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Olivia doesn't startle but turns slowly, as though she already knew Suzanne has been standing behind her. "My talent isn't small, but it's certainly not exceptional. You know how much talent is out there, how little of it is truly special."
"Curtis also?"
Olivia stands. "Julliard."
"Of course you went to Julliard," Suzanne says, not hiding her smile.
"I suppose you needn't even have asked," Olivia says, "And now I will leave you to your work."
When she withdraws Suzanne is again alone in the room in which Alex composed the concerto that she fights to decipher. Today she concentrates on the strange second movement.
When evening comes Olivia makes a dinner of trout, new potatoes, roasted asparagus, sliced tomatoes with fresh basil. The meal is simple but perfectly prepared with good ingredients.
"She's a good cook, I'll give her that," Alex often said. Suzanne never, not once, cooked a meal for Alex.
The two women eat the food outside on the patio, encircled by border gardens of herbs and flowers. The lake smell is not stale and fishy, as Suzanne sometimes imagined it would be, but something fresh carried in on a cooling breeze. Strategically positioned citron candles and a ceiling fan attached to the overhanging roof keep away the mosquitoes. Again it hits Suzanne: this is a lovely home, a place someone would want to live. She reminds herself that it is kept by someone who does not have to work, but still it makes her feel inferior. It's no wonder that Alex never left Olivia and that Suzanne never quite believed him when he said he would leave her the day his son graduated from college.
Olivia draws a bottle of wine from an ice bucket and pours them each a gla.s.s. The wine tastes like grapefruit and minerals, expensive. They finish eating and together clear the table of Olivia's nice white plates and blue cloth napkins before returning to the patio.
As the sun recedes, Suzanne feels sponginess above the bridge of her nose, in the spot on her forehead where she always feels alcohol. She hears her voice: a little loud, some words indistinct, the occasional unfinished sentence. She tries to correct herself so she will sound as clear-headed as she still feels, but she cannot rid her speech of its slight slur. Her hostess drains the bottle into her gla.s.s, and Suzanne suspects that Olivia has not drunk her fair share.
"I tidied your room while you were working," Olivia says. "I couldn't help but notice that you are reading a book about cochlear implants. A deaf child? Do you have children?"
Suzanne fixes Olivia with her eyes, seeking to discern her intention, to understand the degree of pain she is capable of inflicting. Blurry with the wine and thrown by Alex's concerto, she does not trust her instincts. She mouths the words carefully: "A friend's child."
Olivia nods.
Suzanne decides to bare another weakness, to distract this woman from the fragile point she has laid her finger on. She says, "Alex's concerto is not what I expected."
"What did you expect?"
"To be Clara Schumann to Alex's Brahms," Suzanne says, hoping it will stand in for the more complicated thing she means.
"Brahms and Clara had a pure friendship," Olivia says.
"The a.n.a.logy was yours, in the first place."
"You have to understand that I spent almost four years hating you, the woman stealing the man I loved. My husband husband. There were others; you know that?"
Suzanne nods, determined that she will not defend herself.
"Many others. But I do admit you were different, that he might really have left me for you." Olivia laughs, then shrugs-a rare spontaneous gesture. "Or maybe not. He did like it here."
"What's not to like?" Suzanne worries that Olivia can read her mind. She looks out at the lake, which shines like real silver, and breathes in the citron candles, the mint, rosemary, and sweet olive. Quietly she says, "So you loved him, then. Can I ask if that's why you married him, if you married for love?"
"Wouldn't you have married him?"
Suzanne ma.s.sages her earlobe, something Petra taught her to do to relax. "You and I aren't a whole lot alike. I'm asking why you married him."
"He wasn't a conductor yet, you know, not when we met. He was a pianist. A handsome, charming pianist who couldn't quite hide his working-cla.s.s accent and appalling table manners. I got the starter kit, and I made something of him. He was so very, very good on the piano, such expression and creativity in interpretation. He was wilder then, before the conductor's precision took over. You knew he was a piano talent, yes?"
"Yes," Suzanne repeats, her gla.s.s at her lips.
"So very good. But not quite good enough to take the world. I saw it if he didn't, though I think he knew, too, deep down. So I gave him something else to be, something better for him and longer lasting. I put the idea in his head, a baton in his hands, and all my money and friends at his disposal."
"Not that he needed much help."
Olivia's laugh is higher than her speaking voice. "Everyone needs help. Though I'll grant you all the talent and ambition were there when I found him. But plenty of talented people amount to nothing at all. Plenty of ambition goes unfulfilled. It wasn't even the money and the connections so much, though you need those to conduct. It was the direction."
"Behind every great man is a great woman?"
"There's truth to that, you know. It's not enough to be supportive. Anyone can be supportive."
Suzanne's ear is for music alone, so she cannot tell whether Olivia's accent is Connecticut or Ma.s.sachusetts or Maryland. But it is certainly moneyed.
"Why did I marry him? He was irresistible, that magnetic pull. It's that simple, and the rest is extraneous." She leans back, sets her arms evenly on the arms of her chair. "If I decide to forgive you, that will be why-because I know he was irresistible, and all the more so after I made a success of him."
