3
![011](/epubstore/D/A-Dumas/The-three-musketeers/OEBPS/bano_9781411433298_oeb_011_r1.jpg)
THE AUDIENCE
M. de Treville was at the moment in rather
ill-humor, nevertheless he saluted the young man politely, who
bowed to the very ground; and he smiled on receiving D‘Artagnan’s
response, the Béarnese accent of which recalled to him at the same
time his youth and his country—a double remembrance which makes a
man smile at all ages; but stepping toward the antechamber and
making a sign to D’Artagnan with his hand, as if to ask his
permission to finish with others before he began with him, he
called three times, with a louder voice at each time, so that he
ran through the intervening tones between the imperative accent and
the angry accent.
“Athos! Porthos! Aramis!”
The two Musketeers with whom we have already made
acquaintance, and who answered to the last two of these three
names, immediately quitted the group of which they formed a part,
and advanced toward the cabinet, the door of which closed after
them as soon as they had entered. Their appearance, although it was
not quite at ease, excited by its carelessness, at once full of
dignity and submission, the admiration of D’Artagnan, who beheld in
these two men demigods, and in their leader an Olympian Jupiter,
armed with all his thunders.
When the two Musketeers had entered; when the door
was closed behind them; when the buzzing murmur of the antechamber,
to which the summons which had been made had doubtless furnished
fresh food, had recommenced; when M. de Tréville had three or four
times paced in silence, and with a frowning brow, the whole length
of his cabinet, passing each time before Porthos and Aramis, who
were as upright and silent as if on parade—he stopped all at once
full in front of them, and covering them from head to foot with an
angry look, “Do you know what the king said to me,” cried he, “and
that no longer ago than yesterday evening—do you know,
gentlemen?”
“No,” replied the two Musketeers, after a moment’s
silence, “no, sir, we do not.”
“But I hope that you will do us the honor to tell
us,” added Aramis, in his politest tone and with the most graceful
bow.
“He told me that he should henceforth recruit his
Musketeers from among the Guards of Monsieur the Cardinal.”
“The Guards of the cardinal! and why so?” asked
Porthos, warmly.
“Because he plainly perceives that his
piquettee stands
in need of being enlivened by a mixture of good wine.”
The two Musketeers reddened to the whites of their
eyes. D’Artagnan did not know where he was, and wished himself a
hundred feet underground.
“Yes, yes,” continued M. de Tréville, growing
warmer as he spoke, “and his Majesty was right; for, upon my honor,
it is true that the Musketeers make but a miserable figure at
court. The cardinal related yesterday while playing with the king,
with an air of condolence very displeasing to me, that the day
before yesterday those damned Musketeers, those
daredevils—he dwelt upon those words with an ironical tone
still more displeasing to me—those braggarts, added he,
glancing at me with his tiger-cat’s eye, had made a riot in the Rue
Férou in a cabaret, and that a party of his Guards (I thought he
was going to laugh in my face) had been forced to arrest the
rioters. Morbleu! you must know something about it. Arrest
Musketeers! You were among them—you were! Don’t deny it; you were
recognized, and the cardinal named you. But it’s all my fault; yes,
it’s all my fault, because it is myself who selects my men. You,
Aramis, why the devil did you ask me for a uniform when you would
have been so much better in a cassock? And you, Porthos, do you
only wear such a fine golden baldric to suspend a sword of straw
from it? And Athos—I don’t see Athos. Where is he?”
“Sir,” replied Aramis, in a sorrowful tone, “he is
very ill, very ill.”
“Ill—very ill, say you? And of what malady?”
“It is feared that it may be the smallpox,f sir,”
replied Porthos, desirous of taking his turn in the conversation;
“and what is serious is that it will certainly spoil his
face.”
“The smallpox! That’s a great story to tell me,
Porthos! Sick of the smallpox at his age! No, no; but wounded
without doubt, killed, perhaps. Ah, if I knew! S’blood! Messieurs
Musketeers, I will not have this haunting of bad places, this
quarreling in the streets, this swordplay at the crossways; and
above all, I will not have occasion given for the cardinal’s
Guards, who are brave, quiet, skillful men who never put themselves
in a position to be arrested, and who, besides, never allow
themselves to be arrested, to laugh at you! I am sure of it—they
would prefer dying on the spot to being arrested or taking a back
step. To save yourselves, to scamper away, to flee—that is good for
the king’s Musketeers!”
