MADAME * SANS GENE ; SARDOU 'LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF CALIF' presented to the LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SAN DIEGO by FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY Mrs. Edwin W. Meise donor MADAME SANS-GENE AN HISTORICAL ROMANCE TRANSLATED FROM THB FRENCH LOUIE R. HELLER XI- W YORK HURST & COMPANY PUBLISHERS COPYRIGHTED, 1895, BY HOME BOOK COMPANY. MADAME SANS-GENE. CHAPTER I. / THE FRICASSEE. IN the Rue de Bondy lighted lamps smoked and showed the entrance to a popular ball, the Vaux-Hall. This ball, with its fantastic name, was directed by citizen Joly, an artist of the " Theatre des Arts." This was in the great days of July, 1792. Louis XVI. still held a nominal royalty ; but his head, destined to the axe since the twentieth of June, rested now uncertainly on his shoulders. Revolution thundered in the very streets. Robespierre, Marat, and Barbaroux, the handsome Marsellais, had held a secret conclave, in which, with- out being able to agree in their choice of a chief a, dictator who should stand as the " Friend of the Peo- ple," they had decided to make a decisive onset on the royal family, now confined in the palace of the Tuileries as in a fortress. Men waited for the arrival of the Marseilles troops to give the signal for the insurrection. The Prussian King and the Austrian Emperor made preparations, on their side, to throw themselves upon France, which they considered an easy prey, a nation overthrown : counting, too, upon treasons and internal dissensions for cutting a passage for their armies even to the capital. With unwarranted arrogance the Prince of Bruns- wick, generalissimo of the royal and imperial armies, had issued from Coblenz his famous manifesto, in which he said : " If the palace of the Tuileries be forced or insulted, if there be done the least violence, the least outrage, to their majesties, the King Louis XVI. and the Queen Marie-Antoinette, or to any member of the royal family ; if their security, preservation, and liberty be not immediately insured, the Emperor and the King will take such vengeance as shall be forever memo- rable, in delivering up the city of Paris to a military ex- ecution and to total overthrow, and the chief conspirators to such punishment as they shall richly deserve." Paris answered in wildly defiant tones by organizing the uprising of the tenth of August. But Paris is ever a volcano with two craters ; its joy ever alternates with passion. Men armed themselves in the suburbs. They talked in the clubs, at the Commune ; they distributed car- tridges to the national patriotic guards without in the least losing their taste for pleasure and their love of dancing. For people were much agitated in the days, of the Revolution. On the fresh ruins of the Bastille, at last demolished, a placard was placed, bearing the words : " Here one may dance." And this was not irony. The good fortune which could place in the hands of the patriots the melan- choly site where, through many centuries, the un- fortunate victims of monarchical caprice had groaned unheard, made that a place wherein to tune the violins. Strains of joy succeeded the melancholy hoot of the owl ; and it was, moreover, one way of proving the entire disappearance of the old regime. The revolution was accomplished amid the singing; of the " Marseillaise " and the dancing of the " Car- magnole." To enumerate the many balls going on at that time in Paris would take much space. There was dancing at the Hotel d'Aligre", in the Rue d'Orleans-Saint- Honore" ; at the Hotel Biron, in the Hanoverian tent ; in the hall of the Exchequer ; at the Hotel de Longue- ville ; in the Rue Filles-Saint-Thomas ; at la Modestie ; at the dance of Calypso ; in the faubourg Montmartre, at Poncherons ; at la Courtille, and lastly, at the Vaux- Hall, whither we propose to take the readers. Like the costumes, the dances of the old school were blent with new steps ; the pavane", the minuet, and the gavotte were succeeded by the tre"nitz, the rigaudon, the monaco, and the popular fricassee. On the vast floor of the Vaux-Hall one night, at the close of July, 1792, there was a great crowd, and people were amusing themselves mightily. The women young, agile, and well dressed, and the men were full of life. The costumes were varied. Short breeches, with stockings, wig, and French coat, stood side by side with revolutionary long trousers ; for let us remark, in passing, that the term " sans-culottes " which was used to designate the patriots, signified simply that these went about without the customary covering for the legs ; the other faction would have said that the legs of the revolutionists were too much covered, for the citizens used more cloth and no longer wore breeches, but pantaloons. Many uniforms shone there, for many of the national guards were in the hall, ready to rush from the scene at the first drum-call to begin a dance about the throne, the overture to the Revolution. Among these, moving with the air of a victor, and showing to advantage as he passed around and before the pretty girls, was a tall, muscular youth, whose face was both energetic and gentle, and who wore the fop- pish costume of the French guard, with the red and blue cockade of the municipality of Paris. The silver braid on his sleeve indicated his rank ; he had, like many of his comrades, been a sergeant in the city mi- litia before the disbanding of the French guards. He passed again and again before a robust and pretty girl with honest blue eyes, who was not dancing. She eyed the fine French guardsman scornfully when he hesitated to approach her, despite the encourage- ment of his comrades. Go on, go. on, Lefebvre," whispered one of the guards ; " the place is not impregnable." " Perhaps she has herself already opened a breach," suggested another. "If you dare not attempt it, I shall myself," added a third. " You can see for yourself that you are the one at whom she has been looking. They are going to dance the fricassee. Ask her to dance," spoke the first man, encouraging Sergeant Lefebvre. The latter was silent. He dared not accost that fresh young woman, who was in nowise abashed, and yet who seemed to have no chilling frost in her glance. " Do you think so, Bernadotte ? " asked Lefebvre, of him who had last spoken, who was also a sergeant. " By Heaven ! a French soldier has never yet retreated before an enemy nor in the presence of a pretty woman, /will make the attack ! " And, leaving his comrades, Sergeant Lefebvre went straight to the pretty girl, whose eyes were now filled with angry light, and who stood ready to receive him in fine style, having overheard the disrespectful re- marks the soldiers had made about her. " Listen, girl," she said to her neighbor, . " I shall teach those saucy guards whether or not I have made an opening for them." She got up quickly, her hands on her hips, her eyes flashing, her tongue ready for use, prompt to return an answer to the attack. The sergeant thought actions would count more than words. So, holding out his arms, he seized the young girl by the waist, and attempted to imprint a kiss upon her neck, saying as he did so : " Mam'zelle, will you dance the fricasse'e ? " The girl was quick. In the twinkling of an eye, she disengaged herself, and launched out her hand in the direction of the sergeant's cheek, to which, as he stood abashed and confounded, she applied it vigorously, saying coolly, and with a joyous ring in her voice, Take that, boy ! There's your fricasse'e," The sergeant retreated a step ; rubbed his cheek ; blushed ; and, raising his hand to his three-cornered hat, said gallantly, " Mam'zelle, I ask your pardon." "Oh, there's no offence, lad. Let that serve you as a lesson. Another time you'll know with whom you have dealings," replied the girl, whose anger now seemed entirely gone ; and who turned to her compan- ion and said softly, " He's not at all bad, that guards- man." Bernadotte, meantime, who had followed with a jealous eye, when his companion had approached the pretty girl, was well satisfied to see things grow ugly, and coming up to him took him by the arm exclaiming : Come With us, Lefebvre. You see that nobody wants to dance with you. Perhaps mademoiselle doesn't know how to dance the fricasse'e." What's that you say ? " The girl spoke quickly. " \ can dance the fricasse'e, and I shall dance it with whom I please not with you, however. But if your comrade were to ask me politely, ah, then, I should be jlad to dance a measure with him. No ill-feelinj, is there, sergeant ? " And the happy, light-hearted girl extended her hand to Sergeant Lefebvre. " Ill-feeling ? No, surely not, mademoiselle ! Yet I ask your pardon once more. That which has just passed, perhaps you will have noticed, is a little the fault of my comrades. It was Bernadotte, whom you see there, that pushed me to it. And I got simply what I deserved." While Lefebvre was offering his excuses, as best he could, the girl interrupted him and said bluntly, " By your a'ccent one would take you for an Alsatian." " Born a native of the Upper-Rhine at Ruffach," was the response. " Heavens, what luck ! I am from St. Amarin," was the girl's rejoinder. "You are my country-woman, then." And you my countryman. How people do find each other, eh ? " " And you are called ? " " Catharine Upscher, laundress Rue Royal at the corner of the Rue Orties-Saint-HonoreV' " And I am Lefebvre, ex-sergeant of the guards ; but now in the militia." " Later, countryman, we will, if you choose, learn more of each other ; but at this moment the fricassee calls us." And, taking him by the hand, she led him into the maze of the dancers. As she danced past a young man with a pale, almost wan face, who wore his long hair down over his dog- like eyes, whose bearing was quiet and crafty, and whose long coat looked like a cassock, he said haughtily, " What ! Catharine among the guards ? " " You know this Catharine ? " asked Sergeant Berna- dotte, who had heard the remark. " Oh, in all faith, all honor ! " replied the clerical- looking youth ; " she is my laundress. A good girl, worthy, proper, virtuous with open heart, and ready tongue. Throughout the quarter she is called for her frank speech and emphatic ways, ' Mile. Sans-GSne.' " The music of the orchestra grew louder, and the rest of the conversation was lost in the wild tumult of the fricase6e. CHAPTER II. THE PREDICTION. THE dance ended, Sergeant Lefebvre conducted his countrywoman to her place. Peace had been estab- lished. They talked like two old acquaintances and walked arm in arm like lovers. Lefebvre, to insure the continuance of amity, pro- posed taking some refreshments. " Agreed," said Catharine. " Oh, I do not stand o ceremony. You seem to me a good sort of fellow ; and, faith, I shall not refuse your polite offer, especially * the fricasse'e makes one thirsty. Let us sit here." They took their 'places at one of the tables which stood about the room. Lefebvre seemed quite charmed at the turn things had taken. He had, nevertheless, a moment's hesita- tion before seating himself. " What's the matter ? " demanded Catharine, brusque- iy- " Look you, mam'zelle, it is this," he answered, some- what embarrassed, " we are not accustomed among the guards, nor yet in the militia, to act like Swifzers." "Oh, I understand your comrades. Well, ask them. Do you want me to call them ? " And without waiting his permission she rose, mounted a green wooden bench which stood beside the table, and making a speaking trumpet of her hands, called to the three guards who stood at a distance, looking with something of amusement at the sport of the couple. " Ohe ! lads come over here ! We will not eat you ! Besides, to watch others drinking gives one the blues." The three guards found no difficulty in answering the familiar invitation. " What ! Not going, Bernadotte ? " asked one of the guards of the sergeant who lingered behind. " I want to talk with the citizen," answered Berna- dotte, in a cross tone, jealous of the ascendancy of a comrade, and wishing, despite the evident success Lefebvre had scored with the pretty laundress, to hold himself aloof and affect to converse with the young man with the long frock and dog-like eyes. io " Oh, the citizen isn't in the way," cried Catharine ; " I know him, and he knows me. We'll ! is it not so. Citizen Fouche" ?" So called, the young man came toward the table on which Lefebvre had ordered warm wines and pastry to be served ; and said, as he greeted them, " Since Mademoiselle Catharine desires it, I come. We will be seated. I love to find myself among the valiant de- fenders of the city." The four guards and the citizen called Fouch6 seated themselves ; and, glasses having been filled, they drank together. Catharine and Lefebvre, who had already attempted several quiet gallantries, drank, unnoticed, from the same glass. Lefebvre, growing bolder, now endeavored to snatch a kiss. Catharine drew back. " Not that, countryman ! " she said. " I will laugh gayly with you ; but no more." 4< You scarce looked for modesty in a washerwoman, soldier, did you ? " said Fouche". Ah ! in such mat- ters she is not complaisant at any time, our Mile. Sans- " Speak up, Citizen Fouche"," said Catharine quickly ; " you know nje, for I do your laundry-work in the three months since you came from Nantes, is there any one dare say anything against me ? " No nothing absolutely nothing ! " * I will consent to play thus ; to dance a fricassee at times ; even to drink with such good lads as you seem to be ; but no one in the quarter, or elsewhere, mark you, dare boast that he has crossed the threshold of my chamber. My work-room is open to all the world ; but to my bed-chamber but one shall have the key ! " " And who may that lucky fellow be ? " asked Le- febvre, twirling his moustache. "My husband," was Catharine's haughty reply ; and clicking her glass against Lefebvre's she added, laugh- ing, " Then, being married, countryman, what have you to say ? " That it were not so ill for him, in such a case," re- plied the sergeant, still caressing his moustache. " T your health, mam'zelle ! " To yours, citizen, and to the fulfilment of your wishes." And they all drank gayly, laughing merrily at the light sally. At that moment, a singular figure wearing a pointed cap, and dressed in a long black robe, spangled with silver stars and blue crescents, and long-tailed comets, glided among the tables like a spectre. " Look ! it is Fortunatus ! ** cried Bernadotte. " It is the magician. Who wants to have his fortune told ? " Every dance, in those days, had its sorcerer, or its reader of cards, predicting the future and revealing the past, for the sum of five sous. In the confusion of a period such as that which pre- ceded the tenth of August, when an old social order i a gjftadame disappeared entirely to give place to a new, in a change whose rapidity was almost fairy-like, a belief in the marvellous was, naturally, prevalent. Cagliostro and his glass, Mesmer and his trough, had quite upset the heads of the aristocracy. Popular credulity was given to the soothsayers of the cross- roads, and to the astrologers of the taverns. Catharine burned to know the future. It seemed to her that her meeting with the handsome sergeant would in some way alter her life. Just as she was about to ask Lefebvre to call Fortu- natus and question him for her, the magician turned to answer a group of three young men at an opposke table. "Let us hear what he says to them," whispered Catharine, indicating their neighbors. "I know one of them," said Bernadotte, "he is called Andoche Junot. He is a Burgundian. I met him frequently in the battalion of the Cote"-d'Or." " The second is an aristocrat," said Lefebvre ; " he is called Pierre de Marmont He, also, is a Burgundian, and comes from Chatillon." " And the third ? " asked Fouche", " the lean youn^jj man with the olive complexion and hollow eyes ? f I have seen him before. But where ? " "In my work-room, doubtless," said Catharine, blushing slightly ; " he is an artillery officer who has laid down his commission he expects an appoint- ment he lives near me, at the Hdtel des Patriotes, in the Rue Royal-Saint-Roch." 13 " A Corsican ?" asked Fouche". "They all live at that hotel. He has a strange name, that client of yours Berna Buna Bina no, that's not it," cried he, try- ing to find the name which had escaped him. "Bonaparte," said Catharine. "Yes, that's it Bonaparte Timoleon, I think." " Napoleon," answered Catharine, " he is a wise youth, and, one who impresses every one who meets him." " He has a strange name, this Napoleon Bonaparte, and a melancholy air. Ah, if he should ever attain to anything he ought to change that name," muttered Fouch6 ; adding, " Listen ! The magician is speaking to them. What can he be saying to them ? " The four young men grew silent and pricked their ears, while Catharine, grown suddenly serious, im- pressed by the presence of the sorcerer, whispered to Lefebvre : " I wish he would predict good luck for Bonaparte. He's such a deserving young man : He supports his four brothers and his sisters, yet he is far from rich. I've never been able to present him a bill ; though he owes me for several washings," she added, with the air of an alarmed merchant. Fortunatus, meantime, balancing his pointed hat, read, gravely, the hand which the young man whom Bernadotte had called Junot, extended to him. " Thou," he said, in a deep voice, " thy career shall be bright and well-rounded thou shall be the friend of a great man shall share in his glory on thy head shall rest a ducal crown thou wilt triumph in the South." 14 ' Bravo ! I am really already half a soldier. Thou art consoling, friend ! But tell me, after so much good fortune, how shall I die ! " " Madman," said the sorcerer in a hollow voice. " The devil ! The beginning of thy prophecy was worth more than the end," cried the second, laughing. It was he whom Bernadotte had called Marmont. " Dost predict insanity for me, too ? " No ! Thou shalt live for the ruin of the country, and to thine own shame. After a life of glory and honor, thou wilt abandon thy master, betray thy country, and thy name shall be synonymous with that of Judas." " Thou favorest me greatly in thy prediction," said Marmont, with a sneer. " What wilt thou tell our com- rade ? " He pointed to the young artillery officer in whom Catharine was so much interested. But he, drawing his hand back quickly, said gruffly: " I do not wish to be told the future. I know it." And, turning to his friends, he pointed above the wall that enclosed the Vaux-Hall, to where the sky showed through the tent-covering of the dancing-hall. " Do you see that star up there ? " he said in a ringing voice. " No ? You see it not ! Well, I can see it. It is my star." The magician had moved on. Catharine motioned to him ; he approached the group, and, looking at two of the guards, said to them : " Profit by your youth. Your days are numbered." " And where are we to die ? " asked one of the young 15 men, destined to fall among the heroes who died for liberty, shot down by the Swiss Guards. On the steps of a palace." What grandeur ! " cried Bernadotte, " dost thou see for me, too, a tragic death and a palace ? " No, thy death will be peaceful : thtou shalt occupy a throne, and after disowning .thy colors and fighting thy comrades-in-arms, thou shalt lie in a foreign tomb, beside a frozen ocean." " If my comrades take everything, what will be left for me ? " asked Lefebvre. " Thou, " said Fortunatus, " shalt marry the lady of thy heart, thou shalt command a formidable army, and thy name shall ever stand for bravery and loyalty." And I, Sir Magician," said Catharine, frightened, perhaps, for the first time in her life. You, mademoiselle, will be the wife of him you Jove you will be a duchess." Then I'll have to become a duke a generalship will not suffice me," exclaimed Lafebvre gayly. " Ah, sorcerer, finish thy prophecy. Tell me that I shall marry Catharine, and that together we shall become duke and duchess '. " But Fortunatus had passed on, slowly, among the smiling men and attentive women. "Well, really," said Fouche", " this magician is not inventive. He predicted great destinies for you all ; but to me he said nothing. Am I then to be a nobody ? " " You have been made curate," said Catharine. What would you like to become ? " 16 " I was simply a reader, my dear. At present I am a patriot, an enemy of tyrants. What I'd like to be- come ? Oh. that is simple enough Minister of Police." You may get there. You are such a very devil and so conversant with everything that goes on, Citizen Fouche 1 ," retorted Catharine. " Yes ; I shall be chief of police when you are a duchess," he rejoined, with a strange smile that lit up his sad countenance and softened his fierce profile. The ball was over. The four young men rose gayly and moved on, laughing at the sorcerer and his magic. Catharine took the arm of Lefebvre, who had obtained leave to escort her to the door of her work-room. Before them walked their three neighbors, Napoleon Bonaparte a little apart from his two friends, Junot and Marmont. He spoke but little, and was grave and re- served ; now and again, however, he raised his eyes to the blue firmament above as if seeking for that star of which he had spoken, and which shone for him alone. CHAPTER III. THE LAST NIGHT OF ROYALTY. THE tenth of August was a Friday. The night between the ninth and tenth was mild, starry, serene. At midnight the moon shed its pure lustre on the town, apparently calm, peaceful and slumbering. 17 Paris, meantime, had slept for a fortnight past with one eye open, with hand on sword, ready to rise at the first alarm. Since that night when Lefebvre had met the laundress Catharine at Vaux-Hall the city had become a furnace. The revolution boiled as in a mighty cauldron. The Marseilles troops had come, filling the streets and the clubs with their ardor, their fiery patriotism and martial force. They had given to the echoes the immortal hymn of the army of the Rhine, the result of the inspired genius and throbbing heart of Rouget de Lisle. They had brought it to the Parisians, who, instead of calling this song, which was to be always a national one, "La Franchise," gave it, generously, the name of " La Marseillaise." Court and people prepared for the fray, and for a great day's work. The nobles barricaded the palace of the Tuileries and established there a garrison of Swiss Guards, commanded by Courbevoie and De Rueil ; convened all the high-born fanatics who had been styled, after that banquet of October, when the national cockade had been trampled under foot, the "Chevaliers du Poignard." That great day which marks the first victory of the Revolution and the dawn of the Republic (for the twenty-second of September served only to proclaim and legalize the triumphant action of the tenth of August), no man could boast of having organized, commanded, or directed it. Danton slept with Camille Desmoulins while they 1 8 gftaflam* searched for him to bring him to the tribune. Marat slept in his cave. Robespierre lived apart he was only chosen as the eleventh member of the Commune. Barbaroux had declined the honor of leading the Mar- seillais, and Santerre, the great agitator of the Fau- bourg Saint-Antoine, figured in the fight only in the middle of the day. The nameless insurrection of August 10, a battle without a commander-in-chief, had for its general the mob, and for heroes all the nation. The movement did not begin until after midnight oa that radiant night of the ninth. The emissaries of the forty-seven sections had de- manded the downfall of royalty one, the MauconseH section, having voted tramped silently about tbft' streets transmitting from door to door this order : " To arms when you hear the tocsin sound and fight fiercely." Within an hour the tocsin was heard in various places. The clock of St. Germain-d'Auxerrois, which had chimed for the massacre of St. Bartholomew, sounded the doom of monarchy. At the peal of the drums, beating the call to arms, Paris arose, grasped its guns, and rubbed its sleepy eyes. The moon was set. Shadow wrapped the town. But in every window, one after another, lights ap- peared. This sudden illumination as for a fgte had a sinister omen. A strange dawn, in which the smoke of battle, the 19 blaze of burning buildings, and reek of blood, almost obscured the sun. The city gates opened one by one to admit armed men, who passed through them, questioned the sky, and pricked their ears, listening for the approach of their own sections, that they might enter the ranks. They watched the daylight coming up over the roofs. The call to arms was heard in the streets and in the lanes. In the courts sounded the rattling of batteries that were being dragged to position, the metallic ring of the bayonets, whose sockets men tried, and the click of sabres and pikes. The houses near the Tuileries had all their shutters thrown back and several shops, even, were open. Mademoiselle Sans-GSne was by no means the last to put her nose out. Dressed in a short petticoat, with only a light covering over her beating heart, and with a dainty nightcap on her head, she listened at the window to the sounds of the night, heard the drum, and distinguished the tocsin. Hastening into her work- room to strike a light, she then .cautiously half-opened the door. The Rue Royal-Saint-Roch, where the washer- woman's house was situated, was now empty. Catharine stopped, looked, listened. It was not only curiosity which made her so keen for a sight of the troops in arms. She was a good patriot, Sans-Gfine, but another sentiment than hate of the tyrant animated her now. 20 After the fricasse'e dance at Vaux-Hall, she had seen Sergeant Lefebvre again. They had grown to know each other better. At a small party at La Rap6e, whither he had without much difficulty induced her to go, they had exchanged vows and talked over projects. The ex-sergeant had become rather familiar ; but Catharine had told him so plainly that she would never give herself to any one, save as a wife, that the sergeant had ended by asking her to marry him. She had accepted. " We have not much," she had said gayly, "to begin housekeeping on. I have my laundry, where bad debts re never lacking." " And I have my commission ; and a soldier's pay is often in arrears." " Never mind ! we are young, we love each other, and have the future before us. The sorcerer promised me the other day, did he not, that I should be a duchess ? " " And did he not say I should be a general ? " " He said, besides, you should marry her you love." Well, let us realize the beginning of his augury, at once." " Oh, you are Impatient ; I cannot many at once. L must prepare." " Then let us fix a date, Catharine." " At the fall of the tyrant, if you like." " Yes, that suits me : I abhor tyrants look, Catharine, at this I" 21 Turning back his sleeve, Lefebvre showed her his right arm superbly tattooed two sabres crossed with a grenade in flames, surmounted by the words, ' Death to tyrants ! " " Hem ! I am a patriot/' he said proudly, holding out his bare arm triumphantly. " It is fine," said Catharine, with conviction, and she put out her hand to touch it. " Don't touch it," said Lefebvre quickly ; " it is quite fresh." Catharine had drawn back her hand, afraid of injur- ing such fine work. " Don't be afraid. It will not hurt the color ; but it must dry. Listen ! in a few days, you shall' have some- thing better than this." " What ? " Catharine had asked curiously. " My wedding gift," had been the mysterious answer. He had not wanted to say more, and having drunk gayly at the tavern, to the fall of the tyrant and their approaching wedding, which should follow upon it, Catharine and her lover had taken the Charenton diligence to the Rue Bouloi, thence had proceeded on foot, under the keen eyes of the stars, to the Rue Royal-Saint-Roch, where, gaining her own door, the young girl, to avoid a tender parting, closed it quickly in the sergeant's face, crying : " Good-night, Lefebvre. Here you may enter when, you are my husband." Since then, every moment which he could spare from his duties, Lefebvre had spent in seeking the 22 laundry, and passing a few moments with his country- woman. They had both begun to feel that the tyrant took. rather long to die. Thus it was natural that Catharine should look, with the twofold impatience of a good patriot and a girl on the eve of her marriage, for that dawn of the tenth of August. The tocsin, flinging its funereal notes on the night air, sounded at the Tuileries the De Profundis of royalty, and for the little laundress, the " Alleluia" of marriage. Two neighbors in night array, had imitated Cath- arine, and stood by their doors waiting for news. " Is there any news, Mam'zelle Sans-G^ne ? " asked ne of them, across the street. I am waiting, neighbor. Listen ! Have patience, and we shall know all." Breathless with his quick run, Lefebvre equipped and armed, now entered from the Rue Saint-Honore 1 , de- posited his gun beside the door, and caught the laun- dress in an impassioned embrace. " Ah, my good Catharine, I am glad to see you ! It is warm already. It is going to be warmer. The motto for to-day is, Long live the nation.' " The neighbors, who now timidly approached, asked what had passed. " Well," said Lefebvre, striking an attitude, like one who had come to read a proclamation ; " I must tell you, first, that they wanted to assassinate the good M, P6tion, the mayor of Paris." An indignant murmur rose from his audience. 23 " What has been done with the tyrant ? " asked one. " They have held him as hostage. Picture to your- selves the palace as a veritable fortress the windows boarded up, the doors barricaded. The Swiss Guards are armed to the teeth, and with them are those villains, the Chevaliers du Poignard, traitors, friends of the strangers they are sworn to kill the patriots. Oh, let but one fall into my hands in the day that is coming, and I'll settle his accountquickly," cried Lefebvre, with almost savage energy. "Go on," said Catharine; "there aren't any Chev- aliers du Poignard here, and I doubt if you'll find any on the road ; now tell us what happened to M. Pe"tion." "Called before the Assembly there, at least, he is safe Oh, he escaped." " Have they done any fighting yet ? '' " No, only one man has been killed Mandat, the commander of the National Guards." " Your chief! He was of the Swiss faction ? " He was on their side. There was found, over his signature, an order to shoot the patriots from the suburbs behind, when they reached the Pont-Neuf to join their comrades from Saint-Marceau and Saint-Victor ; but the treason was discovered. The traitor, called to the H6tel de Ville to explain himself, was finished by a pistol-shot from among the crowd. Nothing can now impede the onward march of the sec- tions. To-night, Catharine, we will win, and within >eight hours we will marry. Hold ! My wedding gift I promised it to you." 24 And, before the somewhat embarrassed neighbors, he bared his left arm, showing a second tattooing, repre- senting two hearts aflame. " Look," he said, " what is written here: To Cath- arine, for life ! " He stepped back, to give them a better view of the design. " It is fine much finer than the other," said Cath- arine, crimson with pleasure, and she clung to the sergeant's neck, murmuring, " Oh, my own Lefebvre, thou art so handsome, and I love thee so much ! " At this moment, shots rent the heavy air from afar cannon answered. " Away ! Catharine ! I must go where duty calls ; be calrrf; we shall return victorious," cried Lefebvre joyously. And, as he picked up his gun, he embraced her again, and hurried off in the direction of the Tuileries. The Swiss had fired upon a poorly-armed crowd, who now held parley with them. Corpses already covered the vestibule of the Tuileries and the three Courts of the Carrousel. But the cannon of the patriots had sent their missiles to signify^to royalty its end. Louis XVI. had sought refuge in the National Assem- bly, which had again met at two o'clock in the morning, at the sound of the tocsin. While awaiting developments, the legislators, under the presidency of Vergniaud, had discussed the abolition of the negro trade. The sacred 25 cause of human liberty had that day been defended as a whole, without distinction of race or color. The journalistic stenographer, as we would call him to-day, related that, seated in his corne'r, the royal blockhead tranquilly ate a peach, deaf to the belching of the cannon which was to shatter his throne, indif- ferent to the fate of the Swiss, unmindful of the nobles who were dying for him. It was a great day ! The last night of royalty was spent and the Marsellais, chanting their immortal hymn, had gone forth to destroy the last stronghold of feudalism. CHAPTER IV. A CHEVALIER DU POIGNARD. IT was noon ere the cannon had ceased to roar in the neighborhood of the Tuileries. Confused murmurs arose, among which one could vaguely distinguish cries of " Victory ! Victory ! " Heavy clouds floated over the houses ; while sparks and scraps of burning paper and cloth, whirled about and fell in the streets. Many were the changes of fortune on that ever- memorable day. The sections had each named three emissaries, who were to form the Commune of Paris. P6tion, the mayor, called to the H6tel de Ville, had been con- signed to his own house, to be set at liberty at the end 26 of the insurrection. Mandat, found guilty of treason, was dead. Santerre had been named, in his place, commander of the National Guards. The arsenal had been forced, and arms distributed to a first division from the Faubourg Saint -Antoine, who had come to put themselves under orders. The king, after reviewing the battalions of the National Guards required for the defence of the palace, had re-entered his apartments sadly. The Petits Peres, and the Butte^du-Moulins were the only ones who had hailed him. The others had shouted " Long live the nation ! Down with the ' Veto ' ! " and the cannoneers had turned their pieces so that they threatened the palace. Louis XVI. saw that he was lost, and felt his power and his glory vanish. He went to demand safety of the National Assembly, whose executive hall, at that time, was at the " Marege," near the garden of the Tuileries, and on the right of it, where to-day, in the Rue de Rivoli, stands the H6tel Continental. Three hundred National Guards and three hundred Swiss escorted him. There were, in all, nine hundred and fifty Swiss, well- armed and well-disciplined. Most of them spoke only German. These household troops, attached to the person of the king, faithful, to the full measure of their honor, in loyalty and affection, had decided to die for the master for whom they had enlisted, and who paid them. Ignorant of the situation, the Swiss Guards, deceived i&uteme gm$-(&mt. 27 by their captains, and excited by the Chevaliers du Poignard, believed, even at the dawn of the tenth of August, that they were employed to defend the king's person against brigands, who came to kill him. Many, as one of their colonels, M. Pfyffer, testified, were astounded and frightened when they beheld, instead of a popular raid on the palace, the advance of the National Guards. The uniform confused them. They thought to have only the popular uprising, against whose ugliness all good citizens would protest, and they saw, instead, an armed and organized nation advancing against them. One might have thought that blood would have been spared, when the retreat of Louis XVI. had been accom- plished, had not one of those terrible accidents which moments of confusion are apt to produce, given the signal for a pitiless massacre. The Marsellais and Bretons, having as commander, a friend of Danton's, one Westermann, an Alsatian ; once an under-officer, and an energetic soldier, had penetrated the courts of the palace. It had three, at that time, and the Carrousel, much more limited then than to-day, was covered with houses. Westermann had arranged his troops in line of battle. The Swiss were posted in the windows of the palace, ready to fire. They watched each other. Westermann spoke a few words, in German, to the Swiss, to dissuade them from firing on the people, and to encourage them to fraternize. 28 gftadame Already, some of those unfortunate mercenaries had thrown their cartridges through the windows, in sign of disarming. The patriots, encouraged and reassured by these demonstrations of peace, were lounging under the vestibule of the palace. A barrier had been placed at the foot of the steps of the great stairway, leading to the chapel. On each step two Switzers mounted guard, one be- ;side the wall, the other by the banisters ; they stood, motionless, silent, and stern, gun in position, ready to fire. What with their tall stature, their fur caps, and their red uniforms, these mountaineers in regimentals were an imposing sight, and one that might well inspire fear. But there were none but the confederate Marsellais and Bretons in that crowd. The scum of the streets were crowding round. Ruffians can be found at all times and in all places : one is sure to find them well up in front, on the days of fighting, on the morning of an execution, or on the enemy after a battle. Some of those clownish Parisians thought to draw toward them, with hooks and pikes, two or three of the most steadfast of the Swiss. The men thus caught allowed themselves to be easily snared, content to escape a possible brawl, and believing themselves outnumbered. This sport of fishing for the Swiss was being con- tinued, amid shouts of laughter from the bystanders, when suddenly, without any one's being able to place 29 its source, a volley of projectiles was launched upon the inoffensive, amused but not threatening crowd. The correct theory is supposed to be this, that some nobles, posted on the upper palisade, seeing the trapped Swiss yielding without resistance, and ready to frater- nize, suddenly fired, hoping to stop the defection and create a bloody breach between the people and the guard. The two Swiss now among the people, were the first to be struck down. The shot, coolly directed by the defenders of the palace, did its dreadful work. In a moment the vestibule was full of corpses, and blood flowed in rivers over the slabs. A dense smoke enveloped the vestibule. At the signal of the shots from within, a fusilade was begun above. The Swiss and the nobles, many of whom had taken to the uniform of the guard, ran to the shelter of the barricaded windows. All their shots told. The courts were empty. The Carrousel was swept bare. Then the Swiss made a vigorous sortie as far as the Rue Saint-Honor6. But the Marsellais, the Bretons, and the National Guards returned in force, with cannon. The Swiss were cut off, the palace was invaded. Nothing could withstand the triumphant crowd. Most of the Swiss were slain in the apartments, or in the gardens ; they were pursued even to the Champs-Elyse'es. Many owed their lives to the victors, who defended them against the violence of the mob. The king had given directions for the Swiss to cease firing. He had given the order to M. de Hervilly, but this chief of the Chevaliers du Poignard, reserved for himself the right to issue it when he thought circum- stances warranted. Like the queen, he believed that the power remained with the defenders of the palace and that the fire of the Swiss only served the " rabble " rightly. When he saw his mistake, it was too late : the palace was in the hands of the people, and the king, a prisoner in the power of the Assambly, was shortly incarcerated in the Temple. Catharine, who feared no longer, after having fol- lowed feelingly the beginning of the engagement, quite reassured, and not minding the shots, had ventured forth with the intention of reaching the Carrousel. She wanted to see if the tyrant would yield with a good grace, and thus hasten her nuptials. And besides, she told herself, that, perhaps, among the combatants, she could see her dear Lefebvre. This idea of surprising him, black with powder, fighting in the front of battle, like a demon, under fire, far from making her afraid, emboldened her. She wanted to be near him, to be able to hand him his cartridges more than that ; she wanted to grasp a musket herself, load it, and fire on the defenders of the tyrant. She felt within her the soul of a warrior, at the very smell of the powder. She wanted to share all the dangers of her Lefebvre ; she was both 31 proud and a little jealous of the glory he should gain. Not once did it occur to her that she might be struck by the bullets of the Swiss. Had not the augury foretold that he should command armies, and that/ she should be his wife ? Neither he nor she' was destined to die that day. Thus, braving peril, she advanced ever nearer to the cannoneers and the \ Marseillais, seeking for Lefebvre and scorning death. When the furious fusilade of the Swiss began, people had flown wildly apart. In the movement, Catharine felt herself drawn by the mass of fugitives toward the Rue Saint-Honore. Arriving opposite her room, she returned to it, believing that the panic might spread that far, and some one might enter her dwelling. She had not lost all hope, but she began to fear lest her wedding would be put off. " Ah, those men ! They haven't even the heart to slacken their nace," she groaned, as she stopped, rap- ing, at the door of her laundry. "Oh ! if I had had a musket, I should have remained ! I know well that Lefebvre is not saved ! " And, feverishly, impatiently, she kept her ears pricked, listening for the victory for which she waited. When the cannon began again to thunder loudly, she trembled with joy and shouted, " Ah 1 that is ours ! Bravo ! the cannoneers ! " Then she listened again. The cannon shots multiplied, the fusilade increased ; 32 confused cries reached her. Surely it must be the patriots advancing ! They had the victory ! Ah ! how she longed to see her Lefebvre once more safe and sound, to embrace her victor, and say to him, " Can we be married at once ? " She came and went feverishly iq her work-room, whose shutters she had prudently left closed. She dared not give way to her desire to return to the scene of battle, lest Lefebvre should return in her ab- sence. He would be alarmed and would not know where to look for her. It would be best to wait for him. He must surely return by the Rue Royal-Sairtt- Roch with his comrades when the palace was taken> The street had become once more quiet and de- serted. The neighbors were shut in their houses. The noon-hour came. She heard occasional shots. Through her half-open door she saw from afar, on the side toward the Rue Saint-Honor^, flying shadows, pur- sued by armed men. They were the last defenders of the palace, who were being chased through the streets. Suddenly, after two or three discharges quite near to her, she heard what seemed like the sound of quick footsteps in the alley that led to the other door of her work-room on the Rue Saint-Honore". She trembled. There seems to be some one there," she murmured. 41 Yes there's some one walking who can hare come here ? ' 33 Bravely she ran, took down the bar of the alley door, and opened it. A man appeared, pale, weak and blood-stained, holding his hand to his breast ; he dragged himself along painfully. The wounded man wore a uniform of white with knee-breeches and silk stockings. He was not a patriot ; he had fought, surely, in the ranks of the enemies of the people. " Who are you ? And what do you want ? "she said firmly. " A victim I am wounded they pursue me give me shelter save me, for Heaven's sake, madame I am the Count of Neipperg. I am an Austrian officer He could say no more." A bloody foam came to his lips. His face became frightfully pale. He fell on the threshold of the alley. Catharine, seeing this elegant young man falling be- fore her, his coat and vest already blood-stained, gave a cry of pity and affright. "Ah, poor boy," she said, "how they have settled things for him ! He is doubtless an aristocrat he has fired on the people he is not even a Frenchman he said he was an Austrian. It's all the same, he's a man just the same." And, moved by that instinct of good which is found in the heart of every woman, even the most energetic for in even a robust warrior maid, there lies a sweet sister of charity Catharine knelt, touched the wounded 3 34 i&adawt jfems-tttne. man's breast, gently took away the blood-stained linen, tnd tried to assure herself whether or not he was dead. He breathes," she said joyously ; " perhaps I can save him ! " So, running to the trough she filled a bowl with fresh water, and after having taken the precaution of closing the street-door solidly, by thrusting back the bar, she returned to the wounded man. She made a compress, tearing up the first linen gar- ment near at hand. In her hurry she had not noticed that she was tear- ing up a man's shirt. "Ah, I've made a pretty mess," she said to herself,. " I've taken the shirt of a customer." She looked at the mark. " It belongs to that poor little artillery captain, Na- poleon Bonaparte ! The poor boy has none too many. And besides, he owes me a big bill ! Well, just the same, I'll get him a new shirt. I will go and buy it, and take it to him and tell him I burned his with my iron. I hope he'll take it ; he is so proud. Ah ! he's one who pays little attention to his clothes not much more than he does to women, alas ! " she added with a gentle sigh. While thinking of the customer whose linen she had torn to rags,' Catharine had lightly changed her com- presses on the wound of the Austrian officer, who was not looked for at the house of so good a patriot as her- self. The appearance of this young man, perhaps mortally 35 wounded, so pale and weak, whose strength, and life even, ebbed through a gaping wound, had changed all Catharine's sentiments. She was no longer now an Amazon in petticoats, who had advanced among the combatants, bounding with joy at every volley, and wishing to have a musket, that she might take part in the feast of death. She had become a saving angel, who strove to relieve human suffering. A curse against war almost rose to her lips, and she said to herself that men had become savages to kill each other thus. But she repeated at the same time her hate and her anathema against the king and queen, who had made these fatal butcheries necessary. " He is an Austrian," she murmured. " What was he doing here, in his white uniform ? Defending this Austrian woman ! Madame Veto ! But he has not the air of a bad man." She looked at him attentively. " He is so young at most twenty. One might almost think him a girl." Then the professional observation came : " His linen is fine ! batiste ! Oh, he is an aristo " And she sighed, as she said, " What a pity ! " Under the healing influence of the cold water, and the compresses which closed the wound and stopped ihe flow of bipod, the wounded man opened his dying 4yes slowly and looked about, in search of something. With consciousness the impression of danger re urned. He made a movement to rise. " Do not kill me," he murmured in a supreme and instinctive effort, extending his arms before him, as if to parry the thrusts of invisible enemies. Making a great effort and collecting, by a supreme effort of will, all his forces, he was able to say : " You are Catharine Upscher of Saint-Amarin ? It was Mademoiselle de Laveline who sent me to you. She told me you were good that you would help and succor me. I will explain to you later." Mademoiselle Blanche de Laveline ?" asked Catha- rine, stupidly" the daughter of the seigneur of Saint- Amarin my protector. She who helped me to begin wor k_ to buy my place. Do you, then, know her ? Ah ! for her, there is no peril I would not brave. You were right to come here. You are safe here ; come ; and he who finds your hiding-place must do so over my body ! " The wounded man tried to speak. Doubtless he wanted to call again upon the name of this Blanche de Laveline, who seemed to have so great an influence on Catharine. Catharine imposed silence on him, saying, calm, dismiss your fears ; " and she added in a motherly tone, " no one will kill you. Mademoiselle Blanche will be pleased to know that you are in my care, though with a patriot." She stopped herself, and meditatively added : " What have I said to him ? These Austrians do not know what patriots are ? They are subjects, slaves. You 37 are with a. friend," Catharine resumed, raising her voice. Neipperg dropped to the ground. His senses, roused for a moment, had now left him. But he had heard Catharine's compassionate voice, and knew that he was safe. An expression of unspeakable joy and recognition crossed his wan face. He was with a friend the name of Blanche de Laveline would protect him ; he had nothing to fear. With a further effort he half-opened his eyes, ex- tended his blood-stained and cold hand, seeking Catha- rine's warm one. "It is well be calm ! let me take care of you, Austrian," said Catharine, mastering her feelings. And, slowly, anxiously, she said to herself, " He must lie more comfortably, more softly but I am not strong enough to carry him to the bed. Ah! ifLe- febvre were here but he does not come. Oh, can he be " She did not finish the thought. The idea that Le- febvre might be lying, like this foreign officer, lifeless, and blood-stained, presented itself to her for the first time, and she shivered with fright. " How terrible is war !" she murmured. But her energetic nature re-asserted itself, and she sighed. " Bah ! Lefebvre is too brave too strong to be like this little aristocrat. He is a receptacle for balls. Lefebvre ! he'd take half a dozen into his body with- out so much as a cry ! He is not cut like these young sprigs. And this one volunteered to defend Madame Veto ! He dared to fire on the people ! " She shrugged her shoulders and looked again at the wounded man. " It is impossible to leave him here he will die surely. What shall I do ? He is a friend of Made- moiselle Blanche. I cannot let him die so ! I must do my utmost to revive him." Then suddenly a thought struck her. " Maybe he is betrothed to Mademoiselle Blanche." " It were droll, indeed, if I should help her to marry, when she promised me a dowry ! Oh, I must save the young man ! Yet my Lefebvre does not come ! " she repeated anxiously, seeking for a means of carrying the Austrian. Then she reflected, " It is, perhaps, better that Lefebvre is not here. Oh, it is not that he would be angry or reproach me for sparing an aristocrat ; when he found him to be a friend of my best friend, he would say nothing and, besides, after the battle, a French soldier knows no enemies. Lefebvre has told me that often ; but he's as jealous as a tiger. It would dis- please him to see me dressing the wound of this aristo- crat ; then he might demand to know how this young man happened to seek refuge with me. ' To demand a shelter of you, he must have known you ; ' that is what he would say but I know well how I would answer him nevertheless, I'd rather he should not sec him." And once more she tried to lift the body of the young Austrian, now become heavy through unconscious/- ness. Just then some one struck the street door. Catharine trembled. She listened, as pale now as the wounded man. " Who can it be ? " she asked herself. " My work- room is closed and no one would come to bring or take away linen on such a day." The sound of muskets was heard on the stones. Some ne struck, at the same time, on the alley door. Voices were raised confusedly. " He is safe by this time." " He is hidden here." Catharine shuddered. 