Essential Novelists - Alexandre Dumas. Alexandre Dumas

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sent you wine?”

      “You know very well—the wine from the hills of Anjou.”

      “Yes, I know what brand you are talking about.”

      “The wine you prefer.”

      “Well, in the absence of champagne and chambertin, you must content yourselves with that.”

      “And so, connoisseurs in wine as we are, we have sent you some Anjou wine?” said Porthos.

      “Not exactly, it is the wine that was sent by your order.”

      “On our account?” said the three Musketeers.

      “Did you send this wine, Aramis?” said Athos.

      “No; and you, Porthos?”

      “No; and you, Athos?”

      “No!”

      “If it was not you, it was your purveyor,” said d’Artagnan.

      “Our purveyor!”

      “Yes, your purveyor, Godeau—the purveyor of the Musketeers.”

      “My faith! never mind where it comes from,” said Porthos, “let us taste it, and if it is good, let us drink it.”

      “No,” said Athos; “don’t let us drink wine which comes from an unknown source.”

      “You are right, Athos,” said d’Artagnan. “Did none of you charge your purveyor, Godeau, to send me some wine?”

      “No! And yet you say he has sent you some as from us?”

      “Here is his letter,” said d’Artagnan, and he presented the note to his comrades.

      “This is not his writing!” said Athos. “I am acquainted with it; before we left Villeroy I settled the accounts of the regiment.”

      “A false letter altogether,” said Porthos, “we have not been disciplined.”

      “d’Artagnan,” said Aramis, in a reproachful tone, “how could you believe that we had made a disturbance?”

      D’Artagnan grew pale, and a convulsive trembling shook all his limbs.

      “Thou alarmest me!” said Athos, who never used thee and thou but upon very particular occasions, “what has happened?”

      “Look you, my friends!” cried d’Artagnan, “a horrible suspicion crosses my mind! Can this be another vengeance of that woman?”

      It was now Athos who turned pale.

      D’Artagnan rushed toward the refreshment room, the three Musketeers and the two Guards following him.

      The first object that met the eyes of d’Artagnan on entering the room was Brisemont, stretched upon the ground and rolling in horrible convulsions.

      Planchet and Fourreau, as pale as death, were trying to give him succor; but it was plain that all assistance was useless—all the features of the dying man were distorted with agony.

      “Ah!” cried he, on perceiving d’Artagnan, “ah! this is frightful! You pretend to pardon me, and you poison me!”

      “I!” cried d’Artagnan. “I, wretch? What do you say?”

      “I say that it was you who gave me the wine; I say that it was you who desired me to drink it. I say you wished to avenge yourself on me, and I say that it is horrible!”

      “Do not think so, Brisemont,” said d’Artagnan; “do not think so. I swear to you, I protest—”

      “Oh, but God is above! God will punish you! My God, grant that he may one day suffer what I suffer!”

      “Upon the Gospel,” said d’Artagnan, throwing himself down by the dying man, “I swear to you that the wine was poisoned and that I was going to drink of it as you did.”

      “I do not believe you,” cried the soldier, and he expired amid horrible tortures.

      “Frightful! frightful!” murmured Athos, while Porthos broke the bottles and Aramis gave orders, a little too late, that a confessor should be sent for.

      “Oh, my friends,” said d’Artagnan, “you come once more to save my life, not only mine but that of these gentlemen. Gentlemen,” continued he, addressing the Guardsmen, “I request you will be silent with regard to this adventure. Great personages may have had a hand in what you have seen, and if talked about, the evil would only recoil upon us.”

      “Ah, monsieur!” stammered Planchet, more dead than alive, “ah, monsieur, what an escape I have had!”

      “How, sirrah! you were going to drink my wine?”

      “To the health of the king, monsieur; I was going to drink a small glass of it if Fourreau had not told me I was called.”

      “Alas!” said Fourreau, whose teeth chattered with terror, “I wanted to get him out of the way that I might drink myself.”

      “Gentlemen,” said d’Artagnan, addressing the Guardsmen, “you may easily comprehend that such a feast can only be very dull after what has taken place; so accept my excuses, and put off the party till another day, I beg of you.”

      The two Guardsmen courteously accepted d’Artagnan’s excuses, and perceiving that the four friends desired to be alone, retired.

      When the young Guardsman and the three Musketeers were without witnesses, they looked at one another with an air which plainly expressed that each of them perceived the gravity of their situation.

      “In the first place,” said Athos, “let us leave this chamber; the dead are not agreeable company, particularly when they have died a violent death.”

      “Planchet,” said d’Artagnan, “I commit the corpse of this poor devil to your care. Let him be interred in holy ground. He committed a crime, it is true; but he repented of it.”

      And the four friends quit the room, leaving to Planchet and Fourreau the duty of paying mortuary honors to Brisemont.

      The host gave them another chamber, and served them with fresh eggs and some water, which Athos went himself to draw at the fountain. In a few words, Porthos and Aramis were posted as to the situation.

      “Well,” said d’Artagnan to Athos, “you see, my dear friend, that this is war to the death.”

      Athos shook his head.

      “Yes, yes,” replied he, “I perceive that plainly; but do you really believe it is she?”

      “I am sure of it.”

      “Nevertheless, I confess I still doubt.”

      “But the

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