In Times of Fading Light (33 page)

BOOK: In Times of Fading Light
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“Then we’ll just look for a practical little apartment. This house is too big for the two of us anyway!”

The melting snow was still dripping on the zinc of the window sills. On the radio, they were talking about the dissolution of the Soviet Union again, and although this was the umpteenth time that Irina had heard the news of it, she stood by the window with the green cabbage in her hand ... for a moment she looked out at the soft soil of the garden, which was still half covered with remnants of snow, and it suddenly seemed to her really improbable that once, in the dim and distant past, that had been her ... crawling on her stomach over the cold, muddy ground, howling, cursing, her fingers grazed ... and how heavy a wounded man was! And the way back to your own lines was longer and longer ... and just as she was wondering whether she would be justified in taking one more tiny little symbolic sip, drinking to the fall of the Soviet Union, a car hooted its horn outside.

She quickly went to the window in the hall and looked out: Catrin was just closing the gate, and Sasha was getting out of a big, silver-gray car that made her own Lada look like a museum piece.

Irina had last seen Catrin in the summer, and now she remembered that even then she had noticed a change in her: always rather ungainly and cheaply dressed, she had suddenly become something of a glamorous figure. Whether because of her Western clothes (she was wearing a classic dark skirt suit), or her (presumably fake) suntan, Catrin suddenly looked like the women in the catalogs that the postman had recently taken to putting, unasked, into mailboxes. To top it all off, she was wearing very high heels, so that she towered above Irina.

In contrast to her outer appearance, her behavior was noticeably shy. She held ostentatiously on to Sasha, half hiding behind him. She greeted Irina smiling, in a soft voice, looked at her inquiringly from below (she actually managed, despite her height, to look at Irina
from below
), in short, her attitude struck Irina from the first moment as false, a pretense, almost insulting.

But even Sasha seemed a little strange to her at first. Maybe it was just his hairstyle—he had shaved off his side-whiskers, in line with current fashion. His unusually wide-legged jeans (he always used to favor the sort with very narrow legs), and the smart jacket in some coarsely woven fabric for which Irina didn’t know the right word, somehow made him look more mature, set in his ways. But when he hugged her she caught his body odor, and then she had only to see the shimmer of gray in his hair and her eyes filled with tears.

“Oh, Mama,” said Sasha. “Everything’s all right.”

Sasha, it seemed, was in excellent spirits. Irina took the green cabbage apart and listened to what he had to tell her: about the new apartment—
You must both come and see us soon!
—and about the new car, and about the
bloody autobahns in the East
where they had been stuck in the traffic for almost an hour; then about Paris, which they had visited recently, but they hadn’t liked it as much as London, although the food in London was terrible,
almost as bad as in the GDR,
Sasha assured her, telling the story of how they had tried in vain to get
fish and chips
in London, while Catrin, giggling, agreed with him, shifting from foot to foot and constantly changing her posture in a way that infuriated Irina.

“What do you have that we can drink a toast in?” asked Sasha.

“Whisky?”

“Okay,” said Sasha. “Because there’s a reason! I’m going to direct plays at the theater in Moers. I signed the contract two days ago.”

Irina tried to look happy about the news.

“Hey, Mama, it’s great,” said Sasha. “This is the first time I’ll be directing productions in a real theater!”

“Well then,
prost,
” said Irina—and suddenly paused.

“Seems to be something burning,” said Catrin.

Sure enough, she had forgotten to turn down the gas ... Quickly, she took the roasting dish out of the oven. All the water had evaporated, and there was an alarming amount of smoke.

“Can I help?” asked Catrin.

But Irina energetically waved this offer away. “You two take your things to Sasha’s room. I can manage.”

Irina closed the kitchen door and inspected the damage—it was within bounds. She removed a piece of skin from the back of the goose, scraped out the casserole, let it cool off briefly. Meanwhile she stirred half a jar of honey into three-quarters of a liter of port, then poured it over the goose and put the goose back in the oven.

“Everything okay?” Sasha put his head around the door.

“Everything okay,” said Irina.

“Right,” said Sasha, picking up his glass again.

“Are you well?” Irina asked.

