Josephâs ugly apartment, decorated for Christmas Eve, was a far cry from the rich fabrics and natural colours of the Ritz, Sacha couldnât help thinking.
His friend had gone to more effort than usual. The apartment that was usually off-white and grey was silver, gold and red. Josephâs eclectic taste was evident on the Christmas tree, with its mix of patterned decorations from Africa in bright colours, his favourite vintage pieces and the traditional wooden ornaments heâd picked out years ago with his partner. Heâd even tied the few remaining horseshoes onto the sturdier boughs.
But Sacha had given up expecting Ren to be anything other than thrilled with all of it. Sheâd even been excited, if a little taken aback, when heâd explained that they didnât eat the Christmas meal until after midnight mass. Sheâd grown keener on the idea after heâd promised her snacks.
His own enjoyment of Christmas Eve had a bittersweet edge; he was conscious of the memories he was making, feeling keenly the poignancy of their last night. He hadnât wanted to ask what would happen after theyâd made it through lunch with her family on Christmas Day, but he could tell by the way she spoke that tomorrow was the end. She had to return to her responsibilities, her real life. And he had to go back to how his life had been without her. That prospect grew more difficult to imagine with every moment she spent in his world.
Nadia and Ren were making chocolate reindeer with pretzel horns to fill the time. Even Raph had been drawn in, if only to laugh at the mixed results. Ren concentrated meticulously, dipping her cake into the chocolate and carefully adding the eyes, nose and antlers â until the whole thing drooped and dripped and looked like something from a horror film. At which point, she held up her phone and snapped a selfie imitating her work, before collapsing into giggles.
âRen with renne,â she joked.
Joseph was busy in the kitchen as usual, wearing his floral apron and threatening people with his silicon oven gloves if they helped too much. Sacha had placed a chair in the corner for him to rest and goaded him into it regularly. The sponge cake for the yule log was in the oven. Joseph had announced mysteriously that dinner would arrive soon and had something to do with the enormous watermelon by the door.
After the reindeer were sloppily finished, Nadia produced paper crowns, laughing as Sacha and Raph both grumbled about them. Ren insisted they take a photo together with their matching frowns, which of course led to a grinning photo that started up the warm ache inside him again.
âI finally see the queen in her crown,â he murmured, pressing a kiss just below Renâs ear. He was painfully aware of his family gaping, but it wasnât enough for him to keep his hands to himself. She had her hair down in tangled curls the colour of autumn leaves. Every nuanced smile, every warm look made him want her more.
âEnough of that! Game time!â Joseph announced, producing four paper plates before disappearing back into the kitchen. They sat around the table, holding the plates on their heads while they attempted to draw a Christmas scene. The results produced peals of laughter, with unrecognisable zigzags and wonky flames consuming the Christmas tree instead of staying in the fireplace.
âI only hope itâs not telling the future,â Nadia said with a laugh.
âJoseph doesnât have a fireplace,â Sacha commented drily, slipping his arm along the back of Renâs chair.
âIt could be a figurative prediction,â Ren pointed out. âBut itâs more likely a prediction for tomorrow, not tonight.â
âAre they going to flambé Christmas dinner at the Ritz?â
âDonât even mention it. With my luck, that would be a disaster!â
Sacha settled his fingertips on her back. âWith all the horseshoes in this room, your luck shouldnât be in question. And I believe started this discussion about who was going to burn Christmas.â
Ren turned to Nadia. âHas he always been this grumpy?â
âThis grumpy? He is usually much grumpier! Zut, I must show you the family photos! Joseph keeps most of our lives in his spare room â what we managed to save when Papa died.â
Sacha sighed and lifted his hand again so Ren could follow Nadia to the sofa. He allowed Raph to draw him into a few rounds of so he could at least pretend he wasnât listening and blushing as Ren exclaimed over the old photo album Nadia brought out.
âItâs not really fair, though,â Ren muttered at one point. âThe photos of me as a child are all chubby and freckly and full of braces, but Sacha was this adorable his entire life. Oh, hereâs the crooked tooth. If heâd grown up in my position, that snaggle-tooth wouldnât exist and these photos would be full of metal smiles!â
âItâs the grace of God that I have bad teeth,â he muttered.
âTheyâre not bad, theyâreâ¦â
âAdorable?â he suggested with a laugh, utterly unable to affect his usual frown. âYouâre adorable yourself,â he teased, slipping his thumb along her jaw. His go-kart crashed on the TV screen behind him.
âI hear a lot of joy in this room,â came Josephâs loud voice from the doorway, a potato in his hand.
