The Noble Satyr
©Lucinda Brant 1998 & 2003
At the Palace of Versailles, France
1745, the Comte de Salvan plots with the
Chevalier de Charmond…
This is the
first half of Chapter One
The Comte de Salvan stood at the end of the canopied bed in
red high heels and pacified his offended nostrils with a lace handkerchief
scented with bergamot. He was dressed to attend a music recital in stiff gold
frock, close-fitting silk breeches with diamond knee buckles, and a cascade of
fine white lace at his wrists that covered soft hands with their rings of
precious stones. His face was painted, patched and devoid of the disgust and
discomfort his quivering nostrils dared display at the stench of the ill, and
the smell that came from the latrines that flowed just beyond the closed door to
this small apartment below the tiles of the palace of Versailles.
Its occupant, one Chevalier de Charmond, gentleman usher to
the King, languished amongst feather pillows, his shaved head without its wig
and in its place a Chinese cap. He was suffering from la grippe, but
being a committed hypochondriac was convinced he had inflammation of the lungs.
His physician could not tell him otherwise. He blew his nose constantly and
coughed up phlegm into a bowl his long-suffering manservant emptied at irregular
intervals. He had been bled twice that day but nothing relieved his discomfort.
The presence of the Comte de Salvan promised a relapse.
The Comte listened to the Chevalier’s platitudes without a
smile and waved aside the man’s apologies with a weary hand. “Yes it is a great
honor I do you to descend into this stinking hole. How can you bare it? I’m glad
it’s you and not I who must exist like a sewer rat. No wonder you are unwell. If
you left that bed and went about your duties you would feel better in an
instant. But it is your lot,” Salvan said in his peculiar nasal voice. He
shrugged. “It is most inconvenient of you to take to your bed when a certain
matter of great importance to me is left unfinished. If I thought you incapable
of carrying out my wishes…”
“M’sieur le Comte! I—”
“To the benefit of us both, remember, dear Charmond. I
could’ve given Arnaud or Paul-René the privilege of doing me this small favor.
Indeed, does not Arnaud owe his alliance with the de Rohan family all because I
made the effort to whisper in l’Majesty’s ear? One cannot have one’s relatives,
however removed, married to inferior objects.” He proceeded to take snuff up one
thin nostril. “And Paul-René would still be scraping dung off Monsieur’s boots
if I hadn’t put in a good word on his behalf to have him promoted from the
kennels to the Petite Écuries. And now you dare lie there when you are well
aware my dearest wish must be fulfilled forthwith. I will certainly go mad if
something isn’t done soon!”
The Chevalier attempted to sit up and look all concern with
the first rise in the Comte’s voice. He schooled his features into an expression
of sympathy and shook his head solemnly. “You cannot know what agonies, what
nightmares, I have suffered on your behalf, M’sieur le Comte. Every night I have
lain here not sleeping, my head pounding with the megrim, unable to breath, and
I have thought of you, my dearest Comte, and only you. How best to serve you.
How to successfully bring about a resolution to your torments. It has been a
constant worry for poor Charmond.”
“Then why can’t you do this small thing for me?” screeched
the Comte. “Do you believe you are the only one I can trust? Do you? You
promised me three days at the most and I have waited seven. And time is
even more important now because the old General is dying; of a surety this time.
And nothing is signed. Nothing is in writing. Nothing is fixed until you get me
what I want! I must have what I want and I will. I will! Whether you get it for
me or I go elsewhere—Why do you smile, eh?”
The Chevalier blew his nose and tossed the soiled
handkerchief to the floor. “I offer my humble apologies, M’sieur le Comte, if
you thought I smiled at you,” he said quietly. “I was not smiling at you but for
you. I have a picture of the beautiful mademoiselle in my mind’s eye and I am
indeed happy for you. I congratulate you on your good fortune. It is not every
day a man comes across one as she. You are a lucky man, M’sieur le Comte.”
The anger left Salvan’s eyes and he smiled crookedly, a
picture of the girl in his mind’s eye. Some of the heat cooled in his rouged
cheeks and he swaggered. Another pinch of snuff was inhaled, leisurely and long.
