The Three Musketeers Alexandre Dumas (best ebook reader under 100 txt) đ
- Author: Alexandre Dumas
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âAdmirable!â replied the young men in chorus.
âWell,â said Porthos, âI will run to the hotel, and engage our comrades to hold themselves in readiness by eight oâclock; the rendezvous, the Place du Palais-Cardinal. Meantime, you see that the lackeys saddle the horses.â
âI have no horse,â said dâArtagnan; âbut that is of no consequence, I can take one of M. de TrĂ©villeâs.â
âThat is not worth while,â said Aramis, âyou can have one of mine.â
âOne of yours! how many have you, then?â asked dâArtagnan.
âThree,â replied Aramis, smiling.
âCertes,â cried Athos, âyou are the best-mounted poet of France or Navarre.â
âWell, my dear Aramis, you donât want three horses? I cannot comprehend what induced you to buy three!â
âTherefore I only purchased two,â said Aramis.
âThe third, then, fell from the clouds, I suppose?â
âNo, the third was brought to me this very morning by a groom out of livery, who would not tell me in whose service he was, and who said he had received orders from his master.â
âOr his mistress,â interrupted dâArtagnan.
âThat makes no difference,â said Aramis, coloring; âand who affirmed, as I said, that he had received orders from his master or mistress to place the horse in my stable, without informing me whence it came.â
âIt is only to poets that such things happen,â said Athos, gravely.
âWell, in that case, we can manage famously,â said dâArtagnan; âwhich of the two horses will you rideâ âthat which you bought or the one that was given to you?â
âThat which was given to me, assuredly. You cannot for a moment imagine, dâArtagnan, that I would commit such an offense towardâ ââ
âThe unknown giver,â interrupted dâArtagnan.
âOr the mysterious benefactress,â said Athos.
âThe one you bought will then become useless to you?â
âNearly so.â
âAnd you selected it yourself?â
âWith the greatest care. The safety of the horseman, you know, depends almost always upon the goodness of his horse.â
âWell, transfer it to me at the price it cost you?â
âI was going to make you the offer, my dear dâArtagnan, giving you all the time necessary for repaying me such a trifle.â
âHow much did it cost you?â
âEight hundred livres.â
âHere are forty double pistoles, my dear friend,â said dâArtagnan, taking the sum from his pocket; âI know that is the coin in which you were paid for your poems.â
âYou are rich, then?â said Aramis.
âRich? Richest, my dear fellow!â
And dâArtagnan chinked the remainder of his pistoles in his pocket.
âSend your saddle, then, to the hotel of the musketeers, and your horse can be brought back with ours.â
âVery well; but it is already five oâclock, so make haste.â
A quarter of an hour afterward Porthos appeared at the end of the Rue FĂ©rou on a very handsome genet. Mousqueton followed him upon an Auvergne horse, small but very handsome. Porthos was resplendent with joy and pride.
At the same time, Aramis made his appearance at the other end of the street upon a superb English charger. Bazin followed him upon a roan, holding by the halter a vigorous Mecklenburg horse; this was dâArtagnanâs mount.
The two musketeers met at the gate. Athos and dâArtagnan watched their approach from the window.
âThe devil!â cried Aramis, âyou have a magnificent horse there, Porthos.â
âYes,â replied Porthos, âit is the one that ought to have been sent to me at first. A bad joke of the husbandâs substituted the other; but the husband has been punished since, and I have obtained full satisfaction.â
Planchet and Grimaud appeared in their turn, leading their mastersâ steeds. DâArtagnan and Athos put themselves into saddle with their companions, and all four set forward; Athos upon a horse he owed to a woman, Aramis on a horse he owed to his mistress, Porthos on a horse he owed to his procuratorâs wife, and dâArtagnan on a horse he owed to his good fortuneâ âthe best mistress possible.
The lackeys followed.
As Porthos had foreseen, the cavalcade produced a good effect; and if Madame Coquenard had met Porthos and seen what a superb appearance he made upon his handsome Spanish genet, she would not have regretted the bleeding she had inflicted upon the strongbox of her husband.
Near the Louvre the four friends met with M. de Tréville, who was returning from St. Germain; he stopped them to offer his compliments upon their appointments, which in an instant drew round them a hundred gapers.
DâArtagnan profited by the circumstance to speak to M. de TrĂ©ville of the letter with the great red seal and the cardinalâs arms. It is well understood that he did not breathe a word about the other.
M. de Tréville approved of the resolution he had adopted, and assured him that if on the morrow he did not appear, he himself would undertake to find him, let him be where he might.
At this moment the clock of La Samaritaine struck six; the four friends pleaded an engagement, and took leave of M. de Tréville.
A short gallop brought them to the road of Chaillot; the day began to decline, carriages were passing and repassing. DâArtagnan, keeping at some distance from his friends, darted a scrutinizing glance into every carriage that appeared, but saw no face with which he was acquainted.
At length, after waiting a quarter of an hour and just as twilight was beginning to thicken, a carriage appeared, coming at a quick pace on the road of SĂšvres. A presentiment instantly told dâArtagnan that this carriage contained the person who had appointed the rendezvous; the young man was himself astonished to find his heart beat so violently. Almost instantly a female head was put out at the window, with two fingers placed upon her mouth, either to enjoin silence or to send him a kiss. DâArtagnan uttered a slight cry of joy; this woman, or rather this apparitionâ âfor the carriage passed with the rapidity of a visionâ âwas Madame Bonacieux.
By an involuntary movement and in spite of the injunction given, dâArtagnan put his horse into a gallop, and in a few strides overtook the carriage; but the window was hermetically closed, the vision had disappeared.
DâArtagnan then remembered the injunction: âIf you value your own
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