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Authors: Howard Norman

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BOOK: Devotion
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David slid the photograph back inside the transparent plastic pocket, set the wallet on top of the peaches, pears and apples in a bright yellow bowl on the kitchen table. This was where he always put his wallet, in that bowl. It had become habit.
Now, which one next?
he thought, approaching the stack of novels on the counter. He ran his finger along the spines, then pulled
Manuscript of a Country Doctor
out, immediately balancing the others in their column.
Maggie told me this was one of her favorites.

Room 334

T
HE DOORMAN WHO
had taken their photograph was named John Franco. That morning, Maggie handed him her pocket-size tourist camera. John Franco snapped a picture, then opened his palm for a tip. “Joking,” he said when Maggie narrowed her eyes and took back the camera. Ever alert, he turned to another couple getting out of a taxi; the trunk popped open and John Franco lifted out two suitcases. Maggie put her camera in her Dutch schoolbag. She and David went back inside the hotel to have breakfast.

It was 9:30
A.M.
They had slept later than either had done in years, though they'd been awake, except for brief naps, until dawn. In the dining room an Indian woman sat alone
reading the
Guardian,
a stack of Penguin paperbacks secured by twine on her table. Across the room a family—mother, father, lanky teenage daughter—spoke in German. David and Maggie chose a table at the street-side window. The waitress arrived. Maggie ordered orange juice, coffee, a cranberry muffin, a slice of melon. David ordered coffee and oatmeal—“hot cereal” on the menu. When the waitress left to put in the order, David suggested they cancel breakfast and go back to Maggie's room. “I wouldn't hesitate a moment,” she said, “except there's a London
Times
cultural reporter coming to rehearsal this morning who I've got to talk with.” She looked at her wrist, raising her eyebrows at having forgotten to wear her watch. “I've got to be at the hall by eleven. And where do you have to be, David?”

The waitress set down their breakfasts. She poured coffee for them both. “I have to go to my flat and work on a book proposal,” he said.

“Book proposal. For what book?”

David told her about Josef Sudek. His dates: 1896–1976. How he had lost an arm in World War I. How he was closely associated with Prague. How he'd attained fame mainly toward the end of his life. David condensed his knowledge of Sudek in as resonant a summary as possible, wanting Maggie to feel he was capable of wholehearted devotion to an intellectual endeavor. It felt urgently necessary. He didn't know all the reasons why. “I'm really thinking of this project night
and day,” he said. An exaggeration he desired to be plain fact. “Can I show you some of Sudek's photographs later on? In a book, I mean.”

“You know what? I think I've seen a few. In a museum. It may have been here in London. He likes to photograph eggs. Eggs and glasses of water, is that him?”

“That's Sudek.”

“I remember an egg with a crust of bread. He might've gone without food some days. In childhood. During the war. Did he?”

“I don't know.”

“I guess you haven't researched that part yet.”

“I'll definitely look into it.”

“Do you take a lot of photographs yourself?”

“Since I was in grade school.”

“Are you a professional, though? Along with the teaching you told me about? Not that teaching isn't enough. Just naturally curious.”

“I've sold a few photographs. Not often. I consider myself a serious photographer. I have two Nikons. But my favorite is a Rollei—a Rolleiflex with an
f
/28 lens. It's the kind with the viewer on top, you look down into it, like this.” He demonstrated by pretending to snap a picture of her. “All three cameras paid for in full at time of purchase.”

“So, you take photographs where, London?”

“Mainly Prague. I've been to Prague often. I take a lot of pictures in Prague.”

“May I see some of those?” Maggie noticed his hesitation in answering her. With the exception of his Sudek tour, ninety percent of the photographs David took in Prague were of Katrine Novak. “Just to see what the city looks like?”

“Really?”

“Only if you like.”

Maggie finished half a piece of toast, drank some orange juice. The waitress stopped by, refilled their coffee. “David, I've got big news,” she said. “I'm on an expense account.”

“Oh, come on. I'm not the starving-artist type.”

