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Authors: Kathryn Davis

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BOOK: Versailles
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Meanwhile Bossuet stood waiting in his long black robes at the intersection of two paths, arms crossed, tapping his elegantly shod toe. Sun glinting off the crucifix on his chest, off the mammoth dome of his forehead. That pious half smile!

And the moral of the tale? Louis, please! How many-times do I have to tell you to leave your nose alone and pay attention!

It's a miracle, really, that any of the royal children went on to become King. But maybe there's no version of childhood that could adequately prepare you for that particular future.

Louis XIV (the Sun King) begat Louis (the Grand Dauphin), who died after begetting Louis (the Due de Bourgogne), who died after begetting Louis (the Due d'Anjou), who luckily survived long enough to become Louis XV (Beloved) upon the death of Louis XIV in 1715.

Left, and left again, around a hairpin turn. Left once more. Backtracking.

The Monkey and Her Babies. The Fox and the Crane.

A she-monkey gave birth to twins, one of which she lavished with affection, the other, neglected. But by a curious twist of fate she hugged the one she loved so tightly to her breast that she suffocated it.

Tapping that toe, smiling that smile. It's said that once Bossuet actually broke the Grand Dauphin's arm, though certainly not from any overwhelming rush of love. Revenge comes cheap, however. The pleasure, for instance, of picturing a gilt-painted Bossuet with water coming out his nose.

The moral, Louis? The moral?

And how fitting, really, that the South Quincunx should have been built on the site of the Labyrinth. For while it's true that Louis XVI ordered the fountains dismantled and the sculpture packed away, the boxwood hedges mowed down and the latticework gazebos chopped into kindling (Oh Versailles! Oh grief! Oh ravishing glades! The hatchet is at the ready and your hour is come!), it's also true that traces of the Sun King's original Labyrinth remain. A ghost Labyrinth (like Louis XIII's hunting lodge, or the Porcelain Trianon, or the Ambassador's Staircase, or all the trees that were felled in 1774, or that got blown down by the wind, including Antoinette's beloved tulip tree), its maddening nests within nests of paths reborn as secret passageways and corridors, little rooms and littler rooms, closets and stairways, like the little secret stair in the wall connecting the Dauphin's secret gaming room with his father's bedroom. Only to be used in an emergency, advised his father, delicate.

And then Louis XV begat Louis (Dauphin of France), who died after begetting Louis (the Due de Berry), who went on to become Louis XVI, husband of Antoinette.

The path on each side twisting sharply to disappear behind a wall of vine-covered lattice.

To the right? Or to the left?

A rat struck up a friendship with a frog who played a mean trick on him. He tied the rat's foot to his own, and when they came to a pond, he dived in and swam happily around while the poor rat drowned. But then the rat's dead body floated to the surface, where it was spotted by a kite, who snatched it up in its claws and ate it. The frog tried to untie his foot but he couldn't, so the kite ate him, too.

The Rat and the Frog

An evening in late summer, Palais Cardinal, the Paris residence of Louis de Rohan, Cardinal of the Holy Church and Grand Almoner of France, as well as Landgrave of Alsace, Provisor of the Sorbonne, Superior General of the Royal Hospital of the Quinze-vingts, Commander of the Order of the Holy Ghost, arid first cousin to the Princesse de Guéménée. Rohan is a tall man with a big flushed face and rosebud lips; his heavy legs, of which he is unreasonably vain, are crossed at the knee and clad in bright red stockings. When the curtain lifts he can be seen in rapt conversation with the seer Cagliostro, a dark-complected man in a blue silk coat and plumed tricorn hat who claims to have helped build the pyramids. The two men are seated in enormous wing chairs in Rohan's candlelit Salon of Monkeys, its dancing monkey wallpaper dimly visible in the background.

 

R
OHAN
: Tell me again.

C
AGLIOSTRO
: If you insist.
He lifts his head to the ceiling.
It is only a matter of time. Only a matter of time before the truth emerges, radiant, like the stars and planets at the behest of Isis, Goddess of Light. Only a matter of time before the Adored One ceases to dissemble and shows her true colors. Before she ceases to cut you dead in the galleries of Versailles, speaking of you, on those rare occasions when she does, with base contempt, with disgust even, with—

R
OHAN
: No. Wait. Go back to the part about the planets. The true colors.

C
AGLIOSTRO,
irritated:
When you interrupt like that I lose contact with the Seventh House.

R
OHAN
: The Adored One. The Queen. Antoinette. Go back to that.

C
AGLIOSTRO
: If only you hadn't interrupted.
He returns his gaze to the ceiling, clears his throat, waits.
I'm sorry, it's no use.

Rohan puts a hand in the pocket of his frock coat and jingles some coins, lightly at first, and then, when there's no immediate response, more loudly.

C
AGLIOSTRO
: Perhaps
I
was too hasty.
He shakes his head, again clears his throat.
Unhappy lover! Take heart! Glory will come to you from a correspondence.

 

He stands and exits, stage right, as the woman called La Motte enters, stage left. The room is no longer candlelit but sunlit, the wallpaper monkeys plainly visible, swinging from palm tree to palm tree or hanging by their tails. Rohan remains seated in his wing chair; La Motte perches on a low stool at his feet. She is a small-boned woman with masculine features and masses of chestnut hair.

L
A MOTTE,
swatting Rohan's outthrust hand:
Not so fast! How about some refreshment first? It was hot enough today to poach a trout, the carriage was packed to the gills, and all there was to breathe was the breath of a dozen crapulous Goths.

R
OHAN
: Spare me the details.
He rings for his manservant.

L
A MOTTE
: Ah,
I
forgot. The curse of the oversensitive nature—it must be a great burden.
She sighs, reaching deep into her bodice and extracting a blue envelope bordered in gold which she regards with feigned surprise.
But what have we here?

