Ellen Sussman - French Lessons

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A single day in Paris changes the lives of three Americans as they each set off to explore the city with a French tutor, learning about language, love, and loss as their lives intersect in surprising ways.
Josie, Riley, and Jeremy have come to the City of Light for different reasons: Josie, a young high school teacher, arrives in hopes of healing a broken heart. Riley, a spirited but lonely expat housewife, struggles to feel connected to her husband and her new country. And Jeremy, the reserved husband of a renowned actress, is accompanying his wife on a film shoot, yet he feels distant from her world.
As they meet with their tutors – Josie with Nico, a sensitive poet; Riley with Phillippe, a shameless flirt; and Jeremy with the consummately beautiful Chantal – each succumbs to unexpected passion and unpredictable adventures. Yet as they traverse Paris's grand boulevards and intimate, winding streets, they uncover surprising secrets about one another – and come to understand long-buried truths about themselves.

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“Come here,” Simon said, and she stepped into his arms, silencing both of them.

Josie began to pull him toward the bed, but he resisted, smiling mischievously at her.

“We’re not going to bed,” he said. “Yet.”

“I can’t wait,” she told him. “I’ve already buried my face in your neck.”

She loved the smell of him, the soapy, musky Simon smell of him, and had told him that she could live off it, that if she could breathe him in every day she’d never need food again. “You’re losing weight,” he had told her. “Then let me breathe in more of you,” she had said.

“You have to wait. I rented a rowboat.”

“It’s freezing!”

“I have blankets. I brought a thermos of hot buttered rum.”

“You’ve done this before.”

“Stop.”

It was the other taboo, the other locked door. She didn’t believe that she was his first lover. He was too good at it. He knew how to have an affair and she was a novice, a child in an adult’s world.

“I’ve never loved like this,” he would insist.

“How have you loved?” she’d ask him. “Tell me.”

“No. Stop. Believe me.”

She never believed him.

Now he took her hand and led her out of the cabin. He retrieved a duffel bag from the trunk of his car and threw it over one shoulder. They walked toward the lake, which was shrouded in fog, a cold, damp fog that chilled her despite the down jacket she wore. The sky was bleached gray and the lake was the color of iron. A rowboat bobbed on the water at the end of the dock, candy-apple red, astonishing against all that muted color.

“The oars are in the boat!” a voice called, and they both turned toward the office. The old lady stood there, arms locked across her heavy chest, squinting at them.

“Thanks!” Simon called back.

The woman kept her eyes on Josie. The look was hateful, as if Josie had stolen all the good men from all the older women in the world.

“She scares me,” Josie whispered to Simon.

“Ignore her,” he said.

“I can’t. I can feel her watching me.”

But the door slammed behind them and the old crone was gone.

Simon held the side of the boat and Josie climbed in. He placed the duffel bag on the floor of the boat. Then he stepped in and took the oars.

“Grab some blankets,” he told her. “Stay warm while I row.”

She pulled out a Hudson Bay blanket, a couple of fur hats, and the thermos. She placed a hat on Simon’s head and leaned over to kiss him.

“Put yours on,” he said.

She pulled the hat low on her head and was immediately warmer. She took a swig from the thermos and the sweet, thick liquid spread through her body.

She passed it to Simon, who paused mid-row, drank, smiled, and then rowed again. After a few moments, the world around them vanished and they were engulfed by fog. The colors around them bled into one another-sky, fog, water-and only the red outline of the boat held them in, containing them.

Simon stopped rowing. At first the boat moved, rocking slightly, and then it slowed and finally stopped. They were silent and the only sound they could hear was the call of a crow somewhere far away.

“I want to make love to you here,” Simon said, his voice soft in the hushed air.

“It’s so cold.”

“We’ll bury ourselves in blankets.”

“We’ll tip over and drown and no one will ever find us.”

“Then we better not thrash around.”

“Impossible.”

“We’ll do our best.”

They drank more hot rum and they cocooned themselves in blankets on the bottom of the rowboat. They shimmied out of their clothes and the boat rocked. Icy water splashed against the side of the boat. They giggled and passed the thermos back and forth and held each other under the blankets, their bodies naked and electric. Josie was both cold and warm, scared and thrilled, energized and terrified of moving. When Simon ran his hand along her thigh, her hip, her stomach, she felt more than she had ever felt before-as if her nerve endings were jagged, exposed. His breath on her neck, his mouth on her breast, his hand between her legs, and the need to keep still, to restrain herself, as if any movement would plunge her into the black lake, made her feel as though she were caught in the whirling white fog around her.

When he slid inside her they kept very still and she could feel his deep breath; she could see his face looking down at her, his eyes holding hers.

“Don’t move,” he said, smiling.

When she came she felt her body exploding within, as if containing herself created something deeper, bigger, more seismic. And then he came, and kept coming, and the boat rocked and the water held them and the fog held them and the heavy sky held them.

He eased himself down and she felt his weight and the heat of his body.

Suddenly there was a cacophony of sound as if the birds had discovered them there, in the middle of their lake. The caws and screeches and trills were deafening, and though they turned their heads skyward, they couldn’t see a thing.

“It’s us making all that noise,” Simon said. “Echoes from orgasms.”

“That’s just what it sounds like inside me,” Josie said.

“I know,” Simon told her. “I just didn’t know everyone else could hear.”

It was later, back in the cabin, when they had taken a long, hot bath and finished the thermos of hot rum, that Simon said, “I love you,” and Josie said, “Don’t leave me.”

Nico looks up at the sky. Clouds linger, and somewhere in the far distance they can hear the grumble of thunder.

“We’re safe,” he says. “For a short while. Shall we try to walk to the train station?”

“We could walk to Provence,” Josie says.

“I’ve never been a patient man,” Nico says. “Put me on the fast train.”

“Then let’s walk to the train station.”

She doesn’t know if he is serious. She doesn’t know him. She doesn’t know herself these days, nor does she understand much of the ways of the world. So why not walk to the train station?

“What about my shoes?” she asks. Her red high-tops are wet from the rain and her feet are damp and cold.

“We’ll buy them in Provence. We have many things to accomplish today. Make your vowels more precise. Run away together.”

“I don’t even know if you speak English,” Josie says.

“Does it matter?”

“Not at all. In fact, don’t tell me. We need one secret between us.”

“Do you have a secret?”

“I’ve told you all my secrets,” she says.

“Tell me about the book you read when you were young. The book that made you want to come to Paris.”

“Can we sit down? My stomach-”

“Are you going to be sick?”

“I don’t know. We started out too quickly. I’m not used to eating.”

Nico leads her across the street and into a building. She’s confused. Is he looking for a bathroom? It’s a museum-Rodin-but she doesn’t want to walk through a museum right now. He buys two tickets for the gardens, one euro each, and leads her outside again, into a lovely open space. There’s a long expanse of lush, verdant lawn and a wide basin at the far end. She’s stunned. Right here in the middle of Paris they’ve been transported to Eden.

Nico walks with her slowly across the long lawn and they find two lounge chairs at the water’s edge. Josie sits and sighs; her stomach roils.

“Shall I get you some water?”

Josie glances off to the right-there’s a café in the garden.

“No. Sit with me a moment.”

He sits beside her.

“Perhaps the baby doesn’t love wine after all.”

“Impossible,” Nico says.

She glances at him; he looks worried.

“I’m fine,” she assures him. “I’m a little tired. My body isn’t used to food.”

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