A Knock at the Door

by M.G. Warenycia

            The overtaxed AC unit wheezed and strained against the exhalations of the fatigued, sweat-basted bodies that packed, tighter and tighter, into the already-crowded subway car. It did not offer even token resistance to the evil melange of odours accumulating with each succeeding stop. The northbound train hauled units of production away from the downtown core like a boilerman’s shovel dragging spent ashes from a still-warm firebox. Through the windows, its passengers could observe the southbound train carrying scantily but expensively clad clubbers to drink and dance, and, if they were fortunate, acquire a man who would spare them from riding the subway for a few weeks or months of Friday nights. At the end of the line, you would glimpse serried platoons of this army, advancing clumsily down the sidewalks to the gates of the great night hotspots on stilettoed feet, hoping it might be assumed that they had come out of one of the Porsches or Benzes in the parking lot, rather than a bus two or three stops away.

            There was a time, not so long ago, but already seeming more of a half-forgotten dream than a tangible memory, when Angeline Boucher would have been heading out on the cusp of a sweltering summertime night like this one. Only she would not have rode the train. She could have walked, in fact, and more than one night witnessed her, with a squad of housemates, staggering home, heels dangling in the air, skin-hugging dresses and miniskirts taxed by gross quantities of poutine, pizza and artisanal burgers, which they would have virtuously shunned in the light of sober day, a good portion of which would end up in the sinks of the Edwardian duplex they inhabited – to be cleaned up by the least successful of the night’s huntresses…usually Angeline herself.

            Not that Angeline was the ugly duckling – quite the opposite. Clad in yoga tights and sneaker whites, or in a winter ensemble arranged around her prized ultramarine blue, coyote-fur-trimmed parka, she was a veritable goddess among that urban tribe, sometimes loosely referred to as hipsters, though, really, the subcultural lines are blurry. A lean oval face, broadest at the prominent cheekbones, relieved of its severity by a subtly retroussé nose and shaded by an umbrella of jet black bangs; roseate lips painted crimson to contrast with the marble whiteness of her complexion, and a pair of wide, searching eyes whose tint precisely matched Holbein Manganese Blue Hue. Add to that long, supple limbs and the hands of a pianist, her comprehensible yet exotic (to Torontonians) accent and one did not wonder that so many of her classmates asked her to serve as a model for their own life drawings. When, of course, it was that they wanted a traditional Romantic, Pre-Raphaelite or Flapper-era vision of beauty and not something chosen for ‘are you avant garde enough to pretend you find this attractive?’ sorts of images.

            The wheels gave a banshee screech, rending her out of her meditations. “Due to track maintenance…we apologise…” in the staid female voice of the intercom. It was almost 8 p.m. The sun stabbed in at low angles, flickering through the window frames, stinging those manganese blue hue eyes, but the heat and the soothing rhythm of the tracks lulled her once more into somnolence. She drew an old sketchbook. She did not take out a pencil. She was too tired to make art and, besides, the way people were jammed into the subway car, her elbows would get jostled something fierce. She had learned early on what people wanted to see. They wanted to feel guilty, or to be persuaded they were tyrannically oppressed so as to impart some faint degree of pathos into their lives. Insecure from childhood, she craved praise and acceptance. Had she not been both talented and consciously beautiful, this would have been enough.  She had imagined the City would be a safe harbour of like minds in which she could be the Angeline Boucher she sometimes dared to daydream was her real but hidden self. Unquestionably, she had succeeded, in every objective sense…

            She happened upon a sheet of heavy watercolour paper, wedged among the leaves of the sketchbook. A ‘portrait’ of one of those trees in the Sahara which are otherwise perfectly normal-looking but just so happen to be hundreds of kilometres in all directions from the next nearest living tree. It was executed with a brush and pure India ink, with an airbrush-smooth graduation of reds and oranges in the background, representing the sunset. For added interest, she had put a pen-and-ink-wash Egyptian ruin, with headless columns and rubble off to one side in the middle ground. She submitted it, two winters ago, as part of her portfolio for the semester. She’d even constructed themed series dealing with current events and cultural heritage, which she had tried to make an expression spectacle of discovering through her artistic development. Not only did her professors fail to display the enthusiasm they showed for her classmate Becky’s (‘Jake’ by third year) exploration of ‘transcendent’ sexuality through abstract expressionist acrylic paintings and junk sculptures (in a literal and figurative sense), or Zabeeha Al’Sulaiman’s crude copies of famous paintings – sometimes actual commercial prints – with hijabs drawn or painted over the female figures. Zabeeha – not that it mattered – had gingery red hair, freckles and hailed from some hinterland town not unlike Angeline’s own hometown.

            The watercolours – her favourite medium, though she worked in many others – of rolling hills, bucolic farmsteads and cosy villages dominated by church steeples were taken as generic landscapes, mere technique exercises, probably assumed to have been made with wall calendars or postcards as reference photos.  Actually, it was her hometown and its environs. It had been embarrassing in the extreme to stand, waiting five or ten minutes, while her favourite art-history prof, a scatterbrained ex-hippie, scrutinized her ‘masterpiece’ series: a half dozen large canvasses, depicting religious scenes taking stylistic inspiration from medieval illuminated manuscripts and Jules Breton’s paintings of devout peasant women, transposing them into modern urban environments. “Oh, wow, wow, I can tell you were really connecting with the medium…your colour balance, the way it carries the composition…” the prof gasped and mumbled in awe. Then came the let-down. The professor had been spending all that time searching for the disguised irony and subversive innuendo she was sure from the first must have been incorporated into the painting…searching long and hard because she didn’t want to appear ignorant or hurt a student’s feelings by interpreting incorrectly and therefore de facto implying the student had failed to communicate their message. “Mmmh!” Brenda – the prof’s name; everyone called her by her first name – exclaimed after a swig of steaming peach tea from the tacky mug that never left her desk. Professor Brenda proceeded to congratulate Angeline on how she had cleverly subverted traditional iconography to satirise the ways in which the Catholic Church inculcated backwards medieval ideologies into modern women, particularly marginalized, uneducated ones.

             The pièce de résistance – depicting a latter-day Mary Magdalene in jeggings and a Canada Goose jacket, encountering Jesus, personified as a dreadlocked homeless man – was particularly incisive in showing the absurdity of internalized patriarchy in ‘current year.’ Angeline smiled uncomfortably. She had intended, in fact, to portray the spiritual journey of a modern young woman finding herself – and God – in present-day Toronto. The only irony was in her deliberate application of archaic styles to present-day models embodying the true sincerity of past artists who saw spiritual themes in the living world around them. Pious women in 14th century Books of Hours wore wimples and long dresses; those in Breton’s paintings were clad in the peasant garb of late 19th century northwest France. The spirit which inspired those old artists was present in their world, not frozen perpetually in the image of first century Roman Judea, to be contrasted with a pure and crass materialism for today. Angeline had occasionally started attending services at a church that still did Latin Mass on some occasions – though she did not make confession or take communion – in order to put herself in a frame of mind closer to that of the artists she meant to channel.

            She waited patiently for the other passengers to clear out before attempting to wheel the tower of stacked and strapped-together suitcases and bags she was handling. She winced at the jolt coming up the stretched-up handle of the suitcase forming the base of things, winced in anxiety not for the paints, books and clothes inside, but for what was on top – a very small cat carrier, inside of which a very large cat cringed in mute terror. “It’s ok, Giselle, my baby! Mama is here for you…” she kissed soothing words of comfort to the anxious feline, but grew suddenly uneasy and trailed off. She hurried on; it was only a few blocks, and when she was standing up walking straight ahead, she could not see into those plaintive yellow orbs behind the wire grate. She could barely remember when she’d been anywhere near this far on the line, but that’s where Google Maps comes in.

            The neighbourhood was mostly modest, late-20th century bungalows and split-levels, though here and there rapidly rising property values manifested themselves in massive brick edifices with cathedral ceilings and double or even treble garages, built to the very edges of their respective lots. The general quality of the place was more prosperous and confident than…what was it, four years ago? She did not remember so many eye-catching garden plantings – a lot of houses had impressive displays of peonies, as well as red and fuchsia climbing roses, presently in full bloom. The driveways no longer harboured rusty ‘beaters’ and primer-spotted Astro vans. Upscale Hondas and Toyotas stood alongside smaller members of the BMW and Benz families, lending an air of modest but ambitious respectability. The complex of 60s-70s Brutalist highrise apartment blocks looming behind the station, with their weather-stained cladding and dungeon-like, syringe-strewn stairwells had seemed to oppress the very atmosphere beyond their press-bar actuated, mesh-windowed steel doors – its character of tired gloom only enhanced by the colourful murals depicting an idealized version of the community – seemed to fade into the background; a relic of uglier times and no longer the representative face of the neighbourhood’s identity.

             Such occasional jaunts into ‘Fordland’ had only reassured her of the wisdom of her decision to reside downtown – sometimes in Queen West, Baldwin Street for a semester and change, then Kensington Market. The number of roommates required to hold down a place there inevitably led to conflict over fridge space, toilets and showers fouled, and misappropriation of booze and other common resources. More aggravating still was the talk; the scheming, almost always clothed as well-meaning concern for a ‘gurlfriend,’ wanting the best for her. Such eye rolls, and hushed (but not so much they wouldn’t be overheard) conversation shattered fragile egos, broke up promising relationships. But striking out on one’s own, away from the cannibalistic flock of a particular roommate situation, demanded sacrifices. Sacrifices one would not even consider but for the wet bleakness of November, the anger of family-less Christmases, and the interminable, ice-bound nights of December, January, February…black nights of bone-soaking damp cold that no coat or blanket could resist; nights where a young life’s accomplishments grew dim and one had to flee from oneself to keep from suffocating out of existence.

            It was always comforting to know that, tough and frustrating as things were, it was better than being out by Kipling, Finch, or, God forbid, Kennedy. She had gone out rarely, always only after receiving repeated invites, to birthday or dinner parties in such parts. How satisfying it was to sigh about the difficulties of travelling ‘all the way’ out to Scarborough or Etobicoke and to see the envy in the faces of people who merely shopped and studied where she lived. Then, when she finally had a proper spacious condo to herself – a condo practically overlooking the Lake – she was too afraid to attend any more of those parties.

