House of Day, House of Night

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House of Day, House of Night Page 16

by Olga Tokarczuk

basket, and the child was clever enough to distinguish them

  from the equally white puffballs, because puffballs are rough as

  a cow's tongue - the Frosts' child knew this much. But one thing

  he didn't know was that on the shady edges of the meadows the

  meadow mushroom's doppelganger sometimes grows. The

  Amanita vema, brother of the albino A manita phalloides, a loner

  that grows in the scrub on a stout stalk, is the death cap of the

  meadows. It smells sweet and watches the herds of meadow

  mushrooms from afar, like a wolf in sheep's clothing.

  When they got home, Franz Frost's wife fried the mushrooms

  in a little fat, and the amanita's beautiful, finely chopped body

  also found its way into the pot, where its distinctive features disappeared in the sour cream. She laid the table and served the mushrooms with buckwheat. The child didn't want to eat, so she

  had to feed him. One for Daddy at the war, she said, one for our

  neighbour the wig-maker, one for your favourite dog, one for the

  people in the village, one for the priest at Konigswald, one for

  the little kittens who've just been born in the barn, one for the

  whole world, let it not fall into madness. The child's mouth was

  reluctant to open.

  During the night he began to vomit. In the morning, terrified

  by his condition, Mrs Frost carried him in her arms to the village, where the people who lived in the mansion took him by car

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  to the hospital in Neurode. They pumped his stomach, but it

  was no good. On the fifth day the child died.

  Several telegrams went looking for Franz Frost at the front,

  but they never found him.

  A manita verna in sour cream

  half a kilo of mush rooms

  three hundred grams of butter

  one small onion

  half a glass of sour cream

  two tablespoons of flour

  salt, peppe1; caraway seed

  Simmer the finely chopped amanitas for about ten

  minutes with the onion fried in butter, the salt , caraway

  seed and pepper. Stir the sour cream into the Hour and

  add to the mushroom mixture. Serve with potatoes or

  buckwheat.

  T h e w ay s M a r t a m i g h t d i e

  From above the woods hazy white clouds drifted down over the

  valley, and it began to rain. Marta was rolling out pastry on the

  shabby old oilcloth. Beneath her rolling-pin the ball of dough

  turned into a flat sheet, then she cut little circles out of it with a

  glass. I watched her hands and the concent ration on her face. I t

  had gone dark i n her small, low kitchen and the rain was beating against the rhubarb leaves outside. Marta's old radio was mumbling so quiet ly that it was incomprehensible. How will

  death enter her body? I was wondering.

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  O l g a To k a r c z u k

  Through her eyes? Marta will look at something dark,

  unidentifiable, damp and sticky and will no longer be able lO

  avert her gaze. That dark, sodden image will enter her brain

  and smother it. And that will be her death.

  Through her ears? She'll stan to hear a strange, dead sound

  that will drone in her head , low, vibrating, always at the same

  pitch, the opposite of music. Because of it she won't be able to

  sleep and she won't be able lO live.

  Or through her nose? When she senses that her body no

  longer smells, that her skin is becoming papery and is only

  absorbing light from the outside like a plant, but exuding nothing. Worriedly, she'll sniff at her hands, her armpits and feet, but they'll have become dry and sterile, because smell, the most

  volatile sense of all, is the first lO disappear.

  Or through her mouth? Death will shove the words back into

  her throat and brain. The dying don't feel like speaking, they're

  too preoccupied. Whatever would they speak about, what would

  they hand down to other generations? N othing but banal nonsense, common platitudes. What son of person is concerned about sending a message to humanity in the final moments of

  their life? No words of wisdom at the end are worth as much as

  the silence over there, on the other side, at the beginning.

  Death can also enter through the mouth in another way -

  Marta could eat a maggoty apple, one of those dark red ones

  from her old orchard, an apple with a white embryo of death

  inside. Death would be let in this way, and as there is no great

  difference between the flesh of an apple and human flesh, death

  would consume her from the inside. There would be nothing left

  of her but a brittle empty shell that would crack and crumble the

  next time she tugged at the gate with the stiff catch.

  I watched Marta out of the corner of my eye; now she was

  putting a spoonful of rosehip jelly on each little circle and

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  pinching the pastry cases shut, to make crescent shapes with

  crinkly edges. I had brought my small Ukrainian stove so that

  we wouldn't have to get a fire going in her ramshackle kitchen

  range. Suddenly the sunlight broke through the wi ndows,

  although it was still raining. We put the tarts into the stove on a

  tin tray and went outside.

  R. was standing on our terrace pointing at the sky. A rainbow

  hung over the hills. It straddled our car, as if it had just given

  birth to it.

  T h e s m e l l

  Everything bad happens in winter. In winter R. had an accident.

