“And we send reports to Rome every year and mostly they only object to the expense,” Montville said, the light of battle in his eye. “For plays and ballets alike. How do you explain that?”
“The Society of Jesus is deeply in need of reform.”
Montville’s infectious laughter pealed out again. “You become more like our good Jansenists every day!” He leaned closer to Guise. “Is it your old sins troubling you, mon père?”
Charles’s lips twitched as Guise grew white around the nostrils. But before Guise could answer, the rector rose for the final grace and everyone rose with him.
Chapter 3
The final grace’s “amen” echoed from the walls and the professors on the dais filed silently into the passage, to be followed by the boys, table by table. Père Montville hurried Charles outside, past the lay brothers putting a dozen wooden chests down near the doors and setting their lids open to reveal game boards, chessmen, darts, toys, and pastimes for the hour of quiet recreation that followed dinner.
“Never mind Père Guise,” Montville said, making for the main building’s rear door. “He is a good librarian. But he suffers from the handicap of being a Guise. My advice is to do as I do, try hard to stay out of his way. Now. You will spend this hour with Père Jouvancy.” He flashed Charles a sideways grin. “Though whether you will find it an hour of quiet recreation, I beg leave to doubt.”
Nerving himself to face his new boss, Charles held the heavy door open for Montville and followed him into the gray day’s indoor gloom. Père Joseph Jouvancy, senior rhetoric master, was as famous for his brilliant teaching and his rapport with students as for the elegant Latin tragedies he wrote. Drama in schools run by religious orders was a centuries-old tradition, but dance with it was the Jesuits’ new contribution. Though King Louis no longer danced himself, the French court had been in love with ballet for a hundred years, ever since Queen Catherine de Medici brought it to France from Italy. For persons of any social standing, dancing well was an indispensable part of claiming one’s rightful place in the world. Charles, like most people, had heard the cautionary—and true—tale of the young noble who so disgraced himself by dancing badly at court that he was sent abroad by his father until the resulting scandal died down. The Jesuit college ballets trained dancers for the ballets still staged occasionally at court, and for the frequent and lavish productions at great country chateaus. Unlike those ballets, the Jesuit productions had more or less edifying themes, no female dancers and no romantic plots, yet they still attracted glittering audiences and wealthy patrons for the college.
Charles stumbled nervously as he and Montville started up a staircase toward a half-open door. Last night, as Jouvancy and Le Picart had kept him company while he ate a late supper, Jouvancy had been cordial and warm, telling hilarious stories of crises in rehearsals and performances over the years. But Charles had quickly seen that the little man was impatient and exacting, with the tireless energy of a squirrel. Now, as he reached the top of the stairs, a murmuring stream of exasperation, punctuated by thumps and the crackle of paper, poured from the half-open door to meet him. Montville knocked lightly, the murmuring broke off, and a high tenor voice called, “Come, come!”
Putting his head around the door, Montville said, “Here he is, mon père,” clapped Charles on the shoulder and clattered away down the stairs.
Charles went in and found Jouvancy bent over a desk, scrabbling through an ill-assorted drift of books, loose sheets of paper, quills, a long curly dark wig, a cone-shaped sugar loaf wrapped in blue paper on a pewter plate, glass bottles of red and black ink, a sugar sifter, and a thick roll of wide blue ribbon uncoiling itself over the desk’s edge. Even in the gray light from the tall, many-paned window, Charles could see the cloud of dust rising from his efforts.
“Yes, yes, good morning to you, too,” the handsome little priest gabbled without looking up and before Charles had said anything. “I am sorry to trouble you with this nonsense, but I am sure that we are of one mind.”
The sugar sifter slid off the desk and Charles caught it in midair, wondering what nonsense he was being troubled with.
“Here it is. Sit, sit. You are a sensible young man, I could see that last night, look at what he wants—it is impossible, it is an offense, just look!”
The rhetoric master thrust a sheaf of sketches at Charles and went back to his frenzied search. Charles put the sugar sifter back on the desk, removed a papier-mâché Roman soldier’s helmet from a straight-backed chair, and sat down.
“Ah, here it is!” Jouvancy disappeared below the desk and straightened, holding a blond wig. “Well?” He subsided into his chair, glaring at the sketches in Charles’s hand. “Well?”
“These are beautiful,” Charles said sincerely, riffling through the big, flopping pages filled with drawings of ballet characters.
Jouvancy’s fine-boned face darkened ominously.
“Though, of course . . .” Charles fanned the sketches like limp cards and frowned at them, praying that the tirade obviously about to burst forth would tell him what he was frowning at.
“Look—there!” Jouvancy bounced up again and leaned across the desk, flattening the wigs as he stabbed a finger at the drawing of a dancer wearing a clock on his head. “A messenger delivered these sketches to me at dawn. Barely dawn, I wasn’t even dressed. A clock! I ask you, a monstrous black and gold clock! Are my boys tables? How is anyone to dance wearing that? And apparently it chimes—he expects poor Time to tilt his head as he dances and make the cursed thing chime!”
The harried producer fell back into his chair, shoulders around his ears, hands flung up in a gesture of utter desperation.
“Um—Monsieur Beauchamps sent these?” Charles hazarded.
Jouvancy’s nostrils pinched. “Who else?”
Every Jesuit college that staged ballets hired a layman as dancing master and the great Pierre Beauchamps was Louis le Grand’s. Beauchamps was to the world of dance what the pope was to Holy Church and Charles could hardly believe his luck in getting to work with him. The greatest dancing master in France, probably in all of Europe, Beauchamps had danced with the king in court ballets and had gone from strength to strength, first as Louis’s dancing master, then as director of the King’s Twenty-Four Violins, director of the Royal Academy of Dancing, and now dancing master for the Royal Academy of Opera. But Charles did see what the problem was. All dancers, amateur and professional, were used to unwieldy headdresses as part of their costumes. In his student days at Carpentras, Charles had danced the role of Spring with a small cage full of live birds on his head. That had been bad enough, but this clock was three feet tall. Though it would be anchored to a leather cap and tied on, it would be the rare student who could keep the thing from tipping over while making it chime in time to his steps and the music.
Jouvancy shifted in his chair, tapping a finger on the desk and scowling as though Charles were a promising pupil failing to live up to his promise.
“Mon père,” Charles said quickly, “Maître Beauchamps sometimes brings his Opera professionals in to dance for you, does he not? Perhaps—one of them could wear the clock?”
“I am sorry to see that you miss the point, Maître du Luc. Pierre Beauchamps is trying to alter my ballet livret. Mine! Again. Do I change the steps he sets the dancers? No, I do not. In my livret, there is no Time character. Instead, there is a beautiful minuet for the four seasons, wearing simple garlands—flowers, fruit, leaves, bare twigs—to show time’s passage.”