Vasilis Afxentiou
Ilianna didn't wake Dino up,
but brought with her a mug of Nescafe' and
settled in the chair. The pungency of the black brew
briefly dispersed the
sleepiness in her head.
She had heard the melody one day in the past. But
today her fingers felt
thick, clumsy, undisciplined. The tips were blistered
on her left hand and
her thumb cramped from fatigue.
"How are your exercises proceeding?" Anastasi had
asked her at the music
conservatory the other day, giving her a pat as she
stretched the knotted
muscles of her back.
"Just fine."
He had looked at her with those knowing eyes, weighing
and regarding, as he
stood in front of her, twice attempting to say something
that he did not.
She enjoyed watching his curiously delicate
manner. He used his large hazel
eyes to tell more than his tongue--but that morning
she pretended to busy
herself preparing, not looking at him for long, for
she knew he was probing
her. She had even evaded their usual patter.
"You're not well?" He had finally acquiesced.
"Not very. It'll pass."
He put the stool and foot rest in place, shifted ebulliently
with brisk,
spirited movement. And he paused a little. He did
not sit immediately, but
delayed this moment of focus. He relinquished himself
to it as thoroughly as
to his playing. He was never hurried at this particular
stage; he never
rushed at this point. It was, she thought, a kind
of liturgy in him, just as
when he was performing, he was undividedly surrendering.
Yet Anastasi could be as utterly grave or severe.
His reproaches were the
bleakest she had ever seen. He taught as an evangelist
preached. It was for
this thoroughness, she imagined, that she felt esteem
for him.
Ilianna now raised the instrument off her lap
and laid it upright next to a
desk scattered with music sheets, a copy of Chosen
Country by J. dos Passos,
and Mary Magdalene portrayed weeping.
She heard Dino get up and she shut her eyes. The tiny
garret closed in on
her and a sudden vortex made her slump to one side.
She caught herself from
falling and sprung her slight, lean torso up straight
on the uncomfortable
chair. Two years, Anastasi had said. Two hard years
for the fingers to break
in.
"Don't give up," was his favourite infamous statement.
"You come to me with a perfect right hand."
She whiffed the heavy blue smoke meandering into her
cubbyhole study from
the Gauloises Dino was smoking in the kitchen. Her
throat tightened and her
nostrils pinched. He was making Greek coffee. Its
rich fragrance mingled,
somewhere along the way, with the silty wafts from
his cigarette. The smells
made her head whirl. Oblivious to her discomfort she
could hear him singing,
" Take my hand/Take my whole life too..." To him--the
King was The King.
She sat there listening and stared at the only two
paintings in the
apartment. One was an Andrew Wyeth and the other a
Norton Simon. They
represented her wealth and were a gift from her mother,
who had brought them from Astoria, Long Island, six months after Ilianna
had departed from her home.
She had been raised in the ancient neighbourhood of
Plaka, in a house of
post-classical architecture that vaunted better days
right after the war.
Her family was moderately wealthy, an old Athenian
family, endorsing the old ways, trying hard not to be assimilated by the
onrush of world changes
fostered by satellite television and her media-nurtured
generation. From
childhood she had known that her future was already
planned out. She would
be sent to college, earn her degree, and marry a man
with a solid profession,
perhaps even a shipowner. But all that had changed
when one morning she left her home with rucksack bearing down on her thin
shoulders and trust in a calling.
And I will love thee still, my dear,
Till a' the seas gang dry:
Till a' the seas gang dry, my dear,
And the rocks melt wi' the sun;
came the Burns' hyperbole in the form of a TV commercial
for scotch whisky
from the kitchen where Dino sat.
They had been together for almost a year, since she
was nineteen and he
twenty-three. He was like nobody she had ever met
before. He didn't worry
any more about the years ahead than did cattle in
green pastures. There was
a primal manner in his air and a puerile spontaneity
that uninhibited her.
He had a careering way about him, like a twentieth
century gladiator: all was
intense sport, lovemaking, drinking, prancing his
shiny secondhand Harley as
if he were Marlon Brando and she the counter waitress.
His family had been killed in a train disaster when
he was four. He had
been on his own since he was twelve, when he had done
away with the source of his obstacles by hurtling himself over a
glass-strewn wall. The opportunity
had come, just before Christmas dawn. Another inmate
and he had scaled the
shard-sowed barrier to freedom, bloodied and frostbitten.
Nightmares of the
orphanage persisted to this day.
A garage owner had offered him a job and Dino
had taken his courage in both hands. Though he was still a boy then, he
grew up fast to become a man. Yet the strong arms transformed to comforting
wings at night. She could have let her life surrender into his and part
with all that tortured her, walk away
from her own honeyed trial, into the tangy freedom
his world promised....
