to the forest, on her command I had closed my eyes and thenââYou can look now!ââthe shimmering filling my entire field of vision had blinded me, from the gray of the plane treesâ trunks standing there shoulder to shoulder, almost without gaps and air in between, and the crowns, likewise gray, intertwined up above. Never had I seen a forest like that. Since all around me there was nothing but the bone-gray glimmering, it seemed as if the plane forest had swallowed up the entire place. It was like when you are carried in your sleep out of your room without realizing itâfrom childhood, especially from the time my family was fleeing, I remember this happening more than onceâand you wake up in a nowhereland, for instance facing a terror-gray surface, which only today in retrospect do I recognize as the dawn sky above one of the borders we had to cross, while the shifting gray below is a load of gravel in the back of the truck in which we are fleeing.
âHow dizzy I was that time in your forest!â I would tell the woman from Catalonia in such a night of storytelling. And likewise I would then explain to her calmly that at times she was not the right person for me, either because during our time together, whenever I needed something to remain empty, she would fill it up: the house, an evening, a day off, the summer, the yard, our trips, our son, even my room, my table, whose leaves she pulled out to make it bigger, my window, on which, when I wanted to look out at the grass, day after day new notes greeted me, me myself.
âIt was not only for me that you werenât good,â I would be able to tell her to her face again. âYou arenât good for anyone.â Or: âThe right man for you doesnât exist; there will never be someone who suits you, not even death, at most a god. But which one? Just as you not only filled the house with objects but also kept shoving them around, you have constantly been on the move from place to place yourself. Never will you find your place anywhere, with anyone, certainly not alone with yourself. And even with your god you will feel hemmed in sooner or later.â
On such a night the woman from Catalonia would actually listen to me, unlike earlier. At the very most she would say, in a quiet tone like mine, âYou sound like your pal, the petty prophet of Porchefontaine.â And all the while the men next to us in the bar would have been trying not to hear us, making occasional remarks like âSmells like snow,â âWhen I was in the service in Indochina,â âRed gets you riled up; thatâs why butchers are so riled up,â or âBefore the war there were still charcoal kilns up there in the woods.â
Â
Â
B ut at a time like that, when I appeared as I am, and with patience to boot, the woman from Catalonia would never ever show up unexpectedly. She is not capable of taking anyone by surprise. Surprises were something she expected exclusively of the other person, if possible daily. If I managed to pull one off now and then, she was quite overwhelmed. I can recall a sideways glance of unusual gentleness, such as you sometimes receive from a child who has been given a present. But she herself never took me by surprise, as if that were beneath her dignity and were also not appropriate for her.
And besides, nothing would bring her back to this region, and certainly not at night. The very word âsuburbâ was repugnant to her. She equated it with banlieue, and had the conventional adjectives at her fingertipsââdreary,â âcharacterless,â âgrayââlike a travel writer who goads his readers to seek out exotic places, as far away as possible, with a title like âForget the Banlieue!â
She, who came from a town in the provinces, had always dreamed of getting away, and in the end found herself in a similar region, with the same poky houses and streets
Enrico Pea
Jennifer Blake
Amelia Whitmore
Joyce Lavene, Jim Lavene
Donna Milner
Stephen King
G.A. McKevett
Marion Zimmer Bradley
Sadie Hart
Dwan Abrams