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And Baby Face said, “I can’t understand how the last teacher gave you a ‘fairly good’ in your report …”

I interrupted him.

“Don’t you dare talk about him like that.”

He blushed bright red, shocked. There was a deathly silence in the classroom. I should’ve stopped there, if I’d stopped there nothing would’ve happened. But I didn’t stop, I rather liked the silence all around me. If I ever get to be a teacher like Mommy, there’ll always be silence like this in my classes.

“Anyway, it’s a pity you weren’t killed instead of him …”

The class held its breath.

Then the silence scared me, I burst into tears and fled from the classroom, ran straight home. And they told me that Baby Face was so stunned he could hardly carry on with the lesson, he started making stupid mistakes himself. In the end he couldn’t stand it any longer, he stopped the lesson before the bell and ran to the headmaster and told him everything, and the headmaster sent for Mommy at once, and then at last Baby Face found out the connection between us, and maybe he regretted being so hasty, but it was too late for regrets, both for him and for me.

NA’IM

It’s great, I’m so lucky. So free. I’m not sorry anymore that I didn’t stay on at school. Things couldn’t be better. I’m doing real work at night, getting to be a professional. Dafi looks at me with respect when I operate the winch. Already we’re real friends.

Coming back in the morning, washing, putting on my pyjamas, and the old woman brings me my breakfast, waits on me like I’m a king, then going into my room and looking at the marvellous view of the bay coming to life, lying down, can’t sleep for happiness and lust, jerking off and then going to sleep, I get up at midday fresh for new adventures.

Money in my pocket and I’m as free as a bird. First of all I go to a movie, a good Western, to wake me up properly. Going to look in the shops, wandering in and out looking at the goods, the prices. Sometimes buying something, a big penknife or an umbrella. Buying nuts and drinking fruit juice to build up my appetite. Coming back for supper, sitting down and making a clean plate so she won’t think the food she cooks isn’t good, because it is good.

I read her a bit out of Maariv, a bit out of Yediot Aharonot, about how everything’s getting worse, and go to bed. But lately I haven’t been able to sleep in the evenings, I need less and less sleep. So what I do is take the rubbish out, leave the bin in the hall and go out to the movies again, looking for a film with less shooting and more music, and love. I’m tall enough to get into films barred to the under-sixteens without any problem, the only ones I don’t manage to see are the ones where you have to be over eighteen, I get turned away by the manager or the cashier. At nine-thirty I’ve had enough wandering around and go home. She’s already worried about me. Taking off my shoes and lying down on the bed in my clothes, waiting for the phone that I never manage to get to first, she always beats me to it.

And so I lie there in the dark, half asleep, looking out of the window and seeing the city quiet down. Even in the bay the lights go dim, there’re fewer cars. The old woman peeps in at me and I close my eyes so she won’t think there’s something the matter. Sometimes I have a dream, like yesterday, for example, when I dreamed I was walking into the university. I’d never been there but I knew it was the university. Big lecture halls and students sitting there in white coats like in a hospital. I asked where the registrar’s office was and they showed me, it was like Erlich’s office only a hundred times bigger, it was huge and there were maybe a hundred Erlichs sitting at little tables busy with bills. And I walk around quietly, examining the walls, noticing that where the bullets hit them there aren’t holes but swellings, like wounds that’ve healed over and swelled up a bit. One of the clerks looks up at me, like he’s asking me who I am and I answer him confidently, even though I haven’t heard the question.

“I’m a Jew as well.” And I go on wandering about, touching the little swellings, like I’ve been sent by the security forces to check the place out. More people come into the hall and I’m beginning to feel nervous, because one of them’s an Arab and he winks at me and says in Arabic, “Wake up, Na’im, the telephone has rung, they’re coming, enough dreaming.”

The old woman —

ADAM

The weariness gets worse. How much longer? I ask myself. Sometimes when we arrive home the dawn is already breaking. The nights are growing shorter. I get hardly an hour or two hours’ sleep before Asya wakes me gently. She sees how hard it is for me to wake up and she asks, “Why don’t you sleep a little longer?” but I’ve always been an early riser and I can’t lie in bed in the morning. Strange that she never says anything about these expeditions by night, as if they’re none of her business, she doesn’t seem bothered by the thought of Dafi joining in the search for her mother’s lover.

At first Dafi used to share with her the details of what had happened at night, and Asya listened with a frozen face. Whose car we’d towed in, what we’d seen, conversations we’d had, but after a while Dafi stopped doing this and now she just sits beside me, her head in her hands. I arrive at the garage late and everything’s in chaos. I too have work to do now. The owners of the cars that we towed in during the night are waiting for me, agents from the insurance companies, sometimes the police as well. I have to fill in forms, give evidence, answer the phone, give instructions for continuing the repair work that was begun during the night. My head droops, my eyes are sore, I get confused, hurrying between the office and the workshops, my hands covered in grease and oil, explaining things to the workers. And business is booming, Erlich looks at me with love, in the repairs department we shall have to take on more workers. Night customers arrive and they refuse to speak to anyone but me, and I see the workers looking at me with awe, as if I did the towing by hand. And I’m tired and dizzy, I’ve split open a volcano and the lava is pouring out. What’s it all for? Sometimes I go to see the old lady and she trembles, thinking I’ve got news for her. But there’s no sign of him. Sometimes I think perhaps he never existed, it’s all a delusion. I see that even she knows very little about him.

“Where’s Na’im?”

“He’s gone to the movies.”

“Is he helping you here?”

“He’s all right … he’s all right …”

And the weariness grows, already I’m getting only a few hours’ sleep a day. At night the phone starts ringing at ten o’clock, there are some people who phone me on their own account, they’ve heard from their friends about the night tow man and they approach me directly.

Must put an end to all this –

This morning I arrive at the garage exhausted. Last night we towed in a car smashed up in an accident. A child was killed in it. I’ve hardly got inside the garage when the foreman comes running up to me, all excited. He’s had a wonderful idea. He shows me the smashed car that’s already hanging on a sling in one of the workshops. He wants to cut it in half and join the half of it that’s still intact with half of another car of the same model that we bought for scrap some time ago on his advice. A crazy and daring idea for producing a whole new car. He talks and talks, leading me around the car and showing me the possible cutting points, explaining how from two halves of two wrecked cars he’ll make a new car, he’ll paint it and polish it and nobody will know the difference. His eyes sparkle, there’s something a bit shady about the project but a lot of imagination and clear profit, he’s already had a quiet word with the insurance company, all he needs is the go-ahead from me. And I stand and listen, I can hardly keep my eyes open. The weather has suddenly turned warm, the workers walk about in T-shirts, I’m the only one still wearing an overcoat, as if I’m in another world.