Read The Hidden Letters of Velta B. Online
Authors: Gina Ochsner
Your grandmother recorded all this in her newspaper, and I do believe that her devotion to this kind of folklore was therapeutic. But the ferocious attack of her fingers on the typewriter keys suggested to me that she'd not quite forgiven Uncle for selling the manor house. You can't hate a dead man forever, but she did bear this loss heavily. It was a good thing the German Olympia was such a sturdy model; few others could have borne her fury.
Meanwhile, your grandmother ran some racy advice supplied by Mrs. Lim called “Your Cabbage and Furious Fermentation.” Apparently, cabbage, when left unsupervised, yielded a robust alcohol; three squirrels and one hedgehog had died after imbibing. “Keep that stuff away from my cows,” Dr. N. said to me, as I cleaned one day. And then he added thoughtfully, “But I myself wouldn't mind a sip. Or two.”
My feet had grown so heavy I thought they were anchors pulling me into the ground. I couldn't bend over without losing my balance. Dr. N. lowered the seat of his scooter so that I could duck walk it through the hallway. I attached the mop to the backseat and this is how I cleaned his floors without ever getting down on my knees. If I sidled it up to the laboratory sinks, I could wash the beakers and test tubes while sitting. “Like a lady,” I told Mother, though I had to straddle the seat, which wasn't so ladylike.
At Dr. N.'s manor house, Joels hovered constantly, asking, “Can I bring you anything?” His attentiveness was so sweet that sometimes I said I could use a glass of water when I didn't need one. Joels had already collected the data from the various cows at the nearby farms so now Dr. N. worked in furious solitude. All Joels had to do was feed and muck the cows in the doctor's barn and contemplate more jingles. He'd placed second in that coffee-flake jingle contest, to the great relief of his knotted bowels. About this same time, Chem-Do Dry Toilets announced that they were sponsoring a jingle-off for their newest line of outdoor mobile toilets: the Tuxedo Toilet. Joels immediately set about finishing repairs to Velta's piano.
This he was doing late one afternoon. Darkness fell in damp folds outside the shed.
I folded laundry inside and watched Joels. There is something beautiful about a large man doing delicate, intricate work. With such care, he secured the pinblock and hammers; with such tenderness, he tapped the keys. I loved his devotion to the small and fragile. Anyway, after some plinking, Joels leaned back on his heels. In the air his hands drew a tall box, as big as a coffin but wider.
“Imagine if you will a completely sanitary, completely dignified, and completely private portable latrine experience. Imagine the Taj Mahal of toilets.”
“All right,” I said, closing my eyes. “I'm imagining.”
“Okay. Now the jingle: If you must go, then go in style. Tuxedo Toilets: a class act.”
“That's very good,” I said. Sometimes it was necessary to refrain from saying difficult things, like the truth, for the sake of a healthy relationship. We called it “speaking through flowers.” Some people call it lying, but I prefer to think of it as compassionate avoidance.
“Or how about this: cushy-tushyâso comfortable you'll never want to leave.” Joels, I noticed, had his eye on his sax standing at the ready.
“Also good.”
Joels reached for his saxophone, dug in his hip pocket for his mouthpiece, licked his lips, and played a few measures. He sang the jingle. “Don't have a moment, have an experienceâclassy assy.” Joels paused. “Well?”
“It's nice,” I said. “It's very nice,” I said again. Maybe Joels had heard of creative avoidance as well; he threw himself into cleaning his spit trap as if his very life depended upon it.
Night school. I think it's a fabulous idea; plenty of people your age and some much older have done quite well by it. The suggested reading list has me a little perplexed. Pushkin makes sense to me, but
The Sorrows of Young Werther
? Is it a good idea for a young man who makes his livelihood digging graves to read such a depressing book? You assure me that it is most suitable for a moral education. After all, in Mary Shelley's
Frankenstein,
the monster has it at the top of
his
reading list.
