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Authors: Susan Cutsforth

Tags: #Memoir, #Travel Writing

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BOOK: Our House is Not in Paris
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There were mounds of succulent
macarons
glistening in their pastel hues and bright yellow sunflowers in pails, nodding their heads, heavy with sunshine. We already had our favourite stall for
fraise
, the most tantalising strawberries we had ever tasted. It was also our favourite stall for
pêche
,
cerise
and tomatoes. The peaches dripped with gold while, this summer, the cherries were the reddest, fattest and juiciest I had ever seen or tasted. This week, all the produce had a carefully scripted little label. Apart from the cherries, which were from Spain, everything else was grown locally. We were given a golden slither of Quercy melon to sample. Of course, we decided to buy a couple. I loved that they enquired whether it was to be eaten today or tomorrow, as the stallholder's selection for us would depend on our answer. With our French market basket overflowing, we set off to our favourite café for an
espresso
, stopping en route for the obligatory pastry to accompany it. We were thrilled to discover that there was a new array — no doubt ready for the tourist season now in full swing. I was ecstatic to find one of my absolute favourites, a plump almond
croissant
. I remarked that a true French woman would never, ever indulge in one, but would merely breathe in the tantalising aroma. I know there is much speculation about the wraith-like appearance of many French women and how they achieve it; indeed, there are books on the subject. I had made it a point to discreetly watch my French female friends when we shared a meal: their trick is to move their crisp
pommes frites
around their plate as they wave their fork slightly in the air during conversation to distract attention, and then,
voilà
, the meal is finished and the plate is whisked away. But the careful observer will note that the
pommes frites
have merely travelled round the plate. And so, like the French, we settled to watch the world go by. I didn't feel guilty in the slightest about the size and sheer decadence of my
croissant
simply oozing with lusciousness.

Just as well, to seize the moment, for once we returned to our
petite maison
, the day was still a long one for us. Today was a hard, hard day for Stuart. He returned after our shopping foray to struggle with the complexities of French wiring. He had bought some wire cutters to strip the wires to put in two double outlets for appliances in the kitchen. However, after carefully deciphering the instructions — this time in French, German and Portuguese — they still simply wouldn't work. Gerard, when he dropped in, was equally baffled. They must be difficult to use, for, just like Stuart, Gerard is also an expert as he had just renovated their house in the village. So Stuart resorted to the old method that he knew would work. He used a lighter on the ends of the wires and then used pliers to splice them. He told me to remind him never to put in a double outlet in France again. Somehow, I didn't think he would need reminding.

Meanwhile, the
plombier
still hadn't come. The leak continued in the cellar, and the soil was becoming progressively damper. The high point of the day was when the furniture arrived. The
armoire
for our bedroom was more beautiful than I remembered, with teardrop-shaped handles for the long drawer at the top, and was delicately carved at the sides and along the bottom. At last, we could unpack our clothes and no longer live out of our suitcases. It was becoming more and more like a real home. The Chesterfield and two matching armchairs were magnificent and all that I dreamt of for our
petite maison
. However, it did indeed make the farmhouse seem even more
petite
, for they were enormous. They seemed absolutely huge once they were placed in our sitting room. We seemed to have bought so many things with
La Forge
in mind and the renovation of the far-distant future. Certainly it would look perfect one day in the grand proportions of the barn. The sofa was indeed very cracked. However, it was exceptionally comfortable and just the sort of thing to fling yourself upon after a hard day's work in the fields, if one ever had the luxury of time to relax. The cracked leather added to yet another layer of French history and thoughts of the previous owners.

Gerard and Dominique dropped in to admire our new acquisitions. The first thing they did was walk over to the wall where Stuart had put up one of our most treasured finds, our
carte de France
. They immediately pointed out their home in Poitier on the map and their holiday home at the beach in Île d'Oléron. Straight away it was all that we had hoped for: a great talking point for all our friends who visited. We looked at each other and smiled.

We all had a
noix digestif
and used the huge old wooden bellows that we found last year as a coffee table for the very first time while we sat in our new — well, old — sofa and chairs. They invited us for
dîner
the next night but we had already been invited to a ‘grand dinner' the next evening at Jean-Claude and Françoise's, along with an English couple. For the moment, the house was furnished and we had guests. After another long, exhausting and exasperating day, their salute of ‘
Bon courage
' was never more apt.

