These Are the Names (2 page)

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Authors: Tommy Wieringa

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BOOK: These Are the Names
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The dreams with which each of them had left home had gradually wilted and died off. Their dreams differed in size and weight, and remained alive in some longer than in others, but in the end they had almost all disappeared. The sun had pulverised them; the rain had washed them away.

The boy saw planes in the sky. He followed their trails with his eyes. He had never seen an airplane from close by, but he knew of the miracle of travellers climbing on board in one world and disembarking in the next, with only a few hours in between. In his mountain village, planes were seen as dots against the sky that left white trails behind them. An uncle had left on a plane for America and never came back. Later, the boy's aunt and five nieces and nephews had joined him.

The boy had once made a plane from wire and wood. His brother said, ‘How is a plane supposed to fly if it has propellers and a jet engine?'

He had tried to explain the different principles to him, but stopped after a time because he wasn't completely sure himself.

His brother had remained behind because he had a weak constitution. They had sent him instead, even though he was two years younger. He had been found fit for the crossing — not by plane, but overland. The money for the journey was tucked into the toes of his shoes. The pair he'd had on when he left home had worn out and become useless long ago. Back when there was still a whole crowd of them, a man had died along the way, and the boy had taken his shoes. He had pulled them from the man's feet carefully, afraid that the corpse would suddenly open its eyes and shout, ‘Thief! Stop the thief!'

But the man remained dead, and so the boy became the owner of a pair of large, dusty sneakers.

The day came, with dirty light. They set their numb bodies in motion again. In the morning, the sand was wet and heavy, the grass whipping against their legs.

At midmorning, the boy discovered something important: a cigarette package, half-buried in the sand. Plastic bags would blow out onto the steppe and remain hanging in the brush, but cigarette packages didn't do that; people tossed them on the ground, and there they stayed. So there were still people somewhere. Maybe they had been here, and he was holding proof of their existence in his hand! The letters of the
WESTERN
brand were a faded red. Drops of condensation had formed inside the cellophane. Perhaps now they would finally find the long-hoped-for village, or a little town, heralded from a distance by the glistening gold onion of a church. He shook the sand from the moist package and stuck it in his pocket — the same pocket that contained a stone in the shape of a crescent moon, and the knife his brother had given him. His brother had wrapped wire around the handle, and rust had gnawed little dents into the metal of the blade. At night, the boy held the knife tightly. Shivering with pleasure, he imagined himself ramming it into someone's heart.

His fingers slid over the cellophane. He wished he could tell the woman about his discovery, but he kept his mouth shut. It would only break the spell. It was a sign meant specially for him. If he remained silent, it would have its effect. Otherwise not. Then they would continue to wander across the flats for centuries, and it would be his fault. Because he hadn't kept his mouth shut.

Their feet dragged through the sand. Interminable was the space they moved through. The landscape before them was precisely the same as the one behind; the one on the right differed in no way from that on the left. The only lines to guide them on the steppes were the sky above their heads and the ground beneath their feet.

Their footsteps were wiped out quickly behind them. They were passers-by, leaving no trail and no recollections.

Around noon, when the tall man shouted that he could see a village — ‘Houses! Over there! Village! Village!' — the boy was not surprised. He almost burst with happiness, but he was not surprised.

He ran up to the front, where the tall man was pointing his shaky hand at the horizon. ‘Where?' he shouted.

‘There!'

The boy saw nothing, but ran in the direction the tall man had pointed. The tall man always saw things before the others did; he was a born lookout.

The boy ran, he soared across the sand. There went a chosen one, a boy God had selected as the first to know of his intentions. He no longer felt hunger or fatigue. The grass thrashed at his legs; his lungs burned in his chest. He saw the first houses.

‘Hey!' he screamed, so the people there would know he was coming. ‘Hey, you there!'

It was a village sunken in the plain, round and worn as eroded rock. He ran towards a big barn. The rafters were rotten, and the roof swayed like an old horse's back. The boy ran down a street between the houses where the grass was as high as on the steppe. A soundless shriek rose up inside him, but his brain refused to accept what he saw — the vacant, mute windows, the overrun streets.

Not a living soul.

‘Hello?!' he screamed. ‘Is anybody there?'

His question bounced between the houses of wood and clay.

‘Where are you people?'

He yanked on decaying doors. He ran into one house after the next. Empty. Empty, and the people were gone. In the heart of the village he stormed into a little house of prayer. The sparse light falling through the high windows revealed the destruction. Sacred volumes had fallen to ash and shreds; the blaze had gone cold. The boy threaded his way past charred pews and cabinets, and climbed to the altar. There he sank to his knees. He bent over, his hands covering his face, and howled like a wounded animal.

That was how the others found him.

CHAPTER THREE

Economies

At six-thirty, Pontus Beg arose. He stretched as though freeing himself from a headlock.

He ran a washcloth across his face and gargled with mouthwash. In the mirror he saw a stocky man, his chest and shoulders covered in greying hair. He thought about the boy who had swum beside the weir — the smooth, hairless body. The lightness; memories of an other.

The upstairs neighbours' wastewater hissed through the pipes, rushing like a waterfall when the toilet was flushed. These were only some of the building's tidal movements. In early October they had turned the heating on, and the building began to swell; it creaked as hot water sluiced through the pipes with a sigh.

Tucked away behind a pleat in the shower curtain was the glass containing Zita's upper dentures. Beg could remember her real teeth. With the passing of time they had become stained an ever-darker brown. When she smiled she would cover her mouth with her hand. She was ashamed of having teeth the colour of tobacco juice, but feared nothing as much as the dentist. Beg had given her money to have her teeth pulled and dentures fitted. She had asked them to put her under for the operation, and lived toothlessly until the new ones were ready.

