Authors: Gayle Forman
“Do you want it?” Willem asks.
My mom would go nuts if I brought this home, and she’d never have to know where it
was from. The woman winds the clock, to show me that it works, but hearing it tick,
I’m reminded of what Jacques said, about time being fluid. I look out at the Seine,
which is now glowing pink, reflecting the color of the clouds that are rolling in.
I put the clock back in the box.
We head up off the embankment, into the twisty, narrow warren of streets that Willem
tells me is the Latin Quarter, where students live. It’s different over here. Not
so many grand avenues and boulevards but alley-like lanes, barely wide enough for
even the tiny, space-age two-person Smart Cars that are zooming around everywhere.
Tiny churches, hidden corners, alleys. It’s a whole different Paris. And just as dazzling.
“Shall we take a drink?” Willem asks.
I nod.
We cross onto a crowded avenue, full of cinemas, outdoor cafés, all of them packed,
and also a handful of small hotels, not too expensive judging by the prices advertised
on the sandwich boards. Most of the signs say
complet
, which I’m pretty sure means full, but some don’t, and some of the rooms we might
be able to afford if I were to exchange the last of my cash, about forty pounds.
I haven’t been able to broach tonight with Willem. Where we’re staying. He hasn’t
seemed too worried about it, which has me worried our fallback is Céline. We pass
an exchange bureau. I tell Willem I want to change some money.
“
I
have some money left,” he says. “And you just paid for the boat.”
“But I don’t have a single euro on me. What if I wanted to, I don’t know, buy a postcard?”
I stop to spin a postcard caddy. “Also, there’s drinks and dinner, and we’ll need
somewhere for, for . . .” I trail off before getting the courage to finish. “Tonight.”
I feel my neck go warm.
The word seems to hang out there as I wait for Willem’s response, some clue of what
he’s thinking. But he’s looking over at one of the cafés, where a group of girls at
a table seem to be waving at him. Finally, he turns back to me. “Sorry?” he asks.
The girls are still waving. One of them is beckoning him over. “Do you know them?”
He looks over at the café, then back at me, then back at the restaurant. “Can you
wait here for a minute?”
My stomach sinks. “Yeah, no problem.”
He leaves me at a souvenir shop, where I spin the postcard caddy and spy. When he
gets to the group of girls, they do the cheek-cheek-kiss-kiss thing—three times, though,
instead of twice like he did with Céline. He sits down next to the girl who was gesturing
to him. It’s clear they know each other; she keeps putting her hand on his knee. He
throws darting glances in my direction, and I wait for him to wave me over, but he
doesn’t, and after an endless five minutes, the touchy girl writes something down
on a bit of paper and gives it to him. He jams the slip deep into his pocket. Then
he stands up, and they do another cheek-cheek-kiss-kiss thing, and he strides back
to me, where I am feigning a deep interest in a Toulouse-Lautrec postcard.
“Let’s go,” he says as he grabs my elbow.
“Friends of yours?” I ask, jogging to keep up with his long stride.
“No.”
“But you know them?”
“I knew them once.”
“And you just randomly bumped into them?”
He spins toward me, and for the first time today, he’s annoyed. “It’s Paris, Lulu,
the most touristy city in the world. It happens.”
Accidents,
I think. But I feel jealous, possessive, not just over the girl—whose number, I suspect,
he now has in his hip pocket if he hasn’t already transcribed it into his little black
book—but over accidents. Because today it has felt like accidents belonged solely
to us.
Willem softens. “They’re just people I knew from Holland.”
Something in Willem’s whole demeanor has changed, like a lamp whose bulb is dimming
before it burns out. And it’s then that I notice the final and defeated way he says
Holland
, and it makes me realize that all day along, not once has he said he was going
home
. And then another thought hits me. Today, he was meant to be going home—or to Holland,
where he’s from—for the first time in two years.
In three days, I will go home, and there will be a crowd at the airport. Back at my
house, there will be a welcome-home banner, a celebratory dinner I’ll probably be
too jet-lagged to eat. After only three weeks on a tour in which I was led around
like a show pony, I’ll be given a hero’s welcome.
He’s been gone
two years
. Why isn’t Willem getting a hero’s welcome? Is anyone even waiting for him?
“When we were at Céline’s,” I ask him now, “did you call anyone?”
He turns to me, his dark eyes furrowed and confused. “No. Why?”
Because how does anyone know you’re delayed? Because how do they know to postpone
your hero’s welcome until tomorrow?
“Isn’t anyone expecting you?” I ask.
Something happens to his face, for just the slightest of moments, a slip of his jaunty
mask, which I hadn’t realized was a mask until I see how tired, how uncertain—how
much like me—he looks underneath it.
“You know what I think?” Willem asks.
“What?”
“We should get lost.”
“I’ve got news for you, but I’ve been lost all day.”
