Manhattan December 2019
Whenever December rolled around, Manhattan transformed itself into a
city that Maggie didnโt always recognize. Tourists thronged the shows on Broadway and flooded the sidewalks outside department stores in Midtown, forming a slow-moving river of pedestrians. Boutiques and restaurants overflowed with shoppers clutching bags, Christmas music filtered from hidden speakers, and hotel lobbies sparkled with decorations. The Rockefeller Center Christmas tree was lit by multicolored bulbs and the flashes of thousands of iPhones, and crosstown traffic, never speedy in the best of times, became so jammed up that it was often quicker to walk than to take a cab. But walking had its own challenges; frigid wind frequently whipped between the buildings, necessitating thermal underwear, plentiful fleece, and jackets zipped to the collars.
Maggie Dawes, who considered herself a free spirit consumed by wanderlust, had always loved theย ideaย of a New York Christmas, albeit in aย look how prettyย postcard kind of way. In reality, like a lot of New Yorkers, she did her best to avoid Midtown during the holidays. Instead, she either stayed close to her home in Chelsea or, more commonly, fled to warmer climes. As a travel photographer, she sometimes thought of herself less as a New Yorker and more as a nomad who happened to have a permanent address in the city. In a notebook she kept in the drawer of her nightstand, sheโd compiled a list of more than a hundred places she still wanted to visit, some of them so obscure or remote that even reaching them would be a challenge.
Since dropping out of college twenty years ago, sheโd been adding to the list, noting places that sparked her imagination for one reason or another even as her travels enabled her to cross out other destinations. With a
camera slung over her shoulder, sheโd visited every continent, more than eighty-two countries, and forty-three of the fifty states. Sheโd taken tens of thousands of photographs, from images of wildlife in the Okavango Delta in Botswana to shots of the aurora borealis in Lapland. There were photographs taken as sheโd hiked the Inca Trail, others from the Skeleton Coast in Namibia, still more among the ruins of Timbuktu. Twelve years ago, sheโd learned to scuba dive and had spent ten days documenting marine life in Raja Ampat; four years ago, sheโd hiked to the famous Paro Taktsang, or Tigerโs Nest, a Buddhist monastery built into a cliffside in Bhutan with panoramic views of the Himalayas.
Others had often marveled at her adventures, but sheโd learned thatย adventureย is a word with many connotations, not all of them good. A case in point was the adventure she was on nowโthatโs how she sometimes described it to her Instagram followers and YouTube subscribersโthe one that kept her largely confined to either her gallery or her small two-bedroom apartment on West Nineteenth Street, instead of venturing to more exotic locales. The same adventure that led to occasional thoughts of suicide.
Oh, sheโd never actually do it. The thought terrified her, and sheโd admitted as much in one of the many videos sheโd created for YouTube. For almost ten years, her videos had been rather ordinary as far as photographersโ posts went; sheโd described her decision-making process when taking pictures, offered numerous Photoshop tutorials, and reviewed new cameras and their many accessories, usually posting two or three times a month. Those YouTube videos, in addition to her Instagram posts and Facebook pages and the blog on her website, had always been popular with photography geeks while also burnishing her professional reputation.
Three and a half years ago, however, on a whim, sheโd posted a video to her YouTube channel about her recent diagnosis, one that had nothing to do with photography. The video, a rambling, unfiltered description of the fear and uncertainty she suddenly felt when she learned she had stage IV melanoma, probably shouldnโt have been posted at all. But what she imagined would be a lonely voice echoing back at her from the empty reaches of the internet somehow managed to catch the attention of others. She wasnโt sure why or how, but that videoโof all the ones sheโd ever postedโhad attracted a trickle, then a steady stream, and finally a deluge of views, comments, questions, and upvotes from people who had never heard of her or her work as a photographer. Feeling as though she had to respond
to those whoโd been moved by her plight, sheโd posted another video regarding her diagnosis that became even more popular. Since then, about once a month, sheโd continued to post videos in the same vein, mainly because she felt she had no choice but to continue. In the past three years, sheโd discussed various treatments and how theyโd made her feel, sometimes even displaying the scars from her surgery. She talked about radiation burns and nausea and hair loss and wondered openly about the meaning of life. She mused about her fear of dying and speculated on the possibility of an afterlife. They were serious issues, but maybe to stave off her own depression when discussing such a miserable subject, she did her best to keep the videos as light in tone as possible. She supposed that was part of the reason for their popularity, but who really knew? The only certainty was that somehow, almost reluctantly, sheโd become the star of her own reality web series, one that had begun with hope but had slowly narrowed to focus on a single inevitable ending.
Andโperhaps unsurprisinglyโas the grand finale approached, her viewership exploded even more.
* * *
In the firstย Cancer Videoโthatโs how she mentally referred to them, as opposed to herย Real Videosโshe stared into the camera with a wry grin and said, โRight off the bat, I hated it. Then it started growing on me.โ
She knew it was probably in poor taste to joke about her illness, but the whole thing struck her as absurd.ย Why her?ย At the time, she was thirty-six years old, she exercised regularly, and she followed a reasonably healthy diet. There was no history of cancer in her family. Sheโd grown up in cloudy Seattle and lived in Manhattan, which ruled out a history of sunbathing. Sheโd never visited a tanning salon. None of it made any sense, but that was the point about cancer, wasnโt it? Cancer didnโt discriminate; it just happened to the unlucky, and after a while sheโd finally accepted that the better question was reallyย Why NOT her?ย She wasnโt special; to that point in her life, thereโd been times when she considered herself interesting or intelligent or even pretty, but the wordย specialย had never entered her mind.
When sheโd received her diagnosis, she would have sworn she was in perfect health. A month earlier, sheโd visited Vaadhoo Island in the Maldives, on a photo shoot for Condรฉ Nast. Sheโd traveled there hoping to capture the bioluminescence just offshore that made ocean waves glow like
starlight, as if lit from within. Sea plankton was responsible for the spectral, spectacular light, and sheโd allotted extra time to shoot some images for personal use, perhaps for eventual sale in her gallery.
