Clothed in the old-fashioned style of Louis XV—though his velvets and stockings seemed rather the worse for wear—Philidor was a man of dignity and aristocratic bearing. Though tall, he seemed as fragile as a dried flower petal, his translucent skin nearly as white as his powdered wig.
“It’s rare to find such radiant beauty beside a chessboard, madame.”
“Rarer yet to find it dangling on the arm of an old degenerate like Boswell here,” interjected the sandy-haired man, turning his dark, intense eyes upon Mireille. As he too bowed to kiss her hand, the tall young fellow with the hawklike nose pressed closer to be next in line.
“I have never had the pleasure of meeting Monsieur Boswell before entering this club,” Mireille told her entourage. “It is Monsieur Philidor I’ve come to see. I am a great admirer of his.”
“No more than we!” agreed the first young man. “My name is William Blake, and this young goat pawing at the earth beside me is William Wordsworth. Two Williams for the price of one.”
“A houseful of writers,” added Philidor. “That is to say, a houseful of paupers—for these Williams both profess to be poets.”
Blake returned with Mireille’s drink and sat beside her. The last of the guests were taking their seats when Wordsworth came back to join them. A man in front was explaining the rules of play as Philidor sat blindfolded at the board. The two poets leaned toward Mireille as Blake began in low voice.
“There’s a well-known tale in England,” he said, “regarding the famous French philosopher François-Marie Arouet, known as Voltaire. Around Christmas of 1725—over thirty years before I was born—Voltaire one night escorted the actress Adrienne Lecouvreur to the Comédie-Française in Paris. During the entr’acte, Voltaire was publicly insulted by the Chevalier de Rohan Chabot, who shouted across the lobby, ‘Monsieur de Voltaire, Monsieur Arouet—why don’t you decide what your name is?’ Voltaire, never at a loss for retorts, called back, ‘My name begins with me—yours ends with you.’ Not long after, the chevalier had Voltaire beaten by six rogues for this retort.
“Despite the injunction against dueling,” Blake continued, “the poet went to Versailles and openly demanded satisfaction from the chevalier. He was tossed into the Bastille for his pains. While pining there in his cell, he got an idea. Appealing to the authorities not to let him languish yet another stay in prison, he proposed to go into voluntary exile instead—in England.”
“They say,” Wordsworth chimed in, “that during his first stay in the Bastille Voltaire had deciphered a secret manuscript related to the Montglane Service. Now he conceived the notion of journeying here to present this as a sort of puzzle to our famous mathematician and scientist Sir Isaac Newton, whose works he’d read with admiration. Newton was old and weary, and had lost interest in his work, which no longer presented a challenge. Voltaire proposed to provide the required spark—a challenge not only to decipher what he himself had done, but to unravel the deeper problem of its true meaning. For they say, madame, this manuscript described a great secret buried in the Montglane Service—a formula of enormous power.”
“I know,” Mireille hissed irritably as she removed Charlot’s fingers, which were entangled in her hair. The rest of the audience watched with eyes riveted upon the board at center, where the blindfolded Philidor listened to his opponent’s moves read out as, his back to the board, he called out his replies.
“And did Sir Isaac succeed in resolving the puzzle?” she asked impatiently, feeling Shahin’s tension to depart, though she could not see his face.
“Indeed,” replied Blake. “That is just what we wish to tell you. It was the last thing he ever did—for the following year he was dead.…”
Voltaire was in his early thirties—Newton eighty-three—when the two men met at London in May of 1726. Newton had suffered a breakdown some thirty years before. He’d published little of scientific importance since.
When they met, the slender, cynical Voltaire with his rapier wit must at first have been disconcerted by Newton, fat and pink with a mane of snowy hair and a languid, almost docile manner. Though lionized by society, Newton was in fact a solitary man who spoke little and kept his deepest thoughts jealously guarded—quite the opposite of the young French admirer who’d already been twice incarcerated in the Bastille for tactlessness and rash temper.
“I have published only a fragment of my work,” the scientist told the philosopher. “And that, only by the insistence of the Royal Society. Now I am old and rich, and may do as I like—but I still refuse to publish. Your fellow Cardinal Richelieu understood such reservations, or he’d not have written his journal in code.”
“You’ve deciphered it, then?” said Voltaire.
“That, and more,” said the mathematician with a smile, taking Voltaire to the corner of his study where sat a very large metal box that was locked. He extracted a key from his pocket and looked at the Frenchman carefully. “Pandora’s box. Shall we open it?” he said. When Voltaire eagerly agreed, they turned the key in the rusty lock.
Here were manuscripts hundreds of years old, some nearly crumbling to dust through the neglect of many years. But most were well worn and Voltaire suspected by the hand of Newton himself. As Newton lifted them lovingly from the metal trunk, Voltaire glimpsed the titles in surprise: De Occulta Philosophia, The Musaeum Hermeticum, Transmutatione Metallorum … heretical books by al-Jabir, Paracelsus, Villanova, Agrippa, Lully. Works of dark magic forbidden by every Christian church. Works of alchemy—dozens of them—and beneath them, bound neatly in paper covers, thousands of pages of experimental notes and analyses in Newton’s own hand.
