Parisian Promises (8 page)

Read Parisian Promises Online

Authors: Cecilia Velástegui

Monica sipped the last of the champagne, and picked up the sketch pad. Tears pricked her eyes when she saw Jean-Michel's drawing. In his depiction of the longing in her eyes and the sensuality of her moist lips, he had perfectly captured her feeling of lust and abandon, the desperate desire Monica had never before felt––until today.

Instead of positioning her in a lounging pose, like the Manet and Titian compositions he'd mentioned, Jean-Michel had drawn a posterior view of her with her back arched and legs parted in sexual excitement. But what Monica appreciated most in the sketch was Jean-Michel's inclusion of two intricate details; specifics that revealed to Monica that now she belonged to him: his bite marks on her inner left thigh, and his own long fingers that rested possessively inside her. An erotic charge surged through her.

“Jean-Michel, I love the sketch,” Monica called out, “I'm sorry for whatever I said that upset you. Won't you please come back to bed? Or we could go out dancing and meet the rest of our friends ––whatever you want.”

When Jean-Michel didn't answer, Monica summoned the courage to go and look for him. She walked naked from room to room of his apartment, but there was no sign of him anywhere. He was gone.

Monica felt a panic rising from within her and she shook with the coldness of his actions. How could he have just walked out without an explanation? She hurried back to the bedroom and peered out the window. Maybe, as a way to make-up to her for his harsh words to her, Jean-Michel had left the apartment to buy her art supplies, or to pick up some dinner. But she couldn't see him on the street or down on the quai.

This was all her own stupid fault. Why hadn't she just listened when Jean-Michel was telling her the love story about the woman and the Amazon River? He'd been trying to talk of grand passion, something she had never experienced, and she'd been skeptical and ignorant, too unimaginative to understand what he was really saying.

The longer Monica waited for Jean-Michel to return so she could apologize to him, the more guilt she felt at not having shown him respect. He was far more worldly and refined than she, and she had belittled him. It was no surprise that he'd been offended, and that he'd accused her of being superficial and unrefined––and he was right. Monica shivered in the chilly air, closing the window. There was no point in standing here, exposing herself to the world. She crawled with shame back into bed and waited for Jean-Michel's return.

A series of soft knocks on the apartment's door woke Monica from a foggy sleep. After that bottle of champagne, her head was fuzzy, and the bat canopy above the bed looked as though it was about to drop onto her head. The room was dark, and for a moment Monica had to think to remember where she was.

Since she could still hear the incessant tapping sound, Monica wrapped the top sheet around her and stumbled from the room. She walked in hesitant steps along the hallway, patting the walls to find a light switch, but no lights turned on, no matter how many switches she flipped. Her feet cold on the marble of the foyer, Monica managed to find the handle to the front door, and opened it with a creak. She was about to call out Jean-Michel's name until she realized that the knocking came from another outer door, one she could not open. There must be a second landing or another foyer, something she hadn't noticed when Jean-Michel escorted her into his apartment earlier that evening. Slowly, she realized she was trapped.

Outside a man's voice whispered something in French, and then he whistled some type of musical code consisting of three notes. He rattled the door and whistled again. Monica remained frozen in place, one hand on the door handle that would not turn, and the other one stuffed in her mouth so she would not scream.

After a few moments, to her relief, Monica could hear the man's heavy footsteps thumping away and down the stairs. She hurried back to the hallway, tripping over the trailing end of the sheet, hunting for a telephone. If only she could call Madame Caron de Pichet, her housemother would tell her what do. But there seemed to be no telephone anywhere in the apartment.

Panic rising in her throat, Monica retreated to the bedroom and locked herself in. She searched the floor for her underclothes, blue dress, and shoes but they were no longer in the bedroom. Panting with fear, she jerked open drawers and peeked inside an oversized armoire to find something––anything––to wear, but the cabinets were either packed with stuffed birds or completely empty.

Outside the window, the sky was cloudy and starless, and she had no idea what time it was. Without her watch, her clothes, a telephone, a radio, or lights, Monica tried to orient herself based on her recollection of Doisneau's photographs of Paris. Weren't the bookstall dealers, the famous
bouquinistes
, supposed to line the Seine? Where was the alluring accordionist who walked home along the quiet quais after a long night of playing her heavy instrument and singing the same lament, “You can't imagine how much I love you”? And shouldn't there be countless old ladies bent over and walking their poodles?

Monica didn't blame Monsieur Doisneau's romanticized images of Paris for her disappointment and disorientation. He wasn't the reason Jean-Michel had walked out and left her here alone. It was her own lack of perception about life, her dull birdbrained perspective. She had bored Jean-Michel, disgusted him. The sound of a distant motorcycle reminded Monica of Doisneau's photograph of a helmeted couple reaching from one motorcycle to the other in order to kiss passionately––during peak traffic no less––and she craved to recreate this very image with Jean-Michel. When he picked her out from the crowd, Monica had felt special for the first time in her life. How could she have blown this passionate love affair and all the excitement and romance it promised, so soon?

In the somber locked bedroom, Monica murmured her sorrowful prayer of confession and beat her chest three times:
mea culpa, mea culpa, mea culpa.

