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发表于 2016-7-10 17:29:33
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Should I change the wallpaper? Maybe leave just one wall red, and change
the rest? But then it won’t look uniform. Not just from the point of view of the
colour, but also because one wall will look old and the others new. But I like
the red walls. All of them. My mother liked the red walls too. So I’ll leave one
wall red and have the rest white. But the white will hurt my eyes. So maybe I’ll
ask for red wallpaper, but new, But the red wall opposite me has signs I made
when I was twelve. The man’s face with the hat I drew. So I’ll leave it all red,
just like it is. And that’s that.
On that Friday Avigdor had taken his father out of the old age home for the
week-end, to rest and see a bit of the world. Shifra prepared lunch, schnitzel
and chips, and the three of them sat down to eat. The old man looked at the
couple and waited for them to ask him a question, so that he could answer it,
and at the same time take the opportunity to answer a few more questions that
were troubling him. Shifra felt a stir on her left side, where the old man was
sitting, and closed her face and heart, because she didn’t have any desire to
hear a long geriatric monologue. Avigdor was sunk in thought about a shipment of
furniture due to arrive from Denmark.
After they finished eating the old man began a monologue on his own
initiative and told them about his part in the partisan warfare in France during
the Second World War, Avigdor nodded blandly. The old man described plans to
raid a prison camp, and Shifra told him to stop because anyway no one was
listening to him.
The old man withdrew into himself like a baby. Avigdor, who could have let
his father go on talking like this for hours, went red with anger and the vein
on his temple pulsed rapidly. He stood up, kicking over his chair on purpose,
went to the bedroom and quickly packed a bag. The old man mumbled a few words in
French. Shifra turned pale. Afterwards, she didn’t hear a word from Avigdor for
a week. Thus their third child was born. After a week he came back, smashed a
few cups and calmed down.
Now she asked herself if they were going to get a divorce.
She called Ilana.
Ilana said “Hello.”
“Ilana,” said Shifra, “don’t ask, Avigdor’s left me.”
“What do you say?” said Ilana. “Why don’t you come round to me now, my
husband’s just gone out and the kids are in a class. Why don’t you come?”
Shifra said maybe, and the conversation came to an end. With this maybe she
went on sitting for a few minutes, and then she stood up, put on a blue tunic
with a thick blouse under it, and a coat, of course, because the cold, although
it distracted your thoughts from certain harsh thoughts, in the long run
increased human misery.
After two minutes in the street it began to rain on Shifra and on her
parents who were buried at a distance of six meters from each other, because her
mother hadn’t managed to buy herself a plot right next to her father. But the
rain didn’t actually touch their bodies, because the tombstones, one of Italian
marble for her father, which her mother had put up, and one of simple Hebron
marble, which Shifra had put up for her mother, and to this day she ate herself
up for not having had Italian marble for her too, protected them from the rain,
and it would have to rain a lot to wet the decomposing bodies of her
parents.
But her father had died five years before her mother, who had died five and
a half years ago, already six, to be precise, and everything was already behind
them, and if the rain wet them, then it was only their skeletons, and that was a
lot less horrible.
Shifra banished thoughts of her parents’ skeletons from her mind and went
on walking down the rainy street.
The rain began to come down harder, and people without umbrellas ran with
their coats on their heads, which was an amusing sight. She laughed merrily at a
man who almost fell into a puddle. He shot her a surly look, after putting five
meters between them he turned around and yelled for the whole street to hear,
“Go fuck yourself,” and ran on.
People looked at Shifra. She went on walking.
Ilana lived fifteen minutes’ walk from her, but Shifra had said maybe, a
word she had learnt from Avigdor.
Before they married she would ask him if he loved her, and he would say
maybe. She thought it quite natural and logical for men of forty and a bit to
say to their second wife that maybe they loved them and maybe they didn’t, so
that they would always have the option of feeling free and unfettered.
Since marrying him she no longer asked him if he loved her, and decided to
examine the question according to his behavior. But his behavior was hesitant
too, and Shifra couldn’t tell what the truth was.
On the other hand – she herself. When she asked herself if she loved
Avigdor, the answers were always a definite yes or a definite no. Never
maybe.
But for some reason, precisely to Ilana, who asked her three minutes after
seating her wet and dripping by the stove, if she loved Avigdor, Shifra pulled a
skeptical face and said maybe.
She understood three things. One, that Avigdor’s love for her no longer
interested her. Two, that she apparently had a heart of stone, and three, that
it was nothing to be ashamed of.
Shifra went home and felt nothing. Her anaemia bothered her a little, but
she decided to ignore the feeling of weakness and dizziness. Not far from the
centre of her everyday consciousness lay a black void of blurred memories and
mistakes. Most of the time she would ignore this black void and laugh, but
sometimes, when she remembered, the pallor would return to her anyway white
face.
Which way should I go? By Keren Kayement boulevard? Or by Gordon street? If
I go by Keren Kayement boulevard, the bad smell of the zoo will reach me. But
they’ve pulled the zoo down and transferred all the animals to the Safari Park.
So I can go by Keren Kayement boulevard.
When she arrived home at a quarter past nine in the evening she found
Avigdor sitting on the armchair in the living room and smoking a cigar.
“Avigdor,” she whispered.
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