269 34 51MB
English Pages [362] Year 2011
AISO *S*
w The gripping real story of the »j
j
^
diplomat spy ^& and the Chinese opera star
whose affair inspired
-&(.;
^
"M. Butterfly"
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Mi
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JOYCE WADLER
IN US.
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It was a scandal that provoked .and disbelief— and inspired a long-running Broadway play. But the convicted spy at the center of the storm never told his side of the story. .until now. .
LIAISON When Bernard Boursicot, an innocent and charming twenty-year-old yearning for adventure and romance, was posted to the French embassy in Beijing, he met and soon fell in love with a mysterious, seductive opera singer named Shi Pei Pu.
Over the course of the next eighteen two lived out a passionate and dangerous liaison that produced a son, drew them into espionage, and ultimately landed them both in a French prison. The whole time, Boursicot was unaware that Pei Pu, the love of his life and his longtime sexual partner, was a man. years, the
How could this happen? How could he not know? These questions intrigued the world, making Boursicot the subject of incredulity and ridicule,
and ultimately
inspired an immensely popular Broadway hit,
M. Butterfly. But the speculation could
not begin to
rival
the astonishing real story
To uncover the facts behind this sensational case, journalist Joyce Wadler spent three years researching court
documents and psychiatrists'
files,
interviewing relatives, friends, and t\ workers of the pair, including a form prime minister of France. Most irnpo, \n\ of all, she persuaded Boursicot, who had refused to discuss his story since m *
1
arrest, to
break his silence.
(Continued on back flap)
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3 1111 01475 1364
DATE DUE
DEC
1
JAN
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3 1993
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OCT 4, OCT 9 1
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Digitized by the Internet Archive in
2012
http://archive.org/details/liaisonOOwadl
£
-j&i'yw'
ALSO BY JOYCE WADLER
My
Breast:
One Woman 's Cancer Story
^^ Joyce
Wadler
®5§
BANTAM BOOKS TORONTO LONDON SYDNEY AUCKLAND
NEW YORK
jSausdito Public iibra^ **-.
S&usaiito, Californiag*f4$§&
LIAISON A Bantam Book / October 1993
Grateful acknowledgment
is
made
to
The Guidebook Company I Ad. for permission Angela Terzani 1988.
from Chinese Days by Angela Terzani
to quote
©
All rights reserved.
Copyright
©
1993 by Joyce Wadler
Book design
No part
of this book
may
by
Ellen Cipriano
be reproduced or transmitted in any
form or by any means,
electronic
or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
For information
address:
Bantam
Books.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Wadler, Joyce. Liaison / Joyce Wadler. p.
cm.
Includes index. ISBN 0-553-09213-8 1.
Boursicot, Bernard.
—
2.
— France — Biography. France — Spies —China — Biography. — Biography. Espionage —China— History.
and employees Biography. male impersonators China
JN2737.W34
—
Civil service 4. Shi,
3.
Pei Pu.
Officials 6.
5.
7.
I.
Fe-
Title.
1993
354.44'00092— dc20 92-31384
[B]
CIP Published simultaneously in the
I
'nited States
and Canada
Bantam Hooks are published by Han tarn
Hooks, a division of Bantam Doub/eday Dell Publishing trademark, consisting of the words "Bantam Hooks" and the portrayal of a rooster, is Regis fried in U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and in other countries. Marca Registiada. Bantam Hooks, 1540 Broadway, Mew York, New York 10036.
Group,
Int.
Its
PRINTED
IN
I
III
RRH
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 9 8
7
6 5 4 3 2
1
In
memory
of
my
father,
Bernard Wadler, a realist
c
ONTENTS
Prologue
Book One Book Two Book Three Author's Note
Index
3
Love
15
Betrayal
85
Knowledge
237 307 313
£
{frfy***
Bernard's Song
11 ere
the Palais de Justice.
is
They used to bring
an hour through
seventy, eighty kilometers
me
here, the secret police:
Paris, racing through the streets; they
thought the Chinese were standing on the street corners to save me, waiting to
"Monsieur Boursicot, Ambassadeur de Fresnes,"
shoot.
they brought
put me
me
in the
in before the judge. They
chained my hands
and also my feet and
back of this truck, with one car in back, one in front, sometimes a
On
motorcycle alongside.
the
way
would throw
to court it
was
okay, but always, on the
do not remember very
back
to prison, I
was
so full of drugs. They said this in all the newspapers. I
1
'hey
did not
You know to count.
let
me read
the
up. 'The trial itself I
papers myself. They thought
the sorts of things they say:
' '
said when
they
Or
that I
"For an
it
was told
way
well.
I
it later.
would disturb me.
accountant, he did not
know how
lie.
I go to parties. They say, "Everybody needs to be famous once." "Does
spying pay well?" I was not spying for money. I was not spying for the secret of the
washing machine. I was a diplomat. I had a
life.
New
York, Belize, Paris,
Marrakech, the same year I was arrested. Three continents the year
wanted to be Forgive he,
;
Mr. Onassis, with
me for speaking
like this,
I
am
caught
me
sooner, if they
Ah, they took
there, beside
me when
had caught me
was a
I
drunk. Then four years in prison while
"The Living Treasure of the Beijing Opera"
years in prison. Then I
before.
a plane to take me to New York or Harry 's Bar.
—
no, never mind, if they
in China, it
would have
had
been twenty
really great spy.
Notre-Dame,
there
I committed suicide.
is
the Hotel-Dieu, the hospital
There was blood on
where
the walls, there
was
Liaison
2
blood on the floor. recuperate your
No,
mean
My
client,
no, this
is
lawyer came for me in prison; they said
you will be
what I mean
lucky.
—Je me
in his
him, "If you
suis suicide, / committed suicide, I
this precisely:
When he took me
to
"
arms I was
lost.
p
ROLOGUE
here
is
p inner June ;
C
v
''• :
:
"V: >.Vr''.
:•
:
who had
hearing that alarm
He when
heard
30,
week, returning from
for fifteen years at the
on the Quai d'Orsay had been cold to him.
He
problems:
drinking too
is
man
in
the French
of distinction,
head.
earlier that
it
1983, on a busy commercial street in
always dreamed of being a
in his
man he had known
a
alarm that goes off in us, a small
Pans. Bernard Boursicot, an attache
.
Foreign Service is
.'-,'. '•-•
a little
voice that senses danger, and on Thursday,
his post in Belize,
Foreign Affairs office giving
It is
much and smoking
too
him the
old
much and he
cannot sleep. It
down of a
is
at
little
odd. Usually Bernard returns to Paris as a hungry
late-night adventure
— he approaches
In the arena of love, he tends to get thirty-eight, that a bit too
sits
he
is
a
it all
with cheerful greed.
what he wants,
handsome man by
too. It
is
not, at
Parisian standards: His face
is
round; at five seven, a hundred and eighty pounds, his belly, he
sometimes thinks,
is
a little too
round
also.
But
—when
his shoulders are broad,
energy
his hips narrow,
and he
announces
world that whatever the sport, he
But
man
the table. Old friends, good food, all-night bars, the possibility
to the
this
Bank, dressed the tension.
has a grin
morning, walking
his
is
is
high
down Avenue Bosquet on
for his holidays in loafers
and jeans,
all
— that
game. the Left
Bernard feels
is
Liaison
4
He
tries fighting
telling himself
it,
he has every reason
world
in the
to feel good:
He enough
new
has a
and
to
post in Scotland, which will keep
enough away from
just far
And
awaiting him at a shop that caters to diplomats.
been able
years of struggle, Bernard has
Du
Shi
Du,
he prefers
or as
in Brittany
Bernard
he
is
when
brown
eyes, his
He
will take
Bertrand
down
all,
car
after
He
to his family
at a
boy has
clear to Bernard the
adventuresome nature.
wants very
much
she
She
not.
to
is
less
is
glance that
his
own wide
rushed back to Paris
proud of Bertrand's mother, Shi Pei Pu.
old," Bernard thought
at the airport in
is
best of
new
Bertrand arrived from Beijing nine months earlier and introduced
to his friends.
"She has gotten
him
it is
just close
to get his sixteen-year-old son,
proud of Bertrand. You can see
terribly
of mixed blood, but
face, his
him
is
him
has a
him, by his French name, Bertrand,
to call
Tomorrow Bernard and show him off.
out of China.
He
Paris.
be included on
his old love,
he
between them. Already, over the sion sets, tape recorders,
Madame must
when
Pei
her usual guise, dressed as this
will
Grundig
the world, Bernard often thinks,
man. Though she
provide for her, but
it is
finished
he has given too much:
radios, four
He
to greet
outing to meet Bernard's family,
years,
have only the best.
a
Pu came
is
televi-
Rolex watches, because
the only spy in the history of
who paid
to spy.
Even now, he
is
paying: Pei
Pu has heard
owned by
wealthy Chinese friend, which might be had very cheaply,
a
and Bernard has agreed "I will
her
meet you
as
of an apartment on Boulevard Saint-Germain,
to
go with her early
this
evening and look.
planned," he told her the night before, calling
home from a phone booth near his borrowed studio. And she answered as she had since even before they had become
at
lovers in the spring of 1965.
"You
are
still
Her best
my
friend
best friend."
— her best resource — but no
trand; four boys in his family,
matter, he has Ber-
two married with children, and he
only one to provide his mother with a grandson. Bernard
how happy breakfast
still
is
the
remembers
she had been to meet him, coming up from Brittany with
mug
nized her the
a
with "Bertrand" stenciled on the side. Bertrand recog-
moment
she got off the
train.
PROLOGUE "Grandma!" he There
is
Then they
hit
from the
5
yelled.
something
to blood.
suddenly, on the busy shopping street of Avenue Bosquet,
him.
One man
sneakers tackles him from behind, another
in
Bernard thinks
side.
wallet and address
it
book down the
into a car, Bernard grabs a tree
holdup and
a
is
street.
Then,
in his panic flings his as
they
try to
drag him
and holds on. People are stopping
to
stare.
"What
Now two his picture
you doing
are
on
more of them and
it,
at last
"Come with us, we moment he gets into the "Say nothing," he
man?" one yells. on him and one is flashing
to that
are
Bernard realizes
just
want
Renault they
tells
who
to talk to slip
they
badge with
a
are.
you," one says, and the
on the
cuffs.
himself as they tear up the
street, north
toward the Seine. "Nothing, like Sorge."
There
is
an organization
in
France called the Direction de
la
Surveil-
lance du Territoire, which seeks out internal threats to national security,
and
in the
winter of 1982, operating, as they would later report, they
found "within the normal surveillance of the diplomatic representation est:
activities of the
something that piqued
in Paris"
their inter-
the relationship between Bernard Boursicot, identified in their
and "a Chinese
national living in Paris, later identified as Shi Pei
Shi Pei Pu, according to D.S.T. intelligence, was a
who made
his living as singer, writer,
France from Beijing with
opera. Shi Pei
and voice teacher.
teenage son on October
Pu had once been
a star of the Beijing
A
delicate
man who was
in
had arrived
8,
1982, at the
a
governmenton Chinese
Opera, and in
two network television
only a few inches over five feet
had strikingly tiny hands, Pei Pu,
as
performed both men's and women's
was
tall
and
traditional in Beijing Opera,
roles. In
Messenger from Beijing," he appeared
Pu."
of forty-five
He
institute for social studies, to give lectures
France was having great success, starring shows.
man
Maison des Sciences de l'Homme,
invitation of the
funded research
his
files
posted abroad,"
as "a civil servant at the Ministry of Exterior Relations
in
Chinese
as a
one
TV production, "The
shepherdess awaiting news
of her lover in a dreamlike fog beside a bridge.
Liaison
6
"Watching the ocean,
me
bring
eyes see
a
if
Pei
a
Pu had had all,
Revolution, had been
China. Mei was
He
for a
messenger
to
My
Pu was
he was,
a star.
Mei Lanfang,
When
the producer
as usual, vague: Pei
just
the greatest Beijing Opera actor in
made him famous
months mimicking the smallest
details of his
of his wrist as he executed any of the
kimono sleeve symbolizing
Pu
His teacher before the Cultural
so exquisite in the female roles that
movement
of
reappeared once, after
around the eyes.
scars
a face-lift
Pei
that his students spent style: the
a heart condition.
week, with
laughed. But after
of a
sheep and wait
high-pitched voice. "Oh, wait!
in a
Pu had played the prima donna. He complained
and spoke often of
an absence of
asked
my
guard
horse at gallop!"
