Author's note:
I have used some French in this story and there may be a couple of English words unfamiliar to the US contingent of readers. Should you be confused by any content, please check the end of the story for some explanatory notes and translations.
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"Seriously, Val, you need to get a hobby or something. It can't be good for you spending so much time alone."
Valerie looked sideways at her friend and smiled.
"I don't mind spending time by myself, you know that."
"I know you
say
you don't mind, but I still think it can't be good for you."
Like a spy resisting interrogation, Lucinda would stubbornly repeat her point over and over until the opposing party cracked and subjected themselves to her will. Valerie had known her long enough to realise this and accepted that it was just part of Lucinda's individual charm.
"Alright, if it means so very much to you, then I will start thinking about a hobby."
Lucinda subsided happily and Valerie smiled gently in the knowledge that she had only promised to think about it and not to act upon it - not yet, at least.
Valerie knew Lucinda had been worrying about her for a while now, but she had had the sensitivity not to push for any confidences. A divorce was a hard thing to recover from, almost as hard as a bereavement in some ways. You were, after all, grieving the death of a precious living thing: the relationship you had shared, especially one of nearly twenty years. No wonder she was still a bit shaky over a year later.
Valerie sipped her tea and mused over the troubles of the past year as Lucinda chatted away happily about some charity event she was organising. Valerie had long ago learned how to detect the tone of Lucinda's voice that meant she required some kind of response; the rest of the time Valerie tuned out a little bit, as a way of preserving her sanity in the face of so much relentless chatter.
"So you will come, won't you? If you won't commit to starting a hobby you must at
least
let me drag you out of the house sometimes!"
Valerie tuned back into the conversation in confusion and some consternation. She had been nodding away quietly while Lucie talked and now she had the distinct impression that she had unwittingly agreed to do something for her friend's charity event.
Last time she had been volunteered by Lucinda she had ended up in charge of the crèche, every moment of which was a noisy, bad-smelling nightmare that had haunted her for weeks afterwards.
"Where will you be dragging me to?" She ran a hand wearily over the top of her head, smoothing the loose strands of hair back into place. Her faint accent became more noticeable when tired, or under pressure, and she sounded more French now than usual.
Lucinda quirked her eyebrow slightly at the re-emergence of Valerie's Gallic heritage. The intimate knowledge of friendship went both ways and she knew her friend was feeling put upon.
"I just told you!" Her protest met with a blank look so she good-humouredly explained all over again. "We've organised a concert next Thursday. A young French pianist will be playing in the first half -- romance pieces, obviously -- then in the second half we're going to be having a medley by St. Peter's School Orchestra and choir."
"And you just want me to go along?" Valerie's tone of voice was tentative and wondering -- it seemed as if she was to be let off lightly for the cause.
"Well, yes. But we also wondered if you wouldn't mind liaising with the pianist. One of the board members knew him and sorted all that out, but they're not going to be available on the day and we're not sure whether the pianist speaks very good English..."
"...and you want me to translate if there is a problem?" Valerie interrupted with relief. A little translation would be easy after the emotional torments of the crèche.
"That's it exactly! Then you can, of course, stay on for the concert afterwards. You're fond of classical music, aren't you? Monsieur Vincente is supposed to be
wonderful
-- very emotive. Perfect for the occasion."
"Alright alright! I will be there! Just let me get my diary and you can give me the details."
Lucinda dictated exactly where Valerie had to be and at what time, lecturing her sternly about turning up on time and even spelling out what kind of clothes she was expected to wear.
"All the volunteers are wearing black, but with a pink or red top. You have a black suit don't you? Well wear that with your pink silk blouse under it -- that will be perfect!"
"Why do I have to wear pink?"
"Well, it's partly because we're trying to raise money for Breast Cancer Awareness and partly..." she hesitated and looked calculatingly at Valerie as if assessing her state of mind before speaking. "Partly because it's Valentine's day."
Valerie looked sternly at her friend, but restrained herself from saying anything. She couldn't understand this strange obsession with dedicating one particular day to romance. Romance, if one were going to indulge at all, should surely be something one does every day.
She couldn't think of Valentine's Day without remembering the increasingly limp and pathetic garage flowers Martin had brought home each year. It made her shudder. Over a year on and she still felt embarrassed and ashamed that it had taken her so long to realise that he was making a fool of her.
Lucinda knew that she found the whole idea of Valentine's Day distasteful, which was probably why she had tried to downplay its role in the proceedings. Oh well, Valerie thought, at least they were exploiting it in a good cause.
"Don't worry Lucie," she laid her cool hand over her friend's warm one as it lay on the table, "I will be there. Wearing pink." She rolled her eyes and smiled and the two women broke into laughter.
* * * * *
Valerie laid down her brush and took off her glasses to rub her eyes. That was one of the major downsides of getting older -- needing glasses to do her painting. She'd started having trouble just before Martin left: shortly afterwards she'd succumbed and taken herself to the optrician.
Happy Birthday to me, she had thought bitterly, still in the 'anger' stage of grieving. Turning forty-one had seemed a far harder task than the commonly-accepted milestone of the big four-oh the previous year. Needing glasses had been the final straw.
The amount of concentration needed to do her fine watercolour paintings and drawings had weakened her eyes and rendered glasses necessary for all of her work. Every time she sat down to earn some money, so much more desperately needed now that Martin had left her, she suffered the reminder of her increasing age as she settled the glasses on her nose.
"I look like an old crone," she had said to her reflection many a time, turning away in disgust and swearing in French. She had lived in England for more than half her lifetime, but it was still more satisfying to curse in her native language, using the words her mother had so disapproved of.
She looked down at her hands now. The fingers of her right hand were all stained pink and black with paint and ink, and opaque splashes of masking fluid were spattered obscenely over the back of her left hand. A tight, itchy feeling on her cheek suggested that the fluid may have hit her face too, and she knew from experience that her lips, and probably some other parts of her face, would be decorated with dark black ink and the paint-colour du jour.
Pink
, she thought,
at least I'll fit the colour theme...
She smiled wryly, but whatever her personal desires -- to stay here and finish the illustration she was working on so she could get ahead of the deadline set by the publishers -- she knew the time of reckoning had come. She only had an hour before she had to leave and a shower was definitely called for.
"I must stop putting my pen in my mouth," she told herself as she looked in the mirror twenty minutes later to discover a strange-looking wild woman with wet hair, white skin and pale grey lips.
She chewed frantically on her lips as she dried, dressed and styled her hair into a neat chignon. Non! Still grey, only now they were sore, too.
"Merde!"
She turned in desperation to her makeup bag. She rarely wore makeup, considering it a waste of time when she usually ended up splattered with the tools of her trade. Riffling through it hurriedly, she found a deep crimson lipstick in a shiny gold tube: a long-forgotten gift from the dictatorial Lucinda.
She applied it carefully, a little nervous of the vivid shade. She blotted her lips together and looked at herself critically in the mirror. It had hidden the grey completely and even looked quite nice. The rest of her face looked a little pale in comparison, though.
"In for a pound, in for a penny," she muttered, the aphorism coming out slightly twisted as they sometimes did, especially when she wasn't concentrating particularly.
Discovering more discarded presents from her friends she rubbed blusher into her cheeks, covered the shadows under her eyes and even brushed some mascara onto her long lashes. She drew the line at eyeliner, however. Poking herself in the eye with a mascara wand was painful enough without adding a pencil to it.
When she had finished she barely recognised herself. She looked... glamorous.
"Comme ma mère," she said, smiling sadly.