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Authors: Sandra Gulland

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It’s only eight, but I’m going to bed. We’ve sealed the window cracks with wax, which helps. I wonder if Uncle Fesch remembered to bless their bed.

April 18

Château de Navarre.

I could not believe my eyes, for who should be announced this evening as I was playing trictrac with the Bishop of Évreux but my son! I jumped to my feet and threw my arms around him, forgetting all sense of propriety. “Why have you come?” I demanded, suddenly alarmed. Was Hortense all right? Her boys! And what about Bonaparte? Was he …? Eugène held up his hands. “Everyone’s fine. Papa got your letter. He
sent me to tell you that he’ll give you the money you need for repairs.” “But no letter from him?”

“He said to tell you he would write soon. He wanted me to have a look, see how you’re doing.” Eugène frowned at the rotting windowsill. “Well,” he said, his hands on his hips. “I see the problem.”

“It’s really much improved.” In my joy to see my son, my complaints had vanished. “And the fishing here is excellent, I’m told. Isn’t it, Bishop? Oh, forgive me, I’ve neglected civilities. Prince Eugène, Viceroy of Italy, may I have the honour of introducing you to the Bishop of Évreux. The king of trictrac, we call him.”

“A defeated king, alas,” the old man said, struggling to rise.

“Please, stay seated,” my son insisted, lowering himself onto the (hard) sofa.

“No, no, I only care to get trounced once in an evening,” the Bishop said, taking his leave. “Tomorrow evening, Your Majesty, as usual?”

“A charming man,” Eugène said, after he’d left.

“He has saved my life here,” I said, sitting beside my son and taking his hand. “And how
is
Bonaparte?” How is the
Empress?
I wanted to ask, but dared not. Not yet.

“Papa is well,” he said, after a moment’s hesitation. “Although—” He grinned. “Although he has had to make a few
adjustments”

I frowned. Bonaparte did not care for “adjustments.”

“She calls him Popo, for one thing.”

Emperor Popo?

“She likes her bedroom icy cold.” Bonaparte could not tolerate the cold! “She becomes
vexed if
rushed.” “Oh-oh.”

“And she
refuses
to watch tragedies.” Eugène sighed. “Consequently the court is required to sit through a burlesque every single night, while the—”

“Bonaparte as well?” I couldn’t imagine him sitting through a comedy.

“—while the Emperor sleeps in his chair.”

“And does he …?” I tilted my head, smiled, my finger on my chin—as
if posing a light, almost fanciful question. “Does he lo
ve
her, do you think?”

Eugène looked down at the worn carpet. “It’s different, Maman.”

Thursday, early afternoon—Château de Navarre.

A lovely morning with my son. I showed him the new herb bed, my roses and lilacs, the pretty cascades and pools, the charming vistas. “Already you’ve created a paradise here,” he said.

“It’s peaceful.” Isolated, in truth: but I didn’t want him to worry. “And just think: no intrigues.”

“No
clan,
you mean,” he said, for even the new Empress has been made to suffer. “Even Auguste,” he confided.
*

June 10, Sunday—Malmaison.

I’m back at Malmaison again, at last. It is quiet except for the distant crack and fizz of the fire-rockets. Most of my staff are in Paris at the fêtes in honour of the Emperor and Empress. The servants will return drunken and gay. I plan to be asleep.

Mon amie, I’d like very much to see you. I need to know that you are happy and well. Never doubt the sincerity of my feelings for you. They shall last until I die. N.

June 13
.

Bonaparte arrived this morning precisely at ten. A startled maid directed him to the garden, where I was tending roses. I hurried toward him, then stopped short. (We were being watched.) I
would
not weep! We sat side by side on a curved stone bench for over an hour—talking
and talking, as if nothing has changed between us. “I understand Prince Mecklenburg-Schwerin made you a proposal,” he said.

“Who told you that?” I’d been touched (and surprised) by the offer, but had not given it more than a moment’s thought.

“So it’s true? I think you should accept.”

“He’s young. It wouldn’t be fair to him.” And in my heart I was still married, still very much in love with my husband.

At my urging, Bonaparte talked to me about Marie-Louise, his difficulties and concerns. (She’s not pregnant yet, which worries me.) “And unfortunately she’s exceedingly jealous of you,” he said. “She was upset to learn that you are back at Malmaison. I had to use the utmost secrecy to come see you today.”