41 They are seeking him," she murmured, looking with the utmost pity upon the unconscious man beside her' The voices growled two ways an impatient shuffling f feet gave witness to the anxiety of the crowd. " Let us force the door," cried an impatient voice. " How shall I , save him ? " groaned Catharine, and shaking the dying man, she said : " Come citizen sir courage try to walk " He opened his eyes and said in a stifled voice, " I cannot. Let me die ! " " He's anxious to die," growled Catharine. " See have a little energy heavens ! Remember, I must render you alive to Mile, de Laveline she never sent you here to die get up so that's it you see it is- not hard only a little will " 40 Neipperg staggered like a drunken man. Catharine could hardly support him. The cries, the threats, the adjurations redoubled without. Then the blows of the bayonets directed against the door, made it shake. Then a voice was heard " Stop, citizens let me pass that door will be opened to me." And the same voice cried loudly : " Catharine, it is I have no fear come ! " "Lefebvre," said Catharine, trembling, happy -to know that he was safe and sound, but still afraid for her charge. " Yes ; I'm coming," she called. " You see, citizens she will open a little patience pshaw ! you have frightened her by demanding am ^opening in such fashion," said Lefebvre, proudly, when he saw that Catharine recognized his voice. " Did you hear ? " she said quickly to the wounded man. " They want to come in I must open to them come ! " " How far is it ? " " Try to get up these stairs. I will hide you in the' garret." " Oh, I cannot see,, I fall." " Well, in my bedroom, then." And Catharine helped him into her room and locked the door. Then, blushing, breathless, happy, she hastened t open to Lefebvre and the crowd, saying with great glee to herself, " Now he is safe." CHAPTER V. CATHARINE'S BED-CHAMBER. , THE bar removed and the bolts drawn, the door opened, giving admittance to Lefebvre, and three or four National Guards, together with a crowd of neighbors and idlers, among whom women and children were in great numbers. You were slow in opening to us, my sweet Catha- rine," said Lefebvre, kissing her on both cheeks. Well, such a noise such yells ! " Yes, I know, you were frightened ; but they were patriots,' friends, who knocked. Catharine, we are vic- tors on every side ! The tyrant is a prisoner of the nation ; the fortress of despotism is taken ; the people are masters to-day." Long live the nation ! " cried several voices. Death to traitors ! " " To perdition with the Swiss and the Chevaliers du Poignard," cried others in the crowd, which now surged to the very door of Catharine's rooms. n " Yes, death to those who fired upon the people, ^ said Lefebvre in a loud voice. " Catharine^ do you know why they came so rudely to your rooms ? " No I was afraid I have heard shots near here." We were firing at an aristocrat who escaped from 42 the Tuileries one of those Chevaliers du Poignard. who would assassinate patriots. I had sworn that if he fell into my hands I would make his blood atone for ours. Just as my comrades and I pursued him," said Lefebvre, indicating the National Guards with him, "having discharged our guns at him, he vanished at the turn ol the street ; he is surely wounded ; there was blood beside the door of your alley, Catharine, and so we thought he might have taken refuge here." Lefebvre looked around him, and continued, " But he is not, here we' could see him besides, you can as- sure us, can you not ? " Then turning to the National Guards, " Comrades, we have nothing more to do here, not you, at least you see the white uniform is not here you will permit one of the victors of the Tuileries to embrace his wife in private ? " " Your wife ? Oh, not yet, Lefebvre," said Catharine. " How ? Is not the tyrant done for ? " And waving his hand to the guards, "Au revoir, citizens, until later, at the section, we must name a cap- tain and two lieutenants, and also a curate for the parish a patriot curate, surely. The curate grew frightened and ran away, the two lieutenants and the captain were killed by the Swiss, and so w must find others. Au revoir ! " The guards moved off. The crowd still stood round the door. " Well, friends, did you not hear or understand ? " said Lefebvre in a low and pleasant voice. " What are you 43, waiting for ? For h ; tn in white ? He is not here with Catharine ; that is ctear. Oh, he must have fallen some distance from here, by the way he had at least three bails in his breast look for him it is your affair I He is no hunter who gives up his game." And Lefebvre sent them from him. " Well ! well ! we will go after him, sergeant!" " It's easy enough to turn the world upside down," said another. And he added in a slow voice, " Couldn't somebody be hidden in that room ? " Lefebvre quickly closed the door, and opening his arms to embrace Catharine again, said : " I thought they'd never take themselves off. Did you hear their impudence, they spoke of your bedroom, your bed- room, indeed ! -What; a notion ! But how you tremble, Catharine ! Come, it is over ; be calm ! Let us think of each other." He noted Catharine's eyes turned toward the door of her room. Instinctively, he went to the door and tried to open '> It did not yield. Lefebvre stopped, surprised, uneasy. A vague suspicion crossed him. "Catharine," he said, "why is that door closed?" " Because I wanted it so," said Catharine, visibly embarrassed. " That is no reason ; give me the key." "No, you shall not fcftvt it 1 * 44 paflam* "Catharine," cried Lefebvre white with rage, "yott are deceiving me ; there is some one in that room a lover, doubtless. I want that key." " And I have said you shall not have it ! " "Well, I will take it." And Lefebvre put his hand into Catharine's apron- pocket, took the key, went to the door of the chamber, and unlocked it. " Lefebvre," cried Catharine, "my husband, only, I have told you, may go through that door. Enter it by force now, and you shall never go through it with me ! " Some one knocked, again, at the outer door. Catharine went to open it. " Where is Sergeant Lefebvre ? " they asked ; " he is wanted at the section. They talk of making him lieu- tenant." Lefebvre, moved, pale and silent, stepped back from Catharine's chamber. He re-closed the door carefully, took out the key, and returning it to Catharine, said: " You did not tell me that death was in your chamber." " He is dead ! Ah, poor lad ! " said Catharine sadly. No he lives. But tell me true he came not as a lover ? " " Beast ! " said Catharine. " If he had come so, do you think I would have hidden him there ? But you will not give him up, at least ? " She asked it anx- ously. " Though he is an Austrian, he is a friend of Mils. Blanche de Laveline, my benefactress." 45 11 A wounded man is sacred," said Lefebvre. " That chamber, my sweet Catharine, is become an ambulance, which one never disturbs. Tend the poor devil ! Save him ! I shall be ready to help you pay your debt to that lady who has been good to you ; but keep silent that none may ever know it might do me harm in my section." " Ah ! brave heart ! Thou art as good as brave ! Lefebvre, you have my promise. When you are ready, I will be your wife ! " " That will be quickly dp.ne ; but my friends are get- ing- impatient. I must go with them." " Sergeant Lefebvre, they are waiting for you, they want to vote ! " cried one of the guards. "Well, I'm coming ; start on, comrades." And while Sergeant Lefebvre went to the section, where the votes were to be cast, Catharine entered her chamber on tip-toe, where, in a light sleep, interrupted by feverish starts, lay the young Austrian officer, who had become to her a sacred charge, since he had invoked the name of Blanche de iLaveline. CHAPTER VI. LITTLE HENRIOT. CATHARINE brought some bouillon and a little wine to the sick man. As she did so, she said to him, when he had wakened at the sound of her step : " Take this ; you must grow stronger. You need 41 your strength, for you know you cannot stay very wig in this room. Of course, it is not I who would end you away ; you are here as a guest of Mademoi- elle Blanche ; it is she who sent you to me ; it is she who shelters and protects you. But there are too many outsiders who come to my shop my fellow- workers, my customers, and others, and these will not be slow to talk, you may be sure, and that would get both of us into trouble. Why ! you have fired on the people." Neipperg made a movement and said slowly : " We defended the king." The big Veto ! " cried Catharine, elevating her shoulders. " He had taken refuge with the Assembly ; he was safe and quiet ; he left you to fight it out, the great egoist, without thinking about you any more than of that red cap he had snatched from his head on the twentieth of June, often having feigned to wear it with a good grace, among our companions of the Fau- bourg Saint-Antoine. He is good for nothing, an idler, your great Veto, whom his jade of a wife pulls round by the nose do you know whither ? before the guns of the people. That, surely, is where he will go. But," she added, after a short silence, " what on earth were you doing in that engagement, you, a stranger ? For you told me you were an Austrian ? " As lieutenant of the noble guards of his majesty I was charged with a mission to the queen," was the reply. 47 " Th Austrian woman," sneered Catharine, " and for her you fought, you who ha'd nothing to do with our struggles ! " " I wanted to die," said the young man, very simply. " To die ! At your age ? for the king ? for the queen ? There must be a mystery in this, my young man," said Catharine, with good-humored raillery. " Excuse me if I seem indiscreet, but when one is twenty years old, and wants to die, among men one doesn't know, and against whom one has no reason to fight well then, one must be in love. Hem ! have I guessed it ? " " Yes, my good hostess." 11 Gracious ! It was not hard to do. And shall I tell you with whom you are in love ? With Mademoi- selle Blanche de Laveline. Oh, I do not ask your confi- dences," Catharine added quickly, noticing an uneasi- ness in the pale face of the wounded man. " It is none of my business ; yet I know Mademoiselle de Laveline is very lovable." The Count de Neipperg raised himself a little and exclaimed with fervor : " Yes, she is good and beautiful, my darling Blanche. Oh ! madame, if death comes for me, tell her that with my last sigh I breathed her name ; tell her that my last thought, ere life departed, was for her and for " The young man stopped, keeping a confession from rising to his lips. "You -are not going to die," rejoined Catharine, anxious to comfort him. " Who dies at your years when he is in love? You must live, man, for Ma- demoisejle Blanche, whom you love, and who surely loves you, and for that other person you were going to name her father, doubtless, M. de Laveline ? A very fine gentleman. I have seen him several times, the Marquis of Laveline, down in Alsace. He wore a blue velvet with gold embroidery, and he had a jewelled snuff-box that sparkled. Neipperg, when he heard the name of the Marquis of Laveline, permitted a gesture of contempt and anger to escape him. " It seems," said Catharine to hersf If, " that they are not great friends. It is well to know this, I shall not speak to him on that subject again probably Blanche's father is opposed to the match. Poor girl ! That was why the young man wanted to die." And, with a sigh of pity, she began to arrange the poor fellow's pillow, saying to him : " 1 have been talking too much it annoys you perhaps. Won't you try to sleep a little, sir ? It will lessen the fever." The sick man gently turned his head. " Talk to me of Blanche," he urged. " Speak of her again ; that will cure me." Catharine smiled, and sat down to tell- him how, born on a little farm not far from the castle of the seign- eurs of Lavelinej she had watched Mademoiselle Blanche grow up. Reared by her mother, whom the marquis left alone most of the time, being an attendant at court, Blanche had grown up in the country, run- ning through the woodland, hunting and riding alike 49 over field and fell, never minding the bars that had to be leaped, nor the gates to be passed. She was never haughty, and talked pleasantly with the country folks. She had come frequently to the farm and had grown fond of the little Catharine. One day the marquis had called his wife and daugh- ter to Versailles. Catharine and three other young girls had been taken from the country to wait upon Madame and Mademoiselle de Laveline. Catherine had spent several happy years, then Madame de Laveline had died ; and it was then that Mademoiselle Blanche, who had accompanied her father on a diplomatic mis- sion to England, had, before going to London, been so good as to set Catharine up in business, buying her the laundry of Mile. Loblegeois, where she was still to be found. Ah ! she was a creature who ought to be be- loved and blessed, was Mademoiselle Blanche. As Catharine closed the story of her modest exist- ence, and told of the good deeds of the daughter of the Marquis de Laveline, some one knocked at the door. Could it be Lefebvre who was returning with his comrades from the section ? Catharine thought un- easily. " Rest quietly and make no noise," she adjured Neipperg, who pricked up his ears. " If Lefebvre is alone, there is no danger ; but if his comrades are with him, I will speak to them and send them away. Do as I bid you and fear nothing." Catharine hurried to open the door, resolutely, though somewhat excited. Her surprise was great when sh- saw a young woman, who cast herself, trembling, inter 4 the room, saying, " He is here, is he not ? They said they saw a man drag himself to the gate. Is he still alive ? " . " Yes, Mademoiselle Blanche," said Catharine, rec- ognizing in the frightened woman Mile, de Laveline, he is here in my chamber he lives and speaks only of you come and see him." " Oh, my good Catharine, what a happy inspiration led me to send him to you for a sure refuge, when he left to fight with the gentlemen of the palace ! " And Mademoiselle de Laveline took Catharine's hands in hers, and pressed them in gratitude, saying, " Take me to him." The sight of Blanche produced a startling effect on the wounded man. He wanted to leap from the bed on which Catharine had had so much difficulty in help- ing him to stretch himself. But the two women made him stay there, almost by main/orce, Naughty boy," said Blanche, in her gentle voice ; " you tried to let them kill you." " Life without you was a burden ; could I have found a nobler way to leave it than in the fight, sword in hand, smiling upon death who came to me so glori- ously ? " , " Ungrateful ! you should have lived for me ! " " For you ? Were you not already dead to me ? Were you not about to leave me forever ? " " That odious marriage was not yet concluded & chance might have helped us. Hope was not dead." ptaflam* $m$-(&tnt. 51 " You told me, yourself," said Neipperg, " that there was but one hope. To-day, the tenth of August, you were to have become the wife of another, and be called Madame de Lowendaal. Your father had decided so, and you could not resist." " You know that my tears and prayers proved use- less. Afraid of being ruined by the Baron de Lowen- daal, the Belgian millionaire, who had loaned him large sums of money, and insisted on immediate payment, or, in default, my hand, my father consented to give him what he desired most of all." " And that which cost your father least. The mar- quis would pay his debt with his child." " Hush, dear, my father did not know how great our love was he knew nothing he does not know now," said Blanche, with increasing energy. Catharine, during this conversation between th lovers, had turned aside. She had passed discreetly into the outer room at the moment when Neipperg, with mournful vehemence, looked at Blanche and an- swered, " Yes, they are ignorant of everything. When I went away, I grew desperate. My death would have but rendered the silence more complete, the ignorance more profound ; yet the balls of the ' sans-culottes ' did not kill me. I have to try again. Well, occasions to die will not be lacking in the years which are coming. War is declared. I will go and search in the ranks at th imperial army, on the banks of the Rhino, th death which was denied me in the fall of the Tuileria*.* * You shall not do that," was the maiden's reply. 5 2 " Who shall keep me from it ? " Neipperg rejoined. " But forgive me, Blanche ! This is the tenth ot August, the day set for your marriage. How does it happen that you are here ? Your place is beside your husband. They wait for you at church. Why are you not ready to make the Baron de Lowendaal happy and to cancel the debts of the marquis ? The fight, doubt- less, interrupted the ceremony ; but the shooting has ceased, the tocsin is silent, and they can now ring the wedding-bells. Let me die. Here or elsewhere, to- day or to-morrow, what does it matter ? " " No ! no ! You must live forme for our child ! " cried Blanche, throwing herself upon Neipperg, and embracing him passionately. " Our child," murmured the sick man. " Yes, our dear little Henriot ! You have no right to die ! Your life is not your own." " Our child," said Neipperg, sadly; " but but your marriage ? " " It has not yet come off; there is hope still." " Really 1 You are not yet Madame de Lowen* daal ? " "Not yet ! Never, perhaps." "How? Tell me." And a feverish anxiety convulsed the face of the sufferer, while Blanche resumed : " When you had gone, after bidding me a farewell which we both thought was to be forever, for you had told me that you were going to join the defenders of the palace, I had one little hope in my heart. I indicated to you the ] 53 house of good Catharine as a safe refuge, if you should happen to escape from ftie Tuileries. I hoped to be able to join you there." " You hoped for that ? Even while consenting to obey your father ? Why, you had decided to become the wife of Lowendaal." " Yes, but something told me that that wedding would never take place." " And it is come to pass ! " " The insurrection resounded in the suburbs. My father declared that it would be impossible to celebrate the marriage on the day appointed, so the Baron de Lowendaal proposed to postpone the ceremony for three months." " Three months ! " " Yes, the sixth of November; that is the date he has set." " Ah ! M. le Baron is not in a hurry." " Frightened by the turn ot events, doubtful as to the progress of the Revolution, M. de Lowendaal left Paris last night, before the closing of the gates. He has returned to his own country. He has named his palace, near Jemmapes, on the Belgian frontier, as the place where we are to celebrate that impossible mar- riage.** " And you are to go to Jemmapes ? " " My father, somewhat frightened, has decided to g to the baron's castle. We are to go soon, if the roads are open ! " " And you are going with him ? " 54 " I shall go with him ; oh, rest assured, I knov what I have vowed. I shall never be the baron's bride." " You swear it to me ? " " I swear it ! " " But, who will give you the power to resist at Jemmapes, when, you yielded here ? " Before his departure, the baron received a letter which I wrote to him with, oh, such tears ! His servant, whom I bribed, will not have given it' to him till he is over the border " " And he knows ? " " The truth ! He knows that I love you, and that our little Henriot can have none other than you to call father." "Oh, my darling Blanche ! My beloved wife whom I adore ! Ah, you give me back my life ! It seems I have almost power to rise and begin again the combat with the ' sans-culottes.' " And Neipperg, in his wild excitement, made so sud- den a movement that the bandages which covered his wound slipped, the gash re-opened, and a stream of blood flowed. He uttered a cry. Catharine ran in and offered her help. The two women did their best to re-adjust the bandages, and closed the wound again. Neipperg had fainted. He came to slowly. His first disconnected words told the secret. 55 " Blanche I am dying watch over our child," he whispered. Catharine heard this revelation, as if it had been a blow. " Mademoiselle Blanche has a child," she said to har- self; then turning to the young woman who stood, with eyes cast down, she said quickly, " Fear nothing ; what I happen to hear went in at one ear and out at the other. If you should ever need me, you know that Catharine is always ready to serve you. Is the child big ? I am sure he is sweet ! " " He is nearly three years old." " And his name is ? " " Henri-> we call him Henriot." " It is a pretty name. Could I see him, mademoi- selle ? " Blanche de Laveline reflected. Listen, dear Catharine, you can do me a great service, finish what you have begun so well, by rescu- ing and saving M. de Neipperg." " Speak what shall I do ? " " My boy is with a good woman in the neighborhood of Paris Mere Hoche, in a suburb of Versailles." " Mere Hoche, I know her ! Her son is a friend of Lefebvre Lefebvre is my lover, almost my husband ; you see. I too shall marry and have a little Henri, more than one perhaps." " I wish you joy ! You will go and see Mother Hoche. * " I have a message for her from her son Lezare, wh was in the French Guards with Lefebvre. It was 5 6 Lefebvre who took him to enroll. They were together at the taking of the Bastille." " What shall I say to the Citizeness Hoche ? " " Give her this money and this letter," said Blanche, handing Catharine a purse and a paper, and then you are to take the child and carry him off. Is it too much, Catharine ? " " Is that all ? You know only too well that should you ask me to go, alone, and re-take . the Tuileries, though the Swiss had returned to it, I would attempt it for you. Too much ! Ah, you are cruel ! Was it not your kindness that enabled me to buy this place, to establish my business here, and to become, by and by, Mme. Lefebvre ? Think ! have you not some further command for me. When I have taken the little one from Versailles, what am I to do with him ? " " Bring him to me." " Where ? " " At the Palace de Lowendaal near a village called Jemmapes. It is in Belgium, on the border. Can you get there readily ? " " For you I will try anything ! When must I be at Jemmapes with the boy ? " " At the latest by the sixth of November." " Well, I shall be there ! Lefebvre will manage, I am sure, to let me go. Before that we shall have been married, and who knows but he may go with me. The fighting may be over then." " Embrace me, Catharine ! Some day, I trust to b able to acknowledge all you are^doing for me." 57 " Your reward came beforehand. Count on me." " At Jemmapes, then " " At Jemmapes, on the sixth of November," repeated Blanche de Laveline, and looking at Neipperg, she said, " He is sleeping ; I shall watch beside him. Go to your duties, Catharine ; you must find us in the way greatly." " I have told you you are at home here ; but see, he awakes," she said, looking at Neipperg, who slowly opened his eyes ; " you must have a great many things to tell each other. I shall leave you." " You are not going away ? You will not leave me alone ?" . " Oh, I shall not be away long. I must take some clothes to a customer at a little distance. I will return at once. Open to no one. Good-bye." CHAPTER VII. THE TENANT OF THE HOTEL DE METZ. WHILE the Count de Neipperg and Blanche de Laveline, in delicious tSte-A-tete, were discussing their projects for the future and talking of their child, Catha- rine had taken a basket full of clothes on her arm and made herself ready to go out. She wanted to use her time profitably. The lovers were busy, they would not notice her absence ; and, besides, all the morning had been a loss to the latin- 5 8 dress. True, not every day was the Tuileries taken. but nevertheless she had to make up for lost time. Moreover, she reflected on the various things that had come to pass. She had become a keeper of secrets. Neipperg had quite approved the confidence of Blanche which gave the charge of little Henriot to her instead of Mere Hoche, in whose hands he was at Versailles. She was to take him to Jemmapes. When he was recovered, Neipperg would go to the mother of his child, braving the anger of the Marquis of Laveline, ready to beard the Baron of Lowendaal in his own hall and to dispute his right to Blanche, sword in hand, if need be. Thus Catharine, pursuing her way, communed with herself. " Lefebvre is at the section where they are voting. He cannot return before the election of the new officers is announced. That will occupy at least two hours. They take such a long time to vote at the section of the Filles-Saint-Thomas. All good angels guard my Le- febvre ! I shall have time to run to Captain Bona- parte's." And thinking of her client, the lean, pale artillery fficer, she smiled. " He's one who hasn't any surplus shirts," she said. " Poor captain, he'll miss that one." And with a sigh she added, When I am Citizeness Lfebvre I don't want to owe anything to Captain Bonaparte. It is enough that he owes me something. pate* gm#-(&tnt. $9 I'll present him his bill. If he should ask me for it I can give it to him. Anyway, at the worst extremity, I don't expect to get all he owes me, ever. Poor boy, he is such a hard worker such a scholar always read- ing and writing he has a sad youth ; but one cannot have time for everything," she said, with a sarcastic smile and a somewhat disparaging shrug as she felt in her pocket for Captain Bonaparte's laundry bill. She got to the Hotel de Metz, kept by Maureard, where the humble artillery officer lived. He occupied a modest room on the third story, number 14. The youth of this man, at once so great and so un- fortunate, who made the century ring with his name and his glory, whose aureole of blood still ensanguines our horizon, passed without extraordinary events or supernatural revelations. It was only afterwards that people tried to discover that there had been special prophecies, revealing his genius, predicting his mighty career. Bonaparte, as child and young man, deceived all the world. No one could tell his fortune, none could fore- see his greatness. His early years were those of a poor, shy, hard- working-student, proud and somewhat quiet. He suffered cruelly the pangs of ill-fortune. Poverty isolated him. His intense family feeling and clan-, nishness made the precarious condition of those who belonged to him doubly hard to bear. His father, Charles Bonaparte, or more precisely, 60 de Buonaparte, the son of an ancient family of the Tuscan nobility, established at Ajaccio for over two centuries, was, by profession, a lawyer. All his an- cestors had been gownmen. Charles Bonaparte was one of the most ardent partisans of Paoli, the Corsican patriot. He had submitted to French authority when Paoli left the island. Though a member of the Corsican Council of Ad- ministration and highly respected, Charles Bonaparte's means were small. He owned, all his resource, but one plantation of vines and olives, which brought scarce twelve hundred livres as rental. It was not worth even that in his hands. Later, after the troubles in Corsica, even this income was gone, and he saw ruin before him. He had married Letizia Ramolini (born on the twenty-fourth of August, 1749), a young girl with beautiful features and a profile like an antique cameo, who afterwards developed a singularly acute gift of foresight combined with much firmness and tact. When, with the title of " Madame Mere," she sat en- throned among her sons, the rulers of Europe, had she not said to Napoleon, who reproached her for not spend- ing all her allowance, I am economizing for you, my children, who may some day be in want." According to accepted tradition, Napoleon Bonaparte, son of Charles and Letizia, was born August 15, 1769. He was the second son of the Bonapartes by this cal- culation. Another more plausible story says that Joseph was the younger son. That he was born at Ajaccio. 6t Napoleon, born on January 7, 1768, had, according to this, been born in Corsica. The certificate of birth, existing at the military school, and produced for the admission of young Napoleon, bears, plainly, the date August 15, 1769 ; but other papers quite justify the confusion which exists : princi- pally the marriage certificate of Napoleon and Jose- phine. It has been said that Josephine had coqiiettishly wanted to make herself younger than she really was, but that Napoleon, to lessen the distance between their ages, had grown two years older. He had probably been sufficiently gallant to give his actual age, and then, the motives which had induced his parents to substitute one certificate for another were past. They made him younger on account of the conditions for admission to the military school at Brienne. The elder son had passed the age of ten years. His parents, in giving as his the birth-certificate of Joseph, two years his junior and whose tastes were not at all military, had thus made possible the entrance of the future general. Two circumstances largely influenced the formation of his character and the bent of his thought : the per- turbations of his native land and the distresses of his family. Civil war in his home, and poverty at the paternal fireside, alike hardened his soul and embittered his youth. He had been serious when he entered the school at Brienne : he came out sad, and heart-sore. His comrades had made fun of his Italian accent, of bis odd name of Napoleon they called him " Paille-au- Ner." They had insulted his poverty ; and we know how bitter are these boyish taunts, and what cruel wounds they leave in their victims. A good scholar, particularly in mathematics, playing little except in the wkiter, when, a precocious strategist he conducted the boyish assaults, when snowballs were hurled at the ice-fortress, in the courtyard of the school at Brienne, he lived almost unnoticed those first years of his life. Here he learned to know Bourrienne the future miser, his private secretary, who repaid the benefits and in- dulgence of his friend by calumniating and traducing him in memoirs paid for by the people of the Resto- ration. From Brienne, he went to. the Military School, and there, again, he suffered in small ways, daily bearing those pin-pricks which do not kill, but whose misery young men know who are poor and do not complain. He had no money, and not being able to join in the xpensive pleasures of the sons of wealthy families, he kept himself aloof. This isolation, at an age when the heart is ready to expand, helped to render inscrutable and pitiless him who was destined to become the man of bronze. He had lost his father, who died of a cancer in the stomach, at the age of thirty-nine years, just after his son (Napoleon) had been named, on September I, 1785' second lieutenant in the company of bombardiers of 63 the regiment of " la Fere," in garrison at Valencia. He occupied his leisure in the camp by writing a history of Corsica ; and, going into society, he took dancing lessons of Professor Dantel, and paid his court to the ladies assembled at the parlor of a friend. His regiment was sent on to Lyons, then to Douai. He obtained a leaye of absence which enabled him to see his family at Ajaccio, and after a trip to Paris, where he lived at the Hotel de Cherbourg, in the Rue du Four-Saint-Honore", he was ordered to rejoin his regiment at Auxonne, on May i, 1788. Work and privation for he li/ed on milk, having no money made him ill. To comfort his mother, a widow with eight children, Napoleon took with him his young brother, Louis. He lived with the boy, spending at this time but ninety-two francs, fifteen centimes a month ! Two tiny rooms, without fire or furnishings, composed their home. In one fitted up with a cot, a trunk full of manuscripts, a chair stuffed with straw and a white- wood table, slept and worked the future master of the Tuileries and of Saint-Cloud. The future King of Hoi- iand lay in the other room, on a mattress thrown upon the floor. Naturally, they had no servant. Bonaparte brushed the coats, polished the boots, and cooked the soup. Napoleon once alluded to this period of his life to a functionary, who complained that his pay was insuf- ficient. "I knew such times, monsieur, when I had the 6 4 plate* j honor to be a second lieutenant ; I breakfasted on dry bread but I closed the door upon my poverty. I never spoke of it to my comrades." Poverty keeps a man pure, and seldom gives time for love-affairs. At that time Napoleon behaved, perhaps, like the fox with the grapes he could not get, for he launched this anathema against women, I believe love to be the bane of society, of personal happiness for men ; and I believe that love does more harm than good.'* The good Catharine, who, besides washing her client's linen, had experienced a leaning toward him, before she met Lefebvre, was not slow in seeing that Bonaparte practised always his severe philosophy of Auxonne. Raised to a first lieutenancy of the Fourth Artillery, Bonaparte had returned to Valencia, in company with his brother Louis. He had taken up again his life as a studious, quiet, almost cynical officer. It was the dawn of the Revolution. He showed himself a warm partisan of the ideas of liberty and the emancipation of the people. Then he became known as a revolution, ist. He spoke, he wrote, he became an agitator^: he had himself made a member of the club " Les Amis de la Constitution," whose secretary he became. He cer- tainly had much faith. Nor was he lacking in aptitude. Indeed, this extraordinary man could take on any tone with seeming truthfulness, and wear any mask, as if it were his natural face. In October, 1791, he asked leave of absence to im- 65 prove his health and visit his family. He went to Corsica. There, in the bosom of his family, making them his partisans, he asked to be made head of a battalion of National Guards at Ajaccio. This command was as- signed to him by public force the only authority. He was, however, hotly opposed. His chief rival was named Marius Peraldi, a member of a very influential family. Bonaparte set to work feverishly to get recruits. Ajaccio was divided into two camps. The Commissaries of the " Constituante," sent by the central power, were able to enlist, by their presence, a great number of votes, and made the scale turn. Their chief, Muratori, had settled with Marius Pe- raldi. That was done to show that the rival of Bonaparte was agreeable to the authorities. It is well known how great is the weight of official approval in Corsica. Bonaparte's friends, unable to bring any such force to bear, believed the success of Peraldi sure. But the ardent and tenacious man himself did not give up. He assembled some trusty friends, and at supper- time, when the Peraldi faction were at table, their dining* room was entered by an armed force. They aimed at the guests, and between two armed men, Muratori, summoned to arise and go, was coo- ducted to the Bonaparte house. 5 66 The commissioner was more dead than alive. Bonaparte went to meet him smilingly, ignoring the means he had taken to bring his visitor, and extending his hand, said, " You are very welcome to my house. I knew, had you been free, you would not be at the Peraldi's ; be seated at our hearth, my dear commis- sioner." As his guides, with their guns, were still at the door, ready to obey Bonaparte's orders, Muratori sat down, braced himself against his luck, and spoke no word of returning to the Peraldi house. On the morrow Bonaparte was elected commander of the National Guards of Ajaccio. The man of Brumaire was nascent in the candidate for the militia. And the deed of force enacted at Ajaccio foretold that of Saint-Cloud. The situation of Bonaparte, accepting a territorial command, when he had a place in the army in action, was not exactly regular. But it was a revolutionary period. It is certain that, had times been different, this infrac- tion would have cost him dear. He had his furlough prolonged, so that at its end his term of service expired. The motive which made him remain at the head ot the Corsican militia when he had the position of lieu- tenant-colonel, was neither ambition nor political fervor. His military genius could have no field in his miser- able little island. It was money, always a question of money, which at padame attjS-6m. 67 the time governed the conduct of this adventurous youth. His pay in the National Guards was 162 livres, twice the sum he received as lieutenant in the artillery. With this sum he would be enabled to supply the many wants of his large family and educate his brother Louis properly. Here, then, was his motive for staying at Corsica. Bonaparte was always more or less the victim of his family. We are told, that, in taking command of the battalion at Ajaccio, he had not deserted, as has been said. The National Guard was at that time, even in Corsica, in act- ive service. It was part of the army. Bonaparte, to justify himself, argued, besides, that by authority of the camp-marshal of Rossi, who had looked into the regu- larity of the proceeding, he had conformed to the decree of the Assembly of December 17, 1791, which authorized officers of the active army to serve in the ranks of the National Guard. Deposed by Colonel Maillard, Bonaparte went to Paris to justify his conduct and to plead his cause before the minister of war. He hoped to be re-instated. But while awaiting the decision he lived in Paris alone, yet ever busy. He fared badly at his home, and dined, frequently, with M. and Madame Permon, whom he had known at Valencia, and whose daughter was destined to marry Junot and become Duchess of Abrantes. Later, Bona- parte, thought of asking, himself, the hand of Madame 68 Permon,. who had been left a widow with considerable wealth. In spite of his economy, he had, at this time, some debts. I He owed nfteen francs to his host, and, as we have seen, forty-five francs to his laundress, Catharine Sans- Ge-ne. His friends were few. He lived in close intimacy with Junot, Marmont, and Bourrienne. All three, like himself, were penniless, but rich in hopes. On the morning of August loth Bonaparte had risen at the sound of the tocsin, and, simply as a spectator of the fray, had gone to Fauveletde Bourrienne, the elder brother of his friend, who kept a bric-a-brac shop and loan office at the Place du Carrousel. He needed money, and did not want to be quite penniless on a day of revolution ; so he took his watch as a pawn to Fauvelet, who loaned him fifteen francs on it. From the shop of the money-lender, whence it would have been difficult to escape, the battle having begun, Bonaparte could follow all the movements of the fight. At noon, when the people's victory was assured, he regained his lodgings. He went pensively homeward, saddened by the sight of the corpses, sickened by the smell of blood. Many years after, the great butcher of Europe, for- feiting the terrible outpouring of his people's blood, and the mountains of corpses accumulated beneath his conquering feet, remembered again this horrible sight 69 On the rocks of St. Helena he expressed at once, hi* indignation and his emotion at the memory of the innumerable victims of the Swiss and the Chevaliers du Poignard, and the sights he witnessed when he was returning to his hotel, on that bloody morning of the tenth of August CHAPTER VIII. THE HANDSOME SERGEANT. SUCH, then, was the man, as yet unknown, obscure, mysterious, whom Catharine Sans-G6ne went to find in his little room in a furnished house, where he waited impatiently for fortune, the capricious and tardy god- dess who had not yet decided to knock at his door. Everything seemed against him. Nothing went right. Ill-luck pursued him. On his return to his hotel, on that bloody morning of the tenth of August, he had sought, in work, rest for his mind, distraction from his cares, and forgetfulness of that tragic spectacle which he had witnessed from the pawnbroker's shop. He had unfolded a geographical chart, and had set himself to study carefully the region of the south, the border towns of the Mediterranean, Marseilles, and, above all, the port of Toulon, where the royalist reac- tion was going on, and which an English fleet menaced. From time to time he pushed the map away, buried his head in his hands, and dreamed. 7 o His ardent thought excited him. Like a traveller in the dark, he saw, rising before him, visions and prodig- ious mirages. Vanquished cities, where he entered as conqueror, mounted on a white horse, amid the enthusiasm of crowds, and the acclamation of soldiers. A bridge, where shots rang out, and which he crossed, colors in hand ; cheering his forces ; driving back the enemy. Strange horsemen, in gold-embroidered coats, who brandished cimeters aloft, around him, invulnerable, and who, at length stopped, threw down their arms, and bowed their turbaned heads before his tent. Then, the triumphal marches, among hordes of van- quished soldiers, in strange lands, afar ar^d ever-chang- ing. The intense southern sun burning on his head, the northern snows dusted over his cloak then feasts, defiles, processions, kings subdued, prostrated; queens flinging themselves at his feet, the intoxication of glory the apotheosis of triumph ! All this fantastic dream was reared but to vanish again, when he lifted his burning face from his hands. Opening his eyes, the plain and ridiculous reality of his room at the hotel was apparent. A little smile showed itself on his lips, and his prac- tical common sense coming to the top, he chased the deceptive phantom away. Ceasing to see the mirage, he looked with clear eyes at that which was before him, and examined with cold reasoning into the uncer- tain situation, the dreadful present, the probably worse future. 71 His f>osition was deplorable, and no change seemed probable. No money. No work. The minister deaf to his en- treaties. The courts hostile. No friend. No protector. He saw himself threatened with an unavoidable ill . black want and weakness. His ambitious projects were dissipated in the brutal wind of actual life his hope for the future fell like castles of cards. He began to feel the cold shudder of his disillusion. What should he do ? For a moment he thought of passing into a street in the quarter of " Nouvelle- France," then in construction, of hiring some houses and letting out furnished rooms. He dreamed, too, of leaving France and taking serv- ice in the Turkish army. Then he said to himself that he had something in his brain ; and he felt the impetuous blood coursing through his veins, like the swift tide of the Rhine. Then he turned again to his task, applying himself to a topographical study of the basin of the Mediter- ranean, his birthplace, where the cannon was soon to thunder. Oh, that he might be there, where they were right- ing, where they were going to defend the nation, and lead his artillery against the English ! That dream was possible ! If he lived a dreamer's life, it was because the hard-working Corsican was as yet alone in the world, without influence, without anj one who believed in him. Jfentf-CStaw. Again, to overcome the discouragement which began to creep to his heart a subtle poison and a deadly one which can freeze the most indomitable energy he re- turned to the study of his chart, and took up the thread of his work, interrupted by his dream. At this moment there came two light' taps on his door. He trembled. A sharp pain shot to his heart. The bravest men, when penniless, are easily frightened by a sudden knock. They wait, with head erect, and eye serene, for Death to strike them. But they are weak and trembling at the thought of a creditor who may come, bill in hand. There came a second, somewhat louder, knock. "Perhaps it is old Maureard coming up with his bill," thought Bonaparte, blushing. " Come in," he said slowly. A moment passed. And then he repeated impatiently, " Well, come ! " He thought in surprise, " That is not the landlord. Junot or Bourrienne would not wait before entering ; who can have come here to-day ? " He was less un- easy, and more anxious, for he never had any visitors. He HRed his head, inquisitively, to see who might enter. The door opened, the key having been left in the lock, and a young man advanced, wearing the uniform of a foot-soldier. A gentle youth, fresh, rosy and delicate, still too young for a beard, with dark, intense eyes. 73 On his sleeve he wore the stripes of a sergeant, evi- dently just acquired. "What do you want of me?" asked Bonaparte. You have probably made a mistake." The young sergeant gave a military salute. I have the honor to address Captain Bonaparte, of the artillery, have I not ? " he said, in a soft voice. " The same what business brings you ? ** "I am called Rene"," said the young soldier, with a slight hesitation. " Rene" so short ? " said Bonaparte, fixing his pierc- ing glance on the stranger, a glance which penetrated to the very soul. Yes, Rene"," repeated the visitor, with a little more assurance, "in the regiment of volunteers from Ma. yenne-et-Loire, where I am serving ; they call me ' The Handsome Sergeant." You deserve that name," rejoined Bonaparte smil- ing, " though you have rather too gentle and foppish a manner for a soldier. " You must judge me under fire, my dear eaptain,"* said the gay volunteer, proudly. Bonaparte made a grimace, as if it had touched his sore spot. He growled, " Under fire ! Will any one ever see me there ? " Then he answered, looking carefully at his unnoticed visitor, Come to the point What do you want with me ? What can I do for you ? " This, Captain, is the object of my visit ; my regi- ment, under M. de Beaurepaire * 74 " A brave man ! An energetic soldier ! I know and value him," interrupted Bonaparte. " Where is your regiment now ? " He asked it with marked interest, without ceasing to observe narrowly the sergeant, who seemed so young and evidently so timid. " At Paris. Oh, for a few days only ; we came on our way from Angers, and we have asked to be the first men honored with orders for the frontier. We are to go to the help of Verdun." " That is well ! Ah, you are fortunate to be able to go into battle," said Bonaparte, with a sigh ; and he added, " But, you want what of me ? " " Captain, I have a brother Marcel." " Your brother's name is Marcel ? " Bonaparte asked, in a defiant tone. " Marcel ReneY' the handsome sergeant hastened to say, somewhat abashed, and lowering his eyes under the severe and inquisitorial glance of the artillery cap- tain. " My brother is a doctor, he is detailed as aide, in the Fourth Artillery regiment at Valencia." " My regiment my late regiment, rather." " Yes, Captain, that is why I hoped, having heard that you were to be found in Paris. I learned that from one of the National Guards whom I met this morn- ing, at the fight of the Tuileries, Sergeant Lefebvre who knows you." " Valiant Leiebvre f Yes, I know him, too ; what did Lefebvre tell you ? " "Thatyou might, perhaps by word to the commander by your protection get my brother exchanged." 75 Bonaparte thought deeply, without taking his eyes from the handsome sergeant, who g~rew more and more troubled. Embarrassed, anxious to prefer his request as quickly as possible, for it seemed to excite him strangely, the volunteer continued, hurrying on his words : " I would that my brother might be sent from the artillery regi- ment, which is at Valencia, to the Army of the North. He would be with me I should see him we could meet we could be together if he should be wounded, I would be there I might even tend and save him. Oh ! Captain, help us both to that great blessing ! If we can be together, we will bless you, will be ever mindful of your kindness." And, finishing his speech, the young man's voice was husky, one would have thought, with suppressed sobs. Bonaparte had risen. He went straight to the sergeant and said to him in .his jerky way, " To begin with, my boy, I can do nothing for you, nor for him you call your brother. Lefebvre should have told you that ; I am without employment, without commission. They have broken my sword. My recommendation to the Fourth Artillery would be useless worse than nothing. I know no one in Paris. I live alone. I am myself looking for help. I however know the brother of an influential man, an old deputy, called Maximilian Robespierre ; he lives in the Rue Saint-Honor^, very near here. You can go and find him for me ; perhaps he can get for you what would be refused to me : go and see young Robespierre ! " 76 " Oh, thanks, Captain, may I some day be able to prove my gratitude f Bonaparte raised his finger, half smiling, half serious, and said slowly : It seems to me, my pretty Sergeant, that you have changed the usual dress of your sex to enter the army and follow the fortunes of war." The pretty sergeant answered tremblingly : Ah, pardon, Captain, do not betray me ; be generous ; respect my disguise ; do not kill me in divulging my deceit. Yes, I am a woman ! " I suspected it at once," said Bonaparte, good- humoredly. " But your comrades, your chiefs, do they see nothing ? " " There are many young men in the regiment. Not one has a beard, and besides, Captain, I do my duty seriously ! " said the young warrior proudly. " I do not doubt it. You went voluntarily. And you wish to be joined in the Army of the North, if I understand your wish, by this doctor this aide, called Marcel who is, surely, more to you than a brother, for whom, no doubt, you enlisted. Oh, I do not ask your history ! Keep your secret ! You have interested me, and if I can serve you, count on me. Go and see young Robespierre. Tell him his friend, Bonaparte, sent you." And he extended his hand to the pretty sergeant, wh took it with transports of joy. The captain saw Rene"e go out radiant. His face clouded a moment, he sighed enviously. 