Read The Notebook + The Proof + The Third Lie Online
Authors: Agota Kristof
It is winter. I must save coal. I take the edge off the cold in Mother's room with an electric heater that I turn on an hour before she goes to bed and turn off when she has fallen asleep, then turn on again an hour before she wakes up.
As far as I'm concerned, the heat of the kitchen stove and a bit of coal for the living room stove are enough. I wake up early to light the kitchen stove, and once it has produced enough embers I take some into the living room stove. I add a few lumps of coal and in half an hour it's warm in there too.
Late at night, when Mother is already asleep, I open the study door and the heat from the living room immediately flows in. It's a small room and warms up quickly. It is there that I change into my pajamas and bathrobe before starting to write. That way, after I have finished writing all I have to do is go to my room and climb into bed.
Tonight I pace around the house. I stop several times in the kitchen. Then I go into the children's room. I look at the garden. The bare branches of the walnut tree brush against the window. A fine snow settles in thin, frosted layers on the branches and on the ground.
I walk from one room into the other. I've already opened the study door; it is there that I will see my brother. I will close the door as soon as my brother comes, the cold be damned; I do not want Mother to hear us or for our conversation to wake her.
What will I say if that happens?
I will say, "Go back to bed, Mother, it's only a journalist."
And to the other one, to my brother, I will say, "It's only my mother-in-law,
Antonia.
She's been living at our house for a few years, ever since she was widowed. She's not completely right in the head. She confuses everything, gets things mixed up. She sometimes thinks that she's my real mother because she raised me."
I must keep them from seeing each other or they will recognize each other. Mother will recognize Lucas. And if Lucas doesn't recognize Mother, she will say when she recognizes him, "Lucas, my son!"
I want no "Lucas, my son!" Not anymore. It would be too easy.
Today, while Mother was taking her nap, I moved all the watches and clocks in the house forward by an hour. Luckily night
f
alls early this time of year. It's already dark at five in the afternoon.
I make Mother's dinner an hour early. Carrot puree with potatoes, meatloaf, and
crème
caramel for dessert.
I set the kitchen table and go call Mother from her room. She comes into the kitchen and says, "I'm not hungry yet."
I say, "You're never hungry, Mother. But you have to eat."
She says, "I'll eat later."
I say, "Later everything will be cold."
She says, "All you have to do is reheat it. Or maybe I won't eat at all."
'I'll make you some herbal tea to whet your appetite."
Into her tea I dissolve one of the sleeping pills she usually takes. I put another next to her cup.
Ten minutes later Mother falls asleep in front of the television. I pick her up, carry her to her room, undress her, and put her to bed.
I go back into the living room. I turn down the television and mute its screen. I reset the hands on the alarm clock in the kitchen and on the living room clock.
I still have time to eat before my brother arrives. In the kitchen I have a bit of carrot puree and meatloaf. Mother has difficulty chewing despite the dentures I had made for her not too long ago. Her digestion isn't very good either.
When I've finished eating I do the dishes and put the leftovers in the refrigerator; there's just enough for tomorrow's lunch.
I settle down in the living room. I put two glasses and a bottle of brandy out on the little table next to my armchair. I drink and wait. At eight o'clock on the dot I check on Mother. She's sleeping deeply. The detective movie begins and I try to watch it. Around eight-twenty I give up on the movie and take up a post by
t
he kitchen window. The light inside is off and it's impossible to see me from outside.
At eight-thirty exactly a big black car pulls up in front of the house and parks on the sidewalk. A man gets out, walks up to the gate, and rings.
I return to the living room and say into the intercom, "Come in. The door is open."
I turn on the veranda light, sit back down in my armchair, and my brother comes in. He is thin and pale and walks toward me with a limp; a portfolio case is tucked under his arm. Tears come into my eyes, and I rise and stretch out my hand to him. "Welcome."
He says, "I won't disturb you for long. A car is waiting for me."
I say, "Come into my study. It will be quieter in there."
I leave the television sound on. If Mother wakes up she will hear the detective show, as is usual every night.
My brother asks, "You're not switching off the television?"
"No. Why? We cannot hear it in the study."
I take the bottle and the two glasses. I sit down behind my desk and motion to a chair across from me.
"Have a seat."
I pick up the bottle.
"A glass?"
"Yes."
We drink. My brother says, "This was our father's study. Nothing has changed. I remember the lamp, the typewriter, the furniture, the chairs."
I smile. "What else do you remember?"
"Everything. The veranda and the living room. I know where the kitchen is, the children's room, the parents' room."
I say, 'That is not so difficult. All these houses are modeled on the same pattern."
He goes on: "There was a walnut tree outside the window of the children's room. Its branches touched the glass, and a swing hung from it. With two seats. We kept our scooters and tricycles in the shed at the back of the courtyard."
I say, 'There are still toys there, but not the same ones. These ones belong to my grandchildren."
We are silent. I refill the glasses. When he sets his down Lucas asks, "Tell me, Klaus, where are our parents?"
"Mine are dead. As for yours, I do not know."
"Why so formal with me, Klaus? I'm your brother, Lucas. Why don't you want to believe me?"
"Because my brother is dead. I would be very happy to see your papers, if you wouldn't mind."
My brother pulls a foreign passport out of his pocket and hands it to me. He says, "Don't believe too much of it. There are one or two errors in it."
