are a badge of solidarity. They are called, after all, to attend on the demise of the old order, not to be guests at a costume ball. Above the plain cravats a certain pride shows in their starched faces. We are the men of purpose: good-bye to frippery.
Maximilien de Robespierre walked with a contingent from his own part of the country, between two farmers; if he turned his head he could see the embattled jaws of the Breton deputies. Shoulders trapped him, walled him in. He kept his eyes straight ahead, suppressed his desire to scan the ranks of the cheering crowds that lined the routes. There was no one here who knew him; no one cheering, specifically, for him.
In the crowd Camille had met the Abbe de Bourville. “You don’t recognize me,” the abbe complained, pushing through. “We were at school together.”
“Yes, but in those days you had a blue tinge, from the cold.”
“I recognized you right away. You’ve not changed a bit, you look about nineteen.”
“Are you pious now, de Bourville?”
“Not noticeably. Do you ever see Louis Suleau?”
“Never. But I expect he’ll turn up.”
They turned back to the procession. For a moment he was swept by an irrational certainty that he, Desmoulins, had arranged all this, that the Estates were marching at his behest, that all Paris and Versailles revolved around his own person.
“There’s Orleans.” De Bourville pulled at his arm. “Look, he’s insisting on walking with the Third Estate. Look at the Master of Ceremonies pleading with him. He’s broken out in a sweat. Look, that’s the Duc de Biron.”
“Yes, I know him. I’ve been to his house.”
“That’s Lafayette.” America’s hero stepped out briskly in his silver waistcoat, his pale young face serious and a little abstracted, his peculiarly pointed head hidden under a tricorne hat a
“Only by reputation,” Camille muttered. “Washington pot-au-feu.”
Bourville laughed. “You must write that down.”
“I have.”
At the Church of Saint-Louis, de Robespierre had a good seat by an aisle. A good seat, to fidget through the sermon, to be close to the procession of the great. So close; the billowing episcopal sea parted for a second, and between the violet robes and the lawn sleeves the King looked him full in the face without meaning to, the King, overweight in cloth-of-gold; and as the Queen turned her head (this close for the second time, Madame) the heron plumes in her hair seemed to beckon to him, civilly. The Holy Sacrament in its jeweled monstrance was a small sun, ablaze in a bishop’s hands; they took their seat on a dais, under a canopy of velvet embroidered with gold fleur-de- lis. Then the choir:
O salutaris hostia
Quae coeli pandis ostium,
Bella premunt hostilia,
Da robur, fer auxilium.
Uni trinoque domino,
Sit sempitema gloria,
Qui vitam sine termino,
Nobis donet in patria.
Amen.
“Look, look,” Camille said to de Bourville. “Maximilien.”
“Well, so it is. Our dear Thing. I suppose one shouldn’t be surprised.”
“I should be there. In that procession. De Robespierre is my intellectual inferior.”
“What?” The abbe turned, amazed. Laughter engulfed him. “Louis XVI by the grace of God is your intellectual inferior. So no doubt is our Holy Father the Pope. What else would you like to be, besides a deputy?” Camille did not reply. “Dear, dear.” The abbe affected to wipe his eyes.
“There’s Mirabeau,” Camille said. “He’s starting a newspaper. I’m going to write for it.”
“How did you arrange that?”
“I haven’t. Tomorrow I will.”
De Bourville looked sideways at him. Camille is a liar, he thinks, always was. No, that’s too harsh; let’s say, he romances. “Well, good luck to you,” he said. “Did you see how the Queen was received? Nasty, wasn’t it? They cheered Orleans though. And Lafayette. And Mirabeau.”
And d‘Anton, Camille said: under his breath, to try out the sound of it. D’Anton had a big case in hand, would not even come to watch. And Desmoulins, he added. They cheered Desmoulins most of all. He felt a dull ache of disappointment.
It had rained all night. At ten o’clock, when the procession began, the streets had been steaming under the early sun, but by midday the ground was quite hot and dry.
Camille had arranged to spend the night in Versailles at his cousin’s apartment; he had made a point of asking this favor of the deputy when there were several people about, so that he could not with dignity refuse. It was well after midnight when he arrived.
“Where on earth have you been till this time?” de Viefville said.
“With the Duc de Biron. And the Comte de Genlis,” Camille murmured.
“Oh I
A young man rose from his quiet seat in the chimney corner. “I’ll leave you, M. de Viefville. But think over what I’ve said.”