Porthos and Aramis trembled with rage. They could
willingly have strangled M. de Tréville, if, at the bottom of all
this, they had not felt it was the great love he bore them which
made him speak thus. They stamped upon the carpet with their feet;
they bit their lips till the blood came, and grasped the hilts of
their swords with all their might. All without had heard, as we
have said, Athos, Porthos, and Aramis called, and had guessed, from
M. de Tréville’s tone of voice, that he was very angry about
something. Ten curious heads were glued to the tapestry and became
pale with fury; for their ears, closely applied to the door, did
not lose a syllable of what he said, while their mouths repeated,
as he went on, the insulting expressions of the captain to all the
people in the antechamber. In an instant, from the door of the
cabinet to the street gate, the whole hotel was boiling.
“Ah! the king’s Musketeers are arrested by the
Guards of the cardinal, are they?” continued M. de Tréville, as
furious at heart as his soldiers, but emphasizing his words and
plunging them, one by one, so to say, like so many blows of a
stiletto, into the bosoms of his auditors. “What! six of his
Eminence’s Guards arrest six of his Majesty’s Musketeers!
Morbleu! my part is taken! I will go straight to the
Louvre;g I will
give in my resignation as captain of the king’s Musketeers to take
a lieutenancy in the cardinal’s Guards, and if he refuses me,
morbleu! I will turn abbé.”
At these words, the murmur without became an
explosion; nothing was to be heard but oaths and blasphemies. The
morbleus, the sang Dieus, the morts de touts les
diables, crossed one another in the air. D’Artagnan looked for
some tapestry behind which he might hide himself, and felt an
immense inclination to crawl under the table.
“Well, my Captain,” said Porthos, quite beside
himself, “the truth is that we were six against six. But we were
not captured by fair means; and before we had time to draw our
swords, two of our party were dead, and Athos, grievously wounded,
was very little better. For you know Athos. Well, Captain, he
endeavored twice to get up, and fell again twice. And we did not
surrender—no! they dragged us away by force. On the way we escaped.
As for Athos, they believed him to be dead, and left him very quiet
on the field of battle, not thinking it worth the trouble to carry
him away. That’s the whole story. What the devil, Captain, one
cannot win all one’s battles! The great Pompey lost that of
Pharsalia; and Francis the First, who was, as I have heard say, as
good as other folks, nevertheless lost the Battle of Pavia.”
“And I have the honor of assuring you that I killed
one of them with his own sword,” said Aramis; “for mine was broken
at the first parry. Killed him, or poniarded him, sir, as is most
agreeable to you.”
“I did not know that,” replied M. de Tréville, in a
somewhat softened tone. “The cardinal exaggerated, as I
perceive.”
“But pray, sir,” continued Aramis, who, seeing his
captain become appeased, ventured to risk a prayer, “do not say
that Athos is wounded. He would be in despair if that should come
to the ears of the king; and as the wound is very serious, seeing
that after crossing the shoulder it penetrates into the chest, it
is to be feared—”
At this instant the tapestry was raised, and a
noble and handsome head, but frightfully pale, appeared under the
fringe.
“Athos!” cried the two Musketeers.
“Athos!” repeated M. de Tréville himself.
“You have sent for me, sir,” said Athos to M. de
Tréville, in a feeble yet perfectly calm voice, “you have sent for
me, as my comrades inform me, and I have hastened to receive your
orders. I am here; what do you want with me?”
And at these words the Musketeer, in irreproachable
costume, belted as usual, with a tolerably firm step, entered the
cabinet. M. de Tréville, moved to the bottom of his heart by this
proof of courage, sprang toward him.
“I was about to say to these gentlemen,” added he,
“that I forbid my Musketeers to expose their lives needlessly; for
brave men are very dear to the king, and the king knows that his
Musketeers are the bravest fellows on earth. Your hand, Athos!
”
And without waiting for the answer of the newcomer
to this proof of affection, M. de Tréville seized his right hand
and pressed it with all his might, without perceiving that Athos,
what ever might be his self-command, allowed a slight murmur of
pain to escape him, and if possible, grew paler than he was
before.