Backstage, Pei fatigue
I
news," Pei Pu sang
gestures
fifty
feelings from love to subterfuge to pain;
the proximity of his knees and sway of his body as he portrayed an
empress taking tiny steps on bound
The Opera
feet.
D.S.T. had the opportunity
as Shi Pei
Pu went about
to learn a
his
good deal about Beijing
work on "The Messenger from
Beijing":
They had tapped It
was impressive
the phones. to
be the subject of
Pei Pif s circle of friends.
new
a
one-hour television show
Even more impressive was He was seen going several times to the em-
nine months after arriving in a
country.
bassy of the People's Republic of China.
with some of the highest-ranking
He
members
attended dinner parties
of the French diplomatic
community. One evening the man who had served
as
ambassador
China only the year before had personally dropped Shi Pei Pu
to
off at his
apartment.
Most
interestingly to the D.S.T., Shi Pei Pu's
home,
a sixth-floor
studio in a weathered old building on Boulevard de Port-Royal on the
Left Bank
in Paris,
was owned by
Bernard Boursicot. Boursicot was
Foreign Service employee
a
a loose
cannon
working-class kid with a tenth-grade education superiors as something of a maverick.
nothing even that
solid, just talk that
the globe: black-market dealings least
once
posted
in
in his career,
the French
in
It
in
who was viewed by
was never anything
his
serious,
followed him post to post around
Mongolia, his contract dropped
an enthusiastic drinker,
embassy
named
in the organization, a
China
in
a
at
Romeo. He had been
1964
for
one year
as
an
P R
G U E
I.
7
He
accountant and later spent three years there as an archivist.
had
defense secret clearance, giving him access to some classified docu-
He
ments.
embassy
had
He was in
also
—
unknown
for reasons
— twice
Chinese
visited the
in Paris.
posted in Belize, but since the
October 1982 he had made two
trips
arrival of
back
Pu
Shi Pei
to Paris. In
in Paris
mid-June 1983
he returned again.
"The
Pu was
surveillance under which Shi Pei
D.S.T. report of July
2
placed, " reads a
from Commissaire Divisionnaire
Raymond The
Xart,
"revealed that Bernard Boursicot was living with Shi Pei Pu. sion
was made
to call in
Bernard Boursicot
The
tions concerning this situation.
deci-
order to receive explana-
in
service suspected a cooperation
between Bernard Boursicot and the Chinese
intelligence
services
through the intermediary of Shi Pei Pu. Bernard Boursicot was arrested
on June 30, 1983,
Bernard can see "I
at
shaking
is
1
1:40 on the street during a surveillance operation."
as the car
is
afraid
they
it.
am
a
diplomat," he wants to say, "you cannot touch me," but he
can't speak. Everything
quickly he feels he
is
this
is
spinning around him; his mind
is
racing so
seeing sparks.
is
"They're going
'What
speeds across Paris and he
to ask
Chinese doing
me in
about Pei Pu. They're going to say, your place?' " he thinks. "Say nothing,
be strong."
They
tear east across
from the Ministry of the
Boulevard Haussmann and then, three blocks Interior, turn right
onto the
Rue d'Argenson,
pulling up before a five-story building protected by a metal gate. Ber-
nard can see no street
number on
opens and they drive down
the building and no name.
to a second-level
The
gate
basement. From there the
police take Bernard through a series of corridors and lead
him
into a
They do Somebody takes off the cuffs. The man who seems to be in charge is a middle-aged, beefy guv in a blue suit and tie, who introduces himself as Xart. He has the beginlarge room.
not speak. Just like the
nings of a belly and his hairline
is
Gestapo, Bernard thinks.
receding and he looks tough. There
are three others with him, dressed very
Bernard thinks, "They're dressed for
a
much
the same. "Nice suits."
big day."
Liaison
8
down," somebody
"Sit
cops seem to
Bertrand talking to
him look
at
and accusations
tions
"You were and
at
a lot
at
it
around
him
They
in its plastic case.
a picture of let
shoot ques-
once.
all at
the embassy of France in Beijing between '69 and
embassy of Mongolia from 77
in the
They have
about him.
in
will not.
neighbor near the apartment, but they won't
a
just pass
it,
know
hands
his
them from shaking, but they
the pockets of his jeans to stop
The
Bernard does, jamming
says.
to '79
and there are
72 five
hundred documents missing." "You went in
February
"Who
to the
'67
is
and
this
Chinese embassy and you saw the
mysterious Shi Pei Pu
who
"There were no documents missing them, but
his
in
is
my
living at your place?"
time," he wants to
But
it.
at
something was, there was no way they
if
the same time Bernard remembers the slides of
him and Shi Pei Pu and Bertrand he had taken on and the
tell
thoughts are scattered and wild. Nothing could have been
missing from the embassy, and could prove
cultural consul
again in April '68."
on top of
letters
his
desk
at
his last trip to
China
the apartment and he fears this
might be proof enough. "You're homosexual!" somebody
"Says who?" says Bernard, able
"Perhaps we could bring
somebody
is
saying.
for the
moment
some of your
to
be tough.
friends for questioning,"
else says.
"Bring
and he
in
is
in
anybody you
like,"
he
says,
but he knows
who
they
mean
scared.
And then they are waving something in front of him. "What about the plane ticket you got from the Chinese
in April
71?" April 1971
— the time during the Cultural Revolution when Pei Pu
had been sent
to the
countryside and Bernard had refused to give the
Chinese any more documents Beijing.
He
thought he had
The Chinese had
won
until Pei
Pu was allowed
that round, but
now he
to return to
sees he did not:
bided their time until they no longer needed him, and
then given him up.
The words come
out of him unstoppable, like a
moan: "Aaaah,
les
have sold me."
salauds Us tn'ont vendu!" Bernard cries.
"The
bastards
PROLOGUE The game
is
over.
money," Bernard
"I did nothing for
"Who
is
Nothing
somebody
Shi Pei Pu?" to
9
do but
let
asks.
go:
it all
know
"If you want to
says.
the truth, Shi Pei
Pu
is
a
woman," Bernard
says.
They
Silence. after
all,
Perhaps they think he
are stunned.
is
joking.
Why,
wouldn't they?
"Aaah, that's
my
"It's
why
she's with her son,"
one of them says
finally.
son," says Bernard.
Silence again. But briefer.
"And what about
the papers?" the senior
man
asks.
"There were no documents," Bernard wants
to say, but
"One
telegrams of Marshall
Green
.
.
letter of ."
Sihanouk," he begins.
and on and on, into the afternoon.
interesting to see
It is
"Some
he cannot.
what happens
man's signature when he
to a
is
held by the police for forty-eight hours without an attorney and by his
own
volition his
life falls apart.
In the early afternoon
on Thursday, Bernard Boursicot's
police custody, his signature on the
confession
one
is
first
bottom of each page of
his
day
in
typed
name connecting By nine-thirty that
cohesive and controlled, the letters of his
to the other as the letters in a
name
should.
evening, after ten hours of questioning, the letters are starting to sepa-
Friday morning,
rate.
when Bernard
in the night of additional
handwriting
mind
is
is
gives the police a
list
he had made
documents he had given the Chinese,
barely legible, like the writing of a child, or a
unraveling and
who
his
man whose
progressively unlearning everything he
is
knows. For years, Bernard Boursicot
says,
he has been
a spy.
His confession runs fifteen pages, single-spaced. Bernard admits giving the Chinese information on the Soviet Union, Southeast Asia,
Japan, and Laos in the early and late 1970s. larly interested,
embassies
in
he
said, in
The Chinese were
papers arriving in Beijing from the French
Washington and Moscow. They had visit
Henry Kissinger
in 1971, to
to
opening of American-Chinese
specifically requested
of American national security adviser
information on the secret
China
particu-
prepare for talks regarding the
relations.
Liaison
10
He He story.
how
none of the papers was
insists that
also
That
classified or top secret.
frames his espionage activities within the context of a love
story
is
more important
far
to
him than the documents.
"In October 1964,
French embassy
the French embassy,
presented to
me
was assigned on
I
in Beijing
end of December 1964,
as a
where
the acquaintance of Shi Pei Pu,
hit
it
off.
.
.
a
man," he
that this
il s'agit
is
(Tune femme qui se
about
a
woman who
has
says.
reveals the secret he promised Pei
she had been forced to live her
life
Pu he would never
and that when he returned
to
France
was without the knowledge that
returning to China in 1969,
when Red Guard
He
disguised as a man.
says that after learning Pei Pu's secret, he and Pei
force,
He
.
quen fait,
faisait passer pour homme. ..." "I wish to make it clear to you
He
who was
Chinese writer of about twenty-six years of age.
"Je vous precise des maintenant
passed for
a contractual basis to the
functioned as the accountant. At the
I
party given by the First Counselor of
at a
made
I
spoke French and we
it
It is
his formal confession begins:
at
why.
Pu had become
the end of his
He
lovers
stay in 1965,
first
was pregnant.
his mistress
when Mao's
tells
that
tell:
He
told of
Cultural Revolution was in
full
teenagers were beating government leaders
with "Quotations from Chairman
being sent to work camps deaths and forced suicides.
for It
Mao Zedong"
and intellectuals were
"reeducation." There were suspicious
was so bad then
Chinese would not
that a
say hello to an old French friend in the street. Everything foreign was suspect. Despite the dangers, Boursicot
When
their relationship
made
contact with Pei Pu.
was discovered by the Chinese
became
Bernard, in order to protect his mistress and child, "I gave [the Chinese], on
my own
who was then
in Beijing,
French diplomatic bag," he
my
time and prolong close their eyes.
.
.
a letter
I
from Siha-
addressed to Senator Mansfield via the
says. "I
thought that in
relations with Pei
Pu and
this
way I could
that the police
gain
would
.
"I didn't act for personal gain, but for
my
a spy.
initiative, a sealed letter that
had taken from the mailroom of the embassy ... nouk,
authorities,
son and his mother,
who
my
family.
constantly risked their
motivated by the hope that they could leave China.
I
wanted
lives.
I
to save
was always
My only regret
is
to
PROLOGUE have been placed to
me.
I
never
my
in
wanted
life
service."
"Elle est tombee enceinte" qu'il e'tait '
to
where no other
in a situation
11
was proposed
alternative
clandestine role in an information
a
— "She became pregnant"; "Elle a — "She me would be dangerous
dit
in
dangereux de la recontrer"
told
it
meet."
The
prisoner
obviously sincere. Taken before
is
a
judge and
dicted for "having relations with intelligence agents of a foreign
of a nature which would do of France or to a
its
harm
to the military or diplomatic situation
economic
essential
in-
power
interests," Boursicot waives his right
lawyer and reiterates his statement to police. "I gave information only in the
my child
out of China.
I
hope of one day being able
was successful
in this since
my son
is
now
to get
living
with me."
The
police take
him
gloomy maximum-security
to Fresnes, the
prison on the outskirts of Paris, and early the next morning, a Saturday,
climb the
Boulevard Port-Royal to interrogate Shi
six flights of stairs at
Pei Pu.
The boy
Shi
Du
falling over his eyes,
room.
The
studio
is
Du,
a tall
gangly teenager with deep black bangs
The police send him from the The curtains are drawn. The floors
opens the door.
large
and dark.
are covered with Oriental rugs, the walls with long, narrow
Chinese
paintings and calligraphy. Shi Pei Pu, in a man's shirt and baggy trousers
and
a
wig of wavy black
The police call home. The voice is
health. at
"An
better than I?" the smile
Chinese
fairy tale. "I
fonctionnaires
.
denied, the odd
."
.
little
and the mother of
was born
Pei
and allow the suspect
unusual for
sighs often and smiles sadly.
know
looks pale and weary and speaks of poor
hair,
a doctor
Pu
a man's:
into a
begins.
to say.
know.
tale,
I
The
story
is
Pu
Who could told like a
family of Mandarins, high-ranking
Though knowledge
creature admits she
his child.
be questioned
high and breathy. Pei
extraordinary
seems
to
is
of espionage
is
Bernard Boursicot's mistress
She has indeed gone through
life in dis-
guise.
The
D.S.T. are professionals, matter-of-fact
they cannot keep
a
note of excitement from this
"Shi Pei Pu was raised, right from the
in their reports,
but
file:
start,
as
a
boy by her
mother," the police report of July 2 reads. "Her true nature was hidden
Liaison
12
from everyone until
this day.
Pu
fact that Shi Pei
.
Du Du
Today, Shi
.
woman and
a
is
.
his
mother.
.
.
is
ignorant of the
Shi Pei
.
Pu
says
she was ignorant of the fact that Bernard Boursicot was turning over
documents.
.
This
.
.
