Scotland, and if you refuse you may oose betwixt
two names, whi the contempt of all honest men will brand you with--you are
either cowards or traitors!"
e eyes of the Scot flashed fire; and, as oen happens on su occasions,
from shame they passed to effrontery and two heads of clans advanced upon the
king.
"Yes," said they, "we have promised to deliver Scotland and England from him
who for the last five-and-twenty years has sued the blood and gold of Scotland
and England. We have promised and we will keep our promise. Charles Stuart, you
are our prisoner."
And both extended their hands as if to seize the king, but before they could
tou him with the tips of their fingers, both had fallen, one dead, the other stunned.
Aramis had passed his sword through the body of the first and Athos had
knoed down the other with the bu end of his pistol.
en, as Lord Leven and the other ieains recoiled before this unexpected
rescue, whi seemed to come from Heaven for the prince they already thought was
their prisoner, Athos and Aramis dragged the king from the perjured assembly into
whi he had so imprudently ventured, and throwing themselves on horseba all
three returned at full gallop to the royal tent.
On their road they perceived Lord Winter maring at the head of his regi-
ment. e king motioned him to accompany them.
. e Avenger.
T all four entered the tent; they had no plan ready--they must think of one.
e king threw himself into an arm-air. "I am lost," said he.
"No, sire," replied Athos. "You are only betrayed."
e king sighed deeply.
"Betrayed! yes betrayed by the Scot, amongst whom I was born, whom I
have always loved beer than the English. Oh, traitors that ye are!"
"Sire," said Athos, "this is not a moment for recrimination, but a time to show
yourself a king and a gentleman. Up, sire! up! for you have here at least three men
who will not betray you. Ah! if we had been five!" murmured Athos, thinking of
D'Artagnan and Porthos.
"What do you say?" inquired Charles, rising.
"I say, sire, that there is now but one way open. Lord Winter answers for his
regiment, or at least very nearly so--we will not split straws about words--let him
place himself at the head of his men, we will place ourselves at the side of your
majesty, and we will mow a swath through Cromwell's army and rea Scotland."
"ere is another method," said Aramis. "Let one of us put on the dress and
mount the king's horse. Whilst they pursue him the king might escape."
"It is good advice," said Athos, "and if the king will do one of us the honor we
shall be truly grateful to him."
"What do you think of this counsel, Winter?" asked the king, looking with
admiration at these two men, whose ief idea seemed to be how they could take
on their shoulders all the dangers that assailed him.
"I think the only ance of saving your majesty has just been proposed by
Monsieur d'Herblay. I humbly entreat your majesty to oose quily, for we have
not an instant to lose."
"But if I accept, it is death, or at least imprisonment, for him who takes my
place."
"He will have had the glory of having saved his king," cried Winter.
cd
e king looked at his old friend with tears in his eyes; undid the Order of the
Saint Esprit whi he wore, to honor the two Frenmen who were with him, and
passed it around Winter's ne, who received on his knees this striking proof of his
sovereign's confidence and friendship.
"It is right," said Athos; "he has served your majesty longer than we have."
e king overheard these words and turned around with tears in his eyes.
"Wait a moment, sir," said he; "I have an order for ea of you also."
He turned to a closet where his own orders were loed up, and took out two
ribbons of the Order of the Garter.
"ese cannot be for us," said Athos.
"Why not, sir?" asked Charles.
"Su are for royalty, and we are simple commoners."
"Speak not of crowns. I shall not find amongst them su great hearts as yours.
No, no, you do yourselves injustice; but I am here to do you justice. On your knees,
count."
Athos knelt down and the king passed the ribbon down from le to right as
usual, raised his sword, and instead of pronouncing the customary formula, "I make
you a knight. Be brave, faithful and loyal," he said, "You are brave, faithful and loyal.
I knight you, monsieur le comte."
en turning to Aramis, he said:
"It is now your turn, monsieur le evalier."
e same ceremony recommenced, with the same words, whilst Winter un-
laced his leather cuirass, that he might disguise himself like the king. Charles, hav-
ing proceeded with Aramis as with Athos, embraced them both.
"Sire," said Winter, who in this trying emergency felt all his strength and en-
ergy fire up, "we are ready."
e king looked at the three gentlemen. "en we must fly!" said he.
"Flying through an army, sire," said Athos, "in all countries in the world is
called arging."
"en I shall die, sword in hand," said Charles. "Monsieur le comte, monsieur
le evalier, if ever I am king----"
"Sire, you have already done us more honor than simple gentlemen could ever
aspire to, therefore gratitude is on our side. But we must not lose time. We have
already wasted too mu."
e king again shook hands with all three, exanged hats with Winter and
went out.
Winter's regiment was ranged on some high ground above the camp. e
king, followed by the three friends, turned his steps that way. e Scot camp
seemed as if at last awakened; the soldiers had come out of their tents and taken up
their station in bale array.
cdi
"Do you see that?" said the king. "Perhaps they are penitent and preparing to
mar."
"If they are penitent," said Athos, "let them follow us."
"Well!" said the king, "what shall we do?"
"Let us examine the enemy's army."
At the same instant the eyes of the lile group were fixed on the same line
whi at daybreak they had mistaken for fog and whi the morning sun now
plainly showed was an army in order of bale. e air was so and clear, as it
generally is at that early hour of the morning. e regiments, the standards, and
even the colors of the horses and uniforms were now clearly distinct.
On the summit of a rising ground, a lile in advance of the enemy, appeared
a short and heavy looking man; this man was surrounded by officers. He turned a
spyglass toward the lile group amongst whi the king stood.
"Does this man know your majesty personally?" inquired Aramis.
Charles smiled.
"at man is Cromwell," said he.
"en draw down your hat, sire, that he may not discover the substitution."
"Ah!" said Athos, "how mu time we have lost."
"Now," said the king, "give the word and let us start."
"Will you not give it, sire?" asked Athos.
"No; I make you my lieutenant-general," said the king.
"Listen, then, Lord Winter. Proceed, sire, I beg. What we are going to say
does not concern your majesty."
e king, smiling, turned a few steps ba.
"is is what I propose to do," said Athos. "We will divide our regiments into
two squadrons. You will put yourself at the head of the first. We and his majesty
will lead the second. If no obstacle occurs we will both arge together, force the
enemy's line and throw ourselves into the Tyne, whi we must cross, either by
fording or swimming; if, on the contrary, any repulse should take place, you and
your men must fight to the last man, whilst we and the king proceed on our road.
Once arrived at the brink of the river, should we even find them three ranks deep,
as long as you and your regiment do your duty, we will look to the rest."
"To horse!" said Lord Winter.
"To horse!" re-eoed Athos; "everything is arranged and decided."
"Now, gentlemen," cried the king, "forward! and rally to the old cry of France,
'Montjoy and St. Denis!' e war cry of England is too oen in the mouths of
traitors."
ey mounted--the king on Winter's horse and Winter on that of the king;
then Winter took his place at the head of the first squadron, and the king, with
Athos on his right and Aramis on his le, at the head of the second.
cdii
e Scot army stood motionless and silent, seized with shame at sight of
these preparations.
Some of the ieains le the ranks and broke their swords in two.
"ere," said the king, "that consoles me; they are not all traitors."
At this moment Winter's voice was raised with the cry of "Forward!"
e first squadron moved off; the second followed, and descended from the
plateau. A regiment of cuirassiers, nearly equal as to numbers, issued from behind
the hill and came full gallop toward it.
e king pointed this out.
"Sire," said Athos, "we foresaw this; and if Lord Winter's men but do their
duty, we are saved, instead of lost."
At this moment they heard above all the galloping and neighing of the horses
Winter's voice crying out:
"Sword in hand!"
At these words every sword was drawn, and gliered in the air like lightning.
"Now, gentlemen," said the king in his turn, excited by this sight, "come, gen-
tlemen, sword in hand!"
But Aramis and Athos were the only ones to obey this command and the
king's example.
"We are betrayed," said the king in a low voice.
"Wait a moment," said Athos, "perhaps they do not recognize your majesty's
voice, and await the order of their captain."
"Have they not heard that of their colonel? But look! look!" cried the king,
drawing up his horse with a sudden jerk, whi threw it on its haunes, and seizing
the bridle of Athos's horse.
"Ah, cowards! traitors!" screamed Lord Winter, whose voice they heard,
whilst his men, quiing their ranks, dispersed all over the plain.
About fieen men were ranged around him and awaited the arge of
Cromwell's cuirassiers.
"Let us go and die with them!" said the king.
"Let us go," said Athos and Aramis.
"All faithful hearts with me!" cried out Winter.
is voice was heard by the two friends, who set off, full gallop.
"No quarter!" cried a voice in Fren, answering to that of Winter, whi made
them tremble.
As for Winter, at the sound of that voice he turned pale, and was, as it were,
petrified.
It was the voice of a cavalier mounted on a magnificent bla horse, who was
arging at the head of the English regiment, of whi, in his ardor, he was ten steps
in advance.
cdiii
"'Tis he!" murmured Winter, his eyes glazed and he allowed his sword to fall
to his side.
"e king! the king!" cried out several voices, deceived by the blue ribbon and
estnut horse of Winter; "take him alive."
"No! it is not the king!" exclaimed the cavalier. "Lord Winter, you are not the
king; you are my uncle."
At the same moment Mordaunt, for it was he, leveled his pistol at Winter; it
went off and the ball entered the heart of the old cavalier, who with one bound on
his saddle fell ba into the arms of Athos, murmuring: "He is avenged!"
"ink of my mother!" shouted Mordaunt, as his horse plunged and darted off
at full gallop.
"Wret!" exclaimed Aramis, raising his pistol as he passed by him; but the
powder flashed in the pan and it did not go off.
At this moment the whole regiment came up and they fell upon the few men
who had held out, surrounding the two Frenmen. Athos, aer making sure that
Lord Winter was really dead, let fall the corpse and said:
"Come, Aramis, now for the honor of France!" and the two Englishmen who
were nearest to them fell, mortally wounded.
At the same moment a fearful "hurrah!" rent the air and thirty blades gliered
about their heads.
Suddenly a man sprang out of the English ranks, fell upon Athos, twined arms
of steel around him, and tearing his sword from him, said in his ear:
"Silence! yield--you yield to me, do you not?"
A giant had seized also Aramis's two wrists, who struggled in vain to release
himself from this formidable grasp.
"D'Art----" exclaimed Athos, whilst the Gascon covered his mouth with his
hand.
"I am your prisoner," said Aramis, giving up his sword to Porthos.
"Fire, fire!" cried Mordaunt, returning to the group surrounding the two
friends.
"And wherefore fire?" said the colonel; "every one has yielded."
"It is the son of Milady," said Athos to D'Artagnan.
"I recognize him."
"It is the monk," whispered Porthos to Aramis.
"I know it."
And now the ranks began to open. D'Artagnan held the bridle of Athos's
horse and Porthos that of Aramis. Both of them aempted to lead his prisoner off
the bale-field.
is movement revealed the spot where Winter's body had fallen. Mordaunt
had found it out and was gazing on his dead relative with an expression of malignant
cdiv
hatred.
Athos, though now cool and collected, put his hand to his belt, where his
loaded pistols yet remained.
"What are you about?" said D'Artagnan.
"Let me kill him."
"We are all four lost, if by the least gesture you discover that you recognize
him."
en turning to the young man he exclaimed:
"A fine prize! a fine prize, friend Mordaunt; we have both myself and Mon-
sieur du Vallon, taken two Knights of the Garter, nothing less."
"But," said Mordaunt, looking at Athos and Aramis with bloodshot eyes, "these
are Frenmen, I imagine."
"I'faith, I don't know. Are you Fren, sir?" said he to Athos.
"I am," replied the laer, gravely.
"Very well, my dear sir, you are the prisoner of a fellow countryman."
"But the king--where is the king?" exclaimed Athos, anxiously.
D'Artagnan vigorously seized his prisoner's hand, saying:
"Eh! the king? We have secured him."
"Yes," said Aramis, "through an infamous act of treason."
Porthos pressed his friend's hand and said to him:
"Yes, sir, all is fair in war, stratagem as well as force; look yonder!"
At this instant the squadron, that ought to have protected Charles's retreat,
was advancing to meet the English regiments. e king, who was entirely sur-
rounded, walked alone in a great empty space. He appeared calm, but it was ev-
idently not without a mighty effort. Drops of perspiration triled down his face,
and from time to time he put a handkerief to his mouth to wipe away the blood
that rilled from it.
"Behold Nebuadnezzar!" exclaimed an old Puritan soldier, whose eyes
flashed at the sight of the man they called the tyrant.
"Do you call him Nebuadnezzar?" said Mordaunt, with a terrible smile; "no,
it is Charles the First, the king, the good King Charles, who despoils his subjects to
enri himself."
Charles glanced a moment at the insolent creature who uered this, but did
not recognize him. Nevertheless, the calm religious dignity of his countenance
abashed Mordaunt.
"Bon jour, messieurs!" said the king to the two gentlemen who were held by
D'Artagnan and Porthos. "e day has been unfortunate, but it is not your fault,
thank God! But where is my old friend Winter?"
e two gentlemen turned away their heads in silence.
"In Strafford's company," said Mordaunt, tauntingly.
cdv
H you been to the general?" said Mordaunt to D'Artagnan and Porthos; "you
know he sent for you aer the action."
"We want first to put our prisoners in a place of safety," replied D'Artagnan.
"Do you know, sir, these gentlemen are ea of them worth fieen hundred pounds?"
"Oh, be assured," said Mordaunt, looking at them with an expression he vainly
endeavoured to soen, "my soldiers will guard them, and guard them well, I promise
you."
"I shall take beer care of them myself," answered D'Artagnan; "besides, all
they require is a good room, with sentinels, or their simple parole that they will not
aempt escape. I will go and see about that, and then we shall have the honor of
presenting ourselves to the general and receiving his commands for his eminence."
"You think of starting at once, then?" inquired Mordaunt.
"Our mission is ended, and there is nothing more to detain us now but the
good pleasure of the great man to whom we were sent."
e young man bit his lips and whispered to his sergeant:
"You will follow these men and not lose sight of them; when you have discov-
ered where they lodge, come and await me at the town gate."
e sergeant made a sign of comprehension.
Instead of following the knot of prisoners that were being taken into the town,
Mordaunt turned his steps toward the rising ground from whence Cromwell had
witnessed the bale and on whi he had just had his tent pited.
Cromwell had given orders that no one was to be allowed admission; but the
sentinel, who knew that Mordaunt was one of the most confidential friends of the
general, thought the order did not extend to the young man. Mordaunt, therefore,
raised the canvas, and saw Cromwell seated before a table, his head buried in his
hands, his ba being turned.
Whether he heard Mordaunt or not as he entered, Cromwell did not move.
Mordaunt remained standing near the door. At last, aer a few moments, Cromwell
raised his head, and, as if he divined that some one was there, turned slowly around.
cdvii
"What!" said Cromwell, arresting him for a moment as he arose; "is there
nothing more you wish? neither gold nor rank?"
"You have given me all you can give me, and from to-day your debt is paid."
And Mordaunt darted out of the general's tent, his heart beating and his eyes
sparkling with joy.
Cromwell gazed a moment aer him.
"He has slain his uncle!" he murmured. "Alas! what are my servants? Possibly
this one, who asks nothing or seems to ask nothing, has asked more in the eyes of
Heaven than those who tax the country and steal the bread of the poor. Nobody
serves me for nothing. Charles, who is my prisoner, may still have friends, but I
have none!"
And with a deep sigh he again sank into the reverie that had been interrupted
by Mordaunt.
. Jesus Seigneur.
W Mordaunt was making his way to Cromwell's tent, D'Artagnan and
Porthos had brought their prisoners to the house whi had been assigned
to them as their dwelling at Newcastle.
e order given by Mordaunt to the sergeant had been heard by D'Artagnan,
who accordingly, by an expressive glance, warned Athos and Aramis to exercise ex-
treme caution. e prisoners, therefore, had remained silent as they mared along
in company with their conquerors--whi they could do with the less difficulty since
ea of them had occupation enough in answering his own thoughts.
It would be impossible to describe Mousqueton's astonishment when from the
threshold of the door he saw the four friends approaing, followed by a sergeant
with a dozen men. He rubbed his eyes, doubting if he really saw before him Athos
and Aramis; and forced at last to yield to evidence, he was on the point of breaking
forth in exclamations when he encountered a glance from the eyes of Porthos, the
repressive force of whi he was not inclined to dispute.
Mousqueton remained glued to the door, awaiting the explanation of this
strange occurrence. What upset him completely was that the four friends seemed
to have no acquaintance with one another.
e house to whi D'Artagnan and Porthos conducted Athos and Aramis
was the one assigned to them by General Cromwell and of whi they had taken
possession on the previous evening. It was at the corner of two streets and had in
the rear, bordering on the side street, stables and a sort of garden. e windows on
the ground floor, according to a custom in provincial villages, were barred, so that
they strongly resembled the windows of a prison.
e two friends made the prisoners enter the house first, whilst they stood at
the door, desiring Mousqueton to take the four horses to the stable.
"Why don't we go in with them?" asked Porthos.
"We must first see what the sergeant wishes us to do," replied D'Artagnan.
e sergeant and his men took possession of the lile garden.
cdxii
D'Artagnan asked them what they wished and why they had taken that posi-
tion.
"We have had orders," answered the man, "to help you in taking care of your
prisoners."
ere could be no fault to find with this arrangement; on the contrary, it
seemed to be a delicate aention, to be gratefully received; D'Artagnan, therefore,
thanked the man and gave him a crown piece to drink to General Cromwell's health.
e sergeant answered that Puritans never drank, and put the crown piece in
his poet.
"Ah!" said Porthos, "what a fearful day, my dear D'Artagnan!"
"What! a fearful day, when to-day we find our friends?"
"Yes; but under what circumstances?"
"'Tis true that our position is an awkward one; but let us go in and see more
clearly what is to be done."
"ings look bla enough," replied Porthos; "I understand now why Aramis
advised me to strangle that horrible Mordaunt."
"Silence!" cried the Gascon; "do not uer that name."
"But," argued Porthos, "I speak Fren and they are all English."
D'Artagnan looked at Porthos with that air of wonder whi a cunning man
cannot help feeling at displays of crass stupidity.
But as Porthos on his side could not comprehend his astonishment, he merely
pushed him indoors, saying, "Let us go in."
ey found Athos in profound despondency; Aramis looked first at Porthos
and then at D'Artagnan, without speaking, but the laer understood his meaningful
look.
"You want to know how we came here? 'Tis easily guessed. Mazarin sent us
with a leer to General Cromwell."
"But how came you to fall into company with Mordaunt, whom I bade you
distrust?" asked Athos.
"And whom I advised you to strangle, Porthos," said Aramis.
"Mazarin again. Cromwell had sent him to Mazarin. Mazarin sent us to
Cromwell. ere is a certain fatality in it."
"Yes, you are right, D'Artagnan, a fatality that will separate and ruin us! So,
my dear Aramis, say no more about it and let us prepare to submit to destiny."
"Zounds! on the contrary, let us speak about it; for it was agreed among
us, once for all, that we should always hold together, though engaged on opposing
sides."
"Yes," added Athos, "I now ask you, D'Artagnan, what side you are on? Ah!
behold for what end the wreted Mazarin has made use of you. Do you know in
what crime you are to-day engaged? In the capture of a king, his degradation and
cdxiii
his murder."
"Oh! oh!" cried Porthos, "do you think so?"
"You are exaggerating, Athos; we are not so far gone as that," replied the lieu-
tenant.
"Good heavens! we are on the very eve of it. I say, why is the king taken
prisoner? ose who wish to respect him as a master would not buy him as a slave.
Do you think it is to replace him on the throne that Cromwell has paid for him two
hundred thousand pounds sterling? ey will kill him, you may be sure of it."
"I don't maintain the contrary," said D'Artagnan. "But what's that to us? I am
here because I am a soldier and have to obey orders--I have taken an oath to obey,
and I do obey; but you who have taken no su oath, why are you here and what
cause do you represent?"
"at most sacred in the world," said Athos; "the cause of misfortune, of reli-
gion, royalty. A friend, a wife, a daughter, have done us the honor to call us to their
aid. We have served them to the best of our poor means, and God will recompense
the will, forgive the want of power. You may see maers differently, D'Artagnan,
and think otherwise. I will not aempt to argue with you, but I blame you."
"Heyday!" cried D'Artagnan, "what maers it to me, aer all, if Cromwell,
who's an Englishman, revolts against his king, who is a Scotman? I am myself a
Frenman. I have nothing to do with these things--why hold me responsible?"
"Yes," said Porthos.
"Because all gentlemen are brothers, because you are a gentleman, because
the kings of all countries are the first among gentlemen, because the blind populace,
ungrateful and brutal, always takes pleasure in pulling down what is above them.
And you, you, D'Artagnan, a man sprung from the ancient nobility of France, bear-
ing an honorable name, carrying a good sword, have helped to give up a king to
beersellers, shopkeepers, and wagoners. Ah! D'Artagnan! perhaps you have done
your duty as a soldier, but as a gentleman, I say that you are very culpable."
D'Artagnan was ewing the stalk of a flower, unable to reply and thoroughly
uncomfortable; for when turned from the eyes of Athos he encountered those of
Aramis.
"And you, Porthos," continued the count, as if in consideration for
D'Artagnan's embarrassment, "you, the best heart, the best friend, the best soldier
that I know--you, with a soul that makes you worthy of a birth on the steps of a
throne, and who, sooner or later, must receive your reward from an intelligent king-
-you, my dear Porthos, you, a gentleman in manners, in tastes and in courage, you
are as culpable as D'Artagnan."
Porthos blushed, but with pleasure rather than with confusion; and yet, bow-
ing his head, as if humiliated, he said:
"Yes, yes, my dear count, I feel that you are right."
cdxiv
Athos arose.
"Come," he said, streting out his hand to D'Artagnan, "come, don't be sullen,
my dear son, for I have said all this to you, if not in the tone, at least with the
feelings of a father. It would have been easier to me merely to have thanked you for
preserving my life and not to have uered a word of all this."
"Doubtless, doubtless, Athos. But here it is: you have sentiments, the devil
knows what, su as every one can't entertain. Who could suppose that a sensible
man could leave his house, France, his ward--a arming youth, for we saw him
in the camp--to fly to the aid of a roen, worm-eaten royalty, whi is going to
crumble one of these days like an old hovel. e sentiments you air are certainly
fine, so fine that they are superhuman."
"However that may be, D'Artagnan," replied Athos, without falling into the
snare whi his Gascon friend had prepared for him by an appeal to his parental
love, "however that may be, you know in the boom of your heart that it is true;
but I am wrong to dispute with my master. D'Artagnan, I am your prisoner--treat
me as su."
"Ah! pardieu!" said D'Artagnan, "you know you will not be my prisoner very
long."
"No," said Aramis, "they will doubtless treat us like the prisoners of the
Philipghauts."
"And how were they treated?" asked D'Artagnan.
"Why," said Aramis, "one-half were hanged and the other half were shot."
"Well, I," said D'Artagnan "I answer that while there remains a drop of blood
in my veins you will be neither hanged nor shot. Sang Diou! let them come on!
Besides--do you see that door, Athos?"
"Yes; what then?"
"Well, you can go out by that door whenever you please; for from this moment
you are free as the air."
"I recognize you there, my brave D'Artagnan," replied Athos; "but you are no
longer our masters. at door is guarded, D'Artagnan; you know that."
"Very well, you will force it," said Porthos. "ere are only a dozen men at the
most."
"at would be nothing for us four; it is too mu for us two. No, divided
as we now are, we must perish. See the fatal example: on the Vendomois road,
D'Artagnan, you so brave, and you, Porthos, so valiant and so strong--you were
beaten; to-day Aramis and I are beaten in our turn. Now that never happened to us
when we were four together. Let us die, then, as De Winter has died; as for me, I
will fly only on condition that we all fly together."
"Impossible," said D'Artagnan; "we are under Mazarin's orders."
"I know it and I have nothing more to say; my arguments lead to nothing;
cdxv
doubtless they are bad, since they have not determined minds so just as yours."
"Besides," said Aramis, "had they taken effect it would be still beer not to
compromise two excellent friends like D'Artagnan and Porthos. Be assured, gentle-
men, we shall do you honor in our dying. As for myself, I shall be proud to face the
bullets, or even the rope, in company with you, Athos; for you have never seemed
to me so grand as you are to-day."
D'Artagnan said nothing, but, aer having gnawed the flower stalk, he began
to bite his nails. At last:
"Do you imagine," he resumed, "that they mean to kill you? And wherefore
should they do so? What interest have they in your death? Moreover, you are our
prisoners."
"Fool!" cried Aramis; "knowest thou not, then, Mordaunt? I have but ex-
anged with him one look, yet that look convinced me that we were doomed."
"e truth is, I'm very sorry that I did not strangle him as you advised me,"
said Porthos.
"Eh! I make no account of the harm Mordaunt can do!" cried D'Artagnan.
"Cap de Diou! if he troubles me too mu I will crush him, the insect! Do not fly,
then. It is useless; for I swear to you that you are as safe here as you were twenty
years, ago--you, Athos, in the Rue Ferou, and you, Aramis, in the Rue de Vaugirard."
"Stop," cried Athos, extending his hand to one of the grated windows by whi
the room was lighted; "you will soon know what to expect, for here he is."
"Who?"
"Mordaunt."
In fact, looking at the place to whi Athos pointed, D'Artagnan saw a cavalier
coming toward the house at full gallop.
It was Mordaunt.
D'Artagnan rushed out of the room.
Porthos wanted to follow him.
"Stay," said D'Artagnan, "and do not come till you hear me drum my fingers
on the door."
When Mordaunt arrived opposite the house he saw D'Artagnan on the thresh-
old and the soldiers lying on the grass here and there, with their arms.
"Halloo!" he cried, "are the prisoners still there?"
"Yes, sir," answered the sergeant, uncovering.
"'Tis well; order four men to conduct them to my lodging."
Four men prepared to do so.
"What is it?" said D'Artagnan, with that jeering manner whi our readers
have so oen observed in him since they made his acquaintance. "What is the
maer, if you please?"
"Sir," replied Mordaunt, "I have ordered the two prisoners we made this morn-
cdxvi
in writing."
Mordaunt stopped short.
"He has given you some lile writing for me--the least bit of paper whi may
show that you come in his name. Be pleased to give me that scrap of paper so that I
may justify, by a pretext at least, my abandoning my countrymen. Otherwise, you
see, although I am sure that General Oliver Cromwell can intend them no harm, it
would have a bad appearance."
Mordaunt recoiled; he felt the blow and disarged a terrible look at
D'Artagnan, who responded by the most amiable expression that ever graced a hu-
man countenance.
"When I tell you a thing, sir," said Mordaunt, "you insult me by doubting it."
"I!" cried D'Artagnan, "I doubt what you say! God keep me from it, my dear
Monsieur Mordaunt! On the contrary, I take you to be a worthy and accomplished
gentleman. And then, sir, do you wish me to speak freely to you?" continued
D'Artagnan, with his frank expression.
"Speak out, sir," said Mordaunt.
"Monsieur du Vallon, yonder, is ri and has forty thousand francs yearly, so
he does not care about money. I do not speak for him, but for myself."
"Well, sir? What more?"
"Well--I--I'm not ri. In Gascony 'tis no dishonor, sir, nobody is ri; and
Henry IV., of glorious memory, who was the king of the Gascons, as His Majesty
Philip IV. is the king of the Spaniards, never had a penny in his poet."
"Go on, sir, I see what you wish to get at; and if it is simply what I think that
stops you, I can obviate the difficulty."
"Ah, I knew well," said the Gascon, "that you were a man of talent. Well,
here's the case, here's where the saddle hurts me, as we Fren say. I am an officer
of fortune, nothing else; I have nothing but what my sword brings me in--that is
to say, more blows than banknotes. Now, on taking prisoners, this morning, two
Frenmen, who seemed to me of high birth--in short, two knights of the Garter-
-I said to myself, my fortune is made. I say two, because in su circumstances,
Monsieur du Vallon, who is ri, always gives me his prisoners."
Mordaunt, completely deceived by the wordy civility of D'Artagnan, smiled
like a man who understands perfectly the reasons given him, and said:
"I shall have the order signed directly, sir, and with it two thousand pistoles;
meanwhile, let me take these men away."
"No," replied D'Artagnan; "what signifies a delay of half an hour? I am a man
of order, sir; let us do things in order."
"Nevertheless," replied Mordaunt, "I could compel you; I command here."
"Ah, sir!" said D'Artagnan, "I see that although we have had the honor of
traveling in your company you do not know us. We are gentlemen; we are, both
cdxviii
of us, able to kill you and your eight men--we two only. For Heaven's sake don't
be obstinate, for when others are obstinate I am obstinate likewise, and then I be-
come ferocious and headstrong, and there's my friend, who is even more headstrong
and ferocious than myself. Besides, we are sent here by Cardinal Mazarin, and at
this moment represent both the king and the cardinal, and are, therefore, as am-
bassadors, able to act with impunity, a thing that General Oliver Cromwell, who
is assuredly as great a politician as he is a general, is quite the man to understand.
Ask him then, for the wrien order. What will that cost you my dear Monsieur
Mordaunt?"
"Yes, the wrien order," said Porthos, who now began to comprehend what
D'Artagnan was aiming at, "we ask only for that."
However inclined Mordaunt was to have recourse to violence, he understood
the reasons D'Artagnan had given him; besides, completely ignorant of the friend-
ship whi existed between the four Frenmen, all his uneasiness disappeared
when he heard of the plausible motive of the ransom. He decided, therefore, not
only to fet the order, but the two thousand pistoles, at whi he estimated the
prisoners. He therefore mounted his horse and disappeared.
"Good!" thought D'Artagnan; "a quarter of an hour to go to the tent, a quarter
of an hour to return; it is more than we need." en turning, without the least ange
of countenance, to Porthos, he said, looking him full in the face: "Friend Porthos,
listen to this; first, not a syllable to either of our friends of what you have heard; it
is unnecessary for them to know the service we are going to render them."
"Very well; I understand."
"Go to the stable; you will find Mousqueton there; saddle your horses, put
your pistols in your saddle-bags, take out the horses and lead them to the street
below this, so that there will be nothing to do but mount them; all the rest is my
business."
Porthos made no remark, but obeyed, with the sublime confidence he had in
his friend.
"I go," he said, "only, shall I enter the amber where those gentlemen are?"
"No, it is not worth while."
"Well, do me the kindness to take my purse, whi I le on the mantelpiece."
"All right."
He then proceeded, with his usual calm gait, to the stable and went into the
very midst of the soldiery, who, foreigner as he was, could not help admiring his
height and the enormous strength of his great limbs.
At the corner of the street he met Mousqueton and took him with him.
D'Artagnan, meantime, went into the house, whistling a tune whi he had
begun before Porthos went away.
"My dear Athos, I have reflected on your arguments and I am convinced. I am
cdxix
sorry to have had anything to do with this maer. As you say, Mazarin is a knave. I
have resolved to fly with you, not a word--be ready. Your swords are in the corner;
do not forget them, they are in many circumstances very useful; there is Porthos's
purse, too."
He put it into his poet. e two friends were perfectly stupefied.
"Well, pray, is there anything to be so surprised at?" he said. "I was blind;
Athos has made me see, that's all; come here."
e two friends went near him.
"Do you see that street? ere are the horses. Go out by the door, turn to the
right, jump into your saddles, all will be right; don't be uneasy at anything except
mistaking the signal. at will be the signal when I call out--Jesus Seigneur!"
"But give us your word that you will come too, D'Artagnan," said Athos.
"I swear I will, by Heaven."
"'Tis seled," said Aramis; "at the cry 'Jesus Seigneur' we go out, upset all that
stands in our way, run to our horses, jump into our saddles, spur them; is that all?"
"Exactly."
"See, Aramis, as I have told you, D'Artagnan is first amongst us all," said Athos.
"Very true," replied the Gascon, "but I always run away from compliments.
Don't forget the signal: 'Jesus Seigneur!'" and he went out as he came in, whistling
the self-same air.
e soldiers were playing or sleeping; two of them were singing in a corner,
out of tune, the psalm: "On the rivers of Babylon."
D'Artagnan called the sergeant. "My dear friend, General Cromwell has sent
Monsieur Mordaunt to fet me. Guard the prisoners well, I beg of you."
e sergeant made a sign, as mu as to say he did not understand Fren,
and D'Artagnan tried to make him comprehend by signs and gestures. en he went
into the stable; he found the five horses saddled, his own amongst the rest.
"Ea of you take a horse by the bridle," he said to Porthos and Mousqueton;
"turn to the le, so that Athos and Aramis may see you clearly from the window."
"ey are coming, then?" said Porthos.
"In a moment."
"You didn't forget my purse?"
"No; be easy."
"Good."
Porthos and Mousqueton ea took a horse by the bridle and proceeded to
their post.
en D'Artagnan, being alone, stru a light and lighted a small bit of tinder,
mounted his horse and stopped at the door in the midst of the soldiers. ere,
caressing as he pretended, the animal with his hand, he put this bit of burning
tinder in his ear. It was necessary to be as good a horseman as he was to risk su a
cdxx
seme, for no sooner had the animal felt the burning tinder than he uered a cry
of pain and reared and jumped as if he had been mad.
e soldiers, whom he was nearly trampling, ran away.
"Help! help!" cried D'Artagnan; "stop--my horse has the staggers."
In an instant the horse's eyes grew bloodshot and he was white with foam.
"Help!" cried D'Artagnan. "What! will you let me be killed? Jesus Seigneur!"
No sooner had he uered this cry than the door opened and Athos and Aramis
rushed out. e coast, owing to the Gascon's stratagem, was clear.
"e prisoners are escaping! the prisoners are escaping!" cried the sergeant.
"Stop! stop!" cried D'Artagnan, giving rein to his famous steed, who, darting
forth, overturned several men.
"Stop! stop!" cried the soldiers, and ran for their arms.
But the prisoners were in their saddles and lost no time hastening to the near-
est gate.
In the middle of the street they saw Grimaud and Blaisois, who were coming
to find their masters. With one wave of his hand Athos made Grimaud, who fol-
lowed the lile troop, understand everything, and they passed on like a whirlwind,
D'Artagnan still directing them from behind with his voice.
ey passed through the gate like apparitions, without the guards thinking of
detaining them, and reaed the open country.
All this time the soldiers were calling out, "Stop! stop!" and the sergeant, who
began to see that he was the victim of an artifice, was almost in a frenzy of despair.
Whilst all this was going on, a cavalier in full gallop was seen approaing. It was
Mordaunt with the order in his hand.
"e prisoners!" he exclaimed, jumping off his horse.
e sergeant had not the courage to reply; he showed him the open door, the
empty room. Mordaunt darted to the steps, understood all, uered a cry, as if his
very heart was pierced, and fell fainting on the stone steps.
. Noble Natures never lose
Courage, nor good Stomas
their Appetites.
"And you fancy he will not put his maxim into execution, now that he has got
hold of the king?"
"On the contrary, I am certain he will do so. But then that is all the more
reason why we should not abandon the august head so threatened."
"Athos, you are becoming mad."
"No, my friend," Athos gently replied, "but De Winter sought us out in France
and introduced us, Monsieur d'Herblay and myself, to Madame Henriea. Her
majesty did us the honor to ask our aid for her husband. We engaged our word; our
word included everything. It was our strength, our intelligence, our life, in short,
that we promised. It remains now for us to keep our word. Is that your opinion,
D'Herblay?"
"Yes," said Aramis, "we have promised."
"en," continued Athos, "we have another reason; it is this--listen: In France
at this moment everything is poor and paltry. We have a king ten years old, who
doesn't yet know what he wants; we have a queen blinded by a belated passion;
we have a minister who governs France as he would govern a great farm--that is to
say, intent only on turning out all the gold he can by the exercise of Italian cunning
and invention; we have princes who set up a personal and egotistic opposition, who
will draw from Mazarin's hands only a few ingots of gold or some shreds of power
granted as bribes. I have served them without enthusiasm--God knows that I es-
timated them at their real value, and that they are not high in my esteem--but on
principle. To-day I am engaged in a different affair. I have encountered misfortune
in a high place, a royal misfortune, a European misfortune; I aa myself to it. If
we can succeed in saving the king it will be good; if we die for him it will be grand."
"So you know beforehand you must perish!" said D'Artagnan.
"We fear so, and our only regret is to die so far from both of you."
"What will you do in a foreign land, an enemy's country?"
"I traveled in England when I was young, I speak English like an English-
man, and Aramis, too, knows something of the language. Ah! if we had you, my
friends! With you, D'Artagnan, with you, Porthos--all four reunited for the first
time for twenty years--we would dare not only England, but the three kingdoms
put together!"
"And did you promise the queen," resumed D'Artagnan, petulantly, "to storm
the Tower of London, to kill a hundred thousand soldiers, to fight victoriously
against the wishes of the nation and the ambition of a man, and when that man
is Cromwell? Do not exaggerate your duty. In Heaven's name, my dear Athos, do
not make a useless sacrifice. When I see you merely, you look like a reasonable
being; when you speak, I seem to have to do with a madman. Come, Porthos, join
me; say frankly, what do you think of this business?"
"Nothing good," replied Porthos.
cdxxiv
"You see, then, D'Artagnan, though princes oen are ungrateful, God never
is."
"Athos," said D'Artagnan, "I believe that were you to fall in with the devil, you
would conduct yourself so well that you would take him with you to Heaven."
"So, then?" said Athos, offering his hand to D'Artagnan.
"'Tis seled," replied D'Artagnan. "I find England a arming country, and I
stay--but on one condition only."
"What is it?"
"at I am not forced to learn English."
"Well, now," said Athos, triumphantly, "I swear to you, my friend, by the God
who hears us--I believe that there is a power wating over us, and that we shall all
four see France again."
"So be it!" said D'Artagnan, "but I--I confess I have a contrary conviction."
"Our good D'Artagnan," said Aramis, "represents among us the opposition in
parliament, whi always says no, and always does aye."
"But in the meantime saves the country," added Athos.
