2697 lines
129 KiB
Plaintext
2697 lines
129 KiB
Plaintext
**This is a COPYRIGHTED Project Gutenberg Etext Details Below**
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Violists, by Richard McGowan
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This file should be named viols10.txt or viols10.zip
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(C)1994 Richard McGowan
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San Jose, California
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January 22, 1994
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Violists, by Richard McGowan
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March, 1994 [Etext #112]
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(C)1994 Richard McGowan
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San Jose, California
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January 22, 1994
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**The Project Gutenberg Etext of Violists, by Richard McGowan**
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TITLE AND COPYRIGHT NOTICE:
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Violists, by Richarch McGowan
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(C)1994 Richard McGowan
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San Jose, California
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January 22, 1994
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Violists, by Richard McGowan
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This file should be named viols10.txt or viols10.zip
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(C)1994 Richard McGowan
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San Jose, California
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January 22, 1994
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TEXTUAL NOTE: In this edition words of French origin in the
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text are spelled without their customary accent marks, due to
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the limitations of the ASCII medium. It is the author's intent
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that they be spelled with accents whenever possible (e.g., gateau,
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tete-a-tete).
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=====================================================================
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PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION
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"Violists" began to germinate early in December last, as Christmas
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approached. I originally intended that it be ready before the new
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year, but alas, it came in behind schedule, and was not completed
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until January. It is still winter in some places--the right season
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for such morsels--so rather than let the work languish upon the shelf
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for another year...
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Somewhere out there on The Net, I hope there is a solitary reader
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settled comfortably in a warm study with a nice cup of tea. Perhaps
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the lights are out, and the amber glow of the terminal spreads faint
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warmth through the room; overstuffed bookshelves loom behind in the
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darkness. If the evening air is crisp and a soft snow is falling
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outside the window, so much the better--a view of icicles would be a
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magical touch.
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-- Richard McGowan
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San Jose, California
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January 22, 1994
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=====================================================================
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VIOLISTS
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by Richard McGowan
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(Opus 22)
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1. Gretchen in the Library
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2. The Hungarian Lightbulb
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3. Christmas Concert
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=====================================================================
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GRETCHEN IN THE LIBRARY
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In winter the interior of the university library was hardly
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warmer than the outside, and it was terribly drafty. The sole
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difference between the interior and exterior, Gretchen often
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remarked to herself, was that the latter received an occasional
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snow. The library at least was dry. On most days in the
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unfrequented areas--the closed stacks on the second and third
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floors--one could see one's breath in the middle of the afternoon.
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Gretchen thought it hardly the sort of climate she would have
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chosen for her own books. But the cost of heating such an enormous
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building--well, she decided she could hardly imagine so extravagant
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a sum. On the coldest days, she often wore two petticoats. She
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found the best method of staying warm, though, was to bustle as
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quickly as she could. Primarily, she worked in the stacks,
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extracting books for the library's patrons and reshelving books
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that had returned--and keeping the shelves in good order.
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Gretchen's twenty-ninth birthday had arrived--quite too
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quickly--the day before, and she bustled with an excess of alacrity
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to relieve her mind from the brooding that had occupied her for
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several days. She had spent the evening alone, though she knew
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it did her no good to seek solitude. To accept being past her
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prime of life would be simpler perhaps, and productive of less
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anguish, than fretting over what could not be changed. She was
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nearly thirty, though--and she knew what lay in store for her a
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few years hence. She had only to look at the assistant reference
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librarian, Miss Sadie, to see how she herself would be in but a
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few more years. The thought nearly made her shudder, and if she
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allowed herself to think too deeply upon the matter, might have
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brought her to tears. Thankfully, Gretchen told herself, she
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could grow old among the books, where at least she had the company
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of great minds--or their legacy--rather than spend a life straining
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in a factory--or under the yoke of an old-fashioned man.
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She had been estranged from her family for six years and
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rarely given them serious thought since fleeing Connecticut.
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A simple enough row it had been to start--what should she do now
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that she had finished university? Of course her father recommended
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marriage and settling into the domestic life--a pretty girl like
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her. Him and his antiquated ideals--a pretty girl in the kitchen,
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indeed! At twenty-three she had finally come to her senses and
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refused to marry the young man to whom she had been betrothed,
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no matter how well matched her father thought they were.
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Her mother had frequently confided to Gretchen her views on
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the varied pleasures--and trials--inherent in marriage, admitting
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that as the years passed she found the pleasures perhaps not
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worth the other hardships--the outward subjugation of her own
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feelings and the constant deference she was required to display
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within the confines of that marriage, as if she had no independent
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mind. Gretchen had long since determined that would not be her
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fate. She had come to believe that no suitable man could be
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found, yet she remained unsatisfied. The only true regret she
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had about casting off her family ties was that she had disappointed
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her mother. It was her mother who had worked so hard, really,
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to see that Gretchen had an education; her father only begrudgingly
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went along for the sake of domestic tranquility when all efforts
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to dissuade her had failed.
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At university Gretchen had imbibed the rarefied intellectual
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atmosphere with increasing eagerness and found herself drawn
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irresistibly up the slopes of Parnassus. She had always intended
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to work after completing university--and work she did, though
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she had difficulty making due with what employment she could
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find. Even a superlative education, she had learned in six years,
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did not buy one certain rights or reasonable wages. She hoped
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that she would yet see the flowering of an age that she could
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call an enlightened one. She might have been bitter had she
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higher material aspirations, but she was content with little in
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the way of physical comforts. Why the privilege of spending
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nearly all her days in the library would have been worth almost
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any sacrifice--what need had she of wages!
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It was lamentable, she decided, that she should have to
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forgo marital companionship if she were to retain her
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individuality--for the price of her freedom was a monumental
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sort of loneliness that only the severest mental discipline could
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overcome. She had seen so many of her school friends smothered
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in the clutches of bad marriages, worn out beneath their husbands'
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heels--almost like doormats. To be truthful there were those
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who seemed to prosper in the state of matrimony, but she thought
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them few. Yet, she still had an abiding fear that she would grow
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old alone--and soon enough become as obdurate as Miss Sadie--
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a pitiable spinster with none of the finer sensibilities left to
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her. Was there no man, Gretchen wondered, with whom she could
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share her life and interests--a man with progressive ideas?
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Not a man that she, like a tiny moon, would orbit eternally,
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but one with whom she could find a state of mutual orbit. Well,
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she thought, something of that nature anyway. Her knowledge of
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astronomy was not up to the task of finding a better analogy,
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and she resolved to remedy that as soon as she was able.
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She added another volume--'something concerning the heavens' she
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called it--to the list of books she thought she really must read.
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Gretchen bustled, thinking these thoughts, dreading her next
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birthday. She blew softly on a wisp of auburn hair that had
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somehow escaped from the green ribbon with which she tied it back
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that morning. Several strands had somehow got into her mouth
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but her arms were too full of books--heavy tomes, all--to pull
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them away with her fingers. She was on the verge of setting down
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the burden and tending to her hair for a moment when, as she
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turned a corner into the next row, a shadow fell across the
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topmost book in her arms. She glanced up in surprise. A man
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stood mere inches in front of her--and looked up to find her
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bearing down upon him with a full head of steam--even as he
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stepped toward her.
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"Oh!" she cried, attempting to stop herself. The books slid
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irretrievably from her grasp, their pages flying open with a
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flutter.
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The man's arms shot out. "The books!" came his cry of
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astonishment as they tumbled about him. He tried to catch a few,
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left and then right, but alas they fell--all but one--to the
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floor with a dull clatter.
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"Oh dear," Gretchen whispered, looking down. She feared
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she had bent a few pages, and putting a hand to her mouth knelt
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immediately to gather them all. "I'm terribly sorry, sir," she
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continued in a rush as she piled books one after the other.
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"My clumsiness..."
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"Think nothing of it, Miss," the man replied lightly.
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"It's my fault. I do hope _you_ were not harmed by _my_
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clumsiness..." He knelt then, and began to place books upon
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her stack, starting with the volume he had saved from falling.
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The lucky book was one of the late Mr. Darwin's, and when he
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glanced momentarily at the spine she blushed deeply despite
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herself--for she had that day finished reading it, and was
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returning it to its rightful place. She knew that he had seen
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her cheeks color.
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Gretchen looked around, and seeing there were no more stray
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books, prepared to pick up the stack again. She stood up to
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catch her breath and smooth her wool skirt, arching back her
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shoulders. Looking down at the man, she finally remembered to
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blow the wisp of hair from her face. He was looking up at her
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and positively beaming--clean-shaven and light complected, she
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noted--but the smile faded almost instantly to a faint curling
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about the corners of his lips.
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"Please accept my apologies," he stated, still kneeling upon
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the floor. "I will have to be more careful." His hair was
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dishevelled--great curly locks of jet black, and he laughed
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nervously as he brushed it from his eyes. He peered at her with
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eyes so black, yet so kindly, that Gretchen found herself blushing
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again and put a hand to her chest. The man stopped for a moment
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to adjust his shirt and coat, then stood slowly, and with the
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hint of a bow, swept past her and away. Unaccountably, she felt
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suddenly light-headed and sat down upon the floor by her books.
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His eyes! she exclaimed to herself with an outrush of breath.
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She felt that in an instant they had devoured her; had known all
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about her. She could not recall ever having seen such lively
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and intelligent eyes--so deep and black they seemed like windows
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opening onto a starlit sky. And his hand! when he placed the
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last book upon the stack--the nails so trim. His hands were
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almost feminine, and finely wrought. Gretchen gradually composed
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herself, then picked up her books and continued about her work.
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* * *
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Several times thereafter in the course of a fortnight Gretchen
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saw the same young man about the library, and they developed an
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acquaintance that began and ended with nodding pleasantly and
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wishing each other "good day". She thought him quite the most
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interesting patron she had seen in the library for... she knew
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not how long--perhaps never in the two years she had been there.
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He was flamboyant, certainly, Gretchen decided, but he had not
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that rakishness or arrogance that so often accompanies one who
|
|
is as smart a dresser as he seemed. Her thoughts chanced to
|
|
light upon him sometimes, and within the fortnight, she decided
|
|
he must be attached to the university. Perhaps a professor--well
|
|
certainly not a full professor, he was far too young and had not
|
|
grown into that masculine stuffiness that comes with long
|
|
tenure--and his physique was trim. No, she decided, he was
|
|
probably a fresh young assistant to an elder professor.
|
|
|
|
"Gretchen, dear." Miss Sadie's voice crackled behind her
|
|
in a very strange manner and Gretchen looked around. "I do fear
|
|
I'm catching some contagion, dear," Miss Sadie continued in a
|
|
whisper, "can you possibly mind the desk until closing?"
|
|
|
|
Gretchen hesitated for a moment. She had worked long enough
|
|
in the library to feel at ease, and with classes already in recess
|
|
for the Christmas holidays, there were few patrons. "Of course,
|
|
Miss Sadie," she answered. "I do hope you're feeling better
|
|
tomorrow."
|
|
|
|
"If not, I shan't be in," Miss Sadie replied in a very weak
|
|
tone. "I'll--I'll try to send word."
|
|
|
|
"I'll see to everything, Miss Sadie--just take care of
|
|
yourself." She paused. "And I'll inform Mr. Johnson--it's no
|
|
trouble at all." With a smile and a pitying wag of her head,
|
|
she added, "Take good care of yourself."
|
|
|
|
Miss Sadie thanked her, and took her leave. Gretchen was
|
|
alone, at last, if only for an evening, as temporary queen of
|
|
the reference desk. Well, it was about time she was asked to do
|
|
something besides fetch books, she thought airily, and took a
|
|
seat at Miss Sadie's desk. Miss Sadie was not very neat for a
|
|
librarian, she thought, wiping a finger across the desk, so she
|
|
began to tidy a few things up. She put down a fresh blotter and
|
|
arranged the papers in a more orderly manner, then opened a drawer
|
|
in search of a cloth. Really, Miss Sadie is the epitome of
|
|
disorganization, she muttered, seeing the jumble. It's a wonder
|
|
that a woman like her can retain such a position.
|
|
|
|
Bing-bing! Gretchen looked up suddenly when the bell upon
|
|
the front counter sounded. Standing there with his hand poised
|
|
above the bell was the young man.
|
|
|
|
"May I be of assistance?" Gretchen asked, in her most
|
|
librarian-like tone.
|
|
|
|
The young man smiled. "I sincerely hope you can. I wonder
|
|
if you might be able to help me find this book?" He held out a
|
|
small slip of paper between two fingers. "It doesn't appear to
|
|
be in the open stacks."
|
|
|
|
Gretchen glided to the desk and took the slip of paper from
|
|
him. A glance at the number was sufficient. "You're correct,"
|
|
she told him, handing the paper back. "It's in one of the special
|
|
collections."
|
|
|
|
"I wonder, then, Miss..." He paused, drawing out the word
|
|
into a silence, until Gretchen felt obliged to fill the audible gap.
|
|
|
|
"Haviland," she offered in a whisper.
|
|
|
|
"Miss Haviland. Could you help me locate it?" He smiled
|
|
with the slightly curling lips he always wore. Not condescending,
|
|
she decided--perhaps amused, or even flirtatious.
|
|
|
|
Gretchen stood flustered for a moment. Patrons were not
|
|
allowed into the special collections--they were under lock and
|
|
key. Should she leave the reference desk unattended while she
|
|
fetched it for him? In the interim, what if another patron had
|
|
pressing business? A preposterous quandary, Gretchen then told
|
|
herself. "Of course, Professor," she replied crisply. "Let me
|
|
bring the key."
|
|
|
|
The young man laughed then, with a toss of his head so that
|
|
his black curls flopped into his eyes. He suddenly sighed, with
|
|
an exaggerated look of defeat, brushing back his hair. "Do I
|
|
appear so like a professor, Miss Haviland? How did you know?"
|
|
|
|
It was Gretchen's turn to be amused, and she smiled as she
|
|
went to Miss Sadie's desk drawer to bring the key. "You have
|
|
not the air of a student, Professor..." she drew out the word
|
|
in a manner imitative of his previous query, until he had to
|
|
break into a wondrous smile.
|
|
|
|
"Bridwell!" he exclaimed, and rapped four fingernails once
|
|
upon the desk. "Employed only this year--in the English
|
|
department."
|
|
|
|
"Professor Bridwell," she continued, imparting a certain
|
|
air of coquetry to her words, "your dress is frankly too
|
|
punctilious for a student; and if I might be so tactless,
|
|
you seem... more evolved, shall we say."
|
|
|
|
Having drawn out the key, she beckoned him to follow.
|
|
They ascended the back staircase--likewise taboo for patrons.
|
|
All the while Gretchen thought how to exonerate herself should
|
|
she be caught by one of her superiors while leading a patron--
|
|
alone--into the inner sanctum. She decided the best approach
|
|
would be to plead ignorance--"Oh," she could say, "I had no idea
|
|
that professors were considered ordinary patrons." Would that
|
|
be sufficient excuse?
|
|
|
|
The book was easy to find, and Gretchen put herself to no
|
|
particular difficulty--but nevertheless, Professor Bridwell's
|
|
thanks were profuse. He consulted the book--which could not
|
|
leave the library--for an hour or more. On departing he returned
|
|
the book to the counter. He inclined his head, with the
|
|
now-familiar flop of his curly hair, and said, "I do hope to have
|
|
the pleasure again, Miss Haviland."
|
|
|
|
Gretchen watched from Miss Sadie's desk as he departed
|
|
through the foyer and down the steps leading out. She closed her
|
|
eyes for a moment and sat quietly after he had left--simply savoring
|
|
the moment. A faint scent lingered behind him: a distinctive
|
|
cologne that left quite a favorable impression on her.