The dental technician had done a good job: when she smiled, it was as though she'd opened a jewellery box.

I can pay for the teeth, Beg thought, but I can't make the mouth say what I want.

Zita lived in accordance with the iron regime of women. She worked hard; she stood for no nonsense. The nights with Beg she saw as a continuation of her activities around the house — dusting, sweeping, cooking, washing, ironing, and mending his worn shirts and uniforms. Each of these tasks she fulfilled slowly and attentively; in bed, he sometimes thought he heard her humming.

They benefited from each other in an easily quantifiable fashion; neither of them felt short-changed in any way. Beg considered the arrangement a perfect marriage; in Zita's mind it was an excellent position.

He went into the bedroom, observing the sharp lines around her hollow cheeks. In her sleep she looked disgruntled. That was the attitude her face assumed in repose, but it said nothing about her character.

He laid a hand on her shoulder and shook her.

‘Yeah, yeah,' she murmured.

In the kitchen he ladled soup from the pan and ate it cold. Between spoonfuls he took the occasional bite of dark rye bread.

‘You're slurping,' Zita said from the bathroom. ‘You sound like a pig.'

Beg smiled. Yes, it was a good marriage in every way.

When Beg entered the waiting room at police headquarters, two men jumped to their feet. They both began talking excitedly. One of them had run over a sheep that belonged to the other. The second man claimed that the whole herd had already crossed the road when the casualty in question suddenly came traipsing along. ‘A ewe, sir,' the first one said then, ‘such a lovely animal!'

Running over a sheep, Beg knew, was a complicated business. According to old nomadic custom, you were not only liable for the animal you had killed, but also owed recompense to a number of generations to come — one could say, in other words, that the shepherd had a good day when one of his herd was flattened.

‘You've never seen such a lovely little ewe, so broad in the beam,' the shepherd wailed.

‘That's enough!' Beg shouted.

At the information desk, Oksana was playing solitaire on the computer.

‘Where's Koller?' Beg asked.

Oksana looked up. ‘His wife called — an abscess in his armpit. She said it kept him awake all night. He's gone to the doctor.'

‘How many abscesses does the guy have?' Beg asked in annoyance.

‘That was a fistula. On his behind.'

‘So who's going to going to draw up this report?'

Oksana looked over her shoulder at the men in the waiting room. ‘Koller's actually the one on duty,' she said.

Beg shook his head. ‘Call Menchov. Get him out of bed.'

He poured himself a cup of tea, then went into his office. The room was warm, and he could smell himself — his own scent, mingled with cigarette smoke. He turned on the computer. The screen did not light up. He pushed the button again, but the thing was dead. He called Oksana. After a little knock on the door, she came in. Her skirt clung to the lines of her lower body; there, where the elastic pressed against flesh, he could see the contours of her underwear. The top buttons of her glossy white blouse were unbuttoned. A person in government service, Beg felt, shouldn't walk around like that. Maybe in the brothel at the Morris Club, but not at police headquarters.

He stared helplessly at the monitor.

‘Has it stopped working again?' she asked.

He rolled his chair away from the desk. Oksana squatted down and pushed
POWER
. Then she stood up and walked around to the far side. ‘Oh, okay,' she said, ‘that's not too complicated.'

She held up the plug for him to see. She promised to give the cleaners hell, and stuck the plug back in the socket. The computer sighed, and the monitor blipped on.

Beg longed for his typewriter.

One hour later, Oksana came back to say that neither Koller nor Menchov had showed up. The two men were still in the waiting room.

‘Tell Koller I'll break both his legs if he doesn't get down here now. He's on weekend duty, for Christ's sake. There's no reason why he can't draw up a report with a fistula.'

‘An abscess.'

‘Whatever the hell it is.'

‘I'll tell him that in so many words.'

Beg opened the office safe. At the bottom of it lay that month's takings: money in little plastic bags, in envelopes, folded between sheets of paper, held together with paperclips, wrapped in rubber bands; money his men had garnered at roadside from speeders, from those who ignored traffic signals or drove barefooted — driving without shoes on your feet was an obvious violation. First you pulled them over, and then you asked the driver if he wanted to be registered as a traffic offender. That was the signal for the transaction to begin. No one wanted to be registered. Fines were paid on the spot.

Beg counted it all and divided it according to rank and seniority. Before him lay a large pile of banknotes, which he split into many smaller piles. He stuffed the notes into envelopes, and wrote the recipients' names on them. They all came in on the first of the month to pick up their share.

In this country, he thought, everyone steals from everyone else. And those who don't steal, beg. Everywhere he looked he saw outstretched hands: no house was built, no service rendered, without the hands intervening, claiming their piece of the transaction. The system was all-embracing, a colossal weave of kickbacks, bribes, extortion, and larceny — whatever else you might chose to call it. As police commander, he found himself somewhere halfway up the ladder: big hands pinched the chunks above him; little hands scrabbled at the crumbs below. Everyone took part. It was an economic system from which everyone profited and under which everyone suffered.

Around noon, he left headquarters and drove to Tina's Bazooka Bar for lunch. Michailopol: it was his city. Thirty-nine thousand inhabitants, according to the latest census. A border town, it had once been home to a prestigious nuclear-research institute and an ice-hockey team that had been promoted in two consecutive seasons and came within an inch of the national championship. Beg remembered the excitement. At its peak, early in the last century, the city had numbered one hundred and fifty thousand citizens. Michailopol station, with fifteen departures an hour, had been the gateway to the wide world. Now Beg couldn't even remember where the tracks had been. The steel had been torn up, and used to build sheds and fences. The sleepers were chopped into pieces, and disappeared into stoves during the coldest of winters. The Jugendstil station itself was still there, but had decayed beyond rescue. A mortician stored his coffins in one of the outbuildings.

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