by Gy
But I still couldn't tell what made the chess-playing gentleman move, no, even though I looked all over his back, nowhere could I see where any sort of cable or drive belt might have entered his body, which was dressed in a tattered military uniform except that he was barefoot, and his feet were made like his hands, and he looked very thin and very old, and then it occurred to me that maybe he was moving on his own, that maybe he wasn't an automaton but really was alive, or if not, that he was moving on account of some African witchcraft, and an icy fear came over me and I couldn't even move, but then I took a good look at his thick reed chair and I realized that he got electricity through the legs of that chair, that's what made him move, and when I then gave the chair a careful little kick and it didn't budge, I knew I was right. And then I thought there must be a quiet little electric motor in his belly that was making his joints move through some network of connections, through hydraulics and control cables, such things were possible these days after all, and so I sat back in my chair and made another move, just as a test I put him in check with one of my knights, but of course he noticed right away and captured my knight, with a precise, creaking movement he lifted it up and placed it next to the board, and one after another he kept capturing my pieces no matter what move I made, responding right away every time, not thinking even for a second, and when I offered him my bishop so I could nab his queen, he didn't take the bait, it was like he knew exactly what I was up to, and something must have heated up inside him as his hand creaked along because he began to smell like rancid butter, and his movements seemed to speed up as he kept cornering me and taking more of my pieces, he even held his head a bit differently as if it was all he could do not to laugh, and then, when he captured my second bishop and put me in check, I knew it was all over, that no matter what my next move was, I would be in checkmate in no time, and I looked at the automaton, at that old black man's face, at his dusty gray parched skin, and I knew I wasn't about to let him checkmate me if I could help it, so all at once I snatched the white king off the board, and right away the automaton started reaching out after my hand, but with a slow, squeaking motion much slower than mine, and the automaton let out a loud murmur and looked at me and his eyes seemed to glisten with rage, but for a split second only, and then with a wild, creaky swing of his arm he swept the chess pieces off the table, they went tumbling all over the floor, and then he flung back his head and opened his mouth wide and burst out laughing, and smoke started pouring from his mouth and nose, and I stood up so fast that my chair toppled over, but the white king stayed in my hand, the automaton was still cackling so loud that even the walls and the floor were shaking, and that is when I realized that it wasn't the automaton that was laughing, it was Mother.
Yes, I could now hear clear as day that it was her, Mother was laughing really loud and shouting too, even through all those walls and doors I could hear her saying, "Bravo, Comrade Ambassador, splendid, bravo, splendid, magnificent," and she told him not to be scared, to go ahead and hit her one more time, to go ahead and hit her with all his might, to go ahead and hit her if he thought that by hitting a woman he was more of a man, and then he could go on hitting her until morning, yes indeed, he could go right ahead and feel free to hit her, and even as she shouted she was laughing the whole time, so loudly that, I knew, her tears were flowing too, and by then I'd already opened the door and was running toward Mother's laughter, from one room to the next, down the hallways and through room after room, every room was teeming with objects, with crystal vases, glass fish, porcelain soldiers, shot glasses, and wineglasses that tinkled against each other from Mother's laughter, even the framed maps and photographs and the ivory carvings swayed on the walls, and dried tropical fish, shiny with varnish, quivered on their copper wires in an empty aquarium just as if they were swimming, which is not to mention the copper bracelets and anklets strung onto leather belts above the doors, yes, they were moving too, along with some bottles up on shelves, bottles filled with a golden liquid and with official-looking seals on them, and every last chandelier was also swinging to and fro, everything was shaking just like in an earthquake, and I was so afraid the trophies would come tumbling off the walls and bury me under them that I just kept running, opening one door after another, heading from one room to the next, and just as I was beginning to think that I would never find Mother, I flung open a door and there I was, back in the living room, and there was Mother, standing on one leg next to one of the leather armchairs, laughing hysterically, the little table was toppled over and the cherry liqueur had spilled all over the zebra skins, oozing among the crystal shot glasses and slivers of glass scattered on the floor, and one of the antelope heads had fallen off the wall, and even that big lion's head had half come off, the ambassador was standing underneath it, clutching it with one hand to keep it from plopping into the puddle of cherry liqueur while he was trying to put his shirt back on using his other hand, and when he saw me he shouted, "So then, finally you're here, it's high time you cleared out of here once and for all, and you'd better take along your whore of a mother with you," and he said he didn't even know why he'd let us into the apartment in the first place when he might have recognized our sort, not even my grandfather was ever worth a piece of flying shit, and it would be best if I just forgot that my father ever existed, never in this stinking life would we ever see him again because he for one could guarantee that my father would rot away right where he was, at the Danube Canal, and my father could thank his lucky stars if he didn't wind up in a reeducation camp, no, we would never see him again. And I felt my heart in my throat, but Mother just went on laughing, and suddenly I couldn't help but crack up too, because this really was hilarious, how the ambassador was standing there in his undershirt beneath that huge open-mouthed lion's head, clutching the trophy's face with one hand and prancing about as he tried pressing it back onto the wall while furiously attempting to stick his other arm back in his sleeve, so it really was impossible not to laugh, and now Mother also looked at me, and I saw that her nose was bleeding and her mascara had run. "Let's get going," she said through her laughter, I put a hand on her shoulder and we left the room, the ambassador was of course still ranting as he stood there under the lion's head, we could hear him even as I opened the dead bolt on the front door to let Mother out ahead of me, but when the door finally slammed shut behind us, we could no longer hear a thing he was shouting, but Mother was still laughing as she told me to give her a hand because one of her heels had broken off, so I let her put an arm around me, and that is how we went back down those four flights of stairs. On reaching the bottom Mother stopped, adjusted her stockings with one hand, and pressed a handkerchief to her face with her other hand even as she continued shaking with laughter, and right then I reached into my pants pocket and squeezed that white king hard. The cold ivory felt smooth in my hand. No one would defeat me in the war game ever again, I knew, because compared with this commander of mine even the most beautifully painted lead soldier was nothing but a cheap little puff of pussy smoke.
