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Before Moscow waiting for the Boyars' Deputation Vasily Vereshchagin (PD) |
As the troops marched down the dusty track, Pierre Marais looked to his right, expecting to see the Emperor. At first he couldn't spot the man he'd followed since he was a young soldier in Egypt. At first he thought he saw the Emperor's horse, but without the man upon it, it was just a white horse, one belonging to the staff perhaps. Then he saw the man.
There he was, on foot, surrounded by aides, generals, and numerous headquarters flunkies, Napoléon Bonaparte, Emperor of France, gazing with a slight frown upon the city ahead. Moscow!
"What's all the fuss, Sergeant?" Antoine Plouffe from Calais asked. The men were starting to cheer, raising their muskets in the air.
"Listen, boy."
The shouts of Vive l'Empereur began to ring out down the long column of dusty infantry. Though Marais had seen it a hundred times, the old fire began to burn brightly in his breast.
"Cheer lads, there's your Emperor!"
Marais added his voice to the the chorus of shouting and adulation for the man from Corsica. He did it without thinking, it was habit. He was beginning to have his doubts, but deep inside, a part of him still believed.
Napoléon hadn't meant to bark at the young member of the French diplomatic corps, but he was impatient. Winter was not far off and they were nearly 600 leagues from Paris. Rumors of unrest in the capital were starting to filter in. He assumed that what he was calling a victory on the Kalatsha River¹ would be well-received in Paris and quiet any discontent.
Albert Beaufils shifted nervously in the saddle, to have the unbridled attention of the Emperor was something of a new experience for him. He had seen Marshals of France shiver in their boots under Napoléon's gaze.
"Nothing, Sire. Our emissaries were turned away before St. Petersburg."
Napoléon turned his horse, "Turned away? Surely they were told something?"
Beaufils steadied himself, "My apologies, Sire. They were told that the Czar will treat with you only when the last of your soldiers has departed Russia. Or sleeps beneath the soil of Holy Mother Russia."
"Damn it!" The Emperor snapped at the heavens.
"Berthier!"
The Emperor's Chief of Staff spoke, "Sire?"
"Prepare a plan to march on St. Petersburg! Leave covering forces before Moscow. I will bring this aristocrat to heel!"
Without any further word, the Emperor moved towards the road. He would bask in the adulation of the army, with these men he could march to China, conquering all before him.
Sergeant Marais had his men cleaning up their quarters, a rough stable attached to a rather slovenly inn. The word was not to get comfortable, the army would be on the march soon.
"Sergeant?"
Marais turned to look at the young officer, now company commander after the death of Captain Monteil on the Kalatsha. "Yes, Lieutenant Leavitt?"
"Have you taken the roll?"
"Oui, mon Lieutenant, we have fifty seven men fit for duty."
"Is that all? We crossed the frontier with one hundred and forty two. Before the battle on the Kalatsha we had ninety eight."
Marais shook his head, he looked around the stable and then said, "War, lieutenant, it tends to whittle down our numbers. We had twelve killed outright on the Kalatsha, fifteen wounded, and fourteen unaccounted for. Of the latter I would assume that most of them are dead, or still lying where they fell, wounded maybe dying. Maybe not."
Some of the men looked up at that, all soldiers dreaded being left for dead, watching their regiment march away. To be left to the mercy of the elements and the peasantry was worse than being in a field hospital, itself almost a sentence of death.
"Have any of the other company officers turned up?"
It was obvious to Marais, the sole surviving sergeant in the company, that Leavitt was a bit overwhelmed by his new responsibilities.
"No Sir, you are in command of the 2nd Company until Chef de Bataillon Lecerf says otherwise."
"I see, very well Sergeant, see that the men are fed and ..."
"Fed with what, Sir?"
The young officer hesitated, it had seemed the right thing to say. Surely the men were hungry after the march, then again, he had no idea where the company's wagon was. Any food supplies would be carried on the men's backs now.
"I will ask Chef de Bataillon Lecerf his intentions as to our rations."
Marais shook his head, "Let me worry about the rations, Sir. We'll make do, as we always do, with whatever there is to hand."
The lieutenant blushed then turned on his heel and left.
Corporal Michel Kléber joined Marais watching the lieutenant quickly leave the stable.
"He's out of his depth, Pierre."
"Look Michel, we're the only non-coms left, Leavitt is green, the Kalatsha was his first battle. He is a babe in the woods when it comes to war. If any of us wish to return to France alive, it's up to you and me. There is no one else."
"What if Lieutenant Bébé², wants to play company commander?"
"You and I make sure he doesn't get anyone killed unnecessarily, that's all."
"That's asking a lot, Pierre."
