Music
Man
by Teresa
Tipping
Today was the worst day Nicholas had
experienced.
Worse even than the 1987 riots in Brasov, which had
been terrifying yet exciting, when he had accompanied his
father and brother to join the crowds protesting over the
exportation of Romania’s food to fund Ceausescu’s
projects.
Today, seeing his father raise his hand to their dear
mother would haunt him for the rest of his
life.
A shy, reflective boy, 12 year old Nicholas was tall and
spindly, lacking the fine muscle tone of his more
athletic, elder brother, Anton, but they got on well
enough. Both
had unruly ginger hair and a drizzle of
freckles.
Together with their little sisters, the brothers stood in
the far corner watching the drama
unfold.
Beneath the window, Nicholas’s beloved companion, the
walnut piano gracing the room with its grandeur was at
the core of the family quarrel. Their father, Miklos, a
veritable giant, gripped its sides with large, rough
hands to lift it. Her impassioned pleas
ignored, their mother lunged at Miklos, clawing his
arm. Never
had their parents quarrelled like this.
“No, Miklos, not the piano,” she screamed. “Not my
piano. It is
all I have left from Father and what of
Nicholas?
Such talent wasted?”
“Anna, there is never enough food these days. If I do not sell the
piano, who knows what will happen to the
children.”
“Even if you get a good price, where can you but this
food all of a sudden? There is little enough
in the shops.”
“I have been promised a steady supply in return for this
piano by a man from the Ministry. The piano is for his
daughter.”
“How can you trust this man?”
“I have no choice.”
As their father pushed the piano towards the door, their
mother clung desperately to its glowing walnut
veneer.
Nicholas watched silently with clenched fists wanting to
help his mother but he dared not.
“You cannot take it,” she begged.
The blow was sudden, ferocious, catching her
unawares.
Anna toppled across the wooden floor, her head narrowly
missing the iron scuttle in the hearth. Nicholas cried out as
she lay inert while Miklos stood frozen and the girls
sobbed. With
a sudden rush of adrenalin, Anton yelled and the brothers
tumbled together to reach their mother’s
side.
“How dare he raise his hand to you,” Anton said as
together they lifted her into the sturdy oak chair by the
fire.
“Shut your mouth. I will deal with you
later,” Miklos growled. “See to your
mother.”
Nicholas bathed her temple with a cool, wet cloth as the
girls clung to her skirt.
“He had no choice,” she said, her head tilted back
against the chair, eyes closed. “I was selfish and
hysterical.
Now fetch me a drink please Anton.”
“I will kill him for this,” Anton whispered as their
father continued pushing, heaving until he managed to get
the piano outside and onto the truck.
Anna lifted her head. “No,” she said, her
eyes glazed.
“Your father is a good man. He wants to do what is
right for us.”
When Miklos returned, the deed done, he brought home a
basket heaving with food – coffee, bread, fresh eggs,
butter, honey, cheese and some fine
mutton.
They sat in silence eating the biggest meal they could
remember for a long time but for Nicholas, his appetite
had deserted him. Later, in bed as
Nicholas curled up against Anton’s strong back, they
heard their father cry; a feral call from his
soul.
Next morning, Miklos summoned Nicholas to the table
alone. In
front of him, lay a flat brown cloth. “How important is music
to you, Nicholas?” he asked.
“You know it means everything to me,” Nicholas said,
trying to stay calm.
“All is not lost, my boy.” Miklos unwrapped the
cloth to reveal a sheet of long paper on which were drawn
the keys of a piano.
“The man from the Ministry gave me this paper some days
ago so that I could copy a template of the piano
keys. I have
spent many hours ensuring I copied it
exactly. If
you practise on this each day, you will not lose your
skill.”
“But it is just a piece of paper,
father.”
“No, Nicholas, it is a perfect copy, even down to the
black notes.”
