Выбрать главу
eterans. He had served nine years with the Uhlans … My father often told me about him. There was one story I’ll never forget … It must’ve been sometime after the twenty-fourth of June eighteen-hundred-and-fifty-nine, when the Austrian army had retreated to Verona after their defeat at the Battle of Solferino, there, in the stifling heat, by a stream, a soldier was standing guard. Not a leaf was stirring and the air shimmered with heat. The soldier had been standing there thinking how nice it would be to take a cool dip in the stream. He looked around, every which way, then quick as a wink he stripped off his clothes and ran into the water. He was splashing about to his heart’s content when suddenly he heard the whinnying of horses. He ran back out of the water, to his pile of clothes, but saw that a cavalcade of officers was already riding down the hillside. There was no time to get dressed. The soldier grabbed his shako, cartridge box and gun, and then, naked as the day he was born, he saluted the escort of none other than Commander-in-Chief Count Gyulai. The Count halted, followed by his entire retinue, and everyone stared in amazement at the stark-naked soldier. They saw at once that the sentry had been swimming, and in wartime this was punishable by death. The commander thought for a moment, then said … This man shall be pardoned, for he didn’t lose his head and the first thing he did was reach for his gun … Bitterly, the witness to old times Mr. Kořínek finished telling his story, during which he had continually smoothed down his grayish hair, which sprang right back up again, the rain drummed against the windowpanes and leaves flew through the air and clung to the windows, to the statues, when I’d walked through the castle park all the wet statues had been covered with leaves too, aspen and red beech, a gentle, steady wind was now blowing in from the south, it came from somewhere in Libya, this gentle breeze, but brought with it feelings of anxiety and deep depression, the barometer had dropped so low that the nurses had been on their feet all night long bringing around sedatives and giving injections, and on the four beds in Countess Špork’s bedroom, under a net, lay four old women who, for the past ten years, had been affected by every change in atmospheric pressure, but who now, ever since that balmy foehn had begun blowing in from Libya, felt such pain in their souls that they had lost the will to live. The whole castle even seemed slightly drunk to me, some of the pensioners preferred not to get out of bed at all, the more courageous among them staggered down the corridors, they tottered along, clinging to the walls and railings, the wind blew through the castle and made Mr. Kořínek’s hair stand straight up, the wind came in gusts, sometimes it seemed to die down, but then all of a sudden it rose again and blew steadily across the landscape or forced its way through the roof and through the weather stripping along the windows and doors, the nylon curtains billowed, as if the invisible hands of bridesmaids were lifting the edges of a bride’s train as they carried it into the church in time to the “Wedding March” … The three witnesses to old times now watched as the wind ruffled the edges of the children’s smocks and crocheted bibs on the tables, and all the baby things suddenly rose, as if there were a vacuum cleaner somewhere on the ceiling drawing them upward, the lacework and the cords that held together the children’s mittens rose up and did a ludicrous little puppet show on the tables before settling back down again, and Mr. Otokar Rykr spoke … The foehn blows in from Austria and Bavaria, I daresay there are many people in Vienna and Munich who can’t endure that steady wind and commit suicide, it is this same foehn that blows through South Moravia, as in the old folk song “The Wind Blows in from Buchlov” … In the evening the vintner is merry and in the morning he has hung himself, because just like so many others he couldn’t endure the persistent breeze … The old witness Karel Výborný now spoke … This same wind carries fine sand from the Libyan deserts to this region, the wind is most active in areas with a predominance of limestone in the ground. Munich, for example, is all limestone, it lies in an enormous limestone basin, and this wind blows in May, then in October, and again in February, the whole city and in fact the whole region is driven to drink, in May all the breweries tap casks of Maibock, in October the Bavarians defend themselves against the foehn by guzzling beer and dancing till dawn, for an entire week, and in February they stoke up huge stoves in tents and thousands of people celebrate Fasching, but actually they’re only filling themselves with beer so they don’t stick their head in the oven. The only real defense against the foehn is to flee to an area with granite mountains and hills. Regensburg … Mr. Výborný finished telling his story, and Mr. Kořínek smoothed his unruly hair with both hands and said … That foehn will be the death of me yet! It makes me feel miserable, like I’ve been out night after night drinking boilermakers and smoking Old Virginia cheroots. And not only does your whole body hurt after a foehn, but your soul too. My heart pounds in my throat and I’m never sure I’ll make it through the night. By now I know that if I check the barometer every morning, I can tell by the air pressure how I’m going to feel that day. But the worst is when it rains and the barometer shows good weather. When two frontal systems collide … I know that on that day all the hospitals in Prague, and throughout the country, will have, or maybe already do have, a high mortality rate. And the next day you read the obituaries. In Catalonia they call this wind, which in that part of the world blows from the Balearic Islands, the Llevant, it blows across the land for a whole week and even young people living on secluded farms can’t stand the pressure on their souls and go crazy or hang themselves from a tree. It’s customary there to chop them down tree and all. Last year I got a letter, a friend of mine had gone to inspect the body of a young girl who had hanged herself, he arrived to find a grieving mother, whom he tried to comfort … You’ve still got two other daughters! But the rest of the family, who had just chopped down the big tree, which had crashed to the ground with the dead girl still hanging from its branches, all those relatives wailed, along with the mother … Did she have to go and hang herself from our very best apple tree, which gave us twenty baskets of Reinettes a year?… Said Mr. Kořínek, and his hair stood straight up with disgust, just like the clothes on the little table under the sign on the wall, How do our ladies pass the time? where all the lovingly displayed baby clothes sprang up and bristled with disgust at the sultry breeze wafting through Count Špork’s castle, the warm, dry gusts that blew across the Alps all the way from Libya. In the kitchen a loud gong sounded, bong, bong, bong, bong. It was dinnertime, but along the corridors you could see that more than half the pensioners had stayed in bed, because usually most of them would be standing outside the door of the Count’s former banquet hall half an hour before dinner, the pensioners would read the menu over and over again, all that reading made them hungrier and hungrier, they tortured themselves with the thought that they might only get a very small portion, or that their meat would be tough, for half an hour they stood outside the closed doors of the dining hall debating hotly and telling each other about their favorite dishes, which their mothers had prepared for them long ago, dishes they could never forget, they told each other about the banquets and hog killings, the geese that were roasted for the Feast of Saint Martin, Christmas and Easter dishes they couldn’t forget to this day … They told each other all this outside the closed doors of the dining hall, so they wouldn’t have to think about how ravenously hungry they were. But today, for the second day in a row, the foehn was blowing, for the second day in a row the doors to the dining hall were open wide and now and then a dejected pensioner would wander in, sigh deeply and instead of just sitting down, he’d slump into his chair and bump his elbow on the plate, which clinked against the silverware …