Authors: Michael Cadnum
Bruno had long been aware of a certain artificial quality in himself. He had learned how to sound arch and debonair by watching movies. The image of actors like George Sanders had influenced Bruno as strongly as any human being he had actually met. To have contact with a work of art, to be aware of a future stirring itself awakeâthis was what Bruno needed.
The flight north took perhaps an hour and a halfâBruno wasn't sure. It seemed like a long time. When Bruno at last looked down at the glittering freeways and streets in the darkness he felt that this living map, was somehow his.
He left the jet and a cool breeze buffeted him as he crossed the concrete. It was early evening, the sky dark, a typical San Francisco summer night. An aide guided him, whether a Red Patterson functionary or someone who worked for the airport Bruno could not tell.
There was a passage from cold and half-light to airport interior. Then there were people, many of them. So many times Bruno had arrived at an airport and seen the people waiting in the lobby. The people in these foreign airports were always expectant, anticipating the arrival of friends, family. And Bruno had felt at such moments how wonderful it would be if only one person in the throng of strangers would be there to give him a welcoming embrace.
So it was sweet to see so many glad to see him. For a moment Bruno was surprised. He had expected a few reporters, some video-cams, a microphone or two. But this was a crush of people behind a bank of lights. Bruno had underestimated the power of Red Patterson's name.
And, he thought, the power of my own name. It was the sort of sight Bruno relished. He recognized faces. He nodded, smiled. He was prepared to speak without notes. His own handwriting had a tendency to displease him, anyway, staggering across the pageâespecially when he was excited.
The crowdâthere was no other word for such a large gatheringâsubsided into silence.
“I have a statement,” he began.
Bruno had always admired the diva's power over her most distant balcony, her control over the standing-room-only. Bruno did not have song, or voice. But he did have thisâhis sliver of power.
“I have a statement regarding what I have learned in my meeting with Red Patterson in Owl Springs.”
People stirred again, recorders ready, cameras in hand. If there had been any doubt regarding the importance of Bruno's message, it was now in full retreat.
It took a moment for this new stir to subside. The hour was not lateâthere was still time to make the eleven o'clock news. But Bruno would be wise, he knew, to speak simply, light a verbal firecracker or two, and then pass on out of this hall of working men and women, to return to his private joy.
It was only then, as the cameras and the microphones were ready to take him in, that he realized that he should have called Margaret. There was no question: she should be the first to know.
It was too late. The expectant faces awaited him.
“I am pleased to be able to announce news that will delight the art world, reassure the world of psychiatry, and be a source of satisfaction to all of us.” He allowed himself a quiet laugh. “I am more than pleased. I am ecstatic.”
33
Bruno called her, sounding brisk and happy, and she didn't have time to ask him anything. He said that he had just finished a news conference here in San Francisco, and that he was grabbing a cab and was on his way over.
She had been at work at her drafting table, doing a little more drawing before she went to bed, sipping a cup of warm nonfat milk and hoping to feel sleepy soon. She had been plowing ahead with an assortment of sketches of ducks and goats. Bruno's call came, and she was thankful.
She set out some cheese and bread, a melon and an avocado. Bruno might be hungry. She brought a bottle of white wine out, too, because she felt from the way he sounded that there was something to celebrate.
She was wrestling with the corkâwhich was crumbly, and the better bottle opener was lostâwhen the security guard rang to say that Mr. Kraft was on his way up.
He came through the door looking like someone who had run a tremendous distance. He fell into the sofa and accepted a glass of wine.
It did not take him long to assume his usual appearance, poised and sure of himself. He requested some aspirin, and she struggled with a childproof cap until several tablets spilled into his hand. He swallowed four with the wine, pocketing the rest.
“He's started something new,” he said.
“That's wonderful!”
“Please forgive me, Margaret. I have just this minute realized that I'm starving.”
“How did Curtis look?” asked Margaret as she served Bruno.
“There's a new major work underway.” He looked up to see her expectant expression.