            She gazed up at the cuboid lowrise, a parkette on one side, a modest corner strip mall with a Shopper’s Drug Mart, florist, fish-and-chips shop, Afghan supermarket and some other typically suburban GTA shops. The sky as bright and the breeze noticeable fresher and cooler han where she’d come from, and a massive relief after the subway. Yes, this was it, undoubtedly. Beige, flush tinted glass, with chrome details and milk-white orb lamps along the flagged walkway. Always the artist, Angeline reckoned it had a sort of toned-down Art Deco revival style with a Middle Eastern palette. A fresco of winged goddesses and picture writing, maybe a pair of pharaonic sentry sculptures too – those would be a nice touch. On entering the faux-marble floored lobby, she was pleasantly surprised to find a mosaic on the walls by the empty front desk, though it was just a geometric pattern. The emptiness of the halls and elevators was mildly disquieting to someone who spent most of her days – and nights – never leaving the radius of other humans’ body heat, without a full five minutes of silence week to week, but she reasoned that the families (mostly immigrants, she suspected) were probably all in their apartments eating supper. The melange of aromas assailing her nostrils from every direction confirmed the hypothesis.

            Not that she was bothered. Her lithe physique belied the fact she was something of a foodie and had sampled the cuisines of much of the known world since arriving in Toronto. Mind, there were always times – more often in the last year or so, it seemed – when she craved some old-fashioned provincial home cooking. Her grandmother made all kinds of wonders – cipaille, vitréais, pudding chomeur, the best pea soup in the world – things you couldn’t really make correctly just by following recipes off the internet…even if she’d had a proper kitchen to herself, the money for the right ingredients, and the time and energy all on the same occasion. That was all in the past, though; so far in the past she couldn’t remember much else that happened around then, or wouldn’t. You could get lots of poutine in Toronto, true. But she was reluctant to let loose into ‘hangover food,’ even if it was late and she was very drunk. She didn’t want to become sloppy, careless; lose her edge. One thing leads to another and she would end up like…it did not bear thinking now.

            A beseeching, kittenish mew escaped from the carrier atop the luggage stack. “Oh, calm down…” Angeline whispered, dragging her fingers along the carrier’s grate as she wheeled her baggage along. “You’ll be out soon…” she trailed off as she came up to the end of the hall which overlooked the street above a radiator and a broad ledge decked with houseplants that looked like miniature palm trees. “Makes it easy to watch the street and parking lot,” she mused to herself, before shaking off unpleasant memories of peering through a screen of monstera and spider plants to watch for a man – or men – in a green ’93 Camry at the behest of a shitty roommate who left in the middle of the night while Angeline was at work, taking the espresso machine, a jumbo bottle of Point Pelee and a pair of Ray-Bans that didn’t belong to her. Never heard a word about that again.

            “Room three-zéro-a’whun,” she enunciated, rolling her feet. She raised an arm, drew up her parachute-like sleeve with the other hand, and daintily flicked the door with the backs of her fingers, so that the stubby, green-painted nails clacked against the resonant wood. The hallway deserted. She heard a shuffling and a tinny clanking through the door; a few more seconds, then the shlick of the chain and the thunk of the bolt, and the door swung open.

            The young man who opened it had not changed much from the last Angeline remembered, what, three…no, more like four years before. That was Dayna’s house party, maybe? Or at the samba studio…Even the same hairstyle. He was wearing a baggy faux-silk mandarin shirt and holding a dish towel and wooden spoon. The pair stood in silence for a moment, till Angeline giggled and asked, “You’re cooking?”

            “Oh?” the fellow looked at the towel and spoon. “Oh, yes, well, not much of a chef – heating food enough to make it edible, I guess, is how you might put it,” forcing a laugh and retreating back into the kitchen to lift a lid and give some bubbling, spicy goo a stir.

            Angeline took this as a sign to come in and heaved her luggage over the sloped threshold with a winsome “Hmph!” then stood demurely at the edge of the open living room.

            “Oh, sit down, make yourself comfortable,” the man emerged again from the kitchen, sans utensils. “Goodness, it’s a lot to catch up on. I mean, there’s Facebook and all, but you’re hardly ever online and one doesn’t always like to follow people’s business; makes for bad, erh, you know…Coffee?”

            “No thanks,” Angeline bowed and looked about for a seat. “Way too much caffeine in my veins already today.”

            “You can use it as a couch; that’s what I normally do when people are over – not that folks from uni come out here often,” the man motioned to a neat, post-less IKEA bed presently covered with patterned rugs and throw pillows like a Persian divan. Meanwhile, he seated himself on a battered old ottoman, racking his brains for a way to ask ‘how things have been’ without probing that which politeness does not permit to be probed. He came up blank. “Eh, you must have taken a while to reach. We should let this little fellow out, no? Cooped up there so long…” Taking Angeline’s silence as assent, he unstrapped the carrier from its place and heaved it down to the floor. “Ough! Hefty feller you got ‘ehr!” An enormous, beaver-shaped black-and-white cat shambled out of the carrier on incongruously frail-looking legs, proceeding to sniff and scout around the room.

            “Mmh hmm,” Angeline cleared her through, twisting her toes together under the bed. “Her name is Giselle. Really, Ruslan, I’m so grateful, you don’t know how much…To find someone who would take…”

            “Bah! It’s nothing,” Ruslan blushed. “You took in some of my furniture while I was moving house way back when. And gave me that antique sidetable. Matches the place too, Art Deco antique, not some Nordic particle board crap or ‘midcentury’ hipsterness. So, hmm, you been doing ok lately? Going to Montreal for the long weekend?”

            “I like how you’ve set this place up,” the girl responded, wriggling in her seat and patting its springy surface with her palms. “You’ve got a theme going…like, adventure, silk road, Himalayas. Neat! Did you draw those?” She cocked her chin at an arrangement of framed monochromes, most depicting exotic scenes in keeping with the rest of the décor.

            “Yes, actually. Pen and ink, based off the sort of illustrations you find in Victorian travel journals, which you can find online. It used to be a popular thing, before mass jet travel, the internet and convenient cameras; pretty much the only way to get an idea of what some far-off land was like, if you planned to travel or wanted to write a book set there…” realizing he might be boring the charming young lady seated on his couch-bed, Ruslan changed tack. “Have you found a next apartment yet? Just, it’s an odd time to take a vacation, no? Rentals, even in Scarbs, are getting snapped up in hours of people posting them. I have a friend from uni – you don’t know him – like six, seven places he and his girlfriend checked, and not like they are looking for a bargain basement deal. Fifteen, sixteen hundred and of course that’s not counting utilities. Heck, CAMH is moving out of their place over by U of T. Three hundred thirty-three percent rent increase, just like that. So I tell the man, best withdraw to Markham, be amongst your own people. Look me, I’m out here because I’d be homeless if I insisted on staying in ‘the Core.’ People paying a hundred-and-ten percent of their income for a rabbit hutch.” He saw that Angeline’s attention was drifting. The cat was rubbing its solid, round head against her leg, coating her tights with a clingy residue of coarse hairs, like a loveable porcupine cheerfully quilling its victim. “You live in downtown still, yes? Kensington, right?”

            “Mmh,” she kept gazing about the room. “I mean, I’m moving, but, yeah.”

            “Ah. And, where to…right, none yet…how did you find it?”

            “Oh, it was alright. Lotta real local culture; you’ve got so much colour, diversity and all the old homes. Plus the shopping’s great. I mean, duh!” She managed to look back at Rusland and laugh; the cat head-butted her shying feet but was ignored.

            “Ehh,” Ruslan sighed. “Scarborough doesn’t have diversity? It’s an ideal I guess. Yeah, I see it. Character, history, the whole Jane Jacobs mixed-use neighbourhood package. Everything Toronto is supposed to be, but that’s mostly just in people’s imaginations, or thirty years ago. I’d live there myself, but only if I had money, or else you’re sleeping in a windowless ex-laundry room. One needs a certain basic minimum of space, or else how do you paint? Have people over? Or even just pace about when you feel like it alone at night?”

            “I dunno, I have a full bachelor. I cook n’ stuff. I mean had.”

            “Ugh, that’s lucky. Must cost, what, two grand, twenty-five hundred? Wah, that’s more than a barista makes in a whole month…one and a half times their income…” Even as each sentence left his lips, Rusland was inwardly berating himself; “Why did you do that? What good do you think you’ll get out of pushing things? Is it so important that she knows that you know? Probably why she hasn’t even said ‘hi’ on Facebook in years and why Teresa and Emilia and everyone no longer have any gossip to tell.” Naturally, he did not speak these thoughts aloud, though he was convinced he had been speaking in a tense, inquisitorial tone that had put his guest on edge.

            As if to confirm his suspicions, Angeline turned and glanced about the room with an astonishment which seemed to spring out of nowhere. “Wow! Is that yours, too?” She pointed to a large watercolour of a calico cat luxuriating on a Louis Farouk settee.

            “Yes, in fact,” the sweetness of her voice and the unaffected smile in her voice washed away his anxiety but left him quite confused. “I did that one for a friend who went to med school out in BC. His cat. It would cost a fortune to ship it out that far, so I scanned it for him to make prints if he wants. Took me an awful lot of failed attempts to figure out how to get the effect of fur without making it look rough or muddying the colours.” He frowned as he saw himself spilling accidentally into another lecture, but was again relieved as, far from being bored, Angeline’s limpid eyes sparked with unaffected delight.

            “Really? Awesome. You totally killed it. Like those portraits, too…”

            “Kriehuber is my inspiration for those. Parker ballpoint pen for everything, except when I needed solid-solid black, or to wash in backgrounds.”

            “It’s so much more…ngh! I know what I want to say but…the word!…Like, you know, something that you can tell somebody poured a lot of attention and energy into, like art that shapes you as you’re shaping it, through the intensity of the process….raffiné, cultivé…”

            “Refined? Hmm, well, it’s nothing compared to what you turn out, but I try.”

            “No, for real. Like, compared to, you know, how in OCAD the number one thing is photography. Which, okay, you can take a photo that required lots of time and judgement, but anybody with a few hundred buy a digital camera or even an iPhone and photoshop, and honestly you can’t tell the difference whether they did four years studying photography in school or if they just bought a camera and started snapping pics two weeks ago – except based on what they take pics of…normal stuff or trying to gross people out, or be ironic, or make some statement that’s supposed to be all brave and shocking but is just what everyone else is doing.”

