The Moon and the Sun

“You cannot deny it,” Mme Lucifer said. “Everyone knows the King puts on these fetes only for his mistresses.”

 

 

Stumbling around, trying to flee, Yves came face to face with Pope Innocent and all his cardinals. His Holiness’ stormy expression turned thunderous.

 

“Your Holiness, I — I —”

 

“Go to the chapel, my son,” Pope Innocent said. “Meditate on the subject of sin.”

 

“Father de la Croix!”

 

His Majesty strode toward Yves. His Carrousel teams followed him, a cavalry imagined from all the most exotic times and places of the world. The King, in costume, glittered with millions of livres’ worth of diamonds and rubies. The white plumes of his crest draped down his shoulders and back like a cloak. The first time he appeared as Augustus Caesar, he had been twenty-eight. He looked that young again.

 

His Majesty took Yves by the shoulders and embraced him, in the full view of all his cavalry, all his courtiers, all the visiting monarchs, all the Princes of the Church.

 

“Come stand at my right hand, my son.”

 

“To the chapel,” Innocent repeated. “Meditate — and consider particularly the sin of pride.”

 

Yves took one step toward His Majesty.

 

Yves saw, beyond the gate of the courtyard, Marie-Josèphe standing at the shoulder of a gray horse, looking up at the Count de Chrétien — She would hardly look up at him under any other circumstances! Yves thought, then thought of another situation in which she would — and touching his hand. Chrétien raised her hand to his lips. He let her go, prolonging the touch as a lover would. He rode into the darkness. Marie-Josèphe hurried away and disappeared.

 

“Father de la Croix!” Pope Innocent said.

 

“Come along,” His Majesty said. “Have some supper. I like a man with a hearty appetite.”

 

“I — forgive me, Your Majesty,” Yves said. “I must obey His Holiness.”

 

He fled from the courtyard.

 

 

 

 

oOo

 

 

 

 

Marie-Josèphe tried to slip into shadows. Footsteps followed her. It was impossible to hide behind an orange tree while wearing a grand habit. Her pursuer strode toward her, grim-faced.

 

Her brother grasped her shoulders, his eyes wild, his hair awry, his cassock ripped open. The sea monster medal hung heavy on his chest, tangled with his crucifix.

 

“Yves — ?”

 

“This liaison will be your ruin!” he cried.

 

“This — liaison?”

 

“Has he bewitched you?”

 

“Who? What are you talking about? You don’t believe in witchcraft!”

 

“That scheming atheist —”

 

“Count Lucien has offered you nothing but wisdom! How can you speak so cruelly of him?”

 

“He’s a despoiler of women —”

 

“And he’s offered me only kindness! I admire him —”

 

“— and he’ll despoil you, if he hasn’t already!”

 

“— and I love him. If he’d take me, I’d have him!”

 

“You are like our mother — a wanton —”

 

“How dare you?” Marie-Josèphe exclaimed. “Our mother? Have you lost your mind?”

 

“Have you lost your virtue? Our mother did — the King had her, he got me upon her, and you —”

 

“Yves, you’re ridiculous.”

 

He stopped raving, hope in his eyes. If he were not so distraught, she would have laughed at him.

 

“Mama and Papa were in Martinique two years before I was born — did the King, unacknowledged, creep over the Atlantic to Fort de France?”

 

“But I was born in France.”

 

“Yes,” Marie-Josèphe said.

 

“The King acknowledged me.” Yves broke down crying. “He revealed my bastardy, before His Holiness, before everyone. And Mme Lucifer said you were Chrétien’s lover, and the King’s natural daughter, and... and...”

 

 

 

“What? Tell me.”

 

“And the King’s mistress.”

 

“Count Lucien treats me with complete respect. His Majesty has never offered me an improper word or gesture.” She embraced Yves with sudden sympathy. “Oh, Yves, dear brother, this explains so much, I’m so sorry for you.”

 

She tried not to laugh: So that’s why the ladies rose for me, she thought, and why Mlle d’Armagnac copied my peacock feather!

 

She smoothed Yves’ hair, comforting him. “When have I had time to be anyone’s mistress?”

 

At the bottom of the garden, Sherzad sang of loneliness and of despair.

 

“I must hurry,” Marie-Josèphe said. “Sherzad’s calling me. Go back, accept His Majesty’s accolades.”

 

The rumble of wagon wheels approached.

 

“I’ll go with you,” Yves said. “I’ll give Sherzad last rites —”

 

“She doesn’t want you!” Marie-Josèphe cried, desperate to make him go, to send him out of peril. “She isn’t a Christian, she doesn’t want —”

 

Count Lucien drove a baggage wagon past the Orangerie, incongruous in Roman armor, plumed hat, and white deerskin gloves.

 

“Count Lucien!” Marie-Josèphe ran after the wagon.

 

“Whoa!” The cart-horses stopped.

 

“Any news of the treasure ship?”

 

“Marie-Josèphe,” Lucien said patiently, “would I be driving this ugly wagon if I had good news?”

 

She scrambled up beside him, awkward in her elaborate skirts. Yves grabbed her arm.

 

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