“So what if you were? Why should you pay for something neither of us has to pay for? Let Dalhousie University pop for breakfast.” Maggie stood up. David remained seated. “I've got to run,” she said.

“I'm not taking this for granted. Can I see you tonight?”

“Take for granted? Believe me, I'd see that coming a thousand miles away.” The waitress delivered the bill and Maggie signed for it. “The ensemble's performing tonight, eight
P.M.
, Queen Elizabeth Hall. Are you interested? I can arrange a seat directly in front of Miss Brockman and her cello.”

“I am interested, but I teach tonight.”

“What time is class over with?”

“Ten. Maybe ten-fifteen.”

David stood; Maggie leaned down and kissed him lightly. “Let's see, there's the reception. I'm obligated there. This and that. May I expect you in my bed by, oh, say, eleven-thirty?”

“If they'd give me the key, I'd be waiting in your room.”

“They won't,” she said. “You'll tell me about your class. I'll tell you about the concert.”

“Worried there won't be things to talk about?”

Ignoring this, Maggie said, “Tonight's our one concert in London. Noon tomorrow, it's off to Copenhagen. Can you drive me to Heathrow?”

“Of course.”

“I don't take it for granted, you know.”

“You're so beautiful I can hardly look at you, except I can't help it.”

“Temporarily smitten, due to a successful night. No matter; I definitely,
definitely
want to feel beautiful when you say it. But I can't yet. We just met, sort of. Besides, you don't have to say it. I look in mirrors like anyone. I know what I am.”

“I could meet you in Copenhagen.”

“You don't have a wife, do you?”

“What?”

Maggie looked toward the wide doorway. Five members
of the ensemble were just off the elevator, all casually dressed, holding instrument cases and talking in the hallway. “The cars must have arrived,” she said. “I really have to get to rehearsal now.”

She joined the musicians in the lobby. In a few moments David meandered into the lobby as well. Looking through the door onto George Street, he saw Maggie get into a black town car. Some of the musicians piled in after her. A cello case was on the front passenger side. The car pulled away from the curb.

David sat in the red leather chair. He noticed that directly opposite, sitting in a kind of velvet love seat, was an elderly, unshaven gentleman. He had on a rumpled gray pinstripe suit, white shirt soiled at the collar, wide gray tie, was sockless with black shoes. He had wispy white hair, age spots on pate and hands, a boutonniere in his lapel and, oddly, a child's zebra-stripe bandage on his left ankle. John Franco stepped in from the street, glanced at the elderly man, exchanged a few sentences in Italian with the concierge, then stood near David's chair. John Franco was a little shorter than David, with thick black hair, sharp features. “That man there cannot meet his expenses,” he said.

“What will happen?” David asked.

“I don't know. But first thing, the concierge, Mr. Jimmy Modiano, will somehow find him a pair of socks—maybe maid service found one. Mr. Jimmy always sees the human
being. The heart beating. He won't allow a patron of our hotel to go into the manager's office without socks.”

“For the dignity of all concerned,” David said.

Though it had been John Franco who'd been indiscreet to begin with, now he apparently took offense. It was as if David had presumed to share his approval of a time-honored code of ethics held exclusively between doormen and their concierges. John Franco sneered with his upper lip, all cordiality gone up in smoke. “If that is how you choose to think of it,” he said. He walked over and stood next to the concierge. He rigorously cleaned his eyeglasses with a handkerchief, which he tucked back into his uniform's breast pocket in three quick movements, flattening it with a sweep of his thumb. David, as if puppeteered by discomfort, shrugged his shoulders in an exaggerated manner, stretched, faked a yawn. John Franco, with annoyed perplexity, stared at him.

David had simply wished to sit a while longer. To let the life of the lobby quietly go about its business, to be both part of it and an observer of it. Maintaining perhaps the artistic distance of a photographer.

“Can I get you a taxi, sir?” the concierge asked. With this, David relinquished his chair. He walked to his apartment building. His was a nicely appointed flat, with plants along the inside windowsills, lots of books, an antique quilt on the bed, old-style steam radiators, their white paint flaking. David sat on the bed.
Wash your face,
he thought, giving himself instructions on how to kill time.
Maybe go back to the hotel bar—have a cup of coffee—it's okay, stomach feels a lot better, doesn't it?—look directly at that doorman John Franco when you walk past—wait it out—it's just a matter of waiting—it's just a wait of a day and part of a night—it's just a wait until 11:30.