âJoseph, what are you doing? I said Iâd do the potatoes,â Nadia scolded him. She poured him a glass of wine and beckoned for him to sit at the table.
âI can do the potatoes,â Ren insisted, to a chorus of silence and sceptical looks. If she peeled potatoes as well as she cracked eggs, then theyâd need an ambulance on hand.
âWho knew that the job of peeling potatoes was so in demand,â Joseph muttered, but allowed Sacha to lead him to the table for a rest.
âCome, we can both do it,â Nadia said, waving the bottle of wine at Ren and smiling. Sacha drifted into the kitchen after heâd lost his next race against Raph.
âAllez ouste,â Nadia said, waving him away. âShe doesnât want an audience.â
âShit!â Ren cried. He turned to catch the blur of a semi-naked potato flying towards him. Recovering from the shock of the potato impact, he noticed her finger was bleeding and grabbed a tea-towel to apply pressure.
He cradled her arm in his. âYou push from yourself with the économe!â
âSorry,â she said with a grimace. âBut at least I didnât injure you this time.â
âThe potato was very hard. Letâs see how my eye looks tomorrow.â
âWhat?â She brushed her hand over his cheek and inspected his face.
âIâm joking. I wonât appear at your Christmas dinner with a black eye, on top of everything else.â
âIf I ruin your Christmas dinner, you have every right to ruin mine.â
âThatâs fair,â he quipped. Except she wasnât ruining his Christmas. This was the best time heâd had in years, and when he pressed another soft kiss to her lips, it was even better. Heâd never grow tired of the way she expectantly lifted her face to his.
The doorbell rang twenty minutes later, when the potatoes had been tucked onto their tray, ready for roasting. âAh! That is Djamel,â called Joseph.
The family crammed into the hallway to greet the neighbour with kisses. âJoyeux Noël, Joseph,â he said with a smile and handed over a plastic bag. âYour order. I saved the best ones for you.â
âMerci beaucoup. Câest très gentil! This is for you and have a lovely evening. Say hello to Zahra for me.â Joseph handed him a pain dâépices wrapped elegantly in paper with a gold sticker. Tied to it with red ribbon was a horseshoe. âGet the watermelon, Sacha.â
Sacha hefted the enormous melon and shared a smile with Djamel as the neighbour took it. When Djamel had left, Sacha turned to Joseph and gestured to the bag. âIf thatâs what I think it is, Ren should open it.â
Nadia slapped him on the arm. âCâest méchant, mon frère! How mean.â
âDid I hear my name? Or were you talking about queens or reindeer?â Ren asked from the doorway.
Sacha took the heavy plastic bag from his friend and handed it to Ren. âThis is the dinner. Go and open it in the kitchen.â
She peered at the bag with a frown, but did as he said. Sacha grinned unrepentantly, sharing the joke with Raph while Nadia and Joseph scowled at him. âTrois, deux, unâ¦â
âEeek!â Ren cried, accompanied by a rustle of plastic and a crunch as she dropped the dinner.
Nadia rushed to avert disaster â and stop the dinner from feebly crawling away.
âI touched it! Urgh. The leg moved!â
Sacha wrapped an arm around her, but she shoved him away. âYou did that on purpose. Donât expect a hug in return.â She shuddered.
âDonât you like lobster?â he asked with a twitch of a smile.
âI love lobster,â she said with a stamp of her foot.
âAlors, I thank you for⦠bravely subjugating our dinner.â
âOh, shut up. And wipe that smile off your face.â She crossed her arms and regarded him critically, but her lips were wobbling with a smile already. He judged his moment and slipped his arms around her, pulling her against him until she landed with a little âOof,â her arms still crossed. âYouâll have to try harder than that.â
He dipped his head. âThis?â he said, giving her a light, aching kiss.
âA good start,â she murmured. He kissed her again, not surprised when she wrapped her arms around his neck and deepened the kiss.
âIâm still here, vous savez,â Nadia called out from the kitchen bench. âI donât want to see my brother playing roll-the-galosh.â
Ren drew away with a blush. âRoll a what?â
âA shoe, but you call it French kissing,â Nadia said.
âYou donât?â Ren asked.
âMon Dieu, non!â
The dinner prepared and awaiting the final cooking after church, Raph dragged Ren to the sofa to teach her to play and Sacha wandered into the spare room for his regular dose of nostalgia. Heâd stayed in this room many times, often during the lowest points of his life, and now Joseph stored the bits of the past Sacha couldnât bear to keep with him â or that simply wouldnât fit in his tiny, humid cellar.
He reached behind a stack of old schoolbooks for the framed sepia photo that should be on display somewhere, but wasnât. Even the twinkle in Papaâs eye, behind his aviator-style spectacles, looked different today.
