The Moon and the Sun

“Oh,” she said. “Sister, do you mean...”

 

 

“I mean we are sisters — how could you not know? Our father owned my mother, she was his, he did as he pleased, without a thought to what would please her. Or what would horrify her.”

 

Marie-Josèphe’s shoulders slumped. She stared at her hands, limp in her lap.

 

 

 

“Do you hate him terribly? Did she? Do you hate me?”

 

“I don’t hate him. It is fate. I love you, Mlle Marie, though I’ll never see you again.”

 

“I love you too, Mlle Haleed, even if I never see you again.”

 

Haleed pressed a knotted kerchief into Marie-Josèphe’s hand.

 

“Your pearls!”

 

“Not all of them! We promised to share our fortunes. I must go.”

 

They kissed each other. Haleed slipped out the door. She was gone, to embrace an unknown fate that frightened Marie-Josèphe even more than her own.

 

 

 

 

oOo

 

 

 

 

Lucien dreaded the approaching interview. The King was too angry with him, too disappointed, to put his fate in the hands of his guards or his jailers. Lucien had every material thing he wanted, clean linen and food and wine. He was treated with scrupulous courtesy. His back hurt only in its ordinary way.

 

He had everything but liberty, communication, the comfort of intimacy. He hung suspended at a great height, waiting only for Louis to let him fall. He hoped he would not take Marie-Josèphe with him to the depths.

 

The musketeers took Lucien to the guard room outside His Majesty’s private chamber, where Marie-Josèphe and Yves already waited.

 

How strange, Lucien thought. The joy of seeing her is equal to the ecstasy of her touch.

 

He took her hand. Together, they went to face the King.

 

Treasure filled the room, stacked and tumbled in heaps like an ancient dragon’s hoard. Gold bracelets and pectorals and armor lay in jumbled piles, with headdresses, medallions, and strange flared cylinders. Impassive jade statues clustered on the parquet. One of them eerily resembled Lucien’s father.

 

His Majesty gazed into the eye sockets of a crystal skull. Pope Innocent sat beside him, indifferent to the treasure, counting a rosary of ordinary beads. The beads tapped against a wooden box in his lap: Marie-Josèphe’s drawing box. A table piled with books and papers stood beside him.

 

The King picked up a gold pectoral, lowered it over his head, and arranged the curls of his black wig. The wide flare of gold covered his chest.

 

The strange eyes of gold statues stared from every direction. Louis regarded his prisoners in silence.

 

 

 

“I loved you all.” To Marie-Josèphe he said, “You pleased me with your beauty and your charm and your music.” To Yves he said, “I marveled at your discoveries. I was proud to be your sire.” After a long pause, he turned to Lucien. “I valued your wit, your bravery, your loyalty. I valued the truth you told me.”

 

He flung the skull to the floor. “You betrayed me.” The crystal smashed. Shards exploded across the parquet.

 

“Father de la Croix.”

 

“Yes.” Yves cleared his throat. “Yes, Your Majesty.”

 

“I give you to His Holiness, and I command you to obey him without question.”

 

“Yes, Your Majesty,” Yves whispered.

 

“Mlle de la Croix.”

 

“Yes, Your Majesty.” Her voice was as strong and as pure as the sea woman’s song.

 

“You’ve offended me and my holy cousin as well. You must accept punishment from us both.”

 

“Yes, Your Majesty.”

 

Innocent made her wait until he had finished the rosary.

 

“I forbid you this ridiculous desire to compose music,” Innocent said. “Not to save your modesty, for you are lost, but as a punishment. You must be silent.”

 

Marie-Josèphe stared at the floor.

 

“Very well,” Louis said. “Though it’s a shame, for she might have been very good if she were a man. Mlle de la Croix, my punishment is this. You desire a husband, and children. I thought to forbid these to you, to send you to a convent.”

 

Marie-Josèphe paled.

 

I’ll break it down, Lucien thought. I’ll lay siege to the walls as if it were a prison, an enemy city in war —

 

“But that is too simple a solution,” Louis said.

 

He turned away from Marie-Josèphe and addressed himself to Lucien.

 

“You will leave court.”

 

I was right not to hope for a lesser punishment, Lucien thought.

 

“You will resign the governorship of Brittany to M. du Maine. You will resign your title and your lands to your brother.”

 

Lucien’s plans for the good of his family trembled in his hands.

 

“And you will marry Mlle de la Croix. You may live on the dowry I promised her. If you do not give her children, you will break her heart. If you do give her children, you will dishonor your sworn word, to the woman you love — as you dishonored it to me.”

 

“Yes, Your Majesty.” Lucien’s pride finally failed him. He could barely speak.

 

“I’ve condescended to spare your lives — but I wish never to see any of you again.”

 

 

 

He nodded graciously to Innocent. “Here is your priest, cousin.”

 

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