Read Esther : Royal Beauty (9781441269294) Online
Authors: Angela Elwell Hunt
Tags: #FIC042030, #FIC042040, #FIC027050, #Queen Esther of Persia—Fiction, #King Xerxes I (King of Persia) (519 B.C.–465 B.C. or 464 B.C.)—Fiction, #Bible book of Esther—History of Biblical events—Fiction, #Women in the Bible—Fiction
L
AST
NIGHT
,
FOR
THE
FIRST
TIME
since our marriage, the king did not send for me at sunset.
Though I had risked my life to tell him about the conspiracy that threatened his life, he chose to sleep alone . . . or with someone else. Why? Had I offended him? Had Bigtan and Teresh involved someone else in their plot, someone who might still be planning to murder the king while he slept? Hatakh had no answers, and I did not want to cause a stir by making inquiries.
I endured an evening of fitful sleep and woke with pains in my abdomen and a queasy stomach, which emptied itself as soon as I got out of bed. I sank to the floor and gratefully accepted the wet cloth my quick-thinking handmaid offered, then mopped my mouth and perspiring brow. I hoped this horrible feeling was not a sign that something had happened to the king.
One of the maids hurried to tell Hatakh that I had awakened;
a few moments later the eunuch entered my bedchamber with a breakfast tray. I took one look at the fruit and bread, then shook my head and turned away. “I have no appetite,” I told him truthfully. “But let the maids eat their fill. I will not feel better until I know the king is safe.”
“But the king
is
safe,” Hatakh replied, straightening. “After you left him yesterday, the king and his officers conducted a trial. Bigtan and Teresh were confronted with the charges and they confessed to their treasonous plan. They have been sentenced for their crime.”
I turned bleary eyes toward the shuttered balcony, which overlooked the army's training field. “What will happen now?”
The eunuch shrugged. “Given time, they will die. You can see them, if you like.”
Something warned me away from the sight, but desperation for the king's safety drove me forward. I had to know that justice had been done.
As I approached the balcony, two of my handmaids rose to pull the sliding doors aside. I glanced over the royal gardens and stared at the brown plateau outside the city walls. In the center of the warriors' encampment, I spotted two stick figures that looked like puppets. But they were seated on the ground and apparently tied to tall poles.
I glanced at Hatakh, then pointed toward the two men in the distance. “Are those the guilty ones?”
Hatakh looked out at the scene and nodded. “Yes, my queen.”
“But they're simply sitting there.”
“No, my lady.” Hatakh's face paled slightly. “They have been impaled upon a sharpened stick. They will sit beneath the sun until the gods take pity on them and snuff out their lives.”
For a moment his words hung in the air, making no sense, and then they clicked into place. My gorge rose, I vomited again, and the walls swirled around me.
I remember hearing my maids' frightened cries, along with Hatakh's high-pitched wail before the room went dark.
When I woke, the royal physician told me I had lost my baby.
Hatakh said he should never have mentioned the condemned guards; Harbonah said a pregnant woman who looked on death was asking for trouble. I didn't care why I lost my baby; I only wanted to be comforted in my husband's arms.
But the physicians told me to remain in my chamber for at least a few days, and while I recovered I waited for some word from the king. Surely he would send a message of condolence or caring . . . but he did not. So every morning my maids dressed me and did my hair, though I saw no one but my girls and Hatakh.
And while I convalesced, my husband plucked other girls from the harem to fill his bed.
I wish I could write that the knowledge didn't twist in my heart like a knife. I knew the king did not limit himself to one woman; I knew that willing concubines crowded the harem, each of them eager to be called for an hour with the king.
But the realization that my husband was finding pleasure in others spawned a brooding sorrow that spread until it mingled with dozens of other sorrowsâthe loss of my child, of Mordecai's companionship, of Miriam, even my home. I had lost so much since arriving at the palace, and what had I gained? For what possible reason had Adonai brought me to this miserable place?
My husband did send for me after I regained my health, but the bond between us had changed. I yearned for a word of understanding or compassion; I heard nothing. I might have dared to broach the subject of the baby, but I remembered what Hatakh had told me about Persian fathers: they did not want to be at
tached to a child younger than five, lest they be “afflicted by its loss.”
So I bore my grief silently, though my misery was often so overwhelming, so intrusive, it felt like another body in the bed, a dark and foreboding presence. My husband took me in his arms and I tried to respond, but grief had stolen the passion from my kiss.
I wasn't surprised when he stopped sending for me.
And so began a new chapter of my life in the palace, a phase a wiser woman might have foreseen. I was no longer new and exciting, and though I believe the king remained fond of me, he did not call for me more than once or twice a week. I tried my best to be pleasant and charming when I was with him, but the grief of loss clung to me like the smell of smoke from a blistering fire.
Days passed, like leaves from a sycamore tree, one after the other, virtually indistinguishable.
D
ID
I
BELIEVE
THAT
V
ASHTI
successfully petitioned Ahura Mazda for the death of Esther's child? Only Biztha and I knew why the former queen had committed her terrible crime, and afterward, even as I heard the rumors about Queen Esther's tragic loss, I assured Biztha that I still did not believe in the power of Ahura Mazda.
