βItβs kind of simple, donβt you think?β
Keisha turned from the painting she had just placed, ready for tonightβs showing. The gallery had asked her for months to let them show Jordanβs work. Now this youngster was following her around with a comment on everything. Well, Keisha had had enough.
βI beg your pardon?β
βThis painting. I mean, itβs not up to his usual standard, is it?β
βWhat would you know about his work?β
βIβm writing my thesis on him. His paintings usually have such complexity to them. This isnβt very expressive.β
Keishaβs first instinct was to go up one side of the kid and down the other. She reminded herself that she had been young once too. Sighing, she said, βLetβs grab a coffee and Iβll tell you about Jordan Moore.β
She didnβt say anything more until they had sat down next to the cafΓ©βs window. She delayed further, watching butterflies dance in the bush outside. The kid had the good grace to wait until she was ready.
βI get that you think you know Jordanβs work. Youβve studied his paintings. But youβve never seen his later works. And you donβt know him at all. Reading his biographies isnβt the same as living under the same roof with a man, loving him, and sometimes hating him. He was complex, like his work.β
The kid sat up straighter, giving Keisha his full attention. She searched her memory for his name. Harry...no, Jerry.
βListen, Jerry, Jordan hid a lot from the world near the end. I helped him do it. His mind was going, and it showed in his work. He decided to do one final series of paintingsβa visual history of his deterioration.β
Keisha let out a long, slow breath, stared out the window again as she gathered her thoughts and her willingness to share this last piece of her husband. She hadnβt planned to and probably shouldnβt, knowing it was going to end up in the kidβs thesis. But she needed to tell someone.
βThat painting was the last one he ever did. He had a round-the-clock minder by then. They told me he didnβt know me anymore. They said he didnβt know himself. But I sat him down in front of that canvas one last time.β
Jerry was so still, Keisha wasnβt certain he was even breathing at this point.
βThose feathers are the most complex work Jordan ever painted, Jerry. His conscious mind didnβt know what he was doing. But he was still in there somewhere. You can see the feathers disintegrating, their essence dissipating, lost to the world. It was his last message to me, his final goodbye. He died the next morning.β
This flash holds sadness, yet also is about connection. Itβs about Keisha connecting with this young graduate student over their mutual connection to her deceased husband. And itβs about Jordanβs connection with her, so strong, that even after he couldnβt consciously remember her, he gave her one last giftβthe final piece in the story of his dementia.
The title comes from a random title generator. I had an idea of the story I wanted to write, but knew it would be hard to find an image to suit after it was already written. So I went hunting. These feathers told me the direction in which the story had to go.
Wow, Dascha. This story blew me away. How sad. Itβs also incredibly beautiful that he was able to communicate and express his final message to Keisha.
Really lovely, Dascha. This is resonating with me!