Authors: Philip Teir
Max remembered that as a child he would wrap his mother's fur coat around him after she'd hung it up. It was a good hiding place because it reached all the way to the floor, and it became almost a daily retreat for him, embraced by its warm darkness. As a grown man he was struck by what a Freudian image that was, practically a parody. His mother had meant everything to him when he was a child, since he never felt comfortable with his father's passion for sports and physical strength. Vidar wanted his son to take up skiing and orienteering, but Max preferred to read books. At most he might kick around a football, and later on he rode a motorcycle to various parties in the Ãsterbotten region.
If Laura hadn't been waiting for him in town, Max would have stayed longer. But after half an hour, or maybe forty-five minutes, he couldn't help glancing at the door.
âWell, I think I'd better get moving.'
He knew that for Ebba the most important thing was that he'd turned up at all. She had other things to keep her occupied here, other people she could talk to, various activities and visits. A couple of years ago, Max had received a phone call from one of the staff. She told him that his mother and one of the other patients, a man named Harald who was close to ninety, had started up some sort of relationship. Harald had his own car, so their plan was to drive down to Helsinki to visit Max and his family. Harald also had relatives in the city. But after multiple discussions with the staff and with Elisabeth, everyone had agreed that it would be a bad idea, since Ebba would have a difficult time getting from her wheelchair into a car. Both Ebba and Harald vigorously protested this decision, and in an outburst of almost adolescent rebellion, they threatened to make the trip all the same. But Max managed to persuade his mother to take the train to Helsinki instead, accompanied by Elisabeth.
Harald passed away only a few months later, and since then Ebba had not mentioned any more car trips.
Now she nodded as she looked at her son. Max wondered whether he ought to help her back into bed, or leave her where she was.
âWould you like to go to the dining hall?' he asked.
She stared at him for a moment without speaking. Then she said, âI think I'll just sit here and read the paper.'
âOkay, Mum. I've got to go now.'
âAll right. Take good care of Katriina,' she told him.
âI will, Mum.'
Then Max got to his feet and picked up his jacket. He went over to his mother and gave her a hug. She smelled the way she always did now, of medicine and the food that they served in the home. Her cheek felt cool, and her hair was so soft, like that of a young child. Max's parents had been married for decades, but how happy had they really been?
He went back out to the corridor. The woman he'd spoken to earlier was setting the tables for dinner.
âSo, you're off, are you?' she said.
âUh-huh. I've got to head back home.'
âHow was she?'
âShe seemed fine.'
âShe's a very special lady. You have a very special mother.'
âThanks.'
When Max stepped outside, he found that the wind was blowing hard. As he started walking towards town, he rang Elisabeth.
âOkay, I saw Mum and I'm just leaving now.'
âWhat are you going to do next?'
âI'm going to spend the night at RÃ¥ddon.'
âIsn't it a little cold for that?'
âIt'll be fine.'
âHow are you going to get out there?'
Max paused for a moment before replying. What should he say? As far as his sister knew, there was nobody who could drive him out to the cottage.
âI suppose I'll take a cab.'
âI can come and pick you up in the morning if you like. And drive you to the bus. You're taking the bus home, right?'
âNo, that's not necessary. I'd like to do some writing, so I'm not sure when I'll be leaving.'
âOkay. If you think you can afford the expense of a taxi.'
Max had no desire to listen to his sister's reproaches about how he squandered money.
âElisabeth, do you think Mum seems a little more ⦠tired than usual?'
âI don't know. I see her so often, so I'm not sure I'd notice the difference. When was your last visit?'
Max tried to remember. âIn September, when we came to visit you. But I talk to her on the phone all the time.'
âWell, maybe she is more tired. But she's getting older, you know. Can you picture Dad living in a place like that?'
âNo,' said Max. âI think it's good that he didn't even have to consider it.'
âMe too.'
Half an hour later Max rejoined Laura. By then it was three thirty, and she looked a little worn out.
âSorry it took so long.'
âThat's all right. Are we ready to leave now?'
âDefinitely.'
A thick layer of snow covered the yard in front of the cottage. There was a damp smell in the air, and autumn leaves were piled up against the stairs. Max hadn't been out here since August. Back then it was warm and sunny, with lots of birds everywhere. Now it was almost four o'clock and already dark, but it was a lovely, aching kind of darkness with pines towering behind the cottage and a dignified silence hovering over the entire property.
Max was hoping that Laura would find the setting romantic. He was expecting to find firewood stacked up inside so they could light a fire, and maybe then one thing would lead to another.
âHas the cottage been in your family a long time?' Laura asked.
Her cheeks were pink from the cold. Max thought she looked like Snow White, dressed in her black coat as she walked beside him.
âI took it over from my parents twenty years ago. The girls spent a lot of time here when they were kids. We call it RÃ¥ddon. My mother had a tendency to use it as a sort of extra storage place when she was still able to get around.'
âIt looks nice.'
âI just hope we can warm it up a bit. We don't have to stay long if you're tired. But it might be nice to have a cup of coffee before we drive back.'
They went inside, and Max immediately made a fire. Laura sat in a chair to watch. She took out her mobile and tapped on the keys.
âThe coverage isn't great out here.'
âI can see that,' said Laura. âI can't get online.'
