It could be that nothing has happened yet — it’s still fall. The stove is lit. The big water kettle hisses. Gran takes a cast iron pan with a mustard-marinated roast out of the oven and goes to the pantry to get the apple wine. Ice blows in from the front hall. A white dog with a black head sleeps on the edge of the well-worn armchair, until it slides off and lands with a rustle into the pile of onions covering the floor like a thick rug all the way to the window. There’s a porcelain sugar bowl on the table with one handle missing and a sprig of lingonberries painted on its side. And a silver spoon placed in raw cane sugar.
Later, the bed will be made for you in the other room, a scratchy linen sheet put down and a rag quilt on top, heavy as a person. You’ll shiver for more than ten minutes in the freezing bed as you wait for it to warm up. The light will go out, you’ll talk about this and that. Maybe you’ll get a bedtime story, or a story from Gran’s childhood. You’ll warm up as you stare at the low, whitewashed ceiling beams. And the sleep you finally slip into will be a calm and welcoming return to a world that never ends.
You’ll wake up around midnight, the heat of the inglenook against your cheek already cooled to a lukewarm breath. The scratching of mice behind the peeling wallpaper, the resin-like light of the moon… thoughts of nothing. A complete sinking into the heart of the night.
These, Michael, are my sacred resources. Behold, a sugar bowl, a silver spoon, a quilt as heavy as a person. Maybe they’ll outlast us. But they’ll never again live the life that I see through my eyes. Come, Michael, and look into the drawer of Eastern Europe.
Kurzeme
The rain has been coming down hard all night. Puddles form on the ice.
Wind blows the fog toward Riga. Ieva keeps on driving. After years and years she’s gotten up the courage to drive out to the Zari house.
The smells of the Kurzeme region. Is it sentimentality that comes with age? Back then she had no idea what destiny had in store for her, a nineteen-year old waiting at the bus stop.
The Zari house. Andrejs’s parents live there now. Rooms. Familiar smells. After so much time spent in lifeless offices and air conditioning where the atmosphere is dead — here it’s fragrant. Curtains, the door, steps. Everything has a history, even the paint on the walls. The tears well up from the smells alone. Memories swim before her eyes, ghosts. Ieva standing in the big room with an iron in her hand just after Monta had been born, ironing tiny clothes.
Monta once told her about a memory she’d had of summers at the Zari house: “There’s the road, the sun is shining, the wind blowing, and me and the dog.” She’d said it with such happiness in her voice. What can a two-year-old possibly remember? But, see, she remembers. Oh, sentimentality. But Kurzeme has a certain something. Rugged land. Wind from the sea. She’s so lucky that destiny bestowed these things upon her.
Andrejs’s father is napping in the cool of his room upstairs and cries when he sees her. He grows airier every year, like some kind of butterfly. And more gentle. He used to be tough as a rock. He ruled over everything — animals and people. Was the final word for the women, the livestock, the men. Ieva can’t stand it. He’s lighter. Soon the wind will blow him away like dust. She can’t stand it. It makes her want to cry. Scream. But there’s no point. There are no tragedies in Kurzeme. Everything here is self-explanatory. The tears stream like sap from birch trees in spring. There’s no need to scream; this suffering is imagined. She has to say her goodbyes and go on with her life.
A young woman with large, naked breasts lies on the wide bed in the central room, nursing a baby. A hundred thoughts rush through Ieva when she looks at the baby. About Andrejs’s father, sitting in the next room waiting to be blown away by the wind. About Andrejs’s grandmother, still large and heavy in her grandson’s absence, but whose eyes are as teary as all the rest, who squeezes Ieva’s hand as she looks up at her and asks — what reason do I have to stay here? And she knows the answer already. To stay for the sake of staying. To live for the sake of living. To be happy for the sake of being happy. Even though just once she’d like to hear: Because you’re needed. We all need you. Hang on until the end. In this network of hands and hearts. This network of touches and glances.
Smells and a brilliant sun. Andrejs’s mother walks her out — they get in the car and drive over hills and muddy roads. They both cry. They both hide their eyes and know full well that they can’t hide them. The sun betrays them. Skin, pores, wrinkles, wet eyelashes, bright eyes and pitch-black pupils like moving mirrors, wetness smeared across temples and outside over the fields — it glistens. They have to part ways. Ieva is ready to accept even a single word laced with reproach, but it doesn’t come. Mothers are smart. They have to part on good terms. Andrejs’s mother stays on the hill, wipes her eyes with her handkerchief and heads back. Goes her separate way. Ieva honks the horn a few times in farewell.
From the depths someone whispers: All is well. The seaside villages are dipped in the red March sun as it sets. Ieva loves Kurzeme. She can smell it. It nourishes her.
The Crossroads
Aksels
He invites me to meet up with him.
We drink our morning tea on the terrace by the estuary. Next to us is another never-ending meeting — where the river flows into the calm sea. We drink strong, yellow tea that makes the blood in our temples sing like violins. We’re alone, with the exception of a few birds flitting about by our feet.
The sun is already high in the sky, but the clammy cold of last night still hangs in the air. Dew glints on some of the stone tables. Flies rest motionless on the banisters, and the granite floor is still covered in the layer of sand blown onto it overnight. The server reclines in a folding chair he’s put out in the sun, and smokes his first cigarette of the day while reading the paper. Now and then he pushes a hand back through his hair. The smoke that trails thinly up from his cigarette is carefree and winding, freely floating off into the great blue. I feel the structure of this city slowly course through me, saturating the cells of my body with its light.
I start to distinguish between the smells that hide shyly in gardens and those that aggressively rush in from the levee. I can visualize the shadow the black church steeple casts onto the central square, and how it always trips up the paperboy as he runs by with a newspaper bundle in his arms. I realize: if I lived in this city permanently, I’d have to huddle under a blanket with a mug of tea in the middle of the day just to fight off the chills from the persistent blue and razor-sharp cold of the sea.
“More tea please,” I say to Aksels, and in the moment the tea slowly pours from the teapot into my cup, a whirlwind of clarity rises up inside me so strongly that my chest tingles, almost like when you step up to the very edge of a cliff. I suddenly know that the dead come back to life and how they do it. I know how the living come back dead. I know what it’s like to be a bird, a dog, and a spider, I oversee everything in this exact moment of time, a few seconds that last an eternity. The wind blows my hair across my bare shoulders and it’s a loving caress. The city looks on with seeing eyes. I no longer have to count on the rare handouts from friends. From here on out, every new morning, every stranger will be a friend and an embrace — joyful and dramatic. We are all trapped in life.