[The Companions of Jehu by Alexandre Dumas, pere]@TWC D-Link bookThe Companions of Jehu CHAPTER XLII 2/6
After which he put the horses to with a rapidity and skill which bespoke in him a man familiar from childhood with all the details of an art pushed to extremes in our day by that honorable class of society which we call "gentlemen riders." That done, he waited, quieting his restless horses by voice and whip, judiciously combined, or used in turn. Everyone knows the rapidity with which the meals of the unhappy beings condemned to travel by mail are hurried through.
The half-hour was not up, when the voice of the conductor was heard, calling: "Come, citizen travellers, take your places." Montbar placed himself close to the carriage door and recognized Roland and the colonel of the 7th Chasseurs, perfectly, in spite of their disguise, as they jumped into the coach, paying no attention whatever to the postilion. The latter closed the door upon them, slipped the padlock through the two rings and turned the key.
Then, walking around the coach, he pretended to drop his whip before the other door, and, in stooping for it, slipped the second padlock through the rings, deftly turned the key as he straightened up, and, assured that the two officers were securely locked in, he sprang upon his horse, grumbling at the conductor who had left him to do his work.
In fact the conductor was still squabbling with the landlord over his bill when the third traveller got into his place in the coupe. "Are you coming this evening, to-night, or to-morrow morning, Pere Francois ?" cried the pretended postilion, imitating Antoine as best he could. "All right, all right, I'm coming," answered the conductor; then, looking around him: "Why, where are the travellers ?" he asked. "Here," replied the two officers from the interior and the agent from the coupe. "Is the door properly closed ?" persisted Pere Francois. "I'll answer for that," said Montbar. "Then off you go, baggage!" cried the conductor, as he climbed into the coupe and closed the door behind him. The postilion did not wait to be told twice; he started his horses, digging his spurs into the belly of the one he rode and lashing the others vigorously.
The mail-coach dashed forward at a gallop. Montbar drove as if he had never done anything else in his life; as he crossed the town the windows rattled and the houses shook; never did real postilion crack his whip with greater science. As he left Macon he saw a little troop of horse; they were the twelve chasseurs told off to follow the coach without seeming to escort it. The colonel passed his head through the window and made a sign to the sergeant who commanded them. Montbar did not seem to notice anything; but after going some four or five hundred yards, he turned his head, while executing a symphony with his whip, and saw that the escort had started. "Wait, my babes!" said Montbar, "I'll make you see the country." And he dug in his spurs and brought down his whip.
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