Read The Train to Paris Online
Authors: Sebastian Hampson
Tags: #Fiction, #Literary, #Fiction literary
âAre you kidding?' Selvin said. âThis taste is as good as they get. It's sex in the mouth.'
I tried to keep my coughs and splutters under control as I breathed in the smoke and it clouded and swirled.
âWhat do you think, Lawrence?' Ãlodie asked.
âNot bad.' My voice sounded nothing like its old self. It had aged several years. âRather strong.'
âTwenty years I've been smoking these,' Selvin said, âand I've never heard anyone describe it like that before. Either you love it or you hate it. Nobody has ever held such a bland view of a Montecristo.'
âWell, I'm the first at something for once.'
Ãlodie must have seen how much distress I was in. I wanted to throw first the cigar and then myself over the parapet.
âYou don't need any more than that,' she said. âPut it out if you don't like it.'
âHey, I'm not having that,' Selvin said. âMen finish their cigars. Learn to enjoy it.'
I sought relief from my daiquirÃ. Somehow it had become the more attractive option. My head felt light. I was even more desperately in need of water. I took another puff.
âGive it here,' Ãlodie said. She left it to smoulder in the ashtray. âYou did well for a first time. It gets easier with each experience.'
âSome people never experience these sorts of things.'
âAnd good riddance to them.'
It amazed me that Ãlodie could be so intimate one minute and so cold the next. She was everywhere and she was nowhere. I wanted to feel as though we were the two most important people in the world again, as we had been in the restaurant, discussing her favourite wine and pouring it for each other. If only there could be one Ãlodie, the one that I imagined lying beside me on the beach, her hair wet and salty, her eyes alive with longing. Now I could not see her eyes because they were directed at Selvin.
Music started to come through the outdoor speakers. It was a mid-tempo bossa nova with a wispy saxophone.
âGood Lord,' Ãlodie said. âHow do they do that? They somehow guessed that I was in the mood for a dance right about now.'
âThis is what we pay them for,' Selvin said. âI'll sit this one out, though.'
âToo bad. What about you, Lawrence? You could give me a preview of your moves.'
âA preview?'
âDo I really have to explain everything? Come and dance with me.'
She had asked Ed first. That was enough to make me resist the temptation.
âSorry,' I said. âI'm a terrible dancer.'
âVery well, gentlemen. I will give you both a demonstration.'
She moved to the centre of the terrace, backlit by the restaurant and the swirling blue hue of the swimming pool. They cast her into a silhouette. She moved in time with the music, and gave her whole body over to it. Her figure became an extension of the sound.
I was mesmerised. Her hips drew in and out, her limbs became liquid. She flowed along her own channel, and she closed her eyes as she spun around with her arms out wide. It was an act of abandon, yet somehow she kept her dignity.
Selvin applauded once the song had ended, as did a few others who had gathered on the other side of the swimming pool to watch her. I did not. Time had slowed. I could feel the day's decaying warmth waiting to be swept off by an Atlantic breeze. Ãlodie took an exaggerated bow to the audience in her self-made theatre.
âIt really is exhausting,' she said, returning to us.
âWhere in the hell did you learn how to dance like that?' Selvin asked.
âCopacabana. You know, that old cliché. Don't you remember? I lived there for a while.'
âOf course I remember.' He grinned at her in a knowing way. âBack when it was the place to be, right?'
Their discussion was of little interest to me. Ãlodie's vitality now filled her to the brim. I was in awe of her. There was something particularly beautiful about the way that she smoked her cigar. She craned her neck in a swanlike arc, allowing the smoke to stream out of her mouth, neither too fast nor too slow. There was a surreal quality to her performance. I could have watched it forever.
9
Selvin excused himself, saying
he was going to check on Vanessa. Perhaps she really was ill. Ãlodie watched him stride away.
âWhy don't you dance, Lawrence?' she asked.
âI don't know. It doesn't come naturally to me. You were extraordinary, by the way.'
âDon't feign enthusiasm. It always fails to impress me.'
âI wasn't feigning anything.'