The door had remained open, so strong was the
excitement produced by the arrival of Athos, whose wound, though
kept as a secret, was known to all. A burst of satisfaction hailed
the last words of the captain; and two or three heads, carried away
by the enthusiasm of the moment, appeared through the openings of
the tapestry. M. de Tréville was about to reprehend this breach of
the rules of etiquette, when he felt the hand of Athos stiffen
within his, and upon turning his eyes toward him, perceived he was
about to faint. At the same instant Athos, who had rallied all his
energies to contend against pain, at length overcome by it, fell
upon the floor as if he were dead.
“A surgeon!” cried M. de Tréville, “mine! the
king‘s! the best! A surgeon! or, s’blood, my brave Athos will
die!”
At the cries of M. de Tréville, the whole
assemblage rushed into the cabinet, he not thinking to shut the
door against anyone, and all crowded round the wounded man. But all
this eager attention might have been useless if the doctor so
loudly called for had not chanced to be in the hotel. He pushed
through the crowd, approached Athos, still insensible, and as all
this noise and commotion inconvenienced him greatly, he required,
as the first and most urgent thing, that the Musketeer should be
carried into an adjoining chamber. Immediately M. de Tréville
opened the door and pointed the way to Porthos and Aramis, who bore
their comrade in their arms. Behind this group walked the surgeon;
and behind the surgeon the door closed.
The cabinet of M. de Tréville, generally held so
sacred, became in an instant the annex of the antechamber. Everyone
spoke, harangued, and vociferated, swearing, cursing, and
consigning the cardinal and his Guards to all the devils.
An instant after, Porthos and Aramis re-entered,
the surgeon and M. de Tréville alone remaining with the
wounded.
At length M. de Tréville himself returned. The
injured man had recovered his senses. The surgeon declared that the
situation of the Musketeer had nothing in it to render his friends
uneasy, his weakness having been purely and simply caused by loss
of blood.
Then M. de Tréville made a sign with his hand, and
all retired except D’Artagnan, who did not forget that he had an
audience, and with the tenacity of a Gascon remained in his
place.
When all had gone out and the door was closed, M.
de Tréville, on turning round, found himself alone with the young
man. The event which had occurred had in some degree broken the
thread of his ideas. He inquired what was the will of his
persevering visitor. D’Artagnan then repeated his name, and in an
instant recovering all his remembrances of the present and the
past, M. de Tréville grasped the situation.
“Pardon me,” said he, smiling, “pardon me, my dear
compatriot, but I had wholly forgotten you. But what help is there
for it! A captain is nothing but a father of a family, charged with
even a greater responsibility than the father of an ordinary
family. Soldiers are big children; but as I maintain that the
orders of the king, and more particularly the orders of the
cardinal, should be executed—”
D’Artagnan could not restrain a smile. By this
smile M. de Tréville judged that he had not to deal with a fool,
and changing the conversation, came straight to the point.
“I respected your father very much,” said he. “What
can I do for the son? Tell me quickly; my time is not my
own.”
“Monsieur,” said D’Artagnan, “on quitting Tarbes
and coming hither, it was my intention to request of you, in
remembrance of the friendship which you have not forgotten, the
uniform of a Musketeer; but after all that I have seen during the
last two hours, I comprehend that such a favor is enormous, and
tremble lest I should not merit it.”
“It is indeed a favor, young man,” replied M. de
Tréville, “but it may not be so far beyond your hopes as you
believe, or rather as you appear to believe. But his Majesty’s
decision is always necessary; and I inform you with regret that no
one becomes a Musketeer without the preliminary ordeal of several
campaigns, certain brilliant actions, or a service of two years in
some other regiment less favored than ours.”
D’Artagnan bowed without replying, feeling his
desire to don the Musketeer’s uniform vastly increased by the great
difficulties which preceded the attainment of it.
“But,” continued M. de Tréville, fixing upon his
compatriot a look so piercing that it might be said he wished to
read the thoughts of his heart, “on account of my old companion,
your father, as I have said, I will do something for you, young
man. Our recruits from Béarn are not generally very rich, and I
have no reason to think matters have much changed in this respect
since I left the province. I dare say you have not brought too
large a stock of money with you?”
D’Artagnan drew himself up with a proud air which
plainly said, “I ask alms of no man.”
