All That Is Solid Melts into Air
Page 26
He looks up towards Iakov and looks behind him and points to himself—You’re calling me?—a dumb cover, and Yevgeni knows it and Iakov knows it, but he has to do something; he couldn’t just be open about the fact that he’d brazenly ignored him.
The only way to get through this is to show abject deference.
Iakov waves him over again, and they all turn to look, everyone giving a skulking look, a look that growls, and he runs towards them, his arms pumping, constricted by the straps of his schoolbag so that he can only really move his forearms up and down, which he knows makes him look ridiculous but better that than keep them waiting.
Iakov throws an arm around his shoulder and bends him forwards, rubbing his knuckles off Yevgeni’s head.
“This is the kid.”
“Which kid?”
He takes his arm from around Yevgeni’s head and stands him up, displaying him. Yevgeni’s face is by now the colour of the fire, a result of the run and the embarrassment and the jostling, all tinged with the element of dread.
“The gym kid.”
“Gym kid? What gym kid? He does cartwheels on top of moving buses?”
“Little fucking tomato muscles. Big fucking deal. He’s got superpowers or what?”
“Hey, kid, show us a handstand on this barrel.”
A quick wave of stunted laughter.
The guys are all older than Iakov. Even Yevgeni can see that Iakov is struggling in their company. They have bicycle spokes shoved into their potatoes, and they hold on to the end of the rod and slowly turn the potatoes over the flame, taking them off every now and again for inspection or to blow off any embers that look as if they have potential. Yevgeni can smell burnt oil and metal and rubber or whatever they are using for fuel, and a faint tint of crispy potato skin dancing over the stench.
“How many times do I need to tell you this story? Hanging on to the gym rope, his cock dangling in the wind, and Sukhanov down below with that crazy worm vein on the side of his head practically exploding he was so fucking mad.”
Illumination all round, rods going vertical so they can turn and get a look at him.
“Hey, you’re the kid.”
A few cuffs around the head, loose-wristed though, friendly.
“That Sukhanov used to make me sweat out the contents of my ball sack.”
“Sukhanov would make his own mother bleed.”
“Up there for three hours, I hear,” Iakov says.
Yevgeni knows he can’t have been up there for more than five minutes, but he lets the story develop its own pathways, lets them stretch it whatever way they want: it’s their story now, not his. He looks down and smiles. You don’t smile in front of them. Be respectful. Know your place. You’re only a hero so long as you don’t know it.
“Hey, kid, this one’s done. Take it.”
They flick him a potato, a short backhanded whip that makes it twirl through the air towards him. Yevgeni palms it and then bats it between hands, tapping and blowing, way too hot to hold.
Iakov gives Yevgeni a wink and a sideways nod: show’s over, time to go home.
Yevgeni walks off, still blowing the potato, scuffing his soles off the concrete, because he’s done good, kept his mouth shut, stuck one to the man.
“Fucking Sukhanov. Let him come round here, I’ll show him a fucking headstand.”
Chapter 22
Pavel calls and invites her to a party, and Maria finds herself standing in an old bakery, with iron window frames divided into squares of frosted glass and the night outside coming through in a lustrous wash. Above her, on shelves and ledges, dozens of candles sit on cracked dishes, flames wavering, shadows running up the walls, sculpting the darkness of the high wooden roof.
She is one of the early ones and she curses herself for looking too eager, and she’s borrowed a dress from Alina—nothing striking, a plain black cotton dress with a dark felt shawl—but she looks as if she was born in another century from the people milling around the room, in their torn jeans and denim jackets, and the click of her heels pierces the conversations and she is nervous of slipping on the tiled floor. The feeling dissolves eventually as others arrive and, after some staggered conversation and a barrage of compliments, she relaxes. She is who she is, and not being dressed like everyone else is not exactly a situation she is unused to.
One of the old bread ovens still works, and they’ve turned it on and left the door open to heat the space, and everyone gathers on the other side of the room to avoid the blast of arid air, and they press close and talk easily, shedding layers of reserve, the conversation becoming less sporadic, words flowing easily, stories and darting wit and a studious consideration in many faces.
Everyone talks about the pilot. The whole city is talking about the pilot.
The facts are consistent. He’s nineteen. He’s a West German. He was wearing a red flight suit. This is what made the news. This one had to make the news—half the city saw him land. The West German government has already appealed for clemency.
They stand and talk. The talk is that the air defence command were afraid to take him out of the sky: three years ago they shot down a Korean civilian airliner that had drifted into Soviet airspace. They thought it was a spy plane. An international embarrassment of incredible magnitude.
So, the talk is that no one was prepared to give the order.
A few in the room are saying he’s a genuine emissary, sent from the West, a modern-day Messiah. Already they are being mocked.
The official line was that the Moscow radar was down due to routine maintenance work.
Maria wonders where the hell Pavel is. She talks to a tall, slim guy in a black sweater with holes where the shoulders should be. He’s a botanist, midtwenties with deep-set eyes, and he talks without expecting a response, and she sips her vodka, half interested, and tries not to look at the door.
