Parallel Stories: A Novel (178 page)

Read Parallel Stories: A Novel Online

Authors: Péter Nádas,Imre Goldstein

BOOK: Parallel Stories: A Novel
10.46Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

I understand, the young man replied, though at that moment what he truly did not understand was what, if that’s how things stood, the Creator’s intentions might be.

He was ready to make a confession, against his own family, to save all of humankind, and perhaps the Creator might say that he would not accept the confession as valid.

He faltered, shook his head as though trying to shake this disturbing formulation out of his skull, out of his brain, much as a helpless sick animal would.

No matter how much I’d like to change the situation, he moaned at last—his voice very loud or rather very penetrating, because he knew this was an obstacle—I can’t be familiar with anyone.

You may be disturbed by anyone’s physical proximity.

I guess you can put it that way, said Döhring, as if suddenly relieved.

Our being distrustful is mutual, if that’s any reassurance.

But I feel it’s better than dissembling.

I understand.

I know you do.

I must tell you a lot of things so you can see clearly and understand the connections.

I’ll try to understand them, anyway.

Though my case can’t have much to do with the case you’re investigating.

If that is so, you are making me especially curious.

May I ask something of you.

First let’s hear your request, then I can decide whether you may ask it.

Would you tell me what I am suspected of.

That’s a rash question. If the occasion arises it would have to be asked not by you but by your lawyer. But I can give you a clear answer.

Please do.

Suspicion arises when factually and objectively we know what happened. I am free to suspect someone when the evidence allows me to raise charges against him or her. It’s not worth doing before then.

This would be the paradox of your profession.

I don’t know about that, but this way it’s practical. Otherwise one goes astray. One should not shut out other possibilities because of one possibility, and this is a basic premise not just in our profession.

But I had the impression I was under suspicion. Maybe not by the others, but you suspected me. And I must admit that really got to me. As if I were truly the culprit.

You’d probably find it flattering if it were so, but I had no reason to do that.

I know what I’m talking about, I don’t need you to flatter me with such things, I’ve been preparing for a murder for years.

I understand, I should have known.

To be precise, I’ve been getting ready for it for two years.

You probably want to share this compulsion with me so you won’t have to commit it.

There isn’t necessarily a causal relationship between the two.

How should I understand that.

It’s hard to explain, or rather, impossible. I’ve never talked about it seriously. I’ve no experience in it. And I hate people gushing about themselves.

You despise them, you’ve already said that.

I despise them, but I also hate them. I know I should be ashamed, others are ashamed of it, but I’m not. I can hate them individually, but I especially hate them collectively.

That is why I’ve come, you made me curious to know where you’ve acquired so much strength to despise people.

I see you’re at home in psychology, you’re trying to calm me down.

I studied it for two and a half years, to have some idea of it.

Or to learn a few tricks of the trade. When you say I’m strong, for example, you can count on my growing weak.

There’s hardly anyone who wouldn’t grow weak from that.

That I should be easy prey for you.

When we use tricks in our conversation, that doesn’t necessarily mean our intentions are false or treacherous.

I have to kill my father.

There was silence for a while; Kienast sensibly let it be a long pause. And Döhring didn’t even dare swallow during this time, because he wanted to carry out his mission: he wanted to tell all, but the problem was he didn’t have the proper method for doing this. His Adam’s apple moved up and down too rapidly, like that of a young adolescent.

Had Döhring not become so sharply outlined in his exertions, if insanity had not distorted his features, Kienast might have said to himself that Döhring was amiably childlike.

He was struggling with the air, or struggling for it; it can’t have been easy to combine such great trust with such great distrust and then express this.

Almost everyone has to kill his father, said Kienast by way of helping. But that’s not a personal problem but rather a ritual, which should be considered a ceremony. In earlier times the Elevation of the Host or Holy Communion must have had this significance. To take to myself a body that others have murdered and whose bones they have broken, when you think about it, that’s no less brutal and barbaric. I, for example, am in trouble compared with others because my father killed himself instead of killing me.