"Well, now that everything is decided," cried Porthos, rubbing his hands, "sup-
pose we think of dinner! It seems to me that in the most critical positions of our
lives we have always dined."
"Oh! yes, speak of dinner in a country where for a feast they eat boiled muon,
and as a treat drink beer. What the devil did you come to su a country for, Athos?
But I forgot," added the Gascon, smiling, "pardon, I forgot you are no longer Athos;
but never mind, let us hear your plan for dinner, Porthos."
"My plan!"
"Yes, have you a plan?"
"No! I am hungry, that is all."
"Pardieu, if that is all, I am hungry, too; but it is not everything to be hungry,
one must find something to eat, unless we browse on the grass, like our horses----"
"Ah!" exclaimed Aramis, who was not quite so indifferent to the good things
of the earth as Athos, "do you remember, when we were at Parpaillot, the beautiful
oysters that we ate?"
"And the legs of muon of the salt marshes," said Porthos, smaing his lips.
"But," suggested D'Artagnan, "have we not our friend Mousqueton, who man-
aged for us so well at Chantilly, Porthos?"
"Yes," said Porthos, "we have Mousqueton, but since he has been steward, he
has become very heavy; never mind, let us call him, and to make sure that he will
reply agreeably----
"Here! Mouston," cried Porthos.
Mouston appeared, with a most piteous face.
"What is the maer, my dear M. Mouston?" asked D'Artagnan. "Are you ill?"
cdxxvi
A our fugitives approaed the house, they found the ground cut up, as if a
considerable body of horsemen had preceded them. Before the door the traces
were yet more apparent; these horsemen, whoever they might be, had halted there.
"Egad!" cried D'Artagnan, "it's quite clear that the king and his escort have
been by here."
"e devil!" said Porthos; "in that case they have eaten everything."
"Bah!" said D'Artagnan, "they will have le a ien, at least." He dismounted
and knoed on the door. ere was no response.
He pushed open the door and found the first room empty and deserted.
"Well?" cried Porthos.
"I can see nobody," said D'Artagnan. "Aha!"
"What?"
"Blood!"
At this word the three friends leaped from their horses and entered.
D'Artagnan had already opened the door of the second room, and from the ex-
pression of his face it was clear that he there beheld some extraordinary object.
e three friends drew near and discovered a young man streted on the
ground, bathed in a pool of blood. It was evident that he had aempted to regain
his bed, but had not had sufficient strength to do so.
Athos, who imagined that he saw him move, was the first to go up to him.
"Well?" inquired D'Artagnan.
"Well, if he is dead," said Athos, "he has not been so long, for he is still warm.
But no, his heart is beating. Ho, there, my friend!"
e wounded man heaved a sigh. D'Artagnan took some water in the hollow
of his hand and threw it upon his face. e man opened his eyes, made an effort to
raise his head, and fell ba again. e wound was in the top of his skull and blood
was flawing copiously.
Aramis dipped a cloth into some water and applied it to the gash. Again the
wounded man opened his eyes and looked in astonishment at these strangers, who
cdxxix
"You hear, D'Artagnan?" said Athos; "we shall have to look elsewhere for our
dinner."
"It is all one to me now," said D'Artagnan; "I am no longer hungry."
"Faith! neither am I," said Porthos.
ey carried the man to his bed and called Grimaud to dress the wound. In
the service of the four friends Grimaud had had so frequent occasion to make lint
and bandages that he had become something of a surgeon.
In the meantime the fugitives had returned to the first room, where they took
counsel together.
"Now," said Aramis, "we know how the maer stands. e king and his escort
have gone this way; we had beer take the opposite direction, eh?"
Athos did not reply; he reflected.
"Yes," said Porthos, "let us take the opposite direction; if we follow the escort
we shall find everything devoured and die of hunger. What a confounded country
this England is! is is the first time I have gone without my dinner for ten years,
and it is generally my best meal."
"What do you think, D'Artagnan?" asked Athos. "Do you agree with Aramis?"
"Not at all," said D'Artagnan; "I am precisely of the contrary opinion."
"What! you would follow the escort?" exclaimed Porthos, in dismay.
"No, I would join the escort."
Athos's eyes shone with joy.
"Join the escort!" cried Aramis.
"Let D'Artagnan speak," said Athos; "you know he always has wise advice to
give."
"Clearly," said D'Artagnan, "we must go where they will not look for us. Now,
they will be far from looking for us among the Puritans; therefore, with the Puritans
we must go."
"Good, my friend, good!" said Athos. "It is excellent advice. I was about to
give it when you anticipated me."
"at, then, is your opinion?" asked Aramis.
"Yes. ey will think we are trying to leave England and will sear for us
at the ports; meanwhile we shall rea London with the king. Once in London we
shall be hard to find--without considering," continued Athos, throwing a glance at
Aramis, "the ances that may come to us on the way."
"Yes," said Aramis, "I understand."
"I, however, do not understand," said Porthos. "But no maer; since it is at the
same time the opinion of D'Artagnan and of Athos, it must be the best."
"But," said Aramis, "shall we not be suspected by Colonel Harrison?"
"Egad!" cried D'Artagnan, "he's just the man I count upon. Colonel Harrison is
one of our friends. We have met him twice at General Cromwell's. He knows that
cdxxxi
Harrison and his officers siing together at another table, and, in a corner, places
reserved for himself and his companions.
e table at whi the Puritan officers were seated was round, and whether
by ance or coarse intention, Harrison sat with his ba to the king.
e king saw the four gentlemen come in, but appeared to take no notice of
them.
ey sat down in su a manner as to turn their bas on nobody. e officers,
table and that of the king were opposite to them.
"I'faith, colonel," said D'Artagnan, "we are very grateful for your gracious invi-
tation; for without you we ran the risk of going without dinner, as we have without
breakfast. My friend here, Monsieur du Vallon, shares my gratitude, for he was
particularly hungry."
"And I am so still," said Porthos bowing to Harrison.
"And how," said Harrison, laughing, "did this serious calamity of going with-
out breakfast happen to you?"
"In a very simple manner, colonel," said D'Artagnan. "I was in a hurry to join
you and took the road you had already gone by. You can understand our disap-
pointment when, arriving at a prey lile house on the skirts of a wood, whi at a
distance had quite a gay appearance, with its red roof and green shuers, we found
nothing but a poor wret bathed--Ah! colonel, pay my respects to the officer of
yours who stru that blow."
"Yes," said Harrison, laughing, and looking over at one of the officers seated at
his table. "When Groslow undertakes this kind of thing there's no need to go over
the ground a second time."
"Ah! it was this gentleman?" said D'Artagnan, bowing to the officer. "I am
sorry he does not speak Fren, that I might tender him my compliments."
"I am ready to receive and return them, sir," said the officer, in prey good
Fren, "for I resided three years in Paris."
"en, sir, allow me to assure you that your blow was so well directed that
you have nearly killed your man."
"Nearly? I thought I had quite," said Groslow.
"No. It was a very near thing, but he is not dead."
As he said this, D'Artagnan gave a glance at Parry, who was standing in front
of the king, to show him that the news was meant for him.
e king, too, who had listened in the greatest agony, now breathed again.
"Hang it," said Groslow, "I thought I had succeeded beer. If it were not so far
from here to the house I would return and finish him."
"And you would do well, if you are afraid of his recovering; for you know, if
a wound in the head does not kill at once, it is cured in a week."
And D'Artagnan threw a second glance toward Parry, on whose face su
cdxxxiii
an expression of joy was manifested that Charles streted out his hand to him,
smiling.
Parry bent over his master's hand and kissed it respectfully.
"I've a great desire to drink the king's health," said Athos.
"Let me propose it, then," said D'Artagnan.
"Do," said Aramis.
Porthos looked at D'Artagnan, quite amazed at the resources with whi his
companion's Gascon sharpness continually supplied him. D'Artagnan took up his
camp tin cup, filled it with wine and arose.
"Gentlemen," said he, "let us drink to him who presides at the repast. Here's to
our colonel, and let him know that we are always at his commands as far as London
and farther."
And as D'Artagnan, as he spoke, looked at Harrison, the colonel imagined the
toast was for himself. He arose and bowed to the four friends, whose eyes were
fixed on Charles, while Harrison emptied his glass without the slightest misgiving.
e king, in return, looked at the four gentlemen and drank with a smile full
of nobility and gratitude.
"Come, gentlemen," cried Harrison, regardless of his illustrious captive, "let us
be off."
"Where do we sleep, colonel?"
"At irsk," replied Harrison.
"Parry," said the king, rising too, "my horse; I desire to go to irsk."
"Egad!" said D'Artagnan to Athos, "your king has thoroughly taken me, and I
am quite at his service."
"If what you say is sincere," replied Athos, "he will never rea London."
"How so?"
"Because before then we shall have carried him off."
"Well, this time, Athos," said D'Artagnan, "upon my word, you are mad."
"Have you some plan in your head then?" asked Aramis.
"Ay!" said Porthos, "the thing would not be impossible with a good plan."
"I have none," said Athos; "but D'Artagnan will discover one."
D'Artagnan shrugged his shoulders and they proceeded.
. D'Artagnan hits on a Plan.
"What on earth can you have been saying to that bulldog?" exclaimed Porthos.
"My dear fellow, don't speak like that of Monsieur Groslow. He's one of my
most intimate friends."
"One of your friends!" cried Porthos, "this buter of unarmed farmers!"
"Hush! my dear Porthos. Monsieur Groslow is perhaps rather hasty, it's true,
but at boom I have discovered two good qualities in him--he is conceited and
stupid."
Porthos opened his eyes in amazement; Athos and Aramis looked at one an-
other and smiled; they knew D'Artagnan, and knew that he did nothing without a
purpose.
"But," continued D'Artagnan, "you shall judge of him for yourself. He is com-
ing to play with us this evening."
"Oho!" said Porthos, his eyes glistening at the news. "Is he ri?"
"He's the son of one of the wealthiest merants in London."
"And knows lansquenet?"
"Adores it."
"Basset?"
"His mania."
"Biribi?"
"Revels in it."
"Good," said Porthos; "we shall pass an agreeable evening."
"e more so, as it will be the prelude to a beer."
"How so?"
"We invite him to play to-night; he has invited us in return to-morrow. But
wait. To-night we stop at Derby; and if there is a bole of wine in the town let
Mousqueton buy it. It will be well to prepare a light supper, of whi you, Athos
and Aramis, are not to partake--Athos, because I told him you had a fever; Aramis,
because you are a knight of Malta and won't mix with fellows like us. Do you
understand?"
"at's no doubt very fine," said Porthos; "but deuce take me if I understand
at all."
"Porthos, my friend, you know I am descended on the father's side from the
Prophets and on the mother's from the Sybils, and that I only speak in parables and
riddles. Let those who have ears hear and those who have eyes see; I can tell you
nothing more at present."
"Go ahead, my friend," said Athos; "I am sure that whatever you do is well
done."
"And you, Aramis, are you of that opinion?"
"Entirely so, my dear D'Artagnan."
"Very good," said D'Artagnan; "here indeed are true believers; it is a pleasure
cdxxxix
to work miracles before them; they are not like that unbelieving Porthos, who must
see and tou before he will believe."
"e fact is," said Porthos, with an air of finesse, "I am rather incredulous."
D'Artagnan gave him playful buffet on the shoulder, and as they had reaed
the station where they were to breakfast, the conversation ended there.
At five in the evening they sent Mousqueton on before as agreed upon.
Blaisois went with him.
In crossing the principal street in Derby the four friends perceived Blaisois
standing in the doorway of a handsome house. It was there a lodging was prepared
for them.
At the hour agreed upon Groslow came. D'Artagnan received him as he would
have done a friend of twenty years' standing. Porthos scanned him from head to
foot and smiled when he discovered that in spite of the blow he had administered
to Parry's brother, he was not nearly so strong as himself. Athos and Aramis sup-
pressed as well as they could the disgust they felt in the presence of su coarseness
and brutality.
In short, Groslow seemed to be pleased with his reception.
Athos and Aramis kept themselves to their role. At midnight they withdrew to
their amber, the door of whi was le open on the pretext of kindly consideration.
Furthermore, D'Artagnan went with them, leaving Porthos at play with Groslow.
Porthos gained fiy pistoles from Groslow, and found him a more agreeable
companion than he had at first believed him to be.
As to Groslow, he promised himself that on the following evening he would
recover from D'Artagnan what he had lost to Porthos, and on leaving reminded the
Gascon of his appointment.
e next day was spent as usual. D'Artagnan went from Captain Groslow
to Colonel Harrison and from Colonel Harrison to his friends. To any one not ac-
quainted with him he seemed to be in his normal condition; but to his friends--to
Athos and Aramis--was apparent a certain feverishness in his gayety.
"What is he contriving?" asked Aramis.
"Wait," said Athos.
Porthos said nothing, but he handled in his poet the fiy pistoles he had
gained from Groslow with a degree of satisfaction whi betrayed itself in his whole
bearing.
Arrived at Ryston, D'Artagnan assembled his friends. His face had lost the
expression of careless gayety it had worn like a mask the whole day. Athos pined
Aramis's hand.
"e moment is at hand," he said.
"Yes," returned D'Artagnan, who had overheard him, "to-night, gentlemen, we
rescue the king."
cdxl
"D'Artagnan," said Athos, "this is no joke, I trust? It would quite cut me up."
"You are a very odd man, Athos," he replied, "to doubt me thus. Where and
when have you seen me trifle with a friend's heart and a king's life? I have told you,
and I repeat it, that to-night we rescue Charles I. You le it to me to discover the
means and I have done so."
Porthos looked at D'Artagnan with an expression of profound admiration.
Aramis smiled as one who hopes. Athos was pale, and trembled in every limb.
"Speak," said Athos.
"We are invited," replied D'Artagnan, "to pass the night with M. Groslow. But
do you know where?"
"No."
"In the king's room."
"e king's room?" cried Athos.
"Yes, gentlemen, in the king's room. Groslow is on guard there this evening,
and to pass the time away he has invited us to keep him company."
"All four of us?" asked Athos.
"Pardieu! certainly, all four; we couldn't leave our prisoners, could we?"
"Ah! ah!" said Aramis.
"Tell us about it," said Athos, palpitating.
"We are going, then, we two with our swords, you with daggers. We four have
got to master these eight fools and their stupid captain. Monsieur Porthos, what do
you say to that?"
"I say it is easy enough," answered Porthos.
"We dress the king in Groslow's clothes. Mousqueton, Grimaud and Blaisois
have our horses saddled at the end of the first street. We mount them and before
daylight are twenty leagues distant."
Athos placed his two hands on D'Artagnan's shoulders, and gazed at him with
his calm, sad smile.
"I declare, my friend," said he, "that there is not a creature under the sky who
equals you in prowess and in courage. Whilst we thought you indifferent to our
sorrows, whi you couldn't share without crime, you alone among us have discov-
ered what we were searing for in vain. I repeat it, D'Artagnan, you are the best
one among us; I bless and love you, my dear son."
"And to think that I couldn't find that out," said Porthos, scrating his head;
"it is so simple."
"But," said Aramis, "if I understand rightly we are to kill them all, eh?"
Athos shuddered and turned pale.
"Mordioux!" answered D'Artagnan, "I believe we must. I confess I can discover
no other safe and satisfactory way."
"Let us see," said Aramis, "how are we to act?"
cdxli
"I have arranged two plans. Firstly, at a given signal, whi shall be the words
'At last,' you ea plunge a dagger into the heart of the soldier nearest to you. We,
on our side, do the same. at will be four killed. We shall then be mated, four
against the remaining five. If these five men give themselves up we gag them; if they
resist, we kill them. If by ance our Amphitryon anges his mind and receives
only Porthos and myself, why, then, we must resort to heroic measures and ea
give two strokes instead of one. It will take a lile longer time and may make a
greater disturbance, but you will be outside with swords and will rush in at the
proper time."
"But if you yourselves should be stru?" said Athos.
"Impossible!" said D'Artagnan; "those beer drinkers are too clumsy and awk-
ward. Besides, you will strike at the throat, Porthos; it kills as quily and prevents
all outcry."
"Very good," said Porthos; "it will be a nice lile throat cuing."
"Horrible, horrible," exclaimed Athos.
"Nonsense," said D'Artagnan; "you would do as mu, Mr. Humanity, in a
bale. But if you think the king's life is not worth what it must cost there's an end
of the maer and I send to Groslow to say I am ill."
"No, you are right," said Athos.
At this moment a soldier entered to inform them that Groslow was waiting
for them.
"Where?" asked D'Artagnan.
"In the room of the English Nebuadnezzar," replied the staun Puritan.
"Good," replied Athos, whose blood mounted to his face at the insult offered
to royalty; "tell the captain we are coming."
e Puritan then went out. e laeys had been ordered to saddle eight
horses and to wait, keeping together and without dismounting, at the corner of a
street about twenty steps from the house where the king was lodged.
It was nine o'clo in the evening; the sentinels had been relieved at eight
and Captain Groslow had been on guard for an hour. D'Artagnan and Porthos,
armed with their swords, and Athos and Aramis, ea carrying a concealed poniard,
approaed the house whi for the time being was Charles Stuart's prison. e two
laer followed their captors in the humble guise of captives, without arms.
"Od's bodikins," said Groslow, as the four friends entered, "I had almost given
you up."
D'Artagnan went up to him and whispered in his ear:
"e fact is, we, that is, Monsieur du Vallon and I, hesitated a lile."
"And why?"
D'Artagnan looked significantly toward Athos and Aramis.
"Aha," said Groslow; "on account of political opinions? No maer. On the
cdxlii
contrary," he added, laughing, "if they want to see their Stuart they shall see him.
"Are we to pass the night in the king's room?" asked D'Artagnan.
"No, but in the one next to it, and as the door will remain open it comes to
the same thing. Have you provided yourself with money? I assure you I intend to
play the devil's game to-night."
D'Artagnan raled the gold in his poets.
"Very good," said Groslow, and opened the door of the room. "I will show you
the way," and he went in first.
D'Artagnan turned to look at his friends. Porthos was perfectly indifferent;
Athos, pale, but resolute; Aramis was wiping a slight moisture from his brow.
e eight guards were at their posts. Four in the king's room, two at the door
between the rooms and two at that by whi the friends had entered. Athos smiled
when he saw their bare swords; he felt it was no longer to be a butery, but a fight,
and he resumed his usual good humor.
Charles was perceived through the door, lying dressed upon his bed, at the
head of whi Parry was seated, reading in a low voice a apter from the Bible.
A candle of coarse tallow on a bla table lighted up the handsome and re-
signed face of the king and that of his faithful retainer, far less calm.
From time to time Parry stopped, thinking the king, whose eyes were closed,
was really asleep, but Charles would open his eyes and say with a smile:
"Go on, my good Parry, I am listening."
Groslow advanced to the door of the king's room, replaced on his head the hat
he had taken off to receive his guests, looked for a moment contemptuously at this
simple, yet touing scene, then turning to D'Artagnan, assumed an air of triumph
at what he had aieved.
"Capital!" cried the Gascon, "you would make a distinguished general."
"And do you think," asked Groslow, "that Stuart will ever escape while I am
on guard?"
"No, to be sure," replied D'Artagnan; "unless, forsooth, the sky rains friends
upon him."
Groslow's face brightened.
It is impossible to say whether Charles, who kept his eyes constantly closed,
had noticed the insolence of the Puritan captain, but the moment he heard the clear
tone of D'Artagnan's voice his eyelids rose, in spite of himself.
Parry, too, started and stopped reading.
"What are you thinking about?" said the king; "go on, my good Parry, unless
you are tired."
Parry resumed his reading.
On a table in the next room were lighted candles, cards, two dice-boxes, and
dice.
cdxliii
"Gentlemen," said Groslow, "I beg you will take your places. I will sit facing
Stuart, whom I like so mu to see, especially where he now is, and you, Monsieur
d'Artagnan, opposite to me."
Athos turned red with rage. D'Artagnan frowned at him.
"at's it," said D'Artagnan; "you, Monsieur le Comte de la Fere, to the right of
Monsieur Groslow. You, Chevalier d'Herblay, to his le. Du Vallon next me. You'll
bet for me and those gentlemen for Monsieur Groslow."
By this arrangement D'Artagnan could nudge Porthos with his knee and make
signs with his eyes to Athos and Aramis.
At the names Comte de la Fere and Chevalier d'Herblay, Charles opened his
eyes, and raising his noble head, in spite of himself, threw a glance at all the actors
in the scene.
At that moment Parry turned over several leaves of his Bible and read with a
loud voice this verse in Jeremiah:
"God said, 'Hear ye the words of the prophets my servants, whom I have sent
unto you.'"
e four friends exanged glances. e words that Parry had read assured
them that their presence was understood by the king and was assigned to its real
motive. D'Artagnan's eyes sparkled with joy.
"You asked me just now if I was in funds," said D'Artagnan, placing some
twenty pistoles upon the table. "Well, in my turn I advise you to keep a sharp
lookout on your treasure, my dear Monsieur Groslow, for I can tell you we shall not
leave this without robbing you of it."
"Not without my defending it," said Groslow.
"So mu the beer," said D'Artagnan. "Fight, my dear captain, fight. You
know or you don't know, that that is what we ask of you."
"Oh! yes," said Groslow, bursting with his usual coarse laugh, "I know you
Frenmen want nothing but cuts and bruises."
Charles had heard and understood it all. A slight color mounted to his eeks.
e soldiers then saw him stret his limbs, lile by lile, and under the pretense
of mu heat throw off the Scot plaid whi covered him.
Athos and Aramis started with delight to find that the king was lying with
his clothes on.
e game began. e lu had turned, and Groslow, having won some hun-
dred pistoles, was in the merriest possible humor.
Porthos, who had lost the fiy pistoles he had won the night before and thirty
more besides, was very cross and questioned D'Artagnan with a nudge of the knee
as to whether it would not soon be time to ange the game. Athos and Aramis
looked at him inquiringly. But D'Artagnan remained impassible.
It stru ten. ey heard the guard going its rounds.
cdxliv
"How many rounds do they make a night?" asked D'Artagnan, drawing more
pistoles from his poet.
"Five," answered Groslow, "one every two hours."
D'Artagnan glanced at Athos and Aramis and for the first time replied to
Porthos's nudge of the knee by a nudge responsive. Meanwhile, the soldiers whose
duty it was to remain in the king's room, aracted by that love of play so powerful in
all men, had stolen lile by lile toward the table, and standing on tiptoe, lounged,
wating the game, over the shoulders of D'Artagnan and Porthos. ose on the
other side had followed their example, thus favoring the views of the four friends,
who preferred having them close at hand to asing them about the amber. e
two sentinels at the door still had their swords unsheathed, but they were leaning
on them while they wated the game.
Athos seemed to grow calm as the critical moment approaed. With his
white, aristocratic hands he played with the louis, bending and straightening them
again, as if they were made of pewter. Aramis, less self-controlled, fumbled contin-
ually with his hidden poniard. Porthos, impatient at his continued losses, kept up a
vigorous play with his knee.
D'Artagnan turned, meanically looking behind him, and between the fig-
ures of two soldiers he could see Parry standing up and Charles leaning on his elbow
with his hands clasped and apparently offering a fervent prayer to God.
D'Artagnan saw that the moment was come. He darted a preparatory glance
at Athos and Aramis, who slyly pushed their airs a lile ba so as to leave them-
selves more space for action. He gave Porthos a second nudge of the knee and
Porthos got up as if to stret his legs and took care at the same time to ascertain
that his sword could be drawn smoothly from the scabbard.
"Hang it!" cried D'Artagnan, "another twenty pistoles lost. Really, Captain
Groslow, you are too mu in fortune's way. is can't last," and he drew another
twenty from his poet. "One more turn, captain; twenty pistoles on one throw--
only one, the last."
"Done for twenty," replied Groslow.
And he turned up two cards as usual, a king for D'Artagnan and an ace for
himself.
"A king," said D'Artagnan; "it's a good omen, Master Groslow--look out for
the king."
And in spite of his extraordinary self-control there was a strange vibration in
the Gascon's voice whi made his partner start.
Groslow began turning the cards one aer another. If he turned up an ace
first he won; if a king he lost.
He turned up a king.
"At last!" cried D'Artagnan.
cdxlv
At this word Athos and Aramis jumped up. Porthos drew ba a step. Daggers
and swords were just about to shine, when suddenly the door was thrown open
and Harrison appeared in the doorway, accompanied by a man enveloped in a large
cloak. Behind this man could be seen the glistening muskets of half a dozen soldiers.
Groslow jumped up, ashamed at being surprised in the midst of wine, cards,
and dice. But Harrison paid not the least aention to him, and entering the king's
room, followed by his companion:
"Charles Stuart," said he, "an order has come to conduct you to London with-
out stopping day or night. Prepare yourself, then, to start at once."
"And by whom is this order given?" asked the king.
"By General Oliver Cromwell. And here is Mr. Mordaunt, who has brought
it and is arged with its execution."
"Mordaunt!" muered the four friends, exanging glances.
D'Artagnan swept up the money that he and Porthos had lost and buried it in
his huge poet. Athos and Aramis placed themselves behind him. At this move-
ment Mordaunt turned around, recognized them, and uered an exclamation of
savage delight.
"I'm afraid we are prisoners," whispered D'Artagnan to his friend.
"Not yet," replied Porthos.
"Colonel, colonel," cried Mordaunt, "you are betrayed. ese four Frenmen
have escaped from Newcastle, and no doubt want to carry off the king. Arrest them."
"Ah! my young man," said D'Artagnan, drawing his sword, "that is an order
sooner given than executed. Fly, friends, fly!" he added, whirling his sword around
him.
e next moment he darted to the door and knoed down two of the soldiers
who guarded it, before they had time to co their muskets. Athos and Aramis
followed him. Porthos brought up the rear, and before soldiers, officers, or colonel
had time to recover their surprise all four were in the street.
"Fire!" cried Mordaunt; "fire upon them!"
ree or four shots were fired, but with no other result than to show the four
fugitives turning the corner of the street safe and sound.
e horses were at the place fixed upon, and they leaped lightly into their
saddles.
"Forward!" cried D'Artagnan, "and spur for your dear lives!"
ey galloped away and took the road they had come by in the morning,
namely, in the direction toward Scotland. A few hundred yards beyond the town
D'Artagnan drew rein.
"Halt!" he cried, "this time we shall be pursued. We must let them leave the
village and ride aer us on the northern road, and when they have passed we will
take the opposite direction."
cdxlvi
A soon as the noise of the hoofs was lost in the distance D'Artagnan remounted
the bank of the stream and scoured the plain, followed by his three friends,
directing their course, as well as they could guess, toward London.
"is time," said D'Artagnan, when they were sufficiently distant to proceed
at a trot, "I think all is lost and we have nothing beer to do than to rea France.
What do you say, Athos, to that proposition? Isn't it reasonable?"
"Yes, dear friend," Athos replied, "but you said a word the other day that was
more than reasonable--it was noble and generous. You said, 'Let us die here!' I recall
to you that word."
"Oh," said Porthos, "death is nothing: it isn't death that can disquiet us, since
we don't know what it is. What troubles me is the idea of defeat. As things are
turning out, I foresee that we must give bale to London, to the provinces, to all
England, and certainly in the end we can't fail to be beaten."
"We ought to witness this great tragedy even to its last scene," said Athos.
"Whatever happens, let us not leave England before the crisis. Don't you agree with
me, Aramis?"
"Entirely, my dear count. en, too, I confess I should not be sorry to come
across Mordaunt again. It appears to me that we have an account to sele with him,
and that it is not our custom to leave a place without paying our debts, of this kind,
at least."
"Ah! that's another thing," said D'Artagnan, "and I should not mind waiting
in London a whole year for a ance of meeting this Mordaunt in question. Only let
us lodge with some one on whom we can count; for I imagine, just now, that Noll
Cromwell would not be inclined to trifle with us. Athos, do you know any inn in
the whole town where one can find white sheets, roast beef reasonably cooked, and
wine whi is not made of hops and gin?"
"I think I know what you want," replied Athos. "De Winter took us to the
house of a Spaniard, who, he said, had become naturalized as an Englishman by the
guineas of his new compatriots. What do you say to it, Aramis?"
cdxlviii
"Why, the idea of taking quarters with Senor Perez seems to me very reason-
able, and for my part I agree to it. We will invoke the remembrance of that poor De
Winter, for whom he seemed to have a great regard; we will tell him that we have
come as amateurs to see what is going on; we will spend with him a guinea ea per
day; and I think that by taking all these precautions we can be quite undisturbed."
"You forget, Aramis, one precaution of considerable importance."
"What is that?"
"e precaution of anging our clothes."
"Changing our clothes!" exclaimed Porthos. "I don't see why; we are very
comfortable in those we wear."
"To prevent recognition," said D'Artagnan. "Our clothes have a cut whi
would proclaim the Frenman at first sight. Now, I don't set sufficient store on the
cut of my jerkin to risk being hung at Tyburn or sent for ange of scene to the
Indies. I shall buy a estnut-colored suit. I've remarked that your Puritans revel in
that color."
"But can you find your man?" said Aramis to Athos.
"Oh! to be sure, yes. He lives at the Bedford Tavern, Greenhall Street. Besides,
I can find my way about the city with my eyes shut."
"I wish we were already there," said D'Artagnan; "and my advice is that we
rea London before daybreak, even if we kill our horses."
"Come on, then," said Athos, "for unless I am mistaken in my calculations we
have only eight or ten leagues to go."
e friends urged on their horses and arrived, in fact, at about five o'clo in
the morning. ey were stopped and questioned at the gate by whi they sought
to enter the city, but Athos replied, in excellent English, that they had been sent
forward by Colonel Harrison to announce to his colleague, Monsieur Bridge, the
approa of the king. at reply led to several questions about the king's capture,
and Athos gave details so precise and positive that if the gatekeepers had any suspi-
cions they vanished completely. e way was therefore opened to the four friends
with all sorts of Puritan congratulations.
Athos was right. He went direct to the Bedford Tavern, and the host, who
recognized him, was delighted to see him again with su a numerous and promising
company.
ough it was scarcely daylight our four travelers found the town in a great
bustle, owing to the reported approa of Harrison and the king.
e plan of anging their clothes was unanimously adopted. e landlord
sent out for every description of garment, as if he wanted to fit up his wardrobe.
Athos ose a bla coat, whi gave him the appearance of a respectable citizen.
Aramis, not wishing to part with his sword, selected a dark-blue cloak of a mili-
tary cut. Porthos was seduced by a wine-colored doublet and sea-green breees.
cdxlix
D'Artagnan, who had fixed on his color beforehand, had only to select the shade,
and looked in his estnut suit exactly like a retired sugar dealer.
"Now," said D'Artagnan, "for the actual man. We must cut off our hair, that
the populace may not insult us. As we no longer wear the sword of the gentleman
we may as well have the head of the Puritan. is, as you know, is the important
point of distinction between the Covenanter and the Cavalier."
Aer some discussion this was agreed to and Mousqueton played the role of
barber.
"We look hideous," said Athos.
"And sma of the Puritan to a frightful extent," said Aramis.
"My head feels actually cold," said Porthos.
"As for me, I feel anxious to prea a sermon," said D'Artagnan.
"Now," said Athos, "that we cannot even recognize one another and have
therefore no fear of others recognizing us, let us go and see the king's entrance."
ey had not been long in the crowd before loud cries announced the king's
arrival. A carriage had been sent to meet him, and the gigantic Porthos, who stood
a head above the entire rabble, soon announced that he saw the royal equipage
approaing. D'Artagnan raised himself on tiptoe, and as the carriage passed, saw
Harrison at one window and Mordaunt at the other.
e next day, Athos, leaning out of his window, whi looked upon the most
populous part of the city, heard the Act of Parliament, whi summoned the ex-king,
Charles I., to the bar, publicly cried.
"Parliament indeed!" cried Athos. "Parliament can never have passed su an
act as that."
At this moment the landlord came in.
"Did parliament pass this act?" Athos asked of him in English.
"Yes, my lord, the pure parliament."
"What do you mean by 'the pure parliament'? Are there, then, two parlia-
ments?"
"My friend," D'Artagnan interrupted, "as I don't understand English and we
all understand Spanish, have the kindness to speak to us in that language, whi,
since it is your own, you must find pleasure in using when you have the ance."
"Ah! excellent!" said Aramis.
As to Porthos, all his aention was concentrated on the allurements of the
breakfast table.
"You were asking, then?" said the host in Spanish.
"I asked," said Athos, in the same language, "if there are two parliaments, a
pure and an impure?"
"Why, how extraordinary!" said Porthos, slowly raising his head and looking
at his friends with an air of astonishment, "I understand English, then! I understand
cdl
"You will not have long to wait," said the landlord; "they begin to-morrow."
"So, then, they drew up the indictments before the king was taken?"
"Of course," said D'Artagnan; "they began the day he was sold."
"And you know," said Aramis, "that it was our friend Mordaunt who made, if
not the bargain, at least the overtures."
"And you know," added D'Artagnan, "that whenever I cat him I will kill him,
this Mordaunt."
"And I, too," exclaimed Porthos.
"And I, too," added Aramis.
"Touing unanimity!" cried D'Artagnan, "whi well becomes good citizens
like us. Let us take a turn around the town and imbibe a lile fog."
"Yes," said Porthos, "'twill be at least a lile ange from beer."
. e Trial.
T next morning King Charles I. was haled by a strong guard before the high
court whi was to judge him. All London was crowding to the doors of the
house. e throng was terrific, and it was not till aer mu pushing and some
fighting that our friends reaed their destination. When they did so they found
the three lower rows of benes already occupied; but being anxious not to be too
conspicuous, all, with the exception of Porthos, who had a fancy to display his red
doublet, were quite satisfied with their places, the more so as ance had brought
them to the centre of their row, so that they were exactly opposite the arm-air
prepared for the royal prisoner.
Toward eleven o'clo the king entered the hall, surrounded by guards, but
wearing his head covered, and with a calm expression turned to every side with a
look of complete assurance, as if he were there to preside at an assembly of submis-
sive subjects, rather than to meet the accusations of a rebel court.
e judges, proud of having a monar to humiliate, evidently prepared to
enjoy the right they had arrogated to themselves, and sent an officer to inform the
king that it was customary for the accused to uncover his head.
Charles, without replying a single word, turned his head in another direction
and pulled his felt hat over it. en when the officer was gone he sat down in the
arm-air opposite the president and stru his boots with a lile cane whi he
carried in his hand. Parry, who accompanied him, stood behind him.
D'Artagnan was looking at Athos, whose face betrayed all those emotions
whi the king, possessing more self-control, had banished from his own. is agi-
tation in one so cold and calm as Athos, frightened him.
"I hope," he whispered to him, "that you will follow his majesty's example and
not get killed for your folly in this den."
"Set your mind at rest," replied Athos.
"Aha!" continued D'Artagnan, "it is clear that they are afraid of something or
other; for look, the sentinels are being reinforced. ey had only halberds before,
cdliii
now they have muskets. e halberds were for the audience in the rear; the muskets
are for us."
"irty, forty, fiy, sixty-five men," said Porthos, counting the reinforcements.
"Ah!" said Aramis, "but you forget the officer."
D'Artagnan grew pale with rage. He recognized Mordaunt, who with bare
sword was marshalling the musketeers behind the king and opposite the benes.
"Do you think they have recognized us?" said D'Artagnan. "In that case I
should beat a retreat. I don't care to be shot in a box."
"No," said Aramis, "he has not seen us. He sees no one but the king. Mon
Dieu! how he stares at him, the insolent dog! Does he hate his majesty as mu as
he does us?"
"Pardi," answered Athos "we only carried off his mother; the king has spoiled
him of his name and property."
"True," said Aramis; "but silence! the president is speaking to the king."
"Stuart," Bradshaw was saying, "listen to the roll call of your judges and ad-
dress to the court any observations you may have to make."
e king turned his head away, as if these words had not been intended for
him. Bradshaw waited, and as there was no reply there was a moment of silence.
Out of the hundred and sixty-three members designated there were only
seventy-three present, for the rest, fearful of taking part in su an act, had re-
mained away.
When the name of Colonel Fairfax was called, one of those brief but solemn
silences ensued, whi announced the absence of the members who had no wish to
take a personal part in the trial.
"Colonel Fairfax," repeated Bradshaw.
"Fairfax," answered a laughing voice, the silvery tone of whi betrayed it as
that of a woman, "is not su a fool as to be here."
A loud laugh followed these words, pronounced with that boldness whi
women draw from their own weakness--a weakness whi removes them beyond
the power of vengeance.
"It is a woman's voice," cried Aramis; "faith, I would give a good deal if she is
young and prey." And he mounted on the ben to try and get a sight of her.
"By my soul," said Aramis, "she is arming. Look D'Artagnan; everybody is
looking at her; and in spite of Bradshaw's gaze she has not turned pale."
"It is Lady Fairfax herself," said D'Artagnan. "Don't you remember, Porthos,
we saw her at General Cromwell's?"
e roll call continued.
"ese rascals will adjourn when they find that they are not in sufficient force,"
said the Comte de la Fere.
"You don't know them. Athos, look at Mordaunt's smile. Is that the look of
cdliv
a man whose victim is likely to escape him? Ah, cursed basilisk, it will be a happy
day for me when I can cross something more than a look with you."
"e king is really very handsome," said Porthos; "and look, too, though he
is a prisoner, how carefully he is dressed. e feather in his hat is worth at least
five-and-twenty pistoles. Look at it, Aramis."
e roll call finished, the president ordered them to read the act of accusa-
tion. Athos turned pale. A second time he was disappointed in his expectation.
Notwithstanding the judges were so few the trial was to continue; the king then,
was condemned in advance.
"I told you so, Athos," said D'Artagnan, shrugging his shoulders. "Now take
your courage in both hands and hear what this gentleman in bla is going to say
about his sovereign, with full license and privilege."
Never till then had a more brutal accusation or meaner insults tarnished
kingly majesty.
Charles listened with marked aention, passing over the insults, noting the
grievances, and, when hatred overflowed all bounds and the accuser turned execu-
tioner beforehand, replying with a smile of loy scorn.
