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Leaving l'Abbaye, I walked straight across the Place Turenne
to the Rue Tournon, where I had lodgings, when I heard a woman scream for
help.
It could not be an assault to commit robbery, for it was hardly ten o'clock
in the evening. I ran to the corner of the place whence the sounds proceeded,
and by the light of the moon, just then breaking through the clouds, I beheld
a woman in the midst of a patrol of sans-culottes.
The lady observed me at the same instant, and seeing, by the character of my
dress, that I did not belong to the common order of people, she ran toward
me, exclaiming:
"There is M. Albert! He knows me! He will tell you that I am the daughter of
Mme. Ledieu, the laundress."
With these words the poor creature, pale and trembling with excitement,
seized my arm and clung to me as a shipwrecked sailor to a spar.
"No matter whether you are the daughter of Mme. Ledieu or some one else, as
you have no pass, you must go with us to the guard-house."
The young girl pressed my arm. I perceived in this pressure the expression of
her great distress of mind. I understood it.
"So it is you, my poor Solange?" I said. "What are you doing here?"
"There, messieurs!" she exclaimed in tones of deep anxiety; "do you believe
me now?"
"You might at least say 'citizens!'"
"Ah, sergeant, do not blame me for speaking that way," said the pretty young
girl; "my mother has many customers among the great people, and taught me to
be polite. That's how I acquired this bad habit--the habit of the
aristocrats; and, you know, sergeant, it's so hard to shake off old habits!"
This answer, delivered in trembling accents, concealed a delicate irony that
was lost on all save me. I asked myself, who is this young woman? The mystery
seemed complete. This alone was clear; she was not the daughter of a
laundress.
"How did I come here, Citizen Albert?" she asked. "Well, I will tell you. I
went to deliver some washing. The lady was not at home, and so I waited; for
in these hard times every one needs what little money is coming to him. In
that way it grew dark, and so I fell among these gentlemen--beg pardon, I
would say citizens. They asked for my pass. As I did not have it with me,
they were going to take me to the guard-house. I cried out in terror, which
brought you to the scene; and as luck would have it, you are a friend. I said
to myself, as M. Albert knows my name to be Solange Ledieu, he will vouch for
me; and that you will, will you not, M. Albert?"
"Certainly, I will vouch for you."
"Very well," said the leader of the patrol; "and who, pray, will vouch for
you, my friend?"
"Danton! Do you know him? Is he a good patriot?"
"Oh, if Danton will vouch for you, I have nothing to say."
"Well, there is a session of the Cordeliers to-day. Let us go there."
"Good," said the leader. "Citizens, let us go to the Cordeliers."
The club of the Cordeliers met at the old Cordelier monastery in the Rue
l'Observance. We arrived there after scarce a minute's walk. At the door I
tore a page from my note-book, wrote a few words upon it with a lead pencil,
gave it to the sergeant, and requested him to hand it to Danton, while I
waited outside with the men.
The sergeant entered the clubhouse and returned with Danton.
"What!" said he to me; "they have arrested you, my friend? You, the friend of
Camilles--you, one of the most loyal republicans? Citizens," he continued,
addressing the sergeant, "I vouch for him. Is that sufficient?"
"You vouch for him. Do you also vouch for her?" asked the stubborn sergeant.
"For her? To whom do you refer?"
"This girl."
"For everything; for everybody who may be in his company. Does that satisfy
you?"
"Yes," said the man; "especially since I have had the privilege of seeing
you."
With a cheer for Danton, the patrol marched away. I was about to thank Danton,
when his name was called repeatedly within.
"Pardon me, my friend," he said; "you hear? There is my hand; I must leave
you--the left. I gave my right to the sergeant. Who knows, the good patriot
may have scrofula?"
"I'm coming!" he exclaimed, addressing those within in his mighty voice with
which he could pacify or arouse the masses. He hastened into the house.
I remained standing at the door, alone with my unknown.
"And now, my lady," I said, "whither would you have me escort you? I am at
your disposal."
"Why, to Mme. Ledieu," she said with a laugh. "I told you she was my mother."