Döhring was silent again; his eyes shone soberly out of his insanely distorted features.

If you want me to, I’d be happy to tell you about it, Kienast continued readily. And we’ve reached a point, given the various beliefs in supernatural powers, where even girls have to kill their fathers, and I tell you, this is based on my professional experience.

He stopped for a moment, as if he had lost his breath like the young man, because he did not understand how two things that have nothing to do with each other could cross paths so powerfully.

Little girls seduce their fathers so they can kill them, with the help of their mothers, for the incest committed.

Somehow this created a profound silence between them.

From a sociological viewpoint this is a salient symptom in the new era, Dr. Kienast continued cautiously, wanting to say something rational in their mutual silence. You must have read the story of Lolita, or you will read it; the secret of her success must lie somewhere in that attitude.

That’s not what I’m talking about, I’m talking about our own father.

I don’t mean to take the edge off what you’re saying, don’t misunderstand me.

I’m not very interested in ethical questions, so I’m not interested in commercial novels either. Our father had no personality of his own, anyway, so in the sense that you propose, the way you think about it, I’d have no reason for wanting to get even with him. He was a nameless, clumsy petit bourgeois, a nobody who preferred to go around staying out of the way, avoiding everything and making sure not to stand out in the crowd.

Now it was Kienast’s turn to wait and see what the young man was getting at.

He’s the fellow who wouldn’t harm a fly.

Is that why you think, asked Kienast, still guided by surprised caution, that he might be in your way.

It’s not so simple as you might imagine. I’d have to squeal on or accuse family members individually, including dead ones. And you’re coming on with these miserable conceptual dichotomies. If I may, I beg you, please stop it. The others are truly frightening murderers, but not disgusting. Because one can understand them. But my father is a common opportunist. Legally speaking, this seems like a ridiculous accusation, as if I were harping on obsolete business. But it’s the matter of obsolescence, of statutory limitation, that gives me no rest. I won’t lie to you about essential matters. This thing torments me, nothing urges me on so much as that they continue to make a living out of this statute of limitations—until someone exposes them. And there, at that point, that’s where it has to be cut, you understand, so they can’t go on living off the statute of limitations. It’s not the legal process, I don’t care about the law—everything is legal or everything is illegal, that’s a matter of litigation, it’s all the same anyway—what interests me is the way later developments push aside earlier events and the sly way they play with this. I enjoy it too, the place of dread always filled by the next dread. Why should I remember anything, that’s what I want you to explain, but I bet you don’t have an answer.

Kienast did not want to reply to this question, it was simply not his business.

Or why do I still have this penchant for remembering things despite everything. This cannot be understood, and we cannot forgive one another for it.

He stopped suddenly and looked at Kienast as though he now saw or realized why he must kill his father or at least forsake his family.

But I will ask you to leave God out of the game, don’t go on mentioning him to me, because I hate Jesus Christ with all my heart.

Grave silence settled between them, silence of a quality that belonged to neither of them, and for a while neither dared break it.

I despise him, if you’d rather hear it that way, Döhring shouted desperately.

Your preferences are clear: you don’t care about the law, don’t bother with ethical questions, and hate God. However, I haven’t mentioned them, you’re wrong about that, neither Jesus Christ nor God.

Of course you have. You are a blasphemer and so am I. You mentioned their holidays, that’s enough for me. You mentioned the Elevation of the Host, the sacrifice of the body, of course you did, all those flowery words.

Again there was silence between them.

Don’t mention him again, Döhring shouted, you’re probably Catholic, that’s why you mention him so loudly, but don’t mention him to me here, because I hate him, I hate him.

Perhaps they were standing too close together; the poker protruded dangerously from Döhring’s hand. They were barely an arm’s length apart.

Until now, I thought I could follow you without difficulty.

The one they call Jesus Christ I cannot take seriously, I despise him.

Kienast’s glass was still on the mantelpiece; he wanted to reach for it.

