WHAT GOES AROUND
by
Kate Halleron
The
envelope in Dr. Charles Winchester’s “in” box was small and square and
addressed in a pained left-handed scrawl. Not another invitation to some boring
society function, he thought. He’d had more than enough of those in the last
three years. He sighed wearily and slit it open. Sure enough, “You are
cordially invited to the world premiere performance of the Symphony Number One
by David Sheridan . . . .” Good Lord. There was a note enclosed, written in the
same scrawl as the address, “Dear Doctor, Remember me? Call me. David.” and a
local phone number. Remember? The one patient Charles would never forget. He
picked up the phone and dialed.
“Hello?
David? This is Charles Winchester.”
“Doctor!
How good to hear from you. Unfortunately, I’m on my way out the door to deliver
some galley proofs to my publisher, but if you’re not busy, maybe you could
come over for dinner tonight.”
“I’d
be delighted. Would eight o’clock be all right?”
David
gave him the address. “But make it seven. We have a lot to catch up on.”
Charles
tapped the invitation. “Indeed we do. Seven then.”
The
address was a small house in Brookline. As Charles got out of his car, his ear
caught a strain of piano music drifting through the open window. He closed his
eyes, feeling he was on treacherous ground. Not Mozart, please, he thought.
Don’t let it be Mozart. It wasn’t Mozart, but something he didn’t recognize at
all. He knocked on the door.
“Doctor,
it’s good to see you.” David Sheridan shook his hand in a firm grip.
“How
is the hand?” Charles asked, turning it over and examining it.
“Admiring
your handiwork?”
Charles
dropped it. “I only wish I could have done better.”
“I’m
not sure I do,” David said, “but where are my manners? Would you like a drink?
I seem to remember you were a wine drinker.”
“Wine
would be fine. I must say I was surprised to get your invitation. I had no idea
you’d become such a successful composer.”
“I
don’t see why.” David extracted the cork from the wine bottle. “My first three
piano concertos were all performed by the Boston Symphony Orchestra last
season.” He poured the wine and handed Charles a glass.
“Oh.
Well.” Charles took a drink. “I’m afraid I haven’t been to the Symphony since I
came back from Korea.”
“I
find that difficult to believe.” David sat down and waved Charles to a chair.
“Whyever not?”
“It’s
a long story,” Charles sighed.
“Well,
that’s what we’re here for, isn’t it, to catch up with each other?”
“What
about you?” Charles asked. “How long have you been in Boston?”
“About
three months. I moved here temporarily to get my symphony ready for its
premiere, but I find I really like it. I’m trying to convince my fiancee that
we should live here, but she still loves New York.”
Charles
took another swallow of wine. “When are you getting married?”
“Not
for a while. Alicia wants to finish up her residency first.”
“She’s
a doctor?”
“Soon
will be. Pediatrics.”
Charles
looked around the cluttered living room, piled with music books and
manuscripts. He indicated the baby grand piano which took up nearly a third of
the room. “Can you play that?”
David
stood and caressed the keys. “Not well enough for money, but still well enough
for love. Would you like me to show you, Doctor?”
Charles
hesitated. The ground was getting treacherous again; he would have to tread
carefully. “If you would like to. Something of yours, perhaps?”
“Of
course,” David smiled and sat down at the piano. “This is my Piano Concerto
Number One. You’ll just have to imagine an orchestra.” He began to play.
The
piece began in a minor key, softly, like a rain of sorrow that grew slowly and
gradually into a river of despair, seductive and almost sweet. David’s right
hand faltered from time to time, but Charles soon stopped noticing. A second
theme wove itself around the first, first one note, then two, then more, a
theme of hope, soft and insistent. The despair grew in intensity; hope opposed
it, never gaining volume, never losing its insistence. Finally, despair
shattered in a rain of jewel-like notes, leaving the stage to hope, soft as
ever but now triumphant.
“Excuse
me,” Charles said and fled outside to the porch. He clutched the railing, the
tears on his face a pale echo of the dam that was bursting in his soul. He felt
every pain, every loss he had ever endured washing over him in one huge,
crashing wave. He wept silently, choking back sobs, over each one. Loss of
love. Loss of faith. Loss of hope. His soul felt battered. His car beckoned to
him from the driveway, and turning and walking back through the front door was
the bravest thing he had ever done.
David
called from the kitchen, “The bathroom is down the hall to the left if you want
to freshen up.”
Charles
closed the bathroom door and ran the sink full of cold water, which he splashed
over his head and face. “Please, God, if you’re up there at all . . . .” then
he trailed off because he had no idea what to ask for. “Well. Just do the best
you can,” he finished.
“I
hope you don’t mind eating in the kitchen,” David said when Charles came out.
“I don’t have a dining room.”
“The
kitchen’s fine,” Charles said. “David. About what just happened . . . .”
