I spent the next week running back and forth between multiple jobs and practice rooms. The usual routine except that I was constantly wondering when and if David Montagnier would call. I’d seen a photo of him at a museum benefit so he was obviously back in town. I neglected customers as I looked for him out the window from my post at the Juilliard Bookstore cash register. And I caused a spectacular collision at Brittany’s, a trendy restaurant where the wait staff wore roller skates—some challenge when you were carting a tray full of nachos and some joker wanted to pinch your ass as you rolled by. I was delivering desserts and turned my head to gawk out at Broadway just on the off chance that Montagnier might be passing by. I rolled straight into another waitress. Hot fudge sundaes flew, we did a little roller-derby dance, and down we went. The restaurant gave us a standing ovation. That’s what I like about New Yorkers, the warped sense of humor.
Fortunately, I kept the job, which I needed to pay the rent at my studio apartment on West 78th Street. Plus, that week I deposited another twenty bucks in Angie’s savings account and I figured if I only ate a container of yogurt for lunch, I could set aside a little more. The restaurant gave you free saltines, and I knew it wouldn’t kill me to lose a couple of pounds. I called in for my messages every time I snagged a free minute, and when I got home at night I stared at the ring button on my phone. I mean, what if I was yawning when it rang and was temporarily deaf? I took extremely short showers and made sure to stick my head out to listen every few seconds. I dried my hair beside the phone. But David Montagnier had obviously forgotten all about me. I kept reconstructing my last conversation with him and thought I remembered some clue that he wanted to work with me again. But French people pout a little when they talk and it’s sexy as hell. I’d been too busy watching David’s mouth to pay attention to what he was actually saying.
Finally, after not hearing from him by Thursday night, I convinced myself that it was up to me to make the first move. I got all pumped and sat down with a pencil to figure out what I would say into David’s machine in case he wasn’t there. I was not about to screw up, not when there was no prayer of erasing the message once my voice got stuck to that strip of tape. So after a lot of scribbling and crossing out, here’s what I wrote down: “Hello, this is Bess Stallone. (I didn’t know what to call him for one thing, plus there was the issue of the American DAY-vid versus the French Dah-VEED. I figured I’d just avoid the issue.) I wasn’t sure if you wanted to schedule another practice session but next week turns out to be good for me if you’re free. (And the week after that, and the week after that …) You can reach me at 503-8986. Thanks.”
Sounds easy enough, doesn’t it? With a certain understated dignity? So I dialed his number and suddenly the stage fright rose right up out of the floor of my own apartment and grabbed me by the throat. The last time I heard my voice sound like this I’d just inhaled the helium from Pauline’s birthday balloons back in eighth grade: “Hi. This is Stress. Bess! Stallone! … (long gap with heavy breathing, then:) I wasn’t sure if you wanted to do it with me … Oh shit, oh fuck. Sorry. Never mind. Sorry.”
My hand was so drenched with sweat that the phone slipped out of my hand, which was probably just as well. I woke up on the floor: I lay there staring at the peeling paint on the ceiling and realized that I’d hung up without leaving my number, but I figured he’d never want to call me after that anyway.
He didn’t. Another week went by, during which I fought the need to remain totally trashed in order to forget the phone-machine stunt. When I showed up for my lesson, Professor Stein wanted to know how it went with David Montagnier. I said, “Okay, I guess. How are you feeling?”
“Never mind,” he said with a cough. “Did David want to work with you again?”
I started to feel dangerously weepy so I just shook my head and asked the professor to comment on the ornaments I was experimenting with in the Bach D-minor Concerto. Those are the extra finger turns that early composers like to stick onto some of their notes to doll them up. I think of them as hats, like Easter bonnets. Anyway, Professor Stein gave me one of his hawk looks where his eyes narrow and his nose turns almost purple, but he didn’t say anything more about David. At the end of the lesson, he went to the window and opened it wide so he could smoke his cigar. It always scared me how he perched on the windowsill like that, but his wife had made him do it so he wouldn’t stink up the apartment and now he couldn’t break the habit. Summer street sounds blasted in like the brass section of the New York Philharmonic getting cranked up for Copland’s Third Symphony.