One week
later,
is
possible."
they return and arrest Pei Pu anyway.
"I will never be able to stand prison," Pei
Pu
says
when taken
before the judge.
The
story breaks July 5, shortly before Pei Pu's arrest.
Le Monde, the French newspaper of record, giving
it
treats
it
as a
minor item,
only a few inches of space: a Foreign Affairs employee has been
charged with espionage in Beijing to a
The
for giving information
Chinese
woman
tabloids, fascinated
this story of secret love,
from the French embassy
friend.
by Shi Pei Pu's disguise and delighted by
banner
it
on the front page.
"spy for love," screams one headline, while another paper reports that Bernard Boursicot, while in China, provided
documents
to his se-
Chinese wife, the Beijing Opera singer Shi Pei Pu.
cret
French friends of Shi Pei Pu's, some of whom have known him eighteen years, are astonished. Shi Pei Pu likes an aura of mystery. tantalizes
mous a
China scholars by promising
literary figure or that.
They
to tell secret stories of this fa-
wait and wait
— he
rarely tells.
tendency, some are beginning to think, to embroider a
perhaps librettist.
this
to
is
be expected of
But Pei Pu
is
man
also a
man who made
a
it:
The boy was
Shi Pei Pu's gender: Pei
Pu
Pei
is
Two
a
Pu
is
to
adopted. Nor
artist,
France with is
tale,
He
has
though
his living as a
of stature in China, an
had surprised some old friends by coming
no secret about
for
He
and
if
he
a son, there
is
there any mystery about
effeminate, probably homosexual, but Shi
man.
days
later,
no one
is
certain
what Shi
is.
"espion ou espionne?" reads the headline in Le
Monde on July
8.
"French judicial authorities remain perplexed today after questioning,
be
a
on the 7th of July, the Chinese
woman,
lyric artist
Shi Pei
since he [she] has the appearance of a
reads. "Forty-six years of age,
Pu who claims man," the
to
story
he [she] was the lover of M. Bernard
Boursicot, a chancellery attache,
who
has been held since July 2nd
PROLOGUE
13
charged with passing information to foreign agents.
been ordered
perts have
Two
Friends of Bernard Boursicot's, the half dozen to confided that Pei
founded. story:
Pu
is
woman and
a
Margaret Thatcher, no matter that he
and he doesn't get within ten feet of
not crazy, he
can be
is
as British
dumb-
is
in first class
and next thing you know he's
New
York "with" Margaret
— especially when drinking—
not delusional, and he
good
Prime Minister
and she
in tourist
is
her,
talking about the time he flew out of
The
he has
true that Bernard often stretches the truth for a
It is
He
whom
the mother of his child, are
Let him find himself on the same plane
Thatcher.
medical ex-
determine sex."
to
histrionic.
But he
is
hardly inexperienced sexually.
when Bernard was in his twenties, had been a who is now a doctor in Paris. Bernard had adored
of Shi Pei Pu,
rival
beautiful French
girl
her body; she had taken her baths in front of him. Bernard had recently
proposed marriage to
a Polish girl.
She remembers an exquisite seduc-
man who bundled
tion far off in Mongolia: a
overcoat against the freezing winter and played
room. Bernard has also had
knows
certainly
— my made
Pu
wanted,
in press reports
will
soon be
The
difference
two weeks
for
who have examined
the globe:
The man who made
in his prison cell, hears the
news on the
after his arrest.
diplomat into spying,
is
"It's not possible!"
Hari,
a
who
is
accused of entrapping
He
refuses to believe
says.
The
it
police
refuses to believe
a
French
man."
Bernard
yells. "It
when
is
unbelievable!
it
lie.
It's a lie!"
his lawyer comes to see him the
following day and says he has seen the newspaper reports.
Bernard
a
eighteen years and did not know.
"The Chinese Mata
lie,
between
becomes
known round
man
Traviata back in his
And Bernard Boursicot, as he has always a man of extraordinary distinction who
public.
Bernard Boursicot, sedated
He
— the
greatest sexual buffoon of the century.
love to another
radio
a
the findings of the doctors
Shi Pei
are
La
significant liaison with a man. Bernard
God, anyone knows
woman and a man. On July 14, 1983,
her up in his fur-lined
Get the medical
one week
later
when
The
papers
reports.
the lawver announces
Liaison
14
that he has seen the medical reports and the newspapers are correct:
There
is
no sign of surgery. Pei Pu
is
and always has been
Order another examination, Bernard
Pei
Pu
is
a
woman. He sends tender
insists to prison psychologists that
letters to Bertrand.
"Your father
who
loves you," he writes.
Two and one
half
months
a closed hearing prior to
trial
after his arrest,
is
taken to
is
a
man, he refuses
to believe
either.
"I in a
when Bernard
before investigating judge Bruno Laroche
and told that Shi Pei Pu has admitted he
him
normal man.
lawyer. Order a blood test
tells his
my son. He
to prove the parentage of
a
must
tell
you that
I
am astounded by
this declaration,"
he
says,
lengthy and sexually explicit statement. "I have always considered
woman ever since we had sexual relations together, that is from May or June 1965. I have seen him naked on a number of
Shi Pei to say
Pu
a
occasions between 1965 and 1978. declares,
dark.
when we had
...
I
.
.
sexual relations
Contrary to what Shi Pei Pu
we were
not always
in
the
never had relations 'against nature' with Shi Pei Pu."
Eight months
from
.
a plastic
later,
locked
in a prison cell,
he removes the blade
disposable razor and begins slicing at his throat.
BOlOK
/ t is
imagine
difficult to
Ethan the ~ML January,
more exciting place
a
People's Republic of China in 1964. In President Charles de Gaulle announces
government has decided
the French
to recognize
China, and one month later the French open their embassy
becoming the
first
Western power
to
summer, Chairman Mao Zedong China's greatest
ally,
with
a
in Beijing,
do so since the Korean War. In the
attacks the Soviet Union, formerly
"On
speech entitled
Communism." And on October
Khrushchev's Phony
the Chinese
16,
make what is They
preted as their most aggressive and independent gesture: nate their
first
be
to
inter-
deto-
atomic bomb.
But the big thing on twenty-year-old Bernard Boursicot's mind on
October
24, 1964, as
he boards the Aeroflot plane
leg of his thirty-six-hour journey
from Paris
the accountant in the French embassy, It it
had looked wonderful back
even
himself
if it
was
among
a
fifteen years old.
group of
new
when
wool with an
Now,
down
at his lapels.
new job
as
his air
uncle had given
of adult prosper-
passengers, sixty or seventy French
They
more casually than
are very old-fashioned,
His huge wool coat suddenly looks like what
me-down. He takes
for the last
Bernard suddenly finds
as
students, confident and laughing and dressed far
he stares
Moscow
his overcoat.
in Brittany
to him: royal blue, double-breasted
ity,
is
in
to Beijing for his
off the overcoat
17
and
it is:
stuffs
it
he
he,
realizes.
a rich uncle's
hand-
clumsily into an over-
Liaison
18
head compartment, feeling everyone around him does
so.
hopes
Ten
nobody
finds
him
as
and ugly, and there
built, squat,
he
He
out.
plane lands in Beijing in mid-afternoon.
newly
him
hours, he tells himself, and he will actually be in China.
to hell
The are
staring at
is
is
The
airport buildings
an ominous precursor of
a
nation holding itself aloof and apart: At the huge international airport,
Bernard's
the only plane.
is
To Bernard
that only heightens the sense of
adventure and excitement. So does the Paye, a former Minister of Education, the students.
He
is
broad-shouldered
a
Bernard
jovial style; his interest in
"Aah, Boursicot," he
—
is
there's a car waiting,"
says.
Ambassador Lucien
fact that
waiting on the tarmac to greet
man
with
"We've been waiting
and then he turns back
Bernard with an embassy driver and
notebook named Jacques Marcuse,
ruddy face and
a
a
perfunctory.
is
time
you
for
to the students, leaving
with
a fellow
whom
a long
a
monocle and
Bernard takes to be
a
a press
aide.
There trip into
are
the
few
city,
cars
on the highway
men and women working comforting wave of
Buck.
He
as
they
make
the eighteen-mile
only an occasional bus or truck, and looking out
the
the land with their mules, Bernard feels a
literary recognition
also feels shy,
at
and
is
happy
—
aah, yes, the red dirt of Pearl S.
to let
Marcuse,
who seems
to
be
a
very sophisticated man, do the talking. "Interesting people, the Chinese," he says, removing a box of
matches from
"They can
How
his coat
pocket and trying unsuccessfully
build an atomic
old are you,
bomb
make
but they can't
a
to light his pipe.
box of matches.
by the way?"
"Twenty," says Bernard, wondering what
makes people always
it
is
about him that
ask.
"Same age as I was when I first came to China," Marcuse says. They arrive at his home, where a Chinese servant in a white Mao jacket opens the door. "You'll stay for dinner, of course," story to
file
and we can have
a
Marcuse
What
have
a small
drink and have dinner. We'll have dinner
at the Spanish time. I'm very fond of Spain.
riding on the Costa Brava.
says. "I
I
used to go horseback
Have you been?"
Bernard has ridden
in
Spain
is
his
thumb, hitchhiking, but he
LOVE
19
—
man who's been around. Dinner is superb duck, prepared by an old cook who was trained before the revolution. Impossible to get decent help from any of the young people, Marcuse says. The days before the revolution in 1949, now those were the days in China. Playnods
like a
ing polo on sturdy
little
Mongolian ponies. Casinos and opium dens.
Terrible poverty, yes, but even with that the Chinese
seemed
and happier people; they laughed then. And Beijing was city, a
jumble of narrow
streets
a freer
wonderful
a
and Chinese courtyard houses.
It
had not
yet been ruined. After dinner, Marcuse takes Bernard to the Beijing Hotel.
down Changan Avenue,
drive
Everything
street in Beijing.
Changan Avenue measures the center of the
city, is
Avenue of Eternal Peace, the main
the is
so big, so echoingly large
and empty.
Tiananmen Square,
eight lanes across.
gate of the square one can see the
outlines of the curving roofs of the palaces of the Forbidden City.
Changan Avenue,
hotel, just off
in
ninety-nine acres, the largest public square in
Beyond one red-walled
the world.
They
is
The
the grandest Bernard has ever seen:
Columns carved with dragons and painted
yellow and red and green
in
are at the entrance; the floors in the lobby are marble; there are rows of
blue and white Chinese pots
Then, walking
across
filled
the
with red chrysanthemums.
lobby,
Marcuse spots someone he
knows.
The embassy
voice he uses to greet the second-ranking is
at
the French
relaxed and easy.
"Aaah, Monsieur Chayet," Marcuse
new
man
says.
"Let me introduce your
accountant. Monsieur Bernard Boursicot."
Bernard's heart stops for a second.
"The game
is
up," he thinks, but
it
is
okay. Chayet does not
recognize Bernard's face or name.
"You had they arrive
"Oh,
good
a
at his
yes,
I
trip in to
the city?" Chayet asks Bernard
rooms.
came
in
with the press attache. " says Bernard.
"Ah, no," says Chayet. "Monsieur Marcuse
He
is
a journalist for
and
it's
is
not the press aide.
Agence France-Presse."
Bernard's face turns red thinks,
when
— the
got to be a mistake.
first
He
thing out of his mouth, he
fumbles
for
something
to say
but
L
20
is
Within moments,
lost.
a
i
i
o n
s
International Club, she says, a group
Bernard
is
Mme.
she has spotted his discomfort,
as if
Chayet, a slim, elegant woman, breaks is
There
in.
going
—
at
to say no.
He is relieved when he can finally retreat to his room. It is a The furniture is heavy and ornate, the bathroom enormous,
room.
when Bernard opens
the double
windows he can see the red
curving yellow roofs of the Forbidden City.
moat surrounds the
The view
little
He
an adventure book
feels guilty
ment
is
in
when he was
China. But he
is still
about the way he got here.
boy
impression he has
He
made with
moments you
Vannes.
more worried than
He
recalls
the minister councillor
He
excited.
with embarrassto
know was an the
first
makes him
feel
this
thinks of what his mother used to say about
during those
A
looking at an
in
important foreign correspondent, as an attache. That
awful.
walls and
marvelous.
It is like
a
M. Marcuse, who everyone seemed
referring to
and
white carved stone bridges
arch over streams, glowing softly under the moon.
cannot believe he
is
fine
palaces; there are four towers in each corner of the
sprawling grounds, and here and there
illustration in
the
Bernard join them?
will
exhausted but he does not know how
movie
a
is
is
how
to
behave
are not sure of yourself: "// faut tourner sa
langue sept fois da?is sa bouche avant de parler. " "Roll your tongue in your
mouth seven times before speaking." He not
make such
"Why the
a
will
watch himself.