"And where does Mme. Ledieu reside?"
"Rue Ferou, 24."
"Then, let us proceed to Rue Ferou, 24."
On the way neither of us spoke a word. But by the light of the moon,
enthroned in serene glory in the sky, I was able to observe her at my
leisure. She was a charming girl of twenty or twenty-two--brunette, with
large blue eyes, more expressive of intelligence than melancholy--a finely
chiseled nose, mocking lips, teeth of pearl, hands like a queen's, and feet
like a child's; and all these, in spite of her costume of a laundress,
betokened an aristocratic air that had aroused the sergeant's suspicions not
without justice.
Arrived at the door of the house, we looked at each other a moment in
silence.
"Well, my dear M. Albert, what do you wish?" my fair unknown asked with a
smile.
"I was about to say, my dear Mlle. Solange, that it was hardly worth while to
meet if we are to part so soon."
"Oh, I beg ten thousand pardons! I find it was well worth the while; for if I
had not met you, I should have been dragged to the guard-house, and there it
would have been discovered that I am not the daughter of Mme. Ledieu--in
fact, it would have developed that I am an aristocrat, and in all likelihood
they would have cut off my head."
"You admit, then, that you are an aristocrat?"
"I admit nothing."
"At least you might tell me your name."
"Solange."
"I know very well that this name, which I gave you on the inspiration of the
moment, is not your right name."
"No matter; I like it, and I am going to keep it--at least for you."
"Why should you keep it for me? if we are not to meet again?"
"I did not say that. I only said that if we should meet again it will not be
necessary for you to know my name any more than that I should know yours. To
me you will be known as Albert, and to you I shall always be Solange."
"So be it, then; but I say, Solange," I began.
"I am listening, Albert," she replied.
"You are an aristocrat--that you admit."
"If I did not admit it, you would surmise it, and so my admission would be
divested of half its merit."
"And you were pursued because you were suspected of being an aristocrat?"
"I fear so."
"And you are hiding to escape persecution?"
"In the Rue Ferou, No. 24, with Mme. Ledieu, whose husband was my father's
coachman. You see, I have no secret from you."
"And your father?"
"I shall make no concealment, my dear Albert, of anything that relates to me.
But my fathers secrets are not my own. My father is in hiding, hoping to make
his escape. That is all I can tell you."
"And what are you going to do?"
"Go with my father, if that be possible. If not, allow him to depart without
me until the opportunity offers itself to me to join him."
"Were you coming from your father when the guard arrested you to-night?"
"Yes."
"Listen, dearest Solange."
"I am all attention."
"You observed all that took place to-night?"
"Yes. I saw that you had powerful influence."
"I regret my power is not very great. However, I have friends."
"I made the acquaintance of one of them."
"And you know he is not one of the least powerful men of the times."
"Do you intend to enlist his influence to enable my father to escape?"
"No, I reserve him for you."
"But my father?"
"I have other ways of helping your father."
"Other ways?" exclaimed Solange, seizing my hands and studying me with an
anxious expression.
"If I serve your father, will you then sometimes think kindly of me?"
"Oh, I shall all my life hold you in grateful remembrance!"
She uttered these words with an enchanting expression of devotion. Then she
looked at me beseechingly and said:
"But will that satisfy you?"
"Yes," I said.
"Ah, I was not mistaken. You are kind, generous. I thank you for my father
and myself. Even if you should fail, I shall be grateful for what you have
already done!"
"When shall we meet again, Solange?"
"When do you think it necessary to see me again?"
"To-morrow, when I hope to have good news for you."
"Well, then, to-morrow."
"Where?"
"Here."
"Here in the street?"
"Well, mon Dieu!" she exclaimed. "You see, it is the safest place. For thirty
minutes, while we have been talking here, not a soul has passed."
"Why may I not go to you, or you come to me?"
"Because it would compromise the good people if you should come to me, and
you would incur serious risk if I should go to you."
"Oh, I would give you the pass of one of my relatives."
"And send your relative to the guillotine if I should be accidentally
arrested!"
"True. I will bring you a pass made out in the name of Solange."
