“Instanter,” said Gavroche. And with a single bound he plunged into the street.
It will be remembered that Fannicot’s company had left behind it a trail of bodies.
Twenty corpses lay scattered here and there on the pavement, through the whole length of the street.
Twenty cartouches for Gavroche meant a provision of cartridges for the barricade.
The smoke in the street was like a fog.
Whoever has beheld a cloud which has fallen into a mountain gorge between two peaked escarpments can imagine this smoke rendered denser and thicker by two gloomy rows of lofty houses.
It rose gradually and was incessantly renewed; hence a twilight which made even the broad daylight turn pale.
The combatants could hardly see each other from one end of the street to the other, short as it was.
This obscurity, which had probably been desired and calculated on by the commanders who were to direct the assault on the barricade, was useful to Gavroche.
Beneath the folds of this veil of smoke, and thanks to his small size, he could advance tolerably far into the street without being seen.
He rifled the first seven or eight cartridge-boxes without much danger.
He crawled flat on his belly, galloped on all fours, took his basket in his teeth, twisted, glided, undulated, wound from one dead body to another, and emptied the cartridge-box or cartouche as a monkey opens a nut.
They did not dare to shout to him to return from the barricade, which was quite near, for fear of attracting attention to him.
On one body, that of a corporal, he found a powder-flask.
“For thirst,” said he, putting it in his pocket.
By dint of advancing, he reached a point where the fog of the fusillade became transparent. So that the sharpshooters of the line ranged on the outlook behind their paving-stone dike and the sharpshooters of the banlieue massed at the corner of the street suddenly pointed out to each other something moving through the smoke.
At the moment when Gavroche was relieving a sergeant, who was lying near a stone door-post, of his cartridges, a bullet struck the body.
“Fichtre!” ejaculated Gavroche. “They are killing my dead men for me.”
A second bullet struck a spark from the pavement beside him.—A third overturned his basket.
Gavroche looked and saw that this came from the men of the banlieue.
He sprang to his feet, stood erect, with his hair flying in the wind, his hands on his hips, his eyes fixed on the National Guardsmen who were firing, and sang:
“Men are ugly at Nanterre,
‘Tis the fault of Voltaire;
And dull at Palaiseau,
‘Tis the fault of Rousseau.”
Then he picked up his basket, replaced the cartridges which had fallen from it, without missing a single one, and, advancing towards the fusillade, set about plundering another cartridge-box.
There a fourth bullet missed him, again.
Gavroche sang:
“I am not a notary,
Tis the fault of Voltaire;
I’m a little bird,
‘Tis the fault of Rousseau.”
A fifth bullet only succeeded in drawing from him a third couplet.
“Joy is my character,
‘Tis the fault of Voltaire;
Misery is my trousseau,
‘Tis the fault of Rousseau.”
Thus it went on for some time.
It was a charming and terrible sight.
Gavroche, though shot at, was teasing the fusillade.
He had the air of being greatly diverted.
It was the sparrow pecking at the sportsmen.
To each discharge he retorted with a couplet.
They aimed at him constantly, and always missed him.
The National Guardsmen and the soldiers laughed as they took aim at him.
He lay down, sprang to his feet, hid in the corner of a doorway, then made a bound, disappeared, reappeared, scampered away, returned, replied to the grape-shot with his thumb at his nose, and, all the while, went on pillaging the cartouches, emptying the cartridge-boxes, and filling his basket.
The insurgents, panting with anxiety, followed him with their eyes.
The barricade trembled; he sang.
He was not a child, he was not a man; he was a strange gamin-fairy.
He might have been called the invulnerable dwarf of the fray.