Nadia peered around the doorway, but her words died on her lips when she saw what he was holding. âI havenât looked at that photo in years.â He gave an inarticulate response and went to stow the photo behind the books again. âSometimes,â Nadia continued thoughtfully, stopping him in his tracks, âI was jealous of the way you got all his spirit. He never left me any notebooks.â
âHow did you know about the notebook?â
âYou canât keep secrets from me. Alors, does his notebook say anything about first love?â
âDo you still think thatâs whatâs going on?â he huffed. âAnd why love? Iâve hadâ¦â He fell silent.
Nadia gave him a withering look. âJust donât mess it up.â
âI wonât have to,â he muttered. âIt came pre-messed up.â
âI was afraid of this,â she said with a sigh. âYou donât have to care about her family or who she is.â
âThey want me to care. Iâd never make her choose between her grandmother and me.â
âBecause youâre scared sheâd pick her grandmother. But what if she doesnât?â
âShe pick her grandmother,â he grumbled, stuffing down deeper the suspicions that were plaguing him increasingly.
⦠He understood only too well Renâs loyalty to her only living family member, but what if he was right? What if all her family had to offer was money and grief? But then again, what more did have to offer? The grief the money.
âAnd since when do you do what people want you to do?â
âItâs . You donât understand how much trouble weâre in because of⦠this. It canât continue.â
âYouâre right, I donât understand the trouble. All I see is my brother looking so happy he reminds me how much Papa used to love Maman. We all adore her â and you obviously do, too.â
âLoving Maman wasnât the only thing Papa felt,â he muttered.
âPerhaps not,â Nadia agreed, âbut it was one of the best things.â
One of the best things that was ripped away from him â like everything else. Life had not been fair to Karim. âRen deserves someone who can give her the whole world and I barely have a free evening. Thereâs a difference between loving someone and belonging with someone. You should know that.â
âMerde, donât bring me into this! You are not young and stupid, like I was. And sheâs not helpless, needing âthe worldâ from someone. I think she just wants you. You donât love easily. This is⦠big, Sacha.â
âWhat? I love you and Raph⦠so much. How can you say that?â But Nadiaâs words rang in his ears.
⦠It sounded a lot like, âGive me your shadows.â God, he hadnât realised hope could hurt like this.
His sister clutched his shoulders. âI know you love us more than anything. You love so deeply. I saw Maman fade away, too, you know. I lost Papa suddenly, as well. It was awful for me, too, and I understand that you never wanted to lose anyone else you loved that much. But I still say itâs worth the risk. I made us both do it by accident when I got pregnant with Raph. And you know how terrifying that was, to love him so much. You can choose this time, but this is , Sacha â
. Papa left you his poetry to your heart, not to burden it. Go back and read his notebook again, with that in mind. Thatâs what he would tell you to do.â
He stared at Nadia, his mind desperately searching for answers, because he was too scared to search his heart. Renâs words had also planted themselves in his mind. Papa was gone. It was Sacha who had to decide how to respect his legacy. âYou do have Papaâs spirit,â he murmured.
She shrugged. âHow could I not?â
âYou can read the notebook any time.â
She waved a hand dismissively. âOne day I will. But the important thing now is for you to forget this bullshit about trouble and tell her you love her. What better time than Christmas Eve?â
âIt might not make any difference.â Christmas Eve, after all, was followed by Christmas Day, the prospect of which sat heavily in his stomach. âAnd you know how soft-hearted she is. I donât want her to feel indebted to me. I donât want to hold her back.â
âYou mean youâre scared sheâll tell you she loves you, too,â Nadia said flippantly. Before Sacha had time to react beyond a dumbfounded gape, Josephâs voice sounded in the hallway.
âSacha? Nadi? Time to go. Messe de minuit doesnât wait for you!â He poked his head around the door and saw what they were looking at. He approached with a smile. âJoyeux Noël, Karim,â he said conversationally. âDonât worry. Iâm taking them to mass. Oh, and Sacha is in love. Perhaps heâll tell you about it, since he wonât admit it to anyone else.â
âNot you, too,â Sacha muttered, but he draped an arm around Joseph when his friend cuffed him on the back of the head as though he were still sixteen.
âLetâs go.â
As his family fetched their shoes and coats, Sacha hung back. âJust give me five minutes. Iâll be down soon.â To Ren, he added a kiss and a translation into English. Then he snatched the unassuming gift, wrapped in brown paper with her name on it, from under the tree. Opening it carefully, he turned to the right page and took up a pencil.
Perhaps she wouldnât see the note tonight. He could only hope so.