Paris For One (Quick Reads) Read online




  Jojo Moyes

  PARIS FOR ONE

  Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

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  PENGUIN BOOKS

  PARIS FOR ONE

  Jojo Moyes is a novelist and a journalist. She worked at the Independent for ten years before leaving to write full-time. Her previous novels have all been critically acclaimed and include The Girl You Left Behind, Me Before You and The One Plus One. She lives in Essex with her husband and their three children.

  Chapter One

  Nell shifts her bag along the plastic seating in the station and checks the clock on the wall for the eighty-ninth time. Her gaze flicks back as the door from Security slides open. Another family – Disney-bound – walks through into the departure lounge, with buggy, screaming children and parents who have been awake way too long.

  For the last half-hour her heart has been thumping, a sick feeling high in her chest.

  ‘He will come. He will still come. He can still make it,’ she says under her breath.

  ‘Train 9051 to Paris will be leaving from platform two in ten minutes. Please make your way to the platform. Remember to take all luggage with you.’

  She chews her lip, then texts him again – the fifth time.

  Where are you? Train about to leave!

  She had texted him twice as she set off, checking that they were still meeting at the station. When he didn’t answer, she told herself it was because she had been on the Underground. Or he had. She sends a third text, and a fourth. And then, as she stands there, her phone vibrates in her hand.

  Sorry babe. Caught up at work. Not going to make it.

  As if they had planned to catch up over a quick drink after work. She stares at the phone in disbelief.

  Not going to make this train? Shall I wait?

  And, seconds later, the reply:

  No, you go. Will try to get later train.

  She is too shocked to be angry. She stands still, as people get to their feet around her, pulling on coats, and punches out a reply.

  But where will we meet?

  He doesn’t answer. Caught up at work. It’s a surf- and scuba-wear shop. In November. How caught up can he be?

  She gazes around her, as if this might still be a joke. As if he will, even now, burst through the doors, with his wide smile, telling her that he was teasing her (he is a bit too fond of teasing her). And he will take her arm, kiss her cheek with wind-chilled lips, and say something like ‘You didn’t think I’d miss this, did you? Your first trip to Paris?’

  But the glass doors stay firmly shut.

  ‘Madam? You need to go to the platform.’ The Eurostar guard reaches for her ticket. And for a second she hesitates – will he come? – and then she is in the crowd, her little case trailing behind her. She stops and types:

  Meet me at the hotel then.

  She heads down the escalator as the huge train roars into the station.

  ‘What do you mean, you’re not coming? We’ve planned this for ages.’ It is the annual Girls’ Trip to Brighton. They have gone there on the first weekend of November, every year for six years – Nell, Magda, Trish and Sue – piled into Sue’s old four-wheel drive or Magda’s company car. They would escape their daily lives for two nights of drinking, hanging out with the lads from stag weekends and nursing hangovers over cooked breakfasts in a tatty hotel called Brightsea Lodge.

  The annual trip has survived through two babies, one divorce, and a case of shingles (they spent the first night partying in Magda’s hotel room instead). Nobody has ever missed one.

  ‘Well, Pete’s invited me to go to Paris.’

  ‘Pete is taking you to Paris?’ Magda had stared at her, as if she’d announced she was learning to speak Russian. ‘Pete Pete?’

  ‘He says he can’t believe I’ve never been.’

  ‘I went to Paris once, on a school trip. I got lost in the Louvre and someone put my trainer down a toilet in the youth hostel,’ said Trish.

  ‘I snogged a French boy because he looked like that bloke who goes out with Hallé Berry.’

  ‘Pete-with-the-hair Pete? Your Pete? I don’t mean to sound mean. I just thought he was a bit of a …’

  ‘Loser,’ said Sue, helpfully.

  ‘Knob.’

  ‘Prat.’

  ‘Obviously we’re wrong. Turns out he’s the kind of bloke who takes Nell on dirty weekends to Paris. Which is … you know. Great. I just wish it wasn’t the same weekend as our weekend.’

  ‘Well, once we’d got the tickets … it was difficult …’ Nell mumbled, with a wave of her hand, hoping nobody would ask who had got these tickets. (It had been the only weekend left before Christmas when the discount had applied.)

  She had planned the trip as carefully as she organized her office paperwork. She had searched the internet for the best places to go, scanning TripAdvisor for the best budget hotels, cross-checking each one on Google, and entering the results on a spreadsheet.

  She had settled on a place behind the Rue de Rivoli – ‘clean, friendly, very romantic’ – and booked it for two nights. She pictured herself and Pete, tangled up in a French hotel bed, gazing out of the window at the Eiffel Tower, holding hands over croissants and coffee in some street café. She was only really going on pictures: she didn’t have much idea what you did on a weekend in Paris, apart from the obvious.

  At the age of twenty-six, Nell Simmons had never been away for a weekend with a boyfriend, unless you counted that time she went rock-climbing with Andrew Dinsmore. He had made them sleep in his Mini and she woke up so cold that she couldn’t move her neck for six hours.

