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Chapter no 58

Anxious People

Inside the closet, obviously Julia regretted mentioning her former 1ancรฉe as soon as she said it, so she added: โ€œI was engaged when I met Ro. But thatโ€™s a long story. Forget I mentioned it.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™ve got plenty of time for long stories,โ€ Estelle assured her, because sheโ€™d found another bottle of wine in the chest.

โ€œYour 1ancรฉe wanted to jump oP a bridge?โ€ Anna-Lena repeated in alarm. โ€œYes. A bungee jump. With a rubber rope tied around your feet.โ€

โ€œThat sounds mad.โ€

Juliaโ€™s 1ngertips massaged her temples.

โ€œI didnโ€™t like the idea, either. But she was always wanting to do things. Zx9evience everything. It was on that trip that I realized I couldnโ€™t live with her, because I havenโ€™t got the energy to keep experiencing things the whole time. I started longing for everyday life, all the boring stuP, but she hated being bored. So I came back from Australia a week before her, blaming the fact that I had to work. And that was when I kissed Ro for the 1rst time.โ€

Julia started to giggle as she said that. Partly out of shame, but possibly also because it was the 1rst time in ages that sheโ€™d thought about how they fell in love. You tend to forget that when youโ€™re in the middle of the life that follows, when youโ€™re going to become a parent with someone, it suddenly feels impossible to remember that you ever loved anyone else.

โ€œHow did you meet? You and Ro?โ€ Estelle asked, wine staining the corners of her mouth.

โ€œThe 1rst time? She came into my shop. Iโ€™m a Aorist, and she wanted some tulips. That was several months before I went to Australia. I didnโ€™t think much about it, she wasโ€ฆ attractive, of course, anyone can see thatโ€ฆโ€

Estelle nodded eagerly: โ€œYes, that was the 1rst thing I thought! She really is extremely beautiful! And so exotic!โ€

Julia sighed. โ€œExotic? Because her hairโ€™s a diPerent color to yours and mine?โ€ Estelle looked unhappy. โ€œArenโ€™t you allowed to say that anymore?โ€

Julia didnโ€™t know how to begin to explain that her wife wasnโ€™t a piece of fruit, so instead she took a deep breath and carried on: โ€œEither way, she was attractive. Very attractive. Even more attractive than she is now. Not thatโ€ฆ donโ€™t tell her that, whatever you doโ€ฆ sheโ€™s still attractive! But I, well, Iโ€™d certainly have liked to, you knowโ€ฆ with her. But I was already taken. But she kept coming back to buy tulips. Several times a week, sometimes. And she made me laugh, out loud, out of nowhere, and you donโ€™t meet many people like that. I happened to mention that to my mom, and she said: โ€˜You canโ€™t live long with the ones who are only beautiful, Jules. But the funny ones, oh, they last a lifetime!โ€™โ€

โ€œYour momโ€™s a wise woman,โ€ Estelle said. โ€œYes.โ€

โ€œIs she retired?โ€ โ€œYes.โ€

โ€œWhat did she used to do?โ€ โ€œShe cleaned offices.โ€ โ€œWhat did your dad do?โ€ โ€œHe hit women.โ€

Estelle looked paralyzed, Anna-Lena appalled. Julia looked at the pair of them and thought about her mom, and how the most beautiful thing about her was the fact that she always stared life right in the eye, and no matter what it threw at her, refused to stop being a romantic. That takes the sort of heart that hardly anyone possesses.

โ€œPoor dear child,โ€ Estelle whispered. โ€œWhat a bastard,โ€ Anna-Lena muttered.

Julia shrugged, the way children who grew up too soon do, shaking the feelings oP.

โ€œWe walked out on him. He didnโ€™t come looking for us. I didnโ€™t even hate him, because Mom didnโ€™t let me. After everything heโ€™d done to her, she wouldnโ€™t even let me hate him. I always wanted her to meet someone new,

someone who was kind and made her laugh, but she always said I was enoughโ€ฆ But thenโ€ฆ when I told her about Ro, Mom saw something in me that made me see something in her. That probably soundsโ€ฆ I donโ€™t know how to explain it. Something sheโ€™d experienced once, and given up all hope of, if you get what I mean? And I thoughtโ€ฆ is this how it feels? That thing everyone talks about? The real thing?โ€

Anna-Lena wiped some wine from her chin. โ€œSo what happened?โ€

Julia blinked, 1rst quickly, then slowly.

