THE END
General Savary rode straight to Pont
de Briques to report to the Emperor, while Gerard
returned with me to my lodgings to share a bottle
of wine. I had expected to find my Cousin Sibylle
there, but to my surprise there was no sign of her,
nor had she left any word to tell us whither she had
gone.
It was just after daybreak in the
morning when I woke to find an equerry of the Emperor
with his hand upon my shoulder.
‘The Emperor desires to see
you, Monsieur de Laval,’ said he.
‘Where?’
‘At the Pont de Briques.’
I knew that promptitude was the first
requisite for those who hoped to advance themselves
in his service. In ten minutes I was in the saddle,
and in half an hour I was at the chateau. I was
conducted upstairs to a room in which were the Emperor
and Josephine, she reclining upon a sofa in a charming
dressing-gown of pink and lace, he striding about in
his energetic fashion, dressed in the curious costume
which he assumed before his official hours had begun a
white sleeping suit, red Turkish slippers, and a white
bandanna handkerchief tied round his head, the whole
giving him the appearance of a West Indian planter.
From the strong smell of eau-de-Cologne I judged
that he had just come from his bath. He was
in the best of humours, and she, as usual, reflected
him, so that they were two smiling faces which were
turned upon me as I was announced. It was hard
to believe that it was this man with the kindly expression
and the genial eye who had come like an east wind into
the reception-room the other night, and left a trail
of wet cheeks and downcast faces wherever he had passed.
‘You have made an excellent
debut as aide-de-camp,’ said he; ’Savary
has told me all that has occurred, and nothing could
have been better arranged. I have not time to
think of such things myself, but my wife will sleep
more soundly now that she knows that this Toussac is
out of the way.’
‘Yes, yes, he was a terrible
man,’ cried the Empress. ’So was
that Georges Cadoudal. They were both terrible
men.’
‘I have my star, Josephine,’
said Napoleon, patting her upon the head. ’I
see my own career lying before me and I know exactly
what I am destined to do. Nothing can harm me
until my work is accomplished. The Arabs are
believers in Fate, and the Arabs are in the right.’
’Then why should you plan, Napoleon,
if everything is to be decided by Fate?’
’Because it is fated that I
should plan, you little stupid. Don’t you
see that that is part of Fate also, that I should have
a brain which is capable of planning. I am always
building behind a scaffolding, and no one can see
what I am building until I have finished. I never
look forward for less than two years, and I have been
busy all morning, Monsieur de Laval, in planning out
the events which will occur in the autumn and winter
of 1807. By the way, that good-looking cousin
of yours appears to have managed this affair very
cleverly. She is a very fine girl to be wasted
upon such a creature as the Lucien Lesage who has
been screaming for mercy for a week past. Do
you not think that it is a great pity?’
I acknowledged that I did.
’It is always so with women ideologists,
dreamers, carried away by whims and imaginings.
They are like the Easterns, who cannot conceive that
a man is a fine soldier unless he has a formidable
presence. I could not get the Egyptians to believe
that I was a greater general than Kleber, because
he had the body of a porter and the head of a hair-dresser.
So it is with this poor creature Lesage, who will
be made a hero by women because he has an oval face
and the eyes of a calf. Do you imagine that if
she were to see him in his true colours it would turn
her against him?’
’I am convinced of it, sire.
From the little that I have seen of my cousin I am
sure that no one could have a greater contempt for
cowardice or for meanness.’
’You speak warmly, sir.
You are not by chance just a little touched yourself
by this fair cousin of yours?’
‘Sire, I have already told you ’
’Ta, ta, ta,
but she is across the water, and many things have happened
since then.’
Constant had entered the room.
‘He has been admitted, sire.’
’Very good. We shall move
into the next room. Josephine, you shall come
too, for it is your business rather than mine.’
The room into which we passed was
a long, narrow one. There were two windows at
one side, but the curtains had been drawn almost across,
so that the light was not very good. At the
further door was Roustem the Mameluke, and beside
him, with arms folded and his face sunk downwards
in an attitude of shame and contrition, there was standing
the very man of whom we had been talking. He
looked up with scared eyes, and started with fear
when he saw the Emperor approaching him. Napoleon
stood with legs apart and his hands behind his back,
and looked at him long and searchingly.
‘Well, my fine fellow,’
said he at last, ’you have burned your fingers,
and I do not fancy that you will come near the fire
again. Or do you perhaps think of continuing
with politics as a profession?’
‘If your Majesty will overlook
what I have done,’ Lesage stammered, ’I
shall faithfully promise you that I will be your most
loyal servant until the day of my death.’
‘Hum!’ said the Emperor,
spilling a pinch of snuff over the front of his white
jacket. ’There is some sense in what you
say, for no one makes so good a servant as the man
who has had a thorough fright. But I am a very
exacting master.’
’I do not care what you require
of me. Everything will be welcome, if you will
only give me your forgiveness.’
‘For example,’ said the
Emperor. ’It is one of my whims that when
a man enters my service I shall marry him to whom
I like. Do you agree to that?’
There was a struggle upon the poet’s
face, and he clasped and unclasped his hands.
‘May I ask, sire ?’
‘You may ask nothing.’
‘But there are circumstances, sire ’
‘There, there, that is enough!’
cried the Emperor harshly, turning upon his heel.
’I do not argue, I order. There is a young
lady, Mademoiselle de Bergerot, for whom I desire
a husband. Will you marry her, or will you return
to prison?’
Again there was the struggle in the
man’s face, and he was silent, twitching and
writhing in his indecision.’
‘It is enough!’ cried
the Emperor. ‘Roustem, call the guard!’
‘No, no, sire, do not send me back to prison.’
‘The guard, Roustem!’
‘I will do it, sire! I will do it!
