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Authors: Frank Conroy

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BOOK: Body & Soul
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"Plain. A plain donut."

When Claude returned they sat on either side of the counter and fussed with the food. "They don't have plain, so I got you a cinnamon."

"Fine. So?"

Claude began at the beginning and told him everything that had happened. Levits sipped his coffee and listened, his white eyebrows lifting as his eyes widened. As Claude described the visit to Folsom's office, Levits nodded, as if old truths were being confirmed.

"You should sue the bastard anyway," Otto said. "You're a pianist with a broken arm. One million dollars. I'd be glad to testify as an expert witness. Exaggerate a little, maybe."

"We can't prove anything," Claude said. "Anyway, I was lucky. A simple fracture. It'll be off soon. In fact, I've been playing with it on."

"I'll tell you what's lucky. It's lucky you knew Senator Barnes."

"That is true." Claude ate some donut and drank some coffee. "I would've had to sell otherwise. I see that now. A matter of time."

"I wonder who else they fucked over," Otto said. "People who didn't know anybody."

They ate in silence.

"Come downstairs," Claude said when they'd finished. "I want to show you something."

20

S
HIRTS ON TOP
, collars down. Free-lance musicians knew how to pack, he thought. He closed the suitcase, pleased that he'd managed to get everything into one bag, and went into the kitchen and made himself a cup of tea. He drank it in the front room, sitting on the corner of his desk, glancing out the window at the traffic on Third Avenue. It was a mild, sunny April day, just over a year since he'd moved in. One last time he ran over the checklist in his mind: passport, traveler's checks, address book, scores (in the suitcase), two Simenons to read on the plane, his lucky cross. He rinsed the cup in the kitchen, glanced in the bedroom and the study, and went downstairs. The suitcase bumped against the side of his leg.

Emma sat behind the cash register, making an entry in the ledger. Claude had been amazed at how quickly she'd learned the setup. It was as if she'd been a shopkeeper forever. Technical matters concerning the instruments were beyond her, but there Al had shown a flair. He was an excellent salesman, calm, patient, with never a hint of pressure.

Claude put down his suitcase. "I guess I'm off. Where's Al?"

"Downstairs moving stock."

It had become necessary to use part of the studio for storage. Business had increased dramatically since the old days under the el. Guitars of all varieties were particularly hot. But so were books, sheet music, and, for some reason, timbales. "Are you nervous?" she asked.

"Not yet. I won't be nervous till the day before."

"I meant the airplane," she said. "You couldn't get me to go up in one of those things for all the tea in China."

"It's a lot safer than driving a cab," he said. "Statistically."

"Well, I don't have to do that anymore either. I don't know why Al keeps doing a shift. We've got good people for both cars."

"He likes to move," Claude said. "Get out and around. See the sights."

"I suppose." She tapped her pencil on the counter. "Everything here will be fine. You shouldn't worry. We know how to do it."

"I have every confidence," he said, glancing at his watch. "I'd better get going. Say goodbye to Al for me."

"Will do. Break a leg."

He went out the door and jaywalked across the avenue to catch an uptown cab. As he stood on the sidewalk he looked back at the store. Wrapped on three sides by the soaring whiteness of the sixteen-story apartment building, freshly sandblasted, with newly painted trim and cornices, it looked almost quaint. It could be a tiny church, Claude thought, right there in the exact middle of the block. Even as he watched, two customers went in. He imagined the sound of the silver bell.

The cab dropped him off at the BOAC terminal, where he showed his ticket to an attendant and his bag was whisked away. He went inside, surprised to find so few people, bought a newspaper, browsed for a few moments in a tiny bookstore, and wound up at the BOAC desk.

"Good afternoon, sir." The man glanced at the tickets and returned them. "You can board now if you like. Gate twelve, right through there."

"Thanks. I guess I will. Is the flight crowded?"

A quick glance at his computer. "No, sir. I'd say about fifty percent capacity."

A British stewardess met him at the door to the plane. He felt a little thrill of pleasure at her accent. "Right, then," she said with a smile. "Through there to the first-class compartment. Seat zA, by the window. They'll take care of you."

