When Paris came into a view again it was late spring. The
famous landmarks were broken up by the pink and white blossoms and high
mackerel clouds parted like a fan above the Eiffel Tower. I dismounted from the
Eurostar with the intention of meandering around this city for a few days
before taking the train east into the heart of Europe.
Setting up my easel in Paris felt different from in London
where I was a curiosity. Here I was one of the many artists and was happy to
blend into the crowd and be unknown. If I was praised by passers-by, it was for
my talent rather than my name of what someone had read about me in the Evening Standard. I took the Metro up to
Montmartre where the artists of yesteryear had given way to mawkish Disney
cartoonists planted like insects around the lumpen white edifice of the Sacre
Couer. I walked down the hill again and lost myself in a maze of alleys.
Away
from the garish tourist memorabilia and the church like a great sickly wedding
cake, there was filth in the gutters, a faint odor of sewers and run down
basement apartments. Here and there were studios inhabited by real artists,
punctuated by the screams of babies and the rattle of industrial air
conditioners. An old man lifted his
brush and shot me a crooked grin. Suddenly I had an image of Jacques and that
far off look of triumph in his eyes when he surveyed his completed work.
Jacques had learned his trade in this magnificent city but
it had chewed him up like so many before him. I vowed to get back on the train
before the city stripped me of my sureness in my own ability and destiny and
reawakened the ghosts of yesteryear. By the time I reached the Gare de L’Est I
was missing my mentor and wishing to hasten my meeting with his lawyer, even
though I had put it off for more than a year. I boarded an express train that
headed east. I watched France become more rustic and Medieval and then I was in
Germany and flitting through warm evening fields and distant blue hills that
made it hard to square this place with the grim tales of marching men and
conflicts that I had read about in dusty books back in my bedroom in Britain.
When I emerged into the sunshine again I was in another
great European capital and surrounded my high church towers and magnificence.
Bells were ringing across the piazzas and small boats were fluttering on the
Danube. This time I ignored the magnificence and jumped in a taxi . I gave the driver
an address in a low key part of Pest. We clattered through a working class
suburb where washing hung over alley and he dropped my outside a small
courtyard with a tiny door.
The plaque had the name of Pierre Blanc, a
Frenchman who had somehow ended up in this obscure part of Budapest. I went
through a dark passage and ended up in a tiny room like a cell with a sour
faced receptionist behind a desk who communicated in a series of grunts. After
half an hour of guttural noises and paper clips being pushed across a desk for
no apparent purpose, a louder grunt than the rest led me to believe I was being
ushered in to see Monsieur Blanc.
I was confronted by a short, balding man with a flat face.
He took my hand unenthusiastically,
shuffled through some papers, raised his
thick specs and finally said: “Why are you here?”
“I thought you would know that. Jacques the painter said I
should come here.”
The lawyer wiped some sweat off his head and cleared his
throat.
“I’m afraid I know nobody by that name.”
“On come on. The artist. Jacques.”
“Do we have a last name?”
The question troubled me. I had known it once in another world.
As the panic rose within the memory of the name was slipping out of my
consciousness. A large bird of prey had settled on the window ledge and it was
starting intently at me. I felt it suited the lawyer’s office. Pierre Blanc
seemed to have discounted me already. He was tapping his pencil and about to
pick up the phone.
“Vielneuf,” I said finally and desperately.
“I will check my files monsieur.”
He rose to his feet and I noticed his saggy trousers as he
pulled open the drawers of his filing cabinet. He was humming impatiently and
there was more sweat on his forehead. He closed a couple of drawers and shook
his head. Finally he pulled out a large brown folder.
“We do have a Jacques Vielneuf,” he said with some
disbelief. He pulled out some papers and uttered a small exclamation. “Ah.
Artist Jacques.”
“Um yes.”
“And I take it you are Campbell Lawrence. Identification
please.”
I pulled out my passport. This was the easy bit.
“I hope you are not expecting millions.”
“I don’t know what I’m expecting.”
“So look here,” said the lawyer. “He has left you ownership
of his property in Umbria, as well as this.”
I looked it over. It was a letter Jacques had dictated to
the law firm.
“My Dear Campbell. It
was a great pleasure knowing you in the last year of my life. In you I saw the
kind of great talent I could only dream about as a lad. Maybe you have realized
that talent by now. I know from what you told me that you missed her terribly.
Here is the address of Geraldine. God knows if she is still there. I would like
you to go to her and take her with you to my villa in Umbria which will be
yours by the time you read this. It’s probably worth a lot but I don’t want you
to ever sell it. The view from the lemon grove over the hills is heaven itself.
Of course, I could never live there. It’s a long story for an old man of fading
health. Let’s just say it involved a woman. Don’t they always. This letter also
contains a key to my car, so as you can drive to Alsace. Don’t get too excited
about that. It’s a 2CV. It will get you there, just avoid the Autobahns. I wish
you love, happiness, success and the most succulent of olives which grow around
the villa. Au revoir – Jacques.
A villa in Umbria...what a lovely gift. Geraldine? This should be interesting.
ReplyDeleteYes thanks Tracy - a gift I am unlikely to get I fear...
ReplyDeleteLove the painting, and you make Campbell's travels really come to life. Have you visited the places you write of?
ReplyDelete