II
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IN WHICH THE PLOT THICKENS
His visit to M. de Tréville being paid, the
pensive D‘Artagnan took the longest way homeward. On what was
D’Artagnan thinking, that he strayed thus from his path, gazing at
the stars of heaven, and sometimes sighing, sometimes
smiling?
He was thinking of Mme. Bonacieux. For an
apprentice Musketeer the young woman was almost an ideal of love.
Pretty, mysterious, initiated in almost all the secrets of the
court, which reflected such a charming gravity over her pleasing
features, it might be surmised that she was not wholly unmoved; and
this is an irresistible charm to novices in love. Moreover,
D’Artagnan had delivered her from the hands of the demons who
wished to search and ill treat her; and this important service had
established between them one of those sentiments of gratitude which
so easily assume a more tender character.
D’Artagnan already fancied himself, so rapid is the
flight of our dreams upon the wings of imagination, accosted by a
messenger from the young woman, who brought him some billet
appointing a meeting, a gold chain, or a diamond. We have observed
that young cavaliers received presents from their king without
shame. Let us add that in these times of lax morality they had no
more delicacy with respect to their mistresses; and that the latter
almost always left them valuable and durable remembrances, as if
they essayed to conquer the fragility of their sentiments by the
solidity of their gifts.
Without a blush, men then made their way in the
world by the means of women blushing. Such as were only beautiful
gave their beauty, whence, without doubt, comes the proverb, “The
most beautiful girl in the world can only give what she has.” Such
as were rich gave in addition a part of their money; and a vast
number of heroes of that gallant period may be cited who would
neither have won their spurs in the first place, nor their battles
afterward, without the purse, more or less furnished, which their
mistress fastened to the saddle bow.
D‘Artagnan owned nothing. Provincial diffidence,
that slight varnish, the ephemeral flower, that down of the peach,
had evaporated to the winds through the little orthodox counsels
which the three Musketeers gave their friend. D’Artagnan, following
the strange custom of the times, considered himself at Paris as on
a campaign, neither more nor less than if he had been in
Flanders—Spain yonder, woman here. In each there was an enemy to
contend with, and contributions to be levied.
But, we must say, at the present moment D’Artagnan
was ruled by a feeling much more noble and disinterested. The
mercer had said that he was rich; the young man might easily guess
that with so weak a man as M. Bonacieux it must be the wife who
kept the purse key. But all this had no influence upon the feeling
produced by the sight of Mme. Bonacieux; and interest was almost
foreign to this commencement of love, which had been the
consequence of it. We say almost, for the idea that a young,
handsome, kind, and witty woman is at the same time rich, takes
nothing from the beginning of love, but on the contrary strengthens
it.
There are in affluence a crowd of aristocratic
cares and caprices which are highly becoming to beauty. A fine and
white stocking, a silken robe, a lace kerchief, a pretty slipper on
the foot, a tasty ribbon on the head, do not make an ugly woman
pretty, but they make a pretty woman beautiful, without reckoning
the hands, which gain by all this; the hands, among women
particularly, to be beautiful must be idle.
Then D‘Artagnan, as the reader, from whom we have
not concealed the state of his fortune, very well knows—D’Artagnan
was not a millionaire; he hoped to become one someday, but the time
which in his own mind he fixed upon for this happy change was still
far distant. In the meanwhile, how disheartening to see the woman
one loves long for those thousands of nothings which constitute a
woman’s happiness, and be unable to give her those thousands of
nothings. At least, when the woman is rich and the lover is not,
that which he cannot offer she offers to herself; and although it
is generally with her husband’s money that she procures herself
this indulgence, the gratitude for it seldom reverts to him.
Then D‘Artagnan, disposed to become the most tender
of lovers, was at the same time a very devoted friend. In the midst
of his amorous projects for the mercer’s wife, he did not forget
his friends. The pretty Mme. Bonacieux was just the woman to walk
with in the Plaine St. Denis or in the fair of St. Germain, in
company with Athos, Porthos, and Aramis, to whom D’Artagnan would
be so proud to display such a conquest. Then, when people walk for
any length of time they become hungry; D‘Artagnan had often
remarked this. Then one could enjoy charming little dinners, where
one touches on one side the hand of a friend, and on the other the
foot of a mistress. Besides, on pressing occasions, in extreme
difficulties, D’Artagnan would become the preserver of his
friends.
