Tuesday, August 16, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - boat home
Our boat cabin is tiny. I took the top bunk, thrilled to see enormous duvets. We treated ourselves to a posh dinner in the dining room. Niki was on the hunt to find someone dashing for a last European fling, but everyone seemed to be with someone else and way over 40.
We talked about going back to university and how we were going to manage the transition. I found I was actually looking forward to it more than Niki was, despite the fact that I have only a tenuous idea of what courses I'm going to take. She sacked out early, but I lay on my stomach facing the foot of the bed, from where I could see out the microscopic porthole. The view consisted entirely of sea and sky, a most perfect view in my opinion.
Saturday, August 13, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - sleeping next to the dead

Our room overlooks a picturesque churchyard with lopsided gravestones but the inside demands more attention, if not sunglasses! It has a plastic shower plunked right in the middle of it, curtained with a hot pink pastic sheet. the room also contains orange drapes, green bedding, red plastic roses and silk violets in purple vases, a bronze sea-faring scene on the wall, a gilt edged mirror, multi-flowered wallpaper leaning prominently towards the pink end of the colour spectrum, and a cut glass chandelier in the middle of the ceiling that gets knocked every time the shower door is opened. When the sun shines it kind of hurts just to look at it.
I wandered back under a sky filled with stars and sliver of a moon woven between wraiths of cloud. The air was hot and heavy and I flung myself onto the bed, too hot to crawl under the covers. A thunderstorm started a few minutes later – great flashes of lightning and more wind than usual whipping at the trees. I didn’t dare look outside, because I knew I’d get freaked out if I saw the headstones in the graveyard across the street, so I just lay there in the dark until it was over. What a way to spend my last night in Denmark, very ‘Hamlet’!
Monday, August 8, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - fashion style


Friday, August 5, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - life lessons
The Danes were very direct. After breakfast, we walked along the train carriage corridors while Ana peppered us with questions about ourselves before ‘counselling’ me. “You know you should really look people in the eye. I know you are shy, but looking at the ground is so antisocial. People will think you are rude. And get better glasses. They aren’t the right shape for your face. You know, your eyes are really lovely. Have you thought of contact lenses? That way people could see your eyes and you would not hide away behind those thick glasses. And don’t be afraid of being small. Your height is your height. Walk proud and for goodness sake keep your arms away from your waist. It looks like you are trying to keep your stomach from falling out of your body.” She never says anything like this to Niki - probably because Niki is already perfect.
We talked about what parts of our bodies we like best. Even Jens. I didn’t know guys felt as sensitive about some things as girls did. It's a revelation. Niki likes her boobs and hips. Someone complimented me on my ears once and of course I was still thinking about Ana’s comments about my eyes. I wish I had inherited my Mom’s hands. She has lovely hands, and doesn’t seem to know it. Even when she is complimented on them she tosses it off dismissively. I feel sorry for those hands, so beautiful and so unappreciated. If I had hands like that I would cherish them. Maybe I should tell her sometime that I think they are beautiful. I wonder what she would say. I get kind of embarrassed just thinking about it. Ana loves her shoulders and Jens favours his long athletic legs. He bicycles everywhre he tells us which is why his legs are brown and muscular. I was too shy to really look, but Niki bent down and felt his calf muscle. Right there in the middle of the second class compartments! She whistled her appreciation and I blushed while the others laughed. I think I should really try to follow Ana's counsel and maybe I'd feel less like an outsider.
Wednesday, August 3, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - found!
It was a lighthearted day despite having to lug around our bags. When we got to our evening train, in lots of time, we were thrilled to find an empty couchette, but just as we settled down an impatient German conductor chased us out. We found another one with two guys in it. Niki was keen but I put my foot down. Sleeping in a train with two strange men was just too worrying. I’m learning that if I pick my moments to say ‘no’ it’s more powerful and Niki has no problem with it at all, merely shrugging her shoulders. And I know she’s not so stupid as to have sex at any cost. After wandering down long aisles with our bulging packs mashing through narrow doors, we found another couchette with a young couple in it. They seemed really pleasant. When the same conductor came by he scowled at us and said some things which I’m sure weren’t very nice, but the couple spoke back and he left with a stormy look. I got the feeling the couple didn’t think much of him either.
They are brother and sister on their way back home to Copenhagen. What a coincidence, that’s where we’re going! As soon as Niki found out they weren’t married, she got her glittery lion love eyes on and chatted almost exclusively with the guy, Jens. I wasn’t sure about him yet – he had a tattoo, an earring and a distant attitude, but his sister Ana was friendly in a forceful kind of way. The first thing she said to me was my handshake was too limp and I’d better learn how to do it properly or I’ll never get ahead in the world. I am a little cowed by Ana. We thanked them for their help and took the top bunks, lying in hot, airless discomfort, but at least we were horizontal and safe from marauders.
Tuesday, August 2, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - lost
Niki broke my reverie by grabbing my arm. “My purse! Do you see my purse? It’s gone! Some bastard stole my purse!” Then she realized she had left it in the other room hooked over the back of her chair, but when we ran back it was nowhere to be seen.
After looking everywhere at least six times, and getting the barman all flustered wiht the same questions being asked of him several times in quick succession. "Did you see who took my purse? It was right here! How could you have not seen it? Ye Gods and little fishes!", we decided to go to the police. Thank goodness she had her passport, travel cheques and Eurail receipt, although the actual pass was gone. The cash was a write-off, but the sentimental things really hurt, like the wallet, a gift from her parents, and a couple of photos. We went to the bank first so she could change some money and a few blocks towards the police station realized that she’d left her knapsack at the bank! Poor Niki. Severely shaken, she just jabbered constantly, repeating herself and talking way too fast and moving in quick, jerky movements. The lion that was Niki was suddenly a sand flea.
The police were kind and took pains to write everything down. I made her take a copy of the report for insurance purposes which I thought was extremely sensible of me, then insisted on treating her to something at the first place we saw. The first place we saw only sold hot chocolate. Niki took my arm, turned on her heel and led me down the road to a bar. I guess hot chocolate is a little lame after such a dramatic experience.
I tried to keep her mind on positive things, but she talked about her lost purse throughout the entire day and evening. I tried to be sympathetic and listen each time like it was the first time I’d heard the story, but I was exhausted when we finally went to bed.
Sunday, July 31, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - ruminations in Germany
“Gooden alben. Haben sie butter?” I said in what I hoped was a nonchalant manner.
The lady answered “Ya” and then a whole pile of other words I had no idea about. I must have looked completely alarmed because she tilted her head for moment while considering me, then smilingly moved her hands to show small or big. I motioned small and nodded when she got to the right amount. She looked at me expectantly so I tried round two.
“Kahn ik ein I?”
“Ein?”
“Ya, danke.”
“Bitte.”
“Danke. Auf Vedersang.”
Outside again I felt so proud of the egg and butter I’d purchased. The whole experience filled me with a strange sort of elation. The power of words! What must it be like to speak many languages? I must find out. Maybe I should become a French or a German scholar instead. Or maybe even Latin. That would help me read some of my older maps.
During the day Niki and I eat in pubs, trying different beers or wines. The beer makes us burp, which I try to cover but Niki displays proudly. She’s been trying for days to get a whole phrase out with one burp: ‘Walla, Walla Washington’. She’s got the ‘Walla, Walla’ bit, but fades during the ‘Washington’. A bit more practice and she’ll have it. My mother would be horrified, and I can’t believe that we are really 18 years old, but it feels great to act immature and silly sometimes. I am laughing a lot on this trip.
