Pretty Things. Виржини Депант
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Название: Pretty Things

Автор: Виржини Депант

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Современная зарубежная литература

Серия:

isbn: 9781936932269

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ I never win anything.”

      “Maybe your luck is changing.”

      “I wouldn’t go that far, but I’ll take it. Can I buy you a beer?”

      He was over the moon. A radiant sparkle somewhere in the blue of his eyes. He called over the clerk, winning ticket in his hand, showing it off, proud of himself. Turned toward her again, “So, are you having something?”

      She had almost said no, purely out of habit of declining this kind of invitation. But she liked the look of his face, right off the bat. She thought it would be worth it to have a drink with him, accepted.

      As for Nicolas, he examined this prized knockout, amazed to feel so entirely ready to trust her.

      As far as bitches went, she blew everyone else away. Her white jeans and tight blouse like a second skin, accepting his invitation to have a drink. What did she want from him, with her big tits, her flat stomach, her curved hips, and why? She had a mesmerizing ass, and she knew exactly which pants to put it in.

      They threw one back at the counter. She laughed easily, seemed happy to be there. He proposed, “Let’s sit down for another?”

      “Are you going to throw it all away on beer?”

      “With all the debts I have to pay, it’s already spent.”

      She had perfect white teeth. She played with her hair a lot, one of her ways of being ravishing.

      “It’s been ages since I had a drink at a bar. Not since I’ve been here, actually, almost three months. I don’t have a dime, I can’t even buy good cigarettes.”

      She waved her pack of smokes with an amused disgust. Then raised her beer to cheers him, waiting for him to clink his glass. She smelled good, he could smell her from his seat. She folded her hands on the table prudently, her nails were pink. It was impossible for Nicolas to figure out if she was dressed all trashy like this is my thing, or if she actually thought it looked good.

      Later, after many more drinks, he asked her, “But why do you dress like such a slut?” Rolling her eyes she responded, “Listen, darling, you can feed me all the lies in the world, what I know is that all men adore this. Whether or not it’s absurd is besides the point, what matters is that it works every time.”

      Three drinks later, she was telling him her life story: “I live with him, honestly he’s nice. That’s kind of the problem, I feel like I’m sleeping in honey. It’s fine, it’s sweet, but it’s sticky, and besides, I’ve had better. Anyway, it’s temporary, as soon as I find a way to make money I’ll get a room, even a shitty one. Sometimes, when he’s there, I go out for a walk, I look up at the apartments with balconies, huge windows, and yards in the middle of the city . . .”

      And it was true, later on he’d see, when he was walking with her she would often stop, extend her arm to point out a window, “One day, I’ll live there,” and her eyes would light up, she was so sure of it, she knew how to be patient.

      She kept talking, wasn’t hard to listen to. “Starting out, it’s like I’m expected to clean toilets without batting an eye. That’s the only way I can be here, on the alert, but the first chance I get, I’ll jump at it. It’ll take the time it takes.”

      She chewed her bottom lip while she spoke, he noticed sometimes, asking himself if he was imagining the tears of rage that rose in her eyes.

      She must not have been a regular drinker because she couldn’t control herself at all, was in a daze, her eyes staring off into space.

      “Why did you come to Paris?”

      “To be an actress.”

      “In porn?”

      It came out on its own, but you had to admit she looked the part. She just wrinkled her eyes, like she had swallowed something bitter. He stuttered, a vague hope of redeeming himself, “I really didn’t say that to hurt you, I know a lot of girls who—”

      “I don’t give a shit about the girls you know, and I don’t give a shit what you think of me. I’m not so naive that I don’t know what I look like. And I’m not so naive to wait for someone to tell me what I’m capable or not capable of doing either. Time will tell where I end up. And I’ll laugh at all those people who took me for an idiot. I’ll show them.”

      She stood up straight as she spoke, her entire chest stuck out against the world, and then she slouched all at once, comically, self-consciously.

      “But anyway, I’m also not so naive to think I’m the only girl to say that.”

      She kept quiet for a moment.

      “Let’s have one more?”

      “Won’t your man be worried?”

      “Yeah. We were supposed to spend a wonderful afternoon together, watching dubbed action movies and smoking the disgusting pot he gets in the shitty part of town. The kids rip him off, I’m too scared to tell him. But honestly, we’re smoking henna. Anyway, you’re right, I have to get going.”

      “You want another or not?”

      “Just a quick one.”

      The next morning, he got up to puke and she was on the sofa. He didn’t really remember how she’d ended up in his living room. They had coffee, it was comfortable. She stayed with him until she found an apartment. They became friends almost inadvertently, by virtue of always being happy to see each other and always wanting to.

      Three months ago, Nicolas—who was meeting someone near Claudine’s place—went by to see if she was there. “Buy me a coffee?”

      He found her overjoyed. “You know Duvon, the producer? He’s down for the record, I have to call him as soon as the demo’s ready. Listen, I think he’s really into it. The guy really wants to give me a shot. I’ve been telling you about it for a while now, haven’t I?”

      He turned his eyes away from the TV screen where a guy—filmed from the ceiling for no apparent reason except to make it look shitty—approached another guy in the bathroom to shoot him in the head, calling him “my angel.”

      “The demo?”

      “Yeah. I lied, I told him it was almost ready. I thought of your tracks, you know, the two I really like . . .”

      “Not to throw a wrench in things but . . . Claudine, you can’t sing, we’ve already tried.”

      Together they had tried anything and everything to get noticed. Wasted effort. Years piled up, ambitions dampened. More than anything else, what they learned was what to ask for from the social worker, what papers to falsify to get a certain kind of assistance, how not to get audited.

      “I don’t plan on singing.”

      Nicolas was flipping through the channels, stopped on a commercial where a completely crazy-looking girl illuminated by green lights was on her knees in front of a keyhole, eyeing a couple. An already-outdated image.

      “Just tell me up front what you’re planning to do, I’ll never guess.”

      Behind him, СКАЧАТЬ