Burgundy and Lies

 

Burgundy, France   1555

     Family duty could weigh too heavily. Sometimes Abbie Bourgogne thought she would scream from it.
     She twisted her cousin’s blonde hair into a light, twining crown around her head and desperately wished she were training young grapevines onto an arbor instead. The grapes were what was important. Her family’s reputation lay within wine. Why then must she waste her time like this?
     “He kissed me,” Babette said as she held the hand mirror to admire herself in the candlelight.
     With a start, Abbie realized she hadn’t been listening to her cousin’s chatter. “Kissed you? Who?”
     “Who do you think I’ve been talking about all this time? Michel, silly.”
     “Michel Silly... You don’t mean Michel the Silly Fichaud?”
     “That is not his name,” Babette huffed.
     Abbie herself never liked to be lectured to, but she couldn’t help lecturing this flighty girl. Nip the rot in the bud; that was always best no matter how much it hurt. “It should be. Or Michel the Inept, and leave off Fichaud. He may be good looking and talk sweetly to young girls, but he’s no good for you or the family. He’s ambitious beyond his skills.”
     “Take it back, Abbie. I love him!”
     “Oh, you love him.” Abbie chose a jeweled pin to hold Babette’s hair in place, trying not to roll her eyes as she did so. “That doesn’t discount the fact that he is an idiot where wine is concerned. Why your brother ever hired him is beyond me. It’s been two years now with Michel as steward of the winery and --”
     “Wine, wine, wine. All the time with you it’s grapes and wine. I am sooo tired of wine.” Babette slumped in her chair, making it difficult for Abbie to work on the back of her head.
     They thought that this was where she fit in, to be helpmate and companion to her cousin. This was her place within her uncle’s family. It meant she had a home to stay in, a bed at night, and food when she was hungry. Others would have been well-pleased at such a situation.    
     But no one else alive now in the family loved the grape as did Abbie Bourgogne. No one else knew its temper, its moods both on the vine and off. No one else could coax it to full flavor and fame like Abbie.
     Spring was so far away. Would she be back home by then, caring for her vineyard?
     Abbie pulled her cousin back up with a grunt. “Wne is what our family stands for, Babette. Family is the most important thing there is, and our burgundy is the best in all France -- or it was when Papa was still alive. I’m afraid your brother hasn’t the feel for it. I wish he’d take my advice. I do dread to see the Bourgogne family reputation fall.”
     Babette pursed her lips. “I am sorry, but Uncle Robert is dead and has been for years now. It’s time you came back out to see the world, Abbie. Speaking of brothers -- Michel has one. Would you be interested?”
     “Ah, I remember him. Pierre the Dolt, Michel the Idiot’s brother. What a catch.” Abbie gave her cousin a small smile in the silvered mirror and patted her shoulder. “All right, I’m sorry I called him an idiot. Enjoy your little crush, Babette, but remember. You’re seventeen now. Time soon enough for Uncle Gus to be finding you a husband.”
     “You’re eighteen and unmarried.”
     Babette had never been one for thinking before she made sharp comments. Luckily Abbie wasn’t in a hurry to get married and thus the arrow failed to hit its intended mark. Abbie had a more important goal than mere marriage.
     “Able Abbie,” some people called her. If Old Eric wasn’t around, she was the one they turned to for instruction when it came to the grapes. While other children had been off running through summer fields, she had delighted in watching the vines and seeing God’s handiwork grow before her very eyes.
     “You’d better go and play or you’ll set root, too,” her father had often told her with his hearty laugh. But now her vineyard was far away, and Papa and Mama and her brothers were farther still, in Heaven. The grape was all she had left of her family.
     Here they had had grapes, but they weren’t the same: pale chardonnay and pinot blanc instead of dark pinot noir, and such a tiny vineyard it was! It had been intended only for the family’s use. Out of sympathy for the forlorn girl, Uncle Gus had given Abbie a sunny slope that was too rocky for growing his mustard, too steep to graze his cattle.
     She’d planted cuttings from the family’s vineyard and finally last year everyone had come out to wonder at what she’d grown. Holidays had been toasted to excess with her chablis. There was even enough left to sell at the spring fair this year and turn a tidy profit.
     The vines thirsted for the same care she’d given those in her family’s vineyard. She loved these but what she longed for were the hands-filling clusters of the almost-black fruits of home.
