start small," Molly continued. "You could use the place on Eleventh again."
Isabella clicked her tongue. "Which one is the power here?"
"Sorry, Isâit's the thickest cable. You might have to unplug it
under the desk and feed it back upâotherwise that adaptor thing gets stuck. It's a pain."
Molly was right about the concerts, of course. But Isabella did not believe her neighbor really understood that such a course was far from easy. In the past twenty years (yes, since the Wall collapsed, dear, crazy Mother) modern life had speedily (and rather gleefully) drawn up and ranged all its best and biggest guns against anything remotely vocational. (Molly was the exceptionâand it had cost her dearly to find her niche.) The arteries of the world were becoming more and more sclerotic: if you were not creating money, then you were not creating anything. And sure enough, down on her hands and knees, Isabella heard herself citing the hoary old defense: "I've saved quite a lot, thoughâone more year and, well, I reckon I'll have enough for a six-month sabbatical rethink."
"If there's anyone who could rescue that kind of music, Is ... I mean, the classical audience is so pompous and self-regarding, such a bunch of pricks."
Isabella stood, glanced out the window, and leaned over the desk, trying to thread the freed cord up from behind.
"But you're not," Molly continued. "You're young and you're clever and you're ... capable. The only thing ... the only thing is to make a start."
So keenly was Isabella aware of her neighbor's change of tone (and the kindness behind it) that she suddenly felt embarrassed and could not bring herself to turn around. Embarrassed because she wanted both to embrace Molly and to run away from her at the same time. Embarrassed too that she might be guilty of in some way soliciting such sympathy. And worst of all, embarrassed because the acuity of the insight made her want to demur, deny, deflect, evade ... when actually she well knew that she was only being cheered and reassuredâreassured that here was an understanding ear, if ever she needed it. And yet what was the point of talking about this or that, when reallyâthe floor of her mind now cracked apart and rose up like a swarm of agitated waspsâwhen really the whole mess needed sorting: dropping out and then begging her way back into Cambridge; a false-start career in lawâyears wasted; a change of plan; unbelievable amounts of work; then not managing more than three months with the cultish children of Magog at Harvard Business School; this new farce of a career at Media Therapy, also very difficult to lie her way into, with these human simulacra for colleagues. Not forgetting a disastrous series of so-called relationships with infants, a violent cheating manipulative bastard for a father whom (subconsciously) she had crossed the Atlantic to get away from and whom she sometimes felt the urge to pretend (in her sickest moments) had actually physically abused her, so that at least she would have some factual and universally recognized problem to cite as the cause of all her ungovernable feelings of revulsion and nausea toward him. And now the letters. She turned.
"You're right, Mol, I know. I should call the guy again. That place on Eleventh is perfect. But ... but it's not as if I'm going to do this job for more than another year, maximum. I think I just had to get the green card and, you know, find a proper footing here after all the arsing around. If there's one thing about America these days, it's that you have to be legal. Land of the free and all that."
She passed the computer with both hands.
Molly placed it beside her on the bed and looked up, her face a picture of understanding.
And instantly Isabella felt the urge to share something real with her friend. It was cruel to push people away all the time.
Give
something. Anything.
"I had an argument with Sasha last night, is all. After I got back from the work