Even though she asked for them, Mother sold his paints and brushes to the Guild of St. Luke. It helped to pay a debt. When Mother became sick with worry, Magdalena had the idea to take the painting to Hendrick van Buyten, the baker, because she knew he liked her. And he accepted it, along with one of a lady playing a guitar, for the debt of 617 guilders, six stuivers, more than two years’ worth of bread. He smiled at her and gave her a bun.

  Within a year, she married a saddlemaker named Nicolaes, the first man to notice her, a hard worker whose pores smelled of leather and grease, who taught her a pleasure not of the eyes, but, she soon realized, a man utterly without imagination. They moved to Amsterdam and she didn’t see the painting again for twenty years.

  In 1696, just after their only living child, Magritte, damp with fever, stopped breathing in her arms, Magdalena read in the Amsterdamsche Courant of a public auction of 134 paintings by various artists. “Several outstandingly artful paintings,” the notice said, “including twenty-one works most powerfully and splendidly painted by the late J. Vermeer of Delft, will be auctioned May 16, 1:00, at the Oude Heeren Logement.” Only a week away. She thought of Hendrick. Of course he couldn’t be expected to keep those paintings forever. Hers might be there. The possibility kept her awake nights.

  Entering the auction gallery, she was struck again by that keenest of childhood wishes—to make a record not only of what she saw, but how. The distance she’d come from that, and not even a child to show for it! She shocked herself by asking, involuntarily, what had been the point of having lived? Wishing had not been enough. Was it a mistake that she didn’t beg him to teach her? Maybe not. If she’d seen that eventually, with help, she could paint, it might have made the years of birthing and dying harder. But then the birthing and dying would have been painted and the pain given. It would have served a purpose. Would that have been enough—to tell a truth in art?

  She didn’t know.

  To see again so many of Father’s paintings was like walking down an avenue of her childhood. The honey-colored window, the Spanish chair, the map she’d stared at, dreaming, hanging on the wall, Grandmother Maria’s golden water pitcher, Mother’s pearls and yellow satin jacket—they commanded such a reverence for her now that she felt they all had souls.

  And suddenly there she was on canvas, framed. Her knees went weak.

  Hendrick hadn’t kept it. Even though he liked her, he hadn’t kept it.

  Almost a child she was, it seemed to her, gazing out the window instead of doing her mending, as if by the mere act of looking she could send her spirit out into the world. And those shoes! She had forgotten. How she loved the buckles, and thought they made her such a lady. Eventually she’d worn the soles right through, but now, brand new, the buckles glinted on the canvas each with a point of golden light. A bubble of joy surged upward right through her.

  No, she wasn’t beautiful, she owned, but there was a simplicity in her young face that she knew the years had eroded, a stilled longing in the forward lean of her body, a wishing in the intensity of her eyes. The painting showed she did not yet know that lives end abruptly, that much of living is repetition and separation, that buttons forever need re-sewing no matter how ferociously one works the thread, that nice things almost happen. Still a woman overcome with wishes, she wished Nicolaes would have come with her to see her in the days of her sentry post wonder when life and hope were new and full of possibility, but he had seen no reason to close up the shop on such a whim.

  She stood on tiptoe and didn’t breathe when her painting was announced. Her hand in her pocket closed tight around the twenty-four guilders, some of it borrowed from two neighbor women, some of it taken secretly from the box where Nicolaes kept money for leather supplies. It was all she could find, and she didn’t dare ask for more. He would have thought it foolish.

  “Twenty,” said a man in front of her.

  “Twenty-two,” said another.

  “Twenty-four,” she said so loud and fast the auctioneer was startled. Did he see something similar in her face? He didn’t call for another bid. The painting was hers!

  “Twenty-five.”

  Her heart cracked.

  The rest was a blur of sound. It finally went to a man who kept conferring with his wife, which she took as a good sign that it was going to a nice family. Forty-seven guilders. Most of the paintings sold for much more, but forty-seven was fine, she thought. In fact, it filled her momentarily with what she’d been taught was the sin of pride. Then she thought of Hendrick and a pain lashed through her. Forty-seven guilders minus the auctioneer’s fee didn’t come close to what her family had owed him.

  She followed the couple out into the drizzle of Herengracht, wanting to make herself known to them, just to have a few words, but then dropped back. She had such bad teeth now, and they were people of means. The woman wore stockings. What would she say to them? She didn’t want them to think she wanted anything.

  She walked away slowly along a wet stone wall that shone iridescent, and the wetness of the street reflected back the blue of her best dress. Water spots appeared fast, turning the cerulean to deep ultramarine, Father’s favorite blue. Light rain pricked the charcoal green canal water into delicate, dark lace, and she wondered if it had ever been painted just that way, or if the life of something as inconsequential as a water drop could be arrested and given to the world in a painting, or if the world would care.

  She thought of all the people in all the paintings she had seen that day, not just Father’s, in all the paintings of the world, in fact. Their eyes, the particular turn of a head, their loneliness or suffering or grief was borrowed by an artist to be seen by other people throughout the years who would never see them face to face. People who would be that close to her, she thought, a matter of a few arms’ lengths, looking, looking, and they would never know her.

 


 

  Susan Vreeland, Girl in Hyacinth Blue

 


 

 
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