            “Such as? I think I see what you mean, though…Lazy, I guess.”

            “I mean, like,” Angeline’s pallid complexion flushed with uncharacteristic anger; “Say you wanna be, ‘oh, I’m so avant garde that I laugh at silly people with backwards habits and organized religion.’ So, like, this girl I know, you take some photos of people dressed as nuns or mocking some famous religious painting for attention. And if somebody complained, she’d get all outraged, like, ‘oh, how dare you, the church has been oppressing womb-myn for centuries…’ yeah, brave act of rebellion. An’ you know, one time I saw she posts on her wall asking people why there’s all these people on the streets with black marks on their faces. It was the start of Lent. You gotta ask, why such people…ugh!”

            “And they’re the same people who would say the French cartoonists were asking for it,” Ruslan hoped he had grafted something onto the topic without stealing it from Angeline.

            “Exactly. This girl also had one of those Himalayan salt lamps in her dorm and believed in horoscopes. People want all the street cred of being an ‘artist,’ but they don’t want to live the life.”

            “You mean hipsters?” but the passion of the moment had so infused Angeline’s graceful frame that she did not notice his question.

            “…They think that living at a certain address, having those ugly glasses and a fixed gear bike makes you an ‘artist.’ And if you don’t play along, you can’t be one; doesn’t matter if you can draw or play an instrument or whatever. Screw that. And you have to believe everyone who can read a book and use a paintbrush voted for Justin Trudeau and Olivia Chow…”

            “Right, completely agree…”

            “…They don’t want to make the sacrifices. Those neighbourhoods in Paris, you know, that the Impressionists and those modern masters lived in; people moved there because it was cheap and shabby, which meant they could devote their lives to their passion and still pay the rent. The places became special because they lived there. It’s like the total opposite here, where you pay crazy rent, which means you have to work at two or three mundane jobs and never have time for actually creating anything, just so you can live in a place that looks n’ feels like where some authentic starving artist who eats $22 burgers, and…ngh! It’s like, a product you buy: you.”

            “But you lived in Queen West or Kensington Market, no?” Ruslan chimed, instantly regretting it in his head: “Stop. Why can’t you just stop?” He was doubly intrigued now, wondering what exactly it was about this topic that got her so riled up.

            “…And it’s like, if you don’t play along and pretend all that stupid stuff matters, then everybody hates you. And if you seriously try to…be what they pretend to be, they’re scared to ever talk to you or laugh behind your back…! Like, joke’s on you!”

            “I see, yes, I know what you mean,” although Ruslan’s understanding of the problems that tormented the young lady was intellectual and detached. As an overheated boiler venting steam, Angeline suddenly returned to her usual wistful demeanour, staring longingly at the cat which had now mounted the bed beside her and, this exertion completed, was kneading a sleeping place for itself. She stroked its dense, somewhat greasy fur, occasionally wiping her hand against the blankets to scrape off static-clung hairs. As she did this, she half-closed her languid eyes, cooing softly in joual baby talk to it, fully aware that as long as she wasn’t looking at him, Ruslan would not take his sight off her – she could guess he was envisioning her replacing the central female figure in a dozen famous paintings.

            “That’s my favourite kind of cat; you could make her the star of a YouTube channel which would consume thousands of cumulative labour-hours each day!” he suggested, trying to be humorous with obviously tongue-in-cheek grandiosity.

            “Ha-ha, oh, good they don’t allow pets in the studio, or I’d never get anything done!”

            “Mmh, what is she? Looks like Maru, if he was black and white. Scottish fold – one of the prick-eared ones?”

            “Hah, no. You’re right, this loafer could get a job, with her celebrity good looks. Actually, she’s a Laurentian Shorthair, purebred, registered and everything. Got her from a breeder’s in Hull, back in second year. Cost me twelve hundred bucks, too.”

            “Oooh, precious kitty! Pricey as a Canada Goose jacket, one of the top-of-the-line ones, at that.” Ruslan darted into the kitchen to check the pots simmering on the stove. He opened the fridge and surveyed the contents shelved on the door. “Ask or don’t ask,” he debated with himself, laying hands on two bottles of wine. “No,” he concluded in his head, “Just one,” reflecting that, while the commonsense advice holds that naturally prudish and awkward persons, in social situations, especially those involving the opposite sex, ought to toss away inhibitions and try to be fun and playful, it never worked out very well for him in practice. He didn’t want to appear to have ulterior motives. On the other hand, it wasn’t like ‘keeping proper distance’ these last couple years had won any victories. And if it went badly; if he got an indignant ‘that is NOT OK,’ the worst case scenario was…more of exactly the same. He returned to the living room holding a bottle of Red Label. “Something to drink?” he asked, furtively watching Angeline’s reaction. “Been so long, you must have a lot of stories. I’d uh, if you feel like sharing…” toning things down as the embarrassment hit almost before each word had left his mouth; “Catch up on old times, I mean. I’ve always…admired your sincerity, as an artist, you know. How you live your life, determined to be what you want, not just have and act, or…” He wanted to bash his head against the coffee table.

            To his surprise, Angeline responded warmly, “Ah, thanks, definitely!” taking the bottle off him and filling her cup. “Hmm, Red Label ‘wine beverage,’ Kingston, Jamaica…oooh-kay. Didn’t know they could grow grapes down there.” Things moved more smoothly than Ruslan dared imagine, as Angeline regaled him with all kinds of random anecdotes about OCAD life, gallery shows, and her attempts at learning to cook traditional French cuisine. She was also gulping back the 13.5% alcohol fortified wine with a vengeance, leaving him to strategically nurse his initial half of a coffee mug’s worth. Maybe the second bottle would have to come out. Afraid now of seeming like he was only pretending to pay attention, waiting for an opportunity for…whatever. Ruslan searched for a talking point. Alas, he had been too lost in those huge and radiant, yet icy, blue orbs, the measured movements of those tactfully bared porcelain shoulders and the slender but well-formed thighs pressing smoothly against the black leggings confining them….he could only recall with any clarity that very last thing she’d said. “Cooking, eh? I suppose, done well, it’s an art in itself. French especially. You never learned growing up?”

            “What do you mean?” the passion in her face flared once more.

            Caught off guard, Ruslan stumbled. “I mean, I thought you grew up in some little village, farm country… and you’re always keen on history and culture…you know, from mother to daughter, traditions, that sort of thing…thought your mom or grandma would have taught you,  I don’t know. Not to stereotype or anything.”

            Angeline quietly rested her eyes inside her cup for a moment. “My grandma died when I was seven. My mom never taught me how to make anything, except Kraft Dinner. She wanted to smother anything creative I ever tried to do. Like, ‘who do you think you are?’ Everything was like that.” She brooded on her words, taking a long, loud sip and pouring another cup.

            “I see…I see…” The only one in the room not affected by the tension was Giselle, sitting sphinx-like, flapping her short, clumsy tail against the bed. “I thought your dad was a painter. Odd they wouldn’t support you then…”

            “I dunno, if you find him you can ask. My stepdad is a house painter, which isn’t painting; just coating shit in coloured liquid.”

            Ruslan had scanned old photos of childhood birthday parties, with balloons and sheetcake aplenty, and a seemingly affectionate, unselfconscious working-class family on her Facebook. If that was the stepdad, he looked an awful lot like Angeline. Then again, a small Québec village settled four hundred years ago, everyone probably was more or less related. Or relations could have soured. Pretty much nothing new had been uploaded to that page in at least a year. Too nervous now to do anything but dig himself deeper, he carried on. “I thought you visited them lots, like when you got Giselle here. And Aida posted lots of albums of you guys on road trips to Montreal.”

            “Montreal is nowhere near my place.” The hot anger dissipated into cool and airy contemplation. “There’s not really hotels or anything, and nothing to do, unless they want to play dairy maid.”

            “Like Marie Antoinette.”

            “Hah, yeah. Plus we usually go in Aida’s car. I wouldn’t want to drag people out to the middle of nowhere and people don’t speak English…” She trailed off, lost in some melancholy reminiscence.

            Mustering his courage, Ruslan moved over to the bed and sat down there, though keeping a good two or three feet down from Angeline, the cat interposed between. “You keep in touch though, right?” he asked tenderly, now petting the cat, making clicking noises, “good kitty,” and so forth, to put a thin disguise on his surely-perceived plan that their hands should come into contact, with adoring the kitty providing plausible deniability for both parties.

            Angeline was silent for another moment or two – their hands brushed slowly, not staying but nor did she flinch away. “They know I’m in university, studying fine arts…” Ruslan could see her eyes in the shadow of her glossy bangs, looking vaguely at the coffee table in front of her, but seeing something far away – something which he could not see. Her lips parted, revealing the barest hint of even, gleaming teeth, but no words escaped. The foamy clatter of a pot lid startled Ruslan from his trance, and he dashed up towards the kitchen before lentil soup met stove burner and all his neighbours would be irritated by the smoke alarm going off.

            When he got back to his guest after ploughing up the tarry matter on the pot bottom with a long spoon, Ruslan was dismayed to see her standing up beside her luggage, looking perfectly at ease, as if no profound sentiments had crossed her mind all evening, though her cheeks were glowing crabapple pink from the wine. “Going already?” was the best he could do. “Who are you staying with tonight? I know some ex-classmates who might help with the apartment hunting…there’s a lot of units around here, actually, seeing as it seems time’s soured you on downtown…Need help getting tubbums into her carrier?” He picked up the cat, which was purring contentedly, wrapping its paws over his chest like a sleepy, well-fed baby.

            “Hee-hee! She likes you!” Angeline tittered.

            “Seems so! Well, you know, I am a cat person…”

            “Me too!”

            “Yes, that’s pretty obvious. You know, there’s this author, horror-mystery stuff, wrote a fascinating essay on the character differences between cat people and dog people…a bit overboard sometimes, but funny…and true! Pretty much, anyway. I’ll send you the link on F-B…”

            “Actually, I’ll be spending the night on the road.”

            “What the?!?”

            “Travelling!”

            “Oh, right.”

            “I’m going back home for….a while…”

            “With Aida and them?”

            “No…I mean home-home. Not Montreal. I’ll be taking the Greyhound.”

            “Oh. How long will you be staying?”

