‘My mother couldn’t swim.’
‘But grown-ups can touch the bottom there.’
‘I know,’ Tommy said.
‘You were only ten years old. You couldn’t touch the bottom, you had to swim.’
‘I know,’ Tommy said.
‘I know you know. I’ll keep my mouth shut.’
‘No it’s fine,’ Tommy said.
Now they had almost reached the end of the row, and it wasn’t something they had planned to do, to go there, they had been at Willy’s party, that was all, and then all of a sudden they were standing by the house that once had been the Berggrens’ house, at the back, and the windows were still boarded up with the same boards the carpenter had used that day, the man who had a yellow hammer painted on his red van. As far as they knew, no one had even touched the door handle since. It wasn’t that far from Jonsen’s house, some hundred metres only, but Tommy hadn’t been there, hadn’t walked past the Berggren house for four years. He could see it through the window from his seat in the school bus, but he always looked away as they went past.
From the edge of the field they forced their way through the ragged bushes on to the flagstones behind the Berggrens’ house. The old chair Tommy’s father used to sit on and smoke was still in the same place, but you didn’t feel like sitting there now. They walked over to the windows. The boards had started to rot and crack and loosen around the nail heads. They were lousy boards. Tommy started to pull at one of them. No one could see them on this side, there was no one outside back here but the two of them and a quiet mist above the field and the dip and Birkelunden, and you couldn’t see the pond. They could easily hear the diesel engine at the other end of the neighbourhood, but it no longer had anything to do with them. It hardly occurred to them what the telephone company people might say when they arrived and saw what had happened while they were at home in their beds. But the trenches were already in the past, they didn’t think about them. And Tommy pulled hard at one board and the nails came loose and he was suddenly flying backwards with the board in his hands and almost fell over. He threw it away and walked back and pulled another one right off the window, and then another one, and it wasn’t difficult at all.
‘Goddamn, what shitty boards,’ he said. ‘That carpenter may have been a communist, but he was stingy, that’s for sure.’ The carpenter had been around in Mørk for two years, and then he was gone. Everybody said he was a communist, so they didn’t give him much to do, but he probably wasn’t. A communist. He just refused to paint his van a different colour.
A couple more boards, then the window was bare. They leaned forward. It wasn’t easy to see through the dirty glass because the sun was rising in the east, and they were at the back of the house in the west, but it wasn’t really dark. Not now. Everything in there was as it had been. It was four years ago, but it felt a lot longer. They were not the same people. Tommy wasn’t. All kinds of things had happened. Time had happened. He was thirteen years old then, he was seventeen now, going on eighteen. They were the longest years in the world. He didn’t know what to think, but he knew it was not by accident they were standing there, that he would have come here in the end, and even might have yearned to come, and when he did, it would do something to him, that he would look through the windows, as he was doing now, and see something he could take with him into his future life, something important he had not understood until exactly that moment, if he waited long enough and didn’t come here too early. He leaned forward with his forehead against the glass, and Jim did as he did, and for a minute or more they stood like that without speaking, looking in, and then Jim said:
‘It looks like the inside of a doll’s house.’
That was an odd thing to say. But it was true. Tommy saw it at once. Everything was pitch perfect inside in an almost surreal way, untouched, untouchable, everything in its right place. The chairs at the right angle before the TV. The pile of folded newspapers neatly stacked, corner to corner on the coffee table. Everything clean under the dust. The few pictures on the wall level with each other. The Zane Grey novels lined up on the shelf, not one book a millimetre out, as though the spines had been bought all in one piece and placed there to impress. They had been so meticulous about everything. Not a piece of clothing tossed on the floor, not a toy in a corner, not a ball. Everything meant to be as it had not been. It was meant to look like a home. The home of Tommy, Siri and the twins, two big children and the two small, and if anyone came to their house, they would soon see that everything was under control, that there was no need to call anyone, not the police, not child welfare, a little family was living here and they could manage on their own, and then they would be left in peace. Tommy, Siri and the twins. But now it was so easy to see that they had absolutely no idea what they were doing then, for Jim was right. It didn’t look like a home. It looked like the inside of a doll’s house.
Tommy straightened up and stepped two paces back. He wiped his hands on his trousers. He closed his eyes and brushed the muck off his forehead. He opened his eyes again. It wasn’t as he had thought it would be. He shouldn’t have come here, he should have waited even longer, but now it was too late.
Jim straightened up as well and walked back and stood beside Tommy and closed his eyes and brushed the dust and muck from his forehead and eyebrows, he sneezed twice, and said:
‘The house needs hoovering. On the outside. What do you think.’
‘About what,’ Tommy said.
‘What do we do now.’
‘Nothing.’
‘Right. Nothing what.’
‘Just burn the whole shit down.’
JIM ⋅ SEPTEMBER 2006 ⋅ 2005
I ENTERED THE Social Security office and carefully closed the door behind me. There was something about the light in the room, I thought, an unusual whiteness, it was unpleasant, but I could hardly wear my sunglasses inside, it wouldn’t help my case. I stood looking at the tables where several men, only men, sat hunched over forms they had been asked to fill in, some with a pen frozen in the air just above the paper, and there were several computers along the wall that the clients could use, and at the back, and in front of a desk, half sat, half stood a man desperately trying to explain a very important matter to the woman facing him, and the young woman was not looking merciful, and he was ill at ease, sending glances to both sides to check how many others could hear what he was saying, and I thought, how quickly this year has passed, I can’t understand what happened to it. How slowly it came and went. Each second was painful. Looking back from where I was standing, here, right now, in the middle of this floor, there was little I could remember apart from the nights I drove from this side of Oslo via the forests in Enebakk to the other side to go fishing from the bridge between Ulvøya and the mainland, close by Mosseveien. I do not remember the first time I went there or why, that’s true, but I had no trouble remembering Container Jon and his surprisingly red, almost pink, fingerless mittens in the half-dark only this morning and the gleaming line with the twenty shiny triple hooks on his rig and every single word we said to each other, every single fish I had caught. Not that they were many, neither words nor fish. I hadn’t lost my memory, it wasn’t that. I had no trouble remembering my mother, right up until the day she died, nor the fact that I had no idea what my father looked like, and yet thinking I had seen him several times, as late as in Herregårdsveien only a few hours ago, in the hills from Ljan down to the fjord, and that was more than strange because if anyone, anywhere, at any time had ever had a picture, a photo of my father in a box or a folder or at the bottom of a drawer at home, they had not shown it to me. The psychiatrist I had to see told me I dismissed things that happened to me too quickly, even the most important ones, he said, I didn’t carry them with me and that’s not good for you, he said. Right, I said, well, I suppose it isn’t, but why is it, then, that not long ago I got this leading position at the Oslo Libraries if everything that had happened to me up to that day I had dismissed too quickly. I must have carried something with me, I said, otherwise no one would have put their trust in me and appointed me, I said, because if nothing of what I had learned in life was of any use, but was more like empty boxes, no one would have given me a job, surely that is obvious, I said, to which he said it wasn’t what he meant, and I said, I am aware of that. But then he said, or maybe that’s exactly what I do mean. Because here you are.