77 love each other, and they want to fight side by ide for their country. They are fortunate." And the melancholy look came over his face again. He sat down at the table, passed his hand over the chart, and pensively considered at length the city of Toulon, the great maritime port of the south, saying excitedly : " Oh, if I could fight the English ! for I shall fight them there ! there ! " And his feverish finger pointed, on the map spread before him, to a place unknown, visible for him alone, where he destroyed, in thought, the English fleet. CHAPTER IX. THE OATH UNDER THE POPLARS. THE Count de Surgeres, whose chateau, near Laval, reflected its crumbling old turrets in the Mayenne, had, at the first mutterings of the Revolution, sought shelter beyond the Rhine. He had encamped at Treves, near Coblenz, resolved to watch the course of events as a quiet spectator. Nominally, he had taken service in the army of the princes ; but, exempt on account of his years and his evident infirmities, though he had just passed his fiftieth year, the Count de Surgeres was chiefly devoted to high living and to watching events quietly, under the pro- tection of the royal and imperial armies, in the little Rhenish town. The step he had taken in leaving home was due not from fear of the patriots, nor for love of the princes. The count, left a childless widower after a few short years of marriage, had for a long time past had a liaison in secret with the wife of a neighboring gentleman, an ardent royalist, who talked, after the night of the 4th of August, about taking arms, having the tocsin sounded, and calling upon the country folk to defend the church and thefleur-de-tys. M. de Surgeres, in consideration of his intimacy with his neighbor, had no recourse left him but to follow his lead. Yet his chivalrous tasks were peaceful ones, limited to paying court to the ladies ; he left for lovers of brutal sports the honors of war. Besides, he began to grow weary of his slavery ta love. The lady of his thoughts had not only grown, heavier with age ; of yore so trim, so elegant, so tender, so poetically sylph-like, she was now robust and mas- sively square, with a formidably large figure, and she lay heavily on his soul. Of all ponderous bodies, the very heaviest is a woman one has ceased to love. Thus thought the Count de Surgeres, a man of wit, a votary of pleasure ; but hating reproaches, tears, jeal- ousy, and threats. Of independent, somewhat philo- sophical nature, he had, while a youth at Paris, been among the Encyclopaedists, and this independence lent itself ill to subjection. The fetters of the adulterer seemed to him insupportable. If he had been patient and kept, with the Marquis de LouYigne*, the tiresome attitude of a titled lover, it was 79 Because he grew very tired of his own domain, and was too poor to live at court, and because the marquise was the only woman he could make love to in any of the neighboring chateaux. To find a rival for her he would have had to put him- self out to look for a gentle chatelaine in some distant manor or to lower himself to the town's folk and find a lady in the town. M. de Surgeres wisely contented himself with the good fortune which he found in taking up arms. But events were coming, and it was partly the heroic attempts of the marquis, who absolutely wanted to force him into the woods, to make, war on the hedges, and partly the desire of the marquis to follow the example of the Duchesses of Longueville, in that possibly terrible game, in riding along the highways, a white cockade in her hat, and pistols in her. belt, that finally decided the count to take the way of the emigrant. That resolution had a double advantage in leaving no doubt of her sentiment of fidelity to the king, and at the same time delivering him from his fleshy Amazon and from the gentleman who was over-fond of ambus- cades in the woods. He was alone, and comparatively free. He announced his departure, one fine morning, and hurried off, pre- tending that he had received a pressing message from the Count de Provence, asking him to join him afar, in great haste. In his fear that the marquis should renounce his sylvan warfare, and above all that the marquis would desire to gallop across the plains with him, the count added maliciously that the Count of Provence had sent his approval of the faithful Louvigne", for his zeal for loyalty to the crown, and the provinces of the West Charmed with this mark of royal confidence the mar- quis sped his friend onward. The marquise wept a little, but, quite consoled at the idea of going to war, of wearing a hat and white cock- ade, and of having a gun on the saddle of the mighty charger who should bear her, she smiled through her tears when the Count de Surgeres, making his adieux, in her husband's presence, asked permission to kiss her. When he bent his lips to kiss her, though somewhat kept back by the mountain of flesh that surrounded her. Surgeres found time to say in her ear this sentence. " Take care of Renee. I shall go and bid her good- bye." The marquise made an affirmative motion with her head, indicating that she had heard and would remem- ber his injunction. The count, light, joyous and free, made a last sign from his seat on horseback to his friend the marquis, who was quite taken up with plans in which he went out with his farmers, waiting for stray soldiers of the Republic, or going out in small troops. Then the count rode to a turn in the Tougeres road, opposite a white house, dainty and decked with vines, which was called La Garderie." Si There, in days gone by, had been a meeting-place for hunters, a post for the guards of the Lords of Mayenne. The count checked his horse beside the fence en- closing the court, in the centre of which stood the little house. He sprang to the ground, frightening and chasing the chickens scratching in the grass, and the ducks swimming in the middle of a pond which was half covered with greenish slime. A dog barked. "Peace! Peace! Rammoneau," said a strong voice ; "do you not know our good master ? " "Yes, it is I, Father La Bris6e. What news at La Garderie ? " " No news, sir," said the old keeper, standing in his doorway, dressed in his velvet coat, booted, with knife in his belt, ready to bring out his dogs for the chase, and to cock his gun at his game at sunset. Inside, everything was scrupulously clean and bright, scoured to shining, in kitchen and dining-room ; the brass on the hunting-horns shone, beside riding whips, boars' tusks, antlers, stags' heads, foxes' tails, etc., which decorated the walls. " Will monseigneur do me the honor to come In and rest a little and have a mug of cider ? " " That ought not to be refused, and at another time ; but to-day, my good La Brise'e, it is impossible. I am going away on a long journey." La Brise'e made a movement to show he was sorry. 6 *2 pattern* ' Ah, monseigneur is going away," he said, at such a time, too. What is to become of us ? " "I am coming back, my old La Bris^e I am going on a journey simply a pleasure tour." Monseigneur can go and come as he likes," said the old keeper resignedly ; - has monsieur the count any orders to give me for the time he is away ? " he added in his usual tone, as* a submissive servant. Oh, nothing much, La Brisge ; the right of hunt- ing will presently be abolished and will leave you at leisure." La Bris6e made a tragic gesture, and sighed. " It is the abomination of desolation. If one could be allowed to suppress " But he stopped, remembering that his master was there, and the old man, at heart a partisan of all the reforms of the Revolution, save in what concerned the chase, closed his remarks exclaim- ing, " suppress the killing of game ? That should never be done." " You will see I should say, we and many others will see, La Bris^e But let us speak of that which is here. Where is Renge ? " " Mile. Renge is with my wife, very near here, at the farm of Verbois. They will not be long I expect them in a quarter of an hour." "I cannot wait I must sleep at Rennes to-night. Kiss Renee for me. Adieu, my good La Bris6e. I shall return ! I shall return ! " The Count de Surgeres rode off, making a sign of farewell to his keeper. He sprang lightly and nimbly gttadamr ^anjs-^ne. 83 to his saddle. The idea of a tender scene with Ren6e had tormented him until now. He hated these effusions of love. It was not that he was quite incapable of tenderness. Rene"e was his daughter. The child of his amowrs with the Marquise de LouvignS. He had, for this child of a passion long since cold, a sort of mild affec- tion. He had undoubtedly looked after her, but from afar ; and though he had not spared in money and gifts, he had been farless lavish in his caresses. As she had been born, happily for all parties, while the Marquis de Louvigne 1 was away at a convention of gentlemen which met at Rennes, Renee had been con- fided to the care of La Bris6e and his wife. The child had been brought up quietly, never seeing, save from afar and by chance on a walk, her father, and more rarely still her mother, the Marquise de Louvigne", both of whom, in the presence of others, farm-hands, or curious villagers, refrained from show- ing any special interest in her. She did not know her true parentage, and believed herself the child of La Brisge and his worthy but un- aristocratic consort. The count and the marquise, one the greatest lady in the neighborhood, the other the master of the estate where La Brise"e was keeper, allowed themselves to be suspected in nothing, not showing in their occasional visits the real tie which bound them to her. Thanks to the liberality of the count, Ren6e had enjoyed an excellent education, and was accustomed 8 4 to maintaining the independence to be found in daughters of a good family. She had learned to ride ; and galloped, fearlessly and quite alone, across field and wood, on a little mare, taken from the chateau stables. Father La Brisge had taken her in his journeys to the woods, and the girl had become a good huntress. One day,, when La Brisee, having finished his lunch in the woods, was sleeping in the shade of a beech, like one of Virgil's shepherds, she had gently stolen his gun. Very softly she had gone away, avoiding the crackling of dead leaves under her feet, and the break- ing of dry branches. She reached a clearing where the hunting hound, seeing her with a gun, and not looking to see who carried it, started out in quest of game. He started a pheasant, and Rene*e anxiously raised her piece to her shoulder, aimed fired. With a heavy flapping of wings the bird fell. Rene stood an instant stunned ; though assured by the sound of her shot, she looked with surprise not un- mixed with pride at this evident victory, upon her game, which lay motionless upon the damp grass, its feathers ruffled, its beak open. The clog had sprung upon the prey, and wagging his tail, brought it to her in his mouth. With a caress RenSe repaid the beast for his prey, which she took from him ; and, like a miser with his treasure, she hid her game in the pocket of the man's coat she wore for hunting, and went back to find La 85 Brise"e, awakened by the shot, and much excited. He was looking for his gun, which he believed had been stolen by poachers. First he scolded Rene*e, then made up for it by praising her courage, this budding huntress ! He was sorry to have been deprived of his gun while sleeping, but proud of the good use to which his pupil had put the weapon. After that Ren6e accompanied him on his expedi- tions, whenever it was feasible, and frequently shot her rabbit or roebuck. So Rene"e had^grown familiar with much tramping, with fatigue, with powder, and with arms. Frequently, in their hunting, her gun under her arm, she had gone alone, far from Father La Brisfie, who was busy watching the snares he had set for game. On such days, hares, pheasants and partridges might safely sit and plume themselves, even call Rene"e paid no attention to her gun, nor to the appeals of her dog. Then she struck the plain beside a mill where, near the rippling stream that fed it, there stood, behind a grove of poplars, a little verdant cot, made of wild plants, vines, grasses, ivy, climbing and intertwin- ing in a green network. It was not only the freshness of this pleasant retreat, nor the murmur of the stream over the stones, nor yet the deep calm under the heavy shade, that attracted her. For Marcel, the miller's son, these silent banks of She river had an equal attraction. As often as possible, these two young people met there. 86 Book in hand, the young man walked slowly to where he saw Rene"e coming from the chase, and met her. He pretended to read, as she pretended to hunt. But their thoughts were elsewhere, and book and game were only pretexts. RenSe was seventeen, and Marcel was entering his twentieth year. The son of a well-to-do countryman, and the nephew of the curate, Marcel had learned a little Latin and they had thought he would take Orders; but the Church did not attract him. Filled with the charms of nature, loving woods, and fields, and flowers, seek- ing to study the secret of universal life and to find out its mystery, Marcel had shown a great aptitude for natural science. With the sanction of his uncle, the curate, he had been able to take some lessons in anatomy with an old doctor, a friend of the priest's. By dint of study and patient labor he had prepared for his first degree, which he had taken at Rennes. He was now a physician, and in his projects for the future, sketched beside the babbling stream with Ren<5e, who, for him, neglected the chase, and used her gun only to explain her long absence, he saw himself first at Rennes, later at Paris, where alone he could follow science and achieve fame and fortune, practising the great art of healing, which the ancients believed to be a divine attribute. Peaceful and sentimental was Marcel ; and his read- ings of Rousseau, made him something of a philos- 87 pher. He worshipped nature, and his profession of faith was that of the vicaire Savoyard. His thought, enlarged beyond the circle of actualities and things im- mediately around him, embraced all humanity. He believed himself a citizen of the world, and held that the entire globe was the fatherland of humanity. Several works of Anacharsis Clootz had fallen into his hands, and formed his doctrine of a universal Re- public. In this projected course, the young cosmopolitan physician did not dream of going alone to Paris and glory. Renge was to go with him, Rene"e, who was to be his bride ; for these two young people, without ever having said so plainly, loved each other. They were nearly of an age, they cared for each other, and their fortunes seemingly were alike ; so there seemed no possibility of anything which should mar their happiness. Marcel, son of the miller, whose lord was the Count de Sur^eres, did not descend in the scale by marrying her he believed to be the daughter of the count's chief- keeper, father La Brise'e. Good Mother Toinon, the keeper's wife, had surprised their secret, one day when she had gone to get grass for her rabbits, on the river-bank. She had not scolded much, but she had surprised Marcel a little, even in her reticence and slight grum- blings ; for Mother Toinon had insinuated that an ob- stacle existed on Rente's side. The miRer's son, whose well-to-do father might have had some opposition to his marriage with a simple keeper's daughter, did not guess what La Brisfie wife meant. The keeper had no place, however, in her vague remarks. Was his consent nothing, or was there no reason to be uneasy ? Marcel did not place much credence in the remarks of the keeper's wife, nor in the objection which was to arise on Rente's part. When the Count de Surgeres had suddenly left the country, to join the princes abroad, Mother Toinon had said, regarding the lovers narrowly, " Now, my dears, if you want to marry, you have only to ask the miller's consent." Marcel, not understanding why Mother La Brise"e said his father's consent would now be sufficient, went to find him and tell him of his desire to marry Ren6e. The miller, while declaring that he had nothing to say against the girl, had tried to dissuade his son. He had showed him that he was too young ; he had still to work to make a position for himself; lastly, he said what fathers always say, when they do not quite ap- prove a marriage, and are unable to give good reasons for refusing their consent. Surprised at this resistance, which was not what he had expected, for the young man supposed his father would bring up the relatively inferior condition of a keeper's daughter, Marcel resolved to find out the reasons of his father's refusal. His mother mothers are ever foolish when it comes 89 to the happiness of their sons told him that Master Bertrand Le Goe'z, the notary and administrator of the Count's affairs (who had become his substitute ia his absence, and had his general power of attorney), had thrown most amorous glances toward La Garderie. Sweet Rene"e pleased him, and he had asked her in marriage, and was acceptable to La Brise"e. Marcel was really unhappy, and anger shot forth in flames at this confidence of his mother's. So he had Master Bertrand as a rival ! That villain- ous, old, disagreeable man, to whose account a thousand ills had been placed ! But Rene"e did not love the notary. She would not have him. She would frown down his pretension. He was sure of her. On that score, he could be easy. As for La Brise"e, he understood the old man's hesitation ; for he was under Master Bertrand Le Goe'z, who, entrusted with all matters by the Count, was at liberty to dismiss a keeper. There lay the danger. Though Goe'z would not dare dismiss, for such reason, an old and faithful servant like La Brise"e, who was the pride and the model of old- time foresters. Therefore the wily attorney had taken care to gain the influence of the miller. It was in his power to renew the lease of certain tracts of country, belonging to the Count de Surgeres, which was indispensable to the miller for feeding his mill. Le Goe'z had made that bargain readily. Let Marcel give up all pretension to Rene"e, or he 9 would not renew the lease, and the miller, ruined, would have to give up his mill and leave the country. The young man, having learned the projects and calculations of the secretary, said simply that he wanted to go and find him in his study, among his papers, and break his back. His mother dissuaded him from it. Le Goz was powerful and vindictive. True, he had the power of a noble, and for that reason, perhaps, he affected most violent revolutionary principles. He talked about decapitations, and had advised the installation of a tribunal, charged with judging anti- revolutionists, in every community. He was a municipal officer, and corresponder with the influential agitators of the sections in Paris, the bailiff Maillard, the Mar- quis of Saint-Hugure, Tournier, the American, and other men of action. It was well to keep peace with such a man, not to brave him. " What shall I do, then ? " the young man had asked. "Go away," said his good mother, " dream no more of Rene"e. Go to Rennes, where you will finish your studies, become a great physician, and find forgetful- ness, rest, and perhaps fortune." The young lover shook his head and went away sadly, without answering his mother. He wanted neither rest nor oblivion. He knew well that far from Rene"e he would not find happiness. He would remain in the country and save Rene"e from the odious secretary. Ah, he thought with heart open to vague aspirations of life, that he would seek a new country 91 where liberty flourished without danger ; he would go away to that America where France had helped to fight for independence ; there he would work, he would study, he would become a hard-working and useful citizen, far from the noise of camps, far from all the tumult of battle in old Europe. Naturally, in the dream of emi- gration, Rene"e went with him. On the evening of that decisive conversation with his mother, Marcel found Ren6e once more on the banks of the stream, whose song, at that twilight hour, seemed most melancholy, most sad. A crimson bar at setting indicated the death of day, wrapped in a shroud of red and gray clouds. The moon, meanwhile, scattering the clouds slowly, rose in the east, and its radiant disk shone between the tall and leafy branches of the poplars. Rene"e and Marcel, seated in the grass on the banks of the little river, held each other's hands and looked, where, like a circle of silver, the tender, pale planet rolled through space. It was a solemn moment, a nuptial hour. Like the songs of birds calling to each other in the 'month of May, under the branches, the voices of the two young people alternated in the softness of the evening. " I love thee, my Rene"e, and shall ever love but thee." Thou alone, Marcel, dost fill my thoughts, and my heart is thine forever ! " We will never leave each other * 9 a " We will live side by side ! " " Nothing can part us " We will remain together until death ! " " Thou wilt swear to follow me, my Renege " I swear that where thou goest I will go, Marcel ! " " We will love each other always " " Ever will we love ; I swear it ! " " May the branches, emblems of liberty, and the trees which are the pillars of Nature's temple, may these forest people receive and witness my vows I" said Marcel, with an emphasis which showed in both word and gesture, as he raised his hand toward the trees which the Revolution honored as symbols of the nation, In sign of oath. Renee imitated Marcel, and, like him, her hand raised, vowed to love forever, and to follow always him to whom she gave herself freely, and this was the path under the poplars which shone like silver under the soft moon's light. CHAPTER X. THE INVOLUNTARY ENLISTING. WHEN the two young people had, with a chaste kiss, ealed their reciprocal vows exchanged beneath the serenity of the moonlight which flooded the sky and lighted up the last clouds in the west, they thought they heard a crackling of leaves behind them, followed Jby cry like the hooting of a screech-owl. 93 That bird of ill-omen troubled them in their ecstasy. They embraced each other fervently, yet with a secret fear despite their rapture. Marcel took a stone and threw it in the direction whence the sound had come, seeking to dislodge that importunate screamer. " Make off, villainous owl," cried Marcel, looking angrily toward the dark wood where doubtless, amid the trees, sat the witness of their love. No bird flew thence. Instead of a flapping of wings- there was a sound as of footsteps retreating precipitately from the lovers, and it seemed to them that they heard among the leaves the laughter of a man. Some one had surprised them, spied upon them, heard them ! They both returned to the village sad, silent and uneasy. "I fear this augurs ill," said Rene"e at the moment of parting, beside the hedge of La Garderie. " Bah," said Marcel, trying to make the girl feel at ease, " it was some clown who wanted to amuse him- self at our expense, some jealous fellow who was en- raged at our joy. Let us think no more of the matter, sweet ! We love each other, and have sworn to be true to each other always, and so nothing can separate us." And they parted, both alarmed by the warning they had received. An enemy had surely watched them! Who wanted to destroy their happiness ? Who could thus follow and threaten them ? Who objected to their felicity? The memory of the words of the 94 miller's wife and the thought of that Bertrand Le Go6z, who dared to desire to possess Rene"e, presented itself at once to Marcel's mind. He reasoned with himself and attempted to fortify himself against the vague apprehension which penetrated his very soul. " Bertrand Le Goe"z is a bad, jealous man," he said to himself; " but what can he do to us, since Rene"e loves me and has sworn to cleave to me ? " He determined, nevertheless, to be on his guard, and to watch the movements of the secretary. The fear he experienced was not without foundation. Le GoSz multiplied his visits to the mill. He had warned Marcel's father twice that his lease was soon to expire and that he need not count on renewing it. By virtue of the right which the Count de Surgeres had given him, Le Goe'z signified to the miller that he would have to give up his land. No delay would be allowed him. Always, too, the secretary warned Marcel's father that, should he send his son to Rennes, and assure him that the youth had given up all hopes of marry- ing Rene"e, he would consider the renewal of the lease. The miller was much distressed, for his son clung to his intentions, and swore he would wed Ren^e, in spite of Bertrand Le Goe'z ; on her part, the young girl had answered all the overtures of the enamored sec- retary with cold refusals. Bertrand Le Goe'z resolved to part them violently. France was in arms. On all sides there came from 95 the towns volunteers who took pikes and muskets, and went forth to die for their country. The secretary, in his capacity of attorney of the community, assembled, one Sunday morning, all the young men around and addressed to them a warm appeal, calling upon them to go to Rennes to re-enforce the regiment of Ille-et-Vilaine. Several volunteers came forward, enlisted, and left next day. Bertrand Le Goez expressed himself as objecting strongly to the bad example and laziness of those who, young, strong, and able to carry a gun, threw away the honor of defending their country, and preferred to grow weak in the company of old men and girls. His harangue was meant directly for Marcel. He, understanding exactly, what use Le GoSz meant to make of his inaction, went directly to the keeper. He found La Brise'e polishing his guns, and whis- tling a hunter's song. Rene"e sat sewing beside the keeper's wife. She gave a cry of surprise at seeing Marcel enter. Danger was ahead. She questioned him with a look begging him to reassure her. " Father La Brise~e," said the young man, much moved, " I come to bid you and Rene"e adieu ! I am going." . " O God," cried the young girl with her hand on her heart. " Why are you going, Marcel ? Does that wicked Le Goe'z still want to take away your father's land ? " 96 " That is not my only reason for going away." And where are you going, lad ? " asked the keeper quietly, still polishing his gun. "I do not know. Throughout the village I am taunted with being idle ; yet it is not fear that keeps me from taking a musket, but because I consider war as a plague, and the people who go into it as sheep going to the slaughter, as my master Jean-Jacques has demonstrated ! Why do they kill each other for in- terests which touch them not ? War for life is just that is, when slaves take up arms, it is the war of liberty against tyranny, and that Jean Jacques Rousseau himself would have approved." "Then you have enlisted, lad ? " inquired La Brise"e. " It is well very well ! You have done as the others have done. You are good you will go and kill those Prussian thieves, I hope. Pity you never cared for the chase. You are not like Ren6e she would make a fine soldier. But you will learn courage. Marcel." Rene"e had risen, weak and deathly pale. " I am about to leave the country," said Marcel, with rising emotion, " because I can no longer live amid threats and reproaches. Father La Brisde, I am going with my father and mother, who are likewise driven out, to establish myself in America." " What ! " said the keeper, astonished, letting his gun fall ; " you are not going into the army ? What will you do in America, good heavens ! " I want," said the young man, firmly, " to tajce 97 with me, as my wife, your daughter Rene"e. There we will found a family, there we will be happy under the great trees of the wilderness ! " Rene"e had fallen against La Brise'e, saying, " Father I father ! come with us to that America, which I do not know, but which must be beautiful, since Marcel says we pan be happy there." The keeper had risen, much troubled, and address- ing his wife, who sat motionless, as though she had not heard, still drawing her needle through, mechanically, and said : ' " Well, there's another ! Take Rene"e to America I Marry her ! What do you say, old woman ? ** Mother La Brise'e stopped sewing, lifted her head and said severely, " I say that it is all beastly 1 It is time to stop it ! It is necessary, La Brise'e, to tell these two turtle-doves something. They do not know they are not equal. Tell them, thou, about it." Then La Brise'e revealed to Renge that she was the daughter of the Count de Surgeres and could not marry a miller's son. But she said of her absent father^ that, having left her to the paid care of La Brise'e, he had no right to dispose of her, nor to keep her from giving herself to the man she loved. She considered that the irregularity of her birth placed her beyond social conventionalities, wherefore she proposed to be quite free. The Revolution was everywhere, and sowed in the quietest minds, even in the soul of a young girl like Renee, the germs of independence and liberty. 7 Marcel reflected. The new position of Rente had upset all his projects and disconcerted him. The nobility to which Rene"e belonged did not seem to him a serious obstacle. The Revolution had abol- ished classes and declared all men equal. But Ren6e was rich. She could not follow, as she had promised, the son of a ruined miller, like himself ; what was pure love and youthfulness, in other eyes would seem like a calculating cupidity on his part for captivating her unworthily. No ! He could not accept such sacri- fice, though Rene"e was ready to make it. He mus^ force himself to banish remembrance and he would leave France and seek no more for happiness, only for rest ind oblivion. He would go alone to America. His resolution was quickly taken. He would declare his decision to leave the country, to put distance be- tween himself and his love when some one knocked. Madame La Brise"e went to the door. Bertrand Le Go6z was there. He wore a scarf and was accompanied by two commissioners of the district, wearing hats with tricolored plumes, and the insignia of municipal delegates. , As La Bris6e stood, astonished at the sight of the three personages, Le Goez said to one of the commis- sioners, indicating the young man, " Citizens, there is Marcel. Do your duty ! " "Are you going to arrest me," said Marcel, as- tounded. " What have I done ? " We simply come to ask you, citizen," said one of the commissioners, " if it is true that you are about to 99 leave, to desert your home, and your flag, as your father, the miller has said ? " " I have thought of doing so." "You see," said Le Gogz, triumphantly, taking the commissioners to witness. " Then, you desire to emigrate ? You want to bear arms against your country ? Do you not know that the law punishes those who desert now ? Speak ! " I never meant to desert. I do not emigrate. I can no longer live here. Poverty drives me and mine- forth. I go to find beneath another sky work and liberty." " Liberty is to be found beneath the standard of the nation," said the commissioner. " As for work, the nation will give you plenty ! You are a doctor, are you not ? " " I shall be ; I must still get one more diploma." " You shall have it in your regiment ! " My regiment ! What do you mean ? " " This. We have an order for you," said the second commissioner. " Our armies need surgeons, and we- are charged, my colleague and I, to find them." He handed a paper to Marcel, saying, "Sign here, and in twenty-four hours be at Angers. They will tell you there to which corps you are assigned." " And if I refuse to sign ? " * We will arrest you immediately, as a refractionary, an agent of emigration, and we will take you to Angers but to prison. Sign ! " Marcel hesitated. Bertrand Le Goe'z, winking, said to one of the com missioners : "You would have done better to follow my advice and arrest him at once. He will not sign, he is an aristocrat, an enemy of the people." La Brise'e and his wife sat, struck dumb, watching the scene. Renge, meantime, who had approached Marcel, taking a pen, and handing it to him, said, softly : " Sign, Marcel ! It is imperative, I ask it of you ! " " So you want me to leave you to leave you defence- less against all the attempts of that wretch," he said, pointing to Le Goez. Renee answered, whispering : " Sign ! I shall go to you I promise it." Marcel said : " You among soldiers you in the army ? " in a subdued voice. " Why not ? I am like a boy ! I can handle a gun ; ask. my father ' she is not like you.' Go sign ! " Marcel took the pen and nervously signed the deed of enlistment, then addressed the commissioners. " Where must I go ? " " To Angers where they are raising a regiment from Mayenne and Loire. Good luck, Sir Doctor." " I salute you, Commissioners." " Have you nothing to say to me," said Le Goe'z, in a jesting tone. Marcel pointed to the door. " You are wrong to be angry with me. No^r that you are a good sans-culotte ' and serve your country, I esteem you, Marcel ; and to prove it I will renew the ior lease for your parents," said the secretary, laughing cruelly. Bertrand Le Goez retired rubbing his hands. He had gained his point. His rival was going far away, among the enemy. Rene~e, of whose birth he knew the secret, was in his power. Would Marcel ever return ? And she, once his wife, would bring him part of the count's domain, of which he was taking care. He saw himself already master of those vast estates of which he was now but a keeper. He could show himself good-natured toward Marcel's parents, and let them keep their lands ; he would have them for allies and Marcel could not influence them against him. Every- thing reassured him that some day he should go about, not as inspector, but as veritable owner, then, with Ren6e on his arm, as his wife, over the count's lands,, whom the emigrant laws had power to keep out. He took good care to make good her inheritance. Rene"e, meantime, after declaring to La Brise"e and Toinon that she never would have, in spite of Ber- trand, any other love, and that some day she would marry Marcel, had gone, at evening, to the usual tryst- ing place, on the river-bank, under the poplars. There she met Marcel, very sad and uneasy. His hand trembled feverishly, and tears stood in his eyes; She reassured him, repeating her promise to see him in the regiment, And when he again seemed incredulous, she said firmly : " You shall see ! Wouldn't I make a fine sol- dier ? " she added, laughing. " Why ! I haven't your 102 ideas about war ! I am no philosopher ; but I love you, and mean to follow you everywhere." " But the fatigue the rations ? The gun is heavy and the knapsack as well. You have no idea of the ,painful work of war, poor child ! " Marcel said this to dissuade her from the attempt, which, to him, savored of madness. " I am strong I can do it. Many young men go daily to the war who are not as robust as I, and they have not, as I have, a lover beside the standard," she .added proudly. " But if you should be wounded ? " " Are you not a surgeon ? You would take care of me save me." Some days after, at dusk, one might have seen, walk- ing slowly along, a young man, going to Angers, carrying at the end of a cane a small bundle of clothes > and wearing the costume of the National Guard. This young man presented himself, as soon as he got to Angers, at the mayor's office, and was enrolled as a volunteer, in the battalion of Mayenne-et-Loire, under the name of Rene" Marcel, son of Marcel, the miller of Surgeres. The young man had said that he wished to enlist in the company where his brother Marcel, already en- rolled, acted as aide. So the young girl was admitted without difficulty. No one suspected her sex. This enlisting of young women, in masculine attire and with strange names, ^produced, occasionally, at that time, confusion and all Jfctt-<&ttt*. 103 sorts of discoveries. The regiments of the Revolution received, thus, many feminine recruits. There are preserved, among the military annals of the Republic, obscure names and records of, glorious deeds of service performed by these heroic warrior- maids. Their names are inscribed on a deathless page. In the regiment of Mayenne-et-Loire, where Rene"e became a great favorite and was called the " Joli Sar- geant," having attained to silver stripes, a cruel decep- tion was soon exposed. She could not be very long near him she had come to find. A superior order came to aide Marcel to go to the 4th Artillery at Valence, where they were badly in need of surgeons, and who were hurrying to Toulon. The separation was cruel. The necessity of conceal- ing their grief and hiding their tears augmented the bitterness of parting every one watched the two, and too great show of emotion would have betrayed them, They embraced each other at parting, each promise ing to make every effort to rejoin the other. Then came ReneVs visit to Captain Bonaparte, which showed how anxious she was to be once more near him she loved. Thanks to the protection of young Robespierre, who was Bonaparte's friend, the exchange was effected, and we will not tarry to see the meeting^ under the command of Beaurepaire, the heroic defender of Verdun, of Renee, enlisted for love, ami Marcel, the humanitarian philosopher, the pupil of Jean-Jacques, the apostle of peace and universal fraternity, a citizen of the world, as he called him- self, having found a somewhat involuntary enlistment, CHAPTER XL THE CONFIDENCE OF MADAME SANS GENE. AFTER the departure of the "Pretty Sergeant," Bonaparte, engrossed in thought, began again to work. Following on the chart his vast projects for the de- fence of the Mediterranean coast, he cast an ambitious jglance on the mountains between France and Pied oaont, the key to Italy. In the midst of these strategic calculations a knock at the door made him lift his head. " Who comes now ? " he thought. He was impatient at being again disturbed. " It seems to be a day for risks." And he called, Who's there ? " " It is I," answered a woman's voice, " Catharine, the laundress." " Come in," he growled. Catharine entered, a little embarrassed, and said, taking her basket from her arm, Do not disturb your- self, Captain ; I have brought your clothes. I thought you might need them." Without looking up, Bonaparte said, " The clothes ? very well. Put them on the bed." Catharine stood still, amazed. She neither advanced 105 nor retreated, and kept her basket in her hand. She thought, I must have a foolish look 1 But this maa imposes upon me in a way that is beyond my power ta control." She who was called through the Saint-Roch quarter, la Sans GSne, and who really justified that appellation, was actually timid. She stared at the bed to which Bonaparte had pointed ; she shifted her basket on her arm ; then, too, she felt in her apron-pocket for the bill she had brought, but could not decide what to do. She "shook in her shoes," as they say. Bonaparte continued to study the chart before him,., seeming to pay no further attention to her. At last she shook herself slightly, to let him know she was there. " He is not at all gallant," she thought. " Doubtless., though one is decent and doesn't come for anything out of the way, one may still be worth looking at." And, somewhat piqued, she began again her light movement " What ! you still here ? " Bonaparte said, with little politeness, and, after a short silence, he added, withv his accustomed brusqueness, What do you want ? " Citizen, pardon me, Captain ! I wanted to tell yoa that I am about to be married," said Catharine. She was as rosy as a red-cheeked apple". Her bosom heaved under her linen kerchief. Decidedly the cap* tain made her lose her self-possession. " Ah, you are going to marry ? " said Bonaparte,. io6 coldly. " Well, so much the better for you, my girL I wish you much joy. I presume you are going to marry some good fellow who keeps a laundry ?" " No, Captain," said Catharine, quickly and coolly, "a soldier, a sergeant." " Ah, well ! You do well to marry a soldier, made- moiselle," said Bonaparte, in a more friendly tone ; " to be a soldier is to be doubly a Frenchman. I wish you good luck." Bonaparte went back to his work, little interested in the love-affairs of his laundress, but he could not help smiling, as he looked at Catharine's plump figure, which was radiant with health, and her cheeks were so charmingly rosy, in fine contrast to her reserved manner, and the hypocritical quiet she assumed when she brought in his washing. He was always fond of pkimp women, alike when he was the thin and starved young officer and when he was the nervous consul ; even as the stouter em- peror, he always preferred to be surrounded by robust figures. Catharine's ruddy beauty drew him a moment from 'his strategical preoccupation, With a rather brutal gallantry which was usual with him, he came quickly, toward the young laundress and laid his heavy hand upon her neck. Catharine gave a little shriek. The future victor was not one to hesitate. He be- jan the attack. He redoubled his force, and caught Catharine, mak- 107 ing her retreat until she reached the bed, on which she sat, and began to deiend herself. This she did, without false modesty, without show- ing nerself at all frightened. And Bonaparte, forgetting all about Toulon, seemed anxious to hasten his work of getting near her, by shortening the siege and assaulting the place at once. She made an outwork of her basket, which she set before her, like a gabion, saying to the surprised besieger, " No, no, Captain ! It is too late ! You cannot take me ! I have capitulated ! So my husband says." " Really ? " said Bonaparte, stopping. " Then this marriage is really serious ? " " Very serious, and I came to tell you, besides an- mouncing my marriage, that I cannot do your washing any longer." " You will shut up shop, my pretty one ? " "The shop would fare ill these days. And then., too, I want to follow my husband ! " " To the regiment ? " asked Bonaparte, amazed. Why not ? " " I've seen that before." And, thinking of Rene"e, who enlisted to be with Marcel, he said, " Ah, the army has at present more than one family. So, you, too, are going to learn to fire your ammunition, and perhaps to manage a cannon," he said, in a teasing tone. " I can use a gun, Captain, and as for the cannon, I should be glad to take lessons of you, but my husband is in the infantry," she said, laughingly. " No, I shall not fight, unless I have to do so, but they need canteen- carriers in the regiments. I shall supply drink to my husband's comrades ; and I hope to have your patron- age, Captain, if you should serve with us." " I shall write myself one of your customers, but not just yet. The minister will not let me fight, nor " He was going to say "nor eat." But he thought better of it, and simply closed his sentence with, " nor spend money at the canteen. That will do later much later, my girl," he added with a sigh. And he returned to his table, a prey to sad thoughts. Catharine, without saying a word, for she was dis- turbed by the sadness of this young officer (whose story she knew), began rapidly to arrange the clothes on the bed as her client had bidden her. Then, with a courtesy, she went to the door, opened it and said, as if in thought, " Oh, I ruined one of your shirts, by accident, and have replaced it it is there with the drawers and handkerchiefs. Au revoir, Captain." " Au revoir ! Luck to your canteen, my pretty girl," said Bonaparte, who was already deep in study. As she came down the stairs of the H6tel de Metz, Catharine said to herself: "I took him his bill, too ; bt I hadn't the courage to give it to him. Bah ! He'll pay me some day I believe in him I am not like that man Fouche". I am sure he will make his way." Later, she thought, laughing all alone, and put into a good-humor by an amusing reminiscence, " How he tormented jne, that captain ! Oh, he had mixed up all 109 his papers, too. There was no harm in it. Why, it amused him a little, and he has very few occasions to romp, poor young man." And she added, blushing a little, " If he had desired it! Oh, not how at another time, before I was promised to Lefebvre ! " She stopped herself in the retrospective regret she felt in regard to the thin, sad artillery officer. Pursuing her tjain of thought she exclaimed, gayly, Really, he did not think of it, else he never would have done it ! I must run and see if Lefebvre is at the shop. He loves me well ! And I am sure he will make me a better husband than Captain Bonaparte would ! " She had scarce entered her shop when cries and shouts resounded through the street. She opened the door to see what was going on. The entire neighborhood was aroused. Then she saw Lefebvre, without gun or buff-coat, but bearing his sword in his hand, a weapon ornamented with a golden dragon. His comrades surrounded him, and seemed to be carrying him in triumph with them. " Catharine, I am a lieutenant," cried he, gayly, stop* ping beside his betrothed. " Long live Lieutenant Lefebvre," shouted the Na- tional Guards, throwing up hats and guns. " Add, my comrades," said the new Lieutenant, pre- senting Catharine, " Long live Citizeness Lefebvre, for here is my wife 1 We are to be married ne*t week* * no " Long live Citizeness Lefebvre ! " shouted the enthu- siastic guards. " Long live Madame Sans-G<5ne," responded the crowd of neighbors. " Why do they shout so loud ? " asked Catharine softly of her husband, thinking of Neipperg, lying in the next room. They will make our sick man " In the little room of the H6tel de Metz/ meantime, the penniless and unemployed artillery officer, having finished with his map, arranged methodically on a deal shelf the clothes Catharine had brought. " Why ! she left no bill," said the future emperor, well satisfied with this oversight, for he would have had to tell her he could not pay her. He added, making a mental note of his debts, " I must owe her at least thirty francs. The devil ! I must go and settle with her the first time I get some money. She is a good girl, this Catharine, and I shall not forget it ! " And he dressed to go and dine with his friends the Permons. That little confidence made Napoleon, many years after, speak kindly. It was only after many years that she found, at a most unexpected moment, the payment ofthat forgotten wash-bill. And those readers who wish to follow with us, will find again in the following pages, Neipperg, Blanche, the Pretty Sergeant, Marcel, and little Henriot, and the many escapades and adventures oi Catharine, the laun- dress, later the Marechale Lefebvre, then Duchess of Dantzig, who was ever sympathetic and popular, a good, jolly companion, heroic and charitable, bearing the Parisian nickname of Madame Sans-G^ne, BOOK SECOND. CHAPTER I. IN THE POST-CHAISE. " SEE, they will not stop ! See how the postilion makes his whip crack in passing L'Ecu ; he seemed not to see us ! " "Transient travellers are not numerous now-a- days." " We can see no more of them ! They go to the Lion d'Or." Or to the Cheval Blanc." Sighs alternated with these words, sadly exchanged between the stout keeper of the hotel of L'Ecu and his heavy wife on the threshold of the chief inn of Dam- marten. Passengers in coaches were rare after the events which had followed the 2Oth of June. The vehicle which had passed before the disappointed eyes of the keepers of L'Ecu had left Paris early in the vening. It was really the last which got safely over the border, for the order to hold all who wanted to leave Paris was issued that night as soon as the reso- lution to attack the Tuileries at dawn had been taken. Informed by friends of that which was going on at the sections, and of the movement which was coming, the Baron de Lowendaal had postponed his marriage with the daughter of the Marquis de Laveline, and had hurriedly made ready to depart. Being a farmer on a large scale, he feared the nea approach of confiscation by the national powers. The Baron de Lowendaal scented danger. The eve of August loth, therefore, had seen him jump into a post-chaise, accompanied by his factotum, Leonard, carrying with him all the money he had been able to collect, and ordering the driver to proceed, if need be, with fresh relays of horses. The baron travelled as one who feared for his life. At Crepy it became necessary to halt. The horses could do no more. Morning had followed night, and, across the plain great day was driving away the clouds and lifting the darkness. The last stars set in the blue vault of the sky, where, on the side near Soissons, the sun rose. The Baron de Lowendaal was going to his chateau, near the village of Jemmapes, on the Belgian border. Originally a Belgian, but become quite French, baron thought he would be secure there. The Revo- lution would never spread to the Belgian territory; besides, the army of the Prince of Brunswick was as- sembled on the frontier ; it would not be slow in bring- 8 ing the " sans-culottes " to reason and in re-establishing the king. He had quitted France but for a short time, until he should marry the Marquis de Laveline's charming daughter. A little wedding tour ! He had fixed the sixth of November for the solemni- zation of his marriage, because he had to arrange a considerable piece of business in the town of Verdun, where he had a tobacco farm. He had decided to leave Paris quickly, so as to be sure of escaping should he be followed. His horses were excellent and could not be overtaken. He set out, after having arranged some protective measures between himself and the patriots. His nose at the curtain, he sniffed the morning air, and when they had passed the first houses of Cr6py, quite reassured, he ordered the driver to halt. The latter obeyed very gladly. He had been sorry to rush thus on the way without food for his beasts, without a lamp, without a pleasant chat. He could tell so much, too ! It was not every day that one could see Paris arming itself and preparing to dislodge a king from the palace of his fathers ! That was news, surely. How one would be listened to and feasted who could relate what passed at the sections ! At the H6tel de la Poste they took a relay. Whik the host and his servants pressed round, offer- ing the baron a bed, proposing breakfast, enumerating the various refreshments, and turning about with an uneasy air, the confidential clerk, Leonard, went off for 115 a moment under the pretext of seeing thai no over- inquisitive citizens were about. After the attempted escape of the king at Varennes, not only had the municipalities become more vigilant, but everywhere there were men ambitious to rival the glory of Drouet, who had had the honor to arrest Louis XVI. Volunteers examined and searched every sus- pected vehicle. A post-chaise appealed most strongly to the vigilance of the patriots. Happily for the baron, local patriotism had not yet been aroused when his chaise made its noisy entrance into the quiet town of Cre"py-en-Valois. While the traveller sat down to table, before an appe- tizing cup of chocolate, brought hot by a buxom waitress, Leonard had found his way into the stable. There, by the light of a lantern, he sat down to read the letter Mademoiselle de Laveline had given him at parting. Blanche had earnestly asked, adding to her prayer two double Louis d'or, that he should not give that let- ter, a very important one, until the baron was quite gone from Paris. Leonard, scenting a mystery whose discovery might be turned to use, resolved to learn the contents of this serious message. " The secrets of masters may often bring the fortunes of servants," he soliloquized. He had noticed that this marriage, which pleased the baron so much, seemed very distasteful to Made- moiselle de Laveline. Perhaps in that letter, left in his care, he would find a grave revelation from which he could draw much profit. Surely, but with such care, that he could give this strange missive its original aspect, he began to open with his knife the seal, which he had warmed at the lantern-flame. He read, and his face expressed the greatest surprise when he drew out the secret he had sought. This was the contents of Blanche's letter : " MONSIEUR LE BARON : " I owe you a guilty avowal, which I must make, that I may dispel an illusion concerning me, which facts would not take long to disclose. 11 You have given me some affection, and you have obtained my father's consent to a marriage in which you have thought to find happiness, perhaps love. " Good fortune cannot come to you from such a union ; I could promise you no love, for my heart belongs to another. Forgive me that I do not give you his name, who possesses all my soul, and whose wife I consider myself to be, before God ! " I have a final revelation to make to you. I am a mother, Monsieur le Baron, and death alone could part me from my husband, the father of my little Henriot. I shall follow M. de Laveline to Jemmapes, since he desires it ; but I trust that, informed of the obstacle which stands immovably against the fulfilment of your plans, you will pity me and spare me the shame of having to tell my father the real cause which makes this union impossible. " I rely, monsieur, on your discretion as a gallant man. Burn this letter and believe in my gratitude and my friendship. " BLANCHE." 