She was scouting a mostly empty beach near her hotel in midafternoon with a camera in hand, trying to envision the shot she aimed to take once evening descended. She wanted to capture a hint of the shorelineโwith perhaps a boulder in the foregroundโthe sky, and, of course, the waves just as they were cresting. Sheโd spent more than an hour taking different shots from different angles and various locations on the beach when a couple strolled past her, holding hands. Lost in her work, she barely registered their presence.
A few moments later, while scanning the line where the waves were breaking offshore through her viewfinder, she heard the womanโs voice behind her. She spoke English, but with a distinctly German accent.
โExcuse me,โ the woman said. โI can see that youโre busy and I am sorry to bother you.โ
Maggie lowered her camera. โYes?โ
โItโs a little difficult to say this, but have you had that dark spot on the back of your shoulder examined?โ
Maggie frowned, trying without success to see the spot between the straps of her bathing suit that the woman was referring to. โI didnโt know I had a dark spot thereโฆโ She squinted at the woman in confusion. โAnd why are you so interested?โ
The woman, fiftyish with short gray hair, nodded. โI should perhaps introduce myself. Iโm Dr. Sabine Kessel,โ she said. โIโm a dermatologist in Munich. The spot looks abnormal.โ
Maggie blinked. โYou mean like cancer?โ
โI donโt know,โ the woman said, her expression cautious. โBut if I were you, Iโd have it examined as soon as possible. It could be nothing, of course.โ
Or it could be serious, Dr. Kessel didnโt have to add.
Though it took five nights to achieve what she wanted from the shoot, Maggie was pleased with the raw files. She would work on them extensively in digital postproductionโthe real art in photography these days almost always emerged in postโbut she already knew the results would be spectacular. In the meantime, and though she tried not to worry
about it, she also made an appointment with Dr. Snehal Khatri, a dermatologist on the Upper East Side, four days after her return to the city.
The spot was biopsied in early July 2016, and afterward she was sent for additional testing. She had MRI and PET scans done at Memorial Sloan Kettering hospital later that same month. After the results had come in, Dr. Khatri sat her down in the examination room, where he quietly and seriously informed her that she had stage IV melanoma. Later that day, she was introduced to an oncologist named Leslie Brodigan, who would oversee her care. In the aftermath of these meetings, Maggie did her own research on the internet. Though Dr. Brodigan had told her that general statistics meant very little when it came to predicting outcomes for a particular individual, Maggie couldnโt help fixating on the numbers. The survival rate after five years for those diagnosed with stage IV melanoma, she learned, was less than fifteen percent.
In stunned disbelief, Maggie made her firstย Cancer Videoย the following day.
* * *
At her second appointment, Dr. Brodiganโa vibrant blue-eyed blonde who seemed to personify the termย good healthโexplained everything about her condition again, since the whole process had been so overwhelming that Maggie could remember only bits and pieces of their first meeting. Essentially, having stage IV melanoma meant that the cancer had metastasized not only to distant lymph nodes but to some of her other organs as well, in her case both her liver and her stomach. The MRI and PET scans had found the cancerous growths invading healthier parts of her body like an army of ants devouring food laid out on a picnic table.
Long story short: The next three and a half years were a blur of treatment and recovery, with occasional flashes of hope illuminating dark tunnels of anxiety. She had surgery to remove her infected lymph nodes and the metastases in her liver and stomach. The surgery was followed by radiation, which was excruciating, turning her skin black in places and leaving behind nasty scars to go with the ones sheโd collected in the operating room. She also learned there were different kinds of melanoma, even for those with stage IV, which led to different treatment options. In her case, that meant immunotherapy, which seemed to work for a couple of years, until it finally didnโt. Then, last April, she had begun chemotherapy and continued it for months, hating how it made her feel but convinced that
it had to be effective. How could it not work, she wondered, since it seemed to be killing every other part of her? These days, she barely recognized herself in the mirror. Food nearly always tasted too bitter or too salty, which made it hard to eat, and sheโd dropped more than twenty pounds from her already petite frame. Her oval-shaped brown eyes now appeared sunken and oversize above her protruding cheekbones, her face more like skin stretched over a skull. She was always cold and wore thick sweaters even in her overheated apartment. Sheโd lost all her dark brown hair, only to see it slowly grow back in patches, lighter in color and as fine as a babyโs; sheโd taken to wearing a kerchief or hat almost all the time. Her neck had become so spindly and fragile-looking that she wrapped it in a scarf to avoid glimpsing it in mirrors.
A little more than a month ago, at the beginning of November, she had undergone another round of CAT and PET scans, and in December, sheโd met again with Dr. Brodigan. The doctor had been more subdued than usual, although her eyes brimmed with compassion. There, sheโd told Maggie that while more than three years of treatment had slowed the disease at times, its progression had never quite stopped. When Maggie asked what other treatment options were available, the doctor had gently turned her attention to the quality of the life Maggie had remaining.
It was her way of telling Maggie that she was going to die.
* * *
Maggie had opened the gallery more than nine years ago with another artist named Trinity, who used most of the space for his giant and eclectic sculptures. Trinityโs real name was Fred Marshburn and theyโd met at an opening for another artistโs show, the kind of event Maggie seldom attended. Trinity was already wildly successful at that point and had long toyed with the idea of opening his own gallery; he didnโt, however, have any desire to actually manage the gallery, nor did he want to spend any time there. Because theyโd hit it off, and because her photographs in no way competed with his work, theyโd eventually made a deal. In exchange for her managing the business of the gallery, she would earn a modest salary and could also display a selection of her own work. At the time, it was more about prestigeโshe could tell people she had her own gallery!โthan it was about the money Trinity paid her. In the first year or two, she sold only a few prints of her own.
Because Maggie was still traveling extensively at the timeโmore than a hundred days a year, on averageโthe actual day-to-day running of the gallery fell to a woman named Luanne Sommers. When Maggie hired her, Luanne was a wealthy divorcรฉe with grown children. Her experience was limited to an amateurโs passion for collecting and an expertโs eye for finding bargains at Neiman Marcus. On the plus side, she dressed well; she was responsible, conscientious, and willing to learn; and she had no qualms about the fact that sheโd earn little more than minimum wage. As she put it, her alimony was enough to allow her to retire in luxury, but there were only so many lunches a woman could do without going crazy.