โ€œMy 1ancรฉe was still in Australia. And Ro came into the shop. Iโ€™d spoken to Mom on the phone that morning, and she just laughed when I said I didnโ€™t know how Ro felt, or even if she felt anything at all. Mom just said: โ€˜Listen, no one likes tulips that much, Jules!โ€™ I suppose I tried to deny it, but Mom said I was practically being unfaithful already because I was spending so much time thinking about her. She said Ro was my โ€˜Aower shop.โ€™ And I cried. So I was standing there in the shop and Ro came in, and Iโ€ฆ well, I laughed so hard at something she said that I accidentally spat on her face. She was laughing, too. So I guess she plucked up the courage, because I couldnโ€™t do it, and asked if Iโ€™d like to go for a drink with her. I said yes, but I was so nervous when we got there that I got really drunk. I went outside to smoke, got into a row with a security guard, and wasnโ€™t let back in. So I pointed through the window at Ro, who was standing at the bar, and said she was my girlfriend. The guard went in and told her that, and then she came out, and then she was. I called my 1ancรฉe and broke oP the engagement. Sheโ€™s probably been having loads of fun ever since. And Iโ€ฆ damn, I love being boring with Ro. Does that sound mad? I love arguing with her about sofas and pets. Sheโ€™s my everyday. The wholeโ€ฆ world.โ€

โ€œI like the everyday,โ€ Anna-Lena admitted.

โ€œYour mom was right, the ones who make you laugh last a lifetime,โ€ Estelle repeated, thinking of a British author who had written that nothing in the world is so irresistibly contagious as laughter and good humor. Then she thought about an American author who had written that loneliness is like starvation, you donโ€™t realize how hungry you are until you begin to eat.

 

 

Julia was thinking about how her mom, when she told her she was pregnant, looked 1rst at Juliaโ€™s stomach, then at Roโ€™s, then asked: โ€œHow did you decide which of you was going toโ€ฆ get knocked up?โ€ Julia got annoyed, of course, and replied sarcastically: โ€œWe played rock-paper-scissors, Mom!โ€ Her mom looked at them both again with deadly seriousness and asked: โ€œSo who won?โ€

That still made Julia laugh. She said to the women in the closet: โ€œRoโ€™s going to be a brilliant mom. She can make any child laugh, just like my mom, because their sense of humor hasnโ€™t developed at all since they were nine.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re going to be a brilliant mom, too,โ€ Estelle assured her. The bags under Juliaโ€™s eyes moved softly as she blinked.

โ€œI donโ€™t know. Everything feels such a big deal, and other parents all seem soโ€ฆ funny the whole time. They laugh and joke and everyone says you should play with children, and I donโ€™t like playing, I didnโ€™t like it even when I was a child. So Iโ€™m worried the childโ€™s going to be disappointed. Everyone said it would be diPerent when I got pregnant, but I donโ€™t actually like all children. I thought that would change, but I meet my friendsโ€™ children now and I still think theyโ€™re annoying and have a lousy sense of humor.โ€

Anna-Lena spoke up, brieAy and to the point:

โ€œYou donโ€™t have to like all children. Just one. And children donโ€™t need the worldโ€™s best parents, just their own parents. To be perfectly honest with you, what they need most of the time is a chauPeur.โ€

โ€œThanks for saying that,โ€ Julia replied honestly. โ€œIโ€™m just worried my child isnโ€™t going to be happy. That itโ€™s going to inherit all my anxiety and uncertainty.โ€

Estelle gently patted Juliaโ€™s hair.

โ€œYour childโ€™s going to be absolutely 1ne, youโ€™ll see. And absolutely 1ne can cover any number of peculiarities.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s encouraging,โ€ Julia smiled. Estelle went on patting her hair softly.

โ€œAre you going to do all you can, Julia? Are you going to protect the child with your life? Are you going to sing to it and read it stories and promise that everything will feel better tomorrow?โ€

โ€œYes.โ€

โ€œAre you going to raise it so that it doesnโ€™t grow up to be one of those idiots who donโ€™t take their backpack oP when theyโ€™re on public transport?โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll do what I can,โ€ Julia promised.

Estelle was thinking about another author now, one who almost a hundred years ago wrote that your children arenโ€™t your children, theyโ€™re the sons and daughters of lifeโ€™s longing for itself.