"Charming! You observe Solange is my real name."
"And the hour?"
"The same at which we met to-night--ten o'clock, if you please."
"All right; ten o'clock. And how shall we meet?"
"That is very simple. Be at the door at five minutes of ten, and at ten I
will come down."
"Then, at ten to-morrow, dear Solange."
"To-morrow at ten, dear Albert."
I wanted to kiss her hand; she offered me her brow.
The next day I was in the street at half past nine. At a quarter of ten
Solange opened the door. We were both ahead of time.
With one leap I was by her side.
"I see you have good news," she said.
"Excellent! First, here is a pass for you."
"First my father!"
She repelled my hand.
"Your father is saved, if he wishes."
"Wishes, you say? What is required of him?"
"He must trust me."
"That is assured."
"Have you seen him?"
"Yes."
"You have discussed the situation with him?"
"It was unavoidable. Heaven will help us."
"Did you tell your father all?"
"I told him you had saved my life yesterday, and that you would perhaps save
his to-morrow."
"To-morrow! Yes, quite right; to-morrow I shall save his life, if it is his
will."
"How? What? Speak! Speak! If that were possible, how fortunately all things
have come to pass!"
"However--" I began hesitatingly.
"Well?"
"It will be impossible for you to accompany him."
"I told you I was resolute."
"I am quite confident, however, that I shall be able later to procure a
passport for you."
"First tell me about my father; my own distress is less important."
"Well, I told you I had friends, did I not?"
"Yes."
"To-day I sought out one of them."
"Proceed."
"A man whose name is familiar to you; whose name is a guarantee of courage
and honor."
"And this man is?"
"Marceau."
"General Marceau?"
"Yes."
"True, he will keep a promise."
"Well, he has promised."
"Mon Dieu! How happy you make me! What has he promised? Tell me all."
"He has promised to help us."
"In what manner?"
"In a very simple manner. Kléber has just had him promoted to the
command of the western army. He departs to-morrow night."
"To-morrow night! We shall have no time to make the smallest preparation."
"There are no preparations to make."
"I do not understand."
"He will take your father with him."
"My father?"
"Yes, as his secretary. Arrived in the Vendée, your father will pledge
his word to the general to undertake nothing against France. From there he
will escape to Brittany, and from Brittany to England. When he arrives in
London, he will inform you; I shall obtain a passport for you, and you will
join him in London."
"To-morrow," exclaimed Solange; "my father departs tomorrow!"
"There is no time to waste."
"My father has not been informed."
"Inform him."
"To-night?"
"To-night."
"But how, at this hour?"
"You have a pass and my arm."
"True. My pass."
I gave it to her. She thrust it into her bosom.
"Now? your arm?"
I gave her my arm, and we walked away. When we arrived at the Place Turenne--that
is, the spot where we had met the night before--she said: "Await me here."
I bowed and waited.
She disappeared around the corner of what was formerly the Hôtel
Malignon. After a lapse of fifteen minutes she returned.
"Come," she said, "my father wishes to receive and thank you."
She took my arm and led me up to the Rue St. Guillaume, opposite the Hôtel
Mortemart. Arrived here, she took a bunch of keys from her pocket, opened a
small, concealed door, took me by the hand, conducted me up two flights of
steps, and knocked in a peculiar manner.
A man of forty-eight or fifty years opened the door. He was dressed as a
working man and appeared to be a bookbinder. But at the first utterance that
burst from his lips, the evidence of the seigneur was unmistakable.
"Monsieur," he said, "Providence has sent you to us. I regard you an emissary
of fate. Is it true that you can save me, or, what is more, that you wish to
save me?"
I admitted him completely to my confidence. I informed him that Marceau would
take him as his secretary, and would exact no promise other than that he
would not take up arms against France.
"I cheerfully promise it now, and will repeat it to him."
"I thank you in his name as well as in my own."
"But when does Marceau depart?"
"To-morrow."
"Shall I go to him to-night?"
"Whenever you please; he expects you."
Father and daughter looked at each other.
"I think it would be wise to go this very night," said Solange.
"I am ready; but if I should be arrested, seeing that I have no permit?"
