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Authors: John K. Cox

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BOOK: The Attic
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To the conquerors!

she said and raised her glass.


Whore!

snarled Igor, fingering his eye.

Then I broke in:

The only medicine is prostitution and . . .


Whore!

Billy repeated. He hurled his glass to the ground.

She was bent double with laughter.


She

s a bitch,

said an offended Igor.

At the beginning she was rooting for the sailors . . .


But later she was for us,

I said.

Right?


She

s a sneaky bitch,

Igor repeated as he started crying.

They

re all alike. Even whores are dishonest. Even whores!


You haven

t tried everything yet, comrade Igor,

I said, moved by the emotion of it all.


Everything. I

ve tried it all,

he said.

Whores were my last hope.


You haven

t tried Red Fever yet,

I said.

Isn

t that right?

Igor regained his composure.

Do you know the recipe? For real?


Waiter, waiter!

I panted.


What can I do for you?

said a new character as he executed a bow.


Mix us a cocktail with everything imaginable . . . And put a dash of vanilla in it. And some window-box sage . . . And don

t forget the shot of primrose bitters either, and, to top it off, a spot of delirium from poppies and henbane.


And three glasses,

interjected Igor.

He held up three fingers in front of his eyes, as if in amazement. Then he repeated:

Three.

In those days I was hideously bored in the attic. Maybe I missed my lute. That silly, idealistic clamshell. To pass the time, I started prac- ticing jujitsu. Then I acquired boxing gloves and a punching bag.


You

ve gone crazy,

said Igor.


I

m amusing myself,

I replied.


Why don

t you read something?

he suggested.


Nonsense,

I said.

You should

ve just read those sailors some poetry that night at Pygmalion

s to try to get that Mary Magdalene away from them.


Don

t tell me you mean to imply that I didn

t kick enough ass that night?


No, you fool. That

s exactly the point. You kicked ass all right and . . . you earned Mary Magdalene.


So that

s why you

re practicing your boxing? To win Eurydice?


She does not exist
,

I said, irritated, and launched a series of punches at the bag.


Who are you hitting?

Bill Goat asked maliciously.


I

m beating the Lute-meister on the head. I

m knocking some sense into him,

I said, gasping and pounding myself in the mug till the blood flowed.

Then I began learning Sanskrit and Polynesian dialects, but I soon realized that there was no point to this, so I switched to English. Soon I was giving private lessons to the sluts of the port. Never before had I had pupils who were more diligent and compliant. And they paid me regularly. In kind, to be sure. How else? Then I stopped giving lessons to those girls who lived by the Bridge of Sighs, as we referred to them. Every day their madam had brought me coffee with a great deal of sugar and milk, just because once I

d said that I liked it. She was convinced that I was a good boy, even a good pedagogue; she did say, though, that I should smoke less and not study so much. She especially recommended that I not smoke before breakfast, on an empty stomach.


That is the only thing in the world, ma

am, that

s worthwhile,

I said.

Smoking.


There

s some great disappointment in your past . . .


No, no,

I said.

But I prefer a bitter cigarette to sweet coffee with sugar. It

s simply . . .

Then she said suddenly:

Listen, it

s not nice of you to make your caf
é
latte sound even sweeter than it is,
just so I

d end up coming across as all the more insipid
. You reporters are all the same. It goes without saying that I

m mentioning this in your interest. And in the interest of my girls. It could have unpleasant consequences for them . . .


Don

t worry about anything, ma

am,

I said in comforting tones.

There are people who really like a lot of sugar in their coffee.


Nonetheless,

she remarked,

don

t mention my girls

names in that thing you

re knocking together. And move the plot over to another part of the city. Say, for instance,

by the Bridge.



But why, when you don

t live by the bridge but rather by



But I implore you



Oh, forgive me,

I said.

Next time I

ll be more considerate.

Igor suggested these names:

Salvation Harbor,


Last Chance,


Dos Desperados,


Chez Orph
é
e,


The Broken Lute,


The Two Pistols,

and a few others that we rejected out of hand as too banal:

The Shore,


At the Sign of the Three Palms,


A Summer Night

s Dream,


The Bay of the Dolphins.


