Vousi, in a flaming orange blouse, was sitting in the chair in my study. Her long legs in pointy shoes rested on the table, while her slender fingers held a long slim cigarette.
With her head thrown back, she was blowing thick streams of smoke at the ceiling, through her nose.
“At long last!” she cried, seeing me. “Where have you been all this time? As you can see, I’ve been waiting for you.”
“I’ve been delayed,” I said, trying to recollect if I had indeed promised to meet her.
“Wipe off the lipstick,” she demanded. “You look silly! What’s this? Books? What do you need books for?”
“What do you mean by that?”
“You are really quite a problem! Comes back late, hangs around with books. Or are those pornos?”
“It’s Mintz,” I said.
“Let me have them!” She jumped up and snatched the books out of my grasp. “Good God! What nonsense — all three are alike. What is it? History of Fascism… are you a Fascist?”
“How can you say that, Vousi!”
“Then, what do you need them for? Are you really going to read them?”
“Reread them.”
“I just don’t understand,” she said peevishly. “I liked you from the first. Mother says you’re a writer, and I went and bragged to everyone, like a fool, and then you turn out to be the next thing to an Intel.”
“How could you, Vousi!” I said with reproach. By now I had realized that it was impermissible to be taken for an Intel.
“These bookos were simply needed in my literary business, that’s all.”
“Bookos!” she laughed. “Bookos! Look at what I can do.”
She threw back her head and blew two thick streams of smoke out of her nostrils. “I got it on the second try. Pretty good, right?”
“Remarkable aptitude,” I remarked.
“Instead of laughing at me, you should try it yourself… A lady taught me at the salon today. Slobbered all over me, the fat cow… Will you try it?”
“How come she did that?”
“Who?”
“The cow.”
“Not normal. Or maybe a sad sack… What’s your name? I forgot.”
“Ivan.”
“An amusing name! You’ll have to remind me again. Are you a Tungus?”
“I don’t think so.”
“So-o… and I went and told everyone that you are a Tungus. Too bad… Say, why not have a drink?”
“Let’s.”
“Today I should have a strong drink to forget that slobbering cow.”
She ran out into the living room and came back with a tray. We had some brandy and looked at each other, not having anything to say. I felt ill at ease. I couldn’t say why, but I liked her. I sensed something, something I couldn’t put my finger on; something which distinguished her from the long-legged, smooth-skinned pin-up beauties, good only for the bed. I had the impression that she sensed something in me, too.
“Beautiful day, today,” she said, looking away.
“A bit hot,” I observed.
She sipped some brandy; I did too. The silence stretched.
“What do you like to do the most?” she asked.
“It depends. And you?”
“Same with me. In general, I like to have fun and not have to think about anything.”
“So do I,” I said. “At least I do right now.”
She seemed to perk up a little. I understood suddenly what was the matter: during the whole day, I had not met a single truly pleasant person, and I simply had gotten tired of it.
There was nothing to her, after all.
“Let’s go somewhere,” she said.
“We could,” I said. I really didn’t want to go anywhere, I wanted to sit and relax in the cool room for a while.
“I can see you’re not too eager,” she said.
“To be honest, I would prefer to sit around here for a bit.”
“Well then, amuse me.”
I considered the problem, and recounted the story of the traveling salesman in the upper bunk. She liked it, but I think she missed the point. I made a correction in my aim, and told her the one about the president and the old maid. She laughed a long time, kicking her wonderfully long legs. Then, taking courage from another shot of brandy, I told about the widow with the mushrooms growing on the wall. She slid down to the floor and almost knocked over the tray. I picked her up under the armpits, hoisted her back up in the chair, and delivered the story of the drunk spaceman and the college girl, at which point Aunt Vaina came rushing in and inquired fearfully what was going on with Vousi, and whether I was tickling her unmercifully. I poured Aunt Vaina a glass, and addressing myself to her personally, recounted the one about the Irishman who wanted to be a gardener. Vousi was completely shattered, but Aunt Vaina smiled sorrowfully and confided that Major General Tuur liked to tell the same story, when he was in a good mood. But in it there was, she thought, a Negro instead of the Irishman, and he aspired to the duties of a piano tuner and not a gardener. “And you know, Ivan, the story ended somehow differently,” she added after some thought. At this point I noticed Len standing in the doorway, looking at us. I waved and smiled at him. He seemed not to notice, so I winked at him and beckoned for him to come in.
“Whom are you winking at?” asked Vousi, through lingering laughter.
“It’s Len,” I said. It was really a pleasure to watch her, as I love to see people laugh, especially such a one as Vousi, beautiful and almost a child.
“Where’s Len?” she wondered.
There was no Len in the doorway.
“Len isn’t here,” said Aunt Vaina, who was sniffing the brandy with approval, and did not notice a thing. “The boy went to the Ziroks’ birthday party today. If you only knew, Ivan…”
“But why does he say it was Len?” asked Vousi, glancing at the door again.
“Len was here,” I said. “I waved at him, and be ran away.
You know, he looked a bit wild to me.”
“Ach, we have a highly nervous boy there,” said Aunt Vaina. “He was born in a very difficult time, and they just don’t know how to deal with a nervous child in these modern schools. Today I let him go visit.”
