The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas (adult books to read .txt) đ
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- Author: Alexandre Dumas
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âMy faith!â replied dâArtagnan, recognizing Athos, who, after the dressing performed by the doctor, was returning to his own apartment. âI did not do it intentionally, and not doing it intentionally, I said âExcuse me.â It appears to me that this is quite enough. I repeat to you, however, and this time on my word of honorâI think perhaps too oftenâthat I am in haste, great haste. Leave your hold, then, I beg of you, and let me go where my business calls me.â
âMonsieur,â said Athos, letting him go, âyou are not polite; it is easy to perceive that you come from a distance.â
DâArtagnan had already strode down three or four stairs, but at Athosâs last remark he stopped short.
âMorbleu, monsieur!â said he, âhowever far I may come, it is not you who can give me a lesson in good manners, I warn you.â
âPerhaps,â said Athos.
âAh! If I were not in such haste, and if I were not running after someone,â said dâArtagnan.
âMonsieur Man-in-a-hurry, you can find me without runningâme, you understand?â
âAnd where, I pray you?â
âNear the Carmes-Deschaux.â
âAt what hour?â
âAbout noon.â
âAbout noon? That will do; I will be there.â
âEndeavor not to make me wait; for at quarter past twelve I will cut off your ears as you run.â
âGood!â cried dâArtagnan, âI will be there ten minutes before twelve.â And he set off running as if the devil possessed him, hoping that he might yet find the stranger, whose slow pace could not have carried him far.
But at the street gate, Porthos was talking with the soldier on guard. Between the two talkers there was just enough room for a man to pass. DâArtagnan thought it would suffice for him, and he sprang forward like a dart between them. But dâArtagnan had reckoned without the wind. As he was about to pass, the wind blew out Porthosâs long cloak, and dâArtagnan rushed straight into the middle of it. Without doubt, Porthos had reasons for not abandoning this part of his vestments, for instead of quitting his hold on the flap in his hand, he pulled it toward him, so that dâArtagnan rolled himself up in the velvet by a movement of rotation explained by the persistency of Porthos.
DâArtagnan, hearing the Musketeer swear, wished to escape from the cloak, which blinded him, and sought to find his way from under the folds of it. He was particularly anxious to avoid marring the freshness of the magnificent baldric we are acquainted with; but on timidly opening his eyes, he found himself with his nose fixed between the two shoulders of Porthosâthat is to say, exactly upon the baldric.
Alas, like most things in this world which have nothing in their favor but appearances, the baldric was glittering with gold in the front, but was nothing but simple buff behind. Vainglorious as he was, Porthos could not afford to have a baldric wholly of gold, but had at least half. One could comprehend the necessity of the cold and the urgency of the cloak.
âBless me!â cried Porthos, making strong efforts to disembarrass himself of dâArtagnan, who was wriggling about his back; âyou must be mad to run against people in this manner.â
âExcuse me,â said dâArtagnan, reappearing under the shoulder of the giant, âbut I am in such hasteâI was running after someone andââ
âAnd do you always forget your eyes when you run?â asked Porthos.
âNo,â replied dâArtagnan, piqued, âand thanks to my eyes, I can see what other people cannot see.â
Whether Porthos understood him or did not understand him, giving way to his anger, âMonsieur,â said he, âyou stand a chance of getting chastised if you rub Musketeers in this fashion.â
âChastised, Monsieur!â said dâArtagnan, âthe expression is strong.â
âIt is one that becomes a man accustomed to look his enemies in the face.â
âAh, pardieu! I know full well that you donât turn your back to yours.â
And the young man, delighted with his joke, went away laughing loudly.
Porthos foamed with rage, and made a movement to rush after dâArtagnan.
âPresently, presently,â cried the latter, âwhen you havenât your cloak on.â
âAt one oâclock, then, behind the Luxembourg.â
âVery well, at one oâclock, then,â replied dâArtagnan, turning the angle of the street.
But neither in the street he had passed through, nor in the one which his eager glance pervaded, could he see anyone; however slowly the stranger had walked, he was gone on his way, or perhaps had entered some house. DâArtagnan inquired of everyone he met with, went down to the ferry, came up again by the Rue de Seine, and the Red Cross; but nothing, absolutely nothing! This chase was, however, advantageous to him in one sense, for in proportion as the perspiration broke from his forehead, his heart began to cool.
He began to reflect upon the events that had passed; they were numerous and inauspicious. It was scarcely eleven oâclock in the morning, and yet this morning had already brought him into disgrace with M. de TrĂ©ville, who could not fail to think the manner in which dâArtagnan had left him a little cavalier.
Besides this, he had drawn upon himself two good duels with two men, each capable of killing three dâArtagnansâwith two Musketeers, in short, with two of those beings whom he esteemed so greatly that he placed them in his mind and heart above all other men.
The outlook was sad. Sure of being killed by Athos, it may easily be understood that the young man was not very uneasy about Porthos. As hope, however, is the last thing extinguished in the heart of man, he finished by hoping that he might survive, even though with terrible wounds, in both these duels; and in case of surviving, he made the following reprehensions upon his own conduct:
âWhat a madcap I was, and what a stupid fellow I am! That brave and unfortunate Athos was wounded on that very shoulder against which I must run head foremost, like a ram. The only thing that astonishes me is that he did not strike me dead at once. He had good cause to do so; the pain I gave him must have been atrocious. As to Porthosâoh, as to Porthos, faith, thatâs a droll affair!â
And in spite of himself, the young man began to laugh aloud, looking round carefully, however, to see that his solitary laugh, without a cause in the eyes of passers-by, offended no one.