     Still she had a duty to these vines that stretched around this, her uncle’s house. Family and its obligations must come right after God in life’s priorities, even before the wine. Sometimes that realization made Abbie feel more than a mere year older than her cousin -- or perhaps Babette seemed more than a year younger than she. Babette didn’t understand the first thing about family, much less wine. Women comprehended these things; children didn’t.
     “I haven’t a husband because I’m not first in Uncle Gus’ heart,” Abbie said. “He’ll get to me soon enough. You should start seriously thinking of marriage. Once the contract is signed, there’ll be no need for love. Women have no choice in the matter. We have no freedom to choose our lives, much less follow our dreams. Let’s hope the Hereafter is different.”
     Abbie frowned as she brushed fallen hairs from the square neckline of Babette’s good red wool dress. No choice to return home to her vineyard. All she was required to do was this trivial duty, that of being friend and -- let her be honest -- nursemaid to her cousin. She sighed and said, “At least we can be sure that Uncle Gus will find us the best husbands he can. Some fathers are not like that, but Auguste Bourgogne is a good man who loves his family.”
     Unhearing, Babette closed her eyes and clasped the mirror to her bosom. “It was a marvelous kiss.”
     Abbie shook her head and bit her lip on a more biting comment. “I’ll wager he’s practiced on many a girl,” was all she said.
     “Oh, no. He’s true to me alone. He kissed me and then said he loved me.”
     “He said--?” Abbie’s hands froze in mid-air. What had Babette gotten into this time? How involved was she with this fool? “When was this? I thought Michel just arrived yesterday from the Clos.”
     “It happened last night, down at the bottom of the kitchen garden. Michel kissed me at least twenty times. It was heaven!” With that Babette gave the back of her hand several loud kisses as demonstration.
     It sounded like suckling pigs going after their dinner. Abbie grimaced at the swooning girl. “You’re asking for trouble. Perhaps Michel’s a decent man, but you mustn’t... bait him.”
     “Bait him?” Babette stuck her lower lip out.
     “You know. Bat your eyes and smile at him like you do all the boys. They all worship you anyway, but someday one might take you seriously. They might want to go too far.”
     Babette swung the mirror around so she could try her smile out on herself. Blue eyes, pink complexion... And Abbie behind her, seemingly a faded version of Babette, her smile never coming into full bloom any more.
     As if she could read Abbie’s mind, Babette said, “You need to smile at the boys. You need to have fun.”
     “Why bother? I just need to smile at Uncle Gus,” Abbie said with a teasing glint in her eye. “You must teach me how to do it so expertly. Then he will find me a husband who lives near the Clos so I can work there again.”
     “Oh no! He wouldn’t separate us!”
     Abbie sorted through the small chest of jewelry for another pin. “Marriage will part us anyway,” she reminded her cousin. The thought of the day years from now when the two of them would be married had hovered hazily in the back of her mind since she’d come to live with Babette. “There’s nothing to be done about that. I promise I will write you each week and tell you everything just as we do now. We’ll always be like sisters, no matter what happens or where life takes us. I only pray every day that marriage sends me back home. It would be-- Babette!”
     Abbie held up a thick golden crucifix necklace. “This was my mother’s. What are you doing with it?”
     Scarlet flushed over Babette’s face and she wouldn’t meet Abbie’s accusing gaze. “I just borrowed it. Oh, Abbie, don’t be mad at me. I just wanted to wear it a day or two and then I would have put it back.”
     “It’s part of my dowry. Uncle is holding it for me.”
     “It’s still your dowry. I was going to give it back in a while.” Babette pouted. “You can put it back now if it’s so important. I merely wanted to look nice for Father Bernard. Papa said this was to be a very special dinner tonight.”
     “Oh.” Abbie turned the cross over and candlelight caught the edge of it. So clearly she remembered it upon her mother’s breast. A far-off laugh and the fading vision of a warm smile came to her. “Well, just for tonight,” Abbie said slowly. “Please return it before you go to bed. It’s all that I have left of her.”
     “Oh, I had every intention to do so,” Babette declared. Eagerly she took the valuable piece and made a great commotion as she tried to put it on by herself. Abbie had to help her with the clasp. Babette could be such a baby sometimes!
