Read The Unforgiving Minute Online
Authors: Unknown
party connections, he was able to live the life of a king. His
problem was that he was lonely and had very few friends. I had
the feeling he genuinely liked me and needed the small amount of
friendship we gave each other.
There was a small shower in the steam room with a pull
chain which spewed ice water. We would periodically run the cold
water over us to cool off our bodies before moving up to the next
higher row of seats.
After he finished with his life story, I started to tell
him mine. After a point, I suddenly realized that I had spent
too much time in the steam room and virtually ran back into the
shower room to cool off. When I emerged from the shower, I was
so dizzy I couldn’t stand and my heart was pounding at a fast
rate. I sat down on a stool to wait for Semyon and felt myself
losing consciousness.
When I opened my eyes, I found myself lying on a cot in
what looked like a dispensary or first-aid room. I was covered
by a towel and a young man, obviously a physician with a
stethoscope around his neck, was talking to Semyon in Hungarian.
They turned toward me as I awakened.
Semyon grinned and took my hand. “No problems, my friend.
Too much steam, too much alcohol, not enough sex.” With that he
burst into his usual laughter.
I hurriedly dressed and with a great deal of embarrassment
left with Semyon and sat shakily in the passenger seat of his
Lada.
Semyon looked genuinely concerned for me as he
periodically glanced over from the driver’s seat. He was
apologetic that he had so foolishly let me stay so long in the
steam room when I wasn’t used to it.
I closed my eyes, feeling more relaxed than anything else
and pondered the whole idea of the cold war. I thought of all
the blood spilled for so many years in the ongoing war between
communism and capitalism. Here were two men from opposite ends
of the spectrum. He, a devoted Communist and member of the
dreaded Soviet establishment. Me, a dedicated American
conservative, anti-Communist and patriotic all the way. At that
moment, I felt we had both been had. Had by establishments who
had pitted us against each other for years. Semyon was right.
It was all political. It had nothing to do with hating each
other for the sake of our idealogies. Years later, when the cold
war ended altogether, his words still rang in my ears.
“Is all political.”
He dropped me off at the Hilton and I thanked him for the
exciting and boisterous time. He got out of the car and gave me
one of his Russian bear hugs. He promised to get in touch with
me before I left Budapest but I never saw him again. I’ve often
wondered about him since, but I’ve no idea about how to track him
down.
I returned to my room and ordered a continental breakfast
from room service.
I hungrily wolfed down the rolls and marmalade and drank
an entire pot of what turned out to be passable coffee. I
realized at that time that I had eaten neither dinner nor
breakfast. I had, however, neither the strength nor inclination
to seek more food. Instead, I placed the “Do not Disturb” sign
on the door and crawled into bed. I slept most of the day,
awakened in time to order a room-service dinner, and immediately
got back into bed. By the time morning had arrived, I had
regained my strength entirely and felt raring to go.
Just up the street from the Budapest Hilton is one of the
premier pastry shops in the world. It is called Ruszwurm. Its
pastries are called the best in Europe and its decor so beautiful
that it has been designated a national historic monument. I sat
down on one of its cherrywood benches upholstered in striped silk
and ordered a double order of strudel and coffee. It made a
memorable and marvelous breakfast.
After three days in Budapest I hadn’t seen anything of the
city yet and I knew it was time to get moving. I really had no
idea where to go so I decided to sign up for something I never
did before. I would take a sightseeing bus trip. I really hate
those trips, complete with wisecracking tour guides in several
languages and stops at shops where the guide gets a piece of the
action. In a country like this, however, with an unintelligible
language and tourist sites that were virtually unknown to the
rest of the world, I decided that it was sensible to take such a
trip.
I leisurely finished my breakfast and walked slowly past
the Matthias Church to the hotel, breathing in the brisk December
air. For once the sun was shining. There was nary a breeze and
I felt alive and vibrant. The interlude with Semyon had really
shaken me out of my doldrums.
I arranged with the concierge to board a tour bus in front
of the hotel at ten o’clock. When I boarded, I noted that the
bus was about a third full, mostly with American and German
tourists. My bus mates-were all quite elderly and some of the
Americans, from their accents, were either tracing their roots or
visiting the old country. The tour guide was a sallow young man
with a bad complexion, dressed in a dark green uniform and
speaking through an ancient-looking microphone that resembled the
old radio mikes.
He explained that during our travels we would cross back
and forth between Buda and Pest over each of the four major
bridges over the Danube: the Chain Bridge, the Margaret Bridge,
the Arpad Bridge, and the Elizabeth Bridge.