“We took him to be a weather balloon.”
Some people in a circle in the corner are doing impressions of the generals readying their excuses for Gorbachev.
“There was impenetrable, low-hanging cloud.”
Each one elicits a round of laughter, and Maria smiles wryly. Their intonation is pitch perfect: they slur their words, speaking like Neanderthals, and a couple of them take on the persona of gorillas, chewing their knuckles, wrists bent, scratching themselves, elbows at unlikely angles.
“His flight pattern replicated low-flying geese.”
The laughter builds with each enactment.
There’s a box in the basement of their apartment block, stacked together with Alina’s husband’s belongings. Letters, photographs, a restaurant bill, cinema stubs: all the detritus of her marriage that she couldn’t bring herself to throw away. It’s too difficult, too obscure, to think of Grigory out there; Maria has no reference points, no landscape to imagine. And she hasn’t told Alina what she knows. Her sister would respond with practicalities, tell her glibly that she’s loading herself with unnecessary worries, try to reassure her with all those bullshit news reports. So, instead of dwelling on the possibilities, she thinks of the box instead, fills it with all the unspoken words which they’ve yet to exchange.
A man wearing a dark cap arrives to ironic cheers, and he carries with him a large bag. Some of the group huddle around him and help him unpack, and they join metal pieces together until Maria realizes it’s a movie projector that he’s been carrying, and he displays the tin can containing the reel to everyone as if it were a bottle of fine wine, and there’s a hushed murmur of approval and Maria is annoyed that Pavel never mentioned that a film would be the focal point of the evening, and where the hell is he? An hour late is too much, even for him.
The movie is Solaris by Tarkovsky. They sit on whatever is available and lean against the far wall, and the botanist has managed to manoeuvre himself beside her, but he’s timid enough to keep his hands to himself and Maria isn’t anticipating any problems. They have to aim the image over the ovens, and because of this the picture is elon
gated as if the figures in the film are in a hall of distorting mirrors. Maria kind of likes this element, the way the mouths and noses stretch out in close-ups, which makes her consider what an odd thing the human face is in its configuration, how strange in its regularity, all the billions resembling each other.
They stop the reel, and there is some mumbling and fiddling with the projector and the man in the dark cap announces that his speakers are blown so there won’t be any accompanying sound, and there are boos and hisses amongst the crowd, who are getting into the crowd spirit, but Maria can tell nobody really cares, they’ve all probably seen it anyway and know the plot, and the lack of sound somehow enhances the stretched-out picture, makes it all the more curious, and the heat is still blasting from the oven and the industrial taint of the noise it makes is oddly appropriate to the images. They watch people speaking with no sound, and Maria finds herself considering the tongue action and lip movements, and it can’t be denied that it provides a faintly erotic twist.
Scenes pass and nobody moves, everyone as entranced by the spectacle as she is. Maria looks around at the group, bundled together under the blue light that flares and deepens as the camera changes its viewpoint. There doesn’t seem to be that many of them, now that she can see everyone gathered together, a small crew of drifting souls, all reaching to gain purchase on something solid and worthwhile, and the thought strikes her that if a fire consumed the building and they were all trapped inside, would anyone actually notice? Everyone here claiming they were in fact somewhere else.
The film as she remembered it is an intense psychological drama set in a space station, but viewing it here elicits ripples of laughter throughout its small audience. The flimsy and narrow spaceship tunnels, the claustrophobia and intense desire for privacy, the reassuring fantasies the characters cling to, the great, looming, all-controlling planet outside, all so close to their own experience that they have no option but to titter in recognition. Take the sound away and political allegory becomes satire.
Maria allows herself to be swept along by the motion and rhythm of the camera. She’s never done this before, too distracted by the narrative, but now she pays attention to the cutting pattern, the length of a shot, and she looks at the outside of the frame, rejecting where the director wants you to look, seeing instead a blurry stair rail or desk lamp; the smudged, unfocused items on the periphery that hold their own quiet captivations. Watching it is like reading a child’s picture book: no words to pay attention to, just the language of images.
They take a break at the end of the first reel and people spill into the corridor, smoking and talking, and there’s a queue for the toilet and Maria sees Pavel hovering around the door.
“You look lovely.”
“Thanks. You look late.”
“I know, I’m sorry.”
Pavel holds up a bottle he’s brought and pours a swig into Maria’s glass, locates one for himself, and blows the dust out of it. He pours and puts the cap back on and lays the bottle on the floor, clamping it between his feet, and they clink glasses and sip and Pavel looks around the room and Maria looks into her glass, swirling the liquid.
“How long is it since we’ve done this?” he asks.
“Done what?”
“Shared a drink.”
Maria pauses, thrown slightly off kilter.
“I don’t know. Maybe five years?”
She could have come to him. When the trouble started with the newspaper. Pavel would have given advice. She could trust him. Why didn’t she lay more faith in others? Pride maybe, she thinks. She doesn’t like to show her weaknesses. Pavel has always been loyal to her, even if they let a long time pass without seeing each other. She didn’t ask him to dig out a teaching role for her; he was aware of her situation and just called her up one day. At first she wondered if his kindness had a motive to it, if he was perhaps trying to rekindle things, but no, there’s never been an underlying edge to their conversations.
