Songs without Words

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Authors: Robbi McCoy

BOOK: Songs without Words
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Copyright © 2010 Robbi McCoy

Bella Books, Inc.

P.O. Box 10543 Tallahassee, FL 32302

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, without permission in writing from the publisher.

Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper First Edition

Editor: Medora MacDougall Cover Designer: Linda Callaghan

ISBN 10: 1-59493-166-6 ISBN 13:978-1-59493-166-6

Dedication

To Jan, who remains a mystery best left unsolved.

Acknowledgments

I am grateful to my life partner Dot for her continuing interest in my work and her cherished presence in my life. If I have ever come near that elusive concept of happiness, then it would have to be because of her. Many thanks to Maureen McDonald for her helpful suggestions regarding music and musicianship. I am also indebted to Marianne Garver for the hours she has devoted to reading, critiquing and listening to me wailing over this book. A woman of such patience.

Thank you to Gladys, who introduced me to classical music, without which my world would be considerably less. Much appreciation to the several selfless lovers of fiction who gave their time and talent to offer advice: Cherie, Jeanne and Marcia. Without you, this book would have emerged into the world from a void filled with only my own ego and, thankfully, we will never know what form it would have taken in that case.

Finally, I remain awestruck by the intense, meticulous contribution of my editor, Medora MacDougall. Indefatigable! Or, perhaps, tireless. Or maybe...unflagging? What do you think, Medora?

Chapter 1

JUNE 4

Sometimes it seemed to Harper that the only time her life took place was in the summer.

At least, the most interesting parts took place in the summer, the parts that, if a person’s life had an editor, would remain after the cuts. So of course she was excited. It was the last day of school. Summer stretched before her like a promise.

Before she could redeem that promise, though, she had to finish putting her office in order. When she returned in the fall she wanted an uncluttered fresh start. One of the many rewards of having summers off was the feeling, whether it was valid or not, of getting a new beginning each fall.

A stack of books in hand, Harper ventured out of her office and into the main floor of the library, past the cluster of computers and the audio/visual desk, past shelves of DVDs and books on tape. She stopped at the reference section and slipped her books one by one back where they belonged. At some point this library, like so many others, had quit being a repository of books. It had undergone an insidious transformation, starting with the videotape shelves outgrowing their allotted space at the back of the first floor, spreading like a relentless lava flow, eventually engulfing the card catalogue and the numerous volumes of the periodical guide. Banks of computers and printers had sprung up, multiplying rapidly, giving rise to self-service checkout kiosks and sprawling collections of digitized music and movies. The shelf space devoted to those quaint old printed books, by comparison, was shrinking, even disappearing.

The forward march of the digital revolution had proven too much for some librarians, overwhelming their skill level and sabotaging their entire philosophy of life. They continued to believe in the sanctity of books and in their role of protectors against vandals and censors and loud-talking revelers. The library was their church. It was a place of worship. They had thought it was sacred.

That had been true for Harper too, once. Veneration for books was one of the reasons that she had become a librarian. But as the years passed, she had found that her particular talents, her precision, patience and artistic bent, had meshed well with the requirements of the digital age. She had not merely adapted. She had thrived. That might have surprised her if she had simply observed the end result. But she had lived it every day, adapting to the changes in an unhurried, comfortable manner—much as a slow river takes its turns, flowing this way, then that, as the course dictated. She had eventually found herself in a position that hadn’t even existed when she was a graduate student, Director of Digital Library Systems. She liked that about herself, that she was capable of reinventing herself.

As the last book slid into place, a student approached. “Do you work here?”

For a brief, delicious moment Harper contemplated saying no. It was, after all, the last hour of the last day before summer vacation began. She glanced at the reference desk, confirming that the reference librarian had already left for the day, then said, “Yes. Can I help you?”

“I’m trying to look something up on that computer over there,” the girl said, pointing to a cluster of workstations. “I think it’s broken.”

Harper strode over to the unoccupied station, where she found a blank screen and an unresponsive machine. After going through the usual routine of key clicking, button pushing and cable wiggling, she stepped over to the reference desk and called the IT department.

“No, I didn’t reboot it,” Harper said into the phone. “I told you, it’s dead. The monitor has power, but the rest, nothing. No fan, no light, nothing.”

“Is the CPU plugged in?” asked the tech.

Harper balked. “Did you really just ask me that? Look, send somebody over, okay? I think the power supply’s gone.”

“Can’t send anybody today. It’s Friday, after five.”

“All right. I’ll put a sign on it until Monday.” Harper hung up, then turned to see that the student was still waiting expectantly for help. “Try one of the other machines.”

“They’re all being used.” The girl gave her a helpless look. “This is for a paper that’s due tomorrow. It’s my final, my Saturday class.”

