The Splendour Falls

The Splendour Falls by Susanna Kearsley Read Free Book Online

Book: The Splendour Falls by Susanna Kearsley Read Free Book Online
Authors: Susanna Kearsley
Tags: Romance, Historical, Fantasy, Contemporary, Mystery, Adult
he’d taken the chair directly opposite mine. I glanced up, in time to see him shrug off Garland’s comment with a small, indulgent smile. ‘I’m hardly in Christian’s league.’
    ‘Nonsense,’ Simon said. ‘You had Paul reciting poetry today, in the stairwell.’
    Neil’s eyebrows lifted. ‘Poetry?’
    ‘Yeah. In French, of course, so I didn’t understand it. What was it you said, Paul?’
    Paul lifted his head, looking faintly embarrassed, and shrugged. ‘Just a quotation I remembered. Not poetry. Just something George Sand wrote in her diary about Liszt.’
    ‘What was it?’ I asked him, curious myself now. He sent me such a look as Caesar must have given Brutus, and repeated the quotation out loud. It was a lovely phrase, almost lyrical in its sentiment, and it told me rather more about the boyPaul Lazarus than it did about Neil’s violin playing.
    ‘Are you going to share it with the rest of us?’ Garland Whitaker prompted, a trifle impatiently.
    It was only when I looked up, into Neil Grantham’s blank expectant face, that I suddenly realised Paul and I must be the only ones who understood the French language on that level.
    ‘Sorry,’ I apologised. ‘It means: “My griefs are etherealised, and my instincts are …”’ I faltered, and looked to Paul. ‘How would you translate that last word?’
    ‘Exalted?’
    ‘That’s it.’ I nodded. ‘“My instincts are exalted.”’
    ‘How pretty.’ Garland eased back in her chair, satisfied.
    ‘Indeed.’ Neil looked sideways at Paul. ‘Thank you.’
    Paul shrugged again. ‘It’s what I felt, that’s all.’
    ‘Well, it’s no small praise, that, for a musician. I can’t say as I’ve ever etherealised anybody’s grief before.’
    ‘Do you practise every day?’ I asked Neil.
    ‘Every day. Not as much as I ought to, of course, but as much as I’m able.’
    ‘Neil’s not really on vacation,’ put in Garland. ‘He’s recuperating. He broke his hand.’
    ‘Tell her how,’ Simon dared him.
    Neil grinned. ‘Stupidity. I let myself get dragged into a fist fight, in some bar in Munich.’ He held his left hand up to show me. It was a nice hand, square and long-fingered, neatly kept. ‘It’s getting better, but I can’t do all my fingering properly yet. So my employers kindly gave me some time off. On the condition,’ he added, ‘that I don’t enjoy myself too much.’
    ‘And is this your first trip to Chinon?’ I asked him.
    He shook his head. ‘No. This would be my eighth visit, I think – maybe even my ninth. It’s an addiction, really, Chinon is. You’ll understand, if you stay long enough.’
    Beside me, Simon nodded. ‘Monsieur Chamond says once you’ve been to Chinon, you’re hooked for life. He says you’ll keep on coming back.’
    ‘He sounds like a wise man,’ I said. ‘I haven’t met him yet.’
    ‘I’m sure you’ll meet them eventually,’ Jim Whitaker assured me. ‘They’re nice people, both of them.’
    ‘ They speak English,’ Garland said. ‘Not like that nephew of theirs. Honestly, you’d think with all the tourists they get around here, more people would take the time to learn English. It’s so frustrating , trying to communicate.’
    At the far end of the table, Paul smiled gently. ‘I’m sure the French feel the same way,’ he said, ‘when they visit America.’
    Our waiter seemed to understand us well enough. He took Paul’s order first, then Neil’s, then waited while Garland tried to choose a wine and Simon tried to learn which pizza had the egg on it. I settled on a galette for myself – a buckwheat crêpe filled with cheese and mushrooms – washed down with a half bottle of sweet cider.
    The food, when it arrived, was excellent, and yet the meal itself was slightly off. I tried, and failed, to put my finger on the cause. The atmosphere around our table was, at its surface, entirely normal for a group of people who’d just met on holiday – a little forced, perhaps, but

Similar Books

The Scarlet Letterman

Cara Lockwood

Fever Dream

Douglas Preston, Lincoln Child

The Great Shelby Holmes

Elizabeth Eulberg

The New Uncanny

Etgar Keret, Ramsey Campbell, Hanif Kureishi, Christopher Priest, Jane Rogers, A.S. Byatt, Matthew Holness, Adam Marek

Figures in Silk

Vanora Bennett

Ashes of the Realm - Greyson's Revenge

Saxon Andrew, Derek Chido