Written about the saddest moment I ever witnessed. |
In a house with high ceilings and attendant women in premature middle-age and flat, sensible shoes, where old people come to wait it out when there’s no more talk of ‘getting better’, when time inflicts cruelties that relatives cannot bear to watch, in a room opaque with the ever-present smell of failing kidneys, weakened bladders, in a chair that does not face the window with its view of blind, dark earth and choking weeds and a bird table where no birds gather, an old lady sleeps, and in her sleep, she plays an invisible violin. Her knotted fingers press down urgently upon the ghosts of strings, long since snapped, as the other veined, papery hand grasps the recollection of a bow, reduced – by now – to kindling, and she picks out the echo of an old song. There’s memory in the muscles of those aged hands, as they move, pale and sad and delicate as the bleached bones of sparrows’ wings. The brain may forget, but some part of her remembers. There’s instinct, running marrow-deep, and in blood, made slow and heavy with time’s dragging sediment, something pulses to a wistful, distant melody. Her face, trampled by the callous boots of all those years, tightens, pained, as she holds one long, quivering note. I wonder what she’s playing, as her fingers tense and tremble. Maybe something fragile and tragic by Bach, or ‘It Was A Very Good Year’, moved from here to some more dignified time, when she and Sinatra were both still young. I wonder if, in the dark and dusty auditorium of unravelling memory, there is a spotlight, if it shines on her. That tune she wasn’t playing… I can’t seem to get it out of my head. And now, the whole place echoes, with the silence of that one violin. |