And M. Bonacieux? whom D‘Artagnan had pushed into
the hands of the officers, denying him aloud although he had
promised in a whisper to save him. We are compelled to admit to our
readers that D’Artagnan thought nothing about him in anyway; or
that if he did think of him, it was only to say to himself that he
was very well where he was, wherever it might be. Love is the most
selfish of all the passions.
Let our readers reassure themselves. If D’Artagnan
forgets his host, or appears to forget him, under the pretense of
not knowing where he has been carried, we will not forget him, and
we know where he is. But for the moment, let us do as did the
amorous Gascon; we will see after the worthy mercer later.
D‘Artagnan, reflecting on his future amours,
addressing himself to the beautiful night, and smiling at the
stars, reascended the Rue Cherche-Midi, or Chasse-Midi, as it was
then called. As he found himself in the quarter in which Aramis
lived, he took it into his head to pay his friend a visit in order
to explain the motives which had led him to send Planchet with a
request that he would come instantly to the mousetrap. Now, if
Aramis had been at home when Planchet came to his abode, he had
doubtless hastened to the Rue des Fossoyeurs, and finding nobody
there but his other two companions perhaps, they would not be able
to conceive what all this meant. This mystery required an
explanation; at least, so D’Artagnan declared to himself.
He likewise thought this was an opportunity for
talking about pretty little Mme. Bonacieux, of whom his head, if
not his heart, was already full. We must never look for discretion
in first love. First love is accompanied by such excessive joy that
unless the joy be allowed to overflow, it will stifle you.
Paris for two hours past had been dark, and seemed
a desert. Eleven o‘clock sounded from all the clocks of the
Faubourg St. Germain. It was delightful weather. D’Artagnan was
passing along a lane on the spot where the Rue d‘Assas is now
situated, breathing the balmy emanations which were borne upon the
wind from the Rue de Vaugirard, and which arose from the gardens
refreshed by the dews of evening and the breeze of night. From a
distance resounded, deadened, however, by good shutters, the songs
of the tipplers, enjoying themselves in the cabarets scattered
along the plain. Arrived at the end of the lane, D’Artagnan turned
to the left. The house in which Aramis dwelt was situated between
the Rue Cassette and the Rue Servandoni.
D‘Artagnan had just passed the Rue Cassette, and
already perceived the door of his friend’s house, shaded by a mass
of sycamores and clematis which formed a vast arch opposite the
front of it, when he perceived something like a shadow issuing from
the Rue Servandoni. This something was enveloped in a cloak, and
D’Artagnan at first believed it was a man; but by the smallness of
the form, the hesitation of the walk, and the indecision of the
step, he soon discovered that it was a woman. Further, this woman,
as if not certain of the house she was seeking, lifted up her eyes
to look around her, stopped, went backward, and then returned
again. D’Artagnan was perplexed.
“Shall I go and offer her my services?” thought he.
“By her step she must be young; perhaps she is pretty. Oh, yes! But
a woman who wanders in the streets at this hour only ventures out
to meet her lover. If I should disturb a rendezvous, that would not
be the best means of commencing an acquaintance.”
Meantime the young woman continued to advance,
counting the houses and windows. This was neither long nor
difficult. There were but three hotels in this part of the street;
and only two windows looking toward the road, one of which was in a
pavilion parallel to that which Aramis occupied, the other
belonging to Aramis himself.
“Pardieu!” said D’Artagnan to himself, to
whose mind the niece of the theologian reverted, ”pardieu,
it would be droll if this belated dove should be in search of our
friend’s house. But on my soul, it looks so. Ah, my dear Aramis,
this time I shall find you out.” And D’Artagnan, making himself as
small as he could, concealed himself in the darkest side of the
street near a stone bench placed at the back of a niche.
The young woman continued to advance; and in
addition to the lightness of her step, which had betrayed her, she
emitted a little cough which denoted a sweet voice. D’Artagnan
believed this cough to be a signal.
Nevertheless, whether this cough had been answered
by a similar signal which had fixed the irresolution of the
nocturnal seeker, or whether without this aid she saw that she had
arrived at the end of her journey, she resolutely drew near to
Aramis’s shutter, and tapped, at three equal intervals, with her
bent finger.
“This is all very fine, dear Aramis,” murmured
D’Artagnan. “Ah, Monsieur Hypocrite, I understand how you study
theology.
The three blows were scarcely struck, when the
inside blind was opened and a light appeared through the panes of
the outside shutter.