     “And you aren’t wearing it for Michel?” Abbie asked. “So he’ll kiss you again? He’ll be eating with the help tonight, not with us. You won’t go down by the garden again, will you?”
     The door burst open. “Abbieabbie!” her young cousin Therese cried as she ran in. She held her arms open for a hug, and her little fists held ribbons of all colors.
     Abbie knelt down to embrace the dear girl, knowing that it was a half-bribe, as children were wont to do.
     “Don’t you look nice,” Abbie told her, and Therese preened. This was the first dress the girl had helped sew. Abbie and Aunt Danielle had waited one night until Therese was asleep, and then pulled out most of her seams and redone them properly. The girl had never guessed.
     “Thank you,” Therese responded to the complement politely as she’d been taught. She stuck out her hands with those ribbons. “Do my hair.” And as an afterthought: “Please.”
     “Abbie’s attending to me right now,” Babette told her sister.
     Therese gave her a dubious look. “You’re done,” she decided. “Now it’s my turn. Please, Abbie, please?”
     “No!” Babette turned and pointed at Therese. “I go first. I am the oldest.”
     “No, me! Me first!”
     “Me! Me!”
     “ME FIRST!!”
     “MEEE!”
     “MEEEEE!”
     Both girls kicked their feet against the floor, screwing their faces into reddened knots.
     “WHAT is going on up there?!” came Uncle Gus’s bellow from downstairs.
     “Nothing!” All three called.
     Abbie planted both fists on her hips and stared down Abbie. “Therese is seven years old. How old are you again?” Before her cousin could reply, she added, “Seven-year-olds have less patience than grown girls. Or perhaps grown girls should have more patience than seven-year-olds.”
     With that she squatted to reach Therese. “This won’t take long, she assured her as Babette pouted behind her. When all Therese’s ribbons were secured to wave merrily at each movement, and the child had been delighted at her reflection, Abbie scooted her out of the room and turned to Babette.
     Her cousin sat with her arms tightly folded across her chest. A frown tightened her face.
     “Now, Bab,” Abbie said, “I am ready for you.”
     “About time,” Babette muttered.
     “Or I could go downstairs and help Aunt Dani.”
     Another mutter, this one unintelligible.
     “And what would Father Bernard say about this conversation?” Abbie asked. She put on a Bernard expression, puffing out her cheeks and looking around as if slightly unsure where she was. “A lay-die mother puts her, hrum, heh, chiiild-ren fust,” she said as she wobbled in place.
     Babette giggled despite herself. “Oh dear, he would. And just like that, too.”
     “He’d be right. Children can’t help themselves, but we grow out of that.”
     Babette rolled her eyes. “Yes, mother,” she said, and that made Abbie laugh.
     “I do tend to lecture sometimes.”
     “Only sometimes, cousin.”
     They laughed their way through the final pins of Babette’s coiffure.
     “It was magic,” Babette said as Abbie puffed out the tops of her sleeves for her, batting at stray pet hairs that clung to them. “The moon was just setting and there was some star in the sky that was the brightest I’ve ever seen, and it was as if it were just for us. We made a wish upon it. Abbie dearest, I can tell you this.” A trace of steel ice entered her voice. “I know you’ll never tell Papa.”
     Abbie made a noise which she hoped Babette would take as agreement. This entire affair reeked of bad luck. A love match -- if indeed such quick infatuation was love -- was not in the family’s best interests. Babette had never been one to use her brains; instead she relied upon her God-given good looks to make her way through life, and a very good way it had been so far.
     But the girl had no common sense at all. If sinful things happened to other young girls, it never entered Babette’s mind to avoid the same fate. Tonight Abbie would talk to her step-aunt Danielle, who would best know how to approach Uncle Gus about keeping that idiot Michel Fichaud away from his eldest daughter.
     Abbie stepped back to inspect her work. Despite herself she was getting better at this. Babette’s hair shone like the gold she wore at her throat. Pretty Babette. Her eyes were as blue as a spring sky, her cheeks blushed like the primrose; her figure was a willow in the wind, her neck as graceful as a swan’s.
     And her temper could be just as bad as a swan’s, too. Spoiled, used to having her own way, used to keeping her father artfully under her thumb.
     “Aren’t you done yet?” Babette asked. “We’ll be late for dinner and I need Papa’s good graces. I’m going to tell him tonight.”
