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But the sapeurs--the old regiment in which Napoleon had served as a young lieutenant in those glorious olden days--are now as pale as death, their knees shake under them, their arms tremble in their hands.
At ten paces away from the foremost ranks Napoleon halts:
"Soldiers," he cries loudly. "Here I am! your Emperor, do you know me?"
Again he advances and with a calm gesture throws open his well-worn grey redingote.
"Fire!" cries St. Genis in mad exasperation.
"Fire!" commands Delessart in a voice rendered shaky with overmastering emotion.
Silence reigns supreme. Napoleon still advances, step by step, his redingote thrown open, his broad chest challenging the first bullet which would dare to end the bold, adventurous, daring life.
"Is there one of you soldiers here who wants to shoot his Emperor? If there is, here I am! Fire!"
Which of these soldiers who have served under him at Jena and Austerlitz could resist such a call. His voice has lost nothing yet of its charm, his personality nothing of its magic. Ambitious, ruthless, selfish he may be, but to the army, a friend, a comrade as well as a G.o.d.
Suddenly the silence is broken. Shouts of "Vive l'Empereur!" rend the air, they echo down the narrow valley, re-echo from hill to hill and reverberate upon the pine-clad heights of Taillefer. Broken are the ranks, white c.o.c.kades fly in every direction, tricolours appear in their hundreds everywhere. Shakos are waved on the points of the bayonets, and always, always that cry: "Vive l'Empereur!"
Sapeurs and infantrymen crowd around the little man in the worn grey redingote, and he with that rough familiarity which bound all soldiers'
hearts to him, seizes an old sergeant by the ends of his long moustache:
"So, you old dog," he says, "you were going to shoot your Emperor, were you?"
"Not me," replies the man with a growl. "Look at our guns. Not one of them was loaded."
Delessart, in despair yet shaken to the heart, his eyes swimming in tears, offers his sword to Napoleon, whereupon the Emperor grasps his hand in friends.h.i.+p and comforts him with a few inspiring words.
Only St. Genis has looked on all this scene with horror and contempt.
His royalist opinions are well known, his urgent appeal to Delessart a while ago to "shoot the brigand and his hordes" still rings in every soldier's ear. He is half-crazy with rage and there is quite an element of terror in the confused thoughts which crowd in upon his brain.
Already the sapeurs and infantrymen have joined the ranks of the Old Guard, and Napoleon, with that inimitable verve and inspiring eloquence of which he was pastmaster, was haranguing his troops. Just then three hors.e.m.e.n, dressed in the uniform of officers of the National Guard and wearing enormous tricolour c.o.c.kades as large as soup-plates on their shakos, are seen to arrive at a break-neck gallop down the pa.s.s from Gren.o.ble.
St. Genis recognised them at a glance: they were Victor de Marmont, Surgeon-Captain Emery and their friend the glovemaker, Dumoulin. The next moment these three men were at the feet of their beloved hero.
"Sire," said Dumoulin the glovemaker, "in the name of the citizens of Gren.o.ble we hereby offer you our services and one hundred thousand francs collected in the last twenty-four hours for your use."
"I accept both," replied the Emperor, while he grasped vigorously the hands of his three most devoted friends.
St. Genis uttered a loud and comprehensive curse: then he pulled his horse abruptly round and with such a jerk that it reared and plunged madly forward ere it started galloping away with its frantic rider in the direction of Gren.o.ble.
III
And Gren.o.ble itself was in a turmoil.
In the barracks the cries of "Vive l'Empereur!" were incessant; General Marchand was indefatigable in his efforts to still that cry, to rouse in the hearts of the soldiers a sense of loyalty to the King.
"Your country and your King," he shouted from barrack-room to barrack-room.
"Our country and our Emperor!" responded the soldiers with ever-growing enthusiasm.
The spirit of the army and of the people were Bonapartist to the core.
They had never trusted either Marchand or prefet Fourier, who had turned their coats so readily at the Restoration: they hated the emigres--the Comte de Cambray, the Vicomte de St. Genis, the Duc d'Embrun--with their old-fas.h.i.+oned ideas of the semi-divine rights of the n.o.bility second only to the G.o.dlike ones of the King. They thought them arrogant and untamed, over-ready to grab once more all the privileges which a b.l.o.o.d.y Revolution had swept away.
To them Napoleon, despite the brilliant days of the Empire, despite his autocracy, his militarism and his arrogance, represented "the people,"
the advanced spirit of the Revolution; his downfall had meant a return to the old regime--the regime of feudal rights, of farmers general, of heavy taxation and dear bread.
