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Louis-Dominique Serd-Croix Franois, marquis de Bullion was a French aristocrat and Templar who operated during the French Revolution. His role was to find and kill the royalist men and women for Louis Philippe II.
He became the marquis of Bullion early, and with his power, he managed to murder Mlanie Chimen-tienne (a Master Assassin) and her husband Jacques tienne. It was all supposed to go smoothly with killing them: give them trouble with the help of Robert LaGouze, make a death penalty on their family, hang them. But this hit back on him when the Revolution was a fact: Pierre tienne and Louis la Mort with one or two other unnamed Assassin, infiltrated the Palais du Luxembourg with the help of the revolutionary Throigne de Mricourt. The palace was stormed by the citizens, and they attacked the marquis.
Under the attack of Palais du Luxembourg, Pierre, Louis and the other Assassins threw the aristocrat out of a window. The people grabbed his body, and punched him before they beheaded the man. His head was placed on a stake to derision.
Caleb Garret was to be located close to Fort George in New York. Bullion traveled to New York where he established a company which was supposed to collect food and resources from the Natives; this would undoubtedly make him a target, for the Natives location was also the place where Caleb came from. A few months afterwards, Bullion noticed a shadow at the rooftops. The trap was completed: Caleb had taken the bait and eaten it whole. Bullion placed himself in a chair in the study with a book in his hands, and a pistol by his side. A rope was hidden the closet; Bullion would use this to capture the Assassin. He placed a branding iron into the fireplace, and waited. Caleb would undoubtedly kill him with his hidden blade.
January 1776, Bullion did soon learned that of Franois de la Serre, the Grand Master, needed to make sure that the control of Le Louroux was secured. In doing so, he set Bullion to take care of this. Bullion was made the public officer of the little city of Le Louroux, and with the help of a fellow-Templar, named Robert LaGouze, Bullion managed to find and kill a Master-Assassin named Mlanie tienne d'Le Louroux and her husband.
Bullion served as the public officer from 1776 to 1788. As the officer, he was also the executioner, and now he could control people more and more. He did soon learned that the Assassin-family tienne had two children; two orphans was exactly what he needed: an heir to follow in his footprints. When he arrived at the estate, there was no one there: a tragedy.
As a reformed Templar, Bullion's task was to hoard the food from the citizens of Paris. Germain's thoughts was to starve the people. Through famine and fury they would see their masters for what they were. Bullion served under the duke of Orlans however, and he was of the opinion that Bullion should hoard food for bad times. When the people needed food, the Templars would give them this. Gradually, the Templars would have control over the citizens. Germain wanted chaos, the duke of Orlans wanted secret control.
Bullion: "Freedom, freedom, and more freedom. You Assassins only think of freedom; freedom is an inviting to chaos; through chaos, comes death; through death, comes collapse; through collapse, comes the apocalypse. The Templars holding the people in their bare hand, yes, but we created this world. We have puppets in all of the world, because we created the world; we have made sure that the world have been given wealth and prosperity. I do not see why all of you Assassins kill us, when we have given you everything!"
Bullion: "I took the food for harder times. Those dogs [the people] squander their food without even thinking about spare it for harder times. With all the food that have been brought into Paris, it would only last for a few hours before less than one quintic of Paris' citizens had eaten it. Alas, that the Marquis de Bullion should not die in bed with a lover by his side, but to four naive Assassins who think that they can solve all of the world's problems with a flick of a blade. I met an Assassin once before; I killed him, and he was just as naive as you."
Pierre took out his sword and sliced the stomach of Bullion. Afterwards he took the Marquis to an open window, where he threw him out to the people. Afterwards, the Assassins sneaked their way to the rooftop of the palace, where they saw Bullion's head on a stake, to all of the citizens of Paris' pleasure.
L'affaire du roy a est heureusement commence hier matin, et la premire dlibration a est 1,200 mille liv. de la meilleure grce du monde, tous les hauts bancs ayant est uniformes la rserve d'une voix, et dans le tiers estat les capitouls en ont est ; ce qui ne fust pas arriv sans le soin que vous prtes d'en faire exclure le sieur Delive ; et dans tout le reste il n'y a eu que 6 voix caduques qui ne se comptent point, et 6 autres voix 800 mille livr. et un million, ce qui vous doit bien faire augurer et esprer un heureux succs, comme je le fais aussy. Ce n'est pas que je ne prvoye qu'il y aura des difficults monter plus haut ; car je suis assur qu'il y a des gens qui agissent soubs main pour obliger les aultres ne monter pas plus haut. Comme ils n'ont pas est assez puissans pour faire en sorte qu'on n'allt pas 1 200 mille livr., je me persuade qu'ils n'auront pas assez de pouvoir pour empcher qu'on n'aille pas plus avant. M. le prince de Conty y a agy admirablement bien ; tous les bons serviteurs du roy ont fort bien second ses bonnes intentions, et ainsy la chose a bien russi. Il est question de bien finir ; quoy nous allons travailler de toute notre force. Quoyque je vous mande qu'il y a eu fort peu de voix contraires, ne croys pas pour cela que la fin se trouve sans difficult ; car beaucoup de gens ont est pour nous qui seront contre, ayant est entrans venir l'advis qui a pass, voyant la partie si bien faite ; et comme vous m'avs permis et ordonn de vous dire tout ce que je jugerois ncessaire pour les affaires du roy, je croy estre oblig de vous dire qu'il est ncessaire que vous fassis escrire par le marquis de Calvisson son envoy d'aller au plus fort advis. Faites faire la mesme chose par M. le duc d'Uss, par le marquis de Reb qui est Paris, par M. de
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