We got to see the mechanical clock in the central Marianplatz at noon. Everyone says it’s famous, but I don’t think it was worth the build up. I persuaded Niki to see the State Museum, but we only got to see a small portion because it closed early that day. We did see a collection of armour in the original city arsenal but that was kind of depressing. The most important thing for me was getting to see the largest science museum in the world, not because I'm any good at science or know much about it, but because it's the biggest in the world. I wanted to know what that felt like so that everything I see in the future can relate to it contextually. The most interesting thisng was a terrific film and photo section in the Municipal Museum. I got kind of involved at that one until I saw Niki out of the corner of my eye sleeping on a bench and I knew it was time to go. Niki is always telling me to slow down and just sit awhile, “Why do you have to try to see every single museum, every area of the city, every monument? Most of them are exactly the same as the others and extremely boring. And your obsession with looking at new maps and old books is just plain bizarre. It’s like I’m travelling with some boring old professor.” She didn't think much of my latest purchase either, despite the fact that it was as far from an old book or map as you can get. But who couldn't resist a metal duck on a tricycle with a propeller on its head? Maybe I am a little eccentric. I decided not to let her words hurt but instead take them as a compliment.
We’ve taken a couple of day trips to villages, passing fairytale castles, houses with painted frescoes and monasteries that make sickly sweet liqueurs. We were most disappointed to find the black forest is neither black nor a forest. At least not a forest like the ones I grew up with in B.C., dense evergreens and spooky shadows. It didn't even look like the snowy logs on the top of a black forest cake. I usually get a say in what we do in the daytime, but in our evenings after dinner we do what Niki wants and go from pub to disco. Sometimes she goes off with a guy and sometimes she comes back to the hostel with me. If she comes back with me we drink Halbtrocken wine, perfect for late night talks. It’s so great having someone to talk to about issues and ideas. Niki’s not really that way inclined but when we get off the boy topic and she gets inspired she does have some interesting ideas.
“What is it about meringues? I mean, who knew that egg whites could whip up that much? How did the first person think to try? And mushrooms. How do they know which ones were safe to eat? I guess there’s only one way really. Can you picture it? ‘Oops, Johnson’s gone. I guess the red and white spotted ones are on the ‘no’ list.’”
“Have you noticed how some mushrooms grow in a circle? A fairy ring I’ve heard it called.”
“Circles are powerful symbols. Circle of life. Wedding bands. Holding hands in a séance.”
“Have you ever been to a séance?”
“No but I read a book on how to read palms.” Niki sat up. “Here, give me your hand. The left one. Palm side up. Wow, you have a really long lifeline. That’s one of the longest I’ve seen.” She flipped my hand away. “Lucky bitch. Mine is short and is crossed with tons of lines. That means I’ll have lots of short term relationships and then die young.”
I looked at my hand. I didn’t see many lines crossing my lifeline.
Niki went on, “My Mom has almost no lines at all. It is so freaky. I mean, almost none! I thought it was maybe because she is Japanese, but my Grandmother’s hand is all lines and she’s Japanese. Real Japanese. Born there. Mom only had three boyfriends in her entire life. I think Grandmother was a bit of a party girl in her day I hear, so maybe I get that from her. If so, that’s the only thing she’s ever given me.”
“She gave you her feet too – you both have tiny feet. Were they bound when she was a girl? Do they still do that in Japan?”
“I mean like cash. She never gives me cash. She’s so mean. She keeps it all hidden away saying I’m not ready for it. Not ready for it? I was born ready! Even at Christmas, her gifts are so cheap. Even cheaper than my parents’.”
I squirmed a bit. This kind of talk always makes me uncomfortable.
Niki took hold of my hand again and looked at the back of it with a look of shock. “Ye gods. Look at your nails. They’re terrible! You’re a biter aren’t you? Come on, I‘m going to give you a manicure. What do you mean you’ve never had a manicure before? You’re a baby! I’ve got a cool orange shade that will work for you. Now pay attention. Then you can practice what you learn on me."
She opened up a small bag and spilled its contents on my bed. I was amazed to see a cascade of clacking pots of nail polish. What was I thinking, that her fingernails suddenly turned different colours of their own accord? How is it that I am really observant about some things and totally blind to other things right there in front of me?
"While I’m doing this tell me what you were working on in your notebook all day.”
“Calligraphy. There are some really interesting scripts in my new exploration atlas and I thought I would learn how to write like that. Not all the time. But for special things like birthday cards.”
“Well, my Dad always says no talent, however weird, is without value, or something like that.”
“That’s an interesting notion. I never thought about it like that, but it makes sense. I mean, think about all the advances in geographical knowledge that came in the 18th century. Did they just happen? No, it was only because of all the scientific advances and equipment that was invented in the 17th century.”
“Hmmm. Whatever. Nothing starts at the top but a hole.”
“I like that. Hey Niki that’s really good. ‘Nothing starts at the top but a hole.’ Did you just come up with that?”
“No, my Dad did. He’s full of crap like that. Now, do you want your nails rounded or squared off?”
Despite their new and rather bilious orange colour, our nails looked so good that we took them out for the night. Well, mine looked good, Niki's were a little messy but she said I'll get the hang of it in time. Another cheap night out too. We have scored a lot of free drinks and food thanks to Niki. She’s good at flirting, able to get what she wants without having to give anything away that she doesn’t want to. She calls it “not taking shite”. It’s great fun just to watch her in action, although I am getting tired of hearing her repeat the same stories to each of her conquests. Especially about her name. Every time someone asks what it is she rolls her eyes dramatically and goes into the same, long story. Half the guys don’t even know what Sputnik was, and others think it’s weird to be named for it just because she was conceived the night after it was launched.
I don’t like to think of having been conceived, especially by my parents.
Wednesday, July 27, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - Munich

Monday, July 25, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - like living in a nunnery
After a boat trip on the Zurichsee, I went wild in an English bookstore, buying replacements for things I've already read. Niki got one book, what she called a ‘beach book’. I got four, including a copy of the “World Atlas of Exploration” that I had put on my birthday list, but can’t wait for. I am starting to get worried about how everything is going to fit in my pack. I wonder if I can buy another bag and if so, whether or not I’ll be able to carry two of them. We were only in the book store for twenty minutes and Niki was already flirting with the guy at the till. I can’t believe it. She’s amazing.
The hostel in which we are staying is a sort of waiting house where many families of sick people stay. It’s run by nuns who are all extremely kind and helpful. Our room is actually one long hall with each bed section curtained off from the others. Very quiet but full of sadness. I feel guilty when I laugh out loud at something. Even Niki is a little subdued. Or maybe it’s because there are no men here.
I also bought a Swiss army knife today. I’d been pricing them for awhile, trying to be more responsible with my money, or rather Dad’s money as I have spent all of mine and am using his credit card all the time now. I guess I should add up the costs of all my purchases in case I’m close to the limit. That would not only be embarrassing but dangerous to my future as when I have to face Dad he might kill me! I’m really trying to not spend on things that aren’t necessities, but I find too many necessities. The knife I bought has two blades, a cork screw and a screwdriver - even a nail file. I wonder why a Swiss soldier would need a nail file. I would think that might be low on his or her priority list.
