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House of Day, House of Night

Page 17

by Olga Tokarczuk


  passages, guest rooms, draughty chambers into which a sudden

  current of warm air flows, closets, twists and turns and cubbyholes, and larders full of forgotten supplies. I can move about inside them with impunity; in fact I am alone there.

  From the inside these houses seem uninhabited. In the bedrooms the beds are made and covered in willow green bedspreads; the pillowcases are as tight as membranes, the curtains are open, the deep pile of the carpet is undisturbed, and there's a comb on the dressing-table. I cannot sit down on the

  bed or pick up the comb in my hand. I'm disembodied, but I can

  see everything, and I can peep into every nook and cranny.

  I know that I'm inside people - I recognize it from tiny details.

  One of the walls in the corridor is the colour of meat and is

  throbbing gently. Sometimes from the depths a distant, steady

  rumble reaches my ears, sometimes my foot slips on something

  hard and veiny. If I stare at the sideboard in the kitchen for long

  enough , I can see a shapeless, spongy, living structure shining

  inside it.

  T h e m o n s t e r

  The first time I encountered Whatsisname he was standing on

  our terrace with his mouth open, pointing into his rotting maw,

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  looking like a shaggy, ugly little gnome. the sort that spring up

  by the hundreds under the amanita caps each summer.

  'Aaa,' he said, and then I saw a white pill on his tongue.

  We stood facing each other on the terrace in the empty valley.

  Behind him was the sun , behind me the shade. My only concern

  was not to let him into the hall, for then he would sit there

  incubating like a disease until evening, saying 'aaa' with his

  mouth open - which is not something I understand. So I withdrew to the threshold and barred his entry. Panicking, I started wondering how to get to the phone without letting him out of

  my sight. I suppose I was afraid of him. Then he made a gesture

  as if raising a cup to his lips, and I realized that 'aaa' meant 'Give

  me some water.' I told him to wait and ran to the kitchen for a

  glass. When I came back he was still standing there, mouth

  gaping, staring at the picture of a blue-eyed dragon that protects

  the house. The pill vanished into the darkness of his gnome-like

  body.

  'A monster,' he said, pointing at the dragon.

  just after the war, when there was still a pond in the village, a

  monster appeared in it. It was huge, the size of a large cow, and

  the shape of a crocodile, with horny claws and a muzzle full of

  teeth sharp as knives. It ate all the fish left behind by the

  Germans, all the reeds and all the rushes, and then it began to

  prey on sheep, dogs, hens and geese. At night it would come out

  on to the road by the church and shamble along the asphalt

  towards Nowa Ruda, and in the morning, to their horror, people

  would discover its tracks in their backyards. Ducks would suddenly disappear, nothing was left of the geese but violently twisted orange feet, and disgorged ram's horns lay scattered

  about on the edge of the pool. The local authorities were busy

  with other things - apportioning land, tracking down agents

  provocateu rs, and founding cooperatives - so the men from the

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  village decided to take action themselves. They threw carbide

  and rat poison into the water, and then a rusty old grenade that

  exploded. After that the pond looked like a puddle of dirty, poisoned water, but all in vain - the next night the monster ate a bullock, and i t looked as if i t would wreak vengeance. So the

  men sharpened some long poles, nailed logs together to make

  rafts and sailed out into the middle of the pond. Again and again

  they jabbed at the surface, stabbing the muddy waters methodically, bu t the holes they made instantly closed over and the water remained just as impenetrable as before. The third time

  they decided to apply technology and brought in a huge dynamo

  with a crank handle that generated an electric current. From it

  they extended wires, encircling the entire pool with them like a

  net. Then they took turns to crank the handle, lashing the monster with electric shocks. Its great body writhed in pain beneath the surface, making the water spill on to the shores, until finally

  it was still. That evening the villagers drank until dawn.

  But a few days later the monster came to, and dragged an

  incautious woman under the water in retaliation. Nothing was

  left of her but a tin bucket on the edge of the pond.

  That was the beginning of the end of the monster. Everyone

  agreed - you can destroy plants and slaughter animals, but you

  can't take people's lives. The monster had broken the rules. The

  authorities came, the border guards and the Tatra Highland

  troopers, and the sappers too. They opened the pond up imo the

  stream with a huge explosion and the water poured out of it. At

  the bottom of the pond lay the monster, wounded and weak, but

  still alive. Then the soldiers got out their heavy machine-guns

  and set them up by the waterside. The officer gave the signal and

  bursts of gunfire slashed through the monster's body. Despite its

  wounds it still tried to attack, and the people watch ing scuttled

  away screaming. New bands of ammunition were quickly loaded

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  and the hideous body was riddled with holes like a sieve. And

  that was the end of the monster.

