The Good Life France Magazine Winter 2016 | Page 71

The man nods. “It’s impossible.”

They sit, taking small sips as the stars grow bolder and more numerous. A bat zigzags through wooden columns that strain to support a roof heavy with old tiles. The breeze carries the scent of burning vines.

“Of course,” the woman says, “I always say that. Then we get here, we come out onto the terrace, and I remember why.”

The man turns his head.

“You know—why we do it,” she says. “Why we pack up our clothes, our computers, the dogs, everything. Why we close up our house in California and hire strangers to watch over it.”

“Why do we?”

“Because of this,” she says, with an inclusive gesture. “This landscape. This fragrance. This view. As soon as we get here I start to forget all the effort and pain. And then I never want to leave.”

The man raises his eyebrows.

“I think we should write a book about this,” she says. “I think we should write a book about this part of France, about our friends, our neighbors, about Sara, this house, about learning French.

About this.”

They gaze across the field. A light goes on in the next hamlet over. The sky has be-come a sea of stars. The Milky Way is the heavenly wake of some huge ocean liner, passing silently millions of miles overhead.

“Both of us?” says the man.

“Why not?”

“How can two people write a book?”

The woman drains her glass and places it on the table.

“Same way we do everything,” she says, her smile a miniature Milky Way. “You’ll drive and I’ll navigate.”

He reaches for her hand. They laugh. They walk into the house, where the jetlag and the wine and the fragrance of the night overtake them.

For the record, my name is Marty and my wife is Eileen. We’re Americans. But here’s the thing: if we could introduce ourselves to all of our 320 million neighbors in all of our 50 states, no one would call us Americans. We would simply be Marty and Eileen. Yet in this part of France, no one would call us anything but les Américains. Why? Because there are no others. We’ve looked.

Aside from the French, we see quite a few English. In the summer we hear a smattering of Dutch. While the Dutch may simply be taking advantage of the cheap flights out of Rotterdam, the Brits have a historic claim on the place. They lost it in the Hundred Years’ War. And now, six hundred years later, it’s as if they’re quietly buying it back, bit by bit, hoping no one will notice.