Summary
The cardinal
greets d’Artagnan politely, and proceeds to prove that he knows far more about
d’Artagnan than I would expect him to. The cardinal seems to know everything. It’s highly disconcerting.
He knows about his letter being stolen, he knows about d’Artagnan’s trip to
England, he knows about the ring that the queen gave d’Artagnan, and he knows
about the kidnapping of Madame Bonacieux and d’Artagnan’s love for her. In
fact, he orchestrated the capture of Madame Bonacieux because d’Artagnan ignored
his previous summons. Now, he offers a post in the cardinal’s guards to
d’Artagnan. D’Artagnan politely refuses, and the cardinal tells him that he is
trying to protect him. When d’Artagnan makes it clear (still very courteously)
that he refuses the cardinal’s offer, the cardinal tells him to remember in the
future that he approached d’Artagnan first, and tried to save him. He adds that
both of them are going to the campaign against England in La Rochelle, so they
will see each other afterwards. It seems as if the cardinal is warning
d’Artagnan, which scares him. D’Artagnan leaves with a heavy heart and troubled
mind. His friends are relieved to see him in one piece, but Athos is also
worried about the cardinal’s warning.
The next day is
spent packing and preparing for the campaign. The guard that d’Artagnan belongs
to and the king’s Musketeers have an epic party that night, and the Fearsome
Four enjoy themselves greatly. The day after that, both branches report to the
king for review. The king is ill and tired that day, but he approves. Porthos
haughtily bids goodbye to Madame Coquenard, who weeps as he rides away. Athos
drinks wine. Aramis writes a letter to someone (really now, Dumas, you can’t
expect us to be oblivious to the fact that it is clearly the Duchesse of
Chevreuse. Why is Aramis trying to hide this? It’s very clear that she is his
lover). D’Artagnan parties it up with the other Musketeers in the guard. He is
having such an excellent time that he fails to observe Milady pointing to him
and whispering to two thugs. They follow the company on horseback. Trouble
ahead!
Reaction
This chapter is
exceedingly strange and foreboding. The cardinal is terrifying informed, and
seems one step ahead of d’Artagnan. I must admit that I’m kind of glad that d’Artagnan
got into trouble due to his behavior, however. The cardinal makes it clear that
d’Artagnan has come to his attention because of recent complaints (in other
words, Milady told all). However, I hope he watches himself more closely and
stays safe – those thugs are fairly dangerous!
My favorite line
is M. Coquenard’s angry reaction to Porthos’s farewell: “[His] little gray eyes
sparkled with anger at seeing his cousin all blazing new. Nevertheless, one
thing afforded him inward consolation; it was expected by everybody that the
campaign would be a severe one. He whispered a hope to himself that this
beloved relative might be killed in the field.” My goodness! Bloodthirsty
little old man!
1 comment:
Foreboding conversation? Ominous warnings? Scary thugs? HURRAH! Alright, Dumas, this is getting good. I don't have much to say about this chapter, because it was mainly just advancing the plot and amping up the suspense. That's probably a good sign though, Dumas! It means you're doing your job well!
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