Chocolat
by Joris Sprout
On a hot summer day
in 1892, one of those days when the canicule strikes Paris like the blast of
the depths of Hades, Gabriel des Esseintes made his way slowly along the
Boulevard St Germain, his jewel encrusted tortoise at his heels, seeking, as
was his wont, those pleasures, which to him were like the nectar of the Gods,
but which were to others of such a nature that had his purpose been known, he
might have found himself entrusted to the care the guardians of the law which
in that day patrolled the streets of the great city in their never ending quest
to quell the causes of social disorder among the heaving masses.
Seating himself in Les
Deux Magots by the parvis of the ancient church he looked across at the Café de
Flore where two jeunes filles en fleurs sipped coffee in the shade of the great
hornbeams which cast their sombre shades over the convives who gathered at that
early morning to watch, in the way of all French people, the world as it passed
along the great thoroughfare, ploughing ruts in the road and filling the air
with cries of the vendors and the incessant whinnying of the horses, both of
gentry and of tradespeople, as they strove, each in his own way, to go about
their daily business.
Seeing the young
girls he felt within his loins that strange yearning, that indefinable
sensation which he had first encountered when, with the other devotees of the
small religious establishment at which he had been educated, he had first laid
his eyes upon a comely demoiselle of the village.
Margueritte had been
brought into the school for the avowed purpose of demonstrating to the boys the
virtues of maidenly modesty; the intention being that Mademoiselle would be
paraded before of the boys as a living example of the degrading effects of
dissolution upon the comportment of the honest female; notwithstanding which
her abrupt disrobing in the middle of matins, an act generally thought to have
bee instigated by the rich, and it must be said, excessively precocious Henri
de Grand’bite, had left des Esseintes in such a state of physical and emotional
perturbation that a whole term of early morning cold baths had been ordered for
him that he might rid himself of the lascivious thoughts which seemed from that
moment to become his sole preoccupation.
Thus it was that he
had entered upon his existence, devoted now that he was master of his own
fortune, to the pursuit of pleasure, and to a stimulation of the senses in
every way that his so richly tutored mind could imagine.
He dropped a small
measure of water into his absinthe and watched the cloud swirl in the small
glass as he idly picked at his dish of duck's gizzards and bull’s sweetbreads
upon which he breakfasted each day.
So acute were his
senses, so synaesthetic his brain that such food produced in him a surge of
amatory desire, and as his gaze fell upon one of the jeune filles he felt a
cord develop between her most secret place and his own virile member, a cord
which, charged with electricity, stimulated him in a way in which no physical
contiguity in mere mortals could have emulated.
Smoothing his waxed
moustache and curling the ends in the way he knew to be irresistible to the
gentler sex, he rose, placed his gibbus on his head, and walking slowly, for
jewel encrusted tortoises proceed but slowly, he made his way over to where sat
the young ladies.
-
Forgive me Mesdemoiselles, said he, may I
make myself so bold as to introduce myself to you.
The girls dropped
their eyes, as maidenly modesty, that arbitrator of all social intercourse of
man with woman, dictated.
-
Sir, replied Alphonsine, you make too bold
with us, pray.
Des Esseintes twirled
his moustache and fixed them with his cold grey eye: that eye which, seeming as of a gimlet forged
of white hot metal, bore itself into the very soul of its target.
-
Mesdemoiselles, continued he, I make so bold
as to intrude myself into your repast that I may partake of a dish of chocolate
with you.
Des Esseintes had
uttered the word that he knew would captivate any jeune fille who heard it, whether
demoiselle of the fair capital or bergère from a rural metairie. The fateful word, chocolate.
The girls stopped
still as if frozen in place, resistance felled by the thought of chocolate,
little mattered it to them that the chocolate once imbibed could lead only to
their utter humiliation and degradation, for they had been offered chocolate by
a man with curly mustachios, an ivory tipped ebony cane, a jewel encrusted
tortoise and a silk top hat. They were
lost.
For des Esseintes,
but two things mattered to him in his life: the full and venal satisfaction of
the cravings of his sensuality, and the mystic power of control over women that
his looks and the use of chocolate gave him.
Slowly, together and
silently, they sipped their bowls of chocolate; the eyes of Des Esseintes never
for one moment quitting those of the young and beautiful Alphonsine, their
Mesmeric quality drawing her ever deeper into the liquid pool of his soul,
immersing her in the syrup of his sensuality.