âOh darling, you don't have to be earnest about absolutely everything.'
I finished my drink, in a weak effort to wash away the remnants of smoke hanging on my breath.
âHow are you feeling?' she asked. I swayed my head from side to side as if to say,
so-so
. She bent in closer. We were sitting at one of the tables by the parapet, facing towards the hotel, which loomed above. I could see our suite and the terrace with the light streaming out through the open doors.
The stars were already coming out. The stars never came out in Paris. The last time I had seen them they had been hanging over an open field in New Zealand. It felt healthy to be able to see them now.
âShall we abandon Ed?' Ãlodie continued. âI get the feeling that he won't be coming back.'
âThat depends. Am I still your lovelorn puppy?'
Her face remained an unopened envelope.
âI thought that you might have been listening. Bear in mind that what I say to Ed is not necessarily how I feel.'
Once again I felt a violent urge to walk away. Why had I spent my afternoon and evening with her?
âChrist,' I said. âIt really is all about appearances with you, isn't it? Are you ashamed of me?'
âNot particularly. I just think that you need more work. We've done well so far, though.'
âAnd what is the truth? Am I supposed to guess how you feel about me?'
Ãlodie ignored the question. She disappeared into the shadows.
âWe don't have to take things too fast,' she said without warning.
âNo?'
She grew flustered. âWell, it's true that we already have,' she said. âPoint taken. But you shouldn't feel any obligation.'
âI don't. I would hate to take any of this too seriously.'
âOh good. You are learning.'
Our chairs had moved closer together somehow. She reached around my middle, feeling my abdominals as though she was trying to reach beneath my skin and exhume them.
âInteresting,' she said. âVery interesting.'
I could not have resisted her grip, even if I had tried. She moved up to my chest and rubbed it. I could feel her trying to get beneath the buttons of my new shirt. She burrowed her head into the curve of my neck, and I smelt her hair, which was thick with the scents of smoke and lavender.
âWhat are you doing?' I asked, trying not to gasp. I had no way of responding to her touch.
âI'm unwinding you, I hope. Relax and let it happen.'
âNo.' I pulled away. Her face was half-lit, which made it hard to tell if she was displeased.
âI wanted to see how you would react,' she said. âYou were mine for a while there.'
Suddenly I saw that this really was no more than a joke. That moment was meant to have happened with Sophie. Why had we never touched each other in that way? Why had we sat so far apart on the café terrace in Madrid and discussed the meaning of love from such an intellectual perspective? Why had I talked about Goya's
La Maja Desnuda
without once mentioning the shape of her breasts or the hint of her pubic hair? I had a sudden sense of how I had let Sophie down, what a stitched-up creature I was with her. That was where I needed to return. I needed to save myself for Sophie.
âI'm going up to the suite,' I said. âI need to sleep. I need to figure out what I'm going to do with myself tomorrow.'
I headed for the steps leading to the hotel, stumbling on the tiles. The terrace was empty, although there were some patrons in the poolside restaurant.
Before I could reach the steps, she called out. âIf you don't come back, Lawrence, then I will throw myself in the water and probably drown. Do you want that?'
She sounded as serious as a drunkard could. I didn't know how to react. The answer to her question was obvious. But it was her problem, and she wasn't my responsibility.
âWhatever, Ãlodie.'
It was too late and I was too tired. I returned to my path, passing into the light and starting up the canopied steps. The splash did not come until I had reached the top. I turned around to see a purple satin dress billowing out in the water, consuming her tiny figure.
This time I did know how to react. I ran down the steps to the water's edge, peeling off the navy jacket and shirt before I dived in after her.
The water was surprisingly warm, almost leisurely. Surely I should have been rescuing my beloved from the bottom of an ice-cold lake? She offered no resistance, and this hardly surprised me. After all, I had given in to her desires.
I began to pull her to the surface when I felt her fingernails tighten around my wrist as she tried to claw me down with her. I opened my eyes and saw her face right before mine. Her mouth would have been grinning, I felt sure, if it had not been filled with water. She could have pulled me to the bottom of the pool, drowning us there together, sharing our last breaths in panic. But I released myself, and tugged her to the surface.
