Authors: Lynne Shelby
âI didn't hear you come in,' I said.
He said, âAnna, please don't move. I â I have to take your photo.'
âWhat?
Now
? But, I'm not wearing any make-up. I haven't straightened my hair â'
âThat doesn't matter.
S'il te plait,
just stay where you are by the window.' Distractedly, he tossed the paper bags he was carrying in the general direction of the kitchen and picked up his camera. âCould you let go of your dress â put your hands the way they were, and look down â as though you're doing up the buttons, as you were before.'
I did as he asked. I heard the now familiar click and whirr of his camera as he took shot after shot.
âIf only I had time, and the right equipment â and Lou to hold a reflector â to do this properly,' he said. âThere â that'll have to do. The light's changing already.'
I relaxed and let my hands fall. And then, realising that the open front of the dress was exposing not only ivory silk and lace, but a fair expanse of my breasts, I hastened to do it up.
Alex sat down on the bed. âAnna, you have to see these photos.'
I sat beside him, and looked at the screen on his camera. I saw myself caught in the act of fastening the bodice of my white dress, my hair uncombed, my feet bare, light streaming in through the open window, the rooftops of Paris behind me.
âOoh,' I said. âIt's the picture you talked about last night â the oil-panting of the artist's model.'
â
Mais oui
,' Alex said. âWhen I walked in and saw you standing by the window in a ray of sunlight, dressed in white, it was uncanny. I felt as though I'd stepped back in time.' He showed me the rest of the photos. Naturally, the images were much smaller and therefore had much less impact than if they were on a computer screen, but I was still impressed. He zoomed in so that I could see my face more clearly.
âYou've made me look amazing â again,' I said.
He smiled. âAs I have told you before, you are extremely photogenic.'
âThank you. But it's your skill that creates a picture.'
âThank
you.
These shots are nowhere near as technically proficient as if I'd taken them in a studio â I could never exhibit them â but sometimes, you just have to seize the moment. And I hope I never become so pretentious about my
art
that I stop taking photos for pleasure.' He pointed at my dress. âYou've missed a button â actually, you've missed several. Here, let me.'
I sat very still while he fastened my dress. The sun had moved, and the light was now falling on the bed. I wondered what Alex would do if I sank back onto the cotton sheets. Would he lie down beside me? And undo all those tiny pearl buttons?
His hands dropped to his lap. âIf we're going to eat before we head over to the Marais, it's going to have to be soon â I can't arrive late at the gallery.'
I realised that I'd been holding my breath. Enough, Anna. I thought. Focus on your friend's photography exhibition which is really important to him and to his career. âNo, you really can't be late. You go and shave. I'll make you a sandwich.'
He went off. I stood, and smoothed my skirts. When I'd looked up, my dress half-undone, and seen Alex's dark eyes watching me, I'd been sure he was looking at me in the way a man looks at a woman who is
not
a female friend â or a photographic model. Apparently, I was once again mistaken.
Alex was expected at the exhibition an hour or so before the reception, to meet the gallery owners, the guests who were important enough to have a relatively private viewing, and to be interviewed by the media. I travelled across Paris with him to the Marais, so that he could show me exactly where the Galerie Lécuyer, formerly a large residential house, was situated amongst the maze of twisting lanes and cobblestone alleyways that made up this district of Paris. While he networked, I intended to do some more sight-seeing.
âThis area has some of the oldest streets and buildings in the city,' Alex said, as we stood outside the gallery. He pointed to an archway leading to a narrow alley âIf you walk that way, you'll even see some medieval timbered houses.'
âI won't go very far,' I said. âI don't want to get lost.'
âYeah, I'm kind of counting on your being there as soon as they start letting people in.' He ran a hand through his hair, and straightened the sleeves of his black, collarless shirt.
I looked at him more closely. âAre you OK? You seem a bit tense.'
