Twenty Years Later by Dumas, Alexandre. Part one

Page 44

Dumas, Alexandre – Twenty Years After

remembrance of Madame Bonancieux left on his character a

certain poetic tinge, perishable indeed; for like all other

recollections in this world, these impressions were, by

degrees, effaced. A garrison life is fatal even to the most

aristocratic organization; and imperceptibly, D’Artagnan,

always in the camp, always on horseback, always in garrison,

became (I know not how in the present age one would express

it) a typical trooper. His early refinement of character was

not only not lost, it grew even greater than ever; but it

was now applied to the little, instead of to the great

things of life — to the martial condition of the soldier —

comprised under the head of a good lodging, a rich table, a

congenial hostess. These important advantages D’Artagnan

found to his own taste in the Rue Tiquetonne at the sign of

the Roe.

From the time D’Artagnan took quarters in that hotel, the

mistress of the house, a pretty and fresh looking Flemish

woman, twenty-five or twenty-six years old, had been

singularly interested in him; and after certain love

passages, much obstructed by an inconvenient husband to whom

a dozen times D’Artagnan had made a pretence of passing a

sword through his body, that husband had disappeared one

fine morning, after furtively selling certain choice lots of

wine, carrying away with him money and jewels. He was

thought to be dead; his wife, especially, who cherished the

pleasing idea that she was a widow, stoutly maintained that

death had taken him. Therefore, after the connection had

continued three years, carefully fostered by D’Artagnan, who

found his bed and his mistress more agreeable every year,

each doing credit to the other, the mistress conceived the

extraordinary desire of becoming a wife and proposed to

D’Artagnan that he should marry her.

“Ah, fie!” D’Artagnan replied. “Bigamy, my dear! Come now,

you don’t really wish it?”

“But he is dead; I am sure of it.”

“He was a very contrary fellow and might come back on

purpose to have us hanged.”

“All right; if he comes back you will kill him, you are so

skillful and so brave.”

“Peste! my darling! another way of getting hanged.”

“So you refuse my request?”

“To be sure I do — furiously!”

The pretty landlady was desolate. She would have taken

D’Artagnan not only as her husband, but as her God, he was

so handsome and had so fierce a mustache.

Then along toward the fourth year came the expedition of

Franche-Comte. D’Artagnan was assigned to it and made his

preparations to depart. There were then great griefs, tears

without end and solemn promises to remain faithful — all of

course on the part of the hostess. D’Artagnan was too grand

to promise anything; he purposed only to do all that he

could to increase the glory of his name.

As to that, we know D’Artagnan’s courage; he exposed himself

Page 45

Dumas, Alexandre – Twenty Years After

freely to danger and while charging at the head of his

company he received a ball through the chest which laid him

prostrate on the field of battle. He had been seen falling

from his horse and had not been seen to rise; every one,

therefore, believed him to be dead, especially those to whom

his death would give promotion. One believes readily what he

wishes to believe. Now in the army, from the

division-generals who desire the death of the

general-in-chief, to the soldiers who desire the death of

the corporals, all desire some one’s death.

But D’Artagnan was not a man to let himself be killed like

that. After he had remained through the heat of the day

unconscious on the battle-field, the cool freshness of the

night brought him to himself. He gained a village, knocked

at the door of the finest house and was received as the

wounded are always and everywhere received in France. He was

petted, tended, cured; and one fine morning, in better

health than ever before, he set out for France. Once in

France he turned his course toward Paris, and reaching Paris

went straight to Rue Tiquetonne.

But D’Artagnan found in his chamber the personal equipment

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