The tallest boy swung his foot back again and kicked as though taking the definitive penalty shot in an important match. But this time Awromele protected his ear with his hand, so the tall boy’s shoe hit the hand instead of the ear.
A bone in his hand broke. Unnoticed. In passing.
“A good conversation is a two-way street,” the tallest one said. “We communicate with our feet. Do you understand? Can you hear us?” He saw the blood dripping from Awromele’s ear and wondered whether the boy could still hear him. Maybe the ear was clogged with blood. He wasn’t a specialist when it came to ears, so he began speaking slowly and clearly: “Kierkegaard said that the surest way to say nothing was not to be silent but to speak. That’s why we talk with our feet. We’re afraid of saying nothing. What do our mouths have to offer you? Empty promises, the devil’s whispers. Our feet offer you true friendship. Don’t say no to the friendship of our feet.”
The boy whose voice was still changing whispered, “Yeah, Kierkegaard.” As if it were goat cheese from the Bern highlands, available only a few months a year.
The other boys, too, said quietly, “Kierkegaard.” They giggled.
A boy’s bone isn’t hard to break, especially when one is being a bit playful. It starts off as a game and, whoops, there goes the bone. The language of feet is a wonderful, albeit rudimentary, thing.
The other boys could not stand by idly; they kicked Awromele in the ribs, the legs, the stomach, the head, but with less conviction than the tall boy. They did it hurriedly, as though they actually wanted it to be over soon.
Awromele’s body rocked like a ship on the high seas whose captain has lost control of the rudder. But he had stopped screaming. His left hand had swollen like a balloon.
Then the boys stopped. They spat one last time, but the magic was over. Finally, they threw dirt on Awromele’s body, though they didn’t go on with that for long. The ground was too wet — they didn’t want to get dirt under their nails.
“We’ll be going now,” the tallest boy said. He looked for the last time at his new friend, lying still on the ground. “Loneliness is nothing to be ashamed of,” he said quietly. “But from today on, you’ll never be lonely again. Wherever you go, you’ll always think of us, you’ll never forget us. We will be your best friends, even if you never see us again. We will always be with you.” Saying these words made him feel good. He brushed a few strands of wet hair from his forehead.
“Man is a social animal,” the tallest boy said to his friends as he searched for his lighter. “Life is all about communicating. It doesn’t matter what part of your body you use to communicate, as long as there’s communication going on. We need each other, we can’t go off sneaking through the jungle alone.” He breathed deeply, in relief. He had found his lighter, a gift associated with some fond memories.
The boys walked away. When they got back to one of the paths, they all lit their cigarettes. They were filled with wistfulness. A gentle rain was falling.
AWROMELE’S BODY WAS lying beside the mandarin-orange peels. It didn’t move. He had his arms crossed over his face. Blood was dripping from his ear. The ear and the hand hurt. The rest felt numb.
After a minute or two, when he was sure that the boys were gone, he took his arms away from his face.
There were scrapes all over his body. His body looked like one big scrape.
“Xavier,” he shouted hoarsely. But there was no reply.
“Xavier,” he shouted again. Nothing.
Darkness was falling slowly.
“Xavier,” Awromele screamed, as loud as he could, but the screaming hurt his ribs.
“Come out. Where are you?”
Xavier couldn’t come out, for at that moment he was running through the streets of Basel as though he were being chased, as though they were coming after him to blacken his other eye as well.
When he got to his house, he stopped, searched for his keys with shaky hands, opened the door, and ran upstairs, without saying hello to his mother.
Xavier took off all his clothes, avoiding the mirror, and took a hot shower. Only when the water was pouring over him and he stared at his own body did he think about Awromele. How had lain there in the park, under the tree, his pants down around his knees.
“Awromele,” Xavier cried then, “Awromele.” But the sound of the water drowned out his words.
In the kitchen, his mother was breading a schnitzel.
Without a Flashlight
ONCE AWROMELE REALIZED that Xavier was no longer there, that he hadn’t hidden behind a tree, he could have struggled to his feet and dragged himself home. But the only protest he could think of against the treatment he’d been given, against the friendship the boys’ feet had offered him, was not to get up, to remain lying there where he lay.
Awromele rolled onto his side and pulled his legs up. The movement caused him pain. He didn’t dare look at his left hand. He didn’t dare look at anything. He felt bad enough already.
Every once in a while he screamed, but his cries were no longer high and penetrating, not like when Xavier had been lying between his legs. It was a powerless hollering, to which the passersby paid no heed.
While Xavier was warming up in the shower, examining his body, and coming to the conclusion that he would not be able to use his blackened eye for a while — he didn’t dare dab at his eyebrow again, it had felt like sponge cake — he thought about Awromele. His dearest, that’s what he should call him: of all the Jews Xavier would comfort, Awromele was the one dearest to him.
A comforter is not supposed to run away; a comforter should protect. If he had been able to think clearly, he would definitely have stayed in the park, he would have thrown himself on Awromele like a bodyguard on his president. But he had not thought clearly, and now it was too late.
Maybe, Xavier thought, maybe the boys only wanted to talk to Awromele; maybe I was the one they were after. Maybe they just offered him a cigarette and asked him a few questions about the Day of Atonement. Jews were no longer in fashion, but you always had young people who didn’t quite keep up with fashion. Yet this thought, too, failed to ease his mind.
Xavier had run away, that’s what he had done, run away just as he had brought Awromele into his life: on impulse, without thinking about the consequences. But if he had let himself be kicked to death, the Jews would someday have no comforter. He had saved his own skin in order to protect them later, twice over.
Xavier dried himself quickly and, after he had put on his underpants, mustered up enough courage to look at himself in the mirror. His one eye had indeed turned blue, almost black, and his eyebrow looked torn. He dripped some iodine onto the eyebrow and took two aspirins, he hesitated for a moment, then popped a third one into his mouth.
As he dressed, he thought about Awromele. He hid his soiled clothing under his bed.
In the kitchen, the mother was breading a third schnitzel. She heard her son coming down the stairs and couldn’t repress her feeling of disgust. “Dinner is almost ready,” she shouted.
Xavier went into the kitchen. The mother had the schnitzel in her hand, already breaded, now to be fried. In fact, cooking disgusted her as well.
“I have to go out for a minute,” Xavier said. “Marc’s not back yet anyway.” He wanted to protect the mother from unpleasant discoveries. Only when he had truly become a comforter would he tell her everything. He would rock her in his arms, the way he would one day rock the Jews.
The mother dropped the schnitzel into the pan; the fat hissed and spattered. She looked at her son and saw his black eye.