Today she stands in her room, scrutinizing what may be the eighth piece. It sits on her bed, propped against the wall, as she paces back and forth, examining it from every angle. With this, she will have enough to make her applications, and a few more months to manage a final two—or to replace some of those she is less certain about, like the watercolor that shows the bridge over the river near the house, with its curls of water folding in on itself and the light slanting low. It is competent, but it says nothing, and she worries that the judges will think her point of view is shallow.
This piece, though—she thinks she likes it. It is nothing special, in a way. Only a portrait. Gabriel, a three-quarter view, strong shadows over his face. He leans against a doorway, neither inside nor outside the room. He looks like he is about to ask a question. The question was “How long do I have to stand like this,” but she has left out the glint in his eyes, made him wearier. In his eye is the shadowed reflection of a woman. A girl. She calls it Intruder: A Self-Portrait. She worries it is too obvious, not obvious enough, pretentious, common.
She likes it.
She is not satisfied with it, the way Lorelei cautions her against; her colors are muddy in places, the anatomy just off enough to bother her, the reflection of the girl not as distinct as she’d hoped.
Gabriel likes it, too. But he doesn’t like the title. “You’re not intruding on anything,” he’d said.
“Except your life,” she told him.
“Consider yourself an invited guest,” he said with his slantwise smile.
Their families hate each other. The details of it are murky to Emma. His father worked for hers until very recently. There were accusations of theft on one side, mismanagement on the other. But Kenneth Mahoney is a drunk and a deadbeat, and no one was surprised he’d gotten himself fired from another job.
“What is that?” a sharp voice asks.
She turns. Her mother stands in the doorway. She is dressed, as she nearly always is, as if she is about to walk out the door to a charity brunch at any second. Pearls at her neck and her nails shiny, perfect ovals, buffed and polished.
“It’s a portrait of Mrs. Mahoney’s grandson,” Emma says simply, as if this is completely neutral information.
“We’re painting portraits of boys now?” her mother asks in that same sharp tone.
Emma rolls her eyes. “It’s just a portrait, Mom. It’s not like I drew him in the nude.”
Her mother stiffens. “I hear you’ve been hanging around together.”
Tension locks into place down Emma’s spine. There is danger in this conversation. The truth is no defense against her mother’s suspicions. It would only make things worse. “He lives with Mrs. Mahoney. He’s around the house a lot, if that’s what you mean,” Emma says.
“So you’re not sleeping with him?”
“Mom!” She stares at her. She’s never even kissed anyone. There isn’t time for it, even if there were a boy in town who didn’t think she was weird and unapproachable.
Her mother makes a noise in the back of her throat. “You should have been downstairs ten minutes ago. It’s time to practice,” she snaps.
“I’ll practice later,” Emma says. When her mother is in a good mood, sometimes she can get away with half an hour after dinner, instead of the full hour she’s supposed to plink away at the piano. Her fingers are dexterous enough, but she can’t hear the music the way Juliette can. It’s all a jumble of disconnected notes to her, and it comes out sounding like it. Daphne is better than she is—competent, and uncomplaining during her hour. For Emma, it’s torture.
“Now, Emma,” her mother says. She waits; Emma complies. She thuds her way down the steps sullenly. In the great room, Juliette sits with her diary. Daphne is in the sunroom, nose in a book. Probably about something horribly gruesome like the black plague or witch trials, or a detailed explanation of pressing as an execution method, which Emma will enjoy hearing about later, out of their mother’s earshot.
Emma takes her seat. “Posture,” her mother tells her. She straightens her shoulders, stacks each vertebra in painful overcompliance. Fingers on the keys. “Hands,” her mother tells her; she straightens her wrists, relaxes her fingers. She runs through simple scales mechanically as her mother stands ramrod straight and perfectly still at her shoulder.
Her mother selects the first piece. Emma knows what the notes mean; she can read music fluently enough. But the sequence never resolves in her mind to anything other than fragments of information, refusing to cohere. She can’t hear it the way she can see a painting. She can’t sense the whole, and so even when she manages to follow the notes precisely, it somehow never sounds like the same song that Juliette plays.
“Faster here,” her mother tells her, and “Posture,” and “Watch your breathing,” but none of it changes the fact that she is a dull, plodding player, not a musician, not a talent like Juliette. Her fingers ache. She’s held a paintbrush half the day already, and her back has a lick of acidic heat running up beside her spine.
“Pay attention,” her mother snaps. “If you practiced more, you wouldn’t struggle so much.”
“Maybe the piano just hates me,” Emma grouses.
Her mother glares down at her. “You are perfectly capable if you apply yourself. Keep going.”
Emma grits her teeth. She plays on. She speeds up, speeds up more, until her fingers are stumbling drunkenly. Dropping a note, smashing down two keys instead of one, notes tumbling together in a muddle of noise. Her mother says her name. She keeps going. Brutishly forcing her way through the music, shouldering each bar aside to get to its end. Her mother says her name again—a third time—
Irene Palmer reaches out, grabs the fallboard, and slams it shut. Emma whips her hands back. Not quite fast enough. Emma shrieks. Pulls her left hand free, cradles it against her chest, two fingers in sudden agony. Her mother looks down at her with her mouth in a faint O.
Emma laughs. The sound is stretched obscenely, the pain making her shake. She looks down at her hand. The index finger is fine, probably, bruised. The middle finger is swelling quickly, and she knows at a glance that it’s broken. “Guess I can’t play now,” she rasps out.
“Go to your room,” her mother manages, pointing with arm outstretched, like she is claiming control of the situation in the only way she can.
Emma stands, hand still cupped against her chest. She looks at Juliette, who is staring at the floor. She looks at Daphne, staring openly from the sunroom, her book abandoned beside her. She laughs again, a sound that turns to brambles in her throat. Her mother sees that she isn’t moving, isn’t obeying, but her eyes flick away. To argue is to cede more control.
“Juliette, you could use another pass at the Brahms,” she says briskly.
Juliette stands, setting her diary beside her. She walks across the room, eyes on the floor, and takes her seat, forcing Emma to edge away.
Emma shakes her head. She turns away at last and walks swiftly out of the room, her vision blurring with tears as the pain overtakes the outrage.
Behind her, Juliette begins to play.
16
EMMA
Now
Nathan had gone out to the hardware store again. After the third visit they’d caved and opened a credit card there, since it was becoming clear they were going to need a lot more than a bit of paint remover and a mop. The stairs on the back of the house had rotted through. The screen door sagged. The paint was peeling, the toilets flushed at their own whim and not yours, and there was a proud dynasty of squirrels in the attic, their ancestors entombed in the insulation. Nathan had finally gotten the Wi-Fi going and was now spending hours on YouTube, doggedly determined not to pay anyone a cent for what “any real man could figure out on his own.”
Emma had just finished heaving up what little lunch she’d managed to get down and returned to spackling holes in the dining room. Her first batch had dried. She sanded them as smooth as she could, but there was still a slight bump where some vandal had put something through the wall. It wasn’t the only one. Here and there were patches where the texture of the wall changed or a slight dimple marked a patched hole. She set her fingers over one, then made a fist and pushed her knuckles against the spot. But her hands were smaller than her father’s had been.