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Chapter no 53

Anxious People

tara had just stepped out onto the balcony when Jack saw her. That was just after she had told the bank robber out in the hall not to do anything silly, and she needed fresh air, more than ever. If all you saw was the rear view of Zara heading toward the balcony, youโ€™d probably think she was impatient. You needed to see her face to understand that she was feeling fragile. She had surprised herself back there, had lost control, felt things. For anyone else that might perhaps merely have been vaguely uncomfortable, like when you discover youโ€™re starting to share the same taste in music as your parents, or biting into something you think is chocolate but turns out to be liver pรขtรฉ, but for Zara it unleashed a feeling of complete panic. Was she starting to develop a sense of empathy?

She rubbed her hands carefully with sanitizer, counted the windows of the building on the other side of the street over and over again, tried to take deep breaths. She had been in the apartment too long, these people had shrunk her customary distance, and she wasnโ€™t used to that. Out on the balcony she pressed herself up against the wall of the building so no one down in the street could see her over the railing. She clamped the headphones over her ears and turned the volume up until the shrieking noise of the music drowned out the shrieking noise inside her head. Until the bass was thudding harder than her heart.

And just there, perhaps she found it. A truce with herself.

 

She could see winter making itself comfortable across the town. She liked the silence of this time of year, but had never appreciated its smugness. When the snow arrives autumn has already done all the work, taking care of all the leaves

and carefully sweeping summer away from peopleโ€™s memories. All winter had to do was roll in with a bit of freezing weather and take all the credit, like a man whoโ€™s spent twenty minutes next to a barbecue but has never served a full meal in his life.

She didnโ€™t hear the balcony door open, but she felt a furry ear on her hair as Lennart stepped out and stood beside her. He tapped gently on one of the earphones.

โ€œWhat?โ€ she snapped.

โ€œDo you smoke?โ€ Lennart asked, because even though he hadnโ€™t managed to remove the rabbitโ€™s head, there was a small hole in the snout that he was fairly certain heโ€™d be able to smoke through.

โ€œCertainly not!โ€ Zara said, putting the headphone back over her ear.

Lennart was surprised, even if that wasnโ€™t visible through the unchanging ambivalence of the rabbitโ€™s head. Zara looked like someone who smoked, not because she liked it so much as to make the air worse for other people. The rabbit tapped on the headphone again and she removed it with the utmost reluctance.

โ€œWhat are you doing out on the balcony, then?โ€ he wondered.

Zara took a long, hard look at him, starting from his white socks, via his bare legs and his nonelasticated underpants, to his bare torso, where the chest hair had started to go gray.

โ€œDo you really think youโ€™re in any position to question other peopleโ€™s life choices?โ€ she asked, but didnโ€™t sound anywhere near as annoyed as she had hoped, which was annoying.

He scratched his big, lifeless rabbitโ€™s ears and replied: โ€œI donโ€™t smoke, either, not really. Just at parties. And when Iโ€™m being held hostage!โ€

He laughed, she didnโ€™t. He fell silent. She put the headphone back on her ear, but of course he tapped on it again immediately.

โ€œCan I stand out here with you for a while? Iโ€™m worried Roger might hit me again if I go back in there.โ€

Zara didnโ€™t answer, just put the headphone back in place, and the rabbit tapped on it at once.

โ€œAre you here on safari, then?โ€

She glared at him in surprise. โ€œWhat does that mean?โ€

โ€œJust an observation. Thereโ€™s always someone like you at every apartment viewing. Someone who doesnโ€™t want the apartment, but is just curious. On safari. Test-driving a lifestyle. You get to recognize that sort of thing in my job.โ€

The look in Zaraโ€™s eyes was poisonous, but her mouth remained closed. Being seen through isnโ€™t pleasant, you tend to pull your clothes a little tighter when it happens, especially if youโ€™re usually the one who sees through other people. Her instinct was to say something cruel to put a bit of distance between them, but instead she found herself asking: โ€œArenโ€™t you cold?โ€

He shook his head and she had to duck to avoid one of his ears. Then he patted his furry face and chuckled: โ€œNope. They say seventy percent of your body heat gets lost through your head, so seeing as Iโ€™m stuck in here, I suppose Iโ€™m only losing thirty percent right now.โ€

That isnโ€™t the sort of thing a man dressed in tight underwear usually boasts about in freezing temperatures, Zara noted. She put the headphones back on again, hoping that would be enough to get rid of him, but even before he tapped on the headphone again she had already guessed that his next sentence was going to start with the word โ€œI.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m really an actor. This business of disrupting apartment viewings is only a sideline.โ€

โ€œHow interesting,โ€ Zara said in a tone that only the child of a telesales operative would interpret as an invitation to go on talking.

