Ramage & the Guillotine (23 page)

Stafford shook his head. “Once in a lifetime's enough, sir. Cor, wait until I tell the lads.” He topped up Louis's glass and then filled his own, and after putting the carafe down, carefully he raised his glass and looked Ramage straight in the eye.

“‘Ere's to you, sir, an' the Marcheezer, an' may you both live to a ripe hold hage—”

Louis reached for his glass, but Stafford had not finished. “I'm a bit tipsy, sir, an' I ain't very good wiv words, but the other lads—not just Jacko and Rosey, but all the rest of them—well, they'd want me ter thank you for gettin' them out of trouble so often—” He saw the puzzled expression on Ramage's face and hurriedly explained. “Well, like when we rescued the Marcheezer, and then when that Don rammed us in the
Kathleen,
and the privateers at St Lucia with the
Triton,
an' the ‘urricane, an' that skylarking in the Post Office brig …”

As if startled at the length of his speech he hurriedly gulped his wine, followed by Louis, and put his glass down nervously.

Ramage held out his own empty glass, and Louis poured some wine.

“Here's to you and the lads,” Ramage said soberly, not trusting himself to say more.

Louis finished his glass and said: “Before we sleep, we should think of our plan for tomorrow.”

Ramage nodded. “Since it's a Saturday, the
patron
won't expect us to try to do any business at the factories, so we'll establish ourselves as visitors. We can have a look at the Cathedral—after all, it's the biggest in France, and even though the Church is not popular here, we Italians are God-fearing people! After that we'll make sure we know all the roads leading away from this hotel, and you must find out where we can hire horses in an emergency—steal them, if necessary.”

He paused for a minute or two, deep in thought. “Stafford has his picklocks; we have wax in case we have to break and repair a seal, candles, and the little lantern. You have that thin-bladed knife and each of us has a heavier one. Pen, paper and ink to copy any documents. Plaster and some boxwood in case we have to carve a copy of a seal, and the chisels and gouges. You have the sheets of notepaper with the Ministry of Marine heading … Can you think of anything else?”

When Louis shook his head, Ramage asked Stafford: “You have everything you might want?”

“Me picklocks, some thin wire, a spatula an' me fingers; that's all I need, sir.”

CHAPTER ELEVEN

N
EXT morning Louis left them after explaining that he was going to make the necessary arrangements while Ramage and Stafford wandered through the city, establishing themselves as innocent visitors. The short walk to the great Cathedral was almost frightening. The whole city seemed to be silent and foreboding; silent although horses' hooves clattered over the cobbles and cartwheels rumbled; although people walked the streets talking to each other and shopkeepers stood at their doorways, calling out greetings and trying to beguile prospective customers.

There were a few of the noises one would expect in a city; but in an almost deserted city. These were not the noises of a normal city going about its daily business, and he and Stafford had almost reached the Cathedral before Ramage realized exactly what was missing: no one was laughing and no one was bustling: it was as though everyone had a secret guilt and feared that the pairs of gendarmes who seemed to stand at every corner were watching and waiting to make an arrest; that they knew only too well there was among the quiet streets of Amiens a building with barred windows where a man who laughed loudly or joked or behaved in a carefree manner might be dragged before a tribunal and accused of being an enemy of the Revolution.

But surely these people in the streets
were
the Revolution: surely it was for them, the
sans-culottes,
that the Revolution had been staged? With the aristocrats dead or exiled and their estates sold off to the people, with every man proclaimed as free and equal as his neighbour, and the armies of France standing astride Europe from the Mediterranean to the North Sea, surely now was the time for the people to be happy? Yet Ramage sensed that these people in Amiens were far from carefree; they were nervous and suspicious of each other, and looked at those gendarmes not as protectors against burglars, cutpurses and pickpockets but as honest men might be wary of large and unknown dogs.

Louis had told him all this; indeed, he had explained it with great care. Ramage admitted to himself that it had been easy enough to listen but too hard to visualize; one had to see it to believe it.