“We’ll go, too, now,” said Vousi. “You’ll walk with me.
I’ll just fix myself up, because on account of you everything got smeared. In the meantime, you can put on something more decent.”
Aunt Vaina wouldn’t have minded staying behind to tell me a few more things and maybe show me a photo album of Len, but Vousi dragged her off and I heard her ask her mother behind the door, “What’s his name? I just can’t remember it. He is a jolly fellow, isn’t he?”
“Vousi!” admonished Aunt Vaina.
I laid out my entire wardrobe on the bed and tried to imagine what Vousi would consider a decently dressed man. Until now, I had thought I was dressed quite satisfactorily. Vousi’s heels were already beating an impatient rat-a-tat on the study floor. Not having come up with anything, I called her in.
“That’s all you have?” she asked, wrinkling her nose.
“It really isn’t good enough?”
“Well, it will pass. Take off the jacket and put on this Hawaiian shirt… or better yet, this one here. They sure have dressing problems in your Tungusia! Hurry up. No, no, take off the shirt you have on.”
“You mean, without an undershirt?”
“You know, you really are a Tungus. Where do you think you are going — to the pole or to Mars? What’s this under your shoulder blade?”
“A bee stung me,” I said, hurriedly pulling on my shirt.
“Let’s go!”
The street was already dark. The fluorescents shone palely through dark foliage.
“Which way are we bound?” I asked.
“Downtown, of course… Don’t grab my arm, it’s hot! At least you know how to fight, I hope?”
“I know how.”
“That’s good. I like to watch.”
&
nbsp; “To watch, I like, too,” I said.
There were a lot more people out in the streets than in the daytime. Under the trees, in the bushes, and in the driveways there were groups of unsettled-looking individuals.
They furiously smoked crackling synthetic cigars, guffawed, spat negligently and often, and spoke in loud rough voices.
Over each group hung the racket of radio receivers. Under one streetlight a banjo twanged, and two youngsters, twisting in weird contortions and yelling out wildly, were performing fling, a currently fashionable dance, a dance of great beauty when properly executed. The youngsters knew how. Around them stood a small crowd, also yelling lustily and clapping their hands in rhythm.
“Shall we have a dance?” I offered.
“But no, no…” hissed Vousi, taking me by the hand and increasing her pace.
“And why not? You do fling?”
“I’d sooner hop with alligators than this crowd.”
“Too bad,” I said, “They look like regular fellows.”
“Yes, each one by himself,” said Vousi, “and in the daytime.”
They hung around on the corners, huddled around streetlights, gauche, smoked to the gills, leaving the sidewalks behind them strewn with bits of candy paper, cigarette butts, and spittle. They were nervous and showy melancholic, yearning, constantly looking around, stooped. They were awfully anxious not to look like others, and at the same time, assiduously imitated each other and two or three popular movie stars. There were really not that many, but they stood out like sore thumbs, and it always seemed to me that every town and the whole world was filled with them — perhaps because every city and the whole world belonged to them by night. And to me, they seemed full of some dark mystery. But I too used to stand around of evenings in the company of friends, until some real people turned up and took us off the streets, and many a time I have seen the same groups in all the cities of the world, where there was a lack of capable men to get rid of them. But I never did understand to the very end what force it is that turns these fellows away from good books, of which there are so many, from sport establishments, of which this town had plenty, and even from ordinary television sets, and drives them out in the night streets with cigarettes in their teeth and transistor sets in their ears, to stand and spit as far as possible, to guffaw as offensively as possible, and to do nothing. Apparently at fifteen, the most attractive of all the treasures in the world is the feeling of your own importance and ability to excite everyone’s admiration, or at least attract attention. Everything else seems unbearably dull and dreary, including, perhaps above all, those avenues of achieving the desirable which are offered by the tired world of adults.
“This is where old Rouen lives,” said Vousi. “He has a new one with him every night. The old turnip has managed it so that they all come to him of their own will. During the fracas, his leg was blown off… You see there is no light in his place, they are listening to the hi-fi. On top of which, he’s ugly as mortal sin.”
“He lives well who has but one leg,” I said absent-mindedly.
Of course she had to giggle at this, and continued.
“And here lives Seus. He is a Fisher. Now there’s a man for you!”
“Fisher,” I said. “And what does he do, this Seus-Fisher?"’
“He Fishers. That’s what Fishers do — they Fisher. Or are you asking where he works?”
“No, I mean to ask where does he Fisher?”
“In the Subway.” Suddenly she stopped. “Say, you wouldn’t be a Fisher?”
“Me? Why, does it show?”
“There is something about you, I noticed at once. We know about these bees that sting you in the back.”
“Is that right?” I said.
She slipped her arm through mine.
“Tell me a story,” she said, cajoling. “I never had a Fisher among my friends. Will you tell me a story?”
“Well now… shall I tell you about the pilot and the cow?”
She tweaked my elbow.
“No, really…”
“What a hot evening,” I said. “It’s a good thing you had me take off my jacket!”
“Anyway, everybody knows. Seus talks about it, and so do others.”
