Flowers of Darkness Tatiana Rosnay (chromebook ebook reader TXT) đ
- Author: Tatiana Rosnay
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âDuly noted. Letâs get back to the questions. Can you tell me on which occasion you felt the deepest sadness?â
Clarissa realized the irritation she felt at the beginning had fizzled out. Sheâd lost her wariness, as well. Something inside had let go.
âThe death of my son.â
She found it extraordinary that she could actually utter those words so straightforwardly. They had remained locked up for so long.
âWould you care to say a little more?â
âI can say this. When people ask me how many children I have, I always reply, âTwo.â I say, âTwo children.â Iâve been pregnant twice; I carried babies twice; I gave birth twice. It would be even sadder to say Iâve only had one child. It would be erasing my sonâs existence.â
âCould you tell me his name?â
She wondered why Mrs. Dalloway would need to know that, but the words came tumbling out before she could stop them. She said his name out loud.
âThank you, Clarissa. How did you fight the sadness?â
âThe sadness never left me, Mrs. Dalloway. I learned to live with it. Writing helped.â
âWould you say this tragedy shaped the person you are today?â
Clarissa let out a short, curt laugh.
âIn your humble opinion?â
âIâm afraid I donât understand your query, Clarissa. Can you reformulate it?â
âYes, there were repercussions. And yes, I still do suffer. Hypnosis helped me a lot.â
âCan you confirm your hypnotherapistâs name?â
âSheâs no longer with us, Iâm afraid. Her name was Elise Delaporte.â
âWould you like to hear her voice, Clarissa? Thatâs the kind of thing you can ask me to do for you.â
âHear Eliseâs voice? Oh, my GodâŠâ
âPlease ask me, Clarissa.â
âMrs. Dalloway, Iâd like to listen to Elise Delaporte.â
First came silence. Then from its depths sprang the unforgettable silky, clear tones. Clarissa quivered, moved to tears. Elise! It didnât matter what she was going on about; this was Elise, her Elise. She was talking to a journalist, answering questions about her profession, how she chose hypnosis, or rather, how it had chosen her. How she helped others. Clarissa closed her eyes and felt as if she were now in Eliseâs small, hushed apartment; she could feel the firmness of the chair propping up her back while she surrendered to Eliseâs voice, and in front of her eyelids the strange fluctuating white line began to appear, tracing its way ahead like a boundless, enticing path. In her palm, she almost felt the blue china cup filled with warm water that Elise had handed her after each session.
Elise was silent now. So was Mrs. Dalloway. Clarissa opened damp eyelids. The blue eyes vanished from the screen. A few sentences now showed up.
Congratulations, Clarissa Katsef. Your personal virtual assistant was successfully set up. C.A.S.A. wishes you a very pleasant day.
NOTEBOOK
In the beginning, I did what all suspicious wives did. I went through his pockets. Nothing. I looked in his case. Nothing. His mobile was locked; so was his computer. No way I could get inside.
I started following him, my hair hidden under a baseball cap, a large jacket concealing my figure.
His office was near the Palais-Royal. I went to wait at the café just in front. I saw him come out with his colleagues, go have lunch nearby.
I felt silly. All this took time. I had other things to do than spy on my husband. But when I found another hair on his sweater, just as long, just as blond, I knew I couldnât sit around doing nothing. It was an unbearable situation. At our ages, to have to face this again. The lies. The concealment.
He had always told me, the other times. It was he who came to see me, ashamed, red-faced, begging for my forgiveness. Nameless women. Unimportant women. One-night stands.
With my first husband, Toby, I had not had that problem. I had not been through that pain. I did what many women do: I forgave, closed my eyes. I had a couple of discreet affairs. Nothing serious. They did me good.
I donât know why, but I instantly felt that this time, things were different. This affair wasnât like the others. I didnât yet know to what extent.
I took it upon myself to say nothing to anyone. I had to find out. I had to be patient. I ended up noticing it was often at the end of the day that I couldnât get hold of him. His schedule became shady. So I continued to wait in front of his office, hidden under my cap.
There was that afternoon when he came out of his office carrying a small travel bag, in a hurry. He seemed happy. Iâd never seen that bag. He rushed to the MĂ©tro. It was tough following him. Where was he going? Who was he going to meet?
My husband took a route that had nothing to do with our home. I followed, puzzled and anxious. He took the exit at Anvers station. I tried to think of someone we knew who lived around there, but no one came to mind. I looked at the name of the street: rue Dancourt. He entered a small passage and I was able to slip in before the gate closed behind him.
He went into a building on the left, and at that point, I did not dare follow him any longer. I kept back, observing the façade. It was an old edifice, fissured and dilapidated. I drew nearer to read the names on the intercom.
I had a dreadful shock.
His name was there. Our name. The name Iâd been using, in my everyday life, for the past twenty years.
François ANTOINE
6th floor, left.
3TOWER
So, why?
ROMAIN GARY, December 2, 1980
I begin to hear voices and I canât concentrate.
VIRGINIA WOOLF, March 28, 1941
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