  He skidded on the snowy mountain bends and ran into a lorry.

  He hit his head on the steering-wheel and broke his nose. The

  car's long, nickel-plated bonnet saved his life. It was the kind of

  accident where you say nothing happened.

  But something did happen. Although his nose healed and the

  stitches no longer show, ever since the accident R. has been aware

  of a strange smell. The smell appears suddenly, in waves of varying intensity. He's most strongly aware of it in a particular spot on the way down to the pond. There are neules growing there ,

  around a n ash tree, so h e sniffed the nettle leaves and the bark o f

  the tree, but he couldn't find anything. He even thought the smell

  might be coming from the water - it was neither nice uor nasty, a

  bit sweet and a tiny bit sour. But it wasn't the water either. Once

  he found the smell in a glass of brandy, then in some coffee and

  then on a sweater that had been left lying in a cupboard full of

  winter clothes. Finally he discovered that the smell was not a feature of one thing or another, that its source was not a particular object - in fact it had no source at all, it just allached itself to

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  O l g a To k a r c z u k

  things once in a while, quite by chance, and that's why it was so

  hard to identify. It isn't like anything else, R. said once, but later on

  he had the opposite impression, as if it were actually present in all

  other smells, and his broken nose and scarred olfactory cells had

  become sensitive to it, had discovered it and remembered it for

  ever. And that's the nasty thing - not being able to identify something that you can smell, something that attracts your attention while it's there. It's torture not being able to pinpoint the source,

/>   not being able to understand it, or interpret it. Some insects smell

  like that and traces of them are left behind on berries; the smell of

  a knife blade as it cuts a tomato; the smell of petrol mixed with the

  odour of fermented cheese; my old perfume inside an unfashionable handbag; iron filings; the lead from a pencil; a new CD; the surface of the window-pane; spilt cocoa powder.

  I have often seen R. stop in the middle of what he's doing and

  sniff the air. H is face becomes concentrated. He sniffs his palms,

  and suddenly in the middle of a conversation he starts sniffing a

  button that's come off. Or he rubs wormwood leaves between his

  fingers and finally thinks he's discovered what it is. But he never

  has.

  We have both guessed that it's the smell of death, and that R.

  first sensed it when his car hit the lorry, in that split second

  when anything could have happened and there was no going

  back. It was a moment of great potency, loaded with possibilities,

  like the gram of stuff that becomes an atom bomb. That's how it

  smells, and it's the smell of death.

  R. keeps worrying that he'll go on smelling it for ever, and

  that never again will he innocently enter the snow-covered hairpin bends between Walbrzych and jedlina, or drive through the crossroads by the Town Station unaware, or even reach for any

  of my mushroom dishes without thinking. He knows, and I

  know that he knows.

  H o u s e o f D a y, H o u s e o f N i g h t

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  T h e v i s i o n of K u m m e r n i s fro m

  H i l a r i a

  Ego dormio et cor meum vigilat

  I was lying on my back, reciting my final prayers before sleep.

  Suddenly I felt myself rise up, as if I had become weightless, and

  when I looked down I could see my body lying on its back in

  bed, its lips still moving, as if it hadn't noticed that I was no

  longer in it. And I discovered that I could move about in space .

  I was able to move just by thinking about it; even the slightest

  desire allowed me to move, so I raised myself still higher and

  saw the convent from above, the wooden shingle of the roof, and

  the stone coping of the chapel tower. After a while, from an

  even greater height, I saw the whole world ; it was slightly

  convex and steeped in darkness; only from somewhere beyond

  its limits did long rays of sunlight illuminate it, casting black

  shadows into the darkness. Those different gradations of darkness troubled me and filled me with sadness, for I knew that the light existed, but it was hidden. And as soon as I thought about

  the light, I saw it - at first it was pale as a narcissus, weak as

  mist, but it began to grow steadily stronger and I was afraid I

  would be blinded by it. I realized that this must be heaven and

  God, but I was surprised - for my mind was alert - that I

  remained alone and had no guides from anywhere , since in

  proximity to God there live hosts of angels and all manner of

  resplendent beings. Then I felt something like a wind , neither

  warm , nor hot, that wrapped itself around me as if I had fallen

  into the sphere of a great whirlwind. This force was pushing me

  away from the light; between me and the light there was an

  invisible, yet palpable border. And although I wanted to cross it

  and was drawn to the light like never before , I was weak and

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  0 I g a To k a r c z u k

  lacked the strength. Until a voice appeared in my head that

  could have been my own voice as much as anyone else's, and

  the voice said to me: 'This is time.' At once I realized the whole

  truth about the world - that it is time that prevents the light

  from getting through to us. Time keeps us apart from God and

  as long as we are within time, we are imprisoned, doomed to

  fall prey to darkness. Only death releases us from its shackles,

  bu t at that point we have nothing left to say about life. Then I

  was overcome with sadness, although my eyes could see the

  vast expanse of light. I desired nothing else but to die for ever,

  and maybe I did die, for suddenly the wind of time vanished

  and I was plunged into the l ight. I could say nothing about

  being in the light, for along with me all words had disappeared.