He shrugged his shoulders. âKnowing my work is about to be seen and judged by some very knowledgeable art critics is somewhat daunting. I feel like I'm a student again, just before my graduation show.'
I put my hands on either side of his face. âYou're a great photographer, Alex. An artist.'
âNot that you're biased or anything.'
âI should perhaps remind you, monsieur, that I have a degree in the History of Art. I know how to judge a visual image. Even if I'm also your greatest fan. And your very good friend, of course.'
He drew me close and I slid my arms around his waist. As we held each other, I felt his body relax.
âI should go,' he said. âWish me luck.'
â
Bonne chance.
' I kissed his cheek, and looked up into his eyes. He trailed a finger along the line of my jaw. Then he let go of me, and took a step away.
â
à bientôt, mon amie
,' he said.
âSee you later.' I watched as he walked to blue-painted door of the gallery. He looked back over his shoulder and raised a hand, and then vanished inside. I consulted my map, marked the position of the Galerie Lécuyer with an âX' â I wasn't taking any chances on letting Alex down by being unable to find it again â and made my way through the arch he'd indicated. The alley brought me to a courtyard, where I did indeed spot a timber-framed house. I walked across the square, through a covered passageway, and into a labyrinth of crooked, narrow streets. Keeping a track of where I was going on the map, I strolled past art galleries and bars, boutiques, and
patisseries
, old ivy-covered apartments and design stores. Catching sight of my reflection in a gallery window, I thought I looked as though I belonged in this trendy area of Paris. I may have given away my tourist status when I took a photo on my phone.
My circuitous route through the Marais brought me back to the Galerie Lécuyer in good time. Seeing that the blue doors were now standing wide open, and people were going inside, I followed them. I found myself in a bright, white atrium with a metal staircase leading to an upper floor. To my left, a square archway provided a glimpse into a large room displaying a cobweb of light fibres and a colossal pyramid of brown cardboard boxes â Alex had told me that the ground floor of the gallery was used for installations, not really my thing, but I hoped I could appreciate its intentions. In front of me, two women, one in a multi-coloured mini dress (think paint splatters) that was a work of art in itself, the other in unrelieved black, were welcoming invitees to the exhibition, and directing them up the metal staircase. I went over to them, my invitation clutched in my hand.
Without looking at my invitation, the woman in the colourful mini dress gave me a broad smile and said, âWelcome to the Galerie Lécuyer. The award exhibition is on the first floor.'
â
Bonsoir, mademoiselle
.'The other woman, the one dressed in black, ushered me to the staircase. âAt the top, please turn to the left and you will see the entrance to the exhibition.'
â
Merci.
'I followed her instructions, climbing the stairs and turning left into a long, light-filled room, divided into a succession of smaller exhibition spaces, by high partitions. Looking around the first section, I saw that its white walls were hung with close-up photographs of people. Although they were portraits, I knew immediately they weren't Alex's work. He was interested in capturing the personality of his subject, but these shots had been edited so that the faces were distorted. Wanting to find him and let him know I'd arrived, I scanned the knots of viewers gathering in front of the photos. They were of various ages, some younger than me, others considerably older. A middle-aged couple, the woman wearing the sort of dress I'd seen in the shops on the Avenue Montaigne, were talking to a young man in scruffy denim, his long hair tied back in a ponytail. A grey-haired man, standing close enough to one photo to make a nearby gallery employee rather nervous, was writing in a spiral notebook. I wondered if he was an art critic. As there was no sign of Alex, I went into the next section of the gallery.
Here there were more people, many of whom seemed to know each other, and the level of conversation was considerably louder. There was also a bar: a trestle table, behind which a waiter was pouring champagne. I went and helped myself to a glass. The waiter gave me what I thought was a very searching look. For a moment I worried that I'd breached some unspoken rule of exhibition opening etiquette, but other people were helping themselves to champagne, so I decided I was imagining things. Moving away from the bar, I found myself looking at a group of randomly hung monochrome photos no more than a foot square. At first I thought they were abstracts, but as I walked further into the exhibition space, I saw that each individual picture was part of a whole, and if they'd been moved around and fitted together like a jigsaw they would have made a cityscape, a bleak urban wasteland of high-rise tenements and flyovers.
