GLASS SOUP Jonathan Carroll (good romance books to read TXT) đ
- Author: Jonathan Carroll
Book online «GLASS SOUP Jonathan Carroll (good romance books to read TXT) đ». Author Jonathan Carroll
âFizz, you donât hear anything? You donât hear those insects?â
âOf course I hear them! Is that what Iâm supposed to hearâbugs?â
The expression on Vincentâs face changed dramatically. âYou do hear them?â
âSure. So what?â She thought he was jokingâhow could she not hear that close clamor?
âTell me what you hear.â
âCicadas. You knowâthat high chirring sound they make.â
Staring at her, his face said he didnât know if he believed her yet. âAnd it sounds far away?â
âNo, right here around us. Itâs very loud.â
âThatâs loud to you?â
âYes.â She didnât like the tone of his voice. âWhat, Vincent? Whatâs going on?â
âThose arenât cicadas youâre hearingâitâs the dead. Some of the ones you brought back with you when you returned from there.â
âHow do you know that?â
He looked at her sadly. âBecause I remember that sound from when I was dead. Itâs one of the few things I do remember about that time.â
The Moon in the Man
âThe moon in the man, eh?â was the first thing Vincent Ettrich ever heard Isabelle Neukor say. She said it to a woman she was talking with. Then she threw back her head and laughed with her mouth wide open. Vincent had been brought over to meet her by Flora Vaughn and Simon Haden. This Isabella had a face three or four years past beautiful. That was the first thing that came to mind when he saw her. After being introduced, he pointed to the heavy coat she was wearing and the first thing he ever said to her was, âDo you know what they call a coat like that in France?â
She smiled a little and turned to Simon and Flora to see if this was some kind of joke. Eventually she looked back at Vincent. âNo, what would they call my coat?â
âA houppelande.â It cantered perfectly out of his mouth like a dancing horse. âIsnât that a great word? Hope-eh-lond.â
Normally she didnât wear heavy coats but that night it was bitter cold outside. She had just arrived at the party and had not yet taken off her ankle-length gray loden cape. The hood on it was so long that it went halfway down her back. That coat along with her blonde hair, large blue eyes, and cheeks red from the cold made her look either like a fairy tale princess or a dancer in the Ice Capades.
âAnd what is a houppelande?â
âThat kind of coatâbig and dramatic.â
âA Dracula coat?â
âI was thinking more like Dr.Zhivago.â He liked her already. Women who were quick, witty, and willing to laugh at themselves won him easily.
She began to unbutton the cape. âAll right, then Iâve got one for you now.â Her hands were numb and slow from the cold. She cupped them together and blew her hot breath over them before continuing. âHave you ever heard of the tunica molesta?â
âA torture shirt? Sure. Have you ever been to the torture museum in the Sixth District? All kinds of amazing things there: itâs really worth a visit.â
Isabelle looked quickly at Simon Haden, her eyes asking where had he found this guy? Sheâd never met anyone before who knew about the tunica molesta.
As the four chatted, it was obvious there was strong electricity going back and forth between Isabelle and Vincent. Flora and Simon saw that and it made both of them frantic. But there was nothing either could do about it.
Ettrich told a funny, surprisingly tender story about his fatherâs prized accordion collection. And how as a boy, Vincent learned to play the instrument only because he fell in love with one model in the collection named the âMount Everest.â
âCan you really play the accordion?â Isabelle asked.
âYes, I can. Even âFlight of the Bumblebee.ââ
She liked that very much, which showed both on her face and in her body language toward Vincent. Isabelle liked people who could do odd unnecessary thingsâventriloquism, play the accordion, figure skate, or repair old wristwatches. Sheâd fallen in love with one man mainly because he taught her to tango.
On a table in her living room were a bunch of prized objects sheâd made, found, or bought at various flea markets. None of these things had any real value, but Isabelle cherished them all because they were strange, unique, or memory incarnate to her.
For example there was a red rubber toy man from the 1920s that looked exactly like a figure in a Bruno Schulz drawing she loved. Next to it was a giant tooth from a favorite dog, long dead. A dented Viennese street sign for âTolstoi Gasse,â a figure of a frog dressed in a ballerinaâs tutu, and in an intarsia wood frame was part of a white blotter from her childhood desk. It was filled from edge to edge with a little girlâs drawings, squiggles, cryptic notes to herself⊠a nine-year-oldâs world in her own words and illustrations. Looking at Vincent, this accordion player, this interesting man, she wanted to show him these things and hear what he had to say about them.
What clinched it though was the music. A few minutes later while they were talking, music suddenly came on in the room. Things quieted momentarily while the crowd absorbed it, then returned to their conversations. The song âThese Foolish Thingsâ sung by Peggy Lee began. Vincent raised his head and smiled as if recognizing an old friend. And it was an old friendâone of his all-time-favorite songs.
Without hesitating, he asked Isabelle if she would like to dance. She thought he was kidding but he wasnât. No one else in the room was dancing but he wanted toâright now with her to this song. Isabelle was a terrific dancer but had never been the first one out on a floor, never. She looked at her friend to see what she thought, but Flora Vaughn was fighting just to keep a straight face and not go hurrying from the room in tears. Haden knew about Flora and Ettrichâs past affair and he would have been amused by his old loverâs discomfort now if it hadnât been for
Comments (0)