 

 

C
HAPTER
N
INE
Mind Control

U
nable to shake the fog of the champagne, Monica continued to sleep fretfully in the unfamiliar surroundings of Jean-Michel's apartment. She wrapped herself in the stained sheets and, as she tossed and turned, she thought she heard the same three-note whistle at random intervals outside the door. Sometimes, she covered her ears; finally she crawled under the bed in fear and confusion. She was certain that the eerie sounds weren't coming from the man at the front door, but from the dangling bats above her head, communicating their disapproval. “She is not a woman worthy of our master's love!” growled the bats in unison, their fangs glowing in the dark chamber.

The irate toucan opened its huge serrated bill and joined the chorus.

“She will never love him deeply,” it bellowed. “Never in the way he already loves her––
jamais
!”

Monica berated herself for having consumed the other two bottles of champagne: she'd wanted to knock herself out until morning, when, hopefully, she would be able to think more clearly. Her fear increased with every creak of the wooden floors and crack of the centuries-old beams. She covered her ears to block out the toucan's grinding bill as it prepared to defend its territory against the American intruder. In Monica's nightmare, the toucan's six-inch tongue and razor-sharp bill bored through her body cavities, reminding her of the pain––and pleasure––she'd felt at Jean-Michel's bite.

“This is how you mark your territory, my master!” the toucan squawked as it drilled deeper and deeper. “This is how you let her know that she belongs to you now.”

Monica woke-up long enough to cry out for her horse––“Rocky, be careful! A coyote is following us!”–– before falling back into her kaleidoscopic daze, dreaming of the domineering coyotes that marked their territory all along the chaparral peaks surrounding her ranch in California. With images of territorial coyotes and hawks whirling through her subconscious, Monica felt strangely at home. Jean-Michel had the instincts of an animal: he had already marked her as his, and now she was part of their mated pair. As a couple he would protect her, no matter what.

But this part of the dream was disrupted by the shrill squawks of another creature's voice, turning Monica's dream into a nightmare.

“She's incapable of loving our master. She'll never know true love!” the dream-toucan cried, to a resounding bat chorus of “
Jamais, jamais, jamais
.”

Monica woke up, her head throbbing. She did feel unworthy of Jean-Michel's love. From the minute he had inserted the cigar into her fingers at the café with the red awning, he had seemed the answer to her prayers. He was attentive, intelligent, sophisticated, and charismatic. Before leaving California, Monica had petitioned the heavens to let her fall in love in Paris, the city of her dreams.

But instead of capturing Jean-Michel with her goodness and warmth, she'd pushed him away with her clumsy provincialism, disparaging his romantic tale of love in the Amazon. In one way this seemed like such a small grain of irritation, but didn't an oyster clamp down and form layers of protection against that singular grain of sand? Monica had often rebuffed other people in her life, wanting them away from her rancorous ranch––ostensibly because she wanted to shield other people from her feuding parents, but mostly because, little by little, she preferred solitude. In time, she'd found joy in following a simple schedule: going to class, daydreaming about her future life in Paris, drawing her surroundings, and rushing home to Rocky and to help her mother with the other horses. Others might have described this as a monotonous routine, but it gave Monica ample time to dream about falling in love one day in Paris.

With every passing hour of the night, Monica's disorientation inside the ice-cold apartment led her to a clear understanding of the reprehensible person she truly was: she wasn't fascinating or special. Even worse, she wasn't trustworthy, and she didn't know how to love. She was destined to a lonely existence. Every time Monica lay awake, she shuddered at this future vision of herself, trudging from the barn to the arena to the local horseshows trying to sell her swayback trail horses, filled with remorse for scaring off the only cultured man who had ever loved her.

At the first ray of daylight in the sky, Monica wobbled to the morgue-cold bathroom and tried to groom herself. She waited for the rust-colored water to run through the faucet and then took a couple of sips. While she stood transfixed at her reflection, patchy in the silvered antique mirror, she rehashed all the events of the day before and her heart sank at the unavoidable truth. She'd behaved poorly with Jean-Michel. He'd opened up his heart to her, trying to share his treasured love story of Isabel and the Amazon River calamity. Instead of listening to him and hearing what he was trying to tell her about true love and a burning passion, Monica had prattled on about books and movies, and harangued him with vapid questions. No wonder Jean-Michel had dismissed her as featherbrained. She'd muddled and blundered, challenging him and, in effect, accused him of gross exaggeration.

Monica smoothed back her hair and splashed some water on her drawn face. Perhaps she'd always been a goofball, frivolous and banal, without a solid core. Perhaps Lola and Karen and Annie all rolled their eyes behind her back, appalled by the way she swayed one direction on a topic and then flip-flopped back again. As she shivered in the frigid bathroom, afraid to look at the accusatory eyes of the toucan in the next room, she vowed that if Jean-Michel would give her a second chance and open up to her again, she would do anything to prove her commitment to him.