“Perhaps if I met her.” I want Marie-Louise to regard me as an older sister, as someone she can confide in, learn from. I could help her. I could tell her what pleased the Emperor—and what did not. I could tell her how to tend to his delicate health, how to calm his easily ruffled temper.

“Impossible! She’s a child in many ways.” Bonaparte stood, paced. “And perhaps she is right, perhaps she has good reason to be jealous. It’s likely for the best that you will be going to Aix-les-Bains to take the waters soon.”

For the best that I go away—and stay away.

June 18

Aix-les-Bains.

I’ve arrived at the spa, exhausted from days and nights of travel. Already I long for home.

July 6, 1810
Chère Maman,

I’ve just received shocking news: I don’t know what to make of it. In what Papa calls an “act of madness,” Louis has abdicated the throne of Holland, disappearing with his beloved dog
.
*

So I am no longer a queen, Maman. I am not unhappy, I confess. I have no ambition but to lead a quiet life with my boys.

I hope the spa treatment at Aix-les-Bains is proving beneficial for your nerves. Is it true that Madame de Souza and her son Charles are both there? Perhaps I will visit.

Your loving and dutiful daughter, Hortense

Note—I spoke with Madame Clari Rémusat at Talleyrand’s salon. She looks remarkably well.

And another—Empress Marie-Louise is suspected to be with child.

September 14, Saint-Cloud

Mon amie, the Empress has been with child for four months. She is well. Do not doubt the interest I take in you, the feelings I have for you. N.

November 11

Malmaison.

I am back at Malmaison, but for only a few weeks. I’ve had a fever, but I’m better today. Dr. Corvisart has ordered rest. The Château de Navarre won’t be ready until the end of next week, in any case.

6:15 P.M.

Countess d’Arberg has just informed me that an Imperial baptism was held yesterday. Bonaparte and Marie-Louise baptized a number of infants—sons and daughters of the grandees of the Empire. Every baby girl brought to the font was named Josephine, unfortunately. This will only inflame Marie-Louise’s jealousy of me. I had hoped it would be different. I don’t want to go to damp, cold Navarre right now, but I know I must.

December 9, 1810, Milan
Chère Maman,

Im now the father of a big, healthy son. The labour was difficult, but my lovely Auguste seems to be out of danger. Don’t worry—we’ll do exactly as the midwife says.

My girls are thrilled to have a brother. Augustus Karl Eugen Napoleon he will be named—Augustus, for short. Do you like it? Little Josephine asked me to send you this drawing she made of him. You can see that he has a healthy crop of black hair. Eugénie has decided that Augustus is her doll—she will be two on Christmas Eve. It’s hard to believe. Where does the time go?

I think your decision to go to Navarre until after the birth is wise, Maman.

I must be off—I hear the baby crying!

Your very proud and happy son, Eugène

March 19, 1811

Château de Navarre, Évreux.

The villagers of Évreux came in carts harnessed to field nags, reciting verses that they’d written in my honour. They presented me with a bust they’d had made of me, decorated with a crown of wilting spring flowers.

March 20

Château de Navarre.

I was resting, nursing a head pain, when I heard the bells begin to ring in town. “The child is born!” I heard someone call out. A gun salute was followed by another a minute later, and then another, and then another. The silence after the twenty-first salute seemed an eternity. And then … one more.
Twenty-two
guns: a boy!
*

Thank God! My sacrifice has not been in vain. The Empire has an heir.

*
It was important for Josephine and her children to show public support for the new marriage. Indeed, both Eugene and Hortense (as well as Josephine) were involved in the discussions as to which royal princess should be chosen.

*
The prizes: 4,800 pâtés, 1,200 tongues, 3,000 sausages, 140 turkeys, 360capons, 360 chickens, and 1,000 legs and 1,000 shoulders of mutton.

*
Eugène’s wife Auguste wrote her brother regarding the Bonaparte family: “When one has known them at close quarters one can only despise them. I could never have conceived anything so abominable as their ill-breeding. It is torture to have to go about with such people.”

*
The water spaniel jumped out the open window of Louis’s carriage at a posting house. It fell under the wheels and was crushed to death.