"Vive l'Empereur!" was cried in the barracks and "Vive l'Empereur!" at the street corners.
A squadron of Hussars had marched into Gren.o.ble from Vienne just before noon: the same squadron which a few months ago at a revue by the Comte d'Artois in the presence of the King had shouted "Vive l'Empereur!" What faith could be put in their loyalty now?
But two infantry regiments came in at the same time from Chambery and on these General Marchand hoped to be able to reckon. The Comte Charles de la Bedoyere was in command of the 7th regiment, and though he had served in Prussia under Napoleon he had tendered his oath loyally to Louis XVIII. at the Restoration. He was a tried and able soldier and Marchand believed in him. The General himself reviewed both infantry regiments on the Place d'Armes on their arrival, and then posted them upon the ramparts of the city, facing direct to the southeast and dominating the road to La Mure.
De la Bedoyere remained in command of the 7th.
For two hours he paced the ramparts in a state of the greatest possible agitation. The nearness of Napoleon, of the man who had been his comrade in arms first and his leader afterwards, had a terribly disturbing effect upon his spirit. From below in the city the people's mutterings, their grumbling, their sullen excitement seemed to rise upwards like an intoxicating incense. The att.i.tude of the troops, of the gunners, as well as of the garrison and of his own regiment, worked more potently still upon the Colonel's already shaken loyalty.
Then suddenly his mind is made up. He draws his sword and shouts: "Vive l'Empereur!"
"Soldiers!" he calls. "Follow me! I will show you the way to duty!
Follow me! Vive l'Empereur!"
"Vive l'Empereur!" vociferate the troops.
"After me, my men! to the Bonne Gate! After me!" cries De la Bedoyere.
And to the shouts of "Vive l'Empereur!" the 7th regiment of infantry pa.s.ses through the gate and marches along the streets of the suburb on towards La Mure.
General Marchand, hastily apprised of the wholesale defection, sends Colonel Villiers in hot haste in the wake of De la Bedoyere. Villiers comes up with the latter two kilometres outside Gren.o.ble. He talks, he persuades, he admonishes, he scolds, De la Bedoyere and his men are firm.
"Your country and your king!" shouts Villiers.
"Our country and our Emperor!" respond the men. And they go to join the Old Guard at Laffray while Villiers in despair rides back into Gren.o.ble.
In the town the desertion of the 7th has had a very serious effect. The muttered cries of "Vive l'Empereur!" are open shouts now. General Marchand is at his wits' ends. He has ordered the closing of every city gate, and still the soldiers in batches of tens and twenties at a time contrive to escape out of the town carrying their arms and in many cases baggage with them. The royalist faction--the women as well as the men--spend the whole day in and out of the barrack-rooms talking to the men, trying to infuse into them loyalty to the King, and to cheer them up by bringing them wine and provisions.
In the afternoon the Vicomte de St. Genis, sick, exhausted, his horse covered with lather, comes back with the story of the pa.s.s of Laffray, and Napoleon's triumphant march toward Gren.o.ble. Marchand seriously contemplates evacuating the city in order to save the garrison and his stores.
Prefet Fourier congratulates himself on his foresight and on that he has transferred the twenty-five million francs from the cellars of the Hotel de Ville into the safe keeping of M. le Comte de Cambray. He and General Marchand both hope and think that "the brigand and his horde" cannot possibly be at the gates of Gren.o.ble before the morrow, and that Mme. la d.u.c.h.esse d'Agen would be well on her way to Paris with the money by that time.
Marchand in the meanwhile has made up his mind to retire from the city with his troops. It is only a strategical measure, he argues, to save bloodshed and to save his stores, pending the arrival of the Comte d'Artois at Lyons, with the army corps. He gives the order for the general retreat to commence at two o'clock in the morning.
Satisfied that he has done the right thing, he finally goes back to his quarters in the Hotel du Dauphine close to the ramparts. The Comte de Cambray is his guest at dinner, and toward seven o'clock the two men at last sit down to a hurried meal, both their minds filled with apprehension and not a little fear as to what the next few days will bring.
"It is, of course, only a question of time," says the Comte de Cambray airily. "Monseigneur le Comte d'Artois will be at Lyons directly with forty thousand men, and he will easily crush that marauding band of pirates. But this time the Corsican after his defeat must be put more effectually out of harm's way. I, personally, was never much in favour of Elba."
"The English have some islands out in the Atlantic or the Pacific,"
responds General Marchand with firm decision. "It would be safest to shoot the brigand, but failing that, let the English send him to one of those islands, and undertake to guard him well."