Coldplay When You See Marie -famous Old Paint... «Full Version»

The painting’s secret was not its beauty, but its sound. In the gallery’s quiet, Arthur could hear it: a low, persistent hum. It was the sound of a train. The train his father had taken. The train Marie had listened for every night for twenty years, her ear tilted toward the tracks three miles away, believing—against all evidence, all paint, all time—that he would step off it again.

He turned the phone face down. The bidding started at five thousand pounds. Coldplay When You See Marie -Famous Old Paint...

“Lot Seventy-Three,” the auctioneer announced, his voice a velvet monotone. “ Woman at a Window, Evening . Attributed to the circle of Bonnard. Circa 1923.” The painting’s secret was not its beauty, but its sound

Arthur remembered.

He didn’t have a wall to hang it on. His flat was a narrow boat of peeling wallpaper and unpaid bills. But he had a window. He carried the painting home on the Tube, wrapped in his overcoat, and propped it on a chair facing the west. The sun was setting. The real one, outside his grimy pane, was the color of a bruise. The painted one, on the canvas, was the color of hope. The train his father had taken

The canvas was small, unframed, and shimmered with a peculiar, bruised light. It depicted a woman from behind, her back a soft curve of pearl and shadow, her hair a spill of copper catching the last flare of a sunset she was facing. The paint was old, cracked like a dry riverbed. But the moment you saw Marie—for that was her name, the name the artist had scratched into the stretcher bar—you forgot the paint.