"e fact is," said D'Artagnan, "if men are punished for imprudence and triv-
iality, this poor king deserves punishment. But it seems to me that that whi he is
just now undergoing is hard enough."
"In any case," Aramis replied, "the punishment should fall not on the king,
but on his ministers; for the first article of the constitution is, 'e king can do no
wrong.'"
"As for me," thought Porthos, giving Mordaunt his whole aention, "were it
not for breaking in on the majesty of the situation I would leap down from the ben,
rea Mordaunt in three bounds and strangle him; I would then take him by the feet
and kno the life out of these wreted musketeers who parody the musketeers of
France. Meantime, D'Artagnan, who is full of invention, would find some way to
save the king. I must speak to him about it."
As to Athos, his face aflame, his fists clined, his lips bien till they bled,
he sat there foaming with rage at that endless parliamentary insult and that long
enduring royal patience; the inflexible arm and steadfast heart had given place to a
trembling hand and a body shaken by excitement.
At this moment the accuser concluded with these words: "e present accu-
sation is preferred by us in the name of the English people."
At these words there was a murmur along the benes, and a second voice,
not that of a woman, but a man's, stout and furious, thundered behind D'Artagnan.
"You lie!" it cried. "Nine-tenths of the English people are horrified at what
you say."
is voice was that of Athos, who, standing up with outstreted hand and
cdlv
"Well," said the president, seeing that Charles was determined to remain silent,
"so be it. We will judge you in spite of your silence. You are accused of treason, of
abuse of power, and murder. e evidence will support it. Go, and another siing
will accomplish what you have postponed in this."
Charles rose and turned toward Parry, whom he saw pale and with his temples
dewed with moisture.
"Well, my dear Parry," said he, "what is the maer, and what can affect you
in this manner?"
"Oh, my king," said Parry, with tears in his eyes and in a tone of supplication,
"do not look to the le as we leave the hall."
"And why, Parry?"
"Do not look, I implore you, my king."
"But what is the maer? Speak," said Charles, aempting to look across the
hedge of guards whi surrounded him.
"It is--but you will not look, will you?--it is because they have had the axe,
with whi criminals are executed, brought and placed there on the table. e sight
is hideous."
"Fools," said Charles, "do they take me for a coward, like themselves? You
have done well to warn me. ank you, Parry."
When the moment arrived the king followed his guards out of the hall. As he
passed the table on whi the axe was laid, he stopped, and turning with a smile,
said:
"Ah! the axe, an ingenious device, and well worthy of those who know not
what a gentleman is; you frighten me not, executioner's axe," added he, touing it
with the cane whi he held in his hand, "and I strike you now, waiting patiently
and Christianly for you to return the blow."
And shrugging his shoulders with unaffected contempt he passed on. When
he reaed the door a stream of people, who had been disappointed in not being
able to get into the house and to make amends had collected to see him come out,
stood on ea side, as he passed, many among them glaring on him with threatening
looks.
"How many people," thought he, "and not one true friend."
And as he uered these words of doubt and depression within his mind, a
voice beside him said:
"Respect to fallen majesty."
e king turned quily around, with tears in his eyes and heart. It was an
old soldier of the guards who could not see his king pass captive before him without
rendering him this final homage. But the next moment the unfortunate man was
nearly killed with heavy blows of sword-hilts, and among those who set upon him
the king recognized Captain Groslow.
cdlvii
"Alas!" said Charles, "that is a severe astisement for a very trifling fault."
He continued his walk, but he had scarcely gone a hundred paces, when a
furious fellow, leaning between two soldiers, spat in the king's face, as once an
infamous and accursed Jew spit in the face of Jesus of Nazareth. Loud roars of
laughter and sullen murmurs arose together. e crowd opened and closed again,
undulating like a stormy sea, and the king imagined that he saw shining in the midst
of this living wave the bright eyes of Athos.
Charles wiped his face and said with a sad smile: "Poor wret, for half a
crown he would do as mu to his own father."
e king was not mistaken. Athos and his friends, again mingling with the
throng, were taking a last look at the martyr king.
When the soldier saluted Charles, Athos's heart bounded for joy; and that
unfortunate, on coming to himself, found ten guineas that the Fren gentleman
had slipped into his poet. But when the cowardly insulter spat in the face of the
captive monar Athos grasped his dagger. But D'Artagnan stopped his hand and
in a hoarse voice cried, "Wait!"
Athos stopped. D'Artagnan, leaning on Athos, made a sign to Porthos and
Aramis to keep near them and then placed himself behind the man with the bare
arms, who was still laughing at his own vile pleasantry and receiving the congrat-
ulations of several others.
e man took his way toward the city. e four friends followed him. e
man, who had the appearance of being a buter, descended a lile steep and iso-
lated street, looking on to the river, with two of his friends. Arrived at the bank
of the river the three men perceived that they were followed, turned around, and
looking insolently at the Frenmen, passed some jests from one to another.
"I don't know English, Athos," said D'Artagnan; "but you know it and will
interpret for me."
en quiening their steps they passed the three men, but turned ba im-
mediately, and D'Artagnan walked straight up to the buter and touing him on
the est with the tip of his finger, said to Athos:
"Say this to him in English: 'You are a coward. You have insulted a defenseless
man. You have befouled the face of your king. You must die.'"
Athos, pale as a ghost, repeated these words to the man, who, seeing the bode-
ful preparations that were making, put himself in an aitude of defense. Aramis, at
this movement, drew his sword.
"No," cried D'Artagnan, "no steel. Steel is for gentlemen."
And seizing the buter by the throat:
"Porthos," said he, "kill this fellow for me with a single blow."
Porthos raised his terrible fist, whi whistled through the air like a sling, and
the portentous mass fell with a smothered crash on the insulter's skull and crushed
cdlviii
it. e man fell like an ox beneath the poleaxe. His companions, horror-stru,
could neither move nor cry out.
"Tell them this, Athos," resumed D'Artagnan; "thus shall all die who forget
that a captive man is sacred and that a captive king doubly represents the Lord."
Athos repeated D'Artagnan's words.
e fellows looked at the body of their companion, swimming in blood, and
then recovering voice and legs together, ran screaming off.
"Justice is done," said Porthos, wiping his forehead.
"And now," said D'Artagnan to Athos, "entertain no further doubts about me;
I undertake all that concerns the king."
. Whitehall.
agents continually. Alone in his usual room, lighted by two candles, the condemned
monar gazed sadly on the luxury of his past greatness, just as at the last hour one
sees the images of life more mildly brilliant than of yore.
Parry had not quied his master, and since his condemnation had not ceased
to weep. Charles, leaning on a table, was gazing at a medallion of his wife and
daughter; he was waiting first for Juxon, then for martyrdom.
At times he thought of those brave Fren gentlemen who had appeared to
him from a distance of a hundred leagues fabulous and unreal, like the forms that
appear in dreams. In fact, he sometimes asked himself if all that was happening to
him was not a dream, or at least the delirium of a fever. He rose and took a few
steps as if to rouse himself from his torpor and went as far as the window; he saw
gliering below him the muskets of the guards. He was thereupon constrained to
admit that he was indeed awake and that his bloody dream was real.
Charles returned in silence to his air, rested his elbow on the table, bowed
his head upon his hand and reflected.
"Alas!" he said to himself, "if I only had for a confessor one of those lights of
the ur, whose soul has sounded all the mysteries of life, all the lilenesses of
greatness, perhaps his uerance would overawe the voice that wails within my soul.
But I shall have a priest of vulgar mind, whose career and fortune I have ruined by
my misfortune. He will speak to me of God and death, as he has spoken to many
another dying man, not understanding that this one leaves his throne to an usurper,
his ildren to the cold contempt of public arity."
And he raised the medallion to his lips.
It was a dull, foggy night. A neighboring ur clo slowly stru the hour.
e fliering light of the two candles showed fitful phantom shadows in the loy
room. ese were the ancestors of Charles, standing ba dimly in their tarnished
frames.
An awful sadness enveloped the heart of Charles. He buried his brow in his
hands and thought of the world, so beautiful when one is about to leave it; of the
caresses of ildren, so pleasing and so sweet, especially when one is parting from
his ildren never to see them again; then of his wife, the noble and courageous
woman who had sustained him to the last moment. He drew from his breast the
diamond cross and the star of the Garter whi she had sent him by those generous
Frenmen; he kissed it, and then, as he reflected, that she would never again see
those things till he lay cold and mutilated in the tomb, there passed over him one
of those icy shivers whi may be called forerunners of death.
en, in that amber whi recalled to him so many royal souvenirs, whither
had come so many courtiers, the scene of so mu flaering homage, alone with a
despairing servant, whose feeble soul could afford no support to his own, the king
at last yielded to sorrow, and his courage sank to a level with that feebleness, those
cdlxi
shadows, and that wintry cold. at king, who was so grand, so sublime in the
hour of death, meeting his fate with a smile of resignation on his lips, now in that
gloomy hour wiped away a tear whi had fallen on the table and quivered on the
gold embroidered cloth.
Suddenly the door opened, an ecclesiastic in episcopal robes entered, followed
by two guards, to whom the king waved an imperious gesture. e guards retired;
the room resumed its obscurity.
"Juxon!" cried Charles, "Juxon, thank you, my last friend; you come at a fiing
moment."
e bishop looked anxiously at the man sobbing in the ingle-nook.
"Come, Parry," said the king, "cease your tears."
"If it's Parry," said the bishop, "I have nothing to fear; so allow me to salute
your majesty and to tell you who I am and for what I am come."
At this sight and this voice Charles was about to cry out, when Aramis placed
his finger on his lips and bowed low to the king of England.
"e evalier!" murmured Charles.
"Yes, sire," interrupted Aramis, raising his voice, "Bishop Juxon, the faithful
knight of Christ, obedient to your majesty's wishes."
Charles clasped his hands, amazed and stupefied to find that these foreign-
ers, without other motive than that whi their conscience imposed on them, thus
combated the will of a people and the destiny of a king.
"You!" he said, "you! how did you penetrate hither? If they recognize you,
you are lost."
"Care not for me, sire; think only of yourself. You see, your friends are wake-
ful. I know not what we shall do yet, but four determined men can do mu. Mean-
while, do not be surprised at anything that happens; prepare yourself for every
emergency."
Charles shook his head.
"Do you know that I die to-morrow at ten o'clo?"
"Something, your majesty, will happen between now and then to make the
execution impossible."
e king looked at Aramis with astonishment.
At this moment a strange noise, like the unloading of a cart, and followed by
a cry of pain, was heard beneath the window.
"Do you hear?" said the king.
"I hear," said Aramis, "but I understand neither the noise nor the cry of pain."
"I know not who can have uered the cry," said the king, "but the noise is
easily understood. Do you know that I am to be beheaded outside this window?
Well, these boards you hear unloaded are the posts and planks to build my scaffold.
Some workmen must have fallen underneath them and been hurt."
cdlxii
opposite the Isle of Dogs, manned by a captain and four men, who for the sum of
fiy pounds sterling will keep themselves at our disposition three successive nights.
Once on board we drop down the ames and in two hours are on the open sea. In
case I am killed, the captain's name is Roger and the skiff is called the Lightning. A
handkerief, tied at the four corners, is to be the signal."
Next moment D'Artagnan entered.
"Empty your poets," said he; "I want a hundred pounds, and as for my own-
---" and he emptied them inside out.
e sum was collected in a minute. D'Artagnan ran out and returned directly
aer.
"ere," said he, "it's done. Ough! and not without a deal of trouble, too."
"Has the executioner le London?" asked Athos.
"Ah, you see that plan was not sure enough; he might go out by one gate and
return by another."
"Where is he, then?"
"In the cellar."
"e cellar--what cellar?"
"Our landlord's, to be sure. Mousqueton is propped against the door and here's
the key."
"Bravo!" said Aramis, "how did you manage it?"
"Like everything else, with money; but it cost me dear."
"How mu?" asked Athos.
"Five hundred pounds."
"And where did you get so mu money?" said Athos. "Had you, then, that
sum?"
"e queen's famous diamond," answered D'Artagnan, with a sigh.
"Ah, true," said Aramis. "I recognized it on your finger."
"You bought it ba, then, from Monsieur des Essarts?" asked Porthos.
"Yes, but it was fated that I should not keep it."
"So, then, we are all right as regards the executioner," said Athos; "but unfor-
tunately every executioner has his assistant, his man, or whatever you call him."
"And this one had his," said D'Artagnan; "but, as good lu would have it, just
as I thought I should have two affairs to manage, our friend was brought home with
a broken leg. In the excess of his zeal he had accompanied the cart containing the
scaffolding as far as the king's window, and one of the crossbeams fell on his leg
and broke it."
"Ah!" cried Aramis, "that accounts for the cry I heard."
"Probably," said D'Artagnan, "but as he is a thoughtful young man he promised
to send four expert workmen in his place to help those already at the scaffold, and
wrote the moment he was brought home to Master Tom Lowe, an assistant carpenter
cdlxv
and friend of his, to go down to Whitehall, with three of his friends. Here's the leer
he sent by a messenger, for sixpence, who sold it to me for a guinea."
"And what on earth are you going to do with it?" asked Athos.
"Can't you guess, my dear Athos? You, who speak English like John Bull
himself, are Master Tom Lowe, we, your three companions. Do you understand it
now?"
Athos uered a cry of joy and admiration, ran to a closet and drew forth work-
men's clothes, whi the four friends immediately put on; they then le the hotel,
Athos carrying a saw, Porthos a vise, Aramis an axe and D'Artagnan a hammer and
some nails.
e leer from the executioner's assistant satisfied the master carpenter that
those were the men he expected.
. e Workmen.
T midnight Charles heard a great noise beneath his window. It arose from
blows of hammer and hatet, clinking of pincers and craning of saws.
Lying dressed upon his bed, the noise awoke him with a start and found a
gloomy eo in his heart. He could not endure it, and sent Parry to ask the sentinel
to beg the workmen to strike more gently and not disturb the last slumber of one
who had been their king. e sentinel was unwilling to leave his post, but allowed
Parry to pass.
Arriving at the window Parry found an unfinished scaffold, over whi they
were nailing a covering of bla serge. Raised to the height of twenty feet, so as to
be on a level with the window, it had two lower stories. Parry, odious as was this
sight to him, sought for those among some eight or ten workmen who were making
the most noise; and fixed on two men, who were loosening the last hooks of the iron
balcony.
"My friends," said Parry, mounting the scaffold and standing beside them,
"would you work a lile more quietly? e king wishes to get a sleep."
One of the two, who was standing up, was of gigantic size and was driving
a pi with all his might into the wall, whilst the other, kneeling beside him, was
collecting the pieces of stone. e face of the first was lost to Parry in the darkness;
but as the second turned around and placed his finger on his lips Parry started ba
in amazement.
"Very well, very well," said the workman aloud, in excellent English. "Tell the
king that if he sleeps badly to-night he will sleep beer to-morrow night."
ese blunt words, so terrible if taken literally, were received by the other
workmen with a roar of laughter. But Parry withdrew, thinking he was dreaming.
Charles was impatiently awaiting his return. At the moment he re-entered,
the sentinel who guarded the door put his head through the opening, curious as to
what the king was doing. e king was lying on his bed, resting on his elbow. Parry
closed the door and approaing the king, his face radiant with joy:
cdlxvii
"Sire," he said, in a low voice, "do you know who these workmen are who are
making so mu noise?"
"I? No; how would you have me know?"
Parry bent his head and whispered to the king: "It is the Comte de la Fere and
his friends."
"Raising my scaffold!" cried the king, astounded.
"Yes, and at the same time making a hole in the wall."
e king clasped his hands and raised his eyes to Heaven; then leaping down
from his bed he went to the window, and pulling aside the curtain tried to distinguish
the figures outside, but in vain.
Parry was not wrong. It was Athos he had recognized, and Porthos who was
boring a hole through the wall.
is hole communicated with a kind of lo--the space between the floor of the
king's room and the ceiling of the one below it. eir plan was to pass through the
hole they were making into this lo and cut out from below a piece of the flooring
of the king's room, so as to form a kind of trap-door.
rough this the king was to escape the next night, and, hidden by the bla
covering of the scaffold, was to ange his dress for that of a workman, slip out with
his deliverers, pass the sentinels, who would suspect nothing, and so rea the skiff
that was waiting for him at Greenwi.
Day gilded the tops of the houses. e aperture was finished and Athos passed
through it, carrying the clothes destined for the king wrapped in bla cloth, and
the tools with whi he was to open a communication with the king's room. He had
only two hours' work to do to open communication with the king and, according to
the calculations of the four friends, they had the entire day before them, since, the
executioner being absent, another must be sent for to Bristol.
D'Artagnan returned to ange his workman's clothes for his estnut-colored
suit, and Porthos to put on his red doublet. As for Aramis, he went off to the bishop's
palace to see if he could possibly pass in with Juxon to the king's presence. All three
agreed to meet at noon in Whitehall Place to see how things went on.
Before leaving the scaffold Aramis had approaed the opening where Athos
was concealed to tell him that he was about to make an aempt to gain another
interview with the king.
"Adieu, then, and be of good courage," said Athos. "Report to the king the
condition of affairs. Say to him that when he is alone it will help us if he will kno
on the floor, for then I can continue my work in safety. Try, Aramis, to keep near
the king. Speak loud, very loud, for they will be listening at the door. If there is
a sentinel within the apartment, kill him without hesitation. If there are two, let
Parry kill one and you the other. If there are three, let yourself be slain, but save the
king."
cdlxviii
"Be easy," said Aramis; "I will take two poniards and give one to Parry. Is that
all?"
"Yes, go; but urge the king strongly not to stand on false generosity. While
you are fighting if there is a fight, he must flee. e trap once replaced over his head,
you being on the trap, dead or alive, they will need at least ten minutes to find the
hole by whi he has escaped. In those ten minutes we shall have gained the road
and the king will be saved."
"Everything shall be done as you say, Athos. Your hand, for perhaps we shall
not see ea other again."
Athos put his arm around Aramis's ne and embraced him.
"For you," he said. "Now if I die, say to D'Artagnan that I love him as a son,
and embrace him for me. Embrace also our good and brave Porthos. Adieu."
"Adieu," said Aramis. "I am as sure now that the king will be saved as I am
sure that I clasp the most loyal hand in the world."
Aramis parted from Athos, went down from the scaffold in his turn and took
his way to the hotel, whistling the air of a song in praise of Cromwell. He found
the other two friends siing at table before a good fire, drinking a bole of port
and devouring a cold ien. Porthos was cursing the infamous parliamentarians;
D'Artagnan ate in silence, revolving in his mind the most audacious plans.
Aramis related what had been agreed upon. D'Artagnan approved with a
movement of the head and Porthos with his voice.
"Bravo!" he said; "besides, we shall be there at the time of the flight. What
with D'Artagnan, Grimaud and Mousqueton, we can manage to dispat eight of
them. I say nothing about Blaisois, for he is only fit to hold the horses. Two minutes
a man makes four minutes. Mousqueton will lose another, that's five; and in five
minutes we shall have galloped a quarter of a league."
Aramis swallowed a hasty mouthful, gulped a glass of wine and anged his
clothes.
"Now," said he, "I'm off to the bishop's. Take care of the executioner,
D'Artagnan."
"All right. Grimaud has relieved Mousqueton and has his foot on the cellar
door."
"Well, don't be inactive."
"Inactive, my dear fellow! Ask Porthos. I pass my life upon my legs."
Aramis again presented himself at the bishop's. Juxon consented the more
readily to take him with him, as he would require an assistant priest in case the
king should wish to communicate. Dressed as Aramis had been the night before,
the bishop got into his carriage, and the former, more disguised by his pallor and
sad countenance than his deacon's dress, got in by his side. e carriage stopped at
the door of the palace.
cdlxix
tioner?"
"e London executioner has disappeared, your majesty, but a man has offered
his services instead. e execution will therefore only be delayed long enough for
you to arrange your spiritual and temporal affairs."
A slight moisture on his brow was the only trace of emotion that Charles
evinced, as he learned these tidings. But Aramis was livid. His heart ceased beating,
he closed his eyes and leaned upon the table. Charles perceived it and took his hand.
"Come, my friend," said he, "courage." en he turned to the officer. "Sir, I
am ready. ere is but lile reason why I should delay you. Firstly, I wish to
communicate; secondly, to embrace my ildren and bid them farewell for the last
time. Will this be permied me?"
"Certainly," replied the officer, and le the room.
Aramis dug his nails into his flesh and groaned aloud.
"Oh! my lord bishop," he cried, seizing Juxon's hands, "where is Providence?
where is Providence?"
"My son," replied the bishop, with firmness, "you see Him not, because the
passions of the world conceal Him."
"My son," said the king to Aramis, "do not take it so to heart. You ask what
God is doing. God beholds your devotion and my martyrdom, and believe me, both
will have their reward. Ascribe to men, then, what is happening, and not to God. It
is men who drive me to death; it is men who make you weep."
"Yes, sire," said Aramis, "yes, you are right. It is men whom I should hold
responsible, and I will hold them responsible."
"Be seated, Juxon," said the king, falling upon his knees. "I have now to con-
fess to you. Remain, sir," he added to Aramis, who had moved to leave the room.
"Remain, Parry. I have nothing to say that cannot be said before all."
Juxon sat down, and the king, kneeling humbly before him, began his confes-
sion.
. Remember!
T mob had already assembled when the confession terminated. e king's il-
dren next arrived--the Princess Charloe, a beautiful, fair-haired ild, with
tears in her eyes, and the Duke of Gloucester, a boy eight or nine years old, whose
tearless eyes and curling lip revealed a growing pride. He had wept all night long,
but would not show his grief before the people.
Charles's heart melted within him at the sight of those two ildren, whom
he had not seen for two years and whom he now met at the moment of death. He
turned to brush away a tear, and then, summoning up all his firmness, drew his
daughter toward him, recommending her to be pious and resigned. en he took
the boy upon his knee.
"My son," he said to him, "you saw a great number of people in the streets
as you came here. ese men are going to behead your father. Do not forget that.
Perhaps some day they will want to make you king, instead of the Prince of Wales,
or the Duke of York, your elder brothers. But you are not the king, my son, and can
never be so while they are alive. Swear to me, then, never to let them put a crown
upon your head unless you have a legal right to the crown. For one day--listen, my
son--one day, if you do so, they will doom you to destruction, head and crown, too,
and then you will not be able to die with a calm conscience, as I die. Swear, my
son."
e ild streted out his lile hand toward that of his father and said, "I
swear to your majesty."
"Henry," said Charles, "call me your father."
"Father," replied the ild, "I swear to you that they shall kill me sooner than
make me king."
"Good, my ild. Now kiss me; and you, too, Charloe. Never forget me."
"Oh! never, never!" cried both the ildren, throwing their arms around their
father's ne.
"Farewell," said Charles, "farewell, my ildren. Take them away, Juxon; their
tears will deprive me of the courage to die."
cdlxxii
Juxon led them away, and this time the doors were le open.
Meanwhile, Athos, in his concealment, waited in vain the signal to recom-
mence his work. Two long hours he waited in terrible inaction. A deathlike silence
reigned in the room above. At last he determined to discover the cause of this still-
ness. He crept from his hole and stood, hidden by the bla drapery, beneath the
scaffold. Peeping out from the drapery, he could see the rows of halberdiers and
musketeers around the scaffold and the first ranks of the populace swaying and
groaning like the sea.
"What is the maer, then?" he asked himself, trembling more than the wind-
swayed cloth he was holding ba. "e people are hurrying on, the soldiers under
arms, and among the spectators I see D'Artagnan. What is he waiting for? What is
he looking at? Good God! have they allowed the headsman to escape?"
Suddenly the dull beating of muffled drums filled the square. e sound of
heavy steps was heard above his head. e next moment the very planks of the scaf-
fold creaked with the weight of an advancing procession, and the eager faces of the
spectators confirmed what a last hope at the boom of his heart had prevented him
till then believing. At the same moment a well-known voice above him pronounced
these words:
"Colonel, I want to speak to the people."
Athos shuddered from head to foot. It was the king speaking on the scaffold.
In fact, aer taking a few drops of wine and a piece of bread, Charles, weary
of waiting for death, had suddenly decided to go to meet it and had given the signal
for movement. en the two wings of the window facing the square had been
thrown open, and the people had seen silently advancing from the interior of the vast
amber, first, a masked man, who, carrying an axe in his hand, was recognized as
the executioner. He approaed the blo and laid his axe upon it. Behind him, pale
indeed, but maring with a firm step, was Charles Stuart, who advanced between
two priests, followed by a few superior officers appointed to preside at the execution
and aended by two files of partisans who took their places on opposite sides of the
scaffold.
e sight of the masked man gave rise to a prolonged sensation. Every one
was full of curiosity as to who that unknown executioner could be who presented
himself so opportunely to assure to the people the promised spectacle, when the
people believed it had been postponed until the following day. All gazed at him
searingly.
But they could discern nothing but a man of middle height, dressed in bla,
apparently of a certain age, for the end of a gray beard peeped out from the boom
of the mask that hid his features.
e king's request had undoubtedly been acceded to by an affirmative sign,
for in firm, sonorous accents, whi vibrated in the depths of Athos's heart, the king
cdlxxiii
began his spee, explaining his conduct and counseling the welfare of the kingdom.
"Oh!" said Athos to himself, "is it indeed possible that I hear what I hear and
that I see what I see? Is it possible that God has abandoned His representative on
earth and le him to die thus miserably? And I have not seen him! I have not said
adieu to him!"
A noise was heard like that the instrument of death would make if moved
upon the blo.
"Do not tou the axe," said the king, and resumed his spee.
At the end of his spee the king looked tenderly around upon the people.
en unfastening the diamond ornament whi the queen had sent him, he placed
it in the hands of the priest who accompanied Juxon. en he drew from his breast
a lile cross set in diamonds, whi, like the order, had been the gi of Henriea
Maria.
"Sir," said he to the priest, "I shall keep this cross in my hand till the last mo-
ment. Take it from me when I am--dead."
"Yes, sire," said a voice, whi Athos recognized as that of Aramis.
He then took his hat from his head and threw it on the ground. One by one
he undid the buons of his doublet, took it off and deposited it by the side of his
hat. en, as it was cold, he asked for his gown, whi was brought to him.
All the preparations were made with a frightful calmness. One would have
thought the king was going to bed and not to his coffin.
"Will these be in your way?" he said to the executioner, raising his long los;
"if so, they can be tied up."
Charles accompanied these words with a look designed to penetrate the mask
of the unknown headsman. His calm, noble gaze forced the man to turn away his
head. But aer the searing look of the king he encountered the burning eyes of
Aramis.
e king, seeing that he did not reply, repeated his question.
"It will do," replied the man, in a tremulous voice, "if you separate them across
the ne."
e king parted his hair with his hands, and looking at the blo he said:
"is blo is very low, is there no other to be had?"
"It is the usual blo," answered the man in the mask.
"Do you think you can behead me with a single blow?" asked the king.
"I hope so," was the reply. ere was something so strange in these three words
that everybody, except the king, shuddered.
"I do not wish to be taken by surprise," added the king. "I shall kneel down to
pray; do not strike then."
"When shall I strike?"
"When I shall lay my head on the blo and say 'Remember!' then strike
cdlxxiv
boldly."
"Gentlemen," said the king to those around him, "I leave you to brave the
tempest; I go before you to a kingdom whi knows no storms. Farewell."
He looked at Aramis and made a special sign to him with his head.
"Now," he continued, "withdraw a lile and let me say my prayer, I besee
you. You, also, stand aside," he said to the masked man. "It is only for a moment
and I know that I belong to you; but remember that you are not to strike till I give
the signal."
en he knelt down, made the sign of the cross, and lowering his face to the
planks, as if he would have kissed them, said in a low tone, in Fren, "Comte de la
Fere, are you there?"
"Yes, your majesty," he answered, trembling.
"Faithful friend, noble heart!" said the king, "I should not have been rescued.
I have addressed my people and I have spoken to God; last of all I speak to you.
To maintain a cause whi I believed sacred I have lost the throne and my ildren
their inheritance. A million in gold remains; it is buried in the cellars of Newcastle
Keep. You only know that this money exists. Make use of it, then, whenever you
think it will be most useful, for my eldest son's welfare. And now, farewell."
"Farewell, saintly, martyred majesty," lisped Athos, illed with terror.
A moment's silence ensued and then, in a full, sonorous voice, the king ex-
claimed: "Remember!"
He had scarcely uered the word when a heavy blow shook the scaffold and
where Athos stood immovable a warm drop fell upon his brow. He reeled ba with
a shudder and the same moment the drops became a crimson cataract.
Athos fell on his knees and remained some minutes as if bewildered or
stunned. At last he rose and taking his handkerief steeped it in the blood of the
martyred king. en as the crowd gradually dispersed he leaped down, crept from
behind the drapery, glided between two horses, mingled with the crowd and was
the first to arrive at the inn.
Having gained his room he raised his hand to his face, and observing that his
fingers were covered with the monar's blood, fell down insensible.
. e Man in the Mask.
T snow was falling thi and icy. Aramis was the next to come in and to
discover Athos almost insensible. But at the first words he uered the comte
roused himself from the kind of lethargy in whi he had sunk.
"Well," said Aramis, "beaten by fate!"
"Beaten!" said Athos. "Noble and unhappy king!"
"Are you wounded?" cried Aramis.
"No, this is his blood."
"Where were you, then?"
"Where you le me--under the scaffold."
"Did you see it all?"
"No, but I heard all. God preserve me from another su hour as I have just
passed."
"en you know that I did not leave him?"
"I heard your voice up to the last moment."
"Here is the order he gave me and the cross I took from his hand; he desired
they should be returned to the queen."
"en here is a handkerief to wrap them in," replied Athos, drawing from
his poet the one he had steeped in the king's blood.
"And what," he continued, "has been done with the poor body?"
"By order of Cromwell royal honors will be accorded to it. e doctors are
embalming the corpse, and when it is ready it will be placed in a lighted apel."
"Moery," muered Athos, savagely; "royal honors to one whom they have
murdered!"
"Well, eer up!" said a loud voice from the staircase, whi Porthos had just
mounted. "We are all mortal, my poor friends."
"You are late, my dear Porthos."
"Yes, there were some people on the way who delayed me. e wretes were
dancing. I took one of them by the throat and three-quarters throled him. Just
cdlxxvi
then a patrol rode up. Luily the man I had had most to do with was some minutes
before he could speak, so I took advantage of his silence to walk off."
"Have you seen D'Artagnan?"
"We got separated in the crowd and I could not find him again."
"Oh!" said Athos, satirically, "I saw him. He was in the front row of the crowd,
admirably placed for seeing; and as on the whole the sight was curious, he probably
wished to stay to the end."
"Ah Comte de la Fere," said a calm voice, though hoarse with running, "is it
your habit to calumniate the absent?"
is reproof stung Athos to the heart, but as the impression produced by see-
ing D'Artagnan foremost in a coarse, ferocious crowd had been very strong, he
contented himself with replying:
"I am not calumniating you, my friend. ey were anxious about you here;
I simply told them where you were. You didn't know King Charles; to you he was
only a foreigner and you were not obliged to love him."
So saying, he streted out his hand, but the other pretended not to see it and
he let it drop again slowly by his side.
"Ugh! I am tired," cried D'Artagnan, siing down.
"Drink a glass of port," said Aramis; "it will refresh you."
"Yes, let us drink," said Athos, anxious to make it up by hobnobbing with
D'Artagnan, "let us drink and get away from this hateful country. e felucca is
waiting for us, you know; let us leave to-night, we have nothing more to do here."
"You are in a hurry, sir count," said D'Artagnan.
"But what would you have us to do here, now that the king is dead?"
"Go, sir count," replied D'Artagnan, carelessly; "you see nothing to keep you
a lile longer in England? Well, for my part, I, a bloodthirsty ruffian, who can go
and stand close to a scaffold, in order to have a beer view of the king's execution--I
remain."
Athos turned pale. Every reproa his friend uered stru deeply in his heart.
"Ah! you remain in London?" said Porthos.
"Yes. And you?"
"Hang it!" said Porthos, a lile perplexed between the two, "I suppose, as I
came with you, I must go away with you. I can't leave you alone in this abominable
country."
"anks, my worthy friend. So I have a lile adventure to propose to you
when the count is gone. I want to find out who was the man in the mask, who so
obligingly offered to cut the king's throat."
"A man in a mask?" cried Athos. "You did not let the executioner escape,
then?"
"e executioner is still in the cellar, where, I presume, he has had an interview
cdlxxvii
as you know. e mob dispersed. I made a sign to Grimaud and the Scotman, and
we all three retired into a corner of the square. I saw the executioner return into the
king's room, ange his clothes, put on a bla hat and a large cloak and disappear.
Five minutes later he came down the grand staircase."
"You followed him?" cried Athos.
"I should think so, but not without difficulty. Every few minutes he turned
around, and thus obliged us to conceal ourselves. I might have gone up to him and
killed him. But I am not selfish, and I thought it might console you all a lile to
have a share in the maer. So we followed him through the lowest streets in the
city, and in half an hour's time he stopped before a lile isolated house. Grimaud
drew out a pistol. 'Eh?' said he, showing it. I held ba his arm. e man in the
mask stopped before a low door and drew out a key; but before he placed it in the
lo he turned around to see if he was being followed. Grimaud and I got behind a
tree, and the Scotman having nowhere to hide himself, threw himself on his face
in the road. Next moment the door opened and the man disappeared."
"e scoundrel!" said Aramis. "While you have been returning hither he will
have escaped and we shall never find him."
"Come, now, Aramis," said D'Artagnan, "you must be taking me for some one
else."
"Nevertheless," said Athos, "in your absence----"
"Well, in my absence haven't I put in my place Grimaud and the Scotman?
Before he had taken ten steps beyond the door I had examined the house on all sides.
At one of the doors, that by whi he had entered, I placed our Scotman, making
a sign to him to follow the man wherever he might go, if he came out again. en
going around the house I placed Grimaud at the other exit, and here I am. Our game
is beaten up. Now for the tally-ho."
Athos threw himself into D'Artagnan's arms.
"Friend," he said, "you have been too good in pardoning me; I was wrong, a
hundred times wrong. I ought to have known you beer by this time; but we are
all possessed of a malignant spirit, whi bids us doubt."
"Humph!" said Porthos. "Don't you think the executioner might be Master
Cromwell, who, to make sure of this affair, undertook it himself?"
"Ah! just so. Cromwell is stout and short, and this man thin and lanky, rather
tall than otherwise."
"Some condemned soldier, perhaps," suggested Athos, "whom they have par-
doned at the price of regicide."
"No, no," continued D'Artagnan, "it was not the measured step of a foot soldier,
nor was it the gait of a horseman. If I am not mistaken we have to do with a
gentleman."
"A gentleman!" exclaimed Athos. "Impossible! It would be a dishonor to all
cdlxxix
the nobility."
"Fine sport, by Jove!" cried Porthos, with a laugh that shook the windows.
"Fine sport!"
"Are you still bent on departure, Athos?" asked D'Artagnan.
"No, I remain," replied Athos, with a threatening gesture that promised no
good to whomsoever it was addressed.
"Swords, then!" cried Aramis, "swords! let us not lose a moment."
e four friends resumed their own clothes, girded on their swords, ordered
Mousqueton and Blaisois to pay the bill and to arrange everything for immediate
departure, and wrapped in their large cloaks le in sear of their game.
e night was dark, snow was falling, the streets were silent and deserted.
D'Artagnan led the way through the intricate windings and narrow alleys of the
city and ere long they had reaed the house in question. For a moment D'Artagnan
thought that Parry's brother had disappeared; but he was mistaken. e robust
Scotman, accustomed to the snows of his native hills, had streted himself
against a post, and like a fallen statue, insensible to the inclemency of the weather,
had allowed the snow to cover him. He rose, however, as they approaed.
"Come," said Athos, "here's another good servant. Really, honest men are not
so scarce as I thought."
"Don't be in a hurry to weave crowns for our Scotman. I believe the fellow
is here on his own account, for I have heard that these gentlemen born beyond the
Tweed are very vindictive. I should not like to be Groslow, if he meets him."
"Well?" said Athos, to the man, in English.
"No one has come out," he replied.
"en, Porthos and Aramis, will you remain with this man while we go around
to Grimaud?"
Grimaud had made himself a kind of sentry box out of a hollow willow, and
as they drew near he put his head out and gave a low whistle.
"Soho!" cried Athos.
"Yes," said Grimaud.
"Well, has anybody come out?"
"No, but somebody has gone in."
"A man or a woman?"
"A man."
"Ah! ah!" said D'Artagnan, "there are two of them, then!"
"I wish there were four," said Athos; "the two parties would then be equal."
"Perhaps there are four," said D'Artagnan.
"What do you mean?"
"Other men may have entered before them and waited for them."
"We can find out," said Grimaud. At the same time he pointed to a window,
cdlxxx
"Fatality!" he muered.
. Cromwell's House.
I was, in fact, Mordaunt whom D'Artagnan had followed, without knowing it. On
entering the house he had taken off his mask and imitation beard, then, mounting
a staircase, had opened a door, and in a room lighted by a single lamp found himself
face to face with a man seated behind a desk.
is man was Cromwell.
Cromwell had two or three of these retreats in London, unknown except to
the most intimate of his friends. Mordaunt was among these.
"It is you, Mordaunt," he said. "You are late."
"General, I wished to see the ceremony to the end, whi delayed me."
"Ah! I scarcely thought you were so curious as that."
"I am always curious to see the downfall of your honor's enemies, and he was
not among the least of them. But you, general, were you not at Whitehall?"
"No," said Cromwell.
ere was a moment's silence.
"Have you had any account of it?"
"None. I have been here since the morning. I only know that there was a
conspiracy to rescue the king."
"Ah, you knew that?" said Mordaunt.
"It maers lile. Four men, disguised as workmen, were to get the king out
of prison and take him to Greenwi, where a vessel was waiting."
"And knowing all that, your honor remained here, far from the city, tranquil
and inactive."
"Tranquil, yes," replied Cromwell. "But who told you I was inactive?"
"But--if the plot had succeeded?"
"I wished it to do so."
"I thought your excellence considered the death of Charles I. as a misfortune
necessary to the welfare of England."
