I Refuse

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I Refuse Page 12

by Per Petterson


  Tommy was on his feet again and was slowly gliding towards the bank on his skates, and the knees of his trousers were white in a smooth, polished way.

  ‘Sure I did,’ he said, and he said it gently, and when he caught up with Jim he put his hand on his shoulder and said: ‘Hell, I lost my balance too, it almost knocked me over, it was such a goddamn loud crack,’ he said, and bent down and put his mouth to Jim’s ear and said:

  ‘Put your cap on. You’ll freeze your ears off. They’re already white, they will fall off.’ And it was true that Jim’s ears were freezing, the cold cut right through them, they hurt, and Jim felt such an uncontrollable urge to cover them, to hide them, both of them, cup his hands over them, put his cap back on, but he had to freeze just a little more, it felt right, that was what he had to do, he had to hold out for just a few more minutes, there was no way round it.

  ‘Hey, Jim. Put your cap on,’ Tommy said. ‘You’re going to get earache,’ but Jim refused, and Tommy sank in the snow and grabbed the cap, but Jim just held on to it and wouldn’t let go, and Tommy said, for Christ’s sake, and ripped it out of Jim’s hands and pulled it down over his head and over his ears. It was a red woolly cap, a socialist cap, last autumn Jim’s mother had sat in her chair in front of the TV set, with her knitting needles clicking away, you could hear them working all over the house, click, click, click, they went, click, click, click, and they were probably those round needles, they must have been, Jim thought, and he liked that cap, it was red as a flag, but that wasn’t easy to see in the shadows on the banks of Lake Aurtjern where they both were kneeling in the snow beside each other, and their boots were there, and across the lake you could see the moon still shining an almost unreal warm yellow on the ice, but it didn’t look as inviting now as it had done an hour earlier. Tommy didn’t want to go out on the ice again at any price, he felt unwell.

  ‘I didn’t mean to push you back,’ Jim said, and Tommy said:

  ‘I know that. Just forget it, it was nothing.’

  ‘But it’s true, I didn’t mean to.’

  ‘For Christ’s sake, Jim, just stop thinking about it.’

  II

  JONSEN ⋅ DECEMBER 1964

  IT WAS LATE in the evening. He pulled on his cap and went out on to the doorstep and stood for a moment looking up at the sky before he closed the door behind him and walked from his house down the road to the Berggrens’ house. It was cold, the snow lay hip-high on both sides. Most of it had fallen in the last few days, and the air had been confusingly dense and white on both sides of the house, No exit, a sign above the door to the front path might have said, just forget it, it might have said, and when the blizzard had waned, it was everyone out to clear the footpath from the doorsteps to the bins by the road, and they all came, every single one of them. In front of every little house stood a man bent over, shovelling snow, groaning to the rhythm, as though there were someone standing there hitting his stomach with a solid object to keep the beat. In the end just the blue cap could be seen bobbing up and down, and for every shovelful he took, the snow came flying spray-like over the bank, and now and then you could get a glimpse of a glowing face and the knitted mittens clutching the shovel, but the road too was covered in snow, the whole neighbourhood was under siege. No cars could get out, no cars could get in, and for the many who did not own a car, but instead got a lift on the school bus when they needed one, then even the bus couldn’t get through the snow, and nor could the dustcart. And that was not good.

