[Ten Years Later by Alexandre Dumas Pere]@TWC D-Link bookTen Years Later CHAPTER I 5/9
Come, speak freely, monsieur; you know that I told you, once and for all, that you are to be always quite frank with me." "Well, sire! what I have to say is this, that I would prefer being made captain of the musketeers for having charged a battery at the head of my company, or taken a city, than for causing two wretches to be hung." "Is this quite true you tell me ?" "And why should your majesty suspect me of dissimulation, I ask ?" "Because I have known you well, monsieur; you cannot repent of having drawn your sword for me." "Well, in that your majesty is deceived, and greatly; yes, I do repent of having drawn my sword on account of the results that action produced; the poor men who were hung, sire, were neither your enemies nor mine; and they could not defend themselves." The king preserved silence for a moment.
"And your companion, M. d'Artagnan, does he partake of your repentance ?" "My companion ?" "Yes, you were not alone, I have been told." "Alone, where ?" "At the Place de Greve." "No, sire, no," said D'Artagnan, blushing at the idea that the king might have a suspicion that he, D'Artagnan, had wished to engross to himself all the glory that belonged to Raoul; "no, _mordioux!_ and as your majesty says, I had a companion, and a good companion, too." "A young man ?" "Yes, sire; a young man.
Oh! your majesty must accept my compliments, you are as well informed of things out of doors as things within.
It is M.Colbert who makes all these fine reports to the king." "M.
Colbert has said nothing but good of you, M.d'Artagnan, and he would have met with a bad reception if he had come to tell me anything else." "That is fortunate!" "But he also said much good of that young man." "And with justice," said the musketeer. "In short, it appears that this young man is a fire-eater," said Louis, in order to sharpen the sentiment which he mistook for envy. "A fire-eater! Yes, sire," repeated D'Artagnan, delighted on his part to direct the king's attention to Raoul. "Do you not know his name ?" "Well, I think--" "You know him then ?" "I have known him nearly five-and-twenty years, sire." "Why, he is scarcely twenty-five years old!" cried the king. "Well, sire! I have known him ever since he was born, that is all." "Do you affirm that ?" "Sire," said D'Artagnan, "your majesty questions me with a mistrust in which I recognize another character than your own.
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