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Authors: Orly Castel-Bloom

Textile (12 page)

BOOK: Textile
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“That’s all,” he said in his gentle voice, and went to the end of the room to wash his hands in the sink. Gruber noticed that he exaggerated his ablutions. While soaping and scrubbing his arms
up to the elbows, Hamlet called out to him, “Get up very slowly without straining your neck. You have a problem with the first vertebra, which holds up the head. When you get back home, go and have an x-ray. I didn’t work on it much, only around it, on the muscles.”

He dried his arms on a towel that matched the other colors in the room: pale peach and magnolia.

“Get dressed behind the screen, you’ll have time to think about signing the wall while you do it.”

Irad got up slowly. The pain in his back was gone.

From behind the screen he heard Hamlet say, “The effect of the massage lasts for a few hours. You may feel tired.”

“I’m tired anyway,” said Gruber.

When he looked at the signature wall, he saw that they were all in Latin letters, except for Abba Eban’s, who had signed in Hebrew.
A. Eban
. He signed in Hebrew next to him:
I. Gruber
.

IN THE BRIGHTLY LIT reception room, lacking any aroma of medicinal herbs, the Israeli scientist was about to pay for the enjoyable massage himself, but he was informed that Bahat had paid in advance.

Hamlet emerged from the treatment room with a pair of tongs holding a hot towel, which he wrapped round Gruber’s neck, and said, “Run to Mrs. McPhee’s car, the cold is bad for you. I’ve already called her.”

The woman who was going to get his TESU project off the ground, and bestow eternal significance on his signature emblazoned next to that of Abba Eban, stepped out of her warm car with the engine still running to meet him, and quickly opened the door of the passenger seat. She smiled at him. Her teeth were as white as a toothpaste commercial.

“Thank you very much,” he said.

“Don’t mention it,” she replied, and they drove off.

PART II

1

MANDY’S SHOULDER BLADE TRANSPLANTS, WHICH DIDN’T look bad at all, stuck out of the Medical Frontline blanket. It was clear that the operation had succeeded in principle, but she was in excruciating pain such as she had never felt in her life before. Not even after the liposuction from her stomach, which was considered complicated from the point of view of rehabilitation.

In the day that had passed since the surgery, Mandy had been blasted sky-high with pain and painkillers, from Voltaren to Percocet. She felt as if a world war was being fought within her.

She couldn’t believe that this was happening to her, and she longed for the presence of one of her children to hold her hand and feed her water with a teaspoon, since she was lying on her stomach and couldn’t drink anything without spilling it.

But one of them was in the army and the other was keeping an eye on the factory, and her husband was in America with some woman.

It was clear that something mythological was happening. Mandy Gruber, born in Rhodesia, resident of Telba-N., was not made for such levels of suffering. And not only the pain. The humiliation too.

“Nurse, nurse,” she moaned.

Nobody answered.

She wanted morphine!

“Nurse! Nurse!” she tried again, in vain.

With a supreme effort, Amanda succeeded in reaching her cell
phone (just how isn’t clear, since she wasn’t supple, her strong suit was aerobics—she had a class twice a week at the St. Tropez Institute in the Mikado complex) and dailed 144 to ask for the Medical Frontline number, in order to reach the ward in which she herself was hospitalized.

Someone said, “Inquiries 144, Hello. Adina speaking . . .”

Mandy was relieved not to have to remember the number they gave her but only to punch the star. She did punch the number of the extension for the recovery unit, heavily, and listened to seven long rings, which she heard, without synchronization, from the phone and also from behind the wall.

Usually Mandy had a very authoritative voice. She used it when she was giving motivational talks to the girls at the pajama factory. Once every few months Mandy asked Carmela to assemble them all in the neglected yard, and when they were standing in a semicircle, she herself stood on a step (you had to have a bit of hierarchy) and shot words at them.

During these talks Mandy felt at her best, and after them she was exhausted, sometimes she even went straight home.

