Read THE LUTE AND THE SCARS Online

Authors: Adam Thirlwell and John K. Cox

THE LUTE AND THE SCARS (9 page)


Forgive me, but I

d like to be able to tell Marija Nikolajevna a bit more about her sister. And all the others.


What is there to tell you? There are lives that it turns out weren

t worth living. We lived as if we were dead. Farewell.

She closed her eyes, a sign that she was ending our conversation. At that point the door opened.

So, you found her alive after all,

said the woman with the bun in her hair.

Now go, before I call the cops.

For months following my return from the tour, I put off visiting my old landlord and landlady. But one day, walking past the Zvezda cinema, I looked them up. First I walked into Nikolaj Aleksinski

s room. He was reading Berdyaev. I shared my impressions from the tour and told him about the visit to the Novodevichy Cemetery and the Lenin Mausoleum. He served me kirsch.

Then Marija Nikolajevna appeared in the doorway.


Pardon me,

she said.

I don

t want to disturb your carousing. I just wanted to check in with our traveler. Is he still unlucky at love?


We

re talking about Moscow,

I said.

And Leningrad.


Ahhh,

came the reply.

But then what can you see in two weeks? Nothing.


I saw Dostoyevsky

s grave,

I countered.

And Blok

s.


You see?

Marija Nikolajevna said, appealing to the old man with her hands.

I told you he would forget to look for my sister. He did nothing in Russia but drink vodka with the actresses. He

s a bohemian.


I couldn

t get away from the group. That

s not easy to do in Russia.

(Then I translated it into our sign language.)


I knew it,

she said, leaving the room.


No matter,

Nikolaj Aleksinski commented.

It

s better for you to have gone drinking with the actresses than to have roamed about Moscow. It really is better this way. For
her
not to find out.

I realized it was obvious to him that I had carried out my assignment.


Let

s have another glass,

he said.

Then I have to put the bottle away. Marija Nikolajevna is very sick.

Postscript

In this piece, under the influence of Truman Capote, I attempted to approximate, in my own way, the genre of the

nonfictional story,

in which the role of imagination is reduced to a minimum and the facts are everything. In my story

Jurij Golec

I didn

t succeed in carrying out this intention: when a story

s characters, even ones of secondary importance, are specific people who are still alive, the writer is sometimes compelled to make costly adjustments and concessions with regard to
amour-propre
, something that is as understandable as it is human.

At dawn a notice had appeared near the power plant, on a wooden post.

It was autumn, the end of a wet and dreary October. The wind plucked the foliage from the poplars, in gusts. Leaves blew up and all around, like leaflets tossed from an airplane, and then descended to the ground.

The sign was hung on the pole with the rusty thumbtacks that someone had prized with his or her fingers from the death notice of one Slavoljub (Bate) Rapaji
ć
(1872

1945), a disabled pensioner, hanging below. The culprit did however show some respect for the dead: the new sheet of paper, no bigger than that on which the necrology had been printed, was only attached by means of two of the available thumbtacks; this meant that the death notice too was still hanging on the pole, fastened at both ends and still able to withstand the wind.

The paper-stock was yellow, of wartime quality, and in the course of one night or one morning it had browned considerably, to the color of withered leaves; as if, in this environment of autumnal fading, surrounded and grazed by the poplar leaves, the paper had obeyed the laws of mimicry. Its tiny Cyrillic letters

very blue and quite pale

had already begun to wash out in the rain; in all honesty, however, the typewriter ribbon that had been used to type up this text hadn

t been in the best condition to begin with.

The main thing to be cleared up was who, on that fall morning of October 25, 1945, had been the first to notice the sign


in the immediate vicinity of the power plant, attached to a wooden pole with 2 (two) thumbtacks obviously removed from a notice of death on said pole.

This unimpressive scrap of yellowed paper (

half a sheet of typewriter paper of No. 3 quality, folded and cut with a sharp object

), the same size as a death notice, might indeed have gone unnoticed by the citizenry.

