Farewell My French Love Read online




  Farewell

  MY FRENCH

  Love

  Nadine Williams

  www.harlequinbooks.com.au

  Award-winning journalist Nadine Williams forged an impressive career over her twenty years at Adelaide’s The Advertiser focusing on social issues, women’s issues and relationships. She was a features columnist for the paper and its celebrity columnist for some years when her ‘PS’ and ‘Life Etc.’ columns were widely read. Nadine was editor of the supplement Looking Forward, and chief reporter of Boomer magazine for readers over fifty years of age. Among many local awards, she was awarded the Centenary Medal and in 2016 was awarded an OAM for service to the print media in South Australia.

  Nadine lives in the Mitcham Hills of Adelaide and is the mother of three adult children and has five grandchildren.

  Her first book, From France With Love, published in 2007, was a bestselling memoir and Farewell My French Love is its much-anticipated sequel.

  www.nadinewilliams.com.au

  In memory of my late husband,

  Olivier, and in thanks for his legacy,

  a love of French culture.

  ‘Whoever has loved knows all that life contains of sorrow and joy’

  French novelist George Sand

  CONTENTS

  Prologue

  One

  Two

  Three

  Four

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  Fifteen

  Sixteen

  Seventeen

  Eighteen

  Nineteen

  Twenty

  Acknowledgements

  PROLOGUE

  ‘“She is dying of grief …” they will say. But a woman can never die of grief. She is such a solid creature, so hard to kill.’

  French novelist Colette

  The harsh cacophony of kookaburras awakens me and through the window I see the indigo sky, not yet washed with dawn. I lie still and hear the cool morning breeze rustling through the gums which encircle our home. It ushers in a moment of peace before Olivier wakes alongside me in such pain that he moans. He needs morphine immediately and I rise, take a needle from the refrigerator—already prepared by the nurse last night—and jab it deftly into his arm. Soon he relaxes and moves his body under the sheets.

  ‘Sit down here, chérie,’ he says, patting the bedside. Our new puppy, which he bought with such optimism last month when the chemotherapy offered a reprieve, is in his basket watching Olivier’s every move.

  Olivier props himself up, takes my hand as I sit and we gaze fondly at each other. It is 12 January and we know the truth, but neither of us speaks a word of it. He kisses my hand. I smile and lean forward to kiss his forehead.

  Four months ago, in September, Olivier saw the head oncologist at the Tennyson Centre because his regular specialist was overseas. He’d known Dr Dusan Kotasek since as a teenager he played with Olivier’s and Colette’s children in the migrant centre at Pennington where the two families initially settled in South Australia.

  On the day of our appointment, Olivier had been doing well and the chemotherapy had stalled the progress of the cancer in his spine. I knew that Dusan would not lie to us.

  ‘How will he know when the cancer returns?’ I had asked.

  The doctor’s answer rings in my ears today. ‘When the pain returns.’

  Today Olivier cannot move from the bed for the pain. He pats my hand once more and raises it to his lips again. We hold the same thoughts. We know he has exhausted all the chemotherapy treatments for his prostate cancer. It was always terminal, with secondary cancer in his bones being diagnosed before the primary, in the prostate, was discovered. But the human spirit clings desperately to the belief that he will be the first to survive ‘extensive metastases of the spine’.

  Those prophetic words of the neurosurgeon—‘It’s a big story from a little finger’—struck fear in my heart. A year ago, Olivier had entered the specialist’s surgery seeking the source of a nerve pain in his forefinger and he left knowing he was going to die.

  As he kisses my hand again, I feel rent asunder emotionally—so deeply saddened by his deteriorating condition manifesting before me and my utter helplessness. Yet, my mind has played a trick, flashing back to another memorable moment when Oli had taken my hand and kissed it so lovingly. It was on 30 April 2008, in France, on the first evening of our French honeymoon. We had been married three months already, but work commitments had staved off leaving Australia sooner. Olivier had made all the arrangements from Australia and had booked into the idyllic Château de Challanges, close to Beaune in Burgundy, for our first night as a honeymoon couple in France.

