As I stepped out of Shakespeare & Company with my backpack full of new paperbacks, it was nearly as dark outside as in. Barely four o'clock and the late autumn sun was rapidly losing its battle. Across the river, Notre Dame stared back at me as brilliantly cold as ever. A cold drizzle offered a stark reminder that there hadn't been a whole lot of sunshine that day anyway.
I loved every bit of it!
Grad school was over a decade in the rearview mirror, and I hadn't been back to Paris since the day after my last final exam. I still remembered all too well that last beautiful spring morning in my prewar flat in the 20th arondissement, telling myself I didn't really want to stay anyway -- too cold, too brusque -- but knowing all the while that I'd have given anything for an EU work visa. With no chance of that for an American whose grandparents had all been born in Ohio or Indiana, I'd settled for moving to Asia. The change had been good to me for the most part, but never a day had gone by that I hadn't hoped I might end up back in my favorite city.
Through a decade in first Asia, then Australia and even back home for a bit, that wish hadn't come true. At long last, a big turn of fortunes in my latest startup company had brought me back here, for a couple of weeks only, to help set up our European office -- but it was something. Four days in, I'd been too busy to bother with any of my old haunts -- until today. When my last meeting of the day had petered out just after lunch, the office manager had been downright apologetic about the "waste of an afternoon" they'd foisted upon me. I'd only just managed not to laugh as I'd told her it was perfectly fine.
And fine it was! As I lingered outside the bookstore and debated what to do next, I was truly spoiled with choice and overwhelmed with memories. Mostly good ones, a few bitter ones, but I welcomed those too. A certain Ximena Vasquez flitted across my memory yet again, and I felt only pleasure at the nice memories we'd made together before she'd moved on to other guys. I'd blocked her on Facebook ages ago and didn't even know what country she lived in now, and felt liberated to think of our study dates and dinners at the campus hotel and her arms around me after a chilly walk back to the dorm. My only lingering regret was that I could have pursued some other classmate in the time I wasted on her.
But, I reminded myself as I zipped up my jacket and stepped up to the sidewalk, time you enjoy wasting isn't really wasted. And I certainly had enjoyed my time with Ximena even if she had tossed me aside once she'd found other study partners.
I'd promised myself I wouldn't wonder about her. But here I was. Last I heard, she was one of the few in our class who was still in Paris. Maybe I ought to let bygones be bygones and give her a call...I let myself off the hook for that one when I remembered I didn't have her contact information anymore.
Next I thought of walking over the bridge to visit Notre Dame. But the memory of my last visit there -- end of term a decade ago, fresh off a broken heart and a failed exam and my ever finishing my degree in question -- called up nasty memories I was just as happy to leave in the past. I'd won that war, at least, and graduated on time, though I didn't bother flying in from Hong Kong to collect my diploma. That December night in the church a decade ago, lighting candles and praying and soaking up all the history in my quiet desperation, remained a golden memory, or had at least become one once I'd known for sure I'd be graduating.
That certainty, of course, had come only after I'd gone to Hong Kong. The bastards had reserved the right not to approve everyone's degree for any reason -- something I'd reminded myself every time they'd asked me for money since then. They'd never gotten a dime from me and they never would.
No need to tear off that scab again, I reminded myself, as I literally and figuratively turned my back on the cathedral. My heart was full of nostalgia and -- somewhat to my surprise -- not a single regret as the street lamps warmed the dusk on both sides of the Seine and I ambled toward the Rue du Petit Pont and my beloved alleys. Fondue and escargots were definitely on the menu tonight, and if I was really feeling decadent I might even stop by the grocery store and get some foie gras for later. But I wasn't feeling hungry just yet and I absolutely didn't want to retire to my rented room, lovely though it was, just yet.
Besides, I remembered as I made my way up the street I had once known so intimately, the restaurants wouldn't even open for an hour and a half yet. I laughed in spite of myself as I recalled all the many times I'd had to choose between going hungry for the afternoon or going to McDonalds like an ugly American (yes, they do call it a Royal with Cheese, as I recalled from seeing a wrapper some jerk had littered in the street just a few days after my arrival way back when). No, if I wanted to drink in the ambiance of my favorite city, there was only one thing to do: go to a pretentious sidewalk cafรฉ and get an overpriced espresso.
