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Photographs of Claudia

Page 4

by KG MacGregor


  always like to start with the bare minimum.”

  “Like an artist with a blank canvas.”

  “I guess. My dad always taught me that good portraits were

  mostly about light and composition. I have everything I need for

  that.”

  “Is your dad retired?”

  “No, he died about six years ago. Liver cancer. We never even

  knew he was sick until it was too late.”

  Clearly sensing her melancholy, Claudia patted her forearm.

  “I’m sorry. I bet you were close.”

  “We were. But I feel like he’s with me whenever I’m

  working.”

  “That’s sweet. So what about your mom? Where is she?”

  “She moved to Modesto to live with her sister, my Aunt Ellie.

  They were always close, and…well, I can’t really say the same

  about Mom and me. She worked as a receptionist at a doctor’s

  office, so I didn’t see her as much as I saw Dad. After he died,

  she said she always felt like she was on the outside of the circle

  because we talked all the time about the studio.”

  “Do you see her now?”

  “She visits once or twice a year, and I try to see her on

  holidays. We love each other but we’re not all that close.” They

  fell silent for a long moment. Then Leo cleared her throat and

  gestured toward a doorway. “That’s the kitchen through there.

  And believe it or not, it’s actually still a kitchen.”

  “Look at these cabinets!” Claudia exclaimed, eyeing the

  windowpane facings. “I bet they’re the originals.”

  “Probably. They’ve been here as long as I have.” Leo pointed

  toward a staircase by the back door. No one had ever asked to

  see her darkroom, and only a handful of friends had visited her

  apartment upstairs. “Downstairs is the darkroom, and upstairs is

  where I live. Do you want to see those?”

  “Are you kidding? I want to see everything. I would have

  loved growing up in a house like this. We moved at least six times,

  always because Mom wanted something bigger and better. They

  all felt the same to me—empty and bland, no character at all.”

  “If there’s one thing this house has, it’s character,” Leo said.

  “Especially when the roof leaks or the bathtub backs up.” She

  flipped the light switch and started down the stairs. “I ran the

  exhaust fan for an hour after I did your pictures, so it shouldn’t

  smell too bad. Still, we probably ought not stay too long unless

  we put on masks.”

  Claudia chuckled. “You only promised the nickel tour, so

  maybe just a penny or two down here.”

  Leo guided her into the darkroom, where one wall was lined

  with a sink and developing trays and the other with shelves

  of equipment and supplies. She indicated her main tool, the

  enlarger, which was mounted on a counter in between. “I don’t

  use this room much, to tell you the truth. Most of my film goes

  out to the lab. I do some touch-up with the airbrush once in a

  while, especially for glamour shots.”

  “I’m surprised this isn’t your favorite room.”

  “No, the studio is where the real fun is. And if I don’t do that

  part right, I don’t have a whole lot to work with down here.” She

  pulled the door shut behind her as they walked out. “That just

  leaves the upstairs, which, I have to warn you, isn’t as neat as the

  rest of the house.”

  “Will I get to meet your feline photo critic?”

  “Madeline? That depends. Some days she’s bashful, other

  days she’s your best friend.”

  They climbed two flights of stairs to emerge on the upper

  landing, which branched off into four rooms. She started the tour

  in the back corner, where her double bed nearly filled the room.

  “I’ve been sleeping in this room since I left the crib, but it

  seemed so much bigger back then. Maybe because I used to have

  a twin bed.”

  “This is lovely, Leo,” Claudia said, running her hands over

  the well-worn blue and yellow handmade quilt folded across the

  bottom of the bed. “It looks so comfortable. I don’t know how

  you ever get up in the morning.”

  “That’s what Madeline’s good for.”

  “Madeline! Where is she?” Claudia spun in the doorway

  and shot her a grin. “I bet you’re wondering what you’ve gotten

  yourself into, letting some crazy woman roam through your

  whole house.”

  Leo had to admit it was unusual to allow someone she had

  only just met so deep into her personal space. But Claudia’s

  fascination with the house was charming and an easy subject to

  talk about as they got acquainted. “It never occurred to me you

  might be crazy. I thought you just liked old houses.”

  Claudia smirked and leaned through the next doorway.

  “Guest room?”

  “Correct, except that I haven’t had any guests since my

  mother visited last Christmas. I hate to think how much dust is

  under that bed.” She gestured across the hall. “The bathroom,

  which we all shared because it was the only one in the house until

  we added a powder room off the kitchen. Now for what used to

  be my parents’ room.”

  They walked into her den, a circular room that comprised

  the second floor of the turret. The corner by the window was set

  up as a reading nook, with a Scandinavian recliner and gooseneck

  lamp. Across the room a tan leather couch faced a coffee table

  and entertainment center made of teak.

