CHAPTER 32

EVERYTHING was ready! At least that was what Mathurin Jelent had assured Margont, who was hard at work in the printing shop. Outside, Joseph’s agents were keeping watch. He had never met them, and did not try to spot them. He hadn’t noticed them when he had gone out that morning to meet Varencourt in Rue de Rivoli - his life now depended on people he had never met. And he felt that it was absurd that at a time when two hundred thousand invaders were marching towards Paris, and when he might well lose his life in a shoot-out that very evening, he was engaged in printing fripperies! He brandished a proof, the ink still wet and shining. ‘What on earth is the point of this? “Madame la Baronne de Bijonsert has the pleasure of inviting you to her Spring Ball to be held at her house on 29 March.” And she wants five hundred invitations! She might as well have asked for two hundred thousand, because with all the Allies on the way, she could have a fine Spring Ball!’ ‘She’s imperial nobility ...’ explained Mathurin Jelent.

‘And so?’

‘And so she’s squandering her money, throwing it out of the window. She’s doing everything she can to spend a million in a week. Because if Louis XVIII comes to the throne, Baronne de Bijonsert will have to hand her large house over to Baron something or other - Baron Ancien Regime, that is - who lived there before the Revolution, and perhaps he’ll take some of her worldly goods as well. When you are about to lose everything, or almost everything, you might as well treat yourself to a lovely last evening of fun. No one can make you hand over your memories.’

Margont was furious but pretended to be delighted. He told himself if he continued to live with these double thoughts he would really start to lose his mind. He noticed that he had absent-mindedly screwed up the invitation card into a ball.

‘Spoilt proof. It’ll have to be redone.’

Lefine was also there, installed in front of an empty workbench, inert in the midst of all the activity, like the queen bee, dozing in the midst of the worker bees. After Margont had revealed what

Varencourt had said, Lefine decided he’d better stay with his friend at all times. He had that catlike quality of being able to swing instantly from activity to complete rest and vice versa. Whilst every evening Margont needed an hour of reading to calm his thoughts - if his thoughts were ever really calm - Lefine would plunge effortlessly into a state of beatific repose, enjoying the present without thinking about the dark clouds on the horizon. At the moment he was thinking what a fine thing it would be to be a printer. Baronne de Bijonsert wanted five hundred invitations? You’d just print five hundred and one and then you would be off to the ball! A free banquet, dancing with pretty girls. You’d just have to arrive late, when the Baronne had stopped greeting people at the door, and mingle with the crowd. His fingers slid over another proof that had fallen - quite by chance! - into his pocket.

Margont was kicking himself for having allowed Lefine to be seen by the Swords of the King. Yet again he had failed to think through the consequences of his ideas.

The shadows were lengthening in the streets, like dark plants

extending tendrils of night. The door opened; a gust of icy air filled the room. Margont recognised their visitor. He was one of the men who had come to his lodgings with Vicomte de Leaume. ‘Monsieur Lami and I have some business to attend to,’ Margont announced to his staff.

Lefine and he went outside, following the visitor, who said not a word.


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