“Ah, ah!” said the listener, “not through doors,
but through windows! Ah, this visit was expected. We shall see the
windows open, and the lady enter by escalade. Very pretty!”
But to the great astonishment of D’Artagnan, the
shutter remained closed. Still more, the light which had shone for
an instant disappeared, and all was again in obscurity.
D’Artagnan thought this could not last long, and
continued to look with all his eyes and listen with all his
ears.
He was right; at the end of some seconds two sharp
taps were heard inside. The young woman in the street replied by a
single tap, and the shutter was opened a little way.
It may be judged whether D’Artagnan looked or
listened with avidity. Unfortunately the light had been removed
into another chamber; but the eyes of the young man were accustomed
to the night. Besides, the eyes of Gascons have, as it is asserted,
like those of cats, the faculty of seeing in the dark.
D’Artagnan then saw that the young woman took from
her pocket a white object, which she unfolded quickly, and which
took the form of a handkerchief. She made her interlocutor observe
the corner of this unfolded object.
This immediately recalled to D’Artagnan’s mind the
handkerchief which he had found at the feet of Mme. Bonacieux,
which had reminded him of that which he had dragged from under the
feet of Aramis.
“What the devil could that handkerchief
signify?”
Placed where he was, D’Artagnan could not perceive
the face of Aramis. We say Aramis, because the young man
entertained no doubt that it was his friend who held this dialogue
from the interior with the lady of the exterior. Curiosity
prevailed over prudence; and profiting by the preoccupation into
which the sight of the handkerchief appeared to have plunged the
two personages now on the scene, he stole from his hiding place,
and quick as lightning, but stepping with utmost caution, he ran
and placed himself close to the angle of the wall, from which his
eye could pierce the interior of Aramis’s room.
Upon gaining this advantage D‘Artagnan was near
uttering a cry of surprise; it was not Aramis who was conversing
with the nocturnal visitor, it was a woman! D’Artagnan, however,
could only see enough to recognize the form of her vestments, not
enough to distinguish her features.
At the same instant the woman inside drew a second
handkerchief from her pocket, and exchanged it for that which had
just been shown to her. Then some words were spoken by the two
women. At length the shutter closed. The woman who was outside the
window turned round, and passed within four steps of D‘Artagnan,
pulling down the hood of her mantle; but the precaution was too
late, D’Artagnan had already recognized Mme. Bonacieux.
Mme. Bonacieux! The suspicion that it was she had
crossed the mind of D’Artagnan when she drew the handkerchief from
her pocket; but what probability was there that Mme. Bonacieux, who
had sent for M. Laporte in order to be reconducted to the Louvre,
should be running about the streets of Paris at half past eleven at
night, at the risk of being abducted a second time?
This must be, then, an affair of importance; and
what is the most important affair to a woman of twenty-five!
Love.
But was it on her own account, or on account of
another, that she exposed herself to such hazards? This was a
question the young man asked himself, whom the demon of jealousy
already gnawed, being in heart neither more nor less than an
accepted lover.
There was a very simple means of satisfying himself
whither Mme. Bonacieux was going; that was to follow her. This
method was so simple that D’Artagnan employed it quite naturally
and instinctively.
But at the sight of the young man, who detached
himself from the wall like a statue walking from its niche, and at
the noise of the steps which she heard resound behind her, Mme.
Bonacieux uttered a little cry and fled.
D‘Artagnan ran after her. It was not difficult for
him to overtake a woman embarrassed with her cloak. He came up with
her before she had traversed a third of the street. The unfortunate
woman was exhausted, not by fatigue, but by terror, and when
D’Artagnan placed his hand upon her shoulder, she sank upon one
knee, crying in a choking voice, “Kill me, if you please, you shall
know nothing!”
D‘Artagnan raised her by passing his arm round her
waist; but as he felt by her weight she was on the point of
fainting, he made haste to reassure her by protestations of
devotedness. These protestations were nothing for Mme. Bonacieux,
for such protestations may be made with the worst intentions in the
world; but the voice was all. Mme. Bonacieux thought she recognized
the sound of that voice; she reopened her eyes, cast a quick glance
upon the man who had terrified her so, and at once perceiving it
was D’Artagnan, she uttered a cry of joy, “Oh, it is you, it is
you! Thank God, thank God!”
“Yes, it is I,” said D’Artagnan, “it is I, whom God
has sent to watch over you.”
