Read Under the Cajun Moon Online
Authors: Mindy Starns Clark
Tags: #Mystery, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Inspirational
My mother shook her head, sobbing into her handkerchief.
“I don’t know how you did it, Chloe. You know you’re much smarter than I am. I’m sure you figured something out. I just don’t understand what could bring a child to hold up a gun and pull the trigger on their own parent.”
“I didn’t shoot him!”
“Yes, you did!”
“Says who?”
“Says
him
, Chloe. Says your father. He’s out of the coma. And he says you’re the one who shot him.”
L
OUISIANA, 1722
J
ACQUES
”Here. Right here. Feel it?” Angelique said, smiling as she held Jacques’ hand to her belly. He sensed the slightest rippling against his flattened palm. The kick of his baby felt like the kiss of an angel.
“I feel it,” he said, grinning. He kept his hand there until the movement ceased. After that, he put his arm around her shoulders and pulled her close. With the other hand he clicked his tongue and tugged the reins to start the horses moving again. They responded by pulling the wagon back onto the roadway and continuing on down the bumpy, rutted road.
Jacques knew he had never done anything in his life to deserve this much happiness. One year ago, as the door of the convent had been swung open wide to reveal Angelique standing inside, he had done the only thing he could do: With a deep, guttural yell, he had moved into the room, wrapped her fiercely in his embrace, and openly wept, kissing her lips and face and promising her that he would love and care for her forever. Thanks to the startled nuns who then promptly sent for a priest from New Orleans, just a few hours later Jacques and Angelique were declared man and wife.
Jacques thought that would be the single happiest moment of his life. Now here they were a year later, and the child Angelique carried inside her womb was making itself known, giving its first real kicks.
Could his life get any better than this?
Jacques thought that perhaps all the trial and misery of that awful, uncertain time had created within him a heart more easily satisfied with life’s blessings. All he knew was that he spent every waking hour of every single day feeling thankful and deeply blessed. To have the woman he loved, and to create new life within that woman, was more than any man deserved.
Now the two of them were on their way to New Orleans where they would finally claim the two gold fleur-de-lis statuettes that the royal goldsmith had promised to Jacques in his letter one year ago. Jacques already had a buyer arranged, a wealthy landowner who was going to pay him top value for the gold as long as Jacques melted it down first and used it to create a simple golden tray embellished with the man’s family crest. Jacques could handle that job easily, especially given that he now owned a working furnace where he could use his father’s smithing tools.
In fact, Jacques had his own shop in the German settlement, one he had purchased and outfitted using the money sent to him by the royal goldsmith. Through his previous work in the settlement as a store clerk, Jacques had seen the near-constant need among the local farmers for tools and implements. The shop he and Angelique built sold new tools whenever they could get the raw materials to make them and repaired existing ones when they couldn’t. Knowing he could adapt his goldsmithing skills toward more general metalworking, Jacques was already becoming known for the fine axes, hoes, and other farm implements he crafted. He was pleased to realize that his lack of artistic ability made no difference here, for what did a farmer care if his plow was beautiful as long as it was sturdy and did the job? Free at last from the stifling guild system that had limited his occupation back in France, here Jacques was able to do as he pleased, and he found that creating and selling tools to the citizens of this vast territory pleased him very much.
Jacques and Angelique had been living over the shop, but once they cashed in their statuettes, they would have enough money to buy more land and build a home. That had been their plan, and so far everything had been working out perfectly.
“So many people!” Angelique cried, looking around them as they neared
New Orleans and began to come across other carriages and pedestrians. “It almost feels like Paris.”
“Feels like Paris,” Jacques replied, smiling. “Smells like a chamber pot.”
Jacques had expected the mood in the city to be festive, considering today was the day that forty-six other people were about to get the statuette they had waited so long for. And though there were a lot of folks milling about, the mood seemed anything but light. In fact, almost every conversation they overheard was filled with griping and grumbling.
After securing the carriage with a livery service near the port, Jacques and Angelique made their way on foot to the Place d’Arms, a large central open square flanked on one side by the river and on the other side by low, wood slat fencing, a sure sign of construction to come. A crowd had already gathered there on the grass, and it seemed everyone was waiting for the agent of M. Law to appear and give out the treasure they had coming to them. Off to one side, Jacques could see a soldier standing guard over a trunk, the very same trunk from three years before. Just looking at it made Jacques ache with longing for his papa.
At precisely noon, a man entered the Place d’Arms and stepped up on a wooden box so that he could be seen and heard over the crowd. No doubt Freneau’s replacement, the man announced that the three-year waiting period for the statuettes was over, and that those statuettes would be distributed today. His clerk had a list of the passengers who had sailed on the
Beau Séjour
and were eligible to claim the reward. He began reading through the list, and each person as their name was called came forward and accepted their prize. When the man finished reading off the ship’s roster and called out Jacques’ name, people began grumbling, reluctant to let Jacques make his way to the front to claim his prize.
“Why does he get one?” someone called out.
“Yeah, he wasn’t on our ship,” another added.