  It wasn’t snowing now, but moving around was difficult. It was dark, only Jonsen was outside. The snowplough wouldn’t come all the way out here until the next morning to make a corridor wide enough so at least the school bus with the children on board could reach the main road, but right now Jonsen couldn’t see how that would be possible. From years back he could remember the six sturdy horses spread out in a fan before the snowplough pulling it along the road through the deep snow with five men standing on the plough to keep it down. After the plough came all the neighbours in two lines, one either side of the road, the shovels in their hands, and every winter they did the the same, the heavy work, the heavy horses, no boss required, everyone just came, everyone knew what to do. They looked out of the window in the early morning and realised the neighbourhood was so deep under snow that it had to be dealt with, and they all turned out. One time the snow banks were so high the men shovelling on top could hold a hand around the electricity cables between the tall posts without stretching an arm. Jonsen was only a boy then, he saw the men high above him in their open jackets, and there was something about the material they were made of, the inside, the outside and the snow so white, and it was what he remembered best, the coarseness of it, the greyness, he remembered the buttons, every single one of them gleaming with their shiny surface and the swirling wind blocking his vision with icy sugar, and him closing his eyes against the cold vortex. A stranger took a photograph. He was kneeling in the slush with his camera pointing up the steep overhang, and when the picture appeared in the newspaper the snow banks looked even higher than they were in real life. We’re not waiting for the council’s snowplough. We’re not waiting for anyone, it said under the photo, we are the council.

  Eleven o’clock was the time they had agreed, as soon as Tommy was in bed and sound asleep. She had prepared the packed lunches for the following day, four in a line on the kitchen table, one each for Tommy and Siri, who had to go to school, and one each for the twins, who wanted their own ones although they didn’t go, and she had written their names in nicely looped letters on all of them and then nothing else, for there was nothing else she could do, and there was no reason to be sentimental.

  But all the snow confused Jonsen. He had no plan B. What plan would that be. The car was in the garage with its nose sticking out, ready to go tonight. That was all he had, as soon as it was dark and Tommy in bed, he would pick her up and drive her away. The day after, her husband, Berggren the dustman, would be coming home at the crack of dawn, and then it would be too late.

  Like everyone else, Berggren had cleared the snow up the footpath to his door, but that was already twenty-four hours ago, he hadn’t been home since, and fresh snow had gusted in and lay in deep drifts on the path. That was not so bad, maybe, but the prints of two pairs of boots, one large and one smaller, would be there for all to see in the snow when day broke. Or there might be more snow. Jonsen had no idea. He hadn’t been listening to the radio, he had been standing by his black Opel Captain, which was not a Captain, it was a Kapitän, and it always annoyed him when people said Opel Captain, because it wasn’t a Captain, it was a Kapitän. Hell, people couldn’t even read. He had stooped over the car’s engine in the tiny garage, where the walls were made of tin and were freezing cold, and covered with frost on the inside, and he thought, for God’s sake, don’t panic. A hose was leaking, even he could see that, and he searched around until he found a short piece of pipe he could use to replace it, and he jammed it on hard with a jubilee clip on each end. And he had to tighten the fan belt, and he was pretty sure he knew where it was and what to do with it, but he felt overwhelmed. He should have gone to Lysbu to get the help he needed, but he couldn’t, and just the thought of the loud, whining sound the fan belt would make now, tonight, set his nerves on edge. People would jump to their windows and see his headlights shining up the road and where they were coming from, and for those who could put two and two together, it would be obvious. Of course, they would think, that’s it. I’ve known it all along.

  He dropped the bonnet. There was nothing more he could do. But the car had to make it all the way into Oslo and back again, sixty kilometres in, sixty kilometres out, that was the problem, and this time he was on his own. For she couldn’t take the train, stand there on the platform.

  He tapped gently on the door. Why am I doing this, he thought, and the door swung open at once, so she must have been waiting right next to it. Tommy was in bed, asleep. The boy. All the times he had sneaked up to Jonsen�
�s with his backside on fire and sat on the soft sofa by the radio, and as time went by, in front of the TV.

  He saw her face in the doorway. A face looks different in real life from the face you see when you’re alone in bed trying to call it forth in your mind’s eye. In real life the lines are clearer around the corners of the mouth, something right there which can change everything, something in the eyes that’s not there in the dark, the mouth that can open without words and close again, anything can happen, wild dreams, like panic. And he thought, that is why. And he could feel it in his stomach. What will it gain me, he thought, if she leaves tonight.

  ‘I don’t know how we will make it,’ he said, ‘the snow is so high I don’t think I can get the car out.’ He saw her suitcase on the floor behind her. It wasn’t very big. Is that all that is hers, he thought.

