And what’s that stink coming out of you?
said Mama in a new voice, loud and impervious, when she came to wake him the following morning, and rudely, gruffly, raised the blinds before turning back to him for a better look.
You’ve had it for a couple of days already.
Notice that she’s looking straight at you, she isn’t afraid of you anymore.
And he curled up and hid his face in the pillow; what’s changed her, why is she acting strange?
She leaned over him and began to sniff suspiciously, from his feet up to his head, the way she used to sniff Grandma from behind, and suddenly she squinted.
Aron to Aron, run for your life, danger, danger, over; he’d seen that look in her eyes before, the flash of horror that time in the kitchen after the thorough cleaning when the shit came out.
Roughly she turned him over on his back, pushed away the hands he held up to guard his face, sniffed hard, then zeroed in on his nose.
You’re insane, what have you done to your nose, meshuggeneh; it was bad enough without adding this chendelach to your list; in case the blind can’t see what you are, at least they’ll be able to
smell you?
And the doctor at the first-aid station said there was no need to worry, that’s the smell you give off when something gets caught in your nasal cavities.
Did he by any chance remember accidentally sticking something small up there?
Aron only shook his head.
Aron to Aron, get out, get out, run for your life, over.
All around the station there was tumult.
They were getting the stretchers ready, packing bandages, taking an inventory of medicines.
From the corner of his eye Aron saw two seventh-graders he knew strutting around in white coats.
Everyone looked busy, as though they were hurrying to an important meeting, even the children wore that expression on their faces.
It’s a matter of a day or two before the thing starts, breathed the doctor, sticking a fine pair of tweezers into Aron’s nose and poking around.
Aha, got it, ho there, that’s in pretty deep, here it comes, we’ll force it out of you, don’t move, it might hurt for just a second, and slowly and carefully he removed the vile-smelling glob and waved it in the air, but his smile of triumph quickly vanished as he peered more closely at the glob, smudged with letters.
A boy your age, putting something up your nose, shame on you.
The doctor was aghast, tilting his head at Aron,
tsss tsss tsss,
that’s something you’d expect from a three-year-old, not a grown-up ten-year-old.
Silence.
Mama froze.
Now let her tell him, let her tell the doctor everything and the doctor will tell us what has to be done.
This was the last chance.
And maybe there was a perfectly simple solution.
An electric shock or something.
A moment of pain and it’ll be over.
Now, please, before the war starts, because afterward who’ll care?
He’s twelve, mumbled Mama, shamefaced.
Aron stared at her.
She didn’t set him straight.
And before his eyes, caught in the tweezers, waved the letter that would never arrive at its destination.
Aron to Aron, what now, over.
He winced at himself.
He had no right to complain about her.
Wasn’t he too standing here not daring to open his mouth, any more than he had when she bought him elevator shoes for his bar mitzvah.
He had said nothing to her then, and hated himself for it, for having betrayed himself.
Twelve and a half, she mumbled lamely, tucking her head between her shoulders, dark with disgrace.
And the next day was the last day.
At four o‘clock Aron went down to the valley wearing a clean pair of pants and a crisply ironed shirt, his hair slicked down with water.
He left the house without a goodbye, for fear that the sight of them would hold him back or set something off inside.
He had all his equipment with him.
He even remembered the
big can opener, which he hid in his pants.
He arrived at the rock and climbed up it, and at the highest point, with the help of his little red mirror, he flashed the reflected sun at Gideon’s open window; three short flashes, then three long ones, and three short ones again.
Three times over he did it, his hands trembling slightly but scrupulous with the rhythm, and then he sat down on the rock again, feeling weak, curling up on Gideon’s part of the rock shelf, trying to stop what he was feeling, the draining out, and he must have fallen asleep then, wishing someone would touch him on the shoulder and say, You rang?
But at exactly five o’clock he awoke all alone, and stood up languidly and flashed the mirror again three times, aiming at the ceiling in Gideon’s room, because maybe the first time Gideon was sleeping and didn’t see, and right away his knees buckled and he slipped off the rock and lay beside it; he’d had this stunned and hollow feeling, right here, the time he broke his arm; he had been crazy with despair then, much more than now, now was nothing in comparison, now was almost over.