He
will
mistake again.
home?" one sometimes asks a man who grew up in French countryside, and the answer comes back: "I left home be-
cause
did you leave
I
was
tired of eating soup."
Meaning, "I was
tired of fish
every
Wednesday and Friday, tired of the priest in his skirts, tired of the routine of homely things." Even a festive occasion, a communion lunch, which in Brittany is a ten-course affair, with first the champagne and oysters, then the fish, then the pheasant, then the roasted meats, then
the salads, then the cheese, then the fruits and the cakes and the
cognac, could
become
a
in Brittany just after the
a successful
farmer
heavy and oppressive thing.
Second World War
is
common.
after the
If a
such as
ceremonv
at
this
daughter of
in a village outside the old walled city of
married, the whole village would be invited for the
and
A meal
Vannes got
wedding breakfast
the church everyone followed the bride and
L O V E
groom back for
to the farm, singing.
which two cows had been
21
Then one
sat
down
to a
wedding lunch
killed.
Bernard Boursicot's family was not successful. His father, Louis,
had been
and
salesman
a
—
just like Willy
Bernard would think
a smile,
Loman, out there with
later,
a suitcase
reading an American play, ex-
cept that in his father's case he had only the suitcase, never the smile.
He
lost his inheritance in a traveling sales
shops came
He was proud man — he had been the Resistance —and he hated working Nor did he with a
in.
during the war
in
for others.
He
job for long.
venture that failed as large
stay
He
could not bear following orders.
had many
handyman, gardener, cop, but eventually he always 1950s are
money,
boom time
a
France,
in
five strong brothers,
Bernard. Everybody in town
who
is
knows
it,
He dreams "Life
of romance. is
not
It
making
are
some
in the
house? As
say, or
what
home,
for leaving
away from the provinces from the time he
to get
early
Louis the Loudmouth. Louis
too.
thing his wife can sew,
would they do with four young sons Bernard wants
men
the Boursicot
trades:
The
quit.
each one successful, except for the father of
A good
fond of his wine.
all
a
is
a boy.
drives his father crazy.
a fairy tale!"
Louis screams. "Get your head out of the
clouds!" a child, are as real as life.
When
he sees the film Samson and Delilah he weeps. The Count of Monte
Cristo,
Bernard cannot. Movies to him, as
Lord Jim, The Brothers Karamazov; when they he
never there, he
is
Russian steppes.
is
He
is
on Bernard
call
honor or
off dueling for a lady's
He
not an unintelligent boy.
in school
lost
on the
has a talent for
languages, excelling in English and Spanish; he reads books that are
advanced
But he reads only what
for his age.
of interest to him,
is
ignoring his studies, and on vacations he goes hitchhiking. turns eighteen and
That
suits
Bernard
two years behind
is
at
The army rejects X5," giving him a
school they throw
him, too.
—
psychological deferment.
"defaillant psychisme
serve in the military.
whose
His
father
first trip
him
is
When
he
out.
They classify him
fine.
fakes the psychological tests, he will later say
friend
When
— he
as
He
does not want to
an invitation comes from an old school
working
in Algeria,
abroad. Bernard
thousand kilometers from Vannes
he grabs
remembers
it
to Port-Vendres.
it.
so well: hitching the
Buying
a fourth-class
— Liaison
22
steamship ticket
—
His
look at Oran, high on
first
and
a chair
a
women,
Algeria, the veiled
a cliff
over the harbor, with
from the war that took
One
father
looking the
can
still
ocher
hills
see bullet holes in buildings
hundred thousand
a
still
its
Bernard loves
hills like lace.
the sinuous streets, the history. Algeria has
not been independent long.
eign Service people
a spot in
blanket are ten francs extra so he does without.
and palm trees and paths winding down the
whose
him
for Algeria for forty francs that gives
steerage
live
lives.
Yet the French For-
splendidly. Bernard's friend Bertrand
assistant consul general, lives in a two-story villa over-
is
with
city,
a
cook and driver and maid.
When
Bertrand's
father arranges for Bernard to tour the country with an assistant, he
is
when he
is
7
treated like a prince. Bernard also goes along with Bertrand
invited to the beach at Trouville with the family of the consul general,
Claude Chayet. Trouville
a
is
ramshackle
a stretch of weathered villas
beach with
little
and
town,
a
few miles of
and
a post office
a
bakery.
It
bears no resemblance to the elegant French resort adjacent to Deauville for
which
it
was named. But Bernard
man
so important a
as
M. Chayet. He
is
excited to be in the presence of
has, Bertrand tells him, just spent
four years as conseiller d'ambassade to the French delegation to the
United Nations
in
New
York. His father and grandfather
mats. His three children,
who
Of course, when
is
in
the visit
were diplo-
are Bernard's age, are fluent in English.
over,
it is
impossible for Bernard to remain
Vannes. At nineteen, dreaming of adventure, he returns to Algeria
and gets
a
job as an accountant in the bureau of Anciens Combattants et
Victimes de
Guerre, the French war veterans'
la
office.
Algeria having paled, Bernard returns to France and
Foreign Office headquarters
in Paris,
hoping
The war veterans'
Foreign Office. Bernard has
civil service
The man
in
interested.
larly
shame; there
is
a
makes
for a spot in
place as accountant or clerk.
office
A
is
year his
some
later,
way
to
exotic
a division of
the
experience.
personnel who interviews him does not seem particuCan Bernard speak German? he asks. No? What a spot for an accountant in Bremen.
Is
Bernard really
only twenty, or has he misread the form? Frankly, he doesn't have a thing.
He
does not ask Bernard the reason
how much time can one spend on no reason
to
volunteer the information.
Another man, who seems
to
for his military
a clerk, after all?
Then
deferment
—and Bernard sees
they are interrupted.
be the interviewer's boss, steps into the
LOVE room. There
is
23
problem that requires immediate attention. The newly
a
opened embassy of France the premier conseiller
in
China needs an accountant. The name of
mentioned.
is
"Monsieur Claude Chayet," the man "Chayet?" says Bernard,
says.
as if recalling
an old friend.
The atmosphere in the room changes. "You know him?" one man asks. went with him
"I
Eight weeks
he
tion,
on
is
later,
way
his
The French embassy the
to the
in Trouville," says
Bernard.
nervously guarding the secret of his
decep-
little
to Beijing.
is
located in northeast Beijing, in the outskirts of
10 Sanlitun.
city, at
beach
The
ambassador's residence
Bernard, nervous and wearing his
new
is
next door. As
day of
suit, reports for his first
work, he sees Ambassador Pave. Pave has a reputation for being an
easygoing ing so
man
but, Bernard
knows, he had originally been against hav-
young and inexperienced
a
person as Bernard on his
the urgency of getting an accountant had
Now, from
the look he gives Bernard,
"Twenty," he
And people to
do
and
at
says.
the embassy and there
will train
made him change
seems he
"Aaah, well. You
yet things do not go badly.
—Yu Tong,
it
do
will
There
is little
staff.
for
still
for
his
larly intrigues
now." two dozen
are only about
Bernard, in his
first
weeks,
Chinese national who has been handling the accounts
a
him,
is
on sick leave. Bernard, with time on
tells
himself, like Proust.
him:
A
French
qualini, born in Beijing to a
been
in
his hands,
There
is
Chinese mother and
Chinese labor camps
for
seven
years,
has
come
nard
is
fascinated
is
a
Jean Pas-
Corsican father, has
on charges of spying. His their
two
outcasts. Pasqualini, in his years of confinement,
close to death.
ating on the
says.
made
He
one case that particu-
citizen, thirty-seven-year-old
Chinese wife, though she loves him, has divorced him so that sons will not be
mind.
has doubts.
reads the accounting manual and soaks up the stories around him.
observing, he
Only
The French
when he
are
working
for his release. Ber-
hears his boss, consul Jean Colombel, negoti-
phone with the Chinese.
"The weather is so nice between "And yet, we still have a cloud in
our two countries," Colombel the heavens.
In his off hours, he explores the city.
Much
." .
.
of the old city
is
gone,
L
24
as
Marcuse warned. The
a
i
o n
s
i
pailoo, the triumphal arches in
marble and
wood erected in honor of emperors and nobility, are fast disappearing. They symbolized the old feudal society, Mao believed, and when he took power in 1949 he ordered them torn down. Many of the old palaces and traditional courtyard homes were also destroyed. The rickshaw runners, who lived an average of six years after assuming their trade, are also gone,
replaced by bicycle-drawn pedicabs.
French
them.
call
Yet there
is still
much
that
is
beautiful in Beijing. Bernard explores
He
the palaces of the Forbidden City. Purity where the Last Emperor,
married, as a boy.
He
"Pousse-pousse" the
Pu
visits
Yi,
the Palace of Heavenly
had forty years
earlier
been
fascinated by the traditional Chinese house, a
is
one-story building constructed about a central courtyard, hidden behind three walls.
The
exterior wall
next two walls, about gates,
notion, that the spirit world
a
sense of mystery. There
enough
his
a
on
is
a real world,
have
enchanted with
a
this
powerful enough to require
also intrigue Bernard.
no way
He
is
They heighten
passerby can get a sense of the
life
studies conversational Chinese, learning a polite
conversation about the weather,
phrase here and there in the talk around him. While
French colleagues
off alone
is
tries.
to ask directions,
and understand
ceremonial walls with circular
Bernard
evil spirits.
and mortar. Walls
within. But Bernard
high and encircles the property; the
six feet high, are
designed to keep out
barriers of brick
is
socialize
among themselves Bernard
often goes
his bicycle into the old quarters. Foreigners are so rare that
often the Chinese stop what they are doing and stare at him, but that
does not dissuade him. Bernard talks with the peddlers; he soon has regular pousse-pousse driver with
whom
night they ride about the streets.
he shares Gauloises. Late
at
Bernard studies the old ladies
in
trousers and black velvet caps, tottering along on their
inhaling their hand-rolled cigarettes as
up
stories
about them:
They
a
if
bound
they are a drug, and he
are thinking of the old days, he
feet,
makes is
con-
vinced.
But
finally
merchant or cab
Bernard driver,
meals, no going for
There
it
is
frustrated.
For while he can chat with
does not lead to anything. There
a drink,
are
a
no shared
no invitations home.
are other walls, invisible, around the Chinese. Social rela-
LOVE upon by
tionships with foreigners are frowned are a
few Chinese employees
Yu, in
their
government. There
the embassy whose ties to the French
who
date back to the forties and
who does
at
25
viewed
are
as special friends:
Antoine
the accounts with Bernard and whose father had worked
the embassy before the revolution; his brother Odilon Yu,
teaches Chinese to the ambassador and intellectual in his early sixties,
Chinese employees,
at
who
M. Chayet; San Chan
translates
newspaper
who
Liu, an
articles.
But
all
the embassy or in private homes, are screened
and selected by the Chinese government's Bureau of Foreign Services for
Diplomatic Personnel, and the veteran diplomats are aware that the
Chinese must report everything they see Beijing
is
a
segregated
city.
to their
work
unit chiefs.
Before the revolution, the diplomats of
the nations which had once occupied Beijing had lived in their
own
neighborhood, the legation quarter, southeast of Tiananmen Square.
The
streets
were lined with pink mimosa, the buildings were
compound was
of opulent European styles, and the French impressive: a
enter.
the Chinese
to live in the quarter, nor
tell
— the
particularly
better,
Bernard
could their police
the foreigners where to
China, the French are assigned rooms on the
Hotel
fifth floor
Chinese
realizes, for the
live.
to
Arriving in
of the Beijing
keep an eye on
them. As housing becomes available, they are moved to the Sanlitun, a neighborhood so far from the center of
nicknamed boy when
Siberia. Minister councillor Chayet,
his father
old relationship,
mixture
red gate at the entrance, flanked by two stone lions.
tall
Chinese were not permitted
Now
a
worked
in
who
town
district of
it
has been
lived in Beijing as a
the French ministry, has, by virtue of this
been given something very
special: a traditional court-
yard house for him and his family. But Chayet understands the social restrictions.
Though he and
his
Chinese teacher Odilon Yu have known
each other since they were children, and Odilon occasional French reception at
home
or at the
may be
invited to the
embassy, Chayet under-
stands that he will not be invited to Odilon Yu's home. Such an invitation could
make Odilon
where Odilon Yu
politically suspect.
lives.
