Gradually, his mother was put in a nutshell of a few traits: a life in catchwords.
The words had replaced her.
Now there she stood, squinting as she looked out over the fields; behind her, her son snuck into the house, an intruder in his own memories, through the kitchen and into the dark hallway, on stockinged feet into his parents' bedroom, the planks creaking beneath his footfalls â forbidden territory. There is the corner cupboard with its glass doors; she stores her valuables behind panes of cut glass. Her wedding photo in its silver frame, the picture of her parents beside it: her father in the infantryman's summer uniform; her mother in white, a coronet in her raven hair. A jade cameo, an ivory hair clasp â the riches of a farm wife. At the back, covered by the veil she wore at her wedding, is a little candleholder with seven branches.
A candleholder exactly like the one he was looking at now.
Beg stood in the alleyway and put on his cap. The back door of the restaurant was open, and an old woman was peeling onions in the doorway. The skins fell into a bucket between her knees. A cigarette dangled from a corner of her mouth; she kept one eye closed to keep out the smoke. The woman followed his every move, but her hands went on peeling mechanically. Behind her, under fluorescent lighting, Asians were at work in the kitchen.
Beg entered the restaurant from the street side, passing through a curtain of tinkling beads. A man and a girl behind the counter looked at him as expressionlessly as the old woman had.
Sitting at a little table by the window, he flipped through the menu, which featured pictures of the various dishes in strange colours and attitudes, as though a pilot had squeezed off a random series of aerial landscape photos. The caramelised duck glistened temptingly. Beg looked up at the girl and pointed to the duck: âThis one.'
She nodded.
âAnd a coke,' he said.
He watched her go. The Chinese were every bit as enigmatic as the Jews. His legs were shimmying under the table.
âThat thing, what is that?' he'd asked Zalman Eder, after they had stood looking at the candleholder.
The rabbi explained to him that the menorah, along with the Ark of the Covenant, was one of the most important attributes of Judaism.
Beg thought about the poignancy he'd felt â the same thing he'd felt when he talked to his sister. So much had been lost, he thought; sometimes you could survey that loss in its entirety. His sister's voice had carried him back to where he came from, to the days when everything still had its natural place, and none of them had foreseen a future in which your rightful spot on earth was a thing half forgotten. Condemned to years of air and dust, the inconstancy could only be combated with ironclad routine. There was less and less difference between him and the nameless ones they sometimes found â the anonymous ones committed to the soil with a modicum of formalities. His sister's voice was a lifeline tossed to him from the past, to keep him from forgetting who he was and where he came from.
The candlestick showed him his place in the past and awarded him a place in the present. It reminded him about the child he was, sneaking through his parents' bedroom and taking in the objects in the corner cupboard, and told him that he had been born of a Jewish woman who had concealed her past â just as she had hidden the menorah beneath the veil. He had no doubts anymore. He must be a Jew â no, he was one. That was his place in the world, part of a people, of a community. A community extinct, but for one.
That he belonged somewhere, that was the poignant thing.
Sitting in the Chinese restaurant, he looked back over his life. The boy taking a swan dive from the bridge by the weir: a Jew. Pontus the son: a Jew. The cadet: a Jew. Commissioner Beg: a Jew. This time, history, that process of erosion, had won something rather than lost. Nothing had changed, yet everything was different. He belonged to another people now, as chosen as they were doomed, as the rabbi had said.
The last century had roared over their heads with such brute force that now only one of them was left â or, in fact, two. When Zalman Eder died, Beg would be the last Jew in Michailopol. The shuddering of his legs made the table shake.
After the pogroms came the camps. In Michailopol there had been a Lager. People spoke of one hundred thousand to two hundred thousand prisoners who had been executed there: mostly Jews, but also Red Army prisoners. In 1943, the Germans had started destroying the evidence: the mass graves were opened, and Sonderkommandos piled the bodies high and burned them. The fires burned for months. After the war, a Soviet report noted that the ground and substrate was saturated with the juice from corpses and melted human fat.
The girl put a hot plate on the table, and lit the tea-warmers inside it.
Little was left of the camp itself. It had become overgrown with trees and bushes. Years ago, a little monument had been set up beside what were once the gates to the Lager. Later, it was set on fire and plastered with swastikas. The brick walls still standing were daubed with the angled cross. In Michailopol there was no such thing as a respectful nod to the past.
The Chinese girl placed the platters of noodles and duck on the hot plate. Beg served himself, tilting the platter to let the bird and its juices slide onto his plate. He had arrived at the age when only sex and large quantities of food provided him with sensations of happiness. All the rest was extinguished; the heart was a motor that lost power with the years.
Still, undeniably, the discoveries about his past produced in him feelings that seemed like happiness; the right word for it, perhaps, was excitement, an edgy kind of anticipation. As though something was about to start â a sensation he remembered from childhood. The only thing was: he couldn't for the life of him figure out what it was that was about to start. He was a Jew, that was all. It changed nothing and solved nothing. He would harbour no expectations. He would follow it, of course, but without assuming that it would add anything to his life.
It was a strategy the Chinese people behind the counter might have had something to say about, had they not made silence towards outsiders such a part of their nature. They lived behind a screen of enchanted silk, invisible and impenetrable.
In Michailopol's crime statistics, they were almost entirely absent. He couldn't remember a Chinese person ever having been arrested. If he went into the kitchen, of course, he would be sure to find a few people working without the proper documents, but there was no cause for him to check. They weren't bothering anyone. Chinese people seemed to avoid even the most minor of public infractions.
If more ethnic groups did that, his work would be a lot easier. In fact, it would make him pretty much superfluous. He would show up at the scene of accidents, settle minor territorial disputes, and lead an existence otherwise as calm as that of a civil servant at the court of Lu, in the sixth century before Christ.