117 Leonard, having read it, gave a cry of surprise and joy. " Whew ! There I can make a fortune," he said. He turned the letter again and again in his hands, as he closed it, as if trying to squeeze out of it, by telling its secret, all the money he thought it contained. " I thought there was something," he said with a grin ; " M. the baron wanted Mademoiselle Blanche, and mademoiselle didn't want M. the baron. But I'd never have imagined that Mademoiselle Blanche de Laveline had a child and I'd have supposed, still less, that she would relate her escapade to M. the baron ! What creatures women are ! She doesn't know, little Miss Blanche, what she has done ! what folly ! The stupidity was in committing the secret to paper. It is well it was I." He stopped ; replaced the letter, which had explained matters, and in the half-light of the stable, he turned it over in his hands saying, " She wrote it herself. She can't deny the writing. Oh, she is altogether too nai've ! She might regret what she has told in a moment of abandon and over-excite- ment of nerves. Happily it is I to whom she has confided the care of her honor and her fortune." He hesitated a moment. Then putting the letter into his pocket he added : " Mademoiselle Blanche will pay well some day, per- haps when she has become Baroness de Lowendaal that is sure to be for the return of this letter ; so I shall keep it and demand a good price to give it up." n8 And Leonard laughed again, thinking of his gains. " Perhaps, "he muttered, " I shall not be content with money I may ask more or at least another reward, for I, too, find Mademoiselle Blanche fair. But, at present, I must simply guard well this proof, this weapon and encourage quietly my master's hopes, who, more now than ever, must marry Mademoiselle Blanche." And Leonard, after buttoning 'his coat carefully, felt, to be sure that tell-tale letter was there, and with the deep and fierce joy of a usurer, guarded the paper which might some day place in his hands the impru- dent victim who had signed it. He found the baron, on his return, a little uneasy, though having breakfasted, because a crowd of curious folk had assembled before the hotel, and were looking at the chaise. He had asked twice to have the horses put in. Leonard explained his absence, by saying that he had gone to see that nothing would hinder their de- parture. The baron was satisfied, and in high spirits he re- entered his chaise, which rolled thundering over the streets, now no longer the king's highway. CHAPTER II. AT THE FRUIT-SHOP. AT the door of her fruit-shop, in the Rue de Mon- treuil, at Versailles, Mother Hoche managed to serve her customers and to cast an occasional glance at a little fellow, rosy and chubby, who played in the space between piles of cabbage and heaps of carrots. " Henriot ! Henriot ! Don't put that into your mouth ! You'll make yourself ill," she cried from time to time, as the little fellow attempted to suck at a carrot or to eat a turnip. And the good woman continued to attend to the orders of the housekeepers, at the same time sighing, " The little imp, what an appetite he has, and he must handle everything ! But he's a sweet babe just the same." Then she added, turning to the customer she served smilingly, " And with this, what else do you want ? " Suddenly she stopped in her dainty work, which con- sisted of measuring herbs for a country-woman who was going to make a salad she gave a loud cry of surprise. On the door-step, in front of a lieutenant on whose arm was a fresh and dainty young woman, in an or- gandie gown, and with a high hat on her head stood 120 a tall fellow with a proud air and a martial face, whor came toward her. He wore a grenadier's uniform. He smiled and put out his hand. " Eh, well, Mother Hoche, don't you know me ? " he asked, advancing quickly and embracing the good woman, who stood moved and trembling with joy and pride. The customers, abashed, stood still and stared at the cabriolet in which the young man and his two compan- ions had come from Paris. They admired the new uniform, the hat, the scarf, the belt and the shining gold of the sabre of this young soldier. And the neighbors murmured, " He is a captain." " Ah, I know him well," said one of the best-informed housekeepers, " he is little Lazare, the shopkeeper's nephew, whom she has educated as a son ; we have often seen him playing with the lads of his age at the Place d'Armes, and now he's become a captain." " Yes, my good Mother Hoche," said Lazare Hoche to his excellent aunt, his adopted mother, "you see I am captain. Ha! It is a surprise! named but yes- terday, it is true. I vow I couldn't get here sooner. As soon as I received my promotion I ran hither to em- brace you. I wanted that you should be the first to enjoy my rank, so I invited myself and my two friends here." And Hoche, turning, presented his two friends. " Frangois Lefebvre, lieutenant, a companion of mine in the French Guard. A good fellow ! He is, besides. 121 the man who took me to get my arms," said Hoche, tapping his companion's shoulder familiarly. " And now you are my superior," said Lefebvre gayly. " Oh, you will overtake me ! You may even leave me far behind 1 War is a lottery in which all the world can draw a good number ! The only condition is to live ; but let me finish my introductions. Mother, this is the good Catharine, Comrade Lefebvre's wife," said Hoche, introducing to the market-woman the ex-laun- dress of the Rue Royale-Saint-Roch. Catharine took two steps forward rapidly, without ceremony, and embraced the market-woman, who kissed her warmly on both cheeks. " Now," said Hoche, " that you know each other, we will leave you a moment, mother." " What, are you going ? " exclaimed the good woman, displeased. " It was not worth the trouble of coming for this." " Be easy, we must go away a little while. Lefebvre and I have some people officers waiting for us," re- plied Hoche, winking to his companion to warn him to be silent. " But we are coming back ; it will not take us long, I fancy. Meantime, you will prepare us a ragout such as you alone, mother, know how to cook." "Of goose and turnips, eh, laddie ? " " Yes, it is delicious ; and then Catharine wants to talk to you about the little chap who is looking at us with such wide-open eyes as he sits there ! " " Little Henriot ? " asked the woman, surprised. " Yes," Catharine interposed. " I must talk to you, my good woman, about little Henriot, on whose ac- count I am here, else I had let Lefebvre come alone with Captain Hoche. They did not need me for their business in the woods of Satory. I must see you about the little one." "Well, we will talk about the child, and you can help me scrape the turnips," said the woman, " and then we will kill a chicken, with a stuffed omelette ; it will suit you, eh, lads ? " " That stuffed omelette will be famous," said Hoche to Lefebvre. "Mother makes it so well! Come, Frangois, we must leave these two to talk and cook. Later, ladies ! We are being waited for now ! " And the two friends went to the mysterious trysting- place, of which Catharine seemed to know something. The two women, left alone, began preparations for the meal. While shelling peas and helping to pick the chicken, Catharine told the market-woman that she had come to take the child to his mother, and that that was the rea- son of her coming. The good woman was much moved. She had be- come much attached to Henriot. He reminded her of Lazare, when he had played, a little lad, on the door- step. Catharine also told her that her husband was going away, whence arose the haste in taking away Blanche de Laveline's boy. Where is he going ? " asked Mother Hoche. Why ! to the frontier, where they are fighting., Lcfebvre will be made captain ! " " Like Lazare ! " " Yes, in the I3th Light Infantry. He has been ordered to go to Verdun." "Well, your husband is going to the army, and why can't little Henriot stay here ? You can see him just as often as you like, and you can come for him at the last moment when he has to be taken to his mother ! " "There's a little difficulty," laughed Catharine, " and that is, that I am going with'Lefebvre." " To the regiment ? You, my pretty girl ? " "Yes, to the I3th, Mother Hoche ! I have in my pocket my commission as canteen-bearer ! " Catharine smiled to the child, who had not stopped looking at her, with the deep and fixed glance of child- hood, which seems to ponder and to engrave on the young mind all it sees, hears, touches, learns. Then she drew from her bosom a great official docu- ment, signed and sealed with the seal of the War- office. She showed it triumphantly to the older wo- man, saying, " You see, I have a regular commission ! and I must rejoin my detachment in eight hours, at the latest ; it is necessary to deliver Verdun. Down there, there are royalists conspiring with Brunswick, and we are going to root them out," added the new cantiniere. Mother Hoche looked at her with surprise. " What ! You are cantiniere, there," she said shaking her head ; then looking almost enviously at Sans-Ge"ne she added, Ah ! it's a fine thing. I should have loved to do such 124 a. thing too, in my time ! One marches to the beat of the drum ! one sees the country one always carries joy about with one the soldier is at his best beside the canteen ! He forgets his misery, and dreams of being a general or a corporal. And then, on the day of battle, one can feel that one is not a useless woman, good only for idle tears and stupid fear at the sound ol the cannonade ! One is part of the army, and from line to line one travels, giving to the defenders of the nation, heroism and courage, in a little glass, for just two sous. The eau-de-vie which the cantiniere carries is fire as well, and her little cask has more than once helped to decide the victory. How I admire you, and how much I'd like to be like you, girl. Really, were I younger, I would ask to go with my dear Lazare, as you are going with Lefebvre. But the child ? What will you do with little Henriot in the midst of a camp, during engagements, in the fire of battle ? " " As cantiniere of the I3th, I have a right to a horse and wagon. We have .already bought one, by dint of economy," said Catharine proudly ; " I sold out my laundry ; and Lefebvre, when he married, received a small sum, that came as inheritance from his father, the miller at Ruffach, very near my home, in Alsace. Oh, we will want for nothing. And the little lad will be made as much of as a general's son. Won't you have such a fine time, you'll not be sorry you came with us ? " she said to the boy, as she lifted him up and kissed him. Just then the sound of footsteps was heard ; and 125 the child, quite frightened, hid his head on Catharine's shoulder, shrieking Hoche entered, leaning on Lefebvre arm. He wore a bloody handkerchief, as a bandage, hiding half his face. Don't be frightened, mother," he called from the door. " It's nothing ! Only a cut which won't keep me from my meal," he added gayly. " O God ! You are wounded ! What has hap- pened ? " cried Mother Hoche. " You have taken him to a place where they tried to kill him, Lieutenant Lefebvre ! " Hoche began to laugh, and said, " Mother, don't accuse Lefebvre ! He acted as my witness in an affair that is now over. A duel with a colleague. I tell you again, it's nothing." " I was quite sure you wouldn't be much hurt," said Catharine ; " but he " Hoche did not answer. He was busy quieting his adopted mother, and in getting water to bathe a bleed- ing cut on his face, which crossed his forehead and stopped just above his nose. " Hoche has been as valiant as ever," said Lefebvre. Just fancy, long ago in the Guards, and later in the militia, a lieutenant, named Serre, who is, by all odds, the worst fellow in any company, he had been after Hoche, on account of a racket made in a tavern, where Lazare happened to be treating some of his old com- rades. This fellow reported Lazare he had had him put into a cell for three months, for refusing to give the. 126 names of the men who were being sought and when he came from prison, a meeting was decided between Serre and Lazare. You must know that Serre had a reputation as a swordsman he was the terror of the quarter had killed or wounded several men in duel- ling." " It was risky to fight that fellow," said mother Hoche, quite upset by the thought of her dear Lazare 's danger. " But," said Lefebvre, " the duel could not come off, for Lazare was only a lieutenant, and Serre was a captain " " They have fought now " " Yes, since he had become the equal of his op- ponent." " But he who is so brave, so agile, how did he happen to get that dreadful cut ? " " In a very simple way, mother," laughed Hoche ; " I am a poor duellist, for I believe that a soldier leaves his post who risks his life in a personal quarrel ; yet, I could not remain quiet under the threats and insults of that cad he ill-treated the recruits, and had insulted the wife of an absent friend." Lefebvre took Hoche's hand and pressed it warmly, saying, with tears in his eyes, " That last was for me, It was for us he fought ! " he added, turning to Catharine. " It was he, this man Serre, who pretended that you had a lover hidden in your room on the loth of August." " The monster ! " cried Catharine, furious, " where is 127 he ? Presently he'll have an affair with me ! But tell me where is the wretch ? " In the hospital with a sword-thrust in his vitals. He's there for at least six months. If he gets well I shall perhaps meet him again, and I will settle for him at one time, both on Hoche's account and on my own." " We shall have other use for our swords, Friend Lefebvre," said Hoche, emphatically. " The fatherland, is in danger ; we must leave personal rancor my adversary had calumniated, had insulted me besides, he had insinuated that I had asked to be sent to the army of the North, so that I might flee ; therefore, despite my repugnance, I had to take a sword, and show that cad that he couldn't frighten decent men, and I have given him a lesson that will last him. Now, let us talk of other things, and if the ragout is ready, let us sit down." " But that wound ? " said the mother, anxiously, as she set upon the table a meal from which arose a pleasant odor. " Bah," said Hoche, lightly, sitting down and un. folding his napkin, " the Austrians and Russians will doubtless give me some more, and one cut more or less will be of no consequence ; besides, it is dry now, see ! " And lightly he lifted the handkerchief which bound his head, and showed the wound, which, later, was a deep scar on the martial countenance of the future gen- eral of Sambre-et-Meuse. CHAPTER III. THE YOUNG LADY OF SAINT-CYR. THE meal over, Mother Hoche and Catharine got everything ready for little Henriot's departure. They found his holiday clothes, which were packed into a trunk, and into which the good woman put also boxes of sweetmeats, little cakes and candies. The child helped greatly, well pleased with these preparations. Childhood loves change ! And wondering at the gold-hilt on Hoche's sword, with which he played, young Henriot began to enjoy the prospect of going away. He saw, already, the joy of travelling. And besides, ke said to himself, that where they were going to take him there would be soldiers, very many soldiers, exercising, and that they would surely let him play with the hilts of all their swords, and he would live among them. He forgot all about the tenderness and the care of good Mother Hoche ! Far from being sad, the idea of going away, lar away, was anything but disagreeable. Childhood is ungrateful, and its innocence is admirable, yet it goes hand in hand with an all-pervading selfish- ness, perhaps necessary and most useful, which pro- tects and strengthens the weak creature and makes it 129 concentrate upon itself its attention, its instinct of self-preservation, and its desire to live. Hoche andLefebvre, letting the women go, sat astride their chairs, talking of the revolution which was begun, of the war which was rising at all points on the frontier. They had gone out of the shop, taking up a positioa against the fence of the fruit-shop, on the Montreuil road. Glad to be alive, full of the joy of youth, with hopes in their hearts and valor in their eyes, these two heroes, prom- ised to the army of the Republic, sat, after eating Mother Hoche's excellent meal, smoking, laughing and watching the passers-by. This Montreuil, to-day called the Avenue de Saint- Cloud, was the great highway for foot-passengers from Paris : farmers, soldiers, and villagers. For the sake of economy, many quiet travellers took the river-boat to la Samaritaine, at the Pont Neuf, and from the Sevres bridge went a-foot to and from Ver- sailles. Among the going and coming of these humble peo- ple, Lefebvre suddenly espied a thin young man with long hair, whose worn uniform was that of the artillery. The passer-by, who seemed in a hurry, accom- panied a young girl in a black gown who carried a small box in her hand. Both seemed pensive, as they walked along the road. Lefebvre, looking at them attentively, suddenly ex- claimed, "If I'm not much mistaken, that's Captain Bonaparte ' 9 1 3 o " Who's Bonaparte ? " asked Hoche. " A good Republican ! An excellent artilleryman, and a warm Jacobin," replied Lefebvre. " He is a Corsican, and it seems they took away his commission for his opinions. They are all aristocrats, run by priests, on that island ! But I'll go and ask my wife, she knows more about it than I do." He called Catharine, who came in great surprise. "What does he want, my husband?" she said, placing her hands on her ample hips, a favorite attitude, of which all her dancing-masters, Despreaux and all, had much trouble in breaking her when she became marchioness and duchess. " Was not that Captain Bonaparte who passed down the road there, with that young girl," asked Lefebvre. " Yes, I'd know him in a million, not because he owes me money, either ! But I like Captain Bonaparte. What can he be doing with a girl at Versailles ! Have you any idea, Lefebvre ? " " Call him, my dear Catharine ! " " Suppose we ask them to stop and refresh themselves, the girl, too ! It is warm and the road is dusty ! " Lefebvre, with the consent of Hoche, rose, and ran down the road, and overtook the captain and his com- panion. He gave them the invitation. Bonaparte's first movement was to refuse. He was never warm nor thirsty. And besides, he and the girl whom he escorted had no time to lose, as they wanted to take the boat to Sevres, and it left in an hour. " Bah ! There's another in five hours," said Lefebvre, and mademoiselle would perhaps not be sorry to rest a moment," he added, turning- to the young girl. She intimated that she would be glad to have a glass of water. So Bonaparte followed Lefebvre. They brought out into the street a table and chairs, placing them in the shade, and then out came glasses and bottles of good acid wine, like gooseberry syrup. They drank to the nation, and Bonaparte, growing cheerful, presented his sister Marie-Anne, better known under the name of Elisa, who was destined to wed Felix Bacceoche", and become successively Princess of Piombino and Lucques, and afterwards Grand Duchess of Tuscany. Elisa, whose continual ugliness became, like that of her sisters, very trying to Napoleon, and who was always cross amid her greatness, ever anxious to see her little daughters married to kings, was now sixteen years old. She did not dream of her great future nor of its consequent envious traits. She was a tall girl, dark and slender, with a sallow complexion, long, heavy black hair, very sensual lips, a rather prominent chin, a perfectly oval head, and eyes deep and full of intelligence. Her look was full ot- pride, and her eye took in disdainfully the plain men with whom she had to sit down before a fruit-shop. Elisa was one of those young ladies of Saint-Cyr, whose education, conducted on Madame de Maintenon's rules, was paid for by the royal treasury, and who thought herself directly descended""from Jupiter. 132 A decree, on August i6th, h#d suppressed the edu- cational institute at Saint-Cyr, as a royalist house- hold. Parents had had to take their daughters away quickly, and the house was soon empty. Bonaparte, for lack of money, had been slow to take his sister from the deserted convent. It was necessary that the house should be emptied by September ist. On the advice of her brother, Elisa had addressed a letter to the director of Versailles, asking for the sum necessary to send her home. M. Aubrun, at that time Mayor of Versailles, issued the following certificate : that Mademoiselle Marie- Anne Bonaparte, born January 3, 1777, entered June 22, 1784, as pupil in the school of Saint-Louis, was still there, and needed a sum of three hundred and fifty- two livres to return to Ajaccio, the residence of her family. By virtue of this authorization, Bonaparte had gone to Versailles that morning to get his sister. He was taking her with him to Paris, to send her to Corsica. Lefebvre and Hoche congratulated the captain upon having been able to end so nicely this family matter. Bonaparte told them also that the opportunity for asking his sister's return to her family, had opened the way for him to ask for his re-instatement in the army. " Then," said Hoche interestedly, " you will be able to rejoin your regiment, too ! " " The minister of war has re-instated me in the 4th 133 Artillery, with my rank as captain," said Bonaparte, " but I am going to take my sister to Corsica. There, I am authorized to take command of my regiment of volunteers." "Good luck, comrade," said Hoche, " there may be fighting there too." " There will be fighting everywhere," was the re- joinder. " It is a pity that one is not able to kill them on two- sides at one time," said Catharine, enthusiastically. " Ah, if circumstances favor me, my friends," said Bonaparte, emphatically, " I will find you occasions to perish with honor, or to reap commissions, titles, glory, dignities, riches, in the harvest of victory. But excuse us, my sister and me, it is growing late, and we must go on foot to Sevres." " And we, before we betake ourselves to deliver Verdun, which the Prussians threaten, must go back to Paris, to take this future soldier," said Catharine, gayly, pointing to little Henriot, who stood dressed, ready to go. The child looked impatiently at these people who delayed and stood around without getting ready and deciding to start out. " We may meet again, Captain Bonaparte," said Hoche, giving his hand to his colleague. " On the road to glory," said Lefebvre. "To get there," added Bonaparte, laughing, I must get the boat at the Sevres bridge. Come, Mademoiselle de Saint-Louis," he said, pointing to the horizon, and calling his sister. J34 The two talked on the road. " How did you like that captain," asked Bonaparte. 11 Captain Lefebvre ? " " No, not he. He's married. His wife is that pretty Catharine but the other Lazare Hoche ? " " He's not at all bad ! " " How would you like him for a husband ? " The future grand duchess blushed and made an impatient movement. "Oh, you don't like him," said her brother, quickly, interpreting as a refusal that slight movement. ' It's a pity. Hoche is a good soldier and a man of the future." " I haven't said that M. Hoche displeases me," said Elisa, " but, my brother, I am rather young to think of marrying, and besides " " Besides what ? " " I wouldn't have a man who was not devoted to the king. No, I shall never marry a republican ! " " You are a royalist ? " " Everybody at Saint-Cyr was." " That's what justifies the decree of closing it," said Bonaparte, smiling. " Why, what aristocrats the young girls become at Saint-Louis ! We'll have to re-establish the entire nobility to find husbands for them." " Why not ? " said the proud Elisa. Bonaparte raised his eyebrows, and did not again allude to his sister's ambitious suggestion. Elisa's reply did not shock him. But he was disturbed by great visions. 135 " Then," he thought, " despite her education at Saint- Louis, one could easily find her a husband. These little girls think anything possible ! Without dowry, and with brothers who have no standing, ah, it would be very hard ! " Ever haunted by the spectre of family, seeing ever the lamentable vision of his mother, Letizia, surrounded by her large family, before a fireplace ever dark, with a larder often empty, he felt himself growing afraid of the responsibility he had assumed in declaring himself the head of the family. The future of his three sisters tormented and weighed upon him. He was anxious to see tnem settled, and looked about to find husbands for them. He had met Hoche that day : he need not have been angry with himself for suggesting him to the pupil from Saint-Cyr. True, Hoche was only a captain, but one could predict that he would surely rise. He murmured, irritably, as he considered his sister's refusal. " There are men who, as captains, wouldn't marry a penniless girl what has she to risk ? " But, he added, in answer to a secret thought, in his heart, " Captains should marry, if they find a rich, in- fluential, agreeable woman, who can be useful to their relatives, give them position, and a place in the world, but it is not to young girls they should address them- selves." Considering marriage as a means of helping his family from their never-ending want, he would not 136 have to go far to find in a union, however dispropor- tionate, a refuge against poverty, an instrument of fortune, a step by which he could rise from a miserable captain's rank ; and how easily he could conquer such a position if need be ! CHAPTER IV. ^ BONAPARTE'S FIRST DEFEAT. NEXT day, after having secured the money allowed to the young lady from Saint-Cyr to return to her fam- ily, Bonaparte went with his sister to Madame Permon. He wanted to present his sister to her before her departure for Corsica. Another project led him, at the same time, to his friend's widow. Madame Permon, mother of the future Duchess of Abrantes, was a Greek by birth, had lived in Corsica, and was still a very handsome woman. Her coquetry made her deny her age, and, light, frivolous, knowing how to dress, and to move, in a time when luxury was both expensive and dangerous ; surrounded with the pretty trifles of the Louis XV. period, with artistic furniture from that dainty and sensual epoch, she seemed, to the poor young Corsican, a queen of grace and elegance. He saw her surrounded by all these attractions, and her regal bearing, which had always charmed him, bid 137 from his poor, but loving gaze, the wrinkles already visible, and the avoirdupois which usually comes with years. The Permons had, too, a fine fortune. Bonaparte, who in days gone by had often sat with Junot, jMarmont, and Bourrienne, at their table, supposed that the widow had a tidy sum still. These considerations decided him to attempt a double march. Leaving Elisa with Laure, Madame Permon's elder daughter, he accompanied the lady into a little parlor, and proposed to her to marry her young son. And when Madame Permon asked curiously to whom he proposed allying her son, he said, " To my sister, Elisa." " But she is so young," said Madame Permon, "and I know that my son does not now think of marrying." Bonaparte bit his lip and then answered, " Perhaps my sister, Paulette, who is very pretty, would please him better. And," he added, " that it could easily be ar- ranged to marry Laure Permon to one of his brothers, Louis or Jerome." Jerome is younger than Laure," said Madame Per- mon, laughing. " Really, my dear Napoleon, you are a great priest, to-day you want to marry all the world, even the children." Bonaparte affected to laugh, and said, in a rather embarrassed tone, that really the marriage of his family was one of his greatest trials. Then, catching Madame Permon's hand suddenly, h 138 imprinted on it two burning kisses, saying that he had decided to begin the union of the two families, his dearest dream, by marrying her, as soon as convention- ality, on account of her recent bereavement, would permit. Stunned, by finding herself the object of this unex- pected devotion, she knew not what to do ; she began to laugh in the face of the suppliant. Bonaparte seemed hurt by her hilarity, but Madame Permon hastened to explain. "My dear Napoleon," she said, taking a most ma- ternal tone, " let us be serious ; you do not know my age ! Ah, you did not guess at it even. I shall not tell it you, because it is one of my little foibles to hide it ; but I shall tell you that I am old enough to be your mother, or Joseph's, who is your elder brother. Let us leave this nonsense. It hurts me, coming from you." " I was not playing," said Bonaparte, in a hurt tone, " and I did not know that I asked what was so laugh- able. I care not for the age of the woman I shall marry. Besides, without flattering you, you seem no older than thirty." " I'm much older than that." I don't care to me you are young and fair," cried Bonaparte, ardently, " and you are the woman I have dreamed of as a companion." "And if I do not consent to such folly, what will you do ? " " I shall seek elsewhere the happiness you refuse me," said Bonaparte, emphatically. " I shall marry," 139 he added, after a moment of reflection. " My friends lave selected for me a woman as charming as your- ielf about your age whose name and birth are most honorable. I shall marry, 1 say ! Reflect ! " Madame Permon had little to reflect on. Her heart was not her own. She loved secretly a cousin of hers, a great rogue called Stephanopolis. She had intro- duced him to Bonaparte, and wanted to make him enter the Convention's Guard, which was being formed. For this fellow, who later died prosaically in stupidly cutting a corn on his foot, she refused the offer of Bona- parte and gained his ill-feelingo On what threads do destinies hang ! Married to Madame Permon, Bonaparte might never have become general-in-chief of the Italian army, might have served unknown in the artillery, going through war without glory. Bonaparte, in that conversation, had manifested a desire to marry advantageously, to espouse a wealthy woman, who could facilitate his entrance into active life, and open for him the way to great society, now debarred, but which he was ready to enter proudly, though now he saw it but from afar. The double refusal of Madame Permon was destined to make of the pupil of Saint-Cyr the Princess of Piom- bino, and the future General Bonaparte the husband of Josephine. 140 CHAPTER V. THE SIEGE OF VERDUN. M. DE LOWENDAAL had hurried to shorten the di*. 1 tance between Crgpy-en-Valois and Verdun. He had gone at once to the Court-house. Two great interests had combined to carry him to the scene of war, and to come into a city that might at any moment be taken. It was necessary to collect his money and do it cau- tiously, for opposite the town of Verdun lay his tobacco- farm. And another grave care made the baron's coming to Verdun necessary. He wanted, on the eve of marrying Blanche de Lave- line, to rid himself of a tie now insupportable to him, and to break away from a love of some years standing. He had met, at Verdun, a young girl of good family, but no fortune, who had come from Angers to enter a convent. Mademoiselle Herminie de Beaurepaire had not yet taken her vows. She was not yet initiated. She had resigned herself to the taking of the veil, so that her brother might take his place in the world and get a company together. 141 The Baron de Lowendaal had had no trouble in turning Herminie from the cloister. Called to Paris by the care which his great wealth required, the baron soon forgot all about poor Herminie. Intoxicated with a love for Blanche de Laveline, he was more than indifferent to the girl who looked for him with alternating hope and fear, in the sadness of an old-fashioned house with a rich, but invalid old aunt. Perplexed, the baron asked himself what sort of ex- planation he could make to her who considered herself his wife revolving the question from the moment the chaise left the gates of France, on the Chalons road. He must absolutely cut loose and let Herminie un- derstand that she could count no more upon him. He crossed the town anxiously, for the strangest and most contradictory stories were afloat ; and went di- rectly to the chief attorney, of whom he made his demand. He said that the finances of Verdun were in such a condition that no payment whatever could be made. But the magistrate added, taking on a mysterious air, " There is, Monsieur le Baron, one chance for you to reimburse yourself." " What is it ? " asked Lowendaal quickly. " If we have no money," said the man, "the Emperor of Austria has, and if peace could be maintained, if the horrors of a siege could be spared to this unfortu- nate town then, I could answer for your re-imburse- ment. Monsieur le Baron." The baron hesitated to reply. Cosmopolitan, like all financiers, it made little dif- ference to him whether his money came from the French King or the Austrian Emperor. He was not troubled by patriotic scruples. He experienced no indignation, on hearing the magi- strate suggest his betraying the town to the enemy. The baron asked if the attorney were exactly in- formed, if he were sure that the troops of the Prussian King and the Austrian Emperor, masters of Verdun, would be able to guard the town and preserve it against the attack of the volunteers who were coming. He calculated at once the chances which the pro- posed bargain presented. After having reviewed the various chances which the affair presented, he asked about the re-enforcements which were supposed to be coming from Paris to Verdun. " They will come too late," said the attorney. " Then, I'm your man," exclaimed the baron. " Well ! You caine rapidly from Paris ? You spoke to no one ? " " I was really in a great hurry ! " " Have you with you a discreet person, a good boaster ? " " Discreet ! Able to keep a secret ? " " And boastful ; that is, capable of spreading some apparently improbable reports." " I have the very man Leonard, my valet Wh| must he kee silence about ? " 143 " Our projects." He shall not know them." " Then he will surely be silent. The secrets one does not know are easily kept." " And how is he to show himself a talker ? " On the news from Paris the city in the hands o{ brigands the royal authority ready to descend, at the approach of the Prussian and Austrian armies, and re- take the power, and chase off the rebels." " Is that all ? Leonard does not love the sans-cu- lottes, and will readily attend to that mission." " Your Leonard might add that he has, from a good source, the news that eighty thousand English are com- ing to land at Brest and march upon Paris." " And the object of spreading these alarms ? " "To justify our action of to-night." Where ? " " Here. We are to assemble the principal citizens and dictate the terms of their answer to the Duke of Brunswick. You are ours ? " he said. 'You have my promise, as I have yours, for the repay- ment of my confidence." "Between honest men, Monsieur le Baron, one needs but one word," and he took his hand. So the two conspirators parted ; one to send Leonard to spread alarmist reports among the people, the other to cement secret adhesions to his proposed treason. 144 CHAPTER VI. ON THE MARCH. ON the way to Verdun, the volunteers of -Mayenne- ct-Loire were happy, as, accompanied by a detachment of the 1 3th Light Infantry, in which Francois Lefebvre served as a lieutenant with captain's orders, they marched and sang. Enthusiasm sparkled in their eyes, the desire for con- quest filled their hearts. They passed through villages where women stood, their children around them, as in a procession, and the volunteers threw kisses to them. To the men they promised that they would conquer or die. They went, strong, confident, inspiring, to the shrill sound of the fife, and the martial roll of the drum ; the tri-color flapped, with joyous motion, in the wind, and the very soul of patriotism was in their midst. All, on quitting their native land, had made ovef their property to their people, declaring that they might already be numbered with the dead. And these heroes went, with songs on their lips, to die for their country, a death which seemed for them the fairest, and most desirable. O the way, to shorten the long marches, they sang 145 to th music of the Carmagnole, some innocent and jolly lay, like " La Gamelle," * My friends, pray can you tell me, Why all so gay, are we ? Because that meal is best, That's eaten with a jest. We mess together always, Long live the sound 1 We mess together always, Long live the cauldron's sound I " The refrain was carried along the line and the rear. guard answered * Naught of coldness, naught of pride here, Only friendship maketh high cheer. Yes, without fraternity, There is never gayety. Let us mess together, lads, Long live the sound 1 Let us mess together, lads, Long live the cauldron's sound I * As they neared Verdun, whose towers overlooked the wooded plain, the commander, Beaurepaire, called a halt He was anxious to observe the surroundings of the place. The Prussians were not far off; and, after recent events, it was wise to beware of ambuscades. On an elevation, amid the trees, well shut-In and invisible from the town, the little army encamped 10 146 They overlooked a verdant gorge, at whose foot some houses were grouped. A shepherd, who had followed the soldiers from their meeting near Dombasle, was questioned by Beaure- paire. He could give no information on the possible move- ments of the enemy's force. Beaurepaire hailed the shepherd. He called to him and asked : " Do you know the name of that little village among the trees which the woods hide so well .? " " Yes, monsieur ; it is Jouy-en-Argonne." A shudder, quickly repressed, escaped Beaurepaire. He took his field-glass, and, from far above, looked attentively, eagerly, and with sad eyes, upon the modest Tillage. He could not take his eyes from it. Some one had said he would find there something of prime impor- tance to him. There was no trace of an encampment, no sign of bivouac ; nothing to speak of the presence of soldiers appeared in the wooded slope. Beaurepaire returned, pensive, to the volunteers wh had already built fires, and were busy cooking their soup. While some were getting wood, others brought water from a spring that gurgled out a little above them, and the cooks shelled peas, stolen, in passing, from the fields as they came along ; and they accompanied their culi- nary operations with another stanza of " La Gamelle." 147 " Many crowned heads, to-day, Dying, famished far away, Might envy the way Of the soldier gay Who eats our mess to-day. Long live the cauldron's sound ! " A chariot was stationed at some distance from th cooks. A good old gray horse, unharnessed, browsed the grass peacefully, stretching his neck to nibble the young shoots of the trees, which he found toothsome. The chariot bore this inscription : 13 Light. Mme. Catharine Lefebvre, Cantiniere. Near the chariot a child played, rolling about on the grass ; and, as if seeking safety, came from time to time, to the cantiniere, who patted his cheek to re- assure him, at the same time attending to her busi- ness, for the troopers wanted the canteen opened. Aided by a soldier, she put out a long plank, as a table, on two trestles. Very soon pitchers, jugs, and a little keg, with glasses and cups, were set on the improvised table. The canteen was mounted. The men crowded around. The road and the songs had made the good-humored troop thirsty. Soon glasses were filled, and they drank to the suc- cess of the battalion of Mayenne-et-Loire, to the de- liverance of Verdun, to the triumph of Liberty. Some had no money, but the cantiniere was a good girl, and gave the poor ones credit. They would pay after the victory. Beaurepaire looked, smiling, upon the lively scene, and his eyes turned again toward the village of Jouy- en-Argonne, and he said, anxiously, " I cannot go there ; whom could I send ? Some one I could trust a woman were best but where find suh a messenger ? " And he continued to look at the men grouped about Catharine Lefebvre. Aside, and seemingly indifferent to the joy of the troops at rest, a sergeant and a young man wearing the distinctive insignia of the sanitary corps, talked ex- citedly, lowering their voices so as not to be over- heard. It was Marcel, who had rejoined Ren6e the handsome sergeant. He had, thanks to the girl's exertions, ob- tained, through Robespierre, on Bonaparte's recom- dation, his exchange from the 4th Artillery. Sent to the battery, detailed to follow the command of Beau- repaire, he had met the regiment at Sainte-Menchould. The exigences of the service, the difference of rank, and the place of the aide at the end of the column, had kept the young folks from exchanging confidences and showing their joy at the re-union. The unexpected halt, called by the commander on the edge of the forest of Hesse, above the village ox Jouy-en-Argonne, had at last given them the opportu- nity. They were using it Beaurepaire went on, somewhat surprised at the Pattern* att0-$*ttf. 149 seeming intimacy between the sergeant and the aide. He waited to learn its causes later, when Lefebvre, happening to pass, said to Marcel : You come from the 4th Artillery ? " He interrupted the lover's tete-d-tlte. " Yes, lieutenant in the right wing." " Was Captain Bonaparte, who has been re-instated, with the regiment, when you left ? " " Captain Bonaparte was in Corsica. He had gotten leave, but he wrote to friends in Valence ; so we heard in the regiment. They speak frequently of Captain Bonaparte." Beaurepaire, who had listened, came up and said quickly, " Ah ! where is he ? I trust no ill has hap- pened to him. Can you tell me, Major ? I, too, am one of his friends." " My commander," said Marcel, " Captain Bona- parte is well, and now safe, with his family, at Mar- seilles ; but he was in great danger." The devil ! Tell me all about it ! My dear Bona- parte ! What happened to him ?" "Pardon me, Commander," said Lefebvre, "do you not think, to listen to the major's story, we would be more comfortable seated, and with some refreshment? My wife will serve it to us ! " " Gladly," said the commander, sitting down, " Here's to the health of Madame Lefebvre, the pretty cantintere of the I3th." All three clicked glasses, while Lefebvre said to hi* wife, with M. wink, 150 " Listen to the major's tale ! He has news from Corsica about your friend, Captain Bonaparte." " Are you going to be jealous of poor Bonaparte ? " said Catharine shrugging her shoulders. " Has any- thing dreadful happened to him, Major ? ' " He has escaped death by a miracle ! " " Is it possible ? Oh, tell me about it quickly, major, with the commander's permission ! " said Catharine, sitting down on a tree-trunk, lips parted, ears pricked, impatient for the news of her sometime client. Marcel went on to tell how the Corsicans, hostile to the Revolution, had desired to give themselves to Eng- land". Paoli, the hero of the early years of the in- dependence, had negotiated with the English. He had sought to draw Bonaparte into the defection. The in- fluence of the commander of the National Guard of Ajaccio was necessary to him. But Bonaparte had in- dignantly refused to participate in his treason. Paoli, irritated, had incensed the people against him and his. Napoleon and his brothers Joseph and Lucien, were obliged to disguise themselves and flee. Paoli turned his fury against Bonaparte's mother. The house whither Letizia Bonaparte had fled with her daughters had been assaulted, pillaged, burned. The courageous woman had .'iad to save herself that night, before the dawn. It was a sad flight. Some devoted friends, under the orders of an energetic vine-grower, named Bastelica, protected the fugitives. The Bonaparte family marched in the centre of an armed force. Letizia led little 151 Pauline, the future wife of General Leclerc, by the hand ; Elisa, the girl who had just come from Salnt- Cyr, from a quiet school, fell upon adventures in the exodus across the mountain, with her uncle Abbe Fesch, whose best days were over ; little Louis played around the column, shouting and asking insistently for a gun. Little Jerome was carried by Savarea, the devoted servant. They avoided beaten roads. They sought abrupt turnings. They tried to gain the river without being seen by the Paolists. Trees and stones in the path tore the clothes, hands and faces of the crying children. After a sleepless and weary night, they came to a torrent. They could not cross it. Happily, they could procure a horse and ford the stream. They had scarcely crossed when a troop of Paolists, in pursuit of the Bonapartes, passed quickly. They threw themselves down, repressing even their sighs. Madame Bonaparte quieted the frightened Pauline, who was crying. The horse, too, seeming to divine the danger, stood still, ears pricked, listening. At last, beside a rock they saw Napoleon, who had come, in a French ship, to take them across the gulf. Bonaparte hastened to get them on board. Scarcely had he met his people, when a shepherd came running to them. The Paolists had discovered them. They had just time to embark. The Corsicans, reaching the bank, saluted the fugitives with a fire of musketry, but they were beyond reach. 152 Once aboard, Bonaparte turned the single cannon of the ship, and discharged upon the Paolists such a devastating fusilade, that eight or ten of them were slain upon the spot. The rest fled. The family was saved ! " Brave Bonaparte ! " said Catharine, clapping her hands. Oh, those dastardly Corsicans ! If I could only have been there with our men, eh, Lefebvre ? " " Bonaparte was enough," said Lefebvre, " he's a fine cannoneer." " And a true Frenchman ! " added Beaurepaire. He would not give up his country to an enemy. Can you fancy Bonaparte dying thus on an island, an English prisoner ? It would have been absurd, and his fate is too great for that. Thanks, Major, for your tale ! When we have delivered Verdun, I shall write and congratulate Bonaparte ! " The commander had risen. Having thought the rest sufficient, and seeing nothing suspicious about Verdun, he gave the order to get ready to march. They must be on the way in two hours, to reach Ver- dun a little before night, using the friendly dusk. While the men, having eaten their soup and cleaned their muskets, were reforming the column, the com- mander turned to the now deserted vehicle, and Catharine. He made a sign to the cantiniere, that he wished to speak to her. In a low voice, he gave his instructions to Catharine, who seemed to hear him with some surprise. When he had finished, she said, simply, " I under* 153 rtand, Commander ; and when I leave Jouy-en-Argonne, jmd come to Verdun, what then ? " Come to us at once if the town is quiet. Wait and follow, if the enemy have moved." Very well, sir ! I will put on my civil garb. I hope you will be satisfied with me." Then she called to Lefebvre, who was wondering 1 what secret mission the commander had thought fit to intrust to his wife. " Frangois, I shall see you at Verdun, by the com- mander's order. Take good care of Henriot. See that La Violette " he was the young soldier detailed to take care of the canteen " takes care of the horse going down hill holds him by the bridle." " He'll be taken care of," rejoined Lefebvre. " But, Catharine, be prudent. If the Prussian cavaliers who fight this battle should take you prisoner ? " " You wretch ! Remember, under my blouse I carry my two watch-dogs," said Catharine, gayly. And lifting her skirt, she showed her husband the stocks of two pistols, slipped into the belt where she carried her money. The volunteers, meantime, at a sign from Beaurepaire, had fallen into line, and were ready to go on their way. Catharine bravely descended the rapid incline of the gorge, at whose foot lay the little village of Jouy-en- Argonne. She had reached its first houses, when over wood, field and hill, came the full-voiced song of the volun- teers, on their way to Verdun. Ah ! ja ira ! 9a ira ! 93 ira I Little and big we are soldiers at heart I Ah 1 9a ira I 93 ira ! $a ira ! During the battle let no one betray Ah 93 ira ! 9a ira I 9a ira 1 And the echo of the valley repeated, " a ira! 53 ira ! " responding to the martial note of the brave boys going to conquer for their country, and singing under the sacred banner of Liberty. CHAPTER VII, THE FORSAKEN. HERMINIE DE BEAUREPAIRE was in a great wing of the house of Ble'court at Verdun, transformed into an oratory, under the inspiration of her bigoted aunt, Madame de Ble'court. Two crucifixes and a small improvised altar, on which stood a Virgin Mary, holding in her arms the Infant Jesus, and spreading a robe of blue and an aureole of gilded wood over the scene ; candelabras and two vases of flowers completed the decoration of the chamber, which had been turned into a chapel after the suppression of the religious houses. The pious aunt meant that Herminie should continue to prepare for the conventual life to which she had been destined, so as to be ready when the convents were re- opened. 155 When Lowendaal appeared on the threshold of the oratory. Mademoiselle de Beaurepaire gave a cry of surprise, started, then stopped, looking at him doubt- fully, hesitatingly, timidly waiting for a word, a sign, a movement of his lips, a cry from his heart. The baron stood coldly, somewhat embarrassed, twitching his lips, and not daring to speak. " Ah, you are come, monsieur," said the young woman, in a tremulous tone. " I thought I should never see you again, so long a time has elapsed since we met in this place for the last time, and then down there, at the village of Jouy-en-Argonne." Ah ! yes, Jouy ! And how is the child ? Quite well, I suppose ? " " Your daughter is growing ; she is nearly three years old. Ah, would to God the child had never lived ! " and Herminie's eyes were suffused with tears. " Do not cry ! Do not be unhappy ! " said the baron, without losing his calm indifference. " Look, Herminie, be reasonable. Your tears and sighs may attract at- tention all the house is already talking of my coming - r do you want them to know that which it is to your interest to hide ? " Herminie raised her head and said proudly, 0' When I gave myself to you, monsieur, it was my heart alone that spoke to-day reason dictates my course of action. The hour of madness that made me yield to your em- brace is over ; I live no longer for love. The flame of the past is extinguished in me. In looking over my life I find now only cinders and ruin. But I have * 156 padara* child your daughter Alice I must live for her, for her sake I must keep up appearances." " You are quite right ! The world is pitiless, my dear Herminie, in cases of little adventures like ours ! But we were both, as you say, unreasonable ; madness filled our brains ; it was an intoxication we are now fully awakened. But it is always thus ; one cannot be all one's life mad and drunk." And the baron made a gesture indicative of foolish- ness and cynical disgust. Herminie advanced toward him, severely, almost tragically. " Monsieur le Baron, I no longer love you," she said. " Really, it is a great misfortune for me." " Do not jest ! Oh, I know quite well that you no longer love me. Did you ever love me ? I felt for you a moment's distraction a flash of heart-fire no, not of the heart it was rather a sensuous pleasure, a way of using the unemployed hours in a dark, provincial retreat. You had come here on business. The life of gentlemen and soldiers, with their easy pleasures and their wild carousing, seemed to you dull and beneath jour dignity ; you, a brilliant personage at court, a visitor at Trianon, a friend of the Prince de Robau and the Count de Naibonne. You saw me in my corner, sad, alone, dreaming." " You were charming, Herminie ! You are ever desirable and lovely, but then you had for me an Irresistible attraction, a piquancy, a savor." 