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Chapter no 69

Anxious People

The windowsill outside the office is weighed down by snow. The psychologist is talking to her dad on the phone. โ€œDarling Nadia, my little bird,โ€ he says in the language of his homeland, because โ€œbirdโ€ is a more beautiful word there. โ€œI love you, too, Dad,โ€ Nadia says patiently. He never used to talk to her like that, but late in life even computer programmers become poets. Nadia assures him over and over that sheโ€™ll drive carefully when she sets oP to visit him the following day, but heโ€™d still prefer to come and fetch her. Dads are dads and daughters are daughters, and not even psychologists can quite come to terms with that.

Nadia hangs up. Thereโ€™s a knock on the door, like when someone who doesnโ€™t want to touch the door taps on it with the end of an umbrella. Zara is standing outside. Sheโ€™s holding a letter in her hand.

โ€œHello? Sorry, I thoughtโ€ฆ have we got an appointment booked for now?โ€ Nadia wonders, fumbling 1rst for her diary, then for her mobile to see what time it is.

โ€œNo, I justโ€ฆ,โ€ Zara replies quietly. A gentle tremble of the metal spokes of the umbrella gives her away. Nadia spots it.

โ€œCome in, come in,โ€ she says anxiously.

The skin under Zaraโ€™s eyes is full of tiny cracks, worn down by everything itโ€™s had to hold back, 1nally on the brink of bursting. She looks at the picture of the woman on the bridge for several minutes before she asks Nadia: โ€œDo you like your job?โ€

โ€œYes,โ€ Nadia nods, unsettled. โ€œAre you happy?โ€

Nadia wants to reach out and touch her, but refrains.

โ€œYes, Iโ€™m happy, Zara. Not all the time, but Iโ€™ve learned that you donโ€™t have to be happy all the time. But Iโ€™m happyโ€ฆ enough. Is that what you came here to ask?โ€

Zara looks past her.

โ€œYou asked me once why I like my job, and I said it was because I was good at it. But I unexpectedly found myself with some time to think recently, and I think I liked my job because I believed in it.โ€

โ€œHow do you mean?โ€ the psychologist asks, in her professional voice, despite the fact that she feels like saying, unprofessionally, that sheโ€™s really pleased to see Zara. That sheโ€™s been thinking about her a lot. And has been worrying about what she might do.

Zara reaches out her hand, as close to the picture as possible without actually touching the woman.

โ€œI believe in the place of banks in society. I believe in order. Iโ€™ve never had any objection to the fact that our customers and the media and politicians all hate us, thatโ€™s our purpose. Banks need to be the ballast in the system. They make it slow, bureaucratic, difficult to maneuver. To stop the world lurching about too much. People need bureaucracy, to give them time to think before they do something stupid.โ€

She falls silent. The psychologist sits down quietly on her chair.

โ€œForgive me for speculating, Zara, butโ€ฆ it sounds like somethingโ€™s changed.

In you.โ€

Zara looks her straight in the eye then, for the 1rst time.

โ€œThe housing market is going to crash again. Maybe not tomorrow, but itโ€™s going to crash again. We know that. Yet we still lend money. When people lose everything, we tell them it was their responsibility, that those are the rules of the game, that it was their own fault they were so greedy. But of course that isnโ€™t true. Most people arenโ€™t greedy, most people are justโ€ฆ like you said when we were talking about the picture: theyโ€™re just looking for something to cling on to. Something to 1ght for. They want somewhere to live, somewhere to raise their children, live their lives.โ€

โ€œHas anything happened to you since we last met?โ€ the psychologist asks.

Zara gives her a troubled smile. Because how do you answer that? So instead she answers a question thatโ€™s never been asked: โ€œEverythingโ€™s become lighter, easier, Nadia. The banks arenโ€™t ballast anymore. One hundred years ago practically everyone who worked in a bank understood how the bank made money. Now there are at most three people in each bank who really understand where it all comes from.โ€

โ€œAnd youโ€™re questioning your place there now, because you no longer think you understand?โ€ the psychologist guesses.

