Read The Moon and the Sun Online
Authors: Vonda N. McIntyre
Tags: #Fantasy, #Historical, #Romance, #General, #Science Fiction, #Fiction
“Do you know what this means?” Marie-Josèphe exclaimed.
“It means the King’s approval,” Yves said, his smile wry. “And time stolen by ceremony that I’d rather use in study. But I must please the King.” He put his arm around her shoulders. “You’re shivering.”
She leaned against him. “France is too cold!”
“And Martinique is too remote.”
“Are you glad His Majesty called you to Versailles?”
“Are you sorry to leave Fort-de-France?”
“No! I —”
The sea monster whispered a song.
“It sings,” Marie-Josèphe said. “The sea monster sings, just like a bird.”
“Yes.”
“Give it a fish — perhaps it’s as hungry as I am.”
He shrugged. “It won’t eat.” He scooped seaweed from the basket and flung it through the bars of the cage. He flung a fish after it. He rattled the gate to test that it was fastened.
The sea monster’s eerie melody wrapped Marie-Josèphe in the balmy breeze of the Caribbean. It stopped abruptly when the fish splashed into the water.
Marie-Josèphe shivered violently.
“Come!” Yves said suddenly. “You’ll catch the ague.”
3
The sea
monster
floated
beneath
the
surface,
hummin
g, its
voice a
low
moan.
The
edges of
the
small
water
reflected
the
sound.
A
rotting
fish fell
into the
pool.
The sea
monster
dove
away,
then
circled
back,
sniffed
at it,
scooped
it up,
and
flung it
away. It
sailed
between
the cold
black
bars and
hit the
ground
with a
dead
splat
.
The
sea
monster
sang.
oOo
Marie-Jo
sèphe
took
Yves up
the
narrow
dirty
stairs,
through
the dark
hallway
and
along
the
threadb
are
carpet,
to the
attic of
the
chateau
of
Versaill
es. Her
cold
clammy
dress
had
soaked
the fur
lining of
Lorraine
’s cloak.
She
could
not stop
shiverin
g.
“Is
this
where
we’re to
live?”
Yves
asked,
dismaye
d.
“W
e have
three
rooms!”
Marie-Jo
sèphe
exclaim
ed.
“Courtie
rs
scheme
and
bribe
and
connive
for what
we’ve
been
given
freely.”
“It’s
a filthy
attic.”
“In
His
Majesty’
s
chateau!
”
“M
y cabin
on the
galleon
was
cleaner.
”
Mar
ie-Josèp
he
opened
the door
to her
dark,
cold,
shabby
little
room.
Light
spilled
out. She
stared,
astonish
ed.
“An
d my
room at
universi
ty was
larger,”
Yves
said.
“Hello,
Odelette
.”
A
young
woman
of
extraord
inary
beauty
rose
from the
chair
where
she sat
sewing
by
candleli
ght.
“Go
od
evening,
M.
Yves,”
said
Marie-Jo
sèphe’s
Turkish
slave,
with
whom
Marie-Jo
sèphe
shared a
birthday
, and to
whom
she had
not been
allowed
to speak
for five
years.
She
smiled
at her
mistress
in a
matter-o
f-fact
way.
“Hello,
Mlle
Marie.”
“O
delette!”
Marie-Jo
sèphe
ran to
Odelette
and
flung
herself
into her
arms.
“How
—
where
— Oh,
I’m so
glad to
see
you!”
“Ml
le
Marie,
you’re
soaked!
”
Odelette
pointed
to the
dressing
-room
door.
“Go
away,
M. Yves,
so I may
get Mlle
Marie
out of
these
wet
clothes.”
Odelette
had
never,
from the
time
they
were all
children
, shown
Yves a
moment
’s
deferenc
e.
Yve
s offered
her a
mock
bow and
left to
explore
his
rooms.
“W
here did
you
come
from?
How
did you
get
here?”
“W
as it not
your
will,
Mlle
Marie?”
Odelette
unfasten
ed the
many
buttons
of
Marie-Jo
sèphe’s
grand
habit.
“It
was, but
I never
dared
hope
they’d
send
you.
Before
my ship
sailed, I
wrote to
the
Mother
Superior
, I wrote
to the
priest, I
wrote to
the
governo
r —”
The
clammy
wet silk
fell
away,
leaving
her bare
arms
exposed
to the
cold
night
air.
