Essential Novelists - Alexandre Dumas. Alexandre Dumas

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said the procurator’s wife.

      “There remains the valise,” added Porthos.

      “Oh, don’t let that disturb you,” cried Mme. Coquenard. “My husband has five or six valises; you shall choose the best. There is one in particular which he prefers in his journeys, large enough to hold all the world.”

      “Your valise is then empty?” asked Porthos, with simplicity.

      “Certainly it is empty,” replied the procurator’s wife, in real innocence.

      “Ah, but the valise I want,” cried Porthos, “is a well-filled one, my dear.”

      Madame uttered fresh sighs. Moliere had not written his scene in “L’Avare” then. Mme. Coquenard was in the dilemma of Harpagan.

      Finally, the rest of the equipment was successively debated in the same manner; and the result of the sitting was that the procurator’s wife should give eight hundred livres in money, and should furnish the horse and the mule which should have the honor of carrying Porthos and Mousqueton to glory.

      These conditions being agreed to, Porthos took leave of Mme. Coquenard. The latter wished to detain him by darting certain tender glances; but Porthos urged the commands of duty, and the procurator’s wife was obliged to give place to the king.

      The Musketeer returned home hungry and in bad humor.

       33 SOUBRETTE AND MISTRESS

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      MEANTIME, AS WE HAVE said, despite the cries of his conscience and the wise counsels of Athos, d’Artagnan became hourly more in love with Milady. Thus he never failed to pay his diurnal court to her; and the self-satisfied Gascon was convinced that sooner or later she could not fail to respond.

      One day, when he arrived with his head in the air, and as light at heart as a man who awaits a shower of gold, he found the SOUBRETTE under the gateway of the hotel; but this time the pretty Kitty was not contented with touching him as he passed, she took him gently by the hand.

      “Good!” thought d’Artagnan, “She is charged with some message for me from her mistress; she is about to appoint some rendezvous of which she had not courage to speak.” And he looked down at the pretty girl with the most triumphant air imaginable.

      “I wish to say three words to you, Monsieur Chevalier,” stammered the SOUBRETTE.

      “Speak, my child, speak,” said d’Artagnan; “I listen.”

      “Here? Impossible! That which I have to say is too long, and above all, too secret.”

      “Well, what is to be done?”

      “If Monsieur Chevalier would follow me?” said Kitty, timidly.

      “Where you please, my dear child.”

      “Come, then.”

      And Kitty, who had not let go the hand of d’Artagnan, led him up a little dark, winding staircase, and after ascending about fifteen steps, opened a door.

      “Come in here, Monsieur Chevalier,” said she; “here we shall be alone, and can talk.”

      “And whose room is this, my dear child?”

      “It is mine, Monsieur Chevalier; it communicates with my mistress’s by that door. But you need not fear. She will not hear what we say; she never goes to bed before midnight.”

      D’Artagnan cast a glance around him. The little apartment was charming for its taste and neatness; but in spite of himself, his eyes were directed to that door which Kitty said led to Milady’s chamber.

      Kitty guessed what was passing in the mind of the young man, and heaved a deep sigh.

      “You love my mistress, then, very dearly, Monsieur Chevalier?” said she.

      “Oh, more than I can say, Kitty! I am mad for her!”

      Kitty breathed a second sigh.

      “Alas, monsieur,” said she, “that is too bad.”

      “What the devil do you see so bad in it?” said d’Artagnan.

      “Because, monsieur,” replied Kitty, “my mistress loves you not at all.”

      “HEIN!” said d’Artagnan, “can she have charged you to tell me so?”

      “Oh, no, monsieur; but out of the regard I have for you, I have taken the resolution to tell you so.”

      “Much obliged, my dear Kitty; but for the intention only—for the information, you must agree, is not likely to be at all agreeable.”

      “That is to say, you don’t believe what I have told you; is it not so?”

      “We have always some difficulty in believing such things, my pretty dear, were it only from self-love.”

      “Then you don’t believe me?”

      “I confess that unless you deign to give me some proof of what you advance—”

      “What do you think of this?”

      Kitty drew a little note from her bosom.

      “For me?” said d’Artagnan, seizing the letter.

      “No; for another.”

      “For another?”

      “Yes.”

      “His name; his name!” cried d’Artagnan.

      “Read the address.”

      “Monsieur El Comte de Wardes.”

      The remembrance of the scene at St. Germain presented itself to the mind of the presumptuous Gascon. As quick as thought, he tore open the letter, in spite of the cry which Kitty uttered on seeing what he was going to do, or rather, what he was doing.

      “Oh, good Lord, Monsieur Chevalier,” said she, “what are you doing?”

      “I?” said d’Artagnan; “nothing,” and he read,

      “You have not answered my first note. Are you indisposed, or have you forgotten the glances you favored me with at the ball of Mme. de Guise? You have an opportunity now, Count; do not allow it to escape.”

      d’Artagnan became very pale; he was wounded in his SELF-love: he thought that it was in his LOVE.

      “Poor dear Monsieur d’Artagnan,” said Kitty, in a voice full of compassion, and pressing anew

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