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Forty-Five Guardsmen, The
Chapter 13. The Dormitory
Alexandre Dumas
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       _ CHAPTER XIII. THE DORMITORY
       In less than five minutes they arrived at their destination. The duke took out a key, and, after crossing a court, opened an arched door, the bottom of which was overgrown with long grass. They went along a dark corridor, and then up a staircase to a room, of which D'Epernon had also the key. He opened the door, and showed the king forty-five beds, and in each of them a sleeper.
       The king looked at all this with a troubled curiosity. "Well," said he, "who are these people?"
       "People who sleep to-night, but will not do so to-morrow night."
       "Why not?"
       "That your majesty may sleep in peace."
       "Explain yourself. Are these your friends?"
       "Chosen by me, sire; intrepid guards, who will not quit your majesty, and who, gentlemen all, will be able to go whereever your majesty goes, and will let no one approach you."
       "And you thought of this, D'Epernon?"
       "I, alone, sire."
       "We shall be laughed at."
       "No, we shall be feared."
       "But they will ruin me?"
       "How can a king be ruined?"
       "I cannot pay my Swiss!"
       "Look at these men, sire; do you think they would be very expensive to keep?"
       "But they could not always live like this, they would be stifled. And look at their doublets!"
       "Oh! I confess they are not all very sumptuously clothed, but if they had been born dukes and peers--"
       "Yes, I understand; they would have cost me more?"--"Just so."
       "Well, how much will they cost? That will, perhaps, decide me, for, in truth, D'Epernon, they do not look very inviting."
       "Sire, I know they are rather thin and burned by our southern sun, but I was so when I came to Paris. They will fatten and whiten like me."
       "How they snore!"
       "Sire, you must not judge them to-night; they have supped well."
       "Stay, there is one speaking in his sleep; let us listen."
       Indeed, one of the gentlemen called out, "If you are a woman, fly!"
       The king approached him softly. "Ah! ah!" said he, "he is a gallant."
       "What do you think of him, sire?"
       "His face pleases me, and he has white hands and a well-kept beard."
       [Illustration: "HIS FACE PLEASES ME, AND HE HAS WHITE HANDS AND A WELL-KEPT BEARD."]
       "It is Ernanton de Carmainges, a fine fellow, who is capable of much."
       "He has left behind him some love, I suppose, poor fellow. But what a queer figure his next neighbor is."
       "Ah! that is M. de Chalabre. If he ruins your majesty, it will not be without enriching himself, I answer for it."
       "And that one, with such a somber air; he does not seem as though he dreamed of love."
       "What number, sire?"
       "Number 12."
       "M. de St. Maline, a brave fellow, with a heart of bronze."
       "Well, Lavalette, you have had a good idea."
       "I should think so. Imagine the effect that will be produced by these new watch-dogs, who will follow you like your shadow."
       "Yes, yes; but they cannot follow me in this guise."
       "Now we return to the money. But about this, also, I have an idea."
       "D'Epernon!"
       "My zeal for your majesty doubles my imagination."
       "Well, let us hear it."
       "If it depended upon me, each of these gentlemen should find by his bed a purse containing 1,000 crowns, as payment for the first six months."
       "One thousand crowns for six months! 6,000 livres a year! You are mad, duke; an entire regiment would not cost that."
       "You forget, sire, that it is necessary they should be well dressed. Each will have to take from his 1,000 crowns enough for arms and equipments. Set down 1,500 livres to effect this in a manner to do you honor, and there would remain 4,500 livres for the first year. Then for subsequent years you could give 3,000 livres."
       "That is more reasonable."
       "Then your majesty accepts?"
       "There is only one difficulty, duke."
       "What is it?"
       "Want of money."
       "Sire, I have found a method. Six months ago a tax was levied on shooting and fishing."
       "Well?"
       "The first payment produced 65,000 crowns, which have not yet been disposed of."
       "I destined it for the war, duke."
       "The first interest of the kingdom is the safety of the king."
       "Well; there still would remain 20,000 crowns for the army."
       "Pardon, sire, but I had disposed of them, also."
       "Ah!"
       "Yes, sire; your majesty had promised me money."
       "Ah! and you give me a guard to obtain it."
       "Oh! sire. But look at them; will they not have a good effect?"
       "Yes, when dressed, they will not look bad. Well, so be it."
       "Well, then, sire, I have a favor to ask."
       "I should be astonished if you had not."
       "Your majesty is bitter to-day."
       "Oh! I only mean, that having rendered me a service, you have the right to ask for a return."
       "Well, sire, it is an appointment."
       "Why, you are already colonel-general of infantry, more would crush you."
       "In your majesty's service, I am a Samson."
       "What is it, then?"
       "I desire the command of these forty-five gentlemen."
