He went back by a slightly different route, and only now did he notice that not far from his hotel there was a two-floor department store. There wouldn’t have been anything remarkable about it, if not for the name, written out in very special lettering, as if dug up from the late 1940s: Franz Carl Weber. He slowly strolled past the illuminated window displays. As he gazed at the boxes of computer games stacked in a huge pyramid, from which the eyes of hundreds of Batmans and similar characters were looking at him, he felt an uncanny emotion. Franz Carl Weber – those three words, repeated in his mind a few times like a mantra, opened before him the invisible gates of time.
In his parents’ sitting room, the candles were burning on the Christmas tree. He and his brother were standing in the passage, not sure if they could go in there yet, but everything was ready, and as soon as they got the signal they sat down at table: their father, grandmother Maria, the two of them and their mother. During the reading of a passage from the Bible and the sharing of the holy wafer – as every Christmas Eve – they were already glancing at the boxes of wrapped-up presents. This time there were more of them than usual, and they were large in size. Over each festive dish in turn, he and his brother exchanged knowing looks.
Cautiously, to be sure not to damage anything, they laid out the complicated system of tracks under their father’s watchful eye: long straight pieces, bends, points, signals, as well as mountain tunnels, station buildings and viaducts. When they finally switched on the transformer and the goods train with the steam locomotive set off on its first run, while at the same time, from the same station, the international express marked Geneva-Ostend moved off in the other direction, their delight was boundless.
The Märklin models were made to perfection. Examined under a magnifying glass, the buffers, the little ladder, the springs, wheels or headlamps were like perfect prototypes for real train parts. They were especially thrilled by the express train’s central sleeping car. Through one little window with the curtains open, they could see an unfolded bed, a night lamp on a little table, and a lady and a gentleman drinking tea at it. They were wearing patterned dressing-gowns and evidently belonged to a different, better world.
Both trains sped up and slowed down in response to a turn of the transformer knob. On the sharp bends they had to slow down to at least second gear, otherwise the trains fell off the tracks.
‘Seven more circuits to Paris,’ said Grandmother Maria.
They believed her. Before the war, before Poland was cut off from Europe by the Iron Curtain, she had travelled a lot.
‘And what about to Ostend?’ he and his brother asked simultaneously.
‘Twice as many times, but don’t go speeding onto the beach!’
As they leaned over the little coaches and changed the points at the right moments, holding back now one, now the other train at the signal, they hardly took any notice of the adults’ conversation.
‘Now perhaps they’ll let people go abroad,’ said Grandmother Maria.
‘A three-month placement doesn’t make a spring. Of course I’m pleased,’ replied his father, ‘I couldn’t have dreamed of such a thing only a couple of years ago. The moustachioed monster had us locked in a cage.’
‘With the whole world’s consent,’ added his mother, ‘don’t forget.’
‘It was strange,’ he said, ignoring her remark, ‘as I walked along Bahnhofstrasse in Zurich, apart from trolleybuses I saw nothing but signs announcing banks. And in the canteen at Zulzer’s, where I was employed, the workers ate the same dinner as the managers. Can you imagine that here? The shipyard manager eating with a welder? Unmöglich!’[2]
‘There it’s möglich, here it’s unmöglich,’ replied Grandmother Maria.
The boys associated the moustachioed monster with Antoni Zielonka, the caretaker at their apartment house. He smelled of shag, spirits and sweat. He was always insulting them for being intelligentsia. He especially hated their father, whose bow he never deigned to return.
‘You’re only fit for the camps,’ he would occasionally shout, shaking his fist at their windows. ‘Off to Solovki with you! You should be exterminated!’
So they packed Zielonka the janitor into the refrigerator car and transported him to Siberia. Twenty-four circuits.
‘Maybe even further?’ asked his brother.
‘What do you mean?’ he replied. ‘We’ve got to get home, haven’t we?’
Their father showed them how to disconnect the tracks without damaging the joints. The coaches were put away in special slots in their boxes.
‘Look after it,’ he said, ‘an opportunity like this one might not come along a second time.’
Now as he looked at the display, almost forty years on, he remembered that very remark. It was prophetic: his father had never been given another passport after that, and had never brought back such a wonderful toy from any distant journey; the Swiss electric railway beat the East German Piko trains, the Soviet young engineer’s set, the Czech little doctor’s set and the Polish model aeroplane kits into the ground.
As he walked across the square towards the hotel, he remembered another thing too: at the time, as well as the railway set, their father had presented them with a fat tome in a soft, black shiny cover, similar in shape to a school exercise book. It was the catalogue for Franz Carl Weber’s store, the only one in the world that sold nothing but toys. On autumn and winter nights in particular, when for economic reasons or because of anti-aircraft exercises the lights were switched off all over town, he and his brother would sit at the kitchen table over a candle stump, slowly and reverently turning the thin pages.
They had no doubt that this book comprised a list of all the toys in the world. The black-and-white photographs of them, with short descriptions, filled three hundred and sixty-four pages. With great appreciation, first they examined the cranes, diggers, lorries and bulldozers, then moved on to a more interesting section: passenger limousines. Here particular emotions were stirred by the Opel Kapitän, and utter delight by the Porsche sports model. Yet the most important bit of The Book, as they pored over it in adoration by candlelight, was the world of railways.
Steam trains, electric trains, diesel locomotives, dozens of varieties of passenger coaches, special mountain rolling stock, and all possible configurations of goods trains filled their imagination, not just with the clatter of wheels, the lights of signals and the whistle of locomotives. Over this entire world of stations, timetables, signal boxes, tunnels and viaducts there floated a veil of mystery. They did not realise at the time that it was a yearning for a distant journey that would change their lives. As they pored over the mail-order catalogue from Franz Carl Weber’s toy store, they sensed that one day they would simply set off into the great wide world, and that what they were doing now, leaning over the printed pages in the flickering candlelight, was merely preparation.