A man standing next to me said, âIt's clever, but also alienating, and ultimately depressing. I can't look at it for very long.' He was about forty-five, with longish brown hair, and smartly dressed in a linen suit.
âI find it a very desolate piece of artwork,' I said, âbut I presume that's the response the photographer wanted to evoke.'
âIt seems she has succeeded.' He added, âI'm Marcel Guilleroy, Alexandre Tourville's agent. And you, I believe, are one of his models. I recognise you from his photograph.' He held out a hand.
I shook it, and said, âI'm Anna Mitchel.'
âI'm delighted to make your acquaintance, mademoiselle. Have you seen Alexandre's pictures? They are already receiving a great deal of favourable attention.'
âNo, not yet. I've not seen him yet either.'
âHis photos are hanging in the next room. I believe you'll find him there also.' He gestured towards the far partition. â
à bientôt, Mademoiselle Mitchel.'
âà bientôt, Monsieur Guilleroy.'
Marcel Guilleroy turned away, and began talking to the elderly, distinguished-looking man standing on his other side. I took a sip of my champagne, and made my way past the throng now swarming around the bar, and into the next section of the gallery.
I saw Alex straight away, deep in conversation with a man in his thirties, who was listening to whatever he was saying with rapt attention. I managed to catch his eye and he smiled at me, before resuming his discussion. I was about to go up to him when I remembered that while for many of the guests, the opening was a social occasion, for Alex and the other exhibitors, it was work. Rather than interrupt him, I looked around the room for the picture of me. From where I was standing, it was impossible to see any of the photos as each one was hidden behind a cluster of spectators. I went over to the nearest group, and by standing at the side, managed to get a partial view of the photo they were looking at, which turned out to be a portrait of my favourite author, Verity Holmes. I remembered that Alex had photographed her for
The Edge
not long after he'd arrived in England â and given me that novel. In the picture, she was sitting at her laptop, her brows drawn together in concentration.
I heard a woman say, âIt is as though Tourville has photographed the actual creative process.'
Her companion said, âI am usually bored by figurative art, but this â this is different. This is
good
,'
A stout matron speaking American-accented English, the one person I'd heard not speaking French, said, âOnly a Frenchman could photograph a woman who has reached her half-century and make her look so magnificent. I must have this Tourville guy photograph me for my fiftieth birthday.'
This was my friend Alex they're talking about. I turned away from Verity Holmes â whom I happened to know was in her seventies â with a smile on my face, and moved on. Walking past two young men, I was aware that both of them were nudging each other and openly staring at me, which I thought very unsophisticated behaviour considering the venue and the occasion. Deciding that I was flattered rather than annoyed â they were very young, probably photographic students â I ignored them, and headed across the room to a photo which for the moment had only one other viewer. It turned out to be a shot of a little girl sitting on the branch of a tree reading a book. A small plaque gave the title of the photo as
Véronique Reading
, and I recognised Hélène's elder daughter from the picture she'd shown me the day before. Given the angle at which the photo had been taken, I couldn't see how Alex could have got the shot unless he too had climbed the tree â before common sense told me that he wouldn't have sat a child up so high, and that it was his skill that had created the illusion of height. I studied the picture for some time, noting the dreamy expression on the little girl's face, the way she seemed to float between the sky above her head and the ground, seemingly a long way beneath her. I thought about how it felt to lose oneself in a book, particularly when you're young and the stories you read are almost as real to you as everyday life. Alex had precisely portrayed that feeling in this photograph. I wondered how he could capture such emotion through the lens of a camera.
Aware that a number of viewers were beginning to gather behind me, and conscious that I was in the way of those who might be potential customers or curators of Alex's work, I moved away from the photo.