Naïve Super (5 page)

Read Naïve Super Online

Authors: Erlend Loe

Tags: #General Fiction

BOOK: Naïve Super
9.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Børre has seen a bear. In a zoo.

In the zoo, all right, I say. I have also seen bears in a zoo. But I thought we were keeping zoos out of it.

Then, we might just as well include animals we’ve seen on TV, I tell him.

Børre asks if I’ve got cable TV.

After we have discussed a little back and forth, Børre agrees to abandon the thing about zoos. We agree to find out what animals we’ve seen in their natural surroundings.

First I suggest that we should include animals we’ve seen in real life, but Børre soon fouls me, pointing out that animals in zoos are also in real life.

True.

And to compensate for the age gap, Børre is allowed to include animals his dad has seen. I figure it’s fine. I was the one who suggested it. I still feel pretty sure I’ll win.

When I ask Børre whether he knows what animals his dad’s seen, he just nods. He finds it unthinkable that his dad might have seen animals without telling anyone about it.

We agree only to include one specimen of each species, irrespective of sex or age. We won’t, then, write stallion and mare and foal. We keep it simple, and write horse.

I’d rather we drop the animals everybody’s seen. Otherwise we’ll have to list all kinds of ordinary and boring animals. Dog and cat, for example. And cow.

But Børre doesn’t think we ought to differentiate.

An animal is an animal, he reckons. You can’t blame the dog for being ordinary.

No, you can’t, I say.

Børre and/or his dad have seen these animals.

– Horse

– Snake

– Hen

– Whale

I stop him to ask whether it was he or his dad who saw the whale.

It was his dad.

I ask Børre if he’s sure.

He nods and goes on.

– Pig

– Goat

– Swan

– Elk

– Reindeer

– Roebuck

– Deer

– Cod

Wait a minute, I tell him. A cod’s not an animal. It’s a fish.

So what, says Børre.

I groan and say that then we’ll have to include all the other fish as well.

Of course, says Børre.

Was I thinking otherwise?

– Haddock

– Coalfish

– Salmon

– Shark

Come on, I tell him. Now you’re kidding. Your dad saw a whale OK, but a shark … Hardly anybody has ever seen shark.

But Børre’s dad has naturally seen a shark.

Where?

Australia or somewhere like that, Børre says.

I wave my arms. There’s not much I can do.

Has he seen kangaroo as well? I ask with a certain sarcasm. Yes, Børre says.

– Kangaroo

– Eagle

– Turtle

– Hedgehog

– Musk ox

– Crab

– Sheep

– Squirrel

– Otter

– Hamster

– Woodpecker

– Cat

– Owl

– Frog

– Fox

– Hare

– Wood grouse

– Stag

– Badger

– Little birds

I should never have started this. Fortunately it’s beginning to slow down now. I am grateful Børre doesn’t know the names of all the birds.

– Cow

– Grouse

– Ferret

– Dog

There’s silence. A long one. Børre is thinking now. I can see he is a little unsure.

Then he says another word.

– Tiger

Tiger? I ask him.

Børre nods.

I don’t believe you, I say.

But it’s true, Børre says.

I ask where he saw it.

In Africa, Børre says.

But I’ve got him now. Everybody knows there are no tigers in Africa. Everybody except Børre.

I tell Børre that he ought to run upstairs and ask his dad if he’s seen a tiger. Fair is fair.

Børre walks towards the door. Discouraged. He is doubtful.

After a few minutes he comes back down. He is happy. His dad hasn’t been to Africa. He hasn’t seen a tiger, but he’s seen a polar bear. In Spitsbergen. And Børre shows me a photograph his dad took of the polar bear. It looks dangerous. Faced with a dad like that I can’t do much.

I strike tiger from the list.

Why did you say tiger? I ask.

I knew there was something I had forgotten, Børre says.

I think that’s quite a good answer. He took a chance. It’s a straightforward case. Now I’m adding the last animal to the list.

– Polar bear.

That’s it.

Now we’re on to animals I have seen.

I go through Børre’s and his dad’s list. I’ve seen everything they have, except shark and whale and polar bear and kangaroo and otter. Why on earth haven’t I seen otter? But I’ve seen beaver, besides more fish and birds, but so has Børre’s dad, probably, if we start going into detail. I can’t be bothered, so I shut up.