âAs to Porthos, that is certainly droll; but I am not the less a giddy fool. Are people to be run against without warning? No! And have I any right to go and peep under their cloaks to see what is not there? He would have pardoned me, he would certainly have pardoned me, if I had not said anything to him about that cursed baldricâin ambiguous words, it is true, but rather drolly ambiguous. Ah, cursed Gascon that I am, I get from one hobble into another. Friend dâArtagnan,â continued he, speaking to himself with all the amenity that he thought due himself, âif you escape, of which there is not much chance, I would advise you to practice perfect politeness for the future. You must henceforth be admired and quoted as a model of it. To be obliging and polite does not necessarily make a man a coward. Look at Aramis, now; Aramis is mildness and grace personified. Well, did anybody ever dream of calling Aramis a coward? No, certainly not, and from this moment I will endeavor to model myself after him. Ah! Thatâs strange! Here he is!â
DâArtagnan, walking and soliloquizing, had arrived within a few steps of the hĂŽtel dâArguillon and in front of that hĂŽtel perceived Aramis, chatting gaily with three gentlemen; but as he had not forgotten that it was in presence of this young man that M. de TrĂ©ville had been so angry in the morning, and as a witness of the rebuke the Musketeers had received was not likely to be at all agreeable, he pretended not to see him. DâArtagnan, on the contrary, quite full of his plans of conciliation and courtesy, approached the young men with a profound bow, accompanied by a most gracious smile. All four, besides, immediately broke off their conversation.
DâArtagnan was not so dull as not to perceive that he was one too many; but he was not sufficiently broken into the fashions of the gay world to know how to extricate himself gallantly from a false position, like that of a man who begins to mingle with people he is scarcely acquainted with and in a conversation that does not concern him. He was seeking in his mind, then, for the least awkward means of retreat, when he remarked that Aramis had let his handkerchief fall, and by mistake, no doubt, had placed his foot upon it. This appeared to be a favorable opportunity to repair his intrusion. He stooped, and with the most gracious air he could assume, drew the handkerchief from under the foot of the Musketeer in spite of the efforts the latter made to detain it, and holding it out to him, said, âI believe, monsieur, that this is a handkerchief you would be sorry to lose?â
The handkerchief was indeed richly embroidered, and had a coronet and arms at one of its corners. Aramis blushed excessively, and snatched rather than took the handkerchief from the hand of the Gascon.
âAh, ah!â cried one of the Guards, âwill you persist in saying, most discreet Aramis, that you are not on good terms with Madame de Bois-Tracy, when that gracious lady has the kindness to lend you one of her handkerchiefs?â
Aramis darted at dâArtagnan one of those looks which inform a man that he has acquired a mortal enemy. Then, resuming his mild air, âYou are deceived, gentlemen,â said he, âthis handkerchief is not mine, and I cannot fancy why Monsieur has taken it into his head to offer it to me rather than to one of you; and as a proof of what I say, here is mine in my pocket.â
So saying, he pulled out his own handkerchief, likewise a very elegant handkerchief, and of fine cambricâthough cambric was dear at the periodâbut a handkerchief without embroidery and without arms, only ornamented with a single cipher, that of its proprietor.
This time dâArtagnan was not hasty. He perceived his mistake; but the friends of Aramis were not at all convinced by his denial, and one of them addressed the young Musketeer with affected seriousness. âIf it were as you pretend it is,â said he, âI should be forced, my dear Aramis, to reclaim it myself; for, as you very well know, Bois-Tracy is an intimate friend of mine, and I cannot allow the property of his wife to be sported as a trophy.â
âYou make the demand badly,â replied Aramis; âand while acknowledging the justice of your reclamation, I refuse it on account of the form.â
âThe fact is,â hazarded dâArtagnan, timidly, âI did not see the handkerchief fall from the pocket of Monsieur Aramis. He had his foot upon it, that is all; and I thought from having his foot upon it the handkerchief was his.â
âAnd you were deceived, my dear sir,â replied Aramis, coldly, very little sensible to the reparation. Then turning toward that one of the guards who had declared himself the friend of Bois-Tracy, âBesides,â continued he, âI have reflected, my dear intimate of Bois-Tracy, that I am not less tenderly his friend than you can possibly be; so that decidedly this handkerchief is as likely to have fallen from your pocket as mine.â
âNo, upon my honor!â cried his Majestyâs Guardsman.
âYou are about to swear upon your honor and I upon my word, and then it will be pretty evident that one of us will have lied. Now, here, Montaran, we will do better than thatâlet each take a half.â
âOf the handkerchief?â
âYes.â
âPerfectly just,â cried the other two Guardsmen, âthe judgment of King Solomon! Aramis, you certainly are full of wisdom!â
The young men burst into a laugh, and as may be supposed, the affair had no other sequel. In a moment or two the conversation ceased, and the three Guardsmen and the Musketeer, after having cordially shaken hands, separated, the Guardsmen going one way and Aramis another.
âNow is my time to make peace with this gallant man,â said dâArtagnan to himself, having stood on one side during the whole of the latter part of the conversation; and with this good feeling drawing near to Aramis, who was departing without
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