Luanne turned out to be a natural at sales. In the beginning, Maggie had briefed her on the technical elements of all of her prints, as well as the story behind each particular shot, which was often as interesting to buyers as the image itself. Trinityโs sculptures, which utilized assorted materialsโcanvas, metal, plastic, glue, and paint, in addition to items collected from junkyards, deer antlers, pickle jars, and cansโwere original enough to inspire spirited discussion. He was already an established critical darling, and his pieces moved regularly despite their staggering prices. But the gallery didnโt advertise or feature many guest artists, so the work itself was fairly low- key. There were days when only a handful of people entered the premises, and they were able to close the gallery the last three weeks of the year. It wasโfor Maggie, Trinity, and Luanneโan arrangement that worked well for a long time.
But two things happened to change all that. First, Maggieโsย Cancer Videosย lured new people to the gallery. Not the usual seasoned contemporary art or photography enthusiasts, but tourists from places like Tennessee and Ohio, people whoโd begun to follow Maggie on Instagram and YouTube because they felt a connection to her. Some of them had become actual fans of her photography, but a lot of them simply wanted to meet her or buy one of her signed prints as a keepsake. The phone began to ring off the hook with orders from random locations around the country, and additional orders poured in through the website. It was all Maggie and Luanne could do to keep up, and last year, theyโd made the decision to keep the gallery open through the holidays because the crowds kept coming. Then Maggie learned sheโd soon have to begin chemotherapy, which meant she wouldnโt be able to help at the gallery for months. It was clear that they needed to hire an additional employee, and when Maggie broached the
subject with Trinity, he agreed on the spot. As fate would have it, the following day, a young man named Mark Price walked into the gallery and asked to speak with her, an event that at the time struck her as almost too good to be true.
* * *
Mark Price was a recent college graduate who could have passed for a high schooler. Maggie initially assumed he was another โcancer groupie,โ but she was only partially correct. He admitted he had become familiar with her work through her popular online presenceโhe was especially fond of her videos, he volunteeredโbut heโd also come in with a rรฉsumรฉ. He explained that he was looking for employment and the idea of working in the art world strongly appealed to him. Art and photography, heโd added, allowed for the communication of new ideas, often in ways that words did not.
Despite her misgivings about hiring a fan, Maggie sat down with him the same day, and it became clear that heโd done his homework. He knew a great deal about Trinity and his work; he mentioned a specific installation that was currently on display at MoMA and another at the New School, drawing comparisons to some of Robert Rauschenbergโs later work in a knowledgeable but unpretentious way. Though it didnโt surprise her, he also had a deep and impressive familiarity with her own body of work. And yet, though heโd answered all her questions satisfactorily, she remained a little uneasy; she couldnโt quite figure out whether he was serious about his desire to work in a gallery, or just another person who wanted to witness her own tragedy up close.
As their meeting drew to a close, she told him that they werenโt currently interviewingโthough technically true, it was only a matter of timeโto which he responded by asking politely whether she would nonetheless be willing to receive his rรฉsumรฉ. It was, she thought in retrospect, the way heโd phrased his request that charmed her.ย โWould you nonetheless be willing to receive my rรฉsumรฉ?โย It struck her as old- fashioned and courtly and she couldnโt help smiling as she held out her hand for the document.
Later that same week, Maggie had uploaded a job posting to some art- related industry sites and called several contacts at other galleries, letting them know she was hiring. Rรฉsumรฉs and inquiries flooded the inbox and Luanne met with six candidates while Maggie, either nauseated or vomiting
from her first infusion, recuperated at home. Only one candidate made it past the first interview, but when she didnโt show up for the second, she was scratched as well. Frustrated, Luanne visited Maggie at home to update her. Maggie hadnโt left her apartment in days and was lying on the couch, sipping the fruit-and-ice-cream smoothie Luanne had brought with her, one of the few things Maggie could still force down.
โItโs hard to believe we canโt find anyone qualified to work in the gallery.โ Maggie shook her head.
โThey have no experience and donโt know anything about art,โ Luanne huffed.
Neither did you, Maggie could have pointed out, but she remained silent, fully aware that Luanne had turned out to be a treasure as both a friend and an employee, the luckiest of breaks. Warm and unflappable, Luanne had long ago ceased being a mere colleague.
โI trust your judgment, Luanne. Weโll just start over.โ
โAre you sure there wasnโt anyone else in the pool worth meeting?โ Luanneโs tone was plaintive.
For whatever reason, Maggieโs mind flashed to Mark Price, inquiring ever so politely whether she would be willing to receive his rรฉsumรฉ.
โYouโre smiling,โ Luanne said. โNo, Iโm not.โ
โI know a smile when I see one. What were you just thinking about?โ
Maggie took another sip of the smoothie, buying time, until finally deciding to come out with it. โA young man came in before we listed the position,โ she admitted, before proceeding to describe the meeting. โIโm still not sure about him,โ she concluded, โbut his rรฉsumรฉ is probably somewhere on my desk in the office.โ She shrugged. โI donโt know if heโs even available at this point.โ
When Luanne probed the origins of Markโs interest in the job, she frowned. Luanne understood the makeup of the gallery crowds better than anyone and recognized that people whoโd seen Maggieโs videos often viewed her as their confidante, someone who would both empathize and sympathize. They frequently longed to share their own stories, the suffering they had endured, and the losses. And as much as Maggie wanted to offer them comfort, it was often too much to support them emotionally when she felt like she was barely holding it together herself. Luanne did her best to shield her from the more aggressive contact seekers.
โLet me review his rรฉsumรฉ and Iโll speak with him,โ she said. โAfter that, weโll take it one step at a time.โ
Luanne contacted Mark the following week. Their first conversation led to two more formal interviews, including one with Trinity. When she later spoke with Maggie, her praise for Mark was effusive, but Maggie insisted on meeting with him again, just to be certain. It took four more days before she had the energy to make it to the gallery. Mark Price was on time, dressed in a suit and holding a slim binder as he stepped into her office. She felt sick as a dog as she studied his rรฉsumรฉ, noting that he was from Elkhart, Indiana, and when she saw his graduation date from Northwestern, she did a quick mental calculation.
