โI HAVE A CONFESSION TO MAKE.โ
Alicia didnโt look at me.
I went on, watching her carefully, โI happened to pass your old gallery the other day when I was in Soho. So I went inside. The manager was kind enough to show me some of your work. Heโs an old friend of yours? Jean-Felix Martin?โ
I waited for a response. None came.
โI hope you donโt think it was an invasion of your privacy. Perhaps I should have consulted you first. I hope you donโt mind.โ
No response.
โI saw a couple of paintings Iโd not seen before. The one of your mother โฆ And the one of your aunt, Lydia Rose.โ
Alicia slowly raised her head and looked at me. An expression was in her eyes Iโd not seen before. I couldnโt quite place it. Was it โฆ amusement? โQuite apart from the obvious interest for meโas your therapist, I mean
โI found the paintings affecting on a personal level. Theyโre extremely powerful pieces.โ
Alicia eyes lowered. She was losing interest.
I persevered quickly. โA couple of things struck me. In the painting of your motherโs car accident, thereโs something missing from the picture. You. You didnโt paint yourself in the car, even though you were there.โ
No reaction.
โI wondered if that means youโre only able to think of it as her tragedy? Because she died? But in fact there was also a little girl in that car. A girl whose feelings of loss were I suspect neither validated nor fully experienced.โ
Aliciaโs head moved. She glanced at me. It was a challenging look. I was onto something. I kept going.
โI asked Jean-Felix about your self-portrait,ย Alcestis. About its meaning.
And he suggested I have a look at this.โ
I pulled out the copy of the play,ย Alcestis. I slid it across the coffee table.
Alicia glanced at it.
โโWhy does she not speak?โ Thatโs what Admetus asks. And Iโm asking you the same question, Alicia. What is it that you canโt say? Why do you have to keep silent?โ
Alicia closed her eyesโmaking me disappear. Conversation over. I glanced at the clock on the wall behind her. The session was nearly finished. A couple of minutes remained.
I had been saving my trump card until now. And I played it, with a feeling of nervousness that I hoped wasnโt apparent.
โJean-Felix made a suggestion. I thought it was rather a good one. He thought you should be allowed to paint. Would you like that? We could provide you with a private space, with canvases and brushes and paints.โ
Alicia blinked. Her eyes opened. It was as if a light had been switched on inside them. They were the eyes of a child, wide and innocent, free of scorn or suspicion. Color seemed to come into her face. Suddenly she seemed wonderfully alive.
โI had a word with Professor Diomedesโheโs agreed to it, and so has Rowena.โฆ So itโs up to you, really, Alicia. What do you think?โ
I waited. She stared at me.
And then, finally, I got what I wantedโa definite reactionโa sign that told me I was on the right track.
It was a small movement. Tiny, really. Nonetheless, it spoke volumes. Alicia smiled.