But inwardly . . . I wondered.
Privately, I grieved for our queen. Despite her maturity, Esther still possessed the idealistic optimism of youth, so losing her baby left her devastated. During my time in the harem I had seen many young women lose their unborn children, but I had also seen them rally and become pregnant again.
Yet weeks later, Hatakh told me the queen had still not recovered, but frequently curled up on her bed and watered her pillow with tears.
I wanted to weep for her.
I wish my master had been more observant of his young bride. The king adored her above all the virgins who'd been brought to the palace, but he also adored his horses, his hunts, and his harem. After serving the man for so many years, I knew my master to be as fickle in his infatuations as in his hobbies.
Fortunately, he had chosen a worthy wife. Mordecai's lovely ward might quietly grieve over her husband's wandering eye, but she would be a dutiful and faithful consort. If only the king's heart could be as steadfast as his queen's.
Not long after the queen lost her baby, she summoned me to her chambers. After finding her in her garden, bowed low near a rosebush, I pretended to be surprised at the shadow of grief on her face.
“I am fine,” she said, her eyes damp with pain. “I have been ill, but I am better now.”
“I am glad to hear it, my queen.”
She pulled a small knife from the basket on her arm. “Harbonah,” she said, cutting a single rose blossom, “did anyone ever find young Pharnaces?”
My bowels tumbled at the question, and I struggled to keep a blank face. “No, my queen. I would have told you if we had.”
“I am sorry to hear that. I am . . . deeply saddened.” Her words were lighter than air, though I knew they had come from a heavy heart.
“Harbonah, you have served the king for how long?”
“Twenty years, my queen. I hope to serve him the rest of my life.”
“I hope you are together forever.” She offered me a sincere smile that momentarily brightened her face. “Since you know him so well, and since you are a man of discretion, I wondered if you could answer a question for me.”
“I will do my best.”
“This question must not be repeated, do you understand? Not even to another eunuch, because I know how eunuchs love to gossip.”
I smiled, acknowledging the truth in her statement. “I would die, my queen, before I would betray your confidence.”
“I would not ask you to sacrifice yourself for me, not ever. After all, neither of us chose this life, did we?” She forced a quick smile, then looked away. “When I was younger, my friend and I used to look up at the palace and dream of living in such a grand place. We imagined royal life as an endless succession of banquets, dress fittings, and travel. I thought I would love living in the palace . . . but now I find that the queen lives a life of unbearable loneliness. I was far happier in the little house with Miriam and Mordecai. I think of how Miriam used to welcome Mordecai home with a hug, and I am envious of what they shared.”
I waited, knowing she had not summoned me to talk about her life with her cousins. She looked down, her long lashes hiding her eyes, and hesitated. “I know the king has many children, including three sons from his former queen. But I also know that Persian men consider it their duty to father many sons. So what I need to know is thisâdo you think the king expects a child from me? How important is it that I present him with a son?”
Her voice softened as she spoke, and had dwindled to a mere whisper by the time she finished. Her face, which had been composed in regal lines, shifted to the sincere and frightened face of a teenaged girl.
I resisted an almost overwhelming impulse to run forward and enfold her in a comforting embrace. But because such an act would earn a death sentence, I stammered out an answer. “My kingâyour husbandâadores you, my lady. And while I'm sure he would delight in a child from you, I do not think he married you to have more children. He married you because you were unlike anyone else. Of all the women in the harem, you were the one who caught his attention and held it. You were the only one to make him laugh.”
She listened, a fine line between her brows, and her forehead
relaxed as I finished. “I made him laugh. If only I could accomplish that feat now.”
“My gentle ladyâ” I cleared my throat in order to stall and gather my thoughtsâ“you have been married only a few months. I think the king has enjoyed getting to know you as a woman, not a mother. If you were with child, your attention would naturally be divided between your baby and your husband the king. So why not enjoy these days when your thoughts can center on pleasing your husband?”
She closed her eyes, considering, and then nodded. “You are wise, Harbonah. I suppose one can find good in any situation, if one takes the time to look.”
I bowed my head. “The queen is wise.”
She smiled. “The queen has wise counselors. And since you are so astute, I wonder if you could help me with something else.”
I waited, though I could almost see anxiety hanging above her like a dark cloud.
“I want to love the king,” she said, moving to another rosebush, “but I find it difficult to understand him. He talks of trivial things, sometimes he asks about me, but he never tells me much about himself. And if I am to love him well, I must
know
him.” She cut another rose, dropped it into her basket, and whirled to face me. “You know him better than anyone, Harbonah. Tell me what moves him. Tell me what frightens him. Tell me what he needsâand why he needs to love so many women.”
Her blushing face was so open, so honest that I could see the hurt and pride warring inside. In asking these questions she was admitting that she was lost, a queen who did not have a firm grip on her husband's heart.
I hesitated, wavering between two loyalties. I had never exposed the secrets of my master's soul to anyone, not even Vashti, but never before had anyone wanted to care for him as much as
I did. And I wanted to help Hadassah; I wanted Queen Esther to be the salve for my king's deepest wounds. I sensed that she could help him, if only he would allow her to peer behind the mask he wore.