  “This looks so homey. Except that I haven’t seen your cat

  yet.”Leo nodded in the direction of her television cabinet where

  Madeline looked down on them with her usual curiosity. “Check

  out the highest point in the room.”

  “Aw, she’s adorable.”

  “She knows. I have to keep the kitchen door closed or she’ll

  come into the studio to try to get in everyone’s picture.” She picked

  up the packet on the coffee table. “Speaking of pictures…”

  Claudia’s face lit up as she thumbed through the three poses.

  “Damn, I look good. What was I so happy about?”

  “Maybe it was twenty-five kids trying to get you to laugh.”

  She studied the photos again. “That was a fun day. It was my

  first full day in charge of the class and when the last bell rang

  Sandy said she never wanted them back.”

  Leo had decided to mention her friendship with Sandy and

  Maria over dinner, just in case Sandy hadn’t made it clear. That

  way she could let Claudia know she too was gay. “You looked

  like you were enjoying yourself that day. I take a lot of school

  pictures. Most of the teachers I see look miserable.”

  “Yeah, maybe I haven’t been there long enough to get cranky.

  My grandmother that I told you about, the one with the Victorian

  house…she was a teacher for forty-some years. I’ve always wanted

  to be just like her.”

  That certainly explained why Claudia seemed like such a

  natural in front of her class. “I don’t think I could be around kids

  that much, but I have a lot of respect for people that do.”

  “Grandma alway
s said we were meant to do something

  worthwhile with our lives. But it’s a battle I’ve had with my mom

  since junior high.”

  “What sort of career did she have in mind for you?”

  “She wanted me to major in art history or romance languages,

  something I wouldn’t actually use except to impress the women in

  my bridge club. That’s her idea of a worthwhile life. Fortunately,

  my dad is more like my grandma. He’s a pediatrician and he loves

  kids.”

  Leo was glad Claudia had taken after her father. She had seen

  her share of social climbers in the studio, both men and women

  who hired her services but couldn’t be bothered to be friendly,

  as though she were only a minnow in society’s food chain. In

  those cases it worked best to maintain an air of professional

  detachment, since she wouldn’t get a word of praise for her work,

  just a check to cover her fee. From those kinds of people the

  check was enough.

  “I think you made the right choice,” Leo said. “Your students

  do too because they obviously love you.”

  Claudia grinned. “It’s mutual. I just hope I can find a job for

  next spring. It’s hard to get on board in the middle of the year,

  but I’m graduating in December.”

  “Maybe something will open up.” Leo grabbed her wallet

  from the coffee table. “If you’re finished rummaging through my

  house, why don’t we go grab a bite? You like Isabella’s?”

  “Never been.”

  “Pasta and seafood.”

  “My two favorites at the same table. Who could ask for more

  than that?”

  As they turned the corner at the top of the stairs they dodged

  the thin rope that hung from a door in the ceiling.

  “You have an attic?”

  “Yeah, it’s where I hide all my junk. Don’t tell me you want

  to go up there too.”

  “I do, but not today. Now that you mentioned food I’m ready

  to eat.”

  There was much to do in the attic to make it presentable, but

  Leo was already turning over her schedule for when she might

  start. Getting it cleaned out was a built-in excuse for having

  Claudia come back for another visit.

  0

  Chapter 5

  Their table on the rail afforded a full view of the marina,

  which was bustling with activity on the docks as boaters cleaned

  and secured their craft after a beautiful day on the water. A crisp

  breeze rippled the tablecloth, but both of them were prepared

  for the cool California night. Leo had donned her brown leather

  bomber jacket and Claudia had plucked a tweed blazer from her

  car when she dropped off her packet of photos. A waiter brought

  their drinks, a chardonnay for Claudia and a Black Russian for

  Leo.“This sure beats doing laundry,” Claudia said, raising her

  glass in a toast. “I’ve been in Monterey since August and this is

  my first time at the wharf.”

  “So you aren’t from around here?”

  “My folks live in Cambria down the coast near San

  Simeon.”

  “Where the Hearst Castle is?”

  “Right, and to hear my mother tell it, we’re neighbors,” she

  said, rolling her eyes. She was relieved that Leo had loosened up

  during the walk down to the wharf. The shyness that Sandy had

  described wasn’t evident during the house tour, though she had

  indeed seemed a bit nervous. “I ended up here because I went

  to school at UC-Santa Cruz. They try to place all the teaching

  interns as close as possible so they can drop in unannounced and

  watch from the back of the room. Very unnerving.”

  “Melrose seems like a pretty good place to teach. You could

  have done a lot worse.”