"Here is mine."
"But you?"
"Oh, I am known."
"Where does Marceau reside?"
"Rue de l'Université, 40, with his sister, Mlle. Dégraviers-Marceau."
"Will you accompany me?"
"I shall follow you at a distance, to accompany mademoiselle home when you
are gone."
"How will Marceau know that I am the man of whom you spoke to him?"
"You will hand him this tri-colored cockade; that is the sign of
identification."
"And how shall I reward my liberator?"
"By allowing him to save your daughter also."
"Very well."
He put on his hat and extinguished the lights, and we descended by the gleam
of the moon which penetrated the stair-windows.
At the foot of the steps he took his daughter's arm, and by way of the Rue
des Saints Pères we reached Rue de l'Université. I followed
them at a distance of ten paces. We arrived at No. 40 without having met any
one. I rejoined them there.
"That is a good omen," I said; "do you wish me to go up with you?"
"No. Do not compromise yourself any further. Await my daughter here."
I bowed.
"And now, once more, thanks and farewell," he said, giving me his hand.
"Language has no words to express my gratitude. I pray that heaven may some
day grant me the opportunity of giving fuller expression to my feelings."
I answered him with a pressure of the hand.
He entered the house. Solange followed him; but she, too, pressed my hand
before she entered.
In ten minutes the door was reopened.
"Well?" I asked.
"Your friend," she said, "is worthy of his name; he is as kind and
considerate as yourself. He knows that it will contribute to my happiness to
remain with my father until the moment of departure. His sister has ordered a
bed placed in her room. To-morrow at three o'clock my father will be out of
danger. To-morrow evening at ten I shall expect you in the Rue Ferou, if the
gratitude of a daughter who owes her father's life to you is worth the
trouble."
"Oh, be sure I shall come. Did your father charge you with any message for
me?"
"He thanks you for your pass, which he returns to you, and begs you to join
him as soon as possible."
"Whenever it may be your desire to go," I said, with a strange sensation at
my heart.
"At least, I must know where I am to join him," she said. "Ah, you are not
yet rid of me!"
I seized her hand and pressed it against my heart, but she offered me her
brow, as on the previous evening, and said: "Until to-morrow."
I kissed her on the brow; but now I no longer strained her hand against my
breast, but her heaving bosom, her throbbing heart.
I went home in a state of delirious ecstasy such as I had never experienced.
Was it the consciousness of a generous action, or was it love for this
adorable creature? I know not whether I slept or woke. I only know that all
the harmonies of nature were singing within me; that the night seemed
endless, and the day eternal; I know that though I wished to speed the time,
I did not wish to lose a moment of the days still to come.
The next day I was in the Rue Ferou at nine o'clock. At half-past nine
Solange made her appearance.
She approached me and threw her arms around my neck.
"Saved!" she said; "my father is saved! And this I owe you. Oh, how I love
you!"
Two weeks later Solange received a letter announcing her father's safe
arrival in England.
The next day I brought her a passport.
When Solange received it she burst into tears.
"You do not love me!" she exclaimed.
"I love you better than my life," I replied; "but I pledged your father my
word, and I must keep it."
"Then, I will break mine," she said. "Yes, Albert; if you have the heart to
let me go, I have not the courage to leave you."
Alas, she remained!
Three months had passed since that night on which we talked of her escape,
and in all that time not a word of parting had passed her lips.
Solange had taken lodgings in the Rue Turenne. I had rented them in her name.
I knew no other, while she always addressed me as Albert. I had found her a
place as teacher in a young ladies' seminary solely to withdraw her from the
espionage of the revolutionary police, which had become more scrutinizing
than ever.
Sundays we passed together in the small dwelling, from the bedroom of which
we could see the spot where we had first met. We exchanged letters daily, she
writing to me under the name of Solange, and I to her under that of Albert.
Those three months were the happiest of my life.