“Was it with that intention you followed me?” asked
the young woman, with a coquettish smile, whose somewhat bantering
character resumed its influence, and with whom all fear had
disappeared from the moment in which she recognized a friend in one
she had taken for an enemy.
“No,” said D’Artagnan; “no, I confess it. It was
chance that threw me in your way; I saw a woman knocking at the
window of one of my friends.”
“Of one of your friends?” interrupted Mme.
Bonacieux.
“Without doubt; Aramis is one of my best
friends.”
“Aramis! Who is he?”
“Come, come, you won’t tell me you don’t know
Aramis?”
“This is the first time I ever heard his name
pronounced.”
“It is the first time, then, that you ever went to
that house?”
“Undoubtedly.”
“And you did not know that it was inhabited by a
young man?”
“No.”
“By a Musketeer?”
“No, indeed!”
“It was not he, then, you came to seek?”
“Not the least in the world. Besides, you must have
seen that the person to whom I spoke was a woman.”
“That is true; but this woman is a friend of
Aramis—”
“I know nothing of that.”
“—since she lodges with him.”
“That does not concern me.”
“But who is she?”
“Oh, that is not my secret.”
“My dear Madame Bonacieux, you are charming; but at
the same time you are one of the most mysterious women.”
“Do I lose by that?”
“No; you are, on the contrary, adorable.”
“Give me your arm, then.”
“Most willingly. And now?”
“Now escort me.”
“Where?”
“Where I am going.”
“But where are you going?”
“You will see, because you will leave me at the
door.”
“Shall I wait for you?”
“That will be useless.”
“You will return alone, then?”
“Perhaps yes, perhaps no.”
“But will the person who shall accompany you
afterward be a man or a woman?”
“I don’t know yet.”
“But I will know it!”
“How so?”
“I will wait till you come out.”
“In that case, adieu.”
“Why so?”
“I do not want you.”
“But you have claimed—”
“The aid of a gentleman, not the watchfulness of a
spy.”
“The word is rather hard.”
“How are they called who follow others in spite of
them?”
“They are indiscreet.”
“The word is too mild.”
“Well, madame, I perceive I must do as you
wish.”
“Why did you deprive yourself of the merit of doing
so at once?”
“Is there no merit in repentance?”
“And you do really repent?”
“I know nothing about it myself. But what I know is
that I promise to do all you wish if you will allow me to accompany
you where you are going.”
“And you will leave me then?”
“Yes.”
“Without waiting for my coming out again?”
“Yes.”
“Word of honor?”
“By the faith of a gentleman. Take my arm, and let
us go.” D’Artagnan offered his arm to Mme. Bonacieux, who willingly
took it, half laughing, half trembling, and both gained the top of
Rue de la Harpe. Arriving there, the young woman seemed to
hesitate, as she had before done in the Rue Vaugirard. She seemed,
however, by certain signs, to recognize a door, and approaching
that door, “And now, monsieur,” said she, “it is here I have
business; a thousand thanks for your honorable company, which has
saved me from all the dangers to which, alone, I was exposed. But
the moment is come to keep your word; I have reached my
destination.”
“And you will have nothing to fear on your
return?”
“I shall have nothing to fear but robbers.”
“And is that nothing?” “What could they take from
me? I have not a penny about me.”
“You forget that beautiful handkerchief with the
coat of arms.
“Which?”
“That which I found at your feet, and replaced in
your pocket.”
“Hold your tongue, imprudent man! Do you wish to
destroy me?”
“You see very plainly that there is still danger
for you, since a single word makes you tremble; and you confess
that if that word were heard you would be ruined. Come, come,
madame!” cried D’Artagnan, seizing her hands, and surveying her
with an ardent glance, “come, be more generous. Confide in me. Have
you not read in my eyes that there is nothing but devotion and
sympathy in my heart?”
“Yes,” replied Mme. Bonacieux; “therefore, ask my
own secrets, and I will reveal them to you; but those of
others—that is quite another thing.”
“Very well,” said D’Artagnan, “I shall discover
them; as these secrets may have an influence over your life, these
secrets must become mine.”
“Beware of what you do!” cried the young woman, in
a manner so serious as to make D’Artagnan start in spite of
himself. “Oh, meddle in nothing which concerns me. Do not seek to
assist me in that which I am accomplishing. This I ask of you in
the name of the interest with which I inspire you, in the name of
the service you have rendered me and which I never shall forget
while I have life. Rather, place faith in what I tell you. Have no
more concern about me; I exist no longer for you, any more than if
you had never seen me.”