โ€œYouโ€™re going to be 1ne. You donโ€™t have to love being a mother, not all the time.โ€

Anna-Lena interjected: โ€œI didnโ€™t like the poo, I really didnโ€™t. At 1rst it was okay, but when children are around a year old theyโ€™re like Labradors. Fully grown ones, I mean, not puppies, butโ€”โ€

โ€œOkay,โ€ Julia nodded, to get her to stop.

โ€œThereโ€™s something about the consistency at a certain age, it gets like glue, sticks under your 1ngernails, and if you rub your face on the way to workโ€ฆโ€

โ€œThanks! Thatโ€™s enough!โ€ Julia assured her, but Anna-Lena couldnโ€™t stop herself.

โ€œThe worst thing is when they bring friends home, and suddenly thereโ€™s a 1ve-year-old stranger sitting on your toilet demanding to be cleaned up. I mean, you can put up with your own kidsโ€™ poo, but other peopleโ€™sโ€ฆโ€

โ€œThanbs!โ€ Julia said emphatically.

Anna-Lena pursed her lips. Estelle giggled.

โ€œYouโ€™re going to be a good mom. And youโ€™re a good wife,โ€ Estelle added, even though Julia hadnโ€™t even mentioned that last anxiety. Julia was holding the palms of her hands around her stomach, and stared down at her 1ngernails.

โ€œDo you think? Sometimes it feels like all I ever do is nag Ro. Even though I love her.โ€

Estelle smiled.

โ€œShe knows. Believe me. Does she still make you laugh?โ€ โ€œYes. God, yes.โ€

โ€œThen she knows.โ€

โ€œYou have no idea, I mean, wow, she makes me laugh all the time. The 1rst time Ro and I were about toโ€ฆ you knowโ€ฆ,โ€ Julia smiled, but stopped when she

couldnโ€™t think of a word for what she was sure neither of the two older women would actually be horri1ed to hear.

โ€œWhat?โ€ Anna-Lena wondered, uncomprehendingly. Estelle nudged her in the side and winked.

โ€œYou know. The 1rst time they were going to go to Stocbholm.โ€ โ€œOh!โ€ Anna-Lena exclaimed, and blushed from her head to her feet.

But Julia didnโ€™t quite seem to hear. Her eyes lost their footing; there was a joke there somewhere in her memory, one Ro had made in the taxi that 1rst time that Julia had intended to talk about. But instead she found herself stumbling over the words.

โ€œIโ€ฆ itโ€™s so silly, Iโ€™d forgotten this. Iโ€™d done some laundry, and there were some white sheets hanging over the bedroom door to dry. And when Ro opened the door and they hit her in the face, she started. She tried not to let it show, but I felt her Ainch, so I asked what the matter was, and at 1rst she didnโ€™t want to say. Because she didnโ€™t want to burden me with anything, not as early as that, she was worried Iโ€™d break up with her before weโ€™d even got together. But I kept on nagging, of course, because Iโ€™m good at nagging, and in the end we sat up all night and Ro told me about how her family got to Sweden. They Aed across the mountains, in the middle of winter, and the children each had to carry a sheet, and if they heard the sound of helicopters they were supposed to lie down in the snow with the sheet over them, so they couldnโ€™t be seen. And their parents would run in diPerent directions, so that if the men in the helicopter started 1ring, theyโ€™d 1re at the moving targets. And not atโ€ฆ and I didnโ€™t know what toโ€ฆโ€

She cracked, like thin ice on a puddle of water, 1rst just some hairline wrinkles around her eyes, then the rest, all at once. The collar of her top turned a darker color. She was thinking about everything Ro had told her that night, the incomprehensible cruelties that terrible people are capable of inAicting on each other, and the utter insanity of war. Then she thought of how Ro, after all that, had somehow managed to grow up to be the sort of person who made other people laugh. Because her parents had taught her during their Aight through the mountains that humor is the soulโ€™s last line of defense, and as long as weโ€™re laughing weโ€™re alive, so bad puns and fart jokes were their way of expressing their

de1ance against despair. Ro told Julia all this that 1rst night, and after that Julia got to spend all of the worldโ€™s everydays with her.

 

 

Something like that can make you put up with living with birds.

 

 

โ€œAn aPair that started in a Aower shop,โ€ Estelle nodded slowly. โ€œI like that.โ€ She sat silent for several minutes. Then it burst out of her: โ€œI had an aPair once! Knut never knew.โ€

โ€œDear Lord!โ€ Anna-Lena exclaimed, now sensing that this was starting to get out of hand after all.

โ€œYes, it wasnโ€™t all that long ago, you know,โ€ Estelle grinned. โ€œWho was it?โ€ Julia asked.