โ€œTimes are tough for people in the cultural sector,โ€ the rabbit nodded.

Zara pulled the headphones down around her neck in resignation and snorted.

โ€œSo thatโ€™s your excuse for exploiting the fact that times are tough for people selling apartments, too? How come you people in the โ€˜cultural sectorโ€™ never think capitalism is any good except whenย youโ€™veย the ones pro1ting from it?โ€

It just slipped out, she didnโ€™t really know why. Between his ears she caught a glimpse of the bridge. The ears wavered thoughtfully in the December wind.

โ€œSorry, but you donโ€™t strike me as the sort of person who feels sorry for people trying to sell apartments,โ€ he said.

Zara snorted again, more angrily.

โ€œI donโ€™t care about sellers or buyers. But I do care about the fact that you donโ€™t seem to appreciate that your โ€˜sidelineโ€™ is manipulating the economic system!โ€

The rabbitโ€™s head was stuck in a rictus grin while Lennart was thinking hard inside it. Then he said what Zara considered to be the stupidest thing that could ever come out of anyoneโ€™s mouth, rabbit or human: โ€œWhat haveย Iย got to do with the economic system?โ€

Zara massaged her hands. Counted the windows.

โ€œThe market is supposed to be self-regulating, but people like you spoil the balance between supply and demand,โ€ she said wearily.

Of course the rabbit responded at once by saying the most predictable thing possible: โ€œThatโ€™s not true. If I wasnโ€™t doing this, someone else would. Iโ€™m not breaking the law. An apartment is the largest investment most people make, and they want the best price, so Iโ€™m just oPering a service thatโ€”โ€

โ€œApartments arenโ€™t supposed to be investments,โ€ Zara replied gloomily. โ€œWhat are they supposed to be, then?โ€

โ€œHomes.โ€

โ€œAre you some sort of communist?โ€ the rabbit chuckled.

Zara felt like punching him on the nose for that, but instead she pointed between his ears and said: โ€œWhen the 1nancial crisis hit ten years ago, a man jumped oP that bridge because of a property market crash on the other side of the world. Innocent people lost their jobs and the guilty were given bonuses. You know why?โ€

โ€œNow youโ€™re exaggeratโ€”โ€

โ€œBecause people like you donโ€™t care about the balance in the system.โ€

Lennart chuckled superciliously inside the rabbitโ€™s head. He still hadnโ€™t realized who heโ€™d embarked on a discussion with.

โ€œYou need to calm down, the 1nancial crisis was the banksโ€™ fault, I donโ€™t make theโ€”โ€

โ€œThe rules? Is that what you were about to say? You donโ€™t make the rules, you just play the game?โ€ Zara interrupted wearily, seeing as sheโ€™d rather drink

nitroglycerin and go on a trampoline than have to listen to yet another man lecturing her about 1nancial responsibilities.

โ€œYes! Well, no! Butโ€ฆโ€

Zara had spent enough of her life in committee rooms with the target market for cuP links to be able to predict the rest of this guyโ€™s monologue, so she decided to save her time and his larynx: โ€œLet me guess where youโ€™re going with this: you donโ€™t care about the seller of this apartment, you donโ€™t care about Roger and Anna-Lena, either, you only care about yourself. But youโ€™re going to try to defend yourself by saying that it isnโ€™t possible to cheat the housing market, because theย mavbetย doesnโ€™t really exist, itโ€™s aย constvuct. Just numbers on a computer screen. Soย youย donโ€™t have any responsibility, do you?โ€

โ€œNoโ€ฆ,โ€ Lennart began, but didnโ€™t even manage to take a breath before Zara stormed on.

