[The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas]@TWC D-Link bookThe Three Musketeers 56 CAPTIVITY: THE FIFTH DAY 23/28
I only ate some fruit.
I pretended to pour out water from the jug, but I only drank that which I had saved in my glass.
The substitution was made so carefully that my spies, if I had any, could have no suspicion of it. "After supper I exhibited the same marks of languor as on the preceding evening; but this time, as I yielded to fatigue, or as if I had become familiarized with danger, I dragged myself toward my bed, let my robe fall, and lay down. "I found my knife where I had placed it, under my pillow, and while feigning to sleep, my hand grasped the handle of it convulsively. "Two hours passed away without anything fresh happening.
Oh, my God! who could have said so the evening before? I began to fear that he would not come. "At length I saw the lamp rise softly, and disappear in the depths of the ceiling; my chamber was filled with darkness and obscurity, but I made a strong effort to penetrate this darkness and obscurity. "Nearly ten minutes passed; I heard no other noise but the beating of my own heart.
I implored heaven that he might come. "At length I heard the well-known noise of the door, which opened and shut; I heard, notwithstanding the thickness of the carpet, a step which made the floor creak; I saw, notwithstanding the darkness, a shadow which approached my bed." "Haste! haste!" said Felton; "do you not see that each of your words burns me like molten lead ?" "Then," continued Milady, "then I collected all my strength; I recalled to my mind that the moment of vengeance, or rather, of justice, had struck.
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