She waited, her expression saying
go on
.
“Don't you realize what this means?” he said.
He was out of the sofa now, folding his arms, gazing out beyond the balcony of the Newns's penthouse. The water of the bay was black, invisible, and there were only a few lights on the Marin headlands beyond.
“I don't know that it's quite accurate to call this painting a new
Skyscape
,” he continued. “But that's what it is to me. Not a replacement, and certainly not a copy from memory. But something of great value. Something to let us know that the world is a place of promise, not just loss.”
“Drawings?”
“Noâa painting.”
“What was it like?”
“Sketchy, to be frank. Barely begun. But magnificent.”
“A big canvas?”
Bruno chewed, swallowed, applied a napkin to his mustache. “Huge. As big as anything he ever did. He hasn't begun anything like this in years.”
“You took photographs of it?”
“It wasn't necessary. Besides, I'm not the sort of person to carry a camera around wherever I go.”
“And how was Curtis?”
Bruno held forth an open hand: what difference does it make?
She kept her voice very calm and steady. “You did see Curtis, didn't you?”
“He didn't want to see me.”
She said nothing for a moment. “You went all the way there and didn't even set eyes on Curtis?”
Bruno looked mildly outraged. “You know how Curtis is. He refused. What could I do?”
“We all know how helpless you are.”
“I was a guest in the house of Red Patterson and I had no right to insist that I see someone who does, after all, have a recent history of avoiding me. You might say I actually respect Curtis for having a certain consistency of character.”
“I wonderâdid you actually see the painting, or was the painting somehow off-limits, too? Was it described to you, how wonderful it wasâ”
“The painting exists,” he said in a tone of scorn. He frowned into his wine, dabbed a finger into the glass, and removed a speck of cork.
“You want it so badly you might think you saw something that wasn't quite real, maybe just a big blank canvas.”
He adopted a mocking tone. “What is it you think, Margaret? Tell me what it is I saw down there in the desert.”
“He could have shown you anything on canvas and you would have come away convinced because you needed something there, something that would rescue you and your career.”
He set down his glass, pressed his lips into the napkin, and tossed it down. “I don't have to stand here and listen to this.”
“You do,” she said. “Because I am going to call a press conference of my own. I'm going to call a few friends and tell them I'm worried about the health of my husband. I'm going to tell them that I don't believe the new painting even exists.”
“Don't be childish.”
“It worries you though, doesn't it?”
“Absolutely not. You will not go before cameras and call Bruno Kraft a liar.” Referring to himself in the third person empowered him to use his most disdainful accent. “People will think that you're confused and shrill. They will feel sorry for you. I will see to that. You won't stand a chance. You'll be a figure of amusement.”
Margaret gazed ahead from where she sat on the sofa, focusing on nothing. “I thought you were a friend.”
“You're jealous of Red Patterson. Jealousy's one of the deadly sins, Margaret. It's a destroyer of happiness. You resent Patterson's success in making Curtis happy where you failed.”
Their eyes locked. At once Bruno felt himself falter. He was too good at invective, he thought, once he got going. It was a nasty habit.
“I'm sorry,” he said. “Please forgive me.”
“I'd let Curtis go if I believed it would make him happy,” she said. “In a way, I've already lost him, haven't I?”
“I shouldn't have spoken to you like this.”
“You may be right, Bruno. Don't worry. I forgive you. But you do owe me something, don't you?”
“You're a very unusual person, Margaret.”
“Tell Patterson that you're disturbed at what I've told you. That I'm handpicking art critics of my own to fly to Owl Springs and examine the painting. That I'm consulting a new psychiatristâseveral of them. That there is a growing number of people who don't believe in Red Patterson.”
“You're bluffing, dear Margaret.”
She did not answer, except to pick up a knife and cut the avocado into two neat halves.