Niki went out with her bookstore boy tonight and I stayed in and read, not really minding being left behind.
Friday, July 22, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - swiss moment

We decided that we want a real ‘Swiss moment’ and Interlaken sounded like a good bet for finding it. All the pictures we’d seen of the place were filled with quaint wooden houses, cows with bells around their necks and pots of cheese fondue. On the way there we passed lakes and high cliffy mountains, healthy men scything hay in fields and more healthy men piling hay on wagons and open sheds. Niki was salivating.
In the end Interlaken didn’t inspire us, but we had a few hours before the next train so took a boat trip on Thun Lake. A steam operated paddle wheeler slowly did the circuit, stopping at various scenic landings to let people on and off, blowing its whistle continuously. By this time the sun was hot, lighting up that amazing electric blue water. Such a colour! I got one of my ‘beauty pains’. Does anyone else feel pain when they look at something beautiful or am I just weird that way?
We rushed back through Interlaken to get the train to Grindelwald, a pretty town at the end of a high curving track. After looking around and not seeing any signs for ‘pensions’, we stopped at a little grocery store and tried to ask the woman there where we could stay. Our French wasn’t much help – everyone speaks German here, and we didn’t think she understood what we wanted at all because she kept pointing to the ceiling. Finally the shopwoman, looking exasperated, grabbed Niki’s hand and dragged her upstairs.
I was convinced the woman was going to lock her in a room and steal her money, so I followed right behind wondering how on earth I might prevent it. I had just decided that the most effective deterrent would be to hit her with my lumpy, heavy backpack when she led us into a large room with two beds made up. Ahhh, she has a room to rent! That’s why she had been pointing to the ceiling. The relief we both felt was enormous. After much nodding, smiling and hand shaking I think the shopwoman felt relief too.
We went back downstairs to put together a picnic: a loaf of bread, a bottle of white wine called Niersteiner, which Niki said was really good, and some Swiss Cheese called Emmenthal. Our landlady obviously found it amusing that we called it ‘Swiss Cheese’, sort of like when we asked for ‘French Bread’ in France. We hiked along a track following a gurgling stream and ate to the sound of cow bells and the sight of wild flowers with the peak of the Jungfrau just visible. We found our Swiss moment! I closed my eyes to savour the feeling, knowing I will always remember it.
Wednesday, July 20, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - dreamy duvets
Three hours later we regretfully arose to see Bern properly. Old and clean I think is how I’d describe it. We passed by the famous bear pits and had a huge Italian meal. Meatballs. Niki didn’t see the irony after our train incident. I bit into my meatballs with gusto.
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - from mustard to meusli
We missed our train connection in Lyon and finally pulled into Geneva seven hours late, and with another long wait in front of us. Niki went off to get something to eat. I was too hot to eat and felt a little sick. We slept a bit on a bench, then awoke with a start to find our train was leaving in five minutes. Just barely made it running with our heavy bags to find ourselves in another full train, this time with us standing in the aisle. There were two Italian guys who started to press up against us, pretending there was no room except in our direction. I feel their hands moving around my hips, that's four hands! Niki turned to face one of them and started to flirt but I just pretended they didn’t exist, looking out the window and hoping they'd get bored with me. In such a crowded train I was sure they couldn't rape us, but my imagination had them robbing us, leaping out the window and getting away. I decided to conjure up ‘Fakira the brave’, who is still sometimes useful, and made what I hoped was a fierce look, when I noticed Niki was allowing one of them to kiss her neck. Actually kiss her! Fakira the brave instantly vanished. Oh my goodness, what was going on? It was like a bad movie. My heart was beating so fast and my mind was whirling with fear.
Everytime I start to feel this way my mind goes back to that terrible time I had in London so many years ago, when I had to run away from a guy who I am convinced was a rapist, and I get breathless and panicky. I don’t think Niki is totally blind to temptation because suddenly she slapped the face of the guy kissing her and pushed him away. Both guys laughed and then pressed past us to move along the aisle. My knees went wobbly with relief and I realized I’d been gripping the window rail so hard my hand was dented. She told me ‘her guy’ made her rub his balls all the while he pinched her on her bottom, which hurt, but the real end came when he called her a "delicious whore" and she decided not to take the relationship further. She seemed kind of proud at the same time to have flirted with an Italian. How on earth could she have found that situation seductive? Is there something wrong with me? Will I ever understand this whole sex thing?
We finally arrived in Bern early this morning. What a relief! I had no idea it would take so long or that we’d have to change trains as much as we did, but picturesque scenery made up for it. Immaculate fields of lush green, full of extremely happy cows. Little houses that looked like they had been sprinkled over the hills at random, some on flat land and some at precarious angles on steep slopes. They all had overhanging roofs and shutters and window boxes filled with pink and red geraniums. Church bells rang through the valleys. It was magical, like part of some fairy tale. I half expected to see Heidi with her goat gamboling along. It's like a surreal painting, especially after our fraught journey.
Travel is full of extreme moments and the fact they can follow on from each other so quickly makes them all the more unforgetable. I think about Magellan and Cook and Columbus and all sorts of other early explorers that didn't have train schedules go wrong because they didn't have trains to take. No one had been to where they were going and each journey was brand new. They would have met with storms that blew them off schedule, and foreign peoples who caused them discomfort and entered delightfully and unexpectedly picturesque surroundings just like we did. Even though our explorations are nothing as important or world changing as theirs, I can't imagine that each person on those long ago ships didn't go through some of the same kinds of emotions and revelations about the world that Niki and I go through on this trip. And each person must respond slightly differently according to their characters, just as Niki and I do. I feel very connected to those people I've read about, humanities' ancestors, my ancestors. Are we all reincarnations of people who lived and died centuries ago? Are we just reliving the same explorations and voyages again and again but in different eras and throught different means? Do we humans actually learn anything new about ourselves or our place in the universe or do we just go round and round like hamsters on a wheel at night, doing what we do without thought or insight, passing on our findings that mean nothing to anyone else because we have to see things for ourselves to really learn them, to feel them. On a science level we might learn more but on a personal level maybe we don't, and perhaps we have to somehow break through and really learn on a personal level in order to move on to the next level of life, which might be moving to a different kind of solar system or dimensional plane or something. Is it God that oversees all this and makes the call? Or maybe there is more than one God, or some force that we call God but is really something else entirely. Or perhaps it's not some entity or entities at all but something within us, that has to pass through the chain of generations, representing some form of internal knowledge, something that replaces instinct perhaps but isn't so leisurely as faith. Perhaps we must arrive at a point where we don't have to travel anywhere because this sense of knowledge is inside us all the time. That would mean no desire to physically travel, no yearning for movement.
Well, I'm sure not there yet.
Monday, July 18, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - Dijon
Niki has always determined to be a lawyer. She’ll be good – she has strong opinions, she likes to talk and she likes to win. She’s also vowed never to be poor and being a lawyer will help with that. Sometimes I wonder how it is we are friends. I would far rather find something I love to do instead of something that pays well. But I can’t decide what that will be. Mom and Dad are dead set for me to go into ‘one of the professions’ as they call it, medicine or law, ‘respectable and secure careers’ that they can be proud of. Why do such things have to be measured by how they look to other people? I’d rather sit by myself in a room reading maps. I wonder if I could get a job reading atlases, or making them. That would be cool! After all, someone has to make them, but I suppose I'd better do some research on it before suggesting it to Mom and Dad. The time I told them I was more interested in becoming a cartographer or a travel agent instead of a lawyer or doctor, my Dad looked like I’d hit him. Mom wailed “A travel agent? You are in university and you want to be a travel agent? Do you know how I longed for the opportunity to go to a university? How your father and I sacrificed our own dreams to bring up three children so that they could have the opportunities we couldn’t? And this is how you repay our sacrifices? A travel agent? You’ll spend your life going off to dangerous countries where you’ll get horrible food and even more horrible diseases.”