"Yes, his death; but it would have been more seemly not upon the scaffold."
"Why so?" asked Mordaunt.
cdlxxxiii
Cromwell smiled. "Because it could have been said that I had had him con-
demned for the sake of justice and had let him escape out of pity."
"But if he had escaped?"
"Impossible; my precautions were taken."
"And does your honor know the four men who undertook to rescue him?"
"e four Frenmen, of whom two were sent by the queen to her husband
and two by Mazarin to me."
"And do you think Mazarin commissioned them to act as they have done?"
"It is possible. But he will not avow it."
"How so?"
"Because they failed."
"Your honor gave me two of these Frenmen when they were only guilty of
fighting for Charles I. Now that they are guilty of a conspiracy against England will
your honor give me all four of them?"
"Take them," said Cromwell.
Mordaunt bowed with a smile of triumphant ferocity.
"Did the people shout at all?" Cromwell asked.
"Very lile, except 'Long live Cromwell!'"
"Where were you placed?"
Mordaunt tried for a moment to read in the general's face if this was simply
a useless question, or whether he knew everything. But his piercing eyes could by
no means penetrate the sombre depths of Cromwell's.
"I was so situated as to hear and see everything," he answered.
It was now Cromwell's turn to look fixedly at Mordaunt, and Mordaunt to
make himself impenetrable.
"It appears," said Cromwell, "that this improvised executioner did his duty
remarkably well. e blow, so they tell me at least, was stru with a master's
hand."
Mordaunt remembered that Cromwell had told him he had had no detailed
account, and he was now quite convinced that the general had been present at the
execution, hidden behind some screen or curtain.
"In fact," said Mordaunt, with a calm voice and immovable countenance, "a
single blow sufficed."
"Perhaps it was some one in that occupation," said Cromwell.
"Do you think so, sir? He did not look like an executioner."
"And who else save an executioner would have wished to fill that horrible
office?"
"But," said Mordaunt, "it might have been some personal enemy of the king,
who had made a vow of vengeance and accomplished it in this way. Perhaps it
was some man of rank who had grave reasons for hating the fallen king, and who,
cdlxxxiv
learning that the king was about to flee and escape him, threw himself in the way,
with a mask on his face and an axe in his hand, not as substitute for the executioner,
but as an ambassador of Fate."
"Possibly."
"And if that were the case would your honor condemn his action?"
"It is not for me to judge. It rests between his conscience and his God."
"But if your honor knew this man?"
"I neither know nor wish to know him. Provided Charles is dead, it is the axe,
not the man, we must thank."
"And yet, without the man, the king would have been rescued."
Cromwell smiled.
"ey would have carried him to Greenwi," he said, "and put him on board
a felucca with five barrels of powder in the hold. Once out to sea, you are too good
a politician not to understand the rest, Mordaunt."
"Yes, they would have all been blown up."
"Just so. e explosion would have done what the axe had failed to do. Men
would have said that the king had escaped human justice and been overtaken by
God's. You see now why I did not care to know your gentleman in the mask; for
really, in spite of his excellent intentions, I could not thank him for what he has
done."
Mordaunt bowed humbly. "Sir," he said, "you are a profound thinker and your
plan was sublime."
"Say absurd, since it has become useless. e only sublime ideas in politics
are those whi bear fruit. So to-night, Mordaunt, go to Greenwi and ask for the
captain of the felucca Lightning. Show him a white handkerief knoed at the four
corners and tell the crew to disembark and carry the powder ba to the arsenal,
unless, indeed----"
"Unless?" said Mordaunt, whose face was lighted by a savage joy as Cromwell
spoke:
"is skiff might be of use to you for personal projects."
"Oh, my lord, my lord!"
"at title," said Cromwell, laughing, "is all very well here, but take care a
word like that does not escape your lips in public."
"But your honor will soon be called so generally."
"I hope so, at least," said Cromwell, rising and puing on his cloak.
"You are going, sir?"
"Yes," said Cromwell. "I slept here last night and the night before, and you
know it is not my custom to sleep three times in the same bed."
"en," said Mordaunt, "your honor gives me my liberty for to-night?"
"And even for all day to-morrow, if you want it. Since last evening," he added,
cdlxxxv
smiling, "you have done enough in my service, and if you have any personal maers
to sele it is just that I should give you time."
"ank you, sir; it will be well employed, I hope."
Cromwell turned as he was going.
"Are you armed?" he asked.
"I have my sword."
"And no one waiting for you outside?"
"No."
"en you had beer come with me."
"ank you, sir, but the way by the subterranean passage would take too mu
time and I have none to lose."
Cromwell placed his hand on a hidden handle and opened a door so well
concealed by the tapestry that the most practiced eye could not have discovered
it. It closed aer him with a spring. is door communicated with a subterranean
passage, leading under the street to a groo in the garden of a house about a hundred
yards from that of the future Protector.
It was just before this that Grimaud had perceived the two men seated to-
gether.
D'Artagnan was the first to recover from his surprise.
"Mordaunt," he cried. "Ah! by Heaven! it is God Himself who sent us here."
"Yes," said Porthos, "let us break the door in and fall upon him."
"No," replied D'Artagnan, "no noise. Now, Grimaud, you come here, climb up
to the window again and tell us if Mordaunt is alone and whether he is preparing
to go out or go to bed. If he comes out we shall cat him. If he stays in we will
break in the window. It is easier and less noisy than the door."
Grimaud began to scale the wall again.
"Keep guard at the other door, Athos and Aramis. Porthos and I will stay
here."
e friends obeyed.
"He is alone," said Grimaud.
"We did not see his companion come out."
"He may have gone by the other door."
"What is he doing?"
"Puing on his cloak and gloves."
"He's ours," muered D'Artagnan.
Porthos meanically drew his dagger from the scabbard.
"Put it up again, my friend," said D'Artagnan. "We must proceed in an orderly
manner."
"Hush!" said Grimaud, "he is coming out. He has put out the lamp, I can see
nothing now."
cdlxxxvi
T Mordaunt had been so completely taken by surprise and had mounted
the stairs in su uer confusion, when once seated he recovered himself, as it
were, and prepared to seize any possible opportunity of escape. His eye wandered
to a long stout sword on his flank and he instinctively slipped it around within rea
of his right hand.
D'Artagnan was waiting for a reply to his remark and said nothing. Aramis
muered to himself, "We shall hear nothing but the usual commonplace things."
Porthos sued his mustae, muering, "A good deal of ceremony to-night
about crushing an adder." Athos shrunk into his corner, pale and motionless as a
bas-relief.
e silence, however, could not last forever. So D'Artagnan began:
"Sir," he said, with desperate politeness, "it seems to me that you ange your
costume almost as rapidly as I have seen the Italian mummers do, whom the Car-
dinal Mazarin brought over from Bergamo and whom he doubtless took you to see
during your travels in France."
Mordaunt did not reply.
"Just now," D'Artagnan continued, "you were disguised--I mean to say, aired-
-as a murderer, and now----"
"And now I look very mu like a man who is going to be murdered."
"Oh! sir," said D'Artagnan, "how can you talk like that when you are in the
company of gentlemen and have su an excellent sword at your side?"
"No sword is excellent enough to be of use against four swords and daggers."
"Well, that is scarcely the question. I had the honor of asking you why you
altered your costume. e mask and beard became you very well, and as to the axe,
I do not think it would be out of keeping even at this moment. Why, then, have you
laid it aside?"
"Because, remembering the scene at Armentieres, I thought I should find four
axes for one, as I was to meet four executioners."
cdlxxxviii
"Sir," replied D'Artagnan, in the calmest manner possible, "you are very young;
I shall therefore overlook your frivolous remarks. What took place at Armentieres
has no connection whatever with the present occasion. We could scarcely have
requested your mother to take a sword and fight us."
"Aha! It is a duel, then?" cried Mordaunt, as if disposed to reply at once to the
provocation.
Porthos rose, always ready for this kind of adventure.
"Pardon me," said D'Artagnan. "Do not let us do things in a hurry. We will
arrange the maer rather beer. Confess, Monsieur Mordaunt, that you are anxious
to kill some of us."
"All," replied Mordaunt.
"en, my dear sir; I am convinced that these gentlemen return your kind
wishes and will be delighted to kill you also. Of course they will do so as honorable
gentlemen, and the best proof I can furnish is this----"
So saying, he threw his hat on the ground, pushed ba his air to the wall
and bowed to Mordaunt with true Fren grace.
"At your service, sir," he continued. "My sword is shorter than yours, it's true,
but, bah! I think the arm will make up for the sword."
"Halt!" cried Porthos coming forward. "I begin, and without any rhetoric."
"Allow me, Porthos," said Aramis.
Athos did not move. He might have been taken for a statue. Even his breath-
ing seemed to be arrested.
"Gentlemen," said D'Artagnan, "you shall have your turn. Monsieur Mordaunt
dislikes you sufficiently not to refuse you aerward. You can see it in his eye. So
pray keep your places, like Athos, whose calmness is entirely laudable. Besides, we
will have no words about it. I have particular business to sele with this gentleman
and I shall and will begin."
Porthos and Aramis drew ba, disappointed, and drawing his sword
D'Artagnan turned to his adversary:
"Sir, I am waiting for you."
"And for my part, gentlemen, I admire you. You are disputing whi shall
fight me first, but you do not consult me who am most concerned in the maer. I
hate you all, but not equally. I hope to kill all four of you, but I am more likely to
kill the first than the second, the second than the third, and the third than the last.
I claim, then, the right to oose my opponent. If you refuse this right you may kill
me, but I shall not fight."
"It is but fair," said Porthos and Aramis, hoping he would oose one of them.
Athos and D'Artagnan said nothing, but their silence seemed to imply consent.
"Well, then," said Mordaunt, "I oose for my adversary the man who, not
thinking himself worthy to be called Comte de la Fere, calls himself Athos."
cdlxxxix
Athos sprang up, but aer an instant of motionless silence he said, to the
astonishment of his friends, "Monsieur Mordaunt, a duel between us is impossible.
Submit this honour to somebody else." And he sat down.
"Ah!" said Mordaunt, with a sneer, "there's one who is afraid."
"Zounds!" exclaimed D'Artagnan, bounding toward him, "who says that
Athos is afraid?"
"Let him have his say, D'Artagnan," said Athos, with a smile of sadness and
contempt.
"Is it your decision, Athos?" resumed the Gascon.
"Irrevocably."
"You hear, sir," said D'Artagnan, turning to Mordaunt. "e Comte de la Fere
will not do you the honor of fighting with you. Choose one of us to replace the
Comte de la Fere."
"As long as I don't fight with him it is the same to me with whom I fight. Put
your names into a hat and draw lots."
"A good idea," said D'Artagnan.
"At least that will conciliate us all," said Aramis.
"I should never have thought of that," said Porthos, "and yet it is very simple."
"Come, Aramis," said D'Artagnan, "write this for us in those neat lile arac-
ters in whi you wrote to Marie Mion that the mother of this gentleman intended
to assassinate the Duke of Buingham."
Mordaunt sustained this new aa without wincing. He stood with his arms
folded, apparently as calm as any man could be in su circumstances. If he had
not courage he had what is very like it, namely, pride.
Aramis went to Cromwell's desk, tore off three bits of paper of equal size,
wrote on the first his own name and on the others those of his two companions,
and presented them open to Mordaunt, who by a movement of his head indicated
that he le the maer entirely to Aramis. He then rolled them separately and put
them in a hat, whi he handed to Mordaunt.
Mordaunt put his hand into the hat, took out one of the three papers and
disdainfully dropped it on the table without reading it.
"Ah! serpent," muered D'Artagnan, "I would give my ance of a captaincy
in the mousquetaires for that to be my name."
Aramis opened the paper, and in a voice trembling with hate and vengeance
read "D'Artagnan."
e Gascon uered a cry of joy and turning to Mordaunt:
"I hope, sir," said he, "you have no objection to make."
"None, whatever," replied the other, drawing his sword and resting the point
on his boot.
e moment that D'Artagnan saw that his wish was accomplished and his
cdxc
man would not escape him, he recovered his usual tranquillity. He turned up his
cuffs neatly and rubbed the sole of his right boot on the floor, but did not fail, how-
ever, to remark that Mordaunt was looking about him in a singular manner.
"Are you ready, sir?" he said at last.
"I was waiting for you, sir," said Mordaunt, raising his head and casting at his
opponent a look it would be impossible to describe.
"Well, then," said the Gascon, "take care of yourself, for I am not a bad hand
at the rapier."
"Nor I either."
"So mu the beer; that sets my mind at rest. Defend yourself."
"One minute," said the young man. "Give me your word, gentlemen, that you
will not aa me otherwise than one aer the other."
"Is it to have the pleasure of insulting us that you say that, my lile viper?"
"No, but to set my mind at rest, as you observed just now."
"It is for something else than that, I imagine," muered D'Artagnan, shaking
his head doubtfully.
"On the honor of gentlemen," said Aramis and Porthos.
"In that case, gentlemen, have the kindness to retire into the corners, so as to
give us ample room. We shall require it."
"Yes, gentlemen," said D'Artagnan, "we must not leave this person the slightest
pretext for behaving badly, whi, with all due respect, I fancy he is anxious still to
do."
is new aa made no impression on Mordaunt. e space was cleared, the
two lamps placed on Cromwell's desk, in order that the combatants might have as
mu light as possible; and the swords crossed.
D'Artagnan was too good a swordsman to trifle with his opponent. He made
a rapid and brilliant feint whi Mordaunt parried.
"Aha!" he cried with a smile of satisfaction.
And without losing a minute, thinking he saw an opening, he thrust his right
in and forced Mordaunt to parry a counter en quarte so fine that the point of the
weapon might have turned within a wedding ring.
is time it was Mordaunt who smiled.
"Ah, sir," said D'Artagnan, "you have a wied smile. It must have been the
devil who taught it you, was it not?"
Mordaunt replied by trying his opponent's weapon with an amount of
strength whi the Gascon was astonished to find in a form apparently so feeble;
but thanks to a parry no less clever than that whi Mordaunt had just aieved,
he succeeded in meeting his sword, whi slid along his own without touing his
est.
Mordaunt rapidly sprang ba a step.
cdxci
"Ah! you lose ground, you are turning? Well, as you please, I even gain
something by it, for I no longer see that wied smile of yours. You have no idea
what a false look you have, particularly when you are afraid. Look at my eyes
and you will see what no looking-glass has ever shown you--a frank and honorable
countenance."
To this flow of words, not perhaps in the best taste, but aracteristic of
D'Artagnan, whose principal object was to divert his opponent's aention, Mor-
daunt did not reply, but continuing to turn around he succeeded in anging places
with D'Artagnan.
He smiled more and more sarcastically and his smile began to make the Gas-
con anxious.
"Come, come," cried D'Artagnan, "we must finish with this," and in his turn
he pressed Mordaunt hard, who continued to lose ground, but evidently on purpose
and without leing his sword leave the line for a moment. However, as they were
fighting in a room and had not space to go on like that forever, Mordaunt's foot at
last toued the wall, against whi he rested his le hand.
"Ah, this time you cannot lose ground, my fine friend!" exclaimed D'Artagnan.
"Gentlemen, did you ever see a scorpion pinned to a wall? No. Well, then, you shall
see it now."
In a second D'Artagnan had made three terrible thrusts at Mordaunt, all of
whi toued, but only pried him. e three friends looked on, panting and
astonished. At last D'Artagnan, having got up too close, stepped ba to prepare a
fourth thrust, but the moment when, aer a fine, qui feint, he was aaing as
sharply as lightning, the wall seemed to give way, Mordaunt disappeared through
the opening, and D'Artagnan's blade, caught between the panels, shivered like a
sword of glass. D'Artagnan sprang ba; the wall had closed again.
Mordaunt, in fact, while defending himself, had manoeuvred so as to rea
the secret door by whi Cromwell had le, had felt for the knob with his le hand,
pressed it and disappeared.
e Gascon uered a furious imprecation, whi was answered by a wild
laugh on the other side of the iron panel.
"Help me, gentlemen," cried D'Artagnan, "we must break in this door."
"It is the devil in person!" said Aramis, hastening forward.
"He escapes us," growled Porthos, pushing his huge shoulder against the
hinges, but in vain. "'Sblood! he escapes us."
"So mu the beer," muered Athos.
"I thought as mu," said D'Artagnan, wasting his strength in useless efforts.
"Zounds, I thought as mu when the wret kept moving around the room. I
thought he was up to something."
"It's a misfortune, to whi his friend, the devil, treats us," said Aramis.
cdxcii
"It's a piece of good fortune sent from Heaven," said Athos, evidently mu
relieved.
"Really!" said D'Artagnan, abandoning the aempt to burst open the panel
aer several ineffectual aempts, "Athos, I cannot imagine how you can talk to us
in that way. You cannot understand the position we are in. In this kind of game, not
to kill is to let one's self be killed. is fox of a fellow will be sending us a hundred
iron-sided beasts who will pi us off like sparrows in this place. Come, come, we
must be off. If we stay here five minutes more there's an end of us."
"Yes, you are right."
"But where shall we go?" asked Porthos.
"To the hotel, to be sure, to get our baggage and horses; and from there, if it
please God, to France, where, at least, I understand the aritecture of the houses."
So, suiting the action to the word, D'Artagnan thrust the remnant of his sword
into its scabbard, pied up his hat and ran down the stairs, followed by the others.
. e Skiff "Lightning."
D 'A had judged correctly; Mordaunt felt that he had no time to lose, and
he lost none. He knew the rapidity of decision and action that aracterized
his enemies and resolved to act with reference to that. is time the musketeers had
an adversary who was worthy of them.
Aer closing the door carefully behind him Mordaunt glided into the subter-
ranean passage, sheathing on the way his now useless sword, and thus reaed the
neighboring house, where he paused to examine himself and to take breath.
"Good!" he said, "nothing, almost nothing--scrates, nothing more; two in
the arm and one in the breast. e wounds that I make are beer than that--witness
the executioner of Bethune, my uncle and King Charles. Now, not a second to lose,
for a second lost will perhaps save them. ey must die--die all together--killed at
one stroke by the thunder of men in default of God's. ey must disappear, broken,
scaered, annihilated. I will run, then, till my legs no longer serve, till my heart
bursts in my bosom but I will arrive before they do."
Mordaunt proceeded at a rapid pace to the nearest cavalry barras, about a
quarter of a league distant. He made that quarter of a league in four or five minutes.
Arrived at the barras he made himself known, took the best horse in the stables,
mounted and gained the high road. A quarter of an hour later he was at Greenwi.
"ere is the port," he murmured. "at dark point yonder is the Isle of Dogs.
Good! I am half an hour in advance of them, an hour, perhaps. Fool that I was!
I have almost killed myself by my needless haste. Now," he added, rising in the
stirrups and looking about him, "whi, I wonder, is the Lightning?"
At this moment, as if in reply to his words, a man lying on a coil of cables
rose and advanced a few steps toward him. Mordaunt drew a handkerief from
his poet, and tying a knot at ea corner--the signal agreed upon--waved it in the
air and the man came up to him. He was wrapped in a large rough cape, whi
concealed his form and partly his face.
"Do you wish to go on the water, sir?" said the sailor.
"Yes, just so. Along the Isle of Dogs."
cdxciv
"And perhaps you have a preference for one boat more than another. You
would like one that sails as rapidly as----"
"Lightning," interrupted Mordaunt.
"en mine is the boat you want, sir. I'm your man."
"I begin to think so, particularly if you have not forgoen a certain signal."
"Here it is, sir," and the sailor took from his coat a handkerief, tied at ea
corner.
"Good, quite right!" cried Mordaunt, springing off his horse. "ere's not a
moment to lose; now take my horse to the nearest inn and conduct me to your
vessel."
"But," asked the sailor, "where are your companions? I thought there were
four of you."
"Listen to me, sir. I'm not the man you take me for; you are in Captain Rogers's
post, are you not? under orders from General Cromwell. Mine, also, are from him!"
"Indeed, sir, I recognize you; you are Captain Mordaunt."
Mordaunt was startled.
"Oh, fear nothing," said the skipper, showing his face. "I am a friend."
"Captain Groslow!" cried Mordaunt.
"Himself. e general remembered that I had formerly been a naval officer
and he gave me the command of this expedition. Is there anything new in the wind?"
"Nothing."
"I thought, perhaps, that the king's death----"
"Has only hastened their flight; in ten minutes they will perhaps be here."
"What have you come for, then?"
"To embark with you."
"Ah! ah! the general doubted my fidelity?"
"No, but I wish to have a share in my revenge. Haven't you some one who
will relieve me of my horse?"
Groslow whistled and a sailor appeared.
"Patri," said Groslow, "take this horse to the stables of the nearest inn. If any
one asks you whose it is you can say that it belongs to an Irish gentleman."
e sailor departed without reply.
"Now," said Mordaunt, "are you not afraid that they will recognize you?"
"ere is no danger, dressed as I am in this pilot coat, on a night as dark as
this. Besides even you didn't recognize me; they will be mu less likely to."
"at is true," said Mordaunt, "and they will be far from thinking of you. Ev-
erything is ready, is it not?"
"Yes."
"e cargo on board?"
"Yes."
cdxcv
Greenwi. e wind was illy and the jey was deserted, as he approaed it;
but he had no sooner landed than he heard a noise of horses galloping upon the
paved road.
ese horsemen were our friends, or rather, an avant garde, composed of
D'Artagnan and Athos. As soon as they arrived at the spot where Groslow stood
they stopped, as if guessing that he was the man they wanted. Athos alighted and
calmly opened the handkerief tied at ea corner, whilst D'Artagnan, ever cau-
tious, remained on horseba, one hand upon his pistol, leaning forward watfully.
On seeing the appointed signal, Groslow, who had at first crept behind one
of the cannon planted on that spot, walked straight up to the gentlemen. He was so
well wrapped up in his cloak that it would have been impossible to see his face even
if the night had not been so dark as to render precaution superfluous; nevertheless,
the keen glance of Athos perceived at once it was not Rogers who stood before them.
"What do you want with us?" he asked of Groslow.
"I wish to inform you, my lord," replied Groslow, with an Irish accent, feigned
of course, "that if you are looking for Captain Rogers you will not find him. He fell
down this morning and broke his leg. But I'm his cousin; he told me everything
and desired me to wat instead of him, and in his place to conduct, wherever they
wished to go, the gentlemen who should bring me a handkerief tied at ea corner,
like that one whi you hold and one whi I have in my poet."
And he drew out the handkerief.
"Was that all he said?" inquired Athos.
"No, my lord; he said you had engaged to pay seventy pounds if I landed you
safe and sound at Boulogne or any other port you oose in France."
"What do you think of all this?" said Athos, in a low tone to D'Artagnan, aer
explaining to him in Fren what the sailor had said in English.
"It seems a likely story to me."
"And to me, too."
"Besides, we can but blow out his brains if he proves false," said the Gascon;
"and you, Athos, you know something of everything and can be our captain. I dare
say you know how to navigate, should he fail us."
"My dear friend, you guess well. My father meant me for the navy and I have
some vague notions about navigation."
"You see!" cried D'Artagnan.
ey then summoned their friends, who, with Blaisois, Mousqueton and Gri-
maud, promptly joined them, leaving Parry behind them, who was to take ba to
London the horses of the gentlemen and of their laeys, whi had been sold to the
host in selement of their account with him. anks to this stroke of business the
four friends were able to take away with them a sum of money whi, if not large,
was sufficient as a provision against delays and accidents.
cdxcvii
Parry parted from his friends regretfully; they had proposed his going with
them to France, but he had straightway declined.
"It is very simple," Mousqueton had said; "he is thinking of Groslow."
It was Captain Groslow, the reader will remember, who had broken Parry's
head.
D'Artagnan resumed immediately the aitude of distrust that was habitual
with him. He found the wharf too completely deserted, the night too dark, the
captain too accommodating. He had reported to Aramis what had taken place, and
Aramis, not less distrustful than he, had increased his suspicions. A slight cli of
the tongue against his teeth informed Athos of the Gascon's uneasiness.
"We have no time now for suspicions," said Athos. "e boat is waiting for us;
come."
"Besides," said Aramis, "what prevents our being distrustful and going aboard
at the same time? We can wat the skipper."
"And if he doesn't go straight I will crush him, that's all."
"Well said, Porthos," replied D'Artagnan. "Let us go, then. You first, Mous-
queton," and he stopped his friends, directing the valets to go first, in order to test
the plank leading from the pier to the boat.
e three valets passed without accident. Athos followed them, then Porthos,
then Aramis. D'Artagnan went last, still shaking his head.
"What in the devil is the maer with you, my friend?" said Porthos. "Upon
my word you would make Caesar afraid."
"e maer is," replied D'Artagnan, "that I can see upon this pier neither in-
spector nor sentinel nor exciseman."
"And you complain of that!" said Porthos. "Everything goes as if in flowery
paths."
"Everything goes too well, Porthos. But no maer; we must trust in God."
As soon as the plank was withdrawn the captain took his place at the tiller and
made a sign to one of the sailors, who, boat-hook in hand, began to push out from
the labyrinth of boats in whi they were involved. e other sailor had already
seated himself on the port side and was ready to row. As soon as there was room
for rowing, his companion rejoined him and the boat began to move more rapidly.
"At last we are off!" exclaimed Porthos.
"Alas," said Athos, "we depart alone."
"Yes; but all four together and without a scrat; whi is a consolation."
"We are not yet at our destination," observed the prudent D'Artagnan; "beware
of misadventure."
"Ah, my friend!" cried Porthos, "like the crows, you always bring bad omens.
Who could intercept us on su a night as this, pit dark, when one does not see
more than twenty yards before one?"
cdxcviii
"Oho!" cried D'Artagnan, as he went down the steps of the hatway, preceded
by the lantern, "what a number of barrels! one would think one was in the cave of
Ali Baba. What is there in them?" he added, puing his lantern on one of the casks.
e captain seemed inclined to go upon de again, but controlling himself
he answered:
"Port wine."
"Ah! port wine! 'tis a comfort," said the Gascon, "since we shall not die of
thirst. Are they all full?"
Grimaud translated the question, and Groslow, who was wiping the perspi-
ration from off his forehead, answered:
"Some full, others empty."
D'Artagnan stru the barrels with his hand, and having ascertained that he
spoke the truth, pushed his lantern, greatly to the captain's alarm, into the interstices
between the barrels, and finding that there was nothing concealed in them:
"Come along," he said; and he went toward the door of the second compart-
ment.
"Stop!" said the Englishman, "I have the key of that door;" and he opened the
door, with a trembling hand, into the second compartment, where Mousqueton and
Blaisois were preparing supper.
Here there was evidently nothing to seek or to apprehend and they passed
rapidly to examine the third compartment.
is was the room appropriated to the sailors. Two or three hammos hung
upon the ceiling, a table and two benes composed the entire furniture. D'Artagnan
pied up two or three old sails hung on the walls, and meeting nothing to suspect,
regained by the hatway the de of the vessel.
"And this room?" he asked, pointing to the captain's cabin.
"at's my room," replied Groslow.
"Open the door."
e captain obeyed. D'Artagnan streted out his arm in whi he held the
lantern, put his head in at the half opened door, and seeing that the cabin was
nothing beer than a shed:
"Good," he said. "If there is an army on board it is not here that it is hidden. Let
us see what Porthos has found for supper." And thanking the captain, he regained
the state cabin, where his friends were.
Porthos had found nothing, and with him fatigue had prevailed over hunger.
He had fallen asleep and was in a profound slumber when D'Artagnan returned.
Athos and Aramis were beginning to close their eyes, whi they half opened when
their companion came in again.
"Well!" said Aramis.
"All is well; we may sleep tranquilly."
d
On this assurance the two friends fell asleep; and D'Artagnan, who was very
weary, bade good-night to Grimaud and laid himself down in his cloak, with naked
sword at his side, in su a manner that his body barricaded the passage, and it
should be impossible to enter the room without upseing him.
. Port Wine.
I ten minutes the masters slept; not so the servants---hungry, and more thirsty
than hungry.
Blaisois and Mousqueton set themselves to preparing their bed whi con-
sisted of a plank and a valise. On a hanging table, whi swung to and fro with the
rolling of the vessel, were a pot of beer and three glasses.
"is cursed rolling!" said Blaisois. "I know it will serve me as it did when we
came over."
"And to think," said Mousqueton, "that we have nothing to fight seasiness
with but barley bread and hop beer. Pah!"
"But where is your wier flask, Monsieur Mousqueton? Have you lost it?"
asked Blaisois.
"No," replied Mousqueton, "Parry kept it. ose devilish Scotmen are always
thirsty. And you, Grimaud," he said to his companion, who had just come in aer
his round with D'Artagnan, "are you thirsty?"
"As thirsty as a Scotman!" was Grimaud's laconic reply.
And he sat down and began to cast up the accounts of his party, whose money
he managed.
"Oh, laadaisy! I'm beginning to feel queer!" cried Blaisois.
"If that's the case," said Mousqueton, with a learned air, "take some nourish-
ment."
"Do you call that nourishment?" said Blaisois, pointing to the barley bread
and pot of beer upon the table.
"Blaisois," replied Mousqueton, "remember that bread is the true nourishment
of a Frenman, who is not always able to get bread, ask Grimaud."
"Yes, but beer?" asked Blaisois sharply, "is that their true drink?"
"As to that," answered Mousqueton, puzzled how to get out of the difficulty,
"I must confess that to me beer is as disagreeable as wine is to the English."
"What! Monsieur Mousqueton! e English--do they dislike wine?"
"ey hate it."
dii
selves this wine. Know that Monsieur de Bracieux is ri enough to drink a tun of
port wine, even if obliged to pay a pistole for every drop." His manner became more
and more loy every instant; then he arose and aer finishing off the beer at one
draught he advanced majestically to the door of the compartment where the wine
was. "Ah! loed!" he exclaimed; "these devils of English, how suspicious they are!"
"Loed!" said Blaisois; "ah! the deuce it is; unluy, for my stoma is geing
more and more upset."
"Loed!" repeated Mousqueton.
"But," Blaisois ventured to say, "I have heard you relate, Monsieur Mousque-
ton, that once on a time, at Chantilly, you fed your master and yourself by taking
partridges in a snare, carp with a line, and boles with a slipnoose."
"Perfectly true; but there was an airhole in the cellar and the wine was in
boles. I cannot throw the loop through this partition nor move with a pa-thread
a cask of wine whi may perhaps weigh two hundred pounds."
"No, but you can take out two or three boards of the partition," answered
Blaisois, "and make a hole in the cask with a gimlet."
Mousqueton opened his great round eyes to the utmost, astonished to find in
Blaisois qualities for whi he did not give him credit.
"'Tis true," he said; "but where can I get a isel to take the planks out, a gimlet
to pierce the cask?"
"Trousers," said Grimaud, still squaring his accounts.
"Ah, yes!" said Mousqueton.
Grimaud, in fact, was not only the accountant, but the armorer of the party;
and as he was a man full of forethought, these trousers, carefully rolled up in his
valise, contained every sort of tool for immediate use.
Mousqueton, therefore, was soon provided with tools and he began his task.
In a few minutes he had extracted three boards. He tried to pass his body through
the aperture, but not being like the frog in the fable, who thought he was larger
than he really was, he found he must take out three or four more before he could
get through.
He sighed and set to work again.
Grimaud had now finished his accounts. He arose and stood near Mousque-
ton.
"I," he said.
"What?" said Mousqueton.
"I can pass."
"at is true," said Mousqueton, glancing at his friend's long and thin body,
"you will pass easily."
"And he knows the full casks," said Blaisois, "for he has already been in the
hold with Monsieur le Chevalier d'Artagnan. Let Monsieur Grimaud go in, Mon-
div
sieur Mouston."
"I could go in as well as Grimaud," said Mousqueton, a lile piqued.
"Yes, but that would take too mu time and I am thirsty. I am geing more
and more seasi."
"Go in, then, Grimaud," said Mousqueton, handing him the beer pot and gim-
let.
"Rinse the glasses," said Grimaud. en with a friendly gesture toward Mous-
queton, that he might forgive him for finishing an enterprise so brilliantly begun by
another, he glided like a serpent through the opening and disappeared.
Blaisois was in a state of great excitement; he was in ecstasies. Of all the
exploits performed since their arrival in England by the extraordinary men with
whom he had the honor to be associated, this seemed without question to be the
most wonderful.
"You are about to see," said Mousqueton, looking at Blaisois with an expression
of superiority whi the laer did not even think of questioning, "you are about to
see, Blaisois, how we old soldiers drink when we are thirsty."
"My cloak," said Grimaud, from the boom of the hold.
"What do you want?" asked Blaisois.
"My cloak--stop up the aperture with it."
"Why?" asked Blaisois.
"Simpleton!" exclaimed Mousqueton; "suppose any one came into the room."
"Ah, true," cried Blaisois, with evident admiration; "but it will be dark in the
cellar."
"Grimaud always sees, dark or light, night as well as day," answered Mous-
queton.
"at is luy," said Blaisois. "As for me, when I have no candle I can't take
two steps without knoing against something."
"at's because you haven't served," said Mousqueton. "Had you been in the
army you would have been able to pi up a needle on the floor of a closed oven.
But hark! I think some one is coming."
Mousqueton made, with a low whistling sound, the sign of alarm well known
to the laeys in the days of their youth, resumed his place at the table and made a
sign to Blaisois to follow his example.
Blaisois obeyed.
e door of their cabin was opened. Two men, wrapped in their cloaks, ap-
peared.
"Oho!" said they, "not in bed at a quarter past eleven. at's against all rules.
In a quarter of an hour let every one be in bed and snoring."
ese two men then went toward the compartment in whi Grimaud was
secreted; opened the door, entered and shut it aer them.
dv
man with a lantern in his hands and enveloped in a cloak, came and stood just
before the hogshead, behind whi Grimaud, on hearing him come in, instantly
crept. is was Groslow. He was accompanied by another man, who carried in his
hand something long and flexible rolled up, resembling a washing line. His face was
hidden under the wide brim of his hat. Grimaud, thinking that they had come, as
he had, to try the port wine, effaced himself behind his cask and consoled himself
with the reflection that if he were discovered the crime was not a great one.
"Have you the wi?" asked the one who carried the lantern.
"Here it is," answered the other.
At the voice of this last speaker, Grimaud started and felt a shudder creeping
through his very marrow. He rose gently, so that his head was just above the round
of the barrel, and under the large hat he recognized the pale face of Mordaunt.
"How long will this fuse burn?" asked this person.
"About five minutes," replied the captain.
at voice also was known to Grimaud. He looked from one to the other and
aer Mordaunt he recognized Groslow.
"en tell the men to be in readiness--don't tell them why now. When the
clo strikes a quarter aer midnight collect your men. Get down into the longboat."
"at is, when I have lighted the mat?"
"I will undertake that. I wish to be sure of my revenge. Are the oars in the
boat?"
"Everything is ready."
"'Tis well."
Mordaunt knelt down and fastened one end of the train to the spigot, in order
that he might have nothing to do but to set it on fire at the opposite end with the
mat.
He then arose.
"You hear me--at a quarter past midnight--in fact, in twenty minutes."
"I understand all perfectly, sir," replied Groslow; "but allow me to say there
is great danger in what you undertake; would it not be beer to intrust one of the
men to set fire to the train?"
"My dear Groslow," answered Mordaunt, "you know the Fren proverb,
'Nothing one does not do one's self is ever well done.' I shall abide by that rule."
Grimaud had heard all this, if he had not understood it. But what he saw made
good what he laed in perfect comprehension of the language. He had seen the two
mortal enemies of the musketeers, had seen Mordaunt adjust the fuse; he had heard
the proverb, whi Mordaunt had given in Fren. en he felt and felt again the
contents of the tankard he held in his hand; and, instead of the lively liquor expected
by Blaisois and Mousqueton, he found beneath his fingers the grains of some coarse
powder.
dvii
Mordaunt went away with the captain. At the door he stopped to listen.
"Do you hear how they sleep?" he asked.
In fact, Porthos could be heard snoring through the partition.
"'Tis God who gives them into our hands," answered Groslow.
"is time the devil himself shall not save them," rejoined Mordaunt.
And they went out together.
. End of the Port Wine
Mystery.
G waited till he heard the bolt grind in the lo and when he was satisfied
that he was alone he slowly rose from his recumbent posture.
"Ah!" he said, wiping with his sleeve large drops of sweat from his forehead,
"how luy it was that Mousqueton was thirsty!"
He made haste to pass out by the opening, still thinking himself in a dream;
but the sight of the gunpowder in the tankard proved to him that his dream was a
fatal nightmare.
It may be imagined that D'Artagnan listened to these details with increasing
interest; before Grimaud had finished he rose without noise and puing his mouth
to Aramis's ear, and at the same time touing him on the shoulder to prevent a
sudden movement:
"Chevalier," he said, "get up and don't make the least noise."
Aramis awoke. D'Artagnan, pressing his hand, repeated his call. Aramis
obeyed.
"Athos is near you," said D'Artagnan; "warn him as I have warned you."
Aramis easily aroused Athos, whose sleep was light, like that of all persons of
a finely organized constitution. But there was more difficulty in arousing Porthos.
He was beginning to ask full explanation of that breaking in on his sleep, whi was
very annoying to him, when D'Artagnan, instead of explaining, closed his mouth
with his hand.
en our Gascon, extending his arms, drew to him the heads of his three
friends till they almost toued one another.
"Friends," he said, "we must leave this cra at once or we are dead men."
"Bah!" said Athos, "are you still afraid?"
"Do you know who is captain of this vessel?"
"No."
dix
"Captain Groslow."
e shudder of the three musketeers showed to D'Artagnan that his words
began to make some impression on them.
"Groslow!" said Aramis; "the devil!
"Who is this Groslow?" asked Porthos. "I don't remember him."
"Groslow is the man who broke Parry's head and is now geing ready to break
ours."
"Oh! oh!"
"And do you know who is his lieutenant?"
"His lieutenant? ere is none," said Athos. "ey don't have lieutenants in a
felucca manned by a crew of four."