As Jacques finally made it through and was handed his statuettes, the man in charge told the crowd that Jacques was a special case, a man cheated by John Law and who was being awarded restitution by the French government.
“What are you doing with the rest of them?” someone yelled.
“Yeah, what happens to the ones that were supposed to go to all the people who died?”
The crowd was getting angry. One man yelled that he lost his wife and two children on that voyage and that he felt like he deserved their statuettes. He was probably telling the truth, but then ten more men shouted out, claiming that their wife and six children, eight children, twelve children had died, and they deserved their statuettes. The crowd worked themselves up in a frenzy, so much so that the man’s answer could not be heard. Finally, he gestured to the soldier, who fired into the air. The resounding boom caught everyone’s attention and soon they were again quiet.
“Ladies and Gentlemen, bear with me and I will attempt to explain the situation more fully. As you know, M. Law was not one hundred percent honest in his enticements to bring people to the New World. In all fairness, the populating of an entire territory is not an easy task.”
An angry chorus of boos discouraged the man from justifying Law’s actions again.
“In any event, you may recall M. Law saying that the gold for these statuettes had come from here, from the Louisiana territory. That, in fact, was a lie. The gold he used for the statuettes had been smuggled into France from Spain. The reason the royal goldsmith said that it was as fine as the finest gold from the Spanish territories in the New World is because the gold
was
from the Spanish territories of the New World. Law had procured the gold himself and lied to the royal goldsmith about its origins.”
Jacques remembered the original propaganda that had been circulated by Law, posters and brochures that promised one could simply walk down the streets here and scoop up gold and diamonds by the handful. It had sounded ludicrous even then, but once Jacques had arrived in Louisiana he had seen for himself that it was not true. The only things one might scoop up by the handfuls here were mud, mosquitoes, and snakes.
“Given that France has strict sumptuary laws preventing the export of this type of gold,” the man continued, “you will understand why the whole load is in violation of French law and should never have been sent here in the first place. The remaining statuettes, therefore, will be returned to
France, where they will go back into the royal treasury. It is only by the goodness of the regent’s heart that he has agreed to honor the original promise made to you all by M. Law and allow me to distribute these here today.”
The goodness of the regent’s heart? As far as Jacques knew, he’d been as culpable in this as Law was! The regent was only serving until Louis XV was old enough to rule France for himself, and Jacques could only hope that would happen soon!
“How do we know these aren’t fakes?” one man called out.
That seemed to rile up the crowd a bit, as they were all wondering the same thing.
“There has been some confusion about a second, duplicate set of statuettes. The truth is, a second set was made, but from my understanding there was a mix-up at the last minute, and the wrong ones were sent here by mistake.”
“I knew it! They gave us the wrong ones!”
“Yes, but that is to your benefit,” the man insisted, trying to explain that the wrong ones were solid gold and the right ones were gilded.
Things began to turn ugly very quickly after that. Jacques realized what was happening, and it was simply a confusion between the crowd and the agent as to what they each were saying.
No matter how hard the man tried to explain, the crowd simply didn’t get it. When the agent confirmed, for the third time, that the statuettes he had just handed out were indeed the wrong ones, the ones that weren’t supposed to come here, the entire gathering began to spiral out of control.
“It’s a worthless piece of junk!” one man cried, and before anyone could stop him, he raised his arm behind his head and threw his statuette directly at the agent. It struck the man at the temple with a heavy thud, drawing blood and causing him to fall off of his platform.
After that, the crowd went crazy. Jacques tried to stop them, but to no avail. Soon both of the soldiers and the agent were down on the ground, and people were striking them relentlessly with their statuettes. It was as if the poor men were being stoned—all because of a simple miscommunication!
Jacques had to do something. Pushing his way to Angelique, he told her to leave the area and wait for him at the livery.
“Come with me,” she said, clutching at his hand, her eyes wide with fear.
“Angelique, just go! I have to stop this! These two men are going to die for no reason!”
Reluctantly, he let go of her hand and watched her dart off toward the safety of a side street. Jacques again forced his way to the front of the crowd and tried to shout over all the noise, telling people to stop, please stop, but they didn’t understand. He got the attention of several, but as he started to explain, saying that he was one of the goldsmiths who worked on the statuettes, it was as if all the rage and frenzy of the crowd shifted from the agent and soldier lying on the ground, likely dead now, to Jacques himself. Before he could stop them, Jacques felt a sharp blow to his cheek. The next thing he knew, what felt like a hundred more followed as he was pummeled. Curling into a ball against the earth, trying to protect his head with his arms, Jacques could only pray for mercy, begging God to spare him. At some point, he passed out.
Eventually, he awoke.
From the sound of things, the people were gone now. All was silent around him except for the soft weeping of a young woman, the tears of his beloved Angelique. Jacques tried to whisper her name, though all that came out was a low groan.
Still, that was enough to get her attention. Suddenly he could feel her hands clutching at the clothes on his chest, sobbing and begging him not to give up, not to go away. He opened his eyes, though even when he did it was as if everything was shrouded in a veil of hazy white. Slowly, he managed to form a few words, his voice just a hoarse whisper.