The majority of the French people had supported the idea of the Revolution: for generations under the monarchy taxation had been harsh and arbitrary, with the poorest always paying the most. But there had been such a struggle for power after the Revolution: such almost unbelievable cruelties and injustices committed with chilling cynicism in the name of the Revolution by those very leaders, as each struggled for personal power, that the people were bewildered and disillusioned. Debtors denouncing their creditors to avoid paying their bills, vicious men settling old scores by the same means—the people had seen too much of it. Louis must be right—the majority of them were sick of the metallic hiss and thud of the guillotine, sick of passing a tumbril laden with white-faced men and weeping women. This was an aspect of the Revolution they had never visualized and never wanted—seeing former neighbours (and often former friends and sometimes relatives) dragged off to the Widow … This bore no relation to getting rid of the tyrannical landowners and the iniquitous tax collectors of the
ancien régime;
it had nothing to do with driving out the grasping priests and seizing the vast lands owned by the Church.

But in several cases the grasping priests had cast off the soutane, snatched up the Red Cap of Liberty and returned in the role of rabid Revolutionaries. Joseph Le Bon, the former
curé,
had probably killed more innocent Frenchmen in the time of the Revolution than Bonaparte's Army of Italy lost in the march to Rome; and Joseph Fouché, former
abbe
of Nantes and professor at its university, was now the Minister of Police and the most feared man in France. It was, Ramage reflected, as though the old fierceness of the Inquisition readily converted into Revolutionary zeal; merely a question of changing the Church's rack for the State's guillotine in the determination either to command men's souls or kill their bodies. As with the Inquisition so with the Revolution: mere acceptance was not enough; one had to be a zealot.

As he and Stafford side-stepped to avoid three pimply boys who were begging, watched without interest by the gendarmes, he realized that although no one seemed to be starving, few were wearing clothes which had not been carefully darned.

A cool and supercilious look at the outside of the Cathedral. Two more gendarmes standing fifteen yards from the main door watching lethargically, although a strange face was a reason for them slowly swivelling their heads to relieve the boredom. One removed his tricorn and inspected the inside before replacing it on his head.

The outside of the Cathedral had suffered the sort of damage you would expect from excited schoolboys drunk for the first time on Calvados: the heads of all the saints had been smashed off and sculptured groups had been crudely mutilated in an attempt to make them look ridiculous. Yet it was an attempt that was itself ridiculous, since the Cathedral had stood for nearly 600 years, massive and graceful. Disfiguring the small, sculptured groups had as much effect on its majesty as a man relieving himself against a buttress.

Ramage walked through the main door, and despite the gloom saw at once that the great altarpiece spreading the whole breadth of the Cathedral was untouched. As he noted that the beautiful chapels on either side of the choir also appeared to be undamaged he saw five people kneeling. Four seemed to be old women, the fifth a crippled man, one of his legs stuck out sideways. A wooden leg. Their presence emphasized the vastness and the emptiness and the silence: there was none of the distant chanting or murmuring that you usually heard the moment you entered the main door of a great cathedral: simply the chilling silence of an abandoned building … As he walked towards the altar he saw that the famous marble statue of the weeping child had been damaged. The altar was bare—not surprisingly the Revolutionaries had taken the gold and silver candlesticks, and the rich red and purple hangings had vanished. Yet the stained-glass windows were mostly intact—a gap here and there in the delicate lacework of coloured glass showed where an eager fellow with a strong arm had lobbed a brick or fired a fowling-piece.

The crippled man hauled himself up with the clumsiness of pain and began hobbling towards the main door, but seeing Ramage and Stafford he waved his stick as if in greeting. He was tall, though his shoulders were now hunched; his hair was grey and his face lined, but Ramage guessed that pain and worry—or was it sadness?—had aged him more than the passing years.

