Golden Earrings

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Golden Earrings Page 1

by Belinda Alexandra




  Golden Earrings

  Belinda Alexandra

  Dedication

  For Selwa

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Part I

  One: Paloma Paris, 1975

  Two: Evelina

  Three: Paloma

  Four: Celestina Barcelona, 1909

  Five: Paloma

  Six: Celestina

  Seven: Paloma

  Eight: Evelina

  Nine: Celestina

  Ten: Paloma

  Eleven: Celestina

  Part II

  Twelve: Paloma

  Thirteen: Celestina

  Fourteen: Evelina

  Fifteen: Celestina

  Sixteen: Paloma

  Seventeen: Celestina

  Eighteen: Paloma

  Nineteen: Celestina

  Twenty: Paloma

  Part III

  Twenty-One: Celestina Barcelona, 1920

  Twenty-Two: Diario de Barcelona, 2 July 1920

  Twenty-Three: Paloma

  Twenty-Four: Celestina

  Twenty-Five: Paloma

  Twenty-Six: Celestina

  Twenty-Seven: Celestina

  Twenty-Eight: Paloma

  Twenty-Nine: Evelina

  Thirty: Paloma

  Thirty-One: Evelina

  Thirty-Two: Evelina

  Thirty-Three: Paloma

  Thirty-Four: Paloma

  Thirty-Five: Celestina

  Thirty-Six: Paloma

  Thirty-Seven: Celestina

  Thirty-Eight: Paloma

  Thirty-Nine: Paloma

  Author’s Note

  A Special Note To My Readers

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

  Discover the world with Belinda Alexandra …

  Copyright

  PART I

  ONE

  Paloma Paris, 1975

  It was 24 November, the day after the funeral of Generalisimo Franco, the dictator of Spain, that I saw my first ghost. The morning started off ordinarily enough. I woke at six o’clock and stretched my arms and legs before slipping out of bed. It was still dark and I turned on the bedside lamp with its floral shade. By its mottled light, I pulled on my leotard and tights. My hairpins and headband were in the dresser drawer. I fixed my hair away from my face quickly and by habit, before guarding myself against the late autumn chill by wrapping my dressing gown around me and putting on my slippers.

  The hallway was dark, but I didn’t need the light to guide me along it towards the kitchen. I crept past Mamie’s bedroom. My grandmother — whom I called ‘Mamie’ when we spoke French and ‘Iaia’ when we spoke Catalan — was a heavy sleeper and a herd of bulls wouldn’t have disturbed her, but it was guilt that made me move quietly. Mamie said that no ballerina should even think of getting out of bed before nine o’clock, let alone practising before that time. But I was meeting Gaby at the café during her break in lectures, and I had classes to give in the afternoon. Despite the events of the previous summer, I could not give up my daily practice of barre and centre work, even if it meant rising early. I’d rather do without sleep and food than miss my routine of pliés, tendus, ronds de jambe and stretching. They were as essential to me as breathing.

  I switched on the light above the stove, careful not to wake my cockatiel, Diaghilev, who was still quiet in his covered cage. The Australian parrot with the Russian name had been a present to me from Mamie for my eighteenth birthday and was a chatterer. As soon as the morning light entered the kitchen he would be whistling bars from Mozart’s ‘Alla Turca’. I turned on the tap and filled a saucepan with water. There was a copy of El Diario, the Spanish émigré newsletter, on the bench. The newsletter was directed at those refugees who had fled Spain for France in 1939, after the Civil War. Pictures of Franco from his youth to his old age were on the cover. The article said that the dictator, who had died two weeks shy of his eighty-third birthday, would be buried at a memorial commemorating the War Dead. The paragraph was crossed out in red pen. Next to it Mamie had written: ‘The Fascist War Dead!’ I could feel the vehemence in her scrawl. It was not her usual ladylike penmanship and, if there weren’t only the two of us in the apartment, I would have thought someone else had written it.