            “I dunno. A while. Anyways, I haven’t got a new place in Toronto yet, and the people on Bunz weren’t any help. Seeing how much she likes you…”

            “You want me to be cat sitter for Giselle here?” Ruslan sighed.

            “If you’re ok with it. Otherwise…the Humane Society…”

           “Kitty Auschwitz?” Ruslan puffed with righteous indignation. “Good Lord, no, no. It can’t happen. Such a wonderful creature, but…do you have to be travelling now, then? Why not wait?…”

            “Listen, things have been…” Her looks said she knew that he knew – if only intuitively and through fourth-hand gossip. “My mom is…sick. And I have to see her. I can’t keep hiding out here. I can’t run away…”

            Ruslan wondered if that was the meaning of Angeline’s coming to Toronto. Running. Then hiding from what she’d fled. The lights and rush of the City did appear to be a king of anaesthetic for a lot of young people, usually from elsewhere, whether from foreign countries or Northern Ontario, the Maritimes and such places (which was essentially the same thing).  It pained him to contemplate this secret muse of his as being one with the cookie-cutter hipsters; the castrated race of interns competing in obsequiousness; the hackneyed academics quoting post-modernist drivel like religious mantras to accompany vicarious lives, the coffee shop toilers with their resentful herdist attitudes; the meth-scabbed slumpartment dwellers whom three generations on welfare had stripped of all ambitions beyond the fulfilment of the animal appetites. It was inadmissible in the scheme through which he viewed the world. Wiser men that he believed it; if Thomas Hardy, Lombroso and such genius minds were agreed, surely there had to be something to it – that a vessel so exquisite, seemingly embodying so much history and culture (all the more if it was done unwittingly) should, after all, contain a soul undistinguished amid the low and level plain of millennial North American urban humanity. Were the laws of environment so ironclad that the types which inspired the poets and novelists of one or two centuries prior were now no more than stories themselves? Was it so stupid to wish that there were still real flesh-and-blood people who were ‘The Solitary Reaper,’ ‘The Tired Gleaner,’ or ‘Tess of the D’Urbervilles?’ It was undeniable – he insisted to himself – that such permutations of the human character existed – even if they tended to suffer unhappy fates. If it were otherwise, where would anyone have got the idea? Though whether they still could exist in a modern metropolis…

            “I’ve got to go, or I’ll miss the bus and they only come like every two or three hours. You’ll take Giselle, then?”

            “Yes, yes. I’ll look after her till you get back. Oh, I don’t have your address or phone in Québec. I mean, if I needed to get in touch with you…”

            “It’s ok. I’ll probably be staying at a hotel in Montreal while I’m there, not at my parents’ house.”

            Ruslan wanted to ask how that possibly made things ‘ok,’ since he’d be equally at a loss how to reach her. He knew how little she came on Facebook and emails…he’d feel cheated, since he’d never know if she read them or not. Before he could find the words, though, Angeline had slipped nimbly outside. He managed to catch a glimpse of the hall-end door swinging shut on its pneumatic hinge. He had the cat and a suitcase full of sketchbooks, painting supplies and canvasses to ponder upon in the sleepless hours after midnight.

            The leaden white paint clung like a curse to the clapboard walls of the bungalow, grudgingly conceding, flake by flake, to the age and decay which had eaten away at the rest of the house. The mesh screens of the small-paned sash windows, kept open because there was no AC, were holed and gashed by squirrels’ teeth and errant songbirds. The grass around was green and lush from the summer rains, but unmown. An old navy blue LTD, stuffed with random items like an impromptu storage shed sagged to the wheelwells under an open carport. A Chevy van in marginally better condition rested in the gravel drive. The asphalt shingles of the roof were peeling up at the edges like the petals of burnt pinecones. It was not a farm; there were houses on either side and across the road, spaced not that much farther apart than in a typical suburb. For all that, though…perhaps it was the contrast with throbbing, bustling downtown Toronto, or perhaps it was other memories…the bungalow might as well have been in a different postal code from its neighbours. The property had an atmosphere common only to itself – though how much of that was due to its physical condition and how much to other, less quantifiable factors could not be easily determined.

            The CBC news wooshed and crackled on an elderly CRT television. A sluggish retriever was dumbly gnawing a rubber kong, inherited from a predecessor, lolling on the brownish-olive carpet whose pile was cropped and felted with years. The syrupy savour of sausages crisping in a well-greased skillet wafted out of the kitchen. A stiff-faced, knob-jointed woman prodded and turned the blackening meat logs with a two-pronged melamine fork. “Christ, you don’t haftah burn them ta ashes! The money’s gotta last till the first. Gawd, half of everything you gotta throw away, even the daag won’t eat it,” a beefy armed, square-headed man in a rough patterned cardigan shouted from the sofa in the living room.

            “Well, if you were workin’ instead of on pogie…”

            “Don’t come at me with that crap. It’s my pension; they won’t give me anything else ‘cause I worked too damn much. If it wasn’t for me doing twenty-seven years in the mill, how much d’ya think you’d get?”

            “I’m just sayin’…”

            “When you get out and earn it for your goddam self, then you can say whatever you like. Hmph! Yeah, you’d haftah work a lot ‘a overtime, the way thing’s lookin’ now, ya would.”

            At first she had not noticed it above the scrape of the fork and the clatter of dishes. But after the sink was full of hot and soapy water, she paused and listened. Had she really heard anything? The TV was getting in the way. “Turn it down!”

            “Whaaat?”

            “The TV. I heard somebody knockin’ at the door.”

            The man grumbled, but complied.

            “A minute ago,” she considered, glassy-eyed; “I heard someone knocking at the door. Knocking real light. A couple of times, now that I think of it.”

            Probably Jo-hos. Or somebody sellin’ something.” The man turned the volume back up and returned to watching the news, but the woman was gripped with a curiosity – almost a compulsion. It made her uneasy. She went to the front of the house and flung open the rickety screen door, stepping in her socked feet onto the sagging porch. She looked searchingly, left and right, down a long and empty road.

           

          Copyright © 2017 by M.G. Warenycia

The Rough Sleeper

by M.G. Warenycia

Hasteful wading through Yonge Street’s human clutter

Attention seized by a wailing stutter

Issuing from a reeking gutter

Where, ‘mid amorphous heaps of besotted rags,

Empty bottles, bloated shopping bags,

And a cup where, occasionally, a guilt-struck mind

Hath left behind

The change so sought that changes naught,

There, far advanced on the road to perdition,

Lies Mr. Wendal, Canadian Edition.

His face bears the features of the old tenants dispossessed

To make way for this ‘fair domain,’ all bright and blessed;

His swollen eyes and gangrenous grin

Channeling the spirit of Daemon Gin;

Domestic refugee

Of the True North, strong and free…

*

Yet go one block west and all is sharp and clean;

The temples of Mammon and their priests both aglow with Fortune’s sheen.

And down by Dundas the glassy halls teem,

 Ersatz Gandhis and counterfeit Ches gather, all in scholars’ guise,

To preach the gospel of spurious shame,

Baristas heaping rage ‘pon the suits and ties

Because in secret they lust for the same.

*

Why do you look so down-cast?

Go on now, hurry past!

Are you the first?

Do you really think you’ll be the last?

*

***

Ghost Festival; High School Days

Intoxicating idleness of sweet summertime;

Along the boulevard, the locust trees

Feathered in fluorescent lime,

Shaggy lindens with jasmine scent the breeze;

The P-Mall arcade left behind.

Walking sluggish, having richly dined

On fare exotic, cheap and warming,

Savouring the air, fragrant and charming

Freed, for now, from education,

Voyaging together in friendly meditation;

Cosy cul-de-sac and gardened mead

And humid heat relax one’s speed,

By soughing leaves and distant highway’s murmurs,

Two friends spin tales and plan quaint adventures

Beneath the eyes of slumbering houses

—A discordant chill the goose-bumps rouses:

By moon-blued church, faced in carven stone,

Hinting to both “you are not alone.”

To the bus we rush, grab out our fare,

Laughing the moment we’re gone from there;

Each expounding on his sudden rout,

Concealing shivers as he declares his doubt.

The Lake

by M.G. Warenycia

                ‘And thro’ the drifts the snowy clifts

                Did send a dismal sheen;

                Ne shapes of men ne beasts we ken –

                The Ice was all between’  –  Coleridge

            The seasons are moods as much, or more, than they are sections in a calendar. Following the foetid, grossly humid summer in Toronto, the city enjoys, for a brief fortnight or perhaps a month or more, a sort of season, cool but not health-endangeringly frigid, where the life of the great northern metropolis proceeds in a relaxed, yet productive mode. This is particularly the case for students, hordes of whom are returning to the city’s several universities, but are not yet faced with the tedious burden of term papers or the looming existential dread of exams. It was an unremarked certainty that this quaint and pleasant season was over. It was clear, in the wind shipping down out of the Shield Country with all the unflinching sternness of a Puritan schoolmaster, rattling the glass-walled canyons, spearing through jacket collars and zipper seams, flinging empty coffee cups across the busy roadways.

The shuffling, hustling current of pedestrians moving along Dundas Street covered elbows with palms, tucked heads into collars and stiffened their gaits. It was, ironically, perhaps, not so bad for the immigrants – those still sufficiently ‘fresh off the boat,’ at least – who, coming from less-homicidal climes, had not adopted the schizophrenic local dress code: fur trimmed parkas as soon as they were bearable in autumn, beach or strip club fashions as soon as temps rose above fifteen degrees in the spring. Among the locals, many a pair of sockless ankles grew pink as boiled hams, and crossed arms gave a feeble boost to thin ‘mid-century’ print rompers. Ramen and Mongolian hot pot restaurants lining Dundas and nearby shipping streets did brisk business. Spadina fruit vendors huffed glum cloudlets of tobacco smoke as the chattering crowds ignored their pyramids of refreshing, but unfortunately cold and watery, bounty. And the rain began to pink bullets against streetcar windows and the plastic shells of bicycle helmets…

Jemma Paquette, luckily, was dressed more akin to the sensible foreigners, in an olive and beige patterned Aran Isles sweater of heavy wool and sturdy jeans, as opposed to the yoga tights which had rendered pants almost obsolete among the local womenfolk. This was not out of any desire to be unfashionable, nor because she was unattractive – quite the contrary, although a natural insecurity prevented her from showing herself off to best advantage. Rather, it was a habit formed in long hours spent drawing and painting in the studios at TCAD-U, the city’s – indeed, the country’s – premier arts-focused university. The combination of sitting still plus the strong AC in summer and weak heating in winter made such ungainly armour necessary.

