Authors: Lynne Shelby
âIt's my pleasure,' Hélène said. âThere's no way accompanying you to the Rue du Commerce can be considered an altruistic gesture on my part. I'm only too delighted to have an excuse to hit the shops. Oh â I meant to ask you if you'd prefer to speak in French or English. Your French is so good that I forgot.'
âI'm happy speaking French,' I said. âI'm glad to have the chance to practise.'
âThen we'll speak French,' Hélène said. âOut of interest, which language do you speak when you're with Alex?'
âWhen he first came to England, we spoke English most of the time,' I said, âbut lately we seem to drift in and out of English and French.'
âIt was a bit like that in our house when Alex and I were children,' Hélène said. âWe and our parents talked to each other in both languages â although when our mother told us off it was always in English. Alex and I knew that was a sign that she was really angry. People tend to express strong emotion in their first language, I think.'
The Rue du Commerce was situated not far from the Champs du Mars, but at the opposite end to the Eiffel Tower. We got off the Metro at the La Motte-Picquet-Grenelle stop â Hélène told me there was an excellent farmers' market there on Sundays â and she led me down a narrow, one-way street, much less crowded than any of other shopping streets I'd walked along in Paris. There were some fashion and make-up stores that had made the journey across the Channel from Europe to the British high street, but there were others whose brand names were unfamiliar to me, as well as small, quirky boutiques. Almost all the voices I heard were speaking French â the Rue du Commerce, it seemed, catered more for Parisians than tourists.
Hélène and I spent a very enjoyable morning flitting from shop to shop. Like her brother, she was very easy to get on with, and our talk â about the clothes we were trying on, the places Alex had taken me in Paris, my job, her job â never faltered. In one small shop, I found a pink shift dress that I simply couldn't resist (âWhat do you think, Hélène?' âIt was made for you, Anna, you look
trés chic
.'
)
, and a little further along the street, I found the ideal pair of shoes to go with it. Hélène bought herself a silk shirt and two of the cutest dresses ever for her daughters. By then we were both in want of refreshment. As the Rue du Commerce was the site of numerous eateries, we had no trouble in finding a café with an empty table.
âHow old are your girls?' I asked Hélène, as we ate our
assiettes parisiennes.
âVéronique is eight, and Ãlodie is six. I have a photo, if you would like to see them.'
Hélène fished in her bag and eventually extracted a wallet containing a photo of two extremely sweet little girls standing by a fountain.
âThey're delightful. So pretty. And that's a lovely photo. Did Alex take it?'
âYes. He's the only photographer who's ever managed to get Véronique to smile for the camera. She's a very quiet, serious child, while Ãlodie is very talkative, and never sits still. Alex and I were also very different as children. I was the outgoing one â he was shy.'
âI remember. He's changed so much since he was a boy.'
âYou and Alex have become very close since he has been living with you in London, I think?'
Seizing the opportunity to correct any false impressions that Hélène may have received at Alex's apartment, I said, âI'm not his girlfriend, but we are very close friends.'
Hélène regarded me thoughtfully. âHas he told you why he left Paris? Do you know about Cécile? What she did to him?'
I nodded.
âAnna â I have to ask you â Do you think he's still in love with her?'
âHe's over her,' I said. âHe told me so himself only yesterday.'
âOh, I'm so relieved.' Hélène sank back in her chair. âWe â his whole family â have been so anxious about him. That
bitch
broke his heart.'
âHe was sad when he first came to London,' I said. âBut not all the time. And I really do think he's fine now.'
âI suspect much of that is down to you,' Hélène said. âThat night I rang him to tell him that Cécile was getting married, I felt so much better knowing that you were there and he wasn't on his own.'
âAll I've done is listen when he needed to talk,' I said, âas any friend would do.'
âWell, I'm grateful â and I know my parents will be very reassured when I tell them that he's over Cécile. I'm under strict orders to report back to my mother as soon as I get home. Alexandre may be a grown man, but he's still her son, and she worries about his emotional well-being. And to me, he's still my little brother who I feel I have to look out for â which is totally ridiculous, of course, but that's families for you.'