The European community,
When
Chayet does not even know
to Bernard,
is
as insular as
Vannes.
the French arrived to open their embassy earlier in the year, there
were only
fifty-five
French nationals
living in
all
of China.
Now, with
Liaison
26
the embassy staff and exchange students, the Beijing
under one hundred.
still
is
number of French in The British, who recognized the
People's Republic in 1950, have a small consulate. Finland, Denmark,
Sweden, and Switzerland have some diplomatic personnel posted
The
Beijing as well.
who do
Americans,
in
not recognize the country, are
not permitted entry.
There
entertainment. Theater consists of revolutionary
little
is
ballets featuring girls in
Red Army uniform
glorify the worker's struggle.
who wants
to
.4
or operas
and plays which
Bucket of Manure, the story of
use manure for her private garden plot but
her husband to bring
it
to the
go to the International Club,
band wheezes out
communal
is
field, is typical.
in the old legation district,
is
difficult:
a
place for
where
illicit
a
dance
it is
not a
Foreigners cannot go more than
twenty-five miles outside Beijing without permission.
China
convinced by
A foreigner can
fox-trots learned before the revolution, but
cheery alternative. Travel
woman
a
Nor
is
Mao's
pleasures: Drugs, prostitution, even horse racing
are forbidden.
Foreigners are forced to amuse themselves.
which tail
in a
arrive via diplomatic
and dinner
parties.
Sunday mornings some attend Catholic
convent, the only Catholic
raised Catholic but
Bernard has
a
now
is
facility left in Beijing.
Chinese
for the
Press.
Bernard,
services
who was
an agnostic, attends for companionship.
children; Francoise, tutor to the children of second
Language
films,
few acquaintances: Francois, the tutor of the Chayet
Yves Pagniez; Nicholas Komaroff,
who works
They show
pouch from Europe; they have endless cock-
He
is
a
French
as a translator
embassy councillor
linguist in his early thirties
and editor
at the
Foreign
also befriended by Augustin Quilichini, the
fifty-
one-year-old embassy consular agent. Augustin had arrived in China in
1934 as
a soldier
and married
a
French-Chinese woman, Therese. Dur-
ing the sixteen years the French
embassy had been
closed, the couple
stayed on in China, where Augustin lived in a fine old house on Chan-
gan Avenue and served
Now
Augustin takes
tailor,
inviting
him
as consular agent, looking after
French
a fatherly interest in Bernard, bringing
interests.
him
to his
to their house.
But Bernard does not have any close friends and he
is
conspicu-
ously uncomfortable with his coworkers. Foreign Affairs employees,
LOVE
27
and privileged group.
particularly those of rank, are a well-educated
Their
style
is
the opposite of Bernard Boursicot's. While they prize
discretion and understatement, Bernard blurts out the
comes
into his head.
They have attended
thing that
first
the best schools in France: the
Ecole Nationale d'Administration, which has graduated finance minister Valery
Giscard d'Estaing; the Institut d'Etudes Politiques; the Ecole
Normale Superieure, which has trained
and teachers,
intellectuals
in-
cluding Jean-Paul Sartre. Bernard was expelled from school in tenth
The manners
grade.
of the embassy staff are perfect. Bernard
is
visibly
awkward.
He
fusses over his appearance and showers twice daily but
still
When he is excited or drinks he flushes, perspires, talks too much. A buffoon, some people consider him. One day in the embassy, the secretary to whom he gives the ac-
appears unkempt.
and
counts to type
tells
him
that another secretary
is
spreading the story that
his feet stink.
A
few days
"Your bath
later,
the story reaches the minister councillor:
facilities
— they
working order?" he asks Bernard.
are in
Bernard becomes very self-conscious times
There It is
is
something besides adventure that Bernard has never been
love.
agony,
parting, "is
in
eluding Bernard in China.
is
love but he
he had written
for,"
something creative which
feelings of fright and of vitality.
He
had also
knows what
it
entails:
.
more
I
should be working night and day;
I
I
should be meeting
out of this journal
But "fright
a
and
is
in
both the
lots
his
life.
should be living with
a
woman;
I
should be reading and writing
of people;
I
should leave
all
medioc-
." .
.
magnificent love vitality"
provoke
before de-
me
.
sports;
furiously;
will
in his journal
."
what was wrong with
listed
"I should be doing
affair
provoking
not working out.
The
a great
emotional flood of
truth
Bernard has never
is,
woman. He has never even had a steady girl. He had had schoolboy crush on the girl next door when he was eleven her father
made a
his socks three
longing, desperation, barriers.
"What I'm looking
rity
— he changes
a day.
love to a
—
Liaison
28 had been in
a civil
the yard.
servant in Africa, they had a big white Peugeot parked
was
It
up
tied
all
mind: the pretty
in his
the savannas of
girl,
Africa, the shining car, a great erotic escape fantasy.
He
had
bed on humid summer afternoons aroused, thinking about had been too shy to approach
once or twice just
when
Algeria,
been
easier,
woman
show
to
her. In high school,
took him to
a friend
a
whorehouse and it:
but he
he had taken out
that he could, but nothing ever
he could not go through with
lain in his
her,
came
of
a girl
In
it.
could not have
it
Nine dinar bought
a
women, some French, some Algerian, were fat sat in a big room on low Moroccan settees, pink
there, but the
and middle-aged. They and green
light
gowns up
to their hips,
bulbs in the lamps behind them, and hoisted their dirty
showing
fat
nervous boy from the old ruling
men amused "73/
them.
They
thighs with varicose veins. Seeing a
class in the
company
of older Algerian
toyed aggressively with Bernard.
vas venir avec moi?" they'd asked, jiggling
a fat leg.
Bernard found them repulsive. But sex, he often found himself thinking, was a dirty game. You could not get
away from
in a boys'
it
and
school. At night in the dormitory, the prefects patrolled the floors
the bathrooms, suspicious and knowing. At confession,
all
the priests
asked the same questions: "Did you touch yourself? Did you touch another boy?" Bernard always said yes, even though he had not, because he had done
in his
it
mind.
At sixteen Bernard meets
one year younger, but is
a
one of the best soccer players
and
and when Bernard
slim,
young man we at school.
sees
ass.
Bernard
is
He
always has a
him on the soccer
white shorts he finds himself looking
muscular
shall call Francois.
He is He
Bernard's mind a far greater social success.
in
girl.
at Francois' strong legs
good-looking
too.
He
is tall
field in his tight
and
Five feet nine inches
firm,
tall,
he
has clear skin and a muscular body with a swimmer's broad shoulders
and small waist. Bernard does some.
He
not,
considers himself short.
He
however, consider himself handalso thinks
he
is
stupid about sex.
women. He has kissed the having made love to an older
Francois has a magazine collection of naked prettiest girls in school.
He
woman of thirty-five. One day Francois shows days
later,
theater
is
they go to
dark and
a
full
brags of
Bernard some of his magazines.
deserted movie theater.
The
exit
is
of spiders. Francois shows Bernard
A
few
unlocked, the
some
pictures
LOVE of naked
and when Bernard
girls
and they have not
It is
to
Francois
Maybe
pointing. for
is
like
it is
"Did you touch
Now
and
if it
has,
—he comes
your
first
and despite the
Kissing truth
again.
Maybe once
will stop
guilt afterward,
There he
is
He
is
enjoy the
that
it
act.
He
is
boy must be good-looking, muscular, and
designed penis. Bernard never kisses his partners.
when he
will stop sleeping
it
with
turns eighteen, he
with boys;
it
is
makes
a boy.
He
The
feels so
promise to
a
a schoolboy's game.
He
masturbating, too.
Coming
he
something exciting about
starts to
China, Bernard
to
keep
tries to
desperate to lose his virginity, he wants very
and he
disgusted.
is
he knows he should be doing nothing with boys.
strongly about himself:
takes a while
it
month, sometimes with
a
between men and women; he cannot do
is
is,
toilet
Did you touch another boy?" anybody knew it would be awful.
particular in his tastes, too: a slim, with a nicely
seems
however, Bernard finds disap-
that afterward, Bernard
it is
it
meeting with
whiskey, he thinks;
Francois, sometimes with other boys. it,
to this
yourself?
yet he does
he
And
supple, accommodating, and
act itself,
be good. Or maybe
to
it
The
pocket.
his
in
hard Francois turns his back to him
sex.
difficult.
Bernard he has had experience
paper
is
29
finding
it
difficult
even
to get a date.
pick up after church that he
tries to
is
But he
that promise.
much
to
have
He may
a diplomat,
tell
steady
a
is
girl,
the students
but he
is
merely
a
contract worker, hired for a thirty-month period, and the girls can recog-
nize a clerk.
The more
and that makes
it
they look
And
him the more he exaggerates,
November,
my work
after an
and
I
regret it," he writes in his
evening with two French
of the outing: "I think Roselyn finds
Catherine It is
at
even worse.
"I boasted a lot about diary, in early
down
I
me
girls.
attractive but
it's
desire."
the old problem of the romantic:
The one you
can have does
not interest you, the one you cannot have, you must. Bernard does not give up easily, either.
who
haunts me,
When
A week
who tomorrow
later I
he
is
speaking of "this Catherine
will try to
have."
Catherine rejects him, he takes out Roselyn,
"who can
feel
the passion."
Bernard never makes love to either
girl.
He
tells
himself
it
is
Liaison
30 because he does not care to interest him.
to:
There has
love. Also, there
is
to
The
girls
do not
offer sufficient challenge
be some obstacle, some
In the French community, meanwhile, the sicot a
difficulty, for real
something very ordinary about these
nickname.
"Bourricot," they call him, "the donkey."
girls
girls.
give Bernard Bour-
2 n winter in France there are diversions for the | loneliest '*'
When
man.
it is
damp
too chilly and
for
the parks, one can go to the movies, or browse in a bookstore, or
sit
for
hours in a cafe. Bernard, as
the temperature dips into the twenties and a cold wind blows the yellow
dust of the Gobi across Beijing,
is
without those comforts.
the Beijing Hotel to a small apartment in the diplomatic
time
to kill
Moved from unable
district,
the streets and parks, he feels particularly alone.
in
Chinese rush past him bundled up
in
with surgical masks to protect their faces from the biting wind, as
The
an invisible man.
more
finds himself feeling like the
and Bernard, even when he
odd man
from the Chinese,
He
here.
civil servants,
out.
a misfit
He's tired of China, he decides. than pretentious
if
he
is
French, denied their walks and picnics, throw
cocktail and dinner parties,
outcast: cut off
The
padded blue cotton overcoats,
The
He
is,
among
is
in a sense, a
invited,
double
the French.
diplomats are nothing more
saving for retirement.
should be where he wanted to be
when he
He
shouldn't be
got this appoint-
ment.
For the truth
been
in
Aubry, called
is,
Bernard has another secret.
He
has, over the years,
correspondence with the French explorer Fernand Fournier-
whom
he read about
"Adventure
Is
as a
boy of sixteen
My Job." 31
in a
magazine piece
L
32
a
i
o \
s
i
"There's no resisting the winds of adventure"
"When
philosophy.
blows
it
feel
I
not to think and simply follow
He
it
my
and
I
obey. As
the
Amazon,
you can believe adventure
a boy's
it
—and Bernard does—sounds
he was so beloved by the
women
come
to
When
story:
he was
a tribe that the
to his
Gabon with
his first fortune,
he bought
too.
life,
he claims,
in Africa,
his children.
When
he beat the
Returning
to
he
man
France from
cream-colored Hispano-Suiza
a
name he used was
match. Even the
a suit to
shark hunter in
thieves. His
his African workers,
with his whip. His style was marvelous,
and ordered
try
witch doctor asked him to permit
bed so they might have
saw another European mistreating
I
something out of
like
young man
a
a
opium
the Pacific, and has traveled in Afghanistan with if
far as possible,
instincts."
Gabon and
has been a forester in
Fournier-Aubry's
is
fantastic:
Capitaine Tropic.
Most
boys, reading about such a man,
would have done nothing.
Bernard had written Fournier-Aubry telling him
him and
later
made
four pilgrimages to his family
At eighteen, Bernard even managed
who was back to join
had
to China,
embassy
When
in
him. His
France
trip to
really
meeting with
a fleeting
after traveling in the
how much he admired home in Monte Carlo. his hero,
Amazon. Bernard longed
the Foreign Affairs office in Paris, before coming
been
in Brazil, so that
to see if there
might be an opening
he could get from there
he learned there were no openings
in Brazil,
to
in the
Fournier-Aubry.
he grabbed the most
exotic available spot: China.
Now
Bernard writes Fournier-Aubry again.