*
Twenty-one guns announced the birth of a girl, a hundred and one a boy. In Paris, on hearing the decisive twenty-second shot, the
Gazette de France
reported: “One single cry, one ahne rose in Paris and made the walls of that old palace where the hero’s son had just been born tremble, and round which the crowd was so thick that there was not room even for a fly. Flags waved in the air, handkerchiefs fluttered—people ran hither and thither, embracing one another, announcing the news with laughter and tears of joy.”

In which all is for naught

March 21, 1811

Château de Navarre.

Eugène embraced me at the door, sweeping me off my feet. “Our prayers have been answered.”

“Bonaparte must be overjoyed!”

“He commanded me to come to you immediately,” he said, leaning against the wall so that a servant could pull off his muddy boots. “He’s going to write to you tonight, he said. He can’t take his eyes off the baby.”

“Coffee and breakfast cakes,” I told a maid. “And a bottle of champagne,” I called out to her. “Come,” I said, taking my son’s hand, pulling him into the drawing room. “I want to hear
all
about it.”

And I did. Grands Dieux—the young Empress had very nearly died. “Oh, the poor girl.”

“It was awful, Maman. They had to pull the baby out by the feet. Marie-Louise fainted dead away, mercifully. The accoucheur was in a frightful state.
Imagine.
At one point he told Papa that he was going to have to choose between the life of the child and the life of the Empress. Papa never hesitated—he told the doctor to save Marie-Louise.”

“But she’s all right?”

“It’s early yet, of course. She seems well—fatigued, of course.” “And the baby?” King of Rome. “A big boy.”

Mon Dieu—and feet first.

“They thought he was dead, but he revived. A lusty crier,” he said, grinning broadly.

“Bonaparte loves children so much.” A child, at last—and a
son.
“And so, no doubt, there is much celebrating in Paris?”

“Except on the part of the
sisters,”
Eugène said, imitating their long faces. “All they could think of was that their influence would be lessened, that
their
children would lose rank.”

“Why does that not surprise me?” I said as the maid came in with a collation. “A toast,” I said, handing my son a glass of champagne. “To the King of Rome. To
peace.”

“To the Emperor!”

“And to
his wife,” I said, raising my glass. I sacrificed my marriage for this baby, but young Marie-Louise had very nearly sacrificed her life.

March 22, Paris

Mon amie, I received your letter. Thank you. My son is big and very well. He has my chest, my mouth and my eyes. I hope that he will accomplish his destiny. N.

April 2

Malmaison, at last.

How beautiful Malmaison is, the air sweet, the flowers blooming. I’ve been all morning with my gardeners. Yet even so my thoughts pull ever toward Paris, toward
them.

May 18, Saturday.

My daughter appeared like a fairy angel, her cheeks pink under a lime green velvet hat with a high feathered crown. She has gained weight, which is encouraging. I suspect she’s in love (at last), for she blushed when I inquired about aide-de-camp Charles Flahaut.

She stayed only an hour, telling me all about the new baby. “He’s big and handsome—although he does take after
her”
she said, wrinkling her nose.

“But people say the Empress Marie-Louise is pretty.” “Big jaw, Maman.” (We giggled, I confess.)

She told me Marie-Louise is childlike in her attachment to the
Emperor, that she weeps to be separated from him for even a minute, but also does not care to travel. “That makes it difficult,” I said, concerned. “An emperor must travel.” Especially Bonaparte.

“Especially now,” Hortense said, filling me in. Russia is refusing to enforce the blockade against England.

“I don’t understand. Tsar Alexandre agreed. He gave Bonaparte his word.”

“And now there is even talk of war,” she said with a grimace.

With Russia? What a terrible thought! “Does it look serious?”

Hortense started to answer when her boys came running; they wanted to ride the pony, they said. “I’m afraid we must go,” Hortense told them, tying her hat-strings. “I have an engagement in town.”

I persuaded her to leave the children with me for a few days. We waved until her coach was out of sight and then I rang for cakes while the pony was being tacked up. All the while we chattered, chattered, chattered. Petit and Oui-Oui are so sweetly excited about the new baby in the family—”Little King,” they call him.

Petit is mature for a six-year-old, I think, but Oui-Oui is still very much a baby. He seems a bit anxious about being three now. “Uncle says I am grown,” he told me solemnly. Their Uncle Napoleon, who insists on their company at his midday meal, who supervises their lessons, who is tending a rose garden at Saint-Cloud.

“Himself?” I asked, incredulous.