I

m sorry,

I said,

for not contributing anything to all of that. Nonetheless, Igor, you will admit that I myself could have thought it all up as easily as you. You just happened to be the first to start listing them. Just say so: that

s the way it is.


You

re welcome to consider yourself the first one to say them,

Igor countered.

By the way . . .


I know. You want to say that I

m making all this up anyway. But, you see, I won

t admit that to you. Well, maybe just the pistols. They were my idea. But one could just as easily assert that you anticipated them yourself.

This conversation took place at the end of summer, on the coast, as the sun was going down. We watched as the waves pitched the sodden seaweed onto the beach, giving the smooth-faced quartz a red beard. We were seated in front of a small
taverna
on which we had just put down a deposit. We were supposed to start renovating at the end of autumn, as soon as the previous owner had moved out. He was an old man who was hard of hearing and sold only beer and absinthe, and nobody frequented the place except for longshoremen, worn-out, pockmarked sailors, and various old salts. The old guy griped to us that he

d had to fire a sixteen-year-old girl he

d hired because the sailors had slapped their hands against her rear end so much that her buttocks were soon bruised the color of a sailor

s undershirt.


Would you agree to stay on as
ma
î
tre d

h
ô
tel
?

I asked the old man.

You

d earn more than in the past. And, who knows, maybe later on . . .


Nope, nope,

the old man said with a sardonic smile. He had watery, suppurating eyes and he sprayed saliva as he spoke.

I wiped my face with a handkerchief and asked him once more if he would stay with us as a waiter, or headwaiter, if that suited him better. In view of the fact that he spoke Italian and various dialects, he could act as our interpreter.


No,

he said sadly.

Everybody patted and groped her, everybody except for me. And some of them were even older than I. That

s why I fired her. I couldn

t stand to watch the way they all fondled her.

At that point, Billy got right in his face:

Will you stay with us? Stay here! With us!


Nobody prevented me. But I couldn

t. I simply couldn

t do it,

the old guy said.

And they were all slapping her.

Leontina, a spritzer!

and then a deafening smack on her buttocks.


It

s super that you were actually able to hear that!

said Igor with irritation in his voice.

So is that how you went deaf?


For sure!

said the old man, glumly.

I couldn

t keep watching that. That

s why, one evening three or four days ago, I said:

Leontina, in case you . . .



Let

s leave him alone,

said Igor.

It doesn

t seem like he

s spoken with anybody about this till now, and he wants to serenade us strangers with it like an old frog . . . Nevertheless, we will have to look for this Leontina.

Our idea for a little taverna was truly outstanding. Since we were disappointed with everything, and as incapable of love and unqualified for life as we were, we resolved to withdraw from the world. But because we weren

t able to take off to some deserted island, as we had intended at first, we decided to open a restaurant and bar in a small town along the coast. Both Igor and I like the autumnal peace and quiet in these isolated little towns with their narrow streets. Therefore we had resolved to sell all our stuff and save all the money that we earned from giving private lessons to the girls and whores of the city, and then we would rent a little taverna and dedicate ourselves to our studies.


This is the only way that one can study life,

said Billy Wiseass.

Books are an invention. Stories for toddlers. But we will gather around us all kinds of desperados
(we especially liked this word in those days) and listen to
authentic
stories,
authentic
life experiences. Only that will constitute the true school of life,

Billy explained excitedly.

I joined the game with enthusiasm:


It is not we who will have to go out into the world; the world will come to us. Bringing the best that it has to offer. Ships will provide us with sailors, in whose eyes we will discover continents and climates, landscapes and horizons . . . Everything, Igor, everything! We will only accept those people who have seen as much of life as a living person can! Only the ones bearing scars . . .


The ones with callouses . . .


The ones from the streets . . .


The ones from distant lands . . .


The ones who lowered their colors . . .


The ones with no future . . .


The ones with colorful pasts . . .


The ones without love . . .


The ones who have already experienced everything . . .


Seen everything . . .


And desire nothing more . . .


Nothing . . .


Don

t you think,

I said,

that it would be good for us to accept women as well? Raunchy harbor chicks? The kind who carry profound mourning in their eyes.