     “Tell him what?” Abbie asked as she tucked one stray curl back behind Babette’s ear. Really, she had much more skill with grapevines than with hair. She had been taught the secrets of wine since she could first walk, but these more womanly arts had only come these past four years.
     “That we’re going to be married, silly. Michel and I. I think Christmas will be a good time, don’t you? It’s not all that far away. We’ll have all winter to-- you know.” Babette ducked her head between her shoulders, her cheeks reddening.
     Abbie straightened the pins within the jewelry chest. “Michel is but recently merely a farmer, and he’s a younger son at that. He’s only been in his position for two years now. Just look at what he did to this year’s pinot noir crop. A fine year of weather but the crop eaten up to moths and what’s left allowed to mold, barely good enough for verjus. All the other wineries are saying that this was their best year yet.”
     She shut the heavy wooden case with a decisive thump. “No, Babette, a marriage of you to him would just put him in the Clos for the rest of his life and we would never have a good vintage again. Clos Bourgogne Grand Cru would become just another burgundy wine. The family’s reputation would plummet quicker than a fat goose under a hunter’s arrow. Uncle Gus will never let you marry him, so don’t get too attached.”
     I won’t let you marry him, Abbie determined. If she had to run through the church disrupting the wedding mass so the vows were never declared, she’d do so and gladly. No idiot was going to control her vineyard!
     The sudden sound of wagon wheels approaching sent them both to fling open the diamond-paned window onto the brisk late-October evening.
     “It’s Father Bernard at last.” Abbie peered through the gathering darkness and against the bold purple silhouette of the cedars that lined the rutted drive near the house like thick, tapering columns. The shadowed wagon approached at a quick clip despite the puddles left from the morning’s rain. Probably the horses as well sensed a visitor’s supper to be had here.
     Babette craned to see around Abbie, crushing one of Abbie’s sleeve poufs as she did so. “How many men does he have with him? One, two... five. I’ll tell Danielle.”
     “Who is that?” Abbie asked.
     “Which? Oh.”
     A man sat next to the good Father Bernard up front in the priest’s wagon, while the others slumped on covered hay in the back. But this man...
     In the deep dusk his clothing stood out from the black of the priests and monks. Oh, his broad-shouldered, open gown or coat would have marked him as a man of prestige anywhere, and Abbie could see the rich fur it was lined with even from where she stood. But underneath, his bright red hose and what she could see of his doublet were slashed again and again.
     “He hasn’t been in a fight,” Abbie murmured to herself. Surely his gown would have been ripped as well? These tears looked too precise to be accidental.
     “No,” Babette agreed. “Look, he’s wearing hose under his hose. I think it’s supposed to be like that.”
     White hose peeked through the red slashed overhose, as did his white linen shirt through his doublet. A tall, wide-brimmed cap matched his ensemble, and it sported a red feather as long as an arrow climbing up its side. The strange fashion cast a deep, masking shadow over the man’s face.
     “Is he this evening’s entertainment?” Abbie wondered.
     Babette nudged her. “Silly. I think that’s the way they dress in the cities. Some of the fellows told me about the Swiss look, how everyone’s doing it.”
     “Some of the fellows? Who have you been talking to?” Abbie asked and turned to face her, but Babette pushed her shoulder to turn her.
     “Look at that,” she pointed.
     It was not difficult to know what she referred to when the man shifted his position and spread his legs slightly. Abbie wanted to look away but curiosity and the bright contrast of red and white next to such a masculine spot froze her gaze.
     “I hear the city men stuff them with horsehair to make them look bigger,” Babette whispered to her.
     “Uncle Gus will not like it. Remember that beggar clown at the harvest revels? He dressed like that, in rags, and stuffed them, too.”
     “Oh, nonsense; don’t be so old-fashioned. It’s a stylish suit. It shows that this is a man of some distinction. I wonder where he’s from?”
     “Beyond Beaune, that’s certain,” Abbie decided.
     “Dijon, do you think? Maybe even Paris?”
     “Clearly he’s not a priest. Or are the Parisian priests wearing that kind of thing these days?” Abbie asked and Babette giggled.
     Together they decided that was probably not the case.
     Abbie gave the man one more curious look before securing the window against the cold. Babette ran off in a flurry of skirts to inform her step-mother of the number of guests.