In the meantime I was making some interesting experiments suggested by one of
the guillotiniers. I had obtained permission to make certain scientific tests
with the bodies and heads of those who perished on the scaffold. Sad to say,
available subjects were not wanting. Not a day passed but thirty or forty
persons were guillotined, and blood flowed so copiously on the Place de la Révolution
that it became necessary to dig a trench three feet deep around the
scaffolding. This trench was covered with deals. One of them loosened under
the feet of an eight-year-old lad, who fell into the abominable pit and was
drowned.
For self-evident reasons I said nothing to Solange of the studies that
occupied my attention during the day. In the beginning my occupation had
inspired me with pity and loathing, but as time wore on I said: "These
studies are for the good of humanity," for I hoped to convince the lawmakers
of the wisdom of abolishing capital punishment.
The Cemetery of Clamart had been assigned to me, and all the heads and trunks
of the victims of the executioner had been placed at my disposal. A small
chapel in one corner of the cemetery had been converted into a kind of
laboratory for my benefit. You know, when the queens were driven from the
palaces, God was banished from the churches.
Every day at six the horrible procession filed in. The bodies were heaped
together in a wagon, the heads in a sack. I chose some bodies and heads in a
haphazard fashion, while the remainder were thrown into a common grave.
In the midst of this occupation with the dead, my love for Solange increased
from day to day; while the poor child reciprocated my affection with the
whole power of her pure soul.
Often I had thought of making her my wife; often we had mutually pictured to
ourselves the happiness of such a union. But in order to become my wife, it
would be necessary for Solange to reveal her name; and this name, which was
that of an emigrant, an aristocrat, meant death.
Her father had repeatedly urged her by letter to hasten her departure, but
she had informed him of our engagement. She had requested his consent, and he
had given it, so that all had gone well to this extent.
The trial and execution of the queen, Marie Antoinette, had plunged me, too,
into deepest sadness. Solange was all tears, and we could not rid ourselves
of a strange feeling of despondency, a presentiment of approaching danger,
that compressed our hearts. In vain I tried to whisper courage to Solange.
Weeping, she reclined in my arms, and I could not comfort her, because my own
words lacked the ring of confidence.
We passed the night together as usual, but the night was even more depressing
than the day. I recall now that a dog, locked up in a room below us, howled
till two o'clock in the morning. The next day we were told that the dog's
master had gone away with the key in his pocket, had been arrested on the
way, tried at three, and executed at four.
The time had come for us to part. Solange's duties at the school began at
nine o'clock in the morning. Her school was in the vicinity of the Botanic
Gardens. I hesitated long to let her go; she, too, was loath to part from me.
But it must be. Solange was prone to be an object of unpleasant inquiries.
I called a conveyance and Accompanied her as far as the Rue des
Fosses-Saint-Bernard, where I got out and left her to pursue her way alone.
All the way we lay mutely wrapped in each other's arms, mingling tears with
our kisses.
After leaving the carriage, I stood as if rooted to the ground. I heard
Solange call me, but I dared not go to her, because her face, moist with
tears, and her hysterical manner were calculated to attract attention.
Utterly wretched, I returned home, passing the entire day in writing to
Solange. In the evening I sent her an entire volume of love-pledges.
My letter had hardly gone to the post when I received one from her.
She had been sharply reprimanded for coming late; had been subjected to a
severe cross-examination, and threatened with forfeiture of her next holiday.
But she vowed to join me even at the cost of her place. I thought I should go
mad at the prospect of being parted from her a whole week. I was more
depressed because a letter which had arrived from her father appeared to have
been tampered with.
I passed a wretched night and a still more miserable day.
The next day the weather was appalling. Nature seemed to be dissolving in a
cold, ceaseless rain--a rain like that which announces the approach of
winter. All the way to the laboratory my ears were tortured with the criers
announcing the names of the condemned, a large number of men, women, and
children. The bloody harvest was over-rich. I should not lack subjects for my
investigations that day.
The day ended early. At four o'clock I arrived at Clamart; it was almost
night.
The view of the cemetery, with its large, new-made graves; the sparse,
leafless trees that swayed in the wind, was desolate, almost appalling.
A large, open pit yawned before me. It was to receive to-day's harvest from
the Place de la Révolution. An exceedingly large number of victims was
expected, for the pit was deeper than usual.