“You can still travel in your vacations,” my Dad added. “Doctors and Lawyers (he always says them like they start with capital letters) get three or four weeks off every year. That’s more than enough time to go off holidaying.” I wanted to say being a travel agent wasn’t necessary the thing I wanted to do - I just want options - but I didn’t say anything.
“The person who spends the money gets a say in how it’s spent,” Mom added.
“With dedication and hard work you are bright enough to handle Law and Medicine if that's why you're concerned. Don’t bring this up again. It upsets your mother.”
I don’t think I’d ever heard my Dad say anything like this before and it made me uneasy. He usually leaves this sort of discussion to Mom, who likes to have the last say. Well, yes they are spending some money on my tuition, but Babby gave me the same amount. And I pay for my own books and clothes and room and board and transportation. I have two part-time jobs. And I’m the one who has to live the result. I do enjoy going to university, where I can be more anonymous than I was at high school, but I don't want to go there just to come out with some piece of paper and job security in something I cannot bear and that I will feel obligated to do for the rest of my life. I want to learn about so many different things, and maybe discover what my life passion was. I haven’t found it yet; it’s only my first year.
It's so unfair. There were no fireworks when Sidney decided not to go to college but to work in an office so that she could find a husband. She even said so right out loud. All she wants out of life is a husband and a house. Over and out. And Sam wants to live her entire life living with a big bunch of dogs, somehow, and that seems ok with everyone too. Why does having to do something ‘respectable’ fall on me? Just because I’m the only one that wants to go to university? Why is it about what they want for me and not about what I maybe want for me? Babby quietly tells me that whatever I decide to do is ok by her as long as I do something. She tells me how proud she is that at last someone in ‘this damned boring, stupid family’ has any sort of ambition at all. And this from a woman whose son is a scientific researcher! Maybe she was referring more to the boring and lacking ambition bit and less to the stupid bit.
Mom has always treated us all differently. She is always talking to Sidney as if she’s her best friend. Of course Sidney tells her everything and always asks Mom for her advice and Mom loves that. But Sam never asks Mom anything, just tells her what she has decided to do, or when she is going to get home, or what she is going to wear, or who she is going out with, and Mom seems to love that too and acts all easy-breasy and casual with her. “I have such a special relationship with Sam,” she tells everyone. “Our communication is on a deeper, emotional level. ‘Off to the arcade now dear? No, we won’t wait up. Have a lovely time.’ ” With me she fusses and hovers. She hangs by my bedroom door and is always looking for an excuse to come in but hardly ever does, except when I’m not there. I can always tell she’s been in my room while I’ve been out, but she denies it if I ever say anything and makes it sound like I'm the untrustworthy one. Everything I say gets corrected. Everything I wear is critiqued. Every book I read is questioned. Everyone I spend time with is discussed. It’s suffocating. Maybe that’s why I don't go out on dates or hang out with friends. It’s bad enough to feel shy about the whole dating thing, but to have someone analyze every last detail would be unbearable.
I guess that’s just the way she is; Mom treats most everyone differently, not only us. She is charming, I’ll give her that. She’ll link arms with a complete stranger and confide all sorts of terrifying things about other people until either she gets confidences in return or the other person doesn’t play the game and she moves off to find another confidante. She always seems to be part of a group but I've noticed she never seems to have a real friend. I think she’s too needy. Niki says it's because she’s so beautiful. People are attracted to beautiful people and beautiful people have special powers over others. Niki would know I suppose. I certainly wouldn't.
Sometimes it’s hard having a beautiful mother when I’m so obviously not, and especially when I’m the only one in the family who even barely favours her with us both having brown hair and eyes. It's like I let Mother Nature down as well. My sisters can smile and toss off the other stuff or throw it back to her, but I can’t. I always feel stuck in the middle. I know Mom’s parents didn’t support her singing career, or even her continuing to work after she got married. And I also know that she is probably petrified my desire to travel will take me to Madagascar or Botswana or someplace and I'll die of fever, like her brother, and tell myself to be more sensitive, but she seems to have forgotten that she did what she wanted to do against her parents’ advice and won’t allow me the same freedom of choice.
I’m sure they both hope Niki will sway me in the direction of law, but I expect her influence will be felt with more earthy matters. Niki is now contemplating becoming a sex therapist instead. “There’s good money in that. And think of the fringe benefits!”
I really do have to decide something for myself soon. Our second year starts in only a few weeks and I have to pick electives that fit into my major and I still have to choose the major. While we sat on the train, Niki dozed and I looked out of the window. In the next compartment there was a group of little kids. They were all talking at once and I couldn’t help smiling to hear them. Maybe I could become a teacher, to start with anyway. Mom and Dad would probably be satisfied – teaching is a perfectly good, respectable profession. Maybe I could be a Social Studies teacher, then I could justify buying all the maps and charts I want. The idea of standing in front of 30 kids and talking all day is a little scary though. I must have been talking out loud instead of to myself and Niki snorted awake. “A teacher? Standing up in front of a bunch of ankle biters all day long? I can’t think of anything more repugnant. Just listen to that racket in the other compartment. Someone should say something. They are causing a disturbance.”
“But listen to them. To what they say. It's always so fresh and original and honest. Don’t they make you laugh?”
“Only when they get smacked.”
“That's harsh! I think children are fascinating. The way they think and work things out.” I slyly added, “and children are the future of the world.”
Niki rolled her eyes as I knew she would. “Not my future! Ye gods, what a horrible thought.”
I sighed. “The only horrible thought is what do you do with them all day every day? All those eyes and expectations on you all the time.”
“Well I guess teaching would be one way of getting over that shyness nonsense of yours. It’s really annoying you know. It cramps my style, and it’s so immature.”
I said nothing in reply and just looked out the window, hoping I wouldn’t start to cry.
Sunday, July 17, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - Niki fulfilled
Over a lunch of Croque Monsieur and an orange presse (really just a ham sandwich and an orange juice but it sounds so classy in French), I asked Niki about her parents’ jobs because they sound interesting. I’m starting to think about things like jobs more now that I’ve finished my first year of university and have to consider my future. Niki seems to know virtually nothing about what her parents really do. Nor care that she doesn’t know.
“Oh poo, they just go out and do things for people who they don’t even know or build things that don’t do anything really practical. Big deal. It’s not like they save lives or anything. Well, Mom does sometimes but not every day for crying out loud. What I want to know is what got your Mom into that cool job?”
“Singing for a funeral parlour? She says it was either that or the opera. And the stage is all very well to visit, but it’s not a very respectable profession. In her opinion anyway.”
“You go on the stage. What does she think of that?
“Hardly go on the stage! Playing in an amateur youth orchestra is not exactly the same thing, but if I ever wanted to take it up professionally or go into something like acting she’d probably freak out. I don’t know if it’s because she doesn’t want to see me act or if it’s because I don’t have enough talent to act well and then she’d be embarrassed seeing me up there in front of an audience.”
