So it's quite possible I had a hundred glasses of wine last night at Maud's open house.
"How many people are coming tonight?" I asked Maud when I arrived.
Maud has a delicious way of speaking. Her accent is very thick and most of what she says is in metaphor.
She also sells secrets. Elegantly writing something she's never told anyone on a piece of paper, tying it with gold thread and selling it to a stranger. She says she might write a novel, just of secrets. "It's perfume from my life," she says.
I pull out my notebook and write down what she says. "You are a spy," she tells me. I don't contradict her.
Across from me sits Mélanie, an actress I met last time I was in Paris. Then, she had just broken up with a boyfriend and said she'd like to try a woman next. Now it appears she got her wish. She shares a seat with her lover, a stunning, older woman with a dragon tattoo winding down her arm. Mélanie is dressed like she just walked off the set of Flashdance.
"Esmeralda is a bit of a dandy," a girl named Michelle would tell me later. "She has a persona...it's quite powerful. You should dance with her. Then you'll see."
Esmeralda is seldom seen without Gilles, a brooding straight man, who works for a poker magazine and travels to casinos all over the world. He sits in the corner, saying little for most of the night. He is the first to leave.
I'm already drunk off the bad champagne and red wine when Michelle pours me a glass of thick, sweet white. The too-sweet wine mixes suddenly with five hours swimming through the blue haze of ten chain-smoking Parisians in a 200-square-foot apartment and sends me careening me over the edge. I say my goodbyes and stagger out into the piss-scented air of the street.
1 comment:
Dude. Are you not amazed by the fact that you asked for a house party, and the universe not only showed UP, but fully and seriously delivered.
The line is obviously open. Make sure you keep the dreams and wishes flowing. xo, shea
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