Mechanically I approached the grave. At the bottom the water had gathered in
a pool; my feet slipped; I came within an inch of falling in. My hair stood
on end. The rain had drenched me to the skin. I shuddered and hastened into
the laboratory.
It was, as I have said, an abandoned chapel. My eyes searched--I know not
why--to discover if some traces of the holy purpose to which the edifice had
once been devoted did not still adhere to the walls or to the altar; but the
walls were bare, the altar empty.
I struck a light and deposited the candle on the operating-table on which lay
scattered a miscellaneous assortment of the strange instruments I employed. I
sat down and fell into a reverie. I thought of the poor queen, whom I had
seen in her beauty, glory, and happiness, yesterday carted to the scaffold,
pursued by the execrations of a people, to-day lying headless on the common
sinners' bier--she who had slept beneath the gilded canopy of the throne of
the Tuileries and St. Cloud.
As I sat thus, absorbed in gloomy meditation, wind and rain without redoubled
in fury. The rain-drops dashed against the window-panes, the storm swept with
melancholy moaning through the branches of the trees. Anon there mingled with
the violence of the elements the sound of wheels.
It was the executioner's red hearse with its ghastly freight from the Place
de la Révolution.
The door of the little chapel was pushed ajar, and two men, drenched with
rain, entered, carrying a sack between them.
"There, M. Ledru," said the guillotinier; "there is what your heart longs
for! Be in no hurry this night! We'll leave you to enjoy their society alone.
Orders are not to cover them up till to-morrow, and so they'll not take
cold."
With a horrible laugh, the two executioners deposited the sack in a corner,
near the former altar, right in front of me. Thereupon they sauntered out,
leaving open the door, which swung furiously on its hinges till my candle
flashed and flared in the fierce draft.
I heard them unharness the horse, lock the cemetery, and go away.
I was strangely impelled to go with them, but an indefinable power fettered
me in my place. I could not repress a shudder. I had no fear; but the
violence of the storm, the splashing of the rain, the whistling sounds of the
lashing branches, the shrill vibration of the atmosphere, which made my
candle tremble--all this filled me with a vague terror that began at the
roots of my hair and communicated itself to every part of my body.
Suddenly I fancied I heard a voice! A voice at once soft and plaintive; a
voice within the chapel, pronouncing the name of "Albert!"
I was startled.
"Albert!"
But one person in all the world addressed me by that name!
Slowly I directed my weeping eyes around the chapel, which, though small, was
not completely lighted by the feeble rays of the candle, leaving the nooks
and angles in darkness, and my look remained fixed on the blood-soaked sack
near the altar with its hideous contents.
At this moment the same voice repeated the same name, only it sounded fainter
and more plaintive.
"Albert!"
I bolted out of my chair, frozen with horror.
The voice seemed to proceed from the sack!
I touched myself to make sure that I was awake; then I walked toward the sack
with my arms extended before me, but stark and staring with horror. I thrust
my hand into it. Then it seemed to me as if two lips, still warm, pressed a
kiss upon my fingers!
I had reached that stage of boundless terror where the excess of fear turns
into the audacity of despair. I seized the head and collapsing in my chair,
placed it in front of me.
Then I gave vent to a fearful scream. This head, with its lips still warm,
with the eyes half closed, was the head of Solange!
I thought I should go mad.
Three times I called:
"Solange! Solange! Solange!"
At the third time she opened her eyes and looked at me. Tears trickled down
her cheeks; then a moist glow darted from her eyes, as if the soul were
passing, and the eyes closed, never to open again.
I sprang to my feet a raving maniac, I wanted to fly; I knocked against the
table; it fell. The candle was extinguished; the head rolled upon the floor,
and I fell prostrate, as if a terrible fever had stricken me down--an
icy-shudder convulsed me, and, with a deep sigh, I swooned.
The following morning at six the grave-diggers found me, cold as the
flagstones on which I lay.
Solange, betrayed by her father's letter, had been arrested the same day,
condemned, and executed.
The head that had called me, the eyes that had looked at me, were the head,
the eyes, of Solange!