Purge (11 page)

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Authors: Sofi Oksanen

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BOOK: Purge
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Zara’s eye didn’t latch on to anything in the house, no old photographs, no books or inscriptions. She had to think of something else. The photo was there in her pocket.

Aliide went to get some jar lids from the pantry, and

Zara decided to act.

1991
Berlin, Germany
The Photograph That Zara’s Grandmother Gave Her

In the photograph, two young girls are standing side by side and staring at the camera but not daring to smile. Their dresses fall over their hips slightly askew. The hem of one of them is higher on the right than on the left. It may have been ripped. The other one is standing up straighter, and she has a high bust and a slim waist. She’s placed one foot assertively ahead of the other so that its slender form, cloaked in a black stocking, would show well in the picture. There is some kind of badge on the breast of her dress, a four-leafed clover. It wasn’t clearly visible in the photo, but Zara knew that it was a badge from a rural youth organization, because her grandmother had told her about it. And as Zara looked at the photo now she saw something that she hadn’t understood before. There was something very innocent in the girls’ faces, and that innocence shone out at her from their round cheeks in a way that embarrassed her. Maybe she hadn’t noticed it before because she herself had worn the same expression, the same innocence, but now that she had lost it, she could recognize it in their faces. The expression of someone unacquainted with reality. The expression of a time when the future still existed and anything was possible.

Her grandmother had given her the photo before she left for Germany. In case anything happened to her while Zara was away. All kinds of things can happen to old people, and if anything did happen, the photo would already have a head start; it would save Zara the time it took to come and get it. Zara had tried to talk her out of it, but she wouldn’t give the idea up. Zara’s mother thought that anything old was trash, so she wouldn’t save any old pictures. Zara had nodded—she knew that side of her mother —and taken the photo and kept it, even when it was practically impossible, and she would keep it from now on; even if everything else she owned was lost and the shirt on her back belonged to Pasha, she would keep that picture, even if there was nothing in her body that she could call her own, if all her bodily functions depended on Pasha’s permission, even if she couldn’t go to the toilet without Pasha’s permission, or use a tampon or a wad of cotton or anything, because Pasha thought they were too expensive.

In addition to the photograph, her grandmother had given her a card with the address of the place where she was born written on the back, the name of the village and the house. Oak House. In case, on her great world travels, Zara should find herself in Estonia. The idea had surprised her, but it seemed self-evident to her grandmother.

“Germany’s right next to Estonia! Go and see it, now that you have a chance to do it so easily.”

Her grandmother’s eyes had lit up when she told her she was going to work in Germany. Her mother hadn’t been enthusiastic. She was never enthusiastic about anything, but she particularly didn’t like these plans; she thought the West was a dangerous place. The high pay didn’t change her opinion. Her grandmother didn’t care about the money, either, instead insisting that she use the money to visit Estonia.

“Remember, Zara. You’re not a Russian girl, you’re an Estonian girl. And you can buy some seeds at the market and send them to me! I want Estonian flowers on my windowsill!”

The back of the photograph read, “For Aliide, from her sister.” She had also written the name Aliide Truu on the card. No one had ever told Zara anything about Aliide Truu before.

“Who is Aliide Truu, Grandmother?”

“My sister. My little sister. Or she used to be. She may already be dead. You can inquire about her. Whether anyone knows her.”

“Why didn’t you ever tell me that you had a sister?”

“Aliide got married and moved away early on. And then the war came. And we moved here. But you have to go and look at the house. Then you can tell me who lives there and what it looks like now. I’ve told you before what it was like.”

As her mother walked with her to the door on her last day at home, Zara put her suitcase down on the floor and asked her mother why she had never told her about her aunt.

This time, her mother answered her.

“I don’t have an aunt.”

