Page 43 of Long Time Gone


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Nora looked up from her phone. “Ah, you’re a godsend. Let’s sit.”

Nora pointed to a table in the corner of the studio where the cardboard boxes were stacked. Nora had unloaded them from the dolly Ellis had wheeled in the previous afternoon.

“I’m excited to look through the rest of the photos,” Nora said. “I haven’t been through these boxes since that summer.”

“All the photos were taken by Annabelle?”

“Yes.”

“The summer . . .”

“She disappeared, yes.”

They sat at the table and forgot about the bagels.

“I told you Annabelle and I became good friends in the short time we knew each other. And that she became fascinated with photography.”

Nora pulled the top off the first box.

“Back then, when I met Annabelle, I had just started my photography business and was trying to make a name for myself.”

Sloan looked around the massive studio that appeared to have every modern photography gadget that existed.

“I’d say you’ve done pretty well.”

“Thanks. But it took years. And much to the chagrin of Tilly and Reid, I never allowed Ellis to bankroll my business. Everything you see is mine, built organically from the ground up.”

“After I got home last night from our sail, I looked you up and did some stalking. You’re pretty much the only gig in town. If people want photos or portraits, they call Nora Margolis Photography.”

“I love the people of this town, the families. I’ve taken photos of some of my clients’ kids when they were born, when they graduated high school and college, when they got married, and then when those kids had kids of their own.”

“It must be special to be a part of their lives like that.”

“It’s my passion.”

Nora placed the lid to the side and pulled the box to the middle of the table.

“I thought you’d like to see these, because in just the few months that Annabelle and I were friends, photography became her passion as well. She was eager for me to teach her everything about the craft. Not for professional purposes. Annabelle was never interested in the business of photography, only the art. And she was good.”

Nora lifted an envelope of pictures from the box and handed it to Sloan. The envelope was thick with glossy 4X6s.

“I gave her one of my cameras as a birthday gift that summer, and she took hundreds of photos with it. Pictures of the town. Pictures of the creek. Pictures of sailboats. Pictures of her and Preston. Pictures of their home being built. And, of course, pictures of you.”

Sloan smiled and felt that same lump forming in her throat at the thought of her birth mother snapping photos of her as an infant.

“You’re obviously too young, but back in the nineties photography started making the transition from film to digital. But the early digital cameras were expensive, and the switch was slow. In ’95 I was still doing most everything on thirty-five-millimeter film. Are you familiar?”

“With film photography? Not really. I’m an iPhone kid.”

Nora smiled. “Back in the day, a roll of film had twenty-four exposures, sometimes more depending on the make and model of the camera and film. There were no smartphones back then. The world didn’t walk around with a camera in their pocket prepared to photograph every event of every day. Back then, you’d use an actual camera, take a bunch of shots, and hope you captured something interesting.”

“Hope?”

Nora smiled. “God, you are young. Yes, hope. You wouldn’t know if you got a good picture until you developed the film, which was what Annabelle loved most about the process. The darkroom.”

“The darkroom? Where you develop photos?”

“Yes. Where negatives on a roll of film are turned into the glossy pictures you’re holding. The film can’t be exposed to ambient light, or the images it holds will be ruined. So you have to go into a ‘dark room,’ ” Nora said, using air quotes, “to develop them. All the pictures you’re holding now, and all the ones filling these boxes, were developed in a darkroom. My darkroom, actually, right here in the studio.”

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