I will marry whomever you please!’
‘You villain!’ cried a
voice, and there was Sibylle standing in the opening
of the curtains at one of the windows. Her face
was pale with anger and her eyes shining with scorn;
the parting curtains framed her tall, slim figure,
which leaned forwards in her fury of passion.
She had forgotten the Emperor, the Empress, everything,
in her revulsion of feeling against this craven whom
she had loved.
‘They told me what you were,’
she cried. ’I would not believe them, I
could not believe them for I did
not know that there was upon this earth a thing so
contemptible. They said that they would prove
it, and I defied them to do so, and now I see you
as you are. Thank God that I have found you
out in time! And to think that for your sake
I have brought about the death of a man who was worth
a hundred of you! Oh, I am rightly punished
for an unwomanly act. Toussac has had his revenge.’
‘Enough!’ said the Emperor
sternly. ’Constant, lead Mademoiselle Bernac
into the next room. As to you, sir, I do not
think that I can condemn any lady of my Court to take
such a man as a husband. Suffice it that you
have been shown in your true colours, and that Mademoiselle
Bernac has been cured of a foolish infatuation.
Roustem, remove the prisoner!’
‘There, Monsieur de Laval,’
said the Emperor, when the wretched Lesage had been
conducted from the room. ’We have not done
such a bad piece of work between the coffee and the
breakfast. It was your idea, Josephine, and
I give you credit for it. But now, de Laval,
I feel that we owe you some recompense for having
set the young aristocrats a good example, and for
having had a share in this Toussac business.
You have certainly acted very well.’
‘I ask no recompense, sire,’
said I, with an uneasy sense of what was coming.
’It is your modesty that speaks.
But I have already decided upon your reward.
You shall have such an allowance as will permit you
to keep up a proper appearance as my aide-de-camp,
and I have determined to marry you suitably to one
of the ladies-in-waiting of the Empress.’
My heart turned to lead within me.
‘But, sire,’ I stammered, ‘this
is impossible.’
’Oh, you have no occasion to
hesitate. The lady is of excellent family and
she is not wanting in personal charm. In a word,
the affair is settled, and the marriage takes place
upon Thursday.’
‘But it is impossible, sire,’ I repeated.
’Impossible! When you
have been longer in my service, sir, you will understand
that that is a word which I do not tolerate.
I tell you that it is settled.’
’My love is given to another,
sire. It is not possible for me to change.’
‘Indeed!’ said the Emperor
coldly. ’If you persist in such a resolution
you cannot expect to retain your place in my household.’
Here was the whole structure which
my ambition had planned out crumbling hopelessly about
my ears. And yet what was there for me to do?
‘It is the bitterest moment
of my life, sire,’ said I, ’and yet I must
be true to the promise which I have given. If
I have to be a beggar by the roadside, I shall none
the less marry Eugenie de Choiseul or no one.’
The Empress had risen and had approached the window.
‘Well, at least, before you
make up your mind, Monsieur de Laval,’ said
she, ’I should certainly take a look at this
lady-in-waiting of mine, whom you refuse with such
indignation.’
With a quick rasping of rings she
drew back the curtain of the second window.
A woman was standing in the recess. She took
a step forward into the room, and then and
then with a cry and a spring my arms were round her,
and hers round me, and I was standing like a man in
a dream, looking down into the sweet laughing eyes
of my Eugenie. It was not until I had kissed
her and kissed her again upon her lips, her cheeks,
her hair, that I could persuade myself that she was
indeed really there.
‘Let us leave them,’ said
the voice of the Empress behind me. ’Come,
Napoleon. It makes me sad! It reminds me
too much of the old days in the Rue Chautereine.’
So there is an end of my little romance,
for the Emperor’s plans were, as usual, carried
out, and we were married upon the Thursday, as he had
said. That long and all-powerful arm had plucked
her out from the Kentish town, and had brought her
across the Channel, in order to make sure of my allegiance,
and to strengthen the Court by the presence of a de
Choiseul. As to my cousin Sibylle, it shall be
written some day how she married the gallant Lieutenant
Gerard many years afterwards, when he had become the
chief of a brigade, and one of the most noted cavalry
leaders in all the armies of France. Some day
also I may tell how I came back into my rightful inheritance
of Grosbois, which is still darkened to me by the
thought of that terrible uncle of mine, and of what
happened that night when Toussac stood at bay in the
library. But enough of me and of my small fortunes.
You have already heard more of them, perhaps, than
you care for.
As to the Emperor, some faint shadow
of whom I have tried in these pages to raise before
you, you have heard from history how, despairing of
gaining command of the Channel, and fearing to attempt
an invasion which might be cut off from behind, he
abandoned the camp of Boulogne. You have heard
also how, with this very army which was meant for
England, he struck down Austria and Russia in one year,
and Prussia in the next. From the day that I
entered his service until that on which he sailed
forth over the Atlantic, never to return, I have faithfully
shared his fortunes, rising with his star and sinking
with it also. And yet, as I look back at my old
master, I find it very difficult to say if he was
a very good man or a very bad one. I only know
that he was a very great one, and that the things
in which he dealt were also so great that it is impossible
to judge him by any ordinary standard. Let him
rest silently, then, in his great red tomb at the Invalides,
for the workman’s work is done, and the mighty
hand which moulded France and traced the lines of
modern Europe has crumbled into dust. The Fates
have used him, and the Fates have thrown him away,
but still it lives, the memory of the little man in
the grey coat, and still it moves the thoughts and
actions of men. Some have written to praise and
some to blame, but for my own part I have tried to
do neither one nor the other, but only to tell the
impression which he made upon me in those far-off
days when the Army of England lay at Boulogne, and
I came back once more to my Castle of Grosbois.