[The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas]@TWC D-Link book
The Three Musketeers

24 THE PAVILION
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D'Artagnan leaned against the hedge, after having cast a glance behind it.

Beyond that hedge, that garden, and that cottage, a dark mist enveloped with its folds that immensity where Paris slept--a vast void from which glittered a few luminous points, the funeral stars of that hell! But for d'Artagnan all aspects were clothed happily, all ideas wore a smile, all shades were diaphanous.

The appointed hour was about to strike.

In fact, at the end of a few minutes the belfry of St.Cloud let fall slowly ten strokes from its sonorous jaws.

There was something melancholy in this brazen voice pouring out its lamentations in the middle of the night; but each of those strokes, which made up the expected hour, vibrated harmoniously to the heart of the young man.
His eyes were fixed upon the little pavilion situated at the angle of the wall, of which all the windows were closed with shutters, except one on the first story.


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