Read The Unforgiving Minute Online
Authors: Unknown
adventurous period seemed to be fading into a vast black abyss,
never to return again. To have put Laura, who as it turned out
was merely my adventure of the moment just before I embarked on
my odyssey, in the same class as Julie and Ann Marie was
indicative of the aberration my incessant romances had become. I
felt that the trip had been therapeutic after all. I would give
it a little more time and then go home … if I had a home.
I thought more and more about how I could make this up to
the people I loved. Would my children ever look upon me again in
the same way they had before? Would I still have a wife when I
returned? Would my relationship with Ann Marie ever be the same?
After walking a cold several miles I came upon a large,
bleak-looking castle. The sign, in several languages, told me it
was a national museum. I entered, more to get warm than anything
else, and spent some time looking at art and artifacts. Finally,
I came to a room which housed an exhibition of posters. The
colorful posters attracted me from afar and I looked forward to
pursuing them. When I got closer, I could see that they were all
political posters, either by amateurs or budding artists. I was
shocked when I saw the content of the posters. The underlying
theme was anti-American. Some posters showed American soldiers
killing and maiming Oriental children. Others showed blacks
being lynched, beaten and murdered. Several depicted rich
American businessmen stepping upon the common worker. There were
others that were supremely pro-Russian and pro-Cuban. I couldn’t
read the text, which was in Hungarian, but I could imagine what
it said.
I found myself so angry that I scowled at the elderly
museum guards as I left in a huff. I had been treated well by
everyone I ran into in Hungary, yet here was the evidence that it
was still a Communist country under the influence of the Soviet
Union, which was at that time still “The Evil Empire.” All one
had to do to further realize it was to look out my hotel window
at the parliament building across the river with its imposing red
star on the roof.
I left the museum in disgust. My patriotism was burning
in my belly. It sounds corny, but when I’m away from America my
sense of nationalism is magnified tenfold. When I pass an
American embassy and see the flag flying, I actually get a lump
in my throat. I was more angry than I might have been had I read
about the exhibition in a newspaper back home in America. If I
was depressed before, I was doubly depressed now. As I walked
back to the hotel, I all but scowled at every Hungarian I passed.
Adjacent to the hotel, I stopped at the Fisherman’s
Bastion, the picturesque little fort overlooking the river which
makes a wonderful observation post. I stared out at the choppy,
muddy Danube and wondered what in the world I was doing here. I
came so close at that point to taking a cab to the Budapest
Airport and catching the Pan Am flight to New York. I found
myself needing a drink, a woman, or both. I had such a great
understanding of myself now. I knew that I turned to liquor and
women when I was in periods of depression or anxiety.
I knew that if I ever was to recover from these
addictions, I must fight them vigorously. I also knew that I was
weak when it came to really doing it. I had no liquor and there
didn’t seem to be a plethora of available women around, so it was
easy to be noble. I also hadn’t the foggiest idea how to get
decent booze in this country. Compound that with the fact that I
didn’t speak one single word of the language, which precluded me
from liaisons with the locals. Last but not least, single
tourist women seemed to be non-existent.
Just adjacent to the lobby of the hotel was a small store
that sold Soviet goods exclusively. I walked into it and browsed
the merchandise. I was amazed at the junk I saw before me. The
goods, especially the small appliances, looked homemade, as if
they were built in someone’s basement workshop. As I walked up
and down the display cases, I saw a rather portly Slavic-looking
gentleman looking at me and smiling. Several stainless steel
teeth glinted in the artificial light. He was the stereotypical
Russian and his national origin was glaringly obvious. His grin
was annoying me and I gave him a dirty look and turned away. I
walked out the door of the shop into the hotel lobby and could
feel his presence following me. I felt his hand on my shoulder
and turned angrily.
“Please to excuse me, my American friend, but I would like
to talk for moment to you.”
At this point, I hadn’t had a direct conversation with
another human being for God knows how long, so I actually
welcomed his attempt to make conversation.
He offered a large, meaty hand that was damp and sweaty as
he vigorously shook mine.
“Will you please to join me for drink in hotel bar?” he
said in a gruff manner. I couldn’t figure out whether a command
or a request was being proffered.
“Why not?” I said. “I could use a drink just about now.”
I found myself following this Russian whose short legs
were speeding down the corridor at a breakneck pace.
We sat at a table in the cocktail lounge and without
asking my preference ordered an iced bottle of vodka, which was
served in a silver tub with two fluted glasses which were also
chilled. He filled both glasses and, muttering an unintelligible
Russian toast, downed his in one gulp.
“Here’s mud in your eye,” I said and did the same,
bringing tears to my eyes and fire to my throat.
He smiled that steel-toothed smile and said, “I am called
Semyon Antonovich Gorodsky and am Soviet citizen who has seen you
in museum looking at posters with great how you say mads?”
“Damn right I’m mad,” I said as I stared down his blurry
image through my tearing eyes. “Who the hell do you guys think
you are? You’ve got half the goddamn world enslaved and your own
people are standing in line for bread. You hypocritical bastards
show posters of Americans killing children and oppressing blacks.
Well, you’re full of shit, all of you. We’ve fed half the world
and sent money to the other half, including you jokers, so don’t
knock America, because you don’t know what the hell you’re
talking about.” With that I gulped down the second glass of
chilled vodka defiantly. This time there was nary a cough but I
felt as if I were personally fighting the cold war and it felt
good.
