The Three Musketeers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 865 pages of information about The Three Musketeers.

The Three Musketeers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 865 pages of information about The Three Musketeers.

But Lord de Winter might suspect him; Felton himself might now be watched!

Toward four o’clock in the morning the doctor arrived; but since the time Milady stabbed herself, however short, the wound had closed.  The doctor could therefore measure neither the direction nor the depth of it; he only satisfied himself by Milady’s pulse that the case was not serious.

In the morning Milady, under the pretext that she had not slept well in the night and wanted rest, sent away the woman who attended her.

She had one hope, which was that Felton would appear at the breakfast hour; but Felton did not come.

Were her fears realized?  Was Felton, suspected by the baron, about to fail her at the decisive moment?  She had only one day left.  Lord de Winter had announced her embarkation for the twenty-third, and it was now the morning of the twenty-second.

Nevertheless she still waited patiently till the hour for dinner.

Although she had eaten nothing in the morning, the dinner was brought in at its usual time.  Milady then perceived, with terror, that the uniform of the soldiers who guarded her was changed.

Then she ventured to ask what had become of Felton.

She was told that he had left the castle an hour before on horseback.  She inquired if the baron was still at the castle.  The soldier replied that he was, and that he had given orders to be informed if the prisoner wished to speak to him.

Milady replied that she was too weak at present, and that her only desire was to be left alone.

The soldier went out, leaving the dinner served.

Felton was sent away.  The marines were removed.  Felton was then mistrusted.

This was the last blow to the prisoner.

Left alone, she arose.  The bed, which she had kept from prudence and that they might believe her seriously wounded, burned her like a bed of fire.  She cast a glance at the door; the baron had had a plank nailed over the grating.  He no doubt feared that by this opening she might still by some diabolical means corrupt her guards.

Milady smiled with joy.  She was free now to give way to her transports without being observed.  She traversed her chamber with the excitement of a furious maniac or of a tigress shut up in an iron cage.  Certes, if the knife had been left in her power, she would now have thought, not of killing herself, but of killing the baron.

At six o’clock Lord de Winter came in.  He was armed at all points.  This man, in whom Milady till that time had only seen a very simple gentleman, had become an admirable jailer.  He appeared to foresee all, to divine all, to anticipate all.

A single look at Milady apprised him of all that was passing in her mind.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Three Musketeers from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.