“How do you know? Why don’t you just do it? I would.”
“You forget who you are speaking to! You are a confident woman of today, but I am not. I couldn't possibly get up in front of a bunch of people and pretend. I'd be mortified, but my mom would be devastated!
“I think you make her out to be worse than she is. Ok so she kind of hovers around us and tries to get into our conversations. But she’s always nice about it, at least when I’m around.”
“That’s because you know the right things to say.”
Niki laughed. “I always know how to get around grown ups.”
I asked Niki about her brother. “Every time I see him he has a different girlfriend.”
“Oh him. He’s like you, in love with being in love. The minute he’s not, pfft, that’s it, he finds another girlie.”
“Maybe he hasn’t found ‘the one’ yet.”
“You don’t believe that garbage about there being just one person out there for each of us do you? Ye Gods and little fishes, it’s utter crap."
My romatic image was stung but I kept it to myself as Niki carried on. "Mom and Dad of course go all psycho-babble about why he always goes out with the same kind of girl.”
“Why? What do they think?”
Niki sounded like she was reciting some often heard and memorized book passage. “He has not truly matured as a person and that’s why he goes out with girlie girls who are always so much younger and stupider than him. He's a metaphor for their older brother or father and he’ll only find true happiness if he goes out with someone who was his intellectual equal. Mom's take is he finds it hard to live up to the example set by his 'brilliant' psychologist father and so goes out with girls who won’t challenge him or confront his imagined sense of masculine inadequacy.” Niki shrugged. “I think he’s just a guy who wants a lot of sex with a lot of girls. What’s wrong with that? Besides, who cares about brothers? Unless they bring home studly friends, what’s the point? You're lucky only having sisters.”
“Why do people always think it’s lucky to have something they don’t have, without knowing anything about it?”
“I’m tired of talking about my boring old brother. Go on, tell me about your sisters.”
“Well, we share the same mother.”
“No, I mean, what are they like?”
“Well, one’s like Lady Macbeth. The other, um, more like Medusa. But in a good way. We get on ok.”
She laughed. I always feel good making her laugh. Just then a group of guys came into the café, saw Niki and came to sit down at our table, sparing me more conversational bon-mots about my family. The guys were French and we started to chat with them. Well, Niki did. I tried, but I always get mixed up with my French verbs. It’s much easier to avoid making embarrassing mistakes by not saying anything at all. Niki doesn’t care, she just barrels along making tons of mistakes. I wish I was like her. After awhile she said we had to go, but not before we were asked out this evening. Niki was all excited about getting a date in Paris. Even though it was only 3 o’clock in the afternoon we went back to our place to get ready. I never realized how long it can take to get ready for a date! Niki is so much more experienced about these things. She did my makeup and put a whole lot more on than I usually do, but it did make me look older and more sophisticated.
At 7pm three guys showed up at our meeting place and we went to a club where we had a couple of drinks and a couple of dances. One of the guys asked if we liked Abba. Did we have a choice I wondered? It’s all we’ve heard anywhere since we arrived in Europe! I mean I do kind of like them, but I am getting a bit tired of hearing the same tunes. Niki said she prefers Rod Stewart. I’ve always been a fan of Joni Mitchell but none of the guys knew who that was. We went outside and walked around, sort of in couples even though there were five of us and I tried not to favour one guy or another so that no one would feel left out. I always feel sorry for the odd one out. Probably because it’s usually me. The most handsome one, Marcel, latched onto Niki. She has taken to talking English with a French accent, which I think sounds affected but no one else has said anything. “Come zis way. Ze river is so beautiful in ze moonlight.”
One of the others, Pierre, poured himself over me. He couldn’t speak any English, but I got the feeling he wasn’t too worried about speaking at all. It felt like he had a lot more than 2 hands. After awhile the other guy, Jean-Marc, just sort of wandered off. Niki and Marcel went to sit under a tree and Pierre and I sat under another tree. Pierre obviously wanted to do more than just kiss but this is not where or how I want to have sex for the first time. I thought I always wanted to try sex no matter what but now that the opportunity presents itself I realize I want to have it at a certain time and place and not just randomly with some guy I don't know. Besides, I don’t know what to do. Of course I can’t tell Niki I haven’t done it yet. Or anyone else. No one would believe me, or worse, they would believe me and snicker about it. Learning how to kiss is enough for me right now. Pierre and I kissed a lot. Even though the taste of his cigarette smoke was disgusting, I finally get what all the fuss about kissing is. His lips were soft and moist and we made a bit of a vacuum with soft sucking sounds, and my heart sort of jumped inside with excitement. I could feel a sort of ticklish, damp, warm feeling right down inside my deepest insides. Pierre kept saying “Je t’aime, je t’aime.” over and over. I said it too because it’s foreign and it didn’t feel like I was really saying “I love you”.
At about 1:00 in the morning Pierre walked me back to the pension. He pressed me up against the door to our room and I could feel a lump through his pants. It made me nervous and I wouldn’t let him in because I was afraid he wouldn’t leave so I kissed him one last time, really long and passionate with my tongue and everything and then quickly went inside and locked the door. Niki had given me the key because she wanted to stay out longer and I promised I’d listen out for her and let her in. When I got into the room, I was shocked to see the mascara on my eyes had smeared and my lips looked like I’d lost a fight with several ripe tomatoes. I looked like Alice Cooper! How embarrassing! Had Pierre seen me like that? Had Niki or Marcel? No one had said anything, but I was shocked and embarrassed. Maybe they were all outside right then laughing at me and how ridiculous I looked. And here I thought I was being sexy and sophisticated. I quickly washed it all off and turned out the light so I wouldn’t have to look at myself any more.
My heart kept beating fast as I lay in the dark and relived the evening in my mind. I could still feel the pressure of all those kisses and taste the smell of cigarettes and my face felt sort of rough, like it was sunburned. I guess it was from Pierre’s beard. My insides felt weird too, sort of restless, and uncomfortable, but in a way that also felt, well, interesting. Good interesting, not bad interesting. When I lay in bed and thought about Pierre, the good interesting feeling got bigger, then so huge I could hardly stand it. Like fireworks inside me going off in slow waves of heat. Terrible and wonderful. It lasted about a minute then slowly went away. I wondered if I could ask Niki about it without appearing totally ignorant. I feel like this whole sex thing is a mystery that I have only got little clues to work on.
It took a long time for my body to relax but once it did a wave of sleep started to wash over me. I tried to fend it off by planning tomorrow’s train route in my head, but I got confused and kept having to start over. I must have fallen asleep because I didn’t even hear Niki get back at 4:30am. She told me later that she had knocked as loudly as she dared, but when I didn’t answer she went down to the lobby and started to sleep on the chair there because there was no one around. A cleaner saw her and tried to throw her out, and she used all her language skills to convince the cleaner she was a guest but didn’t have a key. Niki can be very persuasive, and the cleaner finally let her in. It’s just as well that I didn’t wake up at that point because Niki was furious with me for falling asleep and might have used violence. At least that’s what she told me when we woke up this morning and talked over the evening. I was contrite and apologized over and over. I had no idea I was such a sound sleeper and promised it would never happen again and she could keep the key next time. She said she wasn’t as mad as she was last night and that she hadn’t realized she’d be out as late as she was.
Saturday, July 16, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - gothic beauty

“Oooo, look at that gold shrine with what’s-her-name-Mary.”
“What’s-her-name-Mary?”