  However, we were utterly pooped when we arrived at the nineteenth-century maison after a sleepless flight followed by a long day on the road, and by the evening I could hardly climb up the two flights of stairs to our honeymoon suite, dragging my suitcase behind me. It was a gorgeous double room, rich in patterned upholstery, drapes and furnishings. The huge bed had a floral cotton canopy and the distinct fragrance of lily-of-the-valley filled the room. Fresh blooms sat on the side table. I leant over the small vase and breathed in their exotic scent.

  ‘It’s the first of May tomorrow and it’s a custom here to buy lily-of-the-valley,’ he said. ‘The children will be selling little posies from baskets in the villages. Whole families pick them wild in the woods from early light and the children spend the day selling them to tourists.’

  We both flopped on the lush queen-sized bed, too exhausted for romance.

  ‘Thank you for bringing me to such a beautiful château, darling.’ I chuckled, ‘Do you remember how you refused to take me to a château that first year in 2004? And here we are.’ And I added, ‘In the fullness of time.’ I stroked his face as I said sleepily, ‘You’re the most important person in my world.’

  He smiled wanly. ‘But you need your sleep.’

  ‘Yes, but it’s been a wonderful day.’

  ‘À demain.’ Until tomorrow. ‘We’ll look for lily-of-the-valley in the woods.’

  And he took my hand as he always did at night as we settled to sleep. However, this time, he took it to his lips and kissed it so lovingly—and it was as sweet as any sex.

  But I did wonder as I drifted off to sleep why I hadn’t told him that I loved him. I love you. Such simple words, but the only ones that really capture honeymoon bliss.

  So, today, as I lift both his legs off the bed and help him to his feet to alleviate pain, I look him in the eye and say with fervour: ‘I love you so much, darling.’ And then I kiss him ever so gently on the lips.

  This last course of chemotherapy has given Olivier one final Christmas with our families. But it has been bittersweet. On Christmas Eve my husband, bald from his treatment, sat at the head of the table wining and dining with his family. Such fun. No pain. His many grandchildren gathered around him.

  But the next morning, Christmas Day, he woke in such agony that, although we joined my family at church, he could not walk to the altar and took communion in the pew. As suddenly as night became day, the cancer had returned.

  By New Year’s Eve, he was so dosed up on morphine that he could hardly stay awake at our intimate dinner at Celsius restaurant. Just the two of us. Just like New Year’s Eve in 2003, when we drank each other in, when we first became lovers. Today, 12 January 2012, is our fourth wedding anniversary.

  He smiles meekly at me as he links his arm into mine for support and when he finds his balance, he rubs my hand warmly.

  ‘I don’t think I hav
e much time left,’ he says in his deep, melodic French-accented voice. And he catches my eye for a response, but I cannot answer or I will break down and weep.

  It’s a poignant truth as it’s the first time Olivier has acknowledged the cruel hand of fate about to play itself out. His impending death has been the elephant in our room.

  And yet, I simply nestle my head into his shoulder and then I do what he has done up until now whenever I’ve tried to broach any aspect of the future; I place my finger on my lips and murmur ‘Shhhh’, and I squeeze his hand so hard that mine aches. Touch is such a powerful sense. He knows that it means I love him so so much. It’s an unbearable thought that I am losing him. My mentor, my lover, my friend, my companion. My wonderful husband is dying.

  ‘I have something for you, chérie,’ he says. ‘I bought it before we married and forgot to give it to you.’ He laughs and adds, ‘I’m still learning about giving cards; luckily I found it in my top drawer, which is a stroke of luck. But I’m sorry I have no gift this time.’

  His big fold-out card is decorated with roses and an embossed gold heart. It reads, ‘I Love Our Life Together’, and inside he has written À Nadine, ma chérie … À toi, mon amour, qui sera bientôt Madame Foubert. Mon amour éternel. To you, my love, who very soon will be Madame Foubert. My love eternal.

