They were coming. I could hear the shouts in the distance. I went to the window. There was a strange light out there. It came from the torches they were carrying.
I heard their chanting voices. ‘Au château! À bas les aristocrats! À la lanterne!’
I thought of the lifeless body of the merchant hanging from the lamp-post and I felt sick with fear.
They were coming nearer and nearer.
Tante Berthe said: ‘The drawbridge will stop them.’
‘Not for long,’ I answered.
We looked at each other fearfully and Lisette glided from the room.
‘Where has she gone?’ asked Sophie.
‘To take off that finery if she has any sense,’ retorted Tante Berthe.
I said: ‘I am going to find her. I am going to talk to her.’
I found her mounting the spiral staircase to the tower. I saw her standing on the battlements. The light from the torches had thrown a fierce glow over the scene for the mob was very close … right at the castle gates.
She stood there on the battlements. She looked magnificent with the diamonds sparkling at her throat.
The mob shouted when they saw her.
‘Lisette,’ I called. ‘Come down. Come down.’
She held up her hand and there was silence. She called out to the mob: ‘I am the daughter of the Comte d’Aubigné … an aristocrat by birth.’
The mob started to shout. ‘À bas les aristocrats. À la lanterne!’
She shouted above the noise and eventually they were quiet, listening.
‘But I have worked for your cause. My friend is Léon Blanchard and he will confirm this. I have worked for you, my friends, against the overlords, against those who caused the price of bread to be so high, against those whose extravagances have impoverished France. I will prove to you that I am your friend. I will let down the drawbridge so that you may enter the castle.’
There was a roar of applause.
She dashed past me. I thought of trying to stop her. She would let them in but did it matter? They would not allow the drawbridge to stop them for very long.
She would save herself at the cost of Sophie’s life and mine. It was the final act of hatred.
I went back to the room. They were all waiting expectantly. It would not be long now. The mob would soon be storming the castle.
Jeanne did a strange thing. She untied Sophie’s hood and took it off so that the hideous disfigurement was displayed. ‘Trust me,’ she whispered to Sophie, who had gasped with dismay. ‘I know these people. I think it best. Trust me.’
I could hear sounds of ribald laughter, the noise of falling furniture. The mob was in the château.
Lisette had joined us. Her eyes were shining with triumph. ‘They have come,’ she said.
The door burst open. It was a horrific moment—the one for which we had all been waiting. They were here.
In those terrifying moments I was surprised to recognize among the people who burst into the room three shopkeepers whom I knew slightly—respectable men—not the kind I should have expected to be involved in such an outrage; but mob madness could spring up everywhere.
Lisette faced them. ‘I am the daughter of the Comte,’ she repeated. ‘I am of aristocratic birth, but I have always worked for you and the revolution.’
A man was staring at the diamonds at her throat. I thought he was going to snatch them. Then one of the shopkeepers pushed him roughly aside.
‘Be careful,’ he growled. There was about him a hint of leadership and I felt a faint touch of relief. I sensed that this man was uneasy … wary, and it occurred to me that he could command a certain respect and perhaps hold the more bloodthirsty of the raiders in check.
His words certainly had an effect, for the men who had entered the room ignored us for a few seconds and went round the room examining everything. They looked at the men lying on the bed. Both Armand and his companion regarded them with indifference.
‘Who are they?’ asked one of the men.
‘They are half dead,’ said another.
Jeanne and Tante Berthe faced them squarely. ‘We are servants here. We are not aristocrats,’ said Tante Berthe. ‘You don’t want us.’
Jeanne had her arm about Sophie and I saw the men staring at her scarred face.
One of them took Lisette by the shoulders.
‘Take your hands from me,’ said Lisette haughtily.
‘Ah, be careful of Madame la Comtesse,’ said one of the men ironically.
‘I am the Comte’s daughter,’ said Lisette, ‘but I am with you. I worked with Monsieur Léon Blanchard.’
‘They are on our side now it is good to be so,’ said another of the men. ‘It used to be a different story.’
They started to hustle Lisette out of the room. She turned and pointed to me: ‘That is the acknowledged daughter of the Comte,’ she cried.
‘Yes,’ said one of the men. ‘I know her. I’ve seen her with the Comte. Don’t take any notice of her dress. That is put on to deceive us.’
I realized then that I was still wearing the servant’s dress which I had put on that morning and what a contrast I must make to Lisette in her finery.
The men were looking at the others in the room. They shrugged their shoulders. Then, dragging Lisette and me with them, they went out of the room.
What happened afterwards still bewilders me.
I can remember being dragged through the crowds; I remember the abuse, most of it directed towards Lisette. How foolish she had been to dress up as she had!
The flare of the torches, the sight of dark menacing eyes, the dirty clenched fists which were brandished close to my face, the painful grip on my arms, the moment when someone spat in my face … they are scenes from a nightmare which would spring up suddenly and carry me back all through my life to that fearful night.
We were forced into a wagonette which was drawn by a mangy-looking horse.
And thus we drove through the mob into the town.
There followed the strangest night I have ever spent. We were driven to the mairie and there hustled out of the cart and taken to a small room on the first floor which looked down on the street.
We were fortunate in as much as these people were unaware of their power at this time. The revolution which had been rumbling for so long had only just broken out and among those men who carried us to the mairie were some who, a short time before, had been known as respectable citizens of the town … shopkeepers and the like. They were unsure of what reprisals might be taken. They knew that there were risings all over Paris but they must have wondered what would happen to them if the risings were suppressed and the aristocrats were in power again.
The mob would have taken us to the lamp-post and hanged us right away, but there were several who advised a certain restraint. The Mayor himself was uncertain. For centuries the Aubigné family had been the power in the neighbourhood. It was early days and they could not be sure that that power was broken; they were not yet accustomed to the new order. And the more sober men of the town were very much afraid of retaliation.
The mob had surrounded the mairie and were demanding that we be brought out. They wanted to see our bodies swinging on the lanternes.
I wondered what was happening back at the château.
Were they safe there? Armand and his friend were not recognizable; poor Sophie’s face had probably saved her. This was a revolt against those who had what the mob wanted. Nobody wanted what those sickly men or poor scarred Sophie had. There was nothing to envy in them. It was different with Lisette and me. They did not believe Lisette. She had miscalculated badly, and if she had not been so anxious to prove herself an aristocrat she would have realized what a very dangerous position she was placing herself in.
There were no chairs in the room, so we lay on the floor.
‘I wish that scum would stop shouting,’ said Lisette.