Even in full daylight the apartment remained gloomy. Today it didn't look quite so grand and impressive: it was revealed as desolate and uninhabited, simply a resting place for obscure pieces of art that had never sold and leather-bound books no one had ever read. The atmosphere was a little creepy, Monica decided, as though the place hadn't been lived in for decades: there were no worn slippers under the bed, no open bottles of aspirin in the medicine cabinet, not even a used tissue in a trash can. When she attempted to pull a book from the stacks, Monica had to give up: the years of leaning on each other had made each tome cling to the next for dear life, and they were stuck like glue.

With a Sisyphean resolve, Monica walked up to the front door and turned its handle, only to realize––again and again and again––that the brass handle would not budge; she was locked inside the cold cage, no different from her fellow avian inmates. With her ear pressed to the door, Monica tried to hear any sign of life on the floors below. No one knew her whereabouts, but she couldn't believe that she'd have to resort to opening the window and calling out for help to passersby on the street below. Jean-Michel would come back for her, wouldn't he?

In her wearied mental state, quivering with cold and hunger, Monica accepted her place in this limbo, in the purgatory of her own making, in this place of torment––this was the penance she must perform for having offended Jean-Michel. That much she'd learned back at her parish church. Her mother had taught her well. Sometimes you must do penance for sins you didn't even know you had committed.

By dusk of the third torturous day, after Monica had consumed two boxes of
macarons
and all the champagne, she discovered a stack of dusty sheets dropped haphazardly in a corner pantry, although there was absolutely nothing to eat in its cupboards. She wondered if the entire apartment had been covered with these sheets. Perhaps Jean-Michel did not live here, at all, and she would have to scream until someone came to rescue her. By now Monica didn't dare return to the bedroom where she'd had the most dreadful two nights of terror under the menacing canopy of bats. Instead, she sat slumped in the corner of the pantry and tried to convince herself that Jean-Michel was the man of her dreams, and that he would return and explain his actions. She studied the sketch he'd drawn of her and compared it to the faint teeth marks surrounded by a yellow-green bruise on her inner thigh. Just as she was about to wrap herself in the dusty sheets to warm up for another night of punishment, she heard the front door open.

“My poor, poor, darling, where are you?” shouted Jean-Michel. “You must be freezing and hungry. Oh, what a dreadful two days I've had! Where are you, my love?”

Monica broke down in silent tears in the barren pantry. She didn't want Jean-Michel to see her bloated from the alcohol and totally disheveled from the restless nights and anguished days. She shook her head in disbelief. Did he just say that
he
had the most dreadful two days? He obviously never even considered her predicament––her three-day transformation from a naïve optimist to a broken-down weakling. She'd not only been abandoned by him, assaulted by self-doubts, and attacked by the eeriness of the locked doors and weird whistles, but she'd been cold, hungry, and utterly disoriented. Monica wanted to strike Jean-Michel across his handsome face for deserting her, just the way her father had greeted her repentant mother years ago after she had disappeared for a few days. That “welcome home” punch had taught Monica well. As much as she loved Rocky, every so often she felt obliged to crack the whip to get his attention, too. But one look at Jean-Michel's worried face when he walked into the kitchen and Monica remembered that it had been her fault, entirely her doing that had pushed him into leaving her stranded. As quiet as a mouse, she crept out of the pantry and whispered, “Here I am.”

Jean-Michel set down his shopping bags near a stone-cold fireplace, his laughter and spirits as jolly as a gift-bearing Santa Claus. He scooped up Monica and carried her to a leather chesterfield sofa. From a nearby chest he retrieved a mothball-scented cashmere blanket and wrapped her in it, and then he rubbed her feet and hands and kissed her warmly. Monica started to feel warm for the first time in days, especially when Jean-Michel tucked her blanket-covered body against the back of the sofa and lay in front of her, heating her body with his.

She wanted him just to lie there, just to kiss and hold her, but instead he began recounting an unlikely tale of woe.

“A friend was in a traffic accident down in the Loire Valley, and I had to drive there to make sure that the hospital was taking good care of him.” Jean-Michel stroked Monica's hair and cupped her icy cheeks. “He's always been the most inept person at everything, such that even a simple thing as driving south was a monumental effort to him. Thankfully, we will not have to deal with him again…since he's back home by now.”

“He's fortunate to have you as a friend.”

Jean-Michel rubbed her back and legs until he felt her body warm up. “You would do the same for a friend you loved, wouldn't you?”

Too quickly, Monica answered, “Absolutely.”

She didn't want to upset Jean-Michel ever again, and she didn't think he would hold her in high regard if she admitted to having few friends. The women she was rooming with here in Paris had become her only close human friends. Even zany Madame Caron de Pichet, who late at night offered unusual and bawdy advice about dealing with men, had become a sort of friend. Yet Monica knew she wouldn't go out of her way to help any of them. Not because they'd been lacking as friends: Monica simply would not let anything get in the way of accomplishing her dream of living in Paris or, more precisely, falling madly in love in Paris. All through her life, she'd always thought of Rocky as her best friend, in a way, and had taken comfort in grooming, training, and riding him. He understood her every gesture and mood, and––unlike her feuding parents––Rocky and his calm nature warmed her heart. His devoted animal love satisfied her more than any friendship could.

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