Выбрать главу

So that’s the end of your poem. Ella leaned over until her hair was dropping on the floor and tried to drink from her wine glass, which was standing beside the bed. Always blood, death and forgetting — you’re mad about them. Well, that figures! The wine glass tipped over, and Ella tried to catch it with her lips.

Thomas gritted his teeth. He was annoyed with himself for reading his poem aloud to Ella. Couldn’t he be happy that she followed his voice into sweet dreams? And what did he want to know about her? What did she know about death? Obviously not half as much as he did. At least she didn’t hope for anything from him. Her troubles were different: the heavy tongue that kept her from speaking well. And Johnny’s unhappy letters were embarrassing, now she came to think of it. She reached for her glass. Better drink a little more. Forget, be silent, wait! Ella was powerless against it, she had nothing to say in answer and nothing to say against it. Glass in hand, she stood up, bobbed a little curtsy and said goodnight: Zumbledum. Sleep well. Would be nice if you’re really better now.

Beginning

Thomas got off the tram and walked along beside an old wall made of rounded, natural stones. Ivy clambered around it, clinging to the stone. Thomas had checked on the street map that the hospital grounds must be in the next block. He was to report to the Personnel Office at 8 a.m. A glance back at the tram stop, but the clock had obviously stopped. His hands sweated if he found himself on the way to a new place on his own, a place that was to mean something to him, a place where he had to prove himself. They had sweated last autumn in the train to Gommern, they were sweating again today. He clenched his hands into fists inside the pockets of his jacket, spread his fingers, then clenched them again. Before he shook hands with anyone he would have to wipe his hand on the lining of the pocket. He had his school reports with him. There was nothing wrong with them, and nothing he could do about it now — good marks hadn’t helped him in Gommern either. Didn’t he need a letter from the Ministry? he had asked Käthe yesterday. He felt naked. No, no letter had come, and she was sure he wouldn’t need one, not this time. Thomas pressed his briefcase more firmly under his arm and put both hands to his mouth, breathing warm air into the loosely clenched fists. Even though his hands were sweating, they were cold as ice. When he reached the gate and passed the porter, it struck him that he hadn’t combed his hair. There were boys who always had a comb with them, even if they didn’t need it. They had been brought up to have it ready. Thomas was not like that; he was uncombed, badly brought up. Anyone could see that at once. Anyone who wanted could simply see it. Thomas ran one sweating hand through his hair. However, he could smile. He smiled.

He would probably be accommodated in the brick building to the right of the entrance — the crematorium. Why else did it have the big chimney? The laundry, the kitchen, the boiler room — he was sure none of them needed chimneys of this size.

Ahead of him there was a broad path with flower beds down the middle. To the right and left of the beds you could walk on small, light-coloured paving stones, and the flower beds were surrounded by cast concrete stones with pebbles in them. A glasshouse on the left might once have been the hospital’s own nursery garden, they must have grown vegetables there during the years after the war; at least, the glasshouse was mended with cardboard and other materials in places, although it was certainly no longer in use. Thomas thought of the Botanical Garden, which since last August seemed to him like the garden of Paradise. It was over a year now since he had last been there, he had gone over to the west of the city on the suburban train with Michael. They had looked at the carnivorous plants and the collection of poisonous plants. For the last time, although they didn’t know it. They would never go there again. By way of compensation there was the Natural History Museum here in the eastern part of the city. Dusty animal specimens, embryos of mammals preserved in formaldehyde. Ammonites and fossils. Never again would he be able to admire a Drosera omissa, however unpretentious. Or an alpine butterwort. When would he ever see Aldrovanda vesiculosa again? True, it was said that the magical waterwheel plant, hanging in the water as lovely as a green bride, also grew in Europe. But he and Michael had searched the reeds beside the Müggelsee in vain last summer, they had waded along the bank, they had also parted the rushes beside the river, but they had not discovered the beautiful plant anywhere. She was a sensitive bride who liked only clear, clean warm water. You could draw a lesson from the plant; it grew at one end while it died at the other. Life as a waterwheel plant must be good.

I can show that I laugh / if you want me to / and that is often. / The rest is my business.

A robin sat in the black foliage of the borders, pecking. The snowdrops were over. The young green leaves of crocuses and grape hyacinths were coming up. How they shone against the black of the winter leaves. A man on crutches was standing on the path, and Thomas almost ran into him, his eyes were so captivated by the robin. Thomas swerved to one side and apologised. A clock hung from the first low building; it was ten to eight. His hands were sweating. Thomas practised walking with a steady step. This slightly uphill path was a long one. Two gardeners were kneeling on the paving stones, putting plants in the soil. Another gardener was removing blackened leaves from the beds with short, sharp movements, using a fan-shaped rake. Why hadn’t Thomas thought of it before? It would be good to be a gardener. He wouldn’t find his hands sweating if he were a gardener, he could kneel on the ground and sow the seeds of flowers, he would prune rose bushes and take snails to places where they would be safe from the birds.

In the Personnel Office he was received by a woman in a white sleeveless overall. She took his reports into the next room to be examined, and told him to wait out in the corridor meanwhile. A good hour later she called him in again, stamped a small card and told him which ward to report to: 3 A. First he was to collect his work clothes from Building C, Room 132. It would be a good idea to get to the ward by ten o’clock when the doctors would have done their rounds, and the ward sister would have time to show him the ropes. When he left he was not to go the way he had come, but go down the corridor on the left down to the little staircase, and out of the back door of the building. Over the yard, diagonally right, then through the open gate. Thomas nodded. His stamped card and the docket for the work clothes in his hand, the folder with his school reports under his arm, he went out of the door, turned left, and looked for the way to go.

In the ward they showed him where to change his clothes. After that he had to sit down on a bench and wait again. The doctors had not finished their rounds at ten. There was a penetratingly sweet and rotting smell, as if of bacteria, and then a sharp smell of vinegar. Thomas could also pick up the scent of floor polish.

Marie, said a soft voice, and a slender hand was offered to Thomas. I’m the ward sister, I’ll show you round.

Thomas felt that the handshake was encouraging. She must notice his cold, damp skin, and he felt that he was blushing. But her own hand was not as warm as he had feared. It was light and firm.

Don’t worry, I won’t bite. Her voice was not only soft but also husky, with a slight scratchiness in it. Thomas got to his feet and followed her. She stopped outside a narrow door with the letters Staff WC on it, turned on the flat heel of her shoe, folded her arms, and smiled at him. First you must wash your hands. That’s always the first thing to do when you come on duty. Do you understand? Washing your hands is essential.