“He’s going to be a gardener when he grows up,” Oui-Oui told me. “Yes, I think so.” Oh Bonaparte! “And what about the Empress? Do you see her often?”

Petit shrugged. “I don’t think she likes us. We’re wiggly, she says.” “But Grandmaman does!” Oui-Oui sang, diving into my arms.

[Undated]

Petit, to Mimi: “Maman spoils me when I’m good, but Grandmaman spoils me all the time.”

And this afternoon, in the woods, Oui-Oui threw his cap in the air, exclaiming, “Oh, how I love nature!”

How I love
them.

[Undated]

Hortense came for the boys this morning. She looked distressed about something, so I lured her into the rose garden to talk. At last she confessed: Caroline, who is supposed to stand as godmother at the baptism, can’t leave Naples. She has asked Hortense to take her place.

“That’s quite an honour,” I said.

“But the ceremony will be held in Notre-Dame, Maman.” Then I understood. Little Napoleon’s tomb is there. “You haven’t been in since …?”

She shook her head. “I’m so afraid I’ll break down!”

June 9, Sunday.

Little King was baptized today. The procession schedule was posted in the market: at two o’clock the Imperial coaches would arrive at Notre-Dame.

I’d planned a number of activities to keep my mind occupied, but with the gun salutes and church bells ringing, it was impossible. At noon I told Mimi: “We’re going.” She looked alarmed. “Incognito,” I assured her. I would wear a broad-brimmed hat and a mask. “I
have
to see.” Had to see the Empress, the
baby.
“We’ll take the landau.” It is a plain vehicle, without insignia, used for riding in the park when the weather is good. “If we leave now, we can get there in time.”

I hadn’t reckoned on the crowds, however. It was well after three by the time the coach driver had fought his way into the heart of the city. I asked Antoine to let us down a few blocks from the route. “We’ll walk.”

The streets were thronged. It was all the troops could do to hold people back. Festive banners had been hung from the rooftops and everywhere I looked I saw garlands of flowers. “Let’s wait here,” I told Mimi, ducking into a recess. Stone steps leading up to the door of a boot-maker’s shop afforded a view over the heads of the crowd.

And wait we did: four, four-thirty, five. The crowd began to thin, the hungry citizens reluctantly returning home. Mimi and I edged our way closer to the street. By luck, we found a spot that gave us a clear view. At five-thirty, at last, guns sounded and bells rang.

“What do you suppose that means?” a woman standing beside us asked.

“That the Emperor and Empress have just left the palace,” I told her.

“It won’t be long now,” someone behind us said. My heart thrilled to the distant sound of drums, a marching band.

“They’re coming!” a man behind us yelled.

I looked at Mimi and grinned. “It’s exciting on the street.”

“I see it,” a child straddling a man’s shoulders cried out as the glittering coronation coach pulled into view, drawn by eight white horses, just like out of a fairy tale. “Where’s the baby?” the boy demanded.

Bonaparte, in purple velvet and gold, looked out over the crowd. He’s thinking of his work, I thought. He’s wondering how long this ceremony is going to take. He’s gauging the enthusiasm of the people. He’s thinking how uncomfortable his jacket is.

“Empress Marie-Louise is prettier than I expected her to be,” Mimi said, covering her face with her shawl.

Marie-Louise. Big lower lip, strong jaw, plump. I thought she’d be more attractive. And she seemed bored—disdainful even. “She’s younger than I expected.” Only a girl. She was dressed—not very elegantly—in white satin, wearing a diadem of brilliants.
My
diadem.

“The other one used to smile,” the woman beside us said. “This one never does.”

“I see the baby!” the boy cried out behind us. “He’s in the next carriage. He’s dressed in white with red ribbons.”

Everyone craned to see as the second carriage pulled into view. The King of Rome was held by Madame de Montesquiou, his nanny. The fat, complacent baby was sucking his thumb. I blew him a kiss, my blessing.

Monday, June 10, 4:30 or so—Malmaison.

Hortense was full of stories about the Imperial baptism. “I’m so relieved that it’s over.” She’d gone to Notre-Dame the night before and persuaded the guards to let her in. In the empty cathedral she’d fallen to her knees before little Napoleon’s tomb and wept. “It was a good thing,” she assured me, seeing my stricken look. “The next day I was able to get through the ceremony without a tear.”