  Those poignant words tear at my heart and once more my mind flies back to France to the first time he introduced me as Madame Foubert—at our French wedding feast at the quayside Hotel Les Colonnes, at St-Martin-sur-le-Port on L’Île de Ré.

  Even now, three years eight months later, I can feel his arm around my waist as he pulled me into himself that night, in front of seven of his closest French friends. Staring into my eyes, he said, ‘You had your white wedding cake in January, chérie, and now it’s my turn to give you a French wedding cake—a croquembouche.’

  A waiter placed the historic French wedding dessert before us. It was a magnificent stack of choux pastry profiteroles piled up and laced together with threads of toffee, dabbed with chocolate and dotted with rosebuds. On the side was a marzipan map of Australia and on top was a bride and groom.

  Oli kissed my lips delicately, then my forehead as he was wont to do in our intimate moments.

  ‘Happy?’ he asked as if we were the only ones in the room.

  ‘Blissfully.’

  Then he turned to our guests and announced, ‘Madame Foubert mes amis.’ The guests clapped and Oli’s best friend Dominique called out mariage d’amour (marriage of love).

  That moment crystallised a new truth—Olivier had given me a lifestyle I could never have imagined. Romantic love with a debonair man and a travelling companion in France. The handsome former French Lieutenant had married me to sprinkle my life with joie de vivre.

  Yet the price of his love is now manifesting before me in our marital bed.

  ‘The card’s a bit out of time, but does that matter?’ he says.

  ‘Not one bit, darling.’ But I feel my voice cracking, so I quickly thrust my card into his hand. In it I have written, ‘No one knows how much I love you. No one knows how much I care. Thank you for four fabulous years.’ A bit of a cop out knowing the flowery words I have written in the past.

  ‘It’s so symbolic,’ I murmur. ‘Look how the two gum trees are entwined like us … two strong trunks but only one lush, entwined crown.’

  Then I can’t help thinking anew ‘in the fullness of time’. Soon I will need to stand alone forever. It has been the hardest thing to learn to live with his diagnosis and act normally as his wife without letting my caring role smother our love. So, once again as if we are walking down the aisle as we did those four years ago, we link arms and walk out to face another day.

  ONE

  THAT FIRST WINTER OF WIDOWHOOD

  ‘The grief was so intense … There I stood alone and wept. Where are you, my bridegroom, my beloved husband?’ The Diaries of Sofia Tolstoy

  The lyrics will not come. I’m humming the tune, but other than ‘seasons in the sun’ the rest is lost in my mind, fogged up as it is by floods of tears.

  I must remember the songwriter’s message because I think it holds the key to overcoming my grief and despair. Not that my life holds any resemblance to halcyon ‘seasons in the sun’, nor those cool, green pastures which were once a great metaphor for my contented married life. Now, I imagine my life is more like a barren desert of loss and loneliness, caught as I am in that grim rite of passage through grief.

  Ah … Now I remember … ‘We had joy, we had fun, we had seasons in the sun …’ All past tense. Now I’m a widow and struggling to come to terms with this new state of being. I have no idea how to be and cannot cope with being alone for the first time in my life. From my childhood with parents, my marriages, single motherhood with small children, then adult children living under my roof. Always someone to care for and to care for me. Now I really do live in an absolutely ‘empty nest’.

  My sense of self is shattered. Somehow I hold together, but any minute I could disintegrate into a thousand pieces.

  I receive an SMS from a close friend. ‘Hey Nadine, love you honey. Big hugs to my brave girlfriend.’

  ‘I feel sick with grief,’ I reply.

  I know I am not absolutely alone. If I would count my big, extended family I would run out of fingers and toes. Anne, for instance, my sister, born on my sixteenth birthday, is a gem. From my first two marriages I have two daughters and a son whom I cherish, and my beloved daughter-in-law and sons-in-law have formed a nurturing family fold. I adore my five grandchildren. How can one feel miserable with such a quiverful of relatives?

