‘Sure. Is it warm enough for you?’
‘Warm’s not the right word,’ Jan says.
‘I think it’ll be better tomorrow.’
‘I won’t be here tomorrow.’
‘We’re going fishing tonight!’ Dieke calls.
‘You don’t even have a rod,’ says Zeeger Kaan.
‘You do!’
‘Careful, that “e” isn’t going right.’
Jan stands up to hand him the brush.
‘No.’
‘Yes. Go ahead.’
‘Don’t start.’
‘Maybe you can do it better yourself.’
‘No.’ He pushes his son’s hand away.
‘What are you doing?’ Dieke calls.
‘My knees hurt.’
Jan lowers himself back down until he’s sitting on the gravel with his legs either side of the raised edges. ‘You asked me to do it. If you go on at me like that, I’ll just stop.’
‘OK,’ says Zeeger Kaan. It’s true, he thinks. I did ask him. He’s the best painter, he does the maintenance on all those holiday homes over on Texel, and he always used to criticise me when I was painting. And rightly so, I loathed all that scraping and sanding. But I never painted full in the sun.
Zeeger Kaan goes for a wander around the ever-shrinking cemetery. He runs a hand over his short hair, he rubs a knee.
‘You going already?’ Dieke screams.
‘No,’ he calls back. ‘Just a little longer.’
‘Don’t forget me, OK?’
Children’s graves are marked with stuffed animals that were once rain-soaked and swollen and are now dry, lumpy and flocky. He looks at the names and years on the headstones. Three mayors buried in a row. All three of them alone, without wives. One of them was mayor when the old Queen came to visit. Knowing him, he probably said something grovelling like, ‘This way if you please, Your Majesty. Lunch will be served here inside,’ before they disappeared into the Polder House. A bunch of daffodils at the foot of the monument to the English airmen is completely withered, just this side of crumbling to dust. He walks on into the older section, behind the Polder House.
‘Are you going?’
‘I’ll be back in a minute, Diek!’
‘Are you in such a hurry to go?’ he hears his son ask.
‘Not really,’ Dieke says.
He stops at his parents’ grave: Jan Kaan and Neeltje Kaan-Helder. A grave that’s much newer than the one Jan’s working on. A grave whose lease, as he now remembers, needs renewing for another ten years sometime soon. Lying next to them are his grandmother and grandfather: Zeeger Kaan and Griet Kaan-van Zandwijk. Always strange to see your own name on a headstone. He never knew his grandfather, who died young. But his grandmother didn’t die until she was ninety-five, on a stormy night in November. Dozens of roof tiles in the yard, fallen trees, no electricity, a big crack in one of the front windows. And early in the morning, a dead grandmother in the three-quarter bed. He stood there, studying her face for a long time, making out what he took for a last trace of resistance. Anna stood next to him, squeezing his hand so hard she was almost crushing it, and he wanted to look at her and smile, but couldn’t tear his eyes away from the dead woman. In the days that followed, his father and mother had a massive clear-out, with virtually everything going onto a huge pile behind the farmhouse that they weren’t able to light for two or three days because of the constant easterly. The old kapok mattress smoked and fizzed for a long time before it finally caught fire, the sansevierias exploded damply.
He walks on quickly to the gravediggers’ shed, where he turns on the tap, cups his hands and splashes water on his face. Then he sees his father, who after clearing the broken tiles from the yard, went directly to his mother’s cabinet and took out his medal. A gold medal, won with the sleigh on Kolhorn harbour one freezing winter. His father was very good with horses. Rubbing the medal on his chest, puffing on it and cleaning it again, while behind him his mother lay dead in her three-quarter bed. The farm was finally his.
He looks in through the window. A shrivelled magpie is hanging on a string. There is a heavy mallet. An old-fashioned bier. Spades and shovels, posts. It must be suffocating in there.
Going back to get Dieke, he realises that there is a whole village under his feet. No, several villages. And still, the older he gets, the smaller and more cramped this place becomes. Will there be space for me? he wonders. Nellie, that was the name of the horse his father won the medal with. Bloody hell, that just popped up out of nowhere.
‘We’re off.’
‘Yes!’ says Dieke. She jumps down onto the ground, grabs her rucksack and heads straight for the gate.
‘We have to say goodbye to Jan first.’
‘Oh, yeah.’
Jan is up to the second e. Zeeger notices how muscular his back is: although he’s bending forward, his backbone is still in a furrow, not sticking out at all. ‘You should take that T-shirt off your head and just put it on.’ A muscular back and thinning hair.
‘Do you know what I thought of this morning, riding past the Polder House?’
‘What?’
‘Uncle Piet, and how he stood on that black ledge.’
‘What do you mean?’
‘At the funeral. He stood on that black ledge without holding on to anything.’
‘Ah, son, come on. That’s not even possible.’
‘Are we going now?’ Dieke asks.
‘It’s still true.’ He’s talking without looking up. He dips the brush into the paint again and puts the tip in the t.
Zeeger Kaan sighs. What an imagination. He takes Dieke’s hand. ‘Come on.’
When they’re seven or eight graves away, Jan calls out to him. ‘Did Mum say anything?’
‘No,’ he lies.
‘Did you try to get her down?’
‘No.’
Dieke tugs on his hand. ‘Grandpa…’
‘When did she actually go up there?’
‘Just before I left to pick you up from the train yesterday, Johan rang. He wanted to speak to her. When we got home, she was up on the straw.’
‘And now?’
‘Grandpa!’
‘Yes, Diek. Nothing.’
They walk on. It’s very quiet. Without speaking, Dieke points out two small birds perched on a low branch of the linden. Blue tits, their beaks wide open. The shells crunch underfoot. He looks at Anna’s bike, which Jan has leant against a chestnut tree. There’s the black-painted ledge that runs all around the base of the Polder House. Seven centimetres wide at most. Black varnish, that’s what it’s painted with. Just to be sure, he inspects the wall, which is painted off-white. Maybe there’s a ring somewhere his brother-in-law could have held on to. Nothing. Dieke has walked ahead to the car. He opens the door and she jumps onto the seat. ‘Oof!’ she says.
‘Wait a sec,’ he tells her. ‘I just have to…’
‘It’s boiling in here.’
‘Leave the door open. I won’t be long.’
He walks around the car and opens the door on the driver’s side as well, turns the key in the ignition and switches the radio on. He stops to listen for a moment. A reporter from Radio North-Holland has gone to the seaside: ‘It’s chock-a-block down here, the beach restaurants are doing a roaring trade and that’s a real turnaround from last year when the summer was a complete washout. I’m now walking down the ramp…’
‘Boring,’ says Dieke.
‘There’ll be music in a minute.’
He walks back to the black ledge, but changes his mind and carries on. Past his wife’s bike, now in the shade of the chestnuts and the gate, which he fortunately didn’t close behind him, so he can go back into the cemetery without making a sound.