Wikipedia commons
THE BUSKER OF TORREVIEJA
Part 1 of 2
(part 2 tomorrow)
Nik Morton
Milly was at least ten years
older than me –
I was twenty-five and she was a bit hazy about her date of birth. Whatever she
wore, she always looked stunning. The black sleeveless dress was in some kind
of all-over stretch lace and the net underskirt rustled as she turned to gaze
at me. “Adrian, be a dear and zip me up,” she said, fixing a pearl earring. Her
hazel eyes shone with the anticipation of seeing Tomás, her new conquest for
this evening.
“Certainly,
Millicent.” She didn’t like me calling her Milly. “You look ravishing, by the
way,” I said, truthfully enough, obliging with the zip.
The
mood was changed by a rapid knock on the hotel room door.
“That’ll
be Tomás,” she said. “Let him in, will you?”
Tomás
Rivera had moved from Madrid to Torrevieja ten years ago and thrived on the
considerable and delightful cultural delights of the town. In every way, he was
Milly’s kind of guy. He pumped my hand vigorously. “You are sure I am unable to
twist your arm for a meal first, young man?”
I
declined. “Sorry, I have to prepare for my performance later.”
Milly
wanted glamor and excitement, while I was only a fairly staid if talented
flautist. True, she liked having me hang on her arm at society events, and to
begin with she’d sponsored me till I became known. I’d thought we were in love
but after a while it became obvious that this was not the case. I suppose I
should’ve realized sooner, but maybe I was selfish, not wanting to jeopardise
my comfortable life, touring and staying in the best hotels, playing my music
and making recordings. Perhaps all artistes are self-centred like me.
As
Milly left with Tomás, I tried to submerge any thought of self. I must live for
the music. Only the music was important. Not Milly, not my happiness, and
certainly not me.
* * * *
It was a hot July. On our way to
the Teatro Municipal, the early evening buzz of Torrevieja’s paseo intruded
pleasantly enough through the open windows of the limousine. My driver Emilio
had explained, “The air-con, it always breaks in summer.”
Then
I heard a remarkable, beautiful sound, a violin playing a Tartini sonata,
though I’d never known it expressed with such feeling. I leaned forward.
“Emilio, turn up the volume, will you?”
“The
radio, it is not on, Mr. Jacobs.”
The
music was fading, I was losing it. “Emilio, stop the car!” Normally, I didn’t
make a habit of being rude, but that music really got to me. I peered out the
rear window and glimpsed a figure with a violin on the corner of the block we’d
just passed.
Emilio
pulled over smoothly, reversed into a side street and, to the accompaniment of
blaring car-horns, he crossed the traffic and headed back the way we’d come.
Thankfully, not a policeman was in sight.
“Where
are we going, Mr. Jacobs?”
“We
passed a – a busker. I want to hear him play.”
“Sí,
vale, Señor.” His tone suggested that he was humouring an escaped inmate from
an asylum. I had to admit, I wasn’t acting rationally. But that music had
really affected me.
Up
ahead three people were scuffling on the pavement. As we approached, I realized
it was two men fighting a woman – and she
was the busker.
“Pull
in, Emilio!”
“This
is not a good idea, Señor.”
“Emilio!”
He
slammed on the brakes and I bundled forward. Fortunately, the drinks cupboard
was shut or I would’ve been wearing it.
By
the time I’d opened the door and stepped out, the two men had knocked the woman
to the ground. “Hey!” I shouted. “What are you doing?” A stupid thing to say,
but it got their attention.
My
stomach churned sickeningly: the woman lay quite still. I was about to get
Emilio to call for an ambulance when I heard something that made my mouth go
very dry and my legs seemed to lose all prior knowledge of mobility.
“Richer
meat here, eh, Fedor?” said the taller one, eyeing me. He was grinning. I
wasn’t. My face felt frozen, the blood draining from it.
And
still not a policeman in sight.
