Paris seems prettier now than when we first
came, maybe it's the cold war against this lingering summer warmth that
ultimately soothes my worried mind. We spend much of the afternoon in
the Luxembourg garden around the palace underneath glimmering cascades
of yellow and red and crisp azure skies stretching into infinity.
He
talks about his classes and the need for radical reforms (of
everything), about summery Christmases in Los Angeles and early memories
of his mother. Everything is tinted in pastel purple and pink, filtered
through the passing of time and only deep in between the lines are
those thin traces of bitterness and grief I've learned to discard as
misanthropy.
We stroll down the Boulevard Raspail to Le Bon
Marché and look at multicolored trompe l'oeil prints from Mary
Katrantzou. "I have a father somewhere" he says, "at least I think I
do". Through it all he holds my hand in his and his ivory skin is soft
and warm like cotton.
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