Provided, of course, that they have remained chaste. Without hackneyed tales of infidelity, betrayal, misery, rape . . .


The ones who have sought love . . .


And not found it . . .


The ones who have loved, body and soul . . .


Body and . . .


And with their whole Body and . . .

And they wandered through the world so wide
embracing everything they did find.

Then Igor picked up where I left off, or vice versa:

And now they pursue their requiems
for their white bodies


For their white bodies.

The specialty drink at the Two Desperados restaurant

a specialty that Billy Wiseass especially envied me for inventing

had the very prosaic (and, incidentally, blas
é
) name

The Desperados

Pistol.

On our menu, it was located right after the Wiener schnitzel
and it cost the same
.

I couldn

t blame Igor if he was jealous; it was really a devilish idea!

We got an order for it right away, on our first night of business.

The customer had a red, puffy face with bags under his eyes. He stared at the menu for a long time with his beady, watery eyes. The menu was bound in golden-green snakeskin and the letters on the cover were emeralds:

CARTE DE VINS OF THE
TWO DESPERADOS TAVERNA

I
MPORTED
W
INES

Malaga
à
la Orpheus

Eyes of Eurydice

Desperados

Dream

Magnolia Maraschino

Glutteus aeburnea
à
la Leontina

Satyr

s Ambrosia

Gelosia vecchia al Umberto

Brandy
à
la Mansarde

Arpeggio
à
la Mansarde

Ž
ilavka Mistress of the Lute

Hossz
ú
l
é
p
é
s Smart Ass

Thea-Lipovanka
á
la Mary Magdalene

Evening Star, bitter

Morning Star, violet

The Song of Tam-Tam

Moonlight of Delphi

Palm Frond Vugava

Primavera marina

Mezzogiorno adriatico

Cyclamen Sailor

s Duel

Le temps retrouv
é

Dollente, lis blanc

Allegro, ma non troppo

Allegretto (108), red

Allegro vivace (152), white

Ritardando brillante, maestoso

Doloroso espressivo

Dolce, ma con fuoco a l

Euridice

Desperados

Soliloquy

Boule-de-neige

Il Sue
ñ
o della Vida

Balata, bitter opal

Tourmaline bicolore

Tourmaline rose (rubellite)

Saphir cagochon

Calitera menandar (Asia)

Precis heleida (Madagascar)

Precis eurodoce

Anea Orphilochus (Sumatra)

Arhonias Bellona (pierides)

Byblia ilithya

Agerona mexicana

Chrisidia madagascariensis

Eucalitia clemante

Amethyst blue (sapphire)

D
OMESTIC
W
INES

Fru
š
ka Gora Pearls of Dawn

Dubrovnik Madrigal

Ohrid Legend

Gra
č
anica Dawn

Slavic Legend, bitter

Morning Star over Herzegovina, bitter

The Highways of Prince Marko (dark)

Scutari Gold (gutedel)

Mother Jevrosima

s Hair

Banovi
ć
Strahinja

s Goblet

Lazar

s Bicep

Vuk Mandu
š
i
ć

s Dream, white

Maternal Curse

Word of Love

Simonida

s Eyes

A Monk

s Manuscript

And then, as far as the food on the menu went

F
ISH AND
S
EAFOOD

Dragonfly in mayonnaise

Poison d

avril

Barbus de Sumatra in palm oil

Danio Rerio with lemon

Egg of Columbus

Girardinus Guppi (Arc-en-Ciel)

Chinese warrior with mint

Barbillon Galapagos

Aquamarino adriatico

Speckled lutist with mustard

Flying coral with French fries

Seaweed with spaghetti

Mistral with orange

Mistral in olive oil

Mistral from the grill

Mistral in a tin can

South African diamond

Gavial of Celebes

Tahitian pictor

White Tahiti-flower with rice

Rouge-Gorge of the Adriatic

Rouge-Bleu of the Adriatic (with cream)

Tomatoes with Greek olives

Tern with eggs

Bouquet de mari
é
e with mustard

Cleaning lady in lemon juice

Shark
à
la Sumatra

BOOK: The Attic
3.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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