“Not magic,” Newton corrected him, “but science. The most dangerous of all sciences, whose purpose is to alter the course of nature. Reason was invented by man only to help decipher the formulas created by God. In everything natural there is a code—and to each code a key. I’ve re-created many experiments of the ancient alchemists, but this document you give me says the final key is contained in the Montglane Service. If this were true, I would give everything I’ve discovered—everything I’ve invented—for one hour alone with those pieces.”
“What would this ‘final key’ reveal that you are unable to discover yourself through research and experimentation?” asked Voltaire.
“The stone,” Newton replied. “The key to all secrets.
The chestnut trees were blooming in Paris when I left Charles Maurice Talleyrand that spring of 1799, to return to England. It pained me to go, for I was again with child. A new life was beginning inside me, and with it the same seed of single-minded purpose—to finish the Game once and for all.
It would be four more years before I saw Maurice again. Four years in which the world was shaken and altered by many events. In France, Napoleon would return to overthrow the Directory and be named first consul—then consul for life. In Russia, Paul the First would be assassinated by a cadre of his own generals—and his mother’s favorite lover, Plato Zubov. The mystical and mysterious Alexander—who’d stood with me in the forest beside the dying abbess—would now have access to that piece of the Montglane Service known as the Black Queen. The world I knew—England and France, Austria, Prussia, and Russia—would again go to war. And Talleyrand, the father of my children, would at last receive the papal dispensation I’d requested of him, to marry Catherine Noel Worlée Grand—the White Queen.
But I had in my possession the cloth, the drawing of the board, and the certain knowledge that seventeen pieces were nearly within my grasp. Not only the nine buried in Vermont—whose location I now knew—but also the eight: those seven of Madame Grand’s and one belonging to Alexander. With this knowledge, I went to England—to Cambridge—where William Blake had told me the papers of Sir Isaac Newton were sequestered. Blake himself, who found almost morbid fascination in such things, secured me permission to study these works.
Boswell had died in May of 1795—and Philidor, that great chess master, had survived him by only three months. The old guard were dead—the White Queen’s reluctant team dismantled by death. Before she had time to assemble a new one, I had to make my move.
“In Egypt,” said Shahin, “they believed there were eight gods that preceded all the rest. In China they believe in the Eight Immortals. In India they think Krishna the Black—the eighth son—became an Immortal, too. An instrument of man’s salvation. And the Buddhists believe in the Eightfold Path to Nirvana. There are many eights in the world’s mythologies.…”
“But Mother, that’s it—don’t you see?” replied Chariot. “That’s why they invoke the god Hermes. In the first phase of the experiment—sixteen steps—they produce a reddish-black powder, a residue. They form it into a cake, which is called the philosophers’ stone. In the second phase, they use this as a catalyst to transmute metals. In the third and final phase, they mix this powder with a special water, a water gathered from dew at a certain time of year—when the Sun is between the Taureau and the Bélier, Taurus and Aries, the Bull and the Ram. All the pictures in the books show this—it’s just on your birthday—when the water that falls from the moon is very heavy. This is the time when the final phase begins.”
“I don’t understand,” I said, confused. “What is this special water mixed with the powder of the philosophers’ stone?”
“They call it al-Iksir,” Shahin said softly. “When consumed, it brings health, long life, and heals all wounds.”
“Mother,” said Chariot, looking at me gravely, “it’s the secret of immortality. The elixir of life.”
Four years it took us to come to this juncture in the Game. But though we knew the formula’s purpose, we still did not know how it was made.
The spa was surrounded by ancient oaks, its long walks bordered in peonies heavy with bloom. As I stood that first morning on the path in the long linen robes one wore to take the waters, I waited there amidst the butterflies and flowers—and saw Maurice coming along down the path.
In the four years since I’d last seen him, he had changed. Though I was not yet thirty, he would soon be fifty—his handsome face webbed with fine lines, the curls of his unpowdered hair shot with silver in the morning sun. He saw me and stopped cold upon the path, his eyes never leaving my face. Those eyes that were still the intense, sparkling blue I remembered from that first morning I’d seen him in David’s studio—with Valentine.
“I shall never forgive you,” were his first words, “for teaching me what love is, then leaving me to contend with it myself. Why have you never answered my letters? Why do you vanish, then reappear only long enough to break my heart again, just as it’s nearly mended? Sometimes I find myself thinking of you—and wishing I’d never known you.”
Then, in defiance of his words, he grasped me and pulled me to him in a passionate embrace, his lips moving from my mouth to my throat, my breast. As before, I felt the blinding force of his love sweep over me. Struggling against the desire I felt myself, I pulled away.
“I have come to collect on your promise,” I told him in faint voice.