       "What! you wish to march at their head?"
       "No; I should have a deputy; only I desire that they should know me as their head."
       "Well, you shall have it. But who is to be your deputy?"
       "M. de Loignac, sire."
       "Ah! that is well."
       "He pleases your majesty?"
       "Perfectly."
       "Then it is decided?"
       "Yes; let it be as you wish."
       "Then I will go at once to the treasurer, and get my forty-five purses."
       "To-night?"
       "They are to find them to-morrow, when they wake."
       "Good; then I will return."
       "Content, sire?"
       "Tolerably."
       "Well guarded, at all events."
       "By men who sleep."
       "They will not sleep to-morrow, sire." _
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Chapter 1. The Porte St. Antoine
Chapter 2. What Passed Outside The Porte St. Antoine
Chapter 3. The Examination
Chapter 4. His Majesty Henri The Third
Chapter 5. The Execution
Chapter 6. The Brothers
Chapter 7. "The Sword Of The Brave Chevalier"
Chapter 8. The Gascon
Chapter 9. M. De Loignac
Chapter 10. The Purchase Of Cuirasses
Chapter 11 Still The League
Chapter 12. The Chamber Of His Majesty Henri III
Chapter 13. The Dormitory
Chapter 14. The Shade Of Chicot
Chapter 15. The Difficulty Of Finding A Good Ambassador
Chapter 16. The Serenade
Chapter 17. Chicot's Purse
Chapter 18. The Priory Of The Jacobins
Chapter 19. The Two Friends
Chapter 20. The Breakfast
Chapter 21. Brother Borromee
Chapter 22. The Lesson
Chapter 23. The Penitent
Chapter 24. The Ambush
Chapter 25. The Guises
Chapter 26. The Louvre
Chapter 27. The Revelation
Chapter 28. Two Friends
Chapter 29. St. Maline
Chapter 30. De Loignac's Interview With The Forty-Five
Chapter 31. The Bourgeois Of Paris
Chapter 32. Brother Borromee
Chapter 33. Chicot, Latinist
Chapter 34. The Four Winds
Chapter 35. How Chicot Continued His Journey, And What Happened To Him
Chapter 36. The Third Day Of The Journey
Chapter 37. Ernanton De Carmainges
Chapter 38. The Stable-Yard
Chapter 39. The Seven Sins Of Magdalene
Chapter 40. Bel-Esbat
Chapter 41. The Letter Of M. De Mayenne
Chapter 42. How Dom Gorenflot Blessed The King...
Chapter 43. How Chicot Blessed King Louis II
Chapter 44. How The King Of Navarre Guesses...
Chapter 45. The Avenue Three Thousand Feet Long
Chapter 46. Marguerite's Room
Chapter 47. The Explanation
Chapter 48. The Spanish Ambassador
Chapter 49. The Poor Of Henri Of Navarre
Chapter 50. The True Mistress Of The King Of Navarre
Chapter 51. Chicot's Astonishment At Finding Himself...
Chapter 52. How They Hunted The Wolf In Navarre
Chapter 53. How Henri Of Navarre Behaved In Battle
Chapter 54. What Was Passing At The Louvre...
Chapter 55. Red Plume And White Plume
Chapter 56. The Door Opens
Chapter 57. How A Great Lady Loved In The Year 1586
Chapter 58. How St. Maline Entered Into The Turret, And What Followed
Chapter 59. What Was Passing In The Mysterious House
Chapter 60. The Laboratory
Chapter 61. What Monseigneur Francois...
Chapter 62. Preparations For Battle
Chapter 63. Monseigneur
Chapter 64. Monseigneur
Chapter 65. French And Flemings
Chapter 66. The Travelers
Chapter 67. Explanation
Chapter 68. The Water
Chapter 69. Flight
Chapter 70. Transfiguration
Chapter 71. The Two Brothers
Chapter 72. The Expedition
Chapter 73. Paul-Emile
Chapter 74. One Of The Souvenirs Of The Duc D'anjou
Chapter 75. How Aurilly Executed The Commission Of The Duc D'anjou
Chapter 76. The Journey
Chapter 77. How King Henri III Did Not Invite Crillon...
Chapter 78. How, After Receiving News From The South...
Chapter 79. The Two Companions
Chapter 80. The Corne D'abondance
Chapter 81. What Happened In The Little Room
Chapter 82. The Husband And The Lover
Chapter 83. Showing How Chicot Began To Understand...
Chapter 84. Le Cardinal De Joyeuse
Chapter 85. News From Aurilly
Chapter 86. Doubt
Chapter 87. Certainty
Chapter 88. Fatality.
Chapter 89. Les Hospitalieres
Chapter 90. His Highness Monseigneur Le Duc De Guise