Alex, I decided, was as fortunate in his family as I was in mine.
Hélène said, âI never liked Cécile. I tried to like her, really I did, particularly when it became obvious that Alex was serious about her, but she always gave me the impression that my conversation bored her. I'm sorry that my brother had to suffer all that pain, but I'm not sorry that Cécile is out of his life. Anyway, we've talked about her quite enough, I think.' She drained her coffee. âWe've another hour before we need to go to the Pompidou Centre â let's shop.'
It was when we were making our way back along the Rue du Commerce to the Metro, that Hélène announced, âLast year, I bought a wonderful jacket in that little shop opposite â we must go in. If we're late meeting Alexandre, I'll tell him it was all my fault.'
I laughed. âI'm sure he won't mind waiting.'
We went into the tiny boutique â there was barely room to move for all clothing-rails and the tables in the centre piled high with jumpers and shirts. Hélène immediately swooped on a sundress (âThis would be perfect for picnics in the Jardin du Luxembourg') and went to try it on. I wasn't intending to buy another outfit, but I couldn't resist leafing through the assorted dresses, every one unique, that were on a rail at the back of the shop. Amongst the bright primary colours and the pastels, I found one dress made of white cotton, with inch-wide shoulder straps, a tight bodice with tiny pearl buttons all down the front, and a calf-length skirt with deep tiers. There was something timeless about the design that really appealed to me. I was still looking at it when Hélène returned.
âThat would look lovely on you, Anna,' she said.
âOh, I'm not thinking of buying it. I never wear white â I'm too pale.'
âAt least try it on.'
â
D'accord
.' I went into the changing room, changed into the dress, and surveyed myself in the mirror. To my surprise, the dress really suited me. An image flashed before my eyes of me sitting in a garden, sunlight falling across my white skirts, just like the woman in the Monet painting that Alex liked so much, and of him taking my photograph. I pulled back the changing room curtain.
âWhat do you think?' I said to Hélène.
She smiled. â
Charmant
.'
â
Merci.
' I checked the price tag â the dress was very reasonably priced. And buying two dresses in the same day wasn't so very extravagant. I was, after all, on my first trip to Paris.
âYou should definitely buy that dress,' Hélène said.
âI'm very tempted to buy it, but I'm not sure when I'd wear it.'
âYou could wear it to the gallery tomorrow,' Hélène said. âYou must buy it,'
âYou know,' I said, âI really think I must.'
âIt really is an extraordinary construction,' I said, looking at the photo I'd taken of the Pompidou Centre, with its brightly coloured utility pipes and air ducts on its outside wall, and its external elevator.
âYes, it isn't often that you see a building turned inside-out,' Alex said.
Hélène and I had arrived at the Pompidou Centre half an hour after our appointed meeting time with Alex, but he'd been perfectly content watching the street performers entertaining the people gathered in the piazza. The three of us had wandered amongst the crowds, admiring the skill of the unicyclists, jugglers, mime artists, and contortionists, and had then gone for a drink at a nearby café. Hélène couldn't stay long as she had to pick up her daughters from a friend's house. Alex and I'd had a meal, and lingered over a second glass of wine, before going back to Montmartre.
âI wish we had longer in Paris,' Alex said, lying stretched out on his bed, his arms behind his head. âThese last three days have gone so fast. There are so many things, so many parts of the city that I still want to show you. Not just the famous sites, but the places the tourists don't see. Once I move back here in the summer, maybe you could come and stay for a couple of weeks.'
âI'd like that.' I didn't want to think about the time Alex would no longer be living in my flat, when I wouldn't see him all the time, and we'd go back to being penfriends, writing each other letters, telling each other about our lives, rather than doing things together. âThis trip has gone very quickly, but we still have one more day before we go back to London.'
