I FOLLOWED JEAN-FELIXย into a storage room. He went over to a large case, pulled out a hinged rack, and lifted out three paintings wrapped in blankets. He propped them up. He carefully unwrapped each one. Then he stood back and presented the first to me with a flourish.
โVoilร .โ
I looked at it. The painting had the same photo-realistic quality as the rest of Aliciaโs work. It represented the car accident that killed her mother. A womanโs body was sitting in the wreck, slumped at the wheel. She was bloodied and obviously dead. Her spirit, her soul, was rising from the corpse, like a large bird with yellow wings, soaring to the heavens.
โIsnโt it glorious?โ Jean-Felix gazed at it. โAll those yellows and reds and greensโI can quite get lost in it. Itโs joyous.โ
Joyousย wasnโt the word I would have chosen.ย Unsettling,ย perhaps. I wasnโt sure how I felt about it.
I moved on to the next picture. A painting of Jesus on the cross. Or was
it?
โItโs Gabriel,โ Jean-Felix said. โItโs a good likeness.โ
It was Gabrielโbut Gabriel portrayed as Jesus, crucified, hanging from
the cross, blood trickling from his wounds, a crown of thorns on his head. His eyes were not downcast but staring outโunblinking, tortured, unashamedly reproachful. They seemed to burn right through me. I peered at the picture more closelyโat the incongruous item strapped to Gabrielโs torso. A rifle.
โThatโs the gun that killed him?โ
Jean-Felix nodded. โYes. It belonged to him, I think.โ โAnd this was painted before his murder?โ
โA month or so before. It shows you what was on Aliciaโs mind, doesnโt it?โ Jean-Felix moved on to the third picture. It was a larger canvas than the others. โThis oneโs the best. Stand back to get a better look.โ
I did as he said and took a few paces back. Then I turned and looked.
The moment I saw the painting, I let out an involuntary laugh.
The subject was Aliciaโs aunt, Lydia Rose. It was obvious why she had been so upset by it. Lydia was nude, reclining on a tiny bed. The bed was buckling under her weight. She was enormously, monstrously fatโan explosion of flesh spilling over the bed and hitting the floor and spreading across the room, rippling and folding like waves of gray custard.
โJesus. Thatโs cruel.โ
โI think itโs quite lovely.โ Jean-Felix looked at me with interest. โYou know Lydia?โ
โYes, I went to visit her.โ
โI see.โ He smiled. โYou have been doing your homework. I never met Lydia. Alicia hated her, you know.โ
โYes.โ I stared at the painting. โYes, I can see that.โ
Jean-Felix began carefully wrapping up the pictures again. โAnd theย Alcestis?โ I said. โCan I see it?โ
โOf course. Follow me.โ
Jean-Felix led me along the narrow passage to the end of the gallery. There theย Alcestisย occupied a wall to itself. It was just as beautiful and mysterious as I remembered it. Alicia naked in the studio, in front of a blank canvas, painting with a bloodred paintbrush. I studied Aliciaโs expression. Again it defied interpretation. I frowned.
โSheโs impossible to read.โ
โThatโs the pointโit is a refusal to comment. Itโs a painting about silence.โ
โIโm not sure I understand what you mean.โ
โWell, at the heart of all art lies a mystery. Aliciaโs silence is her secret
โher mystery, in the religious sense. Thatโs why she named itย Alcestis.ย Have you read it? By Euripides.โ He gave me a curious look. โRead it. Then youโll understand.โ
I noddedโand then I noticed something in the painting I hadnโt before. I leaned forward to look closely. A bowl of fruit sat on the table in the background of the pictureโa collection of apples and pears. On the red apples were some small white blobsโslippery white blobs creeping in and around the fruit.
I pointed at them. โAre theyโฆ?โ โMaggots?โ Jean-Felix nodded. โYes.โ โFascinating. I wonder what that means.โ
โItโs wonderful. A masterpiece. It really is.โ Jean-Felix sighed and glanced at me across the portrait. He lowered his voice as if Alicia were able to hear us. โItโs a shame you didnโt know her then. She was the most interesting person Iโve ever met. Most people arenโt alive, you know, not reallyโsleepwalking their way through life. But Alicia was so intensely alive.โฆ It was hard to take your eyes off her.โ Jean-Felix turned his head back to the painting and gazed at Aliciaโs naked body. โSo beautiful.โ
I looked back at Aliciaโs body. But where Jean-Felix saw beauty, I saw only pain; I saw self-inflicted wounds, and scars of self-harm.
โDid she ever talk to you about her suicide attempt?โ
I was fishing, but Jean-Felix took the bait. โOh, you know about that?
Yes, of course.โ
โAfter her father died?โ
โShe went to pieces.โ Jean-Felix nodded. โThe truth is Alicia was hugely fucked-up. Not as an artist, but as a person she was extremely vulnerable. When her father hanged himself, it was too much. She couldnโt cope.โ
โShe must have loved him a great deal.โ
Jean-Felix gave a kind of strangled laugh. He looked at me as if I were mad. โWhat are you talking about?โ
โWhat do you mean?โ
โAlicia didnโt love him. She hated her father. She despised him.โ I was taken aback by this. โAlicia told you that?โ
โOf course she did. She hated him ever since she was a kidโever since her mother died.โ
โButโthen why try to commit suicide after his death? If it wasnโt grief, what was it?โ
Jean-Felix shrugged. โGuilt, perhaps? Who knows?โ
There was something he wasnโt telling me, I thought. Something didnโt fit. Something was wrong.
His phone rang. โExcuse me a moment.โ He turned away from me to answer it. A womanโs voice was on the other end. They talked for a moment, arranging a time to meet. โIโll call you back, baby,โ he said, and hung up.
Jean-Felix turned back to me. โSorry about that.โ โThatโs all right. Your girlfriend?โ
He smiled. โJust a friend โฆ I have a lot of friends.โ
Iโll bet you do, I thought. I felt a flicker of dislike; I wasnโt sure why.
As he showed me out, I asked a final question. โJust one more thing.
Did Alicia ever mention a doctor to you?โ โA doctor?โ
โApparently she saw a doctor, around the time of her suicide attempt.
Iโm trying to locate him.โ
โHmm.โ Jean-Felix frowned. โPossiblyโthere was someoneโฆโ โCan you remember his name?โ
He thought for a second and shook his head. โIโm sorry. No, I honestly canโt.โ
โWell, if it comes to you, perhaps you can let me know?โ
โSure. But I doubt it.โ He glanced at me and hesitated. โYou want some advice?โ
โIโd welcome some.โ
โIf you really want to get Alicia to talk โฆ give her some paint and brushes. Let her paint. Thatโs the only way sheโll talk to you. Through her art.โ
โThatโs an interesting idea.โฆ Youโve been very helpful. Thank you, Mr.
Martin.โ
โCall me Jean-Felix. And when you see Alicia, tell her I love her.โ
He smiled, and again I felt a slight repulsion: I found something about Jean-Felix hard to stomach. I could tell he had been genuinely close to
Alicia; they had known each other a long time, and he was obviously attracted to her. Was he in love with her? I wasnโt so sure. I thought of Jean-Felixโs face when he was looking at theย Alcestis. Yes, love was in his eyes
โbut love for the painting, not necessarily the painter. Jean-Felix covetedย the art. Otherwise he would have visited Alicia at the Grove. He would have stuck by herโI knew that for a fact. A man never abandons a woman like that.
Not if he loves her.