As indeed they did. A cheerful young woman named Edith fussed over him like a nurse. The seat next to him was apparently going to remain unoccupied, and she brought down a blanket, some pillows, and a pair of slippers. She leaned over him—a whiff of perfume—to adjust the window shade.

"There we are," she said, brushing her hair back over her ear. "What do you say to a glass of champagne while we're waiting?"

"That would be nice. Yes."

"Good," she said, as if he'd pleased her. "I think I can promise you quite a nice dinner tonight. They do lay it on up here. Five courses."

Later, as the plane took off, at the moment of lift, he had a definite feeling of transition, as if he were leaving a known chapter of his life behind him, back on the ground, to enter brand-new territory. It was exhilarating.

The drive into London surprised him. In the confusion he'd gotten a minicab instead of one of the traditional big black diesels he'd been looking forward to. He sat with his knees up and stared out the window. Bad roads and mile after mile of shabby residential housing. As they entered the city he began to notice the double-decker buses, strange advertising signs, and the general bustle of the sidewalks. He saw men with bowlers and umbrellas—although the sun was shining—striding along as they had in practically every British movie he'd ever seen.
Everything
was different—colors, textures, the light, the very air smelled different. It seemed like an alternate reality, but of course perfectly normal for everyone but him. A wonderful mixture of the exotic and the mundane.

"Here we are, guv."

Claude paid with the large notes he'd gotten at the airport, holding out his hand and suggesting the driver take a twenty percent tip.

The management of the London Symphony Orchestra had reserved a room for him at Brown's Hotel, a sprawling, slightly rundown establishment with a reputation for artistic clientele. The lobby was crowded with people speaking a half-dozen languages, and it took Claude a moment to find the reception desk. The clerk checked him in and a bellboy took him to his room.

Claude unpacked, took a long hot bath in the ancient oversized tub, and fell asleep naked on the bed. An hour later he was awakened by the telephone.

"Mr. Rawlings?"

"Yes."

"Ah, splendid. You've arrived, then. This is Albert Shanks from the LSO."

"Oh." He rubbed his eyes. "Hi."

"We thought if it's convenient you might want to drop over this
afternoon. Of course, tomorrow will do if you'd like to rest. Just a chat, you see. Nothing that can't wait."

"No, I'd like that. How about two?"

"Twoish, then. I look forward to meeting you."

Claude spent the next couple of hours walking around the neighborhood, pleasantly bemused by the small scale of everything—the streets, alleys, and arcades laid out every which way, the buildings seeming to lean over the sidewalks. He came upon unexpected little squares, small parks, pubs, shops of every description, theaters, bookstores, all crammed together in the most cunning fashion. He lost any sense of direction, but wandered from one place to another quite happily, since every turn he took led, in a very short time, to some new and interesting nexus.

For lunch, standing up in an open corner shop, he had baked beans on toast and a cup of tea, listening to the language swirling about him—the accents, the speed, the slang. The streets were made for walking. When one of the traditional cabs came to a halt as he flagged it, he wondered how, big as it was, it could possibly negotiate the turns. Somehow it did, pedestrians skipping away with miraculous, insouciant agility.

The hall was a modern free-standing building on the banks of the Thames. Claude found this mildly disappointing. He had imagined something old and grand along the lines of Carnegie Hall. An attendant inside directed him to Albert Shanks's office, which turned out to be a modest-sized room with modern furnishings and a view of the river.

"So good of you to come," said Shanks, a long-haired young man, very pale, wearing black bell-bottom hip-huggers, a white turtleneck, a multicolored vest, and granny glasses. Claude was in a brown suit. Shanks got a large envelope from his desk and moved to the couch. "My congratulations, by the way," he said, sitting down and patting the couch in invitation. "The competition was intense, as I'm sure you can imagine."

"Thank you." Claude sat at the other end.

The phone rang but Shanks ignored it, and after four rings it stopped. "I can't give you the program because it's still at the printer. We're billing it An Evening of American Music. Trying to pull in the tourists, quite frankly. Our Mr. Dove will conduct the Ives, Copland will conduct
Billy the Kid,
intermission, and then you, with Mr. Dove again. It should be fun."

