Lunch in Paris

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Authors: Elizabeth Bard

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Lunch in Paris

A Love Story, with Recipes

Elizabeth Bard

BACK BAY BOOKS

Little, Brown and Company

New York   Boston   London

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Table of Contents

Reading Group Guide

Copyright Page

Author’s Note

Certain names have been changed to protect people’s privacy (poor Gwendal, he didn’t get that lucky).

CHAPTER 1
Coffee, Tea, or Me

I
slept with my French husband halfway through our first date. I say halfway because we had finished lunch but not yet ordered
coffee. It turned out to be a decisive moment, more important for my future happiness than where I went to college or years
with a good shrink. The question was posed lightly: It looked like rain. We could sit it out in a café or, since his apartment
was not far, he could make tea.

I was not fully aware at the time that American girls in Paris are sluts by definition, willing to do sober what British girls
will only do drunk. It seemed like a simple choice; I like tea.

Mind you, I am not that girl. (Or at least, I wasn’t.) I’m not the girl who swings from the chandeliers and screws men because
she can, fixing her lipstick in the rearview mirror of a cab hailed at dawn. I’m the girl you call Wednesday for Saturday.
The girl who reads Milton for fun and knows a fish fork when she sees one. A flirt maybe, but in that harmless, nineteenth-century,
kiss-my-hand-and-ask-me-to-waltz kind of way. Mostly, I’m a thinker, a worrier. Since I’m also a New Yorker, you can take
that last bit up a notch. It’s not that there’s no free spirit in me. But it’s a free spirit with a five-year plan.

As the waiter added up our bill with a ballpoint pen on the paper tablecloth, I took another look at the handsome stranger
sitting across from me. Gwendal. Gwen-DAL. Had I been pronouncing his name with the emphasis on the wrong syllable all afternoon?
Oh well.

He was tall, with thick dark hair that just touched his collar. A wayward strand stuck straight up on the top of his head;
it had probably been that way since he was five. His turtleneck sweater was the color of warm milk. On the empty chair beside
him was a stiff navy blue cap, the kind worn by boys selling newspapers on the snowy streets of Chicago in 1932. He had strangely
perfect teeth for a European, and though it was only one in the afternoon, I could already see the rising shadow of his beard.
I was trying not to stare, but his hazel-green eyes seemed to be exactly the same color as my own.

Like any first date, I knew only a few tantalizing details. The strange name came from Brittany, on the Channel coast of France.
His family was in Saint-Malo, a provincial port city he’d fled as soon as possible. He spoke passable English, much better
than my leftover college French, but with an Australian accent—-something he picked up during his year of military service
at the French embassy in Canberra. He seemed shy and serious, but broke easily into a wide grin—mostly when I said something
was
fascinating
.

We had met in late September, at an academic conference in London called Digital Resources in the Humanities. (Can you think
of a less promising place to meet the love of your life?) He was finishing up a PhD in Computer Science; I was starting a
master’s in Art History. When I spotted him in a seminar on a hypertext version of
Finnegans Wake,
I knew he had to be European. The Americans were too fresh-faced, the English so pale and rumpled. I suppose he could have
been German, on account of his height (and the hideous light blue windbreaker he was wearing),
but something about the dark hair, the square jaw, and the little glasses said
café crème
.

On the last day of the conference, I ran into him on the stairs. We Americans have that wonderful puppy-dog way of going up
to complete strangers with a big smile and a dumb question. I rarely fight it—in so many situations, it’s a gift. I asked
him what his research was about. He took it from there.

Artfully worded e-mails flew back and forth. I even tried writing one in French, begging Gwendal in advance to correct my
grammar. He waited several months to tell me that
corrigez-moi
doesn’t imply “check my spelling” so much as “tie me up and tickle me with a feather duster.” There should really be a footnote
in those high school textbooks.

By December, I’d invented a reason to come to Paris, something about temporary exhibitions.

And now we were here, having lunch.

Gwendal had been strategic in his choice of restaurant. The Bouillon Chartier is a brusque canteen in the 9th arrondissement.
To an American, this was movie-set Paris. Tucked into a narrow arcade between a Chinese restaurant and a
pâtisserie,
Chartier has been open since 1896, and served the same purpose then as now—filling up the masses before a stroll down the
see-and-be-seen Grands Boulevards.

The room was vast, noisy, and completely full. Gwendal’s glasses fogged up as he pushed ahead of me through the heavy revolving
door. The walls were the color of new butter, and the light from the globes of ten enormous chandeliers was much brighter
than the pale gray Paris afternoon we left outside. There must have been two hundred people, all with knives and forks poised
somewhere between their mouths and their neighbor’s nose (emphasizing a point, I imagine). Groups of tables were separated
by dark wooden partitions, like the waiting room of
a train station, and above the heads of the diners were gleaming brass hat rails heaped with folded coats, shopping bags,
and dangling scarves.