“Come to my office,” Harper said. “We can look it up there.”

As she led the girl down the row of staff offices, all dark except for her own, she thought briefly of the old card catalogue with its sturdy wooden cabinetry and typed three-by-five cards. Though inferior to a database in a myriad of ways, it had never “gone down” and had never needed rebooting. This student had probably never used a card catalogue in her life, Harper mused, or one of those stubby little pencils they had kept on hand to write down call numbers.

Harper slid into her desk chair and tapped the space bar to dissolve the screen saver, an alluring beach scene with the caption “Happy Summer, Everyone!” courtesy of the IT department.

“What are you looking for?” she asked.

“Sophie Janssen, the sculptor. It’s for my art class.”

Harper looked at the student more closely, surprised to hear the name of someone she had interviewed for one of her video biographies. “Really?” she said. “What’s the assignment?”

“Just to write a paper about an artist you admire and explain why, what you like about her.”

“And you picked Sophie Janssen?”

“Well, sort of. The teacher gave us a list. We could pick one of our own or one off the list.”

“Oh. So why did you pick her, then?”

The girl shrugged. “Nobody else had picked her yet. And the teacher seemed to like her.”

Harper was disappointed. For a moment, she had considered loaning the girl her video. Hearing the apathy in the girl’s voice, she changed her mind.

“I’m sure you’ll find her fascinating.” Harper said. She wasn’t sure of that, actually. It was hard to know what a nineteen-year-old would find fascinating. She pulled up a list of related books and articles, printed it out and handed it to the girl, who thanked her and left.

Harper walked over to her DVD shelf and pulled out the case with Sophie Janssen’s name neatly labeled on the spine. She hadn’t looked at this since finishing it last summer. It was the fourth in the series. She took the others off the shelf as well: Mary Tillotson, the one that had gotten her started, followed by Catherine Gardiner, the fiery-tempered poet, and then Wilona Freeman, the photographer and Harper’s friend. She put the DVDs in her backpack to take home to re-watch. She had a new subject this summer, Carmen Silva, a weaver, and she was impatient to get started.

Summers, when you have them off work, present a sort of dare, thought Harper, a challenge to spend the time wisely. You could nibble away at them with the odds and ends of ordinary life like organizing your sock drawer. You could get a summer job or do some volunteer work. You could travel, of course, and that was what the majority of the staff did. You could visit family and friends that you didn’t see much during the school year. You could have a summer romance if you were single and, for some, even if you weren’t.

Harper had done all of these things with her summers off. It was a perk she didn’t take for granted, even though she had always had summers free, all through school and then for the sixteen years of her career at Morrison University. Morrison, a school located near, but not competing with, U.C. Berkeley, appealed to women more than to men and even more narrowly to the type of young woman who wanted something approaching a classical education. Which was not to say that the school was stuck in the past. They did have their computer science department and that fancy new electron microscopy lab. But this was a place where the English and history professors might have just a little more cachet than the math and science professors. Harper found that endlessly satisfying, a sort of ironic coup for her, considering that her father was a physics professor. She loved and respected her father, but after a childhood spent feeling inferior because she wasn’t very good at science, she had celebrated a private victory in finding a school like this.

Returning to where she had left off with her office organizing, Harper discarded everything that was still pinned to her bulletin board—Dilbert cartoons, quotations from famous authors—until, finally, only one item remained, a tarot card pinned in the lower left corner. The card depicted a colorfully dressed entertainer carrying a lute—The Fool, also known as The Wandering Minstrel. She had adopted this image as her talisman a few years ago. The Fool was the voice of reason, wit and wisdom, but Harper kept in mind the paradox that he might just as well be a genuine simpleton. She left the card where it was. It was one of the few things that survived the seasonal purging each year. She stared at the card for a moment, remembering Chelsea’s Shakespearean response to it: “Better a witty fool, than a foolish wit.”
So
, she wondered,
how long did I manage to go this time without a thought of Chelsea? Fifteen minutes? Maybe twenty?

Two years later, and there she still was, always on the edge of Harper’s consciousness, the summer romance that had transformed her life. Even though it had ended badly, she couldn’t regret the affair with Chelsea, because it had given her a wonderful gift—self-knowledge. She only regretted that she seemed unable to get past it.

How long
, she wondered,
will monarch butterflies conjure up Chelsea’s smile, or the taste of a nectarine evoke her sweet mouth
? There had been butterflies and nectarines before, but somehow all of those earlier memories had been displaced by that one summer. In Harper’s mind, Chelsea was nearly the personification of the summer sun, all brilliance and warmth, shimmering like a Greek goddess with the flush of youth and a golden glow like the sun’s rays. If Harper had turned her into some kind of supernatural being in her mind, it was simply because she had become unattainable.

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