When the famous Charles De Batz-Castelmore, Comte D'Artagnan, pays the garrison a visit, the only one lacking in enthusiasm is his son, active musketeer D'Artagnan, who is sick of everybody drooling over pa's heroic stories. In the palace a list of French secret agents abroad is stolen from a strongbox only Mazarin and the king hold keys too, even Siroc finds no trace on the lock, just a horse hair, from a servant's wig, he even identifies the queen's footman Marcel Bastide, who is indeed the accomplice of the traitor, the debt-crushed Duke de Fourré. Queen-mother Anne gets an anonymous ransom note. Charles is put in charge of the search by the king; junior mistrusts him and snoops himself, finding a link between Marcel, whom Charles stabbed, and the duke. He discovers Charles is also in debt, beats him in a duel but filially accepts to trust him in the king's service. Mazarin's secret order is behind the creditor, Bon Bon, and most unforgiving...
—KGF Vissers