“Oh, that’s all very well, young man,” continued M.
de Tréville, “that’s all very well. I know these airs; I myself
came to Paris with four crowns in my purse, and would have fought
with anyone who dared to tell me I was not in a condition to
purchase the Louvre.”
D’Artagnan’s bearing became still more imposing.
Thanks to the sale of his horse, he commenced his career with four
crowns more than M. de Tréville possessed at the commencement of
his.
“You ought, I say, then, to husband the means you
have, however large the sum may be; but you ought also to endeavor
to perfect yourself in the exercises becoming a gentleman. I will
write a letter today to the Director of the Royal Academy, and
tomorrow he will admit you without any expense to yourself. Do not
refuse this little service. Our best-born and richest gentlemen
sometimes solicit it without being able to obtain it. You will
learn horsemanship, swordsmanship in all its branches, and dancing.
You will make some desirable acquaintances; and from time to time
you can call upon me to tell you how you are getting on and to say
whether I can be of further service to you.”
D’Artagnan, stranger as he was to all the manners
of a court, could not but perceive a little coldness in this
reception.
“Alas, sir,” said he, “I cannot but perceive how
sadly I miss the letter of introduction which my father gave me to
present to you.”
“I certainly am surprised,” replied M. de Tréville,
“that you should undertake so long a journey without that necessary
passport, the sole resource of us poor Béarnese.”
“I had one, sir, and, thank God, such as I could
wish,” cried D’Artagnan; “but it was perfidiously stolen from
me.”
He then related the adventure of Meung, described
the unknown gentleman with the greatest minuteness, and all with a
warmth and truthfulness that delighted M. de Tréville.
“This is all very strange,” said M. de Tréville,
after meditating a minute; “you mentioned my name, then,
aloud?”
“Yes, sir, I certainly committed that imprudence;
but why should I have done otherwise? A name like yours must be as
a buckler to me on my way. Judge if I should not put myself under
its protection.”
Flattery was at that period very current, and M. de
Tréville loved incense as well as a king, or even a cardinal. He
could not refrain from a smile of visible satisfaction; but this
smile soon disappeared, and returning to the adventure of Meung,
“Tell me,” continued he, “had not this gentleman a slight scar on
his cheek?”
“Yes, such a one as would be made by the grazing of
a ball.”
“Was he not a fine-looking man?”
“Yes.”
“Of lofty stature?”
“Yes.”
“Of pale complexion and brown hair?”
“Yes, yes, that is he; how is it, sir, that you are
acquainted with this man? If ever I find him again—and I will find
him, I swear, were it in hell!”
“He was waiting for a woman,” continued
Tréville.
“He departed immediately after having conversed for
a minute with her whom he awaited.”
“You know not the subject of their
conversation?”
“He gave her a box, told her that that box
contained her instructions, and desired her not to open it except
in London.”
“Was this woman English?”
“He called her Milady.”
“It is he; it must be he!” murmured Tréville. “I
believed him still at Brussels.”
“Oh, sir, if you know who this man is,” cried
D‘Artagnan, “tell me who he is, and whence he is. I will then
release you from all your promises—even that of procuring my
admission into the Musketeers; for before everything, I wish to
avenge myself.”
“Beware, young man!” cried Tréville. “If you see
him coming on one side of the street, pass by on the other. Do not
cast yourself against such a rock; he would break you like
glass.”
“That will not prevent me,” replied D’Artagnan, “if
ever I find him.”
“In the meantime,” said Tréville, “seek him not—if
I have a right to advise you.”
All at once the captain stopped, as if struck by a
sudden suspicion. This great hatred which the young traveler
manifested so loudly for this man, who—a rather improbable
thing—had stolen his father’s letter from him—was there not some
perfidy concealed under this hatred? Might not this young man be
sent by his Eminence? Might he not have come for the purpose of
laying a snare for him? This pretended D‘Artagnan—was he not an
emissary of the cardinal, whom the cardinal sought to introduce
into Tréville’s house, to place near him, to win his confidence,
and afterward to ruin him as had been done in a thousand other
instances? He fixed his eyes upon D’Artagnan even more earnestly
than before. He was moderately reassured however, by the aspect of
that countenance, full of astute intelligence and affected
humility. “I know he is a Gascon,” reflected he, “but he may be one
for the cardinal as well as for me. Let us try him.”