Instinct
must have taken over from common sense. I reached inside the car and grabbed my
flute case. Purposefully, I walked toward them, even though adrenalin pumping
down to my wobbly legs told me that I was going in the wrong direction. I
guessed – hoped – that they were cowards.
“Just
watch, Igor!” said Fedor and rushed me.
I’ve
guessed wrong, I thought with a sinking feeling. Somehow, I side-stepped
Fedor’s charge and luckily brought the flute case crashing down on the back of
his head as he passed. He let out a yelp and slid unconscious to the pavement.
Both
the case and flute were broken. What was Milly going to say?
Igor
came at me with a knife and I forgot all about Milly.
I
was in over my head and knew it. My legs felt like jelly and my heart pounded.
Igor
lunged, but I backed off in time and the blade slashed the front of my jacket.
Blood roared in my ears; I was angry that my life would end here and now, on
this orange-tree lined street.
My
back bumped into an ornate cast-iron lamppost. I had nowhere to go.
Igor
grinned, and I noticed that he needed a dentist.
The
high-pitched squeal of car-tires caught our attention. The limo mounted the
kerb and Emilio stormed straight at Igor, who decided to run.
As
Emilio braked, I turned to the woman – but she was no longer there. Only her
broken violin.
Shakily,
with trembling fingers, I picked up the ebony fingerboard and spruce top-plate,
pieces of wood that had so recently been an instrument capable of sending waves
of emotion that wrenched at my heart. A heart that was now pounding with
relief. Thanks to Emilio, I was still alive. But did I really feel alive?
* * * *
When I finally arrived at
Torrevieja’s impressive theatre, Milly sounded a little uptight over my delay.
That’s understatement. And when I told her what had happened she went ballistic
and railed at me for being irresponsible. She held my hands, stroking them.
“You can’t get involved in brawls, Adrian! The damage you could do to your
hands – it’s too great a risk!” She was simply concerned about my ability to
play music.
Very
altruistic, I thought. “I couldn’t let those thugs get away with–”
“Your
heart’s in the right place, dear,’ she interrupted, ‘even if your head isn’t.
You can’t put your livelihood on the line for some silly busker!”
My
cheeks felt suddenly very hot but, before I could respond, one of her acolytes
said, “Time for the concert, darlings!”
‘We’ll
talk about this later,’ I said and shrugged off her imploring hand and ignored
her whispered words of good luck. Break a leg? That woman busker had made
exquisite music and now her instrument was broken beyond repair. How many
buskers were there in Torrevieja? God knows! All I knew was that it was a long
time since I’d been so affected by anything like that busker’s music.
My
hands trembled with reaction but, somehow, I had to go on and perform. Be a
professional, I told myself, as the applause echoed round the Teatro Municipal.
Since
the evening was humid, no one remarked on my appearance in shirt-sleeves and
cummerbund. I didn’t have a spare jacket but I used my spare flute.
No
matter how hard I tried to be detached, I was haunted by the sound of the
woman’s violin, so I don’t believe that I played too well. Fortunately for my
nerves and reputation, it was a fairly simple programme, Love Themes from the Movies. Popular stuff, like We have all the time in the world, Bilitis, Tara’s Theme from Gone With the Wind, Love is a Many
Splendored Thing, and Three coins in
the fountain.
I
received rapturous applause and was grateful but felt no familiar warmth from
the approbation.
Next
day, I telephoned the few musical instrument shops in Torrevieja and the
outlying area. The F-holes in the violin’s top-plate were unusual and easy to
describe. At the third shop the owner recognised the violin. He complimented me
on my Debussy solo two weeks earlier in Murcia and regretted that all he could
remember about the violin was that a nun had bought it about six months ago. He
offered to search his records, but I told him not to bother. Since I had not
seen a nun busking, it seemed likely that the violin was stolen. End of the
line.
… to be concluded tomorrow…
No comments:
Post a Comment