stepped onto the street. Now she would be able to meet the genius, listen to his views and perhaps find new meanings in many of the classics she already loved.
He was probably the temperamental artiste type, she decided, pleased with the way the evening breeze lifted her hair and cooled her neck. Or a pale eccentric with one earring. It didnât matter. She intended to work hard. Each course she took was a matter of pride to her. It still stung to remember how little she had known when sheâd been eighteen. How little she had cared to know, Natasha admitted, other than dance. She had of her own choice closed herself off from so many worlds in order to focus everything on one. When that had been taken away, she had been as lost as a child set adrift on the Atlantic.
She had found her way to shore, just as her family had once found itsway across the wilds of the Ukraine to the jungles of Manhattan. She liked herself betterâthe independent, ambitious American woman she had become. As she was now, she could walk into the big, beautiful old building on campus with as much pride as any freshman student.
There were footsteps echoing in the corridors, distant, dislocated. There was a hushed reverence that Natasha always associated with churches and universities. In a way there was religion hereâthe belief in learning.
She felt somewhat reverent herself as she made her way to her class. As a child of five in her small farming village, she had never even imagined such a building, or the books and beauty it contained.
Several students were already waiting. A mixed bag, she noted, ranging from college to middle age. All of them seemed to buzz with that excitement of beginning. She saw by the clock that it was two minutes shy of eight. Sheâd expected Kimball to be there, busily shuffling his papers, peering at them behind glasses, his hair a little wild and streaming to his shoulders.
Absently she smiled at a young man in horn-rims, who was staring at her as if heâd just woken from a dream. Ready to begin, she sat down, then looked up when the same man clumsily maneuvered himself into the desk beside her.
âHello.â
He looked as though sheâd struck him with a bat rather than offered a casual greeting. He pushed his glasses nervously up his nose. âHello. IâmâIâmâ¦Terry Maynard,â he finished on a burst as his name apparently came to him at last.
âNatasha.â She smiled again. He was on the sunny side of twenty-five and harmless as a puppy.
âI havenât, ah, seen you on campus before.â
âNo.â Though at twenty-seven it amused her to be taken for a coed, she kept her voice sober. âIâm only taking this one class. For fun.â
âFor fun?â Terry appeared to take music very seriously. âDo you know who Dr. Kimball is?â His obvious awe made him almost whisper the name.
âIâve heard of him. Youâre a Music major?â
âYes. I hope to, well one day, I hope to play with the New York Symphony.â His blunt fingers reached nervously to adjust his glasses. âIâm a violinist.â
She smiled again and made his Adamâs apple bob. âThatâs wonderful. Iâm sure youâre very good.â
âWhat do you play?â
âFive card draw.â Then she laughed and settled back in her chair. âIâm sorry. I donât play an instrument. But I love to listen to music and thought Iâd enjoy the class.â She glanced at the clock on the wall. âIf it ever starts, that is. Apparently our esteemed professor is late.â
At that moment the esteemed professor was rushing down the corridors, cursing himself for ever agreeing to take on this night class. By the time he had helped Freddie with her homeworkâhow many animals can you find in this picture?âconvinced her that brussels sprouts were cute instead of yucky, and changed his shirt
Catherine Gilbert Murdock