โ€œA neighbor in our building. He read a lot, like me. Knut never read. He used to say authors were like musicians who never get to the point. But this other man, the neighbor, he always had a book tucked under his arm when we met in the elevator. So did I. One day he oPered me his book, saying: โ€˜Iโ€™ve 1nished this one, I think you should read it.โ€™ And so we started to swap books. He read such wonderful things. I donโ€™t have the words to describe it, but it was like going on a journey with someone. Where didnโ€™t matter. To outer space. It went on for a long time. I started to fold down the corners of pages when there was a bit I really liked, and he started to write little comments in the margins. Just the odd word. โ€˜Beautiful.โ€™ โ€˜True.โ€™ Thatโ€™s the power of literature, you know, it can act like little love letters between people who can only explain their feelings by pointing at other peopleโ€™s. One summer I opened a book and sand trickled out of it, and I knew heโ€™d liked it so much he hadnโ€™t been able to put it down. Every now and then I would get a book where some of the pages were crumpled, and I knew heโ€™d been crying. One day I told him that, in the elevator, and he replied that I was the only person who knew that about him.โ€

โ€œAnd that was when youโ€ฆ,โ€ Julia nodded with a naughty smile.

โ€œOh, no, no, noโ€ฆ,โ€ Estelle squeaked, and looked like she might have liked to 1nish the sentence by saying that she might possibly have mished it had happened, but of course that didnโ€™t change anything. โ€œWe were never, it never, I could neverโ€ฆโ€

โ€œWhy not?โ€ Julia asked.

Estelle smiled, proud and full of longing at the same time. It takes a certain age for that, a certain life.

โ€œBecause you dance with the person you went to the party with. And I went with Knut.โ€

โ€œSoโ€ฆ what happened?โ€ Anna-Lena wondered.

Estelleโ€™s breathing didnโ€™t show any sign of speeding up, she didnโ€™t have many big secrets left. After this one, possibly none at all.

โ€œOne day in the elevator he gave me a book, and inside it was a key to his apartment. He said he didnโ€™t have any family living nearby, and that he wanted someone in the building to have a spare key โ€˜in case anything happened.โ€™ I didnโ€™t say anything, and I didnโ€™t do anything, but I got the sense that maybeโ€ฆ maybe he would have liked it. If something had happened.โ€

She smiled. So did Julia.

โ€œSo in all that time, you neverโ€ฆ?โ€

โ€œNo, no, no. We exchanged books. Until he died a few years later. Something to do with his heart. His siblings put the apartment up for sale, but his furniture was still there at the viewing. So I went along, pretending to be interested in buying it. I walked around in his home, ran my hands over his kitchen counter, the hangers in his closet. In the end I found myself standing in front of his bookcase. Itโ€™s such an odd thing, the way you can know someone so perfectly through what they read. We liked the same voices, in the same way. So I let myself have a few minutes to think about what we could have been for each other, if everything had been diPerent, somewhere else in our lives.โ€

โ€œAnd then?โ€ Julia whispered. Estelle smiled. De1antly. Happily.

โ€œThen I went home. But I kept the key to his apartment. I never told Knut. It was my aPair.โ€

 

 

Silence settled in the closet for a while. In the end Anna-Lena plucked up the courage to say: โ€œIโ€™ve never had an aPair. But once I changed hairdressers, and I didnโ€™t dare walk past the old one for several years.โ€

It wasnโ€™t the strongest anecdote, but she wanted to feel that she was participating. She had never had time for an aPair, how on earth does anyone 1nd the time? All that stress, Anna-Lena thought, and a whole new man to deal with. She had spent her life working and rushing home, working and rushing home, and always felt guilty for not being good enough in either place. In those circumstances itโ€™s easy to feel sympathy for other people who arenโ€™t quite good enough. Thatโ€™s probably why, out of all the people in the apartment who had already had the thought, it was Anna-Lena who was the 1rst to say out loud: โ€œI think we should try to help the bank robber.โ€

Julia looked up, and their eyes met with a whole new sense of respect.

โ€œYes, so do I! I was just thinking that. I donโ€™t think any of this was the intention,โ€ Julia nodded.

โ€œI just donโ€™t know how we could go about helping her,โ€ Anna-Lena admitted.

โ€œNo, the police must have the building surrounded, so I donโ€™t think thereโ€™s any way she can escape, sadly,โ€ Julia sighed.