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
Gretchen attended a short afternoon concert on campus.
|
|
It was the last student recital of the season, and she had heard
|
|
tell of the program: the afternoon was to open with mazurkas by
|
|
Chopin and a selection of those divine "Transcendental Etudes"
|
|
by Liszt--she could not stay away. Chopin was an aperitif,
|
|
followed by a few mildly diverting piano works by students.
|
|
Then, she sat breathless and transported--utterly transported,
|
|
halfway to tears upon a bed of clouds--through the etudes of
|
|
Liszt. In particular she had never heard the "Harmonies du Soir"
|
|
more beautifully rendered.
|
|
|
|
After an intermission, which she spent simply sitting quietly,
|
|
pondering the exquisite delicacies of Liszt's piano writing, the
|
|
second part of the concert opened with Vivaldi's "The Four
|
|
Seasons", performed by an intimate ensemble rather than with the
|
|
full complement of strings. The performers were students, to be
|
|
sure, but she found it delightful nonetheless. When the "Autumn"
|
|
season opened, she even felt a sudden chill in the air--the
|
|
performance was so wonderfully effective--and she pulled her
|
|
shawl more tightly around her shoulders. She chanced then to
|
|
look across the audience, and thought that several rows down, in
|
|
front of her, she saw Professor Bridwell. She had no idea he
|
|
liked concerts; in fact, she realized that she knew nothing
|
|
whatever about him. She was positive it was the professor--even
|
|
from the back, there was no mistaking his curly hair. At once
|
|
she realized that he rather resembled portraits of Hector Berlioz.
|
|
He sat upright, almost leaning forward in a posture that seemed
|
|
ready to rise in an instant. She fancied that could she but see
|
|
his handsome face, his eyes would be closed, as he was carried
|
|
away by the music, blown upon Vivaldi's autumn wind. Why she
|
|
was looking at the audience rather than at the orchestra she
|
|
really did not know--she forced her gaze away from the professor's
|
|
back and tried to concentrate again upon the music. But her
|
|
effort was unsuccessful.
|
|
|
|
When the concert was ended, Gretchen fairly ran to the exit,
|
|
and stood there at the door, looking back across the auditorium.
|
|
Yes, it was he, she saw finally. He was coming up the aisle and
|
|
she glimpsed his face among the swarm of bodies. He appeared to
|
|
be alone; he spoke to nobody. She stepped out of the way and
|
|
kept looking across the audience, as if seeking someone else.
|
|
He soon arrived, and when he walked past, she turned and looked
|
|
at him, as if suddenly noticing him for the first time.
|
|
|
|
His smile was as delightful as always. "Good evening,
|
|
Miss Haviland," he said, with a tone of warmth.
|
|
|
|
"Good evening, Professor." Gretchen thought that he slowed
|
|
for a second or two, but she felt acutely embarrassed to be
|
|
observing him too closely, and looked away toward the crowd again.
|
|
He continued walking.
|
|
|
|
When the professor had passed, Gretchen let out her breath
|
|
slowly. Into the thick of the crowd she plunged, and went out
|
|
through the lobby. Evening had come on and it was dark outside.
|
|
Vast hordes were dispersing across the plaza, pouring from the
|
|
auditorium. As she stepped into the bitterly chill air and
|
|
started down the stairs, a voice hailed her from behind.
|
|
|
|
"Are you alone, then, Miss Haviland?"
|
|
|
|
Gretchen whirled around at the sound of the professor's
|
|
voice, in time to see him laugh briefly. He was standing just
|
|
outside the doors, facing outward, his greatcoat pulled tightly
|
|
around himself.
|
|
|
|
Gretchen went to stand on the step below. "Actually, yes,"
|
|
she replied, looking up. "I am alone. I came by myself on a whim."
|
|
|
|
"It's quite chilly this evening," he said, stepping down
|
|
once. They started down the stairs beside each other. "Would
|
|
you fancy a cup of coffee, by chance, before making your way home?"
|
|
|
|
Gretchen smiled. He certainly had a forward manner; but
|
|
she found it refreshing, and--after all, she had really been
|
|
seeking him, had she not? "Why, that sounds like a delightful
|
|
diversion, Professor. I believe I shall."
|
|
|
|
With that, they set off together across the plaza. Gretchen
|
|
started immediately upon a likely topic of conversation: the
|
|
concert they had just attended. It was instantly evident that
|
|
Professor Bridwell had found the Liszt etudes as breathtaking as
|
|
she had. And during the Vivaldi, as well, he agreed that he had
|
|
felt a sudden chill at precisely the same time as she.
|
|
|
|
"The ensemble did well," she concluded. "I suppose that is
|
|
the way Vivaldi would have heard the work too--none of these
|
|
large, modern orchestras quite out of proportion to the delicacy
|
|
of the music."
|
|
|
|
"The modern orchestra," stated the professor, "is well enough
|
|
suited for modern works, but really, the intimacy required for
|
|
performing earlier works--as Vivaldi for instance--is really lost
|
|
in the great crowd of strings."
|
|
|
|
"Agreed."
|
|
|
|
Presently they came to the campus gates and found their way
|
|
to a small cafe. Seated at a tiny marble table, they had a
|
|
delightful tete-a-tete, and found much to agree upon regarding both
|
|
the performance, and the subject of music in general. Though he
|
|
had not quite her madness for Liszt, he agreed with Gretchen's
|
|
assessment of the "Transcendental Etudes"--divinely inspired,
|
|
and, like much of Liszt's work, nearly beyond the reach of mortals.
|
|
|
|
Gretchen was on her second coffee and feeling rather giddy.
|
|
She could hardly hold her cup steady, and she finally set it down
|
|
with a laugh.
|
|
|
|
"Do you play an instrument, Professor?" she asked, pushing
|
|
her cup away with one hand.
|
|
|
|
"Well, I would not so much call it playing the instrument,"
|
|
he answered, "as playing _at_ the instrument."
|
|
|
|
"I see," she laughed. "Rather the way I play _at_ the
|
|
viola--though I daresay you speak of Liszt's writing as if you
|
|
have some experience with it."
|
|
|
|
The professor seemed rather at a loss for an instant.
|
|
He glanced away over Gretchen's shoulder, but recalled himself
|
|
quickly and lifted his cup to his lips, meeting her eyes again.
|
|
"I do admit I have _tried_." He set his cup down while reaching
|
|
into his vest pocket, as if searching for something. "But really,"
|
|
he continued, "I haven't the technique. How about yourself, Miss
|
|
Haviland? I take it you do rather well yourself, upon the viola."
|
|
|
|
Gretchen blushed, realizing that she must have sounded
|
|
boastful just then. The professor seemed not to have taken it
|
|
in stride--she realized that this must have accounted for
|
|
his momentary loss for words. "Well," she said then, settling
|
|
herself forward upon her chair. "At one time--when I was quite
|
|
young, you understand--I fancied I would perform upon the
|
|
instrument. But..."
|
|
|
|
"Ah." Professor Bridwell smiled. "Then, other interests
|
|
swept you away, no doubt. But still you play?" He had pulled
|
|
a silver cigarette case from his vest pocket, and he turned it
|
|
over in his fingers.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, indeed." Gretchen sighed deeply. "I suppose, with
|
|
all modesty set aside, I was adequate on the instrument--but
|
|
adequacy in a performer is hardly to be tolerated..." Before he
|
|
could reply, she rushed onward, feeling her face flush.
|
|
"I certainly do not practice with any regularity of late!"
|
|
|
|
Professor Bridwell laughed. "I daresay--at our time of
|
|
life--leisure hours seem so unobtainable..." He looked at his
|
|
cigarette case, polishing it with a thumb. Seeming to think
|
|
better of smoking just then, however, he returned the case to
|
|
his vest pocket.
|
|
|
|
Gretchen's smile was thin. She inclined her head,
|
|
acknowledging the truth of what he said--they were indeed probably
|
|
of an age. Certainly, she thought he could be no more than
|
|
thirty-three or thereabouts. "Then, too, music, while an engaging
|
|
diversion, and the source of much happiness, is better shared,
|
|
wouldn't you say Professor?" He nodded slightly, and Gretchen
|
|
clarified her statement. "That is to say--practicing is all very
|
|
well, but...the joy of music is in sharing it with one's
|
|
friends--musical soirees and evenings in the parlor with a roaring
|
|
fire. Old friends gathered around the piano--and champagne!--"
|
|
|
|
Professor Bridwell warmed to her words, and rubbed his hands
|
|
together as if before the very fire she had mentioned. "You have
|
|
hit it precisely," he replied with enthusiasm. "Why--it's no
|
|
wonder that living, as I do, alone in a house that I fear is far
|
|
too large for..."
|
|
|
|
Gretchen thought she detected the professor falter just
|
|
then, and there was the slightest of pauses in his speech.
|
|
|
|
"... For myself alone, you see," he finished. He laughed
|
|
at himself, tossing the black mop of hair to one side. "But I
|
|
needed some place instantly when I arrived here. I will probably
|
|
find smaller digs in a year or so, when I've come to know the
|
|
city more intimately."
|
|
|
|
"Indeed," Gretchen answered, returning his smile. "I quite
|
|
understand how one needs permanent lodgings--the more quickly
|
|
one can find them in a strange city, why, the quicker one is able
|
|
to settle into life, get one's bearings in a foreign port."
|
|
|
|
"So true," he replied with a firm nod.
|
|
|
|
A few moments later, a juncture seemed to have been reached
|
|
in their conversation. Their coffees were at an end, and neither
|
|
of them had touched their cups for what seemed ages, so engaged
|
|
had they become in their conversation.
|
|
|
|
"But now," Professor Bridwell exclaimed, with a glance to
|
|
his pocket watch, "I should not be keeping you away from your
|
|
supper or--or your other duties any longer. Please allow me to
|
|
escort you home, Miss Haviland--or where you may be going."
|
|
|
|
"Thank you, Professor--but really there is no need," she
|
|
declared. She thought that sounded too firm, and she smiled
|
|
easily, to show that she meant it only literally, not as a rebuff.
|
|
"My rooms are close by, and the evening air will do me good, you
|
|
see. It shan't take me more than ten minutes at a brisk pace."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," he agreed. "I believe I shall walk myself. The air
|
|
is good for the circulation, as long as one's pace is brisk."
|
|
|
|
Gretchen rose, and took a curtsey. The Professor held her
|
|
coat and stood attentively while she donned her gloves. "I do
|
|
thank you most kindly for the enchanting evening, Professor
|
|
Bridwell. It--it has been marvelous."
|
|
|
|
"Likewise, Miss Haviland. I sincerely hope we shall have
|
|
the pleasure again soon."
|
|
|
|
With a few more words of parting, Gretchen stepped into the
|
|
street, followed by Professor Bridwell, and they went their
|
|
separate ways. She fancied that he stood in the street and gazed
|
|
at her until she turned the next corner, but she dared not glance
|
|
back. The evening was extremely cold, though not overcast, and
|
|
her wool coat, even with a shawl wrapped beneath, did not keep
|
|
the chill from seeping into her bones. She rarely wore hats,
|
|
but that evening she wished she had one--one of those large fur
|
|
hats so favored in Russia, she thought--that would be most
|
|
appropriate, since she could pull it down around her ears.
|
|
By the time she arrived at her rooming house a few minutes later,
|
|
she was shivering. She undressed and went straight to bed beneath
|
|
layers of feather comforters with a hot water bottle pressed
|
|
against her chest. She had no appetite for supper, and resolved
|
|
to arise early and eat a hearty breakfast to compensate.
|
|
|
|
Sleep was elusive in the extreme, but Gretchen found herself
|
|
strangely delighted that she could not sleep, for she had the
|
|
leisure to think over in detail all that had happened that day.
|
|
And especially, she had time to ponder her interlude with Professor
|
|
Bridwell. He was a most intriguing man. He was a professor of
|
|
English Literature--well, that could mean almost anything, she
|
|
supposed--yet he did not have that _way_ about him. Nearly every
|
|
professor of English she had ever met--and a good many students
|
|
of literature as well--were continually spouting clever quotes
|
|
gleaned from the works of obscure authors, living and dead--they
|
|
were not particular about that. It often seemed to her that the
|
|
more obscure the quotation, the more it was admired amongst their
|
|
cronies. She had always found such practices revolting.
|
|
But Professor Bridwell was not at all like that. Why, the entire
|
|
evening--and it had been two hours in fact that they had sat over
|
|
cups lukewarm coffee--he had never quoted an author, famous or
|
|
otherwise. Yet, his choice of words, his demeanor, the hint of
|
|
some foreign influence in his accent--the way he talked of
|
|
Liszt--all pointed to an intimacy with the most literate form of
|
|
the English language. Through clear thoughts and meticulous
|
|
expression--rather than through haphazardly quoting other men--
|
|
he exuded what she believed was a real professorial air, built upon
|
|
a solid foundation without pretense. She found him refreshingly
|
|
attractive, both for his own sake and as a change from the pompous
|
|
professors she encountered so often in the library. As she
|
|
drifted into sleep, the hot water bottle pressed against herself,
|
|
she hoped she would have the opportunity for another such
|
|
conversation with Professor Bridwell.