“I have a gig for you,” he said.
A psychotherapist had tried to teach me to short-circuit my knee-jerk response. Take deep breaths. You can choose not to be terrified. But there it was, the lurch of nausea in the gut, the clammy hands, the dizziness, the sense of impending disaster. I closed my eyes against the explosion of colors but as always, it didn’t help.
“Bess?” The Professor climbed out of the window, sat down beside me on the piano bench, and put his arm around me. I didn’t mind the smell of that stogy. In fact, it was kind of comforting. “Bess, it’s a competition in Boston with $25,000 in prize money. You can win it easily.”
“While I’m lying under the Steinway?” The fireworks had quit popping off but lunch was working an instant replay in the back of my throat.
There was a long silence. Then he said, “I think we have to talk about your future.”
“I know,” I said. “We’re wasting our time. I’ve got to quit.”
Professor Stein sucked on his cigar. Then he got up and leaned against the piano so he could look at me. “Darling, I’ve never seen anyone fight so hard to beat the lampenfieber.” The Professor called stage fright by its German name, which, loosely translated, meant being butt-petrified of the lights at the edge of the stage. “I know you’re discouraged but I want you to give it one more try. The Ruggiero’s ready and so’s the Hindemith.”
I avoided looking at him—all that hope in his face made me feel too wretched. “I’ve been checking out the bulletin board for accompanist jobs,” I said. “Maybe I could make enough money.” That kind of thing didn’t freak me out and it would still be a connection.
Professor Stein jabbed his cigar into an ashtray like he was trying to kill something that was living in there. Then he started pacing back and forth between the piles on the floor. He stopped between Beethoven and Grieg. “That talent of yours, hiding behind some second-rate soprano,” he said. “It turns my stomach.”
“I’d be playing music.”
He put his hands on my shoulders, his old bent and knobby fingers forcing me to look at him. “Humor an old man,” he said. “Just this one last time.”
What could I say? He had invested almost ten years into me. I owed him. Besides, twenty-five grand would sure as hell look sweet in Angie’s bank account.
The morning I was supposed to go to Boston, I got a call from Pauline.
“I’m in a phone booth on 79th and Broadway,” she said. “I have to see you. My God, Bess, I have to.”
“I’m just running to catch a bus to Boston. What’s going on?” Pauline had always been a drama queen. Catastrophe could mean anything from a death in the family to losing her Soap Opera Digest on the bus.
“Can I go with you? Let me just ride up there with you.”
“That bad.”
“Oh, shit.” Now she was starting to cry. “I don’t have any money.”
“Don’t worry about it, Pauls. I’ll buy your ticket.”
“But you don’t have any money,” she wailed at me through the phone.
“The music competition’s reimbursing me for my ticket,” I told her. A lie, but how was she to know?
Sniffles, a wet blow of the nose, and then the time’s-up recording cut in.
“Wait right where you are,” I said.
Now I was really late, and running in the ninety-degree heat turned my shower-clean self into a sweaty mess. But then I spotted Pauline standing on the corner and didn’t care anymore. When you’ve got a friend who’s been around since you were four, who’s played in your sandbox and listened to the same endless gripes about your parents and held your hand when your heart was broken and your head when you were throwing up from too many rum-and-Cokes, you just show up.
Pauline had a beautiful athletic body, tall and sleek. Like me, she didn’t do so well in school and for a long time she’d just sort of hung around Rocky Beach picking up one crappy job after another. But she was always fantastic with kids and Jake talked her into taking some special ed courses at his college. She loved everything about it, and for the first time she felt like she was good at something besides Rollerblading and jogging. Last semester she was second in her psych class.