“What is it? You know. Virgin! That’s it. The Virgin Mary.
And I thought I was a religious ignoramus.

Thursday, July 14, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - a rose is a rose
Our goal today was the Mona Lisa at the Louvre museum. It’s actually quite a small painting, and surrounded by red velvet ropes that we were not allowed to step in front of, so our view was limited. There room was large and filled will all sorts of wonderful paintings, yet for some reason this was the one everyone wanted to see. I wonder who decided that.
I really wanted to see the original copy of Marco Polo’s book at the Paris National Library, but Niki rolled her eyes and told me Ye Gods, no way, not another museum and especially not one full of boring old maps and books and she’d meet me at a café instead. Marco Polo’s book is so intriguing to me. Niki didn’t know about it, but she doesn’t like reading much of anything except Cosmopolitan magazine and that’s only because of the quizzes. Marco Polo’s book was so famous right from the beginning that for centuries everyone believed exactly what he wrote about and totally ignored his mistakes. Christopher Columbus even took a copy on his travels, which is probably why he thought America was India. The book’s biggest mistake was describing this huge southern continent that nobody else could ever find. Even Abel Tasman, a guy who was so picky he wouldn’t even trust his own eyes, thought New Zealand was part of this southern continent just because Marco Polo wrote about it. And here I am in the same city as this old, old book that changed the way the world was seen for so, so long! I closed my eyes and breathed in the dusky scent of old paper, hoping some of its molecules would enter my system and make me part of the book in some way.
Niki was waiting at the cafe and motioned me with her usual mad two armed waving technique which embarrasses me to death. I quickly slid onto a rickety wire chair and we talked as if we hadn't seen each other in days. Well, to be honest Niki did most of the talking, but that's ok by me. She's entertaining. She's also curious about my family for some reason and asks about them a lot.
“Where is your Babby from? She has a weird accent.”
“Well, she was born in Denmark, but her father was Russian. Her family moved to the Prairies when she was small.”
“She’s a riot. And pretty cool, for an old lady. Is she your Dad’s Mom or your Mom’s Mom?”
“Dad’s Mom.”
“Oh my God, really? Your Dad is so quiet. He’s always reading the newspaper or out in the garden when I come around to your house. I don’t think I even know what he sounds like. And yet your Babby is so lively. Your Mom’s lively too, but in a different way. I feel a deep connection with your Mom. She seems to dislike children.”
I laughed at that. “No, not really. Just her own.”
“What’s she really like? As a person?”
“Chairman Mao’s widow.”
Niki rolled her eyes at my attempt at humour and mused. “She’s pretty. Your Mom. Pretty, but kind of hard. You know, forceful. Not really happy. She is so, I don’t know, quirky, but in a conventional way. Sort of. But she can’t be totally conventional because you all have such unconventional names. Why is that?
“Well, I’m not sure but I have a bit of a theory. You know her real name is Phyllis. She just calls herself Phil.”
“Yeah? So?”
“Well, Phil stands for Phillip too.”
“Ok, so Phil stands for Phillip too. Is that supposed to mean something to me? Omigod, did she have a sex change? Is your Mom really a man?”
I looked at her with amazement. “Of course she’s not really a man! Where on earth do you get such things? My theory is that she started calling herself Phil when she was a girl. Maybe… about 14. She had a brother.”
“Is this for real or another part of your theory stuff?”
“No, no, for real. She really did have a brother, who apparently was the one every one in the family adored most of all, even her. Especially her. He was quiet but very intelligent, ambitious, sensitive. At least that's what she said the only time I overheard her talk about him. But he died. Some illness, when he was 17. In India. She never talks about him, but my theory is she wanted to have a son to remember him by and to give him her brother’s name. Of course she only had girls. So we all got boys names.”
“Ye Gods! What an amazing story! So I guess her brother’s name was Sidney cause she’s the eldest, huh?”
“No.”
“So which one of you has her brothers’ name?”
“Um, none of us.”
“None of you? Well, what was his name anyway?”
“Leslie.”
“Wait a minute. You mean her brother had a girl’s name?”
“Well, yes,” I said, suddenly seeing the incongruity for the first time in my entire life. Why had I not seen it before? “Ok, it might not be the real reason. I only said it was a bit of a theory.”
Wednesday, July 13, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - electricity issue
I thought our school French wasn’t too bad, but it turns out it’s terrible. No one understands us in Paris, or else they pretend not too. I used to think Niki was better at French than me for some reason but now I think she’s just more confident. She has taken to saying “Les dieux et les petits poissons”, which confuses everyone. It was getting late and we weren't having much luck - everyplace seems to be booked already. I thought sleeping on the streets in Paris might be kind of romantic, but Niki reminded me we need an outlet for our curling iron.

Monday, July 11, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - don't understand quotients
Sunday, July 10, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - therapeutic shoes
We spent the day shopping. Niki felt much better after she bought shoes.
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - sex for Niki (almost)
Niki and I talk a lot about our mothers and what infuriates us about them, which is something we both share. I think Niki’s mother is wonderful and worthy, being a doctor and all, and she thinks mine is ingenious. She’s always going on about how creative Mom’s job is, how daring her clothes are, how original the jewelry she makes herself is and how famous her cocktail creations are. Those things are just embarrassments to me. Especially when she showed up at one of my band concerts wearing silver lame from head to toe. She was like a walking roasting pan! We often wish we could trade mothers. We talk a lot about money, too. No one would enjoy being rich more than Niki. She’d wear her fake nails long and her designer dresses short. I see frosted hair, big jewellry, even a fur coat. She’d take her friends for elaborate lunches and never let them forget it.
What would I do if I had a lot of money? I never seem to have any. As soon as I get my paychecks I see something I just have to buy, usually things in the bookstore where I work. My money practically never even gets to see the outside world! I tried to save for this trip but ended up spending practically everything on guidebooks and maps and stuff. Thankfully Dad gave me his credit card in case I need extra cash. I know he told me it was only for emergencies but I’ve already put a hundred and forty dollars on it. Mostly food and train tickets and sensible things like that, but I did buy five metres of Belgian lace. I don’t know what I’ll do with it, but it was so beautiful I couldn’t resist. And the hankies and table linens don’t take up much room. The maps I put into a cardboard roll and it’s not heavy. I especially like the one of 17th century Belgium. I can’t read the language but it will look great on my wall. Oh and I also bought a little figure made of bronze. Now that might have been a mistake; I had no idea bronze was so heavy. But what can you do when you see something you can’t live without?



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Niki and I had lunch in a neat little café that used to be some sort of shop in a former life. Niki thinks it was a bookstore because there are lots of shelves and a long ladder on wheels, but there are so many little drawers all the way up to the ceiling that I think it must have been something like a hardware store. The best bit was dessert. Apricot pastries, a type of raisin bread called ‘cramique’ and some butter waffle cookies that just melted in our mouths. Niki worries about packing on the pounds but I don't have that worry - the opposite - I've love to be a bit more voluptuous.
The hostel curfew is really early and we decided to ask if we could get a late pass, using a concert as an excuse and if they ask to see our tickets we’ll say we’re picking them up at the door. We had our story all straight before going to the office, and Niki made me do the asking because she says I look less guilty and rowdy, but right away the manager said “No problem. Do you want one or two keys?” Ye gods! We celebrated by going to a pub and trying some of the local beers of which there seem to be hundreds and all with interesting names like Gueuze, Kriek, and Duvel. The pub was cobweb old with huge wooden ceiling beams and rusty tools around the fireplace, but there was pop music playing. Abba again.