For Max, the cottage was filled with memories. On the windowsills were white and black stones that his daughters had collected. The shelves held books that had once completely captured his attention â though it felt as though that was in another lifetime. And it was in the bedroom that they'd always believed Eva was conceived. There were folders with newspaper clippings that his mother had saved from early in his career, and occasionally he'd find himself paging through the articles with a certain perverse pleasure.
It was not a large summer cottage. It had two bedrooms, a bathroom, a living room with a tiled, wood-burning stove, and a small kitchen. In the yard was an outbuilding where they'd put in a sauna and shower. Max had also built a veranda, and it was there that the family ate their meals in the summertime. Actually, he hadn't built it on his own â he'd had help from his son-in-law one summer when Helen and Christian had come to visit, just after Amanda was born. Max had felt like an idiot, since he seemed to be constantly getting in the way whenever he tried to help. Finally, he allowed Christian to take over most of the project, and that made both of them happy.
In the summer the cottage was airy and filled with light. With the windows open, a breeze could blow right through, and the sun shone on the kitchen table every morning when they had their breakfast. Now the place was closed up like a cocoon. The view from the window revealed nothing of the world outside. It was like staring at a blank wall. The cottage could just as well have been floating in space.
âThis is so nice. Do you come here every summer?' asked Laura.
âThe girls don't come out here much any more. Sometimes Helen brings the kids, if they feel like making the drive. We'll have to see what happens with the cottage when ⦠well â¦'
He stopped in mid-sentence. It wouldn't be very erotic to start talking about getting old and dying.
âMax?'
âYes?'
âAre we really going to do some work, or did you bring me out here to seduce me?'
There were plenty of ways Max might have answered that question â after the fact he came up with several different options that would have been better. But he had no time to think, so he did the only thing that came to him, the only thing he could possibly do: he pretended not to have heard her. He simply got up and went into the kitchen and opened a tin of tomato soup to heat for dinner, wondering if he'd ever be able to muster enough courage to go back into the living room. He thought about the yoga exercises he'd learned. He thought about Katriina. He thought about his daughters.
Did you bring me out here to seduce me?
He thought about adding some fresh chilli peppers, garlic and diced tomatoes to make the soup taste better.
The problem is that I wasn't thinking at all
.
He thought that if he simply failed to answer her question, she might not ask him again.
When he went back to the living room, he set two bowls of soup on the coffee table and sat down. He was just about to say something, when Laura spoke first.
âIs there any bedding here? Because I think I'm too tired to drive home tonight. Could we sleep here and drive back tomorrow?'
Max would have been lying if he claimed that the same thought hadn't already crossed his mind. He had hoped that Laura might suggest this change in plan. He'd even brought along a DVD they could watch if they got bored. It was the British film
Brief Encounter
from the forties. Max had watched it with Katriina back in October when they both happened to be home and had no other plans for the evening. But she had fallen asleep halfway through, even though she'd later insisted that she'd enjoyed the film. Max had accused her of being shallow, and they'd ended up having a row about it.
This time things were different.
The minute they put the DVD into Max's computer, Laura was so immersed in the film that she almost seemed to have forgotten he was there. He thought it was pleasant to watch a movie that way, with someone who was truly into the whole mood. Yet Max found it difficult to surrender himself to the story. When Laura set her feet on his lap (âIs that okay?') he suddenly felt as nervous as a teenager, worrying that he might get an erection â something that would have been unthinkable only a couple of weeks ago. The whole situation, being out here in a remote place with another woman, and for once not knowing what direction the evening â or even his life â was going to take, made him feel both restless and terribly self-conscious.
It got so bad that he had to count backwards from a hundred just to focus his mind on something else.
When the credits began to roll, Laura kicked her feet into the air as nimbly as a gymnast and then reached for the wine bottle to pour herself another glass.
âOh, that was great. It's been a long time since I saw a black-and-white film. I especially liked the scene at the train station in the beginning, when the man starts talking about what it's like to be a doctor, and she says that he reminds her of a little boy. It made me think of you.'
âThat's Trevor Howard. One of the best British actors. It was good, wasn't it?' replied Max as he straightened his trousers, which had hitched up and felt tight across his crotch. They discussed the movie some more, and Max was able to show off how much he knew about British talkies from the 1940s, and about the background of this film in particular.
âI brought something too, if you're interested,' Laura told him. She went over to her handbag and took out a small plastic bag that contained something Max quickly realised had to be marijuana.
âIt's been ages since I smoked dope,' he said, looking at the plastic bag and then watching as Laura rolled a joint.
âBut you have tried it before, right?'
âSure, just like anybody who was young in the seventies. But maybe things are different these days. I'm not going to develop a liking for techno music or start wearing latex outfits, am I? Because I haven't got time for that sort of thing.'
âNo. Ha, Ha. You must be thinking of ecstasy, or something like that. The dope I brought isn't that strong. At the most, you might start giggling a bit.'
Max was sceptical. Yet he'd surprised himself lately with so many other things. What was keeping him from trying something new? He needed a distraction, something that would make him stop thinking about his mother and would put him back in a blissful, dreamlike state. He wanted to release those forces in his brain that would make him feel like he didn't have a care in the world.
âOkay. What do we do?'
Laura showed him, and a sweet fragrance quickly spread through the room.