Børre and his dad have won.

Børre holds both arms up high.

Out of curiosity I ask him which are the animals Børre has seen. It turns out it’s not that many. He has seen horse, cat and dog, cow, fox, cod and coalfish. And some birds, whose names he doesn’t know. Eight animals and some birds.

Børre is pleased that I have seen fewer animals than he and his dad. He asks if I want to come up with him and play with the race car track.

It sounds fun, but I’m tired. And besides, I don’t feel like meeting the travelled dad.

I tell him I’ll think about it. We could maybe do it another time. Børre says we can do it anytime.

Now I’m watching a music video on my brother’s TV set. I hardly ever watch TV, but now I’m watching a music video. It’s a great video. The woman singing is called Alanis something-orother. She is singing while driving a car. In America. She’s got three girlfriends with her. They’re on a trip.

Alanis is dressed in a brown jacket and a dark red cap, the one in the passenger seat has a dark red sweater, and the two in the back seat are wearing a green sweater and a yellow sweater.

The song is great. It seems to be about how we have very little control over what’s going to happen to us.

The verse is quiet, but the chorus rocks. I sit bumping my back against the chair in sync with the music. Here comes the chorus again.

Suddenly, I discover that all four girls are the same. They’re all Alanis. We only see one at a time. She has changed sweaters and become each one of them in turn. She’s on a trip with herself. And she meets her own gaze in the rear-view mirror when she sings. It’s very charming. It looks like she’s really having a good time. The Alanis in the front passenger seat is the cutest one. She’s the kind of girl I want. She doesn’t worry. She’s just having fun. Taking things as they come.

While I’m watching her, I think several thoughts.

The first one is that I ought to go to America and drive a car. It looks so cool. To just drive.

The other one is that I dream about meeting an Alanis-girl and living in a house together with her. It’ll be the two of us. Me and her. We go for walks at low tide and turn the rocks over, and we will, after a while, when it’s time, have children.

The third thought is that I am a BA and don’t know what I’m going to become.

This is a problem for me.

I’d prefer to become someone who can make the world a little better. That would be the best thing. But I don’t know if it’s possible. I don’t know what it takes to make the world better. I feel uncertain that it’d be enough just to smile at everybody I meet.

The next-best thing would be to become someone who doesn’t make a difference. Someone who makes the world neither better nor worse. It might not be totally fulfilling, but I think there are many in this category. I wouldn’t be alone.

The worst alternative is to become someone who makes the world worse. I am going to try to avoid that. At almost any price. But I don’t think it’s that simple. Maybe I’ll get mixed up with some bad and dishonest people. It can happen to the best of us. And then I’ll be stuck. And the world will become a little worse and I’ll stop meeting people’s gaze on the street.

It can happen, just like that.

The fourth thought is that Alanis most likely has a boyfriend, and that he is probably very cool.

I am thinking about Ferdinand Finne. The artist. The guy who is pretty old, but who always looks damn good and who seems happy all day long while he stands there painting his pictures of the sea and flowers and whatever.

Someone told me they’d seen a TV interview with him. It was several years ago. He was asked how he would describe his life. If he stopped to look back, what would sort of be the essence? Finne thought about it for a long while, and then he replied that not so long ago he had begun to notice that life, in a way, was a bit like a journey.

I hope it’s true. That I’ve had it told to me correctly. That Ferdinand Finne really said that. It’s really wonderful.

I assume Finne knows how to read. That he knows a thing or two about the world. If that is the case, it could mean that things are less complicated than I think.

I hope I’ll be able to say the same if someone asks me to summarise my life in sixty years. That I can just mull it over for a while and say that I think life can be compared to a journey. And feel that I’m having that thought for the first time. That I came up with it myself and that I mean it.

So far, I’m absolutely unable to say something like that. There are too many confusing elements present. Things I know. Thoughts I have. Sarcasm. Things I think I ought to be doing and places I ought to be going. Always other places.

