Virtuoso Page 2
She stepped back and looked at the badge fixed on the woman’s lapel.
“Aimée DE SAINT-PÉ,” the badge spelled out.
“Merci,” the woman said.
Just then, Jana had the idea to introduce herself, but the woman gave her a brisk smile, turned and began walking towards N39.
Jana watched the woman walk away, her skirt shifting at the curve of her buttocks, then pulling over the slope towards her thighs.
Jana
For the first nineteen years of my life, I was a simple Czech girl, a watercolour.
Those days were a clock run by the workers and the ŠtB, the Czechoslovakian State Security. Workers, dressed in stained beige, loading a truck with big square canvas bags. Workers, wearing buttoned-up shirts, walking to work. Workers, carrying their briefcases with stiff arms. The ŠtB, walking in their plainclothes, snapping hidden photos. Man on steps. Woman with buggy. Man and woman hand in hand. Famous artworks of our era. They tapped telephones, opened letters with their steam apparatus, crawled through the veins of the city and pulled people out, out of their own biographies. People disappeared, reappeared, confessed, reported others . . . Much fervent artwork was created, in the preferred medium of photography: Man Subverting Republic (Black and White), Woman Distributing (Tryptic), Man and Woman Organising (Reprint).
These events closed over like wounds made of water. Life continued. Bubbles of breath rose to the surface and popped. The streets filled up with the absent minded, people walking heavy in their head, burying one worry with another. Anthills and craters. Warm steam from boiling potatoes seeped out of an open window. Pigeons pecked at the bland earth. The ration queues for sugar, coffee, salt, bread . . . Shadows pinched together in the alleyways, then quickly separated. There were kisses. There were pamphlets. There were foreign bills slipped from one pocket to another. At the corner, a woman crossed the street. On the walkway, a kid fell off his bike. Code or meaningless events? The cat in the window stretched her jaw wide open, as if she were a tiger.
*
I was just a particle, a frequency, a rainbow in the sky, a melody on the tip of someone’s consciousness in January 1969, thirteen years before my birth, when, in Prague’s Wenceslas Square, Czech student Jan Palach set himself on fire to protest the continued Soviet domination of Czechoslovakia.
And I was still that immaterial soundless refrain when, a month later, another Czech student, Jan Zajíc, travelled to Prague to the same square for the 21st anniversary of the Communist takeover, on 25 February 1969. He was a nobody kid from Šumperk, where he was attending a technical college, specialising in railroads, and also writing poetry. An hour or so after noon, he walked into the passageway of No. 39 on that square, his white shirt completely soaked. He lit a match and drew it to his chest. His shirt burst into a fur of flames and the body within twitched against itself.
He had planned to run out of the door into the square, the square where Jan Palach burned like a torch. But fully aflame, his body of nineteen years only made it into the hallway, where he collapsed.
*
“Why did they do it?” I remember asking my mother.
“Do what?”
*
Let’s just say I know those boys set themselves on fire, not because someone told me, but because floating particles talk among themselves.
In fact, we were very chatty when, a couple of years after Palach’s protest, the ŠtB tried to destroy any trace of his actions and existence. They exhumed his body after the burial and cremated it. His mother grieved erratically. It’s terrible to mourn a son one never had.
*
Then, all of a sudden, I had to leave the chatty circle of particles and be born – and of all places, in Prague – and of all days, on the 1st of January – and of all names, Jana.
“Why did they do it? Didn’t it hurt a lot? Especially on your face. On your cheeks and on your eyelashes . . .”
My mother looked up from the sink, over at me.
*
I thought often about this act, so unusual, so special. I kept trying to decide if it’s something I would like to do, or would like to reserve for a very special occasion.
Once I was bored, I mean so bored I felt like the air inside of me was cracking, so I pleaded with my brother to play with me. He was older and uninterested in my games. Usually, I accepted his rebuff, trudged away and ran traces into the carpet with my fingernails. But this time, my boredom was so immense and unending, the boredom of rooms and rooms of bed-ridden children, eyeing springtime through the window. I told my brother that if he didn’t play with me, I’d set myself on fire. I turned to leave, he grabbed my wrist and pulled me towards him into what I remember as my first hug.