As we drove through Buda to the Margaret Bridge, he told
the mandatory quips that these guides are famous for. The
passengers, as usual, thought he was hilarious and encouraged
him. I, of course, didn’t crack a smile. We drove through Buda
and over the Margaret Bridge and from a ramp descended down on to
Margaret Island, which is an enormous park and resort area. It
was winter, of course, but I could readily imagine its beauty and
tranquility in the summertime.
The bus weaved through roads in this small paradise
nestled in Danube. As we rolled quietly through the trees,
stripped by winter, I felt as if I were gliding through a dream.
I sat in the nearly empty bus with no seat-mate, feeling that all
of this sightseeing was no good unless you shared it with
someone. I thought that possibly all of my adventures were
serving to teach me something. Taking off into the world alone
was no fun unless you found someone to share it with; whether it
was a woman or a male like Semyon didn’t make any difference.
The fact was that being alone was only good when you had someone
to fall back on. My depression of a few days before was quickly
returning. A new emotion was governing me. I really wanted to
go home but I was afraid to do it. I knew at this moment that it
was only a matter of time. I missed my children terribly and I
was starting to forget the bad parts of my relationship with
Julie and remember only the good parts.
The bus left Margaret Island and stopped at all of the
sights in Pest across the river. We saw the Parliament Building,
the magnificent Byzantine St. Stephen’s Basilica with its
incredible interior and works of art, the Royal Palace, and the
National Gallery. We stopped for lunch at a large restaurant
which obviously catered to tour buses and had a meal of Hungarian
Gulyas, washed down with a cheap Hungarian wine that really
wasn’t bad. Most of the tourists knew each other and travelled
in small packs, so there was really no one to talk to. I
couldn’t wait to get back to the hotel. I had to get out of
Budapest. I had no idea where to go next but I desperately
needed someplace new, and fast.
When the bus dropped me off back at the hotel, I felt
mentally and physically exhausted. I stopped at the concierge
desk and discussed travel plans with her. It seemed there was
kind of a minor-league version of the Orient Express that went
from Budapest to Paris via Vienna. It wasn’t the ornate, old—
style Orient Express but, nevertheless, was called the Orient
Express. I arranged passage on that train, booking a private
compartment for the following morning. It would be a trip of one
night’s stay on the train and would arrive in Paris in about
eighteen hours. I would spend one more night in Paris and then
go on to Florence and then to Rome.
I ate what turned out to be a fine meal in the hotel
dining room. It was the best food I had tasted in Budapest. I
ordered a bottle of the surprisingly good Hungarian red wine and
felt relaxed for the first time in a long time. It was a cold,
clear night and there was a lovely view of the Danube through the
restaurant window.
If there were someone to share it with, I could see
spending more time in this country. I would have liked to rent a
car and drive through rural Hungary. Here I was running from one
lonely place to get to another. I had been lucky for some time
and latched onto companionship, not noticing that I was really,
for all practical purposes, alone. I knew not what would await
me in my further travels but I was hurtling headlong into a new
adventure.
When the bus returned to the hotel that afternoon, I
decided to invite Semyon to dinner. I tried to reach him by
phone at the Russian embassy. I had great trouble finding anyone
who spoke English but when I finally found someone he never heard
of anyone by that name. I was assured that he was in no way a
member of the embassy staff. I then called the United States
embassy and explained that I was trying to reach a Soviet citizen
who was a friend of mine and would they check for me. The woman
I spoke to was incredibly polite and helpful but she too came up
empty searching for Semyon. Like the women I had met and briefly
loved on this odyssey, he too was gone. These temporary
companions were like a great meal: something you ate and enjoyed
and remembered fondly for a while and then disappeared into your
memory, ever fading away.
I retired to my room early, too tired to read, and fell
into a deep sleep. I arose early, showered and dressed in my
best clothes.
When the cab pulled away from the hotel, I felt strangely
sad, as if I had missed something very special.
Chapter 8
I sat in the ample train compartment surrounded by junk
food. The law in Hungary stated that no Hungarian money was to
be taken out of the country. I felt that there would be enough
shops in the railroad station to spend the forty dollars’ worth
of Hungarian money in my pocket. There was no limit to what
forty dollars would buy in Hungary in 1985. To compound that
felony, there were nothing but food and cheap souvenir stands in
the railway station.
I ended up giving the bulk of my money to the porter as an
enormous tip but nevertheless stocked myself with many bottles of
orange soda and countless chocolate cakes. I looked like a
confectionery salesman on a business trip. The station had
resembled most railroad stations in large European cities, except
for the preponderance of Russian soldiers in their service caps
of unusually large diameter.
This version of the Orient Express was not at all what I
expected. It seems there are many different versions of the
Orient Express. This one was very much like an ordinary train
except that it was old enough to have wood panelling and the
seats seemed to be at least a replica of the old plush seats of
years gone by.
