the tale

Stanislaw Barszczak; The fortnight’s holiday.

Our Director and a group of volunteers were gone for a fortnight’s
holiday to China. We manage on behalf of him the “House of Retreat.” We are accepting children and adolescents in the school activities. Do bypass us never the guests from all over Poland here. But I gathered the memories once more. When the front door had shut them out and the Sister Caroline had turned back into the dark heavy hall, I began to live. I stood in front of the inclosure door, listening until I heard the engine of the taxi die out along the our parking. Sister Caroline could go anywhere, even through the green baize door to the pantry or down the stairs to the basement living-room. But I also felt a stranger in my home because I could go into any room and all the rooms were empty. You could only guess who had once occupied them: the rack of pipes in the smoking-room beside the elephant tusks, the carved wood tobacco jar; in the bedroom the pink hangings and pale perfumes and the three-quarter finished jars of cream which Sister Caroline had not yet cleared away; the high glaze on the never-opened piano…

Today I have tried a drive in the country at that time. As every other night sister listened to me going round the house, locking the doors and windows. I was head clerk at Export Agency, and lying in bed I would think with dislike that my home was like my office, run on the same lines, its safety preserved with the same meticulous care, so that I could present a faithful an account to the managing-director in the next future. Regularly
every Sunday the christians had been made such thing. For example Reverend Mister Wladyslaw presented the account to the parish priest, accompanied by his wife and two daughters, in the little church near the ruins of our castle. They always had the same pew, they were always five minutes early, and her father sang loudly with no sense of tune, holding an out-size prayer book on the level of his eyes. “Singing songs of exultation” — he was presenting the week’s account (one household duly safeguarded) — “marching to the Promised Land.” When they came out of church, the looked care about the poor men…

Reverend Mister Richard had taken a couple of hours away from the church
Ministry to see whether his house was still standing after the previous night’s raid. He was a thin, pale, hungry-looking man of early middle age. All his life had been spent in keeping his nose above water, lecturing at
night-schools and acting as temporary English master at some of the smaller public schools, and in the process he had acquired a small house, a wife and one child, a rather precocious girl with a talent for painting who despised him. They lived in the country, his house was cut off from him by a little distance of the centre of Olsztyn. He visited the house titled ‘Fate’ now hurriedly twice a week, and his whole world was now the Ministry for the poor, disabled, cripple on the town. The high heartless building with complicated lifts and long passages like those of a liner and lavatories where the water never ran hot and the nail-brushes were strongly chained yet. Central heating gave it the stuffy smell of mid-Atlantic except in the passages where the windows were always open
for fear of blast and the cold winds whistled in…

I have already written to you about my trip to India, where I was invited by the Hindu priest, Reverend Professor Sebastian. So, we found in extra-built-up. A long train journey on a late December evening 2009, in this
new version of peace, is a dreary experience. I suppose that my fellow traveller and I could consider ourselves lucky to have a compartment to ourselves, even though the heating apparatus was not working, even though the lights went out entirely in the frequent tunnels and were too dim anyway for us to read our books without straining our eyes, and though there was no restaurant car to give at least a change of scene. It was when we were trying simultaneously to chew the same kind of dry bun brought from Mumbai, that my companion and I came together. Before that we had sat at opposite ends of the carriage, both muffled to the chin in
overcoats, both bent low over type we could barely make out, but as I threw the remains of my cake under the seat our eyes met, and he laid his book down. By the time we were half-way to Ujjain we had found an enormous range of subjects for discussion; starting with buns and the weather, we had gone on to. He was still asleep, and I lay down again with my eyes on my fellow. It amused him to imagine that it was himself whom he watched, the same hair, the same eyes, the same lips and line of cheek. But the
thought soon palled, and the mind went back to the fact which lent the day importance. It was the eleven of December…

I could hardly believe that a year had passed since the Director had given his last children’s party for an occasion child’s day. There was a family festival. There were fun, games, tournaments, matches in our “wilderness” in the fresh air that have had no end. There were disabilities also. Francis turned suddenly upon his back and threw an arm across his face, blocking his mouth. Peter’s heart began to beat fast, not with pleasure now but with uneasiness. He sat up and called across the table, “Wake
up.” Francis’s shoulders shook and he waved a clenched fist in the air, but his eyes remained closed. In the close Sunday a family june feast in the parish’s gardens it organizes Community Office, and all our priests…

There is in our town ice cream parlor and pastry shop. When the confectioner had shut his shop for the night he went through a door at the back of the hall that served both him and the flats above, and then up two flights and a half of stairs, carrying an offering of a little box of pills. The box was stamped with his name and address: Pilsudskis Square, olsztyn. He was a middle-aged man with a thin moustache and scared, evasive eyes: he wore his long white coat even when he was off duty
as if it had the power of protecting him like a king’s uniform. So long as he wore it he was free, as it were, from summary trial and settle friendship. On the top landing was a window: outside Olsztyn spread through the spring evening: the peevish noise of innumerable bicycles, the gas works, beyond the bakers and confectioners, like paper frills. A door was marked with a visiting card, Mr. Nicholas Ferenz, confectioner…

I’ll be back for a moment to the time of my youth. The Communists were the first on my life to appear. They walked quickly, a group of about a dozen, up the alley which runs from Olsztyn to Czestochowa. I still have the image in memory; a young man and a girl lagged a little way behind because the man’s leg was hurt and the girl was helping him along. They looked impatient, harassed, hopeless, as if they were trying to catch a train which they knew already in their hearts they were too late to catch.
The proprietor of the café saw them coming when they were still a long way off; the lamps at that time were still alight (it was later that the bullets broke the bulbs and dropped darkness all over that quarter of Czestochowa), and the group showed up plainly in the wide barren third alley. Since sunset only one customer had entered the café, and very soon after sunset firing could be heard from the direction of Olsztyn…

There were roads in my youth by which drove a black car and took up the parents of children. I remember that movie I watched on TV titled “The brigades tiger”, with a panoramic view of Paris a hundred years ago. There is the case for the Defence. It was the strangest murder trial I ever attended. They named it the Paris murder in the headlines, though Boulevard Street, where the old woman was found battered to death, was not strictly speaking in town. This was not one of those cases of circumstantial evidence, in which you feel the jurymen’s anxiety, because mistakes have been made, like domes of silence muting thecourt. No, this murderer was all but found with the body; no one present when the Crown counsel outlined his case believed that the man in the dock stood any chance
at all…He was a heavy stout man with bulging bloodshot eyes. All his muscles seemed to be in his thighs. Yes, an ugly customer, one you wouldn’t forget in a hurry and that was an important point because the somobody proposed to call four witnesses who hadn’t forgotten him, who had
seen him hurrying away from the little red villa in Boulevard Street. The clock had just struck two in the morning…

There are special duties. Reverend Father Joachim lived in a great house in Gardens Square. One wing was occupied by his wife, who believed herself to be an invalid and obeyed strictly the dictate that one should live every day as if it were one’s last. For this reason her wing for the last ten years had invariably housed some Jesuit or Dominican priest with a taste for good wine and whisky and anemergency bell in his bedroom. He looked after his salvation in more independent fashion. He retained
the firm grasp on practical affairs that had enabled his grandfather, who had been a fellow exile with others, to found the great business of Joachims family in a foreign land. God has made man in his image, and it was not unreasonable for Father Joachim to return the compliment and to regard God as the director of some supreme business which yet depended for certain of its operations on Joachims family. The strength of a chain is in its weakest link, and Reverend Father Joachim did not forget his responsibility.

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