Twenty Years After by Alexandre Dumas (epub read online books .txt) đ
- Author: Alexandre Dumas
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DâArtagnan summoned Anne of Austriaâs servant and signified that he was ready to follow him into the queenâs presence.
The servant conducted him by the Rue des Petits Champs and turning to the left entered the little garden gate leading into the Rue Richelieu; then they gained the private staircase and DâArtagnan was ushered into the oratory. A certain emotion, for which he could not account, made the lieutenantâs heart beat: he had no longer the assurance of youth; experience had taught him the importance of past events. Formerly he would have approached 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.
The silence of the oratory was at last disturbed by the slight rustling of silk, and DâArtagnan started when he perceived the tapestry raised by a white hand, which, by its form, its color and its beauty he recognized as that royal hand which had one day been presented to him to kiss. The queen entered.
âIt is you, Monsieur dâArtagnan,â she said, fixing a gaze full of melancholy interest on the countenance of the officer, âand I know you well. Look at me well in your turn. I am the queen; do you recognize me?â
âNo, madame,â replied DâArtagnan.
âBut are you no longer aware,â continued Anne, giving that sweet expression to her voice which she could do at will, âthat 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 forgotten him, she had kept a place for him in the depths of her heart?â
âNo, madame, I was ignorant of that,â said the musketeer.
âSo much the worse, sir,â said Anne of Austria; âso much the worse, at least for the queen, for to-day she has need of the same courage and the same devotion.â
âWhat!â exclaimed DâArtagnan, âdoes the queen, surrounded as she is by such devoted servants, such wise counselors, men, in short, so great by merit or position--does she deign to cast her eyes on an obscure soldier?â
Anne understood this covert reproach 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 generosity.
âAll that you tell me of those by whom I am surrounded, Monsieur dâArtagnan, is doubtless true,â said the queen, âbut 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?â
âI will do everything your majesty commands,â replied DâArtagnan.
The queen reflected for a moment and then, seeing the cautious demeanor of the musketeer:
âPerhaps you like repose?â she said.
âI do not know, for I have never had it, madame.â
âHave you any friends?â
âI had three, two of whom have left Paris, to go I know not where. One alone is left to me, but he is one of those known, I believe, to the cavalier of whom your majesty did me the honor to speak.â
âVery good,â said the queen; âyou and your friend are worth an army.â
âWhat am I to do, madame?â
âReturn at five oâclock and I will tell you; but do not breathe to a living soul, sir, the rendezvous which I give you.â
âNo, madame.â
âSwear it upon the cross.â
âMadame, I have never been false to my word; when I say I will not do a thing, I mean it.â
The queen, although astonished at this language, to which she was not accustomed from her courtiers, argued from it a happy omen of the zeal with which DâArtagnan would serve her in the accomplishment of her project. It was one of the Gasconâs artifices to hide his deep cunning occasionally under an appearance of rough loyalty.
âHas the queen any further commands for me now?â asked DâArtagnan.
âNo, sir,â replied Anne of Austria, âand you may retire until the time that I mentioned to you.â
DâArtagnan bowed and went out.
âDiable!â he exclaimed when the door was shut, âthey seem to have the greatest need of me just now.â
Then, as the half hour had already glided by, he crossed the gallery and knocked at the cardinalâs door.
Bernouin introduced him.
âI come for your commands, my lord,â he said.
And according to his custom DâArtagnan glanced rapidly around and remarked that Mazarin had a sealed letter before him. But it was so placed on the desk that he could not see to whom it was addressed.
âYou come from the queen?â said Mazarin, looking fixedly at DâArtagnan.
âI! my lord--who told you that?â
âNobody, but I know it.â
âI regret infinitely to tell you, my lord, that you are mistaken,â replied the Gascon, impudently, firm to the promise he had just made to Anne of Austria.
âI opened the door of the ante-room myself and I saw you enter at the end of the corridor.â
âBecause I was shown up the private stairs.â
âHow so?â
âI know not; it must have been a mistake.â
Mazarin was aware that it was not easy to make DâArtagnan reveal anything he was desirous of hiding, so he gave up, for the time, the discovery of the mystery the Gascon was concealing.
âLet us speak of my affairs,â said Mazarin, âsince you will tell me naught of yours. Are you fond of traveling?â
âMy life has been passed on the high road.â
âWould anything retain you particularly in Paris?â
âNothing but an order from a superior would retain me in Paris.â
âVery well. Here is a letter, which must be taken to its address.â
âTo its address, my lord? But it has none.â
In fact, the side of the letter opposite the seal was blank.