  ‘Is that all you’re taking,’ he said. ‘Nothing more, nothing personal.’

  ‘No,’ she said, ‘Nothing that’s personal,’ and then she said: ‘We just have to try.’

  ‘But it’s impossible to get out. It’s true what I’m saying.’

  ‘Then I’ll lose my life,’ she said.

  He turned it over in his mind, how far was it to the main road, six hundred metres, seven hundred. Perhaps it would be OK if he could make the car pick up speed, but where on the road was it supposed to pick up speed, he needed at least fifty metres to accelerate, not a metre less, and it would take him the rest of the night to clear a run long enough, and anyway it was hopeless, for even the main road would probably not have been ploughed, if they made it that far. He felt despair now, and irritation creeping in, for what else could they do, if they got stuck in the snow and couldn’t turn the car round or reverse it home, than to walk back in full view, and then everything would be revealed.

  ‘You won’t lose your life,’ he said. ‘But we don’t have a chance now, not tonight,’ he said, and she didn’t answer.

  ‘But you can’t stand here,’ he said, ‘not with that suitcase,’ and it started snowing again, he raised his head, and the wind picked up, and he thought, I’ll take her with me, and then the new snow can cover our tracks, if it keeps falling, and it will. It’s that kind of sky. Let it come down.

  Soon it would be Christmas. In some windows the electric candlesticks were lit, it was the new fashion. He leaned over the threshold and got hold of the handle of her suitcase with two fingers, careful not to place a foot on the floor inside, which he didn’t want at any cost, not there, not him, and he pulled the case over and lifted it through the door, and she stood there ready with her boots on and her warm gloves and with the headscarf over her hair, she looked older than she was. She wasn’t much more than thirty, and neither was he, and now she looked like a wife, which, of course, was what she was, but what he couldn’t stop thinking about, not one, single day, was the corners of her mouth, the skin behind her ears, her naked palms, her naked body, that came to him as such a wonder, so suddenly one evening when they were sitting in his kitchen till late in the night, and soberly she had told him of her life up to that day, and captivated by her voice he was locked to his chair, his elbows on the table and between them the full glass of brandy he never raised, and it was cool and not warm, as perhaps you might think, and he didn’t know then, if it was a good thing, a fine thing, that her body was cool, if that was how it was meant to be. It had been so unexpected, beyond everything else in his life, but love it was not. And tonight he didn’t think of her in that way at all, for she was scarcely the same woman. This woman was afraid, the naked one was not.

  He went ahead of her to his house. ‘Stay behind me,’ he said. ‘Walk in my footsteps so they can’t tell them apart, it’s important,’ and she did as he told her, and it must have looked strange, and what he did then was pray. He said to the Lord: Let no one be without sleep tonight, let no one stand up from their beds in this hour to sit on a chair by the window and gaze out into the blizzard with their head full of worries they cannot escape in their sleep and then catch sight of us here, this woman in my footsteps in the deep snow, in the mellow light from the snow that makes everything so clear no matter how dark it is, and it was past midnight now, and if anyone did, if anyone could really see them, he would no longer be the same person to those who lived here, he would for ever be a different man to them and could no longer stay in this neighbourhood where he had lived for most of his life, but it was not a part of her plan. That he should go with her.

  They entered the hall. He left the door open and put the suitcase down under the mirror, and he didn’t look at her, he went straight back out with a broom and swept the four steps he had dug free of snow only half an hour ago and took a shovel and shovelled his way down to the gate, and he was furious now, his body shaking beneath his jacket, and it took him only five minutes to clear the footpath, and then he went back up and put the shovel by the door under the overhang, stamped the snow off his boots and went in and closed the door behind him. She was still standing in the hall, in her grey coat, and had not moved an inch.

