Read Mama Leone Online

Authors: Miljenko Jergovic

Tags: #Fiction, #Literary

Mama Leone (26 page)

Now they only needed to perform the farewell act, which was certainly less an emotional problem than one of convention. Saying your goodbyes to a person you haven't seen for six years and maybe won't ever see again isn't easy. Maja didn't have any experience with this sort of thing, such farewells obviously at odds with the philosophy of her new life. There were no dramatic farewells in the north nor could there be, there people's goodbyes are temporary, or death or hate parts them.
Of course we'll catch up again in the next few days
, she said,
it's not far for you to pop over to Dubrovnik, and we can always come back
. Boris opened his arms like this so completely went without saying that nothing more needed to be said. So they didn't say anything. Mr. Big held the kid to his chest.

They stood on the ferry gateway.
We're in Hotel Argentina
, she said, not quite yet free of the unease of their parting.
Great, I've got the number!
The lie was a transparent one, but Boris wasn't aware of it and Maja didn't notice. Why would he have the number for Hotel Argentina, doesn't matter, the ferry drew nearer. An elderly ensemble was playing on deck, dressed for a ball from the end of the last century, the singer on the podium not much younger than this century, his black tails looking from a distance like moths had celebrated the sinking of the
Titanic
on them. The singer had the gestures of old photographs, as if posing for someone or something at his death, the merry apocalypse that might just emerge as the bridge lowered toward the shore. In a soft voice, as gentle as if wiping a dust cloth over a piano, he sang
away, I'd rather sail away, like a swan that's here and gone, a man gets tied up to the ground, he gives the world its saddest sound, its saddest sound
.

Mr. Big jumped in excitedly:
whoa, El condor passa
. Maja and Boris laughed simultaneously, their pupils catching a chance square glance. Their pupils stilled, they shared a moment of intimacy free of any other thoughts or feelings, one they would never share again. They kissed and hugged, no mention of seeing each other again, in a few days, in Dubrovnik, or on Hvar. Maja and entourage crossed the footbridge, the bridge was drawn up, the ferry set off, Maja waved from the deck, the kid waved, Mr. Big waved, his waves like signals sent to illegal aviators high in the sky. Boris held his arm in the air, moving it to the rhythm of the farewell song, left and right,
away, I'd rather sail away, like a swan
that's here and gone
. The ferry became smaller, Maja and her waving hand too, until she was as tiny as the brown tips of pine needles. Just before the boat disappeared behind the bay, Boris saw she had lowered her arm and turned around, or maybe that's just what he thought he saw. He punched his hand in the air, extending his arm as far as he could. He liked that. It looked ridiculous and cooled his sweating skin.

Ho freddo, ho molto freddo

The commotion in the train on the Trieste–Mestre line lasted half an hour. First the conductor came down the corridor, then immediately scuttled back, then a pair of carabinieri turned up, and then the conductor flew past again, returning from the dining car with a girl holding a glass of water. In Monfalcone a plump bald man with a doctor's bag got on and was followed down the corridor by the taller of the two carabinieri, and then all was quiet. When the train pulled into Mestre an ambulance was waiting on the platform. Two paramedics entered the nonsmoking car in second class and remained there until the train was empty. Then they went back to fetch a stretcher. On the stretcher lay a black plastic bag. They exited the train ten minutes later. The bag on the stretcher was no longer empty.

At that moment a full three hours had passed since Barbara Veronesse, a retired piano teacher from the music school in Sarajevo; her seven-year-old granddaughter, Azra; and Gianni, Aldo, and Marco, senior-high students from Trieste heading to Venice for a Black Uhuru concert, had all entered the compartment. Nana Barbara sat next to the window, across from her sat Azra,
look here
, Nana said,
this is where my grandma and grandpa were born
, and Azra looked and saw nothing but grass and stone houses,
look here
, Nana pointed,
your grandpa fought here
, and Azra looked and saw nothing but grass and the odd pine tree. She watched Gianni, Aldo, and Marco out of the corner of her eye, shouting, laughing, and clapping in a completely incomprehensible language. Azra knew the whole world didn't speak the same language, didn't even speak English, but she had never imagined that laughter and clapping in a foreign language might sound so strange.