“She is a beauty, is she not, eh, Charmond? Such round, firm breasts. A rosebud
for a mouth. Hair shot with gold and eyes that slant ever so slightly, like a
cat’s. Most unusual. And to think her delights are all untouched. Ah, it makes
me hard just thinking about her! But I tell you, Charmond, I do her a great
honor, a great honor indeed. I am lucky, yes, but she doubly so to even have a
second look from Jean-Honoré Gabriel de Salvan. When she learns of the honor
done her she will surely embrace me all the more sincerely and devotedly. Oh,
Charmond, I cannot wait until she—”
“—becomes your son’s wife?” interrupted the Chevalier
smoothly, which brought the color flooding back into the Comte’s face and caused
his eyes to narrow to slits. “What a joyous day for the house of Salvan!”
declared the Chevalier. “But an even more joyous day for the beautiful
mademoiselle. Who’d have thought the old Jacobite General’s granddaughter would
be done such a great honor? Not she, I’ll wager. She cannot but be grateful to
you, my dear Salvan. She will embrace you! And show her gratitude? Of a
certainty. She will repay you the way you desire her to do so.”
“I do not doubt that but...”
“But?” The Chevalier shrugged expressively. “What can go
wrong?”
“Idiot!” snarled the Comte. “If you do not get me that
lettre de cachet my plans, they will be ruined!”
The Chevalier threw the last of his handkerchiefs on the
floor and rang the small hand-bell at his bedside for a lackey. “I am doing all
I can to do just that, my dear good Comte. Even as we speak I am certain it is
being attended to. Poor Charmond may be bedridden, on the point of pneumonia,
but still he thinks only of you, my dear M’sieur le Comte, and your ever so
desperate predicament. Poor Charmond only hopes, humbly hopes, M’sieur le Comte
has not forgotten his own—not quite so desperate—predicament? After all, and I
beg your pardon for even mentioning it to you because I know you would not
disappoint me, a favor for a favor is what you promised.”
The lackey came into the room with clean handkerchiefs and
the Chevalier boxed his ears and felt better for having done so. He settled back
on the pillows and pretended to show an interest in his hands, but he was
watching Salvan and he trembled inwardly at the black look on the man’s
hideously painted face; the lead paint thick and white to cover pitted cheeks
and chin. He thanked God he had never had the smallpox to such a disfiguring
degree. He cleared his throat and the Comte looked at him.
“Forgive me for recalling to your memory our agreement,
M’sieur le Comte,” said the Chevalier. “You shall have your lettre de cachet.
I hope it brings your son into line. Why he doesn’t want to wed a beautiful
virgin is not for me to understand. He must be a little mad, eh, Salvan?” When
the Comte did not laugh he dropped the smile into a frown. “Should he still not
do as you wish once the letter de cachet is waved under his nose, and you
clap him up in the Bastille or Bicêtre until he sees reason, you still owe
Charmond his favor. I hope M’sieur le Comte intends to honor his bargain.”
“Honor it?” shouted Salvan. He went up to the bed, causing
the Chevalier to cower, and lowered his voice, for he knew the walls between the
apartments to be thin. “How dare you question my honor!” he hissed. “A Salvan’s
word is never in question! You tell me I will have my lettre de cachet,
and so I tell you I am doing all I can to steer Roxton away from Madame de La
Tournelle’s orbit! Your task is the infinitely easier one, Charmond. Have you
any suggestions on how to oust a consummate lover from an eager woman’s bed?
Have you? No! I thought as much. And do not spout drivel at me that it is you
who wants this favor. It is Richelieu who directs you, isn’t it?”
“M’sieur le Duc de Richelieu?” blinked the Chevalier.
“Very well! Play out your game!” spat the Comte. “I know you
have little interest in the de la Tournelle. Or to put it correctly she is not
the sort of female to interest herself with an insignificant worm such as your—”
“M’sieur le Comte! I object most strongly to your tone. Have
I been of insignificance to you? No! Charmond he has been most valuable to
M’sieur le Comte!” The Chevalier blew his nose vigorously and looked offended.
The Comte sighed. “As you wish, Charmond.” He went to the
looking glass in the corner and critically surveyed himself from powdered
campaign wig to the sparkle of his over-sized diamond shoe-buckles. Ever the
conceited nobleman, he was well-pleased with himself and this improved his mood,
as did the thought of seeing the beautiful mademoiselle at the recital. “I grant
you have been helpful to me. But don’t tell me you are interested in Marie-Anne
de Mailly de La Tournelle. That I won’t believe! It’s Richelieu who wants her,
or wants her for the King, and hopes to rule Louis through her. So he thinks.
Whatever! His gyrations don’t interest me.” He glanced at the Chevalier. “I will
tell you why you want to see Roxton tumbled out of Marie-Anne’s bed: jealousy.”
“Jeal-ous-y?” It was the Chevalier’s turn to screech. Instead
he coughed and wheezed until his face turned the color of blood. When he could
speak again he said, “How can you say so? What do I care for Roxton’s conquests?
