Worn-out, navy blue suit, as his mission required. Mişa held a rectangular sheet of pink paper. Took it. The Statistics Sheet had many horizontal and vertical columns. The machines kept rattling on: calculators and recorders to the left, typewriters and trackers to the right. Scanned the headings and columns. Job Code. Suddenly something rang. Some adding or writing or transmitting machine had started signaling errors. Turned around: the row of backs on the left hadn’t moved an inch. Arms twitched rapidly, mechanically, at every table. At the end of the row to the right, at the back of the room, a huge specter held a receiver to its mouth — probably the telephone. There was, indeed, a telephone on each table. Large as it was, the whole room was saturated with thick smoke: on every table — to the left and right — a cigarette burned in a round ashtray.
Rotated back to see broad shouldered, broad faced, sweating Mişa — smiling as he continued to keep watch. Gave him a look. The noises grew louder. There was no telling left from right anymore: calculation and typewriting everywhere. Held out my hand. The Statistics Sheet. Circuit Five. Installed Power. Kilowatt. Felt something soft between my fingers. Stared at my hands: a tuft of silky hair, a wig. Mişa was smiling, wearing gloves — in evening costume now. His wig hadn’t passed completely into my hands. Both of us held it. Would have to ask him, whatever it might be — to talk to him. . to talk to him at any cost. Opened my mouth. Too late. The siren was ringing — or maybe it was the phone. Would have to move, but couldn’t. The sound came from nearby, at my feet. Mişa smiled, bent slightly toward me, took the wig in his immense white-gloved hands, left it on the table, and leaning slightly under the table, he raised the sharp, black tail of his dinner jacket. He placed the telephone on the table, took the receiver in his right hand, and lifted it. For a moment there was nothing but the sound of our breath and the others’ panting behind it.
Through the earpiece, a man’s voice commanded:
— Covalschi here. Tell that dopey woman that there’s no radio broadcast. I piss on her idiotic stories.
The sordid remarks thundered clearly out of the phone so that the whole office resounded with the echo of the rhythmic voice that kept saying the same lousy things, over and over again.
— Tiberiu Covalschi here. You can tell Auntie that she’s never gonna hear her foolish stories on the radio.
Covalschi kept cursing. It was horrifying. Something had to be done: break the earpiece, the office, the voice and — all the voices panting in the background.
— Covalschi here. Tell that plucked chicken that her little stories. .
Palms dampened with cold sweat, flung an arm around the telephone receiver. Closed my eyes halfway. The wardrobe, the stove, the radio. Kept holding the receiver in my hand. No one spoke. Background noise. Dial tone. The receiver slipped from my hand. . again, my shoulders relaxed. Stroked by gentle waves, my feet among the seaweed. Never to return, covered by eternal waters, dipped under the silky water. Complete stillness. A long hall, a castle with thick walls, a table. On the table: a heap of pink pages. Picked one up. A form. Statistics Sheet. Code. Beneficiary. Circuit One, Two, Three. Circuit Four. Raised my eyes. In front of me a man smiled. He had a wide face, sleek hair, and he held the pink sheet in his hand. Was supposed to ask him what it was about, but the bell or siren had gone off. In the rear there were little tables with small, vibrating machines. My neighbor’s smile was dead.
Was supposed to put out my hand, pick up the receiver, move my arm, and bring it to my ear, but now blows were raining on the glass walls. Sprang to my feet. Came to myself in the bulb’s weak light. Someone was knocking on the glass, on the glass door. Was there in a step. Flicked the light switch. The light blinded me. Twisted the spring, the lock, the spring. Pressed the handle, the door, the handle. The door opened in. Pulled it a little more.
Dressed in a navy blue suit, the tall man had a wide, blotchy face.
• • •
Solid, freshly shaved, smelling of the hairdresser. Dark suit, white shirt. Under the soft collar, the tie pulled tight. Mid-weight coat and a briefcase in his right hand. Hair: sleek, thin.
— Mişa, how are you?
The person standing in the doorway to the right of the stairs opened his mouth in shock, accidentally left it open, and straightened his shoulders to deal with the obvious lunatic.
— Doesn’t Comrade Professor Smântănescu live here? The suit-shirt-collar glanced at the small piece of cardboard attached to the door.
— Aren’t you Mişa? Mihai Burlacu? Fell silent, came to myself, clung to the wall, made excuses: Pardon me. Excuse me. Yes, yes, the lady lives here. A mix-up. My misunderstanding. . a workmate. Confused you with someone from the office. Forgive me. Yes, do come in. She does live here.
Hurried to invite him in: an act of absurd, hasty compensation. The door had already closed behind the stranger, who entered and was now waiting.
— Ah, the things one forgets. My sister isn’t at home right now. But who are you?
Ready to attack or defend, the guest looked at me suspiciously.
— An acquaintance. Engineer Grigore Butnaru. Grig.
Let him rattle for a moment or two. The visitor evidently feared a trap. What fun to watch him deal with Madam Professor’s husband! Farces leapt to mind: all equally good. It was hard to choose.
— My sister told me about you, the madman finally remarked. Personally, I don’t live here.
— Mhm. She didn’t write anything about having a brother.
Should have seen that one coming. The end of the letter had been clear.
— Make yourself comfortable. Perhaps you’d like to wait. Have a seat.
Proceeded to pick a pile off the chair. Miscellaneous trash. Couldn’t find a place for it. Threw it on the bed.
— My sister’s getting ready to clean house. There’s a bit of mess. . wasn’t expecting visitors. .
— Ah, no. Just dropped in. . unexpected.
Ill at ease and uncertain of the situation, Mr. suit-shirt-tie took a seat, with a distrustful glance in my direction. Wondered if Mr. Grig wasn’t a total idiot, after all.
— She didn’t mention anything to me about a brother, the less-than-complete idiot said for the second time.
— She’s my step-sister, actually. My mother died a long time ago. My father remarried right away.
— You seem younger.
— My appearance. . Healthy skin.
Grig gave me another long look.
Had a crazy desire to draw him into a sincere conversation, wanted him to expound his principles — to win his confidence: there’d be confessions, promises, and he would slap me on the shoulder like a future brother-in-law. Managed to say:
— Grig’s the name, right? My sister told me about you: she holds you in high esteem. . said something about your letter full of elevated thoughts.
The guy loosened his grip on his coat and set his briefcase down.
— Yeah. . kinda like to say everything outright, especially in writing, because it lasts.
— Good point. My sister told me about your sister as well, the one who’s a professor at Ploieşti. And you’re close with your sister, too — that says a lot about a man’s character. Also heard you’re successfuclass="underline" a guide at the exhibition, several factories calling to hire you.
— Not exactly, but the bit about being able to transfer anywhere is true.
There should have been a glass of slivovitz by now, dirty jokes, tales from the army. However, Grig was starting to look around, and if he got too curious, the jig’d be up.