The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (best book club books .TXT) π
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Edmond DantΓ¨s is a young man about to be made captain of a cargo vessel and marry his sweetheart. But he is arrested at his pre-wedding feast, having been falsely accused of being a Bonapartist. Thrown into the notorious ChΓ’teau dβIf prison, he eventually meets an ancient inmate who teaches him language, science, and passes hints of a hidden fortune. When Edmond makes his way out of prison, he plots to reward those who stood by him (his old employer, for one), and to seek revenge on the men who betrayed him: one who wrote the letter that denounced him, one that married his fiancΓ©e in his absence, and one who knew DantΓ¨s was innocent but stood idly by and did nothing.
The Count of Monte Cristo is another of Alexandre Dumasβ thrilling adventure stories, possibly more popular even than The Three Musketeers. Originally serialized in a French newspaper over the course of a year-and-a-half, it was enormously popular after its publication in book form, and has never been out of print since. Its timeless story of adventure, historical drama, romance, revenge, and Eastern mystery has been the source of over forty movies and TV series.
Read free book Β«The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (best book club books .TXT) πΒ» - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Alexandre Dumas
Read book online Β«The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (best book club books .TXT) πΒ». Author - Alexandre Dumas
βIt was the end of November, all the verdure of the garden had disappeared, the trees were nothing more than skeletons with their long bony arms, and the dead leaves sounded on the gravel under my feet. My terror overcame me to such a degree as I approached the thicket, that I took a pistol from my pocket and armed myself. I fancied continually that I saw the figure of the Corsican between the branches. I examined the thicket with my dark lantern; it was empty. I looked carefully around; I was indeed aloneβ βno noise disturbed the silence but the owl, whose piercing cry seemed to be calling up the phantoms of the night. I tied my lantern to a forked branch I had noticed a year before at the precise spot where I stopped to dig the hole.
βThe grass had grown very thickly there during the summer, and when autumn arrived no one had been there to mow it. Still one place where the grass was thin attracted my attention; it evidently was there I had turned up the ground. I went to work. The hour, then, for which I had been waiting during the last year had at length arrived. How I worked, how I hoped, how I struck every piece of turf, thinking to find some resistance to my spade! But no, I found nothing, though I had made a hole twice as large as the first. I thought I had been deceivedβ βhad mistaken the spot. I turned around, I looked at the trees, I tried to recall the details which had struck me at the time. A cold, sharp wind whistled through the leafless branches, and yet the drops fell from my forehead. I recollected that I was stabbed just as I was trampling the ground to fill up the hole; while doing so I had leaned against a laburnum; behind me was an artificial rockery, intended to serve as a resting-place for persons walking in the garden; in falling, my hand, relaxing its hold of the laburnum, felt the coldness of the stone. On my right I saw the tree, behind me the rock. I stood in the same attitude, and threw myself down. I rose, and again began digging and enlarging the hole; still I found nothing, nothingβ βthe chest was no longer there!β
βThe chest no longer there?β murmured Madame Danglars, choking with fear.
βThink not I contented myself with this one effort,β continued Villefort. βNo; I searched the whole thicket. I thought the assassin, having discovered the chest, and supposing it to be a treasure, had intended carrying it off, but, perceiving his error, had dug another hole, and deposited it there; but I could find nothing. Then the idea struck me that he had not taken these precautions, and had simply thrown it in a corner. In the last case I must wait for daylight to renew my search. I remained in the room and waited.β
βOh, Heaven!β
βWhen daylight dawned I went down again. My first visit was to the thicket. I hoped to find some traces which had escaped me in the darkness. I had turned up the earth over a surface of more than twenty feet square, and a depth of two feet. A laborer would not have done in a day what occupied me an hour. But I could find nothingβ βabsolutely nothing. Then I renewed the search. Supposing it had been thrown aside, it would probably be on the path which led to the little gate; but this examination was as useless as the first, and with a bursting heart I returned to the thicket, which now contained no hope for me.β
βOh,β cried Madame Danglars, βit was enough to drive you mad!β
βI hoped for a moment that it might,β said Villefort; βbut that happiness was denied me. However, recovering my strength and my ideas, βWhy,β said I, βshould that man have carried away the corpse?βββ
βBut you said,β replied Madame Danglars, βhe would require it as a proof.β
βAh, no, madame, that could not be. Dead bodies are not kept a year; they are shown to a magistrate, and the evidence is taken. Now, nothing of the kind has happened.β
βWhat then?β asked Hermine, trembling violently.
βSomething more terrible, more fatal, more alarming for usβ βthe child was, perhaps, alive, and the assassin may have saved it!β
Madame Danglars uttered a piercing cry, and, seizing Villefortβs hands, exclaimed, βMy child was alive?β said she; βyou buried my child alive? You were not certain my child was dead, and you buried it? Ahβ ββ
Madame Danglars had risen, and stood before the procureur, whose hands she wrung in her feeble grasp.
βI know not; I merely suppose so, as I might suppose anything else,β replied Villefort with a look so fixed, it indicated that his powerful mind was on the verge of despair and madness.
βAh, my child, my poor child!β cried the baroness, falling on her chair, and stifling her sobs in her handkerchief. Villefort, becoming somewhat reassured, perceived that to avert the maternal storm gathering over his head, he must inspire Madame Danglars with the terror he felt.
βYou understand, then, that if it were so,β said he, rising in his turn, and approaching the baroness, to speak to her in a lower tone, βwe are lost. This child lives, and someone knows it livesβ βsomeone is in possession of our secret; and since Monte Cristo speaks before us of a child disinterred, when that child could not be found, it is he who is in possession of our secret.β
βJust God, avenging God!β murmured Madame Danglars.
Villefortβs only answer was a stifled groan.
βBut the childβ βthe child, sir?β repeated the agitated mother.
βHow I have searched for him,β replied Villefort, wringing his hands; βhow I have called him in my long sleepless nights; how I
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