R
OHAN
: What? What is it? Don't tease. Give it over. Besides, you know I'll make sure you get what you deserve.

L
A MOTTE
: That's what I'm afraid of.
She sniffs the envelope.
You'd think by now she'd be sick of the smell of heliotrope. You'd think she'd have moved on to something a little more subtle, a little less cloying—goodness knows I've dropped enough hints. Though while we're on the subject of teasing, for some reason I was under the impression you liked being teased.

Rohan rings again, without result.

M
ALE VOICE,
offstage, singing:
"
I
may not be handsome, yet I know how to play. When the night gets dark as jet, every cat looks gray."

F
EMALE VOICE,
offstage:
"How sweet the breeze will seem this evening in the pine grove..."

R
OHAN
: Servants! You can't do a thing with them. They've all fallen under the spell of Beaumarchais, that smooth-tongued scoundrel.

L
A MOTTE
: It must be a great burden, servants.
She tears open the envelope and begins reading.
"My Darling Jeanne, sweetest of friends, best of confidantes—" And blah blah blah on and on in that vein. The poor dear can hardly get enough of me. Of course that's not what ... Let's see. "One in whom I can put my trust—" No. Wait. Ah, here we go. "Of all the mistakes I've made in my life, and I admit to having made quite a few, I suspect my harsh treatment of R. is perhaps the worst."

R
OHAN
: R.?

L
A MOTTE
: Ramses, King of Egypt. Who do you think?

Rohan grabs the letter and takes it into a corner, where he stands reading it to himself, as meanwhile a sullen yet good-looking young man suddenly appears in the doorway, shirt untucked and powdered wig askew.

L
A MOTTE
: Your master's not exactly a quick study.

F
EMALE VOICE,
offstage, singing:
"When a man cheats on his wife—"

M
ALE VOICE,
offstage:
No no no! Just try to remember it's not a dirge,
chérie.
Try it again, only lighter this time.

F
EMALE VOICE,
offstage:
You try it. It's an impossible tune.

Y
OUNG MAN
: Perhaps
I
could be of some service?

L
A MOTTE
: As a matter of fact,
I
'm dying of thirst.

R
OHAN,
waving the letter;
An assignation! The Queen suggests an assignation!

L
A MOTTE
: Why am I not surprised?

R
OHAN
: The Grove of Venus. Wednesday next.

 

The young man winks, reaching lewdly into his trousers while pretending to tuck in his shirt.

 

They all exit, stage right.

 

A scrim descends, stage rear, concealing the dancing monkey wallpaper. Though it's been painted to look like a formal garden in the moonlight, the room is brightly lit; a rehearsal of the last act of Beaumarchais's
Marriage of Figaro
is in progress. Enter Antoinette, in the part of Suzanne, masquerading as the Countess Almaviva in a long white cloak, together with Artois, dressed as Figaro.

 

A
NTOINETTE,
singing:
"When a man cheats on his wife, the world says he's a champ, but let his wife do likewise, and the world calls her a tramp. Who can possibly explain why the world is so insane? Because the men make up the rules, the men make all the rules."

A
RTOIS
: Better. Much better. But you're going to have to sing louder if you want to reach the back row. And at some point you've got to remove that cloak so everyone can see who you really are.

A
NTOINETTE
: Suzanne, you mean? Or Marie Antoinette, Queen of France?
She lets the cloak fall to the floor, singing:
"But let his wife do likewise—"

A
RTOIS
: Your secret's safe with me,
chérie.

A
NTOINETTE
: I have no secrets.

A
RTOIS
: Just as I said.

 

They exit, arm in arm, laughing, stage right.

The lights dim and darken. In place of the scrim, an actual grove of pine trees, their branches forming a vault through which patches of moonless, starless sky can be seen, within which night birds hover and roost. The musical sound of nearby fountains, a statue of Venus visible, stage rear, pouring water from a ewer. Enter Rohan, stage right, his body enveloped in a dark blue cloak, his face hidden by a broad-brimmed hat; when he reaches the center of the grove he is approached by a woman wearing a white lawn dress identical to the one worn by Antoinette in Élisabeth Vigée-Lebrun's most recent portrait and holding a single long-stemmed red rose. Though the woman has the Queen's ash blond hair, blue eyes, and remarkably good figure, she is in fact a Palais Royal streetwalker who goes by the name of Oliva.

 

R
OHAN,
kneeling to kiss the hem of her skirt:
Dearest!

O
LIVA
,
handing him the rose:
You know what this means.

 

She races off into the shadows, stage right, and the curtain falls.

Necklace

It was hideous, an abomination. It looked like a collar a circus horse would wear, a huge clanking thing in four tiers (not counting the knotted tassels and pendants), consisting of 647 diamonds the size of robins' eggs. It weighed more than the Dauphin. The Queen wouldn't have been caught dead in it.

Created for Madame Du Barry by the court jewelers, Böhmer and Bassenge, the necklace in question was of a type called
rivière,
as in river of diamonds, and was the discerning benefactor's gift of choice for his Palais Royal whore. "
Rivières
flow very low," sneered the pamphleteers, "because they're returning to their source."

Unfortunately Louis XV died before he had a chance to pay for the necklace, and despite Böhmer's best efforts to interest Marie Antoinette—even threatening to hurl himself in the Seine if she refused to buy it—for a while it looked as if the jewelers were going to be stuck with the thing. The diamonds in it were worth over one and a half million
livres,
not to mention the time that had gone into its creation. Böhmer and Bassenge were desolate, desperate. They were two nice Belgian men, getting on in years, alone in the world, without a leg to stand on.

And then, melodrama!

And then, a miracle!

BOOK: Versailles
5.07Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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