  I stood by the window while I waited for the coffee to brew. The wheaty smell of fresh bread drifted from the bakery across the street. I lifted the lace curtain and saw a queue of eager housewives waiting on the pavement outside. It was passion that made them early risers, like me. Their pursuit of the finest pain frais to feed their families enabled them to go without sleep. Dance affected me the same way. Nothing gave me more satisfaction than to unfold myself into a beautiful arabesque or execute a graceful grand jeté, even if I had to practise from morning until night seven days a week to do it.

  A bittersweet aroma wafted around the kitchen, signalling that the coffee was ready. I let the curtain fall, noticing for the first time that its hem was frayed. I reached for a cup and saucer from the odd assortment of floral and plain designs in the cupboard. When I sat down to drink the honey-thick brew, my lip touched something rough on the china and I saw the cup was chipped. Mamie was fastidiously neat, but it was my mother who would never have tolerated things like chipped cups or frayed curtains. ‘Beauty is always in the details, Paloma,’ she used to say. But Mama wasn’t here any more, and my grandmother and I muddled along in our chipped and frayed existence without her.

  There were two entrances to my grandmother’s ballet studio: one was directly from our kitchen; the second was next to the landing in the corridor outside. I took the key from the hook on the back of the kitchen door and entered the studio. Daybreak was starting to filter through the windows that overlooked the courtyard of our apartment building, so I didn’t turn on the lights. Although the floor was swept and mopped daily, the closed air was choked with the scent of dust and mould that was common to old buildings in Paris.

  I took my ballet slippers from the cupboard and sat on the floor to tie the ribbons. While I was tucking in the ends, I thought about Mamie’s angry scribbling on the newsletter. When I was a child, I had often asked my grandmother about her Spanish past, but her lips would purse and the light would disappear from her eyes. ‘Perhaps when you are older,’ she would reply. I could see I was causing her pain and learned not to touch on the subject of her life before she came to Paris.

  I left my dressing gown and bed slippers on the piano stool. Our accompanist, Madame Carré, would be in later to play Beethoven and Schubert for our students. But I liked to practise on my own in silence, following my body rather than the beat. From my demi-pliés, I moved to my grand-pliés, relishing the feeling of strength and flexibility in my legs. I cringed when a memory from last June’s debacle at the ballet school tried to force its way into my thoughts. I closed my eyes and pushed the image of me standing in front of the noticeboard, bathed in sweat and with nausea rising in my stomach, out of my mind. Years of training had taught me to focus on a single objective until I achieved it, and I was not going to give up on my dreams now.

  After an hour at the barre, I was ready to do some centre practice. I positioned myself in front of the mirrored wall at the front of the studio and was about to commence a tendu combination when suddenly the daylight outside flickered. It was such a strange phenomenon that I lost my concentration. A thunderstorm so early in the morning? In November? I moved towards the window, perplexed. That was when I saw her, standing in the courtyard as if she was waiting for someone to arrive. I didn’t realise that she was a ghost at first but I wondered — because of her black wavy hair and the proud way that she held her chin — whether she was Spanish. The woman wasn’t anyone
I recognised from Mamie’s collection of former refugees who occasionally gathered in our apartment. My initial impression was that she was a mother coming to enquire about lessons for her child on her way to work.

  I opened the window and called to her, ‘Bonjour, Madame! Un moment, s’il vous plaît.’

  I grabbed my leg warmers and coat from the cupboard, and slipped some loose boots over my ballet shoes. Before I headed out into the corridor, I picked up a leaflet for our school that gave the times of the classes. It was only when I was halfway down the stairs that it occurred to me that the courtyard door should have still been locked. How had the woman got inside? We didn’t have a concierge: my grandfather had never believed in them. He’d viewed anyone outside of the family as a potential spy.

  I reached the ground floor and opened the door to the courtyard. The cold air bit my face and I shivered. I couldn’t see the woman. Where had she gone? Then I felt someone watching me. I turned and saw her standing by the disused well. My breath caught in my throat. She emanated a quality that reminded me of the great étoiles of the Paris Ballet: majesty. Her face was a slightly offset oval, and her nose above her strong, red mouth was broad and flat. But her eyes … I had never seen such eyes. They were like two black shells shimmering under the sea. It was their depth that made me realise the woman was not of this world.