โYouโre twenty-two years old?โ โYes.โ
With his neatly parted hair, blue eyes, and baby face, he looked like a well-groomed teenager, ready for the prom. โAnd you majored in theology?โ
โI did,โ he said. โWhy theology?โ
โMy father is a pastor,โ he said. โEventually I want to get a masterโs in divinity as well. To follow in his footsteps.โ
As soon as he said it, she realized it didnโt surprise her in the slightest. โThen why the interest in art if you intend to go into the ministry?โ
He brought his fingertips together, as though wanting to choose his words with care. โIโve always believed that art and faith have much in common. Both allow people to explore the subtlety of their own emotions and to find their own answers as to what the art represents to them. Your work and Trinityโs always make meย think, and more importantly, they make meย feelย in ways that often lead to a sense of wonder. Just like faith.โ
It was a good answer, but she nonetheless suspected that Mark was leaving something out. Setting those thoughts aside, Maggie continued with the interview, asking more standard questions about his work history and knowledge of photography and contemporary sculpture before finally leaning back in her chair.
โWhy do you think youโd be a good fit for the gallery?โ
He seemed unfazed by her grilling. โFor starters, having met Ms. Sommers, I have the sense that she and I would work well together. With her permission, I spent some time in the gallery after our interview, and
after a bit of additional research, I put together some of my thoughts about the work currently on display.โ He leaned forward, offering her the binder. โIโve left a copy with Ms. Sommers as well.โ
Maggie thumbed through the binder. Stopping on a random page, she perused a couple of paragraphs heโd written concerning a photograph sheโd taken in Djibouti in 2011, when the country was mired in one of the worst droughts in decades. In the foreground were the skeletal remains of a camel; in the background were three families dressed in brilliantly colorful garb, all of whom were laughing and smiling as they walked along a dried riverbed. Gathering storm clouds clotted a sky that had turned orange and red in the setting sun, a vivid contrast to the bleached bones of the skeleton and deep desiccation cracks that illustrated the lack of any recent rainfall.
Markโs comments showed a surprising technical sophistication and a mature appreciation for her artistic intentions; sheโd been trying to show an improbable joy amid despair, to illustrate manโs insignificance when faced with the capricious power of nature, and Mark had articulated those intentions well.
She closed the binder, knowing there was no need to look through the rest of it.
โYou clearly prepared, and considering your age, you seem surprisingly well qualified. But those arenโt my major concerns. I still want to know the real reason you want to work here.โ
His brow furrowed. โI think your photographs are extraordinary. As are Trinityโs sculptures.โ
โIs that all?โ
โIโm not sure what you mean.โ
โIโll be frank,โ Maggie said, exhaling. She was too tired and too sick, with too little time, to be anything but frank. โYou brought in your rรฉsumรฉ before weโd even posted that we were hiring, and you admitted youโre a fan of my videos. Those things concern me because sometimes people who have watched my videos about my illness feel a false sense of intimacy with me. I canโt have someone like that working here.โ She raised her eyebrows. โAre you imagining that weโll become friends and have deep and meaningful conversations? Because thatโs unlikely. I doubt Iโll be spending much time at the gallery.โ
โI understand,โ he said, pleasant and unflustered. โIf I were you, Iโd likely feel the same way. All I can do is assure you that my intention is to be
an excellent employee.โ
She didnโt make her decision right away. Instead, she slept on it and conferred with Luanne and Trinity the following day. Despite Maggieโs continuing uncertainty, they wanted to take a chance on him, and Mark started at the beginning of May.
Fortunately, since then, Mark had given Maggie no reason to second- guess herself. With chemotherapy continuing to wipe her out all summer, sheโd spent only a few hours a week at the gallery, but in the rare moments when she was there, Mark had been the consummate professional. He greeted her cheerfully, smiled easily, and always referred to her as Ms. Dawes. He was never late for work, had never called in sick, and seldom disturbed her, knocking gently on her office door only when a bona fide buyer or collector had specifically asked for her and he deemed it important enough to intrude. Perhaps because heโd taken the interview to heart, he never referred to her recent video posts, nor did he ask her personal questions. Occasionally he expressed the hope that she was feeling well, but that was okay with her, because he didnโt actually inquire about it, leaving it up to her to say anything more if she wanted to.
Moreover and most importantly, he excelled at the job. He treated customers with courtesy and charm, moved the cancer groupies gracefully toward the exits, and excelled at sales, probably because he wasnโt pushy in the slightest. He answered the phone, usually by the second or third ring, and carefully wrapped the prints before shipping those ordered by mail. Usually, to complete all of his tasks, he would stay for an hour or more after the gallery had closed its doors. Luanne was so impressed by him that she had no worries about her monthlong holiday in Maui with her daughter and grandchildren in December, a trip sheโd taken almost every year since sheโs started at the gallery.
None of that, Maggie realized, had been much of a surprise. What did surprise her was that in the last few months, her reservations about Mark had slowly given way to a growing sense of trust.
* * *
Maggie couldnโt pinpoint exactly when that had happened. Like apartment neighbors regularly riding the same elevator, their cordial relationship settled into a comfortable familiarity. In September, once she began to feel better after her last infusion, she had started spending more time at work. Simple greetings with Mark gave way to small talk before
segueing to more personal subjects. Sometimes those conversations took place in the small break room down the hall from her office, other times in the gallery when it was devoid of visitors. Mostly they occurred after the doors had been locked, while the three of them processed and packaged the prints that had been ordered by phone or through the website. Usually Luanne dominated the conversation, chattering about her ex-husbandโs poor dating choices or her kids and grandkids. Maggie and Mark were content to listenโLuanneย wasย entertaining. Every now and then, one of them would roll their eyes at something Luanne had said (โIโm sure my ex is paying for all the plastic surgery on that tacky gold-diggerโ) and the other would smile slightly, a private communication meant just for the two of them.