Bruno wanted to sit down. He found himself wondering about the painting he had seen just a few hours before. What
had
it looked like? He wouldn't allow himself to think like this. Doubting himself made him feel anxious. He wanted to be alone, or with Andy. Andyâthat was who he needed.
The strong, common sense of Andy, who was always changing his hairstyle, always criticizing Bruno's choice of necktie and his shoes, always looking forward to seeing the latest movie, enjoying the silliest pleasures. It was because he lived in the moment, in his relative youth, and in his freedom from ambition. Andy was daylight, and all of this confusion was darkness. Bruno was confusedâhe could not deny it. Maybe he was wrong. Maybe the painting was not by Curtis Newns. It looked authentic. But was it really?
It was a terrible thought, the sort of doubt that makes the high-wire artist waver and fall. Bruno put the question out of his mind.
“You aren't sure of anything, are you?” said Margaret in a tone of gentle pity.
“Do you like jello?” said Bruno. “It's been years since I had any. My mother used to make strawberry jello with bananas sliced up in it.”
“I'm fresh out,” said Margaret.
“I don't want any. I was just realizing that it's been a long time.”
“You disappoint yourself.”
“Please shut up, Margaret.” He said this gently, and put his hand on her head, a gesture of benediction. Her head was warm, her hair soft, delightful to the touch.
“I'm going out there to see Curtis,” she said.
“I'll call Patterson. I'll tell him how dangerous you are.”
Her eyes stayed on his, and he guessed what she was about to ask. “I used to wonder what it would be like to be beautiful,” said Bruno. “You see these photographs of beautiful young people, naked. There's such power in the human body. And I wonder sometimes what it must be like to know that a photograph of one's erection is out there in the world.”
“You're afraid,” she said.
“Too many good people have died in recent years.” For a moment he resented her for making him mention, even in passing, the subject of AIDS. “It's made me honest with myself. I have to stick with what I know and what I love. I love Curtis's art, Margaret. I love my prestige. That sounds smug, but I mean it honestly. I love Rome, and I love Andy. I'm not going back to Owl Springs.”
“Tell Patterson I'm coming.”
“You don't want to get tangled in whatever's going on down there, Margaret. Why can't you just accept it?”
“Because you can't. Because I love Curtis. You're not a bad person, Bruno. But I trusted you, and I shouldn't have.”
Bruno made the phone call. His voice was quiet; she could not make out all the words.
When he was off the phone he stood there in the living room adjusting his cuffs, looking around for a mirror. He went to the mirror she had hung where one of the slashed paintings had commanded the wall.
Margaret watched him, and he made a pretense of ignoring her.
“That was it?” said Margaret. “That was the call? You hung up and everything's the same.”
“Everything has changed,” said Bruno. He seemed satisfied with his tie, patting the knot. “Dr. Patterson was unable to come to the telephone. I spoke with his assistant, Miss Arno. I repeated your threats. Is there anything else you want me to do?”
“You've had a busy evening. You must be tired.”
“TWA has a 1:20
A
.
M
. flight, stopping at Saint Louis. I'll be in Rome by the time I am once again in a good mood.”
She felt herself lose something, further faith in him, in the way reality was ordered.
“But surely you need time to rest.” It occurred to Margaret that a man who traveled all the time might be running from something.
“I'm going back to my own life. And Margaret, if you are wise, you will stay where you are.”
“You can't abandon everything like this.”
“You mean: I can't abandon
you
. Stay here, Margaret. Here you have a certain amount of power. You can call friends, reporters. You can even call a radio station and threaten to shoot someone. But out there.⦔ He gave her a smile. “Don't go to Owl Springs.”
There was a folder of papers from an art restorer, pages describing in centimeters the rips in the canvas, and advising further consultation with experts in distant places, but assessing the damage as being, “well within the bounds of what can be made to resemble the pre-damaged state.” As though to mock what they would seek to mend, the paintings were reproduced in black and white, the cuts in the paints marked with paste-on arrows, like the exhibits of the victim's clothing in old crime magazines.