This is where the weather factor comes into play: it rained the entire morning, with only a few breaks, and a cold north wind was blowing. The majority of passersby were carrying umbrellas and for that reason did their passing by hunched over, fending off the gusts of wind and the showers of rain. Furthermore. it is necessary to take into consideration the fact that this portion of the street leading to the power plant is somewhat remote and is little used by pedestrians. Apart from some of the residents of the new public housing projects (two buildings) and some employees of the power plant, hardly anyone passes this way. The residents make use of the new road, the one that runs along the back of the plant, along the edge of a field. (The old street has been torn up by bombs and tank treads.)

And so on.

But that it would have gone
entirely
unnoticed, even if it was raining cats and dogs out, right up to eleven o

clock

now that just can

t be.

As such, Budi
š
i
ć
took his investigation in the following direction: Who had walked by on that morning, the 28th of October, 1945? When? And why?

First of all, let

s have a look at the residents of this New Town housing complex. (This housing project, incidentally, is not new; it was built before the war and has remained unfinished.)

In Building Two (No. 1 has been destroyed) lives a certain Donka, Donka Boja
č
i
ć
, n
é
e
Ž
uni
ć
, a retiree. Her son fell

on our side

during the war. She didn

t manage to get away

for

medical reasons.

Her subtenant
Đ
or
đ
ina Proke
š
studies at the teachers

college, twenty-two years old, from a Partisan family: left her house about 7:30 on the day in question, toting a man

s umbrella; didn

t notice anything. (

You can trust her, seeing that she

s a Party member . . .

etc.)

Building Three: the Ivanovi
ć
es: father Stevan, sons Dane and Bla
ž
o. Daughters Darinka-Dara and Milena, mother Roksanda-Rosa. (Took the Chetniks

side. Active for some time in the enemy

s employ. Under investigation. Dane carries an automatic pistol around in the city. They

ve been interrogated. I caught up with them when they were dead drunk. Alibi verified: the night before and right up till ten a.m. they had been celebrating the mother

s birthday: Rosa, whom they call
Madame
. Impudent behavior.

Arrogant.

Do not own a typewriter.)

In the electric power plant there are four workers, all members of the Party. Supported our National Liberation Struggle. Alibis verified. Don

t own typewriters.

A certain Pajki
ć
had left for home about seven a.m., after the night shift. Near the plant he ran into Steva Li
č
ina. Li
č
ina lives at the other end of town (in the Zeki
ć
complex).

Who else could be a suspect?

The pupils of the elementary school named after

Pinki the War Hero.

And thus the circle closed. In the center of this circle, as in a mousetrap, was Mr. Li
č
ina, Steva Li
č
ina, pensioner.

What moved the retiree Steva Li
č
ina to write verses directed against the Party and government is hard to say. Their exact content isn

t even known, since Budi
š
i
ć
, on the same morning that Li
č
ina was arrested, burned them in the

mother of all stoves.

Accordingly, we know only this much (or perhaps a bit more): the poem was typed on a (Cyrillic) typewriter and spoke in a deceitful and slanderous manner of the National Liberation Struggle, the Party, and Tito. Li
č
ina was a quiet, diminutive, unprepossessing man. He wore a French cap (beret), and was always properly dressed and shaven even though he lived alone, a widower. Before the war he

d worked as an official of the provincial government. He was a clerk (

a pen-pusher

) under Bodnarov (who fled to America) in the Ministry of Schools and Education.

As we said, the poem by Mr. Li
č
ina was destined to have a short life, and no one knows (and we don

t believe anyone will ever learn) its exact content, either, especially not the offending lines. It

s true that Budi
š
i
ć
had read the poem, yet he couldn

t recall a single line of it. I mean, nothing at all. That means that only the most important thing stuck with him: that the poem offended his (Budi
š
i
ć

s) sensibilities and

spoke disparagingly of the Party, the National Liberation Struggle, and Tito.

How many lines were in the poem?

Budi
š
i
ć
asserted: More

n thirty!

Mr. Li
č
ina: Fourteen. It was a sonnet. Renaissance style. Two quatrains and two tercets.

Budi
š
i
ć
: Don

t lecture. Just talk.

Mr. Li
č
ina: I

ve told you everything. Two quatrains and two tercets. Two times four makes eight, plus two times three, which is six. Together that makes fourteen. A sonnet.

Budi
š
i
ć
: Nope, there were at least thirty! Or more!

Mr. Li
č
ina: I tell you it was a sonnet. Du
č
i
ć
and Raki
ć
wrote sonnets too.