Minutes later, I was happily set with my piping hot drink at a cafรฉ I remembered, but had never before visited, just down the block from the Caveau de la Huchette (which I had visited many a time). It was a bit too cold to be really comfortable outside and my first sip reminded me that I had likely just sentenced myself to a night of tossing and turning, but there I was once again watching Paris go by. With the pleasant memory of how well the day's meetings had gone, I finally allowed myself to start entertaining the possibility, however remote, that I just might be moving back here one of these days. Surely a decent IPO would raise enough money to get a place in the Latin Quarter, and then who knew if I'd ever leave again?
I guess I was smiling through the chill at that idea when I heard her voice just up the block. The almost comically Russian accent I still heard in all her posts on Facebook, and there it was for real for the first time in a decade. "No! Is it you?"
It took a moment to place the voice, but no time to match it to her face when I looked up. "Tanya!" I exclaimed, jumping up from the rickety old table, sloshing my coffee but not spilling it.
"Adam! It
is
you!" Before I knew it, she was throwing herself at me and catching the eye of the hard-nosed locals at the next table; I welcomed their contempt. "I thought you were in Sydney?" she asked.
"I was," I said. "I'm with a new startup and we're opening an office here. I'm just in town for a couple of weeks and I wanted to leave it off Facebook because..."
"Ximena?" she asked, pulling back but still clasping her arms around my back. "She isn't here anymore, she got a job in Madrid years ago."
I grinned, and didn't bother to deny anything. "Thank you. I didn't know that. I also didn't know you were still here, Tanya. I remember when you got your French citizenship, but I thought you and Mattieu moved to...where was it, the Maldives?"
She nodded and finally let me go. "We did, but..."
"Oh, Tanya, I'm sorry!" I said, recalling all at once how she used to post photos of her husband and baby daughter on Facebook nearly every day -- and had stopped cold somewhere along the line.
"Hey, it meant I could come back here," she said. "And I got the house. Speaking of which, Adam, where are you staying?"
"I sublet a place in the tenth," I said. "I was just here looking for an excuse not to go back there just yet."
"That bad?" she said.
"It's a nice little place," I said. "But, you know, a little lonely when I think of the late nights we used to have. Studying, drinking wine, watching DVDs on weekends -- I still miss that, you know?"
"Don't even tell me!" Tanya said. "Adam..." She looked down at my rapidly cooling coffee. "Can I join you?"
"I was just trying to figure out how to ask you," I said, retaking my seat.
"Trying to figure out!" Tanya laughed and gathered up her trenchcoat, and plopped down graciously somehow in the seat beside mine. She crossed her long legs, which were clad in black tights just as in most of my memories of her, and brushed her long dark hair over her shoulders. "Aren't we old friends? There's no need to figure anything out, you just ask!"
"Well said," I agreed, once I'd gulped down the last of my now-lukewarm coffee. "It's just...it has been a long time, hasn't it? And we never got to know one another all that well, you know?"
"What?!" Tanya said. "I mean, I don't remember you at too many of our parties, I guess, but that wasn't about making friends, that was about going wild, wasn't it? I remember your presentations in class, the only American who did it in French...maybe the only non-French person who did! And that speech about the marketing for electric trains? That was so funny!"
"I'd forgotten all about that," I admitted, feeling a lot more comfortable all at once with the classmate I mostly recalled as a party girl who never seemed to worry about grades. She had a rich family back in Moscow, after all -- not that I'd ever resented her for that, since she was never a snob, but she'd still seemed the exact opposite of little ol' me. Already I was having second thoughts about my long-ago impressions of her. "I'm impressed that you remember it."
"Everybody loved your presentations, Adam. So unpretentious and straightforward -- so American! But in a good way!"
"I didn't expect to hear much of that when I came here," I reflected.