The Slave. Micheline Bail. 1999.
Then the wind changed direction, driving the brutal beast westward, directly onto rue Saint-Paul. This time, the whole of Place du Marché was at risk of being engulfed.
An unexpected reinforcement came to the aid of men working axe and saw: the curate named de Grand-Maison marched towards the devastation, the Holy Sacrament brandished like a sword. Waving his sacred weapon in the direction of the fire, he implored in a loud voice, “Lord have mercy on us, poor mortals, for we have sinned.” Many faithful, caught up in his fervour, dropped everything and fell to their knees, their eyes turned towards their pastor; it was all in God’s hands…
The fiery storm raged for some two hours more before abating, finally subdued by the relentless efforts of the fire fighters. At exactly eleven, the alarm bell fell silent.
An odour of sulphur floated over the city.
[…]
The main garden of the hospital was encumbered with everyone's belongings, the survivors, half dead with fatigue and despair, slowly regained their wits, finding respite in a measly soup with bread and a spot of wine, an offering from the Récollets and the Sulpicians, who once again had been spared.
But beneath the dead coals of despair and resignation another fire was smouldering, that of anger. The word was out that the fire had been the scheme of a criminal perpetrator. It was thought that if this were the case, punishment must be exemplary!