  “You’re telling me. And I couldn’t have asked for a better

  supervising teacher than Sandy Irwin. I was so lucky to get

  someone who wasn’t jaded and grouchy all the time. Can you

  imagine if I’d been paired with Betty Tyler? The kids would be

  schizophrenic, what with my positive reinforcement one minute

  and her harping at them the next.” She wondered if Sandy had

  mentioned her invitation to the Halloween party. “How long

  have you known Sandy?”

  Leo squinted as if counting in her head. “About four years. I

  ran into her at a party and recognized her from doing the school

  pictures at Melrose. I already knew her…uh, her friend Maria

  because she’s a photographer too.”

  “Right, I’ve seen some of Maria’s work. She’s amazing.” It was

  interesting that Leo had stumbled over how to describe Sandy’s

  partner.

  They put their conversation on hold to order dinner.

  Once the waiter left Claudia continued, “By the way, Sandy

  invited me to their Halloween party next weekend. She said you’d

  probably be there. Is that right?”

  “I…yeah, sure. I go every year.”

  The quake in Leo’s voice suggested she was dancing around

  the topic of being gay, probably because Claudia hadn’t yet made

  it clear she was cool with having lesbian friends. “She warned

  me I’d probably be the only straight person there but I told her

  it didn’t matter. I just like to be around interesting people, and

  I’m not the kind of person to go judging somebody or blabbing

  their secrets.”

  Leo nodded and offered a faint smile. “Good to know. Not

  everyone feels that way.”

  “That’s ridiculous if you ask me. What people do with their

  personal lives is nobody’s business.” She waved a hand dismissively.

  “I had a gay roommate my freshman year. I even went with her a

  couple of times to a gay bar.” In fact, she had danced with several

  of the women there when they asked, but not when the music

  was slow and romantic.

  “Wow, I have lesbian friends who wouldn’t dare go out to a

  gay bar. They’re afraid of people finding out.”

  “Yeah, that’s what Sandy said. She doesn’t think she’d get

  fired after fifteen years in the classroom, but she’d still have to

  put up with parents getting bent out of shape about it. And then

  she’d end up with a big chip on her shoulder, worrying that every

  single criticism on her evaluation form was really about who she

  slept with, not what kind of teacher she was. Somebody who was

  open about being gay probably couldn’t get hired at all.”

  “I’m sure you’re right. I’d probably lose a few of my customers

  if they knew, maybe even the school contract. Can’t have those

  deviants around little children, you know?”

  Claudia swirled the last of her wine in her glass, noticing that

  Leo’s green eyes had gone dark in the waning sunlight. With the

  black hair that flopped on her brow, it was an amazingly dramatic

  look that most women only got with makeup. “Did your folks

  know about you?”

  “Good question. I never really talked to my dad, but I had

  started seeing Melissa when he first got sick. I told my mom

  about a year later and she said she wasn’t surprised, so I figured

  Dad probably knew too.” Leo drained her drin
k and sucked an

  ice cube into her cheek. “I wish I had talked to him, but I was just

  figuring things out for myself. I think he would have been okay

  with it though.”

  “I’m sure he would have been. It sounds like you two were

  really close.” Based on what Sandy had said about Leo keeping

  her personal life to herself, she had a feeling she had just heard

  something few others knew. “Whatever happened to Melissa?”

  Leo shrugged. “It ran its course. She didn’t really want to

  be tied down, which is another way of saying she wanted to see

  other people too. I tried to be blasé about it, but I guess I’m not

  cut out for the casual romance thing. After I realized she’d been

  with somebody else…” She shuddered and shook her head. “It

  wasn’t special anymore. I figure either it’s serious, or why bother

  at all?”

  “I hear you.”

  On Leo’s signal, the waiter dropped off another round of

  drinks. When he disappeared, she pointed to Claudia’s diamond

  ring. “It looks like you’re serious. When’s your wedding?”

  “Who knows? We can’t even figure out how to be in the same

  country for more than a week or two at a time.”

  “You lost me.”

  “My fiancé, Mike. His family owns this enormous international

  development corporation. And unlike my family, they really are

  neighbors of Hearst.” She lapsed into an exaggerated haughty

  tone. “In fact, Mike’s grandfather used to go to parties at the

  Hearst Castle with all the Hollywood stars. What my mother

  wouldn’t give just to live in their guest house. They have this

  gigantic mansion right on the ocean in San Simeon.”

  “I didn’t realize I was in the presence of such a celebrity.”

  Claudia swatted her hand playfully. “Believe me, there’s

  nothing about my life that says celebrity. I’m about as plain as

  they get. Anyway, Mike’s in Taiwan right now building a mall.

  I think this ring was his way of apologizing for being gone so

  long.”

  “It must be tough being so far apart.”

  Lots of people said that, and they probably found her response

  peculiar. “You know, it’s really not so bad right now. I need to be

  concentrating on finishing my degree and that’s a whole lot easier

  with him halfway around the world. And he needs to concentrate

 

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