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
Gretchen's cart of books was extraordinarily loaded. Rather
|
|
than push it slowly between the stacks as she reshelved books,
|
|
she stopped the cart at the end of each row and carried a few
|
|
books at a time to their proper places. The library was more
|
|
quiet than usual, and despite the overwhelming number of books
|
|
she had to replace that day she worked rather slowly. Lost in
|
|
thought, she hummed to herself, not so loudly that any patron
|
|
who happened to be about could hear, but loud enough for her own
|
|
amusement. She had just returned to the cart and pushed it to
|
|
the next row. She lifted another armful of books, choosing those
|
|
whose home was in that particular row, and turned to walk slowly,
|
|
watching the numbers. She glanced at each book when she shelved
|
|
it, lamenting that she had too little time that day--there could
|
|
be no stolen moments of reading, even briefly. She stood on her
|
|
toes to reach an upper shelf and stopped humming for a moment.
|
|
The sound of a footfall reached her at that instant, and she gave
|
|
the book a quick shove.
|
|
|
|
"Good day, Miss Haviland."
|
|
|
|
Gretchen looked around to see a fine pair of wool trousers,
|
|
as she returned her weight fully to her feet. Following upward
|
|
with her eyes, she felt a pleasant blush. "Professor Bridwell,
|
|
you startled me!" she exclaimed.
|
|
|
|
"Careful," he returned, reaching his hand above her head.
|
|
Gretchen looked up to see that he pushed the book further onto
|
|
the shelf; she had left it precariously tottering on the edge.
|
|
"You almost lost one, Miss Haviland."
|
|
|
|
"Oh dear," she laughed, and grasped the rest of the books
|
|
more securely to her chest. She continued to walk easily down
|
|
the row, with her wool skirt swinging about her ankles. "Is
|
|
there a book I can help you find?" she asked, whirling toward
|
|
him like a schoolgirl.
|
|
|
|
"Actually," the professor said, nervously drawing out the
|
|
word. "I've not come in a--a professional capacity at all today."
|
|
|
|
"Oh?" Gretchen turned to look at him, but kept walking.
|
|
With her free hand, she extracted a strand of hair from her mouth.
|
|
|
|
"The other evening--at coffee," he said, taking up the pace
|
|
beside her. "Well, really, I found the conversation most
|
|
delightful and..."
|
|
|
|
"Yes?" Gretchen stopped, then knelt to shelve another book,
|
|
lower down.
|
|
|
|
"And I was wondering," he continued rather quickly, as if
|
|
he dare not speak of it, "whether you might consent to dine with
|
|
me this evening."
|
|
|
|
Gretchen stood up, rather slowly. "I--well..."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," the professor stammered, "of course--such short
|
|
notice. I understand. It's hardly proper, and I'm sure you're
|
|
quite busy. Perhaps another time." He stepped backward as if
|
|
to take his leave.
|
|
|
|
"Not at all," Gretchen said with a faint smile. She clutched
|
|
the heavy books more tightly in her arms. "I should be delighted,
|
|
really." She caught his eye then, and saw it twinkle. The sight
|
|
of his smile could not but make her return it fully. "The other
|
|
evening, it did seem there was ever so much more to say." She
|
|
continued down the row, with Professor Bridwell beside her.
|
|
|
|
"Is that an acceptance?"
|
|
|
|
She laughed and stopped to face him squarely, as if
|
|
astonished. "Why, I believe it is, Professor." She blinked her
|
|
eyes. The sudden blush in his cheeks was profound, and she
|
|
composed herself to keep from laughing.
|
|
|
|
"Would six o'clock be too late? Or too early?"
|
|
|
|
"Neither, Professor." Gretchen thought he looked as if he
|
|
had been handed a Christmas goose. "I'll meet you at the main
|
|
entrance."
|
|
|
|
"Stupendous! I'll..." He still sounded incredulous, and
|
|
seemed near to bursting. He pushed his black locks from his eye,
|
|
and twisted a lock on one finger. "I'll meet you at six then?"
|
|
|
|
They took their leaves of each other, and Gretchen thought
|
|
she heard a faint whistling in the main stairwell as the sound
|
|
of his boots on the stone steps receded. She flew to her cart
|
|
immediately the sound died away in the distance. Her unflagging
|
|
concentration would be required if she were to be finished by
|
|
six--she had seven more cartloads of books, and less than five
|
|
hours in which to reshelve them all. She did not stop or rest
|
|
until five forty-five, when she bid Miss Sadie good evening, and
|
|
made her way to the main entrance. She stood inside the great
|
|
oak doors, under stone arches where she could see the professor
|
|
through the glass when he approached. With a few moments to
|
|
ponder and catch her breath while she waited, a sudden flutter
|
|
filled her bosom. Good Lord, she thought to herself--it's a
|
|
wonder he did not think me scandalously forward. She felt a
|
|
faint tingling in her cheeks as if she had begun to color. What
|
|
sort of woman would join a stranger for dinner with five hours
|
|
notice? Part of her dared not even answer her own question, but
|
|
another part of her replied that he was not a perfect stranger
|
|
by any means--she had met him any number of times--and had joined
|
|
him for coffee with no notice at all. It was hardly the time to
|
|
start worrying about propriety. She pulled the ribbon from her
|
|
hair and brushed it before retying the ribbon carefully and
|
|
flinging her hair behind her back. The least I can do, she
|
|
thought, is to make myself halfway presentable, though it's a
|
|
pity I haven't time to change my coat. A hat might have been
|
|
welcome for its warmth--the evening was sure to be cold--and for
|
|
fashion as well. But then what is the use of seeming fashionable,
|
|
she thought, if fashionable I am not?
|
|
|
|
With his arms wrapped closely around him and his ungloved
|
|
hands tucked beneath his arms, Professor Bridwell trotted up the
|
|
stairs. Upon seeing him, Gretchen pushed open the doors and
|
|
stepped outside.
|
|
|
|
"Why it's cooler than I had thought," she remarked.
|
|
|
|
The professor's smile fairly warmed her heart. "Let's hurry
|
|
along then," he said between chattering teeth, "I know just the
|
|
place this evening. They'll even have a fire, and if we're quick
|
|
about it, we might find a table close enough to feel its warmth."
|
|
|
|
Side by side, they walked out through the plaza. The clouds
|
|
had descended, muffling the sounds of the city beyond. They
|
|
continued through the campus gates into the nearby streets. The
|
|
neighborhood was uncrowded, since so many students had left for
|
|
their holidays, and though there were a few groups of people
|
|
walking to and fro, dressed warmly against the weather, only the
|
|
occasional carriage rattled by. Professor Bridwell led the way
|
|
into a side street, where they were greeted by a brightly lit
|
|
cafe.
|
|
|
|
"I had no idea...," Gretchen began.
|
|
|
|
"Of a French cafe so near campus?" the professor finished
|
|
for her. "It's quite new." He pulled open the door and the
|
|
sounds of bustling crowds and gay voices greeted them. "I say,"
|
|
he continued, "the place appears to have been discovered."
|
|
Gretchen followed him in while he held the door, and stood by
|
|
removing her gloves while he conferred with the head waiter.
|
|
She glanced up as she folded her gloves in time to see the man
|
|
wisk a bill into his apron pocket.
|
|
|
|
"Follow me, monsieur."
|
|
|
|
The professor took Gretchen's arm and led her along. Their
|
|
table was in the back and, as Professor Bridwell had hoped, it
|
|
was close by an open brick fireplace filled with a roaring blaze
|
|
of crackling oak logs. She sat in silent attendance while their
|
|
waiter recited, in heavily accented English, a seemingly unending
|
|
speech upon the specialities of the house.
|
|
|
|
Gretchen lost the particulars mid-way, and her eyes strayed
|
|
beyond him to the fire. "I'm quite overwhelmed," she exclaimed
|
|
when he had finished and stood poised before them. "Please--
|
|
do what you think best, Professor."
|
|
|
|
Professor Bridwell surprised her then, by leaning back with
|
|
the casual air of one who knows what he is about, and held forth
|
|
in what seemed, to Gretchen's ear, flawless French.
|
|
|
|
"Bravo, Professor," she chimed when he had finished. "Your
|
|
French is beautiful."
|
|
|
|
The professor seemed somewhat embarrassed then, and smoothly
|
|
turned the conversation to the decor. The room was hardly what
|
|
Gretchen should have expected of a French cafe--it was done in
|
|
stark white, with high rafters of carved wood, but upon the walls
|
|
hung gorgeously worked Persian carpets which served to bring the
|
|
ceiling down and lend intimacy to the room; and to muffle the
|
|
sound of so many conversing guests. Their entrees arrived in due
|
|
course--a delightful poached white fish in delicate sauce, which
|
|
they ate practically in silence, but for the occasional comment
|
|
upon the food. He asked after her health, and heard the small-talk
|
|
of the day, then listened with interest to an abridged account
|
|
of her life, interjecting only occasional questions to clarify
|
|
certain points. She stopped short of revealing the estrangement
|
|
of her family, but dwelt upon her years at university.
|
|
|
|
Gretchen at length noticed the emptiness of her plate and
|
|
declared that the fish positively melted in one's mouth. Professor
|
|
Bridwell replied that he would send compliments to the chef.
|
|
His smile grew gradually as he said this, with a hint of something
|
|
further he wished to add, but he stopped.
|
|
|
|
"Was there something else?" she asked, setting her silver
|
|
carefully atop her empty plate.
|
|
|
|
"No, nothing," he laughed, putting down his own silver.
|
|
|
|
Presently, their plates were cleared away and the professor
|
|
ordered a liqueur with coffee. Gretchen declined a liqueur,
|
|
having drunk enough wine already to raise her color slightly--
|
|
she settled for coffee and a small gateau.
|
|
|
|
"You mentioned that you play the viola," he said, taking up
|
|
his liqueur with one hand. "Have you been playing long?"
|
|
|
|
"Since I was sixteen," she replied, stirring cream into her
|
|
coffee. "I began with the violin as a child--I really can't
|
|
recall at what age. When I was sixteen I went away for a summer,
|
|
and..." she stopped to look at him for an instant, tapping upon
|
|
her gateau with her fork. "Well, I met a young man who played
|
|
the viola, and I was quite--quite taken with his instrument.
|
|
It seemed to suit me, really."
|
|
|
|
"I would say it does," the professor agreed. "Unusual,
|
|
especially for a woman--mildly exotic even...and intriguing..."
|
|
|
|
They continued conversing about the viola and the piano,
|
|
telling each other about their favorite pieces, comparing
|
|
composers. Gretchen had never played the piano seriously
|
|
herself--she found it frustrating and was amazed that anyone
|
|
could master such an instrument.
|
|
|
|
"It requires such independence of the hands," she said.
|
|
"I've tried, but I could never play anything worth mentioning.
|
|
Oh, the organ is another one that I simply cannot fathom.
|
|
Beautiful to hear, it's quite comical to watch--and seems so
|
|
awkward to play."
|
|
|
|
"Neither is really any more complicated than the viola,
|
|
I should think," the professor replied. He had been twirling his
|
|
glass for some time, but he stopped and removed his hand from
|
|
the table. "Think of the dexterity required to control your bow,
|
|
and the simultaneous imparting of vibrato while retaining correct
|
|
intonation. It's quite as remarkable."
|
|
|
|
"I see what you mean, certainly. It all seems easy with
|
|
long practice."
|
|
|
|
"Do you sing alto as well?"
|
|
|
|
She laughed. "Very poor alto, Professor."
|
|
|
|
"But alto nonetheless. I was certain you would sing alto."
|
|
He sipped his liqueur again and twirled the glass slowly.
|
|
"What about opera? I despise Wagner myself."
|
|
|
|
"Really?" Gretchen replied, reaching for her coffee.
|
|
"I can't say I truly enjoy Wagner's work, the little I have heard.
|
|
But Verdi--is luscious."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, Verdi. I quite agree with your assessment. And Mozart,
|
|
of course, is beyond reproach."
|
|
|
|
"Positively. But I generally prefer the intimacy of
|
|
lieder myself."
|
|
|
|
"German?"
|
|
|
|
She laughed and pointed her fork at him. "Not only
|
|
German--chansons as well."
|
|
|
|
"I'm relieved to hear it." Professor Bridwell then put one
|
|
hand into his pocket, and withdrew his silver cigarette case.
|
|
"Would you mind, Miss Haviland, if I smoke?"
|
|
|
|
"Of course not," she replied.
|
|
|
|
"Some ladies find it offensive," he said, opening the case
|
|
slowly, "but I find it the perfect finish to a delightful meal."
|
|
|
|
"I couldn't agree more." Gretchen pushed away her plate--
|
|
the gateau though small, was simply too rich--and sat back upon her
|
|
chair. Cigarettes had always appealed to her, and she indulged
|
|
on occasion herself--in private. Cigars she could not abide,
|
|
however, for they reminded her too much of her father's odious
|
|
acquaintances--men who came to play cards each week throughout
|
|
her childhood. "If I might ask," she said quietly, folding her
|
|
hands the table, "how do you feel about women smoking, Professor?"
|
|
|
|
He paused, with the open case upon the table before him and
|
|
looked steadily into her eyes. "Miss Haviland," he answered,
|
|
"we are living in an enlightened age, are we not? Women's
|
|
suffrage--and frankly, it will happen soon, I'm sure. University
|
|
educations--such as your own."
|
|
|
|
She nodded, but let him continue. He studied the top of
|
|
the cigarette case with some care. From the side, a hovering
|
|
waiter produced a shallow ashtray of white china and set it near
|
|
his elbow.
|
|
|
|
"I have no objection," he continued, "to a woman pursuing
|
|
whatever takes her fancy, provided she's reached majority. The
|
|
same as any man." He fingered the cigarette case, closing and
|
|
then opening it again. "A strong and independent mind is an
|
|
asset in anyone, male or female." He looked up hesitantly.
|
|
"You seem to have such a mind. You've read Mr. Darwin,
|
|
I believe--and I suspect other progressive thinkers as well."
|
|
|
|
Gretchen smiled at him, but tilted her head with some
|
|
puzzlement.
|
|
|
|
"You once called me more evolved," he replied answering her
|
|
unspoken question. "That's hardly the sort of phrase an unread
|
|
woman would use. I presumed you have read Mr. Darwin, among
|
|
others." He curled his lips upon seeing her amusement and continued
|
|
speaking. "It is the mind, I believe--and the soul, if one is
|
|
religiously inclined--that really distinguishes man from the
|
|
lesser animals. Female no less than male--we all possess that
|
|
most human of traits."
|
|
|
|
His extensive reply was more favorable and pointed than she
|
|
would have thought possible. It pleased her, and confirmed a
|
|
great deal that she had sensed about him. "Then you won't mind
|
|
at all if I join you?"
|
|
|
|
"By all means," he returned without hesitation, holding the
|
|
silver case toward her. She deftly removed a cigarette, and
|
|
tamping it upon her fingernail twice, held it out for him to
|
|
light. She bent back her wrist and let it dangle between her
|
|
long fingers while he lit his own cigarette.
|
|
|
|
"Now that we've learned all about me," she said, blowing a
|
|
thin stream of smoke away, "perhaps you'll tell me about yourself,
|
|
Professor."
|
|
|
|
"Please," he said, setting the ashtray in the middle of the
|
|
table, "do call me Antoine. We needn't be so formal, I think."
|
|
|
|
She laughed quietly. "Antoine."
|
|
|
|
"My mother was French," he stated quietly.
|
|
|
|
Gretchen caught his use of the past tense, but did not
|
|
inquire further. "No doubt she is the source of your excellent
|
|
French."
|
|
|
|
"Maman did speak French to me as a child--but my French is
|
|
quite poor for anything but domestic conversation."
|
|
|
|
"From what little I speak," she replied, drawing on her
|
|
cigarette, "you sounded quite fluent." She let the smoke linger
|
|
on her lips, then blew it away softly.
|
|
|
|
"Why thank you for the compliment...Miss Haviland."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, dear," she said, realizing what she had neglected.
|
|
"My Christian name is Gretchen."
|
|
|
|
"Gretchen Haviland," he repeated slowly. "That has quite
|
|
a satisfactory ring to it."
|
|
|
|
She complimented him on the quality of the tobacco when they
|
|
were finished smoking. The hour was past nine o'clock, so they
|
|
left the cafe and walked into the street. The fog had descended,
|
|
lower and thicker than before. Occasional carriages appeared,
|
|
rumbling quietly along. Tatters of mist blew sluggishly past
|
|
the gaslights.