Back then he had jumped up and down for over half an hour.
Maybe an hour.
Waiting for just the right moment when his ofzeluchi brain would stray.
When it would neglect to order his arm to bend in time.
Back then he’d gone over all his troubles: Giora trying to drown him to save himself, Giora’s hand-me-downs, the looks people gave him everywhere he went, the insults, sly or obvious; and nothing helped, until he imagined round little Uncle Loniu standing before him at the bar mitzvah, repeating “Body-building, body-building,” and suddenly it happened, he heard a crack, and felt the pain, the worst he’d ever experienced, shooting through him as he realized he’d done it, he’d actually done a thing like that, and now they would never send him to Tel Aviv, and that’s when he started to get scared.
Again he looked at his watch and saw that almost an hour had gone by.
Strange how fast time was flying, and now to signal for the third time.
With what remained of his strength he climbed to the top of the rock and tried to stand up straight—his legs were trembling—to flash a final SOS; maybe last time Gideon was lying on his stomach and didn’t see the moving light-script overhead, because surely if he had seen it he would be here by now, it was an unignorable call for help, even if it came in the middle of a feud.
Even when they were both grown up, living apart in foreign lands, lying in bed in their new homes, or palaces even, if they suddenly saw a light flash on the ceiling, three
dots, three dashes, three dots, they would leap up and pack their bags and, without so much as a goodbye to anyone, hop on the first plane and get there just in time to rescue each other.
They had sworn it.
He leaned against the rock, trying to steady himself, to put on a happy face.
Why appear weak and repulsive?
Trying to fill up with life from the rays of the setting sun.
Let’s say he was in Komi, up to his knees in the ice, longing for this moment by the rock, but he didn’t have the strength to imagine Komi, Komi and the taiga were fading, shrinking.
Aron to Aron, I’ve found something else, over; Aron to Aron, I almost forgot you were there, over; I hardly am anymore, I’m hardly there, it’s the end of the road, isn’t it, over; Aron to Aron, what did you find, over; I found, I found, deep down, under the dust, under the ground, another thing maybe you’d like to take with you, a gift, maybe it will help you, maybe it will last like the oil that burned for eight days; she used to buy a carp for the Sabbath, but it was a special carp.
You’re the one who made it special, before you came along it was an ordinary carp swimming around in the bathtub, opening and closing its mouth, all fat and shiny, and you sat on the edge of the bathtub and watched it; it looked kind of silly, with its tough little body, opening and closing its mouth like a toy, swimming laps up and down the tub, and suddenly you stood up, yes, now I remember, you ran to her closet, climbed on a chair, and opened her jewelry box with the necklaces and bracelets and rings and pins, till you found what you were looking for, the shiny red bead that had dropped off, a shiny red bead, you were sure it was a ruby, and you ran to the bathtub with it, carrying it high in the air like a torch, your shiny red ruby, and then you caught the carp; it tried to wiggle out of your hands but you held it as tight as you could, though it floundered and flapped its tail and fought you, and you pushed the ruby into its mouth and down its throat with your finger, and it looked at you in furious amazement, but the ruby was in its stomach by then, and all day long you strutted around feeling proud of your secret: I have a fish with a ruby inside, and you waited for Mama to cut the carp open on Friday and find it there and make a wish, and whatever she asked would be granted instantly, so okay, it didn’t turn out the way you planned, things never do, especially not when you’re a child; it’s better not to believe in magic, so you don’t get disappointed, but now, nevertheless, on the path to the valley from the building project, here comes Gideon, just in time, at the very last
minute, walking his walk, his bowlegged walk, maybe I’m dreaming.
Aron to Aron, maybe I’m dreaming, yes, maybe I am.
Hi, Kleinfeld, what’s up?
Hello, Gideon.
What are you doing here, all hunched over?
What, you saw my sign?
No.
Move over.
Let me sit on my side.