House of Day, House of Night

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House of Day, House of Night Page 10

by Olga Tokarczuk


  your dress and hold a fine handkerchief to your bosom. 'You're

  so beautiful. I cannot get my fill of you,' said Celestyn suddenly

  into his ear. 'And nov let us pray.' They kneeled beside each

  other on the stone floor and began to mutter their prayers.

  Because in a monastery there is not much difference between

  the past and the future, because not much changes over time

  and in everyday life, except perhaps for the colours of the seasons, the monks live in a constant present. Here, a period of time that in the outside world would seem just a fleeting moment, has

  no beginning and no end. And if it weren't for the wisdom of the

  human body, which never loses sight of its final goal , life in the

  monastery would have been immortal.

  Paschalis was surrounded on all sides by a sequence of

  meticulous rituals, calculated down to the very last gesture, the

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  very last instant. Even the dogs that he watched from the windows took part in the routine of monastery life. They would appear at noon by the rubbish heap, where the leftovers were

  thrown, and feed voraciously. Then they would disappear for a

  while , only to come back and rummage eagerly through the

  next load of refuse. They spent the evenings either establ ishing

  their hierarchy, by biting each other and whining, or holding

  their doggy frolics. In the winter they huddled up against the

  barns and byres. In spring you could hear their envious yapping as they divided up the bitches between them . In summer pathetically helpless puppies would appear in all corners, a nd

  in autumn they formed packs and started hunting small

  rodents.

  Like all the monks, Paschalis got up at dawn, washed his face

  and put on his habit. Then he went straight into the gent le

  rhythm of prayer and work, into the whispering throng of dark

  figures shuffling to and fro along walkways and cloisters.

  Brother Celestyn was father, lover and friend to him. He

  taught him many things. One day he gave him a rare privilege he got him a place on the monthly expedition to deliver fresh meat to the associated convent. It was a great gi ft for Paschalis to

  see a landscape so vast that the monastery cloisters and

  labyrinths seemed sick and stunted in comparison. They would

  leave before dawn to reach the kitchen gate of the convent at

  around noon. The cart rolled slowly uphill, and when it reached

  the pass, even the oxen stopped and stared at the incredibly distant horizon separating the sky from the green valley, and the massive mountains that looked like a row of tables. For some

  reason, at this point Paschalis was always seized by an xiety.

  Further along the way they passed a single small village. just a

  few clay huts, and that was the only moment when he used to

  feel homesick.

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  As soon as the cart stopped before the gate, a bell rang out.

  The cart drove into the yard and the brothers set about unloading sides of pork. Each month Paschalis looked around impatiently for any female figure at all, but usually he only saw

  the older nuns, who had missing teeth and wrinkled faces. They

  reminded him of his mother. Afterwards they would invite the

  monks into the kitchen and treat them to a meal. The kitchen

  was clean and cosy, and smelled of honey and cheese. The nuns

  had an apiary and kept cows. In exchange for the meat the

  monks were given pots of honey and baskets of cheeses wrapped

  in clean rags. Paschalis suspected that a woman's body must

  smell like that: of cheese and honey - a combination both pleasant and nauseating.

  Sometimes Paschalis succeeded in seeing more. Once from

  the cart he saw some nuns over the wall, among their garden

  plots. They were weeding the vegetables and started throwing

  clumps of weeds at one another, smothering their squeals of

  laughter by pressing the broad sleeves of their habits against

  their mouths. This childlike behaviour startled him. Then one of

  them hitched up her skirt and leaped across the vegetable

  patches, without hitting the clusters of plants. Her veil fluttered

  in the wind like hair, or as if wings had miraculously sprouted

  from her head. Afterwards Paschalis tried to copy their movements - soft, always flowing and beautiful.

  After this sort of incident he always felt reluctant to return to

  the monastery, and even to Brother Celestyn. Everything there

  was angular somehow, awkward and crude, including the older

  monk. Yes, Celestyn's body could give Paschalis pleasure - he

  had learned that by now - but it was not the answer to

  Paschalis's dreams. Lying beside him in bed he would fantasize

  that Celestyn was a woman. He would slide his fingers down his

  lover's back, until eventually he fel t rough, hairy buttocks, and

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  withdrew his hand i n disappointment. But soon he began to

  imagine that he himself was a woman, and then Celestyn could

  remain who he was. The very idea of having a woman's body.

  with that secret hole between your legs, made him shudder with

  pleasure until it became an obsession. He wondered what such

  a thing might look like - whether it was a hole like an car or

  nostril, but larger, round and smooth, or maybe like a son of

  split, a continually bleeding wound, like a cut that never heals.

  Paschalis would have given the world to know this sinful secret,

  but not in the usual way, from the outside - he wanted to li'e it,

  to experience it for himself.

