Read Cooking for Picasso Online
Authors: Camille Aubray
Yet here was
Femme à la montre
âshe knew it because of the mirror, the comb and wristwatch, and the crown of yellow forsythia in her hair. Aghast, she turned to look at the second painting.
“Me again. But it's no better!” she said in dismay. Same pose with her blue dress and a mirrorâbut the yellow flowers and the wristwatch were gone, and now there was a second figure sitting on the floor who looked like a faceless wire mannequin with the same curly hair as Ondine's.
Everything was a joke to him! He'd called her a goddess, a Greek statue. Yet how people would laugh at her if they knew she'd sat here posing for
this,
without any pay, without any thanks, hoping that Picasso would guide her to a better life.
“So he sees me as an ugly, foolish creature. Well, my life
is
a joke,” she said bitterly. “I'm to be sacrificed like a lamb to Monsieur Renard. They might as well roast me in one of his ovens! No, I
won't
go to church and marry the baker! I won't be his slave. They killed Lucâbut they won't own
me
.”
She felt like throwing herself out the window then and there, into the storm that was raging relentlessly, and she didn't care if the wind picked her up and blew her straight out to sea. This sudden urge for self-annihilation felt so real that it frightened her. Feeling momentarily lightheaded, she swayed slightly, and looked around for a chair or something to catch hold of.
“Zzzz-zhzz!”
A snoring noise came from down the hallway, puncturing the silence. The dark, brooding morning must have discouraged Picasso from getting out of bed. Only a city man could indulge in the luxury of sleeping so late. Ondine marched over to the room where his snores were coming from, and peered in the open doorway.
Picasso slept peacefully in his bed, oblivious to the storm. She crept closer to the foot of the bed, then stopped and stood there, staring. He'd kicked off the covers in his sleep, like an infant, and was lying on his back naked, blissfully snoring away, his body completely exposed, right down to his wiry pubic hair, from which sprung his penis, perkily alert, like an arrow.
“Here lies the Minotaur,” Ondine murmured, horrified and fascinated. “He devours all the women who enter his labyrinth. Do they die of pleasure, or agony?”
She'd never looked at a man's
zizi
beforeânot even Luc's when he stole into her bed; she'd only felt his friendly arousal nudging against her under the covers in the dark. Yet even with Luc's tender love, sex had involved an invasion that made her bleed.
“I may as well throw myself on the Minotaur instead of out the window, and I don't care what he does with me after this!” Ondine imagined herself impaled upon himâbloody, spent, yet somehow, triumphant. She felt a surge of something else besides rage swelling inside her, arising from all her pent-up, frustrated desires for love and independence and the power of a better destiny.
“
I
want to be the one who is rich and happy.
I
want to be the one who takes
all
the pleasure!”
Defiantly she slipped off her underdrawers beneath her dress, just as she had when she posed for him. But now she wanted to rid herself of this blue dress, too, that she'd worn so many times for Picassoâand in church for Monsieur Renard.
“You don't see me as I really am,” she whispered to the slumbering figure as she unbuttoned her dress. “Nobody does!” With an outraged gesture she yanked it up over her head and hurled it to the floor.
“There. Look at me! Am I not beautiful?”
The thunder crashed directly above now, like a cannon reverberating through the house to its very foundation. It woke Picasso, and with a shocked gasp he sat up suddenly.
“Who's there?” he said in a low voice, squinting and automatically pulling up the sheets. “Ondine? Is that you? What's the matter?”
“Everything,” she said, coming to the side of the bed.
“What do you want?” he asked in surprise, still trying to see her.
Ondine didn't answer but trembled as she stepped out of the shadows. He saw that she was naked, and he studied her face, assessing the situation. Then suddenly he opened his arms to her. When she rushed in, he enveloped her in an embrace that surprised her with its welcoming warmth.
“
Chère
Ondine,” he murmured soothingly. “Why have you come to me now?”