“And
when I
reached
Saint-Cy
r, I
asked
Mme de
Mainten
on for
help — I
even
wrote to
the
King!”
She
hugged
herself,
trying to
ward off
the chill.
“Thoug
h I don’t
suppose
he ever
saw my
letter!”
“Pe
rhaps it
was the
governo
r. I
attende
d his
daughte
r during
her
passage
to
France,
though
the
Mother
Superior
wanted
to keep
me.”
Od
elette
picked
loose
the wet
knots of
Marie-Jo
sèphe’s
stays.
Marie-Jo
sèphe
stood
naked
and
shiverin
g on the
worn
rug. Her
ruined
gown
and
silver
petticoat
lay in a
heap.
Odelette
hung
the
Chevali
er’s
cloak on
the
dress-ra
ck.
“I’ll
brush it,
and it
might
dry
unstaine
d. But
your
beautifu
l
petticoat
— !”
Odelette
fell into
their old
habits of
domesti
city as if
no time
had
passed
at all.
She
rubbed
Marie-Jo
sèphe
with a
scrap of
old
blanket
and
chafed
her
fingers
and
arms to
bring
back
some
warmth.
Hercule
s the cat
watched
from the
window
seat.
Mar
ie-Josèp
he burst
into
tears of
anger
and
relief.
“She
forbade
me to
see you
—”
“Sh
h, Mlle
Marie.
Our
fortunes
have
changed
.”
Odelette
held a
threadb
are
nightshi
rt, plain
thin
muslin,
not at all
warm.
“Into
bed
before
you
catch
your
death,
and I
have to
send for
a
surgeon.
”
Mar
ie-Josèp
he
slipped
into the
nightshi
rt. “I
don’t
need a
surgeon.
I don’t
want
a
surgeon.
I’m just
cold. It’s
a long
walk
from the
Fountai
n of
Apollo
when
your
dress is
soaking
wet.”
Od
elette
unpinne
d
Marie-Jo
sèphe’s
red-gold
hair,
letting it
fall in
tangled
curls
around
her
shoulde
rs.
Marie-Jo
sèphe
swayed,
too tired
to keep
her feet.
“Co
me,
Mlle
Marie,”
Odelette
said.
“You’re
shiverin
g. Get in
bed, and
I’ll comb
your
hair
while
you go
to
sleep.”
Mar
ie-Josèp
he
crawled
between
the
featherb
eds, still
shiverin
g.
“Co
me,
Hercule
s.”
The
tabby
cat
blinked
from the
window
seat. He
yawned,
rose,
stretche
d
hugely,
and dug
his
claws
into the
velvet
cushion.
One
leap to
the floor
and one
to the
bed
brought
him to
her side.
He
sniffed
her
fingers,
walked
on top
of her,
and
kneaded
her
belly.
The
feathers
softened
his
claws to
a soft
pressure
and a
faint
sharp
scratchi
ng
sound.
He
curled
up,
warm
and
heavy,
and
went
back to
sleep.
“Pu
t your
arms
beneath
the
covers,”
Odelette
said,
trying to
pull the
covers
higher.
“No
, it isn’t
proper
—”
“No
nsense,
you’ll
die of a
cold in
your
chest.”
Odelette
tucked
the
covers
around
her chin.
Odelette
spread
Marie-Jo
sèphe’s
hair
across
the
pillows
and
combed
out the
tangles.
“You
mustn’t
go out
anymor
e with
your
hair
poorly
dressed.
”
“I
wore a
fontange
s.”
Marie-Jo
sèphe
yawned.
“But the
sea
monster
knocked
it
loose.”
She lost
track of
what
she was
saying.
“You
should
see the
sea
monster.
You will
see it!”
I’m
still too
excited
to go to
sleep,
Marie-Jo
sèphe
thought.
Then, a
moment
later,
Odelette
laid her
heavy
braid
across
her
shoulde
r.
Marie-Jo
sèphe
had
already
dozed,
and had
not felt
Odelette
finish
her hair.
Odelette
blew
out the
candle.
The
smoke
tinged
the air
with
burned
tallow.
A
shadow
in the
darknes
s,
Odelette
moved
toward
the
window
.