  She moved slowly towards me, her arm extended from her cloak with the grace of a dancer. Her hand hovered near mine as if she wanted to give me something. Without thinking, I opened my palm. Two objects dropped into it. I glanced down and saw a pair of golden hooped earrings. I looked from my palm to the woman, but she had disappeared as suddenly as she had arrived, leaving only the fading echo of her footsteps and the earrings I held in my hand.

  TWO

  Evelina

  My dearest sister,

  So the monster is finally dead! Let them give Franco’s body all the honours they want, for his soul will rot in hell, along with those other devils Hitler and Mussolini! Now the leaders of Europe and America can pay homage to the man who took their help without repayment, and used their policies of non-intervention to destroy the legitimate government of Spain and murder thousands of people. Do they not realise how much Franco was hated? That he relied on repression to rule? Franco’s death, while welcome, brings back too much darkness for me. Perhaps, in time, more light will illuminate what, for the present, I can’t bear to see or remember. They say that now he is gone, a new Spain will emerge. But we have heard that promise before. Even here in my refuge in France, I never feel entirely safe. Or for you, far away in Australia.

  You asked how Paloma is faring. I fear that my granddaughter has had too many blows in her young life: the death of my darling Julieta, the disappointment in her father, the misfortune regarding her graduation from the ballet school. Today when I rose, Paloma was already dressed. She moved about the kitchen with a stunned expression on her face, dropping things, as if something had unnerved her. Although she copies Catherine Deneuve’s bouffant hairstyle and accents her golden brown eyes with liner, she looked so young and vulnerable in her velvet coat and scarf that I almost wanted to sit her on my lap and feed her bread with tomato, as I did when she was a child. She was hurrying to meet her friend who is studying at the Sorbonne. When Paloma turned to say goodbye, I was tempted to ask her what had happened to make her so agitated, but I kept silent. She does not share everything with me these days. When she suffers a disappointment, she shrinks into her own world, avoiding contact with those who might force her to face reality. She still practises six or seven hours a day, and examines the post when it arrives as if all that happened last June might be reversed and she will still be offered a place with the Paris Opera Ballet. That damned Arielle Marineau. She always hated Julieta, and now that her rival is gone, she takes her revenge on the innocent daughter. Wouldn’t be able to carry the load of a professional dancer — whoever heard of such nonsense? Paloma has undergone the most vigorous training since her childhood and is destined to be an étoile. Marineau wields too much power, and although it must have been obvious to the other examiners that Paloma is special, they are too terrified of upsetting the Opera’s ballet mistress. That is the world of dance: beauty and treachery.

  ‘Paloma,’ I tell her, ‘this is life. You make a plan and someone stops you. You must not give in to defeat. Find another way to your dream.’ The Paris Opera is not the only ballet company — and she was made offers by the scouts from New York and London. But I am not sure that she even hears any of what I am saying. It is as if she thinks the only way to keep her mother’s memory alive is to follow in her footsteps: Julieta excelled at the School of the Paris Opera Ballet, so she must too; Julieta became a première danseuse at nineteen and an étoile at twenty, so she must do the same, even though such rapid progression is rare. And so it goes. Paloma does not see that she is a different type of dancer to her mother. Julieta had superhuman physical strength — my poor darling even refused morphine until the very end. But Paloma … well, you have never had the experience of seeing her perform: this slender, quiet girl who comes to life on the stage, moving all with the beauty and delicacy of her performance. One’s heart could break with it. But what can I do? The more I talk, the more she retreats. So now I say nothing. I simply protect her from anything that might upset her fragile equilibrium or stir up her already anxious mind. I am terrified that anything that causes her too much excitement will push her over the edge. I can only pray and hope that time will heal.

  It grows late and my eyes are weaker than they used to be. I will stop here, but I promise to write again soon.

  With kisses and love,

  Evelina

  THREE

  Paloma

  ‘Mon Dieu, Paloma!’ cried Gaby, staring at me with her electric-blue eyes. ‘A ghost?’

