Paris... ah Paris... he had been in love with the city since that magical day in April fifty five years before when he had stepped off the train at the Gare du Nord and walked out of the station into the bustle of the busy streets of the capital. He was a country born and had lived all his life on his father's farm and his mother had decided that now he was sixteen it was time he saw something of the wider world. He was a quiet and sensitive boy who preferred to spend his days with his head buried in a book, or sketching in the countryside. As the youngest of five children, he was his mother's favourite and she had arranged with her sister that he should spend the Easter holidays with her family in their apartment in the Paris suburbs.
His aunt met him off the train and as there was time to kill before they needed to catch their suburban train from the Gare Saint-Lazare she took him to a café on the corner of the Rue Saint Lazare and the Rue d'Amsterdam. It was one of the first warm days after a winter that had been one of the coldest in living memory and they drank fresh pressed citron while he gazed in wide-eyed wonder at the busy traffic and the smartly dressed passers by hurrying about their business. To this day the sound of car horns took him back to that moment and his first experience of metropolitan life, so different from the sleepy streets of his home village.
He had three cousins. The eldest Jean was eighteen years old and in the Army doing his National Service, and was only home at weekends. The other two were both girls, Jacqueline who was seventeen and Geneviève who was two years younger than him. The only girls he had known until then were typical country lasses who dressed simply in plain smocks and wore thick serge stockings, and whose conversation was mainly about dolls and babies. In contrast his cousins seemed much older and so sophisticated, especially Jacqueline who wore smart dresses and nylon stockings, and even makeup, which he found shocking at first.
His uncle worked for SNCF, the national French Railway company , and the family all travelled free in the trains. Over the next two weeks the girls showed him all the sights of the city, and he marvelled at the majestic buildings on the boulevards and the grand palaces, monuments and churches. They climbed the hill of Montmartre to take in the panoramic view of the city from the top of the Eglise de Sacré-Coure, had coffee at one of the many cafés in the Place du Tertre, and strolled past the booths of the street artists, successors of the Impressionists who had lived and worked there in the last years of the nineteenth century. One memorable evening the whole family walked arm in arm along the Champs Elysées past the brightly lit shops until they stood at the tomb of the unknown soldier beneath the arch of the flood-lit splendour of the Arc de Triomphe. The highlight for him however, had been the day they spent at the Musée du Louvre and, best of all, the Museum of the Impressionists in the Tuileries.
It is hardly surprising that as well as the city, he also fell in love with Jacqueline. She treated him as an adult and flirted with him a little, calling him her petit chou-fleur, and one memorable day when they were walking hand in hand in the gardens of the Petit Trianon at Versailles he managed to steal a shy kiss while his aunt wasn't looking. Years later he would say that his three week holiday had changed the whole course of his life and turned him from a gawky and naive boy into a budding adult. Until then he had given little thought to his future, but on his return home he was quite clear that he did not want to be a farmer like his father and live the rest of his life in the country. He had three older brothers, the eldest of whom was at agricultural college and would inherit the farm anyway, one who wished to join the Army, and one who wished to become a priest. After much meditation he realised that most of all he would like to study art at the Sorbonne in Paris, which is what he eventually did, although there was some resistance from his father at first.
That summer he was invited by his aunt and uncle to join them in the South of France for the holidays. They owned an ancient stone villa on the outskirts of a village a few miles from Vence to which they escaped from the oppressive heat of the city for the last two weeks of July and the whole of August — all except his uncle who was only permitted two weeks holiday. For a country boy even the rail journey from Paris to Cannes was exciting and in the taxi from the station he could hardly stop talking.
Over the course of the following weeks his flirtation with Jaqueline deepened into something much more serious. They would take long cycle rides on the quiet country roads carrying their simple lunch of bread and cheese wrapped up in a brightly coloured cloth in a pannier suspended from the handlebars. He had started experimenting with watercolour painting and they would frequently stop for him to sketch something that caught his eye. The quality of the light fascinated him as it had so many artists in the past, and he began to notice how it illuminated the skin of Jacqueline's face as she lay stretched out in the sun while he painted. However, it was only after a visit to see the paintings in the Musée Matisse in Nice that he summoned the courage to ask her to sit for him.
At first he painted her fully dressed, but one afternoon she took the initiative and suggested that if he was going to become a real artist he should really paint her in the nude. He tried very hard to put lustful thoughts out of his mind while she was sitting naked in a wall or reclining in the grass just a few metres in front of him, concentrating on trying to capture the simplicity that had so entranced him in the nude paintings by Matisse in the museum. One hot afternoon however, his feelings of desire overcame his resistance and he reached out to touch her breast. The softness of her warm flesh aroused him further and before long they were lying in the grass kissing passionately and shyly caressing every inch of each other's naked bodies.
They both lost their virginity one memorable afternoon in late August, and although their first coupling was tentative, and also painful for her when he breached her maidenhead, they soon discovered the ecstatic joy of mutually overwhelming orgasms. For the last few days of their holiday they spent many hot afternoons in delighted exploration of the many exquisite ways they could give each other pleasure. Neither knew much about contraception and didn't give a thought to the possibility that Jacqueline might get pregnant, lost as they were in the first flush of sexual love, and in hindsight they were extremely lucky that she didn't conceive.
Far too soon their summer idyll came to an end and at the beginning of September they parted tearfully at the Gare du Nord, promising to be eternally faithful to each other. Over the autumn and winter that followed they wrote long sentimental love letters to each other, but as is the way with teenage love affairs, their ardour slowly cooled in the absence of propinquity. The following summer Jacqueline completed her baccalauréat générale and successfully applied to enter teacher training college at the beginning of the September term. Meanwhile, having finally persuaded his parents to allow him to study art, he followed the advice of his headmaster and spent the first part of the summer in the Louvre copying the works of the old masters. He stayed in the Paris apartment with his uncle who was pleased to have his company while the rest of the family were, as usual, at their home in the South of France.
ooOoo
It had been an uncomfortably hot day, unusually so even for this summer, and there was not even a breath of wind to stir the dust. It was nearly eight in the evening, but the blast of air from the subway entrances was still as scorching as a dragon's breath and he was reluctant to join the masses on the Metro for the short journey to his apartment in the sixteenth arrondissement overlooking the Bois de Boulogne. It would be best to wait until it was cooler he thought and he took another sip of wine from his glass. He decided he would prefer to eat here — he had been told that the steak was very good — even though there would be a meal in the fridge prepared by his daughter for him to heat up when he got home in the evening. Never mind, it would still be okay for another day and he was sure she would understand — she was used to his whims by now. However he'd better phone her anyway so that she wouldn't be concerned — she did worry — and he keyed her number into his mobile.