This story features a female protagonist from Corsica (La Corse), a French island off Italy's west coast. As background, Corsica has been under the rule of numerous Mediterranean powers over the centuries, and many Corsicans are ambivalent, at best, towards mainland France. I mention this not because I have an opinion one way or the other about Corsican independence, but because much of the story includes references to France, Corsica, and their complicated relationship. So . . . Vive la France, Vive la Corse, and I hope you enjoy the story.
-----------------------------------
Knock, knock.
Juliette looked up from her dough. The sound had been faint; maybe she had imagined it?
She closed her eyes, but heard only the tick of the wind-up timer on the kitchen table.
Knock, knock.
She groaned aloud and buried her head in her hands, resting her elbows on her chilled marble pastry slab. Maybe her visitor would go away if she didn't answer?
Then again, maybe the knocks had wafted up the staircase from a door to either the first- or second-floor apartment. Her building was one of the city’s ubiquitous triple-deckers, built with one apartment per floor in the 1800s to house the thousands of immigrants flooding the city; the building’s thin floors and walls were testament to the fact that it had been built both quickly and cheaply. Noise always travelled up to her third-floor apartment.
She cracked an eye open and breathed a sigh of relief. She was in the clear.
"Jules? Hey, Jules. It's me."
Juliette snapped her head up. The apartment's door to the main staircase had muffled the voice, but she knew it.
She brushed her flour-covered hands on her apron as she turned away from the counter, but stopped halfway across the kitchen. Her brain, bruised from a long day, must be playing tricks on her. He was in India, not here in Cambridge. It wasn't him. It
couldn't
be him.
"What's up, Jules. Didn't you hear me knock?"
Juliette looked up to see a man with a goofy grin and unruly, curly brown hair standing on the threshold to the kitchen.
"Ephraim? But how? Aren't you . . . weren't you . . . what are you doing here?"
His grin widened. "It's good to see you, too, Jules."
She tensed as Ephraim approached. She'd grown up in a culture where embraces were reserved for lovers and close family; friends said hello with cheek kisses, not with hugs.
While most of her American friends had stopped hugging her long ago, Ephraim Cohen never had. She wasn't sure if his continued insistence on greeting her with a hug was due to his perpetually upbeat personality or because he liked to tease her; if she had to guess she'd say it was some combination of the two, but all she knew was that for as long as they'd known each other, he'd said hello by winking and pulling her in a giant bear hug.
Maybe this isn't so bad after all
, she thought as he wrapped his arms around her.
She pressed her nose against his shoulder and inhaled a long breath, relaxing as familiar scents of spearmint and aftershave filled her nostrils. His hugs, she decided with a smile, were like aromatherapy.
His t-shirt was nice, too, and featured a squishy-soft cotton, the kind that was the result of dozens of washings. She usually left her arms hanging by her sides in protest when he hugged her, but this time she couldn't help but fist her hands in his shirt and play with the material; the fabric felt comforting beneath her fingertips.
She stumbled when his support disappeared; she hadn't expected him to let go so soon.
"The front door was open?" she asked as she tried to regain her composure.
"Yup." He flopped into one of the cramped kitchen's mismatched 1950s vinyl chairs and propped his feet up on the chrome-and-teal Formica table. "Some things never change, do they?" He raised a beer he'd brought with him, toasted her, and took a sip. "Me walking right in because you forgot to lock the front door, you not loving hugs, me sitting at your kitchen table, you making pastries—"
"How do you know I'm making pastries?"
Ephraim raised an eyebrow. "Your hands are covered in flour and you have that ridiculously frilly green apron on over your skirt." He squinted. "And I think you have some sort of paste or dough on your forehead."
"Oh." Juliette grimaced as she rubbed the back of her hand against her face.
"Plus I ran into your roommates a few minutes ago when I arrived. They told me you were up here, baking."
"They're still downstairs in the second-floor apartment?"
"I think it's safe to say your roommates will remain downstairs until well past midnight," Ephraim said with a laugh.
She furrowed her brows. "Why?"
"Come on, Jules. You live in the third-floor apartment of an old and barely-insulated triple-decker, you have no air conditioning, it was over one-hundred degrees today, and you have the oven on."
"Oh." She bit her lip; had she really driven her roommates out? "If it's too hot for you—"
"Luckily for you, Ms. Arrighi, I just spent months without air conditioning in India. I can take your heat."
Juliette jumped as the wind-up timer she'd placed on the table buzzed; it was time to remove one batch of pastries and start baking another.
She smiled in satisfaction as she pulled her piping hot results from the oven. The dough was a crackly golden-brown, and she'd made the almond filling earlier in the evening. The pastries would be delicious after a light sprinkling of powdered sugar.
"So how's life, Jules? What've I missed since your last letter? How was your day?"
His cheerful tone reminded her that her day had been anything but golden-brown and delicious.
"Why are you here, Eph?"
"Ah, there's my blunt little Frenchie. I've missed that, you know; politeness is overrated."
"Sorry." She took a deep breath to compose herself. "It's nice to see you, but I'm confused. I thought you were supposed to be in India through October." She swallowed her rebuttal to the "Frenchie" dig as penance for her rudeness.
"Ah, that." He picked at the bottle's label, which was damp with condensation. "The funny thing about spending time in jungles is that you tend to get jungle diseases."
"You were sick? With what?"