“Come here at once!” she ordered the nurse who answered at last, but instead of the familiar authoritative tones she heard her voice petering out from one syllable to the next.

“Morphine,” Mandy greeted the nurse who arrived all nice and friendly.

“You need the doctor’s authorization,” said the nurse.

“So ask for it,” whispered Mandy.

“I’ll ask, but I can tell you right now he won’t agree to give you morphine on any account.”

“That’s . . . all . . . I . . . need,” Mandy tried not to scream, but in the end she let out a loud scream, and even the nurse looked sorry for her.

“Okay, okay, I’ll talk to him,” she said.

Tears fell from Mandy’s eyes. She bit her lip and waited for salvation to arrive.

Ten minutes later the nurse returned with the doctor on duty, a young man who had recently completed his residency and had an earring in his ear and a tag on his lapel that read “Dr. Bialystotski.”

The nurse switched on the reading lamp. Mandy explained that she couldn’t stand the pain. Dr. Bialystotski said, “That shouldn’t be happening, let’s examine you,” and closed the curtains round her bed even though it was a private room.

ON ONE SIDE of the bed stood the nurse, on the other the doctor, and both of them together lifted the blanket with the sheet beneath it, and exposed the bandaged back. Then together they removed the bandages, and the young doctor very carefully, but nevertheless painfully, removed the sterile strips supporting the implants, touched here and there, and accompanied the touches with questions:

“Does it hurt here? Does it hurt here? Does it hurt here? And here?”

Mandy answered yes to every touch.

He asked, “Mrs. Gruber, are you sensitive to antibiotics?”

“No,” she groaned.

“How much do you weigh?”

“Fifty-five kilo,” she replied weakly.

He spoke to the nurse in terms of drugs and ccs. And there was a note of urgency in his words.

“And what about the morphine?” asked Mandy.

“Give her morphine,” he instructed the nurse, with a severe expression on his face, “and first come with me to the office.”

But he didn’t wait until they reached the office. Mandy heard him raising his voice in the corridor.

“I don’t like it. We have to locate that butcher from Dresden, Yagoda, immediately, and bring him back urgently. This surgery is his responsibility.”

“But it’s night now in Dresden too,” said the nurse.

“I don’t give a damn,” he yelled, and sounded as if he had given
himself a fright.

“Aah,” he cried suddenly, “she has to be given a pulse of steroids immediately, and make an appointment for a bone-marrow test on Medical On Line for today! And don’t forget Dr. Yagoda,” his voice receded, as if he was talking to her while walking backward, “Keep at it until he answers the phone. Night time in Germany . . .” he snorted in contempt.

Mandy lay with her eyes closed, beside herself with suspense. The nurse came in and added something to the infusion.

“Is my condition grave?” asked Mandy.

“Grave? I wouldn’t say so. Your condition is worrying, and it’s being taken care of. Don’t worry, the painkiller will help you in a minute. Think positive thoughts and good things will happen.”

“Who can think at all?” asked Mandy, and the nurse didn’t answer her.

IT WAS NOT ONLY avoiding thoughts of home that helped the good sniper to carry out his mission as he lay on the roof of a building in Tulkarem. It was not only the disconnection from his mother, that not thinking about her constituted a kind of rest for him. Sniper number two, Hai-Ad Gonen, had given him a bit of cocaine earlier, and Dael could already feel its blessed effects.

Dael Gruber, who all the guys in the army and in civilian life called Gruber due to the difficulty in pronouncing the two vowels one after the other, was regarded by his friends as a sensitive sniper with a delicate soul. And indeed, he was an example to contradict what people generally say about snipers in armies, that they detach themselves from feelings and simply say to themselves, “Someone has to do the job,” and execute their task with cold-blooded composure. This was a sweeping generalization, and it didn’t apply to Dael.

