The Three Musketeers Alexandre Dumas (best ebook reader under 100 txt) đ
- Author: Alexandre Dumas
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The conversation took a cheerful turn. Milady appeared to have entirely recovered. She told dâArtagnan that Lord de Winter was her brother-in-law, and not her brother. She had married a younger brother of the family, who had left her a widow with one child. This child was the only heir to Lord de Winter, if Lord de Winter did not marry. All this showed dâArtagnan that there was a veil which concealed something; but he could not yet see under this veil.
In addition to this, after a half hourâs conversation dâArtagnan was convinced that Milady was his compatriot; she spoke French with an elegance and a purity that left no doubt on that head.
DâArtagnan was profuse in gallant speeches and protestations of devotion. To all the simple things which escaped our Gascon, Milady replied with a smile of kindness. The hour came for him to retire. DâArtagnan took leave of Milady, and left the saloon the happiest of men.
On the staircase he met the pretty soubrette, who brushed gently against him as she passed, and then, blushing to the eyes, asked his pardon for having touched him in a voice so sweet that the pardon was granted instantly.
DâArtagnan came again on the morrow, and was still better received than on the evening before. Lord de Winter was not at home; and it was Milady who this time did all the honors of the evening. She appeared to take a great interest in him, asked him whence he came, who were his friends, and whether he had not sometimes thought of attaching himself to the cardinal.
DâArtagnan, who, as we have said, was exceedingly prudent for a young man of twenty, then remembered his suspicions regarding Milady. He launched into a eulogy of his Eminence, and said that he should not have failed to enter into the Guards of the cardinal instead of the kingâs Guards if he had happened to know M. de Cavois instead of M. de TrĂ©ville.
Milady changed the conversation without any appearance of affectation, and asked dâArtagnan in the most careless manner possible if he had ever been in England.
DâArtagnan replied that he had been sent thither by M. de TrĂ©ville to treat for a supply of horses, and that he had brought back four as specimens.
Milady in the course of the conversation twice or thrice bit her lips; she had to deal with a Gascon who played close.
At the same hour as on the preceding evening, dâArtagnan retired. In the corridor he again met the pretty Kitty; that was the name of the soubrette. She looked at him with an expression of kindness which it was impossible to mistake; but dâArtagnan was so preoccupied by the mistress that he noticed absolutely nothing but her.
DâArtagnan came again on the morrow and the day after that, and each day Milady gave him a more gracious reception.
Every evening, either in the antechamber, the corridor, or on the stairs, he met the pretty soubrette. But, as we have said, dâArtagnan paid no attention to this persistence of poor Kitty.
XXXII A Procuratorâs DinnerHowever brilliant had been the part played by Porthos in the duel, it had not made him forget the dinner of the procuratorâs wife.
On the morrow he received the last touches of Mousquetonâs brush for an hour, and took his way toward the Rue aux Ours with the steps of a man who was doubly in favor with fortune.
His heart beat, but not like dâArtagnanâs with a young and impatient love. No; a more material interest stirred his blood. He was about at last to pass that mysterious threshold, to climb those unknown stairs by which, one by one, the old crowns of M. Coquenard had ascended. He was about to see in reality a certain coffer of which he had twenty times beheld the image in his dreamsâ âa coffer long and deep, locked, bolted, fastened in the wall; a coffer of which he had so often heard, and which the handsâ âa little wrinkled, it is true, but still not without eleganceâ âof the procuratorâs wife were about to open to his admiring looks.
And then heâ âa wanderer on the earth, a man without fortune, a man without family, a soldier accustomed to inns, cabarets, taverns, and restaurants, a lover of wine forced to depend upon chance treatsâ âwas about to partake of family meals, to enjoy the pleasures of a comfortable establishment, and to give himself up to those little attentions which âthe harder one is, the more they please,â as old soldiers say.
To come in the capacity of a cousin, and seat himself every day at a good table; to smooth the yellow, wrinkled brow of the old procurator; to pluck the clerks a little by teaching them bassette, passe-dix, and lansquenet, in their utmost nicety, and winning from them, by way of fee for the lesson he would give them in an hour, their savings of a monthâ âall this was enormously delightful to Porthos.
The musketeer could not forget the evil reports which then prevailed, and which indeed have survived them, of the procurators of the periodâ âmeanness, stinginess, fasts; but as, after all, excepting some few acts of economy which Porthos had always found very unseasonable, the procuratorâs wife had been tolerably liberalâ âthat is, be it understood, for a procuratorâs wifeâ âhe hoped to see a household of a highly comfortable kind.
And yet, at the very door the musketeer began to entertain some doubts. The approach was not such as to prepossess peopleâ âan ill-smelling, dark passage, a staircase half-lighted by bars through which stole a glimmer from a neighboring yard; on the first floor a low door studded with enormous nails, like the principal gate of the Grand ChĂątelet.
Porthos knocked with his hand. A tall, pale clerk, his face shaded by a
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