157 I have lost it all now, have I not ? " No, I protest," said the baron gallantly. " Do not lie to me. I am changed in your eyes. You see how it is. I told you it would be so. I loved you once, and now I care no longer for you." " I like it better so," thought the baron. And he added to himself, " Ah, things are going smoothly. The rupture will come without a fuse, without tears and reproaches. It is perfect." He extended his hand to Herminle. " We shall be friends, shall we not ? " he said. The young woman stood unmoved, refusing the hand Lowendaal offered. A curl of her lips showed her disdain. " Listen to me," she said, in a cold voice. " I was far from thoughts of love here. I was destined to the convent, and I was quite ready to obey them who offered me the cloister as a dignified and worthy retreat for a girl of my position, with a great name and no fortune. Here, with Mademoiselle de Bid- court, I waited for the hour to take my vows. You told me that I would not regret the world, which I had scarce seen, but one glimpse of which (though false) would be gladdening. I had envied those of my com- panions whose wealth would enable them to marry and go through life with joy in their hearts and pride on their faces, beside husband and children. This happi- ness was not for me. I was becoming resigned " " You were one of those to whom life should have given nothing but joy ! " 158 " And to whom she has given only bitterness. Par- don me, sir, that I remind you of these sad occurrences. But it was then, when my abandonment seemed com- plete, and when I saw my youth, my desire, my dreams all sacrificed it was then that you came to me. Did I know what I was doing ? Alas, I knew not! Oh.it is of no use to begin recrimination; but to-day, in this interview which is to be decisive for us both, perhaps, let me put one question to you." " What ? Speak ! You are at liberty to put ten, aye, twenty questions ! What do you fear ? What doubt possesses you ? " " I no longer fear," said Herminie sadly ; " alas, I have forfeited the right to doubt ! Monsieur le Baron, you swore to make me your wife ; are you come to-day to fulfil your promise ? " " The devil ! Now it's out," thought the baron ; and with a smile that scarce hid a grimace, he murmured, "Your demand staggers me and, I vow, embarrasses me I have not forgotten that once, in a moment of madness, as you just called it, I did make that promise. Oh, I do not retract it but I pray you to remember that I hold for you ever most respectful, ardent, sincere sentiments ; yet " " Yet you refuse ? " " I did not say so." " Then you consent ? Look you, answer directly. I have told you that I no longer fear or doubt. I might add that Hope, which once walked by my side has sud- denly, at a turn of the road, forsaken me. I await 159 your answer with the calmness of a heart where all is still where all is dead." " Heavens ! My dear Herminie, you take me at a disadvantage. I did not come to Verdun exactly for the sake of marrying. Weighty matters, interests of prime importance, made my presence here necessary ; and it were a poor time to choose for nuptial joys." "Do not speak of joy between us two. So you refuse ? " "No but, I pray you accord me delay. Wait till peace is established it will not be long " " You think so ? You hope that the cowards and traitors will carry the day, and that Verdun will not defend itself ? " " I believe that defence is impossible. The artisans, villagers, smiths, and cobblers, will not be able to resist the armies of the king and the emperor." " Do not insult the brave men who fight like heroes to rid themselves of traitors and incapable rulers," said Herminie energetically. " I insult no one," said the baron in his insinuating tones. " I simply ask you to consider tha*l the town has no garrison." " It will have one, very soon," murmured she. " What did you say ? " cried the baron, astonished. " I say Look ! Hark ! " And Herminie made a sign for the baron to listen. A confused murmur, cries, and cheers came toward the town. The joyous sound of drums was mingled with the tread of marching feet. 160 The baron grew pale. What is this uproar ? " said he. " Doubtless some uprising. The inhabitants, who insist on opening the gates, and will not listen to the idea of a siege." " No, that noise is a different one, Monsieur le Baron 1 Once more, will you hold to your promise and give to our child, to our daughter Alice, the name, the rank, and the fortune which are her due ? " I have told you, madame, that just now I will not I cannot do so. Listen I have important matters to see to What, the devil ! Be patient ! I tell you, when peace is established ! When the rebels are punished, and when his majesty returns quietly (not to the Tuileries, for the Revolutionists could take it too easily) but to Versailles, then I shall see ! I shall decide ! " Take care, sir ! I am a woman who will take ven- geance on one who swears falsely ! " " Threats ! Well," said the baron, sneering, " I like It best so. They are less dangerous than your tears ! " " I repeat once more, take care ! You think me weak, alone, and uninfluential ! You may be mistaken." " And I tell you, madame, that you cannot frighten me ! " " Do you not hear the approaching noise ? It is the soldiers that come here ! " " Really ! It is strange ! Can the Prussians be in the town already ? " murmured the baron. And he listened, with evident inward satisfaction, adding to himself, " They are come in good time, our 161 friends, the enemy, to cut short this stupid history, and to give me a. decent pretext for getting away from this tiresome girl." " They are not Prussians," said Herminie, trium- phantly ; " they are the patriots who have come to help Verdun." " The re-enforcements they expected ! Why, it cannot be ! Lafayette is with the Austrian powers. Dumouriex is in camp at Maulde. Dillon is bought by the allied forces. Whence, then, can re-enforcements come ? " " You shall know." And Herminie, opening the door of her oratory, said to a woman who was in the next room, with two little children, " Come in, madame, and let M. le Baron de Lowendaal know whose drums they are that wake this town ! " CHAPTER VIII. THE ARRIVAL OF THE VOLUNTEERS. A FAIR young woman entered. She gave a military salute and said, looking directly at the baron : " Catharine Lefebvre, cantiniree in the 1 3th, at your service. You want to know the news? It is the battalion of Mayenne-et-Loire which is making its entry into Verdun, with a company of the 1 3th, which is under command of my husband, Franois Lefebvre. Hein ! mademoiselle, it is a fine surprise for the world ! " II 1 62 The baron murmured, disappointedly, "The battal- ion of Mayenne-et-Loire ! What is it doing here ? " " What are we going to do ? " said Catharine. Why ! Burn out the Prussians, reassure the pa- triots, trample on the aristos if they dare to move." "Well told, madame ! " said Herminie. " Now, please name the chief of the velunteers at Mayenne-et-Loire ; it will please monsieur." " The commander is the brave Beaurepaire." " Beaurepaire ! " said the baron, frightened. " Yes, my brother ! who, an hour before his entry into the town, sent me this brave woman to let me know and reassure me," said Herminie, whose pale face was aglow with joy. " One would imagine this news disconcerted you, little man," said Catharine Lefebvre, tapping the dis- concerted baron familiarly on the shoulder. " You can't be a patriot ! Ah, be careful ; look you for the aristos who wanted to talk of capitulation ; they will have little sport among us ! " " How many volunteers are there ? " asked the baron solicitously. " Four hundred, and then there is my husband, Lefebvre 's, company. That makes in all five hundred hares who want to stir the town, see ! " The baron's face had become calm again. " Five hundred men ! The ill is not so great as I feared 1 These five hundred wretches cannot take the town, particularly if the population, now well worked up, demand a capitulation. The worst is the pres- 163 ence of this Beaurepaire ! How shall I get rid of him ? " Herminie, meantime, had been to get one of the tw* children in the next room. She brought in a little blonde child, pale and fright" ened, who tottered on her thin legs, and said, " Here i* your daughter, monsieur, do you not want to kiss her ? " Lowendaal, hiding a scowl, turned to the child and kissed her forehead quickly. The child was afraid and began to cry. Then entering from the other room, a little lad, wear- ing a liberty cap with the national cockade, came to the little girl and quieted her, saying, Don't cry ! Well go and play, Alice ; they're going to shoot I Poum ! Poum ! a cannon is such fun ! " Catharine Lefebvre looked proudly at him, saying, " That's my little Henriot, a future sergeant I am bringing up, while I have as yet none of my own to teach the defence of the Republic." Herminie pressed the cantiniere's hand affectionately and said to the baron : " This excellent woman is travelling with the regi- ment. When they reached Jouy-en-Argonne, Com- mander Beaurepaire called her and asked her to find a certain house in the town, where there was a child he named he described the house to her then he asked her to take the child and to apprise me of the arrival of the volunteers, of the presence of a protector for my child's unfortunate, forsaken mother. That is how your daughter happened to be here, monsieur I " "Then," stammered Lowendaal, "the General Beaurepaire knows- " " Everything," said Herminie, firmly. " Oh, it was at sad confession ; but I had no hope save in my brother, and I knew not how he would receive the sad confidence I gave him that day when, discouraged .and weary of everything, I hoped to die." " And your brother was lenient ? " said the baron, trying to seem calm and indifferent, though he was be- ginning to be much agitated. " My brother has forgiven me he has hastened to come and help me to set me free. The volunteers of Mayenne-et-Loire, enrolled by him, have crossed France at a run " " Ah, heaven, what marches they were," exclaimed Catharine. " We were so anxious to arrive in time to help the good town of Verdun ; but General Beaure- paire seems to have wings on his feet." The roll of the drums came nearer. The town seemed joyous. Cries of delight rose loudly on the banks of the Meuse. I must go," said the baron. " I am expected at the Court-house." " And I must meet my husband," said Catharine. " Come, march, young recruit I " she added, taking bold of little Henriot The boy resisted. He had kept the little girl's petti- coat in his hand, and seemed anxious to stay with her. See the dandy," said Sans-GSne, good-humoredlf. * bt attaches himself already to the ladies 1 Ah, he \ 165 a promising boy ! March, little one, you shall come again you shall see your little maid again when we have given the Prussians a necessary thrashing." " Madame," said Herminie, much moved, " I shall never forget what you have done for me. Tell my brother I bless you and shall come to him. As for this child," she added, pointing to Alice, who smiled at little Henriot as if she, too, wanted him to stay, " if by any misfortune I should be unfit to defend, love, and guard her, see that she gets to my brother." "Count on me ; I have already this little lad to take In my carriole, and that would give me a pair sufficient to make me patient while I wait for the arrival of any of my own. May it not be long," she said, laughing hefr" jolly laugh and laying her hand upon her ample breast. " Au revoir, madame, I must go now, my soldiers need me there, and Lefebvre will be astounded not to find me in the ranks." Taking little Henriot, who had become sulky and cross at being taken so soon from little Alice, Catharine hurried to rejoin the detachment of the I3th, which was encamped in the town. Herminie, after a frigid bow to the baron, had re- treated into the next room with her child, whom she covered with kisses. Lowendaal went off, sadly, in the direction of the Court-house, saying to himself, " If a capitulation could rid me of this Beaurepaire. But no ! that enraged fel- low is capable of defending the town and making me marry his sister. Ah ! into what a wasp's nest I have run." 1 66 pattern* And ill-satisfied with the turn of affairs, the baron went to the Court-house, where the notables were already assembled, on the convocation of the President of the Directory, Ternaux, and the Attorney-general Gossin, two traitors, whose names should be kept nailed on a pillory by posterity. CHAPTER IX. BRUNSWICK'S MESSENGER. IN the great hall of the Court-house of Verdun, by the light of torches, sat the members of- the districts and the great men. Commander Bellemond was there, too. President Ternaux having opened the meeting, At- tosney-general Gossin explained the situation. The Duke of Brunswick had encamped before the gates of the city. Should they be opened to him and should the imperial generalissmo be hailed as a liber- ator, or should he be shut out, and should cannon-shot answer cannon-shot until the town was laid low ? It was fear that suggested the question. " Gentlemen," said the attorney in a low voice, " our hearts bleed at the idea of the horrors which would result to Verdun from a siege. Gentlemen, resistance against so strong an enemy were madness. Will you receive a person who comes to you with a conciliatory message ? " 167 And the president looked solicitously at the assembly, asking their co-operation. "Yes, we will," answered several voices. "I shall then, gentlemen," said the president, " intro- duce the person who bears the message." A movement of curiosity was made. All eyes turned towards the door of the president's office. It opened quickly, admitting a young man in citizen's Costume. He was very pale, and carried his arm in a sling. He seemed 'to have been very ill. " M. the Count de Neipperg, aide-de-camp of General Clerfayt, general-in-chief of the Austrian army," said the president, presenting Brunswick's messenger. He was none other than the young Austrian whom Catharine had saved, on the morning of the loth ot August. Scarce well of his wound, under Catharine's excellent care, he had left Paris and reached the Austrian head- quarters. Though still suffering, he had been anxious to enter upon active duty. The memory of Blanche de Laveline caused him keener suffering than his hurt. And, think- ing of his child, little Henriot, exposed to all the perils of his strange birth, in the remembrance of Lowendaal's power and the marquis's desire to force Blanche into a. marriage which would part them forever, Neipperg- felt a slow and exquisite torture. He must forget, and war would leave him little time for sad retrospection. So he was glad to be able to serve once more. 168 General Clerfayt, appreciating the bravery and tact of Neipperg, had made him his aide-de-camp. As he spoke French perfectly, the general had chosen him to carry to the great men and the authorities of Verdun the propositions for capitulation. After saluting the assembly, the young envoy made known Brunswick's conditions : they consisted in the surrender of the town, with its citadel, within twenty- four hours, under penalty of seeing Verdun exposed to a bombardment, and its inhabitants delivered after the assault to the fury of the soldiers. Amid absolute silence were these hard conditions spoken. It were well to call one's-self a royalist, as these men would have to do who feared for their property ; and yet it was hard for these rich villagers to hear, without resenting it, such haughty and insulting con- ditions. Several of those poltroons would not have been sorry to take part in a brave protestation, though only for form's sake and to save the appearance of honor. But no word was spoken. No one seemed to dare to call down upon Verdun the anger of the Germans. Neipperg stood motionless, his eyes dropped. He was inwardly indignant at the cowardice of these mer- chants, who preferred shame and the dismembering of their country to a resistance which would expose their houses to the play of artillery. Within himself he thought these could not be the Frenchmen of the loth of August against whom he had 169 fought, and who had made the impassioned assault upon the Tuileries. He had only admiration for the patriots who had wounded him. The heart of a true soldier keeps nr ill-feeling after the battle. But the craven fear of these men made him angry, and their shameful silence hurt him. He wanted to get away, to breathe freely, where he could not see this revolting spectacle of collective cow- ardice. His old wound seemed to inflame in contact with these trembling wretches, these arrant traitors. He looked up and said, coldly ; " You have heard, gentlemen, the communication of the general ; what answer shall I take to the Duke of Brunswick ? " And he waited, paler than at his entrance, his hand, laid upon the table for support. A voice spoke in the general silence : " Do you think,, gentlemen, that in bowing before the merciful senti- ments of the Duke of Brunswick you could best make answer ? or shall we let the duke fire upon the town ? " It was Lowendaal who spoke. Neipperg recognized his rival. A flush mounted to his brow. He made an instinctive movement to step up to th baron and provoke him. But he reflected he was an ambassador he had mission to fulfil and could not act aggressively now. Another thought crossed his mind at the same ijro If the Baron de Lowendaal were in Verdun, was Blanche de Laveline there, too ? " How could he find out ? How see and speak to her? He hoped the baron would unconsciously let him know Blanche's retreat. He must seem, therefore, to be quiet, and must look and listen. A quick murmur had followed Lowendaal's words. " What's he meddling for ? " said the men, talking together. " Has he houses, ware-rooms, merchandise in the city ? Does he expect to take part in plun- dering the town ? Since resistance is impossible, and the commander knows it, what good would it do to permit a universal massacre and expose our homes and our goods to an artillery fire ? " " Our population is wise ; it declines the horrors o a siege," said the president. "The proposition of the Marquis de Lowendaal wouM strike only an imbecile. Now we have in the town no brawlers ; they have all left the city and taken refuge near Thionville ; there they met a few of their own kind, and one Billaud- Varennes, who bought them arms. We trust they will never return to Verdun. Gentlemen, are you minded to imitate them ? Do you want to be shot down ? " " No ! no ! No bombardment ! We will sign at 0nce ! " cried twenty voices. And the most anxious ones seized pens, and, turning toward the president, asked him to let them sign at once 171 the acceptance of capitulation which had been prepared in advance before the arrival of the Austrian army. Neipperg looked in silence upon the meeting, peace- ably begun, but which now threatened to become a quarrel. The Baron de Lowendaal stood aside. " I might as well not have spoken," he said. Already the president, pen in hand, sought to main- tain his nght to sign first, as head of the town, the order of capitulation, when a distant fusilade sounded, and drums were beaten in various quarters, while directly below the windows of the Court-house were heard voices singing the " <^a ira ! " CHAPTER X. BEAUREPAIRE'S OATH. EVERY one had risen in wild bewilderment. The least stunned had sought the windows. The town seemed lighted as for a f6te. In the market-place torches burned, and women and children clapped their hands and formed a fantastic circle around the red light. It was the volunteers of Mayenne-et-Loire who had sung the "fa ira" giving the signal for the uprising of the bewildered town. There were few men in the crowd ; they stood apart, 172 seeming to participate only with their eyes in the martial tumult. The attorney-general spoke to the president. " Those damned volunteers are making a great noise," said M. Fernaux impatiently. M. Gossin answered, shrugging his shoulders, " Patience ! the Duke of Brunswick will soon rid us of them ! " And he added, " I trust those escaped devils will not draw down a bombardment upon us ! " At that moment a red light filled the space, and a flaming bolt fell against one of the houses on the corner, while a loud detonation shook the court-house. " Ah ! I foresaw it ! " cried the attorney. " The Prussians are firing our houses ! There is the bom- bardment you asked ! Are you satisfied, Baron ?" He had turned to seek Lowendaal, but the latter had disappeared. Impatient, and anxious to follow him, and believing that Lowendaal had betaken himself to Blanche de Laveline, Neipperg wanted to retire. I have no further business here, gentlemen," he said, taking his leave. " The cannon has spoken, so I well may be silent. I shall return to my place. My answer is your powder which has been set to do its fell work." " Monsieur le Comte," begged the president, " do not go ! remain ! it is a mistake ; all will be explained arranged " " I cannot see how," said Neipperg, with a grim mile. " Listen ! The cannon from your ramparts 173 answer our howitzers. The drum beats in your streets. It seems to me they are coming to the court-house to get shot and to find extra ammunition." In reality the drum was heard on the stairs of the court-house, and many feet ascended the steps. They heard on the pavement of the vestibule the stocks of the guns. " Do they dare come here ? " cried the exasperated attorney. "Monsieur le G6n6ral," he cried to Belle- mond, director of the fortifications and of the artillery ; " Come quickly ; sign an order for the silencing of the drums and the retreat of the men to their quarters which have been assigned to them ! " "Yes, sir," answered the faint-hearted officer, "I shall give orders ; in a quarter of an hour Verdun will be quiet " " In a quarter of an hour Verdun will be in flames, and we shall chant the Marseillaise to the sound of the cannon ! " cried a loud voice behind them. The door had been pushed open, and Beaurepaire, accompanied by Lefebvre, and surrounded by the soldiers of the I3th and the volunteers of Mayenne- et Loire, terrible as gods of war, burst in among those frightened civilians. The president attempted to assert his authority. " Who authorized you, sir, to come and trouble the deliberations of the municipality and the citizens as- sembled in council ? " he asked, in a voice which he in vain endeavored to render firm. "They say," said Beaurepaire quietly, " that you are 174 scheming here for an infamous act of treason ; that you talk of rendering up the city ! Is it true, citizens ? Speak ! " " We do not need to apprise you, General, of the res- olutions of the authorities ; go back with your men, and stop this firing which you have ordered without per- mission of the council for the defence," exclaimed the president, feeling himself upheld by his associates. Beaurepaire reflected a moment, then taking off his hat said, respectfully : " Gentlemen, it is true, I did not wait for orders from the council for the defence, to fire upon the Prus- sians, who already surround the gates and are prepared to enter at the first signal a signal they seem to expect from here. I have barricaded the gates ; my good friend, Lefebvre, here, has placed his look-outs on both sides of every palisade, and the enemy has retired. At the same time, to keep them from seeing too closely what we are doing on the ramparts, I have sent a few balls among them which have made the Austrians keep back ; they were too anxious to pay us a visit. I had just arrived with my men when I learned the state of things, and I vow I never thought of consider- ing the advice of a defensive council." "You were wrong, Commander," said the artillery director, Bellemond. " Comrade," said the general, " that is my business. I shall answer, if need be, for my conduct to the repre- sentatives of the people, who will soon be here. I respect the Commune of Verdun and her civil officers. 175 I trust they are patriots, ready to do their duty. I shall take their orders for all that concerns the interior service and the political measures. I know the obe- dience soldiers owe to the representatives of the people. But for that which regards me as a soldier, and the fire of the howitzers I direct against the Prussians, you must let me, comrade, do as I will. Take that as your answer. I am here as your equal, and we have but to act together to repulse the enemy and save the town." These words, uttered in a strong voice, impressed Bellemond, a subaltern but lately promoted, and who would have acted bravely had he not been dominated by the president and the attorney. " But," he suggested, " since such council exists, should you not consult them before beginning a bat- tle ?" " When the enemy is at the gates, and when the sol- diers within the town hesitate, the council for defence, when consulted, could give no other order to the head of the troops than to bar the way, place his men on the ramparts, open his guns upon the approaching enemy, and fire ! That is what I have done, com- rade ! just as if I had had time to consult the council over which you preside. But, really, could there have been other advice ? Could they have given me a dif- ferent order ? All they can reproach me with is not having opened fire quickly enough. But the ammuni- tion was wanting. There it is ! Listen ! Ah, it grows warm ! " Louder and louder reports followed Beaurepaire's 176 words. It was from the direction of Porte Saint- Victor that they came. The men trembled. Many feared for their houses, for surely the Prussians and Austrians would answer that furious cannonade by a rain of shot. "Great heaven ! there's a brave man," thought Neip- perg, watching the open countenance of Beaurepaire. * A look at him makes up for this shameful sight." And he advanced to him politely, saying, " General, I dare not leave you in ignorance as to who I am the Count de Neipperg, aide-de-camp of General Clerfayt." In civilian's garb ? " Beaurepaire looked sternly at the man who thus came to him. " I did not come here to speak, General, but was simply charged to deliver a message to the town of Verdun and its defensive council, from the general- issimo." " Doubtless a demand to capitulate ! " " You are correct, sir." " What did they answer here ? " Beaurepaire threw an accusing glance upon the men and the municipal officers, who lowered their eyes and turned their heads. Gossin whispered to the president, " If this agent of Brunswick tells all, that confounded Beaurepaire is quite capable of having his brigands shoot us, my poor Ternaux." " I fear so, my friend Gossin," rejoined the president, sadly. Neipperg, however, said quietly, " I have not yet 177 had time to receive the reply of these gentlemen. You, yourself, took charge of the answer to the general- issimo." This frankness pleased Beaurepaire, who said pres- ently, " So, sir, your mission is ended. Will you per- mit me to conduct you, personally, to the outposts ? " " I am at your command, General." Beaurepaire, before leaving the hall, turned a last time to the president and the attorney-general, saying to them : " Gentlemen of the Commune, I have sworn to my men to die with them amid the ruins of Verdun rather than render up the town. I trust you are of my opin- ion ? " " But, General, if the entire town wanted to capitu- late ? If the inhabitants refused to permit themselves to be besieged ? What would you decide ? Would you continue, despite the wishes of the populace, your murderous fire ? " asked the president. " Well, what would you do ? We await your reply." Beaurepaire waited a moment, and then said, "Should you force me to give up the town, mark me well, sirs, rather than submit to such shame and such treason against my oath, I will kill myself ! I have sworn to defend Verdun to the death }' He went toward the door, returned abruptly, and rapping the table with his hand cried, " Yes, to tfc* death ! To the death ! " and he left, followed by Neip- perg, leaving the council in terror. He'd kill himself! Faith, it would be a fin thiag. 12 178 and a comfort for everybody," thought Lowendaal, wh had just entered noiselessly into the council chamber. They questioned him as to the doings in the town. "They are firing from various quarters," he said, with his cynical smile. "The volunteers fly to the ramparts like deer. Several of them have been struck down. Ah! those fanatics of the I3th ; among them is a female demon ; they tell me she is the wife of Captain Lefebvre, a cantiniere, who goes and comes, carries ammunition, stands beside the cannon, pulls the lighted cotton from the Prussian bombs which fall upon the slopes. I actually think she has fired the guns of the fallen soldiers about her, and has ndt retired until every shot was spent. Happily, there are few soldiers like this Amazon, or the Austrians could never enter here ! " " Do you still hope for it, Baron ? " said the president. " More than ever. This siege was necessary, as I told you ! The inhabitants were not sufficiently im- pressed. My servant, the faithful Leonard, had to tell many stories, beside my instructions, and yet they were not convinced. They hesitated to accept the capitula- tion. By to-morrow morning they will demand it." " You restore our confidence ! " " I tell you, President, they will force you to sign the capitulation." "Heaven grant it," sighed the president, "but the Duke of Brunswick's envoy has returned to his quar- ters. How shall we cause his return? He had the papers." padame g*n#-(&tnt. 179 It will do if some trusted messenger will go to the Austrian camp, and carry your duplicate, with the assurance that to-morrow the gates will be open to the generalissimo." Who will undertake such a mission ? " " I," said Lowendaal. " Ah, you will save us," cried the president, who, rising in an ecstasy of joy, embraced him as if he were a herald announcing a victory. CHAPTER XI. LEONARD'S MISSION. SOME moments later, Lowendaal, with the duplicate tetter of capitulation, left the court-house, and joined Leonard, who was waiting for him. In a low voice, though no one was near, the baron gave him a detailed order. Leonard seemed surprised, showing, however, that he understood the task which was being given him ; but, at the same time, seeming somewhat embarrassed if not frightened, he repeated his master's instructions twice over. The latter said, severely, " Do you hesitate, Master Leonard ? You know that, although we are in a besieged town, there are prisons, and police to take there those who like a certain person I know who coua* i8o terfeited the seal of the State and gave to the emplojr6 of aides and magazines false receipts." " Alas, I know it, Baron," said Leonard, in a sub- missive tone. If you know it, do not forget ! " rejoined the baron. I am sorry, Leonard, to be obliged to remind so de- voted a servant as yourself, that I saved him from the gallows ! " " And that you can send me back there ! Oh, sir, I shall remember it ! " " Then you will obey ? " " Yes, sir ! But remember it is serious ; it is a ter- rible thing you ask me to do ! ' " You exaggerate the importance of this matter and ignore the confidence I choose to repose in you ! By heaven, Leonard, I am used to more docility, more de- votion, from you ! You are growing ungrateful ! To forget benefits is a dreadful fault ! " " Oh, monsieur, I shall be eternally grateful to you," wept the wretch whom Lowendaal had found stealing from farms with the aid of false stamps. " I am ready to follow and to obey wherever you choose to take or to send me. But what you order now is " " Abominable ! You have raised scruples, Master Leonard," sneered the baron. " I should not dare find abominable any task M. le Baron set me. I wanted to say " " Well, your idea was ? I am curious to know your opinion." " Oh, sir the thing is dangerous oh not for any but myself," he hastened to add. " For should I be taken, they will roast me alive and not get your name, as having ordered the task." " Even then, none would believe you," said the baron, dryly, "you have no proof of such an order from me. Besides, to reassure you, let me say, I have made pro. vision for your retreat should you be discovered ; but it is not probable." " Really ? " said Leonard, much pleased. " My post-chaise will await you on the Commercy road, near the Porte-Neuve. There is no fighting on that side." " But how shall I pass through ? " " As on a mission from the council for defence. Take this passport and return to me to-morrow at day- break, in the Duke of Brunswick's camp." Here Lowendaal gave Leonard a town passport. "I shall obey," said Leonard. " Be careful not to do your business so ill as to be captured by Beaurepaire's enraged volunteers. If you should be arrested, I could no longer hide your history. Then, there would be the gallows. Or, perhaps, im- mediate death as a spy." Leonard shivered. " I shall be careful, monsieur," he said. ' Very well ; you understand ! Go ! and in the em- igrant's camp I shall await your news." " I shall do my best, sir. It is all one to me ; yet you ask me to do a very onerous thing, and I fear the chaise will wait in vain at Porte-Neuve." 182 " Imbecile ! In a town besieged on all sides, where everything is in flames, surveillance is impossible. Remember, I count on you, Master Leonard. If you play me false, or if you grow weak, you may rest as- sured that, as soon as I re-enter Verdun, my first call will be the court, and my second to find the functionary charged with taking care of the galley-slaves, and see- ing to the departure of the next crew for Toulon. Adieu, Master Leonard, until to-morrow, at dawn." And Lowendaal went quickly toward the Porte- Neuve, while Leonard, perplexed, meditating on the fulfilment of his mission, said to himself: " How shall I penetrate, without arousing suspicion, into the house of Madame de Ble"court ? How reach General Beaurepaire in the dead of night, alone and unarmed ? " CHAPTER XII. THE EMIGRANT CAMP. LOWENDAAL, on leaving Leonard, murmured, with a self-satisfied air : That fool will do just as I told him ; he is a little afraid ; but his fear of the galleys will be greater than his terror of Beaurepaire's sword. To place a man between two such startling alternatives to be sent to the galleys, or to risk being sent there if captured any sensible man and Leonard is no dolt would choose the risk. First he will go and try 183 to escape ; then he will go a little unwillingly and un- certainly but go he will finally. Do not soldiers act so, too ? When they are sent to the cannon's mouth, it is not always love of glory that urges them, but the fear also of being shot if they prove cowardly. To be good soldiers they must keep with the body of troops. The punishment, falling upon many heads, attaints no one specially. Leonard is alone he dare not turn back and like the good Talthybius, the herald in the palace ot Atrides, I shall hope soon to see, from the emigrants' camp, the expected signal." The baron smiled com- placently, having no scruples on the subject, and loving to show his literary knowledge and his erudition in the matter of great authors. He strolled on through the night, through the de- serted quarters of the town, hearing the distant shots, and following with careless eyes the luminous track of the shells, which, like swift meteors, crossed the black background of the sky. There was no fighting around him. Some few functionaries, awake upon the ramparts, gave their call : "Sentinels, keep your watch," at in- tervals, in the silence, which, otherwise remained un- broken about the Porte-Neuve, whither the baron went. He found, several of the National Guards on duty there, to whom, after his departure from the court- house, the attorney-general had sent an order to pass the Baron de Lowendaal. The head ot the post readily unbarred the door to let the baron out, and wished him a safe return. 184 Going eastward across the deserted field, the baron reached a. woodland whose slim trees rose on its edge, and proceeded directly toward a fire which burned at some distance across the plain a bivouac of the out' post, doubtless. A cry of, " Who goes ? " uttered in French made him stop. "I was not mistaken," thought he: "these are Frenchme v n." He stood still, calling out : "A friend : sent by the municipality of Verdun." A silence followed ; then he saw a dark object rise, accompanied by a click of arms. A light came toward him. Four men, with the lantern-bearer, came to look at him. After having declined to do business with the cap- tain of the division, and having asked to be taken to the general-in-chief, the baron was politely invited to a place beside the fire, while he awaited the general's orders. The invitation he accepted gladly, for it was a chilly- night. He sat down among the royalist volunteers, before the burning logs. His arrival had been whispered through the camp, and many sleepers awoke to hear the news, and to learn what was going on at Verdun. This camp of emigrants was strange and varied. The army of Conde" was composed of volunteers from all parts of France, but principally from the west ; 185 they came to fight against the national army, to de- fend the white flag, and to reoinstate the king and crush the Revolution. Many had come somewhat un- willingly. Some were urged to it by their families, or fired by others' example, or unable to remain upon their ruined and plundered estates. Some came from pure fanaticism, and many in the hope of re-entering France with both triumph and profit. This army of rebels and traitors was collected from various provinces. The gentlemen among them con- served their privileges, and concealed their infatuation. They did not mingle with the rest. Bretagne had sent seven companies of nobles an eighth was in reserve. The costumes, too, partook of the class distinctions. The non-nobles wore an iron-gray garb ; the gentlemen had uniforms of royal blue, with cocked hats. Thus these insurgents, against the will of the nation, as- sembled for the same cause and running the same risks, attempted to keep alive, in their midst, the adherence to hierarchies and the social distinctions which were already a thing ot the past. The townsmen, with their sombre coats of gray were far more self-denying and devoted than the nobles, for they fought for privileges in which they could never share. Some deserters, still wearing the uniforms of their division they were mostly marine officers formed the only really military element of the organization. The marine corps, brave, but superstitious, yet much attached to royalty, had been mustered chiefly from 1 86 padawe the sons of families on the Breton coast, and all hostile to the Revolution. The desertion of these marines en- feebled the naval strength of the nation for a long time, and despite the courage of the sailors, gave Eng- land victories over French ships and strengthened her supremacy on the high seas. The treason of these royalist marine officers is too often overlooked, when one counts the rigorous measures taken by the Con- vention in the west. The heroic resistance of fanaticism was less detri- mental to the country than the flight of these experienced marines comrades of La Pe'rouse and D'Estaing, the glorious adversaries of the English in the American Revolution who quitted the bridges of their ships to run behind Prussian generals, and allow themselves to be shot by the National Guards. These royal volunteers were poorly clad, poorly armed, and poorly provisioned besides. Their guns, of German manufacture, were clumsy and heavy. Many of the nobles had only hunting arms. The combination of this strange army made it seem like a troop of insurgent Bohemians. Even the ages were mixed. Old squires, bent and broken with years, advanced side by side with young fellows. Entire families, from grandsire to grandson, were together in the ranks. It was touching and at the same time grotesque. The army of the princes had been deprived of artil- lery, and despite the individual courage displayed by most of these improvised soldiers, their attachment t* 187- the royal cause was little assistance. The Prussians and Austrians were not wrong in considering- most of these gentlemen only an incumbrance. The Baron de Lowendaal listened, with his satirical smile, to the confidences, boasts, and recriminations of the volunteers. They overwhelmed him with questions as to the con- dition of Paris, when he had left it, and as to the favor- able possibilities for the king's return. The baron answered evasively, saying that, in his opinion, all would arrange itself, although one must naturally calculate upon the over-excitement of crowds, and the ardcr with which men had hastened to enlist as soon as the country was considered in danger. The young gentlemen heard, with haughty sneers, the careful answers of the baron who, on his side, learning the hour at which the general would be ready to receive him, seemed anxious to get his mission fulfilled. While telling his irritable auditors all he knew about the preparations of the entire nation, and their readi- ness to die, if need be, the baron kept one eye open beyond the camp-fire, tow.- -i the ramparts of Verdun, on the Porte-Saint-Victor's side. He seemed to wait from minute to minute for a sig- nal which, however, did not come. At times he drew out his watch, consulted it anxiously, hearing but indifferently the talk ar und him ; then he glanced at u.e sky, ever dark above the town. " What is that dolt, Leonard, doing ? " he thought, " Can he have betrayed me ? Can his courage hav* 1 88 felled at the last moment? Oh, I shall take fearful vengeance on him. If he has deceived me, I shall surely see him sent to the galleys." And the baron, not caring to listen longer to the talk of the volunteers, feigned to fall asleep, closed his eyes, and lay, wrapped in his cloak, beside the embers of the fire, where some one came to tell him that General Clerfayt awaited him in his tent. The baron rose and followed his guide ; not, how- ever, without casting uneasy glances at the houses of Verdun, which showed, from the high grounds, above the ramparts. Plunged in shadow as wrYl as in slumber, these houses seemed indifferent to tfte cannon- ade which continued on the opposite side of the town ; it had grown less and less; the Prussians answered but moderately to the shots of the besieged. Providing for a siege which might, nay, which must, be long, they husbanded their ammunition well. In the general's tent, the baron found the aide-de- camp who had been at the court-house. He scowled, though he saluted, with scrupulous politeness, the Count de Neipperg. The latter returned his salutation icily. The interview was short. The Austrian general asked what was the attitude of the town of Verdun. And when the baron assured him that it was excel- lent, and favorable to surrender, the general answered by a silent movement, lifting the canvas of his tent and bowing the flaming shells flying over the ramparts. 189 The baron mechanically followed, with his eyes, the general's motion. Although he was master of himself on all occasions, he could not repress a quick exclamation of triumph and content. He saw, in the northern quarter of the town, a flam- ing color. Jets of flame shot through volumes of smoke in that part of Verdun, which seemed to have been spared until then by the besiegers. " What is it ? " demanded the general, surprised at this extraordinary emotion on the part of the city's messenger. " Nothing, General nothing at all weariness and care and the joy I feel in knowing that to-morrow the horrors of the siege will be over for that fair city. That is the explanation of my cry at seeing the shells and flaming shot flying through space," said he, forcing himself to be calm outwardly. " Then you believe," said Clerfayt, " that the city will open her gates to-morrow ? " " I'm sure of it, sir. A man is to come to me this very morning with the deed of capitulation signed." " Why did you not bring it yourself ? Why did you not send it with my aide-de-camp, the Count de Neip- perg here, who went, charged by myself and by the Duke of Brunswick to bring your answer? " " I was not certain, General, that the town would be in a state to surrender to-morrow morning." " Ah ! what was the obstacle ? " " A wretch a brigand-chief, General Beau repair 190 gftadam* entered last night by surprise into the town and wanted (o overthrow our plans, ruin all our hopes." " This general is a brave soldier, and an able adver- sary," said Neipperg to Clerfayt. " You have seen him ? " said Clerfayt, interested. "Yes, and heard him speak. You should see him it is he who has put Verdun so rapidly in a state of de- fence. While he is about, I am not of monsieur's opin- ion, Verdun will not surrender." And Neipperg cast a look of scorn at the baron. " What have you to say ? " said Clerfayt. " You promise me the opening of the gates to-morrow morn- ing. My aide-de-camp, who has seen the place and knows the energy of its defender, says ' it will not yield so readily. Answer me ! " " Pardon me, sir," said the baron in his honeyed tones, " I do not contradict the aide-de-camp. I made you aware of that obstacle. I told you what caused my hesitation, my fears. I was not sure, as I told you, that Verdun would surrender." " And now you believe surrender possible ?** , " Certain, sir." " But Beaurepaire ? " " Beaurepaire, sir, is dead ! " " Dead ! How do you know ? Who told you ? " The baron bowed, and with a broader smile than usual said, "Sir, permit me to get the official confirma- tion of that news whose first messenger I am. The man who shall bring me the signed deed of surrender will tell you the end of General Beaurepaire." 191 "Very well, sir, we shall wait," said Clerfayt coldly, signing to the baron that the interview was over. When Lowendaal left, the Count de Neipperg said to the Austrian general, " How does that spying fellow, squinting from under his light and smiling mask, know that Beaurepaire is no more ? He was living not two hours since when I left Verdun ! Can they have mur- dered him ? " Clerfayt regarded his aide with some surprise. He said, " My dear Neipperg, we soldiers make war loy- ally and by daylight ; but these merchants who hold out their hands to us, and open the gates of their town, are capable of any cowardice. There are ill things left over in the kitchen of victory. They who partake of the feast must not trouble to think how it is pre- pared. Otherwise none would care for none would kill for glory. Let us get our message ready, dear lad, for by morning, if this baron speak the truth, wf will have enough to do ; a town to occupy, posts to guard, authorities to change and to look after, without count- ing the triumphal entry of their majesties amid the felicitation and homage of the people. At least we will see if this Lowendaal spoke truth. We will send messengers to this Beaurepaire, who seems to be a hard advert ary." And whih; Neipperg sat down at the little table to write at thi; general's dictation, the latter, lifting the opening of his tent, called to one of the artillery officers beside a baUery : " Commander, continue your fire upon the ramparts of Verdun until you see raised the flag of truce." pattern* CHAPTER XIII. CATHARINE ALARMED. LEONARD, as we have seen, left his master, and, per- plexed and discomforted by the remembrance of a dis- agreeable past, made his way to the Porte de France. On that side the cannon roared constantly, and Leonard did not love its music over-well. But he had received exact orders and he felt he must execute them. Where they were fighting, he hoped to find the man he sought and concerning whom he had received orders this was General Beaurepaire. Before gaining the side of the gate, where, on the slope, stood several officers, and doubtless, too, he whom the mission concerned, Leonard sauntered toward a wagon about which were groups of men, and before which was a table with bottles, glasses, pieces of bread and sausages. It was the canteen of the I3th Light Infantry. Behind the table, which was lighted by two smoking torches stood Catharine Lefebvre, alert, jolly, and ready to serve drink and refreshment, answering to the re- peated demands of the cannoneers and the soldiers who came between shots to drink to the deliverance of Verdun. From time to time Catharine stopped pouring wine, 9r cutting slices of sausage, to glance into her wagon. 193 There, on a. tiny bed, little Henriot slept the dream- less sleep of childhood. " Ah, the cannon lulls him like a cradle-song," said she, and Catharine returned to her distribution not without a few words of energetic defiance of the Prus- sians. From the outset of the siege, Beaurepaire had moved actively about, seeming to be everywhere at once ; he had gone to the batteries, encouraged the gunners, see- ing to the placing of gabions, and guarding the turrets of the Porte de France ; while Catharine, leaving her canteen, had also climbed the slopes. There, like a fury of war, she had shamed the lag- gards, encouraged the brave, helped the first wounded men, and even, at times, seized a gun and discharged it upon the Austrian cavaliers who had advanced under the embrasures of the gates ; she had contributed ener- getically to keeping off a panic and holding back the enemy, who were surprised at so sturdy an extemporized defence. Beaurepaire noticed and praised her. The attack over, the enemy retired, having given up the idea of taking a town so well guarded ; and Cath- arine returned to her canteen and her neglected cus- tomers. She had, in a lull after the first combat, seen Lefebvre, who, with his sharp-shooters, guarded the parapets, and, from the walls, poured a deadly fire on the Austrian infantry. Reassured and happy for this was her baptism of fire she had returned to her canteen, where she 13 194 worked with good-humor and much acceptance by the troop. While she was serving two artillerymen, she noticed, a. little at one side, a civilian who watched them drink- ing. " Eh ! my friend," she said unceremoniously, "why don't you come and take a good cup of'schuick,' as we say ? You are a civilian, but, never mind ; to-mor- row you'll be like the rest in arms. Come ! you may drink with the defenders of your country. We're all brothers ! " And as the man did not answer, and was about to move away she called : " Eh, friend, do not go off that way ! Have you no money ? Never mind, I shall regale you to-day, to- morrow you can pay me. What will you have ?" The man answered dryly, " I do not drink." " You are not thirsty, and you do not fight ? Then, what do you want here ? " The man hesitated, then said in a low voice, " I wanted to speak to General Beaurepaire." Catharine looked surprised. You ? speak to the general ? What do you want with him ? " " I have important news to tell him." Catharine shrugged her shoulders. " You choose a fine time, my lad." " I choose the moment I can get." " Possibly, but just now you can't see him." The man shook his head, and said, " But I must sec him." 195 Catharine distrusted her interlocutor. His insistence was suspicious. She determined to tell her husband. She signalled to one of the soldiers and told him to find Lefebvre, and ask him when Beaurepaire could be seen. Excited by the noise of battle, his tongue loosened by copious draughts taken with a man in town, the soldier grew garrulous. He told, despite Catharine's warning glances, that Beaurepaire had gone to sleep for a little at a relative's house in town ; and at four o'clock would be up again, and had ordered his horse for that hour. Catharine, losing patience, said, " You chatter like a magpie go somewhere and sleep it will do you good. You'll never be ready to meet the general at four o'clock, as he told you to do. Go, or I'll call Lieutenant Lefebvre ; he doesn't play with babblers and drunk- ards." " Very well ; I'll keep still and go," growled the soldier, and went away. Catharine turned once more to serve her soldiers. Mechanically she looked for the man who had in- sisted on speaking to the general. He was gone. Catharine thought she saw him going off in company with the orderly, toward a tavern whose doors stood open to the men who wanted to help, to defend and to shelter the town. She had a moment's suspicion that this man was a conspirator and that some danger threatened Beaure- paire. 