Part 9 (1/2)
Feeling this way, I cannot permit Louis to come back yet awhile.
Meantime, in the hope of replenis.h.i.+ng our cellars with a few bottles of Glenlivet, I will write a letter of pacification to George III., one of the most gorgeous rex in Madame Tussaud's collection of living potentates.”
This Bonaparte did, asking the English king if he hadn't had enough war for the present. George, through the eyes of his ministers, perceived Bonaparte's point, and replied that he was very desirous for peace himself, but that at present the market seemed to be cornered, and that therefore the war must go on. This reply amused Napoleon.
”It suits me to the ground,” he said, addressing Talleyrand. ”A year of peace would interfere materially with my future. If Paris were Philadelphia, it would be another thing. There one may rest--there is no popular demand for excitement--Penn was mightier than the sword--but here one has to be in a broil constantly; to be a chef one must be eternally cooking, and the results must be of the kind that requires extra editions of the evening papers. The day the newsboys stop shouting my name, my sun will set for the last time. Even now the populace are murmuring, for nothing startling has occurred this week, which reminds me, I wish to see Fouche. Send him here.”
Talleyrand sent for the Minister of Police, who responded to the summons.
”Fouche,” said Bonaparte, sternly, ”what are we here for, salary or glory?”
”Glory, General.”
”Precisely. Now, as head of the Police Department, are you aware that no attempt to a.s.sa.s.sinate me has been made for two weeks?”
”Yes, General, but--”
”Has the a.s.sa.s.sin appropriation run out? Have the a.s.sa.s.sins struck for higher wages, or are you simply careless?” demanded the First Consul. ”I warn you, sir, that I wish no excuses, and I will add that unless an attempt is made on my life before ten o'clock to- night, you lose your place. The French people must be kept interested in this performance, and how the deuce it is to be done without advertising I don't know. Go, and remember that I shall be at home to a.s.sa.s.sins on Thursdays of alternate weeks until further notice.”
”Your Consuls.h.i.+p's wishes shall be respected,” said Fouche, with a low bow. ”But I must say one word in my own behalf. You were to have had a dynamite bomb thrown at you yesterday by one of my employes, but the brave fellow who was to have stood between you and death disappointed me. He failed to turn up at the appointed hour, and so, of course, the a.s.sault didn't come off.”
”Couldn't you find a subst.i.tute?” demanded Bonaparte.
”I could not,” said Fouche. ”There aren't many persons in Paris who care for that kind of employment. They'd rather shovel snow.”
”You are a gay stage-manager, you are!” snapped Bonaparte. ”My brother Joseph is in town, and yet you say you couldn't find a man to be hit by a bomb. Leave me, Fouche. You give me the ennuis.”
Fouche departed with Talleyrand, to whom he expressed his indignation at the First Consul's reprimand.
”He insists upon an attempted a.s.sa.s.sination every week,” he said; ”and I tell you, Talleyrand, it isn't easy to get these things up.
The market is long on real a.s.sa.s.sins, fellows who'd kill him for the mere fun of hearing his last words, but when it comes to playing to the galleries with a mock attempt with real consequences to the would-be murderers, they fight shy of it.”
Nevertheless, Fouche learned from the interview with Bonaparte that the First Consul was not to be trifled with, and hardly a day pa.s.sed without some exciting episode in this line, in which, of course, Napoleon always came out unscathed and much endeared to the populace.
This, however, could not go on forever. The fickle French soon wearied of the series of unsuccessful attempts on the Consul's life, and some began to suspect the true state of affairs.
”They're on to our scheme, General,” said Fouche, after a while.
”You've got to do something new.”
”What would you suggest?” asked Napoleon, wearily.
”Can't you write a book of poems, or a three-volume novel?” suggested Talleyrand.
”Or resign, and let Sieyes run things for a while?” said Fouche. ”If they had another Consul for a few months, they'd appreciate what a vaudeville show they lost in you.”
”I'd rather cross the Alps,” said Bonaparte. ”I don't like to resign. Moving is such a nuisance, and I must say I find the Tuileries a very pleasant place of abode. It's more fun than you can imagine rummaging through the late king's old bureau-drawers.
Suppose I get up a new army and lead it over the Alps.”
”Just the thing,” said Talleyrand. ”Only it will be a very snowy trip.”
”I'm used to snow-b.a.l.l.s,” said Napoleon, his mind reverting to the episode which brought his career at Brienne to a close. ”Just order an army and a mule and I'll set out. Meanwhile, Fouche, see that the Bourbons have a conspiracy to be unearthed in time for the Sunday newspapers every week during my absence. I think it would be well, too, to keep a war-correspondent at work in your office night and day, writing despatches about my progress. Give him a good book on Hannibal's trip to study, and let him fill in a column or two every day with anecdotes about myself, and at convenient intervals unsuccessful attempts to a.s.sa.s.sinate Josephine may come in handy.