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accept this mission. So his Eminence thinks that I shall be safer in the Bastille? What a compliment!" "No, Paul. He wishes simply to exonerate you and return to you your privileges. Ah! how could you do it?" "Do what?" sinking upon one of the benches and striving to put together his wine-befuddled thoughts. "Take the brunt of a crime you supposed I had done?" "Supposed? Come, now; you are laughing!" "Word of honor: supposed I had done. It was not till a week ago that I learned what you had done. How I galloped back to Paris! It was magnificent of you; it was fine." "But you? And that cloak which I lent to you?" "Well, I was as little concerned as you, which I proved to Mazarin. I was at my sister's wedding at Blois. Your grey cloak was stolen from my room the day before De Brissac met his violent end. My lad, Hector, found the cloak in a tavern. How, he would not say. He dared not keep it, so sent it to the Candlestick in care of another lad. He understood that its disappearance might bring harm to you. I trounced him well for his carelessness in permitting the cloak to be stolen." "This is all very unusual. Stolen, from you?" bewildered. "Yes." "And it was not you?" "Am I a killer of old men? No, Paul. De Brissac and I were on excellent terms. You ought to know me better. I do not climb into windows, especially when the door is always open for me. I am like my sword, loyal, frank, and honest; we scorn braggart's cunning, dark alleys, stealth; we look not at a man's back but into his face; we prefer sunshine to darkness. And listen," tapping his sword: "he who has done this thing, be he never so far away, yet shall this long sword of mine find him and snuff his candle out." "Good lad, forgive! I am drunk, atrociously drunk; and I have been drunk so long!" The Chevalier swept the hair out of his eyes. "Have you an enemy? Have I?" "Enemies, enemies? If you but knew how I have searched my memory for a sign of one! The only enemy I could find was . . . myself. Here is your signet-ring, the one you pawned at Fontainebleau. You see, Mazarin went to the bottom of things." The Chevalier slipped the ring on his finger, twirled it, and remained silent. "Well?" said Victor, humorously. "You never told me about Madame de Brissac." The Chevalier held the beryl of the ring toward the light and watched the flames dance upon its surface. "Why should I have told yo
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