When Maude Pichon runs away from provincial Brittany to Paris, her romantic dreams vanish as quickly as her savings. Desperate for work, she answers an unusual ad. The Durandeau Agency provides its clients with a unique service—the beauty foil. Hire a plain friend and become instantly more attractive. Monsieur Durandeau has made a fortune from wealthy socialites, and when the Countess Dubern needs a companion for her headstrong daughter, Isabelle, Maude is deemed the perfect adornment of plainness. Isabelle has no idea her new "friend" is the hired help, and Maude's very existence among the aristocracy hinges on her keeping the truth a secret. Yet the more she learns about Isabelle, the more her loyalty is tested. And the longer her deception continues, the more she has to lose. The paperback of Belle Epoque has brand new content that includes a translation and extended author's note about the short story by Emile Zola that inspired the book. A William C. Morris YA Debut Award Finalist
A Junior Library Guild Selection
“Both touching and fun, this is a story about many things—true friendship, real beauty, being caught between two worlds—and it will delight fans of historical fiction.”—Publisher’s Weekly
“A refreshingly relevant and inspiring historical venture.”—Kirkus Reviews
“A compelling story about friendship, the complexity of beauty, and self-discovery…full of strong female characters.”—School Library Journal
“With resonant period detail, elegant narration, and a layered exploration of class and friendship, this provocative novel is rife with satisfaction.”—Booklist
“Much to offer a contemporary YA audience…flirtation and match-making to tantalize romance fans…prime book-club fare.”—The Bulletin
"This delectable Parisian tale left me sighting with sweet satisfaction. J'adore Belle Epoque!"-Sonya Sones, author of What My Mother Doesn't Know and To Be Perfectly Honest
Release date:
June 11, 2013
Publisher:
Delacorte Press
Print pages:
336
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CHAPTER 1 “Perfect, just perfect,” says the stout man. He scrutinizes me, his suit pinching across his rotund torso, and I assume that this is Monsieur Durandeau, but he doesn’t introduce himself. Instead he walks around me in a circle as I stand still and awkward in the middle of the sitting room. A faint perfume lingers in the air. Perfect: no one has ever described me like that before. I glance down at my grubby hem and scuffed boots. What I see is a stray, a runaway--just another waif on the streets of Paris. A younger man, tall and handsome, with a square jaw and waves of brown hair, pops his head around the door. “Laurent, come in.” Durandeau beckons him over and nods toward me. “What do you think?” The young man approaches and looks at me like he’s sizing up a prize heifer. This is supposed to be an interview, but neither of them is asking me questions--am I a hard worker, can I cook or sew? They haven’t even asked my name. I think back to the job notice, now crumpled in my pocket. YOUNG WOMEN WANTED FOR UNDEMANDING WORK. PROPRIETY GUARANTEED. APPLY IN PERSON TO THE DURANDEAU AGENCY, 27 AVENUE DE L’OPÉRA, PARIS. I assumed the work would be like any other position offered to a young woman without connections--washing linens, starching collars, scouring pots and pans. But now a buzzing fly of doubt pesters me. The younger man gives his appraisal. “Not spectacular.” He pauses. “Perhaps for the Dubern contract?” “Exactly!” Durandeau bellows. “Remember, the countess asked for a light ornamentation. You don’t want to deck out a debutante like a society matron.” A countess? I look from one man’s face to the other, trying to fathom what it is they think I’m perfect for, and decide that somewhere I must have lost the thread of conversation. My stomach growls and my eyes dart from theirs. I’m feeling woozy; no wonder I’m confused. I have started to skimp on food the last few days. It’s only been a few weeks since I arrived in Paris and I’ve already spent most of my francs on a dingy garret room. Turns out running away was the easy part; it’s struggling to get by day in, day out, that’s hard. Maybe I should have stayed in the village and accepted the fate Papa arranged for me. I wouldn’t be hungry, that’s for sure, not as the butcher’s wife. I salivate imagining the goose, pheasant and duck hanging in Monsieur Thierry’s shop. But then I think of my supposed husband--not a day under forty, with hammy forearms and a dangerous smile. “Yes, I think she’ll do nicely,” Durandeau says, bringing his hands together in a decisive clap, which causes his double chin to tremble. “We’ll show her at noon. See what the countess says.” Standing silently, I can’t help but take my own inventory of Monsieur Durandeau. I’m reminded of a pigeon: his short legs strain to hold that barrel of a body, and his fat chest puffs out of a pearly satin waistcoat. After Laurent is dismissed, Durandeau finally finds his manners. “What is your name, young lady?” “Maude Pichon.” My voice is husky, I’ve been quiet so long. “Pichon . . . what kind of name is that?” he asks. “Where are you from?” “Poullan-sur-Mer.” He looks doubtful, so I elaborate. “It’s a village in Brittany.” “That would explain the accent, but we can work on that.” I can feel the hackles of my Breton pride quiver. “What’s wrong with