Authors: Olivier Nilsson-Julien
I wasn’t convinced, but
knelt on t
he ic
e, sweeping
the snow away with my hands. What was she talking about?
‘
I c
an’t see a thing. It’s flat as a pancake.
’
‘
Look, feel
. Don’t think!
Be one with the ice.
’
I wasn’t sure about being one with the ice, but
I took my glove off and f
elt the ice and she was right
,
i
t
wasn’t totally smooth. There were microscopic ridge
s. I put the glove on the ice and r
ested my cheek on it to get
as close as possible
. There was no visible order and t
he r
id
ges were all over the place
,
with
t
he whirling snow flakes from the storm constantly
interfering with my observation. I was about to give up, when I looked at Eva.
She was a
white, lifeless shape on a snow
-
covered ice y
ach
t. The Black Pearl was white, everything was white
–
one big whiteness.
I
had to hang on if
I wanted to see Carrie
again.
I did.
I really did.
Our life together had barely star
ted.
Besides,
Eva’s life was in my hands and
I owed it to her to keep going. I would never forgive myself if I didn’t give everything I coul
d to save her. I took off the gl
ove again and felt with my hand, t
rying to tune
into the ice.
66
He’d been excited at the idea of reading history at
Uppsala
University
, but
once he started
his illusions had soon been shattered.
Traditional
ly, history was a
nationalist pursuit
sup
posed to strengthen a nation
.
The only thing Boeck learnt in
Uppsala
was that
today’s Swedish
historians were
hell
-
bent on destroying the s
lig
htest hint of national pride.
Hi
s passion for
Sweden
’s historical greatness was dism
issed as naive and un
-
academic
, while his
patriotism
was labelled as reactionary
and sympto
matic of
a Swedish Finn.
His Swedishness had
already
been rejected in
Helsinki
and n
ow the Swedes were dismissing him as stereotypically Finnish.
He was labelled as neither nor, whereas h
e saw both as p
art of th
e
same history
–
t
hey
were one.
Finland
belonged to
Sweden
.
If it hadn’t been for some
cowardly
Swedish
officers
and a useless King
, Åland and
Finland
would never have been lost in 1809.
Helsinki
lost its guide
–
Sweden, while
Stockholm
strayed
and
has
neglected its greatness ever since
. A stron
g nation has
to harness
collective memory t
hrough
rituals, customs and
historiography
.
Boeck didn’t understand how
tax payers’ money
could be used to pay
academics
to pull apar
t centuries of Swedish culture
.
History was about making the n
ation coherent, not about deconstructing it according to so
-
called
post
-
colonial or multicultural theories
and other
neo
-
Marxist propaganda
.
In spite of the disappointment, Boeck
stuck to his
torical
studies,
more determined than ever
in his resolve for revenge.
This went beyond the personal. It was a matter of national interest.
67
Eventually
,
I thought I could distinguish a pattern. The ridges went in different directions, but not in all
four
. T
he mi
ssing direction must be east
, because
Eva had said that the wind
generally came from the east
–
from
St.
Petersburg
, so west must be in the opposite direction.
Looking at the ic
e, I wa
sn’t sure
I’d really seen it or if
it
was wishful thinking. I looked again and it
was true. It must be true. It had to be. I tried to estimate the aver
age orientation of the ridges, which
shou
ld give me a westerly direction, but
I didn’t know
h
ow
to keep it. I would have
to tr
ust my mental navigation skills. They’d never
been my strength,
but they were
o
ur only rescue
now, as
we had
no A to Z for fin
ding the way out of this
Baltic blizzard.
68
Lying in the yacht,
Eva
forced a smile when I gave her
a hot drink from the thermos.
Coming from her, it was
a sign of resignation, a definite sign that h
er polar clothes had lost their function. The cold had free reign and it wouldn’t be long before s
he was
deep
-
frozen.
I had to find help.
