Harper Collins Canada (Toronto), 1993 (hard cover).
Harper Collins Canada (Toronto), 1994 (trade paper).
Writing Light in the Company of Women was the some of the most fun I’ve ever had writing anything. Sarsfield Middleton, the protagonist, is not merely a pioneer photographer in the Ohio Valley, he’s a pioneer in color photography. Set in 1908, Light in the Company of Women is, so far as I could manage it, written in the style of 1908. Looking for the elusive flavor of the period, for the preoccupations of the time, for the rhythms of the prose and the fictional techniques that were commonly used, I read masses of popular fiction published between 1900 and 1910 — and, of course, I read about how those early photographers had created their color photographs.
Light in the Company of Women was short-listed for the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize. It is out of print.
Excerpt from Light in the Company of Women
Neither Arch nor Sarsfield had ever been out of Raysburg before, and they found their new freedom wildly intoxicating; they walked for hours on the streets of Cambridge, then rode the street-car into Boston and walked for hours there. They looked at historical buildings; they looked at the graves in Mt. Auburn Cemetery; they walked along the Charles and looked at the gentle water and the trees; they looked at the shops and the centers of commerce; but mainly they looked at the girls.
The ladies back home suddenly seemed quaint, old-fashioned, countrified; here in the big city, the socialites were grander, the “bachelor girls” jauntier, the school girls daintier, the ladies of the demi-monde naughtier; the two young men could not begin to get their fill of looking at them. The year before, skirt lengths had risen as high as the ankle bone; but now, as though frightened by their own temerity, they had collapsed again to the ground;—at least so it was decreed in fashionable circles, and so it was done by those who cared about such things; but many young, sprightly Boston girls wore their skirts shorter than anything Arch and Sarsfield had ever seen off the stage. The friends made bets as to how short skirts could get; then, early in their freshman year, in a “dive” by the fishermen’s wharf, they lost their hearts: “Look at that rainy daisy!” Arch said, awe in his voice, “I guess she’s won the cigar.”
Sarsfield was already looking at her: a singularly handsome girl, tall and athletic, with tresses so pale that she had to be of the peroxide persuasion, with what was obviously paint on her cheeks and lips, she ran, laughing, from table to table delivering the pitchers of beer; Sarsfield had never seen skirts that short on a full-grown woman (they must have swung along nearly six inches above the sawdust!); and beneath them twinkled an exquisitely well turned set of ankles and a pair of tiny, fast-moving feet clad in wonderfully bright red boots. As red, literally, as late cherries, those boots lodged themselves in Sarsfield’s memory and would not go away. What a subject for a color photograph!
Her name turned out to be Mae; and she was not at all averse to a night on the town with two young swells from Harvard: “Why so shy, fellahs? I seen you in here rubbering at me every night. I don’t bite, you know.” Sarsfield’s intentions were photographic; but Arch had something in mind more amorous—which got him exactly nowhere at all: “Say, Archy, soft pedal that stuff, can’t ya? I ain’t the kind of girl that gives it away in a doorway,” Mae had a beau who was out to sea; and she guessed she’d marry him one day; but, in the meantime, a girl had to have a bit of fun, didn’t she? Arch and Sarsfield split the cost of the endless procession of cherrystone clams, dainty ices, French pastries, cold cuts, caviar, pate, and truffles that passed down her throat. When Sarsfield asked if he could do her picture, she said: “Sure.”
He wanted to capture her in her natural habitat; the owner of the establishment said he did not mind so long as his commerce was not interfered with. Just before he had left Raysburg, Sarsfield had completed his one-shot color camera; an intricate arrangement of German mirrors and prisms divided the light passing through the lens onto three photographic plates; the entire device was only slightly less large than a steamer trunk. He set it up on a tripod in front of the bar and suggested, hesitantly, that Mae might consider posing there. He had chosen the middle of the afternoon of a brilliantly sunny fall day; the broad saloon windows faced west, and the entire establishment glowed brilliantly. But his color filters cut the light to his plates by a good half, and Sarsfield needed all the illumination he could get; he decided to make a long exposure and augment it with magnesium powder.