11. Playing Search
MOTHER TALKED everything over with me most of the time, often she told me why things were the way they were, and when she did that, she answered my questions too, or when she didn't, then I knew she thought it best that we didn't talk about it, because what I didn't know, I couldn't tell anyone else even by accident, and I had to admit she was right about that because I knew there really were things it was dangerous to even mention, for example, exactly what happened during the civil war or how much so-and-so could get meat or coffee for, or how much it took to pay off so-and-so, or why the Party General Secretary, who was also commander of the armed forces, was a treasonous brute, or which of the people we knew had been taken away, or who had their homes searched and why. When I asked her about things like that, Mother either said only that this was serious business, let's not talk about it, or else that I should ask Father instead when he finally got home. But lots of times she didn't even have to say this much, no,
from the way she looked at me I could tell it would be best if I didn't ask questions to begin with.
That's just how it was when Mother came home one Thursday and asked me if I had any money saved up, and how much. I could tell right away from her voice that she wasn't kidding around, and so I told her the truth, that I had two tens, but I didn't tell her where I got them from because I knew she wouldn't have been happy to find out that I got one of them from my grandfather and that I won the other at cards, because I wasn't supposed to play cards or accept money from my grandfather, but even Mother must have figured it was best not to go asking where I had such a load of money from because she didn't say a thing, no, she just went into the living room and straight to Father's picture, which she took off the wall, there was an envelope stuck to the back of the picture with electric tape, Mother opened it and took out a bunch of bills and licked her index finger and counted the money right away, and then I heard her saying softly, "Five hundred twenty-five plus twenty is five hundred forty-five, so we still have to scrounge up one thousand four hundred fifty-five to make two thousand," and she told me to go look around my room to see what I could do without, and meanwhile she'd pick out some of her clothes and scrape together everything she thought we might get a good price for and didn't really need, and I shouldn't make any plans for Sunday morning, we were going to the flea market because we needed the money by Monday.
I just nodded and went into my room, where I opened the closet and pulled out the drawers of my desk and looked over every square inch of my bookshelf and walls, at the posters and bird feathers and bird scalps and weapons above my bed, but I didn't see anything I would have wanted to sell, so I sat down on my bed and leaned back and tried going through a mental list of everything I had, my lead soldiers, my matchbox car collection, my gum wrappers, my tennis racket, my badminton racket, and my Ping-Pong racket and balls, the little clay figurines I made a while back at the Young Pioneers center; my cartoon character emblems, which I cut from plywood with a jigsaw and painted myself; my French, German, American, and Yugoslavian comic books, which I got from Father's coworkers; my hunting knife, my tomahawk, my slingshot, my bow and arrows, my toy pistols; my three old shotgun shells, which still smelled of gunpowder; my three miniature soccer teams, all of whose players were buttons; my hand-carved chessboard, which also had backgammon; all my posters, one by one; my pocket calendar with pictures of actresses, which I kept under the bottom drawer; and my thirty-six-color set of felt-tip markers, of which only the turquoise still wrote. Anyway, I just sat there looking at one thing after another and trying to imagine what it would be like if each one wasn't there, whether I'd go looking for it or want to play with it anymore. For example, I hadn't even taken those matchbox cars out of the desk drawer in at least a year, and I hadn't played badminton in a long time either, and I knew most of the comic books by heart and I hardly ever looked at them anymore, but no matter how I tried, I just couldn't imagine what it would feel like to open the matchbox drawer and see that it was all empty or to look at the shelf and not see a single comic book at all.
