Gabriel Beaudoin
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Gabriel Beaudoin was the French Director of Finance, serving in the midst of the French Revolution until his death.
A duplicitous man, Beaudoin engaged in an affair with Brigitta von Glück, the wife of Austrian ambassador Friedrich von Glück, enraging the ambassador, who swore revenge. At the same time, Beaudoin frequented a private gambling club in the Palais-Royal, where he and his banker, who also played, were able to cheat the other gamblers out of their winnings.
However, in the last few weeks of Beaudoin's life, he became increasingly agitated, and claimed he could see the specter of a German murdered executed centuries ago that had haunted his office in the Tuleries ever since as "the Red Ghost". From that point on, Beaudoin carried religious icons wherever he went, and even went as far as to ask a local doctor to concoct a supernatural repellent to ward off the evil spirit. However, none of these efforts succeeded, and Beaudoin became inconsolable.
One day, in a fit of despondency, he locked himself in his office. Minutes later, his aides heard a gunshot. Soon after, the Assassin Arno Dorian discovered Beaudoin, who had killed himself with a pistol, and began investigating the events leading up to the Director's death.
Eventually, Arno came to the conclusion that Beaudoin's assistant, LeGall, considered himself a better candidate for the role of Director of Finance, and had used the myth of the Red Ghost to drive Beaudoin to suicide. After confronting LeGall, Arno handed him over to Police Minister Lapparent, and Beaudoin's death was solved.