Before pushing on with the yacht, I checked the direction
by read
ing the ice
again
. It was difficult and
I double
and triple
-
checked. When I thought I’d found the west, I
immediately started moving
. We couldn’t be far from the outer islands of the Swe
dish archipelago. I
f we
’d gone in the right direction...
The wi
nd was too erratic for sailing, so
I had to
take turns
push
ing and pulling
the ice yacht.
When I pushed
,
it kept getting stuck on snowdrifts, but pulling was even harder. There was no easy way.
The storm was lo
uder than a Pink Floyd concert,
l
ike standing under a revving Boeing 747. I considered leaving the yacht, but how else could I trans
port Eva? She’d dozed off again and
I kept
struggling
through the storm, makin
g regular stops to check the ice
. I don’t know how long thi
s went on.
I lost track of time as I walked and walked in a semi
-
conscious
trance. It took
long enough for t
he pain in my injured foot
to return
. We wer
e still surrounded by whiteness and
I didn’t know where we were.
In fact, n
o one kn
ew and no one would look for us, or n
o friends
at least. O
nly foes.
Eva was buried in snow and
I was dragging a
pile of snow through a snow storm.
She was a ghost, her pre
sence only suggested by what was left of the mast
. The only reality was tactile, aural and te
mperature
-
related. I was blind and i
nvisible
at the same time
–
a white man in the snow.
After what
have must have been three or four
hours
, I spotted
a break in the clouds.
The flash of blue sky
gave me renewed energy
and I pushed on faster, but i
t disappeared as quickly as i
t had appeared
and
didn’t reappear unt
il what
felt like
an hour, possibly two. I
t was i
mpossible to tell.
But this time it was larger
and I started running. I don’t
know why, because being l
ost w
it
h or without a blue sky didn’t
make any differe
nce. Maybe it was because I’
d rather b
e lost in visible surroundings
.
It was
concrete, as opposed to the abstract condition created
by the blizzard. I
t
was about having
something to hold on to.
I ran as fast as I could.
69
It w
as the last thing I’d expected, especially as
I’d completely forgotten that I was walking on ice. It had been
unbroken and solid for so long that
I walked straight into the ferry channel with my eyes firmly set on the blue sky. The yacht
s
lid into the water behind me
. I panicked
at first,
but it seemed to be floating and
I managed to climb back in
.
I knew
that i
t was bui
lt for short crossings in calm waters
, but
also
that it had been
generously
peppered w
ith holes by Boeck and his men.
I was soaked, freezing,
but there was no time to lose and I paddled as best I could
w
ith the rifle. It was all I had
,
and we hardly moved as t
he yacht filled
with water seeping
in through th
e
holes. We were sinking and
Boeck wouldn’t be
there to resuscitate us this time. I was born in the
Baltic. I’d been a Baltic baby and the Baltic was reclaiming me, trying to keep me at ‘home’.
Over my dead body.
The
ice
yacht
definitely wasn’t going to get us across. It
was taking in
too much
water and
I
had to pull Eva into the freezing water
to
c
ross the ferry channel
before we
sank. This was insane. She was verging on hypothermia and I had
to expose her to ice
-
cold water, but a
bandoning her wasn’t an op
tion. Our destinies had been locked since t
he moment she’d saved my life the first time
and I was committed
to going all the way.
I needed something to drag Eva once we made it to the
ice on the
other side. The only thing I could think of was the sail. I rolled it into a tight bundle and attached it to the life line. I put the bundle between Eva’s legs, something to hang on to
–
like a drag lift. When I pulled her into the water with me t
he shock made her come to
.
‘
HEY! What the…
’
‘
We’re sinking. We have to swim.
’
Her only reply was a
faint moan.
Holding her under her arms, I half swam,
half dragg
ed her the 50 metres across the
channel.
I don’t know how we did it, but t
his
certainly
made up for my 20 lost ye
ars of winter swimming. I had to work out how to get her out of the water
. She had ice prods rou
nd her neck and
I had a rope. W
hen we reach
ed
the
ice on the
other side
of the channel
,
she had to help because
I’d never
be able to lift her onto it
on my own.