The Man in the Iron Mask (AmazonClassics Edition)
The Friends of M. Fouquet
The king had returned to Paris, and with him D’Artagnan, who, in twenty-four hours, having made with the greatest care all possible inquiries at Belle-Isle, had learned nothing of the secret so well kept by the heavy rock of Locmaria, which had fallen on the heroic Porthos. The captain of the musketeers only knew what those two valiant men—what those two friends, whose defense he had so nobly taken up, whose lives he had so earnestly endeavored to save—aided by three faithful Bretons—had accomplished against a whole army. He had been able to see, launched on the neighboring heath, the human remains which had stained with blood the stones scattered among the flowering broom. He learned also that a bark had been seen far out at sea, and that, like a bird of prey, a royal vessel had pursued, overtaken, and devoured this poor little bird which was flying with rapid wings. But there D’Artagnan’s certainties ended. The field of conjecture was thrown open at this boundary. Now, what could he conjecture? The vessel had not returned. It is true that a brisk wind had prevailed for three days; but the corvette was known to be a good sailer and solid in its timbers; it could not fear gales of wind, and it ought, according to the calculation of D’Artagnan, to have either returned to Brest or come back to the mouth of the Loire. Such was the news, ambiguous it is true, but in some degree reassuring to him personally, which D’Artagnan brought to Louis XIV, when the king, followed by all the court, returned to Paris.
Louis, satisfied with his success, Louis—more mild and more affable since he felt himself more powerful—had not ceased for an instant to ride close to the carriage-door of Mlle. de la Valliere. Everybody had been anxious to amuse the two queens, so as to make them forget this abandonment of the son and the husband. Everything breathed of the future; the past was nothing to anybody. Only that past came like a painful and bleeding wound to the hearts of some tender and devoted spirits. Scarcely was the king reinstalled in Paris when he received a touching proof of this. Louis XIV had just risen and taken his first repast, when his captain of the musketeers presented himself before him. D’Artagnan was pale and looked unhappy.
“What is the matter, D’Artagnan?” asked Louis.
“Sire, a great misfortune has happened to me.”
“Good heavens, what is that?”
“Sire, I have lost one of my friends, Monsieur du Vallon, in the affair at Belle-Isle.”
And, while speaking these words D’Artagnan fixed his falcon eye upon Louis XIV, to catch the first feeling that would show itself.
“I knew it,” replied the king quietly.
“You knew it and did not tell me!” cried the musketeer.
“To what good? Your grief, my friend, is so respectable! It was my duty to treat it kindly. To have informed you of this misfortune, which I knew would pain you so greatly, D’Artagnan, would have been, in your eyes, to have triumphed over you. Yes, I knew that Monsieur du Vallon had buried himself beneath the rocks of Locmaria; I knew that Monsieur D’Herblay had taken one of my vessels with its crew, and had compelled it to convey him to Bayonne. But I was willing you should learn these matters in a direct manner, in order that you might be convinced my friends are with me respected and sacred; that always in me the man will immolate himself to men, while the king is so often found to sacrifice men to his majesty and power.”
“But, sire, how could you know?”
“How do you yourself know, D’Artagnan?”
“By this letter, sire, which Monsieur D’Herblay, free and out of danger, writes me from Bayonne.”
“Look here,” said the king, drawing from a casket placed upon the table close to the seat upon which D’Artagnan was leaning, “here is a letter copied exactly from that of Monsieur D’Herblay. Here is the very letter, which Colbert placed in my hands a week before you received yours. I am well served, you may perceive.”
“Yes, sire,” murmured the musketeer, “you were the only man whose fortune was capable of dominating the fortunes and strength of my two friends. You have used, sire, but you will not abuse it, will you?”
“D’Artagnan,” said the king, with a smile beaming with kindness, “I could have Monsieur D’Herblay carried off from the territories of the King of Spain, and brought here alive to inflict justice upon him. But, D’Artagnan, be assured I will not yield to this first and natural impulse. He is free, let him continue free.”
“Oh, sire! you will not always remain so clement, so noble, so generous as you have shown yourself with respect to me and Monsieur D’Herblay; you will have about you counselors who will cure you of that wickedness.”
“No, D’Artagnan; you are mistaken when you accuse my council of urging me to pursue rigorous measures. The advice to spare Monsieur D’Herblay comes from Colbert himself.”
“Oh, sire!” said D’Artagnan, extremely surprised.
“As for you,” continued the king, with a kindness very uncommon with him, “I have several pieces of good news to announce to you; but you shall know them, my dear captain, the moment I have made my accounts all straight. I have said that I wish to make, and would make, your fortune; that promise will soon be a reality.”
“A thousand times thanks, sire; I can wait. But I implore you, while I go and practice patience, that your majesty will deign to notice those poor people who have for so long a time besieged your antechamber, and come humbly to lay a petition at your feet.”
“Who are they?”
“Enemies of your majesty.”
The king raised his head.
“Friends of Monsieur Fouquet,” added D’Artagnan.
“Their names?”
“Monsieur Gourville, Monsieur Pellisson, and a poet, Monsieur Jean de la Fontaine.”
The king took a moment to reflect.
“What do they want?”
“I do not know.”
“How do they appear?”
“In great affliction.”
“What do they say?”
“Nothing.”
“What do they do?”
“They weep.”
“Let them come in,” said the king, with a serious brow.
D’Artagnan turned rapidly on his heel, raised the tapestry which closed the entrance to the royal chamber, and, directing his voice to the adjoining room, cried:
“Introduce!”
