A drop fell. Beg's heart cringed; it had been so long since he'd heard such a serene sound. The ripple in the water died away quickly. He wished he could undress, go down the steps to the bottom of the basin, let his body go under, and cleanse it of the world's filth. Even the filth that did not wash off, he would scrub that away, too. A new soul â there, deep in the earth, with this magic water, that kind of thing seemed truly possible. What a pleasant, comforting thought ⦠To shed his old soul, that tattered, worn thing, and receive a new one in its stead. Who wouldn't want that? Who would turn down something like that?
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
The judgement
Vitaly bared his upper arm to display the wound. The boy turned away in disgust; the sore, covered in a green film, made him nauseous.
So the black man possessed powers. He'd suspected as much, always had. Yet he still hadn't decided whether he was a good sorcerer or an evil one; harming Vitaly could very well be the act of a miracle worker. Mean dogs are there to be kicked.
âHe says he touched him there,' the woman told the others. âThat that's what caused the sore. Something like that is ⦠well, it's â¦' She searched for words, without finding them.
The boy didn't respond; he hadn't forgotten the slap. He looked around, but saw the black man nowhere. Just to be on the safe side, he would avoid him. And keep his eyes open in the meantime.
Look, he told himself, you have to look carefully.
He remembered something his mother had told him once, a memory of him as a little boy. A little sister was born and, according to his mother, he had said: âBabies can't talk because they're not allowed to tell secrets about heaven.'
All right, he thought now, I may not know about heaven's secrets yet, but I'll sure find out about the earthly ones.
During the journey he had already seen and understood more than in all the years before. If he survived, the trip would shape and scar him.
âHe was the last one to show up,' the man from Ashkhabad said.
âWhat if he touches us, too?' the woman said. âIn our sleep?'
The man from Ashkhabad shook his head, unable to answer.
âHe wasn't the last one to show up,' the boy said. âHe was there from the start. Along with the rest of us.'
âWhy do you say that?' the woman said bitterly. âWhy are you lying about it?'
âHe was the last one,' Vitaly said. âNo one knew where he came from. Suddenly he was just there, to bring us bad luck â¦'
âLike a djinn,' the woman said.
It was the first time the boy saw her talk to the man from Ashkhabad, whose prey she was at night. Once she had spat on him â she had said she would kill him if she got the chance â but that all seemed to have vanished now. The boy kept his mouth shut; this sudden unanimity allowed for no dissent.
It was not his custom, but now the poacher joined in, too. âYou're the one who brought him back to us,' he told the tall man. âWe shook him off, then you showed up with him again. That's the way I see it.'
âAll I did was follow him!' the tall man protested. âHe was the one who found your trail.'
The poacher shrugged. âI'm only telling you what I saw.'
Vitaly nodded furiously, fever and mortal fear in his bulging eyes. The life will go out of him soon. His breathing is agitated. There's only one thing he longs for now: someone on whom to pin his misfortune. He needs to punish the black man, drag him along in his fall. That's what he still has to do. All the venom left in him he will apply to that end.
Evening. As they sit in the wet sand, a host of fat, round clouds converge above their heads. At the edges of the steppe, bolts shoot down from the violet sky.
âHey, beanpole!' Vitaly says. âWhat did you two get up to back there anyway, you and that nigger friend of yours?'
The tall man shrugs reluctantly.
âWe leave you behind for dead and suddenly you're back, nothing wrong with you, fit as a fiddle. How about you explain that to us, how that's possible.'
The others chimed in. Yeah, what exactly did happen?
The tall man looked at the ground. âNothing,' he said quietly.
âBullshit,' Vitaly said. âOne minute you're kicking the bucket, the next minute you come prancing in.'
The woman pulls her coat tighter around her. The boy looks down the row of emaciated male faces, the jutting cheekbones above their beards, their eyes sunk deep in the sockets â an inquisition in rags. They glare at the tall man. He should never have returned from the plains. For that he was being condemned. The deepest suspicion still had to be pronounced, but it floated out in front of the rest, waiting for the right moment to descend: the suspicion that witchcraft was at play here, a conspiracy with the darkness. That was the line of accusation the tribunal would choose, inexorably; the boy sensed it. The tall man could not escape. There was no possible defence; suspicion and verdict were one. The dark shapes before him, a tangled-up ball of fear and rage. The tall man slid back from the circle a little. His hand rested on a pebble. He picked it up and raised it to his myopic eyes: a smooth, white little stone, bleached like the shells on a beach. Had the steppe once been a sea? Black fish slipped noiselessly past his body. Dark waves of kelp bobbed before his eyes, the eyes of a pitiful drowned man at the bottom of the ocean.
âHe gave me something to eat,' he said.
âSo what did you two have to eat?' Vitaly mocked. âSoup and white bread?'
âHe had a can with him.'
âAnd what was in the can? Caviar?'
âDog food. I think it was dog food.'
âAnd where did he get that from?'
He shook his head. âHow should I know â¦?'
âHe's your friend, isn't he?' the woman shrilled.
His quiet voice: âHe's not my friend.'
âYou mean he helped you for no reason? Just like that?'
Behind them, a flash of lightning broke the clouds. Thunder rolled across the sky. Gently, after that, came the sound of rain around them.
Pointing at his upper arm, Vitaly asked whether the black man had touched him, too.
âFor Christ's sake,' the tall man said, âwhat do you mean by that?'
âHere!' Vitaly hissed. âHere, this is where he touched me with his finger!'
Pulling his sweater up over his head, he showed them his arm. They looked in dismay at the wound that lay like a burning sun between faded tattoos. The ring around it had widened, and the crater seemed even deeper.