But instead of answering, Sasha asked back, “How are
you,
Mama?”

“Fine,” said Irina, shrugging her shoulders.

“What’s the matter?”

“You don’t know what’s going on here,” said Irina. “You’re never here.”

“Oh, Mama, let’s not discuss that.”

“And they’ll be cutting our pension,” said Irina quickly, to divert him from the sore point—Moers.

“Nonsense,” said Sasha. “Those are only rumors. You two will be fine! You ought to enjoy life a bit! Go to Paris! Come and visit us!”

Sasha took her firmly by the shoulders and looked into her face. “Mama, Catrin doesn’t have anything against you.”

“I didn’t say she did.”

“Then that’s all right,” said Sasha. “Okay? Everything all right?”

Irina nodded. She tapped two or three cigarettes out of her pack and held them out to him.

“And more good news,” said Sasha. “I’ve given up smoking.”

A little later Kurt was back again. Without Charlotte.

“Well ... ” he said, and went on to tell them, briefly and reluctantly, that Charlotte was sick. She hadn’t known him, she had hardly been conscious. And the doctor had given him to understand that, well, they must be prepared for the worst.

For a moment no one said anything. Sasha stood in the doorway of the conservatory, looking out (or was he looking in?) at the small failure of a Christmas tree—
Kurt’s
Christmas tree: lumpy tinsel, blue cosmetic cotton imitating snow. Catrin assumed a mournful expression, as if Charlotte were already dead. Irina was cross.

She knew it was wrong for her to feel cross. Charlotte couldn’t help it if she was dying now. All the same, Irina was cross. She silently withdrew to the kitchen and began peeling potatoes for the dumplings. She tried to justify her lack of emotion by resorting to the long list of Charlotte’s injuries to her feelings. No, she hadn’t forgotten how she had scraped out the cracks in the wood of the cloakroom alcove. How Charlotte had wanted to marry Kurt off to that Gertrud ... the worst time of her life, thought Irina, as she put the potatoes on and poured herself a whisky—at least she wasn’t going to have to drive today! Worse than the war, she thought. Worse than the first German artillery attack, God knows.

She drank the whisky—the stuff really went to your head!—and smoked another cigarette. Suddenly she laughed when she thought of the two-handled jug shaped like a garbage bin that had been Charlotte’s Christmas present to her last year: a rusty old jug like a garbage bin, would you believe it? ... No, she couldn’t bear Charlotte a grudge anymore. She was old and crazy, and now she was dying all by herself in the nursing home. Tomorrow, thought Irina, she’d look in and visit her. In spite of everything.

She put her cigarette down on the rim of the ashtray and set about grating the raw potatoes—Thuringian dumplings, half and half raw and cooked. Or rather, a bit more of one than the other, but which way around was it? Her cookbook must be somewhere. Irina looked for her cookbook, but after a while she realized that she wasn’t looking for her cookbook at all, her thoughts were still revolving around Charlotte. One thing you had to say for her: over the last two years, or since Wilhelm’s surprising death—he had died on his birthday, and although he was ninety no one had expected him to expire—since Wilhelm’s surprising death Charlotte had changed in a very odd way. And the odd thing was not her craziness suddenly breaking through—for she had always been a bit crazy—but that she had suddenly turned so even-tempered and friendly. All at once, it seemed, the energetic malice that had always driven her had fizzled out. All at once she had begun addressing Irina as
my dear daughter.
She wrote Kurt confused but almost loving letters, or phoned in the small hours to thank them for some tiny little thing... until in the end she turned up at their door one night in long johns, carrying her Mexican suitcase, asking if she could come to live in the room left vacant when Nadyeshda Ivanovna went away. This time it was Kurt who had firmly put his foot down. Of course Irina hadn’t wanted to have her underfoot in the house. But pushing her off into the nursing home seemed brutal, and although Charlotte let them do it without protesting, Irina had to fight back tears every time she saw her there among all those people wandering down the corridors with a blank look in their eyes ...

