In the 1920s the Chelsea
Hotel was still at its peak even though the theatre district had moved uptown
to Herald Square. At this point the 23rd street neighborhood was
getting a little rundown. This story is about a family who lived in a large
suite of rooms at the Chelsea.
Nadia was their spoiled daughter who grew up with the Chelsea’s artistic influence around her. So it was no surprise when she became a painter—her delicate work was done in the Japanese style on sheets of the finest silk cut from bolts of cloth that her father, a successful silk merchant, would bring home from his warehouse.
Nadia was their spoiled daughter who grew up with the Chelsea’s artistic influence around her. So it was no surprise when she became a painter—her delicate work was done in the Japanese style on sheets of the finest silk cut from bolts of cloth that her father, a successful silk merchant, would bring home from his warehouse.
Nadia still in her teens met
and married a handsome playwright and songwriter who sold his songs along old
Tin Pan Alley on 27th Street. The newlyweds struggled with finances
moving from one rooming house to another. Nadia discovered early on that her
husband loved the drink too much, he managed to avoid serving in the war but he
rarely found work. Nadia tried to sale her paintings but when even this failed,
the young couple that already had two children found themselves in dire circumstances.
Nadia’s father made her a
deal if she agreed to do all the housework she and her family could move back
in with her parents at the Chelsea. Nadia didn’t like the idea but her husband
convinced her to accept. She quickly regretted her decision because she found
herself doing all the cleaning, cooking and washing for her large extended
family. Her husband’s drinking worsened and he was no longer able to bring in
the few dollars he had in the past. To top the situation off her mother was
incontinent and had to have her undergarments washed out by hand on a regular
basis.
Nadia’s father viewed her
marriage with displeasure--he had originally been against her choice of husband
so he decided to teach her a lesson –he refused to give her any money. A religious man he felt she must reap what
she had sewn. Already stretched to the limit with work Nadia was forced to take
in piecework to make ends meet. Despite this Nadia was able to snatch a few
minutes each day for her intricate art.
Unfortunately, even her art
could not console her. As the years passed she became more and more bitter and
disillusioned. She found her hands could no longer translate her ideas onto the
canvas. All the washing, cleaning and needlework had left her hands calloused
and knotted. Her joints felt stiff and sore. Her skin, which once had been creamy
smooth was now coarse and reddened. One day as she viewed her hands with
distaste Nadia started to even resent them. She felt a deep anguish as she
cried out, “I’m working my fingers to the bone.”
Still in her early twenties
Nadia started to manifest signs of a mental illness. At one point she was
hospitalized in a facility on Long Island for a nervous disorder and hysteria.
She insisted something was wrong with her hands but her doctors found no
evidence of this. Her father not willing to continue paying out money for her
care and finding her “loss” to the upkeep of the household too great brought
her home. Soon Nadia was back at work but her problems returned.
One night as her children
slept, her husband passed out on the floor from his latest binge. Nadia bent
over a wash tub scrubbing out her mothers soiled undergarments, stiffly
moved off her knees so she could approach a canvas she had been working on. In
her mind it was to be her masterpiece—it was a scene of cranes cavorting in the
Bethesda Fountain. She picked up a brush with great effort and added some final
strokes. She stepped back to survey her work.
Not liking what she saw she
became enraged and grabbed a pair of industrial shears she used to cut the silk
fabric she used, she proceeded to slash the canvas to shreds. She then placed
her right wrist between the blades and fell upon the handles with all her
weight—severing her delicate hand.
The pain seared through her,
it became unbearable. Screaming in agony Nadia gave up—she rushed to the
window, threw open the French doors, and flung herself over the balcony. She
continued to scream as she fell five floors to her death.
Since her suicide Nadia returns to the Chelsea on moonless nights to haunt the hotel. She is seen hovering outside peoples’ balconies. It is said she waves her bloody stump, but it appears that she cannot enter the Chelsea. Some say this is the retribution she must pay for taking her own life.
Since her suicide Nadia returns to the Chelsea on moonless nights to haunt the hotel. She is seen hovering outside peoples’ balconies. It is said she waves her bloody stump, but it appears that she cannot enter the Chelsea. Some say this is the retribution she must pay for taking her own life.
2 comments:
woah good story
Kinda gruesome. LOL!
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