The Tower: A Novel (30 page)

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Authors: Uwe Tellkamp

BOOK: The Tower: A Novel
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21
 
Caravel
 

The
Santa Maria
had lateen sails with red crosses, the
Nina
was fat-bellied, curving over the waterline like a Turkish sabre, Robert said: It’s floating on its hump, and then came Magellan’s ships, sea spray splashing up at the bow, yards torn off in the horse latitudes, the Roaring Forties, masts eaten away with salt and rigging leached dry; Magellan with his telescope on the afterdeck and it was the void into which he was staring, the void explored by Spain and Portugal, wave-torn rocks, dead bays, black holes that kept on swallowing up horizons, suns, moons, signs of the zodiac over the wind-creased sea, and despite everything Magellan looked like a man who had time, that struck Christian as odd and he would spend ages observing the Commander as he circumnavigated the world on a poster opposite the bed. His journey was a string tied round the globe, the equator a cord holding the world together at its fattest place; once right round, from then on there were borders. And beside the bearded seafarer, Gagarin was waving, a man in a space capsule and that, too, had encircled the earth with an invisible string. The colours were slightly faded already, how old was the photo, had they cut it out of a copy of
Army Review
, out of
Sputnik
? Ornella Muti and Adriano Celentano next to them, photos from
Film Mirror
,
Boot Hill
with the, as Ina said, ‘incredibly’ blue-eyed Terence Hill; Captain Tenkes, the heroic Hungarian freedom fighter. For a moment the ticking of the alarm clock on a shelf above Christian’s head was as loud as the click of a metronome, tock, tock, tock, or was it the wooden leg of a buccaneer walking up and down on the deck of his death-trap of a ship, staring at Tortuga, a sharp-tongued parrot on his shoulder? … It must be hot on Tortuga, the mysterious island off Venezuela, as hot as in this bed: Christian threw back the quilt and put
his arm over his forehead. Doctor Fernau had come on Sunday afternoon, had auscultated and percussed him with fingers flattened by a hundred thousand percussions, the pleximeter middle finger on the left, the percussion middle finger on the right, as Richard explained (and no one understood), and all of Fernau’s fingers had bristly hair, they had felt or, rather, kneaded Christian, which hurt quite a bit on his muscles so that Fernau had frowned, told him to Shut His Trap, and continued to knead unmoved, to examine his lymph glands, which he did unexpectedly gently so that Christian, who had anticipated being short of breath, swallowed in astonishment. Then Doctor Fernau scratched his unkempt, iron-grey hair, put his hand to his left breast but found nothing, since he wasn’t wearing his white coat but a loose jacket to go with his grey flannels with the broken zip and coarse felt slippers: he lived not far away from the Hoffmanns, on Sonnleite, the road that wound its way down the steep slope on the east side of the district. Keeping two fingers between Christian’s jaws, he rummaged round in his worn doctor’s bag that was coming apart at one of the seams, growled, ‘Right’, when he found a wooden spatula and rammed it, grunting ‘Aah’, into Christian’s mouth. ‘A bit furred, the lingua. But, my God, as long as it’s not festering … What have we here … ?’ and screwed up his right eye, the left turned into a blue eyepiece behind the lens of his glasses, peered down his throat, the look presumably microscoping round his uvula, that was jiggling up and down apprehensively; Fernau tapped the spatula on his tonsil: ‘Out with the rubbish!’ Christian gave a rasping cough, saw Fernau’s gigantic eye as a monster’s and laughed on the doctor’s lenses, the Cossack moustache widened and slanted: ‘What we have here – clearly nothing at all. Spots of irritation, Waldeyer’s ring inflamed, but what of it, no need for the hospital, the lung’s rattling a bit, is there an important class test in the offing, young sir?’ Dr Fernau said, handing the spatula to Anne. ‘The lad has a bit of a temperature, it happens at his age, hormones sloshing round, you know, and so on. Keep him in bed, if
you like, Frau Hoffmann, the compresses on his legs were a good idea, tea with honey, yes, something to bring his temperature down, yes, has he been sick? Well there you are.’

Influenza infection, Fernau had written, two or three days in bed on a light diet. ‘Could I have an appointment with you, Herr Hoffmann. I’ve got an ingrowing toenail that’s bothering me.’

‘A bit of a temperature?’ Anne asked in a quiet voice once Fernau had left. ‘He’s got forty point three. He calls that a bit of a temperature? Shouldn’t we get them to examine him at the clinic?’

