“Relax, pop,” he says, asking whether he can’t instead lend him some movie or other to watch this evening; he has a brand new suitcase at home for the little luggage he plans to take overseas.
Jón stares at his son as if he’s trying to guess what movie might suit this fifty-one-year-old man who he’d had a hand in shaping. That, he concludes, will be a movie from the library by an Iranian director, a pretty smart movie which he actually needs to return to the library the following day (it has been reserved). It would be fine for Sturla to stop by with the video around 10:00 tomorrow, since he won’t take the bus into Hafnarfjörður before 10:30.
Sturla picks up the video and reads the text on the back of the case. Apparently, the movie is about a middle-aged man who decides to commit suicide, and has to find someone who will bury him after he’s accomplished his task.
“An uplifting movie,” quips Sturla, but Jón doesn’t see any reason to respond. “Everyone tries to get him to change his mind,” Sturla reads from the case, and his father nods his head in agreement. Sturla puts the movie in his plastic bag.
“When were Gogol’s Petersburg stories published?” he asks his father as he takes his overcoat from the back of the chair in the kitchen and strokes the surface to see whether it has dried.
“I reckon that must have been around 1840,” replies Jón.
“No, I meant the new Icelandic translation. The one that came out last year or the year before last.”
“Wasn’t it published last year or the year before that?”
“That’s what I think, yes”
“Well, there’s the answer to your question,” says Jón, watching Sturla put on his overcoat.
They say their goodbyes. Jón wishes his son safe travels, but Sturla reminds him that they will be seeing each other tomorrow when he returns the movie, so he says he’ll hold off on a proper farewell.
The weather has cooled since Sturla came in to the warmth of his father’s house an hour earlier. As he goes past the Hotel Leifur Eiríksson on Skólavörðustígur then down Frakkastígur in the direction of Laugavegur it begins to snow. Snowflakes float lightly to earth in the twilight, an image Sturla tells himself he hasn’t seen for many years; he feels like it hasn’t snowed like this in Reykjavík since he was a kid. But just as he is wondering whether the weather in the Baltic will be like this, his foot slips on the wet sidewalk and he almost swings the plastic bag into a couple of kids who are walking towards him from Njálsgata. The hundred-kronur coins from the casino jingle in time with the quick motion of the bag, and after Sturla apologizes to the pair he reminds himself to go to the bank on the corner of Laugavegur and Barónsstígur before heading home.
He decides there and then to use the money he has received, these coins, to buy himself something special in Lithuania, something that will always remind him of the trip, the way he suspects the new overcoat will. In a book he read about the Baltic countries, Sturla had learned that in Vilnius sophisticated people bought jewelry made of amber — that was the local specialty, designs and creations made from fossilized resin — but he doesn’t have any use for such things, other than to give it to someone, and in the future a knick-knack he gave to someone would hardly remind him of a trip he’d taken on his own.
LÆKJARGATA
The soft winter sun lights up the classroom. Jónas Hallmundsson looks out of the window over Lækjargata and appears not to be listening as the teacher, Armann Valur, begins joking with his pupils that they are now one month into the new system of dating time, a system that began with the eruption on Vestmannaeyjar, the Westman Islands, on January 23rd of that year. He starts talking about the time he stayed in the town of Westman Islands ten years ago, when he visited a schoolmate of his from “this very school, this distinguished school,” and stayed at his parents’ house for a few weeks. At that time, in 1961, he’d been sure a huge volcanic eruption would take place there, and even though Surtsey Island had erupted a couple of years later “in that vicinity,” he’d never lost the faith that the Devil would bring the blesséd Westman Islands to world attention by spewing his powerful essence over the place.
“And because of that,” he continues, “I’m now giving myself permission to invite you up to the board, one at a time, and ask you a few questions about these famous islands of the Westmen, the Vestmannaeyjar.” He turns back to them, flexes his shoulders and stretches his arms out on both sides. Then he lets them fall quickly down to his sides and calls the name of a girl in the class, asking her to be so good as to “trot up to the blackboard.” The girl’s name, Ljótunn, always had an effect on her classmates, the girls no less than the boys: everyone would look up or show some other indication that they had heard her name mentioned, not just because it was an unusual, embarrassing name but because it was so ironic: her facial beauty — not to mention her physical beauty — was undeniable (if you can describe beauty in such terms). Just as people tend to look at the light rather than the dark, they tended to look at Ljótunn rather than the person next to her, if they could.
“How many islands comprise the Vestmannaeyjar?” asks Armann Valur when the girl has come up to the board and stands facing the class. “Do you know?”
“Aren’t there fifteen?” replies Ljótunn.
“That’s what I’m asking,” says Armann Valur, smiling. “You have to answer.”
“I guess it’s fourteen.”
“The number gets lower,” says Armann Valur.
“There are twelve.” Ljótunn corrects herself; her final answer.
“Not bad,” says Armann Valur after thinking for a moment, and addresses the girl by name again; he enjoyed saying her name. “Not bad, Ljótunn; there are exactly twelve. When you fly over them. Seen from land, there are perhaps no more than one or two, but when someone flies over them, I mean on a big iron bird, he needs the fingers of both hands, plus two of the fingers of the person sitting next to him, in order to count them. There are exactly twelve.” He asks the girl another question which she can’t answer, then he asks her to sit back down. She is now out of the game, this is a knockout round.
As Ljótunn goes to her desk and sits down, Armann Valur follows her to her seat with his eyes, even though he knows the other pupils will notice if he indulges his temptation to watch her. Then he scans the room and settles on Jónas Hallmundsson, who is still busy thinking about what is happening down on the street outside the school building.
“Jónas Hallmundsson,” says Armann in a commanding tone. “Would you like to be next in our Vestmannaeyjar quiz?”
Jónas nods his head and glances at the person sitting next to him, his friend Brynjólfur Madsen, who shakes his head, as if to say that he wouldn’t take part in this nonsense himself. Brynjólfur looks away from him to Armann Valur as he begins asking Jónas his first question:
“What is the temperature of a simmering lava field?”
Jónas looks out the window.
“You won’t find the answer out in Lækjargata,” says Armann Valur, his arms folded and an amused expression on his face.
“A hundred degrees,” replies Jónas.
The picture which Armann Valur made of himself, with his arms across his chest and a boastful expression on his face, momentarily calls to mind Benito Mussolini on the balcony of the Palazzo Venezia in Rome, talking to his people. “Very good, very good,” he says, nodding his head quickly. He removes his arms from his chest, and when a pupil in the next row starts to make a comment about Jónas’s reply, Armann stops him with a wave of his hand. “But tell me this, Jónas: How many inhabitants lost their lives when that awful eruption took place on the islands?”