As Jemma leaned forward and squinted her eyes against the wind, she had to simultaneously fight to steady the enormously broad, flat bag she was carrying. It caught the gusts like a galleon’s sail, paining her wrist and guilting her as it occasionally slapped a passer-by. A white plastic bag with the ‘Curry’s’ logo splashed across it. Jemma was coming from the location on Yonge, near the campus of Ryerson University, for they alone among the chain’s downtown outlets happened to have in stock the particular pigments she needed. She could not wait the four to six weeks to order online; she needed her tools now. The stretched canvas, which shaped the bag’s bulk, would embody months of thought, sketches and art theory research, including the term paper she had submitted at the end of the spring semester.

“I wouldn’t wanna get caught in that going home!” Jemma heard a familiar voice; “but I won’t, ‘cause I live like, right here!” Jemma saw her friend and classmate, Eunice Yu emerge from under the awning of a one of those shops selling Chinese curios and random goods that crowd in on the sidewalks of Chinatown. A faux-Qing Dynasty porcelain urn held out salvation in the form of some colourful, wood-handled umbrellas. A wise shopkeeper ran this place. Before Jemma could suggest that her companion wait a minute for her while she goes into the store, Eunice read her thoughts, “Bought ‘ya one!” and offered her a shield against the rain, which was now threatening to become a proper downpour.

Jemma and Eunice, in accord with a prearranged plan, walked northwards up Spadina. Eunice knew the place where they were going, a restaurant. Suggested it just off the top of their head, as she always did when they needed to eat or shop somewhere new. Jemma had to look up the review of the place on BlogThe6ix.com, even though she had lived in this area, owing to her studies, for the last 6 years. She marvelled at her classmate; envied her. Eunice knew these streets; knew their pulse and flow like a salmon knows its ancestral stream. She could navigate them just as well night or day, summer or snow, drunk or sober.

The two young ladies squealed in unison as a peal of thunder clapped the red and white plexiglass signboard, heralding the beginning of the real storm. Eunice called from a table in a nook by the window – she would never sit in the middle of a restaurant – talking in Chinese to the bowing, vest-clad waiter; rather overformal for what was really no more than a slightly glorified version of your typical ‘chop suey house’ sort of restaurant, which, along with beautifully illustrated cookbooks of dubious authenticity, was one of North America’s principle points of contact with Chinese cuisine during the very beginnings of the era of Multiculturalism back in the reign of the first Trudeau. New Ho King, being deep in Chinatown, and with (so one of Jemma’s Chinese classmates had told her) a fair number of allegedly triad-affiliated clientele, had a somewhat more elaborate menu than most and a ghost story or two to its name, but was still of the same basic type. BlogThe6ix online magazine gave it 4.5 out of 5 for providing hearty, greasy fodder for cheap, such that cold, hung-over students at the two nearby universities appreciated, served in a suitably “homey” (read: “close, cluttered, tacky”) and “authentic” (read: “just clean enough to get a Health Department ‘Pass’”) atmosphere. It probably lost the point-5 because there were no schoolgirl-looking waitresses, adorably incompetent and tittering uncontrollably in foreign languages, like at the wildly popular Korean cheesecake place around the corner. Also, it had obstinately kept serving sharks’ fin soup, even when, during a campaign to ban the stuff a couple years back, hipster students, fresh from classes where they had imbibed Edward Said’s Orientalism and raged at their country’s historic discrimination against certain immigrant cultures, proceeded to decry the fact that these Chinese immigrants were permitted to practice their barbaric, backward culture in the sacred and progressive municipality of Toronto. If the owner, old man Hwang, understood, one suspects he enjoyed the yu chi at this grandson’s wedding banquet all the more.

Jemma loved the place for all the reasons BlogThe6ix.com told her to. The dinginess made it even more comfortable a refuge from the blizzards of winter, or the blasting winds of autumn and spring. It was as if the greasy spirit of the past (visible and tactile on the wallpaper and picture frames) somehow lent its spicy, salty warmth to the diners in the present, making its Cantonese comfort food that much more comforting.

Jemma ordered General Tao’s Chicken – it didn’t feel wrong, now, with a Chinese friend – with hot and sour soup, while Eunice chose BBQ pork on rice, with pork blood soup. The rain was lashing down hard outside; so heavy it was like a curtain of water, enshrouding the scene beyond fifty feet or so from the restaurant window. That and the savoury, well-laden dishes made the conversation expand as their stomachs.

Eunice chatted, or, really, lectured about her latest boyfriend, how the crusty old judge had no right to sentence him for a full two years for what was just an ordinary break-and-enter; how school was busy and dull; how her father’s doctor said his blood pressure issues had mysterious vanished…Jemma wasn’t bored by this sort of talk. But, who, who has some secret affair or project, does not wish for others to ask about it and make it the centre of conversation? She wiped the syrupy General Tao sauce from her fingers and fumbled in the Curry’s bag, keeping her eyes and half-hearted smile on her companion. Taking advantage of a moment when Eunice turned to beckon the waiter to refill their teapot, Jemma drew out an object which she made an act of studying while nibbling the batter off a lump of chicken.

“What’s that? Paint?” Eunice was a painter herself, of exceptional talent, moulded by being crammed through all-day art school by her parents from kindergarten till their emigration to Canada when she was in high school. While even the professor paled next to her in sheer technical ability, Eunice was, unlike most artists, not too much of a snob to take genuine interest in individual styles different from her own. The soft tones and use of glowing, flooding light in Jemma’s works, especially her landscapes, impressed Eunice. For all the derivativeness of her subjects and her stilted forms, Jemma had that knack – impossible to learn from books – of using light to create and atmosphere that expressed the ‘mood’ of a season or place better than the light of whatever scene in a true-to-life photograph…kind of like how a horror movie director can make a clean modern office tower into a site of creepiness, or how 1980s Hong Kong filmmakers shot bar and party scenes that long onscreen just like how such experiences feel in the warm, drunk mind of one experiencing them or remembering them in melancholy reminiscence. “Something big cooking in the studio?” Eunice noted the impressive size of the tube.

            “No…” Jemma answered absent-mindedly. “I mean, yes, but, like, not in the studio on campus. You know, if you have a really original idea, how those lazy hipsters will just copy it and claim some shared inspiration”

            “Yeah, I know, right?” Eunice recollected, with no small bitterness, how she had one planned out a series of vaguely cubist-surrealist canvasses themed around the TTC. She had shown off her sketches (stunning works of art in themselves) to classmates, basking in the warm glow of being the first and most admired among colleagues all competing for the same thing. Her triumph was short-lived. Weeks before the end of semester, when she planned to make a dramatic presentation of her series, she saw a poster in the halls and cafeteria of the admin building. She immediately rushed over to the student gallery. Oh. Em. Gee: there was a full on show, complete with elaborate and ridiculous artists’ statements, music, even slam poetry. A couple of her adoring classmates, either more industrious or less scrupulous than her, had pumped out a dozen canvases, large and small, that, besides the signature were indistinguishable from those she was working on or hoped to begin work on. So much for hashtag sisterhood, hashtag ‘you go gurrrl!’ “What is it then?”

            “Well, you know like how the England like Thomas Hardy writes about had Constable, Victorian Australia had Tom Roberts and Frederick McCubbin, and the Boreal forest had the Group of Seven…”

            “Yes, I do know most of those names. Settler colonialist art? What are you getting at?”

            “No, that’s not what I mean…ugh!…It’s…It’s like, you know, an era in space and time, sort of crystallizing its spirit in a distinct style, not created but like channelled through a couple artists who just are that place, that time, that energy….you know?”

            Eunice’s broad, empty smile showed that she kind of got it though failed to see the profound relevance of Jemma’s remarks in the context of her hauling home the canvas and tubes of pigment.

             Jemma Paquette had had spent many years in earnest study of John Berger’s Ways of Seeing, John Campbell’s theories of symbolism and archetypes, Gimbautus’ flattering but groundless pseudo-archaeology, the colour fetishism of the Romantics and the line-worship of the Neo-Classicists. She had diligently practiced, with varying degrees of success, but always with a solid competence, replicating the flat perspectives and unique palette of Ancient Egyptian papyri. She had created convincing works of Medieval illumination (with allowances for material limitations of budget and convenience), even though she had never read the Bible (though she had a self-satisfying sense of being persecuted by the Catholic Church) and found monkish piety unintelligible and revolting. English-style watercolours, cubism, Ab-Ex. She had done a little bit of everything, and done each morsel with the same exacting seriousness and technical proficiency, in her long period of study.

            Actually, you could say that Art, capital A, had been her raison d’être for the entirety of her reflective life, which one might fairly say begins in high school. Indeed, you could say the whole of her education was consecrated to the visual arts, for she had attended a small, selective (though not expensively private) high school, where the focus was on the arts and other ‘soft’ subjects, largely through the charismatic influence of the art teacher, a crazy but genuinely interested and caring old hippie who was also the history teacher, the ‘Ancient Civ’ teacher (Canadian history being taught by the principal), and the World Religions teacher. Poor marks in math and science classes were generally tolerated if a student showed promise in those that counted – not that many of the school’s graduates were inclined to pursue STEM fields in uni anyway.

            Like most of her colleagues at TCAD-U, there had not been a great deal of questioning as to what sort of major Jemma would pursue at uni. True, had she been a bit more aggressive and embittered, she might have gone in for Gender Studies. Had she had a messianic streak, Social Work may have beckoned. But there was never any thought of, say, engineering – so dull and practical; so devoid of soul-cleansing ideological indignation. Nor, for that matter, was the Sisyphean task of ploughing through law or medicine – and the necessity of having one’s skills tested in life or death matters – in the cards.

            She made the choices everyone, including herself, expected her to make. Like most of her colleagues, too, she never asked herself whether they were good choices; she just instinctively knew that every alternative was wrong or not up for consideration. If she needed any reassurance of this – such as when an ex-high school classmate, who had become insufferable for his constant complaints about Toronto (rendering him a pariah among Jemma’s friends and no small embarrassment as a guest at parties), actually left to become a lawyer in hot and easy-going Queensland – she merely had to consult NOW Magazine, BlogThe6ix, or the student newspaper. In an emergency, blocking on Facebook, or at least hiding posts from her feed would prevent any arrogantly posted photos from insulting her and her life choices.

