Expats, or: La Vie En Rosé
“We gulp what is here and                     ours and nobody’s                 and nothing’s” George said, handing her his glass             of rosé.
                         That’s             how he talked. She couldn’t                     understand him half the time but he was a poet so she had             learned not to ask for explanations.
            “Guard it with your life,” he added,  “I’ll             be right back.” 
            
            Nothing he says ever             means what it sounds like, Susan thought. 'Right                 back' could mean ten minutes, three hours or even three months.                  She surveyed the drinks table: two bottles of the local wine, two Perriers, two Evians and fourteen cans of sugary fizzy                 kid stuff.                                   Their hosts were strictly teetotal and stingy to             boot but the isolated expat community never turned down an opportunity                 to socialise so the room was buzzing with familiar talking heads.                 Through the window to the garden Susan could see the teetotal                 host’s teetotally blonde wife in intimate tête a                 tête             with George.
           
            Susan leaned back             and tipped the wine down her throat. Three years on the wagon and             five years of compliance suddenly vanished as she poured the remains             of the first bottle into her husband's glass, drank it, then dispensing             with formalities, expertly guided the rosy stream into her mouth             straight from the neck of the second bottle .
           
                                             Oblivious to the guests' shocked stares, Susan                                 stumbled out of the house and down the village                                 street just as Père Lafitte was passing                                 by. She grabbed his arm, shouting: 
               
                “ Portez-moi  à une             nunnery! “  
 
 
8 comments:
More, I want more! What happened next? There's an entire novel crowding the edges of this tantalising fragment.
Dick, thanks but oh no! A novel? Another project to add to my overstuffed file of guilt-making unfinished projects??
Heh-heh, good one, Natalie!
Thanks Tom, this is fun!
Natalie, Dick is right - maybe a short story at the very least. Excellent. Next instalment please.
Linda, a short short story is conceivable. Anything more would cause severe over-committment plus procrastination syndrome.
A perfectly momentous moment.
Thanks, Zhoen. I've actually thought about finishing the story. I might do that. Maybe.
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