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    Chapter 36 - Page 2

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    "he is not dead; charge your muskets."

    "No, I am not dead," cried Chicot, attacking the speaker.

    But two soldiers came to the rescue; Chicot turned and wounded one in the thigh.

    "The muskets!" cried the chief.

    "Before they are ready, you will be pierced through the heart," cried Chicot.

    "Be firm, and I will aid you," cried a voice, which seemed to Chicot to come from heaven.

    It was that of a fine young man, on a black horse. He had a pistol in each hand, and cried again to Chicot, "Stoop! morbleu, stoop!"

    Chicot obeyed.

    One pistol was fired, and a man rolled at Chicot's feet; then the second, and another man fell.

    "Now we are two to two," cried Chicot; "generous young man, you take one, here is mine," and he rushed on the masked man, who defended himself as if used to arms.

    The young man seized his opponent by the body, threw him down, and bound him with his belt. Chicot soon wounded his adversary, who was very corpulent, between the ribs; he fell, and Chicot, putting his foot on his sword to prevent him from using it, cut the strings of his mask.

    "M. de Mayenne! ventre de biche, I thought so," said he.

    The duke did not reply; he had fainted from the loss of blood and the weight of his fall. Chicot drew his dagger, and was about coolly to cut off his head, when his arm was seized by a grasp of iron, and a voice said:

    "Stay! monsieur; one does not kill a fallen enemy."

    "Young man," replied Chicot, "you have saved my life, and I thank you with all my heart; but accept a little lesson very useful in the time of moral degradation in which we live. When a man has been attacked three times in three days--when he has been each time in danger of death--when his enemies have, without provocation, fired four musket balls at him from behind--as they might have done to a mad dog--then, young man, he may do what I am about to do." And Chicot returned to his work.

    But the young man stopped him again.

    "You shall not do it, while I am here. You shall not shed more of that blood which is now issuing from the wound you hare already inflicted."

    "Bah! do you know this wretch?"

    "That wretch is M. le Duc de Mayenne, a prince equal in rank to many kings."

    "All the more reason. And who are you?"

    "He who has saved your life, monsieur."

    "And who, if I do not deceive myself, brought me a letter from the king three days ago."

    "Precisely."

    "Then you are in the king's service?"

    "I have that honor."

    "And yet you save M. de Mayenne? Permit me to tell you, monsieur, that that is not being a good
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