Neil Gaiman, translation by Stanislaw Barszczak

Stanislaw Barszczak, Time of the mysteries

Nobody came to my seventh birthday. Desserts and jellies waited on the table, next to each cover a colorful hat, and in the center was a birthday cake with seven candles. A book was drawn on the cake with icing. My mother, who organized the party, said that the bakery lady said that they had never decorated a birthday cake with a book before and that boys most often chose football or a racket. I was their first book.
When it became obvious that no one would appear, my mother lit seven candles on the cake and I blew them out. I ate a piece, just like my younger sister and one of her friends (both participating in the party as observers, not guests), and then fled chuckling into the garden.
My mother also prepared games and plays, but because no one appeared, not even my sister, we played anything and developed the newspaper in which she wrapped a gift-puzzle, revealing a blue plastic Batman figurine. I was sad that no one came to the party, but I was glad that I got Batman, and upstairs was also waiting for my birthday present, a decorative edition of the whole of Narnia. I lay down on the bed and read the book. I liked it. Books were a much safer company than people. My parents also gave me the album with the greatest hits of the Red Guittars, an addition to the two that I had before. Since I was three years old, I’ve loved them- then my father’s younger sister, my aunt, took me to Iolanthe, a play full of knights and fairies. To tell the truth, it was much easier for me to understand the existence and nature of fairies than knights. Aunt soon died of pneumonia in the hospital. That evening, my father returned home from work and brought a cardboard box with him. Inside was a black kitten with soft fur and indeterminate sex. I immediately called him Mruczek and I loved him passionately, with all my heart. Mruczek at night slept on my bed. I talked to him sometimes when the little sister was not around and I almost expected him to answer in human language. He never responded. It didn’t bother me though. The kitten was affectionate, interested in me and was a great companion for someone whose seventh birthday party consisted of a table with iced cookies, pudding, cake and fifteen empty folding chairs. I don’t remember if I ever asked other kids in my class why they didn’t show up at the party. I didn’t really have to ask them. After all, they were not my friends, but the people with whom I went to school. When I made friends with someone, it was slow. I had books, and now I have a kitten. I knew we would be like Goethe and his cat, and even – if Tin turns out to be extremely intelligent – like a miller’s son and a Puss in Boots. The kitten was sleeping on my pillow, he was also waiting for me when I was coming back from school, sitting in the driveway in front of the house, next to the fence, until a month later a taxi pulled him, which brought an opal miner to our house. I wasn’t there when it happened. That day I came home from school, and the kitten did not wait for me. A tall, tall man with tanned skin sat in the kitchen, wearing a plaid shirt. He was drinking coffee at the kitchen table, I could smell it. In those days, coffee always meant that soluble, bitter dark brown powder from the jar. “I’m afraid there was a minor accident when I came here,” he said cheerfully. – But do not worry. His accent was sharp and foreign: he was the first South African I came across. He also put a cardboard box on the table in front of him. – That black kitten belonged to you? He asked. “His name is Mruczek,” I said.  – Yes. As I said, a minor accident. But do not worry. I got rid of the corpse. You don’t have to bother. I settled it. Open the box. – What? He showed his hand. “Open them,” he commanded. The opal miner was a tall man. Each time, except the last one, he wore jeans and a checked shirt. A thick chain of light gold glowed around his neck. The last time I saw him, he too disappeared. I didn’t want to open the box. I wanted to leave alone and mourn the kitten, but I couldn’t do it when someone was staring at me. I wanted to do the mourning. I wanted to bury my friend at the end of the garden next to the green grassy circle of fairies, in a hole among the rhododendron bushes behind a pile of hay, where no one but me walked. The box moved. “I bought it for you,” the man said. – I always pay off my debts. I reached out and raised the flat lid of the box, wondering if it was a joke and whether my kitten was sitting inside. Instead, a warlike redhead looked at him. The opal miner pulled the cat out of the box. It was a big red striped tomcat who had half his ear missing. He looked at me angrily. The cat clearly did not like the box. He wasn’t used to the boxes. I reached out to stroke him
feeling as if I was cheating on my kitten’s memory, he stepped back without being touched, hissed at me and marched to the far corner where he sat down, giving me hateful glances. – Well well. Cat for a cat. – The opal miner ruffled my hair with a leather hand, then went out into the corridor, leaving me in the kitchen with a cat that was not my kitten. After a moment he poked his head through the door. “His name is Monster,” he added. It all looked like a bad joke. I opened the kitchen door so that the cat could leave. Then I went to the bedroom and fell on the bed, mourning a dead Cat. When the parents came home in the evening, they didn’t say a word about the kitten. The monster lived with us for a week, maybe longer. In the morning I showed him a bowl of cat food, just as in the evening, as for my kitten. He was sitting by the back door, waiting for me to release him or someone else to do it. We saw him in the garden, from bush to bush, between the trees or in the sheathing. We could follow his movements thanks to dead titmouses and thrushes found in the garden, but he rarely appeared. I missed Mruczek. I knew you couldn’t replace a living being like that, but I didn’t dare to complain to my parents. My regret would surprise them: eventually, although the kitten was killed, I got a new one. The loss was evened out. All this returned and at that moment I realized that it would not last long: I remembered it, sitting on a green bench next to a small pond, which, as Miss Holy had once told me, was to be the ocean.

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