Authors: Patrick Rambaud
*
In the four days he had been in Smolensk, Napoleon hadn't once left the house on New Square, which he had chosen for his quarters. It was undamaged and comfortable. The victuals from Paris for the Emperor's household accumulated in its cellars and kitchens. Did he really understand the situation? He didn't appear affected by his army's tribulations. When they were moving, he barely got out of his berline and ate his fill of the same things he ate at the Tuileries. His entourage did nothing to dispel his illusions. Berthier looked well, as did Daru, and if Prefect Bausset was hobbling on crutches, it was only because he had gout. Caulaincourt was having shoes with three crampons made for the saddle and draught horses, the regiments were getting their strength back, furs and meat were going to be distributed amongst them. Tomorrow the Emperor would leave Smolensk with his Guard. The Minsk road was crisscrossed by ravines and, in places, narrowed by gorges, so they had to avoid congestion and march faster. After him would come Prince Eugène, then Davout, and then Ney with his rearguard ⦠Sebastian appeared; he had the text of the 28th bulletin:
âSince the bad weather of the 6th, we have lost three thousand draught horses, and almost a hundred of our caissons have been destroyed
â¦' The Emperor glanced through the text, which ended with the line,
âThe Emperor's health has never been better.!
He signed it on the
writing desk which a valet drew up in front of him. Then he called for Daru, his Intendant General, to inquire about the distribution of supplies.
âThe Guard have already had their rations, sire.'
âGood. And the others?'
âNot yet, sire.'
âWhy the devil not?'
âThe stores are not sufficiently stocked.'
âLiar!'
âUnfortunately, sire, I am not lying.'
âCome now, Daru! We have two weeks' rations for a hundred thousand men here.'
âBarely half that, sire, and the meat has run out.'
âHow many men to feed?'
âFewer than a hundred thousand, far fewer â¦'
âThe Guard?'
âFive thousand able-bodied.'
âThe cavalry?'
âEighteen hundred mounted troopers.'
âThe regiments?'
âRoughly thirty thousand.'
The Emperor walked round the room, his lips quivering; he took a great pinch of snuff, then threw his snuffbox on the floor, and bawled, âBring me the criminal in charge of provisioning!'
Napoleon stayed alone with the commissary responsible for Smolensk's stores. For a long time the secretaries, valets and grenadiers on guard heard His Majesty's yells and threats and the sobs of the guilty man.
âThis year a group of mallards had their feet frozen to a pond's surface, and now a bald eagle busies himself swooping in and tearing off their heads.'
Jim Harrison,
Just before Dark
I
N THE SHATTERED HOVEL
in the suburbs of Smolensk, there were no planks or beams left to sustain the fire their survival depended upon, so they had to set off again, keep on walking, find better shelter and food. Dr Fournereau, Ornella and the rest of their wretched band were gathering together their possessions when one of them, who had pushed back the palisade to look outside, grabbed Fournereau by his black bearskin cloak.
âMira! Mira! Las puertas!'
The doctor put on his gloves. Hordes of men and women were climbing from all directions towards the open gates of the city; if it weren't for the fact that they sank into the snow at every step, the doctor and his troupe would have run to get ahead of the crowd. The bitingly cold air cut to the bone. Keeping close together, they planted their feet in the snow mechanically, their brains switched down, moving on instinct, like hunters. The Emperor had just set off
towards Minsk with his Guard; his headquarters staff was packing up and the servants were selling Bordeaux from the Imperial cellars at twenty francs a bottle. No officers were able, or inclined, to bring the chaos under control. The soldiers, stragglers and fugitives wouldn't listen to anything but their stomachs. They were besieging the stores where the supply commissaries had barricaded themselves whilst they waited for hypothetical orders.
The snowstorm had veiled the piles of bodies, studding the road that climbed towards the citadel with white mounds. Halfway up, Fournereau and his dependants merged with the thousands of people banging furiously on the massive shutters of the main warehouse. From a first-floor window, Comptroller Poissonnard was haranguing the crowd. âWait! There'll be some for everybody!'
âWhat are we waiting for?'
âWe have to get the rations organized!'
âWe'll organize them ourselves! Open up!'
âWait â¦'
âShut up, little piggy, or you'll end up on a spit.'
A barouche whose horses had been taken by the artillery cleared a path, drawn by voltigeurs, and with the crowd helping to push it, smashed into the door; a leaf started cracking, which fifty hands tore clean away. Slats went flying to make the opening bigger. Then without a word, with the force of a torrent, the crowd surged into the building and fanned out. Fournereau held Ornella by the arm; the rest of his band followed him. They let themselves be swept into a room full of crates that a big uhlan in a tricorne was hacking open with an axe. Held aloft on outstretched arms, two-handled baskets were passing over people's heads; those at the front looted the beans and bags
of flour and rice; those behind bounded up the staircase. On the first floor, the commissaries had jammed the doors shut with bars, but they couldn't withstand the massive pressure. The besiegers discovered a new stockroom where Poissonnard was preparing to flee. He had fixed a ladder to one of the windows and two of his associates had already climbed down it; wagons were waiting for them at the rear of the building. Fournereau grabbed the comptroller by the skirts of his blue coat, as he stepped over the windowsill. âWhat are you taking away in your carts?'