Dael went for it in a big way, in other words he shot to kill, otherwise it wouldn’t have worked for him. It’s a question of psychological makeup. Sometimes it was a little hard for him to shoot
at a concrete target, but then he concentrated and took targets from his life instead and set them up in his imagination in the place of the wanted man. In many cases he imagined the father of Moran Eliot, his girlfriend when he was at the end of the eleventh grade, when she was at the end of the twelfth grade.

Moran Eliot was his first love. It lasted for June–July–August and half of September. Moran was his first, but he wasn’t her first, and she said that after the first it didn’t matter anymore what number he was. It ended badly between them, and with hindsight he didn’t care. Her father was in his sights because he threw Dael out of the house in the most humiliating way, after Moran didn’t want to see him and called him a stalker.

With Aya Ben-Yaish things were steadier, if with less fire. She was a spoiled kid who had moved to Tel Baruch North with her parents when her father had been obliged to sell their villa after going bankrupt, and rent an apartment in Telba-N.

They met for the first time in Mikado. She went down there in very short white pants, as dictated by fashion, to buy Winston Lights for her father, and Dael went to buy Winston Lights for himself. He smoked, of course. No great love erupted between them, but there was definitely a certain love, more meaningful than a convenient arrangement. However, it was true that the distance between Stefan Zweig Street, where the Ben-Yaish family lived, and Yocheved Bat-Miriam Street, where the Gruber family lived, was conveniently short, and Aya herself was pleasant and compliant on the whole.

IT WAS A RESERVIST psychologist in civvies who taught the snipers imaging. He arrived in the framework of a training course organized by the army for elite soldiers, and tried, for example, to explain what happened in the brain of the sniper at the time of shooting. He also gave advice on what to do in all kinds of specific stress situations within a general situation of stress. He divided their time according to levels of stress: very, very stressed, very
stressed, and so on, down to apathetic. Dael and three other guys were the only ones who wrote down what he said, and so he spoke only to them, but mainly to Dael.

Dael also asked good questions, and the reservist was happy to answer them, and before answering each question he said, “I’m happy to answer your question.”

He worked with them on controlling their emotions from the moment they left the base until they reached the site of the assignment. And then during the assignment until the minute they left the field. Dael wrote down all the tips, and looked at his bored companions and wondered what was going on in their heads. He imagined that what was going on it their heads was what would be going on in his head if he hadn’t been so stressed by nature and had not lived in a house where stress was what connected the inhabitants.

The reservist gave them exercises for the suppression of irrational thoughts, and flavored his words with amazing stories about his own past as a senior sniper, before he became a psychologist, and Dael thought he was definitely okay, this guy, like his mother said about the friends he brought home. On principle, he told them to aim in their imagination at people they didn’t feel anything in particular for, neither hate nor love. What he most recommended was a faint revulsion, and he confessed that he hit his own bulls eyes best when he imagined targets that aroused a faint revulsion in him, like teachers in high school, or even commanding officers in the army.

Dael thought that he could try, for example, the guests at his bar mitzvah. Not the ones that came to the synagogue, but the ones that turned up in droves after the service to lunch at the Stefan Baron restaurant.

But when none of the imaging exercises worked, and destructive thoughts swarmed into his mind like locusts, he thought about his father.

His hatred for his father was classic. His adoration of his
mother was classic too. And his attitude toward his sister vacillated according to his mother’s attitude toward her. In the days of Lirit’s forbidden love for Lucas, sixteen-year-old Dael was the chief instigator of the family hostility toward the wayward girl, and on one particularly cold Saturday, when nobody wanted to leave their previous family home in Tagore Street, he wrote on the door of her room “Lirit the Parakeet,” a nickname that had the power to insult her when she was a child, and to which she was still, at the age of almost twenty, not immune.

None of the family tried to defend Lirit. Their father, as usual, was absorbed in himself, and Mandy said that she had a bad case of the flu.

BOOK: Textile
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