Broadway was the usual zany parade, but it was easy to pick Pauline out the way she was standing all forlorn by the phone booth with her arms clutched around her body. She had a big nose and a bony face that had looked strange when she was a kid, like somebody had stuck the wrong head on her shoulders, but now, with her cushiony mouth and green eyes, it all worked to make her striking and sexy.
“Hey,” I said.
She spun around and grabbed me in one of her rib-crushers. “I’m so sorry, Bess,” she said. “You’re an angel.”
“Are you going to tell me what happened?”
Her voice dipped to a whisper. “On the bus. Are you sure it’s okay? It would be so perfect, having you all to myself.”
“Absolutely. You’ll keep my mind off the contest.” And it was true. I’d barely thought about the performance since her call, except for an insane hope she was going to tell me that the world was about to end and I wouldn’t have time to play before we blew up.
We hopped on the subway, picked up our tickets at the Port Authority and were on the bus to Boston in no time. It was cool and quiet, and I could feel Pauline begin to relax beside me. She took the aisle seat where she could stretch out her long legs.
“Okay, Pauls, spill it,” I said when we’d pulled out of the station.
She looked at me with eyeballs the size of pizzas. “You remember that time I told Jake his mother was sick?”
We were in the junior high cafeteria having lunch, the three of us. Pauline had suddenly turned pale, set down her burger, and stared at Jake.
“What?” he said.
But Pauline started to shake and couldn’t answer.
“Come on, Sabatino,” Jake said. “The food’s not that bad.”
“Jake, I think your mom…”
Jake was real close with his mother. His father had died when he was little and he was the oldest of the three boys. Now he was getting nervous. He grabbed Pauline’s arm. “What about her?” he asked.
“I think she’s sick.”
“What the hell does that mean?” he asked.
Pauline shook her head and I still remember how the tears splattered out onto her plastic plate. “I don’t know,” she said.
But Pauline was famous for getting emotional, so we let it pass. Two weeks later, Jake’s mom was diagnosed with ovarian cancer. Pauline had made us swear we’d never mention what happened in the cafeteria, or even bring it up with her, and we hadn’t, even though Jake and I sometimes talked about it.
“Sure I remember,” I said. “How could I ever forget that? It was weird as hell.”
“It just happened again.”
I felt the hair stand up on the back of my neck, not that I had any real use for any of that Shirley MacLaine crap, but still, Jake’s mother really did get cancer. “Somebody’s sick?”
“No. You remember my cousin Andrea from Fort Lee?”
“Yeah.” I pictured a shorter version of Pauline, similar face stuck onto a stubby frame.
“She’s pregnant. She was pregnant. There was a shower last week in Jersey and the whole time I was sitting there dying because I knew there was something wrong with the baby.”
“What do you mean ‘knew’? How ‘knew’?”
“The same way it was with Jake’s mom. It’s like I know you’re sitting here with me and if I turn away, I still picture you in my brain. Well, there it was in my head. That baby with its right leg twisted up against its shoulder and its foot all screwed up.” She looked around as if there might be a spy and lowered her voice. “He was born this morning, exactly the way I saw him. My aunt called. Everybody’s hysterical.” Her fingers tightened around my arm and the tears started again. “Bess, I don’t want to know this stuff!”
I put my arms around her, which wasn’t exactly easy on a Peter Pan bus, and just held her. I mean, what kind of therapist do you recommend for something like that, an exorcist? After a while, she calmed down and by the time we got to Providence, she was beginning to get into the drama of it all. “It’s just the strangest feeling, like not just a suspicion or something but it’s in my core, this total conviction. Do you think I’m some kind of freak?”
“I think you’re sensitive in a way that other people aren’t,” I said. That was safe enough. I sure as hell didn’t feel qualified to explain something this bizarre.
“Bess, I love you down to the innermost sanctuary of my heart,” Pauline whispered. “You’re always there for me when my soul cries out for help.”
Also when you’re knocked up, I could have added. Twice I’d taken her to the clinic back in high school. But God knows she’d have done the same for me. “I’m just glad you caught me,” I said. “Two more minutes and I would’ve been out the door.”