|
|
|
|
"I hope you shall allow me the pleasure of escorting you
|
|
home this evening?" he asked as they walked.
|
|
|
|
"I should be honored."
|
|
|
|
He held out his elbow, and she slipped her gloved hand over
|
|
his forearm. They walked in silence toward her rooming house,
|
|
both enjoying the quiet of the evening. It seemed much warmer
|
|
than before, and Gretchen thought a snow was about to fall.
|
|
The air had the crisp scent of impending snow.
|
|
|
|
"I am delighted," Professor Bridwell said after a while,
|
|
"that you were not busy this evening. Surely you must have so
|
|
many friends. Other engagements."
|
|
|
|
"No," she answered, "I have very few friends. But surely--
|
|
Antoine--there must be any number of ladies who would be far
|
|
better company..."
|
|
|
|
"I'm too involved with my books, I fear. Studying all the
|
|
time; preparing lectures--while the ladies run off with younger
|
|
rakes." He glanced at her with a teasing half-smile. "I'll be
|
|
thirty-five come February."
|
|
|
|
Gretchen laughed to hear him say such things. But she was
|
|
pleased that she had guessed his age so nearly.
|
|
|
|
"I fear," he continued, "it is my fate to attend concerts
|
|
alone, and remain unwed all my life."
|
|
|
|
"Well," Gretchen replied, "there's something sad in that
|
|
then, is there not? Two studious people nearly of an age, with
|
|
no other attachments." She looked sidelong at him. "And with
|
|
Christmas so near..."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," he agreed, "there is a bit of sadness in that. Have
|
|
you no family nearby, Gretchen?"
|
|
|
|
"No, they're ALL in Connecticut--too far to visit this year,
|
|
and my rooming house would hardly be suitable for inviting them
|
|
to visit me."
|
|
|
|
He laughed pleasantly at this. Yet she did not tell him
|
|
that she was estranged from her parents.
|
|
|
|
"Besides my family being far away--at twenty-nine, one cannot
|
|
be forever running home to one's parents, can one?" she asked.
|
|
|
|
"I do understand that," he said. "Fancy the two of us then,
|
|
alone for Christmas--it seems rather a shame."
|
|
|
|
"It does indeed," Gretchen answered looking away. Snow had
|
|
begun to fall, silently and hesitantly. The flakes, drifting
|
|
between the empty branches of trees along the avenue, seemed as
|
|
large as walnuts; as fluffy as eider down.
|
|
|
|
The professor laid his hand across Gretchen's gloved hand,
|
|
suddenly holding her fingers delicately beneath his. She smiled
|
|
at him, looking at his eyes; his mop of black hair, now bedecked
|
|
with great white snowflakes. They stopped walking for an instant,
|
|
and she could see the wisps of mist curling away from his mouth
|
|
as he opened his lips. The street was silent. He took a step
|
|
toward her and she realized that she was not looking far up into
|
|
his eyes--he was not so much taller than herself as she had
|
|
imagined. She thought--suddenly aware of the palpitation of her
|
|
heart--she found herself hoping he would kiss her. She believed
|
|
he would kiss her, just then, and she let out her hot breath.
|
|
Mist escaped her expectant lips on the faintest of breezes.
|
|
|
|
They stood for a long moment, facing each other until he
|
|
turned slowly and stepped forward. Gretchen continued walking
|
|
beside him with her hand upon his arm. They crossed the street
|
|
and at last were near her rooming house. She looked up at the
|
|
falling snow against a gray sky; the tangle of branches above
|
|
them; the misty pools of light beneath the gaslights. She glanced
|
|
at his serene face, turning, though she continued to walk.
|
|
|
|
"I believe you almost kissed me back there, did you not
|
|
Professor?"
|
|
|
|
"So, it's 'Professor' again, is it?" He smiled the faintest
|
|
of smiles and looked away down the street. "Miss Haviland, you
|
|
did not ask to be kissed--back there." She turned quickly in
|
|
front of him to catch his gaze, so that he had to stop. "Not in
|
|
so many words," he added, "I mean--you hesitated as much as I."
|
|
|
|
"Fancy that," she replied with a laugh, and began walking
|
|
again, swinging her legs gaily, letting her skirt billow.
|
|
|
|
He touched her hand, draped over his forearm, and she felt
|
|
the warmth of his fingers through her glove. They walked on
|
|
beneath bare branches and quietly falling snow. It seemed far
|
|
too warm for snow--tropical almost, as if the gaslights were
|
|
warming the whole scene--the whole world. Winter was about to
|
|
melt--the sun might even rise the next instant and spring would
|
|
return in a blaze of gold and green with soft rain, the scent of
|
|
flowers.
|
|
|
|
"In future, perhaps I _shall_ ask, Professor." She leaned to
|
|
grip his arm more tightly and whispered. "Perhaps I shall."
|
|
|
|
|
|
=====================================================================
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE HUNGARIAN LIGHTBULB
|
|
|
|
|
|
When the symphony orchestra collapsed in ruin after years
|
|
spent floating, half-dead near bankruptcy, all the musicians were
|
|
thrown out of work. At that time nearly everyone was out of work
|
|
anyway--many of them discovered soup-kitchens and soon found
|
|
employment at menial tasks. A few--the lucky or the talented,
|
|
but mostly those with both luck and talent--found other musical
|
|
work well below stevedore's wages.
|
|
|
|
Jurgen had tremendous talent but no luck, yet he could not
|
|
imagine any other life than being a violist. He would not look
|
|
for non-musical work--everything was unsuitable, and certainly
|
|
unattractive. He took the little savings he had and went West
|
|
thinking to find a place less crowded with hungry musicians.
|
|
Rather than spend his money on transportation he settled on a
|
|
romantic adventure: he made friends around the freight yards
|
|
and rode the rails west until he arrived on the outskirts of a
|
|
comfortably large city with a clean look--and there he decided
|
|
to make his home. The city was familiar to him, as a professional
|
|
musician: it boasted a fine orchestra whose conductor, one
|
|
Laurence Lamonte, frequently found shockingly intimate details
|
|
of his flamboyant life splashed across the pages of the tabloids.
|
|
|
|
In River Street, on the wrong side of the tracks, after
|
|
hours spent walking from the fashionable districts gradually down
|
|
the economic ladder into a grimy, dilapidated neighborhood, Jurgen
|
|
found the Charleston Residence Hotel. Brownstone, four stories
|
|
tall, it had two windows boarded up on the third floor and
|
|
unmistakable blackened marks from a conflagration that had never
|
|
been cleaned away. There was a sign in the window advertising
|
|
a weekly fee he thought he could manage--if the sign was not out
|
|
of date. It was yellow, curling at the edges, and could hardly
|
|
be read behind a smudged window laced with years of accumulated
|
|
cobwebs. It did not seem like a wholesome place--but the price
|
|
was right so he walked into the tiny lobby.
|
|
|
|
"Have you any rooms?" he asked. He had his viola case tucked
|
|
under one arm and his cracked leather valise dangling from the
|
|
other hand.
|
|
|
|
A short, bearded and balding man in a brown, pinstriped suit
|
|
that might once have been new, stood at the front desk. The stub
|
|
of a stale cigar not two inches long was stuffed between his
|
|
lips. He cupped a hairy hand to his ear.
|
|
|
|
"I asked," Jurgen stated in a much louder voice, "whether
|
|
you have a room to let."
|
|
|
|
"Yeah, we got a lot of rooms." The man grinned. "How many
|
|
you want?"
|
|
|
|
"One will be sufficient, thank you." Jurgen carefully laid
|
|
out one week's rent on the counter. "This is a week in advance."
|
|
The man cupped his hand to his ear, and Jurgen was compelled to
|
|
repeat himself loudly.
|
|
|
|
The man swept the money away--into a vest pocket--and handed
|
|
his new resident a rusty key attached to a length of twine.
|
|
Scrawled on a paper tag attached to the twine were numbers:
|
|
a three, separated by a dash from the number thirteen.
|
|
|
|
"By the way," Jurgen inquired loudly, leaning forward,
|
|
"you don't mind if I PRACTICE the VIOLA during the DAY?"
|
|
|
|
"Violin?" the man yelled back, with a dismissing wave.
|
|
"Just so I don't get no complaints, you do what you want."
|
|
|
|
Relieved at last to be in some lodging--his last few nights
|
|
had been spent in damp freight cars, cowering with one or another
|
|
group of indigents--Jurgen ascended the stairs quietly to the
|
|
third floor. Room thirteen was the last door on the right at
|
|
the front of the building. He opened the door after some fumbling
|
|
with the key. His room proved to be the one with boards on the
|
|
windows. Only one window, on the left, was not boarded. The
|
|
inside had been freshly painted, with white paint. The floor
|
|
was painted a deep gray and partly covered with a threadbare
|
|
carpet patterned mostly in shades of brown.
|
|
|
|
Jurgen fumbled for the light switch and pushed it with a
|
|
loud click. A single bulb glowed dimly, suspended from a long
|
|
wire in the center of the room. He thought that was par for the
|
|
course. At these rates, he could not have expected much more.
|
|
Setting down his valise, he thought he would be in better lodgings
|
|
uptown, as soon as he found work. He laid his viola case reverently
|
|
across the raw, wooden arms of the room's single chair. In the
|
|
far left corner was a single bed. It had no sheets, but a few
|
|
worn blankets folded neatly at the foot of the mattress. Along
|
|
the opposite wall stood a sink with a cracked mirror hanging
|
|
above it, a flush toilet with a broken ceramic handle, and a
|
|
closet door--again with a broken handle. No towels. Putting
|
|
his valise upon the bed, Jurgen went back down the stairs to see
|
|
about sheets and towels.
|
|
|
|
"This is a residence hotel," the proprietor told him, pushing
|
|
back the few hairs on his head with one hand. "Sheets in the
|
|
hall closet at the far end--towels too. Maid comes once a week.
|
|
Toss your sheets and towels down the chute on Tuesday morning.
|
|
Don't use too many."
|
|
|
|
"Thank you," Jurgen replied, making a sincere effort at
|
|
politeness. He went back up and got a set of sheets and a towel,
|
|
then made his bed.
|
|
|
|
Afterwards, he sat on the edge of the bed and opened his
|
|
valise. It contained underwear, a well-used black suit with
|
|
tails, a silk shirt, a silk hat, soap and shaving kit, and sheaf
|
|
after sheaf of printed music. Everything else he had sold as
|
|
necessary; his cash was securely fastened around his waist in a
|
|
money-belt. He wondered if there were a trustworthy bank in the
|
|
neighborhood. Tomorrow, he decided, he would have to go look.
|
|
|
|
Jurgen surveyed the room carefully before turning in.
|
|
On the back of the door a relatively new calendar was posted with
|
|
two thumb tacks. It featured a blonde woman with exquisite, long
|
|
legs and a coquettish smile--advertising a well-known brand of
|
|
chewing tobacco. It was the fourteenth of November, he noted.
|
|
Fifty-seven years ago to the day, his grandmother had arrived in
|
|
New York harbor from Hungary, dragging two young children behind
|
|
her--with less money in her pocket than he had. He pondered her
|
|
memory for a moment--she had been his first musical mentor--then
|
|
went to switch off the light. He laid down on the bed beneath
|
|
fresh cotton sheets and listened to the far-off sounds of the
|
|
city--automobiles and trains, mostly--until he fell asleep.
|
|
|
|
Early in the morning, just after sunrise, Jurgen practiced
|
|
the viola quietly for an hour or so. He had no clock, but when
|
|
he judged, by the sounds in the street that the time was past
|
|
ten, he left the hotel with his viola case under his arm. He
|
|
spent the day wandering from street-corner to street-corner in
|
|
a nearby business district along the river-front and by late
|
|
afternoon had earned enough money for two full meals. He played
|
|
mostly Stephen Foster songs--everyone knew them and they never
|
|
failed to bring smiles. Occasionally a nice old lady would stop,
|
|
and blushing, ask whether he knew one or another of the favorite
|
|
tunes of some prior season. As often as not, he had never heard
|
|
of the tune, but when he did know it, he laid into the instrument
|
|
with such vigor that they always left a good fistful of coins in
|
|
his open case.
|
|
|
|
At a nearby hash-slinging cafe where the cook had anchors
|
|
tattooed on both arms, Jurgen ate breakfast. The waitress wore
|
|
silk stockings beneath a soiled uniform with pink and white
|
|
stripes--and kept a pencil behind each ear, both of them dull
|
|
with their ends chewed. Jurgen reflected with some amusement
|
|
that his description could fit the people as well as the pencils.
|
|
|
|
The next several days passed in much the same manner. Each
|
|
evening, rather than hastily becoming a regular at any one cafe,
|
|
Jurgen preferred to try all of the nearby places in the hope of
|
|
finding the most comfortable of the lot. On Thursday evening he
|
|
saw a small sign he had never noticed before, though he had walked
|
|
down the same street several times. Neatly lettered by hand in
|
|
blue upon a white ground--it said simply "Calcutta", with a
|
|
downward pointing arrow. Jurgen descended the dark stairwell,
|
|
passed one steel door tightly closed with a padlock, and found
|
|
the next door unlocked. The same name was painted on the door
|
|
at eye level. He pushed it open and walked in, thinking he might
|
|
have found a restaurant a bit more exotic than the typical run
|
|
of cafes in the neighborhood. The lighting was dim, the decor
|
|
dark and spare. The place was lined with booths near the door,
|
|
but opened into a space taken over by a checkerboard tiled floor.
|
|
|
|
He could see there were only a few customers--not more than
|
|
five or six people, all told. He looked around slowly, holding
|
|
his viola case under one arm, the other hand laid across the top
|
|
of it. He was the only white person in the establishment.
|
|
|
|
Nobody turned to look at him, but kept right on with what
|
|
they were doing--drinking and smoking, talking quietly. It seemed
|
|
comfortable enough--and he saw some things of interest at the
|
|
far end of the room. There were four tables at that end, under
|
|
dim spotlights.
|
|
|
|
Jurgen walked slowly past the booths toward the spotlights.
|
|
A double bass sat on its side near the wall as if it were the
|
|
subject of the spotlights' illumination--it might jump up and
|
|
break into song any moment. An upright piano stood on the left,
|
|
lurking warily in the shadows, its top opened like a gaping jaw.
|
|
Jurgen knew this all meant music, and he made his way between
|
|
the tables to sit at the one nearest the instruments. It was
|
|
partially shadowed; an unlit candle stood in the middle of the
|
|
round table--a square table-cloth in white and red checks draped
|
|
haphazardly, held in place by the candle. Jurgen sat slowly on
|
|
the nearest wooden chair, facing the music; it creaked when he
|
|
put his weight on it. He set his viola case on the table and
|
|
slid it over so he could rest his left elbow on it.
|
|
|
|
He felt something stir, and looked behind him. A young
|
|
woman in a sleeveless sky-blue dress approached out of the shadows.
|
|
Her hair was pulled back tightly against her head, white teeth
|
|
gleamed in her dark face. She put one hand on the back of the
|
|
nearest booth, and leaning upon it, spoke to him.