my accent?” But he answers my question by posing another. “What age are you? Sixteen, seventeen?” “Sixteen, monsieur.” He nods. “And your parents?” “My parents are dead.” A half lie; my father might as well be dead to me. I cannot go back home. Not only did I thwart his marriage plans for me, I stole all the money in the shop till. It seemed like a fortune at the time, but everything in Paris costs more than I could have imagined. “How tragic,” he says insincerely. “So you read one of our announcements. We haven’t had much luck with them. More delicate phrasing was required, in retrospect.” The job notice was thin on information, but work is work--how flowery should a help wanted notice be? “Now we have Laurent as a recruiter of sorts. He’s charming and sympathetic. We’ve had much better results that way.” His ambiguous statements bother me, and I finally muster some courage. “Monsieur, what is the job exactly?” I ask. “The pay is more than fair,” he continues, ignoring me. “We’ll sort you out with an adequate wardrobe. I’ll send you down the corridor to our seamstress, Madame Leroux. She should be able to get you something more appropriate to wear before the clients arrive.” He wrestles a five-franc coin from his pocket and presses it into my hand. “Welcome to the agency,” he says. I forget my unanswered questions as I stare at the gold coin in my palm. My spirits lift. I have the job? I’m delighted and dumbfounded at the ease of this feat as Durandeau ushers me out of the salon and down the corridor at a march.
Madame Leroux is mumbling to herself as she picks stitches out of the sleeve of a dress. Piles of fabric and dresses in various stages of repair or creation hang around the room. Spools of different-colored thread are stacked precariously like tiers of wedding cake. She uses her teeth to bite at some unwieldy stitch. “No way to run a business . . . making fine dresses out of cheap material.” She tuts and glances up at me, as though the choice of material is my fault. Her hair is wild and unkempt; the strands falling into her eyes like my father’s draft horse. Tutting again, she puts down her work and approaches me. “Let’s have a look at you. Arms out.” She takes out her tape measure and wraps it around my various dimensions in practiced strokes. “You’re thin as a whip. Do we have anything you won’t drown in?” Self-conscious, I look away. I’ve always been slim, and despite the culinary reputation of the city, I’ve shed weight since coming to Paris. She walks toward a rail of hanging dresses and begins to flip through them. I crane my neck to see. “Why do I have to change my clothes?” I ask. Madame Leroux stops and turns to look at me, affronted. “We can’t have you representing the agency in that!” She nods to my simple navy dress and continues looking for a replacement. I squeeze the coin Durandeau gave me and let my mind wander. Working for a countess, I’m probably going to serve in a great house as a maid, or maybe as a governess. Then it strikes me that the dresses hanging on the rack don’t fit this fantasy. They’re not made of practical cotton or wool in hues of gray or black. Instead they’re colorful and fancy, made of satin and taffeta. “These clothes don’t look like uniforms, madame,” I say, curious to get a hint as to my new position. She turns around, pink-faced and triumphant, brandishing a dark green velvet dress with puffed sleeves. “That’s because they’re all one of a kind, silly. There’s nothing uniform about my dresses.” Her response doesn’t shed any light. She ties me into a corset, which feels like a punishment. Then a bustle, like a tail, is fitted around my hips. I step into the skirt and the seamstress helps me with the bodice, making quick work of the umpteen tiny buttons. She nudges me toward the mirror and my face falls when I see how the color of the dress drains my complexion. I imagine what my mother would think. She loved clothes--not that she got to wear fine things working at the village store. I remember the chenille cloak she would wear to church, and I have a recollection of a calico print at a picnic. If she were alive and here right now, I’m positive she wouldn’t have picked this dress. With their exaggerated poufs, the sleeves make my shoulders look broad; my nonexistent chest is flattened to oblivion. I turn to the side and see that the bustle has added inches to my rear, making my waist look even skinnier. I feel ridiculous. There is a shuffling of feet outside the seamstress’s room and I hear women’s voices floating by. “You’d better get a move on and join them in the salon,” says Madame Leroux. “Just one finishing touch.” She opens a jewelry box and fishes out a hideous swan brooch. It’s gaudy for my tastes, but maybe I don’t understand Paris fashion. She pins the brooch to my dress with a grin, eyes twinkling through her faded wisps of hair. I look once more at my reflection and decide that she couldn’t have tried harder to make me look a fright. And then a dark realization begins to creep and spread like spilled ink on white parchment. I blot it out of my head. The chorus of women’s chatter rises as I approach the salon, and nerves dance in my chest. I take a quick breath and push open the mahogany door. There must be at least twenty women and girls squeezed into the room. Every seat is taken--it’s