196 She wanted to follow him and to point him out to Lefebvre, but could not think of leaving her canteen just then. The defenders of Verdun, passing the night in erect' ing defences, raising palisades, and setting cannon in position amid a continuous fire, must find her ready to wait upon them. She shuddered uneasily, though trying to persuada herself that she was unnecessarily alarmed and that no harm could come to Beaurepaire from this man. But Lowendaal, came, ever and again, into her mind. The baron looked like a traitor. Could he have planned aught against the valiant defender of Verdun ? At last, Catharine could endure her anxiety no longer ; and when, as the night advanced, the customers became few, she said briefly that she must get a little sleep, and sent away the last few soldiers, saying that, if they did not feel the need of rest, they could find amuse- ment on the ramparts, where there were a few men trying to place gabions and set guns. CHAPTER XIV. A HERO'S END. AFTER arranging her canteen, and giving a quick kiss to Henriot, who slept peacefully, Catharine went out into the dark streets. Her fears were aroused. It must be in the house ol 197 Madame de Ble"court, whither he had ordered her to take the little girl from Jouy-en-Argonne, that danger threatened Beaurepaire. She divined sorrow, she scented treason. As she approached Madame Blgcourt's house, she heard a shot. It was not a surprising noisexin a besieged city. But that shot, in that isolated quarter, far from the ramparts, and seemingly asleep, was frightful. She was sure of misfortune, crime. At the turn of the lane she saw the shadow of a flee- ing man. She seemed to recognize that strange person whose looks at the canteen had aroused her suspicions. She called to him " Say ! Man ! Don't go so fast ! Who fired that shot ? " But the fugitive redoubled his haste, and answered not ; turning, he disappeared down a dark street. Catharine hesitated an instant. Should she follow him ? But she reflected that a man hurrying by night through a besieged city was not necessarily a culprit, and, besides, what connection could there be between this unknown man and Beaurepaire ? It was not there that the danger lay, if Beaurepaire was threatened. She must go to the Ble"court house, and assure her- self that the general was asleep and safe. Catharine started again, and walked rapidly toward the house, where Herminie de Beaurepaire must be sleeping, with little Alice by her side, and where, doubt- 198 less, Beaurepaire, worn with fatigue, had thrown him- self upon a bed, until he should be called to return to the strife. As she reached the door and knocked, cries and calls arose from within. Frightened people put out their heads, calling for help. In night-cap and gown, the old dowager of Ble"court appeared upon the balcony, waving her arms wildly, despairingly. At the same time a red light sent its sinister glow over the opposite house. Clouds of black smoke poured from the open windows. Great tongues of flames licked upward toward the roof. " Fire ! Fire ! " cried Catharine, " and the door will not give way." Servants, losing their heads, ran screaming down- stairs, calling for keys. Finally, they opened the door and rushed into the street. Some neighbors, awakened by the noise, came up. But the courageous Catharine was already in the burning house. The danger did not frighten her, and she told her- self that there were lives to be saved. She mounted the stairs through the smoke, guiding herself by the glare of the flames. One room, on the first story, had its door open she cried aloud ! " Is any one asleep here ? save yourself, quickly ! * 199 The smoke kept her out. No answer came ! A glare of flame suddenly flashed through the gloom and lighted the chamber. Catharine uttered a cry of terror, There upon the bed lay Beaurepaire asleep, lifeless, deaf to the mighty tumult. She rushed to him. " General quick awake ! Get up thehotee is on fire ! " she cried. He did not move. The room was dark once more. The smoke rolled in, thick, suffocating. Catharine bent over, putting out her hands. She tried in that smoky darkness to find the bed. She wanted to help the general, thinking "Can he bave fainted ? " She touched the lifeless body ; she listened. No sound of breathing came from the bed. "What a strangely deep sleep," she thought and terror filled her strong, manly heart. Nevertheless, she approached ; and laid her ear upon the general's breast. " His heart has ceased to beat," she murmured, witlr at tone of intense agony. A terrible silence seemed to fill the room. She laid her hand upon his forehead and felt some- thing thick, and sticky, on her fingers. Frightened, she recoiled. She felt stunned, weak, sick she almost feBL 20O He was dead dead. She roused herself. " Ah, the window," she thought, astonished that she had not sooner thought of opening it. She went quickly, and let in the air. It was high time. A moment more, and she would have fallen, choked by the smoke. The roar of the flames continued, and lit up once more the bed where Beaurepaire lay. The general seemed asleep, rigid, insensible. His face was livid, his pillow red. A gap in his temple, whence flowed a stream of olood, revealed how deep was the slumber that held the heroic dead. " Ah, the wretches, they have murdered him ! " cried Catharine, rushing from the room. She -shouted an alarm which no one heard in the general confusion, and which was lost amid the horrors of the flames. As she sought the stairs where lay the de"bris x of stone, plaster, and wood-work, half-burned and send- ing up sparks and black smoke, she heard a soft voice singing in a plaintive tone, Sleep, sleep, Baby sleep, Baby's sleep is long and deep. Stunned, Catharine tried to find ou,t whence this unexpected song came. What deaf old nurse could rock her charge with this soft lullaby amid the horrors fthat night I 201 The voice came from the story above. Braving the flames which might at any moment attack the stairs behind her, and cut off her retreat, Catharine went up through the smoke. She opened the door whence came the soft voice, singing, ever in the same tone, that simple cradle-song. She saw, insensible, with vacant stare, and bent head, Herminie de Beaurepaire, sitting on the side of a bed, and holding in her lap little Alice, who was fast asleep. " Come quickly, madame," cried Catharine. " The house is afire ! " But Herminie continued to sing and rock little Alice. At Catharine's cry, the child awoke. " There is no time to lose. Come ! Quick ! " cried (Catherine, imperatively, and she took the trembling child by the hand. Herminie, bowed gravely, and said, " Good-day, madame ! Do you not know ? I am to be married ! You are come to my wedding, are you not ? Shall I not look well ? " " She is mad ! Poor girl," thought Catharine, pity- ingly ; " but I must not think of that now ! Come, you must follow me ! " she said, giving a harsh tone to her voice purposely. The mad-woman rose, her eyes fixed, her arms hang- ing by her sides, and moved automatically. Catharine, taking little Alice, hurried to descend. She turned to see if Herminie were coming. The latter continued to walk stiffly. 2O2 As she passed the room where Beaurepaire lay. Her- minie threw up her hands, gave a scream, and cried : He is there ! there ! The man ! with a pistol at his temple ! He will kill me, too ! " And she sank senseless across the doorway. Catharine could not carry her. She must attend to the child. She hurried on with little Alice and rushed into the street She had saved the child. The soldiers, who had run up at sight of the fire, which they attributed to a Prussian shell, began t organize a chain. She gave them the child, and recognizing some men of Lefebvre's company, she begged them to go into the house and try to bring out Herminie, who was stilt alive, and the body of the general. Three or four men went at once. In a few moments they returned with the body of Beaurepaire, and two soldiers held the mad-woman, who cried : " Let me go ! I must go and dress ! You do not know ! I am to be married ! Everybody is there ! And the candles are lighted.' Oh, the church looks so fine on a wedding-day ! " It was sad to see her thus pointing to the terrible flames that licked the remaining walls. ***** Madame de Bl6court had broken a leg in jumping from the balcony to the street. She died in a tew days. fjftutamt jftutf-tifeu*. 203 Herminie, whose senses had not returned, was taken to a relative, who offered to take care of her. Beaurepaire's body was borne to the court-house. There the president and the attorney declared that he had committed suicide to escape surrender. It was said, they averred, that Beaurepaire had loudly proclaimed that to be his intention the evening when the conditions of surrender had been discussed. Many witnesses would affirm it ; and the news of the general's heroic death dying rather than assist alive at the surrender of a town he had sworn to defend was propagated by the traitors who had caused his tragic end, and was accepted by the patriots. He was accorded great funeral honors, this noble Beaurepaire ; the Convention having also accepted the explanation of an exemplary and glorious suicide. The cowards who had aimed at the murder of Beaure- paire, done by Leonard, opened next day the city gates to the Austrian and Prussian armies, in virtue of the treaty of capitulation which Lowendaal had taken to Brunswick's general. The King of Prussia made a triumphal entry into Verdun. All the rich gentry hailed him. President Ternaux gave a banquet at the court-house, and the attorney, at dessert, compared him to Alexander the Great, taking possession of Babylon. The daughters of royalist houses, who were later ex- ecuted, and whom poetry has glorified as martyrs, in- sulted .the devoted defenders of Verdun. 204 Robed in white with wreaths on their heads, they carried the crown of the King of Prussia, victor ot the town, by treason's aid. Verdun, like Longevy, deserved to be known forever as a city of cowards. The frontier was unguarded, the way to Paris open, and the Austrian and Prussian armies had only to march on to the capital and inflict on it the punish- ment set down by Brunswick. And the royalists, intoxicated with hope, believed that no fortress, no army, no resistance, could arrest the victorious course of the allies. They had not thought of Moulin de Valmy. ***** The garrison of Verdun had been allowed the honors of war. They went out with arms and colors. Lefebvre, now captain, was sent with the I3th Light Infantry to the north. Catharine took little Alice, whose mother, now in- sane, had left her practically orphaned. She slept beside little Henriot, glad to have found her playmate of Verdun once more, and Catharine said to Lefebvre, with a sweet smile, showing him the two fair, sleeping children, Say, dear heart, now we have two children whom our country has sent us, and none of our own ! " Captain Lefebvre embraced his wife and suggested that they might some day be blessed with children of their own. The couple took to the road, with anger in their eyes 205 *nd hope in their hearts, swearing to retake the surren- dered town and to drive out, at the point of the bayonet, the Austrians and Prussians, who would never have entered except lor the traitors of Verdun. CHAPTER XV. ON THE EDGE OF THE UNKNOWN. WHILE these events were taking place in the east, and while Dumouriez and Kellermann arrested the in- vasion at Valmy, and saved France and the Republic, by forcing the Austrians and Prussians to retreat, what was Bonaparte doing ? He was with his family, who had fled to Marseilles for refuge, and he was penniless. After wandering from lodging to lodging, in the poor quarters, expelled by pitiless landlords, Madame Letizia Bonaparte, undaunted and energetic, found a fairly com- fortable situation in the Rue de Rome. The proprietor was a rich soap merchant, named Clary, who showed at once x a great deal of sympathy for the exiles. The Bonaparte family led a hard and narrow life. Rising at dawn, Madame Bonaparte attended to the household, cleaned, washed, prepared the simple meals, and then set her daughters to work. One did the mar- keting, another put things in order ; only the youngest was allowed to play. . 6 During the day the mother and the two elder daughters did sewing, which brought in a little money. Joseph had a position as commissioner in the military- administration, but his emoluments were very slender. As Corsican refugees, victims of their devotion to France, the family received rations of bread from the town. Bonaparte, again without pay, was unable to support his family. Face to face with the horrible spectre of poverty, he lost courage and conceived, in his over-excited state, a notion of suicide. One day, having thrown his last sou to a beggar, he sought a crag that projected far into the sea. Here he fell into a profound reverie. The smooth green water called to him. Useless to his country, disarmed, thinking his genius reduced to nothing, having no longer any confidence in himself ; losing sight, in the darkness of the sky, of that star which had guided him ; saddened by the feeling of loneliness, and that insupportable idea of being a care to his mother, instead of helping her, he considered, fixedly and sternly, the water plashing gently on the rocks before him. Then, should he throw himself down, he would surely kill himself. And out of life his family would have one less to feed, 1 and could use all the bread doled out to the household by public charity. He stood thus, a prey to his sinister resolutions, chiding himself, reproaching himself for hesitating t 2 7 die, persuading himself that he had nothing to hope for on earth, and looking coldly down into the depths that r0 He d s b tood W thus a long time, on the edge of nothingness. The sight of a bark, skimming along toward coast, awoke him from his despairing dream. I must do it," he said quickly. He was calculating the distance and the spring necessary to throw himself from the rock into t water when he heard his own name, and turn A man, dressed like a fisherman, ran toward pn annoyed at being balked in his deter- mination, he began to descend quickly down the rock and to seek a more secluded one, where he could pui "o execution his dark resolve, when the fisherman caned, Is it really you, Napoleon ? What the devil are you doing here ? Don't you recognize me , es- m LL, your o S ld comrade, in the artillery ^regiment of la Fere? Have you forgotten those jolly night Valence ? " A .^^ Bonaparte recognized his old companion, an. two men embraced. Desmazis explained that he had emigrated at the ginning of the Revolution. He lived peacefully in ttaly. near Savona, on the shore. Having heard that his old mother, who lived at Marseilles, was seriously ill, he had gained, without attracting attention. Assured of his mother's returning health, he had em- braced her, and had helped, by his visit, her convales- cence, and was now going off again. He had prudently ordered his skipper to await him outside the harbor. He waited for his gig. " But you what were you doing in this lonely spot ? " he asked kindly. Bonaparte stammered a vague explanation. Then he ceased to speak, and fell again into a deep meditation, looking again fixedly at the green water falling in sparkles of silver against the black rock. " Ah, what ails you ? " said the good Desmazis, anxiously. " You do not hear me. Are you not glad to see me ? What makes you suffer ? What misfor- tune hangs over you ? Answer me for you seem to me like one mad enough to take his own life ! " Bonaparte, won by his comrade's sympathetic tone, revealed all to him, and confessed his suicidal inten- tions. " What ! Only that ! " said Desmazis. " Oh, I cam in good time ! Hold," and he took off a belt, "hero are ten thousand francs in gold. I do not need them. You shall pay them back when you can. Take them and help your family." And he handed to Bonaparte, who stood as if stunned, the ten thousand francs, a fortune for the penniless officer. Then, to escape thanks, and also to prevent reflec- tion from inciting Bonaparte to refuse, Desmazis abruptly left his friend, saying, " Au revoir I M) Paflamc $iw$-6ette. 209 gig is coming my men are waiting. Good luck, Napoleon ! " And, going quickly down the path by which he had climbed to find his despairing friend at a fortunate mo- ment, the generous Desmazis reached his ship, hoisted sail, and was away toward the open sea. Bonaparte, meantime, stunned, had let his preserver go, without a word ; as if fascinated, he looked at that gold which seemed to have fallen from the sky. Then suddenly he started toward the town, and entered the room where Madame Bonaparte sat sewing with her daughters. He came in like a whirlwind. He spread the gold pieces on the table, crying, Mother, we are rich ! Girls, you shall eat every day and each shall have a new gown. Ah, it is a windfall ! ' And he chinked the money joyfully, and enjoyed the sound of the metal. Years after, Napoleon had search made for his bene- factor. Desmazis, hidden in a little village in Provence, occupied himself with cultivating violets, and seemed to have forgotten entirely the comrade he had once helped so opportunely. Napoleon had a hard time making him accept three hundred thousand francs as repayment, and he made him, at the same time, administrator of the royal gardens. The ten thousand francs of his former comrade saved not only Bonaparte and his family from starvation, but they helped Joseph to contract a wealthy marriage, while providing for daily wants as well. M M. Clary, the owner of the house, had two daughters, Julia and De~sire"e. Joseph paid court to Julia, and she became his wife. Bonaparte, always occupied with matrimonial pro- jects, envied his brother's luck. He cast his glances upon De~sire"e and declared his affection on several occasions very seriously. But he was repulsed, politely, gently ; but repulsed, just the same. The future conqueror preluded his manifold triumph by two successive feminine checks. De"sire"e, like Mme. Permon, was not attracted by his sombre mien and his problematical future. Napoleon, on the other hand, seemed long to feel De"sire"e Clary's refusal. The tenacity with which he had followed her could not but augment his irritation. The desire to take a tremendous revenge upon the little woman who had scorned him who later was called upon to choose among the brilliant assemblages of princesses and arch- duchesses contributed, largely, to throw him soon into the way of the Widow Beauharnais, who was destined to be the Empress Josephine. As for D6sire"e Clary, her future, though less exalted^ was nevertheless, a brilliant one. She married Berna- dotte, and we find her, later, Queen of Sweden. Such, then, was the situation of Bonaparte, whenLe- febvre and his wife, in the ranks of the Army of the North, marched toward the ever-memorable town of Jemnaapes. XII CHAPTER XVI, JEMMAPES. ROBESPIERRE said, War is absurd." But he added, We must go into it, nevertheless." This was the " Credo" of the republicans. War was absurd ! because they had no soldiers, no g-nerals, no arms, no ammunition, rations, nor money, nothing which could help a nation to take the field for attack, or to maintain itself on its own ground by barring the way of invasion. All the generals were royalists or traitors, Dumouriez, Dillon, Castine, Valence. The young Duke de Chartres, afterwards Louis-Phi- lippe, was favored by the general-in-chief. Dumouriez, in a secret scheme embracing the far future, held the prince-royal a brilliant part, the young duke was 1 occupy the Meuse and stop the advance of Austrians and Prussians upon Valenciennes and Lille. laurels would be such as could be changed easily to flowers for a crown. But the Duke de Chartres did not conduct himse very bravely on that great day at Jemmapes, and a simple servant, Batiste Renard, in the service Dumouriez, rallied the prince's brigade, startled and ready to flee, deciding thus the victory at the centre. 212 The army it was not an army, but a cohesion of combatants, equipped wretchedly, many of whom still wore their blouses and rustic attire, many without guns, armed with pikes caught up in haste was un- disciplined and uninstructed. But they represented the people, who, in a moment of enthusiasm, had caught the arms at hand and sallied forth, pell-mell, for the deliver- ance of their native land. These enthusiastic volunteers went forth singing the Marseillaise, the Carmagnole, and the Ca-ira, tunes which beat time for their wild marches. But these heroic troops had also faith and endurance. At Jemmapes the improvised infantry of the volun- teers of the Republic, commanded, it is true, by sub- ordinate officers like Hoche and Lefebvre, who replaced nobles who had gone over to the enemy, began the work which made it, for twenty years, victor in battles. On November 5, 1792, when the sun set red as a bloody banner on the horizon, the army of the Republic encamped before the formidable position of Jemmapes. The neighboring heights of the town of Mons held three villages, to-day active centres of the coal-trade, Cuesmes, Berthaimont, and Jemmapes. The Austrians held these heights. Outworks, pali- sades, fourteen small forts, quantities of artillery, Tyrol- ian sharpshooters in ambuscade in the woods, cavalry massed in the valleys, ready to emerge out and cut down the French as they came up toward the hills, such were the naturally impregnable obstacles which the soldiers of Liberty had to overcome. 213 The Duke of Saxe-Teschen, prince of the Empire, lieutenant to the Austrian emperor and governor of the Lovv-Countries r was the commander-in-chief, having under him, Clerfayt, a capable general, whose sage counsels were not destined to prevail. Clerfayt had withstood Gallic impetuosity, and instead of waiting, proposed a sally in three columns, upon the unpre- pared Frenchmen, thinking to scatter. them before they had formed in order of battle. The advantage would thus accrue to the disciplined and battle-hardened troops. The Duke of Saxe-Teschen, happily considered that little glory was to be gained from a night-attack ; he wanted a great battle fought by broad daylight. Dumouriez profited by the inaction of the enemy to arrange his army in a semicircle. General d'Harville commanded the extreme right ; Beurnonvelle the right division toward Cuesmes. The Duke de Chartres oc- cupied the centre directly in front of Jemmapes, and General Ferrand held the left flank. The order was to advance in column. The cavalry was to protect the flanks. The artillery had been dis- posed so as to command the valleys between the three hills. The hussars and dragoons were massed between Cuesmes and Jemmapes, to bar the way of the Austrian cavalry. These dispositions made in one part and another, fires were lighted and the night passed in watching. While the battle was about to begin, this is what was going on in the Chateau de Lowendaal, in the 214 centre of the village of Jemmapes, situate between the two armies. A stream and a wood protected it on the French side, and the mountain rose behind, sheltering its tur- rets from the Austrian fire. Neutral ground between the two camps, the chateau had been designated as advance post for both sides. The French scouts, sent to reconnoitre, met under the walls Austrian patrols. They had saluted each other with a few random shots, then each little troop had gone its way. The Austrians held that the chateau was in the power of the French, and the French declared that the Austrians had taken up a position there. The result was that the Baron de Lowendaal's resi- dence was unoccupied, save by its usual inhabitants. The Baron de Lowendaal had arrived the evening before, and had received there, as he had expected, his friend the Marquis de Laveline, and Blanche. The troops had not yet begun to move, and the baron, more than ever enamored of Blanche, reas- sured by Leonard as to the conclusion of his love adventure with Herminie de Beaurepaire, had not hesi- tated to hasten the preparations for his marriage. Beaurepaire was dead, and Herminie a person with- out reason or social existence ; there was no obstacle now. Lowendaal was free from her reproaches, her tears, her threats. The living proof of this affair, little Alice, had disappeared ; the baron found himself quite free. 215 He neared the goal of his desires. In a few hours he would possess Blanche. The Marquis de Lavelihe had observed that the moment and the place were ill-chosen for the celebra- tion of a marriage, when the enemy might be upon them any day. To this the baron simply replied that he must fulfil his promise. He reminded him, even brutally, that military operations could not alter the settlement of debts, and that the marquis's lands lay in Alsace, under the imperial arms, and he could not easily escape from his engagements. He added also a remark, to such effect that the marquis ceased to object and said, " Then it simply remains to make my daughter decide. I cannot force her to the altar." The baron had growled, "That is your business ! See that you bring the little rebel to reason ! " He sent for the notary of Jemmapes, and ordered the chaplain of the chateau to have everything in readi- ness to pronounce the nuptial benediction. At midnight the marriage was to take place ; and, im- mediately after, making use of the night, the couple were to go to Brussels with the marquis. There, be- hind the imperial army, they could await results in safety. Blanche, since her arrival at the chateau, had shut herself up, giving access to no one. The baron had insisted twice upon having an inter- view ; she had refused to let him enter the apartment which had been reserved for her. She stood anxiously waiting by a window for some one who was late. Her eyes traversed the deserted fields, looking in vain. It was Catharine Lefebvre lor whom she looked. Her breast heaving, her heart beating wildly, stop- ping now and then, with bitter sighs, her throat dry, her hands shaking nervously, Blanche de Laveline re- minded herself of the good woman's promises. She believed in her. She told herself that if Catha- rine did not come to the appointed meeting-place, if she did not bring the child, it must be because some- thing had happened to prevent. What could make Catharine Lefebvre fail thus in her promise, the unhappy Blanche could not guess. She did not know that Catharine was with the Army of the North. She did not know that near her, where the fires of the 1 3 th Light Infantry lighted up the woods of Cuesmes, and whence scouts had come, stood Catharine's canteen, and that there little Henriot and Alice lay asleep while the scouts approached even under the walls of the Cha- teau de Lowendaal. Cathalrine had easily learned that Blanche de Lave- line was at the chateau. A countryman, devoted to the cause of liberty, had reported that the evening before a fine gentleman and a fair lady had come to the chateau. In these elegant arrivals Catharine had no difficulty in recognizing her friend, and now her plan was ar- ranged ; she would go to the chateau, she would see 217 Blanche de Laveline and tell her that little Henriot was with her, protected by Lefebvre's soldiery. Then they would seek the least perilous means of reuniting mother and child, and making it easy for them to cross the lines. Her resolve taken, Catharine, having put into her belt th 2 two pistols she always carried on the battle- field, left the camp and went toward the Chateau de Lowendaal. She had said nothing to Lefebvre, for he would prob- ably have disapproved of the expedition, fearing the dangers his wife would encounter in crossing woods and fields at night between two hostile armies. But before going, she kissed little Henriot, who slept beside little Alice, and she whispered to him, " Sleep, darling ! I am going to your mother/' Then she started, careless and brave, thinking lightly of the Austrians who crossed the field, but a little un- easy as to Lefebvre's opinion about her errand. At the moment when she left a little clump of trees, the last outpost of the French, she saw coming toward her a tall, thin form. The shadow of a man, hidden behind a tree, was distinctly visible. She put her hand to her belt, took one of the pistols, and said, softly, so as not to be heard by the neigh- boring sentinels : " Who goes there ? " And she stood ready to fire. " No enemy, Madame Lefebvre, but a friend," said a voice she knew. Who is the friend ? " 2 ,8 " Why, La Violette, at your service." Ah you, silly boy ! you almost made me afraid. said Catharine, and, recognizing her assistant at the can- teen, a devoted, though simple lad, who was ti- the entire regiment. La Violette was not a brave fellow, to all appearance, and he was daily, as we have said, the ob'ect of jests Catharine had put back her pistol, laughing at her sudden action in drawing it. Well come," she said, " I mustn't scare you ! why are you prowling about here outside the lines, yoi who are a coward ? " La Violette made a step forward. I will tell you, Madame Lefebvre-I saw you leave the camp, and that is why I followed." To act as a spy ? " Oh, no, but I thought you might be going whe there was danger." .. Danger ? Yes, yes, there is-but what is that to you ? Danger and you are usually far apart." I have wanted for a long time past to become ac- quainted with danger, and I thought I might find 1 night a fitting occasion." *. Why to-night ? " Catharine asked, surprised at the voune man's insistence. .-Because," said La Violette, a little embarrassed, and seeking for words, because at^ night, one ease, one is not afraid of being seen." ^ " And you do not want to be seen ? " .. Ah, for that matter, no 1 If I am afraid, at mght 2I 9 no one can see it, while by day that frightens me But something tells me that beside you, Madame Letebvre, I should have no fear." /^,K ar | n ..You want to come with me, then? Catharn ff rew more and more surprised. ^ .. Oh, do not refuse me ! Do not send me back begged the poor lad ; and he added in a tone of deep sincerity and emotion, I love you so much, Madame Lefebvre. I should never have dared to say so by day- Heht-at the canteen-before the men. But re- vfhere all is dark, I am braver-I scarce know myse Catharine had gone on walking while she listened ve answered, and ma half-satirical tone to her silly lover, but two shots j, then sounded through the night. ..Halt," said Catharine, who was ahead. care " she cried more loudly. llviolette ran forward. Behind him rolledaround object, like a moving hump. Catharine had seen the assistant cantm.er disappear in a neighboring hop-field, whence the two sho Tearing an ambush, she had stood still on the edge f She he'atd a noise as o< broken branches the sound of blows, and the scuffle of feet ; then, at a d.stance, on 1 plain, she saw the shadow of a man fleemg toward the woods which surrounded Jemmapes ..He runs the wrong way; he will fall 22O Austrian outpost and be taken," she thought suppos* ing she saw La Violette. And she added, with a sigh tinged with regret, " It is a pity ! He's a good lad, though weak. It will be hard to fill his place at the canteen." She started once more on her way, turning the field, so as to gain the chateau whose roofs she espied, when up from the hops rose, tall and slender as the vines, the figure of La Violette. He held a naked sword in his hand, and attempted to wipe the blade on the leaves. " You ! " she cried, stunned. " Where do you come from ? What have you done ? " "I have kept that 'Kaiserlick' from re-filling his gun as he meant to do," said La Violette quietly, slip- ping his sword back into the scabbard. - Where is he ? " asked Catharine. "There, among the hops." " He is dead ! " I think so. As for the other, he has had his chance to have an affair with a coward like myself, otherwise I should have followed him, for I can run fast, Madame Lefebvre. But I had something which kept me back," said the boy, showing the round object which was hung on his back. " What have you there ? " "The drum, Guillaumet's drum I took it from him." For what ? " "It may be of use to me. Besides, I'd rather have his drum than his gun. I'd like to be a drummer ; but I can't now, I'm too tall. Madame Lefebvre. Now suppose we run on? The Austrian I have . disarmed will give the alarm, and I don't care to have those white- coats at my back. I don|t speak on my own ac< You are not afraid ? " M At night, never 1 I told you so 1 Come, Madame Lefebvre ! " La Violette, you are brave." .. Do not mock me, madame. ! I know I am but a coward. I know, too, that I love you, well, oh, s well - " La Violette, I forbid you to speak thus. Very we ii_I shall be silent-but come on, on, now while no one is about." Catharine regarded her assistant with increase*! prise. He had shown himself in a new and unex pected light. La Violette did not -flinch under f La Violette had thrown himself, sword in hand, upon twoAustrians in ambuscade! Her assistant mu: have changed, indeed. She thought for a moment of sending him back to the camp ; but seeing him so warlike, so martial, she feared to pain him; and, besides, two were always U Vioktte," she said, in a sweet and friendly tone, -I feel I must warn you that I am going to a place where there is danger-great danger. Do you stil Madame Lefebvre I " " Very well. Then begin by following me through water for I must cross this stream to get to the chateau, yonder. That is where I am going."* " Where we are going ! Lead on, madame, I follow." "Very well lips closed and eyes alert." The two descended to the bed of the little river of Weme, and crossed the water, coming about to their knees. Very soon they came before the door of the chateau stables. Carefully Catharine followed the walls, to find a place where it would be easy to get into the garden. Finding a place where the stone was crumbling away, she signed to La Violette to help her to climb. " Gladly, Madame Lefebvre," said this naive lover, happy to feel, as he bent over, the weight of the robust Catharine, who used his shoulders to climb by. In a few moments, both were in the garden, step- ping cautiously, hiding behind trees, and moving toward a room where lights burned brightly. CHAPTER XVII. THE NUPTIAL MASS. THE Baron de Lowendaal and the Marquis de Lave- line had had a final decisive interview. The farming noble had imposed his ' conditions : Blanche was to wed him that very night, or else he 223 would leave at once for Alsace, and confiscate all De Laveline's property, not to mention other reserve meas- ures. Thus the marquis would lose everything. The latter had proved his great desire to have the baron as son-in-law. It was not only the honor of this marriage which attracted M. de Laveline his per- sonal honor was at stake, and he was most anxious that Blanche should show herself tractable and consent to answer the baron's vows. The baron, as he had made Leonard decide to rid him of Beaurepaire, held him by force. He had helped to engage the marquis, always short of money, in a scandalous and very dangerous opera- tion. A friend of the Prince de Rohan, Laveline had had a hand in the miserable Necklace affair. He had escaped detection, but the baron held proofs of his participation in the fraudulent manoeuvres of the instigators of that great deceit which placed the Queen, Marie-Antoinette, in a peculiar light. Could the marquis escape the baron by fleeing from France ? The Austrian court, whose prisoner he would become, would try him, and avenge the honor of the queen, and arch-duchess of the Empire. Would he remain in his own land ? His role in the Necklace business, once exposed to the revolutionary government, would send him to the scaffold. So he was at the baron's disposal. Like the roof over his head, Blanche's father was between two fires. So he resolved to make a last appeal to his daughter. 224 He found Blanche more resolved than ever upon resisting the wishes of Lowendaal. M. de Laveline, when all arguments had failed, ended by confessing his personal danger. The baron was master of his goods, his honor and his life. Blanche must save him, or his death was certain. Would she, driving him to despair, be guilty of parricide ? Blanche, moved and trembling, on receiving this con- fidence, could only utter a few incoherent words. She was astonished at the baron's strange persist- ence. Had he no pity, no dignity, he who would still marry her, knowing that she hated him, and that she loved another whose child was a witness of that love ? Persuaded that the baron had received the letter in- trusted to Leonard, Blanche tried to calm her father's fears. She told herself that, since he had not told M. de Laveline, the baron must have been touched by her confession. He had not revealed her secret, perhaps because he did not want to lessen his influence with M. de Laveline. Deeply in love, perhaps he hoped Blanche would retract her determination. He had pardoned the fault she had confessed. He would forget that another had been loved before him. Perhaps, even, he hoped to be loved in his turn. There, then, at the bottom of M. de Lowendaal's heart, lay the hope that she must crush. So she must persist in her refusal, saying nothing to M. de Lave- line of her reasons for so doing. Blanche reiterated that she would never wed the baron. Very well," said M. de Laveline, carried away by 225 fury, and mad at her resistance, perverse, and rebel- lious girl, I will make you obey. You shall be married to-night, hark you, to-night, if I have to drag you my- self bound, to the altar ! " And he went to the baron and told him to hasten the preparations for the ceremony. Blanche, left alone, began to think. Lowendaal's res- olution should not stand against hers. She must resist a union which was so horrible to her. But, for that stroke, she lacked her chief ally, her boy. Why was he not with her ? The presence of that living witness of her love for another, must, she thought, convince the marquis and make Lowendaal give up his wish to possess her. She asked herself, with wild anxiety, why Catharine Lefebvre had not kept her promise. Darkness had fallen, and she could no longer look across the field. She must give up her hopes of seeing from afar a woman coming to the chateau, with a child in her arms. Then she fell into a profound melancholy reverie, dreaming of armies which, like a band, surrounded the chateau in dark masses. She told herself that Catha- rine might have been afraid to start out among these men ; perhaps she had been stopped. " She is not coming," she thought, sadly ; " and who knows if I shall ever see my boy again ? " Then, frightened at the idea of being forced to that odious marriage, whose preparations were then going IS on and in despair at causing the ruin and perhaps tht death of her father by refusing, the thought of escape struck her. She would take the road, by chance, straight befo her. Night was propitious ; the presence of the two arm favorable. Among so many soldiers she could hide ; the roads were full of poor people who fled before the troops. A woman like herself would pass unnoticed : at least unsuspected. She would get somewhere to Brussels or Lilli thence she could go to Paris, to Versailles, and search for Catharine and her little Henriot. She had some jewels and a little money ; once f from the detested chateau, she would write to her father, and his first anger over, the marquis would help her. Her project settled, she began to put it into execu- *ion. .. .. She took a little bag and threw into it, pell-mell, her valuables, then, wrapping herself in a travelling cloak, and, taking another cape, to use as a covering or as a mattress in the uncomfortable places where chance might provide her lodgings, she went forth. Being careful to leave her light burning, she opened the door cautiously, descended on her toes, traversed the corridor, listening, holding her breath, stopping now and then to hearken oppressed, anxious, b tcrmined. She gained a door leading to the vegetable garden. 227 Noiselessly, she slipped the bolt, and was in the open air. The night was cold and clear, but not dark. She must avoid, in crossing the open places, being seen by the men at the chateau. Once in the woods beside the park she would be safe; should her flight be noticed, she was safe in those shades. As she turned, cautiously, the basement of the hall r and passed a lower room where the servants were eat- ing, she seemed to see, beside a tree, two strange forms. She shivered stopped. Slowly the two forms moved toward her. She was paralyzed with fear. She dared not flee, advance, nor scream. She distinguished vaguely the long, slim shadow of a man, then a woman in a short skirt and a little hat with the brim turned up. Now they were beside her, and the woman said quickly, " Do not speak ! We are friends ! " "That voice!" murmured Blanche. "Who are you ? I am afraid I shall call " " Do not call ! Tell us where to find Mademoiselle Blanche de Laveline ! " " I am she ! My God ! Catharine, is it you ? I know your voice," cried Blanche, recognizing her who was to bring her boy to her. Catharine, surprised and delighted at the meeting; told Blanche quickly that she had come with La Vio lette, whom she presented, and who saluted respect- fully to tell her about her boy, and to bring whom she had promised, though amid the turbulence of war. ,- Where is my little Henriot ? " Blanche asked anx- iously, afraid lest she should hear some terribl- She was quickly reassured. -But this costume," she said, astonished at the can- tiniere's accoutrements. Catharine told her of her service m the regiment, an d that little Henriot was asleep in camp aimd soldiers of the I 3 th Light Infantry. Blanche wanted to get to the camp. Catharine advised her to remain at the chateau. the morrow, at dawn, the movements of the Austrian army would be begun. Perhaps the French would occupy the chateau. Then nothing would be easier than to bring the child. To attempt to do so in tl dead of nigh* across that guarded field, were madness 1 It is fine, for me, a cantiniere, to run thus between the two armies," said Catharine gayly. ' And La Violette added, "You do not know what i is to be afraid! It is frightful! I know r here ; it is better ! Madame Lefebvre, te I her how it was when we had Austrians in the hop-field. Catharine confirmed La Violette s opinion had best pass the night in the chateau, and be advis, on the morrow how to proceed. But Catharine was distinctly told then by that she must quit the castle, or she would be forced, that very night, to marry Lowendaal. .. What is to be done ? " questioned Catharine, em- 229 barrassed, and she added, " What a misfortune that Lefebvre is not with us ! He could advise us ! If only this imbecile had an idea." This last was con- cerning La Violette. Say, have you any idea ? " she said to her attend- ant, quickly. If you wish, Madame Lefebvre," he said, timidly, " I can return to the camp and bring the child." Catharine shrugged her shoulders. I can't fancy you, La Violette, carrying a child in your arms." " Could I go with you ? " said Blanche quickly. " Oh, yes, Catharine, let me go." " But the danger the cannon the sentinels ? " I fear them not. What does a mother fear who longs to embrace her child ? " Catharine was about to answer that she would retreat with her to the French camp, when the sound of a voice made them all hide behind the trees, whose shadow might protect them. Surrounded by servants bearing torches, the Baron de Lowendaal said to one of his servants, " Tell Made- moiselle de Laveline that the hour /or the ceremony has come, and that I shall await her in the chapel, in com- pany with her father, the marquis." The baron crossed the space before the chateau, and entered the chapel, a little edifice toward the right, in the centre of a mossy elevation. -O God! I. am lost they will see that I am gone," murmured Blanche. 230 " We must gain time but how ? There is only one means, and that is risky," said Catharine. " What ? Speak, Catharine. I am ready to brave any danger rather than be violently given to that man. I shall never go to that chapel." " If some one should stay in your stead 1 That would delay their search a quarter of an hour ! " " It would mean safety ! I could get out of the park and hide in the fields. Who knows? I might even reach the French outposts. Oh, it is an excellent idea ! But who will take my place ? " " I, "said Catharine. " Come, you have not a moment to lose. Give me your cloak. Hasten ! Your baron is ' coming ! " Lowendaal, having seen that all was ready in the chapel, returned, satisfied, to look for M. de Laveline, and to give, in passing, some orders to the grooms about the journey. As soon as the marriage was cel- ebrated, he wanted to get away with his young bride toward Brussels. The approach of the Austrian army and the probabilities of battle made him push forward the hour he had set for the ceremony, and for the journey. Catharine had wrapped herself quickly in Blanche's cloak. The latter, covering herself with the cape she had provided, had silently embraced the energetic can- tintere, and followed La Violette, who was proud of ,his new part, as helper to a wandering damsel. Catharine followed them anxiously, till they were lost in the gloom. 251 They were beyond the limits of the park. Blanche was beyond the Baron de Lowendaal's vio- lence. She would soon see her boy. Poor little Henriot ! Shall I return to him ! " thought Catharine sadly ; " and Lefebvre, shall I never see him again ? Bah ! I must not think of that ! I must try to play well 'my new part, as a fiancee," she added, with her habitual good-humor. She went bravely toward the lighted hall, where, sup- per over, the servants joked. She stood in the doorway, and said, briefly, " Let one of you go and tell monsieur the baron that Mile, de Laveline awaits him in the chapel." Then she retired slowly, forcing herself to walk majestically, and taking care not to trip herself with her cloak, which was somewhat too long. As she was about to enter the chapel, she heard voices near her. The baron spoke. 41 Then you have the password, Leonard ? " Yes, sir, I was able to get it. I lured to the kitchea a courier under the pretext of giving him refreshments. I gave him some drink, and he was evidently very- thirsty, and sleepy too, for he's asleep now." "And his papers," said Lowendaal. " I have read them nothing important except the orders, and them I have kept." < It is well, Leonard run quickly to the great Aus- trian guards to warn the commanding officer." And the baron ceased speaking and re-entered th ckSteau. " What does that mean ? " thought Catharine. " What orders were they ? Ours, perhaps ? " She wondered what she should do. Ought she not flee to the French camp and give an alarm ? But she had promised Blanche to stay and deceive her persecutors, by personating her in the chapel. First of all, she must keep her promise, after that she might have time to get to the camp and warn Lefebvre of treason. She entered the chapel resolutely, waiting impatiently for the baron's entry, that she might escape and give the alarm to her husband's soldiers. If they should be surprised in their sleep," she thought anxiously. " No," she assured herself, " the I3th sleeps with one eye open, and they will let no ' Kaiserlicks,' even with a stolen password, arrive within gunshot without showing them how we are cared for, and how we defy traitors." And, somewhat calmed, she sat down in one of the arm-chairs prepared for the couple before the altar. The priest knelt, praying devoutly in a corner. He paid no heed to her. She looked curiously at the altar-pieces, the orna- ments, the little oil-lamp which shed its flickering light about, a^d the four lighted candles giving out their funereal rays. .. B-r-r-r ! this were a better place for masses for the dead, than for a marriage service," murmured Catha- rine impressed by the solemnity of the religious edifice. Her waiting was not long. 233 Suddenly the'chapel door opened loudly. A noise of feet and a clink of swords resounded. Catharine, to preserve her disguise as long as possible, had wrapped herself completely in Blanche's cloak, and knelt, avoiding turning round. The priest had risen slowly, and, after bowing twice, had approached the altar. He had begun rapidly and in a low voice to read the ritual. The Baron de Lowendaal meantime, reaching her he thought his fiancee, took his hat in his hand, knelt and said gallantly, smiling the while, " I had hoped, ma- demoiselle, to have the honor and the great pleasure of accompanying you myself to this sacred spot, with your father, who is as happy as I am at your consent. I understand your timidity and pardon it. Now, may I take my place by your side ? " Catharine neither spoke nor stirred. " I am glad, daughter," said the marquis, who now came to her. " I congratulate you on becoming reason- able at last." Aloud, he added, " But, Blanche, take off that travelling-cloak. It is not well to marry thus and besides it is necessary to do honor to our guests, your witnesses and those of -your husband General Cler- fayt's officers. Show them, at least your face ! Smile a little : it is meet on such a day ! One should see you smiling." Catharine, hearing the Austrian officers named, made a quick movement. She threw aside her cloak, and showed her tricolored skirt. The marquis caught the cloak quickly, and drew it away altogether. "This is not my daughter," cried the marquis, as- tounded. Who are you ? " said the equally astonished baron. The preacher, turning aside toward the cross, held out his arms, saying, Benedicat vos, omnipotens Deus ! Dominus vobis- cum." He waited for the answer, " Et cum spiritu tuo." But the fright was too general for any one to follow the service. The Austrian officers had drawn near. A Frenchwoman ! A cantinere," said he who appeared to be the chief, with comical affright. Well ! Yes, a Frenchwoman ! Catharine Le- febvre, cantiniere of the 1 3th ! Really, that turns your stomachs, my lads," cried Madame Sans-G6ne, freeing herself of her long cloak, and ready to laugh in the face of the discomfited bridegroom, to bandy words with the furious marquis, and to snap her fingers at the uneasy Austrian officers, wondering if the soldiers of the 1 3th, whose number Catharine had fearlessly hurled at them, like a trumpet-call or a battle-cry, were about to come out of the confessional, and surge from out the church under the protection of the Go4 of armies. CHAPTER XVIII. A DEBT OF GRATITUDE. THE first moment of surprise past, one of the officers laid his hand upon Catharine's shoulder. "You are my prisoner, madame," he said, gravely. " Why, then," said Catharine, " I am not fighting 1 I came on a visit, privately " "Do not jest! you have introduced yourself into this chateau, of which I have taken possession in the name of the Emperor of Austria. You are French, and in Austrian territory ; I shall guard you " " So you're arresting women ? That is not gallant." " You are a cantiniere." "Cantineres are not soldiers." "You are not taken as a soldier, but as a spy,* said the officer : and making a sign behind him, he ordered, " Let some one get four men to guard this woman until she has been tried and her fate decided. The Baron de Lowendaal, who had rushed away to Blanche's room, now returned. " Gentlemen," said he in a half-strangled voice, " that woman is the accomplice of a flight ; she has helped my fiancee, Mademoiselle de Laveline, to get away. Where is Mademoiselle de Laveline ? " he asked, turning furiously on Catharine. 