‘Fernau’s been a general practitioner for thirty years, I think he knows what he’s doing,’ Richard replied. – The grandfather clock chimed: a quarter past ten. Anne had let the blind down, but arranged the slats so that a dim light seeped through into the room, pale grey and dismal, in which the heroes of the sea on the wall lost their attraction and Tortuga all its mystery; no ship’s hull bobbing along lethargically in a lagoon with the brass of a sextant glinting on the seabed, no roar of the waves against the prow of the building, as he had sometimes imagined he could hear on windy nights, no navigation lights to starboard or port; and the expressions of Robert’s football heroes said that Italy against Germany, Mexico ’70, had not been a truly world-shattering event, just a football match, in the days when Italy didn’t just play defensively; Uwe Seeler’s expression was blank, not that of a folk hero; World Cup, ’74: Paul Breitner’s hair looked like an electrified feather duster.

Christian got up, put on his dressing gown, staggered into the kitchen to have a drink of the tea Anne had set out for him in two Thermos flasks. In the larder he found an opened packet of Hansa biscuits, he tried one, the biscuits were damp and tasted like soggy cardboard. In Waldbrunn they would be having physics with Herr Stabenow. He didn’t look much older than the pupils with his boyish face and metal-rimmed glasses that kept on slipping down his nose; he would push them back up with the middle finger of his right hand, to which
the class, despite its closeness to the gesture of giving someone the finger, paid less attention than to the set-up for the experiment: two chromium-plated spheres on slanting rods, a rubber band and a crank-handle, and when Stabenow turned it, sparks crackled between the two spheres – middle finger, metal-rimmed spectacles; magnets the size of ice-hockey pucks, Stabenow scattered iron filings between them that formed patterns of the electromagnetic field and glittering sheaves at the poles – middle finger, metal-rimmed glasses; but at some point or other they forgot the gesture, forgot their grins and followed, spellbound, Stabenow’s operations that never seemed uncertain; his experiments, which he set up and tried out meticulously in the little preparation cubicle next to the physics room, always worked and that naturally impressed them, for they could put themselves in Stabenow’s place and sensed their own cruel sharpsightedness that no teacher’s idiosyncrasy could escape, they knew that he could well be thinking that they were secretly waiting for him to make a mistake. Christian drank Anne’s strong fennel tea, annoyed that he was here in bed, sick, while the others could do experiments. At the high school he hadn’t liked physics, it was a subject that had too much maths for his taste; it was only when they got onto nuclear physics that he sat up and took notice, but only as long as it didn’t involve calculations – and when Arbogast, as patron of the Louis Fürnberg High School, had come and talked about his own life and about leading scientists he knew. With Stabenow it was different. He was passionate about his subject, the pupils could feel that. His whole body doubled up when he explained the principles behind the construction of a radio and, almost incoherent with enthusiasm, followed the tortuous route of the human voice through all the tubes, transistors, coils and resistances. At the end of the lesson his tie had slipped out of place – one of the so-called ‘bricklayer’s trowels’ you could buy in Waldbrunn and which, so it was said, his landlady chose for him as she did his socks: Herr Stabenow rented a room in one of the lanes leading off from the market. The blackboard was
covered with sketches and formulae in his genius’s scribble and the remnants of several pieces of red and white chalk were scattered at an exuberant distance around the classroom. He had sparked off a real fever for physics among the boys, they all suddenly wanted to go in for splitting uranium, do great things in the field of microelectronics, invent pocket calculators with a hundred functions … first of all, however, to learn to smoke a pipe, for all the physicists of genius they saw in the photographs Stabenow brought smoked pipes: Einstein, Niels Bohr, Kapitza … Max Planck had smoked a pipe … or was it Heisenberg? The Nobel Prize at thirty-one … that left them fourteen years, that was piles of time, they’d surely manage it too. They just had to smoke a pipe all the time and learn to be significantly absentminded, like the physicist who one morning leapt onto his bicycle and, eyes fixed, pipe in his mouth, started to pedal, until someone asked him: Where are you going? – I’m going to the Institute. – Without a chain?

The fennel tea tasted horrible, Christian poured it down the sink. He looked out of the window, at Griesel’s garden, which was still in bare hibernation; Marcel, the Griesels’ black poodle, was jumping up and down in his kennel, barking, because the neighbours’ fat, grizzled tomcat, Horace, accompanied by his feline lady, Mimi, white with black paws, happened to be sniffing at the tomato sticks in the bed in front of his run and Mimi was elegantly licking her rolled-up right paw; Marcel howled and savaged his toy, a long roll of rags, but it had no effect.