"If you need me,
making
I
a point of saying
where he suggests
life is
am he
is
ready,
now
I
at the
to call,"
embassy of France
he
says,
in Beijing,
grand.
His true feelings are recorded
"What am
you only have
doing tolerating
in his diary.
this
empty
life?"
he writes
in early
December.
And
later,
But such
"Will take a bath and look at this unused body." is
the round of parties in Beijing in late
December
the most melancholy accountant cannot remain at home. invite the
French
to a
try to
like the British,
flummox them with
that
British
Christmas party with Scottish dancing.
French are not surprised: Just and then
The
The
they say, to invite them
that Scottish business. Well, they will
LOVE The
deal with that:
Bernard feels like an foot,
then the
puts him
know or like human trust,
pre-party party so the French can learn
a
master
idiot trying to
and feeling twice
right,
Why
off.
someone who knows the absurd
Quilichinis find
dance and they throw
as if
you are buddies?
among
particularly
girl,
when
but he
who
Claude Chayet
on
his arm,
awkward with the and goes off
diplomatic
is
is
is
is
has talked very
number
throwing
and he
is
really
no
who
of such a good-
to
He
is
British
make
feels
at his
good arriving with
a
make an evening
special.
music and people are dancing. Bernard but he takes her coat
girl,
—
if
when they
he has learned anything
sure the lady has a drink.
When
happily amusing herself on the dance
in
he comes
floor.
not that eager to dance.
in his
attention, yet there
a girl. is
a
His French
a
is
Mao
suit,
and
fluent and he
Chinese guest
He
at a private party.
mid-twenties, wearing
than
taller
is
the
excited to be at the Chayets' Chinese
— the only one Bernard has ever seen man
little to
French students
for the
But then he does see something that interests him:
built
He
invited to another party, which premier
to fetch her a drink
life it is
back, the lady
Bernard
He
British secretary.
There
It's a terrific party.
arrive
not so bad.
it is
looks like Julie Christie, and he
house: the courtyards and spirit walls
feels
And
girl.
home. Bernard takes the girl
reflect the nature of
in his diary.
coup, he feels, to get the
a
it is
Just before Christmas he
beautiful
forced intimacy also
impressed by her looks and the number of people
—
looking, popular
conseiller
does not
It
she gives him her number.
is
surround her
it.
left
diplomats.
to the British party.
blond British secretary
a
The
his bulk.
"I'm the worst," Bernard writes
meets
holding up the
first
it,
put your hand on the shoulder of someone you don't
Nonetheless he goes
pleased
33
is
is
is
a slightly
quite short,
the center of
something about him that seems tentative and
shy. Bernard also sees,
among
his colleagues, a solicitousness that
is
markedly out of character.
"May we
get you a drink, Monsieur Shi?"
"May we
get you some-
thing to eat?"
Bernard
"Why girls
here."
is
curious.
aren't
He
waits a
you dancing?" he
bit,
then walks over.
asks.
"There
are a lot of beautiful
Liaison
34 "I don't really like
it
so
much," the young man
says and turns
away.
Bernard goes to the dance
His date
floor.
is
some
chatting with
other young men; she has perhaps the same utilitarian view of Bernard that he has of her.
whom
to dance.
minutes
later,
He
But
doesn't really care. There are other
mind
his
he returns
to
is
still
They
on the Chinese man. Fifteen
the vivacious party,
and
to
is
"You should
won't permit
try it."
it."
is
impressed. Robert Richard had organized
commercial exposition between France and Beijing
diplomatic relations had been established, and for
the
Mme.
Pu
a
mercial councillor. Bernard a
says. "It
member of the Beijing Writers' Association and that of operas and plays. He also teaches Chinese to Francois, tutor of the Chayet children, who has invited him to this Mme. Eliane Richard, wife of Robert Richard, the com-
a writer
is
man
introduce themselves: Bernard Boursicot, Shi Pei Pu. Pei
Bernard he
tells
he
health," the
with
him.
"It isn't difficult, dancing," he says.
"My
girls
is
in 1964,
before
considered responsible
most successful aspect of Franco-Chinese
relations:
trade.
Richard, in Bernard's opinion, considers herself even grander
than the wife of the ambassador. Bernard doubts she even knows his
name. That
this
man
is
Bernard has never met
Bernard has
making
a
Richard's private tutor
something. Also,
is
a writer.
Chinese teacher, but
this doesn't stop
him from
suggestion now.
"Well,
he
a
Mme.
if
you
are a
Chinese teacher, maybe you could teach me,"
says.
"Perhaps," says M. Shi, going off. Not good enough. The party is breaking up. Bernard, looking across the room, sees Pei Pu writing down his address and phone number for one of the French students.
He
walks over and snatches
it
out of
writes his
name
the student's hands.
"This must be
for
me," he
The young man and and address
where
Pei
Pu
young man
for the
a pousse-pousse
is
says.
are speechless. Pei again.
Then he
Pu
goes into the street,
waiting.
Bernard follows him.
"Remember,
I
want
to see
you," he says. "I will call!"
LOVE Bernard doesn't days, playing It is
the
it
week
35
the next day, though he wants
call
then phones Pei Pu.
cool,
They
before Christmas and there
He
to.
waits three
arrange to have dinner.
work
is little
Bernard
to do.
puts in an appearance at the embassy in the morning, but in the after-
noon goes skating on the great lake he
British charge d'affaires,
an idiot
falls
—why does he always have
ranking men?
By
Beihai Park. Skating by the his wrist.
to fall
the time he meets Pei
on
Pu
Worse, he feels like
his ass in front of high-
in the
Covered Market,
a
antique shops and dusty bookshops unchanged by
street of small
the revolution, his wrist
cheers him.
in
and hurts
on
It's
The
The
up one
a little street,
no other Europeans. jackets; the food
swollen.
is
restaurant Pei
and there
flight of stairs,
Buddhas
waiters look like
Pu
delicate and delicious. Pei
is
Pu has chosen
is
in
white
are
Mao
treated with great
respect.
came here," Pei Pu
"I
says,
"with Mei Lanfang."
Bernard says nothing. Ilfaut tourner sa langue sept fois dans sa bouche avant de parler.
Mei Lanfang,
When
the greatest actor in China, says Pei Pu.
he
Mei perbefore he had become
died four years ago, there was a national day of mourning.
formed Beijing Opera and was Pei Pu's teacher a
playwright, Pei
Pu
says,
he had even enjoyed some fame. rant often in 1959
says Pei Pu,
is
He
and Mei had eaten
and 1960 during the great famine.
was more valuable than
Mei because
invited to eat with
Now he
—
he had been an actor and singer. At seventeen
it
left
A
in this restau-
bag of
rice,
he was always glad
gold;
more food
twenty-six and no longer performs.
for his
He
mother
at
then, to
be
home.
writes plays about the
workers. His tone suggests that the workers are not a subject of very great interest to him.
Pei
Pu speaks
a bit
of his growing up in
Kunming, the
southern province of Yunnan, north of Vietnam. ers, a
very cultivated family. Pei Pu's father,
sor; his
mother,
who
lives
has two older sisters; one table tennis champion.
vice-minister and tural education:
who
with him is
He
now
married to a
in Beijing,
famous
is
has,
Bernard gath-
dead, was a profes-
was
a teacher.
Pei
painter, the other
has an uncle, Ting Hsi Ling,
has traveled abroad. Pei
He was
He
who
capital of the
Pu
as a
who
is
a
a cultural
boy had
taught by French missionaries, which
Pu
was
is
a bicul-
how he
L
36
a
i
o n
s
i
learned the language. Later he received a degree in literature from the University of Kunming.
and
Then
Pei
insists
they go
but the
room
Pu
notices Bernard's swollen hand.
once to
at
One cannot be
to wait:
treated like everyone else.
The
waiting room moves Bernard
a foreigner in
Even
so,
stops his stories
The
a hospital.
spotting a foreigner, quickly
staff,
He
is
crowded,
to his
China and expect
own be
to
takes a long time to see a doctor.
it
injury turns out to be only a sprain, but Bernard
moved by
is
Pei
Pu's concern. Except for his mother, no one has ever taken care of
him.
The
holidays come.
There
is
sit-down dinner at the
a
high-ranking diplomat on Christmas,
New
Ambassador Pave on "According
to the
a black-tie party at
Year's Eve.
young
ladies, you're the best
twenty- to thirty-year-olds," Augustin Quilichini not convinced.
men
a
He makes
a point at
happy new year and kissing
for
But with Pei Pu, he
Bernard, but he
feels relaxed
all
the ladies, which he
is
the gentle-
knows
is
the
glum.
is
me," he writes
Bernard makes no entries
to him.
tells
dressed of the
midnight of wishing
all
correct thing to do, but privately he
"Many faux pas
home of one home of
the
—
in his diary.
perhaps because Pei Pu
in his journal of their first
is
kind
meeting
December, but by January he mentions meeting Pei Pu two
in
or three
times a week. Pei Pu shows him restaurants and parks and shops un-
known
to other foreigners.
and encourages him
He
to buy.
teaches him about paintings and ceramics
He
tells stories
of the emperors and of
palace intrigues: His family, he suggests, was related to the Last
Em-
peror. It
would seem, with Bernard's
history, that there
must
be, in this
friendship with an exceedingly delicate man, a sexual undercurrent, but
Bernard denies delicate
little
it
—those days
man would
are over,
he says and were they
hardly be his type.
Nor
not, this
are there indications in
Bernard's diary of a sexual attraction to Pei Pu. Unlike his
Pu
meetings
with the French
girls,
the barest facts,
and for such an important friendship they are surpris-
Bernard's entries regarding Pei
are limited to
ingly brief:
"Meet
Shi Pei
a restaurant,
Pu
Temple of Heaven, then February ..."
three o'clock; go to the
then to the movie Spring
in
LOVE "Wait
We
for Shi Pei
an
visit
art gallery
Pu
where they
at a place
and do
37
sell
milk and brioche.
Forbidden City."
a tour of the
"Rendezvous with Shi Pei Pu."
A sexual attraction?
make him
Pu's stories that
He
tells a tale: if
what he
his
is
like a
he
He
for
his
It is
Pei
and the marvelous way he
whispery, almost breathless voice, as
sisters
for
him
too.
When
he speaks of
were much older than he
—
it
poem.
my friends
"I took for stars,"
—
in a
some wonder
saying holds
mind, says Bernard:
his
so interesting,
speaks slowly,
lonely childhood
sounds
never crosses
It
moon and
the birds and the trees and the
the
says.
elevates the ordinary to the marvelous.
and Pei Pu
tells
Bernard the cook served
Emperor. They go walking on Coal
Hill,
They go
to a restaurant
the palace of the Last
in
the park north of the Imperial
Pu shows Bernard the locust tree from which the last Ming Emperor, Chong Zhen, hanged himself in 1644 after enemy
Palace, and Pei
troops entered the city and his
own eunuchs turned on him and
He
vented him from fleeing the palace grounds. life in
pre-
Bernard of his
also tells
the Beijing Opera, where actors and actresses often portrayed the
Mei Lanfang was the finest of all the Pu says. Pei Pu himself, at sixteen, played a
opposite sex on stage. His teacher
female impersonators, Pei
woman's
an immortal white snake
role in The White Snake, the story of
who comes
to earth in the
mortal man.
He
form of a beautiful
girl
and
sang the role so well that afterward
falls in
a
love with a
man came
to see
him from the audience. "Oh, what
The man,
a
golden voice you have," he
says Pei Pu,
said.
was Mei Lanfang. Pei Pu became
a favorite
member of his family. Two of Mei's children were actors. His son played women on the stage, while his daughter portrayed men. Both are now famous. But Beijing Opera, pupil, traveling with him, accepted as a
with
its
Only
tales of lovelorn aristocrats
last
summer,
and cunning demons,
is
out of favor.
at the government's Beijing Opera Festival on Con-
temporary Revolutionary Themes, Beijing mayor Peng Zhen said that Beijing Opera "prettified the exploiting classes and uglified the working
people."
Now
theater
who had been an new works and Pei Pu
Qing,
is
to extol the workers.
actress in the 1920s,
says he has updated
is
Mao's wife,
Mme.
Jiang
overseeing the creation of
some
pieces.
L
38 Bernard once attended not bear
The music
it.
scenery. Everything
"Small
as the stage
is
is is,
i
a
s
i
o n
Opera performance and he could atonal, and monotonous. There is no
a Beijing
piercing,
dependent on symbolism and the a
few steps
you
will bring
far
actor's skill.
beyond heaven,"
the actors' adage says: With a few gestures one can create a universe, but
you must understand the code. An actor
raising a foot symbolizes that he
entering a house. Walking in a circle means undertaking a long jour-
is
ney.