After three beers in three different pubs Niki got confident and started checking out the guys. She pointed out which ones would be good kissers and which might be ‘better in the sack’. I blushed just to hear her. I can never talk about what guys attract me without feeling stupid when I hear the words come out. Of course I’m sure no one is really interested in my fantasies anyway. That’s one of the reasons I really like being with Niki. She talks about guys all the time. Although she obviously wants sex and I’m more interested in falling in love. Niki says love is too scary and sex is easier. I still want to fall in love.
She reminds me of a lion. Maybe it’s partly because of her golden skin and golden-green eyes, curved and slanted so gracefully like almonds with their skins on. She shakes her curls back all the time, then teases one over an eye so she can observe. That eye a beacon, sparkling, watching, assessing, registering. She even walks like a lion, slowly, leaning forward, her eyes focussed straight ahead. She sure got the best from both her parents’ heritage, occidental and oriental. I wish I was exotic like Niki. All the guys look at her as we pass in the street. I wouldn’t know what to do if a bunch of guys stared at me. Or talked to me. I know I’d get flustered and say something really stupid. Niki is good at talking to guys so I can stay quiet. I sort of put on a half smile to make it look like I know what I am doing and let her do the talking.
She started to flirt with a couple of English guys at the next table. They were kind of cute and Niki asked them to join us for a drink, which put me in an absolute panic. Anyway, they said they had a car and would drive us back to our hostel after a bit, so that’s all right. James and Charlie, that’s their names, were handsome, although kind of show-offy. Niki adopted James, but I didn’t really feel comfortable hanging on to some guy I didn’t know. Besides, Charlie didn’t seem that keen, so we just sat and chatted about soccer, something neither Niki nor I know much about, and drank our beers. The guys made a few jokes about how good it was that girls had breasts otherwise guys wouldn’t be interested in them because they don’t know anything about sports. The only sport they seemed to know anything about was soccer, so I thought that was a limited assessment on their part . Then the three of them all ordered scotch. I don’t like scotch so I stuck to beer. After awhile James and Charlie got blurry eyes and took drags on a joint, saying “Hey mannn” in a long drawn out way. Niki tried it but I was too shy. I don’t really understand men. What are they thinking about? It can’t only be sports and girls surely. I feel so inexperienced.
I now know what her older brother meant when he told me it was funny to watch Niki drunk. She was so goofy, giggling hysterically, talking way too loudly, yelling out “Ye Gods!” at odd times, and draping herself over James and feeding him peanuts one by one. It was getting really late and I was wondering if peanuts would become our breakfast. Finally they were ready to go and we left the pub to find the boys’ car. James had his arm around Niki. Charlie tried to do that to me, but I felt awkward so walked behind a bit and he didn’t try it again, thank goodness. He probably wasn’t feeling well, because he ducked behind a building and threw up. I just kept walking and hoping he was able to drive. By this time Niki was singing. She’s got a really good voice and was belting out ‘Fever’, kind of a suggestive song. She was singing it with gusto too and I hoped she wouldn’t get us in trouble.
James asked if we could all go to a park, but Charlie said it was too cold for him to sit there on his own which I knew was a comment directed at me but I pretended I didn’t hear it. Then James asked if he was ok to drive because he looked kind of green but Charlie said he got rid of all the alcohol when he got sick. Did it really work that way I wondered? I hope so. Thankfully there wasn’t much traffic on the road, because it felt like he was going way too fast and every time he turned the corner he was in the wrong lane, like he was driving in England.
I was just so relieved when he pulled up with a screech in front of the hostel. I thanked him hurriedly and got out, but Niki was smooching James in the back and I didn’t know what to do, so I just waited by the car. Charlie yelled at her to get out, and then James yelled back and then Niki started singing ‘Fever’ again. Eventually she got out and just fell onto the curb, curled up and went fast asleep. Just like that, fast asleep! The guys took off really fast, screeching around the corner while I tried to get Niki awake. Finally I got her roused only to have her barf all over some rose bushes by the side of the road.
I grabbed her arm and helped her up the pathway to the door telling her for goodness sake to stop singing or we’d be arrested. She told me I was the best friend she’d ever had and no one ever cared about her like this and she wished she was as good a person as me, which despite knowing it was just the drink talking made me feel rather good. Just as I got her to the door she barfed again on the steps of the hostel.
Finally inside and up the stairs. I can’t believe no one heard us, especially as I kept the lights off and tried to make it up the stairs in the dark. Bad idea. We kept missing the top stair of each flight before turning the corner to the next one so we’d go step, step, step, BANG. After a couple of those I decided to turn on the light after all, but it was a really weird switch. The light stayed on only a few seconds before turning itself off, usually in the middle of the next set of stairs and then it was step, step, step, BANG again. It seemed to take an eternity to get to the top.
I dropped Niki on the bed, yanked off her shoes and put the covers over her. She was out like a light. Nothing would wake her now. I quickly got undressed and then got the hiccups. Perfect! Someone once told me the best cure for hiccups is drinking out of the wrong side of the glass, so I went to the bathroom to get some water but I kept spilling it all over the floor, so just went back and lay in bed, holding my breath.
Friday, July 8, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - moules + frites

When Niki woke up she decided we were both hungry, and I agreed with her. So we went out to find ‘moules frites’, which I had read was the national dish of Belgium. We got a big bowl of mussels and a mountain of French fries. I guess the translation for ‘frites’ would be just ‘fries’ and that makes sense. Calling part of the Belgian national dish ‘French’ would not be right. Niki asked for a spinach salad, but told the waiter she hated vinegar. When the salad came it was glistening and she looked alarmed, but the waiter hastened to assure her “Don’t worry, that is not vinegar making it shine, it is the bacon fat.” Well, having a salad that has so much bacon fat on it that it glistens would worry me more than a bit of vinegar, but then I am not on a diet of any kind, so asked for vinegar for my ‘frites’. The waiter looked at me as if he didn’t understand. Then it was obvious he did understand, but didn’t believe it. When he realized I was in earnest, he stayed by our table and watched with open-mouthed horror as I poured vinegar on the ‘frites’ and proceeded to eat them quite happily. My guess is that’s not commonly done in Belgium.
Wednesday, July 6, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - culture
I didn’t get to spend nearly as much time as I’d like at the museums as Niki made me promise to leave by one o’clock. She parked herself on a bench after only about half an hour and looked at me with mournful eyes every time I passed by. “Ye gods and little fishes! How much longer are you going to be?” she’d say as if she was in real pain. I suggest splitting up but she says she has no way of knowing where anything is without me. Oh well, it’s nice to feel needed.
I’d forgotten how old everything is in Europe. Niki says she prefers the idea of newly discovering someplace like being the first person to land in Tahiti. I'm surprised to find I like the opposite feeling, thinking of the millions of people who may have trodden the same path we followed today, or sat on the same place by the canal, or looked at the same spires. It gives me goose bumps on my insides. I wonder about those people’s lives, who they loved and what they did, how long they lived and what they feared and fantasized about. I wonder about what kind of life is up ahead for me, where I will go and what I will do, whether I will ever fall in love.
