Isabella reclined on a plush white couch donned in a leather vest and denim jeans. Hanna sat in a wooden chair across from the couch with a canvas and easel before her. Hebrew letters on canvas were arranged to suggest the outline of Isabella's face and the strands of her hair. Hanna pressed her quill near the center of the face to make the top of a bet. A curved stroke to the right made the side of that letter. A final horizon line finished the consonant. From a short distance, it resembled an eye. Hanna glanced out the window of her Lower East Side studio apartment. "I think that's all for this sitting. The sun is getting low in the sky."
"The artist requires natural light?" Isabella asked.
"The artist has to get to Maariv," Hanna replied.
Isabella got up to look at the calligraphy. "Why do you insist that I wear this costume when you're only drawing my face?"
Hanna explained, "Clothing makes you feel a certain way. When you feel a certain way, you express a certain emotion. Wearing those clothes puts a fierce expression on your face."
"I guess." The pair walked into the hallway together. Isabella turned to Hanna as they waited for the elevator. "So, what do those words on the canvas mean?"
"It's a passage from the Tanach. It's about Deborah criticizing the generals."
"Oh, was she a pacifist?"
"Not exactly," Hanna said as they entered elevator. It took a while for Hanna to gather the courage to ask her question. "Isabella, do you know a good Spanish bookstore in the area?"
Isabella was pleasantly surprised. "Ms. Turo, are you searching for your Sephardic roots?"
Hanna corrected her. "The book is for a friend."
Isabella sighed. "I suppose it was too much to hope for."
Hanna practically ran off after getting the address of the bookstore and saying goodbye to Isabella. She had a stop to make on the way to Maariv, and this was one night when she did not want to be late for services. Hanna waited impatiently as the store clerk found her a book of Spanish love poems. Then she took a cab across Manhattan to Beit Simchat Torah. Her companion was waiting for her on the steps to the synagogue. Hanna waved to her. "Holla, Jovita"
Jovita smiled at her date. "Holla, Hanna. You took a cab?"