Melody had been the curator at the gallery for nearly fifteen years. During that time, she had seen artists come and artists go. Some gay, some straight but all seemed to be bogged down with emotional baggage of some sort. Maybe that was the reason she was never attracted to any of them. So when she stopped to take a long, hard look at Michael, it came as quite the surprise to feel her heart quicken when he looked back at her with those crystal blue eyes.
Forget it,â she thought out loud, but even from a distance, he still found a way to raise her pulse. Quickly she went back to work, praying that her feelings towards a man fifteen years younger were not exposed.
Melody casually strolled around the floor. For an off-season viewing , the gallery was quite full. Some of it was due to a great deal of marketing but the rest was due to Michaelâs work. Every canvas spoke, as if in the middle of beautiful story, heâd taken a snapshot...frozen that exact moment in time. Each were unique in their own right. She stopped in front of her favorite piece: Angel Eyes. A fantastic painting, it stood four feet tall by six feet wide. Michael had mixed a variety of pastels with dark hues to create a sunset of such contrasting colors that even God himself would have to take notes.
Within that sunset Michael placed a woman high on a cliff, covered only in a flowing mane of blonde hair. Her arms and the wings on her back were lifted into the heavens as she basked in the scene of the cloud-filled sunset that draped her naked body in a cloak of prismatic colors. But to Melody, it was neither the sunset nor the perfect shape of the woman that drew her into the picture, but rather the soft, serene face of that woman. When sheâd questioned Michael about the woman, he said he had painted it two years before he arrived in Santa Clara.
His agent had attested to that fact, but still the likeness was uncanny. âMelody, I watched him as he worked on this one,â heâd said. âHe was obsessed. He barely ate or slept for three weeks. He said the girl in the picture haunted him. I would tell him to work on something else but he said the vision of the girl plagued his every thought even to the point where he claimed the other unfinished works in his studio refused to be painted until Angel eyes was done.â
At the time, Melody figured Michael was just another whacked-out artist. But when she saw the work, she understood his feelings.
âQuite the piece.â A voice sounded behind Melody, drawing her back from her study of the painting. âExcuse me?â Melody said coming out of her daydream. She turned to face Ms. Valerie Fitzgerald, a major contributor to the gallery.
âI said âquite a piece of workâ. It is amazing what he can do with a paintbrush. I can only imagine what he is capable of with his hands.â The smile that shone on her face oozed into a comfortable country club affectation.
âYes, he is quite the artist.â Melody shook off the crass comments of older women. âBut if you will excuse me, I need to make sure his work is admired by everyone.â
âNo problem, my dear. I will go see if that handsome lad needs an assistant to hold his âbrushâ.â She turned her back to Melody and strutted toward Michael, who was in the midst of a crowd discussing one of his sculptures.
Melody turned away angrily not wishing to show her jealousy towards Ms. Fitzgeraldâs boldness. Even at her age, Ms Fitzgerald was still prowling for men. It only got worse after her husband died five years ago, leaving her with free time and a substantial sum of money.
Melody scolded herself. âYou shouldnât care what Michael does. He is a big boy. Besides you arenât involved with him nor should you get involved with an artist. They are too flighty and this particular artist is ten years younger. You need someone that isnât some fly-by-night-boy-toy with bulging biceps and a trim waist.â
Melody continued her canvassing around the room, straightening perfectly straight pictures, ordering about the well disciplined wait staff and for all general purposes fussing over things that normally she would have left alone. After ten minutes she had migrated within earshot of Ms. Fitzgerald and Michael.
âOh Ms. Fitzgerald. I would love to come over and see your bedroom etchings, as you call them. But I am a jealous lover and you are too sensual a woman to be held captive in the bonds of just one man. It would not be right for me to take you and hide you away from the bouquet of pleasures that you so longingly desire.â Ms. Fitzgerald blushed openly at Michaelâs remarks.
âYou darling boy. How right you are.â She rubbed Michaelâs tight buttocks with her left hand then gave him a loving pat along the back pocket of his black slacks.
Melody snickered quietly to herself. Michael had masterfully called a woman of Ms. Fitzgerald wealth and power, a harlot and still come out smelling like a rose.
Ms. Fitzgerald content on finding new prey moved off towards two young men standing at the far side of the Gallery.
âStrikes two and three,â Melody said under her breath as she watched Ms. Fitzgerald approach the handsome young gents. âThose two are gay.â She then approached Michael just as he turned around to reposition the sculpture.
