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Madame X Filthy man! He calls himself Artist! We pay him a fat lawyer's fee for his talent at offending me. Those black eyes see naked flesh where others see slips or camisoles. He grins privately, licks his mustache, strikes me in profile when my nose is my least attractive feature, and poses my bust straight ahead. He's painting my blush, isn't he, to set the whole world gossiping, when I wouldn't let him touch me with his brush! My husband hired him, as usual, without a resume, sight unseen. I asked if he'd seen a sample. "One, my dear," he said, "which approximates our nephew's head." My revenge had been this gown, as expensive as it is décolleté, and I suppose I dreamed a painter to be schooled in professional behavior, like my hairdresser and physicians, to be marble-cool near bare shoulders- but those eyes are blind to elegance and see in sophistication only sex. He flickers like black flame licking the canvas with daubs of paint to show that he's so serious in his art; a wink and he'd be at me like a shark. My neck! This portrait is overdue. Aren't voyeurs prone to exhaustion too? God would have had to think again had he spent not seven days, but ten. And when it's done, what will he have made of me? Will I look exactly as I am, well or badly drawn, my beauty replaced by oily paint or psychologically portrayed- the face of hunger or deceit? Will he trap each hair and mole, each blemish like weird species in a zoo? I'd be happier looming through a screen, through a window dripping in the rain. I should listen to my little sister and have it done quickly by photographer. Yes? Fine. So. He says it's finished and invites me to look. A threat. Let's see if it has been worth it. My word! I'm so . . . do I seem so to him? Yes, he's made a mistake with my bosom, but my chin- I hadn't thought the line that clean. He teaches me to appreciate my nose. My hair glows, darkness with a sheen. My skin, alabaster everywhere, except my ears, which do, I know, go red at the least distress; my lips never spoke such thoughts in mirrors; a kiss from them I'd be wanton to bestow. He's cut a heart out of my dress; from waist to breast, the black cloth flares and makes my shape a gift to the admirer, while much else is left undraped. Certainly the neck is false, too long, too muscular. Perhaps it's all the pose he gave me. My husband will conclude he raped me. I was wrong and I will tell him. Oh, he's gone! I didn't see him go! |