If I decide to forgive you. In this moment, for just a moment, they could be friends. Olivia could choose forgiveness over this-whatever this game she is playing amounts to. And Suzanne could forgive Olivia for being right, for marrying Alex, for having a child, for owning everything Suzanne now sees and touches. She seeks Olivia's eyes, trying to exchange something unspoken, the way she does with Petra when they lock gazes. But if they were ever accessible, already Olivia's beautiful eyes have gone opaque, and Suzanne cannot find her at all. Suzanne pushes back her chair to stand, and the difficulty of doing so tells her that, yes, she has indeed drunk too much of Olivia's fine wine.
Her sleep is light and fitful, sprinkled with dream fragments that feel only one beat from real life. In one she dreams she is watching a deaf bird fly into a wall, though she has just learned from her book that deaf birds do not exist.
The dream is followed by two hours of wakefulness and apprehension, in which Suzanne thinks about the new research on birds, whose ears naturally regenerate hair cells. But mostly she worries. She worries about the important things: the meaning of Alex's concerto, whether Olivia will destroy her marriage. She also frets over problems she knows daylight will make trivial: whether she watered her own scraggly herb border before she left, when Daniel's wedding will be if it happens, whether the purchase of a shed would allow the pantry to become a small office, what she will wear opening night of the Black Angels Black Angels. Eventually she submerges, again just below the surface of sleep, and her eyes open early. She is exhausted but irrevocably awake and relieved to be rising rather than still suffering through the night.
In the absolute quiet she thinks Olivia is still sleeping, though she smells coffee. Perhaps Olivia set it up last night, or maybe she was up early and has gone out. Suzanne pads around the house, thinking she might sneak a look into Alex's closet or at the son's room but deciding that she wants to see neither. What she wants is to go home, so she showers and packs and practices until she hears Olivia return, calling out, "I'm ready if you are."
Ready or not, here I come.
In the conservatory, Suzanne rosins her bow and raises the music stand. Sections are impossible to play without bending at the waist and thus impossible to play seated. Olivia sits at the piano, her left hand on the Bosendorfer's keys but her body turned toward Suzanne. In navy-blue pants and a navy blouse, her hair smooth in its chignon, she looks like a silhouette of herself.
Suzanne strikes the opening and plays through all three movements as best she can. She's better at it now, able to interpret and not just sight-read, but still she lands at the concerto's end exhausted, humiliated as a performer. When her breathing returns to normal, she says, "It's ridiculously hard physically. It's like he was trying to kill me."
The rising sun has brightened the gla.s.s panes of the French doors, and the silhouette of Olivia looks dark against the glare, almost black. Suzanne cannot make out her features, only her shape. She cannot find even her eyes.
"Perhaps he was jealous of your talent," Olivia says.
"Alex was proud of me, not jealous, and you must have heard him rail against virtuosity. He could barely stand most concertos."
"But he was writing it for you. If he was proud of you, then maybe he wanted to show you off."
When Suzanne blinks, she holds her eyes closed a moment longer, which exaggerates the otherwise involuntary movement. "So many times," she says, "so many times Alex told me that the best concertos enact conflict and resolution. It's the reason to write them-the only reason, he said. The solo voice should have the larger part in the conversation because it is the weaker voice, the one playing against the many."
"Maybe he was challenging you to match that idea with this music. Try it again."
"Once more," Suzanne says, grateful that clouds have floated in to obscure the glare, finding it easier to concentrate on bow and strings.
Suzanne comes closer this time, but only by a degree. As soon as she finishes she says, "The pajama shirt-I want it."
Olivia's smile is wry.
Suzanne waits.
"I told you performance night."
"This was a performance, and I want the shirt now."
Olivia shrugs and smiles again-an expression that looks genuine. "The pajamas were already in the dryer when I heard the news."
Suzanne's hands shake visibly as she cases her viola, but she controls her voice. "Then why did you tell me you had them?"
Olivia answers quickly and with force: "I wanted you to be lied to."
Suzanne's hands feel suddenly weak, as though her bow might slip and fall to the floor. She places it in the lid, fastens her case's three latches. Leaning against the doorjamb, halfway in the hallway, she whispers, "Just because I'm doing what you want doesn't mean you can torment me."
"Perhaps what I want is is to torment you." to torment you."
Suzanne realizes that she was mistaken the night before. Olivia was never almost her friend, not even for that tiny shard of time. "You should have held on," she says. "You played your trump card. Now you have no way to make me arrange this music for orchestra."
Olivia has not stopped staring at her. "I expected you to be more intelligent, but maybe smart people tend to overlook the obvious."
Suzanne slides down the jamb, all the way to the floor, holding her viola case across her tucked legs. Something hard grows in her throat, and her swallow is painful.
"That's right. I can tell your husband whenever I want to."
"I'm not overlooking that," Suzanne says. She thinks of Ben the night before he left for Charleston, the way they looked directly at each other while making love. He saw her then, and they seemed in that time like two people who had chosen each other, who had found each other in the world and said, That is what I want That is what I want. "Maybe I'll tell him first. Then you'll have nothing over me."