Estelle drank more wine. She turned the packet of cigarettes over in her hand, because of course youโ€™re not allowed to smoke in front of pregnant women, you really arenโ€™t, at least not until youโ€™re so drunk that you can claim with a clear conscience that you were too drunk to notice that there was one nearby.

โ€œMaybe she could just wear a disguise?โ€ she suddenly said, with just a hint of a slur on the s in โ€œdisguise.โ€

Julia shook her head uncomprehendingly. โ€œWhat? Who could wear a disguise?โ€

โ€œThe bank robber,โ€ Estelle said, taking another swig. โ€œWhat sort of disguise?โ€

Estelle shrugged.

โ€œThe real estate agent.โ€ โ€œThe real estate agent?โ€

Estelle nodded.

โ€œHave you seen any sign of a real estate agent in this apartment since the bank robber arrived?โ€

โ€œNoโ€ฆ no, now that you come to mention itโ€ฆโ€ Estelle drank more wine, then nodded again.

โ€œIโ€™m fairly certain that all the police outside will take it for granted that thereโ€™s a real estate agent present at an apartment viewing. So ifโ€ฆโ€

Julia stared at her. Then started to laugh.

โ€œSo if the bank robber pretends to give herself up and let all the hostages go, she can pretend to be the real estate agent and walk out with the rest of us! Estelle, youโ€™re a genius!โ€

โ€œThanks,โ€ Estelle said, and peered down into the bottle with one eye closed to see how much was left before she could start smoking.

Julia struggled to her feet as quickly as she could and hurried over to the door to call to Ro and explain the new plan, but just as she was about to open the door there was a knock on it. Not hard, but hard enough to make the three women jump as if a load of puppies and sparklers had been thrown into the closet. Julia opened the door a crack. The rabbit was standing outside looking awkward, insofar as it was possible to tell.

โ€œSorry, I donโ€™t want to disturb you. But Iโ€™ve been told to put some pants on.โ€ โ€œYour pants are in here?โ€ Julia wondered.

The rabbit scratched his neck.

โ€œNo, I had them in the bathroom, before the viewing started. But I washed my hands and managed to splash water on them, then I saw the scented candles on the washbasin, and thought I might be able to dry my pants by warming them up. And thenโ€ฆ wellโ€ฆ I managed to set my pants on 1re. So then I had to pour even move water over them to put the Aames out. So my pants ended up soaking wet. And then the viewing started and I heard you all out in the apartment, and then the bank robber started shouting, and there wasnโ€™t really timeโ€ฆ well, to cut a long story short, my pants are still wet. So I was thinkingโ€ฆโ€

The rabbitโ€™s head swayed in the direction of the suits hanging in the closet, which he was hoping he might be able to borrow instead. His ears accidentally

hit Juliaโ€™s forehead and she backed away, but the rabbit evidently interpreted this as an invitation to step inside.

โ€œYes, well, come in, why donโ€™t youโ€ฆ,โ€ Julia grunted. The rabbit looked around with interest.

โ€œIsnโ€™t this lovely!โ€ he said.

Anna-Lena disappeared beneath the suits and wiped her eyes. Estelle lit a cigarette, because she didnโ€™t think it mattered anymore, and when Anna-Lena aimed a disapproving glance in her direction Estelle said defensively: โ€œOh, itโ€™ll blow out through the air vent!โ€

The rabbit tilted his head slightly, then he asked: โ€œWhat air vent?โ€

Estelle coughed, it was unclear if that was because of the cigarette or the question: โ€œI meanโ€ฆ there seems to be some sort of ventilation in here, but it was only a guess. Thereโ€™s a breeze from up in the ceiling, though!โ€

โ€œWhat are you talking about?โ€ Julia asked.

Estelle coughed again. Then she stopped coughing. But there was still someone coughing, up in the ceiling.

 

 

They stared at each other, the rabbit and the three women, a diverse group of individuals, to put it mildly, huddled inside a closet at an apartment viewing that had been disrupted by the arrival of a bank robber. Stranger things had probably happened to people in the town, but not much stranger. Estelle had time to think that if Knut had opened the closet door just then he would have laughed out loud, there would have been breakfast everywhere, and she would have loved that. The coughing up in the ceiling continued, like when you try to stiAe it and it just gets worse. A cinema cough.

Julia dragged the stepladder to the back of the closet, Estelle got oP the chest, Anna-Lena helped the rabbit up. He pressed his hands against the ceiling until it gave way. There was a hatch, and above it a very cramped little space.

 

 

And there sat the real estate agent.

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