Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Reunited on the Riviera

My brother Wm. and I took off towards Gare St. Charles at 7:00am. I didn't look back as we left.

Company was nice and conversation was refreshing after three days without English in Marseille.

As the train followed the coast west towards the white and cerulean beaches of Cannes, I shared stories of my time in the cities prior. We watched tile roofs blur into streaks of red and shared a pair of headphones.

Cannes was quiet; I didn't mind.

We swam, read, and watched. We didn't dive and didn't worry.

Opposite the beach and nestled between restaurants and hotels sits a stretch of luxury boutiques. Gucci. Chanel. Prada. Louis V. [Insert name here]. Yawn now.
Polished- Mustang and Gucci.
McLaren SLRxNikon DSLR
Exotic sports cars, like their retail equivalents, don't do much for me. Pretty (sometimes), impractical, and incredibly expensive doesn't get me going; I'd much rather come home to a mid-century Mercedes 300SL (provided I could even fit in one) than some Italian fighter jet-wannabe. There's no denying that the SLR is a beautiful car when you see it parked on the street, though.

There's GTH, and then there's GFY. The latter done by JM Weston.
We shouted, "Mazel tov!" alongside twenty strangers as we watched the sun set behind a wedding on the beach.

Past full restaurants and empty sidewalks, we finally settled on watching the French sing karaoke (read: drunkenly butcher American pop songs) at the Irish pub outside the hotel before heading to bed.

Nice: Bigger, busier, and rockier than Cannes.
Present, past, and future.
There was a dense flea market in Old Town. I've never been partial to souvenirs unless they are found; recently this feeling has grown stronger, but this was a great place to buy old posters and prints.
Fans of silver (?)
Back to the beach.
Nice tires.
Forgetting towels was a big mistake.
Clarity after climbing.
One last look.
There is perfection in retrospect.

We paused for a moment to admire the beauty around us and acknowledge our existence in the present. As we turned to leave, the discomfort of harsh stones and cold water faded, replaced with the unbridled potential of the evening ahead.

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