âNo,' the tall man said, âhe didn't touch me. Or wait, when he helped me to my feet.'
âShow us,' Vitaly said.
âFuck off.'
âShow us!'
âAw, man, knock it off.'
But his plea was weak. Vitaly stood up and began yanking on the man's clothes. âShow us, damn you!'
The tall man flailed his arms wildly and edged back even further. Beyond Vitaly's reach, he slowly pulled off the layers of sweaters and T-shirts. A little later, he stood before them like that, a shivering blade of grass in the rain. They were shocked by the look of him. They knew: they were this skinny, too. His sternum stuck out, and the ribs rose and fell beneath the papery skin. The tall man looked down at his own body, inquisitively, in search of marks. âHey,' he said when he spotted the infected fleabites on his stomach.
âYou see, you see!' Vitaly crowed.
The others could not keep their eyes off his offensive nakedness, the face of starvation. Skin, nails, and hair.
Slow as a cold reptile, the tall man put it all back on.
A web of forked lightning illuminated the twilight.
âAnd that one over there' â the man from Ashkhabad pointed to where the black man had built his nest â âhas been stuffing himself and laughing at us the whole goddamn time.'
This was an unbearable thought, an insult to their desperate hunger.
âHas he got grub or not?' Vitaly asked the tall man.
âI didn't see any.'
âHe gave you something to eat, didn't he? That means he's got grub, doesn't it?'
âMaybe, yeah, I guess.' The tall man flapped his arms wildly now. âHow should I know!'
The man from Ashkhabad rose to his feet, and he and Vitaly walked over to the Ethiopian's camp. The others followed. They approached him cautiously, fearful of the power they had created in their minds.
âHey, Africa,' Vitaly said, kicking at the prone form. The tarp moved, and the black man stuck his head out.
âFood!' Vitaly said. He raised his hand to his mouth.
The black man laughed nervously.
âYou've got food there,' Vitaly said. He kicked at him again.
The black man crawled out from under the tarp and backed away from them.
They dumped the contents of his satchel on the wet ground and lifted the plastic to see if anything was hidden there. Uncomprehendingly, the black man watched as they rummaged through his possessions â the empty can, a Bible they couldn't read (they saw the silver cross on the cover), a roll of newspapers, his empty lighters, and his jingling collection of tin bottle caps. They had counted on finding a secret food stash, and now they looked in disbelief at his paltry possessions. They kicked apart the ring of grass, but found nothing. The Ethiopian looked at the tall man â a look that asked for help, a mitigating word to break the tension â but the tall man averted his eyes. Dark pillars, dripping with rain, they looked in silence at the African. They turned and went back to their places.
CHAPTER NINETEEN
Anonymous
Nagged by regret, Beg followed the rabbi up the steps, back from the hollow in the earth to the surface world where his old soul rejoined him. It was dark in the synagogue now; the vibrant blue had faded from the pillars.
Humming, the old man straightened a cloth that hung before the cabinet containing the Torah. Beg felt like going away, like leaving behind the questions without answers, and resuming his life. The rabbi stood with his back to him, nodding his head slightly now and again. Beg sat down in the front pew. Who had sat here before him? What had those people been like? How unthinkable, suddenly, that he should be one of them! He knew nothing about them; they were as remote to him as the Eskimos. Or the dead. That was more like it, he thought, for there was only one of them left: the captain, who would be the last to leave the ship.
He crossed his legs. No sound made its way in here. He heard only the crystalline singing in his head â inside his head it wasn't quiet at all. It would never be quiet again. It was in surroundings such as these that the metallic whistling had started. He tried not to think about it, that was his strategy; he lived around his burgeoning defects. But now, in the synagogue â where, just like on the steppes, the absence of sound came across as a gentle murmur â he felt a light, serene sorrow at the loss of silence.
For a long time he had feared that the whistling in his ears was a harbinger of deafness. He was afraid of going deaf. The deaf man seemed lonelier to him than the blind, because his world was limited to what he could see. A blind man could hear what happened behind and above him; for the deaf man, the world behind was an abyss. A deaf person could tell you less about the world around him than a blind person; he had proved that to himself at work one time by sealing his ears with balls of wax. The bustle of police headquarters had disappeared as if by magic: he could barely hear the phone, or the knocking on doors. The conversations in the corridor, Oksana's silly chatter, the lowing of a drunken prisoner â all vanished. As did doors that opened and closed, cars in the courtyard, snatches of conversation, the cooing of pigeons on the sill. The world without sound was a flat surface; all depth disappeared.
The rabbi straightened and turned around. He gestured to his guest to follow. At the exit, Beg saw a tapestry woven with gold thread and depicting a candlestick. He stopped in his tracks. There was a memory he was groping after, but couldn't quite reach. He strained his eyes, as though that might help him squeeze out the memory. Suddenly, in his mind's eye, he saw his mother emptying a bucket of potato peels into a trough. She was perspiring, and the hair at the back of her neck was straggly. It was a living memory, so different from the pictures he had of her; photographs tended to overgrow living memories, and finally to replace them. But now he was seeing how she put down the bucket, straightened her back, and rested her hands on her hips; with the back of one hand, she brushed away the hair that hung in her eyes from beneath her kerchief.
The first thing he forgot after she died was her scent. Then it was her voice. And soon enough after that, he could no longer summon up her looks and expressions.
Words had moved in to take their place. That she was loving and hot-tempered, maternal and dominating. At her funeral, he recalled, they had said that she worked like a horse, and had a will of iron. Without her stamina and financial insight, people said, the family would have gone to ruin. (Because the head of the household was a financial nincompoop, he heard them think.)