“Because I wantâ” Ondine began, then found that she could not speak. She tried again. “I want to knowâ¦I want to feel. I wantâI wantâ”
“Yes, yes, I know,” he said, softly stroking her hair away from her cheek. He pulled her closer to his chest, and his arms around her made her feel as if, like Zeus, he could cloak her in something that the storm could not touch. At the same time, his persistent stroking ignited a spark that unleashed the hunger seething inside herâfor, having tirelessly served the appetites of so many people who came and went from the café, Ondine suddenly realized she'd been starving for love all along. Now, instead of working hard to please this man and her parents, it felt like finally somebody wanted to please her.
And although she could not say exactly how it began, she found that he was kissing her and she was kissing him, and her heart was beating faster, faster, faster, as she'd once felt when she was a child climbing up a great tree, higher and higher, her limbs growing taut with strength, her blood like a fire urging her on, and her mind dizzy with the riskâhow high could she go without falling?
He was kissing her breasts as she clung to his strong neck; and to Ondine's surprise her body told her that for quite some time she'd been living in an aching state of arousal, stimulated by each visit into his world, each picture he paintedâher flesh already so exquisitely pliable that she felt triumphantly indestructible as he thrust himself inside her soft wetness. Nothing could stop her now, not even when he began to withdraw while he was still hard; she only seized him hungrily and held him long enough to take what she needed for her pleasure before he, too, surrendered. And for once, her own greedy strength triumphed over everyone and everythingâover anger, over sorrow, over death itself.
L
ATER, SHE HEARD
the rain, like the distant rushing of an Alpine stream pouring down from the heavens in a benediction, washing away the thunder and lightning, whispering and soothing through the trees, making them toss their heads like ladies shaking their hair dry after a day of bathing in the bright blue sea.
Ondine felt fearless now; all the rage was spent from her limbs, and her muscles and bones were relaxed and strong again. She sat up and took a folded blanket from the foot of the bed to open up and wrap around her. She liked its looseness; she did not want to be restricted by clothes yet.
She would have gotten out of bed and gone to the window to drink in the fresh air, but now Picasso stirred and gave her a smile like sunlight. Ondine experienced this perfect moment as an acute grace, so peaceful that she knew, no matter what happened afterwards, nothing could ever take it away from her.
I am alive. I am a creature to be prized. He has given me this recognition and I will take it.
Picasso leaned close to her now and picked up a long spiral of her hair that had fallen over her forehead, gently putting it back into place with the rest of her curls.
“
Belle
Ondine,” he murmured in admiration. She sighed.
“Beautiful,” she repeated. For a moment she remained silent, letting the word reverberate in the air. Then, without reproach she said, “I saw the paintings you made of me.”
“Ah,” he commented. “Well, you don't even have to say it. I know what most women think. âIs
that
how you see me? I don't look like that at
all
!' Am I right?” His alert dark eyes were watchful for an answer.
She mulled it over, then offered the only explanation she could honestly come up with.
“I guess it's very difficult,” she said thoughtfully.
“What is?” he asked, looking wary now.
“To paint people's souls right into the flesh on their faces,” she offered. “Like Rembrandt.”
At first, he howled with laughter. Ondine smiled uncertainly, then shrugged.
“Humph!” he exclaimed, taken aback. “What do you know about Rembrandt?”
“I've seen a picture of his,” Ondine explained. “Just a girl looking out a window.”
“Oh,
that
one!” Picasso nodded.
“You've seen it, too?” she asked eagerly. “I see it every day in the café. And yet she is a mystery to me. Isn't it incredibleâto make a person look real and yet so much more than ordinary?”
“You think I couldn't do it?” Picasso said abruptly, sitting upright and reaching for his clothes. “Come with me to my studio, right now.”
Calmly, still partially wrapped in her blanket, she followed. The soles of her bare feet seemed to feel every grain of the wooden floor, like a healthy animal stalking through the forest.
“Go to that window where the sun is,” he ordered, for indeed, the sky was clearing now. She hesitated until he said challengingly, “You want to be
my
immortal
Girl-at-a-Window,
don't you? Then pose like her, but leave your shoulders bare.”
She could not resist saying, “Look, there's a rainbow out there! What perfect colors.”