âHis Majesty's Service!' Poissonnard answered in a hoarse voice.
âWhere's the meat?'
âThe droves never arrived!'
The doctor bent forward. Catching the comptroller by the throat, he half-strangled him. Below, the man's quarter-master colleagues were waiting for him; the wagon drivers were on their seats, reins in hand, looking around for the signal to leave. Poissonnard moaned, âLet me go, I'm no use to you.'
âNo, you're no use to anyone. Go and join the other lickpennies!' With a hard shove, Fournereau unbalanced Poissonnard, who toppled from his ledge and fell, screaming; he smashed onto a vehicle's oilskin hood. The drivers instantly whipped up their horses and the wagons disappeared round the bend of the snow-covered street. In the warehouse, the systematic pillaging was continuing; everything was vanishing into pockets, sacks, double bags and caps; even the wooden crates were being taken for the next campfire. Fournereau knelt down next to Ornella. She was stuffing her bundle with dry vegetables. âLooks like we're not going to paradise today either,' he said.
âThen it'll be tomorrow,' she answered with a distracted smile. They heard a cannonade in the distance. No doubt one of Kutuzov's armies was attacking the rear-guard.
*
The baggage train followed the route taken by the Emperor and his Guard, across twenty-five leagues of flat country to Krasnoie, a small town where they would be joined by Davout's, Eugene's and Ney's army corps, who were going to leave Smolensk in stages. The secretaries' berline and their department's wagons had spent the night under cover in a birch forest, surrounded by campfires lit by skirmishers of the Young Guard who were commanded by a beefy captain, loudmouthed but attentive to his men, named Vautrin. Before dawn he was poking those who were asleep with his stick, chivvying them along; they were stretched out in the snow, their cloaks stiff with ice. âUp you get! Up you get! If you sleep now you won't wake up again!' They sat up and got to their feet, one by one, blinded by the smoke from the glowing fires that the non-commissioned officers had watched over all night, constantly breaking branches to keep them stoked. âUp you get! A plague on any fool who sleeps too long!' His bellows echoed in the silence. Sebastian opened an eye in the berline he'd been sharing with Fain, Sautet, who was snoring open-mouthed, and Sautet's family since Moscow. âUp you get! Up you get!' Captain Vautrin repeated, belabouring one of his men. The officer stuck his stick in the snow, shook the sleeper and bawled at the survivors of the 2nd Battalion: âOn your feet! Otherwise you'll end up like your friend Lepel!' Sebastian left his travelling companions and went over to
the fires. The soldiers of the Guard were the only ones wearing uniforms that more or less matched, with grey greatcoats, albeit frayed, and shakos with chinstraps in place; despite the furs over their ears and the rags round their gaiters, they had retained a soldierly bearing.
On the tip of a bayonet, Captain Vautrin offered the secretary a piece of grilled meat that he took with his gloved fingers and bit into. It wasn't easy to swallow, but he didn't even ask what things were anymore, he just chewed the blackened, stringy flesh â what difference did it make anyway? He'd gladly have turned cannibal if there were no other way to hold out till Paris.
The skirmishers collected their muskets from the piles; one of them slung the strap of a drum over his shoulder and started playing. Sebastian resumed his position on the berline's box. He sensed similar stirrings in the carriages behind. Day was breaking in a milky white sky, but now it had fallen twenty degrees below freezing, the snow had stopped. Glancing at the hindquarters of their two horses before touching them with his whip, he noticed that the one on the left was covered in blood, black blood, congealed and crusted. He jumped down from his seat, wincing; during the night, some rogues had cut slices the size of large steaks from the thighs of the animal, which hadn't felt anything in the bitter cold.
âMy lord â¦'
âAre we setting off?' mumbled Baron Fain under his covers, screwing up his eyes.
âThat is going to be difficult, with only one horse.'
âWhat are you telling me, Monsieur Roque?'
âCome and see.'
âOh, goodness, what horrors have you in store?'
âWhat is it?' the bookseller asked anxiously, emerging from the berline.
âYou'll find out soon enough,' muttered the Baron as he walked with Sebastian towards the mutilated horse.
The driver of the maps and archives wagon had come to have a look; he was shaking his head.
âThat's not pretty, not pretty at all â¦'
âKeep your comments to yourself,' snapped the Baron, exasperated by this serious reversal.
âWhat shall we do?'
âFirst, Monsieur Roque, take this poor animal out of the shafts.'
âThat will only leave one horse, and he won't be able to pull the berline, even if he did have his share of oats in Smolensk.'
âAh now, for a coach that size,' the coachman said, âyou'd have to have a team of four put to.'
The Baron thought. The 2nd Battalion of skirmishers had marched off behind their drums and rolled colour, of which only the eagle showed above the shakos.