Des Esseintes licked
his lips, cleaning carefully from his moustache the small flecks of chocolate
still remaining there, and as he did so Alphonsine looked about her as those
piercing eyes and the warmth and sweetness of the chocolate suffused through
her whole being producing in her a sort of feeling as if of another world a
world in which but she and he were sole the denizens.
-
Come, said des Esseintes, let us take a turn
within the gardens of the palais.
The Palais, thought
Alphonsine, how fit it would be. To stroll there neath the linden trees and
feel the cool breeze on her face.
Turning upon des
Esseintes her eyes of periwinkle blue, she picked up her parasol, but felt as
soon his restraining hand, firm and commanding.
Of course! Alphonsine knew it be right; she had no need,
neither of parasol nor hat, to stroll beneath the linden trees in the warm heat
of summer, accompanied by a gentleman of distinction and his jewel encrusted
tortoise.
She saw not the look
of surprise upon the visage of her companion, for a young lady of breeding does
not depart sans hat and parasol of ponceau red in the company of a gentleman,
however fine be his breeding, with her mind upon chocolate and the warm summer
breeze upon her fair featured face.
Together arm in arm
they strolled in leisured fashion through the gates of the Luxembourg Gardens,
and passing close the fountain that stood before the palace des Esseintes
withdrew from a small etui a chocolate sweet and placed it soft upon the tongue
of Alphonsine. It tasted sweet, of honey
and lavender, the warm scented air of Provence wherein she had been born, and
where ofttimes would she run barefoot upon the garrigue crushing the sweet
herbs of the maquis neath her dainty feet.
Careless of others
and seeing naught but this vision of her childhood she cast off her shoes and
walked barefoot upon the dew damp grass of the tonnelle. This was how it felt to be free; this was how
it felt to cast off the crushing yoke of bourgeois etiquette. She felt another chocolate placed upon her
tongue, melting there in a pool of delicious sweetness, suffusing her through
with the taste of strawberry, cream and soft brown sugar. It made her warm, it made her feel at peace
and around her she saw naught but the strawberry fields of home where she
strode careless and free, no suffocating cloth of linen lace upon her. She saw at once that she needed this freedom,
and in a trice the cotton dress was unbuttoned to the waist and lay then
crumpled and discarded as she strolled through her fields of white flowers and
scented fruit clad but in the camisole and culottes of her younger years.
Des Esseintes looked
at her and smiled; she looked so charming thus, in silk camisole and culottes;
the culottes coming just above the knee and the camisole hugging her figure
displaying beneath the voluptuous curves of her naked breasts, for she yet
eschewed the wearing of the i bust support, a garment which though à la mode
she felt she had no need, and which indeed she felt did no justice to the
femininity of her figure.
He withdrew from his
etui a further chocolate and Alphonsine felt it dissolve upon her tongue. A hot taste of ginger and orange exploded in
her mouth filling her breasts with intense desire so that they longed to burst
free, to feel the cool wind upon their areolae, to stand erect and proud like
twin peaks of snowy white, and cherry topped, blancmange. She looked around to see herself in hot and
arid countryside and in one motion pulled off the restraining camisole so that
her bosoms stood out free and proud as she held each breast cupped in a perfect
white hand.
Des Esseintes looked
upon those breasts with a deep feeling of satisfaction and, pondering long and
hard and staring once more into the pervanche eyes of his beautiful companion,
he withdrew one last bonbon from its box.
Alphonsine felt it
upon her tongue. It tasted of rose
water and cinnamon. Of the intensely sweet spices of the east and she saw
herself in the seraglio of a mustachioed Turkish sultan, clad not in culottes
but in the silken pantaloon of the odalisque.
And she knew what must be done.
She must be naked for her lord, and casting aside her last remaining
vestment, she stood so that her very charms were displayed in all the natural
glories to his bold discerning eye.
In a trice she stood
there naked, and mounting upon the plinth at the centre of the seraglio, next
the tinkling fount that ever played there, she placed her hands behind her neck
and cast back her head to accentuate the prominence of her bosoms and the sway
of her naked hips.
She closed her eyes
and as she did so she seemed to hear above the splash of the crystal waters a
murmur of voices as if of a great multitude.
She opened her eyes and looked around to see that far from her being undressed
for the lord of the seraglio she was standing upon a plinth before the great
fountain that stands in front of the Palais de Luxembourg. In the distance she saw a man walking slowly
away, walking with the gait of one who leads before him a tortoise bedizened
with rich rubies and emeralds.
Des Esseintes looked
back and smiled at his work of art, for Alphonsine stood there as a statue
before the assembled crowds, in all her natural beauty, and she had upon her
faultless figure not one single stitch of clothing.
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