âI must tell you,â resumed Mazarin, âthat it is in a double envelope.â
âI understand; and I am to take off the first one when I have reached a certain place?â
âJust so, take it and go. You have a friend, Monsieur du Vallon, whom I like much; let him accompany you.â
âThe devil!â said DâArtagnan to himself. âHe knows that we overheard his conversation yesterday and he wants to get us away from Paris.â
âDo you hesitate?â asked Mazarin.
âNo, my lord, and I will set out at once. There is one thing only which I must request.â
âWhat is it? Speak.â
âThat your eminence will go at once to the queen.â
âWhat for?â
âMerely to say these words: âI am going to send Monsieur dâArtagnan away and I wish him to set out directly.ââ
âI told you,â said Mazarin, âthat you had seen the queen.â
âI had the honor of saying to your eminence that there had been some mistake.â
âWhat is the meaning of that?â
âMay I venture to repeat my prayer to your eminence?â
âVery well; I will go. Wait here for me.â And looking attentively around him, to see if he had left any of his keys in his closets, Mazarin went out. Ten minutes elapsed, during which DâArtagnan made every effort to read through the first envelope what was written on the second. But he did not succeed.
Mazarin returned, pale, and evidently thoughtful. He seated himself at his desk and DâArtagnan proceeded to examine his face, as he had just examined the letter he held, but the envelope which covered his countenance appeared as impenetrable as that which covered the letter.
âAh!â thought the Gascon; âhe looks displeased. Can it be with me? He meditates. Is it about sending me to the Bastile? All very fine, my lord, but at the very first hint you give of such 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 French Brutus. It would be exceedingly droll.â
The 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.
âYou were right,â he said, âmy dear Monsieur dâArtagnan, and you cannot set out yet. I beg you to return me that dispatch.â
DâArtagnan obeyed, and Mazarin ascertained that the seal was intact.
âI shall want you this evening,â he said âReturn in two hours.â
âMy lord,â said DâArtagnan, âI have an appointment in two hours which I cannot miss.â
âDo not be uneasy,â said Mazarin; âit is the same.â
âGood!â thought DâArtagnan; âI fancied it was so.â
âReturn, then, at five oâclock and bring that worthy Monsieur du Vallon with you. Only, leave him in the ante-room, as I wish to speak to you alone.â
DâArtagnan bowed, and thought: âBoth at the same hour; both commands alike; both at the Palais Royal. Monsieur de Gondy would pay a hundred thousand francs for such a secret!â
âYou are thoughtful,â said Mazarin, uneasily.
âYes, I was thinking whether we ought to come armed or not.â
âArmed to the teeth!â replied Mazarin.
âVery well, my lord; it shall be so.â
DâArtagnan saluted, went out and hastened to repeat to his friend Mazarinâs flattering promises, which gave Porthos an indescribable happiness.
When DâArtagnan returned to the Palais Royal at five oâclock, it presented, in spite of the excitement which reigned in the town, a spectacle of the greatest rejoicing. Nor was that surprising. The queen had restored Broussel and Blancmesnil to the people and had therefore nothing to fear, since the people had nothing more just then to ask for. The return, also, of the conqueror of Lens was the pretext for giving a grand banquet. The princes and princesses were invited and their carriages had crowded the court since noon; then after dinner the queen was to have a play in her apartment. Anne of Austria had never appeared more brilliant than on that day--radiant with grace and wit. Mazarin disappeared as they rose from table. He found DâArtagnan waiting for him already at his post in the ante-room.
The cardinal advanced to him with a smile and taking him by the hand led him into his study.
âMy dear M. dâArtagnan,â said the minister, sitting down, âI am about to give you the greatest proof of confidence that a minister can give an officer.â
âI hope,â said DâArtagnan, bowing, âthat you give it, my lord, without hesitation and with the conviction that I am worthy of it.â
âMore worthy than any one in Paris my dear friend; therefore I apply to you. We are about to leave this evening,â continued Mazarin. âMy dear M. dâArtagnan, the welfare of the state is deposited in your hands.â He paused.
âExplain yourself, my lord, I am listening.â
âThe queen has resolved to make a little excursion with the king to Saint Germain.â
âAha!â said DâArtagnan, âthat is to say, the queen wishes to leave Paris.â
âA womanâs caprice--you understand.â
âYes, I understand perfectly,â said DâArtagnan.
âIt was for this she summoned you this morning and that she told you to return at five oâclock.â
âWas it worth while to wish me to swear this morning that I would mention the appointment to no one?â muttered DâArtagnan. âOh, women! women! whether queens or not, they are always the same.â
âDo you disapprove of this journey, my dear M. dâArtagnan?â asked Mazarin, anxiously.
âI, my lord?â said DâArtagnan; âwhy should I?â
âBecause you shrug your shoulders.â
âIt is a way I have of speaking to myself. I neither approve nor disapprove, my lord; I merely await your commands.â
âGood; it
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