“Ah, so,” I said with interest. “And what does Seus tell?”
She let go of my arm at once.
“I didn’t hear it myself. The girls told me.”
“And what did they tell?”
“Well, this and that… Maybe they put it all on. Maybe, you know. Seus had nothing to do with it.”
“Hmmm,” I said.
“Don’t think anything about Seus, he’s a good guy and he keeps his mouth closed.”
“Why should I be thinking about Seus?” I said to quiet her. “I have never even laid eyes on him.”
She took my arm again and enthusiastically announced that we were going to have a drink now.
“Now’s the very time for us to have a drink.”
She was already using the familiar address with me. We turned a corner and came out on a wide thoroughfare. Here it was lighter than day. The lamps shone, the walls glowed, the display windows were lambent with multicolored fires. This was, apparently, one of Ahmad’s circles of paradise. But I imagined it differently. I expected roaring bands, grimacing couples, half-naked and naked people. But here it was relatively quiet.
There were lots of people, and it seemed to me that most were drunk, but they were all very well and differently dressed and all were gay. And almost all smoked. There was no wind, and waves of bluish smoke undulated around the lights and lanterns.
Vousi dragged me into some establishment, found a couple of acquaintances, and disappeared after promising to find me later. The crowd was dense, and I found myself pressed against the bar. Before I could gather my wits, I found myself downing a shot. A brown middle-aged man with yellow whites of the eye was booming into my face.
“Kiven hurt his leg — right? Brush became an antique and is now quite useless. That makes three — right? And on the right they haven’t got nobody. Phinney is on the right, and that’s worse than nobody. A waiter, that’s what be is.”
“What are you drinking?” I asked.
“I don’t drink at all,” replied the brown one with dignity, breathing strong fumes at me. “I have jaundice. Ever hear of it?”
Behind me, someone fell off a stool. The noise modulated up and down. The brown one, sitting down next to me, was shouting out some story about some character who almost died of fresh air after breaking some pipe at work. It was hard to understand any part of it, as various stories were being shouted from all sides.
“… Like a fool, he quieted down and left, and she called s taxi truck, loaded up his stuff, and had it dumped outside the town…”
“… I wouldn’t have your TV in my outhouse. You can’t think of one improvement on the Omega, my neighbor is an engineer, and that’s just what he says — you can’t think up an improvement on the Omega…”
“… That’s the way their honeymoon ended. When they returned home, his father enticed him in the garage — and his father is a boxer — and trounced him until he lost consciousness. They called a doctor later…”
“… So, all right, we took enough for three… and their rule is, you know, take as much as you wish, but you get to swallow all of it… and they are watching us by now, and he is carried away — and says — let’s take more… well, I says to myself, enough of this, time to break knuckles…”
“… Dear child, with your bust, I wouldn’t know any grief, such a bosom is one in a thousand, but don’t think I’m flattering you, that’s not my style…”
A scrawny girl with bangs down to the tip of her nose climbed up on the vacant stool next to me and began to pound with puny fists on the bar, yelling, “Barman, barman, a drink.”
The din died down again, and I could hear behind me a tragic whisper — “Where did he get it?” “From Buba, you know him, he is an engineer.” “Was it real?” “
It’s scary, you could croak.” “Then you need some kind of pill -” “Quiet, will you?”
“Oh, all right, who would be listening to us? You got one?”
“Buba gave me one package, he says any drugstore has them by the ton… here, look.” “De… Devon — what is it?” “Some sort of medicine, how would I know?” I turned around. One was red-faced with a shirt unbuttoned down to his navel, and with a hairy chest. The other was strangely haggard-looking with a large-pored nose. Both were looking at me.
“Shall we have a drink?” I said.
“Alcoholic,” said the pore-nose.
“Don’t, Pete. Don’t start up, please,” said the red-faced one.
“If you need some Devon, I’ve got it,” I said loudly.
They jumped back. Pore-nose began to look around cautiously. Out of the corner of my eye, I could see several faces turn toward us and grow still.
“Let’s go, Pat,” said red-face. “Let’s go! The hell with him.”
Someone put a hand on my shoulder. I turned around and saw a handsome sunburned man with powerful muscles.
“Yes?” I said.
“Friend,” he said benevolently, “drop this business. Drop it while it’s not too late. Are you a Rhinoceros?”
“I am a hippopotamus,” I joked.
“No, don’t. I’m serious. Did you get beat up, maybe?”
“Black and blue.”
“All right, don’t feel bad about it. Today it’s you, tomorrow it’s them… As for Devon and all that — that’s crap, believe me. There’s lots of crap in the world, but that is the crap of all crap.”
The girl with the bangs advised me, “Crack him in the teeth… what’s he sticking his nose in for… lousy dick.”
“Lapping it up, and doing it up brown, aren’t you?” said the sunburned one coolly, and turned his back on us. His back was huge, and studded with bulging muscles under a tight half-transparent shirt.
“None of your business,” said the girl at his back. Then she said to me, “Listen, friend, call the barman for me — I can’t seem to get through to him.”
I gave her my glass and asked, “What’s to do?”
The Final Circle of Paradise Page 8