Briquettes were being shovelled in the coalyard behind Griesel’s garden, familiar noises: shovels digging sharply into the pile, metal rasping over concrete, then the coal clattered into large metal scales, the shovels, briefly tapped to clear them of dust, scraped up slack, took a slithering run-up, dug sharply into the coal again, a little angrily, a little deviously, a little obsessively in the self-assured horny hands of Plisch and Plum, as the labourers were generally called in the district, after Wilhelm Busch’s
mischievous pair of dogs, Christian had never heard their real names, one was tall and spindly, the other short and square, a suitcase on two legs, as Aunt Barbara said; and when there was a full hundredweight, the briquettes rumbled down the shiny chutes into gunny sacks that Hauschild, the misshapen, gnarled coal merchant with watery blue eyes shining in his blackened face, would lug round to the shed at the front, on Rissleite, where the customers were waiting.

Christian went back to bed. The light had moved on, the cloud-loom that since Saturday had been weaving a blanket of grey wool over the sky tore open in one place, sending sunbeams into the room: there was Robert’s table, the scattered football pictures, the Olympic photo books he’d borrowed from Niklas, beyond it, placed at a right angle to the window, his own table with the sloping writing top on it he’d made himself from left-over bits of wood and two drawing boards he’d bought from Mathes’s, the stationer’s on Bautzner Strasse, and immediately behind the table the case with his books, hardly three feet away. The tall, solid wood-veneer cupboards, standardized house furnishings, the RUND 2000 model from the state-owned Hainichen furniture works, five of which stood along the walls, leaving just enough space for a sofa, the desks and the bed – Robert’s had to be pulled out – weighed down on the room in their dark solidity. He didn’t like the room, consisting as it did of these heavy cupboards arranged square-on to each other and the carpeted void between them that could immediately be seen into from the door; there was something of a cage about it, the contents of which could be grasped at a glance. The posters on the wall seemed like foreign bodies, tolerated rather than welcomed by Anne, similarly the net with footballs, handballs and Robert’s football boots hanging from a hook over the end of the bed nearest the door. Christian closed his eyes, listened, must have fallen asleep, for he woke with a start when the living-room clock struck the hour. The garden gate slammed and immediately the Griesels’ bell rang: that was Mike Glodde, the mailman with the squint and the hare-lip who was
engaged to the Griesels’ middle daughter and brought their mail to their apartment, but only theirs, for the others there were the central lockers at the far end of Heinrichstrasse that the Post Office had set up to make their delivery men and women’s route shorter; anyway, who wanted to be a postman now, in this phase of transition, according to the law of dialectical materialism, from ‘Soc.’ to ‘Comm.’? Christian smiled when he heard Glodde calling for ‘Mar-tsel’; eleven o’clock: the physics lesson was over and Stabenow would be closing it with his standard concluding exhortation: ‘And just think all this over – why! Why! Why!’

Music was fluttering round the building, a tune full of melancholy and bold sentimentality, sung by male voices: that was the 1930s close-harmony ensemble, the Comedian Harmonists. The tenor’s voice swept upwards, Ari Leschnikoff’s supple timbre, smooth as silk; Christian leant over, put his ear to the wallpaper, now he could hear the lower voices better as well. That was the Stenzel Sisters’ gramophone and at the same interval the record always made a little swerve, soft as butter. Steps and thuds mingled with the music, probably the Stenzel Sisters doing their gymnastic exercises … In their younger days they’d been acrobatic bareback riders in Sarrasani’s Circus. My little sea-green cactus – out on the balcony – hollari, hollari, hollaro … He lay down again. The fever had come back, the weakness in his limbs. Two of the three Stenzel Sisters lived upstairs, the third, the oldest, had a room with the Griesels, and that was something that made Griesel disgruntled: that he, as the officially appointed block superintendent, had had one of his rooms allocated to another person and the Hoffmanns hadn’t, and because there’d been telephone calls about it and remarks about square metres per head and number of children, a few months ago Richard, after a discussion with the Rohdes in the Italian House, had attached a sign, ‘Ina Rohde’, to the door. ‘She only pretends to live here, she never gets any letters,’ Griesel objected. Anne said, ‘Young girls nowadays just get their love letters slipped to them, Herr Doktor
Griesel.’ Will we be going to the Baltic again this August, Christian wondered, together with the Tietzes as we did last year? Ezzo had been given a new, one-piece rod, made of very soft fibreglass and with a Rileh ‘Rex’ fixed-spool reel. The Tietzes would presumably go to Rügen again and if Ezzo was lucky the fishermen would take him with them to the lagoon off Greifswald, where there were the biggest pike. Only recently he’d sent a card to Christian in Waldbrunn, telling him he’d bought a spoon-bait, a wobbler and a cod-wiggler from Press’s, the specialist angling shop down in the Neustadt district, as well as some fifteen-pound line, green, they could try it out on the Kaltwasser some time.

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