“But you who are inspired, tell me how I shall play.”
“You forget that I left this man to be shot?”
“Then I am to destroy him?”
Jacqueline shuddered. “That was my only way, but you, monsieur, you can lift him off the board entirely.”
Bazaine rose from his chair and stood before her. “I am no poet,” he said, “and these flowers of speech hide the trenches. My American means that I may have thousands more like him, and he is a good one to be multiplied even tenfold. Mademoiselle, what am I to understand?”
“Does Napoleon’s letter satisfy none of your doubts?”
Without a word he handed her the packet. It was from Napoleon’s minister of finance, and it exuded woe. The French loans were exhausted by Maximilian’s luxury and mismanagement, and therefore Bazaine was instructed not to advance a cent further. He was, moreover, to take charge of the Mexican ports, and administer the customs. Here, then, was the annihilation of Maximilian’s sway. Here was the whispering of the Sphinx. France herself would take over the Empire.
240“Hardly,” returned the marshal, “but we will frighten His Majesty into bettering his finances,” and he handed her a confidential missive that had accompanied the other. Bazaine was therein authorized, when the security of the Mexican Empire absolutely demanded it, to advance ten millions of francs.
Jacqueline sank back disheartened. Not even Napoleon would help her. The Sphinx had not the courage of his own designs, and she contemptuously flung him out of her way. She would strive alone, and against him, Napoleon, among the rest. First of all, there was his captain general, the man before her.
“Monsieur le Maréchal,” she began, as impersonally as though quoting a dry paragraph of history, “there is a party among the Mexicans who fear the republicans and what the Republic would do. Yet their hope for the Empire is gone, and they want no more of it. These, monsieur, are the moderate liberals, and strange to say, they are the clericals too; in a word, the great landowners. They are for what is good in Mexico. They demand order. But they would not take it from the United States. They look to France–to France, which is Catholic, and liberal.”