Authors: Natalie Meg Evans
‘You mean war? I thought so once, but the Munich Accord gave Hitler what he wanted, didn’t it? He has his Sudetenland and his re-militarised zone. Why should he want a war now?’
‘He blackmailed France and Britain very deftly
and, as we know, blackmailers always come back for more. The Munich agreement is only as good as Hitler’s word, and signing it alienated a vital ally, the Soviets.’
‘Oh, them.’
‘Yes, them. Munich only moved the chess pieces around.’ Noting her dispirited expression, he suggested they go and spend time with the children. ‘They’re painting as only children can. Let them inspire you.’
It snowed on New Year’s Day 1939, making the windows shine like frozen milk. White shantung silk lay in swathes across the salon sofas and, because the floor and walls were white too, Alix felt she had walked into her own blank page.
She’d got halfway through a collection in December then abandoned it. Verrian had asked, ‘But why? Nice shapes,
nice legs … am I missing something?’
She listened … his typewriter had fallen silent. He was working on a freelance article for an American newspaper, and he’d probably finished it. Verrian chiselled at a job until it was done. Unlike her, he produced results. As he said, ‘An editor would rather have the piece that’s ninety-five-per-cent good than the hundred-per-cent-perfect piece that never
arrives. Now you know why it’s called “hack”.’
She looked at the clock – nearly eleven – and took a note from her pocket.
Meet me by the lion, Jardin du Luxembourg, 11.03
.
11.03 would mean 11.30. Paul must have something important to ask her. Something to do with Una? To do with copying? This time she had a simple word ready.
No
.
Alix couldn’t work out why Paul had written when he could easily
have spoken to her at Rue Jacob. Since returning from his English holiday, he’d been coming here every day, dropping his sisters off and picking them up. It had been agreed that Suzy and Lala should stay in Celestia’s care until Paul got back into some kind of routine with his work.
At the lion statue, Alix tramped through pristine snow until she heard her name called. Paul was striding towards
her. They shook hands, an element of constraint still between them. Paul’s face was leaner, his mouth harder. Una’s lover had grown up.
‘Are we freezing for old times’ sake?’ she teased.
He took her arm and they walked. ‘I wanted to tell you somewhere private – Alix, I have news that will shock you.’
She thought instantly,
Bonnet’s back in Montmartre
.
‘Serge Martel was arrested for an attack
on a girl, one of his singers. He hurt her very badly and they’re talking about prison. I thought you should know.’
‘I see.’ What could she say? ‘Poor, poor girl.’
‘You were lucky to get away when you did.’ They walked in silence until Paul said, ‘I hope my sisters aren’t driving you mad. Did you know, Suzy speaks to me now?’
Alix seized upon this happier subject. ‘That’s Pepe’s doing. Nobody
could explain to him that Suzy didn’t speak, so he bom-
barded her till she gave in. You got your speech therapist in the end. Course they aren’t driving me mad. Celestia is wonderful with them and Mémé loves having them.’
‘Good.’ He made an awkward movement. ‘Because, Alix, there’s something else I have to tell you. Something that will change my life and theirs.’
Una. The name sat between them
as he lit one of his pungent cigarettes. Alix predicted his next words – he and Una were going to live together, would Alix care for the girls while they settled themselves?
‘I want to join the navy.’
Her mouth dropped and his smoke drifted into it. ‘What?’ she spluttered.
‘I’d rather sign up than get conscripted.’
‘You’re talking as though we’re actually at war.’ From a distant corner of
the park came children’s voices and Alix felt a formless pain.
Please, not war. Not here. Not poor France again
.
Paul put his arm around her. It was snowing – large, lazy flakes. ‘When we were staying in Hastings, Una and I hired a car and drove along the south coast of England. We stopped at a place called “Lee-on-Solent” – am I pronouncing it right?’
‘It’ll do.’
‘We saw ships out on the water
and there was one, a battle cruiser. Somebody said she was HMS
Hood
. She was magnificent. We bumped into sailors every place we went, and you
know how it is when suddenly you know what you want to do with your life?’
She did of course. ‘What about the girls? And Una?’
‘Una …’ Paul sizzled a snowflake with the tip of his cigarette. ‘She won’t leave Kilpin and I won’t live in her pocket. The girls
will live at Bobigny, with their great-aunt. Gilberte is strict with them, but she loves them in her way and with decent wages, I can pay their keep.’ He took a deep breath. ‘I’ve decided to sell the
Katrijn
.’
Alix nodded sadly. So, an era was over. ‘Suzy and Lala can come to me any time, Paul. Every holiday.’
‘Thank you.’
They said their goodbyes. They kissed cheeks, then lips. A brief, smoky
kiss. ‘I do love you, Paul.’
‘I love you too, Alix.’
‘Will you come to my show in February?’
‘If you make it a happy one. No black.’
They parted and she walked as fast as the snow would allow, wanting to get back to Verrian. Children’s voices grew louder, and as she rounded a corner she saw a group dressed in motley clothes, mufflers and headscarves. They were playing a game with a streamer
of scarves. An older child ran with it, the others chasing to catch its end. They were shouting in German … goodness, weren’t they the gypsy children from St-Sulpice? This must be their playground. Enraptured, Alix’s eyes followed the
kaleidoscope of colour they made against the snow and the knots in her mind gave way.
*
Verrian met her on the front stairs. He noticed the snow on her boots but
asked no questions. ‘The children have been trying to find you. Be prepared to adopt a surprised expression.’ He took her to her flat, where she stopped, poleaxed. One entire wall was a vivid mural.
