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The Painter, She Smiles Like Sunbeams (A Short Story)
The Painter, She Smiles Like Sunbeams (A Short Story)
The Painter, She Smiles Like Sunbeams (A Short Story)
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The Painter, She Smiles Like Sunbeams (A Short Story)

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A stuttering, socially inept college student meets his idol, a cynical, middle-aged artist who might or might not bear a resemblance to Vivien Leigh. They begin an affair that is mutually destructive...but not necessarily dysfunctional. Contains brief scenes of sexuality.

This story originally appeared, with some alterations, in Conte. 5500 words. 

Excerpt:

Half a dozen paintings stood on their easels, scattered throughout the large, cold space, each one concealed under heavy linen sheets. Ellis wondered if anyone else had seen these pieces yet; La Artista didn’t seem particularly close to her management personnel. He wanted to go to every one of them and throw off their coverings, to press his hands and face into the canvases, but was afraid to ask her permission.

An empty frame stood on the far side of the room, a large wooden square. La Artista laid it down on the floor and pulled a spare sheet over it. “Do you stretch your own canvases?” she asked with her back to him. She looked so thin with her blouse tucked into her skirt that he was reminded of Vivien Leigh again.

“Uh-huh. I mean, sometimes. It’s a l-lot more conv-v-venient t-to buy them r-ready-made.”

“Not as fun, though.” If she’d looked younger on the bus, she sounded it now. Her calves, clothed only in black nylons, arched deliciously as she moved over the frame.

He paced the room for several minutes, looking out each small window. Nothing but street and traffic and brightly-dressed strangers outside. La Artista hummed to herself quietly but didn’t speak to him and it made him nervous.

He went to the easel nearest her and placed his hand on the linen. “Are these really new?” In the vacuum of the studio his voice sounded small, childish.

La Artista pushed her sleeves up again and looked over her shoulder at him. “Yeah. I finished that one about three months ago”

“H-has anyone seen them?”

“My agent’s seen a couple.”

He felt a pang of jealousy. “Can I see them?”

La Artista stared at him, narrowed her eyes almost suspiciously. At last she smiled, baring her teeth, and nodded. “Go ahead.”

He felt a stirring between his legs. “Can I t-touch them?”

She didn’t hesitate. “Don’t do anything to them that you haven’t done to me.” She returned to birthing her canvas. Maybe she didn’t want to see his reactions to her work. Maybe she’d already seen the reactions of the agent and felt bored by new eyes.

He ripped the sheet from the easel and draped it over his shoulders like a cape. The painting was a rather small one, perhaps two-and-a-half feet in height. Another one of her studies of the human figure. A man, a shadowy figure, lay across a bed shaped like a violin, his eyes closed, his arms stretched out over the edge as if reaching toward the floor. He appeared to be nude. This piece was less abstract than usual but every line was still soft and gently blurred with the very edge of a fan brush so that each component seemed to bleed into its surroundings. The man was swallowing the sheets, which were, in turn, swallowing him.

“I love you,” Ellis mumbled, either to La Artista or to the painting itself, and began following the boldest brushstrokes with his fingertips.

When La Artista said nothing he embraced the painting and licked the center of it. The dried paint tasted slightly of old vinegar.

He felt La Artista’s hand on his leg.

“Save some of that for me tonight, baby,” she whispered.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 28, 2013
ISBN9781497723337
The Painter, She Smiles Like Sunbeams (A Short Story)
Author

Rachelle Taylor

Rachelle Taylor is a native of the Appalachian region of Virginia who currently lives in the UK. Her work has appeared in several journals, including The Blotter, Neon, Printer's Devil Review, The Subtopian Magazine, Conte, and Danse Macabre. She's an avid fan of Flannery O'Connor, gothic fiction, comic books, turtles and tortoises, and Old Hollywood. She changes her hair often and is currently developing a funny accent.

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    The Painter, She Smiles Like Sunbeams (A Short Story) - Rachelle Taylor

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    THE PAINTER, SHE SMILES LIKE SUNBEAMS

    Rachelle Taylor

    The Painter, She Smiles Like Sunbeams has previously been published, with some alterations, in Conte.

    Cover image by Laura Buller. Used with permission.

    What class did you say this was for again?

    Ellis pulled the fork out of his mouth and swallowed the bits of cheese that remained on his tongue. Modern Art.

    La Artista's dark eyebrow went up. The class is called Modern Art?

    No, it's... act-tually, it's Issues in C-contemporary Art.

    That's a big difference.

    Sorry. He poked the salad again. The vinaigrette had sunk into the massive pile of cheese and grilled chicken that topped the dish, obscuring any trace of plant matter. He always ordered the same thing here. Sometimes he wanted to tip the plate up and drink from it.

    La Artista lifted her water glass and took a large gulp without a straw. Her eyes were darker in person, less lively. In her pictures, those few he'd seen on her website (last updated in 2009) she was a graceful, pale woman with dark hair and lips and high cheekbones accentuated by studio lighting and digital enhancement. Across the table from him, the absence of makeup made her mouth colorless and her face no different than that of any other moderately kept middle-aged woman. The first time she smiled at him he'd seen what he believed to be the beginning of crow's feet at her eyelids.

    He sipped his iced tea in response, pushing his tongue under the straw. Men don't sip, his mother used to say.

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