Alex nodded. âTomorrow morning, I thought we'd go to the Musée du Montmartre. It focuses on the
belle époque,
and I think you'd find it interesting.'
âAnd in the evening, we have your exhibition. I'm so looking forward to it.'
âMe too,' Alex said. âI'm very pleased with the way my photos have been hung. Edouard Geroux, the director, may have been running the gallery for only six months, but he certainly knows his job. The picture of you with the rose is placed exactly where the light is perfect for it.' He added, âI've given it a title:
Anna Awakening.
'
âI like that.' I smiled. âIt's going to be strange seeing myself on the walls of an art gallery after looking at so many famous works of art in the last couple of days â Sorry, Alex, tomorrow isn't about
me
, it's about you.'
âIt does have something to do with you â you're my favourite artist's model.'
âDo you think the artist who used to live in your apartment had a favourite model?'
âI know he did. She was very beautiful.'
âDid she come to this room to pose for him?'
â
Bien sûr.
He was too poor to rent a studio, but the light up here was ideal for him to work by. His easel was in that corner, and she posed in front of that window. One day, I'll be browsing in a flea market, and I'll see an old oil-painting of a girl in an attic room with a view over the rooftops of Paris, and I'll know it's her.'
We both laughed.
âWhat happened to them?' I said. âThe artist who used to live here and his model?'
Alex shrugged, and then he yawned.
âAre you tired?'
âYeah. I know it's not late, but would you mind if we called it a night?'
I was wide awake, my head full of the artist who used to live in Alex's apartment and his beautiful muse, but I said, âOf course not. You need to get a good night's sleep. Tomorrow is an important day for you.'
âIt is. If this show goes well, I can see Edouard and I having a very successful creative partnership.' He stood up, reaching behind his head, the way guys do to pull off his T-shirt. Then he took off his jeans. âDo you want to go first in the bathroom?'
âYe-es.' I went to the bathroom, taking my baggy T-shirt with me. However irrational it might be, considering we were friends sharing a bed, I felt far too self-conscious to casually strip off in front of him, the way he'd just done in front of me. I told myself I was being ridiculous, that I wouldn't think twice about getting changed in front of Beth, that Alex had already had an eyeful, but it didn't make any difference.
Make-up removed, teeth cleaned, and wearing my T-shirt over my underwear, I went back into the living space, and slid under the duvet. Alex padded off to the bathroom. I was already drifting off, when he came and got into bed next to me.
âGoodnight, Anna.'
âBonne nuit, mon ami
,' I said. And fell asleep.
Thirty
From outside the bathroom the next morning. Alex said, âI'm starving, and we're completely out of anything remotely edible.'
âWon't they be feeding us at the reception?'
âThey only ever serve hors d'oeuvres at these events. I'm going to run down to the
boulangerie.
I won't be long.
'
â
D'accord
.' I finished blow drying my hair. Having by now memorised the layout of Alex's neighbourhood, I knew that he wouldn't be back for a least another ten minutes, so I felt able to leave the bathroom wearing only my lace-trimmed, ivory silk bra and thong. I fetched the two dresses I'd bought in the Rue du Commerce and the dress I'd brought from England from the cupboard in the vestibule, and laid them out on Alex's bed. The deep blue wrap-around was one of my favourites, and I always felt good when I wore it. The pink shift was, as Hélène had said, very
chic
. But I knew immediately that it was the white dress, simple and summery, that I was going to wear to the photography exhibition. With my wide leather belt, and the ankle boots I'd rejected the day before, it would make me look just slightly bohemian, I thought. I'd even brought a bag and jacket with me that would match the rest of my ensemble. I stepped carefully into the dress, slid the straps onto my shoulders, and started to fasten the bodice. The buttons were tiny and the holes were very stiff, so I went and stood by the window to see them better in the bright, early afternoon light.
âAnna, I've bought bread, and cheese to go with it â'
I looked up to see Alex standing just a few feet away, holding several large paper bags, his dark eyes staring at me intently. Instinctively, I clutched the dress closed over my bra.