“Must Aramis do as much as I, madame?” said
D’Artagnan, deeply piqued.
“This is the second or third time, monsieur, that
you have repeated that name, and yet I have told you that I do not
know him.”
“You do not know the man at whose shutter you have
just knocked? Indeed, madame, you believe me too credulous!”
“Confess that it is for the sake of making me talk
that you invent this story and create this personage.”
“I invent nothing, madame; I create nothing. I only
speak the exact truth.”
“And you say that one of your friends lives in that
house?”
“I say so, and I repeat it for the third time; that
house is one inhabited by my friend, and that friend is
Aramis.”
“All this will be cleared up at a later period,”
murmured the young woman; “no, monsieur, be silent.”
“If you could see my heart,” said D’Artagnan, “you
would there read so much curiosity that you would pity me, and so
much love that you would instantly satisfy my curiosity. We have
nothing to fear from those who love us.”
“You speak very suddenly of love, monsieur,” said
the young woman, shaking her head.
“That is because love has come suddenly upon me,
and for the first time; and because I am only twenty.”
The young woman looked at him furtively.
“Listen; I am already upon the scent,” resumed
D’Artagnan. “About three months ago I was near having a duel with
Aramis concerning a handkerchief resembling the one you showed to
the woman in his house—for a handkerchief marked in the same
manner, I am sure.”
“Monsieur,” said the young woman, “you weary me
very much, I assure you, with your questions.”
“But you, madame, prudent as you are, think, if you
were to be arrested with that handkerchief, and that handkerchief
were to be seized, would you not be compromised?”
“In what way? The initials are only mine—C. B.,
Constance Bonacieux.”
“Or Camille de Bois-Tracy.”
“Silence, monsieur! once again, silence! Ah, since
the dangers I incur on my own account cannot stop you, think of
those you may yourself run!”
“Me?”
“Yes; there is peril of imprisonment, risk of life
in knowing me.”
“Then I will not leave you.”
“Monsieur!” said the young woman, supplicating him
and clasping her hands together, “monsieur, in the name of heaven,
by the honor of a soldier, by the courtesy of a gentleman, depart!
There, there midnight sounds! That is the hour when I am
expected.”
“Madame,” said the young man, bowing; “I can refuse
nothing asked of me thus. Be content; I will depart.”
“But you will not follow me; you will not watch
me?”
“I will return home instantly.”
“Ah, I was quite sure you were a good and brave
young man,” said Mme. Bonacieux, holding out her hand to him, and
placing the other upon the knocker of a little door almost hidden
in the wall.
D’Artagnan seized the hand held out to him, and
kissed it ardently.
“Ah! I wish I had never seen you!” cried
D’Artagnan, with that ingenuous roughness which women often prefer
to the affectations of politeness, because it betrays the depths of
the thought and proves that feeling prevails over reason.
“Well!” resumed Mme. Bonacieux, in a voice almost
caressing, and pressing the hand of D’Artagnan, who had not
relinquished hers, “well: I will not say as much as you do; what is
lost for today may not be lost forever. Who knows, when I shall be
at liberty, that I may not satisfy your curiosity?”
“And will you make the same promise to my love?”
cried D’Artagnan, beside himself with joy.
“Oh, as to that, I do not engage myself. That
depends upon the sentiments with which you may inspire me.”
“Then today, madame—”
“Oh, today, I am no further than gratitude.”
“Ah! you are too charming,” said D’Artagnan,
sorrowfully; “and you abuse my love.”
“No, I use your generosity, that’s all. But be of
good cheer; with certain people, everything comes round.”
“Oh, you render me the happiest of men! Do not
forget this evening—do not forget that promise.”
“Be satisfied. In the proper time and place I will
remember everything. Now then, go, go, in the name of heaven! I was
expected at sharp midnight, and I am late.”
“By five minutes.”
“Yes; but in certain circumstances five minutes are
five ages.”
“When one loves.”
“Well! and who told you I had no affair with a
lover?”
“It is a man, then, who expects you?” cried
D’Artagnan. “A man!”
“The discussion is going to begin again!” said Mme.
Bonacieux, with a half-smile which was not exempt from a tinge of
impatience.
“No, no; I go, I depart! I believe in you, and I
would have all the merit of my devotion, even if that devotion were
stupidity. Adieu, madame, adieu!”