I was really looking forward to the overnight trip in a
sleeping car. I travelled several times on the old pullman
trains as a boy and had pleasant memories of sleeping on the
train to the hypnotic clicking of the wheels and slight rolling
of the train.
In no time at all, we approached the Austrian border and
the train came to a full stop. The view from the window was
frightening. The border was fenced with barbed wire, obviously
electrified. I saw soldiers or police with mirrors on long poles
looking thoroughly underneath each car. They climbed on top of
the train and walked its length. The same police that had so
cordially welcomed me made a thorough search of the train and
asked many questions, including those about the possession of
Hungarian money. Although they did not physically search me, I
was glad I had disposed of mine. There were no pleasant smiling
faces now. They were seriously looking for anyone trying to
leave Hungary illegally. As the police were carefully searching
my compartment and luggage, I saw a young man with a backpack and
a Canadian flag on his sleeve, snapping pictures out of the
window of the corridor. One of the policemen glanced up and
swiftly entered the corridor from my compartment. He grabbed the
young man roughly by the shoulder and grabbed the camera, opening
it and roughly extracting the film. He glared at the Canadian
and sent him scurrying back to his own compartment with the now—
empty camera.
The police left my compartment after scrutinizing my
papers with great care and I breathed a sigh of relief. Forty
minutes passed while they were obviously going through this
ritual throughout the train. Finally, the train moved forward
and we crossed the Austrian border. The Austrian customs agents
delayed us another forty minutes and, finally, we were truly on
our way.
An Austrian crew came aboard and the porter for my
compartment introduced himself. He explained that he would be
our porter until we reached the French border. In France, a
French crew would come aboard to take us the rest of the way
until Paris.
I took one of the large bottles of orange soda and a
chocolate cake out of the cache of junk food. I had no bottle
opener and no napkin, so I entered the small toilet provided with
the compartment and, after using a protruding door lock to open
the soda bottle, took a drinking glass and towel from the
lavatory and spread out my feast. One gulp of the alleged soda
almost gagged me. The only thing orange about this soda was its
color. I realized that I had six giant-size bottles of this
swill to dispose of. I took a bite of my chocolate pastry and
almost gagged. It tasted like chocolate-flavored sawdust. I
only had twenty-four of these to dispose of.
After brushing my teeth, I carefully packed my goodies
into the carton I brought them aboard in and furtively carried
them through the train. I placed the carton in between cars and
felt like a criminal as I hurried back to my compartment. When I
went back to check on the carton about an hour later, it was
gone. I’ve often wondered who took it and what happened to it.
What really piqued my curiosity was, did someone actually ingest
that stuff?
Soon the train was speeding through the Austrian
countryside. The picture-book towns got prettier after Vienna.
As the Austrian Alps loomed outside my window, I had the feeling
that I was watching a National Geographic special. There was an
aura of cleanliness and fresh air even though I couldn’t smell a
thing through the train window.
I had the feeling of coziness I always have in train
compartments. I appreciated the fact that I had the compartment
to myself. At this particular time I really enjoyed my solitude.
Loneliness is a strange thing. There are times when you
desperately want someone to share your time with. Usually, at
those times, there is no one around. At other times, you feel
like being alone and someone usually annoys you. This was a rare
time. I was alone and actually wanted it that way.
I reached into my collection of great books and realized
that in three-and-one-half months I had only finished two of
them, Madame Bovary and The Heart of Darkness. I rummaged
through the books and selected Crime and Punishment. I figured
that since I wasn’t feeling depressed a Russian novel wouldn’t
plunge me into the doldrums. I read for an hour and dozed off,
dreaming of home and Julie for the first time in months. I woke
up feeling sad and lonely and decided to lay down Crime and
Punishment for another day. I wasn’t hungry at lunchtime and
dozed and read most of the day.
As I awakened for the umpteenth time, I heard a knock on
the glass panel. It was the conductor telling me that dinner was
being served in the dining car. I thanked him gratefully and
departed for the diner.
It was a charming-looking railroad car. The tables were
covered with white linen and each had a bud vase with flowers.
The walls were oak panelled and held a small lamp resembling a
gas light over each table. The floor was carpeted with flowered,
albeit well-worn, green carpeting. Each table seated four on
dark oak armchairs with green plush cushions. The dining car
steward seated me alone. There were about eight people in the
car eating dinner quite decorously and only the light clinking of
silverware could be heard.
I ordered a beer and a fine Czech pilsner was served to
me, ice cold. As I sat pondering the menu, the steward seated a
couple at my table. They nodded to me and conversed with each
other in German, ignoring me during their animated conversation.
The waiter took their drink orders. She ordered a cold white
wine and he the same beer as I.
The waiter took my dinner order, which was a fine
schnitzel with red cabbage. The couple ordered in German.