The cookbook said:
Peel and wash just under 2/3 of the potatoes, grate them finely on the kitchen grater ...
Irina tried to work out the quantity given ... was it really more or less than ... ? Oh heavens, she must stop drinking. Just one more. She needed one more to dilute the bitterness building up inside her. For whatever Charlotte had been like, whatever she had done, it was unthinkable to celebrate Christmas without her. Without Charlotte and her raccoon coat, without her high-pitched voice, her elaborate compliments, her showing off, her man-made fiber bag from which she handed out embarrassing gifts with an air of great generosity—and although that jug in the shape of a garbage bin that Charlotte,
beaming with delight,
had given her, was the most idiotic gift she had ever been given, it was the only one of her presents that Irina felt had really come from the heart ...

One more, thought Irina. One more, a toast to Charlotte on her deathbed.

She could hear the men’s voices from the living room now, the usual discussion: unemployment, socialism ...
the GDR is being liquidated, that’s what’s going on here,
said Kurt. Irina had heard it all before, indeed no one talked of anything else when visitors came—not that many visitors came these days. Suddenly everyone was very busy. Although in fact they were all unemployed. That was odd, too, thought Irina.
The GDR was bankrupt,
she heard Sasha saying,
it invited its own liquidation ...
and that was followed by calculations that she did not entirely understand ...
If salaries were converted at par, the same here as there,
said Kurt as Irina tried to work out the two-thirds proportion,
then all the businesses would have gone bust overnight.
But Sasha said:
If they don’t get paid at par, one to one, then everyone will go to the West...
One to one, thought Irina. Or one-third to two-thirds ...
I don’t understand you,
said Sasha,
you’ve always been saying that socialism is finished yourself. If those were just empty words ...
Suddenly it all seemed to her very far away
... I’m not talking about the GDR, I’m talking about socialism, a real, democratic form of socialism!
Suddenly the dumplings seemed very far away as well ...
There’s no such thing as democratic socialism,
she heard Sasha say. Then came Kurt’s voice:
Socialism is by its very nature democratic, because those who produce the goods are themselves ...

Irina picked up a fork and prodded the potatoes to see if they were cooked ... never mind, she thought. Silly quarrels ... Christmas in this house just once more. Monastery Goose once more. Dumplings exactly as they ought to be once more. And then, she thought, they can carry me out of here feet first!
Prost.
She tipped the dregs in her glass down her throat—only there weren’t any dregs. So she poured herself a last tiny helping of dregs and began peeling the potatoes. All at once the voices were very close:

“Aha,” said Kurt. “So now we’re not supposed to think about alternatives to capitalism! So that’s your wonderful democracy ...”

“Well, thank God you were at least able to think about alternatives under your bloody socialism.”

“You really are utterly corrupt,” said Kurt.

“Corrupt? Me, corrupt? You kept your mouth shut for forty years,” shouted Sasha. “For forty whole years you never dared to tell the story of your marvelous Soviet experiences.”

“I’m doing that very thing now.”

“Yes, now, when no one will be interested anymore!”

“What have
you
done, then?” Now Kurt was shouting as well. “What were
your
heroic deeds?”

“The hell with it!” Sasha shouted back. “The hell with a society that needs heroes!”

Suddenly Irina was in the room with them, not sure herself how she came to be there. In the room with them, shouting, “Stop it!”

There was silence for a few seconds. Then she said:

“Christmas.”

She had really meant to say: It’s Christmas today. She had meant to say: Sasha’s here for the first time in months, so let’s spend these two days in peace and quiet—something along those lines. But while her mind was
perfectly clear,
curiously enough she was having difficulty speaking.

“Christmas,” she said. She turned around and went back to the kitchen.

Her heart was pounding. Suddenly she was breathless. She propped herself against the sink. Stood like that for a moment. Looked at the bloodstained stuff in the bowl that was still standing on the kitchen counter next to the sink... she’d forgotten the giblets. She picked up the big meat knife ... suddenly couldn’t do it. Couldn’t touch it, the stuff in the bowl. It suddenly seemed as if it were hers. As if it were what they’d cut out of her where it hurt low down in her body...

“Are you sure you wouldn’t like some help?” Catrin’s voice, concerned and friendly. “I could shape the dumplings ...”

BOOK: In Times of Fading Light
7.57Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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