And as if he only felt strength to detach himself
by a violent effort from the hand he held, he sprang away, running,
while Mme. Bonacieux knocked, as at the shutter, three light and
regular taps. When he had gained the angle of the street, he
turned. The door had been opened, and shut again; the mercer’s
pretty wife had disappeared.
D‘Artagnan pursued his way. He had given his word
not to watch Mme. Bonacieux, and if his life had depended upon the
spot to which she was going or upon the person who should accompany
her, D’Artagnan would have returned home, since he had so promised.
Five minutes later he was in the Rue des Fossoyeurs.
“Poor Athos!” said he; “he will never guess what
all this means. He will have fallen asleep waiting for me, or else
he will have returned home, where he will have learned that a woman
had been there. A woman with Athos! After all,” continued
D’Artagnan, “there was certainly one with Aramis. All this is very
strange; and I am curious to know how it will end.”
“Badly, monsieur, badly!” replied a voice which the
young man recognized as that of Planchet; for, soliloquizing aloud,
as very preoccupied people do, he had entered the alley, at the end
of which were the stairs which led to his chamber.
“How, badly? What do you mean by that, you idiot?”
asked D’Artagnan. “What has happened?”
“All sorts of misfortunes.”
“What?”
“In the first place, Monsieur Athos is
arrested.”
“Arrested! Athos arrested! What for?”
“He was found in your lodging; they took him for
you.”
“And by whom was he arrested?”
“By Guards brought by the men in black whom you put
to flight.”
“Why did he not tell them his name? Why did he not
tell them he knew nothing about this affair?”
“He took care not to do so, monsieur; on the
contrary, he came up to me and said, ‘It is your master that needs
his liberty at this moment and not I, since he knows everything and
I know nothing. They will believe he is arrested, and that will
give him time; in three days I will tell them who I am, and they
cannot fail to let me go.’ ”
“Bravo, Athos! noble heart!” murmured D’Artagnan.
“I know him well there! And what did the officers do?”
“Four conveyed him away, I don’t know where—to the
Bastille or Fort l’Evêque. Two remained with the men in black, who
rummaged every place and took all the papers. The last two mounted
guard at the door during this examination; then, when all was over,
they went away, leaving the house empty and exposed.”
“And Porthos and Aramis?”
“I could not find them; they did not come.”
“But they may come any moment, for you left word
that I awaited them?”
“Yes, monsieur.”
“Well, don’t budge, then; if they come, tell them
what has happened. Let them wait for me at the Pomme-de-Pin. Here
it would be dangerous; the house may be watched. I will run to
Monsieur de Tréville to tell him all this, and will meet them
there.”
“Very well, monsieur,” said Planchet.
“But you will remain; you are not afraid?” said
D’Artagnan, coming back to recommend courage to his lackey.
“Be easy, monsieur,” said Planchet; “you do not
know me yet. I am brave when I set about it. It is all in
beginning. Besides, I am a Picard.”
“Then it is understood,” said D’Artagnan; “you
would rather be killed than desert your post?”
“Yes, monsieur; and there is nothing I would not do
to prove to Monsieur that I am attached to him.”
“Good!” said D’Artagnan to himself. “It appears
that the method I have adopted with this boy is decidedly the best.
I shall use it again upon occasion.”
And with all the swiftness of his legs, already a
little fatigued, however, with the perambulations of the day,
D’Artagnan directed his course toward M. de Tréville’s.
M. de Tréville was not at his hotel. His company
was on guard at the Louvre; he was at the Louvre with his
company
It was necessary to reach M. de Tréville; it was
important that be should be informed of what was passing.
D’Artagnan resolved to try and enter the Louvre. His costume of
Guardsman in the company of M. Dessessart ought to be his
passport.
He therefore went down the Rue des Petits
Augustins, and came up to the quay, in order to take the New
Bridge. He had at first an idea of crossing by the ferry; but on
gaining the riverside, he had mechanically put his hand into his
pocket, and perceived that he had not wherewithal to pay his
passage.
As he gained the top of the Rue Guénegaud, he saw
two persons coming out of the Rue Dauphine whose appearance very
much struck him. Of the two persons who composed this group, one
was a man and the other a woman. The woman had the outline of Mme.
Bonacieux; the man resembled Aramis so much as to be mistaken for
him.
Besides, the woman wore that black mantle which
D’Artagnan could still see outlined on the shutter of the Rue de
Vaugirard and on the door of the Rue de la Harpe; still further,
the man wore the uniform of a Musketeer.