Now that the baptism is over, she would like to take the waters, she said. Could I look after the boys? (Gladly!) On leaving, she embraced me
somewhat stiffly, and with reserve. Something about the way she walks makes me think of a woman with child. No—
surely
she would tell me.

Lake Maggiore, September 2, 1811
Chère Maman,

I must stay away longer than I expected. My health is a little frail.

I am sending some trinkets for Petit and Oui-Oui. How I miss them! Embrace them for me. Speak to them often of their maman. I hope to be back in October. Will they even remember me after four months?

How are your eyes? (No weeping, remember!) Are you applying the salve I sent you?

I smiled, I confess, on learning that you are trying to make “economies.” Your heart is too good, maman. Your hand is always open.

Ah, my tender, gentle maman—the trials of this world do weigh upon me. We are punished for our pleasures; if only we were rewarded for our pain.

Your loving and dutiful daughter, Hortense

October 11

Malmaison.

Hortense returned in time for Petit’s seventh-year birthday fête. She is thinner, and has an air of melancholy. I suspect, but will not ask; know, but cannot say.

[Undated]

Bonaparte came to see me today. He seemed gloomy—it was clear that there is much on his mind. “Tsar Alexandre refuses to enforce the blockade against England,” he said, his hands on his knees. “And he promised! He’s shipping hemp to England—he
knows
it’s used to make rigging for their Navy. A continental blockade is the only way to get England to the peace table.”

I watched Bonaparte go out the gate with a heavy heart. There will be war again soon, I fear. I saw it in his eyes.
Le feu sacré.

February 11, 1812, Shrove Tuesday—Malmaison.

Carnival. Tonight there is a costume ball at the Tuileries—a ball to which I have not been invited, of course. Hortense will be performing a quadrille. She was here yesterday, showing me her intricate choreography, the lovely costumes. “Please come, Maman. I want you to see it! Nobody would know. You’d be in costume.”

I told her it was too risky, but that was only a partial truth. I cannot bear the thought of seeing Bonaparte attend to his young wife while I stand alone in the shadows.

February 12, Ash Wednesday.

“Your daughter’s quadrille was
brilliant,”
Mademoiselle Avrillion told me. “You should have heard the cheers! Men were standing on their chairs to see her perform. What a talent she has, every move so precise, so light, so …” She made a floating motion with her hand. “So
elegant.
And her troupe of dancers—they were absolutely magical. It brought tears to my eyes to see them. Queen Caroline looked as if she was going to have a fit, she was so angry. Oh, everyone clapped for her dance certainly, but only out of politeness. All that dreadful clumping! And the Emperor? He loved your daughter’s quadrille, it was easy enough to see, but otherwise …? Three times I saw him yawn and pull out his timepiece. And when he and the Empress stood to take their leave, you know what I heard him hiss at her? ‘Try to be graceful.’”

“Oh, the poor girl.”

“Your Majesty, she didn’t smile, not even once.”

Monday, early afternoon at Malmaison, March 9.

Bonaparte stood at a distance, in full view of his aides. It had been months since we’d seen one another, but I had been expecting him. It was, after all, our sixteenth wedding anniversary.

“You’ve gained weight,” he said with a smile.

“So have you.” Even so, he looked unhealthy. “How are you, Bonaparte?”

“Well enough.” He needed to get back in shape, he said, for the coming campaign. He’d been hunting every day in the Bois de
Boulogne, to toughen himself. He’d managed to “disappear” this morning, in order to visit me.

“You can stay a few minutes?” I invited him to join me on the stone bench under the tulip tree. “I want to hear all about your son.” He would have his first birthday in two days.

“He’s a big, healthy boy—a bit of a temper, though.”

Like his father, I thought fondly. “Petit and Oui-Oui tell me so many stories about him. I think it’s wonderful, the time you take with the children.”

“Marie-Louise thinks it unnatural.”

I’d heard that Marie-Louise rarely saw her baby, that weeks went by without her sending for him. “Certainly it’s unusual for a man to enjoy the company of children the way you do.” To
dote
on them. “I’d love to see your son, Bonaparte.”

“I’ve been thinking about that,” he said. “It will have to be arranged carefully, so that Marie-Louise does not find out.”

[Undated]

Baron de Canisy, first equerry to the Little King, has let me know that Madame de Montesquiou will be taking the child to the park of Bagatelle next Sunday. I am to wait for her in the little château there.

BOOK: The Last Great Dance on Earth
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