Napoleon’s conditional coup alliance
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Barrass pitches his proposal to Napoleon, explaining that he needs Napoleon's public support and popularity to legitimize Barrass's new government, envisioning Napoleon as one of the three consuls. Napoleon questions if he's just a figurehead.
Barrass offers Napoleon a position as one of three consuls in the new government. When Napoleon presses him, Barrass demands an immediate decision, but reminds Napoleon that other ambitious young men are available if he declines.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Ruthlessly pragmatic, with a simmering ambition—he’s sizing up Barrass’s offer, but his mind is already three steps ahead, imagining the consul’s chair.
Napoleon Bonaparte stands with his arms crossed, his posture deceptively relaxed as he listens to Barrass’s pitch. His dark eyes flicker with skepticism, then calculation, as he probes the constitutional details. When Barrass mentions the triumvirate, Napoleon’s lips curl slightly—not a smile, but the recognition of an opportunity. His acceptance is conditional, a power play in itself: he’ll commit, but only if Robespierre falls. The threat of denial hangs in the air, a reminder that even heroes have limits to their loyalty.
- • Ensure his role in the new government is substantive, not symbolic
- • Protect his own political future in case the coup fails
- • Military victory alone won’t secure his legacy—political power is the next frontier
- • Barrass is using him, but he’s using Barrass right back
Calculating and in control, with a undercurrent of impatience—he needs Napoleon’s public face, but he won’t tolerate hesitation for long.
Paul Barrass dominates the dimly lit backroom with the poise of a chess master moving his final pieces. He leans slightly forward, his voice a measured blend of persuasion and threat, as he outlines the coup’s inevitability. His hands remain still, fingers steepled—every gesture calculated to project confidence. When Napoleon hesitates, Barrass’s tone sharpens, a veiled warning that the general’s ambition is both his greatest asset and his Achilles’ heel. He’s not just negotiating; he’s testing Napoleon’s loyalty to the cause—or lack thereof.
- • Secure Napoleon’s commitment to the triumvirate to legitimize the coup
- • Eliminate Robespierre’s influence permanently
- • Power is earned through action, not ideology
- • Napoleon’s military prestige is the key to public support for the new government
Anxious but composed, her historian’s instincts clashing with her immediate need to act—she’s witnessing history in the making, and it terrifies her.
Barbara Wright presses her ear to the spy hole, her expression a mix of concentration and quiet alarm. She absorbs every syllable of Barrass’s proposal, her historian’s mind dissecting the implications—this isn’t just a power grab, it’s a rewriting of history. Her fingers twitch slightly, as if resisting the urge to intervene. She exchanges a glance with Ian, a silent acknowledgment that their mission has just collided with forces far larger than they anticipated.
- • Understand the full scope of the coup to anticipate its impact on Susan’s fate
- • Ensure Ian doesn’t act impulsively, given the stakes
- • Revolutions devour their own children—Robespierre’s downfall won’t bring stability
- • Napoleon’s involvement will only replace one tyrant with another
Tense and focused, with a simmering urgency—his mind races to connect this coup to Susan’s imprisonment, knowing time is running out.
Ian Chesterton crouches beside Barbara, peering through the hidden spy hole he drilled into the backroom shelf. His breath is shallow, fingers gripping the wood as he listens intently to Barrass and Napoleon’s negotiation. Every whispered word tightens his jaw—this coup plot isn’t just political maneuvering; it’s a ticking clock for Susan’s survival. His posture is rigid, a man calculating risks in real-time, aware that their eavesdropping could unravel everything if discovered.
- • Gather actionable intelligence to disrupt the coup and save Susan
- • Avoid detection to prevent compromising their mission
- • Political power struggles are distractions from their real goal: rescuing Susan
- • Napoleon’s ambition makes him unpredictable and dangerous
Maximilien Robespierre is never physically present in the backroom, but his shadow looms over every word. Barrass and Napoleon reference …
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Ian’s hidden spy hole is the invisible thread connecting the companions to the coup negotiation. Carved into the backroom shelf and disguised with arranged items, it serves as their lifeline to intelligence—every whispered word between Barrass and Napoleon filters through this narrow aperture. The object’s functionality is flawless: it allows Ian and Barbara to eavesdrop undetected, turning privacy into a weapon. Yet its existence is also a liability; if discovered, it could expose their presence and derail their mission. The spy hole symbolizes their desperate need for information in a world where knowledge is power—and where one wrong move could mean Susan’s execution.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The backroom of The Sinking Ship is a claustrophobic stage for political theater, its dim lighting and heavy shadows amplifying the tension of Barrass and Napoleon’s negotiation. The space is deliberately secluded, chosen for its isolation—no prying eyes, no accidental witnesses. The wooden shelves, the creaking floorboards, and the faint scent of ale from the inn below all contribute to an atmosphere of secrecy and urgency. For Ian and Barbara, crouched behind the spy hole, the room’s acoustics are a double-edged sword: every murmur carries clearly, but so would any sound they make. The location’s functional role is clear: it’s a neutral ground for clandestine deals, where the fate of France is bartered like currency.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The French Revolutionary Army is the silent power behind Napoleon’s leverage in this negotiation. Though not physically present, its influence looms large—Napoleon’s victories in the Austrian Wars have made him a public hero, and his command of the army is the backbone of Barrass’s proposal. The organization’s loyalty to Napoleon is implicit; without it, his role in the triumvirate would be hollow. Barrass exploits this dynamic, positioning Napoleon as the key to legitimizing the coup and securing public support. The army’s potential to enforce the new government’s authority is the unspoken sword hanging over the conversation.
The proposed triumvirate government is the specter of a future France, hanging in the balance of this negotiation. Barrass outlines it as a constitutional amendment—a three-man consulship where Napoleon would hold equal power with himself and an unnamed third. The organization doesn’t yet exist, but its potential is the carrot dangled before Napoleon: a share in the reins of power, a chance to shape France’s destiny. The discussion of its structure (constitutional rights, amendments) reveals Barrass’s intent to legitimize the coup through institutional reform, not just brute force. Yet the triumvirate is also a fragile construct, dependent on Robespierre’s fall and Napoleon’s compliance.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Napoleon accepts Barrass's proposal. Following Ian and Barbara's report, Stirling realizes the grave implications of Napoleon's potential ascent to power."
Stirling splits the group over Susan’s rescue"Napoleon accepts Barrass's proposal. Following Ian and Barbara's report, Stirling realizes the grave implications of Napoleon's potential ascent to power."
Divided Loyalties in the RevolutionThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"BARRASS: "Robespierre will be arrested after tomorrow's convention meeting.""
"NAPOLEON: "If I refuse?""
"BARRASS: "You're in a strong position, Bonaparte, but hardly indispensible. There are other young men equally ambitious.""
"NAPOLEON: "I accept, dependent on Robespierre's downfall. In the event of failure, I shall of course deny this meeting ever took place.""