In both his lives—past and present—André had heard the same maxim echoed by every law professor he had ever studied under: a lawsuit is a battle, and the courtroom, a battlefield. He believed it with all his heart.
That very night, after accepting the Babeuf case, he made his way to the residence of Judge Vinault, a grand villa on the Île Saint-Louis. It was a mansion of unmistakable luxury, its air steeped in the classical grace of the fifteenth century, surrounded by neighbours of wealth and consequence.
Judge Vinault himself was a florid, plump man in his fifties, his hands and cheeks soft and round. Perhaps it was his twenty years as a prosecutor that had trained his booming, authoritative voice—a voice that could command any courtroom.
“You are quite certain you mean to take on Babeuf’s defence?” he asked gravely. Even as he spoke, footsteps sounded beyond the door.
André looked up. Entering with an elegant sway was Madame Vinault, wearing a rose-coloured silk gown heavy with pearls and gold. She carried a silver tray bearing two steaming cups of coffee. The judge rose at once, took the tray from her hands, and passed one cup to André. Taking her delicate fingers in his, he kissed her cheek with a gentle murmur, and did not return to the study for the next hour.
Each man lifted his cup. They drank in silence, unceremoniously—Vinault’s rustic way of taking coffee, lacking all aristocratic refinement but oddly comforting to André, who for a moment felt as though he were back in some twenty-first-century café corner.
As she withdrew, the young wife cast the visitor a playful glance, raising an eyebrow with deliberate grace. Between her fingers fluttered a small folded note. She turned at the doorway, her figure poised and supple, before disappearing with a teasing sway of her hips.
Her boldness embarrassed André. So that’s it, he thought wryly. A harmless attempt to extract another pair of flattering verses. Must she act as though we were conspirators exchanging secret codes across the street? My heart’s thumping like a schoolboy’s. He forced his gaze back onto his cup of coffee, breathing in the steam until the dangerous thoughts subsided.
Vinault, meanwhile, had noticed every detail. Far from jealous, he looked positively pleased; in Paris, a man of rank took pride in a wife whose beauty drew admiration. That his student should compose verses that elevated her standing among the salons of the capital only added to his satisfaction. Beyond that, he preferred not to think.
When the door closed again, André gathered himself and resumed the conversation. “Yes,” he said firmly. “I’ve joined Georges Danton’s Law Office, and the Babeuf affair will be my first criminal case. For the sake of judicial propriety, I intend to submit my resignation from the Palais de Justice.”
The judge nodded, eyes half-closed as he savoured his coffee—or rather, as he weighed in silence the balance of risk and reward.
For years, he had discreetly lent his support to men like Paulze, the tax-farmers who bought and sold the state’s revenues. Yet his involvement had been professional, never personal—a matter of transactions, not of friendship.
But times had changed. Since 1789, the Constituent Assembly, now wielding real power, had grown openly hostile to the fermiers-généraux and their feudal privileges. Deputies from the Champagne region—among them Prieur, André’s compatriot—had condemned the system in withering terms:
“The miserly tax-farmers pay 500,000 livres to the Crown and extort six times that sum from the people, leaving the nation to cover the cost of their abuses.”
Prieur had once moved to abolish the tax-farm outright. Though the motion failed under the resistance of conservatives and moderate nobles, it had spurred another resolution: when the current contracts expired, they would not be renewed. From that moment, taxation would belong solely to the nation.
That very morning, while serving as legal consultant to the Constitutional Committee at The Manège Hall, Vinault had learned that the forthcoming Constitution of 1791 would go further still—abolishing not only the tax-farm but every vestige of feudal privilege.
As a jurist of thirty years, he grasped the magnitude of the change. The August Decrees of 1789 had been appeals to conscience; the coming Constitution would be the mother law—enforced by police, soldiers, and the full weight of the state.
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If the tax-farmers had any wisdom, they would surrender now: renounce their contracts, offer partial restitution, and beg for clemency. Instead, they hid their wealth or sent it abroad. It was folly, pure and simple.
And yet, watching the young lawyer before him, Vinault felt a pang that was half envy, half pride. André stood at the edge of a turning age, poised to carve his name into the chronicles of justice. Win or lose, this case would make him known.
The judge’s thoughts drifted to another scene, years ago—the day Georges Danton had come to resign. Both young, both towering, both filled with fire and gratitude. Danton’s rise from clerk to barrister had owed much to Vinault’s patronage; now, perhaps, it was André’s turn. The youth was diligent, fearless, and—above all—good-hearted. His reforms to the Paris police and his defence in the Blair case had earned universal praise.
For that reason, Vinault decided. He would not stand with the sinking ship of the tax-farmers. As André’s mentor, he would aid him—openly and secretly alike.
He understood why the visit had come at night. The resignation was a formality; what André wanted were details—the inside anatomy of the Babeuf trial. He would need everything: the presiding judge, the prosecutor, the witnesses, the twelve jurors—their professions, sympathies, temperaments, and fears. Even the clerks, bailiffs, wardens, and jailers might prove useful.
Vinault agreed without hesitation. They set a time and place for the exchange. Helping another is helping oneself, he thought; perhaps this protégé would yet surprise him.