  I glanced around the rue Mouffetard café, where we sat waiting for our coffee to arrive. The sudden influx of students from the Sorbonne hadn’t disturbed the man next to us from his contemplation of his newspaper and I was glad to see Gaby’s outburst hadn’t either.

  ‘Incredible!’ she went on. ‘It is fascinating!’ Her face was lit up with curiosity.

  I had been worried that Gaby’s studies in law and political science might have turned her into a cynic, and had half-expected her to question my sanity when I related my account of the morning’s otherworldly visitor. As for me, my hands were still shaking and I’d missed my stop on the Métro because I’d been replaying in my mind how the apparition had vanished so suddenly.

  ‘Who could she be?’ Gaby asked.

  ‘I have no idea,’ I replied.

  ‘But what does it mean?’ Gaby ran her hand through her chocolate-brown hair. ‘When a ghost comes, it is supposed to have some unfinished business to conclude — or it has come to give a warning!’

  I fingered the earrings in my jacket pocket. I had no doubt that the woman’s spirit had meant to give them specifically to me. But why? I hadn’t told Gaby about the earrings yet; how the laws of nature had been interrupted. I had made up my mind I would only show them to her if she believed my story about the ghost first.

  Out of the corner of my eye, I saw the young, lithe waiter weaving his way between the tables with our coffees. We paused in our conversation as he put the cups down. After placing a serviette in front of each of us, he turned to go, but at that moment Gaby looked up. Always beautiful, she was especially ravishing today in her bell-bottomed pinstriped trousers and the floral mini-kimono she was wearing under her open coat. She was also fashionably braless and her small but shapely breasts jiggled along with her bangles each time she moved. The waiter was mesmerised.

  ‘Would you care for anything else, mesdemoiselles?’ he asked. ‘Would a baguette or some soup tempt you? A croquemonsieur perhaps?’ He addressed us both, out of politeness, but didn’t even glance at me.

  ‘Oh no, no,’ said Gaby, flashing a vibrant smile. ‘I’m watching my figure.’

  The waite
r stood there for a moment, opening and closing his mouth. Gaby’s figure was obviously fascinating to him as well.

  I leaned back in my chair. I was aching to show Gaby the earrings, but I had learned to be patient whenever a man interrupted our conversation. I often wished I could be like her — so carefree, so charming, so flirtatious. But I couldn’t; where she was a complete extrovert, I was hopelessly trapped in my shell.

  The waiter was doing his best to persuade Gaby to meet him after work, but I knew he wouldn’t succeed. She was flirtatious but choosy, and he wasn’t her type. She liked her men sporty. So while Gaby, in her usual charming way, flattered the waiter and at the same time quashed any hopes he entertained for an afternoon tryst, I looked at my hands and thought about why I was choosing to tell her about the ghost, rather than Mamie.

  Making friends was not something I was good at, but I’d known Gaby since we’d met at Mamie’s ballet school, before I was accepted into the School of the Paris Opera Ballet. Gaby had been a promising ballet student too, but then she hit puberty and her love of dance gave way to a keen interest in boys. Sometimes I believed that Gaby sincerely liked my company — she was an excellent listener with that talent of making everyone she talked to feel fascinating. At other times I’d find myself wondering if she only kept up her acquaintance with me in order to practise her Spanish, which she needed to realise her ambition of entering the French diplomatic service. She certainly wasn’t my closest confidante: that was Mamie. But I knew if I told Mamie about the ghost she would think I’d gone insane with all the strain of the past year. And I had to tell someone.

  I breathed in the heady air of the café — coffee, wine, garlic, bread and spicy cigarette smoke. These were the smells I associated with the Latin Quarter. I liked to walk around this part of the Left Bank, looking at the markets and bookstalls, and stopping at the record stores to listen to the Rolling Stones and Bryan Ferry. Although many of the streets had been tarred over after the student riots of 1968, the cobblestones of rue Mouffetard were still intact. That’s why I always met Gaby at the café on the corner: the place was steeped in history.

 

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