Sometimes, though, Luanne had to leave immediately after closing. Mark and Maggie would work together alone, and little by little, Maggie came to learn quite a bit about Mark, even as he refrained from asking personal questions of her. He told her about his parents and his childhood, which often struck her as something akin to an upbringing imagined by Norman Rockwell, complete with bedtime stories, hockey and baseball games, and his parentsโ attendance at every school event he could remember. He also spoke frequently about his girlfriend, Abigail, whoโd just started working toward a masterโs degree in economics at the University of Chicago. Like Mark, sheโd grown up in a small townโin her case, Waterloo, Iowaโand he had countless photographs of the two of them on his iPhone. The photos showed a pretty young redhead with a sunny, midwestern affect, and Mark mentioned that he planned to propose after she received her degree. Maggie could remember laughing when he said it. Why get married when youโre still so young? sheโd asked. Why not wait a few years?
โBecause,โ Mark had answered, โsheโs the one with whom Iโd like to spend the rest of my life.โ
โHow can you know that?โ โSometimes you just know.โ
The more she learned about him, the more she came to believe that his parents had been as lucky with him as heโd been with them. He was an exemplary young man, responsible and kindโdisproving the stereotype that millennials were lazy and entitled. Still, her growing fondness for him sometimes surprised her, if only because they shared so little in common. Her early life had beenโฆunusual, at least for a time, and her relationship
with her parents had often been strained. She herself had been nothing like Mark. While heโd been studious and had graduated with highest honors from a top university, sheโd generally struggled in school and had finished less than three semesters at a community college. At his age, she had been content to live in the moment and figure things out on the fly, whereas he seemed to have a plan for everything. Had she met him when she was younger, she suspected that she wouldnโt have given him the time of day; when sheโd been in her twenties, sheโd had a habit of choosing exactly the wrong kinds of men.
Nonetheless, he sometimes reminded her of someone sheโd known long ago, someone who had once meant everything to her.
* * *
By the time Thanksgiving rolled around, Maggie considered Mark a definite member of the gallery family. She wasnโt as close to him as she was to either Luanne or Trinityโtheyโd spent years together, after allโbut heโd become something akin to a friend nonetheless, and two days after that holiday, all four of them had stayed late in the gallery after closing. It was Saturday night, and because Luanne planned to fly to Maui the following morning while Trinity left for the Caribbean, they opened a bottle of wine to go with the cheese and fruit tray Luanne had ordered. Maggie accepted a glass, even though she couldnโt fathom the thought of either drinking or eating anything.
They toasted the galleryโit had been far and away their most successful year everโand settled into easy conversation for another hour. Toward the end, Luanne offered Maggie a card.
โThereโs a gift inside,โ Luanne said. โOpen it after Iโm gone.โ โI havenโt had a chance to get yours yet.โ
โThatโs fine,โ Luanne said. โSeeing you back to your old self these past few months has been more than enough gift for me. Just make sure you open it well before Christmas, though.โ
After Maggie assured her that she would, Luanne stepped toward the platter and grabbed a couple of strawberries. A few feet away, Trinity was speaking to Mark. Because he visited the gallery even less frequently than Maggie did, she heard Trinity asking the same kinds of personal questions that she had over the last few months.
โI didnโt know you played hockey,โ Trinity offered. โIโm a huge Islanders fan, even if they havenโt won the Stanley Cup in what seems like
forever.โ
โItโs a great sport. I played every year until I got to Northwestern.โ โDonโt they have a team?โ
โI wasnโt good enough to play at the collegiate level,โ Mark admitted. โNot that it seemed to matter to my parents. I donโt think either of them ever missed a game.โ
โWill they come out to see you for Christmas?โ
โNo,โ Mark said. โMy dad set up a tour of the Holy Land with a couple dozen members of our church for the holidays. Nazareth, Bethlehem, the whole works.โ
โAnd you didnโt want to go?โ
โItโs their dream, not mine. Besides, I have to be here.โ
Maggie saw Trinity glance in her direction before he turned his attention back to Mark. He leaned in, whispering something, and though Maggie couldnโt hear him, she knew exactly what Trinity had said, because heโd expressed his own concerns to her a few minutes earlier.
โMake sure you keep an eye on Maggie while Luanne and I are gone.
Weโre both a little worried about her.โ
In response, Mark simply nodded.
* * *
Trinity was more prescient than he probably realized, but then again, both Trinity and Luanne had known that Maggie had another appointment with Dr. Brodigan scheduled on December 10. And sure enough, at that appointment, Dr. Brodigan had urged Maggie to focus on her quality of life. Now it was December 18. More than a week had passed since that awful day and Maggie still felt almost numb. Nor had she told anyone about her prognosis. Her parents had always believed that if they prayed hard enough, God would somehow heal her, and telling them the truth would take more energy than she could summon. Same thing in a different way with her sister; long story short, she didnโt have the energy. Mark had texted a couple of times to check in on her, but saying anything about her situation via text struck her as absurd and she hadnโt been ready to face anyone just yet. As for Luanne or even Trinity, she supposed she could call them, but what would be the point? Luanne deserved to enjoy the time she was spending with her own family without worrying about Maggie, and Trinity had his own life as well. Besides, there was nothing that either of them
could really do.
Instead, dazed by her new reality, sheโd spent much of the last eight days either in her apartment or on short, slow walks through her neighborhood. Sometimes she simply stared out the window, absently fondling the small pendant on the necklace she always wore; other times, she found herself people-watching. When sheโd first moved to New York, she had been enthralled by the ceaseless activity around her, by seeing people rushing down into the subway or peering up into office towers at midnight with the knowledge that people were still at their desks. Following the hectic movements of pedestrians below her window brought back memories of her early adulthood in the city and the younger, healthier woman she once had been. It seemed like a lifetime had passed since then; it also felt as though the years had passed in the blink of an eye, and her inability to grasp that contradiction made her more self-reflective than usual. Time, she thought, would always be elusive.
She hadnโt expected the miraculousโdeep down, sheโd always known a cure was out of the questionโbut wouldnโt it have been great to learn that the chemotherapy had slowed the cancer a little and bought her an extra year or two? Or that some experimental treatment had become available? Would that have been too much to ask? To have been given one last intermission before the final act began?
That was the thing about battling cancer. Theย waiting. So much of the last few years had been aboutย waiting. Waiting for the appointment with the doctor, waiting for treatment, waiting to feel better after the treatment, waiting to see whether the treatment had worked, waiting until she was well enough to try something new. Until her diagnosis, sheโd viewed waiting for anything as an irritation, but waiting had slowly but surely become the defining reality of her life.