“This is different. This is getting on purpose lost. It’s something I do when I first
come to a new city. I’ll go into the metro or on a tramline and randomly pick a stop
and go.”
I can see what he’s doing. He’s changing the scenery, changing the subject. And I
get that, in some way, he needs to do this. So I let him. “Like traveler’s pin the
tail on the donkey?” I ask.
Willem gives me a quizzical look. His English is so good that I forget not everything
computes.
“Is this about accidents?” I ask.
He looks at me, and for half a second, the mask slips again. But then just like that,
it’s back in place. It doesn’t matter. It slipped, and I saw. And I understand. Willem
is alone, like I am alone. And now this ache that I can’t quite distinguish as his
or mine has opened up inside of me.
“It’s always about the accidents,” he says.
Nine
I
pick a doozy.
Using the pin-the-tail-on-the-donkey strategy, I close my eyes and spin in front of
the Metro map and land my finger on the benign-sounding Château Rouge.
When we come out of the Metro, we are in yet another Paris altogether, and there’s
not a chateau, rouge or otherwise, in sight.
The streets are narrow, like in the Latin Quarter, but grittier. Tinny, drum-heavy
music blares out from the shop windows, and there’s such an onslaught of smells, my
nose doesn’t know what to breathe first: curry coming out of the patisseries, the
ferric tang of blood from the giant animal carcasses being trundled through the street,
the sweet and exotic smell of incense smoke, exhaust from the cars and motos, the
ubiquitous smell of coffee—though there aren’t so many of the big cafés here, the
kind that take up an entire corner, but more smaller, ad-hoc ones, bistro tables shoved
onto the sidewalk. And they’re all packed with men smoking and drinking coffee. The
women, some wearing full black veils with only their eyes showing through the slits,
others in colorful dresses, sleeping babies tied to their backs, bustle in and out
of the stores. We are the only tourists in this area, and people are looking at us,
not menacingly, but just curiously, like we’re lost. Which we are. This is precisely
why, on my own, I would never in a million years do this.
But Willem is loving it here. So I try to take a cue from him and relax, and just
gape at this part of Paris meets Middle East meets Africa.
We go past a mosque, then a hulking church, all spires and buttresses, that seems
like it landed in this neighborhood the same way we did. We twist and turn until we
wind up in some sort of park: a quadrangle of grass and paths and handball courts
sandwiched in between the apartment buildings. It’s packed with girls in head scarves
playing some version of hopscotch and boys on the handball courts and people walking
dogs and playing chess and sitting out for a smoke at the end of a summer afternoon.
“Do you have any idea where we are?” I ask Willem.
“I am as lost as you are.”
“Oh, we are
so
screwed.” But I laugh. It feels kind of nice to be lost, together.
We flop down under a stand of trees in a quiet corner of the park under a mural of
children playing in the clouds. I slide off my sandals. I have tan lines made from
dirt and sweat. “I think my feet are broken.”
Willem kicks off his flip-flops. I see the zigzag scar running up his left foot. “Mine
too.”
We lie on our backs as the sun throws shadows down between the clouds that are really
starting to roll in on the cooling breeze, bringing with them the electric smell of
rain. Maybe Jacques was right, after all.
“What time is it?” Willem asks.
I shut my eyes and stick my arm out for him to see. “Don’t tell me. I don’t want to
know.”
He takes my arm, checks the time. But then he doesn’t let go. He examines my wrist,
rotating it forward and back, as if it were some rare object, the first wrist he has
ever seen.
“That’s a very nice watch,” he says finally.
“Thank you,” I say dutifully.
“You don’t like it?”
“No. It’s not that. I mean, it was a really generous gift from my parents, who’d already
given me the tour, and it’s a very expensive watch.” I stop myself. It’s Willem, and
something compels me to tell him the truth. “But, no, I don’t really like it.”
“Why not?”
“I don’t know. It’s heavy. It makes my wrist sweaty. And it ticks loudly, like it’s
always trying to remind me that time is passing. Like I can’t ever forget about time.”
“So why do you wear it?”
It’s such a simple question. Why do I wear a watch that I hate? Even here, thousands
of miles from home, with no one to see me wearing it, why do I still wear it? Because
my parents bought it for me with the best of intentions. Because I can’t let them
down.
I feel the gentle pressure of Willem’s fingers on my wrist again. The clasp opens,
and the watch falls away, leaving a white ghost imprint. I can feel the refreshing
breeze tickle against my birthmark.
Willem examines the watch, the
Going Places
engraving. “Where are you going, exactly?”
“Oh, you know. To Europe. To college. To medical school.”
“Medical school?” There’s surprise in his voice.
I nod. That’s been the plan ever since eighth grade, when I gave the Heimlich maneuver
to some guy who was choking on his lamb shank at the next table. Dad had been out
front, answering a call from the service when I’d seen the guy next to us go purple.