 

In class that evening David lectured on a photograph by Sudek,
Bread and Egg.
The photograph depicts a grainy egg set against a piece of bread, which itself is set in relief, offering its sliced side. As the class studied the slide of
Bread and Egg
on the pull-down screen and took notes, David continued to speak, consciously avoiding the term “basic necessities of life,” even though bread was involved. He spoke about the photograph within the trajectory of Sudek's thematic obsessions. He also pointed out the sculptural qualities of the composition, how the surface of the crust of bread seemed etched, crosshatched—that is, had what appeared to be an almost geological history.

Though he lectured each semester on Sudek's work, and so already had slides prepared, he originally had planned to discuss a Paris photograph by Brassai. But
Bread and Egg,
taken in 1950, was the work Maggie had referred to at breakfast, and that was the entire reason for his change of mind; it was a way of keeping her close. After class David sat in the classroom staring at the unfinished letter to Katrine Novak, which he set out on a desk like an important exam he suddenly could not remember studying for. He tore up the letter and dropped its confetti into the wastebasket.
Life,
he thought—indeed, using the word “life,” not “circumstances” or “things”—
in just the last twenty-four hours has taken an interesting turn, hasn't it? I'm gone over this woman. I've heard of this happening to other people. I've read of it.

Their second night together began with heightened anticipation based somewhat on the first. Then they abandoned themselves to even more subtle, and not so subtle, exploration; sometimes in a fugue state of amorous devotion you cannot help what you say; at about 2:30
A.M.,
David said, “I love your body” (a person might say anything, often something, when memory isolates it from its original context, embarrassing), the most complete sentence possible between breaths. At some other point, Maggie slid herself on top of David and, inside a moan, said, “This feels nice.” Then they heard a thud against the wall. They fairly froze; Maggie started laughing; they hung on to each other as if for dear life. David said hoarsely, “Was that a body, do you think?” Maggie's laughter, deep as it was, made things physically a bit awkward, even difficult for David to breathe, the way she lay spent across his chest, her mouth at his ear, her
breath softly ratcheting down to normal, almost. Yet they hadn't in the slightest moved apart.

“I believe it was Miss Brockman's cello case,” she said.

“Her cello case?”

“She had, or decided she'd had, a bad performance this evening. Haydn's Concerto for Cello and Orchestra in D Major, arranged for the more intimate ensemble. She'll wreck her room. I'll have to smooth things over with management. She'll wreck her room like the Rolling Stones, except all on her own and a bit more demurely. She writes things out on the mirrors in lipstick. Some amazing phrases over the years; she's quite the pornographer. When she gets really worked up. Maid service gets some interesting reading when Miss Brockman's in town and doesn't play well.”

David barely began to slip from Maggie; she held him still; David was grateful for this; they'd wait for the next thing to happen. “Do you suppose her cello was in the case?” he said.

“Oh, lord, no. No, no, no. You see, after the concert, I caught a certain familiar look on her face. I told our stage manager, Alistair, to provide the cello safe conduct. He got the empty case back to Miss Brockman's room. Obviously she discovered it empty. That might've set her off.”

“And the cello itself is where?”

“Upright in my closet, right here in room 334.”

“You know these musicians very well, don't you?”

“Quirky natures, many of them. They each have their superstitions and such, which I find interesting. Onstage they like to be observed. Offstage they can be terribly private, some of them. Miss Brockman's alone a lot, I think. Sometimes I'm her mommy. Sometimes I'm her shrink. Mostly I just get her to the concert on time.”

“Okay, three's a crowd. Enough about Miss Brockman.”

They turned sideways, facing each other, continued toward a blissful circumstance impossible to resolve by thought; then Maggie said, “At breakfast I had the right to ask about a wife.”

BOOK: Devotion
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