The waiters certainly looked like they had a train to catch. Dressed in white shirts and black vests, they wove in and out
of traffic, often holding a dozen
escargots,
a
boeuf bourguignon,
and a
baba au rhum
in the crook of a single thumb. There were tiny numbered cubbies along the walls, where regular clients once stored their
linen napkins. The tables were small enough that if you put your elbows on the edge you’d have a hard time not holding hands
with the person across the way.

Though I’d never been in this room before, something about it felt wonderfully familiar. Europe had that effect on me, ever
since I stepped off the plane for the first time in college. I felt more like myself here: as though my love of art and history
was natural and my inability to name the latest rock band didn’t matter. In Paris the past is always with you: you look at
it, walk over it, sit on it. I had to stop myself from grabbing Gwendal’s arm as we walked up the narrow passage to the entrance:
Pardon me, sir, I couldn’t help but notice; the cobblestones outside your door are older than my country.
The idea thrilled me. I’ve always been a bit of an old-fashioned girl. I feel good in old places.

As we waited for one of the turbocharged waiters to take our order, I prodded Gwendal about his PhD research. From the little
he had explained to me when we met, it was something about how to archive film and video on the Internet. In fact, he was
already working full-time for France’s National Radio and Television Archives while he finished his degree.

“Archiving is a question of collective memory,” he said, toying with a slice of baguette from the basket on the table. “When
you decide, as a culture, what you want to keep, you also have to decide what you are willing to forget.”

Honestly, he could have been humming show tunes. It’s not that I wasn’t listening, but mostly I was watching his face. I love
to watch people talk about subjects they are passionate about, especially if it’s something I know nothing about. How many
nights did I spend in New York, seduced by some guy’s discourse on nanotechnology, Kierkegaard, or jumping trains, hobo-style,
in the Dakotas. I know it’s not everyone’s idea of a great pickup technique, but smart has always been sexy to me.

“Wow, that’s fascinating.” There it was, that word again. Must put a lid on the over-enthused American bit. “Do you know what
you’re going to do after you finish?” I asked brightly. “With the Internet exploding, you must have a lot of offers.” He narrowed
his eyes and tilted his head just slightly, as if he couldn’t decide if I was being sarcastic, maybe making fun of him.

“Yeah,” he said with a laugh (did I detect a hint of bitterness?). “Lots of offers.” Clearly he wasn’t used to such optimistic
assessments of his future.

I glanced down at the menu, relieved that although I hadn’t taken a French class since my sophomore year in college, I still
recognized most of the words. Chartier’s menu is full of classics: steaks and chops, grilled sea bass with fennel seed, sweet
chestnut purée, and wine-soaked prunes. What girl could resist the charm of a restaurant that allows you to order a bowl of
crème chantilly
—simple whipped cream—for dessert?

“You must have missed this when you were in Australia,” I said.

“We had our little tricks,” said Gwendal, with a conspiratorial smile. “They sent the Camembert and the foie gras to the embassy
in the
valise diplomatique
. Since it is considered as French government property, the Australian customs can’t search it. Top secret security cables
and cheese.”

“It must have been a big suitcase.”

“It did get quite large around Christmas,” he said.

I couldn’t remember the last time I’d been this hungry. Truth be told, a woman could starve to death in London. Not just the
food—tea and toast are fine for a hangover—but the men. Foppish and charming as they can be, Englishmen have a unique way
of making a woman feel invisible. They either look right through you, or lunge at you in a drunken stupor. The only warmth
comes from those pitiful gas fireplaces (and a couple of pints). I’d studied in Britain before, so I should have been prepared,
but time and distance had put a cozy glow on the gray skies, gray meat, graying men. I’d been back in London for only three
months, but I was already starting to feel a little grayish myself.

The waiter slapped down my
pavé au poivre
. It was not a particularly impressive plate—a hunk of meat, fat fried potatoes piled carelessly to one side. But something
happened as I sliced the first bite—no resistance, none at all. The knife slid through the meat; the thinnest layer of crusty
brown opening to reveal a pulpy red heart. I watched as the pink juices puddled into the buttery pepper sauce.

Gwendal looked up. I must have uttered an audible gasp of pleasure. “I don’t know why you can’t get a steak like this in England,”
I said, careful, even in my haste to lift the first bite to my mouth, not to drip on my sweater. “Since mad cow, I think it’s
illegal.” My fork and knife paused in midair as I let the salt, the fat, the blood settle on my tongue.

Not to minimize Gwendal’s many charms, but he was halfway to home base as soon as I cut into that marvelous steak.

G
WENDAL’S TINY STUDENT
apartment was located in the gritty 10th arrondissement, on a street that the phone company called
la rue des squatters
because of all the illegal inhabitants in nearby
buildings. This was not postcard Paris, at least not yet. We walked past the soot-stained, graffitied facade of the Gare de
l’Est, then across the Canal Saint-Martin, up and over a high Japanese-style bridge. There was a wet mist dripping through
the trees. I didn’t even know there was a canal in Paris.

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