The Forty-Five Guardsmen eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 575 pages of information about The Forty-Five Guardsmen.

The Forty-Five Guardsmen eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 575 pages of information about The Forty-Five Guardsmen.

A moment afterward the lady appeared within the doorway.

She took hold of the cavalier’s arm, who led her to the litter, closed the door of it, and then mounted his horse.

“There is no doubt on the subject,” said Chicot, “it is the husband, a good-natured fellow of a husband after all, since he does not think it worth his while to explore the house in order to be revenged on my friend Carmainges.”

The litter then moved off, the cavalier walking his horse beside the door of it.

“Pardieu!” said Chicot, “I must follow those people and learn who they are, and where they are going; I shall at all events draw some solid counsel from my discovery for my friend Carmainges.”

Chicot accordingly followed the cortege, observing the precaution, however, of keeping in the shadow of the walls, and taking care that the noise made by the footsteps of the men and of the horses should render the sound of his own inaudible.

Chicot’s surprise was by no means slight when he saw the litter stop at the door of the “Brave Chevalier.”

Almost immediately afterward, as if some one had been on the watch, the door was opened.

The lady, still veiled, alighted; entered and mounted to the turret, the window of the first story of which was lighted.

The husband followed her, both being respectfully preceded by Dame Fournichon, who carried a flambeau in her hand.

“Decidedly,” said Chicot, crossing his arms on his chest, “I cannot understand a single thing of the whole affair.”

CHAPTER LXXXIII.

Showing how Chicot began to understand the purport of monsieur de guise’s letter.

Chicot fancied that he had already certainly seen, somewhere or another, the figure of this courteous cavalier; but his memory, having become a little confused during his journey from Navarre, where he had met with so many different figures, did not, with its usual facility, furnish him with the cavalier’s name on the present occasion.

While, concealed in the shade, he was interrogating himself, with his eyes fixed upon the lighted window, as to the object of this lady and gentleman’s tete-a-tete at the “Brave Chevalier,” our worthy Gascon, forgetting Ernanton in the mysterious house, observed the door of the hostelry open, and in the stream of light which escaped through the opening, he perceived something resembling the dark outline of a monk’s figure.

The outline in question paused for a moment to look up at the same window at which Chicot had been gazing.

“Oh! oh!” he murmured; “if I am not mistaken, that is the frock of a Jacobin friar.  Is Maitre Gorenflot so lax, then, in his discipline as to allow his sheep to go strolling about at such an hour of the night as this, and at such a distance from the priory?”

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The Forty-Five Guardsmen from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.