Zaraโ€™s chin moves sadly from side to side.

โ€œNo. Iโ€™ve handed in my notice. Because I realized that I was one of the three.โ€ โ€œWhat are you going to do from now on?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know.โ€

The psychologist 1nally has something important to say. Something she didnโ€™t learn at college but knows that everyone needs to hear, every so often.

โ€œNot knowing is a good place to start.โ€

 

Zara doesnโ€™t say anything more. She massages her hands, counts windows. The desk is narrow, the two women probably wouldnโ€™t have felt comfortable sitting so close to each other if it hadnโ€™t been there between them. Sometimes we donโ€™t need distance, just barriers. Zaraโ€™s movements are wary, Nadiaโ€™s cautious. Only after a long time has passed does the psychologist venture to speak again.

โ€œDo you remember asking me, one of the 1rst times we met, if I could explain what panic attacks were? I donโ€™t think I ever gave you a good answer.โ€

โ€œHave you got a better one now?โ€ Zara asks.

The psychologist shakes her head. Zara canโ€™t help smiling. Then Nadia says, as herself, in her own words rather than those of her psychology training or anyone else: โ€œBut you know what, Zara? Iโ€™ve learned that it helps to talk about it. Unfortunately I think most people would still get more sympathy from their colleagues and bosses at work if they show up looking rough one morning and say โ€˜Iโ€™m hungoverโ€™ than if they say โ€˜Iโ€™m suPering from anxiety.โ€™ But I think we pass people in the street every day who feel the same as you and I, many of them

just donโ€™t know what it is. Men and women going around for months having trouble breathing and seeing doctor after doctor because they think thereโ€™s something wrong with their lungs. All because itโ€™s so damn difficult to admit that something else isโ€ฆ broken. That itโ€™s an ache in our soul, invisible lead weights in our blood, an indescribable pressure in our chest. Our brains are lying to us, telling us weโ€™re going to die. But thereโ€™s nothing wrong with our lungs, Zara. Weโ€™re not going to die, you and I.โ€

The words drift around between them, dancing invisibly on their retinas before the silence takes them. Weโ€™re not going to die. Weโ€™re not going to die. Weโ€™re not going to die, you and I.

โ€œYet!โ€ Zara eventually points out, and the psychologist bursts out laughing. โ€œDo you know what, Zara? Maybe you could get a new job writing mottos

for fortune cookies?โ€ She smiles.

โ€œThe only note a cake eater needs to 1nd is โ€˜this is why youโ€™re fatโ€™โ€ฆ,โ€ Zara replies. Then she laughs, too, but the quivering tip of her nose gives her away. Her gaze darts 1rst through the window, then it sneaks back to glance at Nadiaโ€™s hands, then her neck, then her chin, never quite up to her eyes, but almost. The silence that follows is the longest theyโ€™ve shared. Zara closes her eyes, presses her lips together, and the skin beneath her eyes 1nally gives way. Her terror forms itself into fragile drops and sets oP toward the edge of the desk.

Very slowly she lets the envelope slip out of her hand. The psychologist picks it up hesitantly. Zara wants to whisper that it was because of the letter that she came here, that very 1rst time, when exactly ten years had passed since the man jumped. That she needs someone to read out loud what he wrote to her, and then, when her chest has caught 1re, stop her from jumping herself.

She wants to whisper the whole thing, about the bridge and about Nadia, and how Zara watched as the boy came running over and saved her. And how she has spent every single day since then thinking about the diPerence between people. But all she manages to say is: โ€œNadiaโ€ฆ youโ€ฆ Iโ€ฆโ€

 

Nadia feels like embracing the older woman on the other side of the desk, hugging her, but she doesnโ€™t dare. So instead, while Zara keeps her eyes closed, the psychologist gently slips her little 1nger beneath the back of the envelope and opens it. She pulls out a ten-year-old handwritten note. Four words.

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