"Yes, but Monsieur Groslow is not a captain of the ordinary kind; he has a
lieutenant, and that lieutenant is Monsieur Mordaunt."
is time the musketeers did more than shudder--they almost cried out. ose
invincible men were subject to a mysterious and fatal influence whi that name
had over them; the mere sound of it filled them with terror.
"What shall we do?" said Athos.
"We must seize the felucca," said Aramis.
"And kill him," said Porthos.
"e felucca is mined," said D'Artagnan. "ose casks whi I took for casks
of port wine are filled with powder. When Mordaunt finds himself discovered he
will destroy all, friends and foes; and on my word he would be bad company in
going either to Heaven or to hell."
"You have some plan, then?" asked Athos.
"Yes."
"What is it?"
"Have you confidence in me?"
"Give your orders," said the three musketeers.
"Very well; come this way."
D'Artagnan went toward a very small, low window, just large enough to let
a man through. He turned it gently on its hinges.
"ere," he said, "is our road."
"e deuce! it is a very cold one, my dear friend," said Aramis.
"Stay here, if you like, but I warn you 'twill be rather too warm presently."
"But we cannot swim to the shore."
"e longboat is yonder, lashed to the felucca. We will take possession of it
and cut the cable. Come, my friends."
"A moment's delay," said Athos; "our servants?"
"Here we are!" they cried.
Meantime the three friends were standing motionless before the awful sight
dx
whi D'Artagnan, in raising the shuers, had disclosed to them through the narrow
opening of the window.
ose who have once beheld su a spectacle know that there is nothing more
solemn, more striking, than the raging sea, rolling, with its deafening roar, its dark
billows beneath the pale light of a wintry moon.
"Gracious Heaven, we are hesitating!" cried D'Artagnan; "if we hesitate what
will the servants do?"
"I do not hesitate, you know," said Grimaud.
"Sir," interposed Blaisois, "I warn you that I can only swim in rivers."
"And I not at all," said Mousqueton.
But D'Artagnan had now slipped through the window.
"You have decided, friend?" said Athos.
"Yes," the Gascon answered; "Athos! you, who are a perfect being, bid spirit
triumph over body. Do you, Aramis, order the servants. Porthos, kill every one who
stands in your way."
And aer pressing the hand of Athos, D'Artagnan ose a moment when the
ship rolled baward, so that he had only to plunge into the water, whi was already
up to his waist.
Athos followed him before the felucca rose again on the waves; the cable
whi tied the boat to the vessel was then seen plainly rising out of the sea.
D'Artagnan swam to it and held it, suspending himself by this rope, his head
alone out of water.
In one second Athos joined him.
en they saw, as the felucca turned, two other heads peeping, those of Aramis
and Grimaud.
"I am uneasy about Blaisois," said Athos; "he can, he says, only swim in rivers."
"When people can swim at all they can swim anywhere. To the boat! to the
boat!"
"But Porthos, I do not see him."
"Porthos is coming--he swims like Leviathan."
In fact, Porthos did not appear; for a scene, half tragedy and half comedy, had
been performed by him with Mousqueton and Blaisois, who, frightened by the noise
of the sea, by the whistling of the wind, by the sight of that dark water yawning
like a gulf beneath them, shrank ba instead of going forward.
"Come, come!" said Porthos; "jump in."
"But, monsieur," said Mousqueton, "I can't swim; let me stay here."
"And me, too, monsieur," said Blaisois.
"I assure you, I shall be very mu in the way in that lile boat," said Mous-
queton.
"And I know I shall drown before reaing it," continued Blaisois.
dxi
"Come along! I shall strangle you both if you don't get out," said Porthos at
last, seizing Mousqueton by the throat. "Forward, Blaisois!"
A groan, stifled by the grasp of Porthos, was all the reply of poor Blaisois,
for the giant, taking him ne and heels, plunged him into the water headforemost,
pushing him out of the window as if he had been a plank.
"Now, Mousqueton," he said, "I hope you don't mean to desert your master?"
"Ah, sir," replied Mousqueton, his eyes filling with tears, "why did you re-enter
the army? We were all so happy in the Chateau de Pierrefonds!"
And without any other complaint, passive and obedient, either from true de-
votion to his master or from the example set by Blaisois, Mousqueton leaped into
the sea headforemost. A sublime action, at all events, for Mousqueton looked upon
himself as dead. But Porthos was not a man to abandon an old servant, and when
Mousqueton rose above the water, blind as a new-born puppy, he found he was
supported by the large hand of Porthos and that he was thus enabled, without hav-
ing occasion even to move, to advance toward the cable with the dignity of a very
triton.
In a few minutes Porthos had rejoined his companions, who were already in
the boat; but when, aer they had all got in, it came to his turn, there was great
danger that in puing his huge leg over the edge of the boat he would upset the
lile vessel. Athos was the last to enter.
"Are you all here?" he asked.
"Ah! have you your sword, Athos?" cried D'Artagnan.
"Yes."
"Cut the cable, then."
Athos drew a sharp poniard from his belt and cut the cord. e felucca went
on, the boat continued stationary, roed only by the swashing waves.
"Come, Athos!" said D'Artagnan, giving his hand to the count; "you are going
to see something curious," added the Gascon.
. Fatality.
S had D'Artagnan uered these words when a ringing and sudden noise
was heard resounding through the felucca, whi had now become dim in the
obscurity of the night.
"at, you may be sure," said the Gascon, "means something."
ey then at the same instant perceived a large lantern carried on a pole ap-
pear on the de, defining the forms of shadows behind it.
Suddenly a terrible cry, a cry of despair, was waed through space; and as if
the shrieks of anguish had driven away the clouds, the veil whi hid the moon was
cleated away and the gray sails and dark shrouds of the felucca were plainly visible
beneath the silvery light.
Shadows ran, as if bewildered, to and fro on the vessel, and mournful cries
accompanied these delirious walkers. In the midst of these screams they saw Mor-
daunt upon the poop with a tor in hand.
e agitated figures, apparently wild with terror, consisted of Groslow, who
at the hour fixed by Mordaunt had collected his men and the sailors. Mordaunt,
aer having listened at the door of the cabin to hear if the musketeers were still
asleep, had gone down into the cellar, convinced by their silence that they were all
in a deep slumber. en he had run to the train, impetuous as a man who is excited
by revenge, and full of confidence, as are those whom God blinds, he had set fire to
the wi of nitre.
All this while Groslow and his men were assembled on de.
"Haul up the cable and draw the boat to us," said Groslow.
One of the sailors got down the side of the ship, seized the cable, and drew it;
it came without the least resistance.
"e cable is cut!" he cried, "no boat!"
"How! no boat!" exclaimed Groslow; "it is impossible."
"'Tis true, however," answered the sailor; "there's nothing in the wake of the
ship; besides, here's the end of the cable."
dxiii
"What's the maer?" cried Mordaunt, who, coming up out of the hatway,
rushed to the stern, waving his tor.
"Only that our enemies have escaped; they have cut the cord and gone off
with the boat."
Mordaunt bounded with one step to the cabin and kied open the door.
"Empty!" he exclaimed; "the infernal demons!"
"We must pursue them," said Groslow, "they can't be gone far, and we will
sink them, passing over them."
"Yes, but the fire," ejaculated Mordaunt; "I have lighted it."
"Ten thousand devils!" cried Groslow, rushing to the hatway; "perhaps there
is still time to save us."
Mordaunt answered only by a terrible laugh, threw his tor into the sea and
plunged in aer it. e instant Groslow put his foot upon the hatway steps the
ship opened like the crater of a volcano. A burst of flame rose toward the skies
with an explosion like that of a hundred cannon; the air burned, ignited by flaming
embers, then the frightful lightning disappeared, the brands sank, one aer another,
into the abyss, where they were extinguished, and save for a slight vibration in
the air, aer a few minutes had elapsed one would have thought that nothing had
happened.
Only--the felucca had disappeared from the surface of the sea and Groslow
and his three sailors were consumed.
e four friends saw all this--not a single detail of this fearful scene escaped
them. At one moment, bathed as they were in a flood of brilliant light, whi il-
lumined the sea for the space of a league, they might ea be seen, ea by his
own peculiar aitude and manner expressing the awe whi, even in their hearts of
bronze, they could not help experiencing. Soon a torrent of vivid sparks fell around
them--then, at last, the volcano was extinguished--then all was dark and still--the
floating bark and heaving ocean.
ey sat silent and dejected.
"By Heaven!" at last said Athos, the first to speak, "by this time, I think, all
must be over."
"Here, my lords! save me! help!" cried a voice, whose mournful accents, rea-
ing the four friends, seemed to proceed from some phantom of the ocean.
All looked around; Athos himself stared.
"'Tis he! it is his voice!"
All still remained silent, the eyes of all were turned in the direction where
the vessel had disappeared, endeavoring in vain to penetrate the darkness. Aer a
minute or two they were able to distinguish a man, who approaed them, swim-
ming vigorously.
Athos extended his arm toward him, pointing him out to his companions.
dxiv
you were, of your uncle! executioner, as you were, of King Charles! incendiary! I
recommend you to sink forthwith to the boom of the sea; and if you come another
fathom nearer, I'll stave your wied head in with this oar."
"D'Artagnan! D'Artagnan!" cried Athos, "my son, I entreat you; the wret is
dying, and it is horrible to let a man die without extending a hand to save him. I
cannot resist doing so; he must live."
"Zounds!" replied D'Artagnan, "why don't you give yourself up directly, feet
and hands bound, to that wret? Ah! Comte de la Fere, you wish to perish by his
hands! I, your son, as you call me--I will not let you!"
'Twas the first time D'Artagnan had ever refused a request from Athos.
Aramis calmly drew his sword, whi he had carried between his teeth as he
swam.
"If he lays his hand on the boat's edge I will cut it off, regicide that he is."
"And I," said Porthos. "Wait."
"What are you going to do?" asked Aramis.
"row myself in the water and strangle him."
"Oh, gentlemen!" cried Athos, "be men! be Christians! See! death is depicted
on his face! Ah! do not bring on me the horrors of remorse! Grant me this poor
wret's life. I will bless you--I----"
"I am dying!" cried Mordaunt, "come to me! come to me!"
D'Artagnan began to be toued. e boat at this moment turned around, and
the dying man was by that turn brought nearer Athos.
"Monsieur the Comte de la Fere," he cried, "I supplicate you! pity me! I call
on you--where are you? I see you no longer--I am dying--help me! help me!"
"Here I am, sir!" said Athos, leaning and streting out his arm to Mordaunt
with that air of dignity and nobility of soul habitual to him; "here I am, take my
hand and jump into our boat."
Mordaunt made a last effort--rose--seized the hand thus extended to him and
grasped it with the vehemence of despair.
"at's right," said Athos; "put your other hand here." And he offered him
his shoulder as another stay and support, so that his head almost toued that of
Mordaunt; and these two mortal enemies were in as close an embrace as if they had
been brothers.
"Now, sir," said the count, "you are safe--calm yourself."
"Ah! my mother," cried Mordaunt, with eyes on fire with a look of hate im-
possible to paint, "I can only offer thee one victim, but it shall at any rate be the one
thou wouldst thyself have osen!"
And whilst D'Artagnan uered a cry, Porthos raised the oar, and Aramis
sought a place to strike, a frightful shake given to the boat precipitated Athos into
the sea; whilst Mordaunt, with a shout of triumph, grasped the ne of his victim,
dxvi
and in order to paralyze his movements, twined arms and legs around the muske-
teer. For an instant, without an exclamation, without a cry for help, Athos tried to
sustain himself on the surface of the waters, but the weight dragged him down; he
disappeared by degrees; soon nothing was to be seen except his long, floating hair;
then both men disappeared and the bubbling of the water, whi, in its turn, was
soon effaced, alone indicated the spot where these two had sunk.
Mute with horror, the three friends had remained open-mouthed, their eyes
dilated, their arms extended like statues, and, motionless as they were, the beating
of their hearts was audible. Porthos was the first who came to himself. He tore his
hair.
"Oh!" he cried, "Athos! Athos! thou man of noble heart; woe is me! I have let
thee perish!"
At this instant, in the midst of the silver circle illumined by the light of the
moon the same whirlpool whi had been made by the sinking men was again
obvious, and first were seen, rising above the waves, a wisp of hair, then a pale face
with open eyes, yet, nevertheless, the eyes of death; then a body, whi, aer rising
of itself even to the waist above the sea, turned gently on its ba, according to the
caprice of the waves, and floated.
In the bosom of this corpse was plunged a poniard, the gold hilt of whi
shone in the moonbeams.
"Mordaunt! Mordaunt!" cried the three friends; "'tis Mordaunt!"
"But Athos!" exclaimed D'Artagnan.
Suddenly the boat leaned on one side beneath a new and unexpected weight
and Grimaud uered a shout of joy; every one turned around and beheld Athos,
livid, his eyes dim and his hands trembling, supporting himself on the edge of the
boat. Eight vigorous arms lied him up immediately and laid him in the boat, where
directly Athos was warmed and reanimated, reviving with the caresses and cares of
his friends, who were intoxicated with joy.
"You are not hurt?" asked D'Artagnan.
"No," replied Athos; "and he----"
"Oh, he! now we may say at last, thank Heaven! he is really dead. Look!"
and D'Artagnan, obliging Athos to look in the direction he pointed, showed him the
body of Mordaunt floating on its ba, whi, sometimes submerged, sometimes
rising, seemed still to pursue the four friends with looks of insult and mortal hatred.
At last he sank. Athos had followed him with a glance in whi the deepest
melanoly and pity were expressed.
"Bravo! Athos!" cried Aramis, with an emotion very rare in him.
"A capital blow you gave!" cried Porthos.
"I have a son. I wished to live," said Athos.
"In short," said D'Artagnan, "this has been the will of God."
dxvii
"It was not I who killed him," said Athos in a so, low tone, "'twas destiny."
. How Mousqueton had a
Narrow Escape of being eaten.
A silence reigned for a long time in the boat aer the fearful scene described.
e moon, whi had shone for a short time, disappeared behind the clouds;
every object was again plunged in the obscurity that is so awful in the deserts
and still more so in that liquid desert, the ocean, and nothing was heard save the
whistling of the west wind driving along the tops of the crested billows.
Porthos was the first to speak.
"I have seen," he said, "many dreadful things, but nothing that ever agitated
me so mu as what I have just witnessed. Nevertheless, even in my present state of
perturbation, I protest that I feel happy. I have a hundred pounds' weight less upon
my est. I breathe more freely." In fact, Porthos breathed so loud as to do credit to
the free play of his powerful lungs.
"For my part," observed Aramis, "I cannot say the same as you do, Porthos. I
am still terrified to su a degree that I scarcely believe my eyes. I look around the
boat, expecting every moment to see that poor wret holding between his hands
the poniard plunged into his heart."
"Oh! I feel easy," replied Porthos. "e poniard was pointed at the sixth rib
and buried up to the hilt in his body. I do not reproa you, Athos, for what you
have done. On the contrary, when one aims a blow that is the regulation way to
strike. So now, I breathe again--I am happy!"
"Don't be in haste to celebrate a victory, Porthos," interposed D'Artagnan;
"never have we incurred a greater danger than we are now encountering. Men may
subdue men--they cannot overcome the elements. We are now on the sea, at night,
without any pilot, in a frail bark; should a blast of wind upset the boat we are lost."
Mousqueton heaved a deep sigh.
"You are ungrateful, D'Artagnan," said Athos; "yes, ungrateful to Providence,
to whom we owe our safety in the most miraculous manner. Let us sail before
dxix
the wind, and unless it anges we shall be dried either to Calais or Boulogne.
Should our bark be upset we are five of us good swimmers, able enough to turn it
over again, or if not, to hold on by it. Now we are on the very road whi all the
vessels between Dover and Calais take, 'tis impossible but that we should meet with
a fisherman who will pi us up."
"But should we not find any fisherman and should the wind shi to the north?"
"at," said Athos, "would be quite another thing; and we should nevermore
see land until we were upon the other side of the Atlantic."
"Whi implies that we may die of hunger," said Aramis.
"'Tis more than possible," answered the Comte de la Fere.
Mousqueton sighed again, more deeply than before.
"What is the maer? what ails you?" asked Porthos.
"I am cold, sir," said Mousqueton.
"Impossible! your body is covered with a coating of fat whi preserves it
from the cold air."
"Ah! sir, 'tis this very coating of fat that makes me shiver."
"How is that, Mousqueton?
"Alas! your honor, in the library of the Chateau of Bracieux there are a lot of
books of travels."
"What then?"
"Amongst them the voyages of Jean Mocquet in the time of Henry IV."
"Well?"
"In these books, your honor, 'tis told how hungry voyagers, driing out to sea,
have a bad habit of eating ea other and beginning with----"
"e faest among them!" cried D'Artagnan, unable in spite of the gravity of
the occasion to help laughing.
"Yes, sir," answered Mousqueton; "but permit me to say I see nothing laughable
in it. However," he added, turning to Porthos, "I should not regret dying, sir, were I
sure that by doing so I might still be useful to you."
"Mouston," replied Porthos, mu affected, "should we ever see my castle of
Pierrefonds again you shall have as your own and for your descendants the vineyard
that surrounds the farm."
"And you should call it 'Devotion,'" added Aramis; "the vineyard of self-
sacrifice, to transmit to latest ages the recollection of your devotion to your master."
"Chevalier," said D'Artagnan, laughing, "you could eat a piece of Mouston,
couldn't you, especially aer two or three days of fasting?"
"Oh, no," replied Aramis, "I should mu prefer Blaisois; we haven't known
him so long."
One may readily conceive that during these jokes whi were intended iefly
to divert Athos from the scene whi had just taken place, the servants, with the
dxx
exception of Grimaud, were not silent. Suddenly Mousqueton uered a cry of de-
light, taking from beneath one of the benes a bole of wine; and on looking more
closely in the same place he discovered a dozen similar boles, bread, and a monster
junk of salted beef.
"Oh, sir!" he cried, passing the bole to Porthos, "we are saved--the bark is
supplied with provisions."
is intelligence restored every one save Athos to gayety.
"Zounds!" exclaimed Porthos, "'tis astonishing how empty violent agitation
makes the stoma."
And he drank off half a bole at a draught and bit great mouthfuls of the
bread and meat.
"Now," said Athos, "sleep, or try to sleep, my friends, and I will wat."
In a few moments, notwithstanding their wet clothes, the icy blast that blew
and the previous scene of terror, these hardy adventurers, with their iron frames,
inured to every hardship, threw themselves down, intending to profit by the advice
of Athos, who sat at the helm, pensively wakeful, guiding the lile bark the way
it was to go, his eyes fixed on the heavens, as if he sought to verify not only the
road to France, but the benign aspect of protecting Providence. Aer some hours of
repose the sleepers were aroused by Athos.
Dawn was shedding its pallid, placid glimmer on the purple ocean, when at
the distance of a musket shot from them was seen a dark gray mass, above whi
gleamed a triangular sail; then masters and servants joined in a fervent cry to the
crew of that vessel to hear them and to save.
"A bark!" all cried together.
It was, in fact, a small cra from Dunkirk bound for Boulogne.
A quarter of an hour aerward the rowboat of this cra took them all aboard.
Grimaud tendered twenty guineas to the captain, and at nine o'clo in the morning,
having a fair wind, our Frenmen set foot on their native land.
"Egad! how strong one feels here!" said Porthos, almost burying his large feet
in the sands. "Zounds! I could defy a nation!"
"Be quiet, Porthos," said D'Artagnan, "we are observed."
"We are admired, i'faith," answered Porthos.
"ese people who are looking at us are only merants," said Athos, "and are
looking more at the cargo than at us."
"I shall not trust to that," said the lieutenant, "and I shall make for the Dunes*
as soon as possible."
e party followed him and soon disappeared with him behind the hillos of sand
dxxi
by Mousqueton, who, aer being too cold all night, at the end of a quarter of an hour
found himself too warm.
. e Return.
D the six weeks that Athos and Aramis had been absent from France, the
Parisians, finding themselves one morning without either queen or king, were
greatly annoyed at being thus deserted, and the absence of Mazarin, a thing so long
desired, did not compensate for that of the two august fugitives.
e first feeling that pervaded Paris on hearing of the flight to Saint Germain,
was that sort of affright whi seizes ildren when they awake in the night and
find themselves alone. A deputation was therefore sent to the queen to entreat her
to return to Paris; but she not only declined to receive the deputies, but sent an
intimation by Chancellor Seguier, implying that if the parliament did not humble
itself before her majesty by negativing all the questions that had been the cause of
the quarrel, Paris would be besieged the very next day.
is threatening answer, unluily for the court, produced quite a different
effect to that whi was intended. It wounded the pride of the parliament, whi,
supported by the citizens, replied by declaring that Cardinal Mazarin was the cause
of all the discontent; denounced him as the enemy both of the king and the state,
and ordered him to retire from the court that same day and from France within a
week aerward; enjoining, in case of disobedience on his part, all the subjects of
the king to pursue and take him.
Mazarin being thus placed beyond the pale of the protection of the law, prepa-
rations on both sides were commenced--by the queen, to aa Paris, by the citizens,
to defend it. e laer were occupied in breaking up the pavement and streting
ains across the streets, when, headed by the coadjutor, appeared the Prince de
Conti (the brother of the Prince de Conde) and the Duc de Longueville, his brother-
in-law. is unexpected band of auxiliaries arrived in Paris on the tenth of January
and the Prince of Conti was named, but not until aer a stormy discussion, gener-
alissimo of the army of the king, out of Paris.
As for the Duc de Beaufort, he arrived from Vendome, according to the annals
of the day, bringing with him his high bearing and his long and beautiful hair,
qualifications whi gained him the sovereignty of the marketplaces.
dxxv
D'Artagnan."
"Who is speaking of Monsieur D'Artagnan?" asked an officer who appeared
at that moment upon the threshold of the room.
"What!" cried Aramis and Athos, "what! Planet!"
"Planet," added Grimaud; "Planet, with a gorget, indeed!"
"Ah, gentlemen!" cried Planet, "so you are ba again in Paris. Oh, how
happy you make us! no doubt you come to join the princes!"
"As thou seest, Planet," said Aramis, whilst Athos smiled on seeing what
important rank was held in the city militia by the former comrade of Mousqueton,
Bazin and Grimaud.
"And Monsieur d'Artagnan, of whom you spoke just now, Monsieur
d'Herblay; may I ask if you have any news of him?"
"We parted from him four days ago and we have reason to believe that he has
reaed Paris before us."
"No, sir; I am sure he hasn't yet arrived. But then he may have stopped at
Saint Germain."
"I don't think so; we appointed to meet at La Chevree."
"I was there this very day."
"And had the prey Madeleine no news?" asked Aramis, smiling.
"No, sir, and it must be admied that she seemed very anxious."
"In fact," said Aramis, "there is no time lost and we made our journey quily.
Permit me, then, my dear Athos, without inquiring further about our friend, to pay
my respects to M. Planet."
"Ah, monsieur le evalier," said Planet, bowing.
"Lieutenant?" asked Aramis.
"Lieutenant, with a promise of becoming captain."
"'Tis capital; and pray, how did you acquire all these honors?"
"In the first place, gentlemen, you know that I was the means of Monsieur de
Roefort's escape; well, I was very near being hung by Mazarin and that made me
more popular than ever."
"So, owing to your popularity----"
"No; thanks to something beer. You know, gentlemen, that I served the Pied-
mont regiment and had the honor of being a sergeant?"
"Yes."
"Well, one day when no one could drill a mob of citizens, who began to mar,
some with the right foot, others with the le, I succeeded, I did, in making them all
begin with the same foot, and I was made lieutenant on the spot."
"So I presume," said Athos, "that you have a large number of the nobles with
you?"
"Certainly. ere are the Prince de Conti, the Duc de Longueville, the Duc de
dxxviii
Beaufort, the Duc de Bouillon, the Mareal de la Mothe, the Marquis de Sevigne,
and I don't know who, for my part."
"And the Vicomte Raoul de Bragelonne?" inquired Athos, in a tremulous voice.
"D'Artagnan told me that he had recommended him to your care, in parting."
"Yes, count; nor have I lost sight of him for a single instant since."
"en," said Athos in a tone of delight, "he is well? no accident has happened
to him?"
"None, sir."
"And he lives?"
"Still at the Hotel of the Great Charlemagne."
"And passes his time?"
"Sometimes with the queen of England, sometimes with Madame de
Chevreuse. He and the Count de Guie are like ea other's shadows."
"anks, Planet, thanks!" cried Athos, extending his hand to the lieutenant.
"Oh, sir!" Planet only toued the tips of the count's fingers.
"Well, what are you doing, count--to a former laey?
"My friend," said Athos, "he has given me news of Raoul."
"And now, gentlemen," said Planet, who had not heard what they were say-
ing, "what do you intend to do?"
"Re-enter Paris, if you will let us, my good Planet."
"Let you, sir? Now, as ever, I am nothing but your servant." en turning to
his men:
"Allow these gentlemen to pass," he said; "they are friends of the Duc de Beau-
fort."
"Long live the Duc de Beaufort!" cried the sentinels.
e sergeant drew near to Planet.
"What! without passports?" he murmured.
"Without passports," said Planet.
"Take notice, captain," he continued, giving Planet his expected title, "take
notice that one of the three men who just now went out from here told me privately
to distrust these gentlemen."
"And I," said Planet, with dignity, "I know them and I answer for them."
As he said this, he pressed Grimaud's hand, who seemed honored by the dis-
tinction.
"Farewell till we meet again," said Aramis, as they took leave of Planet; "if
anything happens to us we shall blame you for it."
"Sir," said Planet, "I am in all things at your service."
"at fellow is no fool," said Aramis, as he got on his horse.
"How should he be?" replied Athos, whilst mounting also, "seeing he was used
so long to brush your hats."
. e Ambassadors.
T two friends rode rapidly down the declivity of the Faubourg, but on arriving
at the boom were surprised to find that the streets of Paris had become rivers,
and the open places lakes; aer the great rains whi fell in January the Seine had
overflowed its banks and the river inundated half the capital. e two gentlemen
were obliged, therefore, to get off their horses and take a boat; and in that strange
manner they approaed the Louvre.
Night had closed in, and Paris, seen thus, by the light of lanterns fliering
on the pools of water, crowded with ferry-boats of every kind, including those that
gliered with the armed patrols, with the watword, passing from post to post--
Paris presented su an aspect as to strongly seize the senses of Aramis, a man most
susceptible to warlike impressions.
ey reaed the queen's apartments, but were compelled to stop in the ante-
amber, since her majesty was at that moment giving audience to gentlemen bring-
ing her news from England.
"We, too," said Athos, to the footman who had given him that answer, "not
only bring news from England, but have just come from there."
"What? then, are your names, gentlemen?"
"e Comte de la Fere and the Chevalier d'Herblay," said Aramis.
"Ah! in that case, gentlemen," said the footman, on hearing the names whi
the queen had so oen pronounced with hope, "in that case it is another thing, and I
think her majesty will pardon me for not keeping you here a moment. Please follow
me," and he went on before, followed by Athos and Aramis.
On arriving at the door of the room where the queen was receiving he made
a sign for them to wait and opening the door:
"Madame," he said, "I hope your majesty will forgive me for disobeying your
orders, when you learn that the gentlemen I have come to announce are the Comte
de la Fere and the Chevalier d'Herblay."
On hearing those two names the queen uered a cry of joy, whi the two
gentlemen heard.
dxxx
had placed in the hands of Aramis. Since the moment he had first received these
two mementoes Athos had never parted with them.
He opened the case and offered them to the queen with deep and silent an-
guish.
e queen streted out her hand, seized the ring, pressed it convulsively to
her lips--and without being able to breathe a sigh, to give vent to a sob, she extended
her arms, became deadly pale, and fell senseless in the arms of her aendants and
her daughter.
Athos kissed the hem of the robe of the widowed queen and rising, with a
dignity that made a deep impression on those around:
"I, the Comte de la Fere, a gentleman who has never deceived any human
being, swear before God and before this unhappy queen, that all that was possible
to save the king of England was done whilst we were on English ground. Now,
evalier," he added, turning to Aramis, "let us go. Our duty is fulfilled."
"Not yet." said Aramis; "we have still a word to say to these gentlemen."
And turning to Chatillon: "Sir, be so good as not to go away without giving
me an opportunity to tell you something I cannot say before the queen."
Chatillon bowed in token of assent and they all went out, stopping at the
window of a gallery on the ground floor.
"Sir," said Aramis, "you allowed yourself just now to treat us in a most ex-
traordinary manner. at would not be endurable in any case, and is still less so on
the part of those who came to bring the queen the message of a liar."
"Sir!" cried De Chatillon.
"What have you done with Monsieur de Bruy? Has he by any possibility gone
to ange his face whi was too like that of Monsieur de Mazarin? ere is an
abundance of Italian masks at the Palais Royal, from harlequin even to pantaloon."
"Chevalier! evalier!" said Athos.
"Leave me alone," said Aramis impatiently. "You know well that I don't like
to leave things half finished."
"Conclude, then, sir," answered De Chatillon, with as mu hauteur as Aramis.
"Gentlemen," resumed Aramis, "any one but the Comte de la Fere and myself
would have had you arrested--for we have friends in Paris--but we are contented
with another course. Come and converse with us for just five minutes, sword in
hand, upon this deserted terrace."
"One moment, gentlemen," cried Flamarens. "I know well that the proposition
is tempting, but at present it is impossible to accept it."
"And why not?" said Aramis, in his tone of raillery. "Is it Mazarin's proximity
that makes you so prudent?"
"Oh, you hear that, Flamarens!" said Chatillon. "Not to reply would be a blot
on my name and my honor."
dxxxiii
T night was dark, but still the town resounded with those noises that disclose
a city in a state of siege. Athos and Aramis did not proceed a hundred steps
without being stopped by sentinels placed before the barricades, who demanded the
watword; and on their saying that they were going to Monsieur de Bouillon on a
mission of importance a guide was given them under pretext of conducting them,
but in fact as a spy over their movements.
On arriving at the Hotel de Bouillon they came across a lile troop of three
cavaliers, who seemed to know every possible password; for they walked without
either guide or escort, and on arriving at the barricades had nothing to do but to
speak to those who guarded them, who instantly let them pass with evident defer-
ence, due probably to their high birth.
On seeing them Athos and Aramis stood still.
"Oh!" cried Aramis, "do you see, count?"
"Yes," said Athos.
"Who do these three cavaliers appear to you to be?"
"What do you think, Aramis?"
"Why, they are our men."
"You are not mistaken; I recognize Monsieur de Flamarens."
"And I, Monsieur de Chatillon."
"As to the cavalier in the brown cloak----"
"It is the cardinal."
"In person."
"How the devil do they venture so near the Hotel de Bouillon?"
Athos smiled, but did not reply. Five minutes aerward they knoed at the
prince's door.
is door was guarded by a sentinel and there was also a guard placed in the
courtyard, ready to obey the orders of the Prince de Conti's lieutenant.
dxxxvi
Monsieur de Bouillon had the gout, but notwithstanding his illness, whi
had prevented his mounting on horseba for the last month---that is, since Paris
had been besieged--he was ready to receive the Comte de la Fere and the Chevalier
d'Herblay.
He was in bed, but surrounded with all the paraphernalia of war. Everywhere
were swords, pistols, cuirasses, and arquebuses, and it was plain that as soon as his
gout was beer Monsieur de Bouillon would give a prey tangle to the enemies of
the parliament to unravel. Meanwhile, to his great regret, as he said, he was obliged
to keep his bed.
"Ah, gentlemen," he cried, as the two friends entered, "you are very happy!
you can ride, you can go and come and fight for the cause of the people. But I, as
you see, am nailed to my bed--ah! this demon, gout--this demon, gout!"
"My lord," said Athos, "we are just arrived from England and our first concern
is to inquire aer your health."
"anks, gentlemen, thanks! As you see, my health is but indifferent. But you
come from England. And King Charles is well, as I have just heard?"
"He is dead, my lord!" said Aramis.
"Pooh!" said the duke, too mu astonished to believe it true.
"Dead on the scaffold; condemned by parliament."
"Impossible!"
"And executed in our presence."
"What, then, has Monsieur de Flamarens been telling me?"
"Monsieur de Flamarens?"
"Yes, he has just gone out."
Athos smiled. "With two companions?" he said.
"With two companions, yes," replied the duke. en he added with a certain
uneasiness, "Did you meet them?"
"Why, yes, I think so--in the street," said Athos; and he looked smilingly at
Aramis, who looked at him with an expression of surprise.
"e devil take this gout!" cried Monsieur de Bouillon, evidently ill at ease.
"My lord," said Athos, "we admire your devotion to the cause you have es-
poused, in remaining at the head of the army whilst so ill, in so mu pain."
"One must," replied Monsieur de Bouillon, "sacrifice one's comfort to the pub-
lic good; but I confess to you I am now almost exhausted. My spirit is willing, my
head is clear, but this demon, the gout, o'ercrows me. I confess, if the court would
do justice to my claims and give the head of my house the title of prince, and if
my brother De Turenne were reinstated in his command I would return to my es-
tates and leave the court and parliament to sele things between themselves as they
might."
"You are perfectly right, my lord."
dxxxvii
"You think so? At this very moment the court is making overtures to me;
hitherto I have repulsed them; but since su men as you assure me that I am wrong
in doing so, I've a good mind to follow your advice and to accept a proposition made
to me by the Duc de Chatillon just now."
"Accept it, my lord, accept it," said Aramis.
"Faith! yes. I am even sorry that this evening I almost repulsed--but there will
be a conference to-morrow and we shall see."
e two friends saluted the duke.
"Go, gentlemen," he said; "you must be mu fatigued aer your voyage. Poor
King Charles! But, aer all, he was somewhat to blame in all that business and we
may console ourselves with the reflection that France has no cause of reproa in
the maer and did all she could to serve him."
"Oh! as to that," said Aramis, "we are witnesses. Mazarin especially----"
"Yes, do you know, I am very glad to hear you give that testimony; the cardinal
has some good in him, and if he were not a foreigner--well, he would be more justly
estimated. Oh! the devil take this gout!"
Athos and Aramis took their leave, but even in the ante-amber they could
still hear the duke's cries; he was evidently suffering the tortures of the damned.
When they reaed the street, Aramis said:
"Well, Athos, what do you think?"
"Of whom?"
"Pardieu! of Monsieur de Bouillon."
"My friend, I think that he is mu troubled with gout."
"You noticed that I didn't breathe a word as to the purpose of our visit?"
"You did well; you would have caused him an access of his disease. Let us go
to Monsieur de Beaufort."
e two friends went to the Hotel de Vendome. It was ten o'clo when they
arrived. e Hotel de Vendome was not less guarded than the Hotel de Bouillon,
and presented as warlike an appearance. ere were sentinels, a guard in the court,
stas of arms, and horses saddled. Two horsemen going out as Athos and Aramis
entered were obliged to give place to them.
"Ah! ah! gentlemen," said Aramis, "decidedly it is a night for meetings. We
shall be very unfortunate if, aer meeting so oen this evening, we should not
succeed in meeting to-morrow."
"Oh, as to that, sir," replied Chatillon (for it was he who, with Flamarens, was
leaving the Duc de Beaufort), "you may be assured; for if we meet by night without
seeking ea other, mu more shall we meet by day when wishing it."
"I hope that is true," said Aramis.
"As for me, I am sure of it," said the duke.
De Flamarens and De Chatillon continued on their way and Athos and Aramis
dxxxviii
dismounted.
Hardly had they given the bridles of their horses to their laeys and rid them-
selves of their cloaks when a man approaed them, and aer looking at them for
an instant by the doubtful light of the lantern hung in the centre of the courtyard
he uered an exclamation of joy and ran to embrace them.
"Comte de la Fere!" the man cried out; "Chevalier d'Herblay! How does it
happen that you are in Paris?"
"Roefort!" cried the two friends.
"Yes! we arrived four or five days ago from the Vendomois, as you know, and
we are going to give Mazarin something to do. You are still with us, I presume?"
"More than ever. And the duke?"
"Furious against the cardinal. You know his success--our dear duke? He is
really king of Paris; he can't go out without being mobbed by his admirers."
"Ah! so mu the beer! Can we have the honor of seeing his highness?"
"I shall be proud to present you," and Roefort walked on. Every door was
opened to him. Monsieur de Beaufort was at supper, but he rose quily on hearing
the two friends announced.
"Ah!" he cried, "by Jove! you're welcome, sirs. You are coming to sup with me,
are you not? Boisgoli, tell Noirmont that I have two guests. You know Noirmont,
do you not? e successor of Father Marteau who makes the excellent pies you
know of. Boisgoli, let him send one of his best, but not su a one as he made for
La Ramee. ank God! we don't want either rope ladders or gag-pears now."
"My lord," said Athos, "do not let us disturb you. We came merely to inquire
aer your health and to take your orders."
"As to my health, since it has stood five years of prison, with Monsieur de
Chavigny to boot, 'tis excellent! As to my orders, since every one gives his own
commands in our party, I shall end, if this goes on, by giving none at all."
"In short, my lord," said Athos, glancing at Aramis, "your highness is discon-
tented with your party?"
"Discontented, sir! say my highness is furious! To su a degree, I assure you,
though I would not say so to others, that if the queen, anowledging the injuries she
has done me, would recall my mother and give me the reversion of the admiralty,
whi belonged to my father and was promised me at his death, well! it would not
be long before I should be training dogs to say that there were greater traitors in
France than the Cardinal Mazarin!"
At this Athos and Aramis could not help exanging not only a look but a
smile; and had they not known it for a fact, this would have told them that De
Chatillon and De Flamarens had been there.
"My lord," said Athos, "we are satisfied; we came here only to express our loy-
alty and to say that we are at your lordship's service and his most faithful servants."
dxxxix
"My most faithful friends, gentlemen, my most faithful friends; you have
proved it. And if ever I am reconciled with the court I shall prove to you, I hope, that
I remain your friend, as well as that of--what the devil are their names--D'Artagnan
and Porthos?"
"D'Artagnan and Porthos."
"Ah, yes. You understand, then, Comte de la Fere, you understand, Chevalier
d'Herblay, that I am altogether and always at your service."
Athos and Aramis bowed and went out.
