- On her journey to Paris the queen of England, Henrietta Maria, also the sister of King Louis is robbed of the crown jewels, which has to be sold in order to finance England's armed forces. The Musketeers quickly discover the thief to be Émile Bonnaire, a flamboyant but pathetic criminal they encountered previously. Athos, Porthos and D'Artagnan pressure Bonnaire into leading them to the diamonds' buyers to recover them. Aramis on the other hand, reconnects with Pauline, a childhood friend he grew up with in a bordel where their mothers lived and worked. She is set to marry a French nobleman but is being blackmailed by someone threatening to reveal the circumstances of her childhood, and Aramis tries to resolve the situation peacefully.—Lara Cain
- The king's sister, wife of Charles I of England, is robbed of her jewels and Louis asks the musketeers to retrieve them. They seek out the petty thief Emile Bonnaire to recover the diamonds the queen hopes to sell to aid her husband in the English civil war. Aramis is distracted by meeting childhood sweetheart Pauline, now engaged to older aristocrat St. Pierre and seeking help regarding a blackmailer out to expose her not so innocent past. However, circumstances conspire against a reconciliation between the former couple whilst Grimaud infiltrates Sylvie's libertarian group.—don @ minifie-1
- French King Louis's sister Henrietta Marie, queen of deposed English king Charles I Stuart, arrived in France without armed escort to seek finance for an army to suppress the Puritanic rebellion but the diamond jewels she brought therefore were robbed, ignoring the owner and true value. Louis orders the baffled musketeers to find and retrieve them, while governor Feron, who lost his fortune in a shipwreck, volunteers to pleasantly delay the Dutch banker, whom he also gets to promise the king a private loan. The four gamble luckily the man to lead them is criminal acquaintance Émile Bonnaire, who squirms and pleads in vain to get out of the painful process of recuperating the diamonds already sold, first the bulk to a gang leader, who welcomes the 'opportunity' to gain strait fame by fighting D'Artagnan, yet perishes. Another batch, mainly the blue showpiece diamond, was acquired by aristocrat St Pierre as lavish wedding present for his bride Caroline, who appeals to Aramis rather to help her deal with a blackmailer threatening to disclose her past in the brother where his mother worked. D'Artagnan farm tricks deal with the diamond-ornamented stallion, but Aramis finds his tasks gruesome and disappointing. Finally the king and his royal guests deal with the recuperated loot, the criminals at court and the fortune to defend monarchy.—KGF Vissers
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