It was a fine day in Paris. The city was very light, pale gray and silver. Belle de jour, said Kathrine.
“The Sacré-Coeur,” said Christian, and pointed to the horizon, where a white church was shown in relief against the cloudy sky, “the blessed heart.”
At five they were on the train.
In Cologne, they changed to the night train. They were on the platform far too early. They stood and waited silently, side by side. This is it, I’m going back now, thought Kathrine. We’ll part at Kolding, and then I’ll go home, what else is there for me? I’ll go back to my apartment. Thomas will call sometime, or my mother. Thomas will ask where I’ve been, and my mother will say what did I think I was playing at, and poor Thomas, and didn’t I think of the child at all? And then she’ll tell me about old times, and the next time she sees Thomas she’ll apologize on my behalf, and pretend it wasn’t anything, and say I’d always been mulish like that. And he’ll take my side, and that’ll be the worst of it. Then she remembered she had sent in the lease, and that maybe there was someone else living there. She still had the key, but she didn’t have an apartment anymore.
“Are you thinking about home?” asked Christian.
“Are you? Are you glad to be going back?”
“Yes and no.”
Christian said he admired her. The way she managed her life, fought her way through, did what she wanted.
“What else am I supposed to do? I’ve got a kid. I have to earn money. What does that mean anyway, doing what I want?”
Christian said he was afraid of those things, renting an apartment, buying furniture, settling into a place.
“Why don’t you move in with your girlfriend?”
“I can’t make up my mind. I don’t really love her. She’s OK. She gets on well with my parents. And I suppose she’s quite nice-looking.” He laughed. “When I called my mother yesterday, she told me about meeting you. ‘An odd woman,’ she said, and ‘Who was that?’”
“Do you think I’m odd?”
“No. You’re something unusual. Belle de nuit.”
“Do you think I’m pretty? Did you tell her we were traveling together?”
“I don’t think so!”
“Do you feel guilty about me?”
“We haven’t done anything wrong,” said Christian, looking serious, as though he had to convince himself.
Kathrine had to laugh. Then the train came. She saw people pushing their way through the narrow passages of the couchette coaches, and she was pleased that Christian had booked the more spacious wagon-lits. When the train moved off, she looked out of the window to get a last sight of the cathedral. She went into the compartment where Christian had already stowed the luggage away. The ticket inspector came and collected their tickets and passports.
“Up or down?” asked Christian.
Kathrine sat down on the lower bunk. He sat down next to her.
“I don’t want to go back,” she said, and after a while, “I want to sleep with you. Make love. What’s that in French?”
“Baiser,” he said, and got up. He went to the window, and opened it. Cold air filled the compartment. Christian stuck his head outside. Kathrine went up behind him. The wind scattered his hair. She put her arm round him. He screamed against the noise of the locomotive, a long, high scream like the noise of a locomotive. Like a child, she thought, he’s like a child. She pulled him to herself, his body touched hers without wanting to. She tried to press herself against him. He resisted. She rubbed her face against his neck and for the first time sniffed his skin and his hair. Then she suddenly felt him yield, his body thrust against hers. He turned round and kissed her. He kept his eyes shut tight.
They made love without a word, just the occasional yes or no, like a movement of the hand, nothing else. Christian was different from the way Kathrine had imagined him, fast and powerful, and still with something shy or irresolute about him.
You can never quite imagine it, she thought later, it’s always more or less than you’d thought. She wasn’t sure if it had been more or less.
They lay together in the dark in the narrow couchette. Sometimes a light flashed by outside, and for a moment she caught a glimpse of Christian’s face. His eyes were shut, and it was as though there was a man lying next to her whom she had never seen before. What she had seen of him before had disappeared, and what was left wasn’t much more than a naked body, well built, almost too well, which gave it something lifeless. When she stroked his chest with her hand, the skin felt like packaging material.
“What are we going to do?” asked Kathrine. “What happens next?”
“Sleep,” said Christian, “I’m tired.”
And tomorrow we’ll see, and she wondered if she had made a mistake, and then she thought what’s done is done.
What are we going to do? That had been her mother’s question in the year that had ended with them having to sell the boat. And her father said, I’m tired, and he had gone off to sleep. That was always the way she saw her father when she thought of him now, lying on the sofa asleep or dozing. The TV stayed on all day. Earlier, when they’d lived in Jukkasjarvi, he had always gone fishing in the streams. The fish are just there, he had said to Kathrine once, not like the reindeer, who all belong to someone, even though they run around freely. The fish really are free, they don’t belong to anyone. That was after he’d been caught once, poaching a reindeer. He had cut off its ears, but the police had established that it had belonged to Per-Nils, his uncle. They had left Jukkasjarvi not long after. There wasn’t yet enough money to pay for a boat, and her father had taken out a loan, which eventually ruined him. He didn’t understand about sea fishing. He bought the wrong gear, and he overpaid for the boat. At first he was seasick whenever he went out, and he didn’t catch much, and soon he couldn’t keep up with the payments. They battled on for two or three years. Kathrine’s mother worked in the fish factory, and the catches got gradually better. But then the fish stocks declined, and even the experienced fishermen didn’t catch much anymore. If I can’t catch a cod, I’ll just have to catch a whale, her father said. Moby-Dick, he said, and laughed. He had never read the book. He bought a new sonar system, and some satellite navigation equipment, all on credit. But he didn’t go out anymore. Then he began to drink. First, he went to the Elvekrog. When he no longer had the money for that, he bought black-market vodka from the Russian fishermen, and drank it at home. Sometimes he would get into his old Sami costume. Kathrine’s mother asked him if he would call Per-Nils, his uncle, and ask him for help. I’ll catch you a whale, said her father; that’ll keep us fed for two years. A whale. And then he got sick.
The train drew into a station, and suddenly the compartment was brightly lit up. Kathrine woke up from her half-sleep. A couple of short-haired young men on the platform stared into the compartment, jeered, and waved their beer bottles. Christian had opened his eyes. He looked alarmed, but Kathrine pulled the blanket over him, and said don’t mind them, they’re just soldiers. When the train set off again, Christian stood up, drew the blind, and lay down on the top bunk. Dortmund, he said.
Half an hour before Kolding, Christian got up. His travel alarm clock went off, and Kathrine awoke and watched as he got dressed. When he was done, he approached the window. He didn’t speak.
“We haven’t done anything wrong,” she said with a smile.
He turned and looked at her. There was a cruelty in his eyes that took her by surprise. He seemed to be furious with her, perhaps his conscience was hurting him, she didn’t know. Like a child, she thought, but she didn’t say anything, and he didn’t say anything either. The train was already slowing down as Christian finally spoke. He spoke softly. His voice sounded as gentle as it always did.