When André offered four assignats of 300 livres each as payment, the famously avaricious judge only laughed, pocketed one note of 300, and returned the rest.
The transaction—technically bribery, the theft of judicial secrets, and obstruction of justice—could have earned André a decade in prison. But this was not the twenty-first century, and discretion was easy to buy.
Besides, corruption had begun higher up. Even the jury list bore proof of bias: of twelve active citizens—men paying over 4.5 livres in direct taxes—two were clergymen, seven were nobles or rural gentry, two were urban property owners, and the last a timid farmer newly come to Paris.
How could such men sympathize with a peasant agitator accused of inciting revolt? The verdict was practically written.
Under the criminal code of 1790, a conviction required only seven votes out of twelve. The judge could then impose any sentence he deemed fit—imprisonment, forced labour for life, or hanging. (The guillotine, as yet, had not been invented.)
For the next three weeks, André lived like a hermit. Apart from meals and brief walks, he never left his attic. Day and night he pored over the confidential files Vinault had sent, filling hundreds of pages with notes. The whitewashed walls were covered with timelines, charts, and sketches mapping every connection in the case.
Before the trial, however, he needed to see his client—the accused Gracchus Babeuf, imprisoned in the cells beneath the Châtelet Court.
The French judicial machine was ponderous and bureaucratic. Criminal cases could drag on for years. Fortunately, this one was moving swiftly: the preliminary hearing had been held in early March; the second session was fixed for mid-April.
Beginning on March twelfth, André filed repeated petitions for access to his client—only to be rebuffed each time by the court’s officials.
The first time, they claimed to be “verifying his professional credentials.” Absurd—his degree from the University of Reims, his two years as an assistant lecturer, and his certification from the Paris Bar were all in perfect order.
Days later, he returned. This time they said Babeuf was ill, unfit to meet counsel. They permitted only written correspondence, which they promised to inspect before delivery. André sent a few books by trusted hands.
The third visit ended the same way—with lies thinly wrapped in formality. André turned on his heel without a word and crossed the river to the Palais de Justice. There he filed a formal complaint before the High Court, accusing the Châtelet Tribunal of obstructing counsel’s access to his client and violating the most fundamental principle of justice.
The effect was explosive. In the already tense atmosphere of the capital’s judiciary, André’s petition fell like a lit match into a powder barrel.
In every system—common or civil—the sanctity of the client’s right to counsel was its foundation stone. Now, under the very shadow of the Palais de Justice, that stone had been openly defiled. Unless the abuse was corrected, Paris—and France—would face a judicial scandal without precedent.
Even those judges who despised Babeuf’s politics could not allow such disgrace.
That same afternoon, at Vinault’s urging, the High Court convened a five-member committee of inquiry. André, for his part, discreetly rewarded their diligence with 2,000 livres in assignats.
On April eighth, the committee issued a scathing reprimand, demanding that the Criminal Tribunal uphold the principles of openness, fairness, and justice. The order spread quickly through the capital’s salons and court corridors, turning the Châtelet into the laughingstock of Parisian society.
Note:
Palais de Justice — The central court complex in Paris, housing the High Court and judicial offices.
The Manège Hall — The former royal riding school used as the meeting place of the National Constituent Assembly.
fermiers-généraux — Tax-farmers.
August Decrees: the 1789 reforms abolishing feudal privileges and the Old Regime’s inequalities.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- 192. Staps
- 191. Berlin Surrender
- 190. Battle of Potsdam VI
- 189. Battle of Potsdam V
- 188. Battle of Potsdam IV
- 187. Battle of Potsdam III
- 186. Battle of Potsdam II
- 185. Battle of Potsdam I
- 184. The Second Franco-Prussian War
- 183. Prussia Chose War, We Give them War
- 182. Andre's Marriage
- 181. The Lamb on the Altar
- 180. Roaring Storm
- 179. In Revolution's Name
- 178. God and Loom
- 177. Brussels Peace Conference
- 176. Cannon is Justice
- 175. Talleyrand
- 174. Metternich
- 173. Industry, Oaths, and the Gendarmerie
- 172. Steel, Gold, and the Franc
- 171. Triumph at Liège
- 170. The Second Split of the Jacobin Club
- 169. Shadows Over the Thames
- 168. Holy Roman Empire
- 167. Farewell, Paris II
- 166. Farewell, Paris I
- 165. Fortified Position of Liège III
- 164. Fortified Position of Liège II
- 163. Fortified Position of Liège I
- 162. Unfinished Task
- 161. André and the Comtesse
- 160. Long Live the Republic
- 159. Victory Day III
- 158. Victory Day II
- 157. Victory Day I
- 156. The Valmy Battle VIII
- 155. The Valmy Battle VII
- 154. The Valmy Battle VI
- 153. The Valmy Battle V
- 152. The Valmy Battle IV
- 151. The Valmy Battle III
- 150. The Valmy Battle II
- 149. The Valmy Battle I
- 148. The New Triumvirate
- 147. Refuse Any Peace Overtures
- 146. Charles Beaurepaire
- 145. No Quarter
- 144. Ode to Frederick the Great and French Army Regulation
- 143. The Northern Command Headquarters II
- 142. The Northern Command Headquarters I
- 141. The Sacred War
- 140. Council of State
- 139. The Dictator of the Assembly
- 138. The Dying Lilium III
- 137. The Dying Lilium II
- 136. The Dying Lilium I
- 135. Game of Politics III
- 134. Game of Politics II
- 133. Game of Politics I
- 132. Farewell to the General of the White Horse III
- 131. Farewell to the General of the White Horse II
- 130. Farewell to the General of the White Horse I
- 129. Lafayette's Move II
- 128. Lafayette‘s Move I
- 127. The June Turmoil in Paris II
- 126. The June Turmoil in Paris I
- 125. The Victory of June
- 124. Squares against Sabres; French Infantry vs. Austrian Cavalry II
- 123. Squares against Sabres: French Infantry vs. Austrian Cavalry I
- 122. An Unexpected Battle
- 121. Who Opposes it?
