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    Chapter 80 - Page 2

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    "It is then a service which you propose to render us, count?" asked Anne of Austria, after a moment's silence.

    "Yes, madame, another service," said Athos, shocked that the queen did not seem to recognize him.

    Athos had a noble heart, and made, therefore, but a poor courtier.

    Anne frowned. Mazarin, who was sitting at a table folding up papers, as if he had only been a secretary of state, looked up.

    "Speak," said the queen.

    Mazarin turned again to his papers.

    "Madame," resumed Athos, "two of my friends, named D'Artagnan and Monsieur du Vallon, sent to England by the cardinal, suddenly disappeared when they set foot on the shores of France; no one knows what has become of them."

    "Well?" said the queen.

    "I address myself, therefore, first to the benevolence of your majesty, that I may know what has become of my friends, reserving to myself, if necessary, the right of appealing hereafter to your justice."

    "Sir," replied Anne, with a degree of haughtiness which to certain persons became impertinence, "this is the reason that you trouble me in the midst of so many absorbing concerns! an affair for the police! Well, sir, you ought to know that we no longer have a police, since we are no longer at Paris."

    "I think your majesty will have no need to apply to the police to know where my friends are, but that if you will deign to interrogate the cardinal he can reply without any further inquiry than into his own recollections."

    "But, God forgive me!" cried Anne, with that disdainful curl of the lips peculiar to her, "I believe that you are yourself interrogating."

    "Yes, madame, here I have a right to do so, for it concerns Monsieur d'Artagnan ---d'Artagnan," he repeated, in such a manner as to bow the regal brow with recollections of the weak and erring woman.

    The cardinal saw that it was now high time to come to the assistance of Anne.

    "Sir," he said, "I can tell you what is at present unknown to her majesty. These individuals are under arrest. They disobeyed orders."

    "I beg of your majesty, then," said Athos, calmly and not replying to Mazarin, "to quash these arrests of Messieurs d'Artagnan and du Vallon."


    "What you ask is merely an affair of discipline and does not concern me," said the queen.

    "Monsieur d'Artagnan never made such an answer as that when the service of your majesty was concerned," said Athos, bowing with great dignity. He was going toward the door when Mazarin stopped him.

    "You, too, have been in England, sir?" he said, making a sign to the queen, who was evidently going to issue a severe order.

    "I was a witness of the last hours of Charles I. Poor king! culpable, at the most, of weakness, how cruelly punished by his subjects! Thrones are at this time shaken and it is to little purpose for devoted hearts to serve the interests
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