|
|
|
|
"What'll it be?" she asked with quiet confidence. Her chin
|
|
rose when she finished asking, and she tilted her head to one
|
|
side, smiling.
|
|
|
|
Jurgen gazed at her--she had a pretty face with a narrow
|
|
chin and strikingly high cheekbones; her black eyes sparkled in
|
|
the spotlight. He did not really feel like drinking anything
|
|
intoxicating. "Something soft," he answered. "Something quite
|
|
soft and preferably cool."
|
|
|
|
She nodded and shoved herself off gracefully, trailing one
|
|
hand. Jurgen waited in silence, staring at the back wall. In
|
|
a few moments, the musicians--three black men in baggy workmen's
|
|
clothing--returned to the stage, gliding in stealthily, creeping
|
|
from a door to one side. Without a word, they sat down and took
|
|
up their instruments. The bass player heaved his double bass
|
|
upright, then sat upon a high stool and plucked a few notes.
|
|
The third man carried a clarinet, and standing in the center,
|
|
whipped his fingers through a few scales without making any sound.
|
|
They stole a few glances at each other--then broke simultaneously
|
|
into a molten jazz number, hot as a blast furnace. Jurgen sat
|
|
back slowly in his chair. The blazing tune crackled and sparked,
|
|
then settled into a long, burning ember; he could feel the thin
|
|
layer of ash building up around the coals until it gradually
|
|
settled into a warm mound of slow heat.
|
|
|
|
The young woman appeared with a Coca-Cola in a tall
|
|
glass--Jurgen only glanced at her when she set it down, and
|
|
returned his attention to the musicians. She slid past his table
|
|
and strode under the center spotlight--the clarinetist moved to
|
|
one side without missing a note, nodding at her. She whirled
|
|
around, snapped her fingers to pick up the slow beat--and launched
|
|
into song, so softly at first, he was not sure she was singing.
|
|
|
|
Her voice soon rose in a solo, weaving in and out of the
|
|
clarinet's melody. Flames rushed up to greet her voice--Jurgen
|
|
felt the hairs rising on the back of his neck and across his
|
|
scalp. She sang without words; low tones with all the
|
|
plaintiveness of an English horn, blending into the ensemble;
|
|
and at times her voice rose like a whispering flute and broke
|
|
into autumn leaves, tumbling in a light breeze--the fire crackled
|
|
behind her.
|
|
|
|
The splendor of it entranced Jurgen and he forgot his drink,
|
|
putting both elbows on the table to watch the woman sing. Her
|
|
voice was so rich, so well-trained and supple--he could have
|
|
imagined her on the opera stage, singing mezzo-soprano.
|
|
|
|
The ensemble rushed to a climax that shattered like a glass
|
|
against stone, and was silent. There were applause from the dark
|
|
cafe behind. Jurgen could make out each individual in the
|
|
audience--pitifully few customers to hear such a singer! He
|
|
applauded firmly, with authority, and continued until the last
|
|
clap had died behind him; three more decisive claps and he stopped.
|
|
|
|
The band played a few more numbers, standard blues fare and
|
|
a popular show-tune or two--the young woman sang, standing
|
|
perfectly still with her eyes closed, alone beneath a spotlight.
|
|
She bowed at last, arms outstretched with a beautiful smile, and
|
|
strode into the back. The musicians followed her out to take
|
|
another break.
|
|
|
|
The pianist lagged behind, following the others to the door,
|
|
then turned around and sat down at Jurgen's table, pulling his
|
|
chair close. The man had a few days' growth of beard. He was
|
|
completely bald--perhaps shaved, Jurgen decided--and his smile
|
|
revealed one missing tooth and two silver teeth. When he spoke,
|
|
his voice was deep and bubbly, like a slow pot of soup, simmering.
|
|
"Don't get many o' yer kind here," he began.
|
|
|
|
Jurgen flushed suddenly and swallowed, feeling a sense of
|
|
impending panic. He gaped momentarily, unable to think of a
|
|
reply. Might it be prudent to withdraw?
|
|
|
|
The man sat back and laughed loudly, thrusting his thumbs
|
|
into his belt. He thrust his head forward suddenly, grinning.
|
|
"I mean--you play that fiddle or jes set yer elbow on it?"
|
|
|
|
Jurgen felt instantly relieved, and regained his composure.
|
|
"Certainly I play it," he said, returning the man's smile with
|
|
some hesitation.
|
|
|
|
"Maybe you'll play somethin' for me? Maybe I'll buy yer
|
|
drink, too."
|
|
|
|
"Well--I--I've never played much--any--jazz," Jurgen said
|
|
slowly. "Folk tunes, show-tunes--on rare occasions. I'm a
|
|
symphony violist, by profession."
|
|
|
|
"Oh," the man answered, wrinkling his brow. "I see. Well,
|
|
it don' have to be blue--jes wanna see what you got... If it
|
|
ain't much trouble?"
|
|
|
|
"Alright." Jurgen pulled his viola case toward himself, and
|
|
scooted his chair back to give himself some room. He opened the
|
|
case, strummed the strings once to check the instrument's
|
|
tuning--close enough, he decided. While he rosined his bow he
|
|
tried to decide where he should start. He settled on a Hungarian
|
|
folk tune his grandmother used to play for him. It had a homey,
|
|
intimate quality; rather simple and easily manipulated. He
|
|
readied himself and then poured his heart into playing that
|
|
tune--he worked it around, swished it a few times, tried some
|
|
variations, caught the fever, and finished off with a fast
|
|
spiccato variation.
|
|
|
|
"Sounds like gypsy music," the man said when he had finished.
|
|
"Hot blood."
|
|
|
|
Jurgen smiled. "My grandmother--was Hungarian."
|
|
|
|
"Say," the man said, laying his hand atop the viola case,
|
|
"why don' you join us awhile? Play anything you like--jes name
|
|
it. We know 'bout most anything." He stood up and thrust out
|
|
his hand. "My name's Al," he concluded.
|
|
|
|
Jurgen clasped his hand. "Jurgen. A pleasure to meet you,
|
|
Mr. Al."
|
|
|
|
Al chuckled. "Nah, jes Plain Al. Come on over here..."
|
|
|
|
When the other musicians returned, the young woman--
|
|
Al introduced her as Mabel--sat at the table Jurgen had vacated.
|
|
He took one chair and joined the clarinetist under the spotlight.
|
|
|
|
"Do you know--uh..." Jurgen paused. "How about 'Nice Work
|
|
if You Can Get It'?"
|
|
|
|
"Mmm. George & Ira...," the clarinetist intoned reverently
|
|
with a wide grin. "Ever'body knows that one..."
|
|
|
|
They played a seething rendition that soon had Mabel on her
|
|
feet, improvising alongside Jurgen. She stood facing him, doubling
|
|
over to peer into his eyes, undulating while they ran on in
|
|
imitative counterpoint, two fish in a creek spilling down a
|
|
mountainside. The piano and clarinet stopped while they took
|
|
the tune up on their own, turning it over, peeking into all the
|
|
hidden motives, each musically entwined in the other. Mabel was
|
|
breathless when they finished, and let Plain Al take a solo before
|
|
leading them all back into the melody--Mabel broke into the last
|
|
verse and belted it through the room. There were pitifully few
|
|
customers to applaud.
|
|
|
|
The place was closing up, and Al sat with Jurgen and the
|
|
other musicians around a table. They each coddled a tall Coca-Cola
|
|
mixed with bourbon, and talked and talked, shooting answers and
|
|
questions at each other like they were playing hot-potato. They
|
|
were all semi-professional--none of them were paid for playing
|
|
at Calcutta. Mabel and her brother ran the place, under the eye
|
|
of a kindly landlord who never bothered them; he came in once or
|
|
twice a month, sat through a few songs, and left. Mabel and her
|
|
brother provided free food for anyone who wanted to play for the
|
|
evening. Times being what they were, they could not afford to
|
|
hire anyone to play--and had nothing else to draw any clientele.
|
|
The musicians all held regular jobs, off and on--mostly off, they
|
|
admitted--and Calcutta was like their own private paradise, where
|
|
they were real musicians, where people came to hear them play.
|
|
They were a comfortable bunch, wiling away their evenings with
|
|
music, going home with full stomachs.
|
|
|
|
Jurgen felt exhausted--he had been up since dawn--and when
|
|
he had finished his drink, begged to take his leave. He cradled
|
|
his viola case under one arm. "I'm wondering, Al," he said as
|
|
he stood up. "How this place came to be called 'Calcutta'?"
|
|
|
|
Al laughed. "That's Mabel's idea of jokin' I guess. Mabel,
|
|
she reads a lot--got some fine schoolin' too." Jurgen did not
|
|
comprehend immediately. Al flashed his silver teeth and leaned
|
|
forward with wide, laughing eyes. "Black Hole o' Calcutta?"
|
|
|
|
Jurgen chuckled. "I think I understand. Good night, Al."
|
|
|
|
"Come on back soon, Yoorgin," Al replied. "Play some more
|
|
with us."
|
|
|
|
"I'll do that." Jurgen put his hand to his head, then
|
|
remembered he had no hat. He smiled and walked out.
|
|
|
|
Jurgen returned to his room long after midnight, turned on
|
|
the single light, and sat upon the bed to look through his sheaf
|
|
of music. He tossed the music aside after a few minutes and laid
|
|
down to think back over the evening. It had been a long time
|
|
since he had had as much fun--sheer enjoyment--as that evening
|
|
with Plain Al and Mabel. She was remarkable--sophisticated and
|
|
graceful--they had played together as if they knew each other
|
|
intimately.
|
|
|
|
Something fluttered and fluttered against his eyelids--
|
|
he opened his eyes and looked up. A moth had somehow got into
|
|
the room, and fluttered around and around the lightbulb, casting
|
|
shadows that flitted. Annoyed to be cast from his reverie, he
|
|
took his towel and began flicking at the moth as it circled and
|
|
circled. Something about the lightbulb caught his attention
|
|
then--it was unusually shaped. He pulled the chair over beneath
|
|
it and standing carefully on the chair, looked at the slowly
|
|
swinging bulb before reaching out to grab the socket. Stamped
|
|
upon the end of the bulb in rough, smeared letters were three
|
|
words: Made in Hungary. He almost lost his balance for an
|
|
instant, and jumped to the floor with a thump. There was an
|
|
immediate answering thump from the room below, and Jurgen mentally
|
|
apologized to his lower neighbor.
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
Two days later, on a Saturday evening, after what had become
|
|
his accustomed daily rounds of playing on street-corners--Jurgen
|
|
found himself again descending the stairs into Calcutta. The
|
|
place was noisier than it had been before. There might have been
|
|
thirty people inside. He found a seat at the booth closest to
|
|
the spotlights--the open tables were full. A young waitress in
|
|
a slinky white dress came over to serve him. He decided to have
|
|
dinner there--a repayment to Mabel. The last time, he had only
|
|
ordered one drink, and when he thought back over the evening,
|
|
decided that he had in fact never paid for it or any of the drinks
|
|
he had with Al and the others. At least he could give her some
|
|
business by ordering dinner.
|
|
|
|
"Where's Mabel this evening?" he asked.
|
|
|
|
"Huh?" The waitress seemed confused. She let one knee
|
|
bend, and ran a hand quickly along the strap of her dress.
|
|
|
|
"Oh," he stammered, "I thought Mabel would be here."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, she's here," the waitress said, puzzled. "She don'
|
|
work tables though." She leaned on the table with one hand.
|
|
"Can I get you something to drink first?"
|
|
|
|
"I'll have a Coca-Cola."
|
|
|
|
The waitress left and came back with his drink. She set it
|
|
lightly on the table, with a battered cork coaster beneath, and
|
|
slid it in front of him. He ordered a few side dishes--words
|
|
spilling willy-nilly from his mouth while he glanced over the
|
|
menu. He was uncertain how much he should order and ended up
|
|
ordering far too much food to eat alone--but he felt that he
|
|
really owed Mabel something. Plain Al showed up later; Jurgen
|
|
walked over to say hello, and to thank him for so kindly allowing
|
|
him to play the other evening. Remembering that he had plates
|
|
of untouched food, he invited Al over to his table. They ate
|
|
together and talked about the late George Gershwin.
|
|
|
|
"Pity how he passed away so suddenly, ain't it?"
|
|
Al observed quietly.
|
|
|
|
"I'm sure he'll be counted among the greatest," Jurgen replied.
|
|
|
|
Jurgen joined the band and they spent the rest of the evening
|
|
working over tunes they all knew. Mabel came out and sang with
|
|
them, and they rounded out the evening with a few long numbers
|
|
just for the enjoyment of listening to each other. The crowd
|
|
seemed more appreciative than it had been before--Jurgen believed
|
|
that anything would have been an improvement. There were simply
|
|
more people present, so he felt they were more appreciative, but
|
|
he guessed it was all part of the same thing they heard every
|
|
Saturday night in Calcutta. There were a couple of other
|
|
musicians--a hot young sax player with a large belly and a low-hung
|
|
belt that barely held up a pair of wool pants with worn knees.
|
|
There was a wrinkled old man, half blind, who played blues with
|
|
his beat-up guitar--he had a hole the size of a silver dollar in
|
|
one shoe and he wore no socks. It was far from the symphony,
|
|
but Jurgen thoroughly enjoyed his second evening in Calcutta.