The curtain tinkled. The rabbi came in and walked to the counter without looking around. He placed his order. Beg ate his duck mechanically and watched him. The old man stood at the counter motionlessly until his meal came sliding through the little trapdoor. The Chinese man wrapped the containers in drab paper and dropped them into a plastic bag. Slowly, the rabbi counted out the change from his wallet.
As he was heading for the door, Beg raised his hand and said: âMr. Eder.'
The rabbi looked up, roused from his thoughts. He came over to the table.
They spoke, the rabbi standing, his gaze fixed on the debris on Beg's plate. Only then did Beg tell him about his mother's candleholder. He heard himself talking. The bedroom, the glass cupboard, the veil. Then the rabbi said: âThe menorah is hard for us to part with. It's something ⦠very important. Seven arms that draw us back to our origins.'
He looked at Beg's plate again and said: âYour first meal as a Jew, and already you're in violation.'
Beg looked at the remains in surprise.
âHam,' the rabbi said. âTreife.'
Beg didn't understand.
âNot kosher,' the rabbi said.
There were strips of pink ham between the noodles; Beg hadn't noticed them.
The rabbi looked despondently at his own plastic bag of food. âBut, oh well â¦?'
He was almost to the door when Beg stood up and said: âOne more thing, one more question.'
Zalman Eder came back, his movements impatient.
âI was wondering,' Beg said, âwhat if all those things are a mistake? The directives. All happenstance, what then?'
A sly smile appeared on the rabbi's lips. He said: âLet me ask you this: in a city there are ten butchers, nine of them kosher. Then, on the street, you find a package of meat. Nice meat; you're glad you found it. But is it kosher, or isn't it? You go to the rabbi for counsel. How great is the chance, do you think, that it's kosher?'
âNine out of ten,' Beg said.
âThe chance that it's kosher, I would say, is so great that you can eat it with a clear conscience.'
âAnd what if it's not kosher?'
The rabbi laughed. âThen we pretend it is! And anyone who tries to prove differently had better be pretty damned sharp.'
The Chinese laughed quietly along with them, behind their counter, without understanding a word.
CHAPTER TWENTY
Then there were six
The boy crawled out from under the tarp. He stared into a day of ground fog and water â nothing but gusts of rain and a train of clouds as far as you could see. His travelling companions lay scattered around him in dark clumps, unrecognisable in their night-time shrouds of plastic sheeting and old coats. The man from Ashkhabad and the woman lay furthest from the rest. The boy looked in the direction they would take later, at the flat band of earth, the monotonous view, as though this journey began anew each day, the eternal return of the same. The steppe was a repetition, a dull-wittedly looping melody; it ground them down and wore them out, took another little piece of them every day, and would finally pulverise them all. Sometimes he thought about going on alone, about trying his luck without the others â how much of a chance was there that he would be the only one to reach the far side? And how much of a chance was there that they would arrive without him?
Had he learned enough from them to establish his bearings? Could he imitate the poacher's techniques? Did he know where to dig to find edible tubers? He needed to pay more attention, so that he, too, could survive on his own, someday.
Once, long ago, they would have been on their feet before sunrise. They had been conquerors back then; these days, wild horses couldn't drag them from their beds. They abandoned their dreams with a curse. They scratched at their fleabites and rubbed their eyes. Never did they seem more lost than when they arose and the dispiriting flats rolled out before them.
They packed up their sleeping gear, tossed the bundles over their shoulders, and entered the new day. The wet grass of the steppe soaked their trouser legs. No one said a word. The gaping sole of the boy's right shoe scooped sand. They spread out and moved through the tall, dead grass.
The boy looked back. Africa and the tall man were missing. âHey!' he shouted to the others, then ran back to the campsite. His shoe flapped. It made him dizzy, but he kept running.
Foreboding.
The black man was kneeling beside the tall man's sleeping space. The plastic had been thrown back. The tall man's mouth had fallen open, as though he'd choked on a word he would never pronounce again. His beer-yellow eyes were riveted on the sky above, drops of rain trickling through the grey hairs of his beard.
The black man was murmuring a prayer with his eyes closed. In his hand he held the cross that hung on a cord around his neck. The boy began pulling away the plastic at the tall man's feet, cautiously, ready to leap aside. The trouser legs were pulled up a bit, and he saw his skinny blue shins, bitten to pieces by fleas. The others were coming; he had to work fast. They were filthy old gym shoes and they stank like the plague, but they were still whole. He had the left one already, but it was the right one he needed most urgently. The shoe wouldn't budge; it was lashed tightly to the foot. The boy was in too much of a hurry to untie the laces, so he pulled hard on the heel. The tall man's body shook beneath his efforts.
Almaty, oh Almaty! This is what has become of the world! Oh woe is me!
When the shoe shot loose, the boy fell on his back. The others were almost there; he quickly grabbed the left shoe as well and ran off. He wasn't strong, but he could outrun them all.
From a safe distance, he looked back. They were standing around the body. The black man, still kneeling, was looking up at them. The boy pulled off his own shoes and put on the tall man's. They were much too big for him, but sturdy enough, if he pulled the laces tight.
Shoes were vital. Without shoes, you were lost. Within their little economy, shoes represented great wealth â more than trousers or a coat. Water came first, then shoes. He was proud of his catch. He had been smarter than the others, faster. Above all, it was a victory over Vitaly, the slyest of them all. He had beaten him hands down.
Once he had shared a pair of shoes with his brother. The son with shoes could go to school. He wore them one day; his brother, the next. When he left, they had given him the shoes. Now his brother couldn't go to school anymore.