A crowd had gathered on the terrace, mostly staff from the restaurant. One of them helped us out. Ãlodie rolled on the tiles beside me and laughed unrestrainedly. I did my best to explain to the waiter that she had drunk too much. This made Ãlodie laugh harder.
âCome on,' I said, taking her by the arm. âWe need to go up to the room.'
I apologised to the waiters, gladly taking a towel and my clothes from one of them. It all felt too strange to be true. The onlookers were mesmerised. Ãlodie's dress was ruined. It had drawn in around her, revealing how thin she truly was.
I tried not to let too much water inside the building. Heads turned as we went past: one bare-chested young man and one drenched older women. It must have been something of a spectacle. Despite the absurdity I joined in Ãlodie's laughter. We ran up the grand staircase, past an American couple and their children. They shielded the little girl's eyes.
The champagne and foie gras lay waiting on a tray. Feeling the adrenaline, I popped the cork enthusiastically. It hit the ceiling, and I fell onto the bed, sharing in Ãlodie's high spirits, and drank from the bottle. She kicked off her shoes and undid her dress, which fell to the floor in a lumpy heap.
âRemember to be gentle,' Ãlodie whispered in my ear as she laid herself over me. Her breath was warm and heavy. âDon't get too excited.'
This was useless advice. I wasn't at all sure what to do so I followed my instincts, even though they had not served me well up until that point.
âStart with a touch,' she said. I laid my hand tentatively on her thigh. The skin was as smooth as I had imagined it. But Ãlodie took my hand and dragged it to her breast.
âUp here. I want it here.'
Beneath her guiding hand I could feel the point of her nipple, the firm skin that bound her breasts, and the hint of her ribs. Her grip was as strong as it had been in the swimming pool, her nails digging into my skin.
Then she rolled on her side and directed my hand down between her thighs. I could feel the scar and the moles on her back beneath my fingers and I ran my hands over and over them as I surged, feeling my own strength for the first time. It went on that way for a long time. Our mouths were close, and I could feel the warmth of her panting. She writhed beneath me, tossing and turning as I raced ahead.
âLet's try that again,' she said, once we had both caught our breath. I was still inside her. âMore carefully this time.'
We lost ourselves for what felt like hours. She showed me how to touch her, when to slow down and when to hurry. When I came back into contact with a steady stream of thought, I felt a new sensation coursing through my blood, a combination of terror and euphoria. Part of me wanted to collapse laughing while the other wanted to burst into tears. She lay beside me. We were both exhausted.
âNot bad,' she said. âNot bad at all. We certainly have material to work with.'
She got up and put on a silk kimono, which she'd found in her suitcase. Then she reached over to the tray and poured two glasses of champagne.
âI really should scold you for drinking from the bottle,' she said. âBut I rather liked it. Very caveman of you.'
We clinked glasses. I was elated. I had shared her body in such a spectacular way. It was a momentous achievement, and yet it was also shocking. Nobody must ever find out about this, I told myself. It was to be my wonderful secret, my dirty dream.
âHow was that for a first time?' I asked.
She drew out her bottom lip, as though the answer required some thought.
âYou are the only virgin I have slept with, so I can't make an informed comparison. A bit like your cigar smoking, it needs improvement. But it is promising.'
âWere you really trying to drown yourself?' It sounded silly even as I said it. But rather than mocking me she looked up at the ceiling, as though some detail in the patterned plaster had caught her attention.
âI'm not sure,' she said. âThe thing is, I would try anything once to see what happens. Perhaps you know what I mean by that now.'
Ãlodie excused herself to have a shower. This left me to my disoriented self and a glass of champagne. Something had come over me, and the reality was becoming clear. It had been a febrile madness. I had injected myself with Ãlodie Lavelle and she had left an infection. Her life was saved and I was her saviour.
Standing before the mirror, I tried to make sense of what happened. I could hear the shower running. She was humming, and this sound made me stare more intently at my naked self with his pointed shoulders and his patchy chest hair.
Who are you?
I asked my reflection.