woman and boy and girl. He grimaces at the latter and puts it down again.
He is wearing black trousers, a pressed white and blue shirt, a tie. He does not look completely comfortable.
We were apparently in the middle of a conversation, but I have lost the thread.
What are you talking about? I ask. I see, with alarm, that he is tracing his finger around the edge of my Renoir, his fingers coming perilously close to the young woman’s red hat.
Like what? His movements are making me dizzy. Now he is on the move again, flitting from one object to another, examining everything with great interest.
He seems especially fascinated by my paintings. He moves from the Renoir to the Calder, from the left side of the room to the right, and then to the center, where my Theotokos of the Three Hands glows from its place above the door frame.
There is some connection here, something that tickles about this man and this particular piece. History.
I can more easily tell you about what happened fifty years ago, I say. I struggle out of my bed, holding on to the rails for support. Wrapping my gown around me in some semblance of modesty, I sit myself in the chair he has vacated.
And who are you again?
My favorite?
You do remind me of someone I know.
A boy living in the graduate dorm at Northwestern. Dark like you. Restless like you.
The man stops. I have his attention.
Not much to tell, really. A bit of a ladies’ man. More than a little of a pest. Always knocking on my door, trying to entice me to put down my books and come out to play.
No. Before that. When I still wanted to be a medieval historian. I smiled at my words, so implausible.
My thesis. The conflict in the medieval medical community between applying traditional folkloric remedies and following the precepts found in Avicenna’s
I had a double undergraduate degree in history and biology. My thesis was a way of combining both my passions. But I fell in love with the
Yes. Carl.
My first mentor.
No, never. He just recognized a fellow addict. He was the first person I told that I was quitting the PhD program to apply for medical school. My biggest supporter when I chose orthopedic surgery. The medical establishment was not exactly friendly to the idea of a woman in that role.
Oh. Yes. Him. Another unexpected detour. My life was full of surprises around then. By that I mean I surprised myself. So many about-faces. So many disruptions of well-laid plans.
Yes. It was that.