"Lecerf's an old hand, he'll do what he can to keep the boy from getting us all killed. At least I hope so."
Kléber shook his head then turned to the men, "Knapsack inspection, if you've got food, it goes into the company pot. Pascal, Vaillancourt, Leclair, I want you three to search the vicinity for anything edible, check the inn first."
Soldat Claude Pascal stood up, "What about the Russians, Corporal?"
"If they don't get in the way, leave 'em be. If they want to tussle, give them steel."
The three men made sure their muskets were loaded, after affixing their bayonets, they went off to forage. Pascal hesitated.
Marais looked at the man, "Don't look for trouble, but kill anyone who tries to stop you."
"Anyone, Sergeant?"
"Russians, you muttonhead, now go!"
¹ The Battle of Borodino, fought on the 7th of September. The French referred to this as the bataille de la Moskowa, named for the Moscow River, of which the Kalatsha is a tributary.
² Lieutenant Baby.
In the age of instant communications, we forget how long a "rumor of unrest" in Paris was at the gates of Moscow. As solders marches on their stomachs, the scorched earth defense of the Russians harmed the locals but crippled the enemy army.
ReplyDeleteThe grim moments of the last gasp of empire.
Reading this painted that picture well.
Nothing moved faster than a horse, so messages could take weeks to be delivered from Paris to Moscow.
DeleteThey didn't build telegraph towers, like they did in France? Like the one Hornblower burned in Hornblower and the Hotspur?
DeleteCampaign moved too fast for that as I understand it.
DeleteThank you!
Delete👍
DeleteAlexander, Julius Caesar, Napoléon.......how many died because of the ambitions of each? Marais and Kléber are going to have their hands full in the coming days......cold days. Nice surprise from the Muse Sarge!
ReplyDeleteThe next few episodes will probably be grim indeed.
DeleteSeasoned non-coms are the ...either lubricant that keeps a military running as smoothly as possible or the glue that holds it together. Maybe both. The keepers of order, the passers on of tradition.
ReplyDelete"Colour Sergeant! I need...."
The effective NCO is worth their weight in gold. Always has been, always will be.
DeleteLike in the Navy, where the officers are the brains, and the petty officers are the spine and nervous system.
DeleteYes, we let the officers think they're the brains. Yup, ahuh.
DeleteI was just thinking that was a tough time/place to be a civilian...
ReplyDeleteIf you lived anywhere near where an army passed through, it could be devastating.
DeleteImagine an army in your area looking for firewood...
DeleteI read a book about the American civil war, "Hardtack and Coffee or The Unwritten Story of Army Life", John D. Billings. It was about camp life, food, firewood, etc. Anything that would burn was taken for firewood..
A lot of fencing was destroyed in the vicinity of Gettysburg in July of 1863, as an example.
DeleteOne of the key points of the harrowing of the South by Sherman was that his army was way ahead of his logistics tail and he had to have his troops forage. The side effects, the destruction of property and the shock in the South of losing everything Sherman's army marched through, was just icing on the cake.
DeleteLiving off the land is never good for those who farm that land.
DeleteAs I recall, Sherman was not just far ahead of his logistics tail. He abandoned it and would live off the countryside from Atlanta until reaching Savanna. Georgia was the "breadbasket" of the Confederacy that supplied Lee's army. His march was "total war", (not excepting civilians), destroying anything that supported the Confederate military, including besides food stocks the means to produce and transport food. There was a swath sixty miles wide for three hundred miles "where a crow had to carry his own provisions".
DeleteExactly, he cut himself off and lived off the land. Much to the dismay of the Georgians.
DeleteSeptember, 1812. It's not winter yet. Within a few fortnights, the conditions of today will be recalled fondly as days of plenty and comfort.
ReplyDeleteGlad to see the Muse is showing up for work again.
JB
She showed up after the SUper Bowl, wet, bedraggled, and stinking of cheap vodka. After a shower she said, "I have an idea."
DeleteAnd a good idea it was. There's this time in late summer, early fall, where it seems like it should be warm but there's that first touch of cold, almost a ghostly feel, that can leave you shivering. Actual cold? A psychic cold? Brrr.
DeleteGlad you like it, she was off for quite a few weeks.
DeleteCrusty Old TV Tech here. Wonderful, back to the story! You sure Musie wasn't in Nawlins, sucking down abisinthe and oysters on the half shell in the French Quarter? Seems a rather misty restart to have been just vodka. Whatever shape she was in, welcome back!
ReplyDeleteToo much snow down in N'Awlins. At least there was ...
DeleteThe Muse is back! Huzzah!
ReplyDeleteShe was overdue to return.
Delete