71. Chapter LXX. Wherein the Ideas of D’Artagnan begin to clear up a little.

The Vicomte de Bragelonne /布拉热洛纳子爵

1D’Artagnan immediately took the offensive. Now that I have told you all, dear friend, or rather you have guessed all, tell me what you are doing here, covered with dust and mud?”

2Porthos wiped his brow, and looked around him with pride. Why, it appears,” said he, “that you may see what I am doing here.”

3No doubt, no doubt, you lift great stones.”

4Oh! to show these idle fellows what a man is,” said Porthos, with contempt. But you understand—”

5Yes, that is not your place to lift stones, although there are many whose place it is, who cannot lift them as you do. It was that which made me ask you, just now. What are you doing here, baron?”

6I am studying topography, chevalier.”

7You are studying topography?”

8Yes; but youwhat are you doing in that common dress?”

9D’Artagnan perceived he had committed a fault in giving expression to his astonishment. Porthos had taken advantage of it, to retort with a question. Why,” said he, “you know I am a bourgeois, in fact; my dress, then, has nothing astonishing in it, since it conforms with my condition.”

10Nonsense! you are a musketeer.”

11You are wrong, my friend; I have given in my resignation.”

12Bah!”

13Oh, mon Dieu! yes.”

14And you have abandoned the service?”

15I have quitted it.”

16You have abandoned the king?”

17Quite.”

18Porthos raised his arms towards heaven, like a man who has heard extraordinary news. Well, that does confound me,” said he.

19It is nevertheless true.”

20And what led you to form such a resolution.”

21The king displeased me. Mazarin had disgusted me for a long time, as you know; so I threw my cassock to the nettles.”

22But Mazarin is dead.”

23I know that well enough, parbleu! Only, at the period of his death, my resignation had been given in and accepted two months. Then, feeling myself free, I set off for Pierrefonds, to see my friend Porthos. I had heard talk of the happy division you had made of your time, and I wished, for a fortnight, to divide mine after your fashion.”

24My friend, you know that it is not for a fortnight my house is open to you; it is for a yearfor ten yearsfor life.”

25Thank you, Porthos.”

26Ah! but perhaps you want moneydo you?” said Porthos, making something like fifty louis chink in his pocket. In that case, you know—”

27No, thank you; I am not in want of anything. I placed my savings with Planchet, who pays me the interest of them.”

28Your savings?”

29Yes, to be sure,” said D’Artagnan: “why should I not put by my savings, as well as another, Porthos?”

30Oh, there is no reason why; on the contrary, I always suspected youthat is to say, Aramis always suspected you to have savings. For my own part, dye see, I take no concern about the management of my household; but I presume the savings of a musketeer must be small.”

31No doubt, relative to yourself, Porthos, who are a millionaire; but you shall judge. I had laid by twenty-five thousand livres.”

32Thats pretty well,” said Porthos, with an affable air.

33And,” continued D’Artagnan, “on the twenty-eighth of last month I added to it two hundred thousand livres more.”

34Porthos opened his large eyes, which eloquently demanded of the musketeer, “Where the devil did you steal such a sum as that, my dear friend?” “Two hundred thousand livres!” cried he, at length.

35Yes; which, with the twenty-five I had, and twenty thousand I have about me, complete the sum of two hundred and forty-five thousand livres.”

36But tell me, whence comes this fortune?”

37I will tell you all about it presently, dear friend; but as you have, in the first place, many things to tell me yourself, let us have my recital in its proper order.”

38Bravo!” said Porthos; “then we are both rich. But what can I have to relate to you?”

39You have to relate to me how Aramis came to be named—”

40Ah! bishop of Vannes.”

41Thats it,” said D’Artagnan, “bishop of Vannes. Dear Aramis! do you know how he succeeded so well?”

42Yes, yes; without reckoning that he does not mean to stop there.”

43What! do you mean he will not be contented with violet stockings, and that he wants a red hat?”

44Hush! that is promised him.”

45Bah! by the king?”

46By somebody more powerful than the king.”

47Ah! the devil! Porthos: what incredible things you tell me, my friend!”

48Why incredible? Is there not always somebody in France more powerful than the king?”

49Oh, yes; in the time of King Louis XIII. it was Cardinal Richelieu; in the time of the regency it was Cardinal Mazarin. In the time of Louis XIV. it is M—”

50Go on.”

