The Man in the Iron MaskbyAlexandre Dumas
View Table of ContentsThe Man in the Iron Mask
Chapter 1: The Prisoner.
Chapter 3: Who Messire Jean Percerin Was.
Chapter 4: The Patterns.
Chapter 5: Where, Probably, Moliere Obtained His First Idea of the Bourgeois Gentilhomme.
Chapter 6: The Bee-Hive, the Bees, and the Honey.
Chapter 7: Another Supper at the Bastile.
Chapter 8: The General of the Order.
Chapter 9: The Tempter.
Chapter 10: Crown and Tiara.
Chapter 11: The Chateau de Vaux-le-Vicomte.
Chapter 12: The Wine of Melun.
Chapter 13: Nectar and Ambrosia.
Chapter 14: A Gascon, and a Gascon and a Half.
Chapter 15: Colbert.
Chapter 16: Jealousy.
Chapter 17: High Treason.
Chapter 18: A Night at the Bastile.
Chapter 19: The Shadow of M. Fouquet.
Chapter 20: The Morning.
Chapter 21: The King's Friend.
Chapter 22: Showing How the Countersign Was Respected at the Bastile.
Chapter 23: The King's Gratitude.
Chapter 24: The False King.
Chapter 25: In Which Porthos Thinks He Is Pursuing a Duchy.
Chapter 26: The Last Adieux.
Chapter 27: Monsieur de Beaufort.
Chapter 28: Preparations for Departure.
Chapter 29: Planchet's Inventory.
Chapter 30: The Inventory of M. de Beaufort.
Chapter 31: The Silver Dish.
Chapter 32: Captive and Jailers.
Chapter 33: Promises.
Chapter 34: Among Women.
Chapter 35: The Last Supper.
Chapter 36: In M. Colbert's Carriage.
Chapter 37: The Two Lighters.
Chapter 38: Friendly Advice.
Chapter 39: How the King, Louis XIV., Played His Little Part.
Chapter 40: The White Horse and the Black.
Chapter 41: In Which the Squirrel Falls, - the Adder Flies.
Chapter 42: Belle-Ile-en-Mer.
Chapter 43: Explanations by Aramis.
Chapter 44: Result of the Ideas of the King, and the Ideas of D'Artagnan.
Chapter 45: The Ancestors of Porthos.
Chapter 46: The Son of Biscarrat.
Chapter 47: The Grotto of Locmaria.
Chapter 48: The Grotto.
Chapter 49: An Homeric Song.
Chapter 50: The Death of a Titan.
Chapter 51: Porthos's Epitaph.
Chapter 52: M. de Gesvres's Round.
Chapter 53: King Louis XIV.
Chapter 54: M. Fouquet's Friends.
Chapter 55: Porthos's Will.
Chapter 56: The Old Age of Athos.
Chapter 57: Athos's Vision.
Chapter 58: The Angel of Death.
Chapter 59: The Bulletin.
Chapter 60: The Last Canto of the Poem.
Chapter 61: Epilogue.
Chapter 36: In M. Colbert's Carriage.
As Gourville had seen, the king's musketeers were mounting and following their captain. The latter, who did not like to be confined in his proceedings, left his brigade under the orders of a lieutenant, and set off on post horses, recommending his men to use all diligence. However rapidly they might travel, they could not arrive before him. He had time, in passing along the Rue des Petits-Champs, to see something which afforded him plenty of food for thought and conjecture. He saw M. Colbert coming out from his house to get into his carriage, which was stationed before the door. In this carriage D'Artagnan perceived the hoods of two women, and being rather curious, he wished to know the names of the ladies hid beneath these hoods. To get a glimpse at them, for they kept themselves closely covered up, he urged his horse so near the carriage, that he drove him against the step with such force as to shake everything containing and contained. The terrified women uttered, the one a faint cry, by which D'Artagnan recognized a young woman, the other an imprecation, in which he recognized the vigor and _aplomb_ that half a century bestows. The hoods were thrown back: one of the women was Madame Vanel, the other the Duchesse de Chevreuse. D'Artagnan's eyes were quicker than those of the ladies; he had seen and known them, whilst they did not recognize him; and as they laughed at their fright, pressing each other's hands, -
"Humph!" said D'Artagnan, "the old duchesse is no more inaccessible to friendship than formerly. _She_ paying her court to the mistress of M. Colbert! Poor M. Fouquet! that presages you nothing good!"
He rode on. M. Colbert got into his carriage and the distinguished trio commenced a sufficiently slow pilgrimage toward the wood of Vincennes. Madame de Chevreuse set down Madame Vanel at her husband's house, and, left alone with M. Colbert, chatted upon affairs whilst continuing her ride. She had an inexhaustible fund of conversation, that dear duchesse, and as she always talked for the ill of others, though ever with a view to her own good, her conversation amused her interlocutor, and did not fail to leave a favorable impression.
She taught Colbert, who, poor man! was ignorant of the fact, how great a minister he was, and how Fouquet would soon become a cipher. She promised to rally around him, when he should become surintendant, all the old nobility of the kingdom, and questioned him as to the preponderance it would be proper to allow La Valliere. She praised him, she blamed him, she bewildered him. She showed him the secret of so many secrets that, for a moment, Colbert thought he was doing business with the devil. She proved to him that she held in her hand the Colbert of to- day, as she had held the Fouquet of yesterday; and as he asked her very simply the reason of her hatred for the surintendant: "Why do you yourself hate him?" said she.
