Twenty Years Later by Dumas, Alexandre. Part two

but in the distance was heard, like the noise of the tide

rushing in, the deep hum of the populous waves increasing

now around Notre Dame.

This noise redoubled when D’Artagnan, with a company of

musketeers, placed himself at the gates of Notre Dame to

secure the service of the church. He had instructed Porthos

to profit by this opportunity to see the ceremony; and

Porthos, in full dress, mounted his finest horse, taking the

part of supernumerary musketeer, as D’Artagnan had so often

done formerly. The sergeant of this company, a veteran of

the Spanish wars, had recognized Porthos, his old companion,

and very soon all those who served under him were placed in

possession of startling facts concerning the honor of the

ancient musketeers of Treville. Porthos had not only been

well received by the company, but he was moreover looked on

with great admiration.

At ten o’clock the guns of the Louvre announced the

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Dumas, Alexandre – Twenty Years After

departure of the king, and then a movement, similar to that

of trees in a stormy wind that bend and writhe with agitated

tops, ran though the multitude, which was compressed behind

the immovable muskets of the guard. At last the king

appeared with the queen in a gilded chariot. Ten other

carriages followed, containing the ladies of honor, the

officers of the royal household, and the court.

“God save the king!” was the cry in every direction; the

young monarch gravely put his head out of the window, looked

sufficiently grateful and even bowed; at which the cries of

the multitude were renewed.

Just as the court was settling down in the cathedral, a

carriage, bearing the arms of Comminges, quitted the line of

the court carriages and proceeded slowly to the end of the

Rue Saint Christophe, now entirely deserted. When it arrived

there, four guards and a police officer, who accompanied it,

mounted into the heavy machine and closed the shutters; then

through an opening cautiously made, the policeman began to

watch the length of the Rue Cocatrix, as if he was waiting

for some one.

All the world was occupied with the ceremony, so that

neither the chariot nor the precautions taken by those who

were within it had been observed. Friquet, whose eye, ever

on the alert, could alone have discovered them, had gone to

devour his apricots upon the entablature of a house in the

square of Notre Dame. Thence he saw the king, the queen and

Monsieur Mazarin, and heard the mass as well as if he had

been on duty.

Toward the end of the service, the queen, seeing Comminges

standing near her, waiting for a confirmation of the order

she had given him before quitting the Louvre, said in a

whisper:

“Go, Comminges, and may God aid you!”

Comminges immediately left the church and entered the Rue

Saint Christophe. Friquet, seeing this fine officer thus

walk away, followed by two guards, amused himself by

pursuing them and did this so much the more gladly as the

ceremony ended at that instant and the king remounted his

carriage.

Hardly had the police officer observed Comminges at the end

of the Rue Cocatrix when he said one word to the coachman,

who at once put his vehicle into motion and drove up before

Broussel’s door. Comminges knocked at the door at the same

moment, and Friquet was waiting behind Comminges until the

door should be opened.

“What dost thou there, rascal?” asked Comminges.

“I want to go into Master Broussel’s house, captain,”

replied Friquet, in that wheedling way the “gamins” of Paris

know so well how to assume when necessary.

“And on what floor does he live?” asked Comminges.

“In the whole house,” said Friquet; “the house belongs to

him; he occupies the second floor when he works and descends

to the first to take his meals; he must be at dinner now; it

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Dumas, Alexandre – Twenty Years After

is noon.”

“Good,” said Comminges.

At this moment the door was opened, and having questioned

the servant the officer learned that Master Broussel was at

home and at dinner.

Broussel was seated at the table with his family, having his

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