Even now, she suddenly thought. Here I am,ย waitingย to die.
On the sidewalk, beyond the glass, she saw people bundled up in winter gear, their breath making clouds of steam as they hurried to unknown destinations; on the street, a long line of cars with glowing taillights crawled through narrow lanes lined by pretty brick town houses. They were people going about their daily lives, as though nothing out of the ordinary were happening. But nothing felt ordinary now, and she doubted things would ever feel ordinary again.
She envied them, these strangers she would never meet. They were living their lives without counting the days they had left, something she
would never do again. And, as always, there were so many of them. Sheโd grown used to the fact that everything in the city was always crowded, no matter the time or the season, which added inconvenience to even the simplest things. If she needed ibuprofen from Duane Reade, there was a line to check out; if she was in the mood to see a movie, there was a line at the box office, too. When it came time to cross the street, she was inevitably surrounded by others, people rushing and jostling at the curb.
But why the rush? She wondered about that now, just as she wondered about so many things. Like everyone, she had regrets, and now that time was running out, she couldnโt help dwelling on them. There were actions sheโd taken that she wished she could undo; there were opportunities sheโd missed and now would never have the time to do. Sheโd spoken honestly about some of her regrets in one of her videos, admitting to feeling unreconciled to them, and no closer to answers than when sheโd initially been diagnosed.
Nor had she cried since her last meeting with Dr. Brodigan. Instead, when she wasnโt staring out the window or taking her walks, sheโd focused on the mundane. Sheโd slept and sleptโaveraging fourteen hours a nightโ and had ordered Christmas gifts online. Sheโd recorded but hadnโt yet posted anotherย Cancer Videoย concerning her last appointment with Dr. Brodigan. Sheโd had smoothies delivered and tried to finish them as she sat in the living room. Recently sheโd even tried to have lunch at Union Square Cafe. It had always been one of her favorite places to grab a delicious meal at the bar, but the visit ended up being a waste, since everything that crossed her lips still tasted wrong. Cancer, taking yet another joy from her life.
Now it was a week until Christmas, and with the afternoon sun beginning to wane, she felt the need to get out of the apartment. She dressed in multiple layers, assuming she would stroll aimlessly for a bit, but once she stepped outside, the mood to simply wander passed as quickly as it had come. Instead, she started toward the gallery. Though she wouldnโt do much work, it would be comforting to know that all was in order.
The gallery was several blocks away and she moved slowly, trying to avoid anyone who might bump into her. The wind was icy and by the time she pushed through the doors of the gallery a half hour before closing, she was shivering. It was unusually crowded; sheโd expected that the holidays
would diminish the number of visitors, but clearly sheโd been wrong about that. Luckily, Mark seemed to have things under control.
As always when she entered, heads turned in her direction and she noted dawning looks of recognition on some faces.ย Sorry. Not today, folks, she suddenly thought, offering a quick wave before hurrying to her office. She shut the door behind her. Inside, there was a desk and an office chair, and one of the walls featured built-in bookcases piled high with photography books and keepsakes from her far-flung travels. Across from the desk was a small gray love seat, just big enough to curl up on if she needed to lie down. In the corner stood an ornately carved rocker with flowered cushions that Luanne had brought from her country house, lending a touch of warmth to the modern office.
After piling her gloves, hat, and jacket on the desk, Maggie readjusted her kerchief and collapsed into her office chair. Turning on the computer, she automatically checked the weekly sales figures, noting the spike in volume, but realized she wasnโt in the mood to study the numbers in detail. Instead, she opened another folder and began clicking through her favorite photos, finally pausing at a series of images sheโd taken in Ulan Bator, Mongolia, last January. At the time sheโd had no idea it would be the last international trip she would ever take. The temperature had been well below zero the entire time she was there, with biting winds that could freeze exposed skin in less than a minute; it had been an effort to keep her camera working because the components grew finicky in temperatures that low. She could remember repeatedly tucking the camera inside her jacket to warm it against her body, but the photographs were so important to her, sheโd braved the elements for almost two hours.
Sheโd wanted to find ways to document the poisonous levels of air pollution and its visible effects on the population. In a city of a million and a half people, nearly every home and business burned coal throughout the winter, darkening the sky even in brightest daylight. It was a health crisis as well as an environmental one, and sheโd wanted her images to spur people to action. Sheโd logged countless photographs of children covered in grime as a result of stepping outside to play. Sheโd caught an amazing black-and- white image of filthy cloth that had been used as drapery for an open window, dramatizing what was happening inside otherwise healthy lungs. Sheโd also sought out a stark panorama of the city and finally nailed the image she wanted: a brilliant blue sky that suddenly,ย immediatelyย gave way
to a pale, almost sickly yellow haze, as though God himself had drawn a perfectly straight line, dividing the sky in two. The effect was utterly arresting, especially after the hours sheโd spent refining it in post.
As she stared at the image in the solace of her office, she knew she would never be able to do something like that again. She would likely never travel for work again; she might never even leave Manhattan, unless she gave in to her parents and returned to Seattle. Nor had anything in Mongolia changed. In addition to the photo essay that sheโd contributed to theย New Yorker, a number of media outlets, includingย Scientific Americanย and theย Atlantic, had also tried to raise awareness regarding the dangerous levels of pollution in Ulan Bator, but the air, if anything, had grown even worse in the last eleven months. It was, she thought, yet another failure in her life, just like her battle with cancer.
The thoughts shouldnโt have been connected, but in that instant, they were, and all at once she felt tears begin to form. She was dying, she was actuallyย dying, and it dawned on her suddenly that she was about to experience her very last Christmas.
What should she be doing with these last precious weeks? And what didย quality of lifeย even mean when it came to the actuality of day-to-day living? She was already sleeping more than ever, but did quality mean getting more sleep to feel better, or less sleep so the days seemed longer? And what about her routines? Should she bother making an appointment to have her teeth cleaned? Should she pay off the minimum balance on her credit cards or go on a spending spree? Because what did it matter? What did anything really matter?