âI see you met Ms. Fitzgerald.â
âYes she is quite charming. She said she would buy Angel Eyes if I came over to hang it and look at her private collection of sketches.â
âSo are you?â
âNo. I didnât think it would be appropriate.â
Melody stood in amazement. Michael had just said no to a $4000.00 paycheck and a chance to have his work seen by every dignitary that ventured into the great hall of the Fitzgerald estate.
âBesides,â Michael continued, âI have room in my heart for only one passion.â As he said this he looked directly into her eyes than quickly averted his glance away to the painting behind her.
Heat rose into Melodyâs neck and cheeks. âExcuse me,â she stammered, âI need to check on the champagne.â
Melody quickly exited, tripping over Michaelâs foot as she passed him. For the rest of the night she avoided Michael. Not because of what heâd said or how heâd said it, but because of what sheâd felt. She dared not fall into the charms of this well built artist with his broad shoulders, tender voice and quite confidence. A man years her junior with a dimpled smile and bright eyes, even if the mere mention of his name made her mind swirl in a hazy fog. She sighed heavily as her daydream of Michael flitted away.
The next morning Melody knocked on Debbieâs door. Debbie was Melodyâs assistant, a girl of 25 years, who had graduated with a degree in art. Debbie was an up coming prodigy destined to either replace Melody or move on to a gallery of her own. âShe has more energy ,âMelody had convinced herself late last night as she tossed and turned in her bed unable to get Michaelâs gaze out of her mind. Deb would make an excellent rep for Michaelâs work and her bold ideas would allow his talents to be showcased in such a manner that he could help but get the acclaim he deserves.
âYes,â came a sweet voice from within.
âDebbie,â Melody stuck her head through the door. âIt is high time for you to take on a little more responsibility. Therefore I am putting you in charge of Michaelâs next show and all the viewing of his work there after. You can call and tell him today.â Melody quickly closed the door as the tears streaked down her cheeks.
Weeks went by and Melody acted the constant professional. Cordial in every way toward Michael, but all the while her heart tugged at her mindâs stubbornness. She wanted to be with him. Him and only him. But she dare not even harbor such thoughts. Melody had done her best to distance herself from him, but offering his account to her apprentice had done little to ease her troubled spirit.
Michael, she felt returned her politeness. He smiled at her when he came to the gallery. He continued to work hard and produced some marvelous work and, as Melody predicted, gained the attention of some high-ranking people in the industry.
âOh Melody,â said Debbie the morning after Michaelâs show. âYou should have seen their faces. The people from the San Francisco Museum of Art. They were here you know. Last night at the show. They loved Michael and his work. It is a shame that you havenât been feeling well. You know that is the second show you missed this month.â
Melody just smiled, hung her coat on the rack, and went into her office. Behind closed doors she sighed heavily and sat at her desk. And there propped on her day calendar was a hand written note written on the back of a Gallery Invitation. It read: âGood bye, Angel Eyesâ
Melodyâs heart raced. Was he leaving? Going away? She rushed to Debbieâs office. âI got this note from Michaelâ she panted outside the doorway âIs he leaving?â
âYea, tomorrowâ came Debbieâs bubbly reply. âHe is going to San Francisco to do a showing. Most of his work is being shipped today except the four pieces he sold yesterday and the large panting of the sunset. That one he donated to the gallery as a thank you.â
No, thought Melody. He canât just leave.
She rushed back to her office and flipped open her Rolodex. She dialed and waited. The phone rang and rang but there was no answer.
Her mind in turmoil, she grabbed her purse and flew out of the door. Debbie called after her but she made no attempt to slow down. âJust hold my calls,â she shouted without turning around.
Weaving through traffic in her BMW, Melody raced up the narrow streets of downtown Santa Clara to the warehouse district. She had been to Michaelâs studio only once but she remembered that it was an old warehouse downtown. As she enter the area she searched frantically for the words Anaconda Steel written on the side of the building. It appeared in faded black on the tin building at the end of the row. There it was... Michaelâs studio and home. Above the main floor, Michael had converted the upstairs office space into a studio apartment with the living quarters separated from the bedroom by glass blocks.
Screeching to a halt, she jumped from her car and rushed to the large steel door. She rang the doorbell. It wheezed out a tired buzz but no reply came from inside. Melody checked the door. Locked âDamn.â Where could he be? He should be here packing. She thought
Then from an open window on the second story, she heard the splash of water hitting concrete from a shower faucet. Melody tugged on the door again and then went to the window around the side. She pulled hard and the window yielded slightly leaving a 12-inch gap. Without thinking, she squeezed herself into the open space and fell onto the concrete floor.