[The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas]@TWC D-Link bookThe Three Musketeers 38 HOW, WITHOUT INCOMMODING HIMSELF, ATHOS PROCURES HIS EQUIPMENT 5/13
Well, let us pledge the ring, but upon one condition." "What ?" "That there shall be five hundred crowns for you, and five hundred crowns for me." "Don't dream it, Athos.
I don't need the quarter of such a sum--I who am still only in the Guards--and by selling my saddles, I shall procure it. What do I want? A horse for Planchet, that's all.
Besides, you forget that I have a ring likewise." "To which you attach more value, it seems, than I do to mine; at least, I have thought so." "Yes, for in any extreme circumstance it might not only extricate us from some great embarrassment, but even a great danger.
It is not only a valuable diamond, but it is an enchanted talisman." "I don't at all understand you, but I believe all you say to be true. Let us return to my ring, or rather to yours.
You shall take half the sum that will be advanced upon it, or I will throw it into the Seine; and I doubt, as was the case with Polycrates, whether any fish will be sufficiently complaisant to bring it back to us." "Well, I will take it, then," said d'Artagnan. At this moment Grimaud returned, accompanied by Planchet; the latter, anxious about his master and curious to know what had happened to him, had taken advantage of the opportunity and brought the garments himself. d'Artagnan dressed himself, and Athos did the same.
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