French Scouts on a Quest

My mind struggled to recall all the events of the day before. My back was aching so much I could barely lever myself up off the mattress. I was happy, though, when my eyes caught the
armoire
, perfectly placed in the corner of our room, right next to the beautiful old beam that was exposed last year when we stripped off the wallpaper and now ran through the centre of the wall. My hands and fingers were so sore from all my work in the orchard that my fingers couldn't even unlatch the heavy metal catch on the kitchen window. My hands were swollen and my fingers were throbbing with splinters and thorns embedded from the nettles.

As we chatted last night for a few minutes before falling asleep in utter exhaustion we both admitted that this year had been far harder than last year. In a mere three weeks, Stuart had installed
la cuisine
— a record feat anywhere, let alone in a foreign country. Actually, it was probably less than three weeks, which was even more remarkable, but it was hard to work in an uninterrupted flow. People dropped in constantly; there were deliveries, frequent trips to the
bricolage
, trips to buy food and outings to look for furniture. As for the endless discussions and decisions, our days revolved around them.

After slowly eating my
petit déjeuner
, I once again ventured forth to the orchard and I reflected on the fact that ‘gardening' was a euphemism, an utter understatement. It was not planting out petunias or languidly deadheading roses. No, it was yanking, pulling, heaving, bending, lugging and scrabbling in coarse, dry gravel with my mini mattock to literally attack tenacious and ferocious weeds. As I toiled and toiled in the
jardin
, I also reflected on the fact that I'd been invited to a German film in Souillac with Françoise and Dominique. My choice was to ‘garden' rather than spend the afternoon relaxing with friends. Is this why I came to Cuzance?

I often reflected, too, on the luxury of our rented house in Puymule last year. My long, lazy days of perfect indulgence, lying next to the pool, reading all day long and gazing at the beautiful garden. My perfect day, my perfect holiday. And so I sometimes wondered if we had done the right thing in taking on so much in such a short, short time. I had these thoughts more and more often. Yet I also knew that, had we rented a house every year in France, we would never have the rich layers of the friendships that we had formed. In fact, what is even more extraordinary is that we had introduced Gerard and Dominique to Jean-Claude and Françoise. I also knew, from all that I had read about France, that these friendships are a privilege, a gift, for the French do not take new people lightly into their lives. Indeed, it is often the friends they had made during their schooldays who remain their friends for life.

This morning, as I opened the shutters — a recurring symbolic moment for me to start each day by flinging them open, despite enormous weariness — I smiled to myself at the sight of the baby bunny we first spotted last night; it was the cutest, smallest bunny that I had ever seen. It was racing round and round in crazy circles. What also made me smile was that it was chasing a bird that was also hopping round in circles. The blackbird hopped round on the dry brown grass, feasting on the bittersweet plums that had fallen. However, I felt sad for it, as it didn't seem to have a mother. Stuart told me that it was highly likely it was someone's tasty rabbit stew. I didn't join in his laughter. The French baby rabbit had quite captivated me.

To ward off the incessant swarming flies, we had now resorted to strips of flypaper in several places. It was completely hideous, dangling down over the kitchen sink as well as in the fireplace, but it worked. As I laboured outside or hung the washing out on the line in the carport, I frequently glanced next door at the neighbours.

I constantly admired the old man, Monsieur Chanteur. Today he had his ancient wooden workbench out in the garden and was working under the shade of the enormous spreading walnut tree. I was always impressed by his incessant hard work and I grabbed my camera. Again, with very few shared words, I managed to convey my admiration and indicated that I'd love to take his photo. He continued working, and then his wife appeared from their
maison
. I gestured that I would like to take a photo of them together under the curved stone archway of their house; ‘1882' is carved above the doorway of their grand home. In a language that was universal, they indicated that they were not properly dressed to be captured in a photo. They also told me that soon they were going to
la plage
in Normandy. I wished them ‘
Bonne vacances
' and pictured them side by side, holding hands, in matching striped deckchairs on a pebbly beach.

