Perfume and Pipes

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I smell like an orange tree. An orange tree with vanilla leaves and a sandalwood trunk. Jasmine, too. Ew…like the Body Shop fragrance tester section. My head hurts and the scents are making me dizzy. I am “mix your own perfume,” and I now know why Dorothy fainted in the poppy field on the way to the Emerald City (that and the opium). I smell like that stuff French women use to mask the smell of their poodles when in need of a visit to the groomer‘s. I know this because three days ago, on the morning of my last shower, I bought it at Galeries Lafayette: Chanel No. 5… Marc and I slug up my seven flights of stairs. I lag behind him because I have eaten too many potatoes and am trying to balance a gold paper crown on my head. Yes, it’s true, congratulate me, I broke my tooth on the small porcelain figurine in the Gallette cake. I have just come from a 1 p.m. Sunday brunch in the 16th arrondissement at the home of Marc’s aunt and uncle and their daughter, Constance, and son, Benjamin (whom I intend to marry in order to gain my French citizenship). At the end of the meal, we celebrated a French tradition for the New Year and welcomed Epiphany with Gallette des Rois, a flaky cake built like a pie that contains a fève ( small figurine). Whoever bites into the piece with the fève is the King or Queen. Three hours and four courses later, including an extra two helpings of lamb and potato purée, I can barely make it up my stairs and am wishing I were a real queen. If I were a queen I would be napping on a red velvet settée with my Siamese cat while my four coachmen hoisted me up the 98 stairs. Marc and I reach the top of the seventh flight, and I am so out of breath that I fall against the door. I hand him my purse, too weak to search for my keys, which I expect have fallen out of the coin purse attached to my wallet and are lost in the midst of Ricola orange-menthe cough drop wrappers and left over coinage from the United States. Marc opens the door. I fall into my studio and throw my bag onto my bed and respectfully place my gold paper crown on the red plastic dresser. I undress quickly, anxious to get into the shower and wash off the métro residue and maybe even a couple pounds of potatoes. This is when I see it. A peculiar orange fluid that has taken over my shower and kitchen sink. It is filling the bathtub, coming up from the drain. “Marc!” …But there was nothing Marc, a metro-sexual, could do. The first six days without working plumbing were not terrible, as I was able to shower at Marc’s place. I carry a small bottle of Purell hand sanitizer in my purse; so washing my hands was not a problem either. I don’t do many dishes because most of my meals consist of tuna, eggs and soup, due to my 530-euro purchase of Dolce & Gabbana boots, which were lost at Laura’s office party when I was forced to dress up as an elf and trade my boots for a pair of avocado-green velvet slippers lined with white faux fur that curved upward into a pointed toe with a gold jingle bell on the tip. The last three days, however, have posed a real challenge, when Marc moved out of his Paris apartment, leaving me no place to shower. Yes, I have gone three days without a proper shower. And I feel…well, French. My landlord did have a plumber come out to look at the shower last Monday–I called him the Friday before, when I found my shower filled with Orangina. When the plumber came, I was not there because I was showering at Marc’s, but I received a message from my landlord in a very thick French accent, “Plumber came. I don’t see what you are talking about. I assure you the plumbing is having no problem.” How could this be? Had the orange fluid just evaporated? Was it all in my imagination? Or was it that the entire bottle of Destop that Marc poured down the drain had finally worked its way through the goo after a long 48 hours? On Tuesday I returned home to my studio looking forward to a comfortable American-style shower. In Marc’s shower I have to stand sideways in the tub with my back against the cold pink tiles, while trying to wet my hair with the hand shower without falling over the edge of the tub and into the open toilet bowl where Marc has forgotten to put the seat down. (Note: Ask Laura if leaving the toilet seat up is the behavior of a metro-sexual, I think, maybe not.) I go to the kitchen sink to wash my hands because I accidentally touched petrified mint gum on the métro. The water is freezing. I turn the knob towards the red (hot water) dot–the water stops. I turn the knob back towards the middle of the dial and it shoots out so cold I jump back, knocking my hip into the plastic red dresser, causing a family of 25-cent toys Marc bestowed upon me that he collected from his boxes of Cheerios. I hear a strange tinkle sound coming from the bathroom, so I turn the kitchen sink off to listen. It stops. I turn the kitchen sink on, it starts again. I’m going crazy. This time I leave the kitchen sink on and walk into the bathroom to inspect. The shower is on. I reach in to turn it off but it won’t, and cold water is spraying all over me. I run to the kitchen and turn off the sink. The water in the shower stops. Perfect. The lines have somehow been crossed. Now, I can control my cold showers from the kitchen. I look outside, it’s snowing. I take a breath and enjoy the view, forgetting that I am going to have to go about my day un-showered. I call my landlord, who lives on the third floor of my building, and explain to…
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