He didn’t know what to do, where to go, whom to ask for help. Xavier, who otherwise always knew what to do, who was never at a loss for words in the classroom, who had even, he felt, responded appropriately when he caught his mother in the kitchen with the knife, didn’t have a clue. All he knew was that he had run away from the boys, that he had taken a shower, and that he had arrived too late.
Xavier used the hem of his T-shirt to wipe the dirt and blood from Awromele’s forehead. “Dear Awromele,” he said, “don’t worry, I’m here now, I won’t go away again.” He didn’t dare to touch the wounds: experts would have to do that later on. He murmured, “You’re safe now, they won’t come back.”
Awromele began shivering. He wasn’t dead. His wounds were throbbing like an overheated steam turbine. But when Xavier asked him to stand up, or when he shook him gently by the leg, Awromele didn’t react. “You can’t stay here,” Xavier said. “You’ll get sick. This place will be the end of you.”
Xavier carefully lifted Awromele’s swollen left hand and laid it on his stomach. There was mud and blood sticking to it, but he didn’t dare wipe it clean. The hand looked too mangled.
“It’s me, Xavier,” he said again. He thought that if he said it often enough Awromele would finally hear. “You helped me get circumcised; we’re going to translate Mein Kampf together. We belong together, and I swear to you, I don’t feel a thing, and you don’t feel anything, either, Awromele. That’s why we belong together. Do you hear me? Awromele?”
After a few minutes had passed, when Xavier noticed that he, too, had started shivering, just like Awromele, he saw that staying in this place was not a good idea. There was no use waiting for a reply any longer. He tried to pick Awromele up. First he pulled on his legs, but the body didn’t budge. He heard a joint pop. Xavier put his hands under Awromele’s back and tried to pick him up, as though the Jew were a sack of flour, but that didn’t help, either. He tugged on his arms, to get him to sit up. Awromele didn’t move; his body was unwieldy. His back rose from the ground a little bit, just a few centimers. But when Xavier heard bones cracking again, he was so afraid of breaking anything else that he let the body fall back onto the ground. It fell like a dead thing.
Xavier knelt and murmured: “I’m sorry, Awromele, sorry. I was startled — your bones were making so much noise. That’s why I dropped you. Don’t be angry.”
He laid the swollen left hand back on Awromele’s stomach. He put his mouth up close to Awromele’s good ear. “I’m sorry,” Xavier said. Even in this condition, Xavier could see how gorgeous Awromele was. “I’ll be right back. Stay here. Wait for me.”
Xavier walked away slowly, remembering when he had run from this spot while the boys were standing around Awromele. He thought he was leaving a corpse behind. When he arrived at a path, Xavier started shouting: “Help, help, there’s been an accident.”
It had stopped raining at last, although the wind was still blowing. But it was too early for people to be out walking in the park. Even the dog owners had decided to avoid the park for the moment. No one heard him. Xavier ran through the park again, looking for help. An inexplicable rage took hold of him. He saw Awromele’s face, the swollen hand, and again, each time anew, the ear that had bled — the ear that had stared at him like a madman’s eye. An eye that seemed to demand only one thing: Why did you run away, why you? Why did you have to run away?
And for as long as the ear continued to ask Xavier that unanswerable question, he ran on through the park, screaming for help.
IN THE RESTROOM at Jerusalem Kebabs, Bettina tore open the little bag and looked at the powder for which she had paid so much. She had never done this before. She had seen it in movies, in documentaries, too, and she had read about it in books. She had been planning to do it for a long time — she wanted to experience everything. But now that the time had come, she hesitated. The hesitation was suddenly more powerful than her desire.
She remembered her father’s advice, her mother’s worries, the prayers of her grandmother who had gone to church every day until she broke her hip, and had then turned her bedroom into a chapel. The real world was suddenly a bit too real for Bettina. Yet she knew there was no going back. You can leave Ilanz for the real world, but once you’ve arrived there’s no going back to Ilanz.
In the end, she won out over her hesitation. It would be a waste of all that money — she could hardly trade it back in for kebabs. Feeling a slight aversion, she sniffed deeply, as though sampling a rare wine.
It tickled. This expensive stuff, which had cost her almost as much as she earned in a month of waitressing two afternoons a week, reminded her of sneezing powder. Maybe it was sneezing powder. Maybe she’d been tricked; maybe the Egyptian had sold her something from the trick shop. Bettina’s parents had done their best to encourage their daughter’s wariness, and they had succeeded. People were waiting everywhere to cheat you; on every street corner, in every kebab shop, they waited to press counterfeit goods on trusting souls, and she was trusting, because she knew nothing about cocaine. That thought made her cry.
The torn-open sack of M&Ms was lying beside the sink; some powder still clung to the back of her left hand. “It’s sneezing powder,” she whispered, sitting on the toilet. “It’s just sneezing powder. No one takes me seriously.”
XAVIER RAN THROUGH the park and screamed: “Help, there’s been an accident! Police!” He was running in circles. He didn’t dare go too far away from Awromele. Only at the start of his fourth lap around the park did he notice the shed belonging to the Municipal Parks Service. It had once housed two men whose job it was to keep up the park, but as of late there was only one. The parks service was having trouble making ends meet. Beside the shed was a vegetable garden. In the garden Xavier saw a couple of shovels, a few bags of earth, five garbage cans, and a wheelbarrow. He stopped at the fence and stared at the wheelbarrow the way a child stares at creampuffs in a baker’s window. The wheelbarrow was rusty, but that didn’t matter. With that wheelbarrow, Xavier could roll Awromele all the way to the doctor.
Around the garden, where the park attendant grew a little parsley and chives for himself and his brother — he was still a bachelor — stood a makeshift fence. A few wooden posts and some chicken wire, that was all. An adult could step right over it.
And that is what Xavier did, without taking a running start, without climbing; he hurt himself, he scraped the inside of his thigh, but he didn’t even notice.
In the wheelbarrow was a little puddle of water and a few gardening tools. Xavier put the tools on the ground and took the wheelbarrow by the handles. They were rusty as well. Now he had to find a way out of the garden. He could climb over the fence himself, but he could never lift the wheelbarrow over it.
Xavier thought about Awromele, the way he had been lying there beneath the pine tree; he thought about the testicle in its jam jar at home, beside the collected works of Schiller. “King David,” he whispered, “give me strength, please, give me strength.”
Then he seized the wheelbarrow, rolled it straight across the chives and the parsley, and, with everything he had in him, rammed it against one of the fence posts.
The post shook, but remained firmly in place.
The park attendant had built the fence himself, tapping at the posts with a rubber hammer for a long time to force them deeply into the ground. He was fond of a job well done and took his work seriously, often remaining in the park longer than necessary. The park attendant loved the trees and bushes. And they loved him.