“So what do you think I should do?” she asked.
“Well, first of all, I don’t really see how you can get rid of it. It seems to be a part of you, like being a jock. And lookit, Pauls, in both cases it’s not as if you could have changed anything.”
“But what if it turns out I can predict the future?”
“So far it seems like it has to do with stuff that’s already happening,” I said. “You just get an early news flash.”
She thought this over. “Okay. Maybe that’s not so terrible but it would sure be nice if it wasn’t always something tragic. I mean, this shit truly bruises my heart.”
Pauline had always talked with a mixture of road construction (which, in fact, she’d done for a couple of summers) and romance novel. She read those things the way Jake ate Cheez Doodles. She looked at her watch. “I can’t believe I didn’t even bring my class notes. I’ve got a big exam on Monday.”
It seemed like the crisis was over. I told her she could hop the next bus back.
“Oh, no. I’m going to see you through your ordeal.” She insisted on coming with me to Addams Hall to see if she could talk her way into the audience. There’s always a pretty good turnout for the more prestigious competitions and this time there wasn’t a seat left in the house.
“Okay, Pauls, you better boogie back to New York. You’ve got that exam, don’t forget.”
“Oh my God, that exam. But what if you need me?”
“I’ll be fine,” I said. “But hey, got any vibes about how this is going to turn out?”
She closed her eyes and put her hands on either side of my head. “Yeah. You’re going to stay conscious the whole time and you’re going to win.”
I kissed her good-bye. The truth was, I didn’t like having friends and family around when I was performing. It only made me feel worse, knowing that I was putting them through hell while they waited for me to pass out.
There were five competitors, an Asian woman, two Russian guys, a New Yorker from the Upper West Side named Ziggy, and me. Ziggy had been in my Music History class and had one green eye and one brown one, which didn’t look in the same direction. He was good. Not great, but good, and for him playing in competitions produced about the same level of stress as doing his laundry. I was slated for second to last. Not as bad as last, but damn close. I sat in the green room, purgatory for me as opposed to the stage, which is hell. I had already passed out in the rest room at the bus station. I’d swallowed a couple of beta blockers and thought I could feel them hanging out in my stomach like the useless little BBs they were. In fact, I thought they were adding to my weird sense of detachment, like I was somebody else and whoever she was, she couldn’t play “Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star” much less Hindemith’s Third Sonata. I tried to distract myself with a Gossip magazine I’d picked up in the station. It registered somewhere in my brain that on page ten there was a photo of David Montagnier with Julia Roberts. They looked real chummy. But at the moment, I was just praying that a meteor would strike Boston and blow it sky-high before I had to perform. Ziggy, well aware of my problem, kept checking me out with first one eye and then the other. I saw the relief as he decided he didn’t have to worry about any serious competition from me.
Despite my efforts at slowing down the rotation of the Earth and therefore the passage of time, my turn came. Somebody walked myself out to the piano. I somehow made it through the first section but then I got stuck in a loop. Panic had erased my memory totally and my fingers just kept repeating the same measures over and over. Then there was the blur of the keyboard, the nauseating motion as it pitched and rolled, and finally the familiar head full of fireworks that ended in a blank.
Ziggy walked off with the twenty-five grand. All I had to show for my final performance was a lump the color and size of an eggplant and the realization that it was over for me. My seatmate on the way back to New York must have thought I was escaping a battering husband because all I did was cry and pop Motrin for the lump. Ten years of struggle and hope and disappointment down the hopper, not to mention having to face that old man with the cigar. I felt like I was standing at the edge of a grave, shoveling dirt on my broken heart. Professor Stein was expecting a report as soon as I got home but I could tell when I heard his voice on the phone that he already knew.
“Thank you for trying, Bess,” he said. “You were brave.”
“Is there any point in my showing up for my lesson on Wednesday?” I asked.
There was a hesitation. “Yes. Let’s talk then.” But I could hear the resignation. He was finished.