  After telling me this Whatsisname went off to Nowa Ruda,

  pushing along his old G erman bike , but in the evening he

  dropped by again, because he had remembered that that wasn't

  quite the end of the story.

  For the next few nights the villagers heard a dismal wailing

  from the woods on the Czech side of the border. Some creature

  was crying in the darkness in a voice so chilling that it made

  your flesh creep. A month later, in the dried-up pond they found

  the dead body of a female monster, who had come through the

  woods and meadows and over the state border in search of her

  beloved, and at the site of his terrible death she herself had died.

  R a i n

  On my name-day it began to rain, so we moved the chairs into

  the hall to sit it out until the rain stopped. But i t never ended; it

  came streaming down relentlessly, obscuring the horizon. The

  hall gradually became soaking wet, I really don't know why;

  maybe the water was seeping through the walls. Or maybe it was

  the dogs' fault - they kept marking the floor with their five-spot

  footprints. Outside the hay was quietly getting wet, and the

  slugs were rejoicing in their underground, under-leaf world and

  preparing for a festival - Dampness Day.

  A couple of kilometres down the road towards Nowa Ruda

  there's a strange house, or rather it isn't the house that's strange,

  but its location. It stands in a narrow valley between dark green

  wooded peaks. It's lower than any other house in the neighbourhood and can't actually be seen from anywhere , except perhaps from the top of those peaks. The stream laps against it

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  on both sides, licking its damp walls.
As he stood in the doorway

  staring at the rain R. began to tell the story of the slug family that

  lives there: a big, tough brown father, a slightly smaller mother,

  and two children. In the evenings they sit silently at the table in

  the gloom - there's no light, because the dampness prevents the

  electricity from working. Their dark, shiny skin only reflects

  the weak gleam of the darkening day. At night the whole family

  goes to sleep on the floor in the corner. Four bodies stuck to one

  another, gently throbbing to the rhythm of their sluggish breathing. In the morning they glide off into the lush wet greenery, leaving slimy trails behind them. They bring home rotting strawberries coated in a pale film of mould and chew them in silence .

  Water oozes on to the floors, covering them in a shiny lacquer.

  Neither of us was amused by this story. Instead we opened up

  bright computer worlds and disappeared into them . In the artificial sunlight of the screens our faces shone ghastly pale. Then we logged off and spent the evening playing patience: would it

  ever stop raining? N ever ever. Through the window I could see

  Marta's house , lashed with rain. Perhaps I should go and get

  her, I thought; what could she be doing there all alone in the

  darkness? She was sure to have opened her wig chest and now

  she'd be weaving that dead headgear, of no use to anyone. She'd

  be plaiting strands of hair from strange women who have ei ther

  died or are living somewhere on the other side of the world ,

  travelling, ageing in old people's homes, their youth dried up

  inside them like a scab.

  As I was putting on my gumboots I noticed that the water in

  the pond was overflowing at the very spot R. had so carefully

  built up that spring. It was pouring between the concrete floodgates and had almost reached the footbridge. It was thick, red and muddy. It was no longer making its fa miliar m urmuring

  sound, but droning, as i f buildi ng up to a scream. In his yel l ow

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  gumboots and yellow mackimosh R. looked like a ghost as he

  ran helplessly along the embankment. I could see his fish in the

  dark red foaming eddies anxiously preparing for death. The delicate, languid carp, usually so idle, were now skimming along the stirred-up surface, silently snapping their jaws open and

  shut in amazement. Among them the trout were excited by the

  unexpected promise of a journey to the Nysa River, to the Oder,

  to the sea.

  'I knew what you'd be doing,' I said as I came in.

  Marta was sitting at the table spreading out her collection. She

  was unwrapping tresses of hair from their newspaper, and combing them through with her fingers. Then she began to wind the strands on to the weaving frame. I took off my gumboots and

  jacket; puddles of water poured off them.

  'I can't ever remember so much water,' replied Marta. 'Or

  maybe there's something wrong with my memory.' She smiled at

  me. 'I want to give you a name-day present. I'm going to make

  you a wig, out of real hair, on silk, specially for your head.'

  She picked up a skein of fair hair from the table and held it to

  my face, but she didn't like it and tried another. She told me to

  choose the hair for myself, but I still couldn't bring myself to

  touch it. She told me to sit down, took out a faded exercise

  book and a Bic ballpoint that I had given her, and began to

  measure my head, gently touching my temples and brow with

  the tips of her fingers. I felt the same pleasant shudder as when

  Mama used to take me to her dressmaker, Mrs Poniewierka, and

  I had to stand still while she took my measurements. She would

  build a space around me out of centimetres and the nips and

  tucks of the pattern, kneading it with her hands, wrapping it

  around my waist and shoulders. She hardly touched me at all,

  but my skin still responded, with a muffled shudder of pleasure.