  Yet, it seems the whole world is married. I remember that terrible feeling of isolation when I separated in my late twenties and found it impossible to remain a part of the married congregation of my church. I was the first person to get divorced in my spiritual and social network and I sorely felt like a leper on my own.

  Widowhood means to be without a husband and I feel half lost. Half empty. I don’t feel a whole person anymore. I am beginning to rue the fact that somewhere in the bliss of my marriage, I lost my sense of independence. I became joined at the hip with Olivier, and my feeling of wholeness included him. Emotional interdependence. I wrote about its dangers before I met him and I never intended it to happen to me. However, such intense togetherness was Olivier’s idea of a French marriage, and now I am suffering enormously because of my profound loss. My enjoyable French social life has evaporated virtually overnight except for my delightful French language teacher and her husband, a great friend of Olivier’s. Olivier’s niece also remains close. But that French couple life is gone. Our prolific Australian social life has also fallen away, and invitations for me to attend events with other couples have dwindled. Yet I witness their good times on Facebook. I feel forgotten. Without my women friends and women in my family I would have turned to dust by now. Here I think upon how daughter Serena, who lived in London, brought her family of five to Adelaide three times to stay with us during Oli’s decline and a fourth time for the funeral (from Brisbane by then). I think about the enormous emotional support they gave me.

  In this shadow land of sadness, I know my friends mean well and I have the wisdom to accept every invitation they extend to me. Very soon after Olivier’s death, a married girlfriend asks me to see Yes Minister, the theatre version of the popular TV series, because her husband is having an operation. It is my first appearance in public and, at interval time, some people join us and my body begins to shake and my teeth chatter.

  ‘Nadine what’s the problem?’ my kind friend asks. I don’t know myself, but I feel I am experiencing a meltdown. I know I have to flee from this gathering and I escape to the bar to buy a brandy to steady my state. Then I stand alone at the window staring out over the darkness of the River Torrens until I calm myself, but I wish I could race back to my car and to the safety of my home. I am so fragile and can’t face interacting with anyone who might ask about Olivier.


  In early June, a work acquaintance takes me to a luncheon in McLaren Vale wine country, entitled ‘The Good Vintage’. It is organised by a group of young women lawyers raising funds for an eight-year-old child suffering from an aggressive form of childhood cancer, neuroblastoma. It’s a cold winter’s day and I have progressed somewhat and enjoy talking with people I know through my professional life and a group of the mothers of the young women, who are caring for small grandchildren. However, after lunch, during speeches, we are told that the little girl, named Olivia, is in the US trying a new drug to save her life because the cancer is now in her bones.

  Olivia. Olivier! When will a cure for this insidious disease be found? I break down and sob and simply can’t stop. The kind grandmothers usher me into another room and someone brings a brandy and eventually I settle down. But all I want to do is continue sobbing not only for Olivier but for the little girl and her parents so desperate for a cure.

  My faithful friends coach me to write lists of my single life before Olivier, those twenty exhilarating years of independence when everything I touched turned to gold—not only my successful career as a journalist and columnist, but as a developer of my original family home, subdividing the backyard to build a second little house on the land. It was my third new house since my twenties. I now live in my fourth new home. Indicative of that capricious hand of fate, Olivier was diagnosed in January 2011, the month the foundations of our dream retirement home were drying out.

  ‘Mum, we are still having the slab party on Friday,’ my son had insisted upon hearing Olivier’s diagnosis on the Monday.

  ‘Vanessa and I will organise everything, including the fold-out table. Oli just needs to bring a bottle of bubbly. We are still going to celebrate your new home.’ So in the end, it was just the four of us sitting on the slab, sipping French champagne and trying hard to enjoy our achievement. Tyson had made a correct call. By the end of the first week after diagnosis, we were focused on the present—on building our house and garden—not the grim future.