But what does this have to do with what they’ve been talking about, and Döhring has to explain that.

It’s probably not his fault, maybe he’s not the one to blame for not redeeming anyone’s sin, Döhring continued, as simply and smoothly as if they were talking of the beneficial effect on the world’s stock markets of the fall of the Berlin wall, which was also something factual, but perhaps it’s really impossible to comprehend or understand what sort of crime it is to let others delude themselves with false hopes of redemption. Why would that be a more forgivable nastiness or crime than murder. Why shouldn’t every person be able to end this ugliness of several thousand years, or one’s own life.

You may be right, but not only am I not a Catholic, I’m not even a Protestant. I left the church, have nothing to do with it. The matter is much simpler than that. I’m thirsty, Kienast answered rather softly. I left my church, you understand, I’m hungry as a wolf, that’s how simple life is.

He was not in the mood for a theological debate, did not want to discuss religious wars, would have no counterarguments. If only because he saw how great the adolescent confusion was in the other man’s head, and he did not believe it.

Maybe you know a roadside place nearby that’s open now.

Upon hearing such an indecent proposal, Döhring was not only taken aback but momentarily struck dumb.

Man, oh man, he shouted after a brief silence, and then, flying into a passion, he laughed strangely, very strangely. Here I am, asking you about the existence of the deities and you come back with material things, your hunger and thirst.

Perhaps his laugh was not even a laugh but the beginning of a convulsive dance of his facial muscles.

But that’s what I’m talking to you about, your hunger and your thirst, which Christians can never appease or quench.

He cried out as if he were deeply wounded.

You can’t seriously imagine that anyone around here would dare spend Christmas Eve outside the family circle.

How could there be anything open tonight. No, you won’t find such a depraved place here, not in our neck of the woods. The people who live here are all decent hypocrites.

Isn’t there a different kind of place.

You don’t understand what I’m talking about.

Still, despite your theoretical resistance, I invite you to be my guest, Kienast replied relentlessly.

Just this once, I ask you to sit down and listen to me. Hear me out.

Come on, get your coat, stop groaning and moaning.

I won’t leave the fire. I’m sorry, but I’m not going to leave the fire just because of you. I didn’t chop all that wood to let the fire go out now.

I’ll relight it for you when we come back. That’s one thing I’m really good at, lighting fires in fireplaces.

Go by yourself, I’ve no objection to your coming back.

I didn’t see any food in your kitchen, have you had anything at all to eat today.

The refrigerator is full.

I didn’t ask whether the refrigerator was full but whether you’ve had anything to eat.

What do you want from me, and so what if I haven’t eaten anything.

Get your coat, we’ll go eat something and while we eat I’ll tell you what I want from you. We can also have a glass of something and talk about theology.

You will not talk to me about the object of my hatred. You may not do that.

What, are you preaching to me again, I understand you very well, but please stop these tasteless tirades.

This God of yours has been torturing me all my life.

I have nothing to do with him.

I hate him.

Stop shamming and get your coat. You think other people don’t suffer or other people have no god. I’m not suffering. You think you’re the only one who does.

I don’t think that.

You’ll live through it.

That’s true.

There, you see.

We’re not talking about suffering.

Good, let’s keep it that way, because I can’t stand your mawkish gushing.

But what can I do when my family is crawling with murderers.

We can’t decide before supper which of our families offers the more meaningful example, because my family is crawling not only with murderers but also with suicides.

That’s true.

How would you know. Stop talking like an idiot.

I know.

You see.

I know more than you can guess.

Where’s your coat.

The young man went upstairs and presently returned with the expensive Scottish windbreaker he had received from his aunt.

Other books

JustOneTaste by Sami Lee
At Canaan's Edge by Taylor Branch
Dove's Way by Linda Francis Lee
The Fatal Fashione by Karen Harper
Bzrk by Michael Grant
Mr. Darcy's Daughters by Elizabeth Aston
2 Whispering by Amanda M. Lee
Betsy and Billy by Carolyn Haywood