  Nell’s mother was fond of telling anyone who would listen that Nell ‘was not the adventurous type’. She was also ‘not the type to travel’, ‘not the kind of girl who can rely on her looks’, and now, finally, ‘no spring chicken’.

  That was the thing about growing up in a small town – everyone thought they knew what you were. Nell was the sensible one. The quiet one. The one who would carefully research any plan and who could be trusted to water your plants, mind your kids, and not run off with anyone’s husband.

  No, Mother. What I really am, Nell thought, as she printed off the tickets, gazing at them, then tucking them into a folder with all the important information, is the kind of girl who goes to Paris for the weekend.

  As the big day grew nearer, she started to enjoy dropping it into conversation. ‘Got to make sure my passport is up–to-date,’ she said, when she left her mother after Sunday lunch. She bought new underwear, shaved her legs, painted her toenails a vivid shade of red (she usually went for clear). ‘Don’t forget I’m leaving early on Friday,’ she said at work. ‘For Paris.’

  ‘Oh, you’re so lucky,’ chorused the girls in Accounts.

  ‘I’m well jell,’ said Trish, who disliked Pete slightly less than everyone else.

  Nell climbs onto the train and stows her bag, wondering how ‘jell’ Trish would be if she could see her now: a girl beside an empty seat going to Paris with no idea if her boyfriend was going to turn up.

  Chapter Two

  The train station in Paris is busy. She emerges through the platform gates and is frozen to the spot, standing in the middle of the crowd of people, all pushing and shoving. She feels lost among the glass kiosks and escalators that seem to lead nowhere.

&nb
sp; A three-note chime sounds on the loudspeaker and the station announcer says something in French that Nell can’t understand. Everyone else is walking briskly, as if they know where they’re going. It is dark outside and she fights panic. I’m in a strange city and I don’t even speak the language. And then she sees the sign: Taxis.

  The queue is fifty people long, but she doesn’t care. She scrabbles in her bag for the hotel print-out, and when she finally reaches the front of the queue, she holds it out. ‘Hôtel Bonne Ville,’ she says. ‘Um … s’il vous plaît.’

  The driver looks back at her, as if he cannot understand what she says.

  ‘Hôtel Bonne Ville,’ she says, trying to sound French. ‘Bonne Ville.’

  He looks blank and snatches the piece of paper from her. He stares at it for a moment.

  ‘Ah! Hôtel Bonne Ville!’ he says, lifting his eyes to heaven. He thrusts the piece of paper back at her, and pulls out into the heavy traffic.

  Nell sits back in the seat and lets out a long breath.

  And welcome to Paris.

  The journey takes twenty long, expensive minutes. The traffic is terrible. She gazes out of the window at the busy streets, the hairdressers and nail bars, repeating the French road signs under her breath. The elegant grey buildings rise high into the city sky, and the coffee shops glow in the winter night. Paris, she thinks, and feels suddenly that it will be OK. Pete will come later. She will be waiting for him at the hotel, and tomorrow they will laugh at how worried she was about travelling alone. He always said she was too much of a worrier.

  Chill out, babe, he will say. Pete never got stressed about anything. He’d travelled the world. When he had got held up at gunpoint in Laos, he said, he had just chilled. ‘No point getting stressed. They were either going to shoot me or they weren’t. Nothing I could do about it.’ Then he nodded. ‘We ended up going for a beer with those soldiers.’

  Or there was the time when he was on a small ferry in Kenya, which overturned. ‘We just cut the tyres off the sides of the boat and hung on till help came. I was pretty relaxed about that too – till they told me there were crocodiles in the water.’

  She sometimes wondered why Pete, with his tanned features and his endless life experiences, had chosen her. She wasn’t flashy or wild. He once told her he liked her because she didn’t give him a hard time. ‘Other girlfriends are like this in my ear.’ He mimed a nipping motion with his hands. ‘You’re … relaxing to be with.’

  Sometimes Nell wondered if this made her sound a bit like a DFS sofa, but it was probably best not to question these things too hard.

  Paris.

  She winds down the window, taking in the sounds of the busy streets, the scent of perfume, coffee and smoke. It is just as she’d pictured it. The buildings are tall, with long windows and little balconies – there are no office blocks. Every street corner seems to have a café, with round tables and chairs outside. And as the taxi heads further into the city, the women look more stylish, and people are greeting each other with kisses as they stop on the pavement.

  I’m actually in Paris, she thinks. And suddenly she is grateful that she has a couple of hours to freshen up before Pete arrives. For once she does not want to be the wide-eyed innocent.

  I’m going to be Parisian, she thinks, and sinks back in her seat.

  The hotel is in a narrow street off a main road. She counts out the euros according to the sum on the taxi’s meter, but instead of taking it, the driver acts as if she has insulted him, waving towards her suitcase in the boot.

  ‘I’m sorry. I don’t understand,’ she says. Then, after a pause, she anxiously gives him another ten euros. He takes the money, shakes his head, then puts her suitcase on the pavement. She stands there as he drives off and wonders if she has just been ripped off.