            It was only in the last year of her undergrad and, especially, in the last year, that, unexpectedly and quite unnoticed at first, a nagging, unpleasant feeling had crept over Jemma like a pair of possessed sunglasses that made her world appear in hard-to-describe but manifestly discomfiting tints. As first, the ‘sunglasses’ could be batted off with little effort. Some energizing music, a shopping trip to Pacific Mall with Eunice, foodie-food or PSAs and gossip with the ‘gurrrls.’ An hour or two of the bright sun in the busy city. Then it would be gone for a month; a couple weeks at the very least. But the ‘sunglasses’ kept installing themselves in front of her eyes, casting the throbbing urban life-drama before her in that brooding, inexplicably isolating and mind-fatiguing light. It began to happen with increasing frequency, too. Gradually at first, till, last winter, it was like a person with a longstanding chronic lung complaint, who has suddenly met with cold, damp weather with an immune system that had been silently weakening for months.

            What ‘colour’ were these sunglasses? Of course, they had no colour in a literal sense – in that case she would have gone to a doctor. But there was a definite ‘colour’ nevertheless; not any of the major slices of the colour wheel in their bright, solid forms. No; it was an uncanny blend of tints, cool and murky; a good deal of titanium white blended in, but with some greying by a splash or two of strong ochre and ultramarine. Uncanny it was, too, that she had seen it before…knew it such that if it were in tube form she could come up with a catchy, descriptive name to stick on it. It was in her memory; she felt it in her young bones; in the prickly of her pale, lightly freckled skin. Try as she might, though, it would not burst out of her unconscious.

            A casual observer with a practical mind might have diagnosed the mundanely material worries of a student looking down the barrel at life in a city with few prospects for a young person seeking the normal sorts of things one is supposed to grow up into in a post-Second World War Western capitalist culture. What, with an average house in the City – and not even in the sacred core of the City, where any sane arts grad would want…would need to live being over a million dollars, while the average BA-holding barista-slash-office peon-slash-contract sweater-folder earned barely enough in a steady month to pay the rent on a cramped and scuzzy room in an apartment shared with a couple other random (and usually loud and filthy) co-habitants. And that on a diet of predominately instant noodles and Kraft Dinner to save pennies between the socially-obligatory, vigorously Instagrammed visits to the BlogThe6ix and Torontoist-approved Black Hoof charcuterie pub, Thai fusion at Spring Roll on Yonge, Cantonese comfort food at Kom Jug Yuen, Burgers from Hero and Burgers Priest and poutine from Smoke’s. Not to mention the unmentionable fact that a battery of Aboriginal Studies and feminist theory electives on top of the typical Toronto girl’s YOLO-forever attitudes and non-existent domestic skills had rendered her essentially unmarriageable to a man with prospects anywhere above barista, office peon or contract sweater-folder. A life lived on social media, in restaurants, bars, clubs and galleries, between long intervals of mercifully hidden drudgery, tedium, and doubting loneliness darker than an impasto gob of Mummy Black.

            Such an observer would, for the most part, be overthinking the problem. Though Jemma was not naïve, and all her friends were well-educated, none of them ever really thought about such problems in any theoretical sense. True, there were the aforementioned dissidents, but thankfully they mostly ceased to exist as soon as they passed south of the great lake, or east of the Bluffs. Everyone else she knew as in the same boat, whether they were a few years older or just starting undergrad.

            Sometimes, though, the never-ending orgy of consumerism and, above all, soul-cleansing toil, comforting because  it brought no awkward, guilt-ridden success to detach oneself from one’s friends and classmates…it was alive, real, vital…as a process. The brush strokes were textbook; the professors all nodded encouragement. Yet, in the wee hours of some mornings, or on a late-night walk past the century-old Bay & Gables whose narrow, fretwork-browed eyes glared in the eldritch shadows of the ancient lindens and silver maples…sometimes – just sometimes – her heart would skip a bit as she wondered what on earth she was painting?

            As the thermometer dropped and the wind bit at throats and eyelids, one tip of the iceberg weighing on Jemma’s mind revealed itself to her. It had not been detectable when the student and alumni gallery of TCAD-U was a new, hard-won and hence imposing privilege. Not when Delacroix, Kriehuber, Ingres, Alma Tadema and Bouguereau were just hard-to-spell names in books, more condensed representations of ideologies and aesthetic value-sets in textbooks and lectures; archetypes who existed in a purely hypothetical world with no real-life models to compare against. Familiarity breeds contempt, as the saying goes. When she entered undergrad and began to slavishly hang around the cafes and shops around campus, attending the regular uni social events and house as well as dinner parties, she assumed that her classmates were the modern incarnations of such great names. After all, was not the “starving artist” a creation of the fin de siècle in urban Europe? And was not the Queen West indie café the modern iteration of that in 1890s Vienna where delightfully deranged painters, political poets,  poetical revolutionaries and edgy psychiatrists had mixed and mingled – albeit with pumpkin spiced locally-sourced frapp’ foam and gluten-free macarons (not macaroons!) instead of kaffe mit schlag and sachertorte?

            As she struggled with preparing her Master’s ‘thesis’ for the spring – there is no doing an all-nighter before the due date with an oil painting – everything suddenly looked very different. Which is not to say it was different: everyone looked and acted exactly the same as in undergrad. That made it all the more disturbing. She finally got it after she – perfectly ingenuously – kept trying to discuss art and share her works with her colleagues. She felt like she was being magnanimous, inviting them to share in the creative process (and naturally offering to reciprocate herself), for, she was sure, it was only in their mutual sharing of their artsy lives together that they could live the types they modelled themselves on. To do otherwise would feel fraudulent and a waste of their precious years of uni time, all relatively free and easy (if impoverished). She’d held off on being more aggressive with publicly adopting an ‘artiste’ persona, in fact, until a massive accumulation of professor’s praise, high marks, and Facebook-liked finished works had given her shy nature sufficient confidence to shake off some of her habitual self-deprecating introversion. That loneliness, especially in the winter – it is a killer.

            When she actually went so far as to bring a sketchbook and a couple small canvasses over to a dinner party at Eunice’s, it was as though she’d fallen off her fixxy bike into a mass of urticating caterpillars, her romper-bared legs stung till she wanted to writhe in bloody madness. Oh, yes, Eunice gave the event some artsy name on Facebook, suggesting it was some clubby, insular meeting of avante garde types. Eunice’ own profile pic had her standing in a beret in front of the Louvre, too. Over several hours, what she witnessed was several generic-faced (she had thought all her female friends as beautiful as goddesses, but then she’d never been to Ryerson or bothered to realize that the fact drunken men will sleep with a woman does not make her beautiful), generically dressed young harpies bragging about how they are “like, genuinely, actually, a slut; for real!” Boasting about their exploits with random men at parties or on vacation in Jamaica, England or Spain – when she knew some of them had boyfriends, who were decent men. Stuffing their mildly overweight faces with coarse, greasy food (not regarded as ‘junk food,’ as what is expensive cannot be junk) and dry, weak local wines with no regard for ladylike etiquette. Conspiring with the preternatural cohesion of an ant colony surrounding an intruder to backbite and cause this or that friend of theirs who wasn’t there to break up with her boyfriend. He “wasn’t right for her,” “she could do better,” “she shouldn’t settle,” “he isn’t in her league.” Really, of course, what it really meant in translation was “he earns more money than her even though he doesn’t have a university degree,” “she got banged by someone hotter than him at Danielle’s Halloween party,” “she shouldn’t settle for someone who is not a handsome billionaire, seeing as she’s an up-and-coming young artist with a BA…even though she works at a coffee shop or as a retail clerk,” and “if she gets with him she might one day be above us.” What pathetic people, Jemma though, who would rather smash someone else’s happiness – and convince each other they are actually doing her a favour in it – than make the slightest real effort to improve their own lives. Not to be outdone were the gay-best-friends, with their affected lisps (apparently lisping and limp wrist tendons are causally related to having an address in the old Metro Toronto), skinny-fat physiques squeezed into plaid and skinny jeans fit for their 12-year-old selves, insecurity-concealing beards and shaved-sides long-top hairstyles. Many an honest, muscly but degree-less plumber and one scion of a prosperous Dubai-based Persian business family were spared months of annoyance and stress and perhaps the agony of a mispurchased diamond ring and premature Facebook relationship status due to the conversations that evening.

            And not one of them gave a damn about her sketches and paintings. Nor, for that matter, did they seem to give a damn about their own. It was as if being an “artist” to them really and truly meant the purchase of certain items of clothing, the renting of accommodations within a specific geographic area, riding a ‘vintage’ or otherwise shabby bicycle, particularly in weather and road conditions unsuited for the purpose, and espousing certain superficial ideologies. Nothing more. Nothing.

            The issue weighed her down for weeks afterward. How was she different? She looked at herself in the mirror. The skinny jeans, the thick-framed glasses she didn’t actually need to see, the ghastly and shapeless rompers, the Canada Goose jacket she had to wear on alternate days to Tabitha (who put up half the cost), the snotty bangs, the bicycle that took up a huge chunk of her allotted space in the shared rental which she rode whenever she didn’t need to get anywhere urgently or carry meaningful quantities of groceries or other goods.

            It all suddenly was superficial; hollow; as predestined to collapse as Gibbon’s Roman Empire. Yonge Street was fast becoming unrecognizable. Block after block, she could see it, tacked up beside the laundromat that had been open since Trudeau the First was in office, the army surplus emporium that had kitted out generations of punks and urban rebels, and the sushi place that opened to serve the first yuppies who predicted how the miraculous robot people of the Pacific Rim would become the ruling global superpower of the 90s. The grim black-and-white signs. The owner of this property has applied for re-zoning…to construct a tower as tall and un-godly as that of Babel. All the way from Xanadu in the south, where Eunice had briefly strip-danced to ‘pay her way through uni’ (though the government had already taken care of that) and rebel against her conservative Confucian father, to its main competitor, the Bronze Rail, in the north, and east, and west, soon to blot out what her aesthete’s eye cherished to see. She drew away from her classmates as much as politeness avowed. Indeed, she saw neither of her friends, besides Eunice and Parvaneh, whom she felt could not rightly be lumped with the others as they did not share the taint of their baseness. She would focus on her art, yes…though whether she was in fact an artist was now a matter for doubt.