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
Dropping into the Calcutta to play the evening away quickly
|
|
became a pleasant habit over the next few weeks. Jurgen came to
|
|
consider his previous life as having been sheltered from some of
|
|
the finest home-spun music he had ever heard, and he decided
|
|
there was much to be learned here. Whether they worked in
|
|
factories or restaurants, or tended stores in the neighborhood,
|
|
the people who congregated around Mabel all seemed to have one
|
|
thing in common: concentrated musical talent. They were all
|
|
masters of jazz melody. He looked forward to his regular
|
|
visits--an especially welcome diversion after playing all day in
|
|
the cold, hanging around employment lines looking for symphony
|
|
work. The pennies he earned during the day mostly ended up in
|
|
Mabel's coffers--where Jurgen thought they should be. His own
|
|
savings began to dwindle. He increased the hours he spent
|
|
searching for good employment.
|
|
|
|
It seemed to Jurgen that every time he descended the dark
|
|
stairwell to Calcutta and opened the door, there were more
|
|
customers than had been there the last time. On the last Saturday
|
|
night before Christmas--it was Christmas Eve, in fact--Jurgen
|
|
arrived, thinking he would have dinner there. He threw open the
|
|
door and found the whole cafe crowded far beyond capacity. Every
|
|
booth was full, and there were two new tables plunked down in
|
|
the corner nearest the spotlights. Every table had an extra
|
|
person or two squeezed in. The place was like a morning train,
|
|
but the atmosphere of celebration swirled through the room with
|
|
the blue haze of cigarette smoke. Jurgen went slowly forward
|
|
toward the lights--but could not find a seat anywhere. The
|
|
musicians were out on a break, so the customers all talked among
|
|
themselves, laughing and cheering. He was about to ask someone
|
|
at one of the tables if they would mind him crowding in to watch,
|
|
but Al spotted him from the back doorway.
|
|
|
|
"Yoorgin! Come in back a while," he yelled, flailing his arm.
|
|
|
|
Jurgen waved back and pushed his way between the tables.
|
|
"Excuse me. I'm very sorry," he said as he squeezed through,
|
|
carrying his viola case over his head with both hands. He made
|
|
it to the door, and Al pulled him into the back.
|
|
|
|
"Here, have a glass of bourbon," Al said with his
|
|
silver-toothed grin. "Christmas Eve's time for a little
|
|
celebratin'!"
|
|
|
|
Al brought another rickety wooden chair over to a small
|
|
table where the musicians were gathered. Seated on one side was
|
|
Mabel, dressed in a fine long gown that sparkled with red sequins,
|
|
her hair tied up in a bright green turban; long dangling earrings.
|
|
She was the picture of Christmas, with a tipsy smile. A chef
|
|
and two young men in soiled aprons worked the kitchen stove and
|
|
oven, clanking pans and mixing bowls at the far end of the room;
|
|
the lights were bright.
|
|
|
|
"Jurgen," Mabel said as he sat down, "I was hoping you'd be
|
|
here this evening. I have something for you." She slid her hand
|
|
into the bosom of her low-cut gown, sending a ripple of laughter
|
|
among the musicians. "It's a Christmas present," she whispered,
|
|
fishing deeper and deeper--her shoulders wiggled in mirth.
|
|
"If I can find it..." She drove her hand deeper to keep them
|
|
all laughing.
|
|
|
|
Jurgen pulled his chair closer and held his viola case
|
|
upright between his legs. Al pushed a tumbler of bourbon in
|
|
front of him--and Mabel slapped five dollars onto the table with
|
|
both hands. "Now you go on and take this," she insisted. "Ever
|
|
since you showed up here, business has been getting better and
|
|
better. I want you to know how much we appreciate it."
|
|
|
|
Jurgen looked at the bill--it was a crisp, fresh five-dollar
|
|
note that had been folded, only once, in quarters. "Thank you,
|
|
Mabel," Jurgen said, then paused to fumble with his glass. He
|
|
did not touch the bill, but left it sitting on the table in front
|
|
of him. "I'm speechless." Everyone laughed.
|
|
|
|
"Now you just sit here a while with me," she continued.
|
|
"The rest of you go on out and play for a while. I want to talk
|
|
to Mr. Jurgen in private." A low murmuring sound swept them,
|
|
and they backed away. When Jurgen and Mabel were alone, she
|
|
raised her glass. "Here's to good business," she said.
|
|
|
|
"To good business," Jurgen replied, raising his own glass
|
|
and clinking it delicately against hers. "And a Merry Christmas
|
|
to all..."
|
|
|
|
"Now that," Mabel said, "is what I wanted to talk about."
|
|
She spoke quickly, with clarity--as if she had a speech memorized,
|
|
and was delivering it for an audience. She punctuated her
|
|
sentences with wispy motions of her long-nailed fingers. "I've
|
|
been wondering to myself just what kind of man you are. And I've
|
|
concluded that you're a pretty poor man." When Jurgen's smile
|
|
suddenly dripped away she stopped and closed her eyes theatrically.
|
|
"Oh, that was unfortunately phrased. I mean... you're not a
|
|
wealthy man."
|
|
|
|
Jurgen sat up straight, and Mabel laughed--then set her
|
|
glass down on the table. "It takes no Sherlock Holmes," she
|
|
continued, "to see that. Why, you've been in here nearly every
|
|
evening coming on six weeks--and in all that time, I don't believe
|
|
I've seen you in any clothes but the rags you have on now. You
|
|
must wash 'em, cause you don't smell like my grandpa's
|
|
barnyard--but I'd guess you don't have any other clothes."
|
|
|
|
Jurgen felt himself redden, and looked down, swirling the
|
|
bourbon in his glass until it ran up along the edge, almost
|
|
flowing over the rim. He should have packed a much larger
|
|
wardrobe, and left most of his music behind.
|
|
|
|
"I'm right, aren't I?"
|
|
|
|
"Al once told me you read voraciously."
|
|
|
|
Mabel tossed her head and laughed. "Not in those words,
|
|
I expect. But he's right. And Sherlock Holmes is one of my
|
|
favorites."
|
|
|
|
"Well," he answered slowly, "I must admit I'm rather between
|
|
full-time engagements at this time...and my wardrobe is minimal
|
|
at the moment... I do own a suit, and a top hat..."
|
|
|
|
"So I've been asking myself," she interrupted, "how you
|
|
live, and where you live. I've seen you on street-corners a few
|
|
times, too. Maybe that's all you do--play your viola--I know
|
|
well enough it's not just a 'fiddle'. So, where are you living
|
|
now?" She hung her wrist limply. "Are you on the street?"
|
|
|
|
"I'm presently lodging at the Charleston."
|
|
|
|
"Hew!" she exclaimed, waving her fingers. "That place?
|
|
Nobody of any worth lives at the Charleston. It's full of winos
|
|
and whores."
|
|
|
|
"It's inexpensive," Jurgen replied. "The decor leaves much
|
|
to be desired. But I'm afraid that I'll have to be moving along
|
|
to even cheaper lodgings by the new year."
|
|
|
|
"That bad?"
|
|
|
|
Jurgen nodded. He could probably hold out for another month
|
|
or two, but by then, he would have to close his new bank account.
|
|
|
|
"Well," she continued, "the Charleston is bad enough.
|
|
I just won't stand for one of my friends hanging his hat in a place
|
|
like that, or worse. Do you need a place to stay?"
|
|
|
|
He knew she was sincere, but the situation felt uncomfortably
|
|
close to charity. His grandmother had always warned against even
|
|
seeming to be in need of charity--let alone actually needing
|
|
help. "Really, Mabel, I couldn't presume to burden you with..."
|
|
|
|
"Now, stop it Jurgen," she said with a shake of her head.
|
|
She scooted her hips forward, cupping both hands around her
|
|
bourbon carefully as if she were settling in for a serious talk.
|
|
"Business here has never been better--and I think you've had a
|
|
lot to do with that. You bring a new sound, and people are paying
|
|
to hear it, and drink a few, and they're eating food, too...
|
|
My friend Dotty, just the other day said to me..." Mabel pressed
|
|
her hand to her breast and forced her voice to a higher pitch,
|
|
"Mabel, honey, I hear deyz a strange waat boy down at Calcutta--
|
|
plays jazz on de fiddle."
|
|
|
|
Jurgen laughed at her feigned accent.
|
|
|
|
Mabel let her voice drop to its normal pitch. "Are you
|
|
looking for regular work?"
|
|
|
|
"Nothing seems to be available in my line."
|
|
|
|
"Listen. First thing, we have to get you out of the
|
|
Charleston. Now, my brother's got an extra room--and he's already
|
|
said he'll put you up, cause I've asked him--any friend of his
|
|
sister is always welcome. So that leaves work."
|
|
|
|
"I really could not allow you to do that..."
|
|
|
|
"Well, hear me out, first, before you say that," she answered.
|
|
"I'm not half finished."
|
|
|
|
Jurgen put up a hand to acquiesce. "I'll hear you out."
|
|
|
|
"My old friend Dotty," she began. "We went to school together
|
|
you understand--when we were children, anyway. Now, Dotty works
|
|
for Miss Edna. And Miss Edna thinks the world of her because
|
|
she's so neat and organized. Miss Edna herself is a flighty
|
|
thing--she can hardly paint her own lips with both hands."
|
|
|
|
Jurgen laughed, then bent forward and cupped his glass the
|
|
way Mabel cupped hers, rolling it between his palms. Mabel had
|
|
such a way of expressing herself.
|
|
|
|
"Now Edna's lover-boy is a man named Lamonte. I don't know
|
|
what he sees in Edna--to look at her you wouldn't think she can
|
|
do anything right." She winked. "Miss Edna's got something
|
|
softer than brains; and it's not in her head."
|
|
|
|
Only the first part of what she said really caught his
|
|
attention. "You're speaking of Laurence Lamonte, the conductor?"
|
|
He took a quick sip of bourbon and rolled the glass again between
|
|
his palms, wondering where she was leading; almost seeing it.
|
|
|
|
"That's the man," Mabel replied with a firm nod of her head.
|
|
"With a little help from Edna--getting Lamonte in to hear you
|
|
play--you'll have something decent in no time." She sipped her
|
|
bourbon slowly, regarding him. "It won't be difficult."
|
|
|
|
"Why not?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh," she replied, moving closer with narrowed eyes.
|
|
"I know his secret--Dotty told me. Our Mr. Lamonte enjoys slipping
|
|
off discretely on occasion to hear some... jazz..." Putting both
|
|
palms on the table, she whispered. "The way I sometimes slip
|
|
off to sing... Schubert."
|
|
|
|
Jurgen laughed and sat back in his chair. "Schubert."
|
|
He did not feel particularly surprised; she probably sang all of
|
|
Schubert's lieder beautifully. She sat regarding him with a
|
|
half-smile, and appeared to be finished with her speech. He
|
|
thoughtfully tapped on his glass a few times, mulling over the
|
|
proposal, gazing at his fingers. Finally, he looked up to meet
|
|
her eyes. "You know just what to say."
|
|
|
|
Mabel smiled and reached out to pat his hand. "Be here
|
|
tomorrow," she replied, "with your luggage, and I'll take you to
|
|
meet my brother." She raised her glass, and met his in the middle
|
|
of the table with the lightest of taps.
|
|
|
|
He sipped. "I couldn't have asked for a nicer Christmas."
|
|
|
|
"I could say the same about you." She sipped once, then
|
|
slapped her glass down and stood up, adjusting her sequined gown
|
|
around her hips, then leaned over confidently. "I'll soon have
|
|
you joining my secret musical soirees, too." She pointed at the
|
|
table. "Now, don't forget your five dollars. Let's go make some
|
|
Christmas music." Jurgen slipped the bill into his shirt pocket,
|
|
then followed her out the door and into the spotlights.
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
On Christmas Day at eleven, Jurgen checked out of the
|
|
Charleston Residence Hotel. Packing took only a few minutes, as
|
|
he had little in the way of possessions. When he finished packing,
|
|
he switched off the light and set his valise and viola case down
|
|
outside the door. Leaving the door open, he went back into the
|
|
room and, holding a hand kerchief in his palm, stood on the chair
|
|
to carefully unscrew the hot bulb from its socket. He closed
|
|
the door behind him, then crouched in the hallway and put the
|
|
Hungarian lightbulb into his valise, carefully wrapped inside
|
|
his silk shirt.
|
|
|
|
|
|
=====================================================================
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHRISTMAS CONCERT
|
|
|
|
|
|
It was several nights before Christmas, and all along the
|
|
freeway, cars were lined up like a vast herd of red-nosed reindeer
|
|
being led off to slaughter. I glanced away from the sight and
|
|
reached out to snap off the radio. I'd had far too much of the
|
|
Messiah since Thanksgiving. You'd think a respectable classical
|
|
station could think of something more original to saturate the
|
|
airwaves with. But I knew that even if I changed the station,
|
|
I'd get White Christmas, or Blue Christmas, or Dixie Christmas,
|
|
or some other form of musical blasphemy. Traffic moved along
|
|
sluggishly, inching up a long, curving hill. It was raining
|
|
heavily--one of those sudden tropical storms, only it was happening
|
|
in a refrigerator. I had the windshield wipers on full, but
|
|
still I could hardly see the vehicle in front of me.
|
|
|
|
Along with every other irate father, uncle, brother, and
|
|
son who was late for some engagement or another, I was in the
|
|
fast lane. I had gotten caught in a last-minute sales meeting,
|
|
and I was going to be late for my daughter's concert if the idiot
|
|
in front of me didn't hurry up. The offending car was a Jeep,
|
|
jacked up on all fours with tires big enough to dwarf a
|
|
road-grader, and had struts and shock absorbers and what-not
|
|
sticking out all over the undercarriage--a real useful piece of
|
|
machinery for navigating the treacherous Silicon Valley freeways:
|
|
when you see a car you don't like, you just roll right over it.
|
|
The Jeep had one of those typical California vanity plates, held
|
|
in place by a brass frame which, had I been able to read it in
|
|
the dark, would have said "My other truck is a Mack." The driver
|
|
was pumping on his brakes continually, no doubt keeping time to
|
|
some Country Christmas Hit Classic. Lounging on top of this
|
|
pinnacle of western automotive engineering was a Christmas tree,
|
|
lashed with a couple pieces of thin twine--probably on its way
|
|
to a living room hung with paintings of nudes on black velvet,
|
|
and soon to be littered with tacky country decorations and strings
|
|
of popcorn. The tree listed to one side, bobbing over the edge
|
|
of the Jeep's roof in time with the blinking brake lights. The
|
|
driver's girlfriend was smooching up to him in the front seat--
|
|
I could see her outline through the back window, practically sitting
|
|
in his lap... maybe she _was_ in his lap. I started thinking they
|
|
probably deserved to lose the whole tree. They'd have a real
|
|
nice surprise when they got home without it.
|
|
|
|
I reached over to turn on the radio again, thinking the
|
|
hourly excerpt from the Messiah might be over by then. I should
|
|
have brought a tape from home, but I'd barely had time to change
|
|
my suit. Just when my eyes were averted for an instant, the
|
|
Christmas-tree bedecked vehicle in front of me decided to drop
|
|
its load. I felt my car go bump, bump, and slammed on my brakes
|
|
before I even looked up. The car behind me skidded and swerved
|
|
to one side, then leaned on his horn as if he'd run into an
|
|
iceberg. I just hit the emergency lights and leaned on my own
|
|
horn. The guy in front, perhaps hearing the tooting chorus behind
|
|
him, stopped just down the road, and like an idiot, put his Jeep
|
|
into reverse and came hurtling back toward me. He skidded to a
|
|
stop and put on his emergency lights.
|
|
|
|
What kind of jerk ties down a Christmas tree so loosely that
|
|
it flops off in the middle of a freeway? We were only doing
|
|
twenty miles an hour--in the rain, no less. I thought I would
|
|
have to get out and check the extent of the damage, and I wasn't
|
|
happy about slogging in the rain with my dress shoes on.
|
|
Hallelujah, the jerk stopped, anyway, so I could at least get
|
|
the name of his insurance company--I'd already memorized his
|
|
personal license number (which doesn't bear repeating--I'd always
|
|
thought the DMV had standards of decency).
|
|
|
|
I hopped out, trying to pull up the collar of my overcoat
|
|
even though it wouldn't quite cover my head, and started walking
|
|
forward to have a few choice words with Mister Country Jamboree
|
|
in the over-endowed automobile. Of course, CJ (as I then dubbed
|
|
the driver) bounded out of the Jeep and headed my way, tucking
|
|
in his shirt as he walked. One look at him, and I almost turned
|
|
around and left--CJ could have been Paul Bunyan's twin brother.
|
|
He had the shirt to prove it, too: red and black lumberjack
|
|
style checks, with the top three buttons undone, and chest hair
|
|
that was thicker than my beard. He also wore cowboy boots and
|
|
wide red suspenders.
