“Where is our fakir now, dear monsieur?” said Madame Chalice to De la Riviere once again.

Valmond got silence with a gesture. He opened his waistcoat, took from his bosom an order fastened to a little bar of gold, and held it in his hand.

“Drummer,” he said, in a clear, full tone, “call the army to attention.”

The old man set their blood tingling with the impish sticks.

“I advance Sergeant Lagroin, of the Old Guard of glorious memory, to the rank of Captain in my Household Troops, and I command you to obey him as such.”

His look bent upon the crowd, as Napoleon’s might have done on the Third Corps.

“Drummer, call the army to attention,” fell the words.

And again like a small whirlwind of hailstones the sticks shook on the drum.

“I advance Captain Lagroin to the rank of Colonel in my Household Troops, and I command you to obey him as such.”

And once more: “Drummer, call the army to attention.”