Paris Adrift

Home > Other > Paris Adrift > Page 30
Paris Adrift Page 30

by EJ Swift


  When people ask me about Paris, what will I say? Will I talk about timefaring, eighteenth century parties in the catacombs, a man I loved but could not save? Will I tell them of Clichy, of mojito nights and Oz at dawn, of Gabriela and Angel, Millie’s heroes? Which version do I give and which do I keep close? If I deny either, will it diminish in my memory, grow smaller and blurrier until I can no longer trust it as truth? Or will it remain safe, untarnished, a well to return to in times of drought, a source of joy?

  IN THE EARLY hours of the morning it grows cold, but I remain where I am, ignoring the fluctuations of the night around me, the gradual exodus of revellers. The sky lightens. Birdsong. In the tunnels beneath the boulevard, the métro starts to rumble. And something else. A flare is on the way. I can hear the anomaly singing, I can feel its hum in my bones. I know that I could walk inside Millie’s, wait until the bouncers are distracted and slip inside the barrier with old ease. I could answer the unanswerable call and will myself back to 2042. I could find Léon in Rome.

  My limbs protest when I stand, joints and muscles stiff from hours of sitting in the cold. I take the handle of my suitcase and go down into the métro. Line 2 to La Chapelle: four stops against the wrench of my heart. A short walk to Gare du Nord. Every step an incalculable effort, the song building in my head, the anomaly unwilling to let me go, my mind captive in a place twenty years from now. Line D, all the way down to Gare de Lyon. Take the escalator up into the station. Swept along with the rush of morning commuters. The footprint of the real world. Overhead, the vault of the station roof, rows of trains lined up in their bays. Movement, ever forward. The train to Milan is boarding.

  I walk along the platform, ticket in hand. Conscious now of two presents. In time and out of time. An echo of Léon walks beside me, his weight that of a bird against my shoulder, his arm the ghost of an albatross wing, here but not here, as I go on.

  Acknowledgements

  MY THANKS TO the generous readers who looked at early or later drafts of the book and offered their thoughts and encouragement: Nina Allan, Clare Bullock, Beth Grossman, Genevieve Helme, Dominique Larson, Chris Priest, Kim Swift, Veronica Swift, Andrew Swift, Björn Wärmedal. Thanks to the Southbank Set: David Bausor, Kyo Choi, Christabel Cooper, Jaq Hazell, Dominique Jackson and Colin Tucker, for their feedback on various excerpts and all round support. Thank you to Rooksana Hossenally and Marko Waschke who kindly checked my French and German translations—any errors in the text are my own—and to Sophie Webber who advised me on Jewish weddings. Thanks as always to my agent John Berlyne and to Louise Buckley at Zeno Agency for their editorial advice and support and for keeping faith with the book; to my editors Jon Oliver and David Moore, publicist Remy Njambi, and the wonderful team at Solaris who have given the book a home; and to Joey Hifi for the beautiful cover art. Love and thanks to the friends I met in Paris, an inspiration and a source of joy, and to James for keeping me sane along the way, this time and all the other times.

  Leave a Review!

  Have you enjoyed EJ Swift's Paris Adrift? If so, we’d love it if you let people know!

  Drop a review on Goodreads:

  Or share it on your favourite social media site:

  Remember to follow us for news!

  On Facebook • On Twitter • Our newsletter

  www.solarisbooks.com

  When physicist Robert Strong – newly unemployed and single – is offered a hundred thousand pounds for a week’s work, he’s understandably sceptical. But Victor Amos, head of the mysterious Observation Research Board, has compelling proof that the next round of experiments at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider poses a real threat to the whole world. And he needs Robert to sabotage it.

  Robert’s life is falling apart. His work at the Dark Matter Research Laboratory in Middlesbrough was taken away from him; his girlfriend, struggling to cope with the loss of her sister, has left. He returns home to Scotland, seeking sanctuary and rest, and instead starts to question his own sanity as the dead begin appearing to him, in dreams and in waking. Accepting Amos’s offer, Robert flies to Geneva, but as he infiltrates CERN, everything he once understood about reality and science, about the boundary between life and death, changes forever.

  Mixing science, philosophy and espionage, Libby McGugan’s stunning debut is a thriller like no other.

  www.solarisbooks.com

  NOMINATED FOR THE 2015 ARTHUR C. CLARKE AND JOHN W. CAMPBELL AWARDS

  Rudi is a cook in a Kraków restaurant, but when his boss asks Rudi to help a cousin escape from the country he’s trapped in, a new career – part spy, part people-smuggler – begins. Following multiple economic crises and a devastating flu pandemic, Europe has fractured into countless tiny nations, duchies, polities and republics. Recruited by the shadowy organisation Les Coureurs des Bois, Rudi is schooled in espionage, but when a training mission to The Line, a sovereign nation consisting of a trans-Europe railway line, goes wrong, he is arrested and beaten, and Coureur Central must attempt a rescue.

  With so many nations to work in, and identities to assume, Rudi is kept busy travelling across Europe. But when he is sent to smuggle someone out of Berlin and finds a severed head inside a locker instead, a conspiracy begins to wind itself around him. With kidnapping, double-crosses and a map that constantly re-draws itself, Europe in Autumn is a science fiction thriller like no other.

  ‘One of the best novels I’ve read in a long time.’

  Adam Roberts, The Guardian

  ‘Europe in Autumn is the work of a consummate storyteller and combines great characters, a cracking central idea, and a plot that will keep you on the edge of your seat. Excellent.’

  Eric Brown

  www.solarisbooks.com

  Captain Jim Wedderburn has looks, style and courage. He’s adored by women, respected by men and feared by his enemies. He’s the man to fi nd out who has twisted London into this strange new world.

  But in Dream London the city changes a little every night and the people change a little every day. The towers are growing taller, the parks have hidden themselves away and the streets form themselves into strange new patterns.

  There are people sailing in from new lands down the river, new criminals emerging in the East End and a path spiraling down to another world.

  Everyone is changing, no one is who they seem to be.

  ‘A real feat of the imagination, this is a really exceptional book, unlike anything I’ve ever read before.’

  Chris Beckett

  ‘As strange and unclassifiable a novel as it’s possible to imagine, and a marvellous achievement.’

  The Financial Times

  www.solarisbooks.com

 

 

 


‹ Prev