So I just got up and calmly put my arms around the guy’s diaphragm and pushed until
a piece of meat arced out. Mom was beyond impressed. She’d started talking about my
becoming a doctor like Dad. After a while, I started talking about it too.
“So you’ll take care of me?”
His voice has the usual teasing tone, so I get that he’s joking, but this wave comes
over me. Because who takes care of him now? I look at him, and he makes everything
seem effortless, but I remember that feeling before—a certainty—that he is alone.
“Who takes care of you now?”
At first I’m not sure I said it aloud and, if I did, that he heard me, because he
doesn’t answer for a long time. But then finally, he says, “I take care of me.”
“But what about when you can’t? When you get sick?”
“I don’t get sick.”
“Everybody gets sick. What happens when you’re on the road and you get the flu or
something?”
“I get sick. I get better,” he replies, waving the question away.
I prop myself up on my elbow. This weird chasm of feeling has opened in my chest,
making my breath come shallow and my words dance like scattered leaves. “I keep thinking
about the double happiness story. That boy was traveling alone and got sick, but someone
took care of him. Is that what happens to you when you get sick? Or are you alone
in some gross hotel room?” I try to picture Willem in a mountain village, but all
I get is an image of him in a dingy room. I think of how I get when I’m sick, that
deep sadness, that aloneness that strikes—and I have Mom to take care of me. What
about him? Does anyone bring him soup? Does anyone tell him about the green trees
against the sky in the spring rain?
Willem doesn’t answer. In the distance, I can hear the pop of the handball slamming
against the wall, the coquettish sound of women’s laughter. I think of Céline. The
girls on the train. The models at the café. The slip of paper in his pocket. There’s
probably no shortage of girls wanting to play nurse with him. I get a weird feeling
in my stomach. I’ve made a wrong turn, like when I am skiing and I accidentally swerve
onto a black-diamond run full of moguls.
“Sorry,” I say. “It’s probably just the doctor in me coming out. Or the Jewish mother.”
Willem gives me a peculiar look. Another wrong turn. I keep forgetting that in Europe,
there are hardly any Jewish people, so jokes like that don’t make sense.
“I’m Jewish, and apparently that means when I get older, I’m doomed to fuss about
everyone’s health,” I hastily explain. “That’s what ‘Jewish mother’ means.”
Willem lies on his back and holds my watch up to his face. “It’s strange you mention
the double happiness story. Sometimes I do get sick and wind up puking into squat
toilets, and it’s not so nice.”
I wince at the thought of it.
“But there was this one time, I was traveling from Morocco to Algeria by bus, and
I got dysentery, a pretty bad case. So bad I had no choice but to get off the bus
in the middle of nowhere. It was some town at the edge of the Sahara, not even mentioned
in any book. I was dehydrated, hallucinating, I think, stumbling around for a place
to stay when I saw a hotel and restaurant called Saba. Saba was what I used to call
my grandfather. It seemed like a sign, like he was saying ‘go here.’ The restaurant
was empty. I went straight to the toilets to throw up again. When I came out, there
was a man with a short gray beard wearing a long djellaba. I asked for some tea and
ginger, which is what my mother always uses for upset stomachs. He shook his head
and told me I was in the desert now and had to use desert remedies. He disappeared
into the kitchen and returned with a grilled lemon, cut in half. He sprinkled it with
salt and told me to squeeze the juice into my mouth. I thought I would lose it again,
but in twenty minutes, my stomach was okay. He gave me some terrible tea that tasted
like tree bark and sent me upstairs, where I slept maybe eighteen hours. Every day,
I came downstairs, and he would ask how I was feeling and then prepare me a meal specifically
based on my symptoms. After that we would talk, just as I had done with Saba as a
child. I stayed there for a week, in this town on the edge of the map that I am not
even sure exists. So it is a lot like your story from before.”
“Except he didn’t have a daughter,” I say. “Or you’d be married by now.”
We are on our sides, facing each other, so close I can feel the warmth radiating off
him, so close it’s like we are breathing the same air.
“You be the daughter. Tell me that couplet again,” he says.
“Green trees against the sky in the spring rain while the sky set off the spring trees
in the obscuration. Red flowers dot the land in the breeze’s chase while the land
colored up in red after the kiss.”
The last word,
kiss
, hangs in the air.
“Next time I get sick, you can tell that to me. You can be my girl in the mountains.”
“Okay,” I say. “I’ll be your mountain girl and take care of you.”
He smiles, like it’s another joke, another volley in our flirtation, and I smile back,
even though I’m not joking.
“And in return, I will relieve you of the burden of time.” He slips my watch onto
his lanky wrist, where it doesn’t seem quite so much like a prison shackle. “For now,
time doesn’t exist. It is, what did Jacques say . . . fluid?”
“Fluid,” I repeat, like an incantation. Because if time can be fluid, then maybe something
that is just one day can go on indefinitely.