  I could no longer even think, for there were no thoughts

  either. Nor could I exist, here or anywhere else, for neither

  here nor there existed any more, and no motion existed. In

  this state there were no qualities, good or bad, and I do not

  know how long i t lasted, for there were neither moments nor

  millennia.

  I would have remained like that eternally, neither alive nor

  dead, if I had not suddenly felt a yearning for the world. At once

  an image as brightly coloured as a painting unfurled before me.

  I couldn't tear my eyes away from it.

  Seen from above, the world was full of people sleeping. It was

  a far more densely populated world than the one I was familiar

  with, for everyone whom we thought had died was there too. I

  realized that it was judgement Day and the angels were already

  starting to scroll up the furthest edges of the world, as if they

  were the fringes of an enormous carpet. From above and below

  came the rumble of a great battle - the clash of weapons and the

  drumming of horses' hooves, but I couldn't see who was fighting whom, for my eyes were fixed on the Earth unfurled before

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  me. Some people were already waking up, rubbing their eyes

  and staring into the sky. But their attention was weak and

  unstable - they didn't know what they were looking at. I could

  see mountains that were shaking as if with fear, and their contours were blurring in the thinning air. The sun had stopped at its zenith and was illuminating the air with a bright and burning light. The grass began to burn on the steppes and the water began to boil in the streams. Animals emerged out of the forests

  and, heedless of their natural enemies, came down into the

  clamour of the valleys. People also came marching along the

  dried up roads to some appointed place. They came briskly and

  confidently, no one dragged their feet. The sky was not smooth

  and blue, but seething and swirling. Plants were turning to

  stone beneath it.

  And then I understood with all my heart that I was watching

  the very last moments of time, that I was destined to witness the

  end.

  And I realized that our judgement will be an awakening, for

  throughout our lives we are just dreaming, imagining that we are

  alive. But there was once a time when we really were alive, then

  we died, and now we are dead. And these dream-lives of ours

  that we take as real mean nothing to God, because nothing has

  really happened in them. We shall not have to answer for our

  dreams - the only thing we are responsible for is the life that we

  can't remember, for death has put us to sleep. Only that forgotten existence was real; in it we either sinned or were virtuous.

  We do not know what we shall awaken to - hell fire or eternal

  life in the light.

  Once again I must repeat it: our world is popu lated by the

  sleeping, who have
died and are dreaming that they are alive.

  That is why there are more and more people in the world , for it

  is populated by the sleeping dead who keep growing in number,

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  0 I g a To k a r c z u k

  while the real people living for the first time are few. In all this

  confusion none of us knows or can possibly know if he is someone who is only dreaming life , or really living it.

  C o r p u s C h r i s t i

  Mana said that you should not take what you see too seriously.

  She said it as we were looking out of the window at a Corpus

  Christi procession that went marching by, across the fields where

  the flax has been sown. The priest came first, and after him two

  banners and a small group of people. Lower down along the

  crisply green meadow ran a dog, as if joining in at a distance

  with this unexpected crowd walking across the fields.

  I don't know why she told me this; she was supposed to be on

  her way out and was already holding the handle of the open

  door.

  That evening I remembered her remark. Eyes are constructed

  to see nothing but still photographs from a living, moving film,

  and whatever they see they pin down and kill. When I look at

  something, I believe that what I'm seeing is fixed, but that's a

  false image of the world. The world is constantly in motion,

  always vibrating. It has no zero point that can be committed to

  memory and understood. Our eyes take pictures that are nothing

  but images, mere outlines. The landscape is the greatest illusion

  of all, because there is nothing constant about it. You remember

  a landscape as if it were a picture. Your memory creates postcard

  images, but doesn't really comprehend the world at all. That's

  why a landscape is so affected by the mood of the person looking at it. In it a person sees his own inner, transitory moments.

  Wherever he looks, he sees nothing but himself. That was what

  -tana wanted to tell me.

  H o u s e o f D a y, H o u s e o f N i g h t

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  A d re a m

  I dream I am able to enter people through their mouths.

  People are built like houses inside - they have stairwells, spacious halls, vestibules that are always too weakly lit to count the doors into the rooms, row upon row of apartments, damp chambers, slimy, tiled bathrooms with cast-iron baths, steps with handrails taut as veins, artery-like corridors, joint-like landings,

 

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