1992
Läänemaa, Estonia
Thieves’ Tales Only Interest Other Thieves

When Aliide went into the pantry, Zara took the picture out of her pocket and waited. Aliide would have to respond to it somehow, say something, tell her something, anything at all. Something had to happen when Aliide saw the photograph. Zara’s heart was pounding. But when Aliide came back into the kitchen and Zara waved the photo in front of her and said with a gasp that it had fallen from between the cupboard and the wall, right through a hole in the wallpaper, there was nothing in Aliide’s expression to indicate that she knew who the girls in the photo were.

“What’s it a picture of?”

“It says, ‘For Aliide, from her sister.’”

“I don’t have a sister.”

She turned the radio up louder. They were just finishing up the last words of an open letter from a Communist and were moving on to other points of view. “Give it to me.”

Aliide’s commanding voice compelled Zara to give her the picture, and she snatched it quickly.

“What’s her name?” Zara asked.

Aliide turned the radio up even louder.

“What’s her name?” Zara said again.

“What?”

. . . Since there’s no milk to give to our children, and no candy, how can they grow up to be healthy? Should we teach them to eat nettles and dandelion greens? I pray with all my heart that our country can have . . .

“Women like that were called enemies of the state back then.”

. . . enough bread and something to put on it, too . . .

“What about your sister?”

“What about her? She was a thief and a traitor.”

Zara turned the radio down.

Aliide didn’t look at her. Zara could hear the indignation in her breath. Her earlobes were turning red.

“So, she was a bad person. How bad? What did she do?”

“She stole grain from the kolkhoz and was arrested.”

“She stole some grain?”

“She behaved the way predators behave. She stole from the people.”

“Why didn’t she steal something more valuable?”

Aliide turned the radio up again.

“Didn’t you ask her?”

“Ask her what?”

. . . Across the centuries, a slave’s mentality has been programmed into our genes, which only recognizes money and force, and so we shouldn’t wonder if . . .

“Ask her why she stole the grain.”

“Don’t you people in Vladivostok know what liquor is made from?”

“It sounds like the act of a hungry person to me.”

Aliide turned the radio all the way up.

. . . for the sake of domestic peace we should ask some great power to defend us. Germany, for example. Only a dictatorship could put an end to Estonia’s present corruption and get the economy in order . . .

“You must have never been hungry, Aliide, because you didn’t steal any grain.”

Aliide pretended to listen to the radio, hummed over it, and grabbed some garlic to peel. The garlic skins started falling on the photograph. There was a magazine under it,
Nelli Teataja
. The logo on the cover, a black silhouette of an old woman, was still visible. Zara pulled the radio plug out of the wall. The rattle of the refrigerator ate up the silence, the garlic rumbled into the bowl like boulders, the plug burned in Zara’s hand.

“Don’t you think it’s time you sat down and relaxed?” Aliide said.

“Where did she steal it from?”

“From the field. You can see it from this window. Why are you interested in the carryings-on of a thief?”

“But that field belonged to this house.”

“No, it belonged to the kolkhoz.”

“But before that.”

“Before that, this was a Fascist house.”

“Are you a Fascist, Aliide?”

“I’m a good Communist. Why don’t you sit down, dear? Where I come from, guests sit down when they are asked, or else they leave.”

“So, if you were never a Fascist, then when did you move here?”

“I was born here. Turn the radio back on.”

“I don’t understand. You mean that your sister stole from her own fields?”

“From the kolkhoz’s fields! Turn that radio back on, young lady. Where I come from, guests don’t behave like they own the place. Maybe where you come from you don’t know any other way to behave.”

“I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to be rude. I just got interested in your sister’s story. What happened to her?”

“She was taken away. Why are you interested in a thief’s story? Thieves’ stories only interest other thieves.”

“Where did they take her?”

“Wherever they take enemies of the people.”

“And then what?”

“What do you mean, then what?”

Aliide got up, shoved Zara out of the way with her stick, and plugged the radio back into the wall.

. . . A slave’s spirit longs for the whip, and once in a while a Russian prianiki cake . . .

“What happened after that?”

The photo was covered with garlic skins. The radio was so loud that the skins trembled.