"My dear Athos," cried Aramis, "I think you consented to accompany me only
to give me a lesson--God forgive me!"
"Wait a lile, Aramis; it will be time for you to perceive my motive when we
have paid our visit to the coadjutor."
"Let us then go to the ariepiscopal palace," said Aramis.
ey directed their horses to the city. On arriving at the cradle from whi
Paris sprang they found it inundated with water, and it was again necessary to take
a boat. e palace rose from the bosom of the water, and to see the number of boats
around it one would have fancied one's self not in Paris, but in Venice. Some of
these boats were dark and mysterious, others noisy and lighted up with tores.
e friends slid in through this congestion of embarkation and landed in their turn.
e palace was surrounded with water, but a kind of staircase had been fixed to
the lower walls; and the only difference was, that instead of entering by the doors,
people entered by the windows.
us did Athos and Aramis make their appearance in the ante-amber, where
about a dozen noblemen were collected in waiting.
"Good heavens!" said Aramis to Athos, "does the coadjutor intend to indulge
himself in the pleasure of making us cool our hearts off in his ante-amber?"
"My dear friend, we must take people as we find them. e coadjutor is at
this moment one of the seven kings of Paris, and has a court. Let us send in our
names, and if he does not send us a suitable message we will leave him to his own
affairs or those of France. Let us call one of these laeys, with a demi-pistole in the
le hand."
"Exactly so," cried Aramis. "Ah! if I'm not mistaken here's Bazin. Come here,
fellow."
Bazin, who was crossing the ante-amber majestically in his clerical dress,
turned around to see who the impertinent gentleman was who thus addressed him;
but seeing his friends he went up to them quily and expressed delight at seeing
them.
"A truce to compliments," said Aramis; "we want to see the coadjutor, and
instantly, as we are in haste."
"Certainly, sir--it is not su lords as you are who are allowed to wait in the
dxl
ante-amber, only just now he has a secret conference with Monsieur de Bruy."
"De Bruy!" cried the friends, "'tis then useless our seeing monsieur the coad-
jutor this evening," said Aramis, "so we give it up."
And they hastened to quit the palace, followed by Bazin, who was lavish of
bows and compliments.
"Well," said Athos, when Aramis and he were in the boat again, "are you
beginning to be convinced that we should have done a bad turn to all these people
in arresting Mazarin?"
"You are wisdom incarnate, Athos," Aramis replied.
What had especially been observed by the two friends was the lile interest
taken by the court of France in the terrible events whi had occurred in England,
whi they thought should have arrested the aention of all Europe.
In fact, aside from a poor widow and a royal orphan who wept in the corner
of the Louvre, no one appeared to be aware that Charles I. had ever lived and that
he had perished on the scaffold.
e two friends made an appointment for ten o'clo on the following day;
for though the night was well advanced when they reaed the door of the hotel,
Aramis said that he had certain important visits to make and le Athos to enter
alone.
At ten o'clo the next day they met again. Athos had been out since six
o'clo.
"Well, have you any news?" Athos asked.
"Nothing. No one has seen D'Artagnan and Porthos has not appeared. Have
you anything?"
"Nothing."
"e devil!" said Aramis.
"In fact," said Athos, "this delay is not natural; they took the shortest route
and should have arrived before we did."
"Add to that D'Artagnan's rapidity in action and that he is not the man to lose
an hour, knowing that we were expecting him."
"He expected, you will remember, to be here on the fih."
"And here we are at the ninth. is evening the margin of possible delay
expires."
"What do you think should be done," asked Athos, "if we have no news of
them to-night?"
"Pardieu! we must go and look for them."
"All right," said Athos.
"But Raoul?" said Aramis.
A light cloud passed over the count's face.
"Raoul gives me mu uneasiness," he said. "He received yesterday a message
dxli
from the Prince de Conde; he went to meet him at Saint Cloud and has not returned."
"Have you seen Madame de Chevreuse?"
"She was not at home. And you, Aramis, you were going, I think, to visit
Madame de Longueville."
"I did go there."
"Well?"
"She was no longer there, but she had le her new address."
"Where was she?"
"Guess; I give you a thousand ances."
"How should I know where the most beautiful and active of the Frondists was
at midnight? for I presume it was when you le me that you went to visit her."
"At the Hotel de Ville, my dear fellow."
"What! at the Hotel de Ville? Has she, then, been appointed provost of mer-
ants?"
"No; but she has become queen of Paris, ad interim, and since she could not
venture at once to establish herself in the Palais Royal or the Tuileries, she is installed
at the Hotel de Ville, where she is on the point of giving an heir or an heiress to that
dear duke."
"You didn't tell me of that, Aramis."
"Really? It was my forgetfulness then; pardon me."
"Now," asked Athos, "what are we to do with ourselves till evening? Here we
are without occupation, it seems to me."
"You forget, my friend, that we have work cut out for us in the direction of
Charenton; I hope to see Monsieur de Chatillon, whom I've hated for a long time,
there."
"Why have you hated him?"
"Because he is the brother of Coligny."
"Ah, true! he who presumed to be a rival of yours, for whi he was severely
punished; that ought to satisfy you."
"'Yes, but it does not; I am rancorous--the only stigma that proves me to be a
urman. Do you understand? You understand that you are in no way obliged to
go with me."
"Come, now," said Athos, "you are joking."
"In that case, my dear friend, if you are resolved to accompany me there is no
time to lose; the drum beats; I observed cannon on the road; I saw the citizens in
order of bale on the Place of the Hotel de Ville; certainly the fight will be in the
direction of Charenton, as the Duc de Chatillon said."
"I supposed," said Athos, "that last night's conferences would modify those
warlike arrangements."
"No doubt; but they will fight, none the less, if only to mask the conferences."
dxlii
"Poor creatures!" said Athos, "who are going to be killed, in order that Mon-
sieur de Bouillon may have his estate at Sedan restored to him, that the reversion
of the admiralty may be given to the Duc de Beaufort, and that the coadjutor may
be made a cardinal."
"Come, come, dear Athos, confess that you would not be so philosophical if
your Raoul were to be involved in this affair."
"Perhaps you speak the truth, Aramis."
"Well, let us go, then, where the fighting is, for that is the most likely place
to meet with D'Artagnan, Porthos, and possibly even Raoul. Stop, there are a fine
body of citizens passing; quite aractive, by Jupiter! and their captain--see! he has
the true military style."
"What, ho!" said Grimaud.
"What?" asked Athos.
"Planet, sir."
"Lieutenant yesterday," said Aramis, "captain to-day, colonel, doubtless, to-
morrow; in a fortnight the fellow will be marshal of France."
"estion him about the fight," said Athos.
Planet, prouder than ever of his new duties, deigned to explain to the two
gentlemen that he was ordered to take up his position on the Place Royale with two
hundred men, forming the rear of the army of Paris, and to mar on Charenton
when necessary.
"is day will be a warm one," said Planet, in a warlike tone.
"No doubt," said Aramis, "but it is far from here to the enemy."
"Sir, the distance will be diminished," said a subordinate.
Aramis saluted, then turning toward Athos:
"I don't care to camp on the Place Royale with all these people," he said. "Shall
we go forward? We shall see beer what is going on."
"And then Monsieur de Chatillon will not come to the Place Royale to look
for you. Come, then, my friend, we will go forward."
"Haven't you something to say to Monsieur de Flamarens on your own ac-
count?"
"My friend," said Athos, "I have made a resolution never to draw my sword
save when it is absolutely necessary."
"And how long ago was that?"
"When I last drew my poniard."
"Ah! Good! another souvenir of Monsieur Mordaunt. Well, my friend, noth-
ing now is laing except that you should feel remorse for having killed that fellow."
"Hush!" said Athos, puing a finger on his lips, with the sad smile peculiar
to him; "let us talk no more of Mordaunt--it will bring bad lu." And Athos set
forward toward Charenton, followed closely by Aramis.
. e Battle of Charenton.
A Athos and Aramis proceeded, and passed different companies on the road,
they became aware that they were arriving near the field of bale.
"Ah! my friend!" cried Athos, suddenly, "where have you brought us? I fancy
I perceive around us faces of different officers in the royal army; is not that the Duc
de Chatillon himself coming toward us with his brigadiers?"
"Good-day, sirs," said the duke, advancing; "you are puzzled by what you see
here, but one word will explain everything. ere is now a truce and a conference.
e prince, Monsieur de Retz, the Duc de Beaufort, the Duc de Bouillon, are talking
over public affairs. Now one of two things must happen: either maers will not
be arranged, or they will be arranged, in whi last case I shall be relieved of my
command and we shall still meet again."
"Sir," said Aramis, "you speak to the point. Allow me to ask you a question:
Where are the plenipotentiaries?"
"At Charenton, in the second house on the right on entering from the direction
of Paris."
"And was this conference arranged beforehand?"
"No, gentlemen, it seems to be the result of certain propositions whi Mazarin
made last night to the Parisians."
Athos and Aramis exanged smiles; for they well knew what those proposi-
tions were, to whom they had been made and who had made them.
"And that house in whi the plenipotentiaries are," asked Athos, "belongs
to----"
"To Monsieur de Chanleu, who commands your troops at Charenton. I say
your troops, for I presume that you gentlemen are Frondeurs?"
"Yes, almost," said Aramis.
"We are for the king and the princes," added Athos.
"We must understand ea other," said the duke. "e king is with us and his
generals are the Duke of Orleans and the Prince de Conde, although I must add 'tis
almost impossible now to know to whi party any one belongs."
dxliv
"Yes," answered Athos, "but his right place is in our ranks, with the Prince de
Conti, De Beaufort, D'Elbeuf, and De Bouillon; but, sir, supposing that the confer-
ence is broken off--are you going to try to take Charenton?"
"Su are my orders."
"Sir, since you command the cavalry----"
"Pardon me, I am commander-in-ief."
"So mu the beer. You must know all your officers--I mean those more
distinguished."
"Why, yes, very nearly."
"Will you then kindly tell me if you have in your command the Chevalier
d'Artagnan, lieutenant in the musketeers?"
"No, sir, he is not with us; he le Paris more than six weeks ago and is believed
to have gone on a mission to England."
"I knew that, but I supposed he had returned."
"No, sir; no one has seen him. I can answer positively on that point, for
the musketeers belong to our forces and Monsieur de Cambon, the substitute for
Monsieur d'Artagnan, still holds his place."
e two friends looked at ea other.
"You see," said Athos.
"It is strange," said Aramis.
"It is absolutely certain that some misfortune has happened to them on the
way."
"If we have no news of them this evening, to-morrow we must start."
Athos nodded affirmatively, then turning:
"And Monsieur de Bragelonne, a young man fieen years of age, aaed to
the Prince de Conde--has he the honor of being known to you?" diffident in allowing
the sarcastic Aramis to perceive how strong were his paternal feelings.
"Yes, surely, he came with the prince; a arming young man; he is one of
your friends then, monsieur le comte?"
"Yes, sir," answered Athos, agitated; "so mu so that I wish to see him if
possible."
"ite possible, sir; do me the favor to accompany me and I will conduct you
to headquarters."
"Halloo, there!" cried Aramis, turning around; "what a noise behind us!"
"A body of cavaliers is coming toward us," said Chatillon.
"I recognize the coadjutor by his Frondist hat."
"And I the Duc de Beaufort by his white plume of ostri feathers."
"ey are coming, full gallop; the prince is with them--ah! he is leaving them!"
"ey are beating the rappel!" cried Chatillon; "we must discover what is going
on."
dxlv
In fact, they saw the soldiers running to their arms; the trumpets sounded; the
drums beat; the Duc de Beaufort drew his sword. On his side the prince sounded
a rappel and all the officers of the royalist army, mingling momentarily with the
Parisian troops, ran to him.
"Gentlemen," cried Chatillon, "the truce is broken, that is evident; they are
going to fight; go, then, into Charenton, for I shall begin in a short time--there's a
signal from the prince!"
e cornet of a troop had in fact just raised the standard of the prince.
"Farewell, till the next time we meet," cried Chatillon, and he set off, full gallop.
Athos and Aramis turned also and went to salute the coadjutor and the Duc
de Beaufort. As to the Duc de Bouillon, he had su a fit of gout as obliged him to
return to Paris in a lier; but his place was well filled by the Duc d'Elbeuf and his
four sons, ranged around him like a staff. Meantime, between Charenton and the
royal army was le a space whi looked ready to serve as a last resting place for
the dead.
"Gentlemen," cried the coadjutor, tightening his sash, whi he wore, aer the
fashion of the ancient military prelates, over his ariepiscopal simar, "there's the
enemy approaing. Let us save them half of their journey."
And without caring whether he were followed or not he set off; his regiment,
whi bore the name of the regiment of Corinth, from the name of his arbishopric,
darted aer him and began the fight. Monsieur de Beaufort sent his cavalry, toward
Etampes and Monsieur de Chanleu, who defended the place, was ready to resist an
assault, or if the enemy were repulsed, to aempt a sortie.
e bale soon became general and the coadjutor performed miracles of valor.
His proper vocation had always been the sword and he was delighted whenever he
could draw it from the scabbard, no maer for whom or against whom.
Chanleu, whose fire at one time repulsed the royal regiment, thought that the
moment was come to pursue it; but it was reformed and led again to the arge by
the Duc de Chatillon in person. is arge was so fierce, so skillfully conducted,
that Chanleu was almost surrounded. He commanded a retreat, whi began, step
by step, foot by foot; unhappily, in an instant he fell, mortally wounded. De Chatil-
lon saw him fall and announced it in a loud voice to his men, whi raised their
spirits and completely disheartened their enemies, so that every man thought only
of his own safety and tried to gain the trenes, where the coadjutor was trying to
reform his disorganized regiment.
Suddenly a squadron of cavalry galloped up to encounter the royal troops,
who were entering, pele-mele, the intrenments with the fugitives. Athos and
Aramis arged at the head of their squadrons; Aramis with sword and pistol in his
hands, Athos with his sword in his scabbard, his pistol in his saddle-bags; calm and
cool as if on the parade, except that his noble and beautiful countenance became
dxlvi
sad as he saw slaughtered so many men who were sacrificed on the one side to the
obstinacy of royalty and on the other to the personal rancor of the princes. Aramis,
on the contrary, stru right and le and was almost delirious with excitement. His
bright eyes kindled, and his mouth, so finely formed, assumed a wied smile; every
blow he aimed was sure, and his pistol finished the deed--annihilated the wounded
wret who tried to rise again.
On the opposite side two cavaliers, one covered with a gilt cuirass, the other
wearing simply a buff doublet, from whi fell the sleeves of a vest of blue velvet,
arged in front. e cavalier in the gilt cuirass fell upon Aramis and stru a blow
that Aramis parried with his wonted skill.
"Ah! 'tis you, Monsieur de Chatillon," cried the evalier; "welcome to you--I
expected you."
"I hope I have not made you wait too long, sir," said the duke; "at all events,
here I am."
"Monsieur de Chatillon," cried Aramis, taking from his saddle-bags a second
pistol, "I think if your pistols have been disarged you are a dead man."
"ank God, sir, they are not!"
And the duke, pointing his pistol at Aramis, fired. But Aramis bent his head
the instant he saw the duke's finger press the trigger and the ball passed without
touing him.
"Oh! you've missed me," cried Aramis, "but I swear to Heaven! I will not miss
you."
"If I give you time!" cried the duke, spurring on his horse and rushing upon
him with his drawn sword.
Aramis awaited him with that terrible smile whi was peculiar to him on
su occasions, and Athos, who saw the duke advancing toward Aramis with the
rapidity of lightning, was just going to cry out, "Fire! fire, then!" when the shot was
fired. De Chatillon opened his arms and fell ba on the crupper of his horse.
e ball had entered his breast through a not in the cuirass.
"I am a dead man," he said, and fell from his horse to the ground.
"I told you this, I am now grieved I have kept my word. Can I be of any use
to you?"
Chatillon made a sign with his hand and Aramis was about to dismount when
he received a violent sho; 'twas a thrust from a sword, but his cuirass turned aside
the blow.
He turned around and seized his new antagonist by the wrist, when he started
ba, exclaiming, "Raoul!"
"Raoul?" cried Athos.
e young man recognized at the same instant the voices of his father and
the Chevalier d'Herblay; two officers in the Parisian forces rushed at that instant on
dxlvii
O leaving Paris, Athos and Aramis well knew that they would be encountering
great danger; but we know that for men like these there could be no question
of danger. Besides, they felt that the denouement of this second Odyssey was at
hand and that there remained but a single effort to make.
Besides, there was no tranquillity in Paris itself. Provisions began to fail, and
whenever one of the Prince de Conti's generals wished to gain more influence he
got up a lile popular tumult, whi he put down again, and thus for the moment
gained a superiority over his colleagues.
In one of these risings, the Duc de Beaufort pillaged the house and library of
Mazarin, in order to give the populace, as he put it, something to gnaw at. Athos
and Aramis le Paris aer this coup-d'etat, whi took place on the very evening of
the day in whi the Parisians had been beaten at Charenton.
ey quied Paris, beholding it abandoned to extreme want, bordering on
famine; agitated by fear, torn by faction. Parisians and Frondeurs as they were, the
two friends expected to find the same misery, the same fears, the same intrigue
in the enemy's camp; but what was their surprise, aer passing Saint Denis, to
hear that at Saint Germain people were singing and laughing, and leading generally
eerful lives. e two gentlemen traveled by byways in order not to encounter the
Mazarinists scaered about the Isle of France, and also to escape the Frondeurs, who
were in possession of Normandy and who never failed to conduct captives to the
Duc de Longueville, in order that he might ascertain whether they were friends or
foes. Having escaped these dangers, they returned by the main road to Boulogne,
at Abbeville, and followed it step by step, examining every tra.
Nevertheless, they were still in a state of uncertainty. Several inns were vis-
ited by them, several innkeepers questioned, without a single clew being given to
guide their inquiries, when at Montreuil Athos felt upon the table that something
rough was touing his delicate fingers. He turned up the cloth and found these
hieroglyphics carved upon the wood with a knife:
"Port…. D'Art…. d February."
dl
"is is capital!" said Athos to Aramis, "we were to have slept here, but we
cannot--we must push on." ey rode forward and reaed Abbeville. ere the
great number of inns puzzled them; they could not go to all; how could they guess
in whi those whom they were seeking had stayed?
"Trust me," said Aramis, "do not expect to find anything in Abbeville. If we
had only been looking for Porthos, Porthos would have stationed himself in one of
the finest hotels and we could easily have traced him. But D'Artagnan is devoid of
su weaknesses. Porthos would have found it very difficult even to make him see
that he was dying of hunger; he has gone on his road as inexorable as fate and we
must seek him somewhere else."
ey continued their route. It had now become a weary and almost hopeless
task, and had it not been for the threefold motives of honor, friendship and gratitude,
implanted in their hearts, our two travelers would have given up many a time their
rides over the sand, their interrogatories of the peasantry and their close inspection
of faces.
ey proceeded thus to Peronne.
Athos began to despair. His noble nature felt that their ignorance was a sort
of reflection upon them. ey had not looked carefully enough for their lost friends.
ey had not shown sufficient pertinacity in their inquiries. ey were willing and
ready to retrace their steps, when, in crossing the suburb whi leads to the gates
of the town, upon a white wall whi was at the corner of a street turning around
the rampart, Athos cast his eyes upon a drawing in bla alk, whi represented,
with the awkwardness of a first aempt, two cavaliers riding furiously; one of them
carried a roll of paper on whi were wrien these words: "ey are following us."
"Oh!" exclaimed Athos, "here it is, as clear as day; pursued as he was,
D'Artagnan would not have tarried here five minutes had he been pressed very
closely, whi gives us hopes that he may have succeeded in escaping."
Aramis shook his head.
"Had he escaped we should either have seen him or have heard him spoken
of."
"You are right, Aramis, let us travel on."
To describe the impatience and anxiety of these two friends would be impos-
sible. Uneasiness took possession of the tender, constant heart of Athos, and fearful
forecasts were the torment of the impulsive Aramis. ey galloped on for two or
three hours as furiously as the cavaliers on the wall. All at once, in a narrow pass,
they perceived that the road was partially barricaded by an enormous stone. It had
evidently been rolled across the pass by some arm of giant strength.
Aramis stopped.
"Oh!" he said, looking at the stone, "this is the work of either Hercules or
Porthos. Let us get down, count, and examine this ro."
dli
ey both alighted. e stone had been brought with the evident intention
of barricading the road, but some one having perceived the obstacle had partially
turned it aside.
With the assistance of Blaisois and Grimaud the friends succeeded in turning
the stone over. Upon the side next the ground were scrated the following words:
"Eight of the light dragoons are pursuing us. If we rea Compiegne we shall
stop at the Peaco. It is kept by a friend of ours."
"At last we have something definite," said Athos; "let us go to the Peaco."
"Yes," answered Aramis, "but if we are to get there we must rest our horses,
for they are almost broken-winded."
Aramis was right; they stopped at the first tavern and made ea horse swal-
low a double quantity of corn steeped in wine; they gave them three hours' rest and
then set off again. e men themselves were almost dead with fatigue, but hope
supported them.
In six hours they reaed Compiegne and alighted at the Peaco. e host
proved to be a worthy man, as bald as a Chinaman. ey asked him if some time
ago he had not received in his house two gentlemen who were pursued by dragoons;
without answering he went out and brought in the blade of a rapier.
"Do you know that?" he asked.
Athos merely glanced at it.
"'Tis D'Artagnan's sword," he said.
"Does it belong to the smaller or to the larger of the two?" asked the host.
"To the smaller."
"I see that you are the friends of these gentlemen."
"Well, what has happened to them?"
"ey were pursued by eight of the light dragoons, who rode into the court-
yard before they had time to close the gate."
"Eight!" said Aramis; "it surprises me that two su heroes as Porthos and
D'Artagnan should have allowed themselves to be arrested by eight men."
"e eight men would doubtless have failed had they not been assisted by
twenty soldiers of the regiment of Italians in the king's service, who are in garrison
in this town so that your friends were overpowered by numbers."
"Arrested, were they?" inquired Athos; "is it known why?"
"No, sir, they were carried off instantly, and had not even time to tell me why;
but as soon as they were gone I found this broken sword-blade, as I was helping to
raise two dead men and five or six wounded ones."
"'Tis still a consolation that they were not wounded," said Aramis.
"Where were they taken?" asked Athos.
"Toward the town of Louvres," was the reply.
e two friends having agreed to leave Blaisois and Grimaud at Compiegne
dlii
with the horses, resolved to take post horses; and having snated a hasty dinner
they continued their journey to Louvres. Here they found only one inn, in whi
was consumed a liqueur whi preserves its reputation to our time and whi is still
made in that town.
"Let us alight here," said Athos. "D'Artagnan will not have let slip an oppor-
tunity of drinking a glass of this liqueur, and at the same time leaving some trace
of himself."
ey went into the town and asked for two glasses of liqueur, at the counter-
-as their friends must have done before them. e counter was covered with a plate
of pewter; upon this plate was wrien with the point of a large pin: "Rueil… D.."
"ey went to Rueil," cried Aramis.
"Let us go to Rueil," said Athos.
"It is to throw ourselves into the wolf's jaws," said Aramis.
"Had I been as great a friend of Jonah as I am of D'Artagnan I should have
followed him even into the inside of the whale itself; and you would have done the
same, Aramis."
"Certainly--but you make me out beer than I am, dear count. Had I been
alone I should scarcely have gone to Rueil without great caution. But where you
go, I go."
ey then set off for Rueil. Here the deputies of the parliament had just ar-
rived, in order to enter upon those famous conferences whi were to last three
weeks, and produced eventually that shameful peace, at the conclusion of whi
the prince was arrested. Rueil was crowded with advocates, presidents and coun-
cillors, who came from the Parisians, and, on the side of the court, with officers and
guards; it was therefore easy, in the midst of this confusion, to remain as unobserved
as any one might wish; besides, the conferences implied a truce, and to arrest two
gentlemen, even Frondeurs, at this time, would have been an aa on the rights of
the people.
e two friends mingled with the crowd and fancied that every one was oc-
cupied with the same thought that tormented them. ey expected to hear some
mention made of D'Artagnan or of Porthos, but every one was engrossed by articles
and reforms. It was the advice of Athos to go straight to the minister.
"My friend," said Aramis, "take care; our safety lies in our obscurity. If we
were to make ourselves known we should be sent to rejoin our friends in some deep
dit, from whi the devil himself could not take us out. Let us try not to find
them out by accident, but from our notions. Arrested at Compiegne, they have
been carried to Rueil; at Rueil they have been questioned by the cardinal, who has
either kept them near him or sent them to Saint Germain. As to the Bastile, they are
not there, though the Bastile is especially for the Frondeurs. ey are not dead, for
the death of D'Artagnan would make a sensation. As for Porthos, I believe him to
dliii
be eternal, like God, although less patient. Do not let us despond, but wait at Rueil,
for my conviction is that they are at Rueil. But what ails you? You are pale."
"It is this," answered Athos, with a trembling voice.
"I remember that at the Castle of Rueil the Cardinal Rielieu had some hor-
rible 'oubliees' constructed."
"Oh! never fear," said Aramis. "Rielieu was a gentleman, our equal in birth,
our superior in position. He could, like the king, tou the greatest of us on the
head, and touing them make su heads shake on their shoulders. But Mazarin
is a low-born rogue, who can at the most take us by the collar, like an arer. Be
calm--for I am sure that D'Artagnan and Porthos are at Rueil, alive and well."
"But," resumed Athos, "I recur to my first proposal. I know no beer means
than to act with candor. I shall seek, not Mazarin, but the queen, and say to her,
'Madame, restore to us your two servants and our two friends.'"
Aramis shook his head.
"'Tis a last resource, but let us not employ it till it is imperatively called for;
let us rather persevere in our researes."
ey continued their inquiries and at last met with a light dragoon who had
formed one of the guard whi had escorted D'Artagnan to Rueil.
Athos, however, perpetually recurred to his proposed interview with the
queen.
"In order to see the queen," said Aramis, "we must first see the cardinal; and
when we have seen the cardinal--remember what I tell you, Athos--we shall be
reunited to our friends, but not in the way you wish. Now, that way of joining
them is not very aractive to me, I confess. Let us act in freedom, that we may act
well and quily."
"I shall go," he said, "to the queen."
"Well, then," answered Aramis, "pray tell me a day or two beforehand, that I
may take that opportunity of going to Paris."
"To whom?"
"Zounds! how do I know? perhaps to Madame de Longueville. She is all-
powerful yonder; she will help me. But send me word should you be arrested, for
then I will return directly."
"Why do you not take your ance and be arrested with me?"
"No, I thank you."
"Should we, by being arrested, be all four together again, we should not, I am
not sure, be twenty-four hours in prison without geing free."
"My friend, since I killed Chatillon, adored of the ladies of Saint Germain, I
am too great a celebrity not to fear a prison doubly. e queen is likely to follow
Mazarin's counsels and to have me tried."
"Do you think she loves this Italian so mu as they say she does?"
dliv
A found mu less difficulty than he had expected in obtaining an audience
of Anne of Austria. It was granted, and was to take place aer her morning's
"levee," at whi, in accordance with his rights of birth, he was entitled to be present.
A vast crowd filled the apartments of Saint Germain. Anne had never at the Louvre
had so large a court; but this crowd represented iefly the second class of nobility,
while the Prince de Conti, the Duc de Beaufort and the coadjutor assembled around
them the first nobility of France.
e greatest possible gayety prevailed at court. e particular aracteristic
of this was that more songs were made than cannons fired during its continuance.
e court made songs on the Parisians and the Parisians on the court; and the casu-
alties, though not mortal, were painful, as are all wounds inflicted by the weapon
of ridicule.
In the midst of this seeming hilarity, nevertheless, people's minds were uneasy.
Was Mazarin to remain the favorite and minister of the queen? Was he to be carried
ba by the wind whi had blown him there? Every one hoped so, so that the
minister felt that all around him, beneath the homage of the courtiers, lay a fund of
hatred, ill disguised by fear and interest. He felt ill at ease and at a loss what to do.
Conde himself, whilst fighting for him, lost no opportunity of ridiculing, of
humbling him. e queen, on whom he threw himself as sole support, seemed to
him now not mu to be relied upon.
When the hour appointed for the audience arrived Athos was obliged to stay
until the queen, who was waited upon by a new deputation from Paris, had con-
sulted with her minister as to the propriety and manner of receiving them. All were
fully engrossed with the affairs of the day; Athos could not therefore have osen a
more inauspicious moment to speak of his friends--poor atoms, lost in that raging
whirlwind.
dlvi
"Cardinal, desire them to arrest that insolent fellow before he leaves the court."
"Your majesty," answered Mazarin, "desires me to do only what I was going
to ask you to let me do. ese bravoes who resuscitate in our epo the traditions
of another reign are troublesome; since there are two of them already there, let us
add a third."
Athos was not altogether the queen's dupe, but he was not a man to run away
on suspicion--above all, when distinctly told that he should see his friends again.
He waited, then, in the ante-amber with impatience, till he should be conducted
to them.
He walked to the window and looked into the court. He saw the deputation
from the Parisians enter it; they were coming to assign the definitive place for the
conference and to make their bow to the queen. A very imposing escort awaited
them without the gates.
Athos was looking on aentively, when some one toued him soly on the
shoulder.
"Ah! Monsieur de Comminges," he said.
"Yes, count, and arged with a commission for whi I beg of you to accept
my excuses."
"What is it?"
"Be so good as to give me up your sword, count."
Athos smiled and opened the window.
"Aramis!" he cried.
A gentleman turned around. Athos fancied he had seen him among the crowd.
It was Aramis. He bowed with great friendship to the count.
"Aramis," cried Athos, "I am arrested."
"Good," replied Aramis, calmly.
"Sir," said Athos, turning to Comminges and giving him politely his sword by
the hilt, "here is my sword; have the kindness to keep it safely for me until I quit
my prison. I prize it--it was given to my ancestor by King Francis I. In his time they
armed gentlemen, not disarmed them. Now, whither do you conduct me?"
"Into my room first," replied Comminges; "the queen will ultimately decide
your place of domicile."
Athos followed Comminges without saying a single word.
. Cardinal Mazarin as King.
T arrest produced no sensation, indeed was almost unknown, and scarcely in-
terrupted the course of events. To the deputation it was formally announced
that the queen would receive it.
Accordingly, it was admied to the presence of Anne, who, silent and loy
as ever, listened to the speees and complaints of the deputies; but when they had
finished their harangues not one of them could say, so calm remained her face,
whether or no she had heard them.
On the other hand, Mazarin, present at that audience, heard very well what
those deputies demanded. It was purely and simply his removal, in terms clear and
precise.
e discourse being finished, the queen remained silent.
"Gentlemen," said Mazarin, "I join with you in supplicating the queen to put
an end to the miseries of her subjects. I have done all in my power to ameliorate
them and yet the belief of the public, you say, is that they proceed from me, an
unhappy foreigner, who has been unable to please the Fren. Alas! I have never
been understood, and no wonder. I succeeded a man of the most sublime genius
that ever upheld the sceptre of France. e memory of Rielieu annihilates me.
In vain--were I an ambitious man--should I struggle against su remembrances as
he has le; but that I am not ambitious I am going to prove to you. I own myself
conquered. I shall obey the wishes of the people. If Paris has injuries to complain
of, who has not some wrongs to be redressed? Paris has been sufficiently punished;
enough blood has flowed, enough misery has humbled a town deprived of its king
and of justice. 'Tis not for me, a private individual, to disunite a queen from her
kingdom. Since you demand my resignation, I retire."
"en," said Aramis, in his neighbor's ear, "the conferences are over. ere is
nothing to do but to send Monsieur Mazarin to the most distant frontier and to take
care that he does not return even by that, nor any other entrance into France."
"One instant, sir," said the man in a gown, whom he addressed; "a plague
on't! how fast you go! one may soon see that you're a soldier. ere's the article of
dlx
blushed, and that she might not answer, clasped her beautiful hands till her sharp
nails almost pierced them.
"at man has sagacity, honor and wit, not to mention likewise that he is
a man of undoubted resolution. You know something about him, do you not,
madame? I shall tell him, therefore, and in doing so I shall confer a personal fa-
vor on him, how he is mistaken in regard to me. What is proposed to me would be,
in fact, almost an abdication, and an abdication requires reflection."
"An abdication?" repeated Anne; "I thought, sir, that it was kings alone who
abdicated!"
"Well," replied Mazarin, "and am I not almost a king--king, indeed, of France?
rown over the foot of the royal bed, my simar, madame, looks not unlike the
mantle worn by kings."
is was one of the humiliations whi Mazarin made Anne undergo more
frequently than any other, and one that bowed her head with shame. een Eliz-
abeth and Catherine II. of Russia are the only two monars of their set on record
who were at once sovereigns and lovers. Anne of Austria looked with a sort of
terror at the threatening aspect of the cardinal--his physiognomy in su moments
was not destitute of a certain grandeur.
"Sir," she replied, "did I not say, and did you not hear me say to those people,
that you should do as you pleased?"
"In that case," said Mazarin, "I think it must please me best to remain; not only
on account of my own interest, but for your safety."
"Remain, then, sir; nothing can be more agreeable to me; only do not allow
me to be insulted."
"You are referring to the demands of the rebels and to the tone in whi they
stated them? Patience! ey have selected a field of bale on whi I am an abler
general than they--that of a conference. No, we shall beat them by merely tempo-
rizing. ey want food already. ey will be ten times worse off in a week."
"Ah, yes! Good heavens! I know it will end in that way; but it is not they who
taunt me with the most wounding reproaes, but----"
"I understand; you mean to allude to the recollections perpetually revived by
these three gentlemen. However, we have them safe in prison, and they are just
sufficiently culpable for us to keep them in prison as long as we find it convenient.
One only is still not in our power and braves us. But, devil take him! we shall soon
succeed in sending him to join his boon companions. We have accomplished more
difficult things than that. In the first place I have as a precaution shut up at Rueil,
near me, under my own eyes, within rea of my hand, the two most intractable
ones. To-day the third will be there also."
"As long as they are in prison all will be well," said Anne, "but one of these
days they will get out."
dlxii
A quiing Anne, Mazarin took the road to Rueil, where he usually resided;
in those times of disturbance he went about with numerous followers and
oen disguised himself. In military dress he was, indeed, as we have stated, a very
handsome man.
In the court of the old Chateau of Saint Germain he entered his coa, and
reaed the Seine at Chatou. e prince had supplied him with fiy light horse, not
so mu by way of guard as to show the deputies how readily the queen's generals
dispersed their troops and to prove that they might be safely scaered at pleasure.
Athos, on horseba, without his sword and kept in sight by Comminges, followed
the cardinal in silence. Grimaud, finding that his master had been arrested, fell ba
into the ranks near Aramis, without saying a word and as if nothing had happened.
Grimaud had, indeed, during twenty-two years of service, seen his master
extricate himself from so many difficulties that nothing less than Athos's imminent
death was likely to make him uneasy.
At the braning off of the road toward Paris, Aramis, who had followed in
the cardinal's suite, turned ba. Mazarin went to the right hand and Aramis could
see the prisoner disappear at the turning of the avenue. Athos, at the same moment,
moved by a similar impulse, looked ba also. e two friends exanged a simple
inclination of the head and Aramis put his finger to his hat, as if to bow, Athos alone
comprehending by that signal that he had some project in his head.
Ten minutes aerward Mazarin entered the court of that ateau whi his
predecessor had built for him at Rueil; as he alighted, Comminges approaed him.
"My lord," he asked, "where does your eminence wish Monsieur Comte de la
Fere to be lodged?"
"In the pavilion of the orangery, of course, in front of the pavilion where the
guard is. I wish every respect to be shown the count, although he is the prisoner of
her majesty the queen."
"My lord," answered Comminges, "he begs to be taken to the place where Mon-
sieur d'Artagnan is confined--that is, in the hunting lodge, opposite the orangery."
dlxiv
serve the queen and that draws me naturally into the service of the cardinal; but I
serve the one with joy and the other against my will. Speak, then, I beg of you; I
wait and listen."
"Since there is no harm," said Athos, "in my knowing that D'Artagnan is here,
I presume there will be none in his knowing that I am here."
"I have received no orders on that point."
"Well, then, do me the kindness to give him my regards and tell him that I am
his neighbor. Tell him also what you have just told me--that Mazarin has placed me
in the pavilion of the orangery in order to make me a visit, and assure him that I
shall take advantage of this honor he proposes to accord to me to obtain from him
some amelioration of our captivity."
"Whi cannot last," interrupted Comminges; "the cardinal said so; there is no
prison here."
"But there are oubliees!" replied Athos, smiling.
"Oh! that's a different thing; yes, I know there are traditions of that sort,"
said Comminges. "It was in the time of the other cardinal, who was a great noble-
man; but our Mazarin--impossible! an Italian adventurer would not dare to go su
lengths with su men as ourselves. Oubliees are employed as a means of kingly
vengeance, and a low-born fellow su as he is would not have recourse to them.
Your arrest is known, that of your friends will soon be known; and all the nobility
of France would demand an explanation of your disappearance. No, no, be easy on
that score. I will, however, inform Monsieur d'Artagnan of your arrival here."
Comminges then led the count to a room on the ground floor of a pavilion,
at the end of the orangery. ey passed through a courtyard as they went, full
of soldiers and courtiers. In the centre of this court, in the form of a horseshoe,
were the buildings occupied by Mazarin, and at ea wing the pavilion (or smaller
building), where D'Artagnan was confined, and that, level with the orangery, where
Athos was to be. From the ends of these two wings extended the park.
Athos, when he reaed his appointed room, observed through the gratings
of his window, walls and roofs; and was told, on inquiry, by Comminges, that he
was looking on the ba of the pavilion where D'Artagnan was confined.
"Yes, 'tis too true," said Comminges, "'tis almost a prison; but what a singular
fancy this is of yours, count--you, who are the very flower of our nobility--to squan-
der your valor and loyalty amongst these upstarts, the Frondists! Really, count, if
ever I thought that I had a friend in the ranks of the royal army, it was you. A Fron-
deur! you, the Comte de la Fere, on the side of Broussel, Blancmesnil and Viole! For
shame! you, a Frondeur!"
