Reincarnated: Vive La France-Chapter 63: "Because… your Republic… is a lie."

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.

Rain continue to tell over Paris like a curtain drawn over a stage before the final act.

But no theater could contain the blood being spilled.

Inside the intelligence bureau's war room, General Delon stood over the central operations table, his gloved hand pressing down on a map of Paris riddled with pins, blood stains, and cigarette burns.

Beside that map was a list.

It bore no title, only names.

The Ghost List.

Each name had a consequence, each one a rot that had spread through the bones of France.

Varenne entered quietly.

His coat was soaked, collar turned up, a folder tucked beneath his arm.

He first adjusted his coat and lit a cigarette looking towards the list.

"The last six," Varenne said softly, handing Delon a fresh document.

""Thirteen on the list," Varenne said. "Seven confirmed arrested. You were right. They're not hiding. They're burrowing in."

Delon took the file, his voice colder than the wind outside. "Then we flush them out. Every last one."

The first target was a financier named Lucien Marchal.

On the surface, a simple man with a quiet mansion.

In truth, he'd moved weapons, sold false maps to enemies, funded the black-market pipeline that cost dozens of French patrols their lives.

Delon didn't send soldiers.

He sent dogs.

Inside Marchal's cellar, a door blew open with a charge that shook the house.

Two masked men moved like ghosts, dragging Lucien from his bed.

Blood bloomed across his silk robe.

"You can't do this!" he screamed. "I have immunity! I'm friends with—"

One of the men struck him hard across the jaw.

The other whispered: "You had friends. Now you've got a grave."

They didn't kill him.

They beat him, bled him, and carried him out naked, bound in his own velvet bedsheet.

He was thrown on the front steps of the Palais de Justice as dawn broke.

The second man on the list was Captain Darçay known in secret dossiers as "The Shepherd."

He was organizing desertions, smuggling live intel across the border, and orchestrating hits on loyalist troops from within.

He had been warned.

When Delon's men arrived, the barracks were already locked down.

Darçay had barricaded the central hall with his private guard.

The first shot cracked across the courtyard.

Delon stood outside, calm as stone, revolver holstered.

"Open the gate, Darçay!" he barked. "I won't ask again!"

A reply came two rifle cracks.

One of Delon's lieutenants fell, blood bubbling from his chest.

Delon didn't flinch.

He turned to Varenne.

"Breach protocol. Smoke and steel."

Five minutes later, a wall was blown in.

They didn't come with tactics, they came with fury.

Inside, Darçay tried to run.

A bayonet caught him in the leg, and he collapsed screaming.

Delon stepped into the smoke-filled hall, eyes blazing.

"You betrayed your flag," he said coldly. "Why?"

Darçay, bleeding, barely gasped, "Because… your Republic… is a lie."

Delon fired one round.

The bullet went through Darçay's eye.

"No," Delon replied. "Because men like you made it one."

Far away two lawyers and a magistrate were pulled from their homes, charged under Article 47 Conspiracy with foreign agents during wartime.

One of them tried to jump from his second-story window.

He landed on broken ribs, screaming.

"Please!" he sobbed. "I didn't know they were Germans!"

A gendarme raised his baton. "Then you'll die for being stupid."

The beating lasted eight minutes.

In the Élysée Palace, Delon sat across from President Lebrun.

The room was cold.

Both men were silent.

"I told you to stop the blood," Lebrun said finally, voice low. "Not bathe in it."

Delon's eyes were iron. "Then you should've stopped them before I did."

Lebrun's face twisted in pain. "I'm trying to hold a nation together. You're pulling it apart."

Delon leaned forward. "What I'm doing, Monsieur le Président, is removing rot. You want a clean house? You start by killing the rats."

"I want this to end," Lebrun whispered.

"I've ended it," Delon said. "Two names remain."

The president rubbed his temples. "No more high officials. Arrest them, warn them but do not kill again. No more ghosts. I have already told you this before, If you start moving high official this nation will be gone."

Delon stood slowly.

"For you, Monsieur le Président… I will do what I can."

Inside the black Citroën, Varenne sat beside Delon.

He lit a cigarette and passed one to the general.

"You're quiet," he said.

"I'm thinking of the two left."

"One of them sir....." Varenne was bit conflicted.

"I know," Delon muttered. "He's the one I want alive."

"And the other?"

Delon exhaled smoke. "He'll wish he'd vanished too."

Target: Ambassadorial Liaison Bresson.

When they burst in, Bresson was reading his papers.

He didn't run.

He looked up, startled, as four armed officers stormed in.

"So it's come to this," he said.

"You've had this coming for a long time," said one of the officers.

Bresson stood slowly, buttoned his coat, and extended his wrists.

"Then let's not drag it out."

"No trial?" one guard asked.

Varenne stepped in.

"No. We'll give him a better ending."

Outside, a single gunshot echoed over the rooftops.

The final arrest came with no blood, but it was no less brutal.

A general.

A war hero.

One of the oldest living Marshals of the Republic.

Delon entered his office quietly.

The man didn't look surprised.

"They've sent you," the Marshal said, gesturing to the chair.

"I came myself."

"What do you want?"

"Your confession. And your silence."

"I'll give you one."

Delon nodded.

"I betrayed this army," the Marshal whispered. "By trusting men who put profit over blood."

Delon stood, offering no words.

He left without shackling the old man.

That night, the Marshal drank himself into a coma and never woke again.

At midnight in the war room.

Delon stood before the Ghost List.

Every name was crossed out.

Varenne came in behind him, blood on his sleeves.

"It's over," he said.

Delon nodded slowly.

"No. It's buried."

The purge was done.

But Paris?

Paris remembered.

And so would history.