51It is M. Fouquet.”

52Jove! you have hit it the first time.”

53So, then, I suppose it is M. Fouquet who has promised Aramis the red hat.”

54Porthos assumed an air of reserve. Dear friend,” said he, “God preserve me from meddling with the affairs of others, above all from revealing secrets it may be to their interest to keep. When you see Aramis, he will tell you all he thinks he ought to tell you.”

55You are right, Porthos; and you are quite a padlock for safety. But, to revert to yourself?”

56Yes,” said Porthos.

57You said just now you came hither to study topography?”

58I did so.”

59“Tudieu! my friend, what fine things you will do!”

60How do you mean?”

61Why, these fortifications are admirable.”

62Is that your opinion?”

63Decidedly it is. In truth, to anything but a regular siege, Belle-Isle is absolutely impregnable.”

64Porthos rubbed his hands. That is my opinion,” said he.

65But who the devil has fortified this paltry little place in this manner?”

66Porthos drew himself up proudly: “Did I not tell you who?”

67No.”

68Do you not suspect?”

69No; all I can say is that he is a man who has studied all the systems, and who appears to me to have stopped at the best.”

70Hush!” said Porthos; “consider my modesty, my dear D’Artagnan.”

71In truth,” replied the musketeer, “can it be youwhooh!”

72Praymy dear friend—”

73You who have imagined, traced, and combined between these bastions, these redans, these curtains, these half-moons; and are preparing that covered way?”

74I beg you—”

75You who have built that lunette with its retiring angles and its salient edges?”

76My friend—”

77You who have given that inclination to the openings of your embrasures, by means of which you so effectively protect the men who serve the guns?”

78Eh! mon Dieu! yes.”

79Oh! Porthos, Porthos! I must bow down before youI must admire you! But you have always concealed from us this superb, this incomparable genius. I hope, my dear friend, you will show me all this in detail.”

80Nothing more easy. Here lies my original sketch, my plan.”

81Show it me.” Porthos led D’Artagnan towards the stone that served him for a table, and upon which the plan was spread. At the foot of the plan was written, in the formidable writing of Porthos, writing of which we have already had occasion to speak:—

82Instead of making use of the square or rectangle, as has been done to this time, you will suppose your place inclosed in a regular hexagon, this polygon having the advantage of offering more angles than the quadrilateral one. Every side of your hexagon, of which you will determine the length in proportion to the dimensions taken upon the place, will be divided into two parts, and upon the middle point you will elevate a perpendicular towards the center of the polygon, which will equal in length the sixth part of the side. By the extremities of each side of the polygon, you will trace two diagonals, which will cut the perpendicular. These will form the precise lines of your defense.”

83The devil!” said D’Artagnan, stopping at this point of the demonstration; “why, this is a complete system, Porthos.”

84Entirely,” said Porthos. Continue.”

85No; I have read enough of it; but, since it is you, my dear Porthos, who direct the works, what need have you of setting down your system so formally in writing?”

86Oh! my dear friend, death!”

87How! death?”

88Why, we are all mortal, are we not?”

89That is true,” said D’Artagnan; “you have a reply for everything, my friend.” And he replaced the plan upon the stone.

90But however short the time he had the plan in his hands, D’Artagnan had been able to distinguish, under the enormous writing of Porthos, a much more delicate hand, which reminded him of certain letters to Marie Michon, with which he had been acquainted in his youth. Only the India-rubber had passed and repassed so often over this writing that it might have escaped a less practiced eye than that of our musketeer.

91Bravo! my friend, bravo!” said D’Artagnan.

92And now you know all that you want to know, do you not?” said Porthos, wheeling about.

93“Mordioux! yes, only do me one last favor, dear friend!”

94Speak, I am master here.”

95Do me the pleasure to tell me the name of that gentleman who is walking yonder.”

96Where, there?”

97Behind the soldiers.”

98Followed by a lackey?”

99Exactly.”

100In company with a mean sort of fellow, dressed in black?”

101Yes, I mean him.”

102That is M. Getard.”

103And who is Getard, my friend?”

104He is the architect of the house.”

105Of what house?”

106Of M. Fouquet’s house.”

107Ah! ah!” cried D’Artagnan, “you are of the household of M. Fouquet, then, Porthos?”

108I! what do you mean by that?” said the topographer, blushing to the top of his ears.

