gatecrashers about one hundred. Weâll close to the public at three oâclock. That will give the caterer plenty of time to set up.â
âYouâre a good girl, Jenny.â Now that everything was in order, Mr. Hartley was relaxed and benign. Wait till she told him that she couldnât stay till the end of the reception! âLee just got in,â Jenny continued,referring to her part-time assistant, âso weâre in good shape.â She grinned at him. âNow please stop worrying.â
âIâll try. Tell Lee Iâll be back before one to have lunch with Mr. Krueger. You go out and get yourself something to eat now, Jenny.â
She watched him march briskly out the door. For the moment there was a lull in the number of new arrivals. She wanted to study the painting in the window. Without bothering to put on a coat, she slipped outside. To get perspective on the work she backed up a few feet from the glass. Passersby on the street, glancing at her and the picture, obligingly walked around her.
The young woman in the painting was sitting in a swing on a porch, facing the setting sun. The light was oblique, shades of red and purple and mauve. The slender figure was wrapped in a dark green cape. Tiny tendrils of blue-black hair blew around her face, which was already half-shadowed. I see what Mr. Hartley means, Jenny thought. The high forehead, thick brows, wide eyes, slim, straight nose and generous mouth were very like her own features. The wooden porch was painted white with a slender corner column. The brick wall of the house behind it was barely suggested in the background. A small boy, silhouetted by the sun, was running across a field toward the woman. Crusted snow suggested the penetrating cold of the oncoming night. The figure in the swing was motionless, her gaze riveted on the sunset.
Despite the eagerly approaching child, the solidity of the house, the sweeping sense of space, it seemed to Jenny that there was something peculiarly isolated about the figure. Why? Perhaps because the expression in the womanâs eyes was so sad. Or was it just that the entire painting suggested biting cold? Whywould anyone sit outside in that cold? Why not watch the sunset from a window inside the house?
Jenny shivered. Her turtleneck sweater had been a Christmas gift from her ex-husband Kevin. He had arrived at the apartment unexpectedly on Christmas Eve with the sweater for her and dolls for the girls. Not one word about the fact that he never sent support payments and in fact owed her over two hundred dollars in âloans.â The sweater was cheap, its claim to warmth feeble. But at least it was new and the turquoise color was a good background for Nanaâs gold chain and locket. Of course one asset of the art world was that people dressed to please themselves and her too-long wool skirt and too-wide boots were not necessarily an admission of poverty. Still sheâd better get inside. The last thing she needed was to catch the flu that was making the rounds in New York.
She stared again at the painting, admiring the skill with which the artist directed the gaze of the viewer from the figure on the porch to the child to the sunset. âBeautiful,â she murmured, âabsolutely beautiful.â Unconsciously she backed up as she spoke, skidded on the slick pavement and felt herself bump into someone. Strong hands gripped her elbows and steadied her.
âDo you always stand outside in this weather without a coat and talk to yourself?â The tone of voice combined annoyance and amusement.
Jenny spun around. Confused, she stammered, âIâm so sorry. Please excuse me. Did I hurt you?â She pulled back and as she did realized that the face she was looking at was the one depicted on the brochure sheâd been passing out all morning. Good God, she thought, of all people I have to go slamming into Erich Krueger!
She watched as his face paled; his eyes