He is full of optimism. “My government will be a government of spirit and of youth.” He says this in the face of the hordes of beggars on the streets, the robber bands everywhere, the nations staggering debt. No detail is overlooked. This morning he ordered bulls imported from Switzerland to give strength to French herds, trees to be planted along all our roads. The Ministers are exhausted trying to keep up with him, for he requires daily reports.
And nightly, when a normal man would be entirely depleted by the events of the day, he attacks with the same zeal “our project.” I’m not married to a man, I’m married to a whirlwind!
November 29.
“I’m sorry, Madame Bonaparte, Madame Tallien is not receiving.”
Not receiving
me.
[Undated]
Bonaparte is going mad working out a new constitution with Sieyès, who is both slow and illogical. For a price (a high one) Sieyès has at last agreed to step aside. Now, I pray, things will begin to move.
December 24, Christmas Eve.
There is great celebrating in the streets. The new constitution has been announced. “The Revolution is over!” people cry out, tears streaming.
Over? I want to believe this. I want to believe these words.
December 25, Christmas Day.
A lovely family gathering here this morning: Aunt Désirée, Hortense and Eugène. (It was too chilly for the Marquis to travel.) The children and I enjoyed taking Aunt Désirée on a tour. Aunt Désirée admired the black “Eagle” cooking range with a coal grate in the kitchen, and the elaborate network of bells and cords for summoning servants. The children insisted on showing her the secret passages. (I kept thinking I could hear Barras laughing.) Aunt Désirée left me with careful instructions on the use of Goddard’s powder to polish silver and the proper way to clean walls lined with brocade (brush down and then rub with tissue followed by a soft silk duster).
Now, a quiet moment before preparing for the Bonapartes tonight. Bonaparte is busy drafting a letter to the King of England, proposing peace. Peace! A spirit of optimism has come over us all.
December 31.
Today is the last day of the eighteenth century. It seems that everyone in Paris (except me) is festive, gay,
drunk
—openly celebrating, for mercifully Bonaparte has allowed the Christian holidays to be observed. Wisely, rather, for it would have been impossible to ignore this significant turning.
January 1, 1800!
This is the first day of a new century. Just imagine! Everything I do, every move I make, has a careful yet excited feeling of beginning anew. This morning Bonaparte and I lingered long in our big feather bed, laughing and whispering, teasing and coquetting, working on “our project” (as he so solemnly puts it). I had a hint of the flowers two weeks ago. I am filled with hope.
Later.
One hundred and fifty-seven hackney cabs lined up outside the Palais Egalité to buy sugared almonds and marrons glacés. “Just like in the days
of the Ancien Regime,” Eugène said, chewing a sugared almond, his chin dusted with powdered sugar. “I guess it wasn’t all bad,” he added, licking his lips.
[Undated]
I have been reading to Bonaparte every evening before he drops off to sleep.
*
This is a quiet time for us, a precious moment. He makes love to me, and then we talk, of our astonishing life, the challenges we each face, the exciting possibilities that lie ahead. And then I read to him, usually from his beloved Ossian. This evening the worn leather volume was not in its usual spot beside the bed. “I’ve burned it,” he said, more in sorrow than in anger.
“Why?” I was shocked. Bonaparte took that book with him everywhere.
“It was a fake,” he said. “I found out they’re looking into it in Scotland.”
“They weren’t the words of Ossian?” I found that impossible to believe.
“No, someone made them up, and then claimed that Ossian had written them. Fooled us all.” Embittered. “It just shows, doesn’t it, that nothing can be trusted.”
“But Bonaparte, the beauty in the words—nothing can take that away. Certain things one can trust absolutely.” I put my hand against his cheek.
January 2.
It’s official now. “We’re moving to the Tuileries,” Bonaparte has informed me.
The palace of the Bourbon kings.
The palace of our dead King.
And Queen.
January 3.
Mimi stood on the dirty cobblestones, looking up at the façade of the Tuileries Palace. Obscene messages, revolutionary emblems and slogans had been painted all over the walls. There were dark stains on the cobblestones—bloodstains, I feared. “What a mess,” Mimi said, frowning.