standing room only as I step around them to find a space. I feel conspicuous in the new dress. A couple of women give me sidelong glances; they can’t be judging my outfit too harshly, for it looks like they’ve also been subjected to Madame Leroux’s handiwork. I’m uncertain where I should position myself until a pudgy, red-faced woman gives me a smile. I smile back, noting that her putrid, mustard-colored dress is worse than mine. I stand beside her. Maybe by comparison I look less terrible. A trill of laughter turns my attention to the door. Durandeau enters with two rich-looking society ladies, and a hush falls over the room. My new colleagues freeze and remain motionless, staring into the distance. I study the rich ladies, who look like dolls--painted, perfect and delicate--at home in a well-furnished room. They walk among us slowly and with a deliberate ease. One lady is wearing a striking black and white dress. Her dark hair is rolled in a tight chignon. Her expression is self-satisfied: the cat that got the cream. The other lady’s gown is iridescent pink like the lining of a shell. She has an easy laugh and keeps catching her reflection in the mirror over the fireplace. Durandeau scampers between them like an excited spaniel. “Madame Vary.” Durandeau addresses the lady in pink. “I have just the thing for you this week.” He draws her attention to a woman with a hook nose and pointy chin. “This one’s severe profile will greatly accentuate your perfect proportions.” Madame Vary steps toward my unattractive colleague, scrutinizing her closely. Durandeau turns to the lady in black and white. “Countess Dubern, your fine eyes would captivate next to the piggy eyes of this one.” I flinch at Durandeau’s words. The countess merely flashes a smile at his suggestion. The salon women remain stoic, and I’m shocked. Why don’t they react to these insults? “Madame Vary,” the countess calls to her friend. “Look at me with this one? What do you think, better than the one I rented last week?” “They’re both so hideous I can’t decide,” Madame Vary says. “Although maybe the piggy one shows off your figure better.” That unwelcome thought is pushing through again. Panicked, I scan the room, taking in the faces of my new colleagues, until it hits me. The women differ in age, height, shape and coloring, but they do share one common characteristic: they are all, without exception, extremely unattractive--some outright ugly. My cheeks blaze; my heart combusts with shame at the realization that I am one of them. Durandeau spies me across the room and breaks into a trot. “Now, Countess, here’s what I thought for your daughter.” He gestures for me to come forward. “A light ornamentation of plainness. She would complement Isabelle very nicely, I think. Nothing too flashy for her Paris debut at the Rochefort ball.” I do as he says and step forward, gripping the folds of my dress. The countess glides toward me with a languid step. She is beautiful and imposing, like an actress on stage. Durandeau continues dissecting me. “Note her hair, the color of wet straw; the upturned nose; the tarnish of freckles on the complexion; and the unremarkable eyes--bovine in expression, dull in color. Lastly the bony angles of the figure.” My heart, recovered from its initial shame, is now pierced by the barbs of his words--this inventory, this list of human flaws, my flaws, so casually delivered. Her eyes smirk as she looks me up and down. “Yes, I think she’ll do. It’s hard to tell until we see them side by side.” Durandeau claps his hands. “Perfect. I will arrange a meeting once we’ve finished with her training. It’s a match, I’m sure.”
“You’re red as a beet, ma pauvre!” My mustard colleague is grinning at me. I don’t respond. I can’t move, much less speak. Durandeau, the countess and Madame Vary have since quit the salon, and the women around me have picked up their conversations again. No one else looks bothered by the preceding selection process. “Countess took quite a shine to you, eh?” Mustard goes on. I look at her, aghast. “What is this job?” She places a hand on her ample hip. “We are repoussoirs, of course. No one told you?” I hesitate. “Repoussoir? I don’t understand.” But then it dawns on me. Could the name come from the verb repousser? To push away, to repel or repulse. “Re-pou-ssoir,” I repeat. It stings when I roll the syllables over my tongue. The notion is impossible to absorb. “We are meant to repel, to repulse?” I say, horrified. Mustard chortles. “Just your luck, getting singled out the first day.” She takes my arm and guides me across the salon, following the others, who are filing out of the room. “This way, ma grande. The dining room’s just next door. Looks like you haven’t seen a hot meal in a while.” Food is the least of my considerations as I’m led along the hallway with the train of salon women and girls. The only thing I can think of is getting out of this place. I pull away from her hold on my arm. “No, no, I can’t. I have to be on my way now. I just came for the interview.” I can smell lunch; a waft of meat stew makes my stomach clench and burn with emptiness. I can hear the clatter of cutlery, the clink of glasses and the scraping of chairs. Under any other circumstances, I would welcome a free meal--but not here.
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