I remembered when my grandmother died, the pain in my chest like a broken rib. I would forget, and then it would clobber me all over again. It’s over for you, Bess. You will never be a concert pianist. It was the never part that killed me. Despite everything, I’d been hanging on to the possibility that one day I’d be rid of the terror and could walk out on a stage free and strong. I was almost surprised that there was no relief, only sorrow and a sickening sense of shame.
It was raining hard when I set off for the Professor’s studio on Wednesday afternoon. I didn’t take my music with me. It was time the old man focused what limited energy he had left on someone who could deliver the goods. He’d done it twenty years ago with Eugene Seidelman and he might still have the satisfaction of creating another star.
It wasn’t unusual to find his door ajar with a shoe holding it open. Sometimes when he’s been hitting the cigars pretty hard and there’s not much cross breeze, he does that to keep from setting off the smoke alarm. The smell of that funky old stogy was just too much for me. I started crying again out there in the hallway and stood mopping rain and tears off my face. I was damned if I was going to show up all weepy and pitiful. But while I was busy dehydrating myself, I realized that words were floating out along with the cigar smoke. I recognized the voice of David Montagnier. I could almost hear the hiss as my tears evaporated. I shoved my ear next to the opening.
“There’s no one to equal Eugene as an interpreter of avant-garde composers,” Professor Stein was saying, “but Bess can play anything. The first time I heard her, the hair stood up on the back of my neck. She should have been her generation’s answer to Horowitz.”
“Tragic for her, perhaps,” David Montagnier said, “but it may be good luck for me.”
“I tell you, it breaks my heart,” the Professor went on. “And it’s not that she doesn’t have courage, but I’ve never seen a more extreme case. We’ve tried everything short of electric shock.”
I was amazed that they couldn’t hear my heart clattering like a kettledrum on the other side of the door. I realize it was not exactly kosher, my eavesdropping like that, but I was dying to hear how come my catastrophe was David Montagnier’s good fortune.
“It’s not just her musicality, Harold,” David went on. “It’s one thing hearing her through a practice studio door but quite another in person. It’s palpable, that star quality. She has extraordinary presence.”
At that, a surprised snorty noise came out of me, but they still didn’t seem to notice.
“What’s to become of her, David?”
At first, I thought Montagnier answered, “I wonder,” but then I realized it was I want her.
“After playing with her only once?” the Professor asked. “You have no idea if she’ll be able to perform.”
“Look here, Harold, I knew she was the one the first time I listened to her practicing. What made me walk past that studio that particular hour; that day? I haven’t been down that hall in years. It could have been an old lady with three heads in there, but I knew this was the person I’d been waiting for. I just knew. She was speaking to me through the door, through her music.”
“How are you going to get her out on a stage?” the Professor asked.
“I’m not worried about it,” David answered.
This time I covered my mouth. He wasn’t worried about it!
“I think either you’re deluded or you’re a little bit in love with her.”
“I assure you, Harold, neither applies. But you’ll see, I’ll get her past this fainting nonsense.”
Putting it mildly, this was a lot to absorb. I was pretty light-headed and had to grip the doorknob to keep from toppling over. Professor Stein’s next-door neighbor came out into the hall with her godzilla of a dog on a leash. It shoved into me affectionately and gave me a sloppy kiss on the hand. This seemed like a signal so I knocked and let myself in. Professor Stein was on the windowsill letting in the rain. Montagnier was perched on a pile of Schumann.
“Hi,” I said.
They stared at me without speaking. It was a strange moment, really, the three of us stuck there on the edge of something. My eyes went from Professor Stein’s weary old face with all its familiar sags and wrinkles to David Montagnier. Once in a great while, I guess life pulls off some unlikely pranks, and this one was a beaut. There he was, David Montagnier; darling of the media and the concert stage, speaker of six languages, romancer of starlets, brilliant musician and intellectual. Who could possibly have been more alien to me? And all I could think of when I looked at him sitting there on a heap of piano music was, Okay, Bess. You’re home.