“Hmm,” he observed gruffly, “you know, you're
not
like most females, especially when you make love. You're tooâ¦aggressive, like a man. A woman can be strongâbut not in bed!” A faint tone of paternal disapproval crept into his voice. “You're not a virgin, are you?”
Ondine looked away defiantly and warned, “Don't spoil it.” She didn't want a father or a priest lecturing her now.
“Then turn your head more this way and be still,” Picasso growled, picking up his brush.
For a long while, all was quiet. Then she asked curiously, “What's Paris like?”
“Dirty and wonderful,” Picasso replied, still looking preoccupied.
“If I came to Paris would youâ” Ondine began, but he looked up so sharply that she said hurriedly, “âintroduce me to people who run the restaurants? I want to be a great chef there.”
“Everyone always wants the glory, but nobody wants to do the work,” Picasso muttered. “It takes years to learn a trade, any trade. Assuming one has the talent to begin with.”
“Hard work doesn't scare me. I've worked hard for
years
!” Ondine exclaimed. “Whatever I don't know, I'll learn fast. You can see that. You know I have the gift for cooking,” she said, matter-of-factly.
Picasso conceded, “You do. But in Paris all the head chefs are men. They won't give a top job to a woman. Besides, a big restaurant kitchen is no place for a girl. They're full of bad men working there. They'd rape you in the basement the day you arrived. What's the matter with you? You belong
here
. Why do you want to run away from lovely Juan-les-Pins?”
“My parents are planning to marry me off to a man I can't possibly love!” Ondine cried passionately. “I must get away and cook on my own.”
He stopped painting momentarily. “Listen to me,” he said sternly, “Paris is no place for a sweet country girl like you. They'll eat you alive. You can't just find a job. You have to know somebody.”
“I know
you,
” Ondine pointed out. But she could see that he looked fairly alarmed at the idea, and clearly he had no desire whatsoever to have her turn up in Paris looking for favors. Remembering what the nuns sometimes did to place their students in positions of governesses and ladies' maids, she said softly, “Won't you at least write me a letter of recommendation, saying that I am an
artiste
in the kitchen, just as you told Miss Dora Maar? I could use that anywhere.”
Picasso wore the trapped expression of a small boy ensnared by his own boasts. He returned to his canvas, muttering, “Of course, of course. I'll do it tomorrow. But don't blame
me
if you hate where you end up! Those kitchen jobs pay shit. You'll die an old, hardworking peasant unless you learn to take yourself seriously.”
“What do you mean?” Ondine asked, intrigued.
“If you want something in life,” Picasso said, looking hard at her now with those fearless black eyes, “you don't ask nicely and politely for it. You don't write letters. You have to kill for it.”
“Kill?” Ondine echoed. “Kill who?”
“Anyone who gets in your way,” Picasso answered. He saw her doubtful expression. “You think I'm wrong? Listen, every time you cook something for me, you have to kill it first. It doesn't matter if it's a carrot or a pig,” he said bluntly. “You have to kill something, every day, just to live.”
Ondine pondered this. She could think of people she'd like to kill. The postman, for one.
“So you might as well stay home in Juan-les-Pins,” Picasso said, putting down his brush now, “and let a man do the killing for you, while you have his babies.”
But Ondine smiled defiantly to herself. One thing she'd already learned today, to her surprise, was the strength of her own ravenous appetite, the discovery of her own powerful teeth and claws.
“Can I see my portrait now?” she asked, observing that he had stopped painting.
“It's not finished,” Picasso said, “but yes, you may look.”
Ondine padded across the floor and peered at it. “Oh!” she cried. “It
is
beautiful!”
Like the other canvases it was stretched upon wood, but this one was smaller. It was indeed
A
-
Girl-at-a-Window
âand it was a Picasso, but what sort of Picasso? More tender, natural, eternally human. She'd never seen him paint this way before. This girl in the picture had Ondine's face, of that there could be no doubt. Her flesh glowed with the radiance of youth, health and vitality. Her eyes were alight with curiosity, her mouth just hinting at her innermost thoughts, her hair in all its colors seeming as if every expressive strand was an echo of her spirit.