236 The latter began to laugh. " If you want to see Mademoiselle de Laveline again," she said to him, " you must leave these Austrian gentle- men, and get to the French camp. She is waiting there." " In the French camp ! What business has she. there ? " The marquis whispered to the baron, " Let that fact make you easy ! She cannot, among the French, be with that Neipperg of whom you were jealous." He tried to calm thus the discomfited fiance". " It is possible," said the baron, " but, once more, what can she be doing in the French camp ? Can she be in love with Dumouriez ? " " She went there to get her child," said Catharine quietly. " Her child," cried the baron and the marquis, both equally astonished. " Why, yes, little Henriot, a lovely little cherub, fairer than any child of yours could ever be, Baron ! ** cried Catharine familiarly, to the sorry bridegroom. But Lowendaal moved aside, too much mystified, too much stunned, to answer Catharine's mockery. Leonard, meantime, who had assisted at this scene, was quite disconcerted and made a sorry lace. All his projects were gone. Blanche was flown, the child, of whose existence the baron was now aware, was no longer a means of intimidation, a menace, an arm ever raised over her who was to have been, at th?t moment, the Baroness de Lowendaal. He had no jurther hope of realizing any of the schemes he had 237 concocted since he came into possession of Madem- oiselle de Laveline's secret. He thought over quickly the part he should -take He was a clever man as well as an unscrupulous one, this Leonard ; and only his fear of the galleys kept him from betraying his patron at this time. " I, too, shall go to the French camp," he mur- mured, " I have the password. I can pass and per- haps I have not lost everything. We shall meet, my baroness ! " So, noiselessly, he slipped behind the Austrian soldiers whom one of the officers had brought, gained the chapel door, and shot across the fields. The officer who had arrested Catharine said, shortly, " We must get through. Baron, have you any observa- tions to make ? any question to ask of the prisoner ? " No, no ! Take her away ! Guard her ! Shoot her ! " cried he desperately ; " or, better," he added in comical despair, " question her, find out what she knows as to the whereabouts of Mademoiselle de Lave- line ; maybe she will tell what she knows about the child she spoke of." The officer answered quietly, "We are going to im- prison her in one of the rooms of the Chateau to-mor- row she will be called upon to answer." " To-morrow the soldiers of the Republic will be here, and we will not speak together, for you will all be dead or captured," cried Catharine proudly. Take her," said the officer, coldly, turning toward his men. And he added, 238 " Put down your guns, and carry that woman, after tying her, if she resists." The four men leaned their guns against the rail of the chancel, and advanced, ready to execute the order. " Do not dare to come near me," cried Catharine. " The first man who moves is dead ! " And, drawing her two pistols, she presented them at the soldiers who- were about to arrest her. " Advance ! Advance ! " roared the officer, " are you afraid of a woman ? " The four men were about to attempt to execute the order, when, through the silence of the night, close to- the chapel, sounded the roll of the drum. It was the onset of battle. " The French ! The French ! " cried the terrified baron. And a sudden, irresistible panic ensued. The soldiers, forgetting their guns, ran in disorder. On their tracks sprang the officers, seeking to rally them so as to return to their quarters, persuaded that this was an attack by Dumouriez's advance-guard. The marquis and the baron fled, to shut themselves up in the chateau. The chapel was deserted. The priest, at the altar, indifferent to all that passed, continued to pray. The drum continued to sound more loudly. On the threshold of the chapel, Catharine, surprised, and happy, saw appearing, still beating his drum, the tall, spare form of La Violette. "You here!" she cried. "What for? Where is the regiment ? ** < In the camp. By heaven ! " said La Violette, stop- ping. " I came just in time, Madame Lefebvre. Say, if we close the doors, will we be more alone ? " And he closed the doors quickly, and adjusted the bolt. Then he explained to Catharine how he had con- ducted Blanche to the camp, but that midway they had met a French patrol, commanded by Lefebvre. He had given Mademoiselle de Laveline in charge of two reliable men, and she was now, surely, safe with her little Henriot, in Dumouriez's lines. Then, he had hurried back to the chateau, fearing for the safety of the I sth's brave cantiniere. Surprised by the noise in the chapel, he had gone thither, and, raising himself up to a window, had seen the danger of his captain's wife. Suddenly an idea struck him. He would use his drum to frighten off the Kaiserlicks." " And so, Madame Lefebvre, I found a good use for the chappie's drum. Wouldn't I make a fine drum- mer ? But I'm too tall." Thus ended the brave boy's recital. Where did you leave my husband ? " asked Cath- arine, anxiously. Two hundred yards from here ! ready to run with his men, if I give the signal." What signal ? " A shot." Listen ! I think some one is coming. Do you not hear it that noise like the tramp of horses ? " 240 The steps of men and a trampling of horses indicated the arrival of a great troop, with cavalry. " Shall I shoot, Madame Lefebvre ? " said La Vio- lette taking hold of his gun. And he added, seeing the forgotten Austrian guns, "We can give, with these, four good signals." " Do not shoot," she said quickly. " Why ? Do not think I'm afraid of the ' Kaiserlicks/ for it is night, and, as I've told you, now I'm not afraid." " Unhappily, the Austrians have re-enforcements. You will throw Lefebvre and our men into an ambus- cade. We, too, must escape otherwise we must Command, Madame Lefebvre, I am here to serve you." A rude knock came on the door, and a voice cried, "Open ! or we'll force the door." Catharine told La Violette to draw the bolt. The door was open, and cavaliers and soldiers entered. Their dark mass was shown by glittering swords, and casques and helmets, in the dark. Catharine and La Violette had taken refuge beside the altar. They saw there a great, black shadow. It was the priest, who, having finished his mass, was muttering prayers perhaps, for those engaged in war. The soldiers had invaded the chapel. Everywhere gleamed swords and guns. The officer who had wanted to arrest Catharine, re- appeared, humiliated by having run before a woman, and anxious to take his revenge. He turned to a personage enveloped m an embroid- ered cloak, who seemed to be a superior officer. .Colonel," said he, -we should shoot this sold: and this woman -- ... .-The woman, too?" asked the man he calle colonel, coldly. - They are spies our orders are such , Ask them who they are-their names-what . wanted here-then we will 'decide," said the colo, Catharine had listened. I demand," she said firmly, that we be treated prisoners of war .< The battle has not begun," said the officer Yes by us ; I was the advance-guard, and 1 the first column," said she, pointing to La Violette. .-You have no right to shoot us, since we giv, selves up. Take care! If you permit any wrong, lt shall be avenged-expect no mercy from the soldiers of he 3 th tThey are not far off 1 They will not be slow n gating here" Remember the mill at Valmy! Your prisoner! will pay for us both I My husband, who s a captain, will avenge us, as surely as my r , who had been called colonel, cTmTforwtrd a few steps, trying to discern, in the shadow, her who spoke thus. ,. Are you, madame," he said politely, " related to a x6 -242 certain Lefebvre, who served in the Guards at Paris, and who married a washer-woman, who was called Sans- Ge-ne ? " " That washer-woman, Sans-GSne, am I ! Lefebvre Captain Lefebvre, is my husband ! " The colonel, greatly moved, made a few steps toward Catharine, then throwing back his cloak, and looking in her face, said, " Do you not recognize me ? " Catharine stepped back, saying, " Your voice your features, Colonel, seem to me oh, it is as if I had seen you dimly ! " " That dimness was the smoke of cannon ! Have you forgotten the loth of August ? " The loth of August? Ah! are you the wounded man ? The Austrian officer ? " cried Catharine. " Yes, I am he, the Count de Neipperg, whom you rescued ; and who has ever been grateful. Ah, let me embrace you, to whom I owe my life." And he advanced with open arms to draw her toward him. But Catharine said quickly, " I thank you, Colonel, for having remembered so well. What I did for you that day, was inspired by humanity ; you were pur- sued, unarmed, and wounded ; I protected you, not stopping to ask under what flag you received that wound why you fled. To-day I find you wearing the uniform of the enemies of the nation, commanding soldiers to invade my native land ; therefore I desire to forget what happened at Paris my friends, the soldiers of my regiment, my husband the brave boy who stands, a prisoner, by my side all these patriots 243 ought to reproach me for saving the life of an aristo- crat, an Austrian, a colonel who would shoot people who give themselves up. Sir Count, speak no more of the loth of August ! Let me forget that I preserved such an enemy ! " Neipperg was silent. Catharine's energetic words seemed to produce in him an unusual emotion. Finally he said, in a tone of perfect sincerity " Catharine, my preserver, do not reproach me, that I serve my country as you serve yours. As your valiant husband defends his standard, so must I fight for mine. Destiny has made our birthplaces wide apart, under different skies, and seems to. bring us together only in moments of imminent peril. Do not hate me. If you will forget the loth of August, I shall ever re- member it ; and as colonel of the staff of the imperial army, victorious " " Not yet victorious," said Catharine dryly. "It will be so to-morrow," said Neipperg. And he added, " The colonel of the Empire, who commands here, has not forgotten that he owes a debt contracted by the soldier of the Tuileries, the wounded man of the laundry at Saint-Roch. Catharine Lefebvre, you are free ! " " Thanks," said she, simply, " but and La Vio- lette ? " she said, pointing to her assistant, who held his tall form proudly erect, desirous of showing to the best advantage before the enemy. " That man is a soldier he came here by a ruse I cannot keep from him the treatment given to spies." 244 " Then /ou must shoot me with him," said Catharine simply. " It shall not be said at the camp that I, Catha- rine Lefebvre, cantiniere of the I3th, left a brave lad to die who, but for me, had never been taken by the Aus- trians. So, Colonel, give your orders, and let them be quick, for I don't want to wait. It is not amusing to think of taking a dozen shots into one's body, when one is young, and loves one's husband. Poor Lefebvre, he will miss me. But such is war ! " "Pardon me, Colonel," said La Violette in his child- ish voice, " I beg you will shoot only me. I deserve it. I cannot deny it. Each for himself, and woe unto him who is captured ! I have nothing to say to avert my execution. But Madame Lefebvre has done noth- ing. It was I who kept her here." ,,You for what? What was she doing herewith you ? " I made her come, to bring a child where one is not expected and I am, at best, no famous nurse." "What child? My God!" cried Neipperg, rush-, ing upon Catharine, " you were to bring a child. It was " -Yours, Count. I had promised Mademoiselle de Laveline to bring her boy here to Jemmapes." And risked it ? Oh, brave heart ! Where is my child ? " << In security in the French camp', with his mother." Mademoiselle de Laveline no longer here ! What do you tell me ? " She fled at the moment when her father wanted to force her to marry the Baron de Lowendaal." .But for you/I should have been too late to save hC Without La Violette," said Catharine. He did it all " .'-Ah I see I must set La Violette at liberty too said Neipperg, smiling. .-Catharine, you are free tell you again. Take your comrade with you. all send two men to accompany you beyond the outpos Then, having given the necessary orders, Neipperg said to Catharine, "You will see Blanche ; tell love her ever, and will wait for her, after the battle, 01 the road to Paris Or on the road to Brussels," said Catharine, saucily. Neipperg did not answer this. He saluted, with his hand raised to his hat, and said to Catharine, "Use the last hours of night to regai your camp. Believe, my dear Madame Lefebvre, that I do not consider my debt paid. I am ever under obi gations to you. Perhaps the chances of war may give L an opportunity to prove Jo you that the Count , Neipperg is not ungrateful ! " .-Pshaw," said Catharine. "We are quits, Count, for that affair of the loth of August, but I owe yoi something for this lad," pointing to La Violette. you say, we must all pass, and sooner or ater acquit ourselves. Adieu, Colonel. And you, tall fellow by the right-hand path, and with quick steps, marct she added, nudging La Violette jovially. 246 Pattern* Both passed, proudly, before the Austrian soldiers. La Violette did not seem to lose a jot of his height, and Catharine, her hands upon her hips, her cocked hat with its tricolored cockade on one side, went out with her laugh of defiance on her lips. As she crossed the chapel threshold, she turned and said, sarcastically : "Adieu, gentlemen! I shall return with Lefebvre and his sharpshooters before noon ! " CHAPTER XIX. BEFORE THE ATTACK. NEIPPERG anxiously watched Catharine's departure. He wondered if, as the brave cantiniere had said, he should soon find Blanche and see his little son again. How should she, a young woman with a child, find a way to escape danger, in the midst of fighting armies ? One joy he had the marriage plotted by Lowendaal and the marquis had not taken place ; Blanche was free, and might still be his. He looked about for Lowendaal and M. de Laveline, but they had disappeared. An under-officer, whom he questioned, told him that both men had hurriedly entered a carriage that awaited them, and hastily taken the road to Brussels. 47 Neipperg gave a sigh of content. His rival was no longer there to dispute his possession of her who was his very soul. Hope returned to him. The future was no longer dark. Blanche and her child lighted it up. He would find them, and live in bliss. But a shadow crossed that radiant vision. How re- join Blanche ? in what way find the child ? The battle was about to begin. He could not dream of crossing the lines, nor of going to the French camp, even under a truce, at that hour, when, with the sun's rising over the hills, a lurid light of cannon would illumine all, from Jemmapes to Mons. He must wait the result of that day. Doubtless the victory would be theirs, with the old, disciplined troops of the imperial army. Could the shoemakers, tailors, and mercers, who formed the republican army, hope to hold out against the veterans of the Duke of Saxe ? The cannonade ofValmy had been only a surprise. The fortune of war must return at Jemmapes to the side of the greater number, with military skill and tactics ; the Duke of Saxe-Teschen had already despatched a courier to Vienna to announce the defeat of the " sans-culottes." But in the inevitable routing of the French, what would become of Blanche and the child ? Neipperg's anguish was very great, thinking of the dangers of that defeat, and the disbanding of that improvised army, incapable of managing an orderly retreat. 248 He sought, vainly, a means of saving the two who were so dear to him from the terrible consequences of that disorder which he foresaw, when a sound above made him go immediately from the great room of the chateau (which had been made a centre, and where the officers who accompanied him waited to be given General Clerfayt's orders) to attend to the preparations for the coming engagement. He asked the cause of the tumult. He was told that a dishevelled woman, with torn garments and a wild look, was being arrested at the entrance to the Park. She had wanted to pass the sentinels, and enter the chateau. She pretended to be the Marquis de Laveline's daughter, staying, for the time being, with M. de Lovvendaal. Neipperg gave a cry of surprise and fright. Blanche at the chateau ! Blanche having crossed the plain, full of troops ! What did this sudden ap- pearance mean, when Catharine had assured him that she was safe in the French camp ? What unexpected misfortune did this sudden return presage ? It was really Blanche de Laveline, her garments tattered by the bushes and brambles she had passed through in the fields. He rushed to her, and enfolded her in a passionate embrace. Amid tears and smiles for joy crossed her sorrow like a ray of sunshine through rain Blanche de Lave- line told her lover about her flight, of which he had 249 already heard, and of her arrival at the French camp, escorted by Lefebvre's soldiers. By the instructions given by the good Catharine, si had been able to find hastily the canteen of the I3th Light Infantry. There on a mattress, rolled in a blanket, she found a sleeping child. Beside it lay another mattress, whose covers were turned back. She had gone to that sleeping babe, kissed it ravis ingly upon its fair forehead when, by the light of the lantern which one of her soldier-guides carried, she saw the features of the sleeper. It was a girl, who awoke, and stared at her wit! wide eyes. She shrieked-" Where is my child? Where Henriot ? " Her heart was torn with anguish. The little girl looked around her and then said- ,. Why-Henriot is not here ! He has gone to see them shoot the cannon ! Bad boy, he didn't wake me t0 Laier a soldier explained that he thought he had seen a man-a civilian-fleeing with a child m t arms, toward Maubeuge. Blanche had fainted upon hearing that dreadful ^She had been carried to the medical post and had been cared for. When she recovered, she had asked for her she remembered now-that man on the Maubeuge road with a child-she wanted to rise and follow h 250 The aide who tended her had pitied her distress. "You could not," he had said, " pass by that road blocked with wagons, troops, guns, and fugitives." " I want to find my child," the unhappy mother had persisted, adding, as she prayed him to let her go, " Why did that man take my boy ? What crime does this point to ? Who paid the villain ? For whom did he come ? " No answer could be given to these questions, which were uttered confusedly by the feverish woman. A sergeant who had joined the doctor, Marcel, at the ambulance, whispered to him, and much affected by her great suffering, had said, " Madame, I know something which may put you on the track of the wretch who stole into the camp, doubtless to help on some treason." " Oh, tell me what you know," Blanche cried, hope- fully. " Speak, Renge," the aide had said, " in a case like this, the least indication which can help to find the cul- prit is welcome." And the pretty sergeant (for it was Rene'e the young fiancee who spoke) had told how, in his company was a former orderly of the unfortunate General Beaurepaire. This orderly had recognized, approaching the wagon of Catharine Lefebvre, a man with whom he had once drunk at Verdun, on the night of the cannonade. He had been sure of him. He was a servant of the Baron de Lowendaal ; his name was Leonard. " Leonard ? M. de Lowendaal's confidential scrv- 251 ant ? " Blanche had cried. And then, seeing whence the stroke came, she had accused Lowendaal of having sent Leonard to take the child, to threaten her, and to force her to that marriage she had thought to escape by flight. Little Henriot would become a weapon in the baron's hands. Then, despite the counsels of the aide and Rende, Blanche suddenly recovered and started out again. She had retaken the perilous route already passes over, hiding among reeds and rushes, wading streams, her feet bleeding, her gown in shreds ; she had come again to the chateau, hoping to find there, with Lowen- daal and Leonard, her stolen child. She knew not what she would do, what she would say to resist the threats of Lowendaal and her father's commands. But she was strong ; she would manage to tear her child from the hands of the thief. Her joy at finding Neipperg in the chateau was min- gled with the pain she felt in hearing that her father and Lowendaal had gone without any one's having seen either Leonard or the child. No doubt the villain would join the baron at some place designated in advance and give him the boy. Yet how accuse Lowendaal and the Marquis de Laveline ? And why ? For no one was sure whither Leonard had gone with his precious burden. Neipperg told Blanche that her father and Lowen- daal had taken the Brussels road. We will catch them to-morrow," he said, reassur- ing Blanche a little by his own calmness 252 " Why not go to-night ? " said Blanche impatiently. "We could be in Brussels by to-morrow." "To-morrow, my sweet wife," said Neipperg, smil- ing, " I must go to battle. When we have defeated th* French, I may go and follow the wretches who have stolen our child. My duty as a soldier must stand before my sorrow as a father." Blanche sighed and said : " I obey ; I shall wait. Oh, how long will be this night and to-morrow ! " Neipperg was in a brown study. i " Blanche," he said suddenly and gravely, " what will you do here, one woman among so many assembled soldiers ? I cannot be constantly with you and even then I must be discreet reserved. I have no right to claim for you respect and help, regard and influence from our generals, princes and soldiers. Blanche, do you understand me ? " She blushed, bent her head and was silent. Neipperg continued. "If we meet after the battle, your father and M. de Lowendaal, will assert their au- thority." " I shall resist defend myself " " They will rule you, through your child, whom they hold so they will claim my son. What right would I have to claim that child, to insist upon their returning him to you ? Blanche.have you dreamed of the difficulty which naught can surmount nothing but your will ? " " What am I to do ? " Give me the right to speak firmly and proudly, in your name and mine " 253 Do as you will. Do you not know that my way is ever yours ? " Well, then, though parted, the chances of war have brought us together ; and we must be united at once ; you must be my wife. Do you consent ? " Mademoiselle de Laveline's only answer was given in the embrace she gave her future lord. All is ready for a marriage celebration," said Neip- perg. " The priest is at the altar, the notary is asleep in the chateau, and has his certificates ; we must wake him he can change the names while the priest is pronouncing the benediction. Come, sweet, and make me the happiest of husbands ! " An hour later, in the chapel where Catharine Le- febvre had for an instant played the bride, Blanche de Laveline became Countess de Neipperg. The last words of the sacrament had scarce been said, which should unite the pair, and while the fright- ened secretary was standing with the contract, duly signed and sealed, a burst of musketry resounde. through the valley below the chapel. Trumpets and drums gave to the echo the unmistak- able signals of combat. .Gentlemen," said Neipperg conducting Blanch toward a group of officers, I wish to present to you the Countess de Neipperg, my wife- All bowed, and invoked a thousand blessings and all prosperity upon a union contracted on the morning of battle, the eve of a great victory, in a chapel trans- formed to a fortress, where great volleys of cannon-shot pealed instead of marriage bells. CHAPTER xx. THE VICTORY WON IN SINGING. THOSE who were, that memorable morning of Novem- ber 6, 1792, on the crest of Jemmapes the Belgians oppressed by the Empire, and destined to be freed by the republican victory, saw a majestic spectacle which they could never forget. Dawn rose, pale and gray, over the hills. Light winds rose on the summits, bending the tree-tops, and rus- tling amid the dry leaves. Great numbers of Austrians, Hungarians, and Prus- sians, occupied the heights. The furred coats of the hussars, the tall bonnets of the grenadiers, the half- conical caps of the infantry, the lances, the cavalry sabres, glistened, twinkled, shone in the livid light of that autumn morning. Below, improvised redoubts and fortifications and palisades hid the Tyrolese sharp-shooters in their pointed felt hats with a pheasant or heron feather stuck in the band. The artillery, hid right and left in the embrasures of gabions and breastworks, was ready for delivering shot upon shot. The Austrian position was, indeed, formidable ; the 255 right rose to the village of Jemmapes, forming a square with the front and left facing the Valenciennes road. On the three wooded hills, as an amphitheatre, were arranged three rows of redoubts, each guarded with twenty pieces of heavy artillery, besides howitzers and three cannon to each battalion, making a total of nearly a hundred pieces ready to belch their deadly fire. The advantage of position, the superiority of a trained army, well provided with ammunition, commanded by experienced generals like Clerfayt and Beaulieu, the force of artillery fired from above, upon an enemy advancing on a plain full of bogs, and forced to run the murderous fire from terribly defended declivities all this gave the Imperial general an almost positive as- surance of victory. Moreover, the Austrian army, well rested, installed on dry ground, with plenty to eat, was ready, at the first shot, to start with the dawn and open the battle. The French had passed the night on a damp soil : they had no time to cook their soup. They were told that they should have time later in the day to eat at Mons, after the victory. And so they started, with empty stomachs, but hearts full of hope, promising themselves a breakfast before noon, after the battle. Slowly the mist rose from the plain, disclosing men running, hiding, advancing in a great disorderly torrent. At the first cannon-shot, while the army was beginning to move, the bands of all the brigades began in a mag- nificent chorus the Marseillaise." The sonorous trumpets answered the boom of the guns. From fifteen thousand throats rose, simultaneously, to the time of the artillery and the tune of the trum- pets, the martial words of the terrific hymn of the Revolution. And the echoes of Jemmapes, Cuesmes, and Berthaimont carried to the Austrians the superb defiance of the heroic call, "To arms, citizens; and form your battalions ! " It was no longer an army falling into line, but an entire nation, rallying to defend its soil and save its liberty. The old tactics were abandoned. As if it were a sea bursting its bonds, France gathered, forced its masses of men onward to the assault of those heights, carrying redoubts, fortresses, palisades, shelters, from below, even to the summit. A flood in a hurricane such was the battle of Jem- mapes. Only the cannon and the bayonet were used. From a distance, the artillery desolated the Austrian defences, then, with naked arms, the volunteers, guards, peasants, workmen of yesterday, fell upon the defence line, cut down the cannoneers, forced the squares of infantry, surrounded the squadrons of cavalry, con- quering instantly. The old imperial forces, veterans of monarchical wars, were cut to pieces, dispersed, annihilated, by these raw young heroes, many of whom still wore their 257 farm-clothes, or mechanics' coats, and whose hands grasped guns for the first time. General d'Harville commanded the left with old General Ferrand. Charged to free the village of Jem- mapes, the latter met some resistance ; Dumouriezsent Thgvenot with re-enforcements, and they soon entered as victors. It was noon. Beurnonville attacked the right. Under his orders, Dampierre commanded the Parisian volunteers. To these children from the suburbs of Paris belonged the honor of carrying three redoubts. These impro- vised warriors hesitated a moment, before the impos- ing array of the Austriahs. The Imperial dragoons, charged upon them with a magnificent and terrible force. Intrepid, facing death and catching firm hold of their guns, they drove forward with fixed bay- onets, dispersing that gaudy cavalry in all directions. Dumouriez's hussars finished the rout and drove every- thing before them as far as Mons. As the centre two brigades had halted, a soldier, without rank or uniform, Dumouriez's valet, Baptiste Renard, took upon himself to rally them, to lead them, and so assured the victory at that point. There Lieu- tenant-General Egalit6, better known later as Louis- Philippe, was in command. It was to the sound of the "Marseillaise" and the Ca-ira that the last Austrian intrenchments were carried by the Parisian brigades, among whom were brave volunteers, and the Lombard contingent. The regular troops, the i3th, with whom Lefebvre fought like a 17 2S 8 tiger, the marksmen and hussars of Berchimy and Cam- boraud, all these contributed equally to that decided victory which preserved France from invasion, de- livered Belgium, wiped out the old German forces, and gave to the new republic its glorious baptism of fire. ***** After the battle the victors wanted something to eat, as they had sore need. Breakfast and dinner hours were long past. They decided on an evening meal. They drank to victory and to the nation, to Du- mouriez, to Baptiste Renard, a hero-servant, to the National Convention, to the liberated Belgians, and to all humanity. This last toast was proposed among the volunteers of Mayenne-et-Loire by a young major, with a blood- stained uniform, for he, too, had fought well among the heroes of that great day. As they each related their adventures during the fight, one soldier said, suddenly, " You don't know what we found in the chateau down there, which was the Austrian headquarters! Major Marcel, it ought to interest you." What was it ? " asked the philosopher, who had, on that da- at least, very conclusive arguments, living and dead, to make good his theory of the barbarity of war. Why, Major ! A child What did you say, a child ? Tell us about it," said Rene" who had drawn near, for one was sure to find the Handsome Sergeant " near the major, Marcel. 259 Rene added, " Madame Lefebvre, cantiniere of the 1 3th, has been asking about a child. Tell us what the poor little thing was doing among all the firing? And how you took him thence ' " I didn't take him," said the soldier. You hadn't the heart to leave the little innocent ex- posed to danger ? That would be unworthy a French soldier ! " Listen, Sergeant," said the narrator ; " we ad- vanced, some comrades and I, toward the deserted chateau. We went carefully, fearing some ambuscade; for the absolute silence of the place boded ill." "That was wise," said the major. " Go on." Suddenly, drawn by a sigh, we saw in a cave what looked like a shadow. I raised fired then down we went to the cave. We heard a call a cry forced the entrance, and there was a scared little fellow who had been shut up there. He said to us, when he saw us, " It was Leonard ! He ran away there," and he pointed to a second opening, leading to an outer passage Leonard ! One might be sure to find that traitor wherever there was any villainy to be done, said a voice behind the soldiers. It was Catharine Lefebvre, who had come up in time to hear the end of the soldier's story. She said quickly, " What did you do ? Shot Leon- ard, I trust, and saved the child. Where is he, dear little Henriot ? For I am sure it is he, whom that wretch stole and wanted to give over to the Baron de 2 6o Lowendaal. Speak up, you slow fellow," she said to the soldier. He hung his head. "Leonard escaped, he said. As for the boy " You left him, wretch ? " I had to. In getting out, that fellow Leonard s fire to a barrel of powder left by the Austrians. We had to make a rush for the barracks-to beat a retreat. Friends," cried Catharine, " kind hearts are not ing among you. Who will go and search among t ruins about the chateau ? Perhaps the poor little one is still living ! Well ! Don't all speak at once," s al d she, irritated by their silence. One may happen to be wounded," said one ma We haven't finished our soup,", said another. To-morrow we must be in condition to enter Mons," said a third. And he who had told the adventure, growled : may be shots still, and more powder barrels to burst i that wretched place. A child isn't worth risking o: skin for that way " -I am going, anyway," said Catharine, "and ; too for Lefebvre is busy at the outpost, and you are too 'great cowards to go with me, I promised his mother to bring her that child one day, and I shall hoi. to my promise. Eat, drink and sleep well, chile Good-night ! '' Madame Lefebvre, I will go with you, if you 1. said the Handsome Sergeant. Two are more coi ageous than one 1 ' 361 Say three," said a timid voice, and the tall La Violette appeared. His sword had no longer a scab- bard, his uniform was torn with sabre-cuts. He wore the cap oi a dragoon captain of the Imperial army. You coming with us, La Violette ? It is good ot you, lad. We are going, you know, about our little Henriot, for it is certainly he whom that poltroon Leonard has left in the chateau ! " It is for you, I am going, Madame Leiebvre. I shall not let you go alone, across the battle-field, as you know. Ah ! I was mightily afraid by daylight ! That captain of dragoons should have noticed it, when he made for my head with his sabre you see I had no cap." " And you killed the captain ? " -Yes, to take his casque. I couldn't go about bare- headed. It would look as if I'd slept during the battle ; and that would not have been comfortable, Madame Lefebvre. Then there were five dragoons with the captain who didn't want to let me take their chiefs cap it seems they wanted it. So I had to treat them all the same way ; but it was hard, the five held on to the last, and they have hard heads, those Germans.'' Good boy, you did all that ? " Yes, Madame Lefebvre. But let us get to the chateau. You know, I told you, at night I am no coward." As they were about to start, a dark figure stepped across their way. 262 Catharine said, in surprise : " What ! yoa, Major Marcel ? " " He'll come too ! " said Rene". " Is a doctor of no use ? Suppose the child were hurt," said the major. And so these four went out into the night among the slain, and the pile of d6bris and broken arms, which lay upon the field of Jemmapes. Among the ruins of the Chateau de Lowendaal, Catharine found little Henriot, once more ; faint, but with only a tew bruises. Marcel attended him, and he soon revived. Brought to the camp, the little lad, saved on the battle-field, was adopted by the I3th, and became the child of the regiment. CHAPTER XXI. THE STAR. TOULON, like Lyons, Marseilles, Caen, and Bordeaux, had become a place for treason. The Royalists, united with the Girondists, had opened the gates of the town, with the arsenal, to the allied forces. All the poetry and the charm which surround the oratorical talent, the virtues and the renown of the Girondist deputies, cannot absolve them from their crime of infidelity to the country. At the hour when monarchical Europe hung over ptaflam* att0- 292 sired to see him particularly, she was led to a small room beside the director's study. She waited some moments. The partition was thin : a sound of voices came from the neighboring room ; she heard the end of a discussion. Why do you suspect Bonaparte ? " said Barras, whose sonorous voice Josephine recognized ; " he is a man pure as gold, such as we need." " I fear he is ambitious," said the person who was talking with Barras. " Are not you so, too, Carnot ? " answered the director. " Do be frank ; you are jealous of Bonaparte ; the plans he made for the army of Italy, you destroyed them without submitting them to the Directory, fearing the glory would leave you in the triumph of arms ! " I did not know his plans," said Carnot. " I never knew them. I swear that is not true." Do not raise that hand 1 " cried Barras brutally. It is red with blood ! " You reproach me, you, too," said Carnot harshly, " for having signed the death-roils ? " All the death-rolls yes, you signed them all with Robespierre " I signed without reading them, as Robespierre signed my plans of attack without casting his eyes upon them we served the Republic, each in his own way. May posterity judge us ! " " Go to, you drinker of blood ! " cried Barras. Adieu, you who grow weak with gold, and volupt- uousness," said Carnot. "I tell you, yet again I 293 fear the ambition ot Bonaparte ; but I will not oppose him as general in Italy ! After all, he too was a Ter- rorist, a protege" of the Jacobins, a regicide like you and myself ; reward him as you will but I fear his. intentions are not as virtuous as you suppose. He did not save Rome that day, the I3th Vende'miaire." And the old member of the Committee of Public Safety left the room, slamming the door behind him. Barras, lifting a portiere, came to Josephine smiling, and said, " What happy chance, fair viscountess, draws you aside from pleasure to surprise me so agreeably with a private interview ? " Barras was really uneasy. He had not disdainedf to show passing favors to the seductive cceole, but he never meant to make lasting those relations which, on both sides, were only occasional and capricious. Jose- phine, poor, uninfluential, alone, was happy to have held for a moment this victor, this so-called noble, gen- erous, amiable, able to be of service to her though not known as her protector at least if she were care- ful. He, on his part, impatient to renew the old-style ways, was flattered by this conquest of a member of the aristocracy, this widow of a president of the Con- stituency, general-in-chief of the glorious army of the Rhine. But there now remained between them only the memory of a pleasant intimacy, the savor of pas- sions long since grown cold. Josephine, a little troubled, confessed the object of her visit. 294 " Somebody wants me to marry, my dear Director ; what do you think of it ? " " I think you would make a man very happy. May I know who the man is, whom you have transfixed with those eyes ? " You know him, Barras ! It is the General Ven- de"miaire ! " said Josephine, smiling. Bonaparte ? A man of promise an artilleryman of eminent ability. If you had seen him, as I did, on horseback, in the alley Dauphin, turning his cannon against the sectionists on the roads of Saint-Roch, you would know that so brave a man cannot be other than an excellent husband ! Oh, he is intrepid ! I was by his side, and those sectionists kept up a devilish fire," said Barras,. in a low, even tone. " He is good," said Josephine. " He will be a father to Alexandre de Beauharnais's children, and a husband to his widow." " That is laudable ; but do you love him ? " " I will be open with you, Barras ; no, I do not love him love " " Do you dislike him ? Lady, it would not pay to pretend." -I neither love nor hate him I am in a state of inde- cision which I do not like. Such a state as the pious you know, in Martinque, my home, they are very relig- ious find very bad for the soul." " One must consider one's body, too, when it comes to marriage." " Love is a cult, too, Barras. It excites faith ; one 295 must have counsels, and exhortations to believe, to be fervent that is why I ask yours. To make up my mind has ever been a hard task for my careless nature I have all my life found it easier to follow the bidding of others." " Then, I must tell you, marry the general ? " " Only advise me. I admire his courage. He saved society that ijth Vendemiaire." " He protected the Convention, put down the insur- gents who wanted to overthrow the Republic, and gained, alone, in Paris, a battle in the streets worth all the regular battles." " He is a superior man. I appreciate the extent of His knowledge in all things of which he speaks and speaks well; the quickness of his mind makes him understand another's thought, almost before it is spoken ; but, I confess to you, I am a little frightened at the empire he seems to want to exercise over all who come within his reach." " He has a compelling eye. The first time I saw him," said Barras, gravely, " I was strangely struck with his appearance. I saw a man, below medium -height and very thin. He looked like an ascetic escaped from his solitudes ; his hair, cut very strangely, hung round his ears, and down to his shoulders. Oh,, he is not one of those fops of the "jeunesse dore"e," he wore a long, straight coat, buttoned to the top, orna^ mentecl with a meagre embroidery of gold ; in his hat was a tricolored feather. At first, his face did not seem a fine one to me ; but his pronounced features. 296 his quick and fiery eye, his alert and animated move- ments, evidenced an ardent spirit ; his large forehead showed him a deep thinker. He spoke little. He is a man, Josephine ; a man of honesty and valor who may to-morrow be a hero. Since he wants you, take him. It is a friend's advice I give you believe me." " Then you advise me to marry him ? " . " Yes and in time, you will love him." " You think so ? I am a little afraid of him." "You are not the only one. All my colleagues are, too. Carnot, a Terrorist, a man who drinks blood, a companion of Robespierre, even he detests him, because he is jealous of him and fears him." " If he intimidates the directors, think what an im- pression he makes on a woman." "You will grow used to it ; besides, he loves you you said so ? " " I believe he is very much in love with me ; but, Barras between friends, there can exist such confi- dences as this having passed my first youth, can I hope to keep for a long time the general's impulsive tender- ness, which is like an access of delirium ? " " Do not fret about the future." "But if, when we are married, he should cease t love me, would not his faithlessness be a reproach t me ? He might repent of his infatuation. He might awake from his intoxication. Would he not regret a more brilliant marriage with a younger woman ? What should I do then ? What should I say ? Tears ? Heaven help me from tears ! " 39? " Do not foresee misfortune. Why suffer in anti- cipation ? Bonaparte is devoted to high honor. Are you superstitious ? " He has confided to me that he has a star, and that he believes " "At Martinique, a negro enchantress, whose local prophecies were all realized, told me I should become a queen. I can't imagine Bonaparte a king, and my- self sharing his throne " You may share with him the glory which crowns the commander-in-chief of the fairest army of the Republic ! " - What do you mean, my dear Barras ? " said Josephine, surprised, and remembering the argument with Carnot, which she had overheard, and of which Bonaparte was the object. I mean that you will be one of the happiest of wo- men, as you are one of the fairest queens of beauty in our Republic, if you marry Bonaparte ; and as a wed- ding gift, I, your old friend, knowing the general who put^down the insurgents so promptly, will give you a fair jewel." " Really ? What ? An agraffe of gold and dia- monds, like Madame Tallien's ? " -More than that the command of the army of Italy. But I shall be missed from the f6te," said Barras, enjoying her astonishment. Take my arm, and let us return to the salon. I want to be the first to con- gratulate Bonaparte on his marriage and his new com- mand." And, with the widow Beauharnais, speechless at t decision which had been made for her, and the favor the all-powerful director meant to show her future lord, Barras re-entered majestically into the halls, ablaze with light, flowers and women ; on his arm was she who was soon to become Madame Bonaparte. CHAPTER XXV. THE SWORD FROM THE PYRAMIDS. BONAPARTE was named, February 23, 1796, General .of the Army of Italy. Carnot had given in to Barras. Reubell's was the only opposing voice, and his col- leagues overruled him. March gth, a few days after this, the marriage of the general and the widow Beauharnais was celebrated. All this portion of Bonaparte's life was one fever of love. He literally adored Josephine. Prostrate, ecstatic, absorbed, like a Carmelite before a divine revelation, he smothered her with caresses, embraced her wildly, flung himself upon her and took her in his arms. Like a barbarian, pillaging a palace, he cast himself upon those gauzy draperies, in which, in memory of tropical nights, Josephine loved to array her charms. He caught, tore even to shreds, all which made an obstacle to the impetuosity of his trembling hands and his eager Jips. All the exuberance of his exceptional nature flamed at the animal possession of her, like a charge of cavalry. He loved toe knew a woman on terms of intimacy for the first time, or almost the first, and the reserve of accumulated passion burst with the vio- lence ot a river, long repressed when its bounds are broken. In that vigorous expansion, that satisfying of youthful desire, in that double joy of satisfied self-love, and flattered vanity, mingled the joy of an end at- tained, of a dream accomplished, and amid these in- toxications Bonaparte seemed to forget the way of war, of glory, of the power which had hitherto governed his heart. He seemed a changed man. He trembled, he talked, he laughed, he wept. He fell, in that possession of Josephine, into madness and intoxication. The celebration of the marriage came and soon an end of his honeymoon, all too short. Two days after the official ceremony was over, he started for Italy. He was off on the road to glory, and could stop at the inns of love only in passing between victories, until that day when fate made him stumble against the dazzling couch of the 'Arch-duchess Marie- Louise of Austria. In the marriage certificate, Bonaparte gallantly, to lessen the discrepancy of age, made himselt two years older ; and Josephine, through coquetry, produced a certificate of birth, in which she made herself four years younger. That foible of a pretty woman, desirous to appear as young as her young husband, was destined to have some terrible consequences for Josephine, at the time of divorce, when the legality of the procedure was questioned. 