The question was how best to arrange his flash-pans; but, as Sarsfield studied the situation, Mae, just to get into the spirit of things, jumped onto the bar and kicked up her legs, showing, momentarily, the flounced edge of some undergarment. The customers sprang to their feet and began yelling encouragement. Caught between the fear of missing an absolutely splendid picture and a desire to get the lighting right—and, it must be admitted, somewhat muddled by a pitcher of beer,—Sarsfield did not bother to measure the flash powder, but piled it on lavishly just as he had seen his father do. He dumped about six ounces on a pan behind the bar as a back light, a good eight ounces on each pan in front of the girl, and at least twelve ounces on the pan above the camera. Running now (the men were chanting “Mae, Mae, Mae!” and banging their glasses on the tables), Sarsfield connected a wire to each pan, connected them all to the dry cell battery and the switch that would,—if the properties of electricity did not fail him,—set the whole works off at once. Arch, watching, was laughing so hard he threatened to topple over.
Sarsfield threw the cloth over his head and focused the lens until Mae appeared sharply on his ground glass. All around him he heard a wild roar of pandemonium; some of the men were suggesting, in crudely effective language, that they would like to see somewhat more than Mae had yet shown them. Grinning, she hiked up her skirts to display her lace-trimmed bloomers. A yell went up that would have shamed a Republican nominating convention; when it subsided, Sarsfield shouted out the usual photographer’s order that everyone understood at once: “Hold it!” Mae froze, grinning at the camera; the men in the saloon froze. Sarsfield squeezed the bulb to open the lens. He had not had time to get out his stop watch; and he began to count in his mind just as his father had taught him: “Naught. One-half-and-one, one half-and-two—” At twelve seconds, he began to sense that his time was running out: soon someone would move and ruin the exposure. He felt perspiration pouring down his sides. At twenty-four seconds, he knew that he couldn’t expect the formidable, breathless immobility in the saloon to persist even a second longer; he gave Arch the sign to set off the powder.
Sarsfield had not, of course, been at Krakatoa when the volcano exploded. Sarsfield was sure, for ever after, that the volcano could have had nothing on his flash powder. Broken bottles and glass were flying everywhere. Men were diving for cover under tables. The camera on its tripod legs, seemingly with a life of its own, was cake-walking away with alarming speed; Sarsfield leapt after it, seized it just a foot short of the ground. Even then the air was still full of flying debris; an enormous cloud of smoke hung over everything. Arch was convulsed on the sawdust howling in a spasm of inhuman laughter. For minutes afterward the entire establishment reverberated like the inside of a wash tub struck by lightning. “Gee, fellahs,” Mae said, “that better be some swell picture!”
Sarsfield and Arch had to empty their pockets to pay for the damage. The next morning, suffering “the cold gray dawn of the morning after” (huge draughts of soda water helped), Sarsfield had to admit that, as much as he did not care for the idea, he was—at least partially—his father’s son: oh, Jack Middleton would have been proud of him all right! He developed his plates to the fullest; but, despite the sunlight and the gargantuan amount of magnesium he had exploded, his negatives were thin, so he decided to use an oil-based transfer process to print them; getting it right took him most of his free time that fall. Arch watched as Sarsfield transferred layers of gelatine to the ground, registered them, rolled them, and gently peeled back the cloth support; they would both hold their breath, hoping the gelatine would not disintegrate. “Explain it to me again, old man,” Arch would say, “Maybe I’ll take it in this time.”
“Look, it’s as simple as can be,” Sarsfield would reply, “your blue filter withholds blue light and allows all other light to pass. And all the other light that’s passing is everything that isn’t blue. And everything that isn’t blue is red and green; and red and green makes yellow. So when you print the negative that was made through the blue filter, you make a yellow positive out of it.”
Then Arch would laugh uneasily, and Sarsfield would see in his friend’s eyes, once again, a total incomprehension.
As tedious as it had been to make, the final result was delightful. There was Mae, captured by photography—her merry grin, her exquisite calves, her white lace bloomers, her cherry-red boots. Sarsfield did not realize until he had framed it and hung it on the wall what a spicy image it was; his classmates came to stare and snicker. They all believed that it was an oil painting. He could not convince a single one of them that it was a photograph.
©Keith Maillard, 1993