Evie
When I’d let myself in last night, there’d been no trace of the wake. The apartment was spotlessly clean and dauntingly quiet. After taking a bite of the cold meat Marie-Thérèse had left in the kitchen, I flung myself straight to bed, barely pausing long enough to pull off my clothes. I’d wanted nothing more than to let sleep blot out all the events – and discouragements – of my long day. Especially that last conversation.
Even now, after a heavy sleep, with coffee and a croissant beside me, Marie-Thérèse audible in the kitchen, clattering pans and the sun pouring through the long windows, I didn’t really feel better.
It was futile to try and make sense of Grandmother’s note, I could see. I’d never find her Zhenya.
The taxi driver had been right.
The other people I’d come across here who understood Russian, and whom I’d thought might help, weren’t quite the noble souls I’d expected from Tolstoy. Some were turning out to be full of flattery and charm, but too clearly on the make to trust (the artists and Plevitskaya). Some had been plain rude (that woman last night, Madame Sabline). The officers downstairs seemed far too busy with their mysterious military planning.
The only person I’d met who, every instinct had told me, would be trustworthy, had been the driver last night, Jean. There’d been something in the sadness of his eyes that I’d felt at one with as soon as we’d started talking.
While he’d been talking so articulately about exile, I’d felt I almost understood his predicament. I’d been wondering, too, whether Grandmother had been attracted to people living with the sense of loss he was describing because of the private sadness I knew she must also have felt at being cast out from her past world? I’d even been thinking that maybe I’d one day be able to ask him what he thought of that idea, and that maybe it was something he’d understand. And then, suddenly, all the warmth of the conversation had switched off, just like that.
Of course, it was only because it had been late, and there’d been so many other disappointments in the day, that I’d felt tears springing as he’d driven off. But still, that sudden coldness had hurt.
Hughie would probably have been able to explain it away and make me laugh, I thought, and for a moment, as I recalled his voice, saying of a Russian that he ‘couldn’t stop telling us all the usual stories: about how grand he’d been before the Revolution, and how tragic his life had become since’, I felt just a little nostalgic for home. Yes, Hughie would have said something amusing about the Slav soul that would have taken the sting out of last night.
But, as it was, I was on my own. And when I called to mind the hostility I’d last seen in the driver’s surprisingly beautiful pale-blue eyes, the closed look on his chiselled face and the harshness that seemed to have come into his voice in those last few minutes, I couldn’t help, even in this morning’s sunlight, but feel downcast.
I looked around the room I’d woken up in, and suddenly I didn’t know what I was doing here, camping in this stranger’s life, halfway across the world from everything I’d ever known.
Pull yourself together, I told myself, trying to be robust, but it made no difference to the cold, lost feeling inside.
I tried to reason with myself. I had somewhere to live, money to live on, and I was in the City of Lights. Even if I accepted that none of the things I’d imagined doing here were going to happen – that Grandmother was gone and with her the flickering idea I’d had that, through getting to know her, I would learn something important about myself – it would be insane to walk out on Paris without even trying to have an adventure. Imagine what Eliza and Winthrop and Bill would say. Surely I could just substitute another kind of adventure for the one I’d wanted? Surely I could find the other Americans here, for a few days or weeks at least? I could go to Shakespeare and Company, the bookshop, where all the young writers went hoping to be recognized. I could join some of the young men writing modern books in very short sentences. Or I could go and pay homage to the weirder young Frenchmen writing surreal poetry. Hadn’t I been thinking I might try my own hand at writing, just a few days ago on the train on the way here? And even if I couldn’t do any of this, surely, surely I could just go dancing in nightclubs and have affairs? There were plenty of girls here doing that.
I sighed. I didn’t have the remotest interest in doing any of those things. The kind of meaning I’d wanted to find on this journey had been so different. But, if I didn’t want to do those things, and the thing I did want to do was, as Jean had so brutally said, impossible, well, then …
When I got out of bed, I thought gloomily, it might make sense to pack. Then I should tell Marie-Thérèse I’d go home soon … And then I should go to the shipping office and get myself a ticket.
All that I could imagine. It was the part that came next that I couldn’t bear even to contemplate: sliding back through the front door into my old life.
Wrapping a robe around my nightdress, I went into Grandmother’s room. It was empty of her presence now to the extent that the bed had been stripped, the drapes and windows and shutters opened, and the sickroom accoutrements taken away from the bedside tables. But it still had a clutter of her belongings on the surface of the other furniture: the scent I’d borrowed yesterday, a few bracelets. Marie-Thérèse, I saw, had put some crates neatly in a corner. Grandmother’s clothes would need clearing.
I didn’t want to think about that. I turned my eyes away from the boxes to the scatter of small things above the fireplace that suggested she might reappear at any moment. Next to a small string of amber beads (Heavens, were they the huge ones I remembered her wearing, long ago?) was, I saw, a cracked, faded photograph propped against the glass. It showed two young people in a rowing boat, on a river, with more people on the shore to one side in the background. It was summer. A corner of a picnic table was visible. There must have been someone on the river bank – one of the picnickers – with a camera and a tripod.