            One late winter afternoon she and Parvaneh, another ex-high school buddy, were strolling along College Street near Bathurst. They were heading to a Persian restaurant, Parvaneh’s treat – she had plenty of spending cash. Then again, she lived with her doting, shamelessly bourgeois parents in North York. She wasn’t even an arts major – studied tropical agriculture, actually, a subject as practical as it was absurd. However, she had the hyper-developed aesthetic sense that all Persian people seem to have… “Am I being racist to think that?” Jemma wondered to herself. Parvaneh could share in the art galleries, museum visits, and the general appreciation of the beauty in the details of everyday life that Jemma regarded with unaffected seriousness – the bloom of the crabapples in April-May, the majesty of a hundred-year old willow waving on the banks of a watercourse, the sublime waves that crashed against the Beaches in all but the cheeriest weather. They passed a stone-fronted section of the sidewalk strip, where, between an upmarket curry house and a Japanese fashion store, was an art gallery, no doubt converted from some random shop closed more due to rent than lack of business. A small bay window projected beside the recessed door. While it was impossible to see inside the gallery proper from the sidewalk, the window bay was given over to a display of small to medium-sized paintings, stacked three layers high. Jemma broke off the trivial conversation she’d been carrying on with Parvaneh and stopped. She stared, half the enchanted dreamer, half the cynical critic.

           Every single one of the pictures was a recognizably “Toronto” scene. Not Canadian. Oil on canvas, watercolour, gouache – all were Toronto. Most were winter scenes, the more to distinguish the notoriously frigid city. Too, there was something about the winter and how it played on the pulses of the citizens. What it was Jemma could not specifically identify, but it was there. There were sections of old-school Victorian shop-tenement fronts, carefully cropped to exclude any chain stores or glass-and-steel condos looming in the background. There were certain famous intersections – Dundas and Spadina, for example, or that spot in front of the haunted old castle-looking building on the U of T campus – with streetcars passing. Without the streetcars, of course, the entire character of the scene would be lost. Usually vintage designs, the streetcars, often ones that were pulled out of service when Jemma was just starting high school…though the presence of modern cars and the still-recognizable arrangements of businesses in the images reminded one they were supposed to represent the unique character of the City as portraits, not as history pieces. None of the paintings, for instance, featured horse-drawn vehicles. It was a past that, to the ahistorical smartphone and Twitter generation, was blurry enough to be beyond critical analysis, yet near enough to somehow identify themselves with.

           “Hey!” Parvaneh tugged the fur-trimmed shoulder of Jemma’s parka. “I thought you were hungry. What’s so interesting?”

            Jemma stepped back and gestured to the window display.

            “Meh, they don’t have much character to them, do they?”

            “I…I think they’re charming scenes. And it’s our life,” Jemma tried to respond to the stinging but all-too-correct dismissal of the works that had so charmed her fifteen seconds earlier.

            “Ehhh, yeah, no, not really. I mean, there’s nothing like the architecture and history in the landscapes you can find here that would match any street corner in London or Tehran.” Both cities’ names were over-pronounced in volume and accent. Parvaneh never bragged about her degree, though it was a Master’s in a subject genuinely intellectually challenging. She did, however, endlessly lament how everything in Toronto was not like its unarguably superior equivalent in London (though her university was in Manchester) and equally not like its indisputably more cultured and exotic equivalent in Iran – even the bad aspects of which were so foreign they were interesting, at least in second-hand story telling.

            “But this is our City. The snow. The streetcars. Don’t you ever find it cool, you know when something that you have special feels for; something that you think is just like some stupid part of your own personal tastes…and, like, suddenly see it in some format you never expected. Like when they make a Hollywood movie out of your favourite TV show when you were a kid, or, like, an oil painting of Mario Kart, or a gourmet restaurant serving mac n’ cheese prepared by Michelin-starred chefs.”

            “I know what you’re talking about, yeah, ‘it’s ironic,’ But…these paintings…I mean, I guess you love ‘The 6ix’ and all, but you could do way better than that. It’s like they were all done by the same artist, although obviously, with the signature n’ things, it’s not. It’s like they are painting for cookie tins.”

            Jemma understood what Parvaneh meant. And she was right. Each of the paintings was of that style, hard to describe but familiar to any critical eye that’s seen it, if, indeed, it would be reckoned a style at all. Jemma had to admit that the paintings were more about their subjects than the art. Irony over inspiration. Jean-Leon Gerome and Edwin Lord Weeks also painted contemporaneous with photography. It was not for the simple purpose of possessing images of India and the Middle East that people bought works by Gerome and Weeks. They could get those easily enough and more economically from the camera – a whole genre of vintage French postcards attest to that. But the soul, vitality, ‘colour’ (in the metaphysical sense) of the Orient; that no mere camera could capture.

            Jemma sighed and the two girls carried on up the street. Their destination’s turquoise-framed door and sign styled like the inlaid walls of a Central Asian mosque were within sight when Jemma felt a hand grab her wrist. A hand larger, rougher and…she struggled against fear to turn her head…much darker than Parvaneh’s….aye, it was purplish black in parts, with dirt or necrosis from drug injections; possibly both. Parvaneh was dumbstruck; she motioned with her cellphone as if to suggest calling the police and held her mouth open as if to say something, but couldn’t figure what to do. Jemma giggled nervously. “I don’t have any spare change,” she tittered, pressing the palm of her free hand over the bulge of her wallet in her coat pocket.

            This hobo – no one would guess him anything but a member of that tribe which is all too numerous in Toronto, what with his long, dishevelled beard and hair, trembling, liquor-rotted frame and greasy, shapeless clothes – did not appear to be interested in ‘change!’ though.

“Get your hands off me!” Jemma managed to cry out.

 The leathery brown claw dropped, but the strange man, somehow still he held her, held her with his glittering eye: “Sorry, lil’ lady…I dunno, I dunno,” he slapped his forehead; “When I see the face, I just know it in my bones, Gawd, I got’s ta’ tell my story. Won’t cha’ hear my story, lil’ lady? There was a ship…”

“I, uh…I’ve got to go to the restaurant there with my friend…uh…I’ll…I’ll mace you!” but, brave words aside, it was as if she could not choose but to hear the ancient and filthy wanderer tell his tale, even as his overproof breath made her choke and wince.  

He rambled and ranted, yet his voice, and more so his glassy, hypnotic eye fixed the two girls in place, struggle as they might to tear away. At first, the tale appeared to be like the typical fantastic ravings of such individuals, replete as it was with mentions of golden apples on golden trees…golden apples for everyone….slithering eels and snakes crawling upon seas of slime and what appeared to be references to dreams that troubled him. It eventually became apparent that there was a coherent story to the greybeard lunatic’s mutterings…a story that, if true, might make an episode of the Fifth Estate. Something about a ship, a storm….there was mention, probably another fantastic element, of a “great gull” whose eyes could see the sins of a man’s soul, and whose piercing cry denounced the sinner to God and man (he stopped up his ears when he spoke these lines). Something about waves roaring with the voice of hell; about a beach; a hot summer night; lost souls dancing in the moonlight…

When he quivered out “The body and I pulled at the same rope…but she said nuttin’ ta’ me,” the two girls’ will and fear overpowered the spell and they sprinted into the restaurant.

The restaurant was one which Jemma loved to eat at whether in the harsh cold of winter or on sweltering summer nights, for the food and décor were equally suited to both. Mind you, just as she never went into certain Chinatown shops without Eunice (even where she did not anticipate any conversation with the staff), she would not eat here without Parvaneh as escort. She would not be looked askance at by the owners, who, for that matter, had netted much of their early clientele from among local professionals and academics who had done the ‘Hippie Trail” in their younger days – before the Revolution in 1979 that both put an end to that party and sent the restaurant’s owners and their beloved Monarch into exile (a portrait of the Shah and Shahbanu hung in a discrete but respectful location from the date of opening). Too, those well-paid baby boomers were willing to pay good coin to savour a slice of their youths, which required the owners to set the place up properly, almost opulent – like something out of a 1970s National Geographic. This suited the owners as much as their customers, for Mr. and Mrs. Ispahani, too, liked to be able to imagine themselves in a piece of pre-Revolution Iran, cryogenically preserved and transplanted. It was a sanctuary as much as a business.

As it was a weekday afternoon, Parvaneh was able to secure one of the coveted dining booths that were one of the restaurant’s main draws, now that plenty of other establishments in the area offered similar food. These were raised platforms towards the interior of the dining area, situated somewhat above the level of the regular tables and cordoned off by wooden railings and partition screens. Inside, one got to dine in an atmosphere right out of….well, a 1970s National Geographic… “The High Road through Central Asia” or some such. Patrons sat on cushions and rugs, lavish things hand woven by the most talented traditional labour (surely either blind old women or illiterate children), in rich maroons, blacks and creamy whites, with detailing in yellow and forest green. On the walls were calligraphy scrolls and framed reproductions of Qajar-era paintings of hunting and palace scenes.

Somehow, this time, the cosy and exotic atmosphere did not succeed in transporting Jemma’s mind to the freer, more interesting haunts of daydreams, however. While Parvaneh ravenously attacked her morasa polo, Jemma dug her spoon listlessly at her kashk-e bademjaan. Parvaneh may have been rich as well as pretty, but that did not prevent her from being sensitive to the moods of her friends who were less fortunate in both departments. “Hey, darling! Don’t play the mysterious artist with me! Something’s bothering you. Is it your roommates? A guy? Tell me and I will teach him to behave himself with you!” She gripped her knife in mock menace.

For a minute or so Jemma was silent. Eventually Parvaneh gave up and returned to the task of eating. Then Jemma suddenly leaned in to her, wide-eyed, “It’s my art…”

“Oh?  You got bad marks on your exams or something? Worried about that…thesis?”

“What? No. Not worried. I mean, I was but…it’s like I was given an epiphany today.”

“Today? When?”

“The wise man who shared his story with us before we…”

“What the…you mean the crazy homeless guy talking about…I dunno what…somebody he murdered out on a boat or something.”

“Buried in the shore, I think….but you get it was moving, right? Like, remember what I was saying about an oil painting of Mario Kart or something?”