You've lit the burzuika and I'm glad for crackling heat that dries the jelly in my joints. I do not wish to complain, but you asked me what it felt like to die and I'm telling you. Pinches at the wrist, a buzz in the back of the brain. And the pain is a harmonic series of sensations, each piled on top of the other. On knees and knuckles, the cold creeps in. I feel it tighten over my ribs with each draw of breath. Cold is the devil's carpet, ice his only friend. He rides the bitter winds looking for a place to land. Restlessness is his soup and bread, but all the devil really wants is sleep. This is why, if caught out in the cold, you should never let yourself succumb to the urge to close your eyes. The devil will seize your body, pull your skin over his, and sleep inside your body for a thousand years.
It's a kind of hell, desiring sleep and not having it. You tell me that Uncle complains of insomnia, how it burns holes through his stomach. I don't understand why his experience should be so different from others. Mr. Dumonovsky told you that after he felt himself thrashed and threshed his mistakes, sins if you will, were milled to a fine powder and carried off on a wind. He was never so glad to see a thing go. Afterward, that same wind shouldered through what was left of him, passed through him as breath on paper, as paper on a comb, and made music of him. That this has not happened to Uncle puzzles me. He does not make music. Itches that can't be scratched. A thirst that can't be quenched. A story that won't be finished. Death is a furious irritation, he told you.
“What could be preventing his passage, his transformation?” I mused.
You leveled your gaze on mine. “You are,” you said.
As autumn settled in, Mr. Zetsche's Riviera grew a good two meters taller than the tree line. Father didn't like this new construction because of the afternoon and evening shadows the building cast over the new cemetery. Our town seemed beset in a gloom we could not name nor shake. Ligita, unable to pass the hiring screenings for any of the future Riveria jobs, spent her days wandering up and down the lane and through the woods. She wasn't looking for mushroomsâit was too late in the season for boletes, and she'd never regained her appetite for fungi after our ill-fated hunt together. What she was after was harder to find: a stalk of corn with two ears on it. A fruit or vegetable that had grown together. Any such sign that boded well for a woman who wanted to get pregnant. And though she might wear herself out looking, I was glad that hope in second chances had pulled Ligita out of our house. This was not a problem afflicting Rudy. We rarely saw him that autumn. He drank with other men at the
kafenica.
He attended political meetings. He brought home newspapers and flyers bristling with nervous, angry energy. Though Mother made no mention of Rudy's dark demeanor, there were days when I'd see her standing at the kitchen sink, a dish passing from one hand to the other. And over her face, worry settling as a shadow. We were changing in ways she could not control or even imagine. Only our traditions remained the same, or nearly the same.
Every spring we had the Push the Swing ceremony, in summer we had Jani Day, and in winter we held a Christmas pageant in the hall. This meant that every October the Christmas pageant steering committee gathered to determine who would play the various roles. Every year Mother tried to excuse herself from the madness, citing her atheism. But she always ended up going, for fear someone might try to use the oven. This year was no exception. The only difference was that Joels went with me for moral support. Also, Miss Dzelz, on account of being the most recent hire at school, had been elected committee president.
An energetic woman, she seemed perfect for the job. She was a ferocious stick walker, an exuberant style of walking that looked a lot like cross-country skiing minus the skis and the snow. On weekends Joels and I had observed her stabbing the new concrete pavement of Mr. Zetsche's waterside promenade with her poles. Where and how she found such energy I did not know. She was at least twice my age: a spinster who made no secret that she was on the lookout for a husband. Each month she dyed her hair in an unprecedented shade of magenta we only knew to call Dzelz Red.
In years past, the steering committee meetings earned a reputation for boisterousness. This was because the widows Sosnovskis, Rezniks, and Spassky, not wishing to succumb to the sins of sloth or spiritual boredom, insisted each year on participating. This they did with their whole hearts. And everything else, too. They could argue the seventy-two angles of a circle, which is why Mother was so vital to these meetings. She brewed the tea that kept everyone going, usually three tureens but sometimes four.
Miss Dzelz called the meeting to order. Of course, Widow Spassky lodged her protests immediately. Being Orthodox Russian, she wanted to celebrate Christmas a solid thirteen days later than everyone elseâjust to be difficult. Back and forth the argument swung: Was Jesus an Orthodox Russian Jesus or a Baptist Jesus or a Lutheran Jesus?
Finally Mother arbitrated. “We'll hold the program on January 1. At noon. Exactly halfway between the two dates in question. All in favor say aye.”
