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Archive
La Mairie
Scarlet. Rarely spoken, the name, this colour out in the open, blazing - her bodice, hugging the cream dress, shaped to her waist, raising her breasts - the perfect bride! Him, broad in his cream-white suit, his arterial-red waistcoat, matching hers, beaming.
Together, perspiring, in the town hall the old mayor and his assistant proclaim the marriage. Outside it is raining dry rice, thrown by adults, children, a train of brightly coloured dresses follow the couple to the village square the church steps, in front of the camera.
Before we drink, we join the cavalcade of cars - thirty - threading their way through the heat, among villages tooting horns, passengers waving, shouting French greetings, bride and groom riding high on the back seat of a white, 1920s Bentley.
A night of feasting, of drinking beneath the Burgundy sky: joints roasting over a dry, radiant pit, and champagne, more champagne wine, red, red wine an accordion voicing its French lyric as the dancing begins…never ends.
© Steve Walter
Stall turn
He told me before he went to sleep just after we had said good night, Dad, tomorrow I want to do a stall turn.
His first flight nearly a year ago, now barely turned fifteen, this only his third with the RAF: What do you mean?
Well, you fly full throttle, vertical, then stop. Cut the power to idle; hang suspended at fivethousand feet; the flaps, with no air passing over them to help lift the wing, are loose -
then, avoiding flop, or roll you turn and drop to earth.
© Steve Walter August 2004
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