Sleet. Stig Dagerman
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Название: Sleet

Автор: Stig Dagerman

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Контркультура

Серия:

isbn: 9781567925135

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СКАЧАТЬ by his own lie, he watched her come towards him, trembling and weak. Her mouth moved a few times, but no words came out. As if in a dream, he watched her poor shivering arms reach out for her sweater on the hook. A moment later they were outside again in the dark. They made their way through the mute garden each trembling. Hand in hand, they stepped out onto the black road. It was cold and quiet and above them a haze of stars was wavering in the sky. All at once, Grandmother stopped by the hedge and whispered:

      “Where?”

      “Not here,” said the boy in a low voice. “Farther down.”

      They walked along in the shadow of the hedge, and it protected them. But then the hedge ended, and Grandmother stopped. She would not go any further. Nor did the boy dare to – but he had to. Step by step he forced himself out into the black unknown. Just a little ways off, he stopped on the side of the road and bent over.

      “Here!” he cried softly to Grandmother.

      She would not come closer, but he heard her call out:

      “How does he look?”

      The boy looked down into the gravel. He grasped a couple of small stones in his hand and answered:

      “He’s tall. He’s awfully big. And there’s a hat over his face.”

      “Take away the hat,” said Grandmother.

      The boy lifted his hand from the road.

      “Is he breathing?” asked Grandmother.

      The boy turned his head and lowered his ear to the gravel. With tearless eyes he stared out into the depths of night, desperate and lost. It was quiet all over the world. Some black trees stood out on the meadow, like darkness over darkness. It seemed as though they were walking towards him. He closed his eyes and lowered his ear even more. And then, just then, a very remarkable thing happened. A warm stream of air rushed into the boy’s ear. From the gravel below rose the calm, steady breath of a sleeper.

      “Grandmother!” he shouted, excitedly. “He’s sleeping! He’s just sleeping!”

      From the end of the hedge came a deep sigh.

      “Wake him up,” said Grandmother. “He can’t lay out in the cold like this.”

      The boy shook his empty hand in the air. Then he closed his eyes and lowered his ear. From the gravel came a grunt and a hoarse whisper.

      “What’s he saying?” asked Grandmother.

      “He says to go inside. He says he’s not sleeping, just resting. He’ll move on in a minute.”

      With a quick leap the boy was back beside the hedge. He found Grandmother’s hand tucked inside the sweater, and taking it, he led her back along the safe black shadow. Suddenly the wind picked up from out of the darkness, and all of the branches began to sway, their leaves rustling. On the other side of the road was the creek, holding the stones awake with its whispers. And in reply, the forest of clouds above them let out a strong, calm murmur.

      “Grandmother,” said the boy. “You don’t have to be scared anymore. He wasn’t dead.”

      And with his hand he could feel how she stopped shaking altogether. They walked through the garden. The grass rustled. An apple fell. And each of them heard it.

      “Grandmother,” whispered the boy. “One of Grandfather’s boots is broken.”

      And Grandmother said, “Oh, honey, that doesn’t matter. We can fix it.”

      So in silence they continued on to the bright, quiet house, and to a new and good night.

      The Surprise

      There are some people who never do anything to be loved and yet still are. And then there are those who do everything to be loved, but never are. The very poor, it could be said, often find it hard to be loved. When Håkan’s mother had been a widow for five years, her father-in-law turned seventy. They were invited to his birthday celebration in the form of a short, curt letter some eight lines long; it read:

      Of course you’re free to come if you want to, Elsa, but you got to bring your own bedding ’cause its cold in the back room. Besides, some people’s probably gonna have to sleep in the hallway. You ain’t the only ones coming. There’s the bank clerk and the store manager Mr. Jonsson. Both of them’s been invited and they’ll probably sleep in the living room. If you can come up a day ahead of time, then that would be nice. We’ll need some help with the cleaning and the tables and the cooking.

      Best,

      Irma

      p.s. I’m sure there’s a few other things, like the dishes and such, that’ll have to be taken care of afterwards, and maybe Håkan can chop some firewood.

      Håkan’s mother read the letter out loud one night under the lamp. She was tired and she gripped the edge of the writing table with both hands as she read. For the whole day she had been cleaning the ceiling of a large, lush apartment in Östermalm, and she had a terrible headache from all the hours spent with her head crooked upwards. After she finished reading, both she and Håkan sat quietly for a while without looking at one another. Håkan began flipping through his geography book: the waterfalls at Trollhättan have a natural beautythe Dutch are a cleanly folk who scrub their pavements dailyunder Mussolini’s harsh but effective rule, these unsanitary swamps were nonetheless drainedfrom Chile comes a fertilizer we call guano …

      Håkan’s mother stared out into the room. Her hands were completely alone as they crumpled the letter into a rough ball. As he looked at those hands, Håkan could see that they were ashamed. The hands of the poor are always ashamed. They worked to smooth out the letter again, but it kept its wrinkles, like the face of an old woman.

      That night the light burned long over the small desk, and Håkan went to sleep quite late. For a while he thought his mother had fallen asleep with the light on. But when he raised himself up carefully on his elbows, he could see that her eyes were still open. And he could see her hands on top of the blanket, at first crumpling up and then smoothing back out a small invisible letter.

      The next night the light burned even longer. Fully dressed, his mother sat at his father’s old desk, writing. It was a letter that never seemed to be finished. By the time Håkan went to sleep, the desk top was littered with wadded balls of inkstained paper. When he awoke in the middle of the night, it was cold, and his mother was sitting on the edge of his bed. She was holding her hand on his forehead, as if he were running a fever. She waited until he was fully awake and then looked him in the eyes.

      “It’s only twelve o’clock,” she said. “How do you spell ‘century’? With a ‘c’ or an ‘s’?”

      The alarm clock said quarter past one. “C,” he whispered. He heard her tiptoe quietly back to the small desk and begin scratching with her pen. Then he fell back to sleep and slept the deep sleep of a child until morning.

      The next day she was standing outside the school gate, waiting for him. Like all children with poor mothers he was ashamed at first and pretended that he didn’t know her. He crossed the street with his friends, СКАЧАТЬ