Home   [800x750]    About


who was to set out that evening for Tours, was waiting in the next chamber.
   Athos sipped the last bottle of his Spanish wine.
   In the meantime d'Artagnan was defiling with his company. Arriving at the Faubourg St. Antoine, he turned round to look gaily at the Bastille; but as it was the Bastille alone he looked at, he did not observe Milady, who, mounted upon a light chestnut horse, designated him with her finger to two ill-looking men who came close up to the ranks to take notice of him.   To a look of interrogation which they made, Milady replied by a sign that it was he.   Then, certain that there could be no mistake in the execution of her orders, she started her horse and disappeared.
   The two men followed the company, and on leaving the Faubourg St. Antoine, mounted two horses properly equipped, which a servant without livery had waiting for them.

   41   THE SEIGE OF LA ROCHELLE

   The Siege of La Rochelle was one of the great political events of the reign of Louis XIII, and one of the great military enterprises of the cardinal.   It is, then, interesting and even necessary that we should say a few words about it, particularly as many details of this siege are connected in too important a manner with the story we have undertaken to relate to allow us to pass it over in silence.
   The political plans of the cardinal when he undertook this siege were extensive.   Let us unfold them first, and then pass on to the private plans which perhaps had not less influence upon his Eminence than the others.
   Of the important cities given up by Henry IV to the Huguenots as places of safety, there only remained La Rochelle.   It became necessary, therefore, to destroy this last bulwark of Calvinism--a dangerous leaven

Chapter available in: French Spanish Italian Portuguese Romanian Next