*
I gave up on playtime and resigned myself to endless hours with my face pressed against the window, watching people in the streets below come and go. I felt like I could read their thoughts.
I followed a woman with my eyes, in her listless walk, carrying a bag, her mind twisting. I should have said – no, just keep quiet, that’s it, silence will show him – remember to save a garlic clove – but who does he think he is, professor’s son – that chicken smelled bad this morning – it’s about getting a little respect – I hope it didn’t go bad – now that she’s eating chicken – I’ll take her to the park this Saturday – That son of a bitch and his Goddamn face – Why does my leg itch? – If it comes, it comes. I refuse to be afraid to die.
*
Paranoia was our speciality. Right before that final autumn of 1989, I remember my uncle telling my father that he shouldn’t sit on the toilet without looking first into the bowl.
*
The Communist regime in Czechoslovakia made everyone pragmatic and self-serving. To an alien eye, ironically, we might have looked like a capitalist mental asylum, obsessed to the bone of each day about getting more or less than someone else, and why, and why not, and how – tomorrow, next time – not to let him, not to let her, get more, get mine, get me.
The young mothers took to the park for information. They’d take a seat on a bench, send their little ones to fumble around together as the gossip began. The park bench was the only safe place to talk, one eye on your child, and the other on the mamkas. They spelled out the necessary information, encoded seamlessly in their chit-chat. Her mother’s dying meant the apartment was up for grabs, a two-bedroom like that, and right on Janáčkovo nábřeží, third floor, windows facing the river, I’ll pay her a visit, poor woman – “Lenka don’t put your face on that, that’s filthy!” Your Lenka’s gotta stop touching everything. You know what’s-her-name’s little girl just kept sucking on nails she picked up from the ground. Then she got tetanus and died. Her mouth just rotted away. I know, I know, I’m always telling Lenka if she puts her face and fingers in everything, she’ll get tetanus and die . . . but you know kids, they’re stubborn. By the way, does Lýdie still come by meant what kind of Western products does she have. And Karel is cheating on her with the Director of the mathematics department meant your son better make friends with his. “LENKA I SAID GET YOUR FINGERS OUT OF YOUR MOUTH UNLESS YOU WANT IT TO ROT AWAY LIKE WHAT’S-HER-NAME! . . . Poor girl. She sure was pretty before her mouth fell off.”
*
I was a clean-handed little girl. I was not curious about things that could leave a stain. I did not touch dirt. I did not touch puddles. I never plunged a finger secretly into a pot of jam. Although I followed, in my quiet vigour, the initiative of those children, the ones who got onto their stomachs at the kerb and shoved their full hand into the gutter, then pulled it out and ran around, chasing the others, all of us shrieking out of the fear and delight we could not voice at home. At home, we had to keep quiet. Your grandma’s sick, keep quiet. Your mother’s got a migraine, keep quiet. The neighbours’ll complain we’ve got a spoiled child, keep quiet.
Of course, we – the quiet children of the neighbourhood – were bottled up with the desire to shriek. We would have welcomed any occasion.
We would have chirped in ultimate joy at the sight of someone being stabbed in the street, wishing our hearts into a knot that this stabber would pull out his meaty blade and run with it at us, so we could shriek even louder! We were so desperate for every giggle.
*
My brother in his loose blue T-shirt kneeled down by my side. He took the two shoelaces out of my hands and pulled them up like magic ropes and twisted them around each other. Then in one swift gesture, he released his hands and I marvelled at the perfect bunny-eared bow on my shoe.
*
There were two rules to my childhood. Don’t get stolen and don’t get molested.
*
There was a girl I knew who had disappeared. She used to live in the building across from me. Milena. A year or so older than us. I would see her, walking through our courtyard, the one we shared, my building, her building and the other one in front. Our parents just sent us children out – “Go play” – so they could get a little quiet in their small shared living quarters. So each banished child would kick their feet around in that courtyard until someone else was sent to “Go play,” then we’d join together in our exile and do something with a rock or the spaces between the trees or the cracks between the bricks or, if we were really in the pit of an insurmountable boredom, someone would resort to the hand-in-the-gutter trick.