  The next winter Celestyn caught a chill, and once it was clear

  that nothing could possibly help him, the brothers gathered in

  his cell and began to recite the three-part prayer for the dying.

  Celestyn knew what this meant, and he cast his feverish gaze

  across the faces of the brothers, as if seeking their reassurance

  that what awaited him would resemble the order of monastery

  life. Then there was a rap at the door and all the monks assembled to hear his last confession . Pascbalis cried as the abbot intoned the Credo in unum Deum. The tears went on pouring

  down his face as Celestyn made his fitful confession and failed to

  mention the sin they had committed together for months on

  end. The abbot gave the dying man absolution and his bndy

  was laid on the stone floor. In the evening he died.

  The abbot must have noticed the young monk's despair

  because he suggested releasing him from the duty of the next

  clay's meat delivery expedition. But Paschalis didn't want to be let

  off the trip. His skin, brain and heart were burning as if he had

  fallen into the flames of a living hell.

  The delivery wagon set off in the dark. The wooden ca rtwheels creaked steadily and the freezing breath of the oxen ro�c above their muzzles in a bright cloud . The sun came up O'Cr a

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  low wimer sky and the pass opened before them, revealing nothing but misty white air - neither the Glatz valley nor the Table Mountains were visible. Before they reached their destination,

  Paschalis was running a temperature, vomiting and shaking with

  fever. The cart moved slowly as the oxen struggled to wade
r />   through the snow. There was no sense in taking the sick man on

  the return journey, so the brothers left him at the convent, to the

  dismay of the sisters, and promised to come back for him once

  he was better. Outside a blizzard was raging.

  Paschalis forgot where he was. He thought he was being carried into a damp, murky vault, and suddenly he realized that they wanted to lay him beside the dead body of Celestyn, to bury

  them together in the same grave. He tried to break free, but he

  had the impression of being tied or, more likely, tangled in his

  own habit, which had suddenly become heavy and stiff as a

  coffin lid. Later he saw two terrible sorceresses leaning over

  him. They seized him by the head and poured some hot, odious

  liquid into his mouth. One of them led him to understand that

  he was drinking Celestyn's urine, and Paschalis grew rigid with

  shock. Tm poisoned, I'm poisoned ! ' he shouted, but his voice

  echoed strangely off the bare walls.

  Suddenly he awoke in a small room with a high, narrow

  window. His bladder was full, so he sat up on the pallet and lowered his feet to the floor. He felt the soft, warm touch of sheepskin underfoot, and all at once his head began to spin. He stood up

  cautiously and glanced under the bed in search of a chamber pot,

  but there was nothing in the room apart from the bed, a prayer

  stool and the bedside rug. He wrapped himself in the bedspread

  and peeped outside. He saw a broad corridor with windows on

  one side that looked straight on to sheer cliffs, and only then did

  he realize where he was. A squat clay vessel stood by the door. He

  hauled it into the room and relieved himself, and went back to bed

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  83

  feeling happy. The air here was warmer, and smelled completely

  different. His feet revelled in the touch of the sheepskin.

  In the evening the prioress came to see him. She was the

  same age as his mother. Fine lines radiated from her mouth,

  and her dry, wrinkled skin was the colour of ash. She took him

  by the hand and measured his pulse. 'I'm so weak that I can't

  stand up,' Paschalis assured her in a whisper. She looked him

  closely in the eye. 'How old are you, boy?' she asked. 'Seventeen,'

  he said, cl inging on to her hand. 'Please would you let me

  recover here, Sister?' he asked and kissed her hot , dry hand .

  She gave a faint smile and stroked his shaven head.

  Next day the two old crones whom he remembered from his

  feverish hallucinations summoned him to the kitchen. A

  wooden washtub stood steaming full of hot water. 'You'll have a

  bath so you don't bring us any lice,' said the older nun , who had

  drooping cheeks like empty purses. She spoke softly, like a

  child - perhaps she had no teeth, or maybe she came from the

  south. They washed him with their heads averted, scrubbing

  his small body just as his mother used to - single-mindedly, but

  gently, until his skin glowed red. He was given a long linen shin

  of the kind worn by the nuns, and leather boots for his legs.

  Without a word the nuns escorted him back to the room where

  he had lain sick for the past two weeks.

  From then on the prioress came to sec him every day. She

  would stand over him and gaze at him intently. He could n't bear

  this searching gaze. He was sure she knew all about his lying and

  pretending. He would turn his face to the wall and wai t . Once

  she had checked his pulse they would kneel together to say the

  Hail Mary and the prayer for the sick. When she left , he would

  close his eyes and try to catch her scent in the air. But the prioress had no scent. He found her bea u t i ful - she was tall and fine-figured, strong and healthy looking, and had a gap between

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  her front teeth. One evening she came and told him from the

  doorway to get ready for the return journey. She had already

  turned and placed her hand on the door handle when Paschalis

  threw himself down before her, caught hold of her habit and

  pressed his lips to her stockinged feet. 'Don't send me back there,

  Mother,' he cried in a shrill voice. She stood still , and only now

  could he smell her scent - of dust, smoke and flour. He clung to

  that scent, ready for anything. After a long while she leaned

  over him and raised him from his knees.