300 Bonaparte was burning with the fever of passion, as he passed through Italy, where prodigious triumphs awaited him. He never let a day pass without addressing to his Josephine amorous epistles, a little emphatic in tone, which suggest the pomp of Saint-Preux writing to Julie. Weary with travel, lacking sleep, scarcely descending Irom his horse after giving consideration to the position of to-morrow's battle, the young general, amid ever- increasing preoccupation and danger, never failed to fill a sheet with loving words, witnessing the intensity of his affection, which a courier, galloping night and day, carried to Paris, along with the account of battles won, and captured standards, which were laid upon the altar of the country, in a magnificent ceremony pre- sided over by the directors. And that feast of Victory which he organized from his tent pitched upon the plateau of Rivoli, that day of patriotic joy which he gave to Paris, when his friend Junot presented himself before the Convention with the captured Austrian standards, the idea came to him to start that theatrical scene in honor of his Josephine. She was the queen of France, that day, the insignif- icant and sensual creble. Before the troops, in face of all the assembled people, amid the sound of cannon and bells, proclaiming to the city the Halleluia of victory, she paraded on the arm of Junot, in whom the people hailed the representative, friend, and companion of that hero whose name soared to the sky, shouted by a hundred thousand voices. pattern* ^attf-^w. 3 01 Carnot, at the centre of the altar in the Champ de Mars, pronounced a harangue in which he compared the young victor to Epaminondas, and to Miltiades ; Lebrun, the poet, led a chorus who sang Intoxication comes from glory, as from wine. Our laurels won, great Bacchus stands above. So drink to Victory divine, The Frenchman's faithful love. Thus did all Paris do honor to the Citizeness Bona- parte and her absent husband, who, giving the order t march upon Mantua and take it, was about to achieve another triumph. Josephine, the very evening of that apotheosis where she had figured as goddess, having dismissed a young actor who had attended her for some hours, spent her time with a handsome second-lieutenant of hussars, a M. Charles, to whom she gave that which money- lenders and merchants had left her of the money Bona- parte had sent her. That was her sort of gratitude to the army. Josephine not only deceived her young husband, who was so ardent, so glorious, so much coveted by all women, and whom she did not even love, but she did not even pretend to have for him that regard which conventionality demands. She had long refused to join Bonaparte in Italy, where he ardently desired her presence. Bonaparte, his brain excited by privation, at last became almost foolish ; he talked of giving up his command, of laying down his commission, so as to 302 return to Paris, to be near his Josephine, if she did not come to him. At length she consented to leave Paris, which she loved, and to rejoin him. Later, in the course of this tale, we will recount Napoleon's divorce, we will return to his queen, of whom poets, dramatists, novelists, have written so pityingly as to deceive pos- terity. Napoleon was not betrayed by the marshals whom he had loaded with honors and wealth. The two women whom he called to share the glory of his name were two infamous wretches ; yes, even that bestial daughter of emperors, that Marie-Louise, was she not more excusable ? She was not one of the members of the degenerate period of the Directory, and one can- not expect that she should have so fully understood the crowned soldier, who conquered her, sword in hand, and entered her chamber as a vanquished capital. After the Italian campaign and the treaty of Campo Formio, Bonaparte, victor and peacemaker, began to dream again of the East. It was not now the prick of poverty, or of ambition, that spurred him, nor yet the desire of an ardent wife eager for his advancement, who would bring him his desires. The East was not only a field for conquest and glory, in this reawakened dream. It was also a haven a resting-place. Returning to Paris December 5, 1797, after the ratification of the treaty of Campo Formio, and the signing of the return of Mayence and Manheim to 33 France (that is, the Rhineland), he soon learned, in his little abode in the Rue Chantereine, flatteringly re- named Rue de la Victoire, the dangers of popularity and the perils of his exceptional position in the public. He had to be present at all fetes in honor < victorious army. He found himself a hero. Every- where he was hailed with a flutter of flags: and even Talleyrand, praised him soberly, Bonapai answered vaguely. In his reply, only one sentence was clear ; and that almost threatening. When welfare ot the French people is established upon t best organized laws, then all Europe will become free said he energetically. Thus was the storm prophes The thunder-clap of the i8th Brumaire was qui. announced in those words big with fate. Bonaparte tried to free himself from the ovations which pursued him. Carnot's place was vacant at t Institute. It was offered to him, and, when seen at public ceremonies, he appeared to be overwhelmed by his honors. He seemed, thus, less a victorious sol. than a deep student. It was proposed to present him with the Chateau de Chambord, that marvel of Renaissance art, as a natic eift He refused it. He declined all distinctions would only accept the title of Commander-in-cl the army for the conquest of England. He started a project of descent upon Great 1 In reality he sought a means of striking the great enemy Of France and the Revolution where she was most vul 34 ncrablc in her colonies. So he developed, in his burn- ing brain, a gigantic and chimerical plan for conquering not only Egypt, but^Syria, Palestine, and Turkey, and of entering as a conqueror into Constantinople, and thence to ovenun Europe, adding to his army Fellahs, Bedouins, Turks, and people from Asia Minor ; he would fight all armies, change the face of things, and, before his conquering sword, all sovereigns and all nations should bow. Thus, among his charts and maps of Egypt, did Bonaparte weave a fantastic dream of a vast western empire. At the same time his cool reason counselled departure. He knew well that, when he was gone, the Directory could not but make mistakes, the generals could know but defeats. His need of activity stim- ulated him to seek new fields of glory. He reminded himself that the mob is fickle, and soon tires of hero- worship. " When they have seen me three times," he said, " they won't look at me any more." A conspiracy hastened his departure. The jealousy of the directors was revealed. Reubell, an honest man, but an imbecile, had, one day, when he spoke of re- signing, handed him a pen at once to sign the same. They sought for opportunities to accuse him of mis- using moneys in Italy. The directors seemed to forget that they had urged the general to draw from Italy money, pictures, statuary, and that every month, the victorious Bonaparte had sent to Moreau and his less fortunate colleagues in the army of the Rhine, sub- sidies to pay their soldiers. On May 19, 1798, he left Toulon. Before setting out he addressed to his troops a proclamation full of hope, in which he pictured to them the splendor of the promised land. " Soldiers," he said, " you know you have not yet done enough for your country, nor has the country done enough for you. I am about to take you to a land where, by your future exploits, you shall surpass those which to-day astonish your admirers ; and when you shall render to your country such service as she has a right to expect from an invincible army, I promise to each soldier, on his return from this expedition, he shall have the wherewithal to purchase six acres of land ! " The campaign in Egypt began with its fabled marches the soldiers lightly asked, when they struck the desert of Gizeh, if it was there that the general wanted to allot the promised acres the seeming vic- tories, the maritime disasters, the great revenge of Aboukir, it was like a tale of the Arabian Nights, holding the public charmed, waiting for the end. But on October 15, 1799, there came great news : Bonaparte had embarked at Frejus. He was coming to Paris amid universal acclamations. He was the hero, the saviour, the god ! France gave herself to him, in one mighty rush, like an actress swooning in the arms of a man in a play. Had he, in returning so suddenly, foreseen his re- versal of the government, his ability to substitute his will for the existing Constitution ? Never ! He was a great dreamer. He had dreamed of the possibility of 20 306 a change as in the reconstruction of a Carlovingian empire. But he held these Utopian schemes subordi- nate to actualities. The 1 8th Brumaire was commanded by public opinion and executed by Bonaparte. The Directory had now fallen ; France was tired of that dictatorship of inca- pacity. She did not know what she wanted, but she wanted something. Had Bonaparte not attempted the coup, Augereau' Bernadotte, or Moreau would have done it. ^Bonaparte had surrounded himself with a brilliant and valorous staff; Lannes, Murat, Berthier, Marmont ; legislators, with a knowledge of jurisprudence, like Cambace"res ; and fishers in troubled waters like Fouche" and Talleyrand. His two brothers, Lucien and Joseph, worked actively for him, especially Lucien, who was a member of the Cinq-Cents. The result was achieved, though without great precaution. The 1 8th Brumaire, November 9, 1799, at six in the morning, all the generals and superior officers, con- vened by Bonaparte, were assembled in his house in /the Rue de la Victoire, under pretext of a review. There were the six adjutants of the National Guard, and at their head, Moreau, Macdonald, Serrurier, An- drdassy, Berthier, and the prudent Bernadotte, in civilian costumes. A single important general was absent. Bonaparte asked for him uneasily. "Where is Lefebvre ?" he asked of MarmonU " Why is he not here with us ? " 37 Just then, General Lefebvre was announced. He had made great strides, this husband of Sans- . The French guardsman, the lieutenant in the militia, the captain at Verdun and in the Army of the North. had become a general in charge of -the i;th military division ; in other words, the governor of Paris. From being captain in the 13* Light Infantry at Jemmapes, he had become chief of a battalion, then brigadier-general in the army of the Mozelle, under his friend Hoche, on January 10, 1794, he had been made a general, and commanded the immortal army ofSambre-et-Meuse, at the death of his friend Hoche. At Fleurus, and at Alten Kirchen, he had behaved like a hero. After commanding the Army of the Danube he been a candidate for the Directory, but had been put aside on account of his pronounced republican opinions, and his military occupation. As Commander-in-chief of the Army of Paris, he was perhaps the most indispensable man to the fulfilment of Bonaparte's plans. He had not been warned of the projects of the i master of France. At midnight, learning that movements of troops were afoot, he had mounted and ridden through the city. ^Surprised to see, without his orders, the cavalry ready to depart for an unknown destination, he had questioned the commander, Sebastian, sharply. The latter seat him to Bonaparte. So Lefebvre arrived at Bonaparte's in a bad humor. Bonaparte, seeing him, ran to him with outstretched arms. " Ah, dear old Lefebvre," he cried, familiarly, "how are you ? And how is your wife, the good Catharine ? Ever with heart in her hand and her answer ready ? Madame Bonaparte complains that she sees too little of her." " My wife is well, I thank you, General," sSid Le- bvre coldly, but that is not the question " Bonaparte interrupted him. " Look, Lefebvre, dear old comrade," said he, with the affectionate tone of good-fellowship he could as- sume on occasion you are one of the props of the Republic ; would you let it fall from its station through the hands of lawyers? Look, here is the sword I carried from the Pyramids, accept it as a token of my esteem and confidence." And he handed to Lefebvre. hesitating, yet flattered a magnificent sabre, with a jewelled hilt, the cimeter of Mourad Bey. "You are right," said Lefebvre, suddenly calmed, :t us throw the lawyers into the river 1 " He took the Sword of the Pyramids. The 1 8th Brumaire was over. The evening of that decisive day, which changed e more the destiny of France, Lefebvre, emb/ac- Catharine, half drew from its scabbard Bonaparte's ift, and said, -Look, wife, it is a Turkish sabre, good only on parade or to rap over the backs of advo cates We willleave it in its scabbard. It will simply serve' to remind us of the friendship of General Bon parte who started from as lowly a place as we, swee Catharine " Will you not use this fine sword ? Sans-G asked No t To defend my country, to strike Austn Prussians, English, or any one else, to use wherever Bonaparte may choose to lead us ; ay, were it to G very thunder, I have mine, sweet, toy sword of Sam et-Meuse ; and it is good enough ! " And General Lefebvre, drawing to him the wife he loved as well as on the loth of August, kissed her i rently ; and his kiss was as honest and as pure as 1 dear old sword. 310 BOOK THIRD, LA MARECHALE. CHAPTER I. MADAME LA MARECHALE TAKES A DANCING LESSON. SOFTLY, gently, the door of a sleeping apartment at Saint-Cloud was opened. A maid peeped into the room, and finally entered, going up to a magnificent mahogany bed, crowned with a coronet, whence fell two great flowered curtains. In soft tones she called : Madame la Mare"chale ! Madame la Mare"chale ! It is ten o'clock." A strong, rather hoarse voice came from underneath the bedclothes. " Heavens ! One can't even sleep soundly in this pasteboard palace." " Pardon, Madame la Mare"chale ; but Madame la Mare"chale asked to be wakened at ten o'clock." " Ten o'clock already ! What a lazy wretch I am ! I had different habits in the days gone by, when I was a washeawoman. I rose early later, too, in the regi- 3" ment, beside the canteen, I did not wait for the morn- ing drum-call to sound twice before I bestirred myself. But now I am Madame la Mare"chale, I can't stir be- times. Come, quick, Lise, my dressing-gown." And she whom the maid had called Madame la Mare-chale jumped out of bed, swearing like a trooper because she failed to find the hose she had thrown down the night before. She was not an easy mistress to dress, being very impatient. She who was now la Mare"chale Lefebvre still kept the looks, the familiarities, the gestures, and the general good-fellowship, which she ' had shown in the Saint-Roch quarter as laundress, in the great days of the Revolution, and in the armies of the North, of Sambre-et-Meuse, and of the Moselle, where she had served as cantiniere and had gained the title of Madame Sans-G^ne. The course of events had meanwhile changed not only the face of the earth but human destinies as well. The little artillery-officer of Toulon, the needy client of the laundress of the Rue des Orties-Saint-Honore", had become General-in-chief, First Consul, and, later, Emperor. His throne was ablaze with glory, and at its foot humbled kings fell prostrate. France, amid the sound of bugles and the flutter of banners, showed herself among the nations of Europe, as a vast camp, whence radiated the superb light of the sun of Austerlitz. Like the lean and care-worn officer, who had pawned 3 12 his watch the morning of August loth, those who had figured with him in the prologue of that gigantic drama had risen until they were scarce recognizable. The prediction of the magician Fortunatus was almost realized for Lefebvre and his wife. Rising rapidly, the former sergeant of the French Guard, more fortunate than his companion Hoche, had been spared by war. On the i8th Brumaire he was general of a division, in command of Paris, consecrated to the fortunes of Bonaparte. Nor did he ever lose for a moment the favor of the First Consul, or the Emperor. In 1804, Napoleon had restored the old but abolished dignity of the Marshals of France. Lefebvre was one of the first to be invested with the decorative title. At the same time he occupied a senator's chair. Lefebvre, if he was the least able of the senators, had, nevertheless, Napoleon's esteem. The latter con- sidered him the bravest of all men, sword in hand ; but also the most ignorant in the use of the pen of all his generals. When plans were under discussion, the impatient Lefebvre was wont to throw aside papers, plans, maps, of which he knew nothing, and to cry, Let me do something ! Let me go, with my grenadiers, to meet the enemy, and I'll give you my decision." And he always made his way. It is true, however, that he was ever docile and re- spectful toward his emperor, his god, and that he executed to the letter the orders of the master of war. Napoleon schemed and Lefebvre executed. He was as a ball in a cannon. Where the Emperor threw him he went straight ahead with irresistible force, under a powerful impulse, and nothing withstood him. It was he who commanded the Imperial Foot- Guards, tall as a legion of giants. But Lefebvre was not only a great warrior ; he was also an exceptional husband. Toward Catharine he was ever the same, despite the change of uniform ; and the great medal of the Legion of Honor which hung on his breast had nowise altered the true pulses of his heart. They laughed a little in the Imperial Court, at the conjugal fidelity of these two good people, but Napo- leon, who upheld an apparent severity of manners, congratulated Lefebvre and his wife on the excellent example they set to the households of the officers, an example, later, little followed, chiefly in his own family. The Emperor meantime had not failed to make some remarks to Lefebvre on the manners and ways of his lady. " Listen to me," he said ; " try to make your wife un- derstand that she must not lift her skirts when she enters the Empress's apartments, as if she were pre- paring to jump a ditch ; tell her, also, to use no oaths, and to pronounce her f's and her p's on all occasions. Ours are no longer the times of Hubert, and my court 3H is not that of Pere Duchesne. Ah, one more sugges. tion. Are you listening, Lefebvre ? " " Yes, sire," said the marshal ; for though he recog- nized the truth of the Emperor's words it pained him -to hear them. Weil, your wife is ever disposed to bandy words with my sisters especially with Elisa. This must not be one doesn't like constant bickerings among women " " Sire, Madame Bacciochi reproaches my wife with her humble birth with her republican and patriotic opinions nevertheless, sire, we are republicans, you and I." " Surely," said Napoleon, smiling at the naYve confi- dence of Lefebvre, who, like most of the old soldiers of '92, still fancied he served the Republic in bowing to the Emperor. "Lefebvre, old friend," said Napoleon, "tell the mardchale that I trust she will not in future quarrel with my sisters." " Sire, I shall report your Majesty's remarks to the mare"chale. She will remember them, I promise you." "If she can," murmured the Emperor. "I do not demand the impossible. Early habits will cling." He stopped in his rapid march up and down his room, and muttered : " What folly, to marry when one is a sergeant." Then, anxiously, he added: " Ah, I made almost the same mistake as Lefebvre. He wedded a laun- 315 dress, and I hem there is one remedy divorce but " As if to change the current of his thought he sud- denly drew from the pocket of his white waistcoat an oval snuff-box, and inhaled the odor of its contents. That was his way of taking snuff. He never smoked. Having smelled his tobacco, Napoleon, as if he had made a serious resolution, said to Lefebvre : " Your wife must take lessons of Despre"aux, the famous danc- ing-master. He, only, has conserved the beautiful tra- ditions of true elegance and the etiquette of the old court." Lefebvre bowed, and, having left the Emperor, has- tened to summon Master Despre"aux. Such a personage as he was, this master of dancing and etiquette ! Small, slight, agile, graceful, light, powdered and perfumed, he had pirouetted through the Terror with- out being stained with gore. And when the tumult was over, and pleasure opened once more the doors of salons still cooled by sighs and saddened by missing faces, then Despre"aux became a person of importance. It was the coming of Despre"aux to the palace which made la Mare"chale Lefebvre order her maid to wake and dress her at ten o'clock, though she had returned late from a soiree given by Josephine. She found the professor of graces in the salon, limber- ing up his joints, and bowing before a glass. "Ah, there your are, Monsieur Despre"aux, and how is your good health ? " said Catharine brusquely, taking the hand he never dreamed of extending, and shaking it vigorously. Despre"aux blushed, stammered, and looked down, for the mare"chale had interrupted him in the second movement of his best bow ; he drew back his hand from the grasp of Sans GSne, and, readjusting the frills of his cuffs, said dryly : " I have the honor to await Madame la Mare"chale's orders." "Well, little one," said Catharine, leaning on the edge of the table, " this is the case. The Emperor thinks that we have not at his court sufficiently fine manners ; he wants us to acquire them you know what he wants, my boy ? " Despre"aux, shocked to the heart by the tone of fa- miliarity, replied, in his weak voice, choked with emo- tion, His Majesty is right to desire in his empire the flower and charm of distinction, and the elegance of a polished court. I am, Madame la Mare"chale, the respectful interpreter of his wishes. May I ask what you desire specially to learn in the great art to give pleasure to his Majesty ? " " That's just the point, lad. There is to be a great Uall at the court on Tuesday. They are to dance the gavotte. It seems it was danced the days of the tyrants. The Emperor wants us to know the gavotte. You have the article, it seems; hand it over ! " Madame la Mare"chale, the gavotte is a difficult thing it needs inclination. Perhaps I shall not be 3*7 able to teach you that dance which was a special favorite with Madame the Dauphiness, to whom I had the honor to be dancing-master," said DesprSaux with assumed modesty. -We can try, anyway. Oh, if it were only the Emperor, I wouldn't bother much. He did not care whether or not I could dance a gavotte when I washed his clothes. But it is Lefebvre who asks it and you see, boy, what my husband wishes, that I wish also. Ah', that is it, Lefebvre and I are like two fingers on the' same hand, and we let the young sprigs who wait upon the princesses laugh at us because we are true to our marriage vows. Come, my man, ready for the gavotte. Tell me where I must put my feet ! " And Sans-G6ne tapped the floor twice, with her foot, in military fashion, as a call. Despre-aux shrugged his shoulders slightly, and sighed. In his heart the aristocratic dancer deplored the rul- garity of the times, and his necessity to teach good manners and dances like the gavotte to retired laun- dresses, become, by the grace of victory, great ladies ii the land. He approached Catharine impatiently and said: " Madame, did you ever dance ? " Yes long ago at Vaux Hall ! " " I do not know the place," said Desprdaux, pursing up his lips. " What did you dance ? The pararui, th tr6nitz, the minuet, the monaco ? " " No. La fricassee." Despre*aux shuddered. A dance of porters and laundresses, 1 * he mur- mured. "I danced it first with Lefebvre. That was how we became acquainted." The professor of elegance shook his head mourn- fully, as if to say, "Upon what evil days I am fallen, I the dancing-master of Madame the Dauphiness ! " And, with an air of concentrated sadness, he began to teach Catharine Sans-G6ne the elements of the great dance which Napoleon wanted to replace in the festivities of his court. CHAPTER II. THE THUNDER-BOLT. CATHARINE tried to extend her arms, to turn and bend, to draw her foot back, in time to the music drawn from the little violin in Despre"aux's hands as he played an arietta from Pagsiello. At this precise moment the door was pushed open rudely and Lefebvre entered. He was in full uniform, with all his insignia. His great plumed hat was in his hand. The badge of the Legion of Honor sparkled on his breast, and across his gold-embroidered uniform he wore the red sash of hi* rank. He seemed violently excited. 3'9 Aha ! " he said, as he strode into the room, and like a drunken man, haggard and convulsed, he threw his hat on the floor, and shouted aloud, ' Vive fEm- pereur ! " Then he rushed to his wife, kissed her, and held her close to him. )f . What, in Heaven's name, has happened ?" inquired Catharine. Despre-aux, interrupting the easy bow he was trying to show to his refractory pupil, advanced and said : " Monsieur le Marshal, is the Emperor dead ? Lefebvre's only reply was a vigorous kick which struck the dancing-master in the back and made him pirouette in a fashion not recognized by the rules of his art." . Despre-aux stood the shock, and saluting witl best grace, asked : " Did Monsieur le Mai^cna! speak ?" Come, Lefebvre, be calm. Tell us what has hap- pened. Despreaux asks if the Emperor is dead. That is impossible." ., No it is not that the Emperor is not dead ; he cannot die; he will never die, our Emperor. It is something else, Catharine we are to go." -Where, my husband?! should say Monsieur I Mare-chal," said Catharine, looking ironically at Des- pre"aux. I know not where but it is necessary for us to go and that quickly I believe to Berlin." Is Berlin far off? " asked Catharine naYvely, for she was not well versed in geography. 320 " I don't know," said Lefebvre ; " but nothing is far for the Emperor." And how soon do we start ? * To-morrow." ' So soon ? " The Emperor is in a hurry. The Prussians are in arms against us. The Emperor has never yet injured them. They came- with the Austrians, the English, the Russians, the Spaniards, with everybody, and invaded France. They were pardoned. It was believed the Em- peror loved them he has always spoken feelingly of one called Goethe, a lad who wrote for the papers. He says if he had been a Frenchman he would have been made a count, as one called Corneille, from Rouen, should have been a prince but I believe he's dead." " So the Emperor wants to fight the Prussians ! " "Yes ; he has astonished us all by telling us it is a hard job. For us, Prussians are naught. The Em- peror pretends that this war will be one of glory : he inows best. However, I dislike to have to use my steel upon an insignificant people like the Prussians. There is no glory to be gained by routing such ignoble enemies." " Your pardon, Monsieur le Marshal, Frederick the Great was a Prussian, and his nation celebrates annually the fete of Rosbach," Despre"aux ventured to remark, as he widened the distance between him and 'Lefebvre for fear of a second encounter with the mare"chal's boot. Rosbach ? Don't know it I That must be ancient 3 21 history before the Emperor's day. Where he is, the victory always is his also." " That is true," said Catharine, "what a man ! But, Lefebvre, may not I go with you ? " " If you like as far as the frontier. The Emperor is going to take the Empress. It is simply a walk over in uniform a little walk. Ah, Catharine, my sweet, how like a thunder-clap in a summer's day is this sud- den decision of war. But let us see to means for our departure. Have you seen Henriot ? " " Henriot is waiting for you as you ordered." "That is right. I shall present him to the Emperor ; perhaps this war, so suddenly declared, will serve to advance him. Go and find our dear Henriot." Catharine rose to comply. Despre"aux started to offer his services. He rushed to the door in advance of Catharine. "Pardon, fair lady," said he. He had no time to finish. A violent kick interrupted him, and Lefebvre growled, You idiot ! We are among military folk here, you little acrobat." Despre"aux left, rubbing his posterior parts, cursing in his heart such military customs, and sighing for the happy era when he taught the principles of stately courtesies to Madame the Dauphiness. Catharine ushered in a young under-lieutenant. Lefebvre took his hand quickly, saying, " Henriot. I have news ! " News of what kind, godfather ? " 21 322 "War." But where are we to fight ? "Presumptuous youth! Why, lad, you're not sure of being there. I must see the Emperor. Do you think it's such an easy thing to be allowed to die for the Emperor ? I trust, however, you will attain to that honor." Henriot, overjoyed, cried, Thanks, dear godfather. When will you present me to the Emperor ? " At once. There is to be a review of the Imperial Guard, and you can come with me. Madame la Mar<- chale will go and talk with the Empress." Yes, I shall go at once to Josephine. Ah, my little Henriot, I promise you you shall go." A drum-call sounded under the windows. Let us hurry," said Lefebvre, "the Emperor is mounting his horse ; the review will begin at once." And he hurried Henriot away, while Catharine calle loudly for Lise and two other waiting-women, who came running at her call, and succeeded in arraying their mistress to meet the Empress. It was the close of September, 1806. The French empire then comprised two-thirds c Europe Napoleon, on a throne built of trophies and standards, ruled people and kings. The members ol his family were, also now in exalted positions. Joseph Bonaparte was King ot Naples and Sicily ; Louis wa King of Holland ; Elisa, whom we met first as ,rirl from Saint-Cyr, received the principalities of Lugue and Piombino; Caroline, Madame Murat, had become 323 Grand-Duchess of Berg. Pauline, the widow of General Leclerc, had married Prince Borghese, and was Duchess of Guastalla. Yet there was little family concord. All the Emperor's sisters were jealous of one another, and complained constantly. Not one was satisfied with the place given herby their all-powerful brother. It would seem," Napoleon once said, half-smiling-, half-displeased, " to listen to their plaints, as though I had defrauded them of part of their inheritance from the late king, our father." When the Mare-chale Lefebvre entered the Empress's salon, she found the entire court in high excitement. The news of the declaration of war was already known. Every one questioned anxiously when the Emperor would decide to start. They all turned to the Empress, to learn from her Napoleon's intentions. But, I tell you, I don't know," she said, forcing her- self to hide beneath a smile her great anxiety. " His Majesty has simply told me to be ready I am to go with him as far as Mayence." Lefebvre told me," said Catharine, " that I, too, was to go. It gives mq pleasure to be again among soldiers. Ah, your Majesty, one grows stiff and rusty in a palace. You will sleep well on a soldier's cot. And to-morrow, or is it to-night ? " Who can say?" said the Empress, shaking her head. ' You know the Emperor's ways. He settles things quickly, quietly, and as Chough he were going at once. No one may tarry. Every one is at his post. 324 Then he can, if he likes, declare war, and start at once. He told me to be ready. I am ready. When his Majesty gives the signal I shall go down, and enter the coach with him that's all I know ! " " Oh, we are used to drum-calls," said the mare"chale ; " such trifles do not worry us. But I should like to know if your Majesty has seen the Emperor this morn- ning, and if he is in a good humor ? " " You have a favor to ask of him ? " "Yes, madame, I have a godson, young Henriot, a gentle youth, who, having attained his majority, and under-lieutenancy, wants permission to go with Lefebvre." "If it would give you pleasure, my dear lady, tell your godson I will take him into my escort." "Thanks, madame ; but it is on the field and not in the hall that Henriot wants to gain advancement. It is not in vain that he is Lefebvre's godson ! " "Well, he shall go! He shall have an opportunity to die, if he's so anxious for it." " Your Majesty is too good," said Catharine, enrapt- ured at the promise. At last her adopted child, the son of Neipperg and Blanche de Laveline, was going to gain glory and fight for the Emperor. In the court below the Emperor was receiving the grenadiers of the Guard. Beside him stood the generals destined to command his great army : Lefebvre, Bernadotte, Ney, Lannes, Davoust, Augereau, and Soult. Mortier, who com- manded the Westphalian reserve, and Murat, the 325 cavalry chief, were the only ones absent in that line ofheroes. After having inspected the soldiers with his usual care, the Emperor approached the drum-major of the grenadiers, who, tall and straight, stood waiting to- give the signal. "What is your name ?"he asked. " La Violette, sire," answered the giant in a soft voice. " Where have you served ? " ' Everywhere, sire." "Good," said the Emperor, who loved short answers., 44 Do you know Berlin ? " " No, sire." " Would you like to go there ? " "I shall go wherever my Emperor wishes." " Well, La Violette, get ready your drum and drum- sticks ; in a month from now you shall be first to enter, with head erect, the Prussian capital." "We shall enter, sire." " La Violette, how tall are you ? " asked the Em- peror, regarding, with some astonishment, the former aide-cantinier who seemed to have grown taller since he had become drum-major of the Grenadiers. " Five feet eleven inches, sire." " You are tall as a poplar." " And you, Emperor, are great as the whole world," said La Violette, beside himself with joy at thus con- versing with the Emperor, and unable to forego the expression of his enthusiasm. Napoleon smiled at the compliment, and turning to 326 Lefebvre said, "You must remind me, Marshal, in proper time, of this drum-major." Lefebvre bowed. The Emperor continued his in- spection ; then, at a signal from the marshal, the drums beat, the trumpets sounded, and the grenadiers of the Guard passed, superb and warlike before their god, who stood with his hands clasped behind him. And when the drums ceased, a great shout arose from that forest of men, great and strong as oak trees, many of whom were destined never to return from Prussia, whither they were about to be led by their master, the terrible butcher. Vive V Empereur ! " I believe my cousin, the King of Prussia, will soon be sorry he provoked my wrath. With such men I might war against the Almighty and his legions of archangels, commanded by St. Michael and St. George. Marshal, go, embrace your wife ; we leave here to- night." CHAPTER III. LEFEBVRE TRIES TO UNDERSTAND. ON the 8th of October a French army, under Murat, opened fire upon Schleitz. On the loth was the engagement at Saalfeld, where Prince Louis of Prussia was killed, and whence Marshal Lannes marched to Jena. On October I3th, Napoleon arrived at Jena, and the 327 spot where his tent was pitched was called Napoleons- berg. From his headquarters he sent Rapp, his aide-de- camp, to find Marshal Lefebvre. The latter arrived and entered quietly, his uniform torn and the gilt on his cloak blackened with powder. Napoleon went directly to him, and shook his hand heartily. " Well, dear old Lefebvre ! We have made a good thing of this. Do you not think so ? " " Sire, with you and my grenadiers, we could always do well ! " " Yes, your Imperial Foot-Guards are admirable." "The Imperial Cavalry Guard, which Bessieres com- manded, did well, too," said Lefebvre, who was excep- tionally free from jealousy of other marshals. He loved them all except Bernadotte, in whom his honest nature suspected treason. "You are all admirable ! " said Napoleon, " and you may say to your grenadiers to-night, ' Soldiers, the Em- peror is pleased with you.' " " Thanks, thanks, sire ! That will be all-sufficient for them. Do you know that the Guard covered forty leagues at a single march, speeding all the way ? Oh, sire, you gave me, long ago, your sabre from the Pyra- mids. You would not do ill to give me another," said Lefebvre familiarly, " for mine is used up. See, it is like a cork-screw ! " "Well, well! In place of your sabre you shall have a broadsword. Now you have a ba.ton you shall stride on again I " 328 I do not understand," said Lefebvre, whose powers of .induction were not well developed. " Sire, explain to me." See, you have a marshal's baton." .. Yes but the sword ? " "You will know by and by. See, here is a fine piece of work, done by a man of great merit, General Chasseloup." Ah, yes," said Lefebvre, indifferently regarding the plan before him ; he was as little interested in geograph- ical charts as in Hebrew. Napoleon continued, " It is the plan of the town of Dantzig, with a study of distances, heights and depres- ' sions of the entire place." "So that is Dantzig ? Really ! I don't know any- thing about Dantzig," said Lefebvre, coolly, for he placed little faith in these charts furnished to the Emperor. You shall know Dantzig well, my dear Lefebvre. It is a port of prime importance on the Vistula. There all the commerce of the north centres. It has tre- mendous resources and unequalled facilities for the campaign I propose in the plains of Poland for we are going to meet the Russians." "So much the better," interrupted Lefebvre. "I shall enjoy cutting down more formidable antagonists than these Prussians. When do we meet the Russian troops ? " " Patience, patience, Lefebvre ! Russia is a vast empire and a difficult one to handle. She can defend 3 2 9 herself by her size, her intense cold, her lack of com- munications, and even by famine. My soldiers would die of hunger and lack everything in those Polish snows ; they could never reach the heart of Moscow if I did not assure myself of sufficient supplies at my rear. That is why I need Dantzig ! " " If you need it you will have it." I trust so ; but Dantzig is a place of strategic im- portance. The King of Prussia has made it the citadel of his kingdom. A garrison of forty thousand Prus- sians, with re-enforcements of four thousand Russians, are its defenders. Brave Marshal Kalkreuth is its governor. I tell you he is a brave soldier. He would set fire to the place sooner than admit a besieger. But, that is not all. Come, let us go over the plan." And Napoleon pointed out the situations to Lefebvre, who tried to understand General Chasseloup's work, but failed. -You see," said Napoleon at length, "as I said before, Dantzig is impregnable." Lefebvre shook his head and answered calmly, " Yes, quite so, sire." To himself he thought, "Why on earth does the Em- peror tell all this to me ? What would he have me make of these papers ? " Napoleon continued, tapping the marshal's arm, -Yes, Dantzig is impregnable. That is why I give \oyou the task ot taking it." -To me ! It is I who Oh, I see, sire, I shall take it ! With my grenadiers." 330 -With this, stupid," said Napoleon, pointing to Gen- eral Chasseloup's plan. Lefebvre was mystified. He looked first at the Em- peror and then at the plan, from one to the other, trying to find some connection between the two. What could Napoleon mean ? How could one take a city with a scrap of paper ? He was ordered to take Dant- zig he would do it. But with his soldiery. They should see. Old horse," said Napoleon, " you shall take Dant- zig, as I want you to, and then, when we return to France, you will have a tale to tell in the Senate Chamber ! " Lefebvre bowed, pleased with his Emperor's confi- dence. The latter had promised him minute instruc- tions and the able assistance of Chasseloup, and the artillery general, Lareboisiere. < I shall write this good news to my wife," said Le- febvre, taking leave of the Emperor. " She will be so glad, and bless your Majesty again for your kincuess ! " -Your wife ? La Sans-GSne ? " said Napoleon in a disdainful voice. " Ah, you think a great deal of your wife, eh, Lefebvre ? " he asked carelessly. The marshal raised his head in surprise. Do I ? Why do you ask that, sire ? Ah, Catha- rine and I love like a pair of children. We are the same lovers to-day as when she was a laundress and I a sergeant, never dreaming that we should one day appear at your court, she as Madame la Man5chale and I as Commander of the Imperial Guard. Do I love Pattern* an$-$m. 33 Catharine ? Oh, sire my emperor, my wife, and my flag. 1 know only these and the law of arms ! I am untutored scarce ever went to school. I am capable of but three things. To serve my emperor, to love my wife, and to defend the eagle you have confided to my care'. I know 'these three, and but these three ; but I defy any in the Empire to avow himself better thsCn I on these points." - Very well ; be calm, Lefebvre," said Napoleon, hiding, with a smile, a thought he judged it best not to speak at the moment. " I would not keep you from /oving your wife. When you have taken Dantzig, and we have conquered the whole line see, old friend, I know the Marechale Lefebvre, despite her occasional oaths, and her aspect of a misplaced soldier, at my court is at bottom a good, true wife it might make me smile in fancy ; but all the world will bow to her, when I place on the head of the former laundress a trophy they shall envy." < Ah, I will try to understand," murmured Lefebvre, rubbing his forehead to facilitate the entrance of the idea " Yes I have a marshal's baton, you would adc other honors to it. Oh, sire, how can I ever repay you ? For you I should attempt the impossible ! Do so take Dantzig." - I will " answered Lefebvre ; and bowing hel Emperor, his eyes bright, his cheeks flushed, his step buoyant and his spirit joyous. Brave heart," murmured Napoleon, looking ; him, -those soldiers of the old order were wondrous 332 men." And with a sigh he added, " That such heroes should become useless war changes I have altered it and such men as Lefebvre cannot be found again not such men as he nor as myself, perhaps. Ah, he who lives will see. Now for Berlin ! " And, on the 27th of October, 1806, Berlin was the scene of a mighty spectacle. Like the legions of Rome the victorious army made its entry into the capital of the vanquished state, and La Violette was at its head. CHAPTER IV. MONSIEUR LE DUG. WE must now carry the reader to the 26th of May following the events of our last chapter. On that day, Marshal Lefebvre made his official entry into Dantzig. He had invited his two colleagues, Marshal Lannes. and Marshal Mortier, to ride beside him, between double files of soldiers, to receive the surrendered sword of Marshal Kalkreuth, who was to evacuate the place with his vanquished garrison. Lannes and Mortier refused on the ground that Le- febvre had the sole right to the honors, as he alone had sustained the labors and dangers of that memorable siege. All the troops who had taken part in the capture of Dantzig formed the detachment of honor, and with 333 drums beating, and colors flying, marched behind their victorious chief. The siege had lasted fifty-one days. The formidabl position of the place, the equal number of assailants and besieged, the lack of artillery in the besieging camp, the cold, the snow, the rain, had all helped to prolong resistance. The moral effect of the surrender of Dantzig was mense. The material result was equally important. for Napoleon found quantities of provisions, grain, and wine, which had been stored away. The wine es- pecially was, in that cold climate, a cordial for the soldiers, an elixir of life and good spirits. Two days after Lefebvre's entry into Dantzig, Na- poleon came to visit the place. He assigned two regiments as town garrison, and gave a great dmne to all the generals, at which feast Lefebvre sat at his right hand. Before the dinner, while all the generals and mar- shals Lefebvre, Lannes, and Mortier awaited the ar- rival of the Emperor, Duroc, the grand-marshal en- tered, bearing a sword whose hilt was encrusted with diamonds. An officer accompanied him, bearing a red vel cushion, on which lay a coronet of gold. Duroc, holding the sword and the officer the cushion. took their places on either side of the chair reserved for Napoleon. He entered presently, wearing his ordinary co< and seated himself, smiling amusedly as his eyes caught sight of sword and crown. 334 The Emperor now rose and said solemnly to Duroc, "Pray ask our dear old friend, Marshal Lefebvre, to come hither." Duroc bowed and addressed himself to Lefebvre, who had turned toward Napoleon. He put out his hand rnechanically, thinking the Em- peror intended to greet him fraternally, before them all, in token of his victory. But Napoleon said : Grand-Marshal, pray ask Monsieur le Due de Dantzig to kneel and receive the investiture." Hearing that unaccustomed title, Lefebvre turned to see if the Emperor was addressing some one behind him a Prussion functionary, or a Russian, for at that time there were in France neither dukes nor duchies. Duroc whispered to him : Kneel." And he saw Duroc's assistant place a cushion for his knee, while Napoleon, taking the coronet, placed it on his head. Entirely stupefied, Lefebvre remained on his knees, scarce understanding the great fortune which had come to him, while 1 Napoleon, taking the sword, struck his shoulder thrice, saying, with the gravity of an officiating pontiff, " In the name of the Empire, by the Grace of God, and the desire of the nation, Lefebvre, I this day create thee Duke of Dantzig, to enjoy and profit by such advantages and privileges as shall be added to that dignity." Then, in a softer voice, " Rise, Monsieur le Due de Dantzig, and embrace your Emperor." 335 Immediately the drummers placed under the win- dows beat a march, and all the generals and marshals crowded round to congratulate Lefebvre. Moved by the Emperor's embrace, and a little awk- ward about his coronet, which did not seem firm on his head, and seeking for a place to lay the ducal sword, which was to replace the sabre from the Pyramids, the Due de Dantzig said to Duroc, who congratulated him : " How glad my good wife will be Catharine a duchess ! how strange, Duroc ! " And, as he laughed heartily, he turned again to Duroc. " Dear Marshal, how soon will the Emperor give the signal for us to be seated ? " " Are you hungry, Lefebvre ? " " No ! But the sooner the Emperor lets us dine, the sooner we'll have finished ; and I own to a wild desire to be the first who embraces and congratulates Madame, the Duchess of Dantzig." CHAPTER V. AT THE EMPRESS'S SALON. THE Emperor was expected. Victorious, master of Europe, having forced his friend- ship upon Russia, and his will upon Prussia, Napoleon returned once more as victor into Paris. A state function had been arranged in honor of the 336 new Duchess of Dantzig. All the little world of great folk was busy with it. People questioned, ironically, how the new duchess would take her rank. Evil tongues were many ; and people spoke with ill- oncealed sneers of the fact that the lady in question had been a laundress. Many of the women who spoke thus of her were of equally humble extraction, and many of them were the subjects of scandalous tales. The good Catharine, on the contrary, had a stainless reputation. She was laughed at for her devotion to her husband As laundress, as cantintere, as general's wife, as lady Of one of the first officers of the Empire, as Madame la Marechale, ,. V en. she had had, this daughter of the people, but one love in her whole pure life ; that love was her husband, her Lefebvre. He, too, had been faithful ; a virtue rare among the soldiers of the Empire. He had never indulged in the accidental and allowed aknesses of his master, his friend, his idol. Napoleon might deceive the Empress ; Lefebvre shook his head and murmured, That is the only ground on which I 3 not follow the Emperor." Once, laughing heartily, he said to his less scrupu. tides, Look you, if I were, to deceive Catharine could not conquer Prussians. I should be thinking xmstantly of her ; I should be a prey to remorse ; and e must have a whole heart and a clear conscience to jftutf-tftn*. 337 fight, as we do, one to twenty. And brave Lefebvre never blushed for his conjugal fidelity. The Empress's reception was well under way when Catharine appeared. Caroline and Elisa, Napoleon's two sisters, were quarrelling. Caroline was queen of Naples, and Elisa, the young lady from Saint-Cyr, was only a princess. From this low source sprung their war of words. While his wife was going to Josephine's salon the brave marshal sat at breakfast with the Emperor. The latter loved Lefebvre. He knew him to be hon- est and poor. He had made him a duke ; he decided also to make him rich. At table he asked, suddenly, " Do you like chocolate, Monsieur le Due ? " " Why yes, sir ! I like chocolate, if you would have me do so. I like anything you like." " Well, I will give you some it is Dantzig chocolate. It is right you should taste the product of the town you have conquered." Napoleon rose. He went to a little table, from which he took a long narrow package nearly the shape of a block of chocolate in a wrapper. He handed it to the marshal, saying, " Due de Dant- rig, accept this chocolate. Such little gifts prove friend- ship." Lefebvre took the package unceremoniously, put it into his pocket, and, taking his seat at table again, said, " Thank you, sire. I shall send the chocolate to a hos- pital. They say it is good for the patients." 22 33 8 " No," said the Emperor smiling, I pray you keep it yourself, I pray you do so." Lefebvre bowed, and thought. " What a strange idea, to give me chocolate, like a little girl." The meal proceeded. A pasty representing the city of Dantzig the chef- d'oeuvre of the imperial cook was served. The Emperor, before cutting it, said, " They could not have put that pasty into a shape to please me better. Yours be the signal of attack, Monsieur le Due, there is your conquest. You must do the honors." And he handed the knife to Lefebvre, who charged upon the mimic city. The marshal returned home, enchanted with the kindness of his sovereign. " What a pity Catharine was not there ! " he thought, smiling. "His majesty was never in better humor; but that singular gift of Dantzig chocolate 1 " Mechanically he opened the packet. Under the satin paper were bank-notes for three hundred thousand francs ! It was the Emperor's gift to the new duke to sustain his rank. The favor in which the marshal stood with the Em- peror served, no doubt, to protect his wife somewhat from unkindness. But Napoleon's sisters and the ladies who curried favor with them, lost no opportunity to remind her of her humble birth. fat-aflame, nn0- career you may ruin, for whom you may spoil all the futu, by a hopeless, mad interview of a moment. Go . ,. I Jve heard you. And as for Lefebvre, and I will not tax him so far. I have decided-I will go. " At once ? " < The Empress, knowing that through you the execi tion was delayed, and being angry with Savary, will prevail upon the Emperor to reinstate you. She will praise your ability, protest against the injustice of your removal, and make her august spouse put you again at the head of his police ministry." Duchess, I am convinced. I will try to save him. How ? " I will see the Emperor at once." Just then Constant, the Emperor's valet, came out. - Will you tell the Emperor I am here, my good C Slant ; I wish to speak with him ? " Constant bowed and withdrew. What will you say ? " asked Catharine. I will show His Majesty that it is impossible to deliver an order of execution at once without regular proceedings, without judgment, upon a man found by night in the palace ; that he will be ridiculed ; that he will compromise the Empress, irritate the Austrian court, and, at the same time, justify all the scandalous tales afloat concerning an intimacy between M. de Neipperg and Marie-Louise." " Ah, here comes Constant." 392 Will his Majesty see me ? " " His Majesty will receive the Duke of Otranto ; but only after he has seen M. le Due cle Rovigo." " Is that all his Majesty said ? " " His Majesty added, ' I cannot receive the Duke of Otranto now ; I must first settle with M. de Neipperg.' So, monsieur, you must wait. Ah, here comes M. de Rovigo. I must announce him." Savary had come, rather out of breath. " Ah ! What has happened ? Do you know why the Emperor has sent for me in the middle of the night, you who pretend to know everything ? " he said to his predecessor. And, he added scornfully, "I presume it is to you I owe this call. You have again given his Majesty a notion of a military conspiracy ! " " Not at all," said Fouche", in his most indifferent tone. " It is about M. de Neipperg, the former courtier." " M. de Neipperg ? Why, he is peacefully sleeping on his estates near Vienna. He hunts, he fishes, he plays the flute. I have just received a most detailed report He is seen only near Vienna." " My dear successor, tell that to the Emperor, and he will congratulate you on your accurate information." "Oh, that is nothing. I shall simply tell him M. de Neipperg is at Vienna, to stay there !" And Savary entered proudly into the Emperor's apart- ments. " Neipperg knows your writing, does he not, Duchess ? " Yes." " Well, since Savarv is here we must work rapidly 393 Write as I dictate," and he handed her pen and paper. She wrote, not without an effort, two lines, ordering Neipperg to feign sleep, and then to get out of a window which would be noiselessly opened for him while the guards were drawn aside. "Send this note to him," said Fouche to Catharine, " and say it is sent so he may write to his mother be- fore he dies." Catharine sent the paper and ink, and M. de Lauris- ton undertook her mission. He returned empty-handed. It was done and none who had charge of Neipperg knew what had been sent him. " I must leave you a moment, my dear Duchess," said Fouche", " I must post some of my men below the window, to receive our prisoner. You, Madame la Margchale, must try to attract the attention of M. de Brigode, who, through an open door, watches Neip- perg. Your protege" must get a chance to go to the window and leave his coat, as if he were sleeping under it. Good-bye, and do not despair ! " Fouche- slipped out. Like a shadow, he glided among the officers and was gone. Catharine, taking courage, called loudly : " M. de Brigode, will you kindly ask the Emperor if I may retire, or if I am to wait here ? " The Emperor wants to see you, madame," said Napoleon's voice, behind her. Sire, I obey orders," said Catharine, trembling. The Emperor's entry presaged no good. Would he hasten the execution ? Savary was there I Would the prisoner have time to escape ? 394 All these anxious thoughts tortured her. " For once, you understand," said Napoleon, rudely to Savary ; " try to be less incapable than usual. Go ! ** " Sire," answered the Duke de Rovigo, bowing, " in three hours, at sunrise, the condemned will be no more, and no trace will be left of the place where his guilty body is laid." And the minister of police took his departure. " Now, madame," said the Emperor to Catharine, we too have an account to settle ; or rather we three, for I shall send for Madame de Montebello." He had that lady brought to him. " Now leave us," he said. He plied both ladies with questions. He wanted to extract a confession, a revelation. Madame de Monte- bello had brought Neipperg in, and guided him toward Marie-Louise's room ; Mare"chale Lefebvre had known him ; during his sojourn in France Neipperg had often been at the Lefebvres' an intrigue with the mare"chale had even been hinted at. Holding them with his piercing eye, Napoleon ordered them to hide nothing of the truth, however dreadful. He must know if Marie-Louise were true or false, no matter how much it would hurt ! He almost feared to know the truth ; and yet doubt was worse. He would gladly have said : "My crown, my sceptre, my empire, for a word, an indication, a proof ! " In his great mind, now so troubled, so dejected, a thousand confused thoughts arose. He made scores of conjectures. 395 With the tenacity of an officer of the Spanish Inquisi- tion, he plied the two women with questions, fixing upon them his burning eye, losing no movement efface or figure, seeking to read their conscience, and their innermost thoughts. By their firmness, they succeeded in allaying some of his suspicions. His voice grew softer, his eye less stern, less cruel. < So you think, Madame, the Duchess of Dantzig, that I am deceived in my opinion of the object of M. de Neip- perg's visit here-tq-night ? " he said, in a less irritated tone. " You really think Madame de Montebello told the truth, when she said that it was only about a letter to be sent, confidentially, through M. de Neipperg, to my father-in-law ? " Sire, I am persuaded that such is the truth, and the whole truth," said Catharine, firmly. Oh, would it were the truth ! " murmured Napo- leon, wistfully. "' But, sire, you can verify Madame de Montebello's statement," said Catharine, to whom a bold idea had come, which might persuade the Emperor. Tell me how ! " Her Majesty is asleep she knows nothing of what is going on in the palace." True silence has been enjoined the sentinels are forbidden to speak with her or her women." Then, sire, act as though you knew nothing. Let Madame de Montebello finish, under your own eyes. her interrupted mission, an* you will see for yourself! " 396 " By Heaven, you are sensible, madame. I will try your experiment at once." Only he added, severely, taking Madame de Montebello by the arm, " do not you play with me ! Not a word, not a sign to warn the Empress. Forward ! Remember, I am behind you ! " So the lady-in-waiting started toward the Empress's apartments, her knees shaking, her body trembling con- vulsively, for she did not know that the Empress had been warned by Lefebvre's loud words to the sentinel, in regard to intercepting her letter and sending it to the Emperor. Napoleon stood, burning, in a corner, his hands clenched, grasping the arm of a cliair, listening, look- ing, with head thrown forward; eyes bright, and every nerve tingling. Madame de Montebello, meantime, had entered the < Empress's room, and, leaving the door open, on the Emperor's orders, said, distinctly : " Madame, M. de Neipperg sends me to ask your answer he is in the ante-chamber what shall I say to him ? " The Empress sighed like one aroused from sleep, stretched her arms, and took, from a table beside her bed, a sealed letter, which she gave to Madame de Montebello, saying, " Here is the answer ! Greet M. de Neipperg kindly for me and leave -me, for I am very sleepy." The lady-in-waiting returned to Napoleon, the letter in her hand. flatae *tt*-