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The Portrait

The Portrait
When C. agreed to come to my place, I was rather disappointed. C. and I were colleagues, working at a downtown hardware store — she as a clerk-typist, I as an accountant. As the only female on the establishment, C. was sometimes called upon to serve as a receptionist too; otherwise, she sat next to me, occasionally typing, but mostly staring at the glossy enamel on her nails. She wore that air of inviolability about her that made flirting with her truly exciting.

Whenever she brought cheese sandwiches for lunch, she offered me one, and then cruised out with me to the shop across the road to have coffee. On one of these forays into the coffee shop, I dropped a hint that she visit me on the weekend. She picked at the lipstick on her lips, and then splaying out her fingers — as usual — started to inspect her nails closely. Sure she knows, I thought, how to play at it. Then doubts besieged me, and I thought maybe that was how a woman snubbed. 

After a week, another sandwich for me, another coffee visit, purplish lipstick with matching nail polish, and I tossed her way another hint. She giggled loudly, bent over, and slapped her left calf hard. ‘I suspect there’s an insect crawling up my leg,’ she said. Even though she had plucked a tiny squashed insect from her dress, I thought she could easily have been ambiguous. I hated myself, and vowed never to give her another chance to humiliate me.

Yet the flirting continued. A few sandwiches later, I broke my vow, and asked her again to visit me. This time C. accepted. I had always hoped she wouldn't, but she did, and now I had a problem on hand. 

Not well paid at my job, I had rented a small room in a rundown neighbourhood. I owned neither stylish furniture nor expensive linen to impress a woman. So I thought my landlady, who was stereotypically bosomy with unpredictable swings of mood, might help. Reluctantly, and half-expecting to be thrown out, I divulged C.'s impending visit to her. Her eyes began to shine with glee. She shrugged, in exasperation or resignation, I couldn’t really make up my mind, but as she stomped up the stairs to my room I knew she had taken control of things. 

Upon entering the room, she gave out a loud sigh, then came and stood with arms akimbo at the head of the bed, her eyes darting from corner to corner. 

‘What a mess,’ she muttered resignedly, and set to work. I stood near the door, watching her bring order and precision in the shambolic world of a bachelor’s room. Even though she herself dressed rather slovenly, her feminine touch had soon transformed the room. Then, without any request being made, she offered to lend me bed linen and a table cloth. ‘For an additional charge of course… which goes without saying,’ she added matter-of-factly. 

But now another problem cropped up. Immediately after renting the room, I had noticed a shapeless damp spot in the wall above the foot of my bed. It was not big enough at the time, but over time, and particularly after the rains, moss had grown on it. It looked bigger now, adding darkness and gloom to the room. I had scrubbed the mark hard, but this had made the moss penetrate deeper into the plaster, and now the spot looked uglier, and completely discoloured. The landlady stared at it for a moment, and then said, ‘Just cover it. Better with a picture if you can.’ Her suggestion was practical, the only thing that could be done at such a short notice. It immediately reminded me of the framed portrait stowed away under the bed.

When I took the room, the only luxury coming with the rent was a wide bed with a soiled stringy mattress. Since I had very little money to spare, I decided to get a reading table and a couple of chairs from the flea market. 

The landlady had directed me to a shop, whose small and wiry shopkeeper refused to reduce the price of the table and the brace of chairs I wanted to buy. I was strapped for cash, and thought they made a good bargain, their dark brown varnish lending them the look of old-world furniture. I wanted to save some money for a bed sheet and a table cloth — which could only happen if he reduced their price. 

After much haggling, I could whittle the salesman’s avarice to the extent that he suggested a compromise. He offered a framed photograph as a free gift with my purchase. ‘It’s expensive, near-antique,’ he said. Then after a pause, he added cryptically, ‘You’ll be grateful.’ 

I wanted the particular table at any cost, and had no use for either the frame or the daguerreotype it contained. Yet I accepted it now. Having haggled and kept waiting a few customers for too long, I had no other option left but to take it as a face-saving gesture. I thought I would frame my own photograph in it. But when the furniture was delivered at my room, I promptly threw the frame under the bed and forgot its existence. And now it came in quite handy.

The picture frame was heavy and sturdy, and expensive-looking, like that of the antique portrait frames that usually adorn the walls in fashionable drawing rooms. It took a while and some effort to find the nail that could hold its weight. But when the picture had been hung, thanks of course to the landlady, the damp patch was completely covered. 

C. could now visit me, which indeed she did, on the appointed day. It was a strange age. There were very few fashionable restaurants, and those that there were I could hardly afford. Our first date and we did not know what to talk about. It was in the midst of such a predicament that C.’s eyes fell on the picture frame on the wall. The admiring look on her face forced me to follow the direction of her attention, and for the first time I had a close look at the portrait in the frame. C. was staring intently at the portrait, and I realised that it was a strikingly handsome face. A strange feeling stabbed at my heart. The thinning hair plastered on the scalp with dandyish care was adding to the person’s mystique.

As her eyes lingered on the picture, I thought I could make use of her passing interest in it. This way maybe I could mask my ineptness for not being able to engage her in a meaningful conversation. So without any deliberate attempt, my mouth blurted out that the portrait was that of one of my ancestors, my granduncle’s to be precise. 

‘Looks well bred,’ C. said. I got the lead, and now I knew what exactly to say.
‘He was an aristocrat. Was in the army actually,’ I said. I thought this way I could impress C. — at least let my ancestors do that if not me.

‘Yes,’ she said, a little incredulously.

There was a brief lull in our conversation; then she heaved a sigh. 

‘He looks strangely,’ she said, ‘you can’t make out if he is happy or sad.’ I started; I wasn’t that observant. 

‘I would say sad,’ she continued.

She was staring at the portrait fixedly. ‘What is it?’ she said in somewhat a distressing voice. ‘He is looking at us.’

Her words made me notice the portrait’s mesmerizing gaze, particularly the right eye, unfaded and gleaming.

C. had risen in my esteem. She was refined, sensitive and expressive, much to my disconcert. She was far superior to me. Maybe the face had unhinged a repressed memory inside her. I was found wanting, and now she was feeding upon the portrait and projecting her fantasy on my granduncle. 

To overcome my embarrassment, I began to embroider the picture, filling out the background. So he became an aristocrat, a soldier, an expert marksman with medals, even an adventurer, and to add to it all a dash of romance, he died at a young age, at thirty-eight to be exact.

C. was too romantic and intelligent for me. She never came back, though she did mention the picture and the strange look on the face once or twice. But when D. came over and looked inquisitively at it, I felt no qualm in telling her that he was an actor of yesteryears, a theatre artist. 

I had discovered a new use for the picture, and the fibber in me knew exactly what to do and how to invent an ancestry, glorious and majestic. She clapped her hands. ‘How wonderful!’ she exclaimed with an enthusiasm I thought was more a sham than real. With little else to do I recounted to her his daring adventures, all made up in my mind, of course, at the spur of the moment. I even talked suggestively about his sexual exploits, angling to get D. into bed, though she expertly wriggled out of the situation. I had soon unleashed on her a repertoire of made-up antics of my imagined ancestor whose supposed photograph the gilded frame carried. The dead uncle owned the evening.

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