Anyway, I’d seen a photo of Dominique, so if his sister had any resemblance, my parents could rest assured.
She turned out to be gorgeous, of course.
But there n’était pas frolicking. She said “hello” when I arrived, “goodbye” when I left, and almost pee-peed (pretend I am saying it with a French accent) herself laughing when I ate brains for dinner one evening, thinking that they were dumplings. Fishy-tasting dumplings, granted.
The French gits.
And that was the extent of our interaction.
Even in provincial Besancon, there was a multitude of beautiful girls. The school we had to attend was no different. They put our lot to shame.
Granted, we weren’t fielding Cathy Hughes, Jo Rice, Helen Kirk, or Catherine Hunt. But it wouldn’t have made much of a difference. We’d still have been Banbury United playing against AS Saint-Étienne (the best French team of the time).
Dee Musallam
The school trip that everyone needs. Perfectly imperfect