"On my word of honor," said Athos, "one must be either a Mazarinist or a
Frondeur. For a long time I had these words whispered in my ears, and I ose the
laer; at any rate, it is a Fren word. And now, I am a Frondeur--not of Broussel's
dlxvi
party, nor of Blancmesnil's, nor am I with Viole; but with the Duc de Beaufort, the
Ducs de Bouillon and d'Elbeuf; with princes, not with presidents, councillors and
low-born lawyers. Besides, what a arming outlook it would have been to serve the
cardinal! Look at that wall--without a single window--whi tells you fine things
about Mazarin's gratitude!"
"Yes," replied De Comminges, "more especially if it could reveal how Monsieur
d'Artagnan for this last week has been anathematizing him."
"Poor D'Artagnan'" said Athos, with the arming melanoly that was one
of the traits of his aracter, "so brave, so good, so terrible to the enemies of those
he loves. You have two unruly prisoners there, sir."
"Unruly," Comminges smiled; "you wish to terrify me, I suppose. When he
came here, Monsieur D'Artagnan provoked and braved the soldiers and inferior
officers, in order, I suppose, to have his sword ba. at mood lasted some time;
but now he's as gentle as a lamb and sings Gascon songs, whi make one die of
laughing."
"And Du Vallon?" asked Athos.
"Ah, he's quite another sort of person--a formidable gentleman, indeed. e
first day he broke all the doors in with a single push of his shoulder; and I expected
to see him leave Rueil in the same way as Samson le Gaza. But his temper cooled
down, like his friend's; he not only gets used to his captivity, but jokes about it."
"So mu the beer," said Athos.
"Do you think anything else was to be expected of them?" asked Comminges,
who, puing together what Mazarin had said of his prisoners and what the Comte
de la Fere had said, began to feel a degree of uneasiness.
Athos, on the other hand, reflected that this recent gentleness of his friends
most certainly arose from some plan formed by D'Artagnan. Unwilling to injure
them by praising them too highly, he replied: "ey? ey are two hotheads--the
one a Gascon, the other from Picardy; both are easily excited, but they quiet down
immediately. You have had a proof of that in what you have just related to me."
is, too, was the opinion of Comminges, who withdrew somewhat reassured.
Athos remained alone in the vast amber, where, according to the cardinal's direc-
tions, he was treated with all the courtesy due to a nobleman. He awaited Mazarin's
promised visit to get some light on his present situation.
. Strength and Sagacity.
N let us pass the orangery to the hunting lodge. At the extremity of the court-
yard, where, close to a portico formed of Ionic columns, were the dog kennels,
rose an oblong building, the pavilion of the orangery, a half circle, inclosing the
court of honor. It was in this pavilion, on the ground floor, that D'Artagnan and
Porthos were confined, suffering interminable hours of imprisonment in a manner
suitable to ea different temperament.
D'Artagnan was pacing to and fro like a caged tiger; with dilated eyes, growl-
ing as he paced along by the bars of a window looking upon the yard of servant's
offices.
Porthos was ruminating over an excellent dinner he had just demolished.
e one seemed to be deprived of reason, yet he was meditating. e other
seemed to meditate, yet he was more than half asleep. But his sleep was a nightmare,
whi might be guessed by the incoherent manner in whi he sometimes snored
and sometimes snorted.
"Look," said D'Artagnan, "day is declining. It must be nearly four o'clo. We
have been in this place nearly eighty-three hours."
"Hem!" muered Porthos, with a kind of pretense of answering.
"Did you hear, eternal sleeper?" cried D'Artagnan, irritated that any one could
doze during the day, when he had the greatest difficulty in sleeping during the night.
"What?" said Porthos.
"I say we have been here eighty-three hours."
"'Tis your fault," answered Porthos.
"How, my fault?"
"Yes, I offered you escape."
"By pulling out a bar and pushing down a door?"
"Certainly."
"Porthos, men like us can't go out from here purely and simply."
"Faith!" said Porthos, "as for me, I could go out with that purity and that
simplicity whi it seems to me you despise too mu."
dlxviii
our friends reaes us or till we are visited by a good idea. But don't sleep as you
do all the time; nothing dulls the intellect like sleep. As to what may lie before us,
it is perhaps less serious than we at first thought. I don't believe that Monsieur de
Mazarin thinks of cuing off our heads, for heads are not taken off without previous
trial; a trial would make a noise, and a noise would get the aention of our friends,
who would e the operations of Monsieur de Mazarin."
"How well you reason!" said Porthos, admiringly.
"Well, yes, prey well," replied D'Artagnan; "and besides, you see, if they put
us on trial, if they cut off our heads, they must meanwhile either keep us here or
transfer us elsewhere."
"Yes, that is inevitable," said Porthos.
"Well, it is impossible but that Master Aramis, that keen-scented bloodhound,
and Athos, that wise and prudent nobleman, will discover our retreat. en, believe
me, it will be time to act."
"Yes, we will wait. We can wait the more contentedly, that it is not absolutely
bad here, but for one thing, at least."
"What is that?"
"Did you observe, D'Artagnan, that three days running they have brought us
braised muon?"
"No; but if it occurs a fourth time I shall complain of it, so never mind."
"And then I feel the loss of my house, 'tis a long time since I visited my castles."
"Forget them for a time; we shall return to them, unless Mazarin razes them
to the ground."
"Do you think that likely?"
"No, the other cardinal would have done so, but this one is too mean a fellow
to risk it."
"You reconcile me, D'Artagnan."
"Well, then, assume a eerful manner, as I do; we must joke with the guards,
we must gain the good-will of the soldiers, since we can't corrupt them. Try, Porthos,
to please them more than you are wont to do when they are under our windows.
us far you have done nothing but show them your fist; and the more respectable
your fist is, Porthos, the less aractive it is. Ah, I would give mu to have five
hundred louis, only."
"So would I," said Porthos, unwilling to be behind D'Artagnan in generosity;
"I would give as mu as a hundred pistoles."
e two prisoners were at this point of their conversation when Comminges
entered, preceded by a sergeant and two men, who brought supper in a basket with
two handles, filled with basins and plates.
"What!" exclaimed Porthos, "muon again?"
"My dear Monsieur de Comminges," said D'Artagnan, "you will find that my
dlxx
friend, Monsieur du Vallon, will go to the most fatal lengths if Cardinal Mazarin
continues to provide us with this sort of meat; muon every day."
"I declare," said Porthos, "I shall eat nothing if they do not take it away."
"Remove the muon," cried Comminges; "I wish Monsieur du Vallon to sup
well, more especially as I have news to give him that will improve his appetite."
"Is Mazarin dead?" asked Porthos.
"No; I am sorry to tell you he is perfectly well."
"So mu the worse," said Porthos.
"What is that news?" asked D'Artagnan. "News in prison is a fruit so rare that
I trust, Monsieur de Comminges, you will excuse my impatience--the more eager
since you have given us to understand that the news is good."
"Should you be glad to hear that the Comte de la Fere is well?" asked De
Comminges.
D'Artagnan's penetrating gray eyes were opened to the utmost.
"Glad!" he cried; "I should be more than glad! Happy--beyond measure!"
"Well, I am desired by him to give you his compliments and to say that he is
in good health."
D'Artagnan almost leaped with joy. A qui glance conveyed his thought to
Porthos: "If Athos knows where we are, if he opens communication with us, before
long Athos will act."
Porthos was not very qui to understand the language of glances, but now
since the name of Athos had suggested to him the same idea, he understood.
"Do you say," asked the Gascon, timidly, "that the Comte de la Fere has com-
missioned you to give his compliments to Monsieur du Vallon and myself?"
"Yes, sir."
"en you have seen him?"
"Certainly I have."
"Where? if I may ask without indiscretion."
"Near here," replied De Comminges, smiling; "so near that if the windows
whi look on the orangery were not stopped up you could see him from where you
are."
"He is wandering about the environs of the castle," thought D'Artagnan. en
he said aloud:
"You met him, I dare say, in the park--hunting, perhaps?"
"No; nearer, nearer still. Look, behind this wall," said De Comminges, kno-
ing against the wall.
"Behind this wall? What is there, then, behind this wall? I was brought here
by night, so devil take me if I know where I am."
"Well," said Comminges, "suppose one thing."
"I will suppose anything you please."
dlxxi
hope. In fact, it seems to me so great an honor for a prisoner that I think Monsieur
de Comminges must be mistaken."
"What? I am mistaken?"
"Monsieur de Mazarin will not come to visit the Comte de la Fere, but the
Comte de la Fere will be sent for to visit him."
"No, no, no," said Comminges, who made a point of having the facts appear
exactly as they were, "I clearly understood what the cardinal said to me. He will
come and visit the Comte de la Fere."
D'Artagnan tried to gather from the expression of his eyes whether Porthos
understood the importance of that visit, but Porthos did not even look toward him.
"It is, then, the cardinal's custom to walk in his orangery?" asked D'Artagnan.
"Every evening he shuts himself in there. at, it seems, is where he meditates
on state affairs."
"In that case," said D'Artagnan, "I begin to believe that Monsieur de la Fere
will receive the visit of his eminence; he will, of course, have an escort."
"Yes--two soldiers."
"And will he talk thus of affairs in presence of two strangers?"
"e soldiers are Swiss, who understand only German. Besides, according to
all probability they will wait at the door."
D'Artagnan made a violent effort over himself to keep his face from being too
expressive.
"Let the cardinal take care of going alone to visit the Comte de la Fere," said
D'Artagnan; "for the count must be furious."
Comminges began to laugh. "Oh, oh! why, really, one would say that you four
were anthropaphagi! e count is an affable man; besides, he is unarmed; at the first
word from his eminence the two soldiers about him would run to his assistance."
"Two soldiers," said D'Artagnan, seeming to remember something, "two sol-
diers, yes; that, then, is why I hear two men called every evening and see them
walking sometimes for half an hour, under my window."
"at is it; they are waiting for the cardinal, or rather for Bernouin, who comes
to call them when the cardinal goes out."
"Fine-looking men, upon my word!" said D'Artagnan.
"ey belong to the regiment that was at Lens, whi the prince assigned to
the cardinal."
"Ah, monsieur," said D'Artagnan, as if to sum up in a word all that conver-
sation, "if only his eminence would relent and grant to Monsieur de la Fere our
liberty."
"I wish it with all my heart," said Comminges.
"en, if he should forget that visit, you would find no inconvenience in re-
minding him of it?"
dlxxiii
"Not at all."
"Ah, that gives me more confidence."
is skillful turn of the conversation would have seemed a sublime manoeuvre
to any one who could have read the Gascon's soul.
"Now," said D'Artagnan, "I've one last favor to ask of you, Monsieur de Com-
minges."
"At your service, sir."
"You will see the count again?"
"To-morrow morning."
"Will you remember us to him and ask him to solicit for me the same favor
that he will have obtained?"
"You want the cardinal to come here?"
"No; I know my place and am not so presumptuous. Let his eminence do me
the honor to give me a hearing; that is all I want."
"Oh!" muered Porthos, shaking his head, "never should I have thought this
of him! How misfortune humbles a man!"
"I promise you it shall be done," answered De Comminges.
"Tell the count that I am well; that you found me sad, but resigned."
"I am pleased, sir, to hear that."
"And the same, also, for Monsieur du Vallon----"
"Not for me," cried Porthos; "I am not by any means resigned."
"But you will be resigned, my friend."
"Never!"
"He will become so, monsieur; I know him beer than he knows himself. Be
silent, dear Du Vallon, and resign yourself."
"Adieu, gentlemen," said De Comminges; "sleep well!"
"We will try."
De Comminges went away, D'Artagnan remaining apparently in the same
aitude of humble resignation; but scarcely had he departed when he turned and
clasped Porthos in his arms with an expression not to be doubted.
"Oh!" cried Porthos; "what's the maer now? Have you gone mad, my dear
friend?"
"What is the maer?" returned D'Artagnan; "we are saved!"
"I don't see that at all," answered Porthos. "I think we are all taken prisoners,
except Aramis, and that our ances of geing out are lessened since one more of
us is caught in Mazarin's mousetrap."
"Whi is far too strong for two of us, but not strong enough for three of us,"
returned D'Artagnan.
"I don't understand," said Porthos.
"Never mind; let's sit down to table and take something to strengthen us for
dlxxiv
the night."
"What are we to do, then, to-night?"
"To travel--perhaps."
"But----"
"Sit down, dear friend, to table. When one is eating, ideas flow easily. Aer
supper, when they are perfected, I will communicate my plans to you."
So Porthos sat down to table without another word and ate with an appetite
that did honor to the confidence that was ever inspired in him by D'Artagnan's
inventive imagination.
. Strength and
Sagacity--Continued.
S was eaten in silence, but not in sadness; for from time to time one of those
sweet smiles whi were habitual to him in moments of good-humor illumined
the face of D'Artagnan. Not a scintilla of these was lost on Porthos; and at every one
he uered an exclamation whi betrayed to his friend that he had not lost sight of
the idea whi possessed his brain.
At dessert D'Artagnan reposed in his air, crossed one leg over the other and
lounged about like a man perfectly at his ease.
Porthos rested his in on his hands, placed his elbows on the table and looked
at D'Artagnan with an expression of confidence whi imparted to that colossus an
admirable appearance of good-fellowship.
"Well?" said D'Artagnan, at last.
"Well!" repeated Porthos.
"You were saying, my dear friend----"
"No; I said nothing."
"Yes; you were saying you wished to leave this place."
"Ah, indeed! the will was never wanting."
"To get away you would not mind, you added, knoing down a door or a
wall."
"'Tis true--I said so, and I say it again."
"And I answered you, Porthos, that it was not a good plan; that we couldn't
go a hundred steps without being recaptured, because we were without clothes to
disguise ourselves and arms to defend ourselves."
"at is true; we should need clothes and arms."
"Well," said D'Artagnan, rising, "we have them, friend Porthos, and even
something beer."
"Bah!" said Porthos, looking around.
dlxxvi
do so, I hope. Lay him down here; we'll gag him and tie him--no maer where--
somewhere. So we shall get from him one uniform and a sword."
"Marvelous!" exclaimed Porthos, looking at the Gascon with the most pro-
found admiration.
"Pooh!" replied D'Artagnan.
"Yes," said Porthos, recollecting himself, "but one uniform and one sword will
not suffice for two."
"Well; but there's his comrade."
"True," said Porthos.
"erefore, when I cough, stret out your arm."
"Good!"
e two friends then placed themselves as they had agreed, Porthos being
completely hidden in an angle of the window.
"Good-evening, comrade," said D'Artagnan in his most fascinating voice and
manner.
"Good-evening, sir," answered the soldier, in a strong provincial accent.
"'Tis not too warm to walk," resumed D'Artagnan.
"No, sir."
"And I think a glass of wine will not be disagreeable to you?"
"A glass of wine will be extremely welcome."
"e fish bites--the fish bites!" whispered the Gascon to Porthos.
"I understand," said Porthos.
"A bole, perhaps?"
"A whole bole? Yes, sir."
"A whole bole, if you will drink my health."
"Willingly," answered the soldier.
"Come, then, and take it, friend," said the Gascon.
"With all my heart. How convenient that there's a ben here. Egad! one
would think it had been placed here on purpose."
"Get on it; that's it, friend."
And D'Artagnan coughed.
at instant the arm of Porthos fell. His hand of iron grasped, qui as light-
ning, firm as a pair of blasmith's pincers, the soldier's throat. He raised him,
almost stifling him as he drew him through the aperture, at the risk of flaying him
in the passage. He then laid him down on the floor, where D'Artagnan, aer giving
him just time enough to draw his breath, gagged him with his long scarf; and the
moment he had done so began to undress him with the promptitude and dexterity of
a man who had learned his business on the field of bale. en the soldier, gagged
and bound, was placed upon the hearth, the fire of whi had been previously ex-
tinguished by the two friends.
dlxxix
"We will not answer, then; we will simply sele our hats on our heads and we
will escort his eminence."
"Where shall we escort him?"
"Where he is going--to visit Athos. Do you think Athos will be sorry to see
us?"
"Oh!" cried Porthos, "oh! I understand."
"Wait a lile, Porthos, before crying out; for, on my word, you haven't reaed
the end," said the Gascon, in a jesting tone.
"What is to happen?" said Porthos.
"Follow me," replied D'Artagnan. "e man who lives to see shall see."
And slipping through the aperture, he alighted in the court. Porthos followed
him by the same road, but with more difficulty and less diligence. ey could hear
the two soldiers shivering with fear, as they lay bound in the amber.
Scarcely had the two Frenmen toued the ground when a door opened and
the voice of the valet-de-ambre called out:
"Make ready!"
At the same moment the guardhouse was opened and a voice called out:
"La Bruyere and Du Barthois! Mar!"
"It seems that I am named La Bruyere," remarked D'Artagnan.
"And I, Du Barthois," added Porthos.
"Where are you?" asked the valet-de-ambre, whose eyes, dazzled by the
light, could not clearly distinguish our heroes in the gloom.
"Here we are," said the Gascon.
"What say you to that, Monsieur du Vallon?" he added in a low tone to Porthos.
"If it but lasts, most capital," responded Porthos.
ese two newly enlisted soldiers mared gravely aer the valet-de-ambre,
who opened the door of the vestibule, then another whi seemed to be that of a
waiting-room, and showing them two stools:
"Your orders are very simple," he said; "don't allow anybody, except one per-
son, to enter here. Do you hear--not a single creature! Obey that person implicitly.
On your return you cannot make a mistake. You have only to wait here till I release
you."
D'Artagnan was known to this valet-de-ambre, who was no other than
Bernouin, and he had during the last six or eight months introduced the Gascon
a dozen times to the cardinal. e Gascon, therefore, instead of answering, growled
out "Ja! Ja!" in the most German and the least Gascon accent possible.
As for Porthos, on whom D'Artagnan had impressed the necessity of absolute
silence and who did not even now begin to comprehend the seme of his friend,
whi was to follow Mazarin in his visit to Athos, he was simply mute. All that he
was allowed to say, in case of emergencies, was the proverbial Der Teufel!
dlxxxi
Bernouin shut the door and went away. When Porthos heard the key turn in
the lo he began to be alarmed, lest they should only have exanged one prison
for another.
"Porthos, my friend," said D'Artagnan, "don't distrust Providence! Let me
meditate and consider."
"Meditate and consider as mu as you like," replied Porthos, who was now
quite out of humor at seeing things take this turn.
"We have walked eight paces," whispered D'Artagnan, "and gone up six steps,
so hereabouts is the pavilion called the pavilion of the orangery. e Comte de la
Fere cannot be far off, only the doors are loed."
"at is a slight difficulty," said Porthos, "and a good push with the shoulders-
---"
"For God's sake, Porthos my friend, reserve your feats of strength, or they will
not have, when needed, the honor they deserve. Have you not heard that some one
is coming here?"
"Yes."
"Well, that some one will open the doors."
"But, my dear fellow, if that some one recognizes us, if that some one cries
out, we are lost; for you don't propose, I imagine, that I shall kill that man of the
ur. at might do if we were dealing with Englishmen or Germans."
"Oh, may God keep me from it, and you, too!" said D'Artagnan. "e young
king would, perhaps, show us some gratitude; but the queen would never forgive
us, and it is she whom we have to consider. And then, besides, the useless blood!
never! no, never! I have my plan; let me carry it out and we shall laugh."
"So mu the beer," said Porthos; "I feel some need of it."
"Hush!" said D'Artagnan; "the some one is coming."
e sound of a light step was heard in the vestibule. e hinges of the door
creaked and a man appeared in the dress of a cavalier, wrapped in a brown cloak,
with a lantern in one hand and a large beaver hat pulled down over his eyes.
Porthos effaced himself against the wall, but he could not render himself in-
visible; and the man in the cloak said to him, giving him his lantern:
"Light the lamp whi hangs from the ceiling."
en addressing D'Artagnan:
"You know the watword?" he said.
"Ja!" replied the Gascon, determined to confine himself to this specimen of the
German tongue.
"Tedesco!" answered the cavalier; "va bene."
And advancing toward the door opposite to that by whi he came in, he
opened it and disappeared behind it, shuing it as he went.
"Now," asked Porthos, "what are we to do?"
dlxxxii
"Now we shall make use of your shoulder, friend Porthos, if this door proves
to be loed. Everything in its proper time, and all comes right to those who know
how to wait patiently. But first barricade the first door well; then we will follow
yonder cavalier."
e two friends set to work and crowded the space before the door with all
the furniture in the room, as not only to make the passage impassable, but so to
blo the door that by no means could it open inward.
"ere!" said D'Artagnan, "we can't be overtaken. Come! forward!"
. e Oubliettes of Cardinal
Mazarin.
A first, on arriving at the door through whi Mazarin had passed, D'Artagnan
tried in vain to open it, but on the powerful shoulder of Porthos being applied
to one of the panels, whi gave way, D'Artagnan introduced the point of his sword
between the bolt and the staple of the lo. e bolt gave way and the door opened.
"As I told you, everything can be aained, Porthos, women and doors, by
proceeding with gentleness."
"You're a great moralist, and that's the fact," said Porthos.
ey entered; behind a glass window, by the light of the cardinal's lantern,
whi had been placed on the floor in the midst of the gallery, they saw the orange
and pomegranate trees of the Castle of Rueil, in long lines, forming one great alley
and two smaller side alleys.
"No cardinal!" said D'Artagnan, "but only his lantern; where the devil, then,
is he?"
Exploring, however, one of the side wings of the gallery, aer making a sign
to Porthos to explore the other, he saw, all at once, at his le, a tub containing an
orange tree, whi had been pushed out of its place and in its place an open aperture.
Ten men would have found difficulty in moving that tub, but by some me-
anical contrivance it had turned with the flagstone on whi it rested.
D'Artagnan, as we have said, perceived a hole in that place and in this hole
the steps of a winding staircase.
He called Porthos to look at it.
"Were our object money only," he said, "we should be ri directly."
"How's that?"
"Don't you understand, Porthos? At the boom of that staircase lies, probably,
the cardinal's treasury of whi folk tell su wonders, and we should only have to
descend, empty a est, shut the cardinal up in it, double lo it, go away, carrying
dlxxxiv
off as mu gold as we could, put ba this orange-tree over the place, and no one in
the world would ever ask us where our fortune came from--not even the cardinal."
"It would be a happy hit for clowns to make, but as it seems to be unworthy
of two gentlemen----" said Porthos.
"So I think; and therefore I said, 'Were our object money only;' but we want
something else," replied the Gascon.
At the same moment, whilst D'Artagnan was leaning over the aperture to
listen, a metallic sound, as if some one was moving a bag of gold, stru on his ear;
he started; instantly aerward a door opened and a light played upon the staircase.
Mazarin had le his lamp in the gallery to make people believe that he was
walking about, but he had with him a waxlight, to help him to explore his mysterious
strong box.
"Faith," he said, in Italian, as he was reascending the steps and looking at a
bag of reals, "faith, there's enough to pay five councillors of parliament, and two
generals in Paris. I am a great captain--that I am! but I make war in my own way."
e two friends were crouing down, meantime, behind a tub in the side
alley.
Mazarin came within three steps of D'Artagnan and pushed a spring in the
wall; the slab turned and the orange tree resumed its place.
en the cardinal put out the waxlight, slipped it into his poet, and taking
up the lantern: "Now," he said, "for Monsieur de la Fere."
"Very good," thought D'Artagnan, "'tis our road likewise; we will go together."
All three set off on their walk, Mazarin taking the middle alley and the friends
the side ones.
e cardinal reaed a second door without perceiving he was being followed;
the sand with whi the alleys were covered deadened the sound of footsteps.
He then turned to the le, down a corridor whi had escaped the aention
of the two friends, but as he opened the door he paused, as if in thought.
"Ah! Diavolo!" he exclaimed, "I forgot the recommendation of De Comminges,
who advised me to take a guard and place it at this door, in order not to put myself
at the mercy of that four-headed combination of devils." And with a movement of
impatience he turned to retrace his steps.
"Do not give yourself the trouble, my lord," said D'Artagnan, with his right
foot forward, his beaver in his hand, a smile on his face, "we have followed your
eminence step by step and here we are."
"Yes--here we are," said Porthos.
And he made the same friendly salute as D'Artagnan.
Mazarin gazed at ea of them with an affrighted stare, recognized them, and
let drop his lantern, uering a cry of terror.
D'Artagnan pied it up; by good lu it had not been extinguished.
dlxxxv
"Oh, what imprudence, my lord," said D'Artagnan; "'tis not good to be about
just here without a light. Your eminence might kno against something, or fall into
a hole."
"Monsieur d'Artagnan!" muered Mazarin, unable to recover from his aston-
ishment.
"Yes, my lord, it is I. I have the honor to present to you Monsieur du Vallon,
that excellent friend of mine, in whom your eminence had the kindness to interest
yourself formerly."
And D'Artagnan held the lamp before the merry face of Porthos, who now
began to comprehend the affair and be very proud of the whole undertaking.
"You were going to visit Monsieur de la Fere?" said D'Artagnan. "Don't let us
disarrange your eminence. Be so good as to show us the way and we will follow
you."
Mazarin was by degrees recovering his senses.
"Have you been long in the orangery?" he asked in a trembling voice, remem-
bering the visits he had been paying to his treasury.
Porthos opened his mouth to reply; D'Artagnan made him a sign, and his
mouth, remaining silent, gradually closed.
"is moment come, my lord," said D'Artagnan.
Mazarin breathed again. His fears were now no longer for his hoard, but for
himself. A sort of smile played on his lips.
"Come," he said, "you have me in a snare, gentlemen. I confess myself con-
quered. You wish to ask for liberty, and--I give it you."
"Oh, my lord!" answered D'Artagnan, "you are too good; as to our liberty, we
have that; we want to ask something else of you."
"You have your liberty?" repeated Mazarin, in terror.
"Certainly; and on the other hand, my lord, you have lost it, and now, in
accordance with the law of war, sir, you must buy it ba again."
Mazarin felt a shiver run through him--a ill even to his heart's core. His
piercing look was fixed in vain on the satirical face of the Gascon and the unang-
ing countenance of Porthos. Both were in shadow and the Sybil of Cuma herself
could not have read them.
"To purase ba my liberty?" said the cardinal.
"Yes, my lord."
"And how mu will that cost me, Monsieur d'Artagnan?"
"Zounds, my lord, I don't know yet. We must ask the Comte de la Fere the
question. Will your eminence deign to open the door whi leads to the count's
room, and in ten minutes all will be seled."
Mazarin started.
"My lord," said D'Artagnan, "your eminence sees that we wish to act with
dlxxxvi
all formality and due respect; but I must warn you that we have no time to lose;
open the door then, my lord, and be so good as to remember, once for all, that on
the slightest aempt to escape or the faintest cry for help, our position being very
critical indeed, you must not be angry with us if we go to extremities."
"Be assured," answered Mazarin, "that I shall aempt nothing; I give you my
word of honor."
D'Artagnan made a sign to Porthos to redouble his watfulness; then turning
to Mazarin:
"Now, my lord, let us enter, if you please."
. Conferences.
M turned the lo of a double door, on the threshold of whi they found
Athos ready to receive his illustrious guests according to the notice Com-
minges had given him.
On perceiving Mazarin he bowed.
"Your eminence," he said, "might have dispensed with your aendants; the
honor bestowed on me is too great for me to be unmindful of it."
"And so, my dear count," said D'Artagnan, "his eminence didn't actually insist
on our aending him; it is Du Vallon and I who have insisted, and even in a manner
somewhat impolite, perhaps, so great was our longing to see you."
At that voice, that moing tone, and that familiar gesture, accenting voice
and tone, Athos made a bound of surprise.
"D'Artagnan! Porthos!" he exclaimed.
"My very self, dear friend."
"Me, also!" repeated Porthos.
"What means this?" asked the count.
"It means," replied Mazarin, trying to smile and biting his lips in the aempt,
"that our parts are anged, and that instead of these gentlemen being my prisoners
I am theirs; but, gentlemen, I warn you, unless you kill me, your victory will be of
very short duration; people will come to the rescue."
"Ah! my lord!" cried the Gascon, "don't threaten! 'tis a bad example. We are
so good and gentle to your eminence. Come, let us put aside all rancor and talk
pleasantly."
"ere's nothing I wish more," replied Mazarin. "But don't think yourselves in
a beer position than you are. In ensnaring me you have fallen into the trap your-
selves. How are you to get away from here? remember the soldiers and sentinels
who guard these doors. Now, I am going to show you how sincere I am."
"Good," thought D'Artagnan; "we must look about us; he's going to play us a
tri."
"I offered you your liberty," continued the minister; "will you take it? Before
dlxxxviii
an hour has passed you will be discovered, arrested, obliged to kill me, whi would
be a crime unworthy of loyal gentlemen like you."
"He is right," thought Athos.
And, like every other reflection passing in a mind that entertained none but
noble thoughts, this feeling was expressed in his eyes.
"And therefore," said D'Artagnan, to clip the hope whi Athos's tacit adhesion
had imparted to Mazarin, "we shall not proceed to that violence save in the last
extremity."
"If on the contrary," resumed Mazarin, "you accept your liberty----"
"Why you, my lord, might take it away from us in less than five minutes
aerward; and from my knowledge of you I believe you will so take it away from
us."
"No--on the faith of a cardinal. You do not believe me?"
"My lord, I never believe cardinals who are not priests."
"Well, on the faith of a minister."
"You are no longer a minister, my lord; you are a prisoner."
"en, on the honor of a Mazarin, as I am and ever shall be, I hope," said the
cardinal.
"Hem," replied D'Artagnan. "I have heard speak of a Mazarin who had not
mu religion when his oaths were in question. I fear he may have been an ancestor
of your eminence."
"Monsieur d'Artagnan, you are a great wit and I am really sorry to be on bad
terms with you."
"My lord, let us come to terms; I ask nothing beer."
"Very well," said Mazarin, "if I place you in security, in a manner evident,
palpable----"
"Ah! that is another thing," said Porthos.
"Let us see," said Athos.
"Let us see," said D'Artagnan.
"In the first place, do you accept?" asked the cardinal.
"Unfold your plan, my lord, and we will see."
"Take notice that you are shut up--captured."
"You well know, my lord, that there always remains to us a last resource."
"What?"
"at of dying together."
Mazarin shuddered.
"Listen," he said; "at the end of yonder corridor is a door, of whi I have the
key, it leads into the park. Go, and take this key with you; you are active, vigorous,
and you have arms. At a hundred steps, on turning to the le, you will find the wall
of the park; get over it, and in three leaps you will be on the road and free."
dlxxxix
"Ah! by Jove, my lord," said D'Artagnan, "you have well said, but these are
only words. Where is the key you speak of?"
"Here it is."
"Ah, my lord! You will conduct us yourself, then, to that door?"
"Very willingly, if it be necessary to reassure you," answered the minister, and
Mazarin, who was delighted to get off so eaply, led the way, in high spirits, to the
corridor and opened the door.
It led into the park, as the three fugitives perceived by the night breeze whi
rushed into the corridor and blew the wind into their faces.
"e devil!" exclaimed the Gascon, "'tis a dreadful night, my lord. We don't
know the locality, and shall never find the wall. Since your eminence has come so
far, come a few steps further; conduct us, my lord, to the wall."
"Be it so," replied the cardinal; and walking in a straight line he went to the
wall, at the foot of whi they all four arrived at the same instant.
"Are you satisfied, gentlemen?" asked Mazarin.
"I think so, indeed; we should be hard to please if we were not. Deuce take
it! three poor gentlemen escorted by a prince of the ur! Ah! apropos, my lord!
you remarked that we were all active, vigorous and armed."
"Yes."
"You are mistaken. Monsieur du Vallon and I are the only two who are armed.
e count is not; and should we meet with one of your patrol we must defend
ourselves."
"'Tis true."
"Where can we find another sword?" asked Porthos.
"My lord," said D'Artagnan, "will lend his, whi is of no use to him, to the
Comte de la Fere."
"Willingly," said the cardinal; "I will even ask the count to keep it for my sake."
"I promise you, my lord, never to part with it," replied Athos.
"Well, well," cried D'Artagnan, "this reconciliation is truly touing; have you
not tears in your eyes, Porthos?"
"Yes," said Porthos; "but I do not know if it is feeling or the wind that makes
me weep; I think it is the wind."
"Now climb up, Athos, quily," said D'Artagnan. Athos, assisted by Porthos,
who lied him up like a feather, arrived at the top.
"Now, jump down, Athos."
Athos jumped and disappeared on the other side of the wall.
"Are you on the ground?" asked D'Artagnan.
"Yes."
"Without accident?"
"Perfectly safe and sound."
dxc
"Porthos, whilst I get up, wat the cardinal. No, I don't want your help, wat
the cardinal."
"I am wating," said Porthos. "Well?"
"You are right; it is more difficult than I thought. Lend me your ba--but
don't let the cardinal go."
Porthos lent him his ba and D'Artagnan was soon on the summit of the
wall, where he seated himself.
Mazarin pretended to laugh.
"Are you there?" asked Porthos.
"Yes, my friend; and now----"
"Now, what?" asked Porthos.
"Now give me the cardinal up here; if he makes any noise stifle him."
Mazarin wished to call out, but Porthos held him tight and passed him to
D'Artagnan, who seized him by the ne and made him sit down by him; then in a
menacing tone, he said:
"Sir! jump directly down, close to Monsieur de la Fere, or, on the honor of a
gentleman, I'll kill you!"
"Monsieur, monsieur," cried Mazarin, "you are breaking your word to me!"
"I--did I promise you anything, my lord?"
Mazarin groaned.
"You are free," he said, "through me; your liberty was my ransom."
"Agreed; but the ransom of that immense treasure buried under the gallery,
to whi one descends on pushing a spring hidden in the wall, whi causes a tub
to turn, revealing a staircase--must not one speak of that a lile, my lord?"
"Diavolo!" cried Mazarin, almost oked, and clasping his hands; "I am a lost
and ruined man!"
But without listening to his protestations of alarm, D'Artagnan slipped him
gently down into the arms of Athos, who stood immovable at the boom of the
wall.
Porthos next made an effort whi shook the solid wall, and by the aid of his
friend's hand gained the summit.
"I didn't understand it all," he said, "but I understand now; how droll it is!"
"You think so? so mu the beer; but that it may prove laughter-worthy
even to the end, let us not lose time." And he jumped off the wall.
Porthos did the same.
"Aend to monsieur le cardinal, gentlemen," said D'Artagnan; "for myself, I
will reconnoitre."
e Gascon then drew his sword and mared as avant guard.
"My lord," he said, "whi way do we go? ink well of your reply, for should
your eminence be mistaken, there might ensue most grave results for all of us."
dxci
"Along the wall, sir," said Mazarin, "there will be no danger of losing your-
selves."
e three friends hastened on, but in a short time were obliged to slaen the
pace. e cardinal could not keep up with them, though with every wish to do so.
Suddenly D'Artagnan toued something warm, whi moved.
"Stop! a horse!" he cried; "I have found a horse!"
"And I, likewise," said Athos.
"I, too," said Porthos, who, faithful to the instructions, still held the cardinal's
arm.
"ere's lu, my lord! just as you were complaining of being tired and obliged
to walk."
But as he spoke the barrel of a pistol was presented at his breast and these
words were pronounced:
"Tou it not!"
"Grimaud!" he cried; "Grimaud! what art thou about? Why, thou art posted
here by Heaven!"
"No, sir," said the honest servant, "it was Monsieur Aramis who posted me
here to take care of the horses."
"Is Aramis here?"
"Yes, sir; he has been here since yesterday."
"What are you doing?"
"On the wat----"
"What! Aramis here?" cried Athos.
"At the lesser gate of the castle; he's posted there."
"Are you a large party?"
"Sixty."
"Let him know."
"is moment, sir."
And believing that no one could execute the commission beer than himself,
Grimaud set off at full speed; whilst, enanted at being all together again, the
friends awaited his return.
ere was no one in the whole group in a bad humor except Cardinal Mazarin.
. inking that Porthos will
be at last a Baron, and
D'Artagnan a Captain.
did you manage to escape that scoundrel Mazarin? You must have mu reason to
complain of him."
"Not very mu," said D'Artagnan.
"Really!"
"I might even say that we have some reason to praise him."
"Impossible!"
"Yes, really; it is owing to him that we are free."
"Owing to him?"
"Yes, he had us conducted into the orangery by Monsieur Bernouin, his valet-
de-ambre, and from there we followed him to visit the Comte de la Fere. en
he offered us our liberty and we accepted it. He even went so far as to show us the
way out; he led us to the park wall, whi we climbed over without accident, and
then we fell in with Grimaud."
"Well!" exclaimed Aramis, "this will reconcile me to him; but I wish he were
here that I might tell him that I did not believe him capable of so noble an act."
"My lord," said D'Artagnan, no longer able to contain himself, "allow me to
introduce to you the Chevalier d'Herblay, who wishes--as you may have heard--to
offer his congratulations to your eminence."
And he retired, discovering Mazarin, who was in great confusion, to the as-
tonished gaze of Aramis.
"Ho! ho!" exclaimed the laer, "the cardinal! a glorious prize! Halloo! halloo!
friends! to horse! to horse!"
Several horsemen ran quily to him.
"Zounds!" cried Aramis, "I may have done some good; so, my lord, deign to
receive my most respectful homage! I will lay a wager that 'twas that Saint Christo-
pher, Porthos, who performed this feat! Apropos! I forgot----" and he gave some
orders in a low voice to one of the horsemen.
"I think it will be wise to set off," said D'Artagnan.
"Yes; but I am expecting some one, a friend of Athos."
"A friend!" exclaimed the count.
"And here he comes, by Jupiter! galloping through the bushes."
"e count! the count!" cried a young voice that made Athos start.
"Raoul! Raoul!" he ejaculated.
For one moment the young man forgot his habitual respect--he threw himself
on his father's ne.