|
|
|
|
"Holy moley, mister!" he yelled with a tone of real concern.
|
|
"You alright?"
|
|
|
|
I was about to lay into him when his gum-chewing girlfriend
|
|
appeared from behind, tucking herself into his armpit. "Oh!"
|
|
she squealed, "Ah'm so sorry! Looks like our tree smashed up
|
|
your brand new car!"
|
|
|
|
My car wasn't exactly brand new, but I looked around to
|
|
where she pointed. Sure enough, the front grill was bent in and
|
|
one headlight had gone out, the glass completely smashed. The
|
|
tree itself was nestled cozily under the car, nuzzling up against
|
|
the oil pan.
|
|
|
|
The look of childish helplessness on both their faces--
|
|
and frankly what I considered might be a moderate dose of dull
|
|
wittedness--somehow got to me just then, and I couldn't quite
|
|
bring myself to swear at them. Besides, the fastest thing to do
|
|
would be to shrug it off with a happy face, extract their battered
|
|
shrubbery from beneath my car, and be on my way. I decided that
|
|
silliness would carry the day. "Merry Christmas!" I called,
|
|
throwing out my arms. "Sorry about your tree!" Both of them
|
|
lit up in grins.
|
|
|
|
"Look--he ain't even mad," the guy said to his girlfriend.
|
|
|
|
She batted her lashes in astonishment. "We're awfully sorry
|
|
about this," she chimed, wagging her head.
|
|
|
|
It only took a minute to get the tree out from under the
|
|
car. All the while, I was thinking of how to explain it to the
|
|
patrolman who would undoubtedly appear in a moment: it's just
|
|
another roadkill, officer, nothing to be alarmed about; I'm sure
|
|
it happens all the time, what with all these trees swooping down
|
|
on unsuspecting holiday merrymakers.
|
|
|
|
The tree was pretty battered up around the lower branches,
|
|
but it really could have sufficed to cheer someone's holiday--
|
|
if one cut off a couple feet from the bottom and turned the bad
|
|
side toward the wall so it couldn't be seen. You only decorate
|
|
half the tree anyway, right? I started trying to explain this
|
|
to my countrified acquaintances, but they would have none of it.
|
|
|
|
"Look, mister," CJ drawled, propping up the tree with one
|
|
hand. "We busted out yer headlight. Hell, the least I can do
|
|
is give ya the tree."
|
|
|
|
The woman tilted her head and shot out a hand to touch my
|
|
arm. She had a horrified look in her wide eyes that I could
|
|
see even through her dripping mascara. "You ain't already got
|
|
one do ya, mister?"
|
|
|
|
I glanced at my watch and tried to weasel out of it.
|
|
I'd already nixed the idea of a Christmas tree--told my family
|
|
(meaning my daughter, Jenny) we weren't having one that year,
|
|
and that was final. They just shed all over the carpets and had
|
|
to be tossed out at precisely the right moment in January or the
|
|
city garbage folks wouldn't pick them up. We'd had a tree one
|
|
year that sat around well into February because we missed the
|
|
magic pick-up date. I finally chopped it into little bits and
|
|
threw it out a piece at a time over the next six weeks. I had
|
|
no use whatever for a Christmas tree.
|
|
|
|
In the end, I didn't want to argue with them--it was cold,
|
|
exceedingly wet, and I was already going to be late for the
|
|
concert. So CJ helped me load the mortally wounded conifer into
|
|
my trunk. We groped around for the twine, but couldn't find it,
|
|
so he battened down the lid with his girlfriend's belt. She had
|
|
high-tailed it back into the Jeep to wait for him out of the
|
|
rain. He whispered into my ear while he cinched up the belt.
|
|
"She don't really need her belt," he said. "I'd have it off her
|
|
in another couple o' miles anyways." He gave me a wink and wished
|
|
me a Merry Christmas.
|
|
|
|
By the time I arrived at the hall, the concert had long
|
|
since begun and it was almost intermission. I detest arriving
|
|
late for these things, and I had to wait around the lobby until
|
|
the first part was over. I was thankful I'd not been any later.
|
|
Jenny would have been sorely disappointed if I'd missed her big
|
|
debut: about twenty minutes from the time I arrived in the lobby,
|
|
she was scheduled to begin her first public performance as a
|
|
featured soloist--playing "Harold in Italy". If you don't know
|
|
it, it's a fine piece of music, but it's not in the
|
|
frequently-performed repertoire, because it's sort of a
|
|
half-fledged concerto for viola. Not the violin or the cello--
|
|
the viola: underdog of all orchestral instruments.
|
|
|
|
My daughter Jenny wasn't always a violist. We started her
|
|
out right on the violin--something I considered a respectable
|
|
instrument for a young lady. My ex-wife and I had faint hopes
|
|
that someday she'd be a concert violinist--Jenny was that good
|
|
from the time she picked up her first quarter-sized fiddle.
|
|
We spent a fortune on expensive teachers, and as soon as she was
|
|
ready, we started her on the long track: youth symphony. But
|
|
just after her fourteenth birthday, something happened to her
|
|
brain. I don't mean a pre-mature stroke or some kind of lesion.
|
|
She came home one day with this hideous dreamy look in her eyes,
|
|
and she puttered around the kitchen nervously helping me cook.
|
|
She wasn't talking very much.
|
|
|
|
I didn't want to probe, figuring she'd tell me what was on
|
|
her mind when she was ready. "I have to go to Milan next month,"
|
|
I said, trying to be cheerful.
|
|
|
|
She was tearing lettuce leaves into microscopic fragments,
|
|
and she looked up. "Will you see Grandma?"
|
|
|
|
Jenny meant my mother--fountainhead of all family quirks.
|
|
As a bright-eyed Italian girl of seventeen she married her American
|
|
sweetheart and came to the States. It turned out to be a terrible
|
|
marriage, and years later, after dutifully raising four kids,
|
|
she divorced my father, American style, and went home to the Old
|
|
Country. Jenny had only met her a few times, but when they did
|
|
meet you couldn't pry them apart.
|
|
|
|
"Uh-huh. I thought I might take you along, if you can stand
|
|
it," I teased. I pulled the salad bowl away from her and tossed
|
|
in the tomato I had been cutting. "We'll leave the day before
|
|
spring-break."
|
|
|
|
She brightened a bit at that, and with a very limp wrist,
|
|
laid a whole leaf of lettuce on top of the chopped tomato.
|
|
"Can we stop in Vienna?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I don't know, Jenny... Maybe for a day or two."
|
|
|
|
She put on a weak smile. "Can we go to the opera?" she
|
|
asked softly. Jenny's enthusiasm for opera was phenomenal.
|
|
She must have inherited that from my mother, too--I always thought
|
|
half the reason she went back to Milan was because they did too
|
|
many German operas in San Francisco.
|
|
|
|
"Only if you can drag Grandma along." I picked up the salad
|
|
and two bowls, then waltzed away toward the dining room.
|
|
|
|
Over dinner she made her momentous announcement. I had just
|
|
put a big bite of steak into my mouth and was chewing thoughtfully.
|
|
I even recall we were listening to something by Prokofiev.
|
|
|
|
"Daddy, I'm going to switch," she said quickly with an air
|
|
of non-chalance.
|
|
|
|
I paused, finished chewing, and then fell right into the
|
|
pit. "That's fine, honey..." Another pause. She wasn't looking
|
|
right at me, and I leaned over to try to catch her eye. "You're
|
|
going to switch what?"
|
|
|
|
She stabbed at her steak, fork delicately held in her left
|
|
hand just like we'd taught her all her life. "To viola." She
|
|
slid a small piece of steak into her mouth and started chewing.
|
|
|
|
I gagged, and put down my fork, but she kept on chattering
|
|
with her mouth full, trying to convince me before I could even
|
|
voice the beginning of an objection. Finally she appealed to my
|
|
conceit. "You want me to be a great musician, right Daddy?"
|
|
|
|
I tried to agree that had been our hope, but I was still
|
|
trying to catch my breath.
|
|
|
|
"Well, I'm sitting third-desk right now. Do you know what
|
|
that _means_?" she whined. "I'll never get anywhere in a concert
|
|
career. You have to sit first-desk--or be the concert mistress."
|
|
|
|
I coughed a couple more times. "But you're doing fine,"
|
|
I insisted. "You're the best."
|
|
|
|
She gave me her old half-frown, pulling down one side of
|
|
her mouth and screwing up her eyes, then rolling them away toward
|
|
the ceiling. "Daddy," she said, "I'm not the best. Mary is the
|
|
best." She pushed another piece of steak onto her fork. "I'm
|
|
sitting third desk with Deadpan Wang." She got that dreamy look
|
|
again, and balanced her fork on two fingers. "But if I switch
|
|
to viola--they're always in greater demand you know, because
|
|
fewer people play viola, Daddy--I could be sitting first desk."
|
|
|
|
"Look," I told her, "you've already won a couple of
|
|
competitions, are you going to throw all that effort away, and
|
|
take up... the _viola_?" I actually gulped.
|
|
|
|
"_You_ might call it winning," she shot back, "but I've never
|
|
taken better than second place."
|
|
|
|
"What about the cello?"
|
|
|
|
"Daddy," she whined again, putting down her knife and picking
|
|
up her milk. "The technique is too different--you should have
|
|
started me on cello ten years ago."
|
|
|
|
"Does your mother know about this?"
|
|
|
|
She twirled her fork among her green beans and wouldn't meet
|
|
my eyes. "No." She looked up with knotted eyebrows. "She
|
|
doesn't care."
|
|
|
|
"Jenny, she does too..." I let that trail off lamely and
|
|
we ate in silence for a while.
|
|
|
|
Now, I had nothing particular against the viola, as an
|
|
instrument. Frankly speaking, I've known a couple of violists
|
|
pretty intimately--and I've always found violists to be warm and
|
|
tender people. Much less high-strung, so to speak, than
|
|
violinists. Not quite as passionate as cellists. But I would
|
|
hardly have considered the viola to be a prestigious solo
|
|
instrument. How many famous violists can you name? How many
|
|
great viola concertos? "The repertoire is too limited," I said,
|
|
speaking what was on my mind. This fact did not deter her
|
|
determination.
|
|
|
|
"Mr. Rossi thinks I'd make a great violist," she replied.
|
|
There was that look again, right in her light brown eyes. Just
|
|
like her mother.
|
|
|
|
I had a sudden insight: my teenage daughter had a crush on
|
|
the conductor. He needed a violist, and apparently he was astute
|
|
enough to take advantage of a young girl's infatuation to get
|
|
one. Maybe I'd have a word about cradle robbing with Mr. Rossi.
|
|
Well, no that was a bit much, I decided. Jenny would have given
|
|
me the silent treatment for a week. I'd have to stay calm.
|
|
I told her to think about it for a while, and after a couple weeks,
|
|
if she still wanted to descend to being a violist, we'd see.
|
|
|
|
Half an hour later, while I did the dishes, she was on the
|
|
phone to someone, and jabbered away for a couple of hours to her
|
|
friends while she dragged the phone all over the living room.
|
|
I decided again I'd have to join the modern age and get a cordless
|
|
phone. She probably was about ready for her own private line.
|
|
I thought maybe I ought to make her pay for it, too.
|
|
|
|
Jenny worked her way up to first desk within a year of taking
|
|
up her beloved viola, and despite myself I was beginning to be
|
|
slightly proud of her. She really was in higher demand, and was
|
|
constantly so involved with chamber ensembles, youth symphony,
|
|
flitting here and there, that a lot of her schoolwork was suffering
|
|
noticeably. Her grade-point average dropped until she was barely
|
|
maintaining a "B". We had a little talk about that, and decided
|
|
mutually (or at least I like to think it was mutual) that she
|
|
needed to pull it up, or I'd pull the plug on all her
|
|
extra-curricular activities.
|
|
|
|
So there I was, three years later, pacing the lobby, waiting.
|
|
I heard applause in the auditorium, so I snuck in the door.
|
|
The hall was packed solid. At least it seemed packed solid for
|
|
a moment. I found a pretty lousy seat near the back and plopped
|
|
myself down while I looked around for something closer. I spotted
|
|
an aisle seat near the middle, so I moved down and slid into it.
|
|
I need not have rushed--it was intermission, so I sat there for
|
|
ten minutes contemplating. Soon, the orchestra filed back in
|
|
and the audience bustled around to reclaim their seats. The
|
|
conductor, the notorious Mr. Rossi, re-appeared on stage, and
|
|
the orchestra stood for him. I waited through the next torturous
|
|
work on the menu, hoping it would be over quickly. When it ended,
|
|
I clapped a couple of times and hoped the rest of the audience
|
|
didn't go wild.
|
|
|
|
When the applause died out, I found I was holding my breath.
|
|
Then, Jenny appeared in the wings, and strolled forward, her
|
|
instrument dangling easily from one hand. I could see her scan
|
|
the crowd and smile--she was really just looking for me. I felt
|
|
like waving, but that would have been gauche, so I kept my hands
|
|
to myself. There she was, her black skirt billowing from a waist
|
|
and hips that resembled her mother's gorgeous figure more each
|
|
time I noticed it. Her starched white blouse almost crackled.
|
|
She had spent half an hour fussing over it with the iron, then
|
|
spent another half an hour getting every speck of lint off her
|
|
silk skirt. I noticed that her shoe-laces were untied, as usual, and
|
|
broke out in a smile. At that instant, she tripped over the foot
|
|
of a music stand--an intense foreboding chill shot through my
|
|
spine and flashed along every nerve in my body when I saw her
|
|
sailing headlong toward the floor. A gasp went up from the crowd,
|
|
and the applause stopped immediately.
|
|
|
|
Her reflexes, I must admit, were those of a well-bred cat,
|
|
and her instinct for self-preservation must never have been
|
|
stronger: her viola never hit the floor. The conductor, wheeling
|
|
around when he heard the clattering sound, stepped from his podium
|
|
to assist her in standing again. One of the violinists, whose
|
|
improperly placed music stand had done the damage, put down his
|
|
violin to pick up the debris. The conductor had a few words with
|
|
Jenny, and then he escorted her off the stage. She limped, and
|
|
would put no weight on one leg. Rossi's arm seemed to be
|
|
practically fondling her chest and I felt a surge of fatherly
|
|
irritation. I was already on my feet when they started off, and
|
|
was trotting down the aisle toward the front of the auditorium.
|
|
|
|
"I'm her father," I shouted at the old ladies who tried to
|
|
stop me from ascending the side stairs. By then, some numbskull
|
|
appeared from the wings to make an announcement that there would
|
|
be a slight delay, and ask the audience to please wait a few
|
|
moments. "Tell 'em a few jokes," I suggested as I dashed past.
|
|
I didn't wait to hear what he said next, but ran into the back,
|
|
looking for the green room. I was certain that's where she would
|
|
have gone. I hoped they had a doctor handy.
|
|
|
|
In another minute or two, I was with Jenny and the infamous
|
|
Mr. Rossi, who had his arm around her waist and was consoling
|
|
her in oily whispers. She sat with her priceless viola set across
|
|
her lap--well, it was priceless enough to me, as I couldn't afford
|
|
to buy another one like it even if I sold both of my cars. Her
|
|
bow had been snapped in two and was draped across the viola, two
|
|
pieces of splintered wood dangling from white horsehair. She
|
|
wept into the palm of one hand.