- 120. He is Here
- 119. Archduke Charles of Austria
- 118. Defend Robespierre
- 117. Failure of the Army of the North
- 116. Roland and the Declaration of War
- 115. André Cannon
- 114. Lieutenant Colonel Moreau and the Verdun Fortress
- 113. André's Power
- 112. First Commissioner
- 111. The Three Northern Armies and the Attack Plan
- 110. Joseph Fouché
- 109. Political Maneuver
- 108. Second Split of the Jacobin Club
- 107. Poland and the Refusal of Dictatorship
- 106. Against Robespierre
- 105. The Triumvirate
- 104. War is Coming
- 103. The Foreign Affairs Committee
- 102. Strike Back
- 101. From Constituent Assembly to Legislative Assembly II
- 100. From Constituent Assembly to Legislative Assembly I
- 99. Going to Paris
- 98. Adjustments of the Champagne Composite Brigade
- 97. Paris, Marne, Ardennes
- 96. The Escape III
- 95. The Escape II
- 94. The Escape I
- 93. The Escape Decision
- 92. The Inventions
- 91. Macarons and the Marquis de Demoë
- 90. The Brigade Recast, the Candidate Crowned
- 89. The Princess
- 88. A Conspiracy in the Low Countries
- 87. Utopia’s Scarlet Letter
- 86. Lavoisier
- 85. Thirty Million Livres and the Corsican Lieutenant
- 84. The Gaoler of Conscience and the City of Refuge
- 83. The Champs-Élysées Salon and the Volcano of Lyon
- 82. Steel Capital and the Gospel of Cowpox
- 81. Prisoners of Easter and the Steam Conspiracy
- 80. The Fox and the Flight
- 79. Mesdames de France
- 78. The Death of Comte de Mirabeau
- 77. Dying Mirabeau and the Le Figaro
- 76. Building Reims
- 75. Warning
- 74. Bandits in the Trap
- 73. Davout
- 72. Last Mass and Reverend Mother
- 71. Citywide Search
- 70. The Ball
- 69. Hatred
- 68. Charles de Marey
- 67. Building the Bacourt Camp
- 66. March into Reims
- 65. Marquis de Demoë
- 64. Sister Matron
- 63. Desmoulins
- 62. Cazalès
- 61. Reims and Military Intelligence Office
- 60. Condorcet
- 59. Refuse the King
- 58. I Have Not Love the World
- 57. Dismissal of the Ministers II
- 56. Dismissal of the Ministers I
- 55. Arrangements
- 54. Deals with Marat and Danton
- 53. The Special Fiscal Court
- 52. Penduvas
- 51. Berthier
- 50. André, British, and Cowpox
- 49. Drinking and Smoking
- 48. Chief of Staff and the Ball
- 47. First Lesson of Training
- 46. Entering the Camp
- 45. New Officers
- 44. Gains
- 43. Popular André
- 42. Ambush against ambush
- 41. Champagne Composite Regiment
- 40. France and Churches
- 39. Prosecutor Luchon
- 38. Wine Industry
- 37. Bordeaux Mixture
- 36. Rectification
- 35. The Bordeaux Customs II
- 34. The Bordeaux Customs I
- 33. Bordeaux United Industries Company
- 32. Le Renard
- 31. Marquise de Fontenay
- 30. The Gentleman Bandit
- 29. Châlus
- 28. Leaving Paris
- 27. Lashes
- 26. Thomas Paine
- 25. Marne Delegation
- 24. Festival of the Federation
- 23. Choices
- 22. Taxation
- 21. Salons
- 20. Mirabeau and Robespierre
- 19. Louis de Saint Just
- 18. About the Steam
- 17. Work on Finance
- 16. Augereau
- 15. Divergence
- 14. Solve the Case
- 13. Trial III
- 12. Trial II
- 11. Trial I
- 10. The Day before Trial
- 9. Cordeliers Club II
- 8. Cordeliers Club I
- 7. Lawsuit III
- 6. Lawsuit II
- 5. Lawsuit I
- 4. Marat II
- 3. Marat I
- 2. André Franck
- 1. Officer and Lawyer