A hundred random thoughts and questions overran her; lost in all of it, she felt herself choke before letting go completely. She didnโt know how long the outburst lasted; time slipped away. When she was finally spent, she stood and swiped at her eyes. Glancing through the one-way window above her desk, she noticed that the gallery floor was empty, and that the front door had been locked. Strangely, she didnโt see Mark, even though the lights were still on. She wondered where he was until she heard a knock at the door. Even his knock was gentle.
She considered making an excuse until the evidence of her breakdown had subsided, but why bother? Sheโd long since stopped caring about her appearance; she knew she looked awful even at the best of times.
โCome on in,โ she said. Pulling a Kleenex from the box on her desk, she blew her nose as Mark stepped through the door.
โHey,โ he said, his voice quiet. โHi.โ
โBad time?โ โItโs all right.โ
โI thought you might like this,โ he said, holding out a to-go cup. โItโs a banana-and-strawberry smoothie with vanilla ice cream. Maybe itโll help.โ
She recognized the label on the cupโthe eatery was two doors down from the galleryโand wondered how heโd known how she was feeling. Perhaps heโd divined something when sheโd made a beeline for her office, or maybe heโd simply remembered what Trinity had told him.
โThank you,โ she said, taking it. โAre you okay?โ
โIโve been better.โ She took a sip, thankful it was sweet enough to override her messed-up taste buds. โHow was it today?โ
โBusy, but not as bad as last Friday. We sold eight prints, including a number three ofย Rush.โ
Each of her photographs was limited to twenty-five numbered prints; the lower the number, the higher the price. The photo Mark mentioned had been taken at rush hour in the Tokyo subway, the platform jammed with thousands of men dressed in what seemed to be identical black suits.
โAnything by Trinity?โ
โNot today, but I think thereโs a good possibility of that in the near future. Jackie Bernstein came in with her consultant earlier.โ
Maggie nodded. Jackie had bought two other Trinity pieces in the past, and Trinity would be pleased to know she was interested in another.
โHow about on the website and phone-ins?โ
โSix confirmed, two people wanted more information. It shouldnโt take long to get the sales ready for shipment. If you want to head on home, I can handle it.โ
As soon as he said it, her mind floated additional questions:ย Do I truly want to go home? To an otherwise empty apartment? To wallow in solitude?
โNo, Iโll stay,โ she demurred, shaking her head. โFor a while, anyway.โ
She sensed his curiosity but knew he wouldnโt ask more. Again, she understood the interviews had left a lingering mark.
โIโm sure youโve been following my social posts and videos,โ she began, โso you probably have a general sense of whatโs going on with my illness.โ
โNot really. I havenโt watched any of your videos since I began working here.โ
She hadnโt expected that. Even Luanne watched her videos. โWhy not?โ โI assumed you would prefer that I didnโt. And when I considered your initial concerns about my working here, it seemed like the right thing to
do.โ
โBut you did know I underwent chemotherapy, right?โ
โLuanne mentioned it, but I donโt know the details. And, of course, in the rare times you were at the gallery, you lookedโฆโ
When he trailed off, she finished for him. โLike death?โ โI was going to say you looked a bit tired.โ
Sure I did. If gaunt, green, shrinking, and balding could be explained by waking up too early.ย But she knew he was trying to be kind. โDo you have a few minutes? Before you start getting the shipments ready?โ
โOf course. I donโt have anything planned for tonight.โ
On an impulse, she moved to the rocker, motioning for him to get comfortable on the love seat. โNo going out with friends?โ
โItโs kind of expensive,โ he said. โAnd going out usually means drinking, but I donโt drink.โ
โEver?โ
โNo.โ
โWow,โ she said. โI donโt think Iโve ever met a twenty-two-year-old whoโs never had a drink.โ
โActually, Iโm twenty-three now.โ โYou had a birthday?โ
โIt wasnโt a big deal.โ
Probably not, she thought. โDid Luanne know? She didnโt say anything to me.โ
โI didnโt mention it to her.โ
She leaned forward and raised her cup. โHappy belated birthday, then.โ โThank you.โ
โDid you do anything fun? For your birthday, I mean?โ
โAbigail flew out for the weekend and we sawย Hamilton. Have you seen
it?โ
โA while ago.โย But I wonโt ever see it again, she didnโt bother to add. Which was another reason not to be alone. So that thoughts like those didnโt precipitate yet another breakdown. With Mark here, it was somehow easier to keep herself together.
โIโd never seen a show on Broadway before,โ Mark went on. โThe music was amazing and I loved the historical element and the dancing andโฆeverything about it. Abigail was electrifiedโshe swore sheโd never experienced anything like it.โ
โHow is Abigail?โ
โSheโs doing well. Her break just started, so sheโs probably on her way to Waterloo right now to see her family.โ
โShe didnโt want to come out here to see you?โ
โItโs sort of a mini family reunion. Unlike me, she has a big family. Five older brothers and sisters who live all over the country. Christmas is the only time of year they can all get together.โ
โAnd you didnโt want to go out there?โ
โIโm working. She understands that. Besides, sheโs coming out here on the twenty-eighth. Weโll spend some time together, watch the ball drop on New Yearโs Eve, things like that.โ
โWill I get to meet her?โ โIf youโd like.โ
โIf you need time off, let me know. Iโm sure I can manage on my own for a couple of days.โ
She wasnโt sure she could, but it felt like she needed to offer. โIโll let you know.โ
Maggie took another sip of her smoothie. โI donโt know if Iโve mentioned it lately, but youโre doing really well here.โ
โI enjoy it,โ he said. He waited, and she knew again that heโd made a choice not to ask personal questions. Which meant she would have to volunteer the information or keep it to herself.