Meanwhile I could hear Mother in the living room opening closets and pulling drawers open, flinging out her clothes and other things, and I imagined her taking her old outfits off their hangers in the closet one after another and putting each one on the couch, so I leaned up against the wall and just sat there on my bed with my hands around my knees, listening to the rustling of clothes in the living room, but then Mother left the room, and seconds later I heard the pantry door creak open and Mother let out a big moan, I knew she was taking the suitcase off the top shelf of the pantry, and then the wheels of the suitcase kept hitting the kitchen's tile floor as Mother carried it into the room, and that's when it occurred to me that she wasn't only going through her own clothes, but maybe she was also looking over Father's shirts, ties, shoes, belts, and suits.
Before then, we never touched Father's things, we didn't even open his closet or his desk drawers so if he came home he'd find everything just the way he left it the day they came and took him away, and ever since then I stood in front of Father's closet lots of times and looked into the shiny polish of its door as if it was a mirror, and I thought of the smell the closet must have had when Father opened it to take out some hidden piece of chocolate or chewing gum, and I tried imagining that Father was standing there behind me and that the only reason I couldn't see him was because the polish was too shiny, and as I sat there on my bed listening to Mother pack that suitcase, I again tried thinking through my things one after another because I knew I'd have to pick out something anyway, but then I started remembering when I got each one or where I got it from, plus what I'd done with it or wanted to do with it, and I knew this just wouldn't work, that I wouldn't be able to pick out anything this way either, and then I clearly heard Mother opening Father's closet door and giving a big sigh, and I heard the rustling of Father's suits as Mother threw them one after another onto the couch, and then I stood up and stopped in the middle of my room and snooped slowly around like I did whenever I played search-the-premises or pretended I was a burglar, as if it wasn't even my own room but some stranger's, as if I didn't know what anything was and where it was from and what it was for, as if I was simply looking for something, and that everything else was just in the way, and then suddenly I heard Mother sniffling softly out in the living room, so I knew for sure that she was packing Father's clothes, and then I leaned down and pulled an empty cardboard box out from under my bed, a box I wanted to cut up into a suit of armor for the next time my friends and I had ourselves a little costume party, and I went over to my shelf and began taking things off it one after another, and without picking and choosing at all I just threw all my comic books, model airplanes, and hand-painted lead soldiers into the box, and I didn't stop even when my old stamp album ended up in my hands, no, I placed even that right in the box, and then my slingshot and my blowgun too, and my Indian books and hunting books, one after another, and I went over to my desk and pulled out the matchbox drawer and poured all my cars into the box, but then one of the cars, the red Ford with the doors you could open, accidentally fell on the floor, so I leaned down and picked it up before putting it in the box by the other cars, and then I set the drawer on the floor and I stood up on my bed and tried taking my posters off the wall, but I couldn't do that as fast, no, I was worried they'd rip, I'd glued them to the wall because I didn't have thumbtacks and I was especially worried about those double-page soccer team posters I'd gotten from an illustrated magazine and about my movie posters with Indians on them, and about the picture of that champion goalie with his signature specially printed on it, so anyway, I had to be really careful taking those posters down so that even if the paint peeled off the wall at least the pictures themselves wouldn't rip, and I did it by leaning up against the wall and squeezing my palm under the middle of each poster and then working them off like that, one by one, and then I put them all on my bed, I laid the posters on top of one another and rolled them up together and set the whole bundle in the corner of the cardboard box, and then I went over to my desk and from the shelf above it I removed my badminton rackets and my genuine rubber-faced Vietnamese Ping-Pong paddle and my yellow competition-grade Ping-Pong balls, all four of them, and I put all of that into the box too, and then I opened the closet and took out my button-soccer box containing not only my three champion teams but also the goals I'd made from copper wire and pantyhose, to look like real netting, yes, I threw my whole button-soccer collection into the cardboard box, and as I did so I heard the buttons scatter, meaning the teams had just gotten all mixed up, but what did I care, and next I went to the closet and removed my gun belt with its fake-leather holsters containing my two plastic pistols that fired caps, and then I took out my cowboy hat, which I'd made by sewing bits of elk skin on a straw hat, and as I stood there holding the hat by the sliding copper ring of its chin strap, it occurred to me that one of the pistols must still be loaded with that red phosphorus powder I'd scra
tched off match heads and filled the old caps with, and I was just about to draw one of the pistols from the holster when I heard Mother out in the living room slamming down the top of the suitcase, so instead I just went ahead and threw the gun belt into the box and tossed the cowboy hat on top, but the box was so full already that the hat almost fell out, its chin strap got caught on the rolled-up posters and the hat just hung there, and then I heard the suitcase snap open out in the living room, its lock was really bad, it took two people to close it, one person had to press it shut while the other person locked it with the key. I heard Mother slamming down the top of the suitcase over and over again, and I heard her gasping for air while trying all by herself to click the lock shut, and I knew she wouldn't call me over to help, but I also knew I'd go out there and help her all the same.