I examine the passport.
"So you are called
Claus,
with a 'C.' Your date of birth is not the same as mine, and yet Lucas and I were twins. You are three years older than I am."
I hand him back his passport. My brother's hands are shaking, as is his voice.
"When I crossed the frontier I was fifteen. I gave a false birthdate to seem older, of legal age, in fact. I didn't want to be put under a guardianship."
"And the first name? Why the change in first names?"
"Because of you, Klaus. When I filled out the questionnaire at the border guards' office I thought of you, of your name, which had been with me for the whole length of my childhood. So instead of Lucas I wrote
Claus.
You did the same thing when you published your poems under the name Klaus Lucas. Why Lucas? In memory of me?"
I say, "In memory of my brother, actually. But how do you know I publish poems?"
"I write too, but not poems."
He opens his portfolio and takes out a large schoolboy's notebook, which he places on the table.
"This is my last manuscript. It's unfinished. I won't have time to complete it. I'm leaving it for you. You'll finish it. You have to finish it."
I open the notebook but he stops me with a gesture.
"No, not now. When I'm gone. There's something important I'd like to know. How did I get my wound?"
"What wound?"
"A wound close to the spinal column. A bullet wound. How did I get it?"
"How would you suppose me to know? My brother, Lucas, did not have a wound. He had a childhood illness. Poliomyelitis, I believe. I was no more than four or five when he died and cannot remember exactly. All I know is what I was told later on."
He says, "Yes, exactly. For a long time I too thought I had had a childhood illness. That's what I was told. But later I learned that I had been wounded by a bullet. Where? How? The war had only just started."
I remain silent and shrug. Lucas persists: "If your brother is dead, he must have a grave. His grave, where is it? Can you show me?"
"No, I cannot. My brother is buried in a mass grave in the town of S." "Oh yes? And Father's grave, and Mother's grave, where are they? Can you show me?"
"No, I cannot do that either. My father did not come back from the war, and my mother is buried with my brother, Lucas, in the town of S."
He asks, "So then I didn't die of poliomyelitis?"
"My brother didn't, no. He died in the middle of a bombing. My mother had just gone with him to the town of S., where he was to be treated at the rehabilitation center. The center was bombed and neither my brother nor my mother ever came back."
Lucas says, "If they told you that, they lied to you. Mother never went with me to the town of S. She never went there to see me. I had lived at the center with my alleged childhood illness for several years before it was bombed. And I wasn't killed in the bombing. I survived."
I shrug again. "You, yes. My brother, no. Nor my mother."
We look each other in the eye and I don't turn away.
"As you can see, we are talking about two different fates. You will have to pursue your investigation elsewhere."
He shakes his head. "No, Klaus, and you know it very well. You know I'm your brother, Lucas, but you deny it. What are you afraid of? Tell me, Klaus, what?"
I reply, "Nothing. What could I be afraid of? Were I convinced that you are my brother, I would be the happiest of men for having found you again."
He asks, "Why would I come find you if I weren't your brother?"
"I have no idea. There is also your appearance."
"My appearance?"
"Yes. Look at me and look at you. Is there the slightest physical resemblance between us? Lucas and I were true twins and looked perfectly alike. You are a head shorter and weigh sixty pounds less than me."
Lucas says, "You're forgetting my illness, my infirmity. It's a miracle that I learned to walk again."
I say, "Let us move on. Tell me what became of you after the bombing."
He says, "Since my parents didn't reclaim me, I was sent to live with an old peasant woman in the town of K. I lived with her and worked for her until I left for abroad."
"And what did you do abroad?"
"All sorts of things, and then I wrote books. And you, Klaus, how did you survive after the death of Mother and Father? From what you tell me, you were orphaned very young."
"Yes, very young. But I was fortunate. I spent only a few months at an orphanage. A kindly family took me in. I was very happy with them. It was a large family with four children, of which I married the eldest daughter, Sarah. We had two children, a girl and a boy. At present I am a grandfather, a very happy grandfather."
Lucas says, "It's odd. When I first came in, I had the impression that you lived alone."
"I am alone at the moment, that is true. But only until Christmas. I have pressing work to complete. A collection of new poems to prepare. After that I will rejoin my wife, Sarah, my children, and my grandchildren in the town of K.
,
where we will all spend the holidays together. We have a house there that my wife inherited from her parents."
Lucas says, 'I've lived in the town of
K.
I know the place very well. Where's your house?"
"Central Square, across from the Grand Hotel, next to the bookseller's."
"I've just spent several months in the town of K. In fact I lived right above the bookseller's."
I say, "What a coincidence. It is a very pretty town, would you not agree? I often spent vacations there when I was a child, and my grandchildren like it very much. Especially the twins, my daughter's children."
"Twins? What are their names?"
"Klaus and Lucas, obviously."
"Obviously."
"For the time being my son has only one child, a little girl named Sarah after her grandmother, my wife. But my son is still young and he too may have other children."
Lucas says, "You're a happy man, Klaus."
I reply, "Yes, very happy. You too, I suppose, have a family."
He says, "No. I've always lived alone."
"Why?"
Lucas says, "I don't know. Perhaps because no one ever taught me how to love."
I say, "That is a shame. Children bring one a great deal of joy. I cannot imagine my life without them."
My brother stands up. "They're waiting for me in the car. I don't want to disturb you any longer."