But Milena, she only walked through, holding her Daddy’s hand, and looked at us with a still, floating presence like she was a Czarina being led to her carriage. Even if we were in the heat of it, whatever game it was we had scraped together that day, we would stop and stare at her as she crossed the yard. She was never sent to “Go play.” She never let go of her Daddy’s hand.
*
Milena was a doll. Or the closest thing any of us had seen to a doll – since there were no toys really, except for the rag-dolls our grannies would sew for us if we really pleaded. But there she was, blonde pig-tails and candy eyes, in her neat clothes, the hem of her rose and yellow dress smooth, unlike our wrinkled cotton prints, always pinched into our underwear or twisted at the side, where you could see the stitched tears our mothers had scolded us for getting and our grannies had sewn up for us.
Milena’s eyelashes fluttered in a quick gesture when she blinked, like those paper-thin hand fans. Her skin was always sun-kissed, even when it was grey for weeks, I’m telling you, and, although her body was small like ours, her arms and legs and neck all had something quite refined, unlike our kiddish, knotted limbs, blotted with bruises and scrapes and itched-off mosquito bites.
Every part of her was a doll. Even her knees were mesmerising. Like wax moulds. Mine were always grated from sitting on the carpet for so long, or crouching on the cement to count the weeds, or kneeling on the wooden stairway to look through the small window at my neighbours (especially Ms Květa on the second floor, who painted her lips red “as if she had nothing to be ashamed of”, according to Mamka, and who was always fixing her breasts through the front opening of her dress).
*
I had veiny-white skin, puddle-coloured hair and flat grey eyes. Milena’s eyes always sparkled – always; even from the distance of her crossing the yard, they glimmered above her round, fresh cheeks, which flushed and framed those lips, so pink and perfectly drawn.
*
I had assumed that molestation was inevitable for all little girls, like getting your period – it may include some mystical pains, but you get over it, and you learn bodily maintenance.
When my cousin, my father’s bad-seed brother’s son, came back from prison, my dad kept standing in front of me – he wouldn’t let Jiří lay his eyes on me. I was fascinated by this buzz-cut, pug-featured kid, with a tattoo on his neck. I kept trying to squirm around my father, to catch Jiří’s eyes – just then, he looked over and I looked up and there it was, my eyes sparkled like Milena’s perhaps, and I thought, finally!
*
I spent much of my childhood waiting to be molested, like waiting for womanhood. Try as I might to make myself molestable, it never came.
*
I heard Milena got molested.
*
Oh, Milena made me terribly jealous those days.
*
My cousin Jiří did have a predatory feel about him. But he was a kid. He was seventeen. And he couldn’t keep himself out of prison. Also, someone once told me I looked a bit like his older sister, rest in peace. She was the one who had raised him, but then ran off in a young-love marriage, and Jiří joined a pack of boys who all had the same scar. So maybe seeing me was a case of being haunted, as happens when people die, but the anger stays. I think Jiří’s squinty eyes were on me in that way, twisting oddly like damaged fingers, trying to peel the layers of the package before him, to get to what he truly saw in front of him: his late sister Frida. He must have been staring at me, the frame of a child holding the shadow of that young woman, with his eyelids quivering – why didn’t you stick around for me . . . I was so scared.
Or maybe he did want to touch my young formless body, just because he was bigger and stronger than me. Or maybe he wasn’t even into the struggle. Maybe he wanted to use some of his drugs on me, until I was passed out, just so he could hold a warm limp body, like a rabbit freshly passed away, long and flimsy, so he could say the words that would inexplicably come to his mind: “Now you’re safe.”
*
Poor Jiří. But everyone back then was a bit damaged or violated or hungry or bored. Marcel Proust was banned for our parents, and our national anthem is still “Kde Domov Můj?” – “Where Is My Home?”