โI met with my oncologist last week,โ she stated in what she hoped was an even voice. โShe thinks another round of chemotherapy will do more harm than good.โ
His expression softened. โCan I ask what that means?โ โIt means no more treatment and the clock is ticking.โ
He paled, registering what she hadnโt said. โOhโฆMs. Dawes. Thatโs terrible. Iโm so sorry. I donโt know what to say. Is there anything I can do?โ
โI donโt think thereโs anything anyone can do. But please, call me Maggie. I think youโve worked here long enough for the two of us to use first names.โ
โIs the doctor certain?โ
โThe scans werenโt good,โ she said. โLots of spread, everywhere. Stomach. Pancreas. Kidneys. Lungs. And though you wonโt ask, I have less than six months. Most likely, itโs somewhere around three to four, maybe even less.โ
Surprising her, his eyes began to well with tears. โOhโฆLordโฆโ he said, his expression suddenly softening. โWould you mind if I pray for you? Not now, but when I get home, I mean.โ
She couldnโt help smiling. Of course he would want to pray for her, future pastor that he was. She suspected heโd never uttered a profanity in his life. He was, she thought, a very sweet kid. Well, technically he was a young man, butโฆ
โIโd like that.โ
For a few seconds, neither of them said anything. Then, with a soft shake of his head, he pressed his lips together. โIt isnโt fair,โ he said.
โWhen is life ever fair?โ
โCan I ask how youโre doing? I hope youโll forgive me if Iโm oversteppingโฆโ
โItโs okay,โ she said. โI guess Iโve been in a bit of a daze since I found out.โ
โIt has to feel unbearable.โ
โAt times it does. But then, other times, it doesnโt. The strange thing is that physically, I feel better than I did earlier in the year, during the chemo. Back then, there were times when I was sure dying would be easier. But nowโฆโ
She let her gaze wander over the shelves, noting the trinkets sheโd collected, each one imbued with memories of a trip sheโd taken. To Greece and Egypt, Rwanda and Nova Scotia, Patagonia and Easter Island, Vietnam and the Ivory Coast. So many places, so many adventures.
โItโs a strange thing to know the end is so imminent,โ she admitted. โIt gives rise to a lot of questions. Makes a person wonder what itโs all about. Sometimes I feel that Iโve led a charmed life, but then, in the next instant, I find myself obsessing over the things I missed out on.โ
โLike what?โ
โMarriage, for starters,โ she said. โYou know Iโve never been married, right?โ When he nodded, she went on. โGrowing up, I couldnโt imagine that Iโd still be single at my age. It just wasnโt the way I was raised. My parents were very traditional and I assumed Iโd end up like them.โ She felt her thoughts drifting to the past, memories bubbling to the surface. โOf course, I didnโt make it easy for them. Not like you, anyway.โ
โI wasnโt always a perfect child,โ he protested. โI got in trouble.โ
โFor what? Anything serious? Was it because you didnโt clean your room or because you were a minute late for your curfew? Oh, wait. You were never late for your curfew, right?โ
He opened his mouth, but when no words came out, she knew she was right. He must have been the kind of teenager who made things harder for the rest of his generation, simply because he was wired to beย easy.
โThe point is, Iโve been wondering how things would have turned out had I chosen a different path. Not just marriage, though. What if Iโd worked harder in school, or graduated from college, or had a job in an office, or moved to Miami or Los Angeles instead of New York? Things like that.โ
โYou obviously didnโt need college. Your career as a photographer has been remarkable, and your videos and posts about your illness have inspired a lot of people.โ
โThatโs very kind, but they donโt really know me. And in the end, isnโt that the most important thing in life? To be truly known and loved by someone youโve chosen?โ
โMaybe,โ he conceded. โBut that doesnโt diminish what youโve given people through your experience. Itโs a powerful act, even life-changing for some.โ
Perhaps it was his sincerity or his old-fashioned mannerisms, but she was once again reminded of someone sheโd known long ago. She hadnโt consciously thought about Bryce in years. For most of her adult life, she had tried to keep her memories of him at a safe distance.
But there was no need to do that anymore.
โWould you mind if I asked you a personal question?โ she said, mimicking his curiously formal tone.
โNot at all.โ
โWhen did you first realize you were in love with Abigail?โ
The mention of Abigail softened his expression. โLast year,โ he said, settling into the cushions of the love seat. โNot long after I graduated. Weโd been out together four or five times, and she wanted me to meet her parents. We were driving to Waterloo, just the two of us. Weโd stopped for a bite, and on the way out, she decided she wanted an ice cream cone. It was scorching outside, and the air-conditioning in the car wasnโt working well, so it started melting all over her. Most people might have been annoyed, but she just started giggling as she tried to eat it faster than it could melt. There was ice cream everywhereโon her nose, her fingers, in her lap, even in her hairโand I remember thinking I wanted to be around someone like that forever. Someone who could laugh at lifeโs little inconveniences and find joy in every moment. Thatโs when I knew she was the one.โ
โDid you tell her then?โ
โOh, no. I wasnโt brave enough. It took me until last fall before I could finally work up the courage to tell her.โ
โDid she say that she loved you, too?โ โShe did. That was a relief.โ
โShe sounds like a wonderful person.โ โShe is. Iโm very lucky.โ
Though he smiled, she knew he was still troubled.
โI wish there was something I could do for you,โ he said, his voice soft. โWorking here is enough. Well, that and staying late.โ
โIโm glad to be here. I wonder, thoughโฆโ
โGo ahead,โ she said, gesturing with the smoothie. โYou can ask whatever question youโd like. Iโve got nothing to hide anymore.โ
โWhy didnโt you ever get married? If you thought you would, I mean?โ โThere were a lot of reasons. When I was just starting out in my career,
I wanted to concentrate on that until I established a foothold. Then I started traveling a lot, and then came the gallery andโฆI guess I was just too busy.โ
โAnd you never met someone who made you question all that?โ
In the silence that followed, she unconsciously reached for the necklace, feeling for the small shell-shaped pendant, making sure it was still there. โI thought I did. I know I loved him, but the timing wasnโt right.โ
โBecause of work?โ
โNo,โ she said. โIt happened long before then. But Iโm pretty sure I wouldnโt have been good for him. Not back then, anyway.โ
โI canโt believe that.โ
โYou donโt know who I used to be.โ She put down her cup and folded her hands in her lap. โDo you want to hear the story?โ
โIโd be honored.โ โItโs kind of long.โ
โThose are usually the best kind of stories.โ
Maggie bent her head, feeling the images begin to surface at the edge of her mind. With the images, the words would eventually come, she knew.
โIn 1995, when I was sixteen years old, I began to lead a secret life,โ she started.