And so, as I returned to continue toiling away in the
jardin
, Stuart embarked on his last electrical endeavour in
la cuisine
. He had carefully assessed it last thing before we went to bed the previous night to avoid waking in the middle of the night worrying about it. He always tells me that half the work in renovating is the thinking and reflecting time. The more planning that takes place, the more meticulous the appraisal; the more likely it is that the job will go smoothly. As I have worked by his side renovating for many years now, I know that this approach is usually effective. Today I was working on the succulent border (the cactus variety, that is, not tasty) in the stone wall outside our bedroom: the wall that was the boundary with the Chanteurs. It is the only part of the enormous garden that holds any remnants of its former self. There was a rose climbing on the wall — and, yes, it was a rose — and when I stood back at last to look at my progress I felt hugely pleased by the artistic display of succulents crowning the stone wall. I also slid my hand behind moss-covered stone when I glimpsed some shards of ancient pottery. I gathered enough dark brown pieces, including two broken handles, that when I laid them out on the ground I was sure it must have been a
terrine
for the thick, country style
campagne
—
pâté
— of the region. I also thought that, as the pieces were so deeply buried, they wouldn't simply have been tossed there but used in a deliberate way within the wall. It seemed to be an old form of recycling, to find another use for a broken household item. As I carefully placed the pieces as a display on the front porch, I once again thought about who once lived here and what their life story was. I was glad to have a fragment of it, no matter how small.

I then moved on to the bottom of the
jardin
to finally move all my piles of dead branches. When I later stood back to look at my mountainous pile in the corner, I was utterly amazed that I had dragged, right across the land, half a dead tree. Seriously, I didn't know I had that sort of strength. Yet what I did know is that a sort of feverish madness seemed to possess me when I set myself seemingly impossible goals. Every day, I was driven by the one thought: ‘I need to do more!'

I actually thought I was all alone in my remote rural wilderness when four heads appeared above my crumbling stone wall in the lane behind. They were schoolchildren with their young leader, and all the teams were on a quest to find and exchange objects. At first, when they held up a packet (it was lunchtime), I thought they wanted to come into the house for some boiled water for what I imagined was dried noodles. However, I finally understood and, fortunately, the directions to our house are left, left, left — ‘
À gauche
' is all I ever seem to remember for directions and never the right word for ‘right'. I ran into the house to gather up what I could find, and all I could come up with for the band of half a dozen shy, young boys were a few empty cardboard boxes and paper bags, though I did also offer them fruit from the orchard. I later found out that Jean-Claude and Françoise were given a wine stopper in return for a pottery bowl. It seemed I didn't quite grasp the concept of the quest. No wonder when the second leader and his group joined the first one in our garden, when I gathered them all together for a photo, he seemed to have rather a superior attitude towards me about my gifts. I simply didn't understand. After all, I was given, at the outset, a
petite
box of
chocolat
-flavoured
petit déjeuner
cereal. Anyway, thank you, quest boys; it came in handy when Sylvie and Axel came to stay, as I gave it to Axel for his breakfast.

The Grand Soirée

We were invited to a grand dinner at Jean-Claude and Françoise's with an older and charming English couple, John and Angela Hone. We had come with a scarlet fuchsia to add our touch to the garden. We knew that in France, though we did take champagne on some occasions when we were invited to dinner with our friends, it is not the custom to take a bottle of wine (as we were so used to doing at home). We had, in fact, read that it is instead the custom to arrange to have flowers delivered the day before, so that, on arrival, if you come bearing flowers, the hostess will not be distracted by finding a vase and tending to them rather than her guests. We had also learnt that it is polite to have a box of significant
chocolat
or
macarons
to present to your hosts. Another astonishing fact that we were aware of is that if the occasion is particularly grand,
apéritifs
are not served until all the guests have arrived. We had heard of unwary newcomers into French circles who had been not been aware of this and people had been gathered waiting for an hour before a single
apéritif
was poured. Fortunately, it was all far more relaxed with our new friends. Just as well, as at least on one occasion when Jean-Claude and Françoise had been invited to our
petite maison
, time had somehow slipped away from me in the
jardin
and I was still in a very dishevelled state.

BOOK: Our House is Not in Paris
13.17Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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