“I’ve done everything I promised—more than I promised,” he told me bitterly. “I’ve sacrificed everything for you—my life, my freedom, perhaps my immortal soul. In the eyes of the LORD, I’m still a priest. For you, I’ve married a woman I don’t love, who can never bear me the children I want. While you, who’ve borne me two, have never let me glimpse them.”
“The pieces,” he said harshly. “Never fear, I have them. Extracted by trickery from a woman who loves me more than you ever have or will. Now you hold my children as hostage to get them from me. My God, that I should want you at all astounds me.” He paused. The bitterness he felt could not be concealed, but it was mingled with a dark passion. “That I cannot live without you,” he whispered, “suddenly seems the height of impossibility.”
He trembled with the force of his emotion. His hands were on my face, my hair, his lips pressed to mine as we stood there on the public path, where people could come along at any moment. As always, the strength of his love was beyond bearing. My lips returned his kisses, my hands moved over the places where his robes had fallen open.
“This time,” he whispered, “we shall not make a child—but I shall make you love me if it’s the last thing I do.”
Charlot was now ten and already looked like the prophet Shahin had predicted he’d be, with his mass of red hair to his shoulders and the sparkling blue eyes of his father that seemed to see through time and space. At four, little Charlotte resembled Valentine at that age. It was she who captivated Talleyrand as we sat in the baths of Bourbon-l’Archambault in the steamy mineral waters.
“I want to take these children away with me,” Talleyrand said at last, stroking Charlotte’s fair hair as if he could not bear to let her go. “The life you insist upon leading is no life for a child. No one need know our relationship. I’ve acquired the estate of Valençay. I can give them their own titles and land. Let their origins remain a mystery. Only if you agree to this will I give you the pieces.”
“Charlot must remain,” I told him. “He was born in the eyes of the goddess—it is he who shall resolve the riddle. It was foretold.” Charlot moved through the hot waters to Talleyrand and put his hand on his father’s arm.
“You will be a great man,” he told him, “a prince with many powers. You will live long, but you’ll have no other children after us. You must take my sister, Charlotte—marry her into your family so her children will bond again with our blood. But I must return to the desert. My destiny is there.…”
Talleyrand looked at the little boy in amazement, but Charlot had not yet finished.
“Alexander?” said Talleyrand, looking at me through the thick steam. “Has he a piece as well? But why should he give it to me?”
“You’ll give him Napoleon in return,” Chariot replied.
Talleyrand did meet Alexander at the Conference of Erfurt. Whatever pact they made, everything Chariot had predicted came to pass. Napoleon fell, returned, and fell for good. In the end, he saw it was Talleyrand who had betrayed him. “Monsieur,” he told him over breakfast one morning, in the eyes of all the court, “you are nothing but shit in a silk stocking.” But Talleyrand had already secured the Russian piece—the Black Queen. With this, he gave me also something of value: a Knight’s Tour done by Benjamin Franklin, which purported to portray the formula.
When it had dissolved and vanished, we saw the thick residue of reddish black coating the base of the glass. Scraping it away, we wrapped it in a bit of beeswax to drop it into the aqua philosophia—the heavy water.
Now only one question remained: Who would drink?
It was the year 1830 when we completed the formula. We knew from our books that such a drink could be lethal as well as life giving, if we’d done it wrong. There was another problem. If what we had was in fact the elixir, we must hide the pieces at once. To this end, I decided to return to the desert.
I crossed the sea again for what I feared might be the last time. At Algiers, I went with Shahin and Chariot to the Casbah. There was someone there I thought would be of use to me in my mission. I found him at last in a harem—a large canvas before him, and many women, veiled, reclining about him on divans. He turned to me, his blue eyes flashing, his dark hair disheveled, just as David had looked so many years before when we’d posed for him in his studio, Valentine and I. But this young painter resembled someone else far more than David—he was the very image of Charles Maurice Talleyrand.
“Your father has sent me to you,” I told the young man, who was only a few years younger than Chariot.
The painter looked at me strangely. “You must be a medium.” He smiled at me. “My father, Monsieur Delacroix, has been dead for many years.” He twirled the paintbrush in his hand, anxious to get on with his work.
“Those rumors are quite unfounded,” he told me curtly.
“I know differently,” I said. “My name is Mireille, and I’ve come from France on a mission I need you for. This is my son, Chari
Then I told him the tale.
It was weeks before we reached the Tassili. At last, in the secret cave, we found the place to hide the pieces. Eugène Delacroix scaled the wall as Charlot directed him where to draw the caduceus—and outside, the labrys form of the White Queen, which he added to the existing hunt scene.
When we’d completed our work, Shahin withdrew the vial of aqua philosophia and the pellet of powder we’d wrapped in beeswax so it would dissolve more slowly, as prescribed. We dissolved the pellet, and I looked at the vial I now held in my hand, as Shahin and Talleyrand’s two sons looked on.