Ten Years Later by Dumas, Alexandre. Part two

absorbed a double quantity of air and sun. Mordioux! what

will it be then, if I double that fortune, and if, instead

of the switch I now hold in my hand, I should ever carry the

baton of a marechal? Then I really don’t know if there will

be, from that moment enough of air and sun for me. In fact,

this is not a dream, who the devil would oppose it, if the

king made me a marechal, as his father, King Louis XIII.,

made a duke and constable of Albert de Luynes? Am I not as

brave, and much more intelligent, than that imbecile De

Vitry? Ah! that’s exactly what will prevent my advancement:

I have too much wit. Luckily, if there is any justice in

this world, fortune owes me many compensations. She owes me

certainly a recompense for all I did for Anne of Austria,

and an indemnification for all she has not done for me.

Then, at the present, I am very well with a king, and with a

king who has the appearance of determining to reign. May God

keep him in that illustrious road! For, if he is resolved to

reign he will want me; and if he wants me, he will give me

what he has promised me — warmth and light; so that I

march, comparatively, now, as I marched formerly, — from

nothing to everything. Only the nothing of to-day is the all

of former days; there has only this little change taken

place in my life. And now let us see! let us take the part

of the heart, as I just now was speaking of it. But in

truth, I only spoke of it from memory.” And the Gascon

applied his hand to his breast, as if he were actually

seeking the place where his heart was.

“Ah! wretch!” murmured he, smiling with bitterness. “Ah!

poor mortal species! You hoped, for an instant, that you had

not a heart, and now you find you have one — bad courtier

as thou art, — and even one of the most seditious. You have

a heart which speaks to you in favor of M. Fouquet. And what

is M. Fouquet, when the king is in question? — A

conspirator, a real conspirator, who did not even give

himself the trouble to conceal his being a conspirator;

therefore, what a weapon would you not have against him, if

his good grace and his intelligence had not made a scabbard

for that weapon. An armed revolt! — for, in fact, M.

Fouquet has been guilty of an armed revolt. Thus, while the

king vaguely suspects M. Fouquet of rebellion, I know it —

I could prove that M. Fouquet had caused the shedding of the

blood of his majesty’s subjects. Now, then, let us see?

Knowing all that, and holding my tongue, what further would

this heart wish in return for a kind action of M. Fouquet’s,

for an advance of fifteen thousand livres, for a diamond

worth a thousand pistoles, for a smile in which there was as

much bitterness as kindness? — I save his life.”

“Now, then, I hope,” continued the musketeer, “that this

imbecile of a heart is going to preserve silence, and so be

fairly quits with M. Fouquet. Now, then, the king becomes my

sun, and as my heart is quits with M. Fouquet, let him

beware who places himself between me and my sun! Forward,

for his majesty Louis XIV.! — Forward!”

Page 382

Dumas, Alexandre – Ten Years Later

These reflections were the only impediments which were able

to retard the progress of D’Artagnan. These reflections once

made, he increased the speed of his horse. But, however

perfect his horse Zephyr might be, it could not hold out at

such a pace forever. The day after his departure from Paris,

he was left at Chartres, at the house of an old friend

D’Artagnan had met with in an hotelier of that city. From

that moment the musketeer travelled on post-horses. Thanks

to this mode of locomotion, he traversed the space

separating Chartres from Chateaubriand. In the last of these

two cities, far enough from the coast to prevent any one

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