Niki surprised me by actually saying she wanted to go with me to the Anne Frank museum, located in the house the diarist hid inside during the Second World War. It's a powerful thought that one little girl’s diary became a definitive work of that period of history. I wonder if she would have been proud or embarrassed to have people from all over the world read her intimate thoughts. I would be embarrassed. Niki said it was really interesting and she would never have known about it but for me and that made me feel good. I like to think I might be a positive influence on someone else.
Everyone speaks really good English here. As well as other languages too. We heard someone our age talking in Dutch, then English, then French and then German all in the same conversation. I feel a bit inferior. I never thought about it before but it is kind of unfair that we English speakers seem to expect everyone else to know English. Travel is really opening my eyes to lots of things. I feel like a flower bud that’s starting to open out and realizing it is a flower after all and not just some useless bud.
In the evening we took a canal boat cruise. It took us an hour and a half to get dressed up because we thought it would be really sophisticated and there might be guys but it was kind of cheesy and full of old tourists and couples. The boat had a glass top so we sipped wine and looked up at the lights and the stars and tried to imagine we were older and more experienced. Niki has given up on having sex in Holland. She said it’s a cliche anyway and will wait until Belgium.
Tuesday, July 5, 1977
Chapter 4 - Northern Europe - red lights
Amsterdam‘s slender buildings are lovely, with decorative plaster to differentiate rooflines. Canals cut across cobbled streets and there are bicycles everywhere. Not an easy place to get to know; each street looks a lot like the last and I had to pay attention, but after a couple of false starts we found the hostel. Niki wanted to see the red light district, but I made her promise first to see the Rijksmuseum tomorrow. There might be a few clashes on this trip. Niki has made no secret of the fact that she is here to meet guys – she wants to have sex in every country we visit. Nice to see she has ambition.
I am here to fill every crevice of my mind and soul. I want to know the history, the geography, the art, the literature, the language, the mannerisms of everywhere. I want to inhale the air of Europe and hold it in my lungs. I want to see it, devour it, satiate my hunger to know everything about everything. Niki says I should cool it and slow down, Europe will always be here and I say yes but I won’t be, I’ve already spent 18 years on this earth and have seen only a tiny portion of it. At my age, Marco Polo had already started out on his voyages and writing his narrative, probably the most influential European historical document from the first half of this millennium. He almost singlehandedly launched the Age of Discovery and all its consequences. I haven’t even had sex yet. Niki says some people are never satisfied. I say she’s right. But I know we are talking about different things.
The red light district was more interesting than I thought it would be. Women were sitting or standing or dancing behind large windows in their living rooms, wearing bored expressions and not much else. “Ye gods!” breathed Niki, rolling her eyes in that way of hers. Everything is always a bit of a drama with Niki. I wonder what it’s like for the women in the windows – do they shut down their brains and go through the motions or are they aware of everyone that passes by? How irksome it must be to be stared at by teenaged tourists like us, but it doesn’t seem to faze them. I guess they must be used to it. One of them even waved to us and gave us a thumbs up sign when she saw the Canadian pins on our jackets.
Despite jet lag we are trying to keep awake as long as possible and get used to local time. At about 4pm we went into a brown bar full of pale students all smoking hand rolled cigarettes and marijuana, drinking beers and talking earnestly while Abba songs played at full blast. I wish we could be part of such a group. We drank shots of genever, a kind of raw gin that scraped about six layers of skin off my throat, and breathed in second-hand smoke.
Even though we have different aims, I’m glad to be doing this trip with Niki. Ever since we met two years ago, I have envied her confidence. She does so effortlessly what I find painful to even contemplate. I know I hide my feelings with layers of protection, and am told I look like I don’t care, don‘t notice, but really I’m dying a thousand deaths every time the attention comes on me. Mom once called me cold and that hurt so much. She usually disapproves of my more adventurous friends but she likes Niki for some reason. Niki sure does know how to turn on the charm in front of adults, but I know she is really a rebel.
I don’t have the courage to rebel. And what would I rebel against? It's not like I was ever mistreated or beaten so I’d have some angst to write about, but of course I could never say anything like that out loud to anyone because it’s sounds so awful and they just wouldn’t understand. And I don’t really want to be beaten. I just wish I had something in my past to make me more interesting, a more tragic heroine. Instead of being a skinny spotty teenager, which is completely unromantic.
I hate the way I am sometimes. For one thing, I can't speak up for myself. Every time I try it comes out wrong. Mom wanted me to borrow her suitcase and her clothes for this trip – I mean, “Ye gods” as Niki would say - her clothes! They are not at all appropriate and they reek of cigarette smoke. I secretly wondered if it’s so she can worm her way into my room and try to get all chummy with me. She’d never dream of trying to lend her clothes to Sidney or Sam. Why does she always try it on with me? I tried to be gentle.
“I would hate to ruin them you know, and Europe is probably pretty dirty. We’ll be on trains and stuff. London was filthy I remember.”
“You don’t like them. Don’t lie to me. You don’t like my taste in clothes.”
“No, it’s not that. They are nice clothes.”
“This silver blouse will be lovely with the navy skirt and the plaid. Try it on. Let’s see how it looks.”
I took a breath. I want to take a backpack, not a suitcase. And a silver blouse and plaid skirt! I mean really. “Mom that outfit is so 1974. And it’s a little grown up for me. I think we will be spending most of our time in student places and these will look – um – a little too – good. You know. Why can’t I choose my own things?”
“Well, let’s see what you’ve got,” she said in that wry way she has just before she makes me feel like an idiot. “You have four old pairs of jeans and two swimsuits. No sweater, no skirt, no dress.”
“Mom. I haven’t finished yet. At least don’t rag on my choices until I’ve finished packing them.” A lame ending I know, especially as there was nothing else on my bed ready to go into my pack. I have a tough time making decisions.
“Right, I suppose you know best. You’ve always known best. I try to take an interest in the things you like to do, try to break into that shell of yours but everytime I do I get rebuffed. I thought you’d want to perhaps take a piece of me with you on this trip to remind you of me. Like part of me can be with you, watch over you. Did you never think that I never got the chance to go to Europe at your age? That I would have loved to? At least I can help you experience things I never could. Well, you’re young and headstrong and the only way to learn is to make mistakes rather than listen to the advice of others who know better.” Does she really know better, I wondered? How would she know what a student should pack for Europe? “I’m sure whatever you want to take will be stunning and turn the crowned heads of Europe in your direction.”
“Mom! I don’t want that.” Honesty started to creep in. “Listen, I just don’t want to look, um, geeky. I’m still young. I’d rather die than wear old lady clothes.”
Oops, wrong word to use. ‘Lady’ was fine. But ‘old’ was not so good. She looked at me with flashes in her eyes.
“You’d rather die? Well, I like that. You’d rather die than wear something I chose and paid for with my own hard earned money and that I wear proudly. No thank you. Wear your own things then. Stuffed into a grubby sack that makes you look like a pack mule. Just promise me one thing – one thing.”
“What is it?”
“You can’t make a promise without having to know what it is? I am only asking for one thing, one small promise.”
“Okay, okay, I promise.”
“Do not show me any degrading photos of you wearing ragamuffin attire in European capitals. It would be too distressing and I’d be ashamed of you.”
Huge relief. That was a promise I readily accepted. Besides, I have a feeling that travelling with Niki might produce photos I won’t want anyone to see. Secretly I hope so. I’m pathetic. When she left the room, I sat on my bed, feeling horrible. Yet another moment with Mom turned into a confrontation.