The doors were stuck; it had been a long time since they’d been opened. Two men together (the architect and a journalist) were unable to loosen the seal. Then Bonaparte threw himself against it and the doors fell open. We laughed to see him fly.
“How easy for
you
to enter this Palace of Kings, Consul,” the journalist said. “One would think you were expected.”
“Palace of the
Government,
we’re calling it now,” Bonaparte corrected him.
“Yes, Consul!” He took out a paper, lead pencil.
I peered into the vast depths. The windows were high, dirty, some boarded over. It was cold, too, colder than outside. And musty. It smelled of old air.
“The hard part will not be moving in,” Bonaparte said, brushing off his shoulders. “The hard part will be staying. Antoine, get the torches,” he ordered our coachman. “I’ve a country to run.”
“And the shawls!” I called after him.
“I’ll get them,” Mimi said, sprinting down the steps two at a time.
We were like a medieval procession in that place, some ancient doomsday rite. Antoine, torch held high, bravely took the lead, hitting a stick against the walls to scare off rats.
“Oh,” Mimi said, clasping my hand.
“This must have been the King’s suite,” Bonaparte said, studying a plan. He looked up, around, paced off the room. “This will be my office. I’ll receive in that room there.” The room with the throne.
We descended to a lower level, darker, mustier and colder: the Queen’s rooms.
“This place is gloomy, Consul General,” the journalist said, his deep voice echoing in the empty rooms.
“Gloomy like all grandeur,” Bonaparte said.
“The Committee of General Security met in this room,” the architect said, examining the fireplace façade. “I recognize the detail on the chimney face. The Queen could not bear monotony—everything had to be ornate.”
“Yes,” the journalist said, his voice a whisper. We were in that forbidden realm: the realm of the past.
“Then that room over there, the reception area, must have been where Robespierre—” I put my hand to my eyes and pressed until I saw stars, but the image remained: of the tyrant, wounded, stretched out on top of a table with Blount, his faithful Great Dane, whimpering, licking his hand. Had Robespierre not died that day, I would not be …
It was then that I saw her, the figure of a woman in white, standing by the wardrobe.
They laid me out on the cold floor, my shawl under my head. Mimi fanned me, stirring up dust. I coughed, struggled to sit up. All of them were standing over me with worried expressions. “I’m fine,” I assured them.
“She’ll be fine,” Bonaparte said, tugging at my hand.
“I’ll get her, General,” Mimi said, her hand supporting my head.
I leaned on Mimi for support. She was steady, not trembling. “Oh Mimi, wasn’t she a fright!” I whispered. The men were examining the windows. I put my hand to my chest. A shakiness had come over me, and a chill; it seemed to come from within me, from inside my very bones.
Mimi frowned. “Who?”
“That woman by the wardrobe.” Breathing in, out, in, out.
She had been mannish, her jaw firmly set, her hair cropped short, ill-covered by a ruffled cap. She’d been wearing a white gown with long sleeves, plain. “You must have seen her. She was standing by the wardrobe door. How could you not have seen her?” She was so clear.
“Oh-oh,” Mimi said, screwing up her face.
Then I remembered where I’d seen that face, the jaw clenched against adversity. At Citoyen David’s studio—his rough pen portrait of Queen Marie Antoinette, on her way to the scaffold.
January 7.
Too busy to write: working day and night getting the Tuileries Palace in condition to live in. It is ten o’clock in the morning and already I have selected fabric for all the drapes, met with my frantic cook about what the Tuileries kitchen will need (everything had been stolen: there’s not even a stockpot) and met with Madame Campan about protocol and staff. (Madame Campan’s experience as lady-in-waiting to the Queen makes her invaluable to me now. It’s so overwhelming: my cook alone will require three assistant chefs in the kitchen. No wonder he’s having fits.)
Tomorrow I’ll attend to my wardrobe.
I’m hearing Barras’s chuckle from somewhere in this palace. We are all of us going mad.
January 17.
Bonaparte came into my drawing room at noon. He sat down, staring into the fire. “Murat just asked for Caroline’s hand.”
“Oh?” Relieved, I confess. A week before I’d discovered Murat and Caroline sprawled on a sofa.
“Murat’s the thirteenth child of an innkeeper; I don’t want to mingle my blood with his. I was thinking more of General Moreau.”