Sometimes I envy the goldfish. Apparently, they only have a few seconds’ worth of memory span. It’s impossible for them to follow a train of thought. They experience everything for the first time. Every time. As long as they themselves aren’t aware of their handicap, life must be one long happy story. A party. Excitement from dawn to dusk.

This is what I would paint if I were a painter.

– Bicycles

– Deserts

– Balls

– Girls

– Clocks

– People who are late for the bus

Now the phone is ringing. I answer it.

It’s my bad friend, Kent. I have known for a long while that it would be only a question of time before he found me, and it is with a certain apprehension that I’ve waited for him to call. He has been in touch with my parents and they’ve obviously given him my brother’s phone number. There’s little I can do. He’s on the phone. He’s wondering why he hasn’t heard from me. The truth is, it’s always him who calls. Sometimes I think he’s not aware that that’s the case. Maybe he believes that we phone each other.

Kent works at the Central Statistics Bureau. He knows how many litres of milk Norwegians drink per annum and how often people have sex. On average, that is. And he is a member of Mensa, the club for the two percent (or whatever it is) of the population who have an IQ higher than some number or other around 140.

He loves exercises that are meant to define the intelligence quotient. Patterns that are meant to fit together. Association tests. How many litres of water run through such and such cylinders, and when the trains will meet if the southbound one starts in Bodø and travels at 80 km/h, and the northbound one starts in Lillehammer and travels at 84 km/h, but stops for 27 minutes in Trondheim. Sometimes he brings those kinds of tests to parties.

He keeps trying to convince me to take the Mensa test. He says I am probably not dumber than he is and that I’ll pass with flying colours, but I know he hopes that I’ll fail. I am never going to try.

Kent is a really bad friend to have. Useless. I have indicated several times that I don’t think he’s anything much, but he doesn’t seem to take it seriously. I’ve known him since primary school and we have done fun things together, a long time ago. He’s not so easy to get rid of. I also feel a bit sorry for him.

Kent’s world is full of what I don’t want my world to be full of. When he opens his mouth, there are almost invariably stupid or unpleasant things coming out of it. He is a human being living in disharmony with almost everything. What he talks about the most is girls and what he fancies doing with them. He subscribes to the most bizarre forms of sexual practice and seems to have no clear means of separating right from wrong. Things that are demeaning and vulgar to me are fine to Kent. Fortunately, I see him rather seldom, but the sad thing is that he is even less in touch with himself than he is with me.

To me, Kent represents everything I try to get away from. The dark side of man. If Kent had a part in a
Die Hard
movie, he would get crushed by a car or an elevator during the opening titles.

He also talks too loud. And now he is on the phone waiting for me to say something. An evening with Kent is the last thing I need right now. One beer, I tell him. We can have one beer.

While I am tying my shoelaces, a fax comes through from Kim. I am grateful that something is taking my mind off Kent.

Kim has also seen some animals. Not very many. But at least some.

– Dog

– Cat

– Pig

– Pigeon

– Seagull

– Crow

– Sparrow

– Robin

– Titmouse

– Cockerel

– Hen

– Fish

– Crab

– ‘O’ shell (Kim’s drawn a line through this word)

– Horse

– Cow

– Donkey

– Dromedary

It’s quite a pathetic list. Kim must have lived a rather static outdoor life. One day I’ll take him to where the elks are. I know a place.

When I arrive at the cafe, Kent is sitting there with two guys whom I don’t know. Kent tells me one is about to finish his doctorate in physics and the other one is a graduate physician in the process of becoming a psychiatrist. I greet them.

Kent asks me what I am up to, and I tell him that I have left university and started throwing a ball because everything suddenly seemed so meaningless to me.

This is evidently an item of news that Kent is unable to take in properly. He lets it pass and asks whether I’ve met any girls lately. I tell him I haven’t met a single one.

Kent is silent. I sort of start chatting to the two others. The psychiatrist is asking me whether I see my choices as waves breaking. I ask him if it’s doubt he’s talking about. Whether he means that I’m in doubt when I am faced with choices. He means what he says.

Other books

Ringer by C.J Duggan
Paris Stories by Mavis Gallant
Night's Touch by Amanda Ashley
Outcast by C. J. Redwine
One Bad Day (One Day) by Hart, Edie
A.D. 33 by Ted Dekker