Claude gave a little laugh. "I hope so."

Shanks handed him the envelope. "Everything you need is here. The pass gives you ingress and free access to the building, including the practice pianos downstairs. We've also set up a rehearsal schedule which I hope doesn't conflict with anything."

"It won't. I'm not doing anything else."

"I'm sorry it wasn't possible to give you more time with the orchestra. We stretched it as far as we could, but you know how these things are."

"Sure," Claude said. "I hope Mr. Dove can go over the score with me, though. You know, just the two of us."

"I'm sure he's expecting that. His telephone number is in there. Now, how're your digs?"

"I'm sorry?"

"The hotel. Everything satisfactory?"

"Oh, absolutely. It's fine."

"You must take tea there. Charming. Try the Savoy Grille for dinner some night. Hard to get in, but worth it." He got up to shake hands. "Anything you need, just ring me up."

Claude fell into a comfortable routine, going over to the hall every morning to play in the basement, feeling fit, enjoying himself. Something strange had happened the previous year when the cast had come off. His left arm had felt light the first few days, practically insubstantial, and his freed wrist responded with a remarkable fluidity and suppleness, as if it had been packed in oil all that time. His right wrist followed like a dutiful student, and the arm and shoulder tightness that had plagued him disappeared completely. His fingers had never felt stronger nor more responsive to the images of the music in his mind. It was a joy to play.

Mr. Dove, a rather severe man in his fifties, formally dressed—the sartorial antithesis to Mr. Shanks—knocked politely on the practice room door one morning and came in with a score of the concerto. Claude had one of his own, and they sat at the nested Steinways and worked through the music for several hours. Dove was intelligent, scrupulous, and totally focused, possessing great powers of concentration. He did not chitchat or ask any irrelevant questions. He made good suggestions about matters of notation, tempo, and some of the score markings, explaining that "the British usually mark it this way." Claude was tired at the end of the session, but Dove still seemed fresh.
"We've gotten a lot done," he said. "Perhaps a short meeting next Monday? Same time?"

"I'm very grateful," said Claude.

"Not at all."

It became Claude's habit to take tea at Brown's every afternoon. Comfortable armchairs with handy side tables filled a long room off the main lobby. Waiters brought pots of strong tea and offered small crustless sandwiches—cucumber, cheese and tomato, watercress. A table of pastries was displayed under the tall windows. As the afternoon light softened, the room hummed with conversation, the clink of cups and saucers, and the rustle of newspapers. Scents of pipe tobacco mixed with the sharper, higher smell of Virginia cigarettes.

At first he didn't realize what he was seeing. A glimpse, through the people milling near the lobby, of a curved, black wing of hair below a pale jaw. It disappeared as a fat man interposed, and then Claude froze, cup in the air. Catherine walked into the room, her chin lifting as she scanned the crowd, looking for someone. Her darting eyes found Claude and stopped. A suggestion of a smile as she moved forward. He realized—and the thought seemed impossible, unreal—that she'd been looking for him.

"There you are," she said. "The man at the desk said you might be in here." She stood there in a simple dark green dress, buttoned to the neck, a tan raincoat over her arm. Thinner, but otherwise unchanged—enormous dark eyes, a faint flush under the cheekbones, the carved mouth that smiled full-out now at the effect of her entrance. "May I join you?"

Flustered, his mind racing, his body recovering from the shock, which had been as tangible as electricity—a frisson right up his spine—he got to his feet, knocking a saucer to the carpet as he did so. He tried to speak, but wound up nodding and indicating the chair next to his own.

She bent smoothly to retrieve the saucer. She had an air of composure, her movements suggesting certainty, an inner certainty he could sense but not name. He was almost overwhelmed by her proximity, by the power emanating from her small, narrow-shouldered frame.

A waiter had materialized out of thin air. "Will you be taking tea, Madam?"

"Yes. Thank you." She turned to Claude. "I read about it in the paper."

"Yes," Claude said.

"I called the offices and said I knew you."

"I thought you, I mean didn't you, aren't you in Australia?"

"I've been here for two years," she said. "I'm at London University."

"Ah..." His mind continued to race.

BOOK: Body & Soul
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