“My friend,” said he, slowly, “I wish, as the son
of an ancient friend—for I consider this story of the lost letter
perfectly true—I wish, I say, in order to repair the coldness you
may have remarked in my reception of you, to discover to you the
secrets of our policy. The king and the cardinal are the best of
friends; their apparent bickerings are only feints to deceive
fools. I am not willing that a compatriot, a handsome cavalier, a
brave youth, quite fit to make his way, should become the dupe of
all these artifices and fall into the snare after the example of so
many others who have been ruined by it. Be assured that I am
devoted to both these all-powerful masters, and that my earnest
endeavors have no other aim than the service of the king, and also
the cardinal—one of the most illustrious geniuses that France has
ever produced.”
“Now, young man, regulate your conduct accordingly:
and if you entertain, whether from your family, your relations, or
even from your instincts, any of these enmities which we see
constantly breaking out against the cardinal, bid me adieu and let
us separate. I will aid you in many ways, but without attaching you
to my person. I hope that my frankness at least will make you my
friend; for you are the only young man to whom I have hitherto
spoken as I have done to you.”
Tréville said to himself: “If the cardinal has set
this young fox upon me, he will certainly not have failed—he, who
knows how bitterly I execrate him—to tell his spy that the best
means of making his court to me is to rail at him. Therefore, in
spite of all my protestations, if it be as I suspect, my cunning
gossip will assure me that he holds his Eminence in horror.”
It, however, proved otherwise. D’Artagnan answered,
with the greatest simplicity: “I came to Paris with exactly such
intentions. My father advised me to stoop to nobody but the king,
the cardinal, and yourself—whom he considered the first three
personages in France.”
D’Artagnan added M. de Tréville to the others, as
may be perceived; but he thought this addition would do no
harm.
“I have the greatest veneration for the cardinal,”
continued he, “and the most profound respect for his actions. So
much the better for me, sir, if you speak to me, as you say, with
frankness—for then you will do me the honor to esteem the
resemblance of our opinions; but if you have entertained any doubt,
as naturally you may, I feel that I am ruining myself by speaking
the truth. But I still trust you will not esteem me the less for
it, and that is my object beyond all others.”
M. de Tréville was surprised to the greatest
degree. So much penetration, so much frankness, created admiration,
but did not entirely remove his suspicions. The more this young man
was superior to others, the more he was to be dreaded if he meant
to deceive him. Nevertheless, he pressed D’Artagnan’s hand, and
said to him: “You are an honest youth; but at the present moment I
can only do for you that which I just now offered. My hotel will be
always open to you. Hereafter, being able to ask for me at all
hours, and consequently to take advantage of all opportunities, you
will probably obtain that which you desire.”
“That is to say,” replied D’Artagnan, “that you
will wait till I have proved myself worthy of it. Well, be
assured,” added he, with the familiarity of a Gascon, “you shall
not wait long.” And he bowed in order to retire, and as if he
considered the future in his own hands.
“But wait a minute,” said M. de Tréville, stopping
him. “I promised you a letter for the director of the Academy. Are
you too proud to accept it, young gentleman?”
“No, sir,” said D’Artagnan; “and I will answer for
it that this one shall not fare like the other. I will guard it so
carefully that I will be sworn it shall arrive at its address, and
woe be to him who shall attempt to take it from me!”
M. de Tréville smiled at this flourish; and leaving
his young compatriot in the embrasure of the window, where they had
talked together, he seated himself at a table in order to write the
promised letter of recommendation. While he was doing this,
D’Artagnan, having no better employment, amused himself with
beating a march upon the window and with looking at the Musketeers,
who went away, one after another, following them with his eyes till
they disappeared.
M. de Tréville, after having written the letter,
sealed it, and rising, approached the young man in order to give it
to him. But at the very moment when D‘Artagnan stretched out his
hand to receive it, M. de Tréville was highly astonished to see his
protégé make a sudden spring, become crimson with passion,
and rush from the cabinet, crying, “S’blood, he shall not escape me
this time! ”
“And who?” asked M. de Tréville.
“He, my thief!” replied D’Artagnan. “Ah, the
traitor!” and he disappeared.
“The devil take the madman!” murmured M. de
Tréville, “unless,” added he, “this is a cunning mode of escaping,
seeing that he has failed in his purpose!”