“But Bonaparte—”
“Perhaps it would be wisest to wait. In a short time it’s possible I could marry her into royalty.” He smiled. “Now that’s a thought.”
“Murat is brave,” I persisted. A swearing swashbuckler so much the fashion now. A swashbuckler in peacock plumes. “He served you well at the Battle of Aboukir, and at Saint-Cloud.”
“Brave isn’t enough. He’s not intelligent, he’s uneducated and he’s of lowly birth—”
“He suits Caroline perfectly.”
Waiting to be called to supper.
An amusing exchange. “Are you sure this is what you want?” Bonaparte demanded of his young sister.
Caroline sat primly on the sofa, muslin ruffles everywhere. “I love him.”
“That’s easy to say now, but as your brother I must warn you, when he’s naked, a big brute of a man like that, and in a state of desire, you’re not going to find him so very—”
She burst into a peal of delighted giggles.
January 18.
It’s done, the contract has been signed in the presence of every Bonaparte in Paris: Signora Letizia, the five brothers, two sisters, Uncle Fesch. And, as well, a tiny trio of Beauharnais: myself, Hortense and Eugène.
The house-poor brothers were scarcely able to scrape together a dowry of thirty thousand francs, ten thousand less than Elisa and Pauline each received when they were married, so at the last moment Bonaparte added a lovely pearl necklace. I frowned when I saw it. It looked familiar. It was familiar: it was my own.
January 20.
The iridescent pearls, loose on a black satin cloth, reflected the candlelight. “I’ve never seen pearls so …” So
pure.
“Indeed, Madame, these are that rarest of gems, the round saltwater pink pearl.” Monsieur Lamarck spoke in a reverent hush. “It is
impossible
to find pearls of this size and perfection: look at these ugly baroque pearls, Madame, to compare: covered with blisters. They resemble potatoes. Or look at this set of freshwater pearls, shaped like little wine barrels. But
these
pearls—” He handed me a magnifying glass, pulled a lantern closer. “These pearls have lustre.” He murmured the word “lustre” confidentially, as if he were imparting dangerous information. “And
iridescence.
Observe: rainbows.
Captured
within. Indeed, Madame, it is an exceptionally thick layer of nacre that makes them so”—he rolled his eyes erotically—
”hypnotic.
Some claim that the nacre has healing powers—but that is strictly conjecture and as you know, Madame, we deal
only in
fact. Observe, Madame, a fact: they are imperfect. A
perfect
pearl
is an imperfect pearl. Did you know, the Queen of Spain wears green pearls?” Whispering now. “Her jeweller should be hanged. But these pearls, Madame, these pearls are without question the finest in the world. Even a queen could wear them with confidence. Oh, forgive me.” Withdrawing an enormous handkerchief from his gold-embroidered waistcoat pocket. “Excuse me, Madame.” Sniffing. “I got carried away. Now, where was I—yes, the price. The price is five hundred thousand francs.”
I swallowed, my mouth suddenly dry.
“Y-y-yes?” Monsieur Lamarck slipped off his spectacles, cleaned them with a corner of his handkerchief, put them back on. “Did I hear you correctly, Madame? Was it
yes
that you said?”
What has come over me, what have I done? I am made breathless by my daring, shaken by my foolishness—giddy by my gall! Such money! The price of a vast estate contained in a necklace. I look upon them entranced; it’s as if they have cast a spell over me. I am transformed, bewitched! How am I to pay? I’ll find a way, for I cannot be parted from them. I put on these gems, and I
am
a queen. Grand Dieu.
*
Josephine was said to have a low, musical voice. When she read to Napoleon, the servants would hover outside the door to listen.
In which I must sleep in Marie Antoinette’s bed
January 21, 1800.
This evening Bonaparte handed me a thick file.
“What is this?” But I knew: it was the List—the names of the French aristocrats who were forbidden from returning to the Republic. For years Thérèse and I had lobbied to get names removed. Each small success had been a battle won.
“I’d like you to determine who should be taken off,” Bonaparte said, opening his battered tin snuffbox.
I stared at him, not comprehending. “You want me to decide?” To name who was innocent, who guilty—rule whose life would be ruined, whose life saved?