โ€œThen youโ€™ll dredge up some pop-psychological nonsense about money not having any value because thatโ€™s also a construct. And then we get to the history lesson, where clever old you gets to teach silly, ignorant me about economic theory and how the stock market came about. Maybe you feel like telling me about Hanoi 1902, when the city tried to 1ght a plague of rats by oPering the inhabitants a reward for every rat they killed and whose tail they handed over to the police. And what did that lead to? People started breeding rats! Do you have any idea how many men have told me that story to illustrate how sel1sh and untrustworthy ordinary people are? Do you know how many men like you every single woman on the planet meets every day, who think that every thought that pops into your tiny little male brains is a lovely present you can give us?โ€

Lennart had backed away three steps toward the railing by this point. But Zara had got into her stride now, so all he had time to say was: โ€œIโ€”,โ€ before she snapped: โ€œYou what? You what?ย Youโ€™veย not the greedy one,ย euevyone elseย is? Is that what you were about to say?โ€

The rabbit shook its ears.

โ€œNo. No, Iโ€™m sorry. I didnโ€™t know anyone had jumped oP that bridge. Did you knowโ€ฆ?โ€

Zaraโ€™s cheeks were throbbing, her throat was bright red beneath the headphones. She was no longer talking to Lennart, but exactly who she was

talking to probably wasnโ€™t clear even to her, but it felt like sheโ€™d been waiting ten years to yell at someone. Anyone at all. Herself most of all. So she roared: โ€œPeople likeย youย andย meย are the problem, donโ€™t you get that? We always defend ourselves by saying weโ€™re only oPering a service. That weโ€™re just one tiny part of the market. That everything is peopleโ€™s own fault. That theyโ€™re greedy, that they shouldnโ€™t have given us their money. And thenย meย have the nerve to wonder why stock markets crash and the city is full of ratsโ€ฆโ€

Her eyes were wild with rage, and little clouds of smoke kept puffing breathlessly out of her nostrils. The rabbit didnโ€™t reply, those unblinking eyes just looked at her as she tried to get her pulse under control. Then there was a hacking sound from inside the head, and at 1rst Zara thought the old bastard was having a stroke, then realized that this was what Lennart sounded like when he was laughing, really properly, from deep in his stomach. He held his arms out. โ€œI donโ€™t know what youโ€™re talking about anymore, to be honest. But I give

up, you win, you win!โ€

Zaraโ€™s eyes narrowed, from fear as much as anger. It was easier to talk to the rabbit than other people, because she didnโ€™t have to look Lennart in the eye. She wasnโ€™t prepared for what that was going to do to her. She leaned forward and stretched her 1ngers out on her thighs, bent and straightened them, over and over again. Then she said in a quieter voice: โ€œI win, do I? Do Anna-Lena and Roger win? Heโ€™s trying to get rich and sheโ€™s trying to make him happy, and all theyโ€™re really doing is postponing an inevitable divorce. But that probably just makes you happy, because then theyโ€™ll have to buyย tmoย apartments.โ€

At that, something happened. Lennart raised his voice for the 1rst time. โ€œNo! Thatโ€™s not enough! Becauseโ€ฆ becauseโ€ฆ I donโ€™t believe that!โ€

โ€œSo what doย youย believe, then?โ€ Zara snapped back, andโ€”regardless of whatever it was that had led her to this pointโ€”her voice 1nally broke. She screwed her eyes shut and clenched her 1sts around the headphones. She had been waiting ten years for someone to ask her that question. So it almost Aoored her when he said:

โ€œLove.โ€

Lennart picked up and dropped the word so carelessly, as if it werenโ€™t a big deal at all. Zara wasnโ€™t prepared for it, and that sort of thing can make a person

angry. Lennartโ€™s voice became more muAed inside the rabbitโ€™s head, hurt now: โ€œYouโ€™re talking like Iโ€™d be happy if people got divorced. No one can go to two thousand apartment viewings and not realize that thereโ€™s more love in the world than the opposite.โ€

Not even Zara had an answer to that. And he still didnโ€™t seem to be freezing, the idiot in the rabbitโ€™s head, which just made her more annoyed. Stop talking about love and feel cold, for Godโ€™s sake, like any normal idiot, she thought, and prepared to 1re back with some devastating remark. But all she heard herself ask was: โ€œWhat do you base that on?โ€

The rabbitโ€™s ears quivered.