âI'll ride the second horse,' decided the Baron. âWe'll pack it with a modest load. And you, Monsieur Roque, will follow with our wagons, on this driver's box.'
âAnd the Sautets?'
âLet them walk like everybody else. After all, Dr Larrey recommends walking to prevent numbness. You will explain the situation to them.'
The horse that had been butchered alive fell in the snow, jerking spasmodically; the steam pluming from its nostrils quickly turned to ice, like that tear Sebastian
thought he could see at the corner of its staring eye. The Baron chose necessities, which he stuffed in a satchel. When he was ready, he mounted the unharmed horse without either saddle or stirrups, clasped its neck with both arms, and pressed his face into its mane. He squeezed the flanks of his mount with his knees and trotted off after the battalion, telling his clerk, âI'il find a saddle on the road, no one would have thought to slow themselves down with one of those.'
âYou follow me then, right?' the coachman suggested to Sebastian.
âYes, but I have to warn the passengers first â¦'
âWell, get a move on. We don't want to go wasting any time.'
It was a delicate mission. Sebastian loathed being the bringer of bad news. He was trying to become more callous, and it was easy enough in His Majesty's entourage, but in this case, how was he to explain to the bookseller that they were leaving him in this forest a long way from the city? At least, by a stroke of luck, they had entrusted the last of their wounded, the lieutenant with the fever, to the doctors in Smolensk. He opened the door wide.
âAre we setting off or not?' demanded the bookseller.
âThe truth of the matter is that everyone, from now on, is making their own arrangements to continue their journey â¦'
âWhat's this nonsense you're telling me, young man?' âThere are no horses to draw the carriage.'
âThat means â¦'
âThat you gather up what you think will be useful.'
âAnd then set off on foot?'
âI fear so, Monsieur Sautet.'
âWell, I dread so! At my age, what an idea! What about my wife? And my daughter?'
The two scared women were biting their lips. Emboldened by a sudden flash of courage, the bookseller asked Sebastian to take his daughter in the map wagon.
âWhat about you two?'
âMélanie and I shall stay in the carriage.'
âBe reasonable, Monsieur Sautet â¦'
âAre you invoking reason, in circumstances like this? Come now, there is only the one road. A barouche will have room for us. There are other former inhabitants of Moscow, acquaintances of mine, in this wretched cortege.'
âVery well,' said Sebastian. âMademoiselle â¦'
He helped Mlle Sautet down onto the slippery foot-board, took her in his arms to prevent her falling and found as best a place for her as he could between the piles of files and scrolls filling the wagon. The dog Dimitri was barking. Sautet leant out of the door, a book in his out-stretched hand. âMonsieur le secrétaire, this volume fell out of your bag, it would be a pity to lose it.'
âThank you, sir, thank you.'
Sebastian took the book, Seneca's
On the Tranquillity of the Soul
, from which the bookseller, either mockingly or pretentiously, recited a passage:
âWhen one believes that whatever can happen is about to happen, this always cushions the shock of the misfortune
. But take care of Emilie â¦'
âI promise, Monsieur Sautet.'
The wagon left. As they passed the stranded berline, Sebastian saw the bookseller and his wife clasped in each other's arms. He lowered his eyes. The barking hadn't stopped; the little black dog was scampering along next to
the wagon. The secretary bent down, stretched out a hand, picked up the animal by the scruff of its neck and settled it on his lap under the wolfskin cover. The coachman rolled his eyes heavenwards.
*
The reality of what was happening tormented Sebastian Roque. No one had prepared him for such cruelty. He kept telling himself that the secretariat's wagons were full to bursting, fuller, even; it just wasn't possible for them to take the bookseller and his wife; he'd already contravened regulations as it was, by fitting their daughter in amongst the ragtag assortment of maps and administrative documents, maybe he'd get into trouble for that in itself. What was going to happen to the Sautets? No carriage would stop to save them; the bookseller had used this argument to salve the young man's conscience, it was elegant, brave and false. They would die of hunger or cold if peasants didn't massacre them first. Sebastian despised himself and exonerated himself in equal measure as he stroked Dimitri the dog, who gave off a little heat.
âWe're there,' the coachman said.
âWhere?'
âKrasnoie, probably.'
With his whip he pointed to a jumble of shacks in the distance whose roofs were sagging under thick snow. An unbroken line of regiments and berlines was heading there. Dead horses still lay everywhere, and corpses frozen like statues on the roadside, which they looked at wearily, as one would boundary posts. They hadn't quite arrived, however. First the road dipped down into a defile with sides of sheet ice. At the entrance to a narrow bridge, carriages and wagons
were snarled. One of the Treasury's caissons burst open as it fell and unleashed a rain of gold coins. Exhausted soldiers stopped at the edge of the ravine. Sebastian wanted to see as well. Unable to move, the coachman grumbled, âYou're too curious, sir.' When Sebastian pushed back the cover, the black dog bounded down into the snow.