Ten Years Later: Louise de la Valliere by Alexandre Dumas Chapter 34 Page 22

carriages, and led him into the room corresponding to La Valliere’s. The man set to work with a will, tempted by the splendid reward which had been promised him. As the very best tools and implements had been selected from the reserve stock belonging to the engineers attached to the king’s household — and among others, a saw with teeth so sharp and well tempered that it was able, under water even, to cut through oaken joists as hard as iron — the work in question advanced very rapidly, and a square portion of the ceiling, taken from between two of the joists, fell into the arms of the delighted Saint-Aignan, Malicorne, the workman, and a confidential valet, the latter being one brought into the world to see and hear everything, but to repeat nothing.

In accordance with a new plan indicated by