“How is it that you’re here, Aliide, but your sister was taken away? Didn’t that put you under suspicion?”

Aliide made no sign that she had heard; she just yelled, “Put some more wood on the fire!”

“Was it because you had such a good background? You were such a good party member?”

The garlic skins danced off the edge of the table and drifted to the floor. Aliide got up to throw them on the fire. Zara turned the radio down and stood in front of it.

“Were you a good comrade, Aliide?”

“I was good, and so was my husband, Martin. He was a party organizer. From an old Estonian Communist family, not like those opportunists that came later. He had medals. Awards.”

The rapid-fire yelling over the sound of the radio made Zara pant, she pressed against her chest to get it to settle down, opened the buttons of her dress, and found it hard to recognize in this woman in front of her the same Aliide who had been jabbering away calmly a little while ago. This woman was cold and hard, and she wasn’t getting anything out of her.

“I think you should go to sleep now. There’s a lot to think about tomorrow—like what to do about your husband, if you still remember that problem.” Under the blankets in the front room, Zara was still gasping for breath. Aliide had recognized her grandmother.

Grandmother hadn’t been a thief or a Fascist. Or had she?

There was a slap of the flyswatter in the kitchen.
—Paul-Eerik Rummo

PART TWO

Seven million years

we heard the führer’s speeches, the same

seven million years

we saw the apple trees bloom

June 1949
Free Estonia!

I have Ingel’s cup here. I would have liked to have her pillow, too, but Liide wouldn’t give it to me. She made herself at home again; she’s trying to do her hair the same as Ingel’s. Maybe she’s just trying to cheer me up, but it looks ugly. But I can’t bad-mouth her, because she brings me food and everything. And if I get her mad, she won’t let me out of here. She doesn’t show her anger; she just won’t let me out or bring me any food. I went hungry for two days the last time. It was probably because I asked for Ingel’s nightgown. No more bread.

When she lets me out, I try to please her, chat pleasantly and make her laugh a little, praise her cooking—she likes that. Last week she made me a six-egg cake. I didn’t ask how she came by that many eggs, but she wanted to know if the cake wasn’t better than the ones Ingel makes. I didn’t answer. Now I’m trying to think of something nice to say. I sleep with my Walther and my knife beside me in here. I wonder what’s keeping England?

Hans Pekk, son of Eerik, Estonian peasant

1936–1939
Läänemaa, Estonia
Aliide Eats a Five-Petaled Lilac and Falls in Love

On Sundays after church Aliide and Ingel had a habit of walking to the graveyard to meet their friends and watch the boys, flirting as much as the bounds of decency permitted. In church they always sat near the grave of Princess Augusta of Koluvere, twirling their ankles and waiting to get out and display themselves at the graveyard, to show off their ankles, stylishly and expensively covered in black silk stockings, to step out prettily, looking their best, beautiful and ready to give eligible suitors the eye. Ingel had braided her hair and wrapped it in a crown on top of her head. Aliide had left her braids down on her neck, because she was younger. That morning she had talked about cutting her hair. She had seen such
charmant
electric permanent waves on the city girls—you could get one for two krooni—but Ingel had been horrified and said that she shouldn’t say anything about it where mother could hear.

The morning was especially gentle for some reason, and the lilacs especially intoxicating. Aliide had begun to feel like an adult, and as she pinched her cheeks in front of the mirror, she was quite sure that something wonderful would happen to her this summer—why else would she have found a lilac with five petals? That had to portend something, especially since she had dutifully eaten the flower.

When the congregation finally came murmuring out of the church, the girls could go on their walk under the spruce trees in the graveyard, ferns brushing against their legs, squirrels running along the limbs, the well creaking now and then. Farther off, crows were croaking; what did they foretell about suitors? Ingel hummed, “
vaak vaak kellest kahest paar saab
”—caw, caw, crow above, which of us will fall in love—the future shone down from the sky and life was good. The anticipation of years to come burned in their breasts, as it generally does for young girls.

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