Wednesday, November 19, 2014

The Painting on the Wall


 
What they were seeing may be hard to believe when you read it in print, but it was almost as hard to believe when you saw it happening. The things in the picture were moving. It didn't look at all like a cinema either; the colours were too real and clean and out-of-door for that. Down went the prow of the ship into the wave and up went a great shock of spray.
C.S. Lewis

I think it was in the middle of November when I first noticed the painting moving. I believe it was then, because I remember the snow swirling outside the window in the living room next to my rocking chair. I was halfway finished knitting a scarf for John. When I saw the grey yarn at the craft store it reminded me of his eyes; dark and quiet. Yes, it must have been the middle of November, because my normal radio station had just started playing Christmas music. I remember that I was pulling out a flawed stitch when I looked up and saw the movement for the first time. John had bought the painting years ago at an outdoor art fair, because he said it reminded him of Turner and he had always liked Turner. I liked the painting too. The massive ship on the torrid waves had always captivated me. But I was not captivated when I saw the waves crashing against the ship and spraying foamy green water into the dark violet background; I was frightened. My needles dropped out of my hands and onto my lap and the music seemed to suddenly dampen, as if somebody had thrown a down comforter over the radio. I watched as the waves continued to bombard the ship and wondered if I had gone mad. I looked around the room to see if there was anything else unusual. The snowflakes were still whipping past the window, Rascal was curled up on the couch and twitching her whiskers as she dreamed, and Elvis was crooning “I’ll Be Home for Christmas.” I looked back at the painting and gasped as a flash of lightning illuminated the floundering ship. I began to wonder if I was dreaming and decided the best thing to do was to believe that I was and pretend that the movement was completely normal. With shaking hands, I picked my needles back up and continued to knit as my mind raced. People always talked about people who lived alone. Especially if they were older. They said it did things to you. Made you see things. Hear things. I looked back up at the painting. The ship was surmounting a gigantic and unforgiving wave. I started to knit faster. They kept telling me that John was dead. As if I didn’t know. I did know. I remembered his funeral. Putting him in the ground. I felt a chill run through me and thought about the cold ground. John’s Sunday suit wasn’t keeping him warm. I listened to Elvis and remembered the war. Elvis had fought, hadn’t he? No, he hadn’t. He left. Or did he ever go? Yes, he had, but not for very long. John went. Spent time on the Western Front. But he didn’t like to talk about it. At least, not to me. I looked back up and saw the waves subsiding. I relaxed my grip on the needles and smiled as Rascal stretched and changed her position on the couch. John had been a good husband. Quiet, but good. Never complained. Always ate what I set in front of him. Always wore the sweaters I made him even when his poker buddies teased him. Elvis was gone. Now it was a singer I didn’t recognize. Why did the radio play new music? What was wrong with the old songs? John sometimes woke up during the night. Crying. I would wrap the blanket around him and he would go back to sleep. The waves were calm now. I tied the final knot on the scarf. He would wake up the next morning and not remember what had happened during the night, so I wouldn’t bring it up. I would just make him an extra fried egg and give him an extra kiss before he left the house. I didn’t know where he went during the day. He worked at the post-office, but only part-time. I knew when his shifts were and he would come back home hours after they ended. But I never made a fuss. Just gave him a kiss and was glad he was home. I looked up at the painting. The sun was peeking out from behind a dark grey cloud. The sky wasn’t violet anymore, but pink. The ship seemed to be resting. The snow had stopped falling outside the window and “Blue Christmas” came on the radio. I smiled and folded up the scarf as I imagined wrapping it around John’s neck when he finally came home.

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