  ‘You there, get going,’ he said and impatiently he started to undo the big buttons at the front of her coat and was so rough in doing it that one came loose and was dangling from a thin thread, and she said:

  ‘What are you doing. Jonsen, stop it, I can unbutton my own coat, I don’t need your help with everything,’ and he felt desperate when she called him Jonsen, oh Christ, the distance there was in that name, as though he didn’t have a first name like any other person. But no one had called him anything else since he went to school, but then they all called one another by their surnames, just for fun, like precocious nicknames, it was what they were doing then, carrying their bags under the left arm and saluting with two fingers to the cap, as the grown-ups did, but gradually their names went back to Vidar and Olaf and Øivind or any other name they were christened with. Only his surname stayed on, Jonsen persisted in the years afterwards, and he didn’t understand why, but his solid first name slowly melted into air, into thin air, and at times it was as though he himself couldn’t remember what he was called other than Jonsen, and now he was Jonsen for her too, even though he called her Tya, and he liked her name so much, but he stopped using it, and he didn’t call her anything any more, the woman who had lain beside him in his bed, her body outstretched and cool, and him with his tentative warmth, but she had been a stranger to the district, she had come here in Berggren’s car, pregnant with Tommy, and for all he knew she might never have heard his first name.

  ‘That’s fine,’ he said. ‘Do it yourself, but hurry up and take that coat off,’ and he heard his words and the tone he used and knew she hadn’t deserved them, for it was he who had offered to help her.

  ‘I’m sorry,’ he said. ‘Take the time you need and I’ll make a bed for you in the living room,’ and she said:

  ‘Maybe you can make make a bed for us both. That would be nice,’ she said, ‘wouldn’t it,’ and he did, with taut sheets and much effort he made a bed for them both, but she was only half there during the act, as it’s known, during the act she was only half there, she made love with him absent-mindedly, and once, right in the middle, when he was well into deeper waters and full flow, she said:

  ‘Do you think the snow will keep falling. Do you think I’ll have to wait even longer,’ and there was nothing she wanted more than to get away and nothing else had been on her mind while they were lying there, and if she had asked him what he wanted for Christmas, he couldn’t have been more perplexed. He tensed and lost what heat he had, and as if from above, he could see his back stretched over her body, almost covering it completely, and he could see his backside, and thighs, and her eyes staring past his ear at the ceiling, at anything but his face, and he thought, I can’t lie here like this, I’m disgracing myself, and then he stayed there anyway and slowly started to move again and then faster from where he had left off before she began to speak, and he thought, I want what I can get, or I take what I can take, and by then there was no love be
tween them, but something else, and afterwards it made no difference to him what it had been.

  Early next morning the snowplough woke him. She was already sitting on the divan, huddled up under the window, wearing a white vest and nothing else and was white all over, and with her head barely over the edge she was watching the road, and although day had not yet broken, the road outside cast a white light on her face, and her face white and her knees drawn up to her chin and her arms crossed over her breasts. She might have looked like a girl with her back arched that way, only the plaits were missing. But she didn’t look like a girl.

  She turned away from the window, she was eager now.

  ‘I couldn’t sleep,’ she said, and that was how it seemed, as though she hadn’t slept a wink, but he had, and he hadn’t noticed her getting up and realised he was alone in bed, and he thought, that’s it then, so things are back to how they’ve always been, and he felt redundant in his own home.

  She said:

  ‘The school bus will be here in an hour.’

  ‘I’ll make some breakfast then,’ he said. ‘You don’t need to sit there in front of the window for a whole hour.’

  ‘I have to pay attention,’ she said. ‘Don’t you see.’

  He went into the kitchen and put on water for coffee, and finally she followed him in to eat, and they ate with the curtains drawn, and when they had finished she didn’t thank him, but stood up and went back to the living room and to the window, crouched down so she couldn’t be seen from outside and sat down on the divan with her eyes just above the windowsill, and still she was wearing no more than a white vest, and it suddenly made him bitterly embarrassed, that she didn’t care whether he saw her dressed or undressed, he was nothing to her.

 

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