‘This is our gallery.’ Pepe beetled over to them, pulling her and Verrian towards the vast painting. Lala came up to sell them a ticket. ‘Ten francs each.’
It took Alix a moment to realise that one
of Bonnet’s rolls of blank canvas had been opened out and nailed up in the living room. Verrian must have done it, and the children must have stood on tables to paint. And such painting. Trees and flowers, strange animals, herself, Verrian in his hat, a princess or two, fairies, aeroplanes, houses and cars and more flowers, all in riotous colour. It took her back to Picasso’s
Guernica
– she felt
the same awe, but this was the antidote to Picasso’s monochrome depiction of atrocity.
Verrian mistook her reaction. ‘I haven’t damaged the wall much.’
‘You’re good with hammer and nails?’ she asked him, reaching up to kiss him. ‘Because I’ve just realised how I’m going to create my next collection.’
*
Her staff thought she was mad. Hand-paint three hundred metres of silk?
Yes, she told them.
It would be stretched over frames, like an artist’s canvas. She would cut the children’s painting into stencils – with their permission of course – and trace them on to silk, outlining each shape in gutta, a rubber resist. After which, let the painting begin. Anybody capable of holding a brush could help.
The children were early recruits, and soon Mémé and the other staff from Modes Lutzman joined
in enthusiastically. Celestia and Verrian couldn’t escape and M. Hubert, the sleepy accounts clerk who had guarded Alix’s front office until his dismissal, was invited back. Even Paul spent his evenings daubing on shantung. Once he’d shed his inhibitions, he began adding his own designs of ships and river boats, which, Alix confided to Verrian, were almost as good as Pepe’s.
Designs poured from
Alix’s pencil. All she needed was to produce clothes that showed off the fabric. ‘I’m going to make peacock tails,’ she told Verrian.
‘Madame?’
A desk clerk broke Alix’s trance. She’d been mentally rehearsing the opening moments of her show, when her mannequins would walk out four in a line, in beach pyjamas – flared pants and halter-neck tops, a casual style first introduced by Coco Chanel and now creeping into daily wear. Alix’s version in printed silk was substantial
enough for lounging at home – or risqué enough for a night out. This whole collection involved risk, but that felt good …
‘A telephone call for you in reception.’
She allowed a smile. She was now ‘Madame’. Not because she was married – yet – but because she had gained the status of a businesswoman. ‘I’ll be just a moment.’ The girls would walk down a gangway between tables to a roped-off area
where they’d turn and pose. A swing quintet playing from the raised area currently dominated by a grand piano would provide the rhythm.
When Verrian had suggested hiring the Polonaise’s Alexandra Lounge for her show, she’d thought he’d missed the point.
‘People need to
see
the clothes. I can’t have my mannequins jostling through tea-drinking dowagers.’
‘We’ll hire it privately, in the evening.
Tell me a better location.’
She couldn’t. Place Vendôme was inner-elite Right Bank. She wouldn’t have to persuade people to schlep out to Rue Jacob. Wouldn’t have to worry about refreshments, flowers, wine. Wouldn’t even have to hire chairs.
And the clincher: ‘It can go on my father’s bill. It can be his wedding present to us.’
‘Are you proposing marriage, Mr Haviland?’ she’d asked.
He had
left that question dangling, telling her he had an article to finish.
Around the same time, the Comte de Charembourg had written to Alix describing a meeting he’d had with Adèle Char-boneau, whose true address he’d found in his wife’s contact book. ‘
She was shocked to find me on her doorstep
,’ the comte wrote, ‘
and quickly confessed that my wife paid her to trick you into making an illegal copy.
If it helps, Mlle Charboneau is ashamed of herself as you were so kind. I will show contrition in a more practical way –
’ His company, he declared, would provide any remaining fabric Alix needed for her new collection, free of charge. ‘
Things come full circle, dear Alix
.’
Her collection now had a date; 1
st
March, four days away. Verrian’s Hispano money had disappeared on labour, mannequins, accessories
and rent. She was back in business. She’d snatched herself one last chance.
In the hotel lobby she was handed a telephone receiver. ‘Alix Gower speaking … ?’
When she put the receiver down two minutes later, all her hope was gone. Luck and courage were not enough, it seemed. Not when you had enemies hell-bent on bringing you down.
*
A caramel voice called, ‘Knock-knock, may I come in?’
Alix
was in her salon, staring at the rails of clothes that, for a second time, would not be shown. She turned to see Una Kilpin. ‘What are you doing here?’
‘You could manage a frisson of delighted surprise, surely? I need no excuse to come to Paris, but among other things, I wanted to see you. And dare one say it … a show?’
She looks how I feel
, Alix thought. Una’s glow had dimmed. Still chic though.
She carried a tiny handbag against the back of her hand, presumably with a strap through which the palm slid. It was the same tan colour as her suit and gloves.
‘Oh, kiddo, why the funeral face?’
‘My mannequins have quit,’ Alix said. ‘The agency supplying them rang to say they weren’t available after all. Four days’ notice.’ She gestured to the rails. ‘Everything finished, just the last few
bits … I have to cancel. Again. Una, I don’t know why this keeps happening to me.’
‘I do.’ Una flicked the popper on her handbag and pulled out a letter. ‘It was sent me by the fashion editor of the London
Times
– a friend of mine.’
Alix read:
To whom it may concern
,
Haute couture is the flower of French culture, a flower cankered by copying and theft. Those of us who patronise the finest
fashion houses of Paris pledge to support their integrity. Our first move is against ‘mushroom houses’ such as Modes Lutzman, whose proprietor Alix Gower was convicted for counterfeiting –