The guitar stood waiting. Elegant, skillfully
crafted, painful, it ignored
her musings and the fever in her hands. Two years
had passed four months
ago, and still her appendages moved slowly, sluggishly,
producing a
cacophony. There were days when she played adeptly,
but few. She could not
account for it.
Dino's deep, black eyes were upon her from where he
sat, this minute. She
could feel their moot, fixed look. It had been a bad
night, last night. A
bad night for love. There had been depression in the
dark of the room, a
tiredness she felt more often than not. He had finally
left her and gone to
the other end of the bed, and she had lain alone and
silent. Sirocco-warm
tears ebbed out of her scouring the hours by.
The night faded once more whence it came. She massaged
the thumb muscle to lessen the stiffness. Veins stood out like winding
blue worms on her forearm and the back of her hand. Dipping her fingers
into the dish of alcohol temporarily numbed them.
Her index finger puffed out at the bottom, tapering
like an obelisk of flesh
to a firm phalanx. A straight dark line of clotted
blood scarred the once
soft tissue behind the finger nail. Friction from
the repeated barre
exercises maintained the wound, fresh and visible.
All were the credits of
the craft. All the visible signs of hard, diligent
work were there. Texture was not.
Dino brushed by her on his way out. She smelled the
tobacco on his clothes.
He stood by the door not speaking, then closed it
behind him.
"The classical guitar is like a man," had been Anastasi's
first words that
decisive March noon. Ilianna's first lesson had begun.
"He will want and want some more. You will hate and
love him. Give yourself to him and he will give everything to you. As someone
once said, 'Love is,
above all, the gift of oneself'."
Anastasi had then embraced the guitar and began to
play the `etude.
Ilianna's last minute doubts dissolved with certainty.
Each undulating
stroke charged a longing that had so long been left
yearning for its mate.
The cords mingled and blended, entwined and braided,
melded and plexed and fused, weaving a dulcet onomatopoeia of counterpoint
plenishing her every pore, progressing so ever-softly turning, spinning
sheer summer air into a gossamer completion that longingly never came.
The tinkling of the strings
echoed, ignoring, conquering time.
"The moan of doves in immemorial elms/And murmuring
of innumerable bees--do you hear him, do you hear Maestro Tennyson's sigh
in the pluckings? You are in love, no?" Anastasi had remarked, putting
the guitar down.
"Yes."
But the instrument before her seemed unconcerned,
aloof, like Dino. Both
promised ecstasy, both wanted her soul. But she had
not the strength to
serve two masters.
When she had awakened it was a comfort to know that
the entire day would
belong to her alone. But by the time she got through
the Segovia scales,
even the light burden of the instrument was too much
for her to hold. She
had not slept much during the night, she realized,
for her eyelids drooped
more often than not. She had a drifty feeling that
made her dreamlike and
lose herself.
"Rest if you must, but don't you quit," came Cushing's
words from the poem
Anastasi had drilled into her memory two years before.
Finally, she put the guitar down. The noon sun rays
dabbed the wall next
to her with a craggy segment of column from the Parthenon
beyond. She found herself gliding into oblivion on the chair. She dozed.
She was overwhelmed by her dreaming of her mother and felt happiness.
She was seldom like this, not ever since they had
met. But now, like a
torrent, the cumulated snags in their relationship
suddenly all deluged upon
her, and she was surprised that she did nothing to
stop the onset. She
recollected afresh their quarrel the night before,
recalled the options
remaining, put to her. About the music -- she could
not remember what had
been said to be wrong with it. Possibly it was not
the music; she did not
know. She retained only the oppressive, mostly mute,
suffocation of Dino's
demands.
At the recollection she began to tremble for an instant,
uncontrollably, and
gasp for more air to enter her lungs. It had been
a turbulent episode, the
worst; like an Aegean August gale, with only a hint
of warning, that drowns
one unsuspectingly. She was sinking, she told herself.
She was feeble
against his wants -- whatever these were. And perhaps
the giving on her part
would never quench the needing on his....
Her fingers felt better. She dipped them once more
and waited for them to
dry. The melody came again, this time urging and stronger
than before. She
picked up the guitar and gave, yielding herself to
it. There was a knock on
the door that she did not hear.
She was solely aware that the mellifluous pluckings
did not come from the
instrument but from her. Like heartbeats, they were
as much hers as her
heart's. A presence was there, completing her metamorphosis.
Unlike before,
she knew, the threshold now was scaled, the union
of her self and her dream
realized. She played, all of her, and did not stop
her care because now she
could not. Like the pulsing in her chest, her will
no longer participated in
its existence. A being had been freed, and free, it
reigned over a kingdom
of two. The knocking stopped. The footsteps died softly
away behind the
closed door, and the room glowed in the summer afternoon
with Ilianna and a sublime `etude.
A short story from my anthology 'Potpourria'
Available at: http://www.m-pro.demon.co.uk/bookstore.html
End