|
|
|
|
"Darling, are you OK?" I asked, rushing up to her. Mr. Rossi
|
|
wisely removed his roaming hand and stood back a few steps.
|
|
|
|
"I think I just sprained my ankle," she replied, but that
|
|
was not the uppermost thing on her mind. "Oh, Daddy--look at my
|
|
bow!"
|
|
|
|
"Hey, we can get a new one," I told her, lifting it up.
|
|
"I saw the way you saved your viola," I said, trying to sound
|
|
cheerful. "It was a great maneuver!"
|
|
|
|
She didn't smile. "But... how am I going to _play_?"
|
|
|
|
I turned to Mr. Rossi. "Look, I'll take her to see a
|
|
doctor, and..."
|
|
|
|
"NO!" Jenny screamed. "I have to go on! There are people
|
|
waiting out there!"
|
|
|
|
"Honey," I replied, "you have to see a doctor right away."
|
|
|
|
"Daddy--people paid _money_ to see me play tonight..."
|
|
She started crying again. "If I don't go on I'll be humiliated
|
|
forever!"
|
|
|
|
Under his breath, Rossi was making ecstatic noises in a
|
|
thick, and quite ineffable, European accent. He sounded like a
|
|
bad Italian wine with a French label--bottled in Austria and
|
|
shipped via the Trans-Siberian Railway to Alaska where it was
|
|
smuggled south on a Canadian ship. "She eez a true artiste..."
|
|
|
|
Try as I might, I could not convince her to come away with
|
|
me. She was stubborn in that way--more stubborn than her mother
|
|
had ever been. Mr. Rossi was no help at all in the matter either:
|
|
he seemed to agree with her!
|
|
|
|
"But you can't stand up," I added, still trying to convince her.
|
|
|
|
"I'll sit," she replied curtly. Her tears had all dried up
|
|
by then.
|
|
|
|
"Oh yais, eets no problaim," Mr. Rossi interjected, "we'll
|
|
seemply yoos ainuther baow." I shot him a look that shut him up
|
|
immediately.
|
|
|
|
Jenny insisted on performing. She always carried another
|
|
bow, and now the wisdom of that practice was proven.
|
|
Unfortunately, it would have to suffice, though she had repeatedly
|
|
decried it as being "quite an inferior stick" for playing anything
|
|
serious. She got her elitism from her mother, too.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Rossi clapped his hands, entirely relieved. "Ah, but
|
|
ZEES awdiense weel nevair hear souch subtle deefferense!" I knew
|
|
what he meant too--the auditorium was filled with hundreds of
|
|
glassy eyed parents, siblings, and tiny tots; half of them probably
|
|
could not even spell "viola". Mr. Rossi practically pranced
|
|
away--off to see the numbskull and make another announcement:
|
|
the soloist was unharmed; the show would go on.
|
|
|
|
Jenny had only one further thought: she'd had enough time
|
|
to stop shaking, but she was so unnerved by the experience that
|
|
she decided she could never trust herself to play from memory.
|
|
"I really must have the score, Daddy. I should."
|
|
|
|
The ladies of the green room were bustling around, trying
|
|
to fawn over her, but keeping a respectful distance from her
|
|
father, whom they correctly perceived to be an ape in a touchy
|
|
mood. Oh, yes, they all agreed whole-heartedly that it would be
|
|
no disgrace at all. Plenty of soloists had played before with
|
|
the music in front of them. And considering the state of her
|
|
nerves, the audience would be so relieved--and honored--to have
|
|
her play at all, that they would forgive the minor irregularity
|
|
of playing from the music. By all means, she must have the score.
|
|
|
|
Reluctantly, I finally gave in and knelt down to tie her
|
|
shoe-laces. She could not stand unassisted--we tried a few
|
|
experimental steps and she collapsed immediately under her
|
|
own weight. One of the ladies produced an ace bandage, so we
|
|
tied up her ankle, which had swollen so much it looked like
|
|
a baked yam. A chair was taken onto the stage for her to sit.
|
|
And of course, since she would be playing from the score,
|
|
she needed a page turner.
|
|
|
|
It was the hand of fate: I knew the music, and I was wearing
|
|
a black suit. "Honey--I'll turn the pages," I offered boldly
|
|
before anyone else could volunteer. "Just like we used to do."
|
|
|
|
She gave me that little-girl smile--I'd hardly seen it in
|
|
ten years, but it made me feel like a real father again.
|
|
"Oh, Daddy, would you?"
|
|
|
|
"Come on," I said, putting my arm around her. "I'll escort
|
|
my princess to her throne." She laughed, and we left the green
|
|
room with her limping along beside me.
|
|
|
|
Now, I'm not much of a theatre person. I never attend plays,
|
|
and the last time I was on stage I was in the third grade. By
|
|
the time we reached the wings, I knew my face had already turned
|
|
the color of a ripe tomato and I was sweating. I should have
|
|
let one of the bustling ladies turn pages for her. How I could
|
|
face an audience, I had no idea. I concentrated on keeping my
|
|
daughter's weight off her sprained ankle.
|
|
|
|
As we sat down, I had a brief moment to look out and feel
|
|
terrified. The auditorium was dark, so I could only see the
|
|
first few rows. And I could sense the breathing masses beyond
|
|
the lights, hovering expectantly in the shadows, ready to slash
|
|
me to ribbons. A hot wind was blowing in over the bobbing heads
|
|
in the front; their forked tongues wagged angrily as they coiled
|
|
slowly. I could almost see the sand whipping across the dunes.
|
|
They were pretty damp dunes, though, since it was a rainy night.
|
|
I could feel the intense humidity in the breeze. The conductor
|
|
gave a nod, with a broad smile in our direction, and the orchestra
|
|
struck up with the soft introduction.
|
|
|
|
I panicked at first, shooting my eyes across the page of
|
|
music, trying to remember what I was supposed to be doing. Where
|
|
was the first page turn? I couldn't even remember how to read
|
|
the little black dots. The page took on the look of an obscure
|
|
foreign document splayed out across the music stand, filled with
|
|
incomprehensible ink blots. It was a Rorschach test for the
|
|
incurably insane. The whole scene was backed by the restless,
|
|
peering faces of the audience. I closed my eyes briefly, trying
|
|
to calm myself. I snapped them open immediately, however.
|
|
If I had my eyes closed, I would miss Jenny's signal. If that
|
|
happened, I knew all would be lost for certain. I'd be laughed
|
|
off the stage, and she would be ruined before she had even begun.
|
|
|
|
Only an eccentric maniac like Rossi the Terrible would have
|
|
picked "Harold in Italy" for the finale of a Christmas concert.
|
|
It's not seasonal in the least--what was wrong with something
|
|
seasonal that didn't require a viola solo? But I guess, the
|
|
orchestra was ready, Jenny was ready--maybe under his mop of
|
|
stringy and vaguely European hair he thought it would be an
|
|
exquisitely quirky touch to perform it for Christmas instead of
|
|
waiting until spring.
|
|
|
|
The first few page turns passed without incident, and my
|
|
heart-rate steadily decreased toward normal. She nodded knowingly
|
|
at just the right instants, and I managed to turn the pages
|
|
without spilling everything all over the floor or uttering a
|
|
primal scream. After that, each page turn became easier, and I
|
|
found that by the time we were well into the piece, I was breathing
|
|
again, and I could follow the score. I began to get cocky too,
|
|
and took a few glances at the audience out of the corner of my
|
|
eye. I could feel the rapture, starting up out there somewhere
|
|
like a wisp of cool air. She was playing beautifully,
|
|
passionately. Mr. Rossi was conducting as brilliantly as he
|
|
could--at least his expansive gesticulations looked fervent.
|
|
I had heard the piece so many times--the solo passages anyway--
|
|
that I knew it by heart. But hearing it then, pouring from
|
|
Jenny's viola backed by the shimmering of Berlioz' orchestration,
|
|
it took on a sublime quality that I had completely forgotten.
|
|
It had been a long time since I had really listened to "Harold
|
|
in Italy", and all the old memories started to come back.
|
|
|
|
The second movement has a quality like a caravan painted in
|
|
broad, colorful strokes. It starts out very softly, and builds
|
|
up as the caravan approaches, passes by the listener, and then
|
|
eventually recedes into the distance. It's a striking section,
|
|
and personally I think it's the best part of the whole work.
|
|
By that time, I was alert again, and was trying to gauge the audience
|
|
reaction. I had started to recognize individual faces, and
|
|
remember where they were--I had been turning pages for more than
|
|
fifteen minutes. I kept track of where people were looking,
|
|
whether they folded their hands, how they tilted their heads at
|
|
certain points. I didn't hear a lot of coughing and shuffling
|
|
either. As my eyes grew accustomed to looking at them, I could
|
|
see further, beyond the first few rows. They really were--
|
|
I suppose a Victorian might have said "transported"--by the music.
|
|
I flipped the page again at Jenny's nod.
|
|
|
|
I had noticed previously one rather large woman near the
|
|
front row. She was all dressed up with several long strings of
|
|
pearls and a long dress of medium golden-brown shades with lacy
|
|
white frills and a high collar. She had pale, white skin, and
|
|
her brunette hair was tied up in a hideous bun and topped with
|
|
a white flower. The whole outfit made her look like an overdressed
|
|
turkey dinner with all the trimmings and those little white caps
|
|
on the drumsticks. She seemed for a long while to be even more
|
|
"transported" than anyone else. I could see the rouge on her
|
|
cheeks; her lips were parted and she bent forward. The next time
|
|
I chanced to look her way, near the end of the second movement,
|
|
she was crying into her handkerchief.
|
|
|
|
At that moment, as the caravan was fading into the distance,
|
|
I had a kind of revelation that I'll never forget. This is what
|
|
it's all about, really, I told myself. This is Jenny's life,
|
|
and the kind of emotions she can evoke in an audience are her
|
|
special gift. Maybe I had never really come to terms with the
|
|
direction she had chosen. I started to feel tingly and blurry
|
|
eyed. If she, with her playing, could bring tears to even one
|
|
large woman in a worse-than-average audience, she must also be
|
|
bringing joy to another, and at least some feeling to someone
|
|
else; maybe everyone else. If she really wanted to do that with
|
|
a viola instead of a violin--bringing a new kind of life to a
|
|
little regarded solo instrument--I felt I could finally accept
|
|
it. Somehow, over the past three years, my opposition to her
|
|
taking up the viola had completely blinded me to the fact that
|
|
she was actually succeeding. It felt like her destiny beginning
|
|
to unfold. I was sitting on stage with my seventeen year-old
|
|
daughter, actually participating in her debut as a soloist. How
|
|
many fathers have that opportunity, I wondered. I felt a growing
|
|
sense of privilege attending the event, and I was elated by the
|
|
time the third movement was over. Jenny would fly away from me,
|
|
of course, into some concert career, climbing ever higher--
|
|
the inevitable result of a child growing into an independent woman
|
|
with a great art to unleash on the world. Whether she ever became
|
|
a famous soloist or not, I thought at that moment, was irrelevant.
|
|
It was really the ambience that she lived for; not only the brief
|
|
moments of performing, but also the people around her--the friends
|
|
with whom she played and passed her time, the practicing, the
|
|
dedication; even Mr. Rossi, whether I really liked him or not.
|
|
I could hardly keep tears out of my eyes long enough to turn
|
|
pages through the end of the fourth movement.
|
|
|
|
When the music finished and the last blast faded into the
|
|
walls, there was fully ten seconds of absolute silence in the
|
|
auditorium. What happened to all the tiny tots? I almost wondered
|
|
if the audience had gone to sleep! The applause began from the
|
|
front--the large woman held her handkerchief between two fat
|
|
fingers, and was applauding wildly, ecstatically, leading the
|
|
crowd. I had never seen such fervor in a spectator. She was
|
|
shaking her head, back and forth--I could see the tears glistening
|
|
on her cheeks--she threw kisses. In an instant, the applause
|
|
grew to a tremendous roar that crashed against the front of the
|
|
stage... and then the audience, en masse, were on their feet.
|
|
I could almost not believe it--a standing ovation for "Harold in
|
|
Italy"? No, it was all for Jenny.
|
|
|
|
The reception afterwards was gorgeous. I stood back, still
|
|
hovering close to Jenny while she took the greetings of her
|
|
friends and random members of the audience, including the large
|
|
woman with the handkerchief. I sipped a California white wine
|
|
that was far too young and sassy, and let her bask for nearly an
|
|
hour. She still could not stand up, of course, so they had
|
|
brought her a padded chair from somewhere, and she sat
|
|
straight-backed like a little monarch, with a big bouquet of pink
|
|
roses nestled in the crook of one arm, nodding and smiling.
|
|
The other hand was perpetually extended to receive other hands--
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|
and on a few occasions to receive a kiss from some lecherous
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old geezer.
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It ended all too soon for Jenny, I could see. But when I
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glanced at her face as the last of the stragglers were leaving
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the room, I could tell she was dead tired. The pain in her ankle
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could not be masked any longer either. She winced and stretched
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out her legs when I approached.
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"Daddy, let's stop by the hospital on the way home, OK?
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Just to make sure it's not broken or anything."
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I laughed. "Sure thing, Jenny." She had always been small,
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like her mother, and had never grown too big to carry. I lifted
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her up, and holding her viola case in one hand, carried her out
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to the parking lot. The rain had stopped, and half the clouds
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had dispersed. The moon lit up the remaining clouds like big
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silver scoops over the far hills--and a few stars twinkled overhead
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in the cold air.
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I whirled around, and around as I walked. "Let's see,"
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I kept saying, "was it this way?" And I would whirl her one way.
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"Or was it that way?" She was in giggles, with her arms clasped
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behind my neck.
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We found the car--I knew where it was all along, but I was
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having fun. When we reached the car, I set her down on her feet
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for a moment to fish my keys out of my pocket. Meanwhile,
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I handed her the viola case, and she took it absently. She turned
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around then, and seeing the front of the car for the first time,
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burst out in a squeal. "What the hell happened to your car?"
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She limped to follow me to the door.
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"Little mishap on the freeway," I replied, unlocking the
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passenger door. Her eyes went from the front grill back along
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the side of the car. I couldn't help smiling when her eyes
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stopped at the trunk. It was half open, with big sprigs of fir
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tree bulging out all over.
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"Oh, Daddy..." she whispered, clutching my shoulder. I heard
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that warm tone come back into her voice and she embraced me.
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"You said we weren't going to have a tree this year..."
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"Changed my mind, honey," I replied. "Besides--it was too
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cheap to pass up." I grabbed her viola case out of her hand.
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"Got it from mah ol' frenn CJ," I drawled.
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She looked at me like I was made of goat cheese. "What?"
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"Get in, I'll tell you about it on the way," I answered,
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holding the door for her. "Poor thing had an accident on the
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freeway, but it ain't nothin' a little amputation won't fix."
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***************************************************************
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End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of
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Violists by Richard McGowan
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