“Don’t you city slickers read the paper?”
He held the wrench out straight, like a fencer, pointed at the fields and hills.
“Gerade aus,” he declared. “Straight ahead, go like hell to the future. That’s a train that makes no stops, Felix. Mark my words.”
“Globalization, isn’t that what they call it?”
Opa Nagl grunted as he put more pressure on a turn of the wrench.
“Wait for this Constitution thing,” he said. “We’ll show them.”
Then he groaned, cursed, and let down the wrench. He massaged his hand.
“Let me.”
“Leave it, Felix. I broke it, I’ll fix it. Okay? It’s the stupid fingers and knuckles that need a wrench.”
Slowly he stood, and drew out a rag from the back pocket of his overalls. His father used to joke that Opa Nagl had arrived in the world in the same blue overalls, cursing, that it had been this way since day one.
He watched his grandfather wipe his hands, holding them out one by one, stretching them. Those are claws now, he thought, not hands.
“What’ve you got there?”
“Just a few things, for the kitchen.”
“What? Flowers for your oma? And…? You want a bite to eat, are you peckish?”
Felix shook his head. He looked around the yard.
“Just a bit of peace and quiet, right?” said Opa Nagl. “The way things used to be.”
“Something like that I guess.”
Opa fixed him with a mischievous eye.
“Did I hear something there maybe?”
Felix pulled out two bottles.
“Prima. It’s been a long day. But stay out here, the house stinks of paint.”
They strolled over to the edge of the cement area Felix had helped lay while he was still in school. The pigs heard them and began shuffling about in the pen.
Berndt flopped down beside them and soon lay his snout flat over his paws, staring too, Felix imagined, at the faraway hills to the south. There was a slight glow to the sky there, broadening as Felix turned and looked over the house toward the West.
“Your father sat here, the same as you. Damn. My big mouth.”
Felix drank from the bottle again.
“I’m sorry,” Opa Nagl went on. “It’s probably the last thing you want to hear.”
Then, after a while, he spoke again.
“Only that it reminds me of him. He never showed up emptyhanded. What a man he was and you too. You’re not a complete loss to the city I mean.”
Felix smiled.
“Do you really believe that old stuff, Opa? Stadtleute and g’scherter, the city people and the country people stuff?”
“What if I do? Is that not allowed?”
Felix shrugged.
“Even if I don’t believe it, plenty do. Why else do we have the Freedom Party?”
“Don’t ask me. I’m a Green.”
“How can you be a Green and a policeman? That I don’t get.”
Felix eyed him.
“Okay,” Opa said. “So I have these rules in my head. But everyone does.”
“But all that country versus city stuff, it’s so, I don’t know, so ancient.”
“You think so?”
“The Internet, Opa. Osama Bin Laden. Mobile phones.
Turkey, the EU.”
“Jesus and Mary, you came all the way up here from Graz to educate your elders?”
“I didn’t mean it that way.”
“Wait until I tell our ancient Oma. She’ll take a wooden spoon to you hell, forget it, she’ll take a shovel to you, kid. She’s down with the Wagners there, down the hill a way. You talk about ‘ancient’? She’s been best friends with that Frieda since they were spots. Well kindergarten. And you know what? Their mothers were friends too. It all goes back.”
Felix drained the bottle and he began to study the label.
“Maybe you went to school with that Oetzi guy, did you?”
“Oetzi? I don’t know any Oetzi. Otto, I know. Otto Biedermeier?”
“Oetzi the Iceman. Remember the one they found high up, just across in Italy? Preserved, in the ice?”
A sardonic expression took over Opa Nagl’s face.
“Him,” he murmured. “The archaeology people? I get it now.
Of course. Yes, he was on his way over the mountains to see me when he croaked.”
Felix glanced over, and grinned.
Opa Nagl seemed ageless. He still had the schoolboy’s vitality and mischief close to the surface. For a moment Felix imagined his opa striding over the moors in the high mountains six thousand years ago, grumbling that his friend Oetzi was late again. Then, maybe finding Oetzi curled up just as he was when a hill-walker was to find him in 1992 half encased in the ice, what would he do, or say? Maybe standing over the unresponsive, curled-up figure, Opa might berate him for losing his way: Oetzi, you clumsy clown! I’m leaving you here so someone can find you in thousands of years, a monument to the Earliest Austrian Idiot. And the figure of Opa Nagl, hill farmer, prodigious farter, mechanic and joker, would move on across the high passes, the blue overalls visible thousands of metres away to the prehistoric peoples who would deem him a god.
“What? What is so funny?”
“Just thinking old times.”
Opa’s face showed his skepticism.
“Ach so? Well don’t do it, kid. That’s not a family heirloom you should accept.”
Felix watched his grandfather swallow more beer.
“By all means, keep the good stuff,” he added then.
“What would that be?”
“What I said,” said his grandfather, turning serious. “Your dad.
He had a big heart. Never let anyone…”
And he turned away. After humming awhile a sign he was restless, annoyed or wanted out, Felix knew he turned back. He had a gentle expression now.
“Come on Felix. You are a grown man. You know me. You know more about the world already than we ever will. Don’t listen to an old goat like me. It’s strange how the feelings linger. It must be the anniversary, all that it brings it back.”
“I never had anyone say, or suggest, anything about Dad, Opa.”
The crease between his grandfather’s eyebrows was anger more than bewilderment.
“Of course not. Why are you even saying that?”
“Heirloom, what does that mean?”
“I have a big mouth, that’s what it means. See this beer? You brought this on.”
Felix waited but his grandfather shook his head and muttered.
An uneasy silence settled between them. Felix began to feel tired, aching even. The events of the day began to roll through his mind like a silent movie, stopping at Speckbauer’s face with its halfsarcastic lift of the eyebrow and that knowing look, then to his voice with the studied courtesy and fake warmth.
“Too much,” he muttered.
“Too much what?”
“Too much in one day. I’m tired.”
“Good. It’s the mountain air. It means you are relaxed, like the weeks you used to spend with us. Christ, but we had fun! Like a couple of pranksters. Remember the tractor you nearly rolled there in the high field?”
In the distance they heard the occasional car coming up the hill. There wasn’t a breath of wind. They made their way to the old bench by the wall, and soon another beer was opened. Felix no longer felt the chill of the evening air up here. They stared down the valley, the jokes and conversation now done, and Felix remembered how quiet his grandfather was when he got the few anecdotes and gossip out of the way.
“Come on,” said his grandfather, we’ll go in. Your oma will be home. A bit of dinner better be on the table.”
Felix took his time getting up. He found his grandfather’s eyes on him.
“You’re going to bed early, I am thinking, no?”
“I’ll pick up steam, Opa.”
“You’re looking broody to me. Have forty winks anyway.”
Felix sighed and stretched.
“You have that one-hundred-kilometre look all right. What’s going on in that head of yours?”
“It’s so different here, I had almost forgotten.”
“That’s what the city does.”
“Nothing changes up here, it feels like.”
His grandfather gave him a look.
“Your mother said the exact same thing. A million times she couldn’t wait, you know.”