  I'd be lulled to sleep standing up.

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  And now Marta was repeating this ritual. I felt embarrassed by

  the pleasure of i t and closed my eyes. You have a large head. You

  have a small head. I don't know what Marta said.

  T h e f l o o d

  Last night there was a storm. The dogs kept barking anxiously

  so we woke up at dawn and saw that despite the rain, the daylight had come.

  The pond had vanished. The stream was flowing where it

  used to be, but now it was more powerful, rough and angry.

  There were no floodgates, no footbridge, none of the sheets of

  metal that R. had used yesterday i n a desperate attempt to

  strengthen the edges. There were no graceful carp, or impatient

  trout. Our pond had run away. It had let itself be seduced by the

  water that was pouring in from all sides and had flowed down

  across the meadow, along the edge of the forest, through Pietno,

  into another river, and on into the Nysa. It could be in Klodzko

  by now, maybe even further away. The aristocratic carp, unaccustomed to such a violent journey, would have got stuck in the twists and turns of the river, or been crushed by the current in

  the waterlogged undergrowth. There is no pond . R. is eating

  beetroot soup and staring out of the window. Marta is emptying

  some very full rainwater barrels. I wave to her; she waves back

  and then disappears into her little house.

  After dinner R. went back to the story of the slug family. He

  described the activities of the master of the house. At night the

  father slug glides through the grass to the road, rests a while, and

  then sets off for people's homes. There he cats the wet lettuce in

  people's gardens and the tender young courgette shoots. He enjoys

  gnawing holes in them, but it's not out of malice - it is his form of

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  creativity. He revels in the holes and the rain. But what he likes

  most of all is bonfire ash that has turned to mud. He wallows

  about in it, and goes home dirty, drunk on the damp remains of

  the fire. His wife silently reproaches him - she was dying of worry.

  N a i l s

  Marta and l went to Nowa Ruda to get nails. The cars moved

  slowly, crawling along in single file, because the flood had torn

  up part of the highway. From the bus stop in the village we

  picked up Krysia, who was wearing men's gumboots and getting

  soaked in the rain. As soon as she got in she took them off and

  put on a pair of shoes she had in a carrier bag.

  All the little streets along the river were caked in mud. The

  buildings were smeared in the stuff up to the ground floor windows. The shopkeepers were busy drying out their wares. The owner of the second-hand shop was hanging out used clothes

  that had already been through a lot in their ragged lives -

  moving house, changing cupboards, broken washing-machines,

  overheated irons, their owners getting fatter, sometimes even

  dyi ng - and now a river run wild at night.

  Someone had arranged pairs of trainers on the sandbags,

  dozens of identical Adidases and N ikes. Their laces hung down

  to the water like wicks, and their garish colours blazed against

  the grey of the muddied walls.

  Krysi
a thanked us for the lift and went on her way, straightening her lemon-yellow jumper. We parked past the bridge by the jeweller's and bought some pickling cucumbers. Then that

  lunatic everyone knows came up to us - the Prophet, the

  Clairvoyant - a shaggy fellow in a poncho made out of an old

  blanket. He smiled at Marta; they must have known each other.

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  'How are you?' he asked.

  'As ever,' said Marta.

  He looked at her in disbelief. 'As ever?'

  At that moment I thought I saw his face cloud over, as if he

  were about to burst into tears. Marta told him to take care or

  something of the kind, but he took a cucumber from the scales,

  turned and walked away.

  T h e c l a i r v oy a n t

  That man had a beautiful, exotic name - Leo. And that's what he

  looked like too, like a lion.

  He had let his hair and beard grow long, and one harsh winter

  they'd both gone grey, God knows why.

  Leo the clairvoyant lived on a state pension because, although

  it's hard to believe it, once upon a time as a young man he had an

  accident in a mine and lay buried for two days almost one hundred metres down in a hot, black hole, like a mother's womb, painfully conscious the whole time, his bright spirit shining

  around his head in a phosphorescent halo. He was s ure he

  would die, but he didn't. The rescue team pulled him out, and

  then he spent a long time in hospital . After it was all over he got

  down to real life - reading books from dawn till dusk. First he

  read whatever came his way, but in time he was drawn to unpublished manuscripts that he got from a semi-legal mail-order bookshop in Krakow. These included the writings of Iksall l .

  I3lavatsky and Ossowiecki, muddled reports of spiritualist

  seances, H indu and jewish cabbalas and prophecies of all kinds.

  One day he came across the address of the Astrologers' Society in

  I3ydgoszcz, and from the book they sent him, he taught himsel f

  t o read horoscopes one Christmas. From then o n noth ing gave

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  him so much pleasure as immersing himself in the intricate

 

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