Chapter 106: Paris Night

Paris, France.

In a deep alley, two people were dragging corpses, and there were as many as seven corpses on closer inspection.

The two of them looked blankly from the corpse searching for everything they could use, including clothes and boots. One of them was injured, but the other was still on guard, and the scene was indescribably weird.

In fact, both were prisoners serving sentences in Siberia, Russia, and lived in darkness in that cold hell.

But suddenly one day someone came to them and said that there was a great man who needed them to do something, and as long as they did, they would be pardoned, and even if they died, their families would be pardoned and leave this bitter cold land.

Just as a drowning person will hold on to a straw, desperate people like them will naturally not let go of a glimmer of life.

Soon they were hooded, loaded into carriages, and bumped all the way when the hoods were removed. Each of them found themselves in a room with five people and a full table of dishes, but only a chair and a set of utensils.

In fact, there is no need for the people outside to say anything, and the people in the house understand everything.

The bloodiness, violence, and desire to survive were vividly manifested in a moment, and Rojem Kaslev personally ended the lives of three people, including a tall but thin child, but he survived.

Suddenly he heard an eager bell outside, and Rodem Kaslev thought it was time for him to go out to meet the big man.

Rogem Kaslev did not like the way of such big shots, but he had to live to the end to return his family to the warm South Russian steppe.

But the moment Rogem Kaslev opened the door of the hut, he was dumbfounded, because there were many similar huts around, and those doors were slowly opening.

By the end of the night, only twenty of the five hundred prisoners had survived. After that, they were sent to the special third section for emergency training, and in the end only ten of them came to Paris, and the others were "eliminated".

Their mission was simply to kill one of them at a meeting between Queen Victoria of England and King Louis Philippe of France, and it didn't matter who it was.

Successful assassinations are heroes, and these heroes and their families are pardoned, whether they are alive or not.

They will not be recognized if the assassination fails, and if their identities are revealed, their families and themselves will be erased from this world.

Regardless of whether the mission succeeded or failed, a ship was waiting for them next to the canal, a British-flagged merchant ship with immunity and free passage on the Seine.

Of course, Duke Lyubai also gave them the opportunity to quit, and returned to Siberia as if nothing had happened.

But although these people don't know the specific identity of the other party, they all know very well that choosing to quit at this time is no different from committing suicide.

The ten men were then arranged to Paris in different capacities in order to approach and kill their targets, most of them in the crowd with ordinary people, and some were given the status of journalists and attendants.

The closest person to the target that day was only about fifty meters away, but the sudden attack disrupted the whole arrangement.

The chaotic crowd and the large number of military personnel completely separated them from the target, after which a large number of patrol officers drove them and the ordinary people away from the scene, and they could only sit back and watch the plan fail.

In fact, in Franz's view, the Russians' one-shot approach is too primitive. At the very least, the Dutch would deliberately find someone with a Russian accent to bribe Adolf Fitzkelentz, and even if they failed, they would lead people in the wrong direction.

Adolf Fitzclarentz was the captain of the "Victoria and Albert", the illegitimate son of the former British king.

In reality, however, the Russians often had the highest success rate, but Franz disrupted the plan.

The assassination failed before it could be carried out, which also disrupted Duke Lyubai's plans. These people are all very dangerous outlaws, and among them are very murderous political prisoners and members of cults.

He could not have allowed these people to return to society, let alone let the French help him. Coupled with the failure of this assassination, Duke Lyubai could already imagine the thunderous outburst of Nicholas I.

He now has to deal with the mess he has created, so a live-action battle royale in Paris begins, and there is actually a hint of a violent neighborhood, after all, the Duke of Lyubay also enlisted the help of the local gangsters in order to increase the success rate.

None of the ten killers returned to the pre-agreed ship, because the killers also understood who they were doing things for, at least for whom the big man was doing things, and Nicholas I would not allow them to remain alive.

The gang members teamed up with the agents of Duke Lyubhai to launch a surprise attack on the killers, but the battle was not fierce, there were no fierce shootouts, and there was no crazy drag racing drama.

Although Russia had acquired a mature technology for the manufacture of revolvers, in fact, only high-ranking officials were equipped with such weapons.

Even officers could not do one, and the equipment rate of the Tsarist Guard was less than 50%, not to mention the supernumerary personnel of the special third section.

This is not so much about the high cost of the new revolvers, nor the fact that Russia's industrial strength is not enough to produce them. It's just that because this weapon is too cheap and excellent, it affects the interests of many people.

As a result, this standard weapon became a "rare commodity", after all, at this time, no one in Europe could compare with Russia in terms of corruption.

The agents under the Duke of Leubay did not, nor did the local gangsters in Paris, but that didn't mean that there were no killers who were supposed to assassinate the king.

After a day and a night of pursuit, six of the ten killers have been confirmed dead, two have left Paris by boat, and two are hiding in unknown corners.

And most of Duke Lyubai's men have been lost, it's not that those killers are really super soldiers, but the French police can't hold their face.

After all, Louis Philippe was annoyed by the fact that the League's proposal had been put on hold, and he felt that this was a problem with the security of the Paris police, so he had changed several police chiefs in succession.

At this time, the newly appointed police chief even led people on the streets to fight crime, which has not had a natural effect in France for hundreds of years.

After all, it is on the territory of the French, and it is not easy to end up making such a big fuss.

The Duke of Lyubai was still thinking about how to deal with the aftermath, and the Paris police did him a great favor.

The assassination of Queen Victoria, as well as the successive acts of violence, were all described as acts of terror by the insurgents.

The next day, the new police chief, Chopper, ordered his men to tie the bodies of the criminals killed last night to the back of the carriage and drag them.

What the director never expected was that this move once again greatly affected the image that Louis Philippe had worked hard to create in front of the people.

(End of chapter)