โ€œAll the apartments that arenโ€™t for sale.โ€

 

Zaraโ€™s 1ngers fumbled around her neck. It wasnโ€™t an entirely ridiculous answer, which obviously annoyed her. Why couldnโ€™t Lennart have the decency to be a complete idiot? An idiot who is also a romantic is almost unbearable, and that โ€œalmostโ€ can drive a woman with headphones mad.

So she remained silent, gazing oP toward the bridge. Then she let out a resigned sigh and pulled two cigarettes out from her bag. She stuck one in the rabbitโ€™s snout and the other in her own mouth. The rabbit was smart enough not to start going on about her earlier claim that sheย didnโ€™tย smoke. She appreciated that. When she gave him the lighter he managed to singe the fur on his nose and had to pat the Aames out with his hands. She appreciated that as well.

They smoked without any sense of urgency. Then Lennart said, heavily but with no trace of accusation, as he looked out across the rooftops: โ€œYou can think what you like about me, but Anna-Lena is one of the few clients Iโ€™ve got who Iโ€ฆ canโ€™t help rooting for. She doesnโ€™t want to make her husband rich, she just wants to make him feel needed. Everyone takes it for granted that sheโ€™s submissive and oppressed and that sheโ€™s always had to stand back and make sacri1ces for his career, but do you know what job she used to do?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ Zara confessed.

โ€œShe was a senior analyst for a big American industrial company. I didnโ€™t believe it at 1rst, because sheโ€™s as scatty as a box of kittensโ€ฆ but you wonโ€™t 1nd a smarter, better-educated person in this apartment, I can assure you of that. When their kids were young his career started to take oP, but hers was going even better, so Roger turned down a promotion so he could spend more time at home with the children, and she could go on all her business trips. It was only going to be for a few years, but her career started to go even better while his was treading water, and the more diPerence there was between their salaries, the harder it was for them to swap places. When the kids had grown up and Anna-Lena had accomplished all her goals, she turned to Roger and said โ€˜Now itโ€™s your turn.โ€™ But he wasnโ€™t oPered any more promotions. Heโ€™d got too old. They didnโ€™t have any way of talking about that, because theyโ€™d never practiced the right words. So now sheโ€™s trying to make it up to him by moving all the time and renovating apartments, all so they haveโ€ฆ a project in common. Roger has no kids to look after anymore, so he feels worthless. And Anna-Lena just wants a home. You can say a lot of things about me, but donโ€™t you dare insinuate that Iโ€™m not rooting for those two.โ€

Zara lit another cigarette, mostly so she could keep her eyes busy staring at the glowing tip.

โ€œDid Anna-Lena tell you all that?โ€ โ€œYouโ€™d be surprised what people tell me.โ€ โ€œNo I wouldnโ€™t,โ€ Zara whispered.

She felt like telling him that she needs distance. That she canโ€™t stop massaging her hands. That she counts everything in every room because it calms her down. That she likes spreadsheets and turnover forecasts because she likes order. But she also felt like telling him that the economic system she has devoted her life to working in is the worldโ€™s biggest problem right now, because we made the system too strong. We forgot how greedy we are, but above all we forgot how weak we are. And now itโ€™s crushing us.

She felt like saying all this, but by this point in her life she had gotten used to the fact that people either didnโ€™t understand or didnโ€™t want to understand. So she stood there in silence. And, deep down, wished sheโ€™d stayed silent the whole time.

They each smoked another cigarette. Zara objected to his presence less than she would have expected, and that day had already oPered more new experiences than she felt ready to absorb, so her 1ngers immediately started to trace the edges of the headphones when the rabbitโ€™s ears wavered in her direction again. She could tell that he was trying to think of something to ask her, to keep the conversation going. That was what annoyed Zara most about men. Because they could only ever come up with two questions: โ€œWhat line of work are you in?โ€ and โ€œAre you married?โ€

 

But this peculiar Lennart plucked up the courage to ask instead: โ€œWhat are you listening to?โ€

 

Bloody hell,ย Zara thought.ย Why canโ€™t you just feel the cold and not be intevested in me?ย She opened her mouth, there was so much she wanted to say, but all that came out was: โ€œThe bank robberโ€™s going to give up soon. The police will come storming in any time now. You should go and put a pair of pants on.โ€

The rabbit nodded disappointedly. He left her with her headphones on, music at top volume, counting the windows over and over again. It may not be the sort of love story anyone would write poetry about. But they Aoored each other there and then.

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