She draws him into a corner.
“What do you know about Chernobyl?”
“Why?”
“It’s begun to interest me. What have you heard?”
“Probably the same as you. Of course, I don’t directly know anyone who has been there. It’s all hearsay. But, yes, there’s been talk.”
“Such as?”
“I don’t know. Wild tales, odd tales. The animals have been affected, rabid wolves are populating the forests, two-headed calves being born in the local farms. Fairy-tale stuff.”
“So you don’t think there’s any truth in them?”
“I really don’t know. A West German kid lands a plane in Red Square—who would have believed that one if there weren’t so many around to see it?”
“Anything else?”
“A colleague of mine, his cousin works as a night porter in one of the hospitals in Kiev. They’ve been bringing the cleanup workers there. There are sections of the hospital that even the doctors refuse to enter.”
“And? A porter has more than one story.”
“Well, he talked about a girl in Belarus who was brushing her hair. Eleven years old with beautiful, long pigtails, and she’s preparing for bed, running a wide brush through her hair, holding it with one hand and brushing with the other, and the whole handful just dislodges from her head. She’s bald within thirty seconds. This is what they’re saying.”
Pavel raises his eyebrows in conclusion, takes another drink. “But if you ask me, a porter is a job with plenty of gossip time.”
Maria transfers her glass to her other hand. “Grigory’s there.”
Pavel’s eyes widen. “Are you sure?”
“Yes.”
“How do you know?”
“I called to him after we met at Lenin Hills. I hadn’t seen him in months. He was gone.”
“Have you talked to him?”
“No. I can’t find out where he is. I’ve spoken to anyone who might know. Nothing.”
She says this and her face buckles.
Pavel draws her to his shoulder. She stays there, forehead pressed against his collarbone. Breathing deeply.
“I’m sorry,” he says. “I’ll ask around, I have some medical friends who have sway in the Ministry of Health. I’ll get them to find some details.”
Maria steps back. Nothing to wipe her eyes with, so she uses her hands.
“Be careful about it. I don’t want anyone to draw attention to him.”
“Okay. I will.”
The crowd clusters in again and the second reel of the film is loaded and plays, but Maria can’t pay attention anymore. Her eyes stray from the screen. Instead she looks at the beam coming from the projector, dust swirling through it, the past floating everywhere.
When the film finishes, people stand and stretch, unrolling their vertebrae, cigarettes still dangling from their lips. Maria’s eyes itch from the smoke.
Pavel takes her elbow. “There’s someone I want you to meet. If you’re up to it?”
She nods.
They enter a room further down the corridor. This one is filled with portable steel racks, about two metres high, presumably the cooling room for the baked bread.
A man in his early forties is standing alone, inspecting the employee notices, still pinned to the walls.
He turns. His clothes are well cut, hair swept back from his forehead, an impressive bearing, a firm handshake.
“Danil is a lawyer who looks for honest ways of practicing the law. If a writer needs to arrange an exit visa or begin the rehabilitation process to get his name cleared, Danil is the one we turn to for advice.”
“I see.”
Danil has assured, intelligent eyes.
“I’m presuming you’re not here for the film, Danil.”
“No, I’m not.”
He draws a flyer from his pocket, a small white rectangle of paper, clumsy block print.
Maria reads it. It’s a strike-appeal leaflet for the plant Maria works in, requesting that workers meet at the main
gates in ten days’ time, just before the morning shift begins. They intend to march through the factory and on to the main road, which they’ll follow all the way into the city.
Maria has seen hundreds of these already. They’ve been leaving them on streetcars and trains on the way into the plant. Workers pass them around on their walk home. Nestor, in particular, is very excited. He’s expecting that at the very least the factory board will appoint a new set of union officials. He claims they may even reinstate Zinaida Volkova. Maria has stopped arguing with him.
“What do you think?” Danil asks.
Maria looks at Pavel, asking if she can trust this man. Pavel nods.
“If they want to strike, then let them,” she says.
“Is there much support among the workers?”
“Yes. I think so. People seem enthusiastic about it.”
“But you aren’t.”
“No.”
“Because you think it’s futile.”
She answers reluctantly. “Yes.”
“You think it’s futile because you have background knowledge. You’ve studied the developments in Poland. You know that the strikes there were toothless until Solidarity came up with a new tactic.”
Maria stays silent.
This was true. Maria had a source in Poland who reported developments to her of a strike in the shipyards of Gdańsk six years ago. A few hundred workers entrenched themselves inside a factory. They held the machinery hostage, and the factory chairman could no longer bring in unemployed workers. It was a much different prospect for the militia; they couldn’t just chop down the strikers on the streets. To clear them from the factory would need a full-blooded military operation, and the chairman didn’t have the stomach for that. It had the added advantage of holding their morale together, reminding each other that they had a claim on their own workplace.