The Three Musketeers Alexandre Dumas (best ebook reader under 100 txt) đ
- Author: Alexandre Dumas
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âWell,â said Milady, âI have not seen our Gascon this evening.â
âWhat, Milady! Has he not come?â said Kitty. âCan he be inconstant before being happy?â
âOh, no; he must have been prevented by M. de TrĂ©ville or M. des Essart. I understand my game, Kitty; I have this one safe.â
âWhat will you do with him, Madame?â
âWhat will I do with him? Be easy, Kitty, there is something between that man and me that he is quite ignorant of: he nearly made me lose my credit with his Eminence. Oh, I will be revenged!â
âI believed that Madame loved him.â
âI love him? I detest him! An idiot, who held the life of Lord de Winter in his hands and did not kill him, by which I missed three hundred thousand livresâ income.â
âThatâs true,â said Kitty; âyour son was the only heir of his uncle, and until his majority you would have had the enjoyment of his fortune.â
DâArtagnan shuddered to the marrow at hearing this suave creature reproach him, with that sharp voice which she took such pains to conceal in conversation, for not having killed a man whom he had seen load her with kindnesses.
âFor all this,â continued Milady, âI should long ago have revenged myself on him if, and I donât know why, the cardinal had not requested me to conciliate him.â
âOh, yes; but Madame has not conciliated that little woman he was so fond of.â
âWhat, the mercerâs wife of the Rue des Fossoyeurs? Has he not already forgotten she ever existed? Fine vengeance that, on my faith!â
A cold sweat broke from dâArtagnanâs brow. Why, this woman was a monster! He resumed his listening, but unfortunately the toilet was finished.
âThat will do,â said Milady; âgo into your own room, and tomorrow endeavor again to get me an answer to the letter I gave you.â
âFor M. de Wardes?â said Kitty.
âTo be sure; for M. de Wardes.â
âNow, there is one,â said Kitty, âwho appears to me quite a different sort of a man from that poor M. dâArtagnan.â
âGo to bed, mademoiselle,â said Milady; âI donât like comments.â
DâArtagnan heard the door close; then the noise of two bolts by which Milady fastened herself in. On her side, but as softly as possible, Kitty turned the key of the lock, and then dâArtagnan opened the closet door.
âOh, good Lord!â said Kitty, in a low voice, âwhat is the matter with you? How pale you are!â
âThe abominable creature,â murmured dâArtagnan.
âSilence, silence, begone!â said Kitty. âThere is nothing but a wainscot between my chamber and Miladyâs; every word that is uttered in one can be heard in the other.â
âThatâs exactly the reason I wonât go,â said dâArtagnan.
âWhat!â said Kitty, blushing.
âOr, at least, I will goâ âlater.â
He drew Kitty to him. She had the less motive to resist, resistance would make so much noise. Therefore Kitty surrendered.
It was a movement of vengeance upon Milady. DâArtagnan believed it right to say that vengeance is the pleasure of the gods. With a little more heart, he might have been contented with this new conquest; but the principal features of his character were ambition and pride. It must, however, be confessed in his justification that the first use he made of his influence over Kitty was to try and find out what had become of Madame Bonacieux; but the poor girl swore upon the crucifix to dâArtagnan that she was entirely ignorant on that head, her mistress never admitting her into half her secretsâ âonly she believed she could say she was not dead.
As to the cause which was near making Milady lose her credit with the cardinal, Kitty knew nothing about it; but this time dâArtagnan was better informed than she was. As he had seen Milady on board a vessel at the moment he was leaving England, he suspected that it was, almost without a doubt, on account of the diamond studs.
But what was clearest in all this was that the true hatred, the profound hatred, the inveterate hatred of Milady, was increased by his not having killed her brother-in-law.
DâArtagnan came the next day to Miladyâs, and finding her in a very ill-humor, had no doubt that it was lack of an answer from M. de Wardes that provoked her thus. Kitty came in, but Milady was very cross with her. The poor girl ventured a glance at dâArtagnan which said, âSee how I suffer on your account!â
Toward the end of the evening, however, the beautiful lioness became milder; she smilingly listened to the soft speeches of dâArtagnan, and even gave him her hand to kiss.
DâArtagnan departed, scarcely knowing what to think, but as he was a youth who did not easily lose his head, while continuing to pay his court to Milady, he had framed a little plan in his mind.
He found Kitty at the gate, and, as on the preceding evening, went up to her chamber. Kitty had been accused of negligence and severely scolded. Milady could not at all comprehend the silence of the Comte de Wardes, and she ordered Kitty to come at nine oâclock in the morning to take a third letter.
DâArtagnan made Kitty promise to bring him that letter on the following morning. The poor girl promised all her lover desired; she was mad.
Things passed as on the night before. DâArtagnan concealed himself in his closet; Milady called, undressed, sent away Kitty, and shut the door. As the night before, dâArtagnan did not return home till five oâclock in the morning.
At eleven oâclock Kitty came to him. She held in her hand a fresh billet from Milady. This time the poor girl did not even argue with dâArtagnan; she gave it to him at once. She belonged body and soul to her handsome soldier.
DâArtagnan opened the letter and read as follows:
This is the third time I have written to you to tell you that I love you. Beware that I do not write to you a
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