Olivia's face remains placid as she says, "I imagine that would be a good way to hurt all of us. Maybe what I wanted to do was torment you, but that's not what I want now. That sort of revenge can never be what one really wants, I suppose. What I want now is to have that music orchestrated, and you'll do it. You'll arrange the music because you don't really want to tell your husband, but mostly you'll arrange it because Alex wrote it and because it's good." After a pause she says, "Play it for me again-try it on his viola this time-and then I'll drive you to the airport."
Seventeen.
Suzanne finds the porch light on-an unusual thoughtful detail from Petra-and Petra reading in the living room wearing underwear, tee-shirt, and slippers, her hair loose and her face clean. Suzanne registers the house's distinctive smell, a smell she notices only when she has been away for more than a day.
Petra stands and embraces her. "Thank G.o.d you're home. I'm not cut out to be a single mother."
Suzanne almost says, "But you are a single mother." Instead she says, "You're a great single mother. Adele feels lucky to have you."
"I'm trying, but I'm a disaster. I don't know what I'd do without you. And Adele missed you like crazy. It's like you're the mother and I'm the father."
"What does that make Ben?"
Petra shrugs and follows Suzanne to peek at Adele sleeping and then to the main bedroom. "So tell me everything about this mysterious session work."
Her back turned to her friend as she sorts through the suitcase on her bed, Suzanne says, "I kind of lied to you. There was another reason I went to Chicago."
Petra laughs. "Finally you're having an affair!"
Suzanne shudders, restraining tears, holding back her desire to tell Petra every single thing. She wants to tell her about the time Alex took her to hear the all-Argentinean program at Frank Gehry Hall, about holding his hand while Renee Fleming sang Strauss in a darkened Carnegie Hall, about watching the awkward left hands of aspiring conductors at a conductors inst.i.tute in South Carolina until they were laughing so hard they had to leave. Most of all she wants to tell Petra about the night Alex made good on his promise of a private performance by the world's most celebrated violinist.
"I was just kidding, of course." Petra hops on the bed, her hair falling easily around her shoulders. She leans back on Ben's side of the bed.
Suzanne puts her dirty clothes in the small hamper in the corner, stows her earrings in the jewelry box in the top drawer of her nightstand. "Why 'of course'?"
"Oh, give me a break. I know you. But something's up. What?"
Instead of telling her the Felder story, Suzanne tells her the easier truth that Alex Elling's widow has commissioned her to complete and orchestrate a posthumous concerto. She says it in a plain voice, planning to attribute any quaver or false note to her travel fatigue.
Petra's response stings: "Why would she ask you?"
"Because it's for the viola, because I played under him once. Because ... I don't know."
"But you don't have any composition credits to speak of. Of course you should should have some, but it's really weird that she would pick you without them." have some, but it's really weird that she would pick you without them."
Now Suzanne shrugs. "Maybe she's crazy, I don't know. And maybe I'm crazy, too, because I told her I'd do it."
"Good for you." Petra's smile is fast and wide. "Good for you!"
Suzanne spins the empty suitcase onto the floor and lies down next to Petra. "Maybe it will be the start of something big. I need something new, something to change."
"Yeah, I feel like that a lot. I wish I knew what was going to happen with the quartet. Oh, oh, oh." Petra slaps the bed several times. "I need to warn you: Anthony is going crazy with the online promotion."
"Does he know he'll be rubbing elbows with the Neue Musik people?"
"He read an article about the conductor of the National Symphony Orchestra live-posting a performance."
Suzanne imagines Alex's reaction to that news. Her smile is stopped by the recurring thought she keeps pushing away: I didn't really know him I didn't really know him. "Please tell me," she says, "that he's not planning that for Black Angels Black Angels."
"Not yet, thank G.o.d. But the rehearsal, promotion, stuff like that. He'll have to get people to notice him, of course, which I'm sure he plans to use you for."
Suzanne measures the information, the anxiety she feels in her throat. She has always been very careful not to self-promote, not directly, and she enjoys the conversations she has online. They make her feel in touch with some larger endeavor, part of a bigger music-a hint of the way she felt when she played with a traveling symphony and at receptions when Alex introduced her to people she never would have talked to otherwise. Yet Ben may be right that musicians have no business marketing themselves in words at all. Perhaps they should admit that they make something almost no one wants and that those few who do want it already know where to find it.
Not wanting to talk this kind of shop, she asks, "What about Adele? Have you decided?"
Petra turns to face her, head propped on one hand, tucking her hair behind her ear with the other. "I'm going ahead. I asked her, and she said she wants to hear us play."
"She's a little girl, though, honey. You're the grown-up."
Petra nods, her expression sad. "But she's smarter than I am, and she's old enough to know what she wants. And what she wants is what I want, too. I don't want to make her do it, but I want her to do it."
"You're doing the right thing. Inasmuch as there is a right thing, you're doing it."
Suzanne's eyes film with tears, and soon Petra is crying.
Through her crying Petra says, "When you're young you always think there's a right thing to do. You're obsessed with making the right choice, like your fate is going to go in one direction and you could jump on the wrong boat and get it all wrong."