Budi
š
i
ć
: They were traitors.

Mr. Li
č
ina: Perhaps Du
č
i
ć
was, I

ll grant you that . . . but Raki
ć
was a patriot.

Budi
š
i
ć
: How come you wrote it? Who told you to do it? Who were you in cahoots with?

Mr. Li
č
ina: I sincerely regret it.

Budi
š
i
ć
: Too late, too late . . . You should have thought of that earlier.

So they led him away into investigative detention. These were the days when the new regime had not yet consolidated its power, and the Chetniks,

bushfighters,

and other renegades were still hiding out in remote districts. Sometimes they would come down into the cities and

in the coffee houses, under napkins

leave behind messages such as:

Mile Ko
ž
urica ate here, Chetnik rebel. Long live King Petar!

Budi
š
i
ć
, accordingly, had more serious matters to deal with than the case of Mr. Li
č
ina. One day he was summoned to Kosovo, where the

bushfighters

were wandering around wreaking havoc, so Mr. Li
č
ina remained in detention for two or three months. He was a model prisoner. He mingled little with the other inmates, and he barely ever spoke. Sometimes he recited, half to himself, this or that verse. Du
č
i
ć
and Raki
ć
for the most part. (

Thus they say to us, children of this century . . .

and so on. Or:

Tonight, my lady, at the prince

s ball . . .

)

In January the interrogations began. He was now being questioned by a certain Projevi
ć
.


So, Li
č
ina. You wrote a poem against Tito and the National Liberation Struggle. Do you know what we were doing with the likes of you less than six months ago? You know exactly what. You know. Remember that I

m not Budi
š
i
ć
. Remember that. There

ll be no dilly-dallying with me. Go on, spill it. Who put you up to this? Who helped you write it? At whose behest? Who paid you? Answer each in turn.

Mr. Li
č
ina: I have already answered everything forthrightly and freely.

Projevi
ć
: Leave your feelings of sincerity out of this, you miscreant. What do your feelings have to do with it?

Mr. Li
č
ina: Believe me, sir, I don

t remember anything else.

Projevi
ć
: Should I help your mem

ry along a bit?

Mr. Li
č
ina: I admit that the verses were inappropriate. Morally I bear full responsibility.

Projevi
ć
: And you say you don

t recall a single line?

Mr. Li
č
ina: No. I give you my word of honor. I wrote the verses at four in the morning. Composed them at the typewriter.

Projevi
ć
: Go on. Keep talking. We have a lot more important things to do than this.

Mr. Li
č
ina: Then I put on my coat and picked up my umbrella. Forgive me, but what

s become of my dog?

Projevi
ć
: Well, look at him go. He

s back on the dog kick again. I told you: we

re feeding him every day, three times a day, with sausages and Dalmatian prosciutto. We

re giving him milk, as if he weren

t a dog but a lamb. Now just go on.

Mr. Li
č
ina: I thank you for that . . . I

m relieved to hear it.

Projevi
ć
: You took your coat and umbrella and went out into the street. Did you show the poem to anyone?

Mr. Li
č
ina: Not to anyone.

Projevi
ć
: Whom did you run into along the way?

Mr. Li
č
ina: I cannot recall. Nobody.

Projevi
ć
: This is really rich. Just great. Doesn

t remember the poem, doesn

t remember the people. But don

t play na
ï
ve with me. You

re no fool if you know how to write poems against the Partisans and against the people. We

ll fix you right up. Oh, yes we will. Don

t you worry about that. Here

s a pencil for you, and paper, and now produce some poetry, my friend. To your heart

s content.

Mr. Li
č
ina: Thank you, sir.

Projevi
ć
: Don

t thank me, you worthless piece of . . . You act like this is a gift. Now get lost.

Mr. Li
č
ina: Thank you, sir.

Projevi
ć
: I don

t want to set eyes on you till this poem is finished.

Mr. Li
č
ina: I understand, sir.

Projevi
ć
: How much time will you need . . . Let

s say three months?

Mr. Li
č
ina: Three days would be quite enough.

Projevi
ć
: Nonsense! Three days? No way. Write it and revise it for three months. Till it looks like it was written by Zogovi
ć
. Get it? Like Zogovi
ć
? Or Mayakovsky . . . . Now get a move on!

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