Tombee — Feuille
He had not always been old. Once, he had been a boy who climbed that linden tree to kiss a girl named Céleste. She had laughed and dropped a handful of leaves over his head. "Feuille tombée," she whispered. Fallen leaf. She meant him. He was always falling—out of trees, into love, into trouble. And she was always there to catch him.
One morning, a single leaf landed on his windowsill. It was not special—brown at the edges, gold at the heart, a small bruise of decay near the stem. But Auguste picked it up and turned it over. On its underside, written in the fine veins, he imagined a message: You are still here.
The old man’s name was Auguste, and for seventy years he had lived in the same village nested in the loam of the Loire Valley. Every autumn, he watched the linden tree in his courtyard shed its leaves. He never raked them. He liked the way they lay like forgotten letters on the wet earth.
He stepped outside in his slippers. The ground was clean, dark, and final. For the first time, he felt truly alone. No trace of all those years. No trace of Céleste's laughter caught in the branches. Feuille tombee
But Céleste had fallen, too. Not from a tree. From life. Fifteen years ago, in the bedroom upstairs, with the window open so she could hear the linden rustling. Auguste had held her hand as she let go, as she became the thing she had always called him: a leaf, detached, drifting.
Margot did not understand. She saw decay. He saw geography—the map of every autumn he had lived, every ending that had also been a beginning.
That night, a storm came. Auguste lay in bed listening to the wind tear at the linden. Branches scraped the roof like fingers. And then, silence. When he woke, the courtyard was bare. The leaves were gone—blown into the neighboring field, the river, the unknown. He had not always been old
"No," Auguste would answer. "They are not fallen. They are returned."
Then he looked down. On the top step of his porch, sheltered by the overhang, lay one last leaf. It was torn in half, rain-soaked, but unmistakably there. He bent—his knees complaining—and picked it up.
And somewhere, in the river or the field or the wind, a million other fallen leaves were already dreaming of spring. "Feuille tombée," she whispered
He did not imagine a message this time. He simply heard Céleste's voice, as clear as the morning air: "Feuille tombée... mais pas oubliée."
Auguste smiled. He tucked the leaf into his shirt pocket, over his heart. Then he went inside to make coffee, because the world, for all its endings, still had a beginning waiting in the next cup.
Fallen leaf... but not forgotten.
Now he sat with the leaf from the windowsill pressed between the pages of a book he could no longer read. His daughter, Margot, visited on Sundays. She would bring soup and sigh at the mess of leaves on the ground. "Papa, let me rake," she would say.