Wandering around the red light district of Paris as a teenager taught me all I
need to know - about teenagers, not women, says Laurie Taylor in his weekly
column.
As far as I was concerned Ken Marshall knew more about French prostitutes and
what they got up to than anyone else in Liverpool.
He knew, for example, that French parents would routinely send their teenage
sons to prostitutes so that their first experience of sex would be far happier
than the messy back-alley encounters he'd recently endured with such local
unsophisticates as Josie Rimmer and Maureen Dillon.
He also knew from talking to his brother, Vinnie, who was in the Merchant Navy,
that French prostitutes were sufficiently proficient in every sort of sexual
technique to constitute a veritable wonderland for teenage boys like ourselves
who grudgingly became used to regarding a breast fondle or a knee tremble as
the best that could be hoped for on an average night out in town.
So naturally I stayed close by Ken's side when we embarked on our first night
out in Paris.
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"Look as though you know what you're doing," he told me as we walked into our
first bar in Pigalle.
It wasn't the easiest instruction to follow, because although I'd casually
Brylcreemed my hair, undone the top button of my check shirt, and carefully
positioned a Capstan Full Strength in the corner of my mouth, I couldn't resist
the feeling that at any moment all these trappings of nonchalance might fall
away and I'd be revealed as nothing more than a randy little schoolboy with a
rather nasty pimple underneath my left nostril.
But I did my best to follow Ken's example and seated myself next to him on the
nearest banquette.
"Now, don't forget what I told you," he whispered. "When a woman comes across
and sits by you, don't buy her a drink. She'll ask for champagne and when it
arrives, it will really be fizzy water but you'll pay a bomb. So just sit still
and play dumb."
Thigh stroking
We sat and waited, sipping our drinks. And then, almost as though Ken had
whistled them up, two very attractive young women in tight skirts and
dangerously low tops wandered across to our table and squeezed themselves
between us on the banquette.
"Buy me a drink, honey?" said my girl.
I could hardly speak: a prostitute, a lady of the night, someone who knew how
to actually do all those things one had only heard about, was not only sitting
at my side, but was now moving her fingers slowly across my thighs, across the
coarse black cotton and rayon mixture of my John Collier suit.
"Buy me a drink, honey?"
If I'd had my way I'd have bought my new girlfriend every bottle of champagne
in town. But Ken was already indicating that it was time to go.
She did propose 'a night of bliss' for about 10
Reluctantly I followed him outside. "See what I mean," he said triumphantly.
"Dead beautiful girls and a free touch-up. Told you Paris was fantastic."
"But why couldn't we stay," I stuttered, following him down an alleyway. "We
couldn't afford girls like that," he said.
"They're only for Americans. We have to find somewhere much less grand. And
remember don't try to get off with anyone just yet. The prices go down after
midnight."
The rest of the night, as defendants like to say in court, was more or less a
blur. We made our way, via glass after glass of cheap pastis, to the lousiest
dive we could find in the back streets of Pigalle. ("You can't get any lower
than this," said Ken, as we stepped over a sleeping drunk to gain access to the
bar).
It was in this grubby, sweaty place that I danced or rather lurched across the
sticky floor with a woman called Monique who struck me at the time as the most
beautiful woman in the whole world but who Ken told me was "an old slapper".
Naughty treats
She did propose "a night of bliss" for about 10 but by that time I was too
exercised by the problem of putting one foot in front of the other to
contemplate any more complex physical activity.
"Great night out, wasn't it," said Ken, the next morning. "But we didn't do
anything," I said. "We didn't get a woman."
Ken dismissively waved a hand across his half-eaten croissant.
"No, but we got a good idea of what you could do if you had the money. Just
think of it. All that sex out there. Just waiting."
It was that picture, that impression of Parisian nightlife, which I took back
with me to England.
It was that picture of licentious ever-available sex which I laid on my friends
for years afterwards.
If anyone ever asked if I'd personally availed myself of any of the naughty
treats I so vividly described, I'd give them an old-fashioned smile.
Anyone like me, who's savoured the exotic delights of the back streets of
Pigalle never again has to prove his worth by answering such obvious questions.