Miklos gripped his son’s shoulder. “It is true you will
not make music that you can hear but you will feel it in
your heart if it is true to you. One day, you may once
again play a real piano.”
He relaxed his grip on Nicholas. “If you do not think it
is a good idea, I can give the paper to your sisters to
cut up for clothes for their dolls.”
“I will do as you suggest,” Nicholas said
quickly.
“Every morning before breakfast and every evening after
dinner, we will keep the table free from clutter for you
and you will practise.
Agreed?”
As Nicholas nodded, his smile lit the room. It was a mad idea, but
sometimes, there was a profound truth in the maddest of
ideas.
Every day, except Sundays, when father insisted they
attend Church, Nicholas practised on the paper
piano. At
first, it seemed incredibly futile, his fingers wandering
aimlessly over the paper notes and he had to bit his lip
to stop tears of frustration but after a few days, if he
visualised music flowing through his nimble fingers on to
each paper key, he felt the music vibrate through his
heart.
Anton taunted him relentlessly. “You are wasting your
time. You
will never be able to play even if you did by some
miracle acquire another piano. You’d be better off
playing football.”
“I don’t care for football and one day I will play
again,” Nicholas protested but as months passed, he
wondered if he would ever make music again. It was hard to imagine
ever owning a piano again while Romanian people were
suffering so. Still, with
determination, he practiced, lovingly wrapping the paper
piano in its brown cloth each night.
Temptations were many. On cold wet days, he
longed to stay snuggled up in bed a little
longer. On
hot sunny days, he longed to roam in the cool shade of
the woods seeking out the company of birds and rabbits
but music meant everything and he continued
practising.
“Look what I found in my family chest,” his mother said,
presenting him with a leather bound music
book. When
Nicholas opened the delicate pages carefully and moved
his fingers as the notes dictated, he could almost
imagine himself dressed in a fine suit with his fingers
moving easily over the keys of a grand piano playing a
popular concerto in front of an appreciative
audience.
One day his dream would come true.
Many months had passed when his father came home with a
strange request.
“Nicholas, I need you to chop some wood and undertake
other errands for an old Roma lady.”
“A gypsy!
Why would I do that?”
“Because she is old and needs help.”
“Why can’t Anton?”
“Anton’s leaving for Brasov soon to find
work.”
Nicholas sighed. Was his father in
trouble? Was
it money again? When Anton left there
would be no one else to help them.
“Do I have to Father, there is enough to do here and when
will I find the time to practise on my paper
piano?”
Miklos shrugged. “Put on your
jacket.
We’ll go and discuss what she needs.”
A large lady with stringy grey hair and dark eyes stood
in the doorway of the dilapidated apartment
block. The
Roma was not as frail as Nicholas had
imagined.
She opened a tin and pushed a little snuff into her
nostrils as they approached.
Miklos pushed Nicholas towards her. “My son, Nicholas,” he
said to the woman.
Eyeing Nicholas up and down, she nodded. “I have trouble with my
joints; I
can’t do for myself anymore.”
Nicholas looked at her swollen, twisted knuckles. He must
help her, poor old lady. His father was
right.
“How much are you paying?” he blurted, knowing his father
would expect him to ask.
The Roma sniffed. “Look at
me. I have
nothing.
Come, take a look.”
Nicholas was surprised at the barren neatness of her home
– a chair, a table, some little trinkets lovingly placed
on the window ledge. Then his eyes honed in
on a small cherry wood piano.
He strode across and lifted its lid, his fingers itching
to touch the coolness of the black and white
keys.
The Roma shuffled forward. Quickly, he closed the
lid, and apologised for his insolence.
She grinned.
“Well, music man, in return for some help, you may come
once, maybe twice a week to practise on that old
fellow. Do
we have a deal?”
“A deal,” Nicholas said, shaking her
hand.
Ecstatically, he ran home feeling whole again, cherishing
the bliss of the moment. For now, it would be
enough and maybe, after all, he had a
future.
© 2008 Teresa Tipping
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