Nana sighed and closed her eyes. Azra watched a lock of hair fall on her forehead, the wheels of the train banging away,
taram-taramtaram
, the lock falling lower and lower, now just above the eyebrow, with the next
taram-taramtaram
it'll be almost in her eye, no it won't, it'll take one more
taram-taramtaram
, there we go, it's fallen. Nana's asleep and doesn't notice, the foreign boys holler away, what's wrong with them, can't they see Nana's asleep? Azra closed her eyes, if they see she's sleeping too maybe they'll quiet down.

Barbara Veronesse had lived with her granddaughter in Pore
č
for two years. They had made it out of Sarajevo in the fall of 1992, a month
after Azra's father was killed. Her mother, Eva Veronesse-Teskeredži
ć
, had been dead for exactly how long Azra had been alive. She died two days after giving birth, eaten up by a tumor that had grown inside her for nine months, maybe a little longer; the doctors had told her she must abort to save her own life, a childless one for sure but a life all the same; she didn't want to, the doctor, Sre
ć
ko, asked her whether she believed in God, and not waiting for her answer said
even Christ would forgive you, don't kill yourself, please
, to which Eva looked at him sadly and said
but doctor, I don't believe in him and I know there is no God
. Azra's mother only saw her once in her life. She was given her first dose of morphine shortly after, and the next day she was already dead.

Nana Barbara had wanted to show Azra Venice, believing the child would remember her by the city for the rest of her life. In seven days she was to see Azra off on an airplane that would take her to Boston, where her uncle Mehmed, a computer scientist, lived, with whom Azra would live too, with him and his wife, Nevzeta, in a big house with a yard full of cats and dogs. The truth was that Nana had only heard about the one dog, but she had told Azra there were at least ten to make the leaving easier on the child, and so she wouldn't cry because Barbara Veronesse couldn't stand tears. Tears were all that remained of her own daughter and she wanted to avoid them, even if she had to make up all the cats and dogs in the world. With her granddaughter leaving, she would return to Sarajevo, and then what would be, would be; if we have to die, let us die where we belong, where we've lived our whole lives.

Aldo tapped the old woman on the shoulder, who opened her eyes to see Azra bent over the seat throwing up.
My child
, she searched her handbag for a tissue, the Italians had squashed into their corner, palely looking on, Azra was crying, the conductor came in and asked Grandma something, she replied, and Azra choked
Grandma, don't leave me
, she squeezed her hand,
I won't, sweetheart, I'd never leave you, just relax
, Azra threw up again,
it's nothing sweetheart, you just had a bad dream
, the girl with the water came, trying to catch Azra's eye and make her smile, yet the child didn't see her,
but Grandma, I don't want cats and dogs
, Barbara Veronesse struggled to breathe, the child threw up again, who knows where she's getting it all from, the doctor came in mumbling something in a foreign language and pinched Azra's cheek,
Grandma, don't let me go
, Barbara Veronesse started to get dizzy,
God, just not now, don't kill me now
, she closed her eyes, she just had to close her eyes a little, Azra cried, the doctor murmured, someone held Barbara's hand, someone held both of Azra's hands, Azra screamed and lost her voice,
let's go home, please Grandma, let's go home to Bistrik
, Barbara Veronesse remembered her piano, the brothers would open the monastery windows when she played, when Brother Ivan died she had played
Eine kleine Nachtmusik
the whole night through.
Don't cease God's work
, a young seminarian had told her, and she had played until five in the morning when Brother Ivan's soul expired; she felt someone trying to take her pulse, she couldn't hear Azra anymore, the child must have stopped crying, must have calmed down, a silence grew from all
sides, as big as Trebevi
ć
and as wide as Sarajevo, she tried to open her eyes but couldn't, Barbara Veronesse's eyelids were as heavy as the big red curtains at the National Theater and didn't want to rise.
Mi aiuti, per favore
, his voice was shaking, she felt someone grab her feet, someone grab her shoulders, she was lying down,
signora, signora
, somebody had undone the buttons on her blouse, someone was slapping her face, someone's hands were pressing violently on Barbara's chest, they must have taken the child out of the compartment,
signora, signora
, there was a humming in her ears, she remembered the Bistrik stream and how it flowed when she was a little girl, she could tell apart every stone at its bottom, the hands pressed her chest in the same rhythm as the Bistrik's flow, and with each press the stones would jump from the bottom, just look how light they are, like they aren't stones at all but full of air, before sinking again, the water so deep you could drown in there in the fall, who had drowned? Barbara Veronesse was afraid, she was so terribly afraid that she opened her eyes and saw a big sweaty forehead with glasses. Azra wasn't beside the window anymore and the water was gone. That calmed her, it calmed her so much she no longer even needed to sigh.
Signora, signora, come sta, come va, signora
, the bald face shouted. Barbara opened her mouth, smiled, and said
ho freddo, ho molto freddo
and closed her eyes. The doctor took Marco's coat and covered her with it. For some time he held the wrist of Barbara Veronesse, the retired piano teacher from Sarajevo, and then he slowly laid her hand on her chest and with his fingertips, as if he was scared of
waking her, placed the coat over her face. His eyes were full of tears. At that moment all the doctors in the world detested him, him, the doctor who cried.