“Yeah….but I don’t see….”

“Think about it. Ok, I know you like my art. But, be honest. It’s all so formulaic. Like everyone else who puts on a lumberjack shirt and skinny jeans and a toque and is like, ‘Oh-em-gee, I’m such an artist!’”

“Yeah but you’re more talented than your classmates. You’d think the first time some of them held a paintbrush was in the first semester of undergrad. That’s why they all go in for photography…as if it was difficult to take yet another pic of the CN Tower looking all spirey and tall, or of red streetcars in the white snow and the crowds huddling up in the cold at Yonge and Dundas under the bright lights…Oooh, the contrast!”

“I know, but it’s the same thing. I mean, in spirit, what’s different with me? I paint what the professor tells me. I take photographs everyone else takes. I’ve done art of the City. But what have I done for the art of the City? Do you get me?”

“No…” Parvaneh’s good will ran into a wall of perplexity. “I’m afraid I don’t, actually. You mean like volunteering at the AGO or something? You wanna do some artistic job outside class? Sure, why not…”

“No! Nnngggh!” Jemma clenched her hands. “That’s not what I mean! Like, ok, you know why people like us, progressive young people, now, in 2016, are moved by the poems that William Blake wrote back in the 1700s, or Wordsworth, and how people still read Dickens’ novels, but nobody gives a crap about Coleridge, or Bouguereau, and honestly the Brontes are more popular than Trollope or Wilkie Collins now? Right?”

“Umm I see what you mean but, uhh, my dad has a print of a Bouguereau up in his study. And, oh my God, what are you talking about…’as if some vast Tropic Tree, itself a wood;’ that one doesn’t make your spine tingle? There’s a reason I didn’t take Eng-lit.”

“Hear me out. There’s a reason people love the Impressionists and not Bouguereau; Dickens, not Wilkie Collins; Blake not Coleridge.”

“Depends on your people, but ok.”

“The Impressionists painted raw, authentic Life. Bars with tired, sultry-eyed ladies of the night drinking absinthe. Polynesian women, their innocent freedom unspoiled by civilization and patriarchy. Crowded, urban streetscapes on rainy evenings. Bouguereau painted, what? Exotified, Otherised Arab girls with thick eyebrows and devilish glances? Umm, the objectifying male gaze anyone? Dickens and Blake wrote about chimney sweeps; about mill workers; about the marginalized of early capitalist society. Collins wrote about ‘good ol’ boy’ white Anglo-Saxon heirs solving poor girls’ problems with their stuffy honest-to-a-fault chivalry and inherited fortunes. And stereotyping Indian and Caribbean religious practices for poetry…there’s a reason that shit just doesn’t reach educated people today.”

“Suit yourself. I’d like if my man was honest and respectable and bought a yacht and a big country mansion for me…and hired Bouguereau to paint my portrait…in oil! Take that, our high school art teacher!”

“Please tell me you see what I’m getting at. All of the contrasting artists I mentioned. They all, you can’t argue, reached the highest level of skill and technique in their respective mediums, yes? The difference was in their spirit; their choice of committing in faith and self-identification with…with who and what? With rich country squires and damsels with dulcimers? With emotionally dependant princess who die of sadness? With dying generals; soldiers in khaki lusting with yellow fever after colonized maidens with whom they have relationships with unhealthy power dynamics, because they can’t stand the strong, independent women back home?”

“Unladylike is more like it. But go on…”

“Identification plus inspiration. Plus talent, of course. And sheer determined energy. We respect Blake, Dickens, the Impressionists in ways we don’t respect the others because they chose to take all their skill and social status, and throw in their lot…live with, identify with, express the soul of the mill towns, the slums, the South Sea islands, the seedy cabarets. They volunteered themselves to serve as the conduit of the soul of their eras, places…”

“If I follow, you propose…to be to The 6ix, in the 2010s, what Constable was for the English countryside in the 18th century? Wow, ambitious. I mean, I’m not saying you can’t do it but…how? What will you paint?”

“How? Classical oil painting. The most exacting, the most prestigious style. No acrylic cookie tin images. No abstract or surrealist easy excuses. No editing photos in with an App to look like paintings. As for what I will paint…”

“The CN Tower? The streetcars? The pretty signs and fruit stalls in Chinatown? The condo towers glittering at night?”

Jemma pondered. “Hmm, no. No…That’s…that’s its expression; the soul of the City’s expression in terms of higher level stuff, more superficial stuff, yes. I want the soul itself. To depict that; to speak that in paint. Not the Constable of The 6ix…the Caspar David Friedrich.”

Parvaneh had only the faintest idea of what her friend was saying, so let the matter lie. Eunice, too, forgot her girlfriend’s worried face and gloomy thoughts, blending them in her memory with the countless other vicissitudes of the hyper-emotional lives of perpetually up-and-coming university artists, struggling to find their individuality as they savagely beat themselves into narrow subcultural moulds.

It was several weeks, in fact, that neither of them had seen Jemma, though they never troubled themselves about it, nor thought it unusual. Late in semester, as exams are coming up, some students prefer to study on campus…perhaps for socialization, perhaps so they can be seen to be studying, or maybe their residence situation makes it necessary. Others instead cloister themselves in their apartments, compelling concentration with solitude. Jemma had been putting up regular Instagram posts. Never of social situations, though; always natural scenes, or pictures of old architecture in the still-lowrise-dominated parts of Toronto which can still properly be said to have something of an ‘urban forest.’ Cherry Beach was the most recently dated one, as Parvaneh checked her social media again after the gauntlet of exams and final papers had been run, though that was dated Friday. Now it was Monday. It was an unseasonably warm early December. Still cold in a general sense, of course – everyone in coats at least, though not necessarily full parkas, toques and boots yet. There was no snow on the ground though. Just decaying grass, flattened like gelled-down hair and faded to a sickly pale olive-yellow.

Cherry Beach. Parvaneh remembered, that was the ring tone on Jemma’s phone. Cherry Beach  Express. Something told her she should waste no time in hurrying down there. Hurrying was possible for her at least, as she didn’t have to rely on the riding ‘the rocket.’ She raced her mom’s Rav4 south through the downtown core, down to the beaches. Luckily, it was early in the afternoon, before the rush. She parked on a side street and trotted down the boardwalk, across the stiff hummocks of grass-knotted wet pink sand. She looked around. Not a soul in sight, besides a soccor mom running with her golden retriever two hundred yards or so down the shoreline. And the seagulls circling overhead – if those had souls. She instinctively walked over to a spindly but venerable white ash that she, Jemma and Eunice had often picnicked and sketched under. She remembered that the last time they had done that, on the Labour Day weekend, Jemma had remarked on how all the ash trees in the city would soon be gone; victimized by the emerald ash borer beetle, or cut down by the municipal authorities desirous of saving time. Probably to be replaced with Norway maples or oleasters, Jemma had lamented. Parvaneh remembered this, though she didn’t understand what it meant.

Then, half buried in a tuft of grass at the ash tree’s roots, she saw Jemma’s cell phone. There was no mistaking it. Jemma had made a point about bucking the trend towards ever-more-complicated and capable smartphones by acquiring an old mid-2000s flip phone from an indie trading site online. She used her own, much more effective device to call Eunice. “Hey, Eunice.”

“Sup, girl?”

“I need you to go to Jemma’s place. Need. Break down the door if you have to.”

“Haha, don’t worry, I know how to pick a lock. But…why exactly?”

“I can’t explain right now. I am not sure actually…just…just go. You’re like five minutes away.”

“Ok, sure thing, but you gotta explain if it’s some CIA shit your trying to get me involved in!”

It was an agonizing several minutes of waiting. Parvanah gazed out at the lake. The overcast winter weather meant that the New York side was not visible. It was as if the edge of the sand represented the end of her world. It was a windy day; the waves were enormous. The slimy green water, flecked with indecipherable objects, roared at the land and its inhabitants. It was opaque, as if the clear greenish pigment had been blended with a chalky white. She almost felt tempted to try dare the waves as they climbed up the shore with her foot, as she did on vacation in the Caribbean, laughing hysterically when the sea caught her bare ankles. She fought the temptation; it scared her.

Her phone rang. “Yeh, hi, Eunice again. Listen, her roommates know me and they didn’t mind to let me in. Her door wasn’t locked actually. But…I dunno how to explain this.”

“Just…ugh, tell me. Did you talk to her?”

“She’s…she’s not there. The girls here say she left out Saturday morning for a walk. Man, though…her housekeeping standards have really been slipping. You can hardly walk with all the Mr. Noodles cups and cooler bottles on the floor. Eww…I just saw a roach…”

“Is there…” Parvaneh didn’t want to admit to herself what she was asking. “Is there a note?”

“No but….there’s a painting. Huge. Like wide as the bed. Really amazing, too. Sublime. Like, a Gothic Romanticist sort of sublime. A landscape.”

“Just send me a pic!” Parvaneh yelled, losing herself for a moment.

Eunice duly did as requested. Parvaneh held up her phone in the shadow of the ash tree, so as to see the screen more clearly. She held it straight in front of her and stared. It was as though she were looking through her camera App. Above, a seagull shrieked. She cast the old flip phone in her other hand as far as she could fling it and ran, stumbling, across the hummocks and board steps up towards her car.

Milltown Belle

Face framed by silken strands, tobacco-soaked and stringy;

Sandals scoured by calloused soles, her jeans worn and clingy.

A little Sunfire, manual shift,

Between trials, travels, toil and thrift,

Revving, rolling…gone adrift,

Inhabiting the house in youth she’d fought to flee,

Before she chanced to fill it, and somehow grew alone,

Gripped by bills, petty thrills, work that’s cheap but steady

And some half-forgotten dream that weighed her like a stone.

*

Factory town, thirty years run down,

Where the sun seems dull at hot midday

And, firm-lipped, she seems to drown

As what has been devours what may,

Ray-Bans hiding vivid visions

Her ill-read tongue would strain to speak;

Keeping safe from neighbourly derision

What a lifetime’s stumbles eloquent leak.

*

The idle mill’s time-tired eyes are bricked, or broke, or blear;

Like hers, unflinching, they’ve never cried a tear.

The sultry streets lie silent, but for a distant mower’s whine;

She shuts the door and hits the road, still seeking for a sign.

*

* * *

Copyright © 2018 by M.G. Warenycia