He sniffles a little.
A die that he dragged on for a few days.
"It's because of the temperature changes, the air conditioning in the trains", apologizes Théo Curin, when he arrives at the swimming pool of Lagardère Paris Racing, a very select club in the Bois de Boulogne (Paris XVI) where he comes from s train.
The trains, he knows well.
In recent months, the disabled swimmer, double vice-world champion, amputated arms and legs at the age of 6 after meningitis, crosses France in all directions.
A life at 100 an hour, which has accelerated even further since his big challenge, crossing Lake Titicaca (between Bolivia and Peru), 108 km by swimming at an altitude of 3,800 m, last November.
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