Twenty Years Later by Dumas, Alexandre. Part two

and he opened the door, with a trembling hand, into the

second compartment, where Mousqueton and Blaisois were

preparing supper.

Here there was evidently nothing to seek or to apprehend and

they passed rapidly to examine the third compartment.

This was the room appropriated to the sailors. Two or three

hammocks hung upon the ceiling, a table and two benches

composed the entire furniture. D’Artagnan picked up two or

three old sails hung on the walls, and meeting nothing to

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Dumas, Alexandre – Twenty Years After

suspect, regained by the hatchway the deck of the vessel.

“And this room?” he asked, pointing to the captain’s cabin.

“That’s my room,” replied Groslow.

“Open the door.”

The captain obeyed. D’Artagnan stretched out his arm in

which he held the lantern, put his head in at the half

opened door, and seeing that the cabin was nothing better

than a shed:

“Good,” he said. “If there is an army on board it is not

here that it is hidden. Let us see what Porthos has found

for supper.” And thanking the captain, he regained the state

cabin, where his friends were.

Porthos had found nothing, and with him fatigue had

prevailed over hunger. He had fallen asleep and was in a

profound slumber when D’Artagnan returned. Athos and Aramis

were beginning to close their eyes, which they half opened

when their companion came in again.

“Well!” said Aramis.

“All is well; we may sleep tranquilly.”

On this assurance the two friends fell asleep; and

D’Artagnan, who was very weary, bade good-night to Grimaud

and laid himself down in his cloak, with naked sword at his

side, in such a manner that his body barricaded the passage,

and it should be impossible to enter the room without

upsetting him.

71

Port Wine.

In ten minutes the masters slept; not so the servants

—hungry, and more thirsty than hungry.

Blaisois and Mousqueton set themselves to preparing their bed

which consisted of a plank and a valise. On a hanging table,

which swung to and fro with the rolling of the vessel, were

a pot of beer and three glasses.

“This cursed rolling!” said Blaisois. “I know it will serve

me as it did when we came over.”

“And to think,” said Mousqueton, “that we have nothing to

fight seasickness with but barley bread and hop beer. Pah!”

“But where is your wicker flask, Monsieur Mousqueton? Have

you lost it?” asked Blaisois.

“No,” replied Mousqueton, “Parry kept it. Those devilish

Scotchmen are always thirsty. And you, Grimaud,” he said to

his companion, who had just come in after his round with

D’Artagnan, “are you thirsty?”

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Dumas, Alexandre – Twenty Years After

“As thirsty as a Scotchman!” was Grimaud’s laconic reply.

And he sat down and began to cast up the accounts of his

party, whose money he managed.

“Oh, lackadaisy! I’m beginning to feel queer!” cried

Blaisois.

“If that’s the case,” said Mousqueton, with a learned air,

“take some nourishment.”

“Do you call that nourishment?” said Blaisois, pointing to

the barley bread and pot of beer upon the table.

“Blaisois,” replied Mousqueton, “remember that bread is the

true nourishment of a Frenchman, who is not always able to

get bread, ask Grimaud.”

“Yes, but beer?” asked Blaisois sharply, “is that their true

drink?”

“As to that,” answered Mousqueton, puzzled how to get out of

the difficulty, “I must confess that to me beer is as

disagreeable as wine is to the English.”

“What! Monsieur Mousqueton! The English — do they dislike

wine?”

“They hate it.”

“But I have seen them drink it.”

“As a punishment. For example, an English prince died one

day because they had put him into a butt of Malmsey. I heard

the Chevalier d’Herblay say so.”

“The fool!” cried Blaisois, “I wish I had been in his

place.”

“Thou canst be,” said Grimaud, writing down his figures.

“How?” asked Blaisois, “I can? Explain yourself.”

Grimaud went on with his sum and cast up the whole.

“Port,” he said, extending his hand in the direction of the

first compartment examined by D’Artagnan and himself.

“Eh? eh? ah? Those barrels I saw through the door?”

“Port!” replied Grimaud, beginning a fresh sum.

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