The Three Musketeers Alexandre Dumas (best ebook reader under 100 txt) đ
- Author: Alexandre Dumas
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His interlocutor, whose head appeared through the carriage window, was a woman of from twenty to two-and-twenty years. We have already observed with what rapidity dâArtagnan seized the expression of a countenance. He perceived then, at a glance, that this woman was young and beautiful; and her style of beauty struck him more forcibly from its being totally different from that of the southern countries in which dâArtagnan had hitherto resided. She was pale and fair, with long curls falling in profusion over her shoulders, had large, blue, languishing eyes, rosy lips, and hands of alabaster. She was talking with great animation with the stranger.
âHis Eminence, then, orders meâ ââ said the lady.
âTo return instantly to England, and to inform him as soon as the duke leaves London.â
âAnd as to my other instructions?â asked the fair traveler.
âThey are contained in this box, which you will not open until you are on the other side of the Channel.â
âVery well; and youâ âwhat will you do?â
âIâ âI return to Paris.â
âWhat, without chastising this insolent boy?â asked the lady.
The stranger was about to reply; but at the moment he opened his mouth, dâArtagnan, who had heard all, precipitated himself over the threshold of the door.
âThis insolent boy chastises others,â cried he; âand I hope that this time he whom he ought to chastise will not escape him as before.â
âWill not escape him?â replied the stranger, knitting his brow.
âNo; before a woman you would dare not fly, I presume?â
âRemember,â said Milady, seeing the stranger lay his hand on his sword, âthe least delay may ruin everything.â
âYou are right,â cried the gentleman; âbegone then, on your part, and I will depart as quickly on mine.â And bowing to the lady, he sprang into his saddle, while her coachman applied his whip vigorously to his horses. The two interlocutors thus separated, taking opposite directions, at full gallop.
âPay him, booby!â cried the stranger to his servant, without checking the speed of his horse; and the man, after throwing two or three silver pieces at the foot of mine host, galloped after his master.
âBase coward! false gentleman!â cried dâArtagnan, springing forward, in his turn, after the servant. But his wound had rendered him too weak to support such an exertion. Scarcely had he gone ten steps when his ears began to tingle, a faintness seized him, a cloud of blood passed over his eyes, and he fell in the middle of the street, crying still, âCoward! coward! coward!â
âHe is a coward, indeed,â grumbled the host, drawing near to dâArtagnan, and endeavoring by this little flattery to make up matters with the young man, as the heron of the fable did with the snail he had despised the evening before.
âYes, a base coward,â murmured dâArtagnan; âbut sheâ âshe was very beautiful.â
âWhat she?â demanded the host.
âMilady,â faltered dâArtagnan, and fainted a second time.
âAh, itâs all one,â said the host; âI have lost two customers, but this one remains, of whom I am pretty certain for some days to come. There will be eleven crowns gained.â
It is to be remembered that eleven crowns was just the sum that remained in dâArtagnanâs purse.
The host had reckoned upon eleven days of confinement at a crown a day, but he had reckoned without his guest. On the following morning at five oâclock dâArtagnan arose, and descending to the kitchen without help, asked, among other ingredients the list of which has not come down to us, for some oil, some wine, and some rosemary, and with his motherâs recipe in his hand composed a balsam, with which he anointed his numerous wounds, replacing his bandages himself, and positively refusing the assistance of any doctor, dâArtagnan walked about that same evening, and was almost cured by the morrow.
But when the time came to pay for his rosemary, this oil, and the wine, the only expense the master had incurred, as he had preserved a strict abstinenceâ âwhile on the contrary, the yellow horse, by the account of the hostler at least, had eaten three times as much as a horse of his size could reasonably be supposed to have doneâ âdâArtagnan found nothing in his pocket but his little old velvet purse with the eleven crowns it contained; for as to the letter addressed to M. de TrĂ©ville, it had disappeared.
The young man commenced his search for the letter with the greatest patience, turning out his pockets of all kinds over and over again, rummaging and rerummaging in his valise, and opening and reopening his purse; but when he found that he had come to the conviction that the letter was not to be found, he flew, for the third time, into such a rage as was near costing him a fresh consumption of wine, oil, and rosemaryâ âfor upon seeing this hotheaded youth become exasperated and threaten to destroy everything in the establishment if his letter were not found, the host seized a spit, his wife a broom handle, and the servants the same sticks they had used the day before.
âMy letter of recommendation!â cried dâArtagnan, âmy letter of recommendation! or, the holy blood, I will spit you all like ortolans!â
Unfortunately, there was one circumstance which created a powerful obstacle to the accomplishment of this threat; which was, as we have related, that his sword had been in his first conflict broken in two,
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