“Good morning, Citizen,” he said carefully, as though wanting to pass the time of day but wary and unsure, like a man half-afraid he was about to be accused of trespassing. Ramage thought of the two gendarmes near the main door. Perhaps they were more interested in visitors to the Cathedral than they seemed: a man attending church, albeit without there being a priest present, could be a man against the Revolution …

Ramage shook hands and, guessing that the man could satisfy his curiosity about the Cathedral's fate during the Revolution, waved towards the altar: “Things have changed since I was last here.”

“You are not French. Italian, perhaps?”

Ramage nodded. “From Genoa. I've been to Boulogne; now I go to Paris and then back home.”

“Italy … at the pass of Mont Cenis—” the man tapped his wooden leg with his stick “—that's where I left this leg.”

Was there fighting up among the Alps? Who would be crazy enough to have a battle among the mountains? The man saw his puzzled look and said: “The snow—my régiment was part of the Army of Italy. We marched over the mountains in thick snow. Some of us were too weak to get over the pass.” He glanced at Stafford, uncertain whether to go on.

“And the weak were left behind?” Ramage asked quietly.

The man nodded. “If an arm or a leg freezes it dies, and if it isn't amutated quickly gangrene sets in. It can set in even if it is amputated. I was lucky.”

“They carried you in a wagon?” Ramage asked innocently, hoping to draw the man out.

“They left me in the snow, just where I collapsed. There was a monastery nearby,” he added, almost absently. “After the Army had gone the monks came along the pass to see what had been left behind. Not looking for loot, you understand; they were interested only in saving lives. They found me—and seventeen more like me. They carried us back to the monastery. They couldn't save my leg, but they saved my life. They had very little food, but they shared it with us—with eighteen atheists who up to a few hours earlier had belonged to the 24th
Infanterie de Ligne.
They nursed us and fed us and sheltered us. For the five of us that needed them, they made legs of wood, specially carved and fitted. It was five months before I was well again—and by then spring had come and the snow had melted and I could leave …”

“So you returned to your régiment?”

“With one leg?” He knew Ramage was encouraging him to talk and he smiled. “There was war in Italy and war in Austria—there was war almost everywhere; but there was peace in the monastery near the top of Mont Cenis, so I stayed and tried to pay my debt. I helped hoe and sow and reap the year's harvest—it's a very brief season—and I left the following spring, when the snow had once again cleared, just a year and a half after I first arrived. I got back to my home here in Amiens as winter began; it was a long walk for a one-legged man.”

“But your family was glad to see you.”

“I found that my family was dead.” Again that flat, expressionless tone of voice. “My brother and my wife had been denounced as anti-Revolutionaries and guillotined, and the shock had killed my old father.”

“Who denounced them?”

“The man who wanted our grocery shop,” he said simply. “He is now the prefect of Amiens and the most powerful man in the city.”

“And you?” Ramage asked quietly. “What do you do?”

The man glanced at the statue of the weeping child for a few moments, and then at the old women who were still kneeling. “I come each morning and pray; I pray as I did before the Revolution and I pray as I learned to at the monastery. I pray for the souls of those I loved, and I have one other prayer which I can reveal to no man.” No flourish, no drama; just a plain statement by a man no longer afraid.

Louis had become an atheist at the Revolution; but now he prayed, too; he prayed that there was an after-life, so that Joseph Le Bon would be eternally punished. Had Le Bon worked here in Amiens?

“I have met men who have prayed for Citizen Le Bon,” Ramage said in a voice barely above a whisper.

The man's eyes held his. “I'm sure you have; many true Normans say a prayer for him before they go to sleep at night.”

The man had spoken freely because he was beyond fear. At first he had been cautious—probably because he saw no reason to invite trouble—but Ramage thought he would probably talk as freely to a gendarme. Such a man had nothing more to lose to a régime which had abandoned him in the snow of an Alpine pass and slaughtered his wife and brother (and, to all intents and purposes, stolen the family business). Fortune held none of his family hostage because now he had none to submit. With one leg chopped off above the knee, he must find it hard to make a living—Louis had said something about the wounded being reduced to begging once the Navy or Army had finished with them, the same as it was in Britain—so threatening such a man with the guillotine was about the same as offering him a swift release from his misery.

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