Belmonte was alone in the house, and he received Julia and Munoz in the drawing room, sitting in his wheelchair near where
“I didn’t want to hang anything else there just yet,” he explained, “not for the moment.” He raised one bony hand and waved it in a gesture of resignation. “It’s difficult to get used to…”
“I understand,” said Julia with genuine sympathy.
The old man nodded slowly.
“Yes, I know you do.” He looked at Munoz, doubtless hoping for a show of equal understanding from him, but Munoz remained silent, looking at the empty wall with inexpressive eyes. “I’ve always thought you were an intelligent young woman, right from the very first day.” He looked at Munoz. “Wouldn’t you agree, sir?”
Munoz slowly shifted his eyes away from the wall to the old man and nodded slightly, without saying a word. He seemed immersed in remote thoughts.
“As for your friend,” Belmonte said, and he seemed to be embarrassed, “I’d like you to explain to her… that I really had no choice.”
“Don’t worry. I understand. And Menchu will too.”
“I’m so, glad. They put a lot of pressure on me. Senor Montegrifo made a good offer too. He also undertook to give maximum publicity to the painting’s history.” He stroked his ill-shaven chin. “And, I must confess, that did influence me somewhat,” he sighed softly, “that and the money.”
Julia pointed to the record player.
“Do you play Bach constantly, or is it just a coincidence? I heard that record the last time I was here.”
“The
Munoz pointed at the wall.
“That nail,” he said rather abruptly, “also seems to symbolise a lot of things.”
Belmonte looked attentively at Munoz and nodded slowly.
“That’s very true,” he confirmed with another sigh. “And sometimes I find myself looking at the place where the picture was and I seem to see it there still. It isn’t there, but I see it. After all these years, I still have it up here.” He tapped his forehead. “The people, the exquisite detail. My favourite parts were always the landscape you can see through the window and the convex mirror on the left, reflecting the foreshortened figures of the players.”
“And the chessboard,” said Munoz.
“Yes, and the chessboard. I often used to reconstruct the position of the pieces on my own chessboard, especially at the beginning, when I inherited it from my poor Ana.”
“Do you play?” asked Munoz casually.
“I used to. Now I hardly ever do. But the truth is, it never occurred to me that you could play that game backwards.” He paused, tapping his hands on his knees. “Playing backwards. It’s odd. Did you know that Bach was very keen on musical inversions? In some of his canons he inverts the theme, elaborating a melody that jumps down a pitch every time the original theme jumps up. The effect can seem strange, but when you get used to it, you find it quite natural. There’s even a canon in the
“As in the painting,” said Munoz.