  He told her everything, even about Celestyn. He told her

  about his body, that didn't want to be the way it was. Finally he

  burst into tears, which ran down his face and soaked his linen

  shirt. 'It is hard to comprehend all of God's works,' she said,

  sighing, and looking at him with a strange glint in her eye. The

  boy could not control his sobbing. The prioress left the room.

  'One thing I know. You can't stay here,' she told him at dawn,

  when without warning she entered his cell straight after prayers.

  'You are not a woman, you have the physical traits of your

  sex . . . although they can be hidden. As a man you are dangerous and undesirable here.' Torn from sleep, Paschalis had difficulty in following what she was saying. 'But I prayed to the

  Holy Virgin and she sent Kummernis to me.' In a whisper

  Paschalis repeated the name . He couldn't understand what it

  meant. She told him to get up. He let her throw a cloak over his

  shirt and followed her down the corridors, from narrow into

  wider ones, which twisted and turned, becoming cloisters and

  staircases, until at last they stopped at the door of a small chapel

  built on to the stone wal l of an empty room. The prioress genuflected, and Paschalis automatically repeated the gesture. They went into a smallish space illuminated by a little oil lamp close

  to the floor. The prioress used i ts flame to light the candles.

  Gradually, his eyes took in the sight before them.

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  85

  The entire altar was a large oil painting of a cross with a body

  crucified upon it. Something about it made Paschalis feel uneasy,

  and at the same time there seemed to him somethmg er

  '

  y familiar in the scene - the folds of the dress, falling softly to the

  ground. He couldn't tear his gaze from the two smooth, w hite

  female breasts that, exposed by the figure's outstretched anns,

  seemed to him the central point of the painting. Bu t there was

  something even more bizarre, something impossible to accept ,

  and Paschalis began to tremble - the female body on the cross

  was crowned with the face of Christ, the face of a man with a

  youthful, reddish growth of beard.

  Though Paschalis couldn't understand what he was seeing, he

  instinctively sank to his knees. His teeth were chattering, not

  because of the early morning chill, but from the apprehension

  that he was kneeling before a creature like himself, similar to

  him in some way, although it was patently unnatural. The eyes

  of Christ gazed at him meekly and with a sadness that could

  only be the flip side of love. There was neither torment nor pain

  in them.

  He turned to the prioress. She was smiling.

  This is Kummernis. We also call her Holy Care,
and she has

  many other names.'

  'It's a woman,' said Paschalis quietly.

  'She isn't a saint yet, but we believe that one day she'll be

  canonized. So far Pope Clement has blessed her. She l ived O"Cr

  two centuries ago not far from here, in Broumov. She was ,·i nuous and beautiful. All the men 'ied for her hand, but she chose Our Lord as her only husband. Her father t ried to force her to

  marry by imprisoning her, and then a true miracle occurred

  The Lord jesus, wanting to protect her from the loss of her ,·i rginity and to reward her constancy, ga'e her I l is face . · The prioress genuflected slowly. He

  '

  r enraged fat her crucified her, :-.o

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  she died a martyr's death, just like her Betrothed. We chose

  Kummernis as the patron saint of our order, but the present

  Pope has banned her cult, so we keep her shut up in here. Ve

  believe the Pope will change his decision. But come on now, or

  you'll freeze.'

  On the way back she asked him if he could keep a secret. He

  said yes eagerly. 'And can you read and write?'

  H e n s a n d c o c k e r e l s

  Every spring Marta goes down to Nowa Ruda and buys herself

  two hens and a cockerel. She then looks after those chickens,

  tending to their mindless existence, which boils down to hour

  after hour spent wal king round their enclosure with their attention equally divided between the earth below, where there might be grain, and the sky above, where there might be a hawk. In the

  world of the chicken, there is life beneath their feet, and death

  above their heads. In the evenings Marta ushers all three of them

  into the henhouse, and in the morning she lets them out again.

  She brings them potatoes boiled to a pulp and mixed with bran

  in an old cake tin. The chickens are little bother, and she gets

  two eggs a day for her pains. Sometimes she brings me an old

  sugar bag full of eggs, their shells stained with chicken droppings. Their yolks are intensely yellow; just looking at such a perfect replica of the sun is enough to make you squint. Each

  autumn, Marta kills her chicken family with her own hands in

  one day.

  I have ne'er understood this; the first year I didn't speak to her

 

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