“Save
it until after dinner, Doctor. Take some time to pull yourself together, then
we’ll talk.”
Charles
took a deep breath. “Thank you. And it’s Charles.”
“All
right, Charles. Come eat now.”
Dinner
was a simple affair of chicken and vegetables, but Charles found he had never
been so ravenous. He took seconds of everything. Afterward, they adjourned to
the living room.
“Did
you ever have physical therapy, Charles?” David asked.
“No, I can’t say that I have.”
“I
did. Six months on the hand and the leg. I cried myself to sleep from the pain
almost every night.”
“Surely
your doctor gave you pain medication.”
“I
refused it. I was already starting to write then and the drugs dulled more than
the pain. I got so used to writing with my left hand that I still do even
though I don’t have to.”
“And
your point?”
“That
any pain is bearable if it’s for a purpose. It’s the pointless pain that breaks
you. So tell me why you don’t go to the Symphony anymore.”
“It
was in Korea.”
“I
had gathered that.”
“Yes,
I guess you would. Well. I’d always loved music, you know that, but in Korea it
became more. It was my lifeline; my link to the outside, civilized world; my
hedge against the insanity and the death.”
“You
certainly could have picked worse things to fulfill that need.”
“Yes,
and I know so many who did. But in the last days of the war, five musicians
with the Chinese army surrendered to me.”
“Really?”
“Yes,
really. They didn’t speak English and I didn’t speak a word of Chinese, but I
taught them,” Charles swallowed, “. . . I taught them to play Mozart. The
Quintet for Clarinet and Strings.”
“Lovely
piece.”
“David,
they were all killed.”
“Oh.”
Charles
rushed on. “I haven’t been able to bear listening to music since. All it can do
is remind me.”
David
cleared his throat. “That seems like far too high a price to pay for one
horrifying experience.”
“David,
I lost the thing that mattered to me most in the world. You can’t imagine what
that feels like.”
David
held up his right hand. “Yes, I can.”
There
was a long moment of silence. “All right,” Charles said. “I suppose you can.”
David
flexed each finger. “You know, I still miss it. I’m very proud of what I’ve
accomplished, but sometimes, when I hear someone play one of my concertos and I
know in my soul that I once could have played it better, it still hurts. What I
have now is better than what I lost, but I’ll always miss it.”
“I’m
truly sorry.”
David
snorted. “I wish you would stop saying that; you’re not the one who fired that
mortar shell at me. No one could have put me back together better than you did.
Stop pretending you’re God.”
“That’s
a lesson I’ve been trying to learn for years.”
“Am
I the first person you’ve told that story to?”
Charles
leaned back in his chair. “Yes.”
“Why?
Surely you have people here who care about you?”
“I’ve
thought about telling my sister, but she has enough of her own problems.”
“Worry
about you being the chief among them, I’m sure.”
Charles
opened his mouth to deny it, then hesitated. “Hunh. You . . . may be right
about that.”
David
leaned forward. “Then talk to her. If you have friends you can trust, talk to
them. And come back and talk to me. If you don’t, I’ll come find you. I’ll camp
on your doorstep until you do.”
“Heh.
You would, too, wouldn’t you?”
“Yes,
I would. And take the music back, Charles. You’ve been without it much too
long.”
Charles
bent forward, covering his face with his hands. “I’m . . . not sure I can.”
“Despair
is easy. Don’t you remember all the things you told me when I thought I’d never
play again?”
Charles
looked up. “Yes. Every word.”
“The
music is in your soul, too. It’s how you got through to me; it’s how you
connected with them. We all speak the same language.” David stood up and walked
over to the piano.
“Please,
no more,” Charles said.
“Now
surely, of all the things that happened in Korea, this is what you should be
most proud of,” and David began to play Ravel’s Piano Concerto for the Left
Hand. Charles sat utterly still, waiting for the pain to start, but there was
none. Just peace. “See, that wasn’t so bad, was it?” David said when he was
finished.
“No,
it wasn’t,” Charles said, astonished. David’s fingers picked out an unfamiliar
tune, soft yet strong. “What’s that?”
“I
don’t know yet, maybe the Symphony Number Two.”
“No
offense, David,” Charles said, “but I think I’ve had all I can take for one
day.”
David
stood. “I understand. My door is always open to you, I hope you know that.”
“Thank
you. But before I come back, I think I’d better have that talk with my sister.”
David
smiled. “Good. But if I don’t hear from you in a couple of days, I’m going to
come find you.”
“You
do that.” Charles turned to go.
“Just
one more thing,” David said. “You haven’t said whether you’re coming to my
premiere.”
Charles
thought for a moment. “How could I not?”
Driving
home, Charles found himself unconsciously whistling Eine Kleine Nachtmusik.
Damn, not Mozart, he thought. Ah, the hell with it, and he kept on whistling
anyway.
The
pain was excruciating, but he wondered how he could have lived so long without
it.