The woman’s hood was pulled down, and the man held
a handkerchief to his face. Both, as this double precaution
indicated, had an interest in not being recognized.
They took the bridge. That was D‘Artagnan’s road,
as he was going to the Louvre. D’Artagnan followed them.
He had not gone twenty steps before he became
convinced that the woman was really Mme. Bonacieux and that the man
was Aramis.
He felt at that instant all the suspicions of
jealousy agitating his heart. He felt himself doubly betrayed, by
his friend and by her whom he already loved like a mistress. Mme.
Bonacieux had declared to him, by all the gods, that she did not
know Aramis; and a quarter of an hour after having made this
assertion, he found her hanging on the arm of Aramis.
D’Artagnan did not reflect that he had only known
the mercer’s pretty wife for three hours; that she owed him nothing
but a little gratitude for having delivered her from the men in
black, who wished to carry her off, and that she had promised him
nothing. He considered himself an outraged, betrayed, and ridiculed
lover. Blood and anger mounted to his face; he was resolved to
unravel the mystery.
The young man and young woman perceived they were
watched, and redoubled their speed. D’Artagnan determined upon his
course. He passed them, then returned so as to meet them exactly
before the Samaritaine, which was illuminated by a lamp which threw
its light over all that part of the bridge.
D’Artagnan stopped before them, and they stopped
before him.
“What do you want, monsieur?” demanded the
Musketeer, recoiling a step, and with a foreign accent, which
proved to D’Artagnan that he was deceived in one of his
conjectures.
“It is not Aramis!” cried he.
“No, monsieur, it is not Aramis; and by your
exclamation I perceive you have mistaken me for another, and pardon
you.”
“You pardon me?” cried D’Artagnan.
“Yes,” replied the stranger. “Allow me, then, to
pass on, since it is not with me you have anything to do.”
“You are right, monsieur, it is not with you that I
have anything to do; it is with Madame.”
“With Madame! You do not know her,” replied the
stranger.
“You are deceived, monsieur; I know her very
well.”
“Ah,” said Mme. Bonacieux, in a tone of reproach,
“ah, monsieur, I had your promise as a soldier and your word as a
gentleman. I hoped to be able to rely upon that.”
“And I, madame!” said D’Artagnan, embarrassed; “you
promised me—”
“Take my arm, madame,” said the stranger, “and let
us continue our way.”
D’Artagnan, however, stupefied, cast down,
annihilated by all that happened, stood, with crossed arms, before
the Musketeer and Mme. Bonacieux.
The Musketeer advanced two steps, and pushed
D‘Artagnan aside with his hand. D’Artagnan made a spring backward
and drew his sword. At the same time, and with the rapidity of
lightning, the stranger drew his.
“In the name of heaven, my Lord!” cried Mme.
Bonacieux, throwing herself between the combatants and seizing the
swords with her hands.
“My Lord!” cried D’Artagnan, enlightened by a
sudden idea, “my Lord! Pardon me, monsieur, but are you not—”
“My Lord the Duke of Buckingham,” said Mme.
Bonacieux, in an undertone; “and now you may ruin us all.”
“My Lord, madame, I ask a hundred pardons! but I
love her, my Lord, and was jealous. You know what it is to love, my
Lord. Pardon me, and then tell me how I can risk my life to serve
your Grace?”
“You are a brave young man,” said Buckingham,
holding out his hand to D’Artagnan, who pressed it respectfully.
“You offer me your services; with the same frankness I accept them.
Follow us at a distance of twenty paces, as far as the Louvre, and
if anyone watches us, slay him!”
D’Artagnan placed his naked sword under his arm,
allowed the duke and Mme. Bonacieux to take twenty steps ahead, and
then followed them, ready to execute the instructions of the noble
and elegant minister of Charles I.
Fortunately, he had no opportunity to give the duke
this proof of his devotion, and the young woman and the handsome
Musketeer entered the Louvre by the wicket of the Échelle without
any interference.
As for D’Artagnan, he immediately repaired to the
cabaret of the Pomme-de-Pin, where he found Porthos and Aramis
awaiting him. Without giving them any explanation of the alarm and
inconvenience he had caused them, he told them that he had
terminated the affair alone in which he had for a moment believed
he should need their assistance.
Meanwhile, carried away as we are by our narrative,
we must leave our three friends to themselves, and follow the Duke
of Buckingham and his guide through the labyrinths of the
Louvre.