The room fell silent. It was a near-blasphemous proposition, but it also smacked of good old-fashioned pragmatism.
“Aye” came the response. I could hear only one quiet nay, and this from Mrs. Friemane, a forlorn nihilist who nonetheless lent her talents as resident costume designer year after year.
“Now, then.” Miss Dzelz consulted her clipboard. “The cast. Mr. Gipsis's class will be the sheep. Mrs. Gepkars's class will be the multitude of angels. The three oldest boys from Mrs. Inese's class will be the shepherds tending their flocks by night.” Miss Dzelz paused and smiled at me. “Mary will be played this year by Inara Kalnins, er, Henriksen. For obvious reasons, she seemed the natural choice.” At this, the widows exchanged significant glances. “And then, naturally, the part of Joseph has fallen to Inara's husband, Joels.”
Joels shifted in his chair. “Actually, Miss Dzelz, I must respectfully decline. I am uncalibrated in my feelings about Jesus.”
“But I've written into the script several potent thinking poses for you.”
Joels took a big breath, held it, then let it out slowly and steadily as if he were playing an imaginary solo on his saxophone. “I would consider playing the saxophoneâfrom a distance. I would even consider building the set. But I cannot participate in a Christmas program.”
“Why not?” Miss Dzelz asked.
“The truth is, I'm Jewish.”
Miss Dzelz frowned. “Is it Jesus the man who's troubling you or Jesus the baby?”
“Jesus the man.”
“Oh, that's fine then.” Relief flooded her voice. “We're not the least bit concerned about the man and we're certainly not interested in any of his messianic claims. We're focusing only on Jesus the baby. And the sheep. And the cows. By the wayâdoes anyone know where I can find a few cows?” Miss Dzelz looked wildly around the room.
Mother rolled her eyes toward the ceiling.
Joels touched my elbow. “I didn't actually agree, did I?”
“You did, actually. At these meetings, silence is consent.”
I patted his knee and Joels excused himself for home. A good thing, too, as no one was finished arguing yet. The solo part had yet to be determined, and this was the point at which good manners strained, friends and neighbors sometimes coming to verbal fisticuffs.
“Little Ksinia should have the solo,” Widow Rezniks said.
“She had it last year,” Mrs. Lee said.
“And a fine job she did, too,” Widow Spassky piped up.
“Let little Aija sing. Ksinia sang last year,” Mrs. Lim said.
“And a fine job she did, too,” Widow Spassky insisted.
“Everyone should have a chance. This is Latvia,” Mrs. Gipsis said.
“Do we want equality or do we want quality?” Widow Rezniks asked.
“Do you hear what you are saying?” Mrs. Lim asked.
Widow Rezniks slammed her palms on the table.
“Every cow licks her own calf,” Mother muttered.
“What?” Widow Rezniks swung her head toward Mother.
Mother smiled, slung her purse over her shoulder, and rose from her seat. “I need to pee. I'm going home now. All I ask is that nobody messes up the kitchen.” Mother plucked at my sleeve. “Let's go.”
We went to the bathroom, where we listened to the women. After all, they still had one more tureen of tea to argue through. Once the topic of politics had been introduced, however obliquely, the floodgates had been let open. Imagine the noise: fifteen women arguing the finer points of immigration law and the theoretical versus practical differences between occupation and annexation. I sat on the toilet and hung my head. Mrs. Lim and Miss Dzelz discussed why a woman would and would not make a better president than a man. And from Widow Rezniks, a bitter lament that Latvia could and never should join the EU as long as ethic Russians like her were being persecuted.
“Persecution!” Mrs. Baltmanis bellowed. “Let me tell
you
about persecution!”
Mother knocked on the divider between the two stalls. “What's the best thing to feed a Latvian?” The answer: another Latvian. I groaned. It was a tired joke in the east.
Mother unbolted her door and stood at the sink. “All this fuss over a
baby,
” she muttered. By how she said the word
baby,
I understood the trouble I was causing her and would continue to cause her. Tears welled in my eyes. I coughed and sniffled, did all I could to contain my tears. I made excuses until finally Mother went home without me.
“Inara? You all right in there?” Miss Dzelz knocked lightly on the stall door.