The movement
of a sleeve signifies remorse. Occasionally props
have their own language
are used, but they
someone explains
general,
as well.
That
horse jumps in a stream; you can
for Beijing
ers far
because there
tell
is
all.
Opera requires
a
a
Now
the
the word "water"
Bernard crazy, and among Westerners he
a sign. It drives
is
one the enemy; you can see
to Bernard, that
the difference in the masks. Bernard sees no difference at
on
actor
is
not alone,
complicity between audience and perform-
more demanding than the Western
stage. Assistants carry props
on- and offstage during a performance, dressed in black to signify that
The Chinese do
they are invisible.
supposed
to see
"How "Too
long
not see
them because they
are not
them, but the Europeans do and are distressed. is
Beijing Opera?"
long," he says, and
someone asks Bernard.
when
Pei
Pu
him
invites
to
one he has
cowritten, Bernard does not go.
Bernard with M. and
on
is
Mme.
a visit to the
a foreigner
him.
Richard
at
the Beijing Hotel.
Ming tombs
at
midnight
with a Chinese, stops the
tutors Francois
is
He
car.
He
and Francoise, and Francoise
a soldier,
seeing
enjoys spending time with also studies to
his
impressed and somewhat curious about
works closely with the Chinese
visits regularly
takes the Chayets
—during which
Bernard himself introduces Pei Pu
Komaroff
Pu
not Pei Pu's only French friend. Pei
as a translator
Chinese with
friend
Komaroff.
this friendship.
He
and never sees them
socially.
But
it
seems
to
Bernard that he and Pei Pu are best friends, telling
each other things they reveal to no abruptly silent.
women
He
tells
And yet sometimes Pei Pu turns when he was a famous young actor
else.
Bernard that
pursued him, but that he had nothing to do with them.
Bernard asks why, Pei Pu becomes
When
irritable.
"You cannot understand," Bernard remembers him saying. "You couldn't possibly."
L
He
He
says friendship
about
frets often
claiming fatigue; he
V
between
tires easily
39
Chinese and
a
his health;
E a foreigner
is
doomed.
he cancels dinners on short notice
on walks.
—
Even something that should be cause for fun the arrival from Hong Kong of Bernard's new bicycle, a light, smooth piece of equipment compared to the bikes in Beijing Pei Pu views fearfully.
—
"C'mon,
try it,"
Bernard
says.
"I don't ride bicycles," says Pei Pu.
buy
it
"But when you
leave,
I
will
from you."
So Bernard
at last
has a friend
—but he
still
hates embassy
people, he thinks, have no interest in China. All they do
life. is
about their servants and talk about the houses they will buy
These
complain
when they
retire.
Nor
are his
employers entirely happy with him.
In the beginning of the year, Bernard ing,
falls
and the normally easygoing ambassador
is
behind
in his
furious.
He
Bernard's office one Friday, knocking ledgers to the
floor.
"This place
is
A
at the French Embassy warns Pei Pu about Pu passes the comments along to Bernard.
a
mess," he
says.
high-ranking friend
Bernard, and Pei
"He's the lowest person
Pu
account-
bursts into
tells
in the
Bernard she has been
embassy,
accountant," Pei
a little
told.
"I have a very important job," Bernard says. "I pay the ambassa-
dor."
But inside, he
Even
social
hurts.
events with Pei Pu seem to go badly.
One evening
children's tutors, Francoise and Francois invite Bernard and Pei to the
house
—
perhaps Pei Pu put them up to
it,
talk about Beijing Opera and then Pei
music and
one of as
his
"The
most famous Story of the
about to give to settle in
a
piano
in
gent young lady
Pu
listen to
French
tells a story
about
"The Shadow of the Willow," also known Butterfly." He begins it just like a gentleman roles:
recital.
and the pianist
Long ago
Pu over
Bernard thinks, be-
They
cause he's sure the cultivated pair don't like him.
the
A
smile, a pause allowing for the audience
to hear his inner song,
China, Pei Pu says, there lived
named Zhu
Yingtai.
The
and then the music:
a beautiful
and
intelli-
daughter of a learned man,
L
40
she wishes very
much
I
to attend
A
S
I
N
()
one of the imperial schools that prepare
students for national exams, but being a
girl
she
not permitted to do
is
troubles her, particularly because she has a brother
so. It
badly
in school.
She begins
who does
very
dream.
to
/were a boy," the girl thinks, "I could be number one." She makes a plot with her brother: They exchange clothes and she "If only
goes off to school brilliant student.
pretending to be
in his place,
She
also
becomes
Liang Shanbo. They share
close friends with a
bed and come
a
Zhu
a boy.
to love
Yingtai
handsome
he feels
She yearns
to tell
him her
Then Zhu's
family.
very
but she
much is
boy,
feelings of
attracted to Liang, too.
afraid of
endangering her
They have found
her a
returns to school and reveals her identity
girl
though disturbed by the news,
to her friend. Liang,
he now understands
secret,
is
family calls her home.
husband. Anguished, the
for
Zhu
for this boy.
a
each other very
much, though Liang Shanbo does not understand the strange attraction
is
his feelings for his schoolmate.
is
relieved because
He
declares his love
her and asks her to marry him, but Zhu, though she loves him,
cannot disobey her family. "It
is
too late," she says.
She returns family
tells
says she
home. Distraught, Liang takes
to her
her she must go on with the wedding.
first
must go
his life. girl
burial dress," she says,
no
tomb
dies.
Her
family, finally understanding
Liang, buries her beside him. butterflies
And
is
and beneath
the willows shadowing Liang's grave, she throws herself on his
and
Zhu's
agrees, but
She sees now there
to her beloved's grave.
way she can love another. "My wedding dress will be my
The
as the
and they
fly
The
how much
souls of the
away together
their daughter loved
two lovers turn
into
to live in everlasting happiness.
willows under which Liang and
Zhu
are buried grow, the
branches intertwine. It is a
wonderful
enjoys Pei Pu's stories
story,
when
the story and interrupts.
Then
in
He
wonderfully
is
But Bernard, though he
makes fun of
not invited again.
mid-March he gets the
four years: Capitaine Tropic invites
the jungles of Brazil.
told.
they are alone, this evening
letter
him
he has been dreaming of
to join
him on an expedition
for in
The ,,
address
41
to Bernard:
"Territorio
Rondoniol,
ile
the envelope and paper so light they are practically tissue.
Brasil,
"Your
found
unknown
is
E
V
/.
me
letter,
made
having
after
around the world, has
six trips
corner of the jungle of the Amazons, a vast region of
in a
woods and plantations," Capitaine Tropic
writes. "If your intention
is
to
we are on the same wavelength." now that escape is possible, he not one-third finished. The govern-
be useful and live the great adventure, Bernard can't believe
And
it.
suddenly has doubts: His contract
yet,
is
ment has brought him here at great expense. His boss Colombel, seeing him buckle down after the ambassador's reprimand, has told him if he applies himself he may have a career with the Foreign Service.
know what
Bernard does not a
walk with him
to do.
in the railroad station. It
He
up Pei Pu and goes
calls
is
a big
Bernard
says.
marble
station,
but
for it is
not busy; they are quite alone.
'Tm
thinking
I
will resign,"
Pei Pu, though he
is
supposed
be
to
a friend,
seems unable
to think
of this in terms of anything but their relationship.
"So," he says, as
if
the decision has been
'i will not see you anymore.
I
am
made and was
Bernard feels bad. But he has dreamed of adventure if
he does not accept
ask again?
He
this invitation,
resigns.
inevitable.
sad."
who knows
if
his life,
and
Fournier-Aubry
will
all
Then, Pei Pu morosely accompanying him, he
goes to the post office and wires Fournier-Aubry that as soon as the
embassy
finds a replacement, he will join him.
Bernard
is
place that
it
replacement
at
a
a little
Is
it
only
when one
decides to leave a
the embassy a raise comes through for Bernard, and in
April he
is
monthly
trips to the
told
blue himself.
becomes more pleasant? While he awaits word of he
will carry the
consulate in
diplomatic pouch on one of the twice-
Hong Kong.
It
sounds
to
Bernard like
a
vacation, not work: a special travel allowance, first-class hotels, and the
famous there.
nightlife of
He
"Me
reveille
day before find in
Hong Kong. Bernard knows
will at last rid
songeant
exactly what he will do
himself of his virginity. .
.
his departure. "I
.
,"
he writes
in his diary
wake up daydreaming
on April 30, the
of the
women
I
will
Hong Kong."
It is
an excellent
trip.
Bernard
first flies to
Canton.
It is
May
Day,
the big workers' holiday, and there are fireworks and celebrations. Ber-
Liaison
42
nard wants to get out in the street and be part of
about
his responsibility to leave the diplomatic
his hotel
window. The next day he takes the
but he
it,
pouch.
He
is
too serious
watches from
train across the
border to
Kowloon, on the Hong Kong peninsula, and then picks up the
Hong Kong island. He Then he checks into the
He
has,
pouch from
to the
Embassy Hotel
elegant
he thinks, the best job
salary until the
pouch
delivers the
in the financial district.
in the world: five
Paris arrives to
ferry to
French consulate.
days of liberty, on
be carried
to Beijing.
He goes out to buy condoms and find a girl. The second is not so easy. He walks for two hours until, finding himself in a seedy strip near the ferry station, he sees two pretty Chinese girls. He strikes up a conversation, inviting them to the movies. Then he goes home and changes his socks. In the evening, he meets the
Cinema. The movie episodes of The
is
The Spy with
Man from
Bernard has no interest trying to decide
When
in
back
leave. Bernard goes diary, follows
at
it
all.
He
it
Face, a spoof consisting of a
concentrates on the prettier
friend gives
They
to him.
to the hotel dejected.
him back. A week
later
Bernard
A
is
him
named Daniel who
My
see
Frenchman,
friends with another is
girl,
a dirty look.
just hail a taxi
a
and
boy, he notes in his
back
in Beijing.
highlight of his stay in the capitalist center of vice will have
making
few
elapse before he takes her hand.
away and her
do not speak
girls
the Princess
U.N.C.L.E., an American television series.
how much time should
he does, she takes
Afterward, the
My
girls at
The been
twenty-six-year-old student
traveling around the world, and going with
him
to
Fair Lady.
when Bernard returns, is moodier than ever. There is a nice interlude when Bernard's new friend Daniel visits Beijing for ten days. Daniel is a quiet, intellectual young man who is making his tour on an
Pei Pu,
educational grant. There
him
Pu
is,
Bernard
feels,
— something that makes him sensitive
likes Daniel, too.
He shows him
and Daniel, who wants
Chinese
librettist. Still,
to
be
is
one of the
a
white Tibetan pagoda.
in
to
who need
help. Pei
the city and takes him to the zoo, is
fascinated by this
troubling Pei Pu. Bernard sees
it
Beihai Park, rowing on the North Lake.
It
is
prettiest spots in Beijing; there
The
people
a writer himself,
something
one evening when they are
something very decent about
is
an island on the lake with
park was once the
site
of Kubla Khan's
LOVE palace,
and lovers
sit
of summer, the park telling
him about
on the benches about the
open
is
his trip to
says Bernard, does
late.
But
Hong Kong,
lake.
Bernard wants to move
his
Pu removes
tells
With the long days
as
Bernard rows with Pei Pu,
Pei
Pu seems nervous. He
something that makes Bernard
puts his hand on Bernard's and
discomfort, Pei
43
him
that he
also,
feel very odd:
He
his "nice friend."
is
hand, but he does not. Perhaps sensing his his
hand and goes back
what
to
becoming
is
a familiar litany:
"You
are
my friend, but you When you leave,
understand me. It
anxious to find
for love
my
best friend."
— he
is,
after
He
this.
is
Hong Kong, even more
a girl.
May, he gets
his chance.
young Chinese man comes up girl.
will lose
has the ring of lovesickness, but Bernard does not see
busy looking elsewhere
In
do not understand China, you don't I
Officially prostitution
As he walks along Changan Avenue,
to
him and
a
flashes a picture of a pretty
may have been wiped
out,
but
it is
clear she
is
The young man gestures to him to sit on the handlebars of his heavy bicycle. They drive through narrow streets to a small shack. Inside, the lights are dim. The man walks to a bed and pulls down the blanket. A girl, in her underwear, is lying there. The man leaves. Bernard approaches the girl. She is his age and frightened. He moves his hand gently over her arms, trying to soothe her, and when he does, his hands come up against a knife. She is being offered. At eleven that night, Bernard returns.
clutching outside.
it
in
one hand, half hidden beneath her
The man seems
teur,
Bernard thinks; he
from
his
hip.
be nervous now, too
is
more worried about getting Bernard away
neighborhood than collecting
a fee.