  But the hotel looks nice. She will not let anything upset her. She walks in, and finds herself in a narrow lobby. Already she’s wondering what Pete will think of it. ‘Not bad,’ he will say, nodding. Not bad, babe.

  ‘Hello,’ she says, nervous, and then, because she has no idea how to say it in French, ‘I have booked a room.’

  Another woman has arrived behind her, huffing and puffing as she scrabbles in her bag for her own paperwork.

  ‘Yeah. I have a room booked too.’ She slaps her own paperwork on the desk beside Nell’s. Nell shifts to the side, and tries not to feel crowded.

  ‘Ugh. I have had a nightmare getting here. A nightmare.’ The woman is American. ‘The traffic is the pits.’

  The receptionist is in her forties, with short well-cut black hair. She glances up at the two women with a frown. ‘You both have bookings?’

  She leans forward and examines the bits of paper. Then she pushes each one towards its owner. ‘But I have only one room left. We are fully booked.’

  ‘That’s impossible. You confirmed the booking.’ The American woman pushes the paper back at her. ‘I booked it last week.’

  ‘Me too,’ says Nell. ‘I booked mine two weeks ago. Look, you can see on my bit of paper.’

  The two women stare at each other, suddenly aware that they are in competition.

  ‘I am sorry. I do not know how you have this booking. We only have one room.’ The Frenchwoman makes it sound as if it is their fault.

  ‘Well, you will have to find us another room. You must honour the bookings. Look, there they are in black and white. I know my rights.’

  The Frenchwoman lifts a perfectly plucked eyebrow. ‘Madame. I cannot give you what I do not have. There is one room, with a twin bed or a double bed, depending on how you want us to arrange it. I can offer one of you a refund, but I do not have two rooms.’

  ‘But I can’t go anywhere else. I’m meant to be meeting someone,’ says Nell. ‘He won’t know where I am.’

  ‘I’m not moving,’ says the American, folding her arms. ‘I have just flown six thousand miles and I have a dinner to go to. I have no time to find somewhere else.’

  ‘Then you may share the room. I can offer each of you a discount of fifty per cent and I will ask the maid to turn the bed into two singles.’

  ‘Share a room with a stranger? You have got to be kidding me,’ says the American.

  ‘Then I suggest you find another hotel,’ says the receptionist coolly, and turns to answer a telephone.

  Nell and the American woman stare at each other. The American woman says, ‘I have just got off a flight from Chicago.’

  Nell says, ‘I’ve never been to Paris before. I don’t know where I would find another hotel.’

  Neither of them moves. Nell says finally, ‘Look – my boyfriend is meant to be meeting me here. We could both take our cases up for now, and when he arrives I’ll see if he can find us another hotel. He knows Paris better than I do.’

  The American woman looks her up and down slowly, as if working out whether to trust her. ‘I’m not sharing with two of you.’

  Nell holds her gaze. ‘Believe me, that is not my idea of a fun weekend away either.’

  ‘I don’t suppose we have a lot of choice,’ the woman says. ‘I can’t believe this is happening.’

  They inform the receptionist of their plan. The American woman says, ‘And when this lady leaves I still want my fifty per cent discount. This whole thing is shameful. You would never get away with service like this where I come from.’

  Nell wonders if she has ever been more uncomfortable, trapped between the Frenchwoman’s lack of interest and the American’s resentment. She tries to imagine what Pete would do. He would laugh, take it all in his stride. His ability to laugh at life is one of the things she finds attractive about him. It’s fine, she tells herself. They will joke about it later.

  They take the key and share a tiny lift up to the third floor. Nell walks behind. The door opens onto an attic room with two beds.

  ‘Oh,’ says the American. ‘No bath. I hate that there’s no bath. And it’s so small.’

  Nell drops her bag and texts Pete to tell him, and asks if he
can find another hotel.

  I’ll wait here for you. Can you let me know whether you’ll arrive in time for supper? Am quite hungry.

  It is already eight o’clock.

  He doesn’t respond. She wonders if he is in the Channel tunnel: if he is, he is at least an hour and a half away. She sits in silence as the American woman huffs and puffs and opens her suitcase on the bed, taking all the hangers as she hangs up her clothes.

  ‘Are you here on business?’ says Nell, when the silence becomes too heavy.

  ‘Two meetings. One tonight, and then a day off. I haven’t had a day off this month.’ The American says this as if it is Nell’s fault. ‘And tomorrow I have to be on the other side of Paris. Right. I’ve got to go out now. I’m going to trust that you won’t touch my stuff.’

  Nell stares at her. ‘I’m not going to touch your stuff.’

  ‘I don’t mean to be rude. It’s just I’m not in the habit of sharing rooms with total strangers. When your boyfriend arrives, I’d be glad if you could hand in your key downstairs.’

  Nell tries not to show her anger. ‘I’ll do that,’ she says, and picks up her book, pretending to read as, with a backward glance, the American leaves the room. And it is just at this moment that her phone beeps. Nell snatches it up.