
The story opens on a bright February morning in 1815, when the three‑masted Pharaon limps into the bustling harbor of Marseille. Crowds gather on the ramparts of Saint‑Jean, eyes fixed on the vessel that carries a young, dark‑haired sailor named Edmond, his calm demeanor belying the weight of recent tragedy. He tells the shipowner Morrel of the sudden death of Captain Leclère, a fever that struck the man at sea, and of the cargo that has safely reached port.
Yet the atmosphere is tinged with unease; whispers of a possible plot swirl among the onlookers, and the young man's steady gaze hints at a deeper danger awaiting him. As the crew prepares the ship for its next voyage, Edmond's loyalty to his captain and his own sense of honor become the quiet forces that will soon be tested. The stage is set for a tale of intrigue, betrayal, and a quest for justice that will carry him far beyond the Mediterranean waters.
Language
fr
Duration
~12 hours (720K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2006-03-15
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1802–1870
Best known for The Three Musketeers and The Count of Monte Cristo, this wildly popular French storyteller helped define the adventure novel. His life was dramatic too, shaped by family history that reached from France to Saint-Domingue, now Haiti.
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1813–1888
Best known as Alexandre Dumas’s behind-the-scenes collaborator, he helped shape some of the most famous adventure novels of the 19th century. A historian, dramatist, and novelist in his own right, he spent much of his life balancing literary success with a long fight for proper credit.
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