In the next compartment Aldo and Marco tried to laugh, Gianni performed a pantomime for Azra. He played a man building a house, but the bricks kept falling down, then a man trying to change a light-bulb, then a man doing something else, he tried everything, but Azra just watched him, the nausea had passed and she didn't want to cry, she was in wonder at this mute world, seemingly at peace with it. In this mute world there was no Nana and no Bistrik, but neither were there people who lived their whole lives in foreign languages.

Like a little girl and an old dog

The sky above Sur
č
in is low and heavy. Drunken angels have installed themselves on the clouds somewhere high above and are now celebrating, oblivious that they're sinking lower and lower, that they're about to hit the ground, among the plowed fields, where the Vojvodina plain begins and forgotten pumpkins freeze. The plane has just broken through the clouds, and here it is, growing, bigger and more real than when the story began. In a few seconds it'll touch down, the landing gear has long been extended, and the captain just needs to say those few words of signing off, of welcome and the weather, the hoping we'll see you again.

Marina is sitting in a fourteenth-row window seat looking out. Her gaze is empty; she can't see what she was wanting to see, nor can she
even remember what it was she'd wanted. Marina is on her way home for the first time in three years. Actually it's not home, it's just where her parents live and where her things are, things she doesn't need anymore or perhaps never needed, things not for junking because wherever they are means you're home. She's never lived in Belgrade apart from the several months between their leaving Sarajevo and her leaving for Canada. But still she tries to recognize the ground beneath her, the runway expanding like it might swallow the plane, the screech of the wheels as they touch ground; she searches for the code to a former world, to which, as the story goes, she belongs.

It's cold outside, she inhales, catching on the air the faint scent of petrol and a hint of frozen winter grass, but this is all. Nothing she knows, nothing that after so much time would make you say
hello again, I'm back, take me in again for a little while
.

They don't know her time of arrival. She couldn't bring herself to tell them; who could have handled a meeting in the airport terminal, voices echoing to eternity, thousands of eyes rubbernecking at scenes that are none of their business, a situation where you have to stand, hug, wave your arms, wipe away tears, swallow pounding hearts, no sitting or lying down, no way, no cushioning your head, because it's an airport, people spit on the floor, you can't sit or lie down, crying's no good in a place like this, what would everyone think, each with his own opinion and explanation of the spectacle. When in the hour of greatest weakness and vulnerability, in the midst of sorrowful joy, people find
themselves under a stranger's gaze, in a stranger's imagination, they risk spilling like water, their fates draining down into whatever strangers have dreamed up for them.

On the bus she closed her eyes, wanting to sleep the exact duration of the journey. She opened her eyes every few minutes, in fear of a stranger's touch or that someone might think her unwell and want to help her the way people do here when you're unwell – with a series of kindnesses and offers of assistance that make you feel even more unwell. Every time she opened her eyes she'd see something different. Apartment towers at the city's edge, women at an improvised market, one of them holding a box of matches and smiling, yellowed buildings and a poplar, young guys smoking in front of a movie theater, a house with a sign saying “Kolobara.” It wasn't necessarily a single city. It could have been ten different cities, one for each opening of her eyes. Each was equally unfamiliar and unknown and only a queasy childhood premonition told you that in some way, distant but real, you belong to this scene; this same premonition reminded Marina of her anxiety when she used to go into a supermarket where a bitchy check-out woman, without asking, would give her a piece of bubble gum in place of her small change, at least until Marina was old enough to fire back
lady, what do you think, is this appropriate behavior
, but the premonition might have easily reminded her of something else, not that it mattered; Marina just didn't want anyone touching her or talking to her. Ideally your entrance into such worlds would be invisible, and you would stay
that way, not uttering a word until you had established possible connections to your past. Spoken in such places, words disappear into dark spaces where you've never been in your life, or where you were once but have since departed, and then those words return when you want them least, to a world where you really are, and wound you.

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