cream-colored Persian carpet, which as a backdrop looked like a field fogged with steam, and then she had climbed on top of a table to photograph it from above before they picked it back apart and reassembled it into a desk. An old Chinese birdcage, broken down into a web of arched wires, had become an eagle, its brassy skeletal wings spread as if about to take flight. An overstuffed sofa had become an elephant, trunk raised in trumpet song. The series of photos that emerged from this project were both intriguing and unsettling, the animals incredibly intricate and lifelike, and then you looked closer and realized what they had been made of. She had sold quite a few of these, through her friend Anita, a gallery owner in New Yorkâa person Pearl had never met in a place sheâd never been. Mia hated New York, would never go even to promote her own work. âAnita,â Mia had said into the phone once, âI love you dearly but I cannot come to New York for a show. No, not even if it meant Iâd sell a hundred pieces.â A pause. âI know it does, but you know I canât. All right. You do what you can, and thatâs good enough for me.â Still, Anita had managed to sell a half dozen of the series, which meant instead of cleaning houses Mia had been able to spend the next six months working on a new project.
That was how her mother worked: one project for four or six months, then on to the next. Sheâd work and work and come up with a group of photos and Anita would usually be able to sell at least a few of them in her gallery. At first the prices had been so modestâa few hundred dollars per pieceâthat Mia sometimes had to take on two jobs, or even three. But as time went on, her work became regarded well enough in the art world that Anita could sell more pieces, for more money: enough to pay for what Mia and Pearl neededâfood, rent, gas for the Rabbitâeven after Anitaâs fifty-percent cut. âTwo or three thousand dollars, sometimes,â Pearl toldhim with pride, and Moody did quick mental math: if Mia sold ten pictures a year . . .
Sometimes the photos did not sellâa project Mia did with skeletal leaves sold only one, and for several months she took up a series of odd jobs: housecleaning, flower arranging, cake decorating. She was good at anything that involved her hands, and she preferred the jobs where she did not have to work with customers, where she could be alone and thinking, to waitressing, secretarying, salesclerking. âI was a salesgirl once, before you were born,â she told Pearl. âI lasted one day. One. The manager kept telling me how to put the dresses on hangers. Customers would pull the beads off clothes and demand discounts. Iâd rather mop a floor, alone in the house, than deal with that.â
But other projects did sell, and got attention. One seriesâwhich Mia began after sheâd been doing some seamstress workâsupported them for nearly a year. She would go to thrift stores and buy old stuffed animalsâfaded teddy bears, ratty plush dogs, threadbare rabbitsâthe cheaper the better. At home, she took them apart at the seams, washed their pelts, fluffed their filling, repolished their eyes. Then she stitched them back together, inside out, and the results were eerily beautiful. The ragged fur, in reverse, took on the look of shorn velvet. The whole animal, resewn and restuffed, had the same shape but a different bearing, the backs and necks straighter, the ears perkier; the eyes shone now with a knowing glint. It was as if the animal had been reincarnated, older and bolder and wiser. Pearl had loved watching her mother at work, bent over the kitchen table, laboring with the precision of a surgeonâscalpel, needle, pinsâto transform these toys into art. Anita had sold every photo in this series; one had even, she reported, made its way to MoMA. Sheâd begged Mia to take another