I admit, my dear Salvan, I find it unbelievable that such a one as he is so
sought after in the bedchambers of Versailles and Paris. Yet, he is! His
reputation equals Richelieu’s. Some say it surpasses his conquests. What female
hasn’t thrown back the covers for M’sieur le Duc de Roxton? And which ones does
he disdain from favoring? Only the ugly and the virtuous. And as they are one
and the same, my dear Comte, the number is small indeed!”
The Chevalier pulled a face of loathing and thumped his fist
into the coverlet. “Why? Why do our women receive this tall Englishman with open
arms who dares wear his own hair down his back like some Viking conqueror? He
has a great beak for a nose, shoulders that are too broad and legs as thick as
tree trunks! And as if to goad us all beyond permission, what does he do?” he
continued in a thin voice. “He does not keep beagles or wolf-hounds or
greyhounds. No! He-he keeps whippets. A woman’s toy! He could very well
parade about with two kittens in diamond collars as have those ill-looking
animals at his heels. Ugh! I will say no more.” He collapsed against the pillows
and wiped sweat from his florid face. “You must excuse me, M’sieur le Comte. I
must be bled…”
Salvan came away from the looking glass and stood over the
Chevalier, his eyes bright with a private humor. “You lie in that bed sweating
like a pig, pouring scorn on my English cousin, when it’s what he does with
this,” he grabbed at his own genitals, “and this,” stuck out his tongue and
wiggled it, “is why your heart’s delight prefers the attentions of M’sieur le
duc d’Roxton.”
“You defend him only because his mother was a Salvan,”
the Chevalier said sulkily.
“As it should be,” the Comte replied haughtily. “I can’t
answer for his English ancestry, except it is an ancient lineage. An English
dukedom is no small thing. And his mother, my aunt, was of impeccable virtue and
of a most noble character, and a Salvan by birth. Enough said! Do not try my
patience to its limit, my dear Charmond.” He flicked open his gold snuffbox and
took a pinch. “Your observations of Roxton amuse me because they are quite to
the life, but when you dig beneath the muck you lose your footing!”
“Forgive me, my dear M’sieur le Comte,” said the
Chevalier with excessive politeness. “I admit I harbored expectations that
Felice would grant me certain liberties. That was until she caught the eye of
your cousin at the Comédie Française. Yet I do not despair of having her,
knowing Roxton tires so quickly of such easy prey. But resentment wasn’t the
only reason which prompted my outburst. Perhaps I will not voice my concerns at
this time. It is late. You have a recital to attend, and I, I am tired. It is
only—well, no, I shall not open my mouth—”
“Open it! Open it!” ordered the Comte. “Don’t goad me,
Charmond! You have wasted enough of my evening and still I am no nearer to
having what I want in my hands!”
“Has not M’sieur le Comte considered the alternative?”
asked the Chevalier smugly. “It would be infinitely simpler if you bedded the
beautiful mademoiselle without consideration for the formalities. Why must you
wed her to your son before you can take her as your mistress? Is not your son’s
marriage to the beautiful mademoiselle the bone that sticks in your throat?
Remove it! Touché. All is as it should be.”
The
Comte de Salvan had a great desire to
choke the life out of the Chevalier de Charmond yet he restrained this murderous
instinct. Instead he clapped an open palm to his powdered forehead and groaned
aloud. “Why do I endure this imbecile? Mon Dieu. I am surrounded by fools
and scoundrels!” He stuck his face up close to the startled Chevalier. “Do you
think I did not think of that? Ah! You are too stupid. I will not explain. Do
you think me a man of no honor? I, a Salvan? I don’t go about as M’sieur le Duc
de
Richelieu seducing unwed females. Preposterous! There is my unsullied reputation
to think of. There is what I owe my name. That fever, it has entered what little
brain you possess. I am done with you!” He turned on a heel to go to the door.
“I will have the lettre de cachet by the end of this week—”
“Your so English cousin has turned his
satyr’s eye on the beautiful mademoiselle.”
The Comte
stood still. He did not turn or speak so the Chevalier continued after a pause
and a blow of his red nose. “You think me a dolt and a scoundrel for advising
you to cut through the formalities, but I tell you, my dear Salvan, if you do
not, the girl will no longer be worth all the energies you expend to have her in
your bed—wed or unwed. Roxton has noticed her and so it is only a matter of time
before his tongue—”
“By the end of the week,” Salvan said
without turning and slammed the door.