*
They eventually found Milena’s body. It was laid out on the dirt beneath the square shrubs at the side gate of Saint George’s Basilica. She had been dug up and dropped off there, half-decomposed. After all those years, she was still seven. It all remained a mystery. Since we are telling the truth, the first feeling I had was, well, at least Milena will never get her period. Now we are even, I suppose. I forgive you Milena, for being beautiful, for being molested, for being my first love.
The new girl
Milena’s family moved out, and in came a new one. A bird-eyed mamka in a heavy fox-fur coat, a stubble-faced papka with a hernia-type stride, and a little raven-girl.
*
It was almost December. I was six and the new girl was six too. I saw her in the courtyard from my window, holding her winter hat in a small mittened fist, the top of her head sleek with dark hair. She turned to look at the buildings and I saw her left eye was slightly puffed up, and below it a streak of violet-blue. Then she looked up, straight at my window. Her pupils pointed into mine.
New Year and my birthday came around and a couple of the families in the building celebrated together as usual, except that year, the new one was invited too. All of us children knew each other except for the little raven-girl, so we all just stood around and stared at her, and she crouched against the wall and leaned her spine into the light socket, glaring back at us. Slavek’s mamka said, “What’s the matter with you all standing like stones, go play.” She meant inside, it was a holiday, she wasn’t kicking us out into the courtyard. Plus it was snowing. Anyway, the adults quickly forgot about us, and got drunk and opened and closed the window to smoke or coat the top of their glasses of liquor with snowflakes. Since the Communist takeover in 1948, the Czechoslovak people had grown less and less interested in politics or having opinions about anything bigger than their neighbourhood or family. They planned their countryside summer holidays, they drank, they bickered, they recited poetry, they went to bed.
Some of the kids snuck in sips. Slavek was already getting drunk, and his little cheeks flushed as he ran around his father’s legs, saying “Papka, Papka, show us the knife!” It was the famed knife, with a thin snake coiled on the metal handle, that Slavek’s father’s father had apparently killed a Nazi soldier with – slicing him right across the throat below the Adam’s apple – but Slavek’s father just used it to shear a chicken’s skin in the kitchen
sink or sharpen the ends of electrical wires. “Not now,” Slavek’s papka said and he pushed the boy out of the way. Slavek twirled a bit, then played swords with my brother, then vomited by the couch. After the women cleaned it up, his father put a hand on his son’s shoulder, knelt down and said, “Now, Slavek, if you drink the booze, you gotta keep it down.”
Slavek pouted, then murmured, “I’m sorry I yacked, Papka . . .”
*
The raven-girl and I stayed still like stones and stared at each other until the countdown began. Ten . . . Nine . . . Eight . . . all the adults were hurriedly refilling their glasses, Three . . . Two . . . But suddenly the raven-girl sprung away from the wall and ran and threw her limbs out greedily and sang a loveable song in a nasty voice. Her mamka tried to pull her down by her wrists, but the girl kept springing back up, until her mamka gave her a sharp smack to the back of the head and her sleek black hair whisked up. The girl stopped, touched her skull with her palms, then grew very quiet.
Her mamka excused her right away and told everyone not to mind it too much – her little girl was prone to these fits of stagecraft and this was precisely why they called her the Malá Narcis, because she’s a Little Narcissus who can’t get enough of herself from time to time. The other kids started laughing with their mouths closed, the sound bursting out like spit, the adults turned the music up and began to dance, now that it was a new year, and the raven-girl looked around, then crawled under a chair. She sat there, watching everyone’s calves. It was a couple of minutes past midnight and I was officially seven years old. I went over to her, crouching down in such a way as to try not to mess up my dress in case my mamka was watching, and crawled under the table to sit near her. She looked over at me. I sucked my lips in, then let them go. “Hey,” I said. Then we both looked at everyone’s calves. I saw my mamka’s knee slide past her daddy’s trouser leg. I saw his sock showing as he took a step back to the beat, the hem of his grey suit trousers were lowered because of his long legs. I saw her mamka’s white heel cross over and her tanish-coloured stocking crease behind the knee. “I’m Zorka,” I heard next to me. When I looked over at her, she was picking her nose.