Book the Third - The Track of a Storm
1. I. In Secret
 
The traveller fared slowly on his way, who fared towards Paris from
 England in the autumn of the year one thousand seven hundred and
 ninety-two.  More than enough of bad roads, bad equipages, and bad
 horses, he would have encountered to delay him, though the fallen and
 unfortunate King of France had been upon his throne in all his glory;
 but, the changed times were fraught with other obstacles than these.
 Every town-gate and village taxing-house had its band of citizen-patriots, with their national muskets in a most explosive state of
 readiness, who stopped all comers and goers, cross-questioned them,
 inspected their papers, looked for their names in lists of their own,
 turned them back, or sent them on, or stopped them and laid them in
 hold, as their capricious judgment or fancy deemed best for the
 dawning Republic One and Indivisible, of Liberty, Equality,
 Fraternity, or Death. 
A very few French leagues of his journey were accomplished, when
 Charles Darnay began to perceive that for him along these country
 roads there was no hope of return until he should have been declared
 a good citizen at Paris.  Whatever might befall now, he must on to
 his journey's end.  Not a mean village closed upon him, not a common
 barrier dropped across the road behind him, but he knew it to be
 another iron door in the series that was barred between him and
 England.  The universal watchfulness so encompassed him, that if he
 had been taken in a net, or were being forwarded to his destination
 in a cage, he could not have felt his freedom more completely gone. 
This universal watchfulness not only stopped him on the highway
 twenty times in a stage, but retarded his progress twenty times in a
 day, by riding after him and taking him back, riding before him and
 stopping him by anticipation, riding with him and keeping him in
 charge.  He had been days upon his journey in France alone, when he
 went to bed tired out, in a little town on the high road, still a
 long way from Paris. 
Nothing but the production of the afflicted Gabelle's letter from his
 prison of the Abbaye would have got him on so far.  His difficulty at
 the guard-house in this small place had been such, that he felt his
 journey to have come to a crisis.  And he was, therefore, as little
 surprised as a man could be, to find himself awakened at the small
 inn to which he had been remitted until morning, in the middle of the
 night. 
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