"Madame, in politics," replied he, "the differences of system oft bring about dissentions between men. M. Fouquet always appeared to me to practice a system opposed to the true interests of the king."
She interrupted him. - "I will say no more to you about M. Fouquet. The journey the king is about to take to Nantes will give a good account of him. M. Fouquet, for me, is a man gone by - and for you also."
Colbert made no reply. "On his return from Nantes," continued the duchesse, "the king, who is only anxious for a pretext, will find that the States have not behaved well - that they have made too few sacrifices. The States will say that the imposts are too heavy, and that the surintendant has ruined them. The king will lay all the blame on M. Fouquet, and then - "
"And then?" said Colbert.
"Oh! he will be disgraced. Is not that your opinion?"
Colbert darted a glance at the duchesse, which plainly said: "If M. Fouquet be only disgraced, you will not be the cause of it."
"Your place, M. Colbert," the duchesse hastened to say, "must be a high place. Do you perceive any one between the king and yourself, after the fall of M. Fouquet?"
"I do not understand," said he.
"You _will_ understand. To what does your ambition aspire?"
"I have none."
"It was useless, then, to overthrow the superintendent, Monsieur Colbert. It was idle."
"I had the honor to tell you, madame - "
"Oh! yes, I know, all about the interest of the king - but, if you please, we will speak of your own."
"Mine! that is to say, the affairs of his majesty."
"In short, are you, or are you not endeavoring to ruin M. Fouquet? Answer without evasion."
"Madame, I ruin nobody."
"I am endeavoring to comprehend, then, why you purchased from me the letters of M. Mazarin concerning M. Fouquet. Neither can I conceive why you have laid those letters before the king."
Colbert, half stupefied, looked at the duchesse with an air of constraint.
"Madame," said he, "I can less easily conceive how you, who received the money, can reproach me on that head - "
"That is," said the old duchesse, "because we must will that which we wish for, unless we are not able to obtain what we wish."
"_Will!_" said Colbert, quite confounded by such coarse logic.
"You are not able, _hein!_ Speak."
"I am not able, I allow, to destroy certain influences near the king."
"That fight in favor of M. Fouquet? What are they? Stop, let me help you."
"Do, madame."
"La Valliere?"
"Oh! very little influence; no knowledge of business, and small means. M. Fouquet has paid his court to her."
"To defend him would be to accuse herself, would it not?"
"I think it would."
"There is still another influence, what do you say to that?"
"Is it considerable?"
"The queen-mother, perhaps?"
"Her majesty, the queen-mother, has a weakness for M. Fouquet very prejudicial to her son."
"Never believe that," said the old duchesse, smiling.
"Oh!" said Colbert, with incredulity, "I have often experienced it."
"Formerly?"
"Very recently, madame, at Vaux. It was she who prevented the king from having M. Fouquet arrested."
"People do not forever entertain the same opinions, my dear monsieur. That which the queen may have wished recently, she would not wish, perhaps, to-day."
"And why not?" said Colbert, astonished.
"Oh! the reason is of very little consequence."
"On the contrary, I think it is of great consequence; for, if I were certain of not displeasing her majesty, the queen-mother, my scruples would be all removed."
"Well! have you never heard talk of a certain secret?"
"A secret?"
"Call it what you like. In short, the queen-mother has conceived a bitter hatred for all those who have participated, in one fashion or another, in the discovery of this secret, and M. Fouquet I believe is one of these."
"Then," said Colbert, "we may be sure of the assent of the queen-mother?"
"I have just left her majesty, and she assures me so."
"So be it, then, madame."
"But there is something further; do you happen to know a man who was the intimate friend of M. Fouquet, M. d'Herblay, a bishop, I believe?"
"Bishop of Vannes."
"Well! this M. d'Herblay, who also knew the secret, the queen-mother is pursuing with the utmost rancor."
"Indeed!"
"So hotly pursued, that if he were dead, she would not be satisfied with anything less than his head, to satisfy her he would never speak again."
"And is that the desire of the queen-mother?"
"An order is given for it."
"This Monsieur d'Herblay shall be sought for, madame."
"Oh! it is well known where he is."
Colbert looked at the duchesse.
"Say where, madame."
"He is at Belle-Ile-en-Mer."
"At the residence of M. Fouquet?"
"At the residence of M. Fouquet."
"He shall be taken."
It was now the duchesse's turn to smile. "Do not fancy the capture so easy," said she; "do not promise it so lightly."
"Why not, madame?"
"Because M. d'Herblay is not one of those people who can be taken when and where you please."
"He is a rebel, then?"
"Oh! Monsieur Colbert, we have passed all our lives in making rebels, and yet you see plainly, that so far from being taken, we take others."
Colbert fixed upon the old duchesse one of those fierce looks of which no words can convey the expression, accompanied by a firmness not altogether wanting in grandeur. "The times are gone," said he, "in which subjects gained duchies by making war against the king of France. If M. d'Herblay conspires, he will perish on the scaffold. That will give, or will not give, pleasure to his enemies, - a matter, by the way, of little importance to _us_."
And this _us_, a strange word in the mouth of Colbert, made the duchesse thoughtful for a moment. She caught herself reckoning inwardly with this man - Colbert had regained his superiority in the conversation, and he meant to keep it.
"You ask me, madame," he said, "to have this M. d'Herblay arrested?"
"I? - I ask you nothing of the kind!"
"I thought you did, madame. But as I have been mistaken, we will leave him alone; the king has said nothing about him."
The duchesse bit her nails.