"Look, my lord cardinal," said Aramis, "would it not have been a pity to have
separated men who love ea other as we love? Gentlemen," he continued, address-
ing the cavaliers, who became more and more numerous every instant; "gentlemen,
encircle his eminence, that you may show him the greater honor. He will, indeed
give us the favor of his company; you will, I hope, be grateful for it; Porthos, do not
dxciv
"As for me," replied Aramis, "I have in my poet the very programme of the
conditions whi the deputation--of whi I formed one--went yesterday to Saint
Germain to impose on you. Let us consider first the ancient rights. e demands in
that programme must be granted."
"We were almost agreed on those," replied Mazarin; "let us pass on to private
and personal stipulations."
"You suppose, then, that there are some?" said Aramis, smiling.
"I do not suppose that you will all be quite so disinterested as Monsieur de la
Fere," replied the cardinal, bowing to Athos.
"My lord, you are right, and I am glad to see that you do justice to the count
at last. e count has a mind above vulgar desires and earthly passions. He is a
proud soul--he is a man by himself! You are right--he is worth us all, and we avow
it to you!"
"Aramis," said Athos, "are you jesting?"
"No, no, dear friend; I state only what we all know. You are right; it is not you
alone this maer concerns, but my lord and his unworthy servant, myself."
"Well, then, what do you require besides the general conditions before re-
cited?"
"I require, my lord, that Normandy should be given to Madame de
Longueville, with five hundred thousand francs and full absolution. I require that
his majesty should deign to be godfather to the ild she has just borne; and that my
lord, aer having been present at the ristening, should go to proffer his homage
to our Holy Father the Pope."
"at is, you wish me to lay aside my ministerial functions, to quit France and
be an exile."
"I wish his eminence to become pope on the first opportunity, allowing me
then the right of demanding full indulgences for myself and my friends."
Mazarin made a grimace whi was quite indescribable, and then turned to
D'Artagnan.
"And you, sir?" he said.
"I, my lord," answered the Gascon, "I differ from Monsieur d'Herblay entirely
as to the last point, though I agree with him on the first. Far from wishing my
lord to quit Paris, I hope he will stay there and continue to be prime minister, as
he is a great statesman. I shall try also to help him to down the Fronde, but on one
condition--that he sometimes remembers the king's faithful servants and gives the
first vacant company of musketeers to a man that I could name. And you, Monsieur
du Vallon----"
"Yes, you, sir! Speak, if you please," said Mazarin.
"As for me," answered Porthos, "I wish my lord cardinal, in order to do honor
to my house, whi gives him an asylum, would in remembrance of this adventure
dxcvii
erect my estate into a barony, with a promise to confer that order on one of my
particular friends, whenever his majesty next creates peers."
"You know, sir, that before receiving the order one must submit proofs."
"My friends will submit them. Besides, should it be necessary, monseigneur
will show him how that formality may be avoided."
Mazarin bit his lips; the blow was direct and he replied rather dryly:
"All this appears to me to be ill conceived, disjointed, gentlemen; for if I satisfy
some I shall displease others. If I stay in Paris I cannot go to Rome; if I became pope I
could not continue to be prime minister; and it is only by continuing prime minister
that I can make Monsieur d'Artagnan a captain and Monsieur du Vallon a baron."
"True," said Aramis, "so, as I am in a minority, I withdraw my proposition, so
far as it relates to the voyage to Rome and monseigneur's resignation."
"I am to remain minister, then?" said Mazarin.
"You remain minister; that is understood," said D'Artagnan; "France needs
you."
"And I desist from my pretensions," said Aramis. "His eminence will continue
to be prime minister and her majesty's favorite, if he will grant to me and my friends
what we demand for France and for ourselves."
"Occupy yourselves with your own affairs, gentlemen, and let France sele
maers as she will with me," resumed Mazarin.
"Ho! ho!" replied Aramis. "e Frondeurs will have a treaty and your em-
inence must sign it before us, promising at the same time to obtain the queen's
consent to it."
"I can answer only for myself," said Mazarin. "I cannot answer for the queen.
Suppose her majesty refuses?"
"Oh!" said D'Artagnan, "monseigneur knows very well that her majesty re-
fuses him nothing."
"Here, monseigneur," said Aramis, "is the treaty proposed by the deputation
of Frondeurs. Will your eminence please read and examine?"
"I am acquainted with it."
"Sign it, then."
"Reflect, gentlemen, that a signature given under circumstances like the
present might be regarded as extorted by violence."
"Monseigneur will be at hand to testify that it was freely given."
"Suppose I refuse?"
"en," said D'Artagnan, "your eminence must expect the consequences of a
refusal."
"Would you dare to tou a cardinal?"
"You have dared, my lord, to imprison her majesty's musketeers."
"e queen will revenge me, gentlemen."
dxcviii
"I do not think so, although inclination might lead her to do so, but we shall
take your eminence to Paris, and the Parisians will defend us."
"How uneasy they must be at this moment at Rueil and Saint Germain," said
Aramis. "How they must be asking, 'Where is the cardinal?' 'What has become
of the minister?' 'Where has the favorite gone?' How they must be looking for
monseigneur in all corners! What comments must be made; and if the Fronde knows
that monseigneur has disappeared, how the Fronde must triumph!"
"It is frightful," murmured Mazarin.
"Sign the treaty, then, monseigneur," said Aramis.
"Suppose the queen should refuse to ratify it?"
"Ah! nonsense!" cried D'Artagnan, "I can manage so that her majesty will
receive me well; I know an excellent method."
"What?"
"I shall take her majesty the leer in whi you tell her that the finances are
exhausted."
"And then?" asked Mazarin, turning pale.
"When I see her majesty embarrassed, I shall conduct her to Rueil, make her
enter the orangery and show her a certain spring whi turns a box."
"Enough, sir," muered the cardinal, "you have said enough; where is the
treaty?"
"Here it is," replied Aramis. "Sign, my lord," and he gave him a pen.
Mazarin arose, walked some moments, thoughtful, but not dejected.
"And when I have signed," he said, "what is to be my guarantee?"
"My word of honor, sir," said Athos.
Mazarin started, turned toward the Comte de la Fere, and looking for an in-
stant at that grand and honest countenance, took the pen.
"It is sufficient, count," he said, and signed the treaty.
"And now, Monsieur d'Artagnan," he said, "prepare to set off for Saint Germain
and take a leer from me to the queen."
. Shows how with reat and
Pen more is effected than by
the Sword.
D 'A knew his part well; he was aware that opportunity has a forelo
only for him who will take it and he was not a man to let it go by him without
seizing it. He soon arranged a prompt and certain manner of traveling, by sending
relays of horses to Chantilly, so that he might be in Paris in five or six hours. But
before seing out he reflected that for a lad of intelligence and experience he was
in a singular predicament, since he was proceeding toward uncertainty and leaving
certainty behind him.
"In fact," he said, as he was about to mount and start on his dangerous mission,
"Athos, for generosity, is a hero of romance; Porthos has an excellent disposition, but
is easily influenced; Aramis has a hieroglyphic countenance, always illegible. What
will come out of those three elements when I am no longer present to combine them?
e deliverance of the cardinal, perhaps. Now, the deliverance of the cardinal would
be the ruin of our hopes; and our hopes are thus far the only recompense we have
for labors in comparison with whi those of Hercules were pygmean."
He went to find Aramis.
"You, my dear Chevalier d'Herblay," he said, "are the Fronde incarnate. Mis-
trust Athos, therefore, who will not prosecute the affairs of any one, even his own.
Mistrust Porthos, especially, who, to please the count whom he regards as God on
earth, will assist him in contriving Mazarin's escape, if Mazarin has the wit to weep
or play the ivalric."
Aramis smiled; his smile was at once cunning and resolute.
"Fear nothing," he said; "I have my conditions to impose. My private ambition
tends only to the profit of him who has justice on his side."
dc
of D'Artagnan and Porthos the two soldiers had been found bound and gagged. On
recovering the use of their limbs and tongues they could, of course, tell nothing but
what they knew--that they had been seized, stripped and bound. But as to what
had been done by Porthos and D'Artagnan aerward they were as ignorant as all
the inhabitants of the ateau.
Bernouin alone knew a lile more than the others. Bernouin, seeing that his
master did not return and hearing the stroke of midnight, had made an examination
of the orangery. e first door, barricaded with furniture, had aroused in him certain
suspicions, but without communicating his suspicions to any one he had patiently
worked his way into the midst of all that confusion. en he came to the corridor, all
the doors of whi he found open; so, too, was the door of Athos's amber and that
of the park. From the laer point it was easy to follow tras on the snow. He saw
that these tras tended toward the wall; on the other side he found similar tras,
then footprints of horses and then signs of a troop of cavalry whi had moved away
in the direction of Enghien. He could no longer erish any doubt that the cardinal
had been carried off by the three prisoners, since the prisoners had disappeared at
the same time; and he had hastened to Saint Germain to warn the queen of that
disappearance.
Anne had enforced the utmost secrecy and had disclosed the event to no one
except the Prince de Conde, who had sent five or six hundred horsemen into the
environs of Saint Germain with orders to bring in any suspicious person who was
going away from Rueil, in whatsoever direction it might be.
Now, since D'Artagnan did not constitute a body of horsemen, since he was
alone, since he was not going away from Rueil and was going to Saint Germain, no
one paid any aention to him and his journey was not obstructed in any way.
On entering the courtyard of the old ateau the first person seen by our am-
bassador was Maitre Bernouin in person, who, standing on the threshold, awaited
news of his vanished master.
At the sight of D'Artagnan, who entered the courtyard on horseba, Bernouin
rubbed his eyes and thought he must be mistaken. But D'Artagnan made a friendly
sign to him with his head, dismounted, and throwing his bridle to a laey who was
passing, he approaed the valet-de-ambre with a smile on his lips.
"Monsieur d'Artagnan!" cried the laer, like a man who has the nightmare
and talks in his sleep, "Monsieur d'Artagnan!"
"Himself, Monsieur Bernouin."
"And why have you come here?"
"To bring news of Monsieur de Mazarin--the freshest news there is."
"What has become of him, then?"
"He is as well as you and I."
"Nothing bad has happened to him, then?"
dcii
"Absolutely nothing. He felt the need of making a trip in the Ile de France,
and begged us--the Comte de la Fere and Monsieur du Vallon--to accompany him.
We were too devoted servants to refuse him a request of that sort. We set out last
evening and here we are."
"Here you are."
"His eminence had something to communicate to her majesty, something se-
cret and private--a mission that could be confided only to a sure man--and so has
sent me to Saint Germain. And therefore, my dear Monsieur Bernouin, if you wish
to do what will be pleasing to your master, announce to her majesty that I have
come, and tell her with what purpose."
Whether he spoke seriously or in jest, since it was evident that under existing
circumstances D'Artagnan was the only man who could relieve the queen's uneasi-
ness, Bernouin went without hesitation to announce to her this strange embassy;
and as he had foreseen, the queen gave orders to introduce Monsieur d'Artagnan at
once.
D'Artagnan approaed the sovereign with every mark of profound respect,
and having fallen on his knees presented to her the cardinal's leer
It was, however, merely a leer of introduction. e queen read it, recog-
nized the writing, and, since there were no details in it of what had occurred, asked
for particulars. D'Artagnan related everything with that simple and ingenuous air
whi he knew how to assume on occasions. e queen, as he went on, looked at
him with increasing astonishment. She could not comprehend how a man could
conceive su an enterprise and still less how he could have the audacity to disclose
it to her whose interest and almost duty it was to punish him.
"How, sir!" she cried, as D'Artagnan finished, "you dare to tell me the details
of your crime--to give me an account of your treason!"
"Pardon, madame, but I think that either I have expressed myself badly or
your majesty has imperfectly understood me. ere is here no question of crime or
treason. Monsieur de Mazarin held us in prison, Monsieur du Vallon and myself,
because we could not believe that he had sent us to England to quietly look on while
they cut off the head of Charles I., brother-in-law of the late king, your husband,
the consort of Madame Henriea, your sister and your guest, and because we did
all that we could do to save the life of the royal martyr. We were then convinced,
my friend and I, that there was some error of whi we were the victims, and that
an explanation was called for between his eminence and ourselves. Now, that an
explanation may bear fruit, it is necessary that it should be quietly conducted, far
from noise and interruption. We have therefore taken away monsieur le cardinal to
my friend's ateau and there we have come to an understanding. Well, madame,
it proved to be as we had supposed; there was a mistake. Monsieur de Mazarin had
thought that we had rendered service to General Cromwell, instead of King Charles,
dciii
whi would have been a disgrace, rebounding from us to him, and from him to your
majesty--a dishonor whi would have tainted the royalty of your illustrious son.
We were able to prove the contrary, and that proof we are ready to give to your
majesty, calling in support of it the august widow weeping in the Louvre, where
your royal munificence has provided for her a home. at proof satisfied him so
completely that, as a sign of satisfaction, he has sent me, as your majesty may see,
to consider with you what reparation should be made to gentlemen unjustly treated
and wrongfully persecuted."
"I listen to you, and I wonder at you, sir," said the queen. "In fact, I have rarely
seen su excess of impudence."
"Your majesty, on your side," said D'Artagnan, "is as mu mistaken as to our
intentions as the Cardinal Mazarin has always been."
"You are in error, sir," answered the queen. "I am so lile mistaken that in ten
minutes you shall be arrested, and in an hour I shall set off at the head of my army
to release my minister."
"I am sure your majesty will not commit su an act of imprudence, first,
because it would be useless and would produce the most disastrous results. Before
he could be possibly set free the cardinal would be dead; and indeed, so convinced
is he of this, that he entreated me, should I find your majesty disposed to act in this
way, to do all I could to induce you to ange your resolution."
"Well, then, I will content myself with arresting you!"
"Madame, the possibility of my arrest has been foreseen, and should I not have
returned by to-morrow, at a certain hour the next day the cardinal will be brought
to Paris and delivered to the parliament."
"It is evident, sir, that your position has kept you out of relation to men and
affairs; otherwise you would know that since we le Paris monsieur le cardinal has
returned thither five or six times; that he has there met De Beaufort, De Bouillon,
the coadjutor and D'Elbeuf and that not one of them had any desire to arrest him."
"Your pardon, madame, I know all that. And therefore my friends will conduct
monsieur le cardinal neither to De Beaufort, nor to De Bouillon, nor to the coadjutor,
nor to D'Elbeuf. ese gentlemen wage war on private account, and in buying them
up, by granting them what they wished, monsieur le cardinal has made a good
bargain. He will be delivered to the parliament, members of whi can, of course,
be bought, but even Monsieur de Mazarin is not ri enough to buy the whole body."
"I think," returned Anne of Austria, fixing upon him a glance, whi in any
woman's face would have expressed disdain, but in a queen's, spread terror to those
she looked upon, "nay, I perceive you dare to threaten the mother of your sovereign."
"Madame," replied D'Artagnan, "I threaten simply and solely because I am
obliged to do so. Believe me, madame, as true a thing as it is that a heart beats
in this bosom--a heart devoted to you--believe that you have been the idol of our
dciv
lives; that we have, as you well know--good Heaven!--risked our lives twenty times
for your majesty. Have you, then, madame, no compassion for your servants who
for twenty years have vegetated in obscurity, without betraying in a single sigh the
solemn and sacred secrets they have had the honor to share with you? Look at me,
madame--at me, whom you accuse of speaking loud and threateningly. What am I?
A poor officer, without fortune, without protection, without a future, unless the eye
of my queen, whi I have sought so long, rests on me for a moment. Look at the
Comte de la Fere, a type of nobility, a flower of ivalry. He has taken part against
his queen, or rather, against her minister. He has not been unreasonably exacting, it
seems to me. Look at Monsieur du Vallon, that faithful soul, that arm of steel, who
for twenty years has awaited the word from your lips whi will make him in rank
what he is in sentiment and in courage. Consider, in short, your people who love
you and who yet are famished, who have no other wish than to bless you, and who,
nevertheless--no, I am wrong, your subjects, madame, will never curse you; say one
word to them and all will be ended--peace succeed war, joy tears, and happiness to
misfortune!"
Anne of Austria looked with wonderment on the warlike countenance of
D'Artagnan, whi betrayed a singular expression of deep feeling.
"Why did you not say all this before you took action, sir?" she said.
"Because, madame, it was necessary to prove to your majesty one thing of
whi you doubted---that is, that we still possess amongst us some valor and are
worthy of some consideration at your hands."
"And that valor would shrink from no undertaking, according to what I see."
"It has hesitated at nothing in the past; why, then, should it be less daring in
the future?"
"en, in case of my refusal, this valor, should a struggle occur, will even go
the length of carrying me off in the midst of my court, to deliver me into the hands
of the Fronde, as you propose to deliver my minister?"
"We have not thought about it yet, madame," answered D'Artagnan, with that
Gascon effrontery whi had in him the appearance of naivete; "but if we four had
resolved upon it we should do it most certainly."
"I ought," muered Anne to herself, "by this time to remember that these men
are giants."
"Alas, madame!" exclaimed D'Artagnan, "this proves to me that not till to-day
has your majesty had a just idea of us."
"Perhaps," said Anne; "but that idea, if at last I have it----"
"Your majesty will do us justice. In doing us justice you will no longer treat
us as men of vulgar stamp. You will see in me an ambassador worthy of the high
interests he is authorized to discuss with his sovereign."
"Where is the treaty?"
dcv
"Here it is."
Anne of Austria cast her eyes upon the treaty that D'Artagnan presented to
her.
"I do not see here," she said, "anything but general conditions; the interests of
the Prince de Conti or of the Ducs de Beaufort, de Bouillon and d'Elbeuf and of the
coadjutor, are herein consulted; but with regard to yours?"
"We do ourselves justice, madame, even in assuming the high position that
we have. We do not think ourselves worthy to stand near su great names."
"But you, I presume, have decided to assert your pretensions viva voce?"
"I believe you, madame, to be a great and powerful queen, and that it will be
unworthy of your power and greatness if you do not recompense the arms whi
will bring ba his eminence to Saint Germain."
"It is my intention so to do; come, let us hear you. Speak."
"He who has negotiated these maers (forgive me if I begin by speaking of
myself, but I must claim that importance whi has been given to me, not assumed
by me) he who has arranged maers for the return of the cardinal, ought, it appears
to me, in order that his reward may not be unworthy of your majesty, to be made
commandant of the guards--an appointment something like that of captain of the
musketeers."
"'Tis the appointment Monsieur de Treville held, you ask of me."
"e place, madame, is vacant, and although 'tis a year since Monsieur de
Treville has le it, it has not been filled."
"But it is one of the principal military appointments in the king's household."
"Monsieur de Treville was but a younger son of a simple Gascon family, like
me, madame; he occupied that post for twenty years."
"You have an answer ready for everything," replied the queen, and she took
from her bureau a document, whi she filled up and signed.
"Undoubtedly, madame," said D'Artagnan, taking the document and bowing,
"this is a noble reward; but everything in the world is unstable, and the man who
happened to fall into disgrace with your majesty might lose this office to-morrow."
"What more do you want?" asked the queen, coloring, as she found that she
had to deal with a mind as subtle as her own.
"A hundred thousand francs for this poor captain of musketeers, to be paid
whenever his services shall no longer be acceptable to your majesty."
Anne hesitated.
"To think of the Parisians," soliloquized D'Artagnan, "offering only the other
day, by an edict of the parliament, six hundred thousand francs to any man soever
who would deliver up the cardinal to them, dead or alive--if alive, in order to hang
him; if dead, to deny him the rites of Christian burial!"
"Come," said Anne, "'tis reasonable, since you only ask from a queen the sixth
dcvi
of what the parliament has proposed;" and she signed an order for a hundred thou-
sand francs.
"Now, then," she said, "what next?"
"Madame, my friend Du Vallon is ri and has therefore nothing in the way
of fortune to desire; but I think I remember that there was a question between him
and Monsieur Mazarin as to making his estate a barony. Nay, it must have been a
promise."
"A country clown," said Anne of Austria, "people will laugh."
"Let them," answered D'Artagnan. "But I am sure of one thing--that those who
laugh at him in his presence will never laugh a second time."
"Here goes the barony." said the queen; she signed a patent.
"Now there remains the evalier, or the Abbe d'Herblay, as your majesty
pleases."
"Does he wish to be a bishop?"
"No, madame, something easier to grant."
"What?"
"It is that the king should deign to stand godfather to the son of Madame de
Longueville."
e queen smiled.
"Monsieur de Longueville is of royal blood, madame," said D'Artagnan.
"Yes," said the queen; "but his son?"
"His son, madame, must be, since the husband of the son's mother is."
"And your friend has nothing more to ask for Madame de Longueville?"
"No, madame, for I presume that the king, standing godfather to him, could
do no less than present him with five hundred thousand francs, giving his father,
also, the government of Normandy."
"As to the government of Normandy," replied the queen, "I think I can promise;
but with regard to the present, the cardinal is always telling me there is no more
money in the royal coffers."
"We shall sear for some, madame, and I think we can find a lile, and if
your majesty approves, we will seek for some together."
"What next?"
"What next, madame?"
"Yes."
"at is all."
"Haven't you, then, a fourth companion?"
"Yes, madame, the Comte de la Fere."
"What does he ask?"
"Nothing."
"ere is in the world, then, one man who, having the power to ask, asks--
dcvii
nothing!"
"ere is the Comte de la Fere, madame. e Comte de la Fere is not a man."
"What is he, then?"
"e Comte de la Fere is a demi-god."
"Has he not a son, a young man, a relative, a nephew, of whom Comminges
spoke to me as being a brave boy, and who, with Monsieur de Chatillon, brought
the standards from Lens?"
"He has, as your majesty has said, a ward, who is called the Vicomte de
Bragelonne."
"If that young man should be appointed to a regiment what would his
guardian say?"
"Perhaps he would accept."
"Perhaps?"
"Yes, if your majesty herself should beg him to accept."
"He must be indeed a strange man. Well, we will reflect and perhaps we will
beg him. Are you satisfied, sir?"
"ere is one thing the queen has not signed--her assent to the treaty."
"Of what use to-day? I will sign it to-morrow."
"I can assure her majesty that if she does not sign to-day she will not have
time to sign to-morrow. Consent, then, I beg you, madame, to write at the boom
of this sedule, whi has been drawn up by Mazarin, as you see:
"'I consent to ratify the treaty proposed by the Parisians.'"
Anne was caught, she could not draw ba--she signed; but scarcely had she
done so when pride burst forth and she began to weep.
D'Artagnan started on seeing these tears. Since that period of history queens
have shed tears, like other women.
e Gascon shook his head, these tears from royalty melted his heart.
"Madame," he said, kneeling, "look upon the unhappy man at your feet. He
begs you to believe that at a gesture of your majesty everything will be possible to
him. He has faith in himself; he has faith in his friends; he wishes also to have faith
in his queen. And in proof that he fears nothing, that he counts on nothing, he will
restore Monsieur de Mazarin to your majesty without conditions. Behold, madame!
here are the august signatures of your majesty's hand; if you think you are right in
giving them to me, you shall do so, but from this very moment you are free from
any obligation to keep them."
And D'Artagnan, full of splendid pride and manly intrepidity, placed in Anne's
hands, in a bundle, the papers that he had one by one won from her with so mu
difficulty.
ere are moments--for if everything is not good, everything in this world
is not bad--in whi the most rigid and the coldest soul is soened by the tears
dcviii
"No, madame; if you have forgoen the history of Oedipus, I, at least, remem-
ber it."
"Really, sir, you are delightful, and I should like to spend a month at
Bragelonne."
"Are you not afraid of making people envious of me, duess?" replied Athos.
"No, I shall go incognito, count, under the name of Marie Mion."
"You are adorable, madame."
"But do not keep Raoul with you."
"Why not?"
"Because he is in love."
"He! he is quite a ild!"
"And 'tis a ild he loves."
Athos became thoughtful.
"You are right, duess. is singular passion for a ild of seven may some
day make him very unhappy. ere is to be war in Flanders. He shall go thither."
"And at his return you will send him to me. I will arm him against love."
"Alas, madame!" exclaimed Athos, "to-day love is like war--the breastplate is
becoming useless."
Raoul entered at this moment; he came to announce that the solemn entrance
of the king, queen, and her ministers was to take place on the ensuing day.
e next day, in fact, at daybreak, the court made preparations to quit Saint
Germain.
Meanwhile, the queen every hour had been sending for D'Artagnan.
"I hear," she said, "that Paris is not quiet. I am afraid for the king's safety; place
yourself close to the coa door on the right."
"Reassure yourself, madame, I will answer for the king's safety."
As he le the queen's presence Bernouin summoned him to the cardinal.
"Sir," said Mazarin to him "an emeute is spoken of in Paris. I shall be on the
king's le and as I am the ief person threatened, remain at the coa door to the
le."
"Your eminence may be perfectly easy," replied D'Artagnan; "they will not
tou a hair of your head."
"Deuce take it!" he thought to himself, "how can I take care of both? Ah!
plague on't, I will guard the king and Porthos shall guard the cardinal."
is arrangement pleased every one. e queen had confidence in the courage
of D'Artagnan, whi she knew, and the cardinal in the strength of Porthos, whi
he had experienced.
e royal procession set out for Paris. Guitant and Comminges, at the head
of the guards, mared first; then came the royal carriage, with D'Artagnan on one
side, Porthos on the other; then the musketeers, for two and twenty years staun
dcxiii
friends of D'Artagnan. During twenty he had been lieutenant, their captain since
the night before.
e cortege proceeded to Notre Dame, where a Te Deum was anted. All
Paris were in the streets. e Swiss were drawn up along the road, but as the road
was long, they were placed at six or eight feet distant from ea other and one deep
only. is force was therefore wholly insufficient, and from time to time the line
was broken through by the people and was formed again with difficulty. Whenever
this occurred, although it proceeded only from goodwill and a desire to see the king
and queen, Anne looked at D'Artagnan anxiously.
Mazarin, who had dispensed a thousand louis to make the people cry "Long
live Mazarin," and who had accordingly no confidence in acclamations bought at
twenty pistoles ea, kept one eye on Porthos; but that gigantic body-guard replied
to the look with his great bass voice, "Be tranquil, my lord," and Mazarin became
more and more composed.
At the Palais Royal, the crowd, whi had flowed in from the adjacent street
was still greater; like an impetuous mob, a wave of human beings came to meet the
carriage and rolled tumultuously into the Rue Saint Honore.
When the procession reaed the palace, loud cries of "Long live their
majesties!" resounded. Mazarin leaned out of the window. One or two shouts of
"Long live the cardinal" saluted his shadow; but instantly hisses and yells stifled
them remorselessly. Mazarin turned pale and shrank ba in the coa.
"Low-born fellows!" ejaculated Porthos.
D'Artagnan said nothing, but twirled his mustae with a peculiar gesture
whi showed that his fine Gascon humor was awake.
Anne of Austria bent down and whispered in the young king's ear:
"Say something gracious to Monsieur d'Artagnan, my son."
e young king leaned toward the door.
"I have not said good-morning to you, Monsieur d'Artagnan," he said; "nev-
ertheless, I have remarked you. It was you who were behind my bed-curtains that
night the Parisians wished to see me asleep."
"And if the king permits me," returned the Gascon, "I shall be near him always
when there is danger to be encountered."
"Sir," said Mazarin to Porthos, "what would you do if the crowd fell upon us?"
"Kill as many as I could, my lord."
"Hem! brave as you are and strong as you are, you could not kill them all."
"'Tis true," answered Porthos, rising on his saddle, in order that he might ap-
praise the immense crowd, "there are a lot of them."
"I think I should like the other fellow beer than this one," said Mazarin to
himself, and he threw himself ba in his carriage.
e queen and her minister, more especially the laer, had reason to feel anx-
dcxiv
fighting. Like all popular movements, the sho given by the rush of this mob was
formidable. e musketeers, few in number, not being able, in the midst of this
crowd, to make their horses wheel around, began to give way. D'Artagnan offered
to lower the blinds of the royal carriage, but the young king streted out his arm,
saying:
"No, sir! I wish to see everything."
"If your majesty wishes to look out--well, then, look!" replied D'Artagnan.
And turning with that fury whi made him so formidable, he rushed toward the
ief of the insurgents, a man who, with a huge sword in his hand, was trying to
hew a passage to the coa door through the musketeers.
"Make room!" cried D'Artagnan. "Zounds! give way!"
At these words the man with a pistol and sword raised his head, but it was
too late. e blow was sped by D'Artagnan; the rapier had pierced his bosom.
"Ah! confound it!" cried the Gascon, trying in vain, too late, to retract the
thrust. "What the devil are you doing here, count?"
"Accomplishing my destiny," replied Roefort, falling on one knee. "I have
already got up again aer three stabs from you, I shall never rise aer this fourth."
"Count!" said D'Artagnan, with some degree of emotion, "I stru without
knowing that it was you. I am sorry, if you die, that you should die with sentiments
of hatred toward me."
Roefort extended his hand to D'Artagnan, who took it. e count wished to
speak, but a gush of blood stifled him. He stiffened in the last convulsions of death
and expired.
"Ba, people!" cried D'Artagnan, "your leader is dead; you have no longer
any business here."
Indeed, as if De Roefort had been the very soul of the aa, the crowd
who had followed and obeyed him took to flight on seeing him fall. D'Artagnan
arged, with a party of musketeers, up the Rue du Coq, and the portion of the
mob he assailed disappeared like smoke, dispersing near the Place Saint Germain-
l'Auxerrois and taking the direction of the quays.
D'Artagnan returned to help Porthos, if Porthos needed help; but Porthos, for
his part, had done his work as conscientiously as D'Artagnan. e le of the carriage
was as well cleared as the right, and they drew up the blind of the window whi
Mazarin, less heroic than the king, had taken the precaution to lower.
Porthos looked very melanoly.
"What a devil of a face you have, Porthos! and what a strange air for a victor!"
"But you," answered Porthos, "seem to me agitated."
"ere's a reason! Zounds! I have just killed an old friend."
"Indeed!" replied Porthos, "who?"
"at poor Count de Roefort."
dcxvi
"Well! exactly like me! I have just killed a man whose face is not unknown
to me. Unluily, I hit him on the head and immediately his face was covered with
blood."
"And he said nothing as he died?"
"Yes; he exclaimed, 'Oh!'"
"I suppose," answered D'Artagnan, laughing, "if he only said that, it did not
enlighten you mu."
"Well, sir!" cried the queen.
"Madame, the passage is quite clear and your majesty can continue your road."
In fact, the procession arrived, in safety at Notre Dame, at the front gate of
whi all the clergy, with the coadjutor at their head, awaited the king, the queen
and the minister, for whose happy return they anted a Te Deum.
As the service was drawing to a close a boy entered the ur in great excite-
ment, ran to the sacristy, dressed himself quily in the oir robes, and cleaving,
thanks to that uniform, the crowd that filled the temple, approaed Bazin, who,
clad in his blue robe, was standing gravely in his place at the entrance to the oir.
Bazin felt some one pulling his sleeve. He lowered to earth his eyes, beatifi-
cally raised to Heaven, and recognized Friquet.
"Well, you rascal, what is it? How do you dare to disturb me in the exercise
of my functions?" asked the beadle.
"Monsieur Bazin," said Friquet, "Monsieur Maillard--you know who he is, he
gives holy water at Saint Eustae----"
"Well, go on."
"Well, he received in the scrimmage a sword stroke on the head. at great
giant who was there gave it to him."
"In that case," said Bazin, "he must be prey si."
"So si that he is dying, and he wants to confess to the coadjutor, who, they
say, has power to remit great sins."
"And does he imagine that the coadjutor will put himself out for him?"
"To be sure; the coadjutor has promised."
"Who told you that?"
"Monsieur Maillard himself."
"You have seen him, then?"
"Certainly; I was there when he fell."
"What were you doing there?"
"I was shouting, 'Down with Mazarin!' 'Death to the cardinal!' 'e Italian to
the gallows!' Isn't that what you would have me shout?"
"Be quiet, you rascal!" said Bazin, looking uneasily around.
"So that he told me, that poor Monsieur Maillard, 'Go find the coadjutor, Fri-
quet, and if you bring him to me you shall be my heir.' Say, then, Father Bazin--the
dcxvii
heir of Monsieur Maillard, the giver of holy water at Saint Eustae! Hey! I shall
have nothing to do but to fold my arms! All the same, I should like to do him that
service--what do you say to it?"
"I will tell the coadjutor," said Bazin.
In fact, he slowly and respectfully approaed the prelate and spoke to him
privately a few words, to whi the laer responded by an affirmative sign. He then
returned with the same slow step and said:
"Go and tell the dying man that he must be patient. Monseigneur will be with
him in an hour."
"Good!" said Friquet, "my fortune is made."
"By the way," said Bazin, "where was he carried?"
"To the tower Saint Jacques la Bouerie;" and delighted with the success of
his embassy, Friquet started off at the top of his speed.
When the Te Deum was over, the coadjutor, without stopping to ange his
priestly dress, took his way toward that old tower whi he knew so well. He arrived
in time. ough sinking from moment to moment, the wounded man was not yet
dead. e door was opened to the coadjutor of the room in whi the mendicant
was suffering.
A moment later Friquet went out, carrying in his hand a large leather bag;
he opened it as soon as he was outside the amber and to his great astonishment
found it full of gold. e mendicant had kept his word and made Friquet his heir.
"Ah! Mother Nanee!" cried Friquet, suffocating; "ah! Mother Nanee!"
He could say no more; but though he hadn't strength to speak he had enough
for action. He rushed headlong to the street, and like the Greek from Marathon
who fell in the square at Athens, with his laurel in his hand, Friquet reaed Coun-
cillor Broussel's threshold, and then fell exhausted, scaering on the floor the louis
disgorged by his leather bag.
Mother Nanee began by piing up the louis; then she pied up Friquet.
In the meantime the cortege returned to the Palais Royal.
"at Monsieur d'Artagnan is a very brave man, mother," said the young king.
"Yes, my son; and he rendered very important services to your father. Treat
him kindly, therefore, in the future."
"Captain," said the young king to D'Artagnan, on descending from the car-
riage, "the queen has arged me to invite you to dinner to-day--you and your friend
the Baron du Vallon."
at was a great honor for D'Artagnan and for Porthos. Porthos was de-
lighted; and yet during the entire repast he seemed to be preoccupied.
"What was the maer with you, baron?" D'Artagnan said to him as they de-
scended the staircase of the Palais Royal. "You seemed at dinner to be anxious about
something."
dcxviii
"I was trying," said Porthos, "to recall where I had seen that mendicant whom
I must have killed."
"And you couldn't remember?"
"No."
"Well, sear, my friend, sear; and when you have found, you will tell me,
will you not?"
"Pardieu!" said Porthos.
. Conclusion.
O going home, the two friends found a leer from Athos, who desired them to
meet him at the Grand Charlemagne on the following day.
e friends went to bed early, but neither of them slept. When we arrive at
the summit of our wishes, success has usually the power to drive away sleep on the
first night aer the fulfilment of long erished hopes.
e next day at the appointed hour they went to see Athos and found him
and Aramis in traveling costume.
"What!" cried Porthos, "are we all going away, then? I, so, have made my
preparations this morning."
"Oh, heavens! yes," said Aramis. "ere's nothing to do in Paris now there's no
Fronde. e Duess de Longueville has invited me to pass a few days in Normandy,
and has deputed me, while her son is being baptized, to go and prepare her residence
at Rouen; aer whi, if nothing new occurs, I shall go and bury myself in my
convent at Noisy-le-Sec."
"And I," said Athos, "am returning to Bragelonne. You know, dear D'Artagnan,
I am nothing more than a good honest country gentleman. Raoul has no fortune
other than I possess, poor ild! and I must take care of it for him, since I only lend
him my name."
"And Raoul--what shall you do with him?"
"I leave him with you, my friend. War has broken out in Flanders. You shall
take him with you there. I am afraid that remaining at Blois would be dangerous
to his youthful mind. Take him and tea him to be as brave and loyal as you are
yourself."
"en," replied D'Artagnan, "though I shall not have you, Athos, at all events
I shall have that dear fair-haired head by me; and though he's but a boy, yet, since
your soul lives again in him, dear Athos, I shall always fancy that you are near me,
sustaining and encouraging me."
e four friends embraced with tears in their eyes.
dcxx
en they departed, without knowing whether they would ever see ea other
again.
D'Artagnan returned to the Rue Tiquetonne with Porthos, still possessed by
the wish to find out who the man was that he had killed. On arriving at the Hotel
de la Chevree they found the baron's equipage all really and Mousqueton on his
saddle.
"Come, D'Artagnan," said Porthos, "bid adieu to your sword and go with me
to Pierrefonds, to Bracieux, or to Du Vallon. We will grow old together and talk of
our companions."
"No!" replied D'Artagnan, "deuce take it, the campaign is going to begin; I
wish to be there, I expect to get something by it."
"What do you expect to get?"
"Why, I expect to be made Mareal of France!"
"Ha! ha!" cried Porthos, who was not completely taken in by D'Artagnan's
Gasconades.
"Come my brother, go with me," added D'Artagnan, "and I will see that you
are made a duke!"
"No," answered Porthos, "Mouston has no desire to fight; besides, they have
erected a triumphal ar for me to enter my barony, whi will kill my neighbors
with envy."
"To that I can say nothing," returned D'Artagnan, who knew the vanity of the
new baron. "en, here's to our next merry meeting!"
"Adieu, dear captain," said Porthos, "I shall always be happy to welcome you
to my barony."
"Yes, yes, when the campaign is over," replied the Gascon.
"His honor's equipage is waiting," said Mousqueton.
e two friends, aer a cordial pressure of the hands, separated. D'Artagnan
was standing at the door looking aer Porthos with a mournful gaze, when the
baron, aer walking scarcely more than twenty paces, returned--stood still--stru
his forehead with his finger and exclaimed:
"I recollect!"
"What?" inquired D'Artagnan.
"Who the beggar was that I killed."
"Ah! indeed! and who was he?"
"'Twas that low fellow, Bonacieux."
And Porthos, enanted at having relieved his mind, rejoined Mousqueton
and they disappeared around an angle of the street. D'Artagnan stood for an instant,
mute, pensive and motionless; then, as he went in, he saw the fair Madeleine, his
hostess, standing on the threshold.
"Madeleine," said the Gascon, "give me your apartment on the first floor; now
dcxxi
――――
dcxxiii
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