He
drives Bernard back to
the center of Beijing, pedaling frantically. Bernard gives
—the equivalent, he The
later learns, of three
next day, Bernard
"You must not do
Bernard runs
— he must be an ama-
to
tells
weeks'
him
thirty
yuan
salary.
Pei Pu.
this," Pei
Pu
says.
"It
is
very dangerous in
China."
Soon afterward, Pei Pu time.
It is
invites Bernard to his
understood by both that the
ment would approve. To Bernard, Pu takes some
precautions.
He
this tells
home
for the first
visit is
not something the govern-
makes
it
particularly exciting. Pei
Bernard to wait
eastern gate of the Forbidden City in early evening
for
when
him
at
the
there will be
L
44
a
i
o n
s
i
fewer people. From there, they walk
few blocks
a
east, to
Nanchezi,
but Nanchezi
streets are rare in Beijing,
form
trees
a
is
and lush that the
so narrow
Number
dappled green canopy. At
25, Pei
Pu
stops and
takes Bernard through three circular gates, to a paved courtyard. are three
one, Pei
little
Pu
houses around the courtyard. Pei Pu's mother
in another. Pei
the entranceway
is a little
Pu's
home
burns and the lighting
bedroom with
low.
is
clean and spare.
is
netting; to the right are a writing table
A
lives in
the
left
of
canopy bed with mosquito
a
and chairs and
bulb shines through
Incense
a stove.
a red
lamp shade,
Pu disappears and
feeling of having entered a temple. Pei
ments
To
There
room blood amber, deep and unnatural. Bernard has the
tinting the
her
a
narrow street of courtyard houses with deep red gates. Tree-lined
long,
later returns
with his mother,
a
few mo-
a
woman
diminutive, gray-haired
in
sixties.
"Ni hao," she
She
says.
"How
stays only long
do you do?"
enough
to serve tea. Pei
Pu seems concerned
about Bernard's presence, so he stays just a short time. But he
Some people spend
is
excited.
years in China and are never invited into a private
home.
A
few days
later,
Bernard does not
tell
such
Pu
girl
Bernard has no plans of seduction.
a girl,
irritable.
he
He
mood does
When
feels.
to
dinner
at a restaurant.
there will be another, but he arrives with a
French-Vietnamese
strikingly beautiful party.
Bernard invites Pei Pu Pei
Pei
Pu
arrives
finds fault with the food,
as if
at
an embassy
could never succeed with
and sees the
he finds
not improve until they put the
Bernard keeps talking about her
he has met
He
fault
girl
girl,
he
is
at
once
with the service; his
on the bus.
he doesn't notice
his friend
is
jealous.
"But don't you
The
following
find her beautiful?" he says.
week
Pei
Pu and Bernard go walking near the en-
trance to the Forbidden City in one of their favorite places, a courtyard
beyond the main gate where Water Stream.
It is a
five
marble bridges arch across the Golden
beautiful evening, mild and not yet dark
— the
tiles
moon gold. It is a night when one feels close to emperors and legends, when one can remember the boy emperor Pu Yi, kept prisoner in his own palace; when it is possible to think of spirits like the White Snake goddess who come to earth to make mischief in of the Forbidden City are
L
human
form.
who
girl
Pu
Then,
as
"Look
at
And
my
who
it is
love with her
falls in
played that role on the stage, Pei Pu
re-
his favorites.
my
his little hands:
"Look
hands," he says to Bernard.
my
at
That
face.
story, too."
shadow of the Forbidden
then, in the
Pu
Pei
He
was one of
it
Bernard the story of the Butterfly:
tells
Bernard remembers, Pei Pu holds up
story of the Butterfly,
it,
again
dresses as a boy; the boy
not knowing her secret.
minds Bernard;
45
perfect setting for one of the old stories, and as they
It is a
stand on the bridge Pei the young
E
V
Palace, as Bernard recalls
another story: Pei Pu's mother, as Bernard knows, had two
tells
daughters before Pei Pu was born but there were no sons. Sons are
more important than daughters
Chinese home. With the
in a
far
birth of a
third child
imminent, Pei Pu's paternal grandmother, who ruled the
household,
made
Pei Pu's mother did not at
a decree: If
last
provide the
family with a boy, Pei Pu's father would have to take a second wife. Pei Pu's mother was terrified. She did not want to lose her position in the
household his
another wife. Pei Pu's father was upset also
to
one great
he could not bear
love;
to see her
And
Pu's mother gave birth to Pei Pu.
Pu had
lie to
man, struggling
to
be something against
far too
dangerous, in modern
one the
secret. It
in to
is
doing
so,
an incredible story
a girl.
along he has
He
is
known
to
as a boy.
So
be equals,
to
it
was. Pei
admit that
an old, feudal sense of values. But now, Pei Pu Pei
Pu
is
trusting Bernard with her
—and yet Bernard accepts
adjustment to be made, no space
buddy
was
men and women were supposed
telling Bernard. In It is
They
Pu
lived disguised as a
one had given
a pact:
the grandmother and raise Pei
nature, telling no
China, where
was
a girl baby, yes, a girl.
So Pei Pu's mother and father and the midwife made agreed to
his wife
unhappy. And then Pei
Pu was
Pei
—
The
is
not. It
is
strongest feeling he has
as if is
life.
as if there
to bridge, in learning that
surprised and yet he
this.
it
is
is
no
your best
somehow
all
one of compas-
sion.
"You But
are
my
later, as
on the hour-long
The
best friend.
he goes
home
will tell
I
trip to Sanlitun,
familiar streets
nobody," he
says.
in a pousse-pousse through the side streets
the
full
impact of the story
under the moon seem
hits
him.
like a stage-set in a black-
and-white movie. Everything has changed. Pei
Pu
is
no longer
a friend;
he
is
a
woman and nobody
else can see
Liaison
46
it,
and now
Pu
another romance Bernard will have with
it is
him
so
much, he
As Pei Pu
story.
—
this person. Pei
—
no, she has told him and him alone her woman, Bernard must save him no, her and her from China. He must care for her and protect her and later
trusts
deliver
—
a
is
on must do everything
make her
woman
a
even
again,
"Revelation!"
help her restore her personality.
to
This delayed reaction
—
He must
necessary to marry.
if it is
volcanic.
is
the one word Bernard writes that night in his
is
diary.
A Pu.
few days
He
Bernard
later
does not feel
and Pei Pu have
to do:
we
another, therefore
starts
thinking about making love to Pei
a great passion;
You
rather something he feels he
it is
woman,
are a
should have sex.
am
I
It is
a
man, we love one
almost like a clause
in a
contract.
"If you are a
Pei
woman, we should
Pu does not
sleep together," he says.
say yes, but she does not say no either.
"Not now," Bernard remembers her saying. "Whenever you think it is possible," he says.
They
set the date, finally, for the eleventh of June, at Bernard's
apartment. Bernard can think about nothing else for days. the rendezvous, he counts hours. Pei
Pu
arrives at his
The day
apartment
of
at six
o'clock.
She things
is
not dressed for an evening of love, in
— how can she be? She
leather jacket and a
Moved, he goes
Mao suit;
to her
is
dressed like
a
soft, pretty,
feminine
young man, wearing
a
she wears her secret story, thinks Bernard.
and kisses her on the neck, gently. Then he
starts
to undress her.
"Let
me
do
it,"
she says, taking her clothes
off,
down
to her
underpants.
Naked, Pei Pu has
tiny
little
breasts and
Bernard's touch seems to frighten her.
He
is
is
indeed rather plump.
somewhat nervous,
too.
He
goes into the bathroom and puts on one of the condoms he bought
Hong Kong; he comes back
to Pei
Pu and
lies
down
with her and
in
starts
to caress her.
Pei
Pu catches
"Let me do It is
his hand.
it,"
Pei
Pu
says,
guiding him.
over quickly and Bernard has to admit to himself that this
first
LOVE time with
because
a
all
woman
is
not so erotic as
the planning had
so worried about Pei Pu.
He
"My
leg.
He
had been with boys
finds Pei
feels terrible that
— perhaps
tense, perhaps because he
goes into the bathroom to get
condom and when he comes out he blood on her
it
made them
47
Pu
in
he has hurt
poor friend," he says, taking her
rid
was
of the
her underwear with her.
in his arms.
"My
wife."
J he movies are right about love %l thing. Bernard, except for
H
feelings of tension
him ful.
He
is
begun, feels wonder-
is
The
staff
is
put on a
schedule and Bernard has to work only two afternoons
love
affair.
know house.
is
He
with Pei Pu.
his true destination,
When
when he
he
arrives,
even more
is
Pei
now,
still
a
man
will
to Pei Pu's
kisses his wife
there
is
—the
Pei Pu's mother does not speak
cannot understand
much Chinese,
Shi dotes on Pei Pu. She does
as
summer The rest
to hide their
then walks two or three blocks
cleaning. Pei Pu, in turn, says her
word "comrade"
week.
Forbidden City, so no one
he kisses Pei Pu the way
feels, are prudish.
French and Bernard
Mme.
careful,
a
home, though not when her mother
returns
Chinese, Bernard
translates.
He
hires a pousse-pousse to the
inexplicable
Pu adores him. Even the
lover and hero and savior. Pei
of the time he
changes every-
it
which once or twice come over
shortly after the affair
Foreign Service seems to be aiding love:
—
some odd,
mother
is
all
so Pei
Pu
the cooking and
her closest friend. If the
used by the government reflected the feelings that
Pu and her mother have
for
one another,
it
would be
a
very fine
Pu says. After lunch, Pei Pu's mother leaves, and Pei Pu and Bernard make love under the mosquito netting on Pei Pu's canopied
thing, Pei
bed.
The
sex
is
Pu often seems
not entirely satisfying to Bernard. to prefer to
be
at least partially
48
It is
hurried, and Pei
dressed. Oriental
mod-
L
E
V
49
Bernard assumes, and the more universal fear that her mother
esty,
might walk into the room. Pei Pu does not allow Bernard he would
fully as
me"
"Let It
does not matter that
sit
for
and she
be
likes to
in control.
she always says.
knowledge of her they
like, either,
to caress her as
much
to Bernard;
secret, that binds
hours and
They
talk.
his love for Pei Pu, his
it is
When
them.
the lovemaking
same kind of
like the
education by French nuns has given her a knowledge of
is
over
Pei Pu's
stories.
Hugo and
Balzac and de Maupassant. Despite the growing government restric-
on what constitutes appropriate entertainment, Pei Pu has been
tions
exposed
to foreign movies.
A
few years
Writers' Association had screened
earlier,
her boss at the Beijing
some American movies
people with screenwriting. Bette Davis starred
in
to help his
some. Ignore the
content, study the structure, the boss said, for the movies of course
Pu could not ignore the
reflected a decadent capitalist system. Pei
content. She was mesmerized by Bette Davis: those eyes, that haughty style, that
Maid,
in
way she swept
When
child to her cousin so that
it
does not know Bette Davis It
makes Pei Pu
cry.
the soldier will not
her.
and Jim, the
What
fate?
He
songs.
in
Back
in
own
America who
The
death?
the two friends
Are there love
it.
Is
whom we
affairs so
at
made
is
love
pow-
love a question of
Pei
Pu
film's lilting, bittersweet love
France, British rock singer Petula Clark has a has
who
Hong Kong, and he and
Moreau singing the
"Downtown" and Bob Dylan Now, Baby Blue." In Beijing,
child
child? Bernard's favorite
woman and
has bought a tape recorder in
often listen to Jeanne
in
Bette Davis gives the
be marked by scandal.
Bernard cannot stop talking about
end
woman
killed,
The Old
is
greater pain can there be for a mother
tragic story of a
erful that they can only
is
movie
her mother and regards her with con-
is
than to be unable to reveal herself to her Jules
favorite
which Bette Davis plays an unmarried
has a child by a soldier.
tempt.
Her
across a room.
hit
with
the charts with "It's All Over
student parties, they're dancing to the
Beatles and the Rolling Stones. Bernard does not care for rock music
and he despises
folk.
He
likes torch songs.
He
likes
melancholy, sophis-
smoky voices of Juliette Greco and Edith Piaf; the dusky, sad tenor of Leo Ferre singing "Paname," his love song to Paris. If Bernard and Pei Pu have a song, it is that: of ticated, cigaret