109Why, you say the house, when speaking of Belle-Isle, as if you were speaking of the chateau of Pierrefonds.”

110Porthos bit his lip. Belle-Isle, my friend,” said he, “belongs to M. Fouquet, does it not?”

111Yes, I believe so.”

112As Pierrefonds belongs to me?”

113I told you I believed so; there are no two words to that.”

114Did you ever see a man there who is accustomed to walk about with a ruler in his hand?”

115No; but I might have seen him there, if he really walked there.”

116Well, that gentleman is M. Boulingrin.”

117Who is M. Boulingrin?”

118Now we are coming to it. If, when this gentleman is walking with a ruler in his hand, any one should ask me,—‘who is M. Boulingrin?’ I should reply: ‘He is the architect of the house.’ Well! M. Getard is the Boulingrin of M. Fouquet. But he has nothing to do with the fortifications, which are my department alone; do you understand? mine, absolutely mine.”

119Ah! Porthos,” cried D’Artagnan, letting his arms fall as a conquered man gives up his sword; “ah! my friend, you are not only a Herculean topographer, you are, still further, a dialectician of the first water.”

120Is it not powerfully reasoned?” said Porthos: and he puffed and blew like the conger which D’Artagnan had let slip from his hand.

121And now,” said D’Artagnan, “that shabby-looking man, who accompanies M. Getard, is he also of the household of M. Fouquet?”

122Oh! yes,” said Porthos, with contempt; “it is one M. Jupenet, or Juponet, a sort of poet.”

123Who is come to establish himself here?”

124I believe so.”

125I thought M. Fouquet had poets enough, yonder—Scudery, Loret, Pelisson, La Fontaine? If I must tell you the truth, Porthos, that poet disgraces you.”

126Eh!—my friend; but what saves us is that he is not here as a poet.”

127As what, then, is he?”

128As printer. And you make me remember, I have a word to say to the cuistre.”

129Say it, then.”

130Porthos made a sign to Jupenet, who perfectly recollected D’Artagnan, and did not care to come nearer; which naturally produced another sign from Porthos. This was so imperative, he was obliged to obey. As he approached, “Come hither!” said Porthos. You only landed yesterday and you have begun your tricks already.”

131How so, monsieur le baron?” asked Jupenet, trembling.

132Your press was groaning all night, monsieur,” said Porthos, “and you prevented my sleeping, corne de boeuf!”

133“Monsieur—” objected Jupenet, timidly.

134You have nothing yet to print: therefore you have no occasion to set your press going. What did you print last night?”

135“Monsieur, a light poem of my own composition.”

136Light! no, no, monsieur; the press groaned pitifully beneath it. Let it not happen again. Do you understand?”

137Yes, monsieur.”

138You promise me?”

139I do, monsieur!”

140Very well; this time I pardon you. Adieu!”

141The poet retreated as humbly as he had approached.

142Well, now we have combed that fellows head, let us breakfast.”

143Yes,” replied D’Artagnan, “let us breakfast.”

144Only,” said Porthos, “I beg you to observe, my friend, that we only have two hours for our repast.”

145What would you have? We will try to make two hours suffice. But why have you only two hours?”

146Because it is high tide at one oclock, and, with the tide, I am going to Vannes. But, as I shall return to-morrow, my dear friend, you can stay here; you shall be master; I have a good cook and a good cellar.”

147No,” interrupted D’Artagnan, “better than that.”

148What?”

149You are going to Vannes, you say?”

150To a certainty.”

151To see Aramis?”

152Yes.”

153Well! I came from Paris on purpose to see Aramis.”

154Thats true.”

155I will go with you then.”

156Do; thats the thing.”

157Only, I ought to have seen Aramis first, and you after. But man proposes, and God disposes. I have begun with you, and will finish with Aramis.”

158Very well!”

159And in how many hours can you go from here to Vannes?”

160Oh! pardieu! in six hours. Three hours by sea to Sarzeau, three hours by road from Sarzeau to Vannes.”

161How convenient that is! Being so near to the bishopric; do you often go to Vannes?”

162Yes; once a week. But, stop till I get my plan.”

163Porthos picked up his plan, folded it carefully, and engulfed it in his large pocket.

164Good!” said D’Artagnan aside; “I think I now know the real engineer who is fortifying Belle-Isle.”

165Two hours after, at high tide, Porthos and D’Artagnan set out for Sarzeau.