employed there for thirty years, and who have the melancholy task of closing down the place, and who know that Mrs. Lübing is still alive and that she lives in the Frederiksberg district and is listed in the phone book, and why do I want to know?
âShe did me a favor once,â I tell them. âNow I want to ask her about something.â
They nod and say that Mrs. Lübing did a lot of favors for people, and they have daughters of their own my age, and they tell me to stop by again.
On my way back toward the city along Strand Boulevard I think that inside even the most paranoid suspicion there is a sense of humanity and the desire for contact waiting to emerge.
No one who has lived side by side with animals that have plenty of room can ever visit the zoo. But one time I take Isaiah along to the Natural History Museum to show him the room with the seals.
He thinks they look sickly. But heâs fascinated with the model of the aurochs. On the way home we walk through Fælled Park.
âHow old did it say it was?â he asks.
âForty thousand years old.â
âThen itâs going to die soon.â
âYouâre probably right.â
âWhen you die, Smilla, can I have your hide?â
âAll right,â I say.
We walk across the Triangle. Itâs a warm autumn day, the air is misty.
âSmilla, can we go to Greenland?â
I see no reason to spare children from unavoidable truths. They have to grow up to bear the same burdens as the rest of us.
âNo,â I say.
âAll right.â
Iâve never promised him anything. I canât promise him anything. Nobody can promise anyone anything.
âBut we can read about Greenland.â
He says âweâ about our reading aloud, aware that he contributes just as much by his presence as I do.
âIn what book?â
âIn Euclidâs Elements .â
Itâs dark by the time I get home. The mechanic is pushing his bicycle down into the basement.
He is very wide, like a bear, and if he straightened up his head
he would be quite imposing. But he keeps his head down, maybe to apologize for his height, maybe to avoid the doorframes of this world.
I like him. I have a weakness for losers. Invalids, foreigners, the fat boy of the class, the ones nobody ever wants to dance with. My heart beats for them. Maybe because Iâve always known that in some way I will forever be one of them.
Isaiah and the mechanic had been friends from the time before Isaiah learned to speak Danish. They probably didnât need many words. One craftsman recognizing another. Two males who were alone in the world, each in his own way.
I follow along as he pushes the bike downstairs. I have an idea about the basement.
He has gotten a double room for a workshop. It has a cement floor, warm, dry air, and a bright yellow electric light. The limited space is packed full. Thereâs a workbench running along two walls. Bicycle wheels and inner tubes on hooks. A milk crate full of defective potentiometers. A plastic panel with nails and screws on it. A board with small insulated pliers for working with electronics. A board full of hooks. Ten square yards of plywood with what looks like all the tools in the world. A row of soldering irons. Four shelves of plumbing supplies, paint cans, dismantled stereos, sets of socket wrenches, welding electrodes, and an entire set of Metabo electrical tools. Against the wall two large canisters for a CO 2 welder, and two small ones for a blowtorch. There is also a washing machine in pieces. Buckets full of a solution to fight dry rot. A bicycle stand. A foot pump.
There are so many things gathered here that they seem to be waiting for the slightest excuse to create chaos. On a purely personal level, I think all youâd have to do is send me in here alone to turn on the light, and that would trigger such a state of confusion that you wouldnât even be able to find the light
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