Da Capo- a love story (continued) "Not like that, Julie! Give it to me and I'll show you how to do
it." "Hang on, Mum, give me a chance. I'll get it in a
minute." There is more vigorous blowing into my mouth. Fingers
hammer down on me in a meaningless order I can do nothing with. I scream with a
pain I can't control. "Give it here. You'll never get anywhere like
that." Her voice has a sharpness to it now, but as she lifts me
out of the hands of the young tormentor, I know that these are hands that have
learnt how to hold me. I remember the touch. A soft and generous mouth comes to me. Warm, sweetly
scented breath flows into me creating a mellow sound that moulds us together in
one long note. "I didn't know you could play, Mum." The soft kiss goes away. I call out. "I remember you! Don't give up. We've hardly
begun. I love to feel your lips against me. Give me time to get used to you.
I'll get better. Please try again. Don't go." "Your Granddad gave me some lessons when I was about
your age but I never really became any good. It takes lots of practice and I
never seemed to have the time." "How can you say that." I scream silently at her.
"What other purpose can there be but to make lovely sounds. Why
couldn't you see that then and why can't you see that now! Don't
give up again. I'll try really hard for you. Just give me your lips again
and give me some of your gentle life." "Could you teach me, Mum?" "I don't know enough and anyway you don't
settle at anything for more than five minutes." "Oh, please Mum. It was Granddad's." My spirits rise. She could learn, with time. Somehow, he
would help her. "Take me from this place, take me home with you." But the hard window ledge replaces the softness of her
fingers. My plea is unheard and I am dismissed as she pulls the window shut. "I don't think so. It really is no use to us. Come
on, Julie. We must be on our way. It can go to house clearance with the rest. The attic door squeaks again, the footsteps disappear down
the stairs. They are gone and I am rejected. I feel exposed by the window. I miss the old trunk that had
kept me company throughout those long months. Re-awakened memories are more
painful in the restored silence. There is an emptiness too. She doesn't
want me, and it hurts. But then this silence is brutally broken. Raucous sounds
come bursting in, drowning all others. Bursts of machinery roar outside. Then a
growling all the way up the drive. A cacophony of bawling and banging, clanking
and crashing comes from everywhere with the moving of furniture and the ripping
up of carpets. I hope they do not find my attic. But they come thudding up
to my door. They move quickly and the dust swirls. I am grabbed round the
throat, rolled in a moldy blanket and my journey begins. The movement is constant. I find myself in a droning
machine which jerks and sways. I'm grateful for the blanket that keeps me
from harm and muffles the roar. The jolting stops. There are many different voices. My
protector and I part company. Rough hands grasp me and toss me with little care
from surface to surface. I'm moved from one noisy place to another. In rare moments of stillness, I try to recall those
marvellous waves of sound and vibration that had been part of me. But they are
all so far away that they bring little relief. I wonder if I will ever know
harmony again. Now I am by another window. The sun scorches me and the air
is again full of growling. A constant reminder of my journey. The insistent
roar leaves no room for half-remembered melodies. Occasionally, I am lifted up, held, turned, inspected. All
sorts of hands; often rough and uncaring but occasionally kind. These kind
hands understand my feelings. They hold me with respect, cradle me comfortably. These are the ones I call out to. "Take me away from here. I can't bear it any
longer. There are no melodies. There is only a roar and my body is cracking
with the scorching sun." But they come and depart without me. Sometimes I feel their
lips against me and I try to make my sweetest sounds for them. But they leave
alone. I feel ashamed and used. One day, the scorching sun is replaced by a gentle warmth.
The season has changed; with little light outside, the window is lit by bright
bulbs. A soft nest has been made for me to lie on and the pain in my body
recedes a little. Above the roar outside, I begin to hear more familiar
sounds. Songs and harmonies, even a band. More hands come to look at me. I know straight away that she's for me. There's an
instant connection between us. She doesn't ask to see anyone else. Only me.
She lifts me gently from my resting place and holds me close. From her hesitant
touch I wonder how much she knows and whether I will be able to sing for her.
But her touch is full of respect and kindness and I am reassured. I am aware of deep voices talking of me then I am
taken from her and placed on soft velvet in a bed that fits perfectly. Another
journey. A gentle hum replaces the roar and I feel that I am safe. I am taken
somewhere warm and laid under a tree until morning. From my cradle, I hear
happy sounds and cheerful music. I so want to be a part of it. I feel lonely
though and desperately want her to touch and hold me again. As my eagerness
grows, it is hard to be patient. Now excited voices, ripping paper, happy laughter. Now
quieter. Footsteps move towards me gently across the carpet. She comes closer
and then lifts my box from under the tree. Opening it, she caresses me with the
back of her finger. "Now for your Christmas present." Her voice is
barely above a whisper. She rubs me with a soft damp cloth. The liquid she uses
soaks into me and, as if by magic, the aching cracks melt into my memory as a
bad dream at the first light of morning. I begin to feel better. She rubs me all over, adjusts a little bit of me here,
eases a little bit there. Some cleansing oil for one part and a gentle change
of position for another. And all the time she talks, telling me what she is doing,
dispelling my fears. "You looked so unhappy there in the shop window.
You've been in the wars but I just knew that you could look beautiful with
a little bit of care. Will you play for me beautifully when you are well
again." "Yes! Yes!" I shout out to her, willing her to
hear me. Anything she wants, I will do for her. Anything at all. She leaves me, but I know it won't be for long.
She's not far away. I hear her footsteps coming back into the room and
sense her peering at me. I know she wants to be with me. Would she wait if she knew how I long to feel her lips
against me. To feel her young breath fill me with life. But I know she's
doing what's best for me. Her gentle hands take me again but this time her fingers
move fleetingly over my body to prepare me. Her lips come to me in a long drawn
out caress and as her breath comes into me, I return to a time that I thought I
had forgotten. Lightly her fingers run up and down me sounding the scales.
She is teasing, testing me. Listening for weaknesses. Measuring strengths. Then
arpeggios, rising and falling, loud then soft. Brilliant major chords then
somber minors. My whole body is full of vibration. I feel the column of air
inside me reach out and join with the air in her throat and her chest until she
and I are playing as one. A wild exaltation fills me as I realize her hands are
experienced beyond her years. It is a wonderful but terrifying thing to be
played like this again. Then, unbelievably, she moves to a higher plane and takes
up a folk jig. I swoop up in fast triplets then the notes toss and tumble. I
tremble as I respond to her touch and breath. She challenges me, forces me to
reach right down into the furthest corners of my experience. Her playing draws
out of me more than just a tune; the past and present unite. Then, somehow, I am aware that we are no longer alone -
others are listening. Quietly, her family has crept in, not wanting to disturb
the moment. I sense their approval, their pride and their love. I feel her
happiness and theirs. At last I know my days of solitude and silence are past.
Soon my music will again reach the ears of many as it did before. Slowly she lets the sounds of the music subside but I know
music like that can never disappear. I may be a simple wooden flute but, in her
soft hands, my sounds will once again mingle with the great harmonies of all
time.
The End
(c) Rob Hopcott 1999, 2000, all rights reserved. All characters are fictitious in this story and no
reference is intended to any person living or otherwise.
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