Aimée had been stuck on a girl name Céline with eyes the colour of absinthe and mean-looking lips protruding into the flashing lights. She had kissed her and they had fondled each other on the dance floor but Céline seemed to be neither interested nor disinterested. Which made sixteen-year-old Aimée desperate for her attention.
Aimée had reached the tautness of her longing. She lay in bed masturbating, thinking of Céline, when her hand froze and her breath cut off.
She had a vision of the Seine, pushing dully forward, the top skin wrinkling over itself, the skylight a pinkish white, the water like mud. Aimée exhaled and got out of bed. Without deciding, she pulled on her jeans, clipped on her one sexy black lace bra from H&M, pulled over a loose grey jumper and snuck out. She thought she was going to the Seine to jump in. She went to Le Pulp instead.
Céline was on the dance floor, moving her body like a wrench, her wavy dark bob behind her ears, her eyes lined with black, and those glimmering green pupils, always as if she’d poisoned herself. Her lips, thickly coated with red, were staining the cigarette hanging from her mouth.
Aimée watched Céline dance. She stared. She went over every part of her with her glare. But Céline wouldn’t even glance up. Her eyes were nowhere. They were diamonds being cut from smut. Aimée felt the chiselling in her chest. She felt the mud of the Seine. All the times she had glanced at a girl in school and clenched her gut. All the words she had stumbled over in her life. All the ways she hated herself and everything she couldn’t bear to leave behind. Céline, her eyes of green venom glowing in the spotlight, smoke crawling out of her red mouth.
Don’t we all ask for death before we know how to ask for what we really want? Usually it’s night-time – out of its stem, a rose blooms open with a fragrant scream.
Aimée stood there and swallowed. Over and over again. Watching Céline. An oracle. A knife’s blade. Petal by petal, to the moon. Then someone else spoke.
“Oh la la…”
Aimée turned around.
“Don’t tell me…”
The girl was taller, her features velour in the darkness. By the way she stood, Aimée could tell that she was not only older, but already knew who she was and had some agreement from the world about it.
“Pardon?” Aimée said.
“That girl. The one you’re watching. Elle est chiante. She’s a waste of time.”
Aimée glanced over at Céline, then back at the girl.
“But you like her, huh?” the girl continued.
Aimée nodded without meaning to.
“What else do you like?” the girl asked.
Aimée hesitated. “…Gin and tonics.”
“Now that’s interesting.”
The girl knew the DJ and bought Aimée all her drinks. The girl was no girl either, but twenty-six to Aimée’s sixteen.
“Hey Dominique!” the girl’s buddy Olivier called out to her. He opened up his cigarette box and pulled out a small baggy with two blue pills. Dominique took the baggy out and tucked it into her bra, then pulled out a cigarette and offered one to Aimée.
Olivier turned to Aimée and said, “You know you’re smoking with a star, right?” and gave her a wink.
At that time, Dominique was a star and felt like one, though her main claim to fame was that theatre piece she’d co-starred in alongside Fanny Ardant, at Théâtre de la Madeleine, which Aimée’s father had taken her to. Fanny Ardant, with her dark brows and dark hair and buttery eyes and her lips imbued with that voice, assured and coy… Fanny Ardant, the woman who was always wearing red, even when she was not. Dominique had assumed that she had the makings of a woman like that, who owned a colour all to herself.
The director had cast Dominique to play Mme Ardant’s younger ghost, somewhere between herself as a child and her daughter. It was a symbolic mise en scène, both women wore sleeveless grey tweed dresses, ending at mid-thigh, then in the last scene both women were in white satin nighties. Fanny Ardant was “Femme”, Woman, and Dominique was “Fille”, Girl.
The last night, the curtain fell and with it descended a vexation within Dominique. Back stage, both actresses washed off their make-up. FEMME went back to being Fanny Ardant, the acclaimed French star. FILLE went back to being Dominique, not quite a shooting star and almost just make-up powder rising into oblivion.
Months after the show, she couldn’t sleep. She’d get up in the middle of the night, turn on the bathroom light, and recite her lines from the show into the mirror.
FILLE (facing FEMME, who is still looking out at horizon)
You scare me.
(takes step closer to FEMME) I never asked to be your likeness.
(another step closer) I never asked the Maker to make me in your image.
(another step) I never asked to spend my whole life carrying your features.
(another step) I never asked to be young when you are already old.
(another step) I never asked for you to grow old before me.
(another step) I never asked for you to die first.
(pause)
I never asked to hear your voice again. (bumps into FEMME)
I never asked to remember your scent. (thrusts more deliberately)
I never asked to feel your hands. (thrust)
I never asked—(thrust)
I never asked—(thrust)
Dominique took off her nightshirt and underwear. Naked, she ran her fingers over the faint bruises on her sternum and just above her pelvis, where she had ‘thrust’ into FEMME in the show. She could almost feel Fanny Ardant’s shoulder and hip ramming into her, as she thrust against her fixed body, pinned to the stage like nails. She could almost hear her own voice, peeling, screeching, her face both humid and icy, her armpits clutching, her legs stiff, and her tear-streaked face and bare feet on the cold stage floor. It was bliss.
Everything changed for Aimée with Dominique. The Seine was made of buoyant water, not mud. She smiled at things just for being there. Céline was no one, an indistinguishable figure among the others.
“Baby, baby, baby…” Dominique was pulling her in from behind.
Just as Aimée was turning seventeen, feeling full of all the things she could do as she was peeling off childhood, Dominique was turning twenty-seven and realising she was no longer the star she had been four years ago, in fact, perhaps, she never had been at all.
When Aimée turned eighteen, Dominique asked her to move in with her.
Aimée traced her finger behind Dominique’s ear as she was standing in front of the large white bookshelf, looking across the spines, choosing which one to pull out. Aimée kissed her neck, and just then Dominique pulled away. She crouched down and ran her finger across the line of spines, and began to pull at the sky-blue hardcover binding of a book wedged in the bottom row.
Dominique’s mother was a vigorous altruist with a shy polyglot hobby from a Catholic parish just outside of Lyon. She had casually managed to acquire a conversational level of Serbian, Spanish, German, Polish and Portuguese. Reaching her thirties with an unintentional pact of celibacy while working for the French Catholic organisation in Porto, she met the Portuguese university fellow of social psychology at Sunday mass. His regard like a troubadour’s guitar without strings, hers, a saint’s lawyer.