I couldn’t help but be fascinated. I took it over to the window.
My sense of being utterly alone lifted a little when I recognized, in the young black-haired woman with the mutton-chop sleeves sitting in the boat, the same younger version of Grandmother I’d already seen pictured in that photograph in Mother’s room. The girl was in profile this time, and her looped-up hair was messier and wispier than in that other studio shot, as if she’d got the breeze in it. She looked happier, too, as if she’d spent the whole day smiling. I smiled too, to see that familiar face; for a moment, it felt almost as though I were greeting an old friend.
Then I turned to the young man opposite her, with oars in his hand. I was expecting to see the same thin, dark, related-looking person who’d been in Mother’s picture – my grandfather, Eddie. But, however long I looked, I couldn’t make this image resolve itself into that remembered one.
This young man was tall and thin, too, but much fairer, with thick nearly blond hair under a peaked military cap and a tunic buttoned up to the neck. The uniform was unfamiliar. It didn’t look like anything from the American military that I’d ever seen. The young man’s face remained equally, stubbornly unfamiliar, however much I stared. Still, I liked the look of him; he had the same carefree air as Grandmother. Who was he? Perhaps a boatman, or her driver – a servant? (Though that uniform looked very smart for a servant.) I turned the picture over. There was a Russian scribble on the back. Nothing more.
My misery returned. I’d never know. I should leave all this alone, I told myself, not quite understanding the darkness that settled on me as I put the picture back. But it was pointless wondering, and wishing I understood and could piece together the bits of Grandmother’s past. It was gone: dust to dust, ashes to ashes. I was only torturing myself by trying.
And then, through the window, I saw a taxi draw up at the kerb outside, and the same driver – the Russian Jean – get out, with swift, beautiful economy of movement. He held open the door. He was smiling tenderly at his client. He drew out the same elderly gentleman I’d seen on my first evening here, the one with the splendid military uniform.
As I stared – well, it didn’t matter if I stared now, did it? They couldn’t see me up here – the memory of that first evening filled my mind. It must have been Jean who’d given me that furious scowl, but been so affectionate to his customer, out in the street. And the portly man with whiskers must be his father, General Miller.
Then something else struck me. I hadn’t recognized the father yesterday without that eye-catching jacket, festooned with gold frogging, and with his hair damped and combed into submission. But now I was looking at him again, it was obvious. It had been General Miller who’d come, in shirtsleeves, into the church at the beginning of Grandmother’s funeral, and whom I’d seen, later on, sitting by her grave. It had almost certainly been General Miller who’d left that romantic scatter of carnations, too.
General Miller, whose office was only a few feet from Grandmother’s apartment; General Miller, whose name, Jean had told me last night, was Yevgeny …
The world shifted a little, as pieces of the puzzle seemed to lock into shape.
All at once, I thought I could see, in this slightly unlikely assemblage of corpulence and elaborate facial hair and bulk and Ruritanian frogging, the man who not only brought out the gentle side of the moody son I’d so warmed to last night, but whom my chic grandmother must have known, and maybe loved, and wanted me to make amends to.
Suddenly I was full of hope again. I couldn’t stop myself. I was already running downstairs.
‘You’re General Miller, aren’t you?’ I said quickly, emerging through the front door into the sunshine. He looked uncertain, but I took his hands in mine and rushed on, ‘I recognize you from yesterday, because didn’t I see you at my grandmother’s funeral? Thank you, if so. Thank you for coming.’ He bowed his head.
‘And thank you for the flowers, too, because it was you who left those, wasn’t it? The carnations …’ I said, but I was already faltering over the last words of my burst of bravery, because I didn’t understand his reaction. He wasn’t hugging me, or bursting into tears, or starting to tell me how he’d loved Grandmother, or any of the novelish things I’d been half hoping for from a Russian gentleman – reactions that would have shown Jean, who was standing so close but whom I couldn’t bring myself to look at, that I wasn’t just on a fool’s errand.
Instead, before the General had lowered his head in that bow, he’d looked terribly embarrassed. He’d shut his eyes, too, and they were still shut now. His head was still down, as if fearing what he’d see if they were open.
What had I done wrong? Perhaps the Russian gentry didn’t come hurtling out of doors, blurting. Perhaps I should have waited to thank him till after we’d drunk a glass of tea from a samovar, and sat in silence together under an icon.
A bit bewildered, I let go of his hands.
As I stepped back, humiliatingly aware of how wrong my attempt to start up a conversation with the General had gone, I couldn’t help but see Jean’s face.
He looked furious. Again. Ignoring me, just as I’d ignored him, he turned towards his father and began questioning him in Russian. I couldn’t understand a word, of course, but I could see the old man flinch and hang his head. ‘Stydno!’ I heard Jean mutter. He shook his head before, still without looking at me, he ushered his father inside.
And then the door clicked shut, and I was alone on the sunny pavement.