The three men D’Artagnan had named soon appeared at the door of the cabinet in which were the king and his captain. A profound silence prevailed in their passage. The courtiers, at the approach of the friends of the unfortunate surintendant of finances, the courtiers, we say, drew back, as if fearful of being affected by contagion, with disgrace and misfortune. D’Artagnan, with a quick step, came forward to take by the hand the unhappy men who stood trembling at the door of the cabinet; he led them in front of the fauteuil of the king, who, having placed himself in the embrasure of a window, awaited the moment of presentation, and was preparing himself to give the supplicants a rigorously diplomatic reception.
The first of the friends of Fouquet’s that advanced was Pellisson. He did not weep, but his tears were only restrained that the king might the better hear his voice and his prayer. Gourville bit his lips to check his tears, out of respect for the king. La Fontaine buried his face in his handkerchief, and the only signs of life he gave were the convulsive motions of his shoulders, raised by his sobs.
The king had preserved all his dignity. His countenance was impassible. He had even maintained the frown which had appeared when D’Artagnan had announced his enemies to him. He made a gesture which signified, “Speak”; and he remained standing, with his eyes searchingly fixed upon these desponding men. Pellisson bowed down to the ground, and La Fontaine knelt as people do in churches. This obstinate silence, disturbed only by such dismal sighs and groans, began to excite in the king, not compassion, but impatience.
“Monsieur Pellisson,” said he, in a sharp, dry tone. “Monsieur Gourville, and you, Monsieur—” and he did not name La Fontaine—“I cannot, without sensible displeasure, see you come to plead for one of the greatest criminals that it is the duty of my justice to punish. A king does not allow himself to be softened but by tears and remorse; the tears of the innocent, the remorse of the guilty. I have no faith either in the remorse of Monsieur Fouquet or the tears of his friends, because the one is tainted to the very heart, and the others ought to dread coming to offend me in my own palace. For these reasons, I beg you, Monsieur Pellisson, Monsieur Gourville, and you, Monsieur ——, to say nothing that will not plainly proclaim the respect you have for my will.”
“Sire,” replied Pellisson, trembling at these terrible words, “we are come to say nothing to your majesty that is not the most profound expression of the most sincere respect and love which are due to a king from all his subjects. Your majesty’s justice is redoubtable; every one must yield to the sentences it pronounces. We respectfully bow before it. Far from us be the idea of coming to defend him who has had the misfortune to offend your majesty. He who has incurred your displeasure may be a friend of ours, but he is an enemy to the state. We abandon him, but with tears, to the severity of the king.”
“Besides,” interrupted the king, calmed by that supplicating voice and those persuasive words, “my parliament will decide. I do not strike without having weighed a crime; my justice does not wield the sword without having employed the scales.”
“Therefore have we every confidence in that impartiality of the king, and hope to make our feeble voices heard, with the consent of your majesty, when the hour for defending an accused friend shall strike for us.”
“In that case, messieurs, what do you ask of me?” said the king, with his most imposing air.
“Sire,” continued Pellisson, “the accused leaves a wife and a family. The little property he had was scarcely sufficient to pay his debts, and Madame Fouquet, since the captivity of her husband, is abandoned by everybody. The hand of your majesty strikes like the hand of God. When the Lord sends the curse of leprosy or pestilence into a family, every one flies and shuns the abode of the leprous or plague-stricken. Sometimes, but very rarely, a generous physician alone ventures to approach the ill-accursed threshold, passes it with courage, and exposes his life to combat death. He is the last resource of the dying, he is the instrument of heavenly mercy. Sire, we supplicate you, with clasped hands and bended knees, as a divinity is supplicated! Madame Fouquet has no longer any friends, no longer any support; she weeps in her poor deserted house, abandoned by all those who besieged its doors in the hour of prosperity; she has neither credit nor hope left. At least, the unhappy wretch upon whom your anger falls receives from you, however culpable he may be, the daily bread which is moistened by his tears. As much afflicted, more destitute than her husband, Madame Fouquet—she who had the honor to receive your majesty at her table—Madame Fouquet, the wife of the ancient surintendant of your majesty’s finances, Madame Fouquet has no longer bread.”
Here the mortal silence which enchained the breath of Pellisson’s two friends was broken by an outburst of sobs; and D’Artagnan, whose chest heaved at hearing this humble prayer, turned round toward the angle of the cabinet to bite his mustache and conceal his sighs.
The king had preserved his eye dry and his countenance severe; but the color had mounted to his cheeks, and the firmness of his look was visibly diminished.
“What do you wish?” said he, in an agitated voice.
“We come humbly to ask your majesty,” replied Pellisson, upon whom emotion was fast gaining, “to permit us, without incurring the displeasure of your majesty, to lend to Madame Fouquet two thousand pistoles collected among the old friends of her husband, in order that the widow may not stand in need of the necessaries of life.”
At the word widow, pronounced by Pellisson while Fouquet was still alive, the king turned very pale; his pride fell; pity rose from his heart to his lips; he cast a softened look upon the men who knelt, sobbing, at his feet.
“God forbid!” said he, “that I should confound the innocent with the guilty. They know me but ill who doubt my mercy toward the weak. I strike none but the arrogant. Do, messieurs, do all that your hearts counsel you to assuage the grief of Madame Fouquet. Go, messieurs—go!”
The three men arose in silence with dried eyes. The tears had been dried up by contact with their burning cheeks and eyelids. They had not the strength to address their thanks to the king, who himself cut short their solemn reverences by intrenching himself suddenly behind the fauteuil.
D’Artagnan remained alone with the king.
“Well,” said he, approaching the young prince, who interrogated him with his look. “Well, my master! If you had not the device which belongs to your sun, I would recommend you one which Monsieur Convart should translate into Latin, ‘Mild with the lowly; rough with the strong.’”
The king smiled, and passed into the next apartment, after having said to D’Artagnan:
“I give you the leave of absence you must want to put the affairs of your friend, the late Monsieur du Vallon, in order.”