Still . . . he was my master and my king. And his wounds were not mine to share.
But perhaps they rightfully belonged to his wife.
“I . . . admire you,” I began, “and I know the king does, too. Yes, you made him laugh, but it was the sincerity and compassion behind your laughter that touched his heart. He chose you because you remind him of the king he wants to beâwise, generous, compassionate, and courageous.”
Her lip trembled as her eyes filled with tears, and she looked away as if embarrassed for me to see her emotion. “He . . . has never said anything like that to me.”
“He wouldn't. I'm not sure he understands the man beneath the crown. Since I love my master I cannot speak ill of him, but you should know three things: first, he struggles to live up to his father's example. Second, the defeat at Greece haunts him still. And third, in bedding other women, for the space of an hour he sees himself as a conqueror.”
I covered my mouth and turned away as my blood ran thick with guilt. If the king had heard me confess these things, he would have pronounced me guilty of treason and sent me to the executioner. I couldn't help feeling that I had transgressed against him and he would read my sin on my face.
But then Esther the queen broke every rule of protocol and placed her hand on my trembling arm. “Thank you, Harbonah. I will hold your words in my heart and consider them carefully. And I will never, ever speak of these things again.”
I closed my eyes and exhaled in relief.
“Thank you for coming,” the queen said, removing her hand.
She stepped back, reassuming her royal demeanor. “I appreciate your heartfelt advice.”
I left her, grateful that I had been able to offer some measure of comfort. Aside from the king and her seven maids, to whom she had grown close, the queen was quite alone in the palace. Her position isolated her from her rivals in the harem, and she had no children to occupy her time.
I hoped she would not remain alone forever.
While working to serve my king and ensure my queen's happiness, I watched Mordecai's gentle ward grow into a beautiful woman. Over the course of the next five years, her oval face softened and became even more refined. She no longer exuded youthful enthusiasm, but radiated a refined, almost visible aura. The other eunuchs frequently questioned her handmaids to learn what lotions produced her haunting loveliness, but I knew the effect did not derive from any potion or oil. The delicacy and strength in her oval face were the result of loneliness, unspoken sorrow, and unfulfilled love.
I don't know how many times our queen found herself with child during those years, but I do know that for weeks she would beam with inexpressible joy and then, without explanation, her joy would be swallowed up by sorrow. Though Queen Esther appeared to be in perfect health, the royal physician visited her chambers regularly and her loyal handmaids could not be persuaded to speak of whatever ailed their mistress.
Every time I suspected Esther of being pregnant, I told the harem guards to keep a watchful eye on the king's children. Though Biztha and I did not speak again of what Vashti had done to Pharnaces, I wanted to be sure she did not attempt to sacrifice any of the other
royal sons. I did not believe in Ahura Mazda's power, but I had no trouble believing in the former queen's ambition.
I did not worry so much about Esther. The queen's maids were the most tight-lipped crew ever to dwell in the palace, immune to bribery, flattery, and threats. They did not gossip, they did not slander, and they did not hobnob with the other servants, so most of the eunuchs knew practically nothing about their queen. Once Hegai made a wager with Hatakh, betting a cloak of fine wool that he could discover from which nation the queen had descended, but he finally had to pay, for no one who knew Esther wanted to break her confidence.
Our queen, so unlike all the king's other women, exuded mystery, which only added to her allure. The women of the court imitated her simple style of dress, her habit of shyly ducking her chin, and her modest posture when seated on the throne. Completely unlike Vashti, Esther's rare appearance in the king's audience hall introduced a pleasant atmosphere to a situation that had always been fraught with tension. The king remained unpredictable and impulsive, but he appeared to mellow in the queen's company.
My king and queen might have been supremely happy if not for the ghosts that haunted them. Esther mourned the children she could not seem to carry, and the king mourned the loss of his reputation as an invincible warrior. If they had been willing to confess these matters to each other, and if they had been honest, they might have comforted each other and eased their respective burdens.
But the king would never confess that he feared not measuring up to his fatherâin order to remain on the throne, he had to believe he deserved it. Esther might have been willing to open her heart about her grief over her unborn children, but I think she feared hearing that he didn't need a child from her because he had more than enough children from other women. If he had said those
wordsâeven if they were meant to comfortâshe would hear that he didn't care about the thing she valued more than anything else.
Though neither of them spoke of the matters uppermost in their hearts, their hidden burdens built a wall between them. Perhaps the king sensed the queen's unhappiness; perhaps she sensed the king's dissatisfaction. In any case, they began to drift apart.
As the king and queen saw less and less of each other, the king sent for women from the harem, and Hegai was quick to supply. These femalesâdark, tall, short, fair, round, or willowyâwould entertain the king for a night, but none of them captured his heart the way Esther had.
He missed her. She had made him laugh. She had gazed at him as though he could do anything he set his mind to. She had given herself completely, with no thought for her own advancement. She was unlike any of the other women, and he yearned for the heart of his queen.
If only he would realize it.