He looked across the table at me and spoke to me as if I
were an errant child. His smile was avuncular and his manner
gentle.
“Please, my friend, is not personal. Is political. You
understand, no … Political?”
“Political, shit,” I said in my most bellicose manner.
He smiled again. “My good friend, I did not paint
posters. I also think posters are funny. I spend eight years in
your Washington, D.C. America is great country. Soviet Union
also great country. Two great countries. Is all political, no?
Is all big game and we are the players. Drink, my friend, to
friendship.”
What could I say? I downed another vodka and another and
another. After forty minutes we were Bobby and Semyon as we
staggered out to his car, a Lada that sounded like a percolator
and was probably made in neighboring Czechoslovakia.
We weaved dangerously through the narrow streets of Buda
singing songs from America, like Home on the Range” and “The
Wabash Cannonball” and songs from the Soviet Union, like “Moscow
Nights” and “Those Were the Days.” I didn’t know where he was
taking me and I didn’t care. I was totally relaxed, totally
drunk, and having a great time. We crossed one of the bridges
over the Danube into Pest and in contrast to quiet, residential
Buda the city was alive and animated. He was a most skillful
drunken driver. He never missed a traffic light or a stop sign
and, aside from his frequent incursions onto the wrong side of
the road when no one was coming the other way, I felt strangely
safe. I was, of course, as drunk as he was and was probably
incapable of being afraid.
Finally, after about half an hour, we stopped at a
beautiful house on the far side of Pest. The house resembled a
New York brownstone. It was reddish-brown in color and the
magnificent architecture and carved columns and arches told me it
was of pre-World War II vintage. The two of us exited the car
and teetered up the front steps. I had absolutely no idea where
I was going, but at that point in time Semyon was my best friend
and I would have followed him anywhere.
A dowdy-looking woman opened the door and instantly
recognized Gorodsky. She hugged him and he hugged her and for
about five minutes they babbled unintelligibly in Hungarian.
During the conversation he pointed to me and the woman, who was
equally as heavy as he, hugged me in a bearlike embrace. She
smelled of sweat and cheap perfume and her scent made me slightly
dizzy. In my inebriated state I slipped off the top step,
ripping my suit pants and skinning my knee.
I was so anesthetized by the vodka that I felt no pain
even though my shin was bleeding.
The woman ushered us into a baroque sitting room with
burgundy plush cushions on an ample sofa. The upholstery was
piped with worn, imitation gold and looked at least twenty-five
years old. Semyon sat in a matching chair, looking florid and
sweating from the short walk up the steps. He was noticeably
panting.
For the first time, I really observed him. He was about
five feet six inches tall with a ruddy complexion and thick,
tightly curled grey hair. He wore a grey suit with pinstripes
that had a decidedly cheap look. His shirt collar was without
stays and pointed in several directions. His overly wide tie was
stained and worn-looking. He smiled frequently, exposing those
awful stainless steel teeth to view.
“Semyon, old buddy, just where in the hell are we and what
happens next?” I was frankly puzzled and thought perhaps I was
in the waiting room of a dentist or physician.
Suddenly, a door opened and four women walked in. They
were all attired similarly. They wore garter belts and stockings
with no panties, exposing their buttocks and pubic area. Over
their breasts, they wore skimpy bras that were meant to show
their charges twice as large as life. Each of the girls wore
high-heeled shoes. I knew where I was now. I was in a bordello.
I had never until this night availed myself of the
services of ladies of the night. I loved the conquest at least
as much as the act and there was certainly no conquest here. I
was, however, strangely turned on by this scene.
The girls slowly paraded around the small room like models
on a runway. It was obvious that we were to select from this
group.
The girls ranged in age from about eighteen to about
forty. They each had a professional, glued-on smile and an
almost believable come-on look in their eyes. I looked them over
to make my choice. In 1985 no one thought AIDS was a
heterosexual disease, so the only thing I was afraid of was
gonorrhea. Penicillin could take care of that, so I approached
it as a fun evening which I needed a hell of a lot.
The youngest of the girls was definitely the prettiest but
she was younger than my own daughter and that would give me the
creeps. The oldest was on the flabby side so I eliminated her.
Of the remaining two, one was a blonde and one was a brunette.
Really, if one inspected the pubic area, they were both
brunettes. I pointed to the “blonde” because she had the most
beautiful blue eyes I’ve ever seen. She was in her late
thirties, tall, with a great derri´ere. She had a face that was
far from intelligent-looking with a weak chin but was more than
passable-looking.
I pointed to her, not knowing the procedure, and instantly
Semyon spoke in Hungarian to the women and the one I had selected
and the young one remained. Semyon looked relieved that I had
not selected the young one and I realized that he had politely
waited for me to make my choice before he made his. My choice
took my hand and led me down a dimly lit hall. I could hear
Semyon and his nymphet conversing in Hungarian and giggling
behind me. I was expecting to be led to a bedroom, but instead
was shown through a double oak door of prodigious thickness into
a room which resembled a western saloon in 1930’s “B” movies.
There was a bartender, complete with handlebar moustache, upon an
eastern bloc visage. There were four round oak tables with
oilcloth tablecloths and comfortable, if badly worn, armchairs.
A jukebox stocked with seventy-eight RPM records that were very
old and scratched played big band music from the forties. At
this moment the strains of Harry James’ “You Made Me Love You”
wafted through the room. There were two other gentlemen in the