As soon as the waiter left, they turned to me and the man
offered his hand and said, “Don Wetzel, and this is my wife,
Marie. Sorry, we didn’t realize you were an American until we
heard you speak.”
I laughed. “And I can’t believe you’re Americans; you
could have fooled me.”
She spoke in lightly accented English. “We both came to
America when we were very young … right before the war.”
He was slight of build and very dignified. His hair was
white even though his face was very youthful. She was extremely
attractive, although you certainly wouldn’t call her beautiful.
She was small and gamin-like and exquisitely dressed.
It seemed they had boarded in Vienna, where they were
visiting friends and relatives and were stopping off in Paris for
a brief time before going home.
We made small talk as we ate and I came up with a cover
story that I was travelling on business.
I found them attentive toward each other but without any
outward signs of affection. I wondered what the story was behind
their marriage. I thought that it would be an exciting thing to
get into any marriage with a kind of x-ray vision and find out
what it was really like. Was its public image the same as its
private image? I wondered also whether my own marriage was
typical of marriages of long duration or if it was out of the
ordinary. Were there really people out there who were as
enthralled with each other after thirty years of marriage as they
were the day they met?
The waiter brought the check and I asked if I might buy my
new-found friends a drink in the club car.
Don smiled affably. “I’m very tired and feel like
relaxing in my compartment but if Marie would like to join you
that would be fine.”
I was pleasantly surprised when she said, “Yes, I’d like
that very much.”
“Good then,” said Don as he got up to leave. “I’ll see
you later then.”
He shook my hand warmly and disappeared through the cars.
We walked through the diner to the bar car and found a
love seat with a small cocktail table bolted to the floor in
front of it.
She ordered a Pernod and water and I took the same.
While we waited for our drinks, I decided to ask a very
personal question.
“I thought it was kind of strange, your husband letting
you have a drink with a complete stranger of the opposite sex?
Is he always like that?”
She smiled and for the first time I noticed her face. She
had jet-black hair over a face that appeared reasonably young,
maybe late forties. Her skin was as tan as if she’d been to a
tropic island. Her eyes were silver-blue and beamed right
through you like a laser beam. Her teeth were snow white and she
had high, tight cheekbones. Her skin was so tight, I suspected a
facelift. There was no doubt about it. She was exquisitely
beautiful in a regal way.
“Of course, he is. He doesn’t own me; he’s married to me.
On the other hand, I don’t own him either. We are very
comfortable with each other.”
The drinks came and we touched glasses in a toast.
We chatted for several hours, drinking all the while.
The Wetzels had a large apartment on the west side of
Central Park and had no children. He was a stockbroker and she
was a vice president of a theatrical agency. They were obviously
quite well off. As I was sipping my third Pernod, I found myself
becoming enamored with Marie Wetzel and found myself plotting to
get her to my compartment and my bed. The thought of this
exquisite little lady naked was titillating to my mind and body.
The waiter brought the check and we walked out of the bar
car. Her compartment was about five cars down and we walked
leisurely, kind of tipsy from all of the drinks, and chatted
while walking. When we reached the second car, two other people
were walking toward us. The corridor between the compartments
and the other side of the train was not quite wide enough for two
people, no less four. Marie scrunched against the opposite wall
to let the people by and I leaned in the same direction,
inadvertently pinning her to the window on my right. When the
people passed by, I didn’t move. We looked into each other’s
eyes. I was intoxicated in more ways than one. I could smell
her perfume and feel her hard, perfectly muscled body against
mine. She stared at me with those cold blue eyes. Her look was
neither passion nor anger but rather a look of ethereal
detachment. I bent and kissed her full on the lips. She neither
pushed me away nor responded. Her lips were as cold as her eyes.
I stayed with my lips pressed to her for what seemed like a very
long time, waiting for some sort of response, positive or
negative. Finally, I stood and looked at her, questioning her
with my eyes.
She looked at me, almost apologetically. “I’m so sorry,
but I can’t. I only wish I could; I really do.”
I didn’t understand. “Of course you can; why not? What’s
wrong with a little fling when two people are attracted to each
other?”
“That’s the point,” she said. “I’m not attracted to you.
You’re attracted to me.”
I hardly thought that every woman in the world was
enamored with me. I realized that everyone sees everyone else
differently, but I had enough experience to read the face and
body language of a woman when she was interested. I was more
surprised than insulted, although I must admit that my ego was at
least slightly bruised. I couldn’t believe I had read the whole
situation incorrectly.
“I apologize,” I said. “I thought I was getting signals
from you that I obviously wasn’t. I’m embarrassed.”
She took my hand and held it gently. “You really don’t
understand. I think you are very attractive. It isn’t you per