Kleinzeit (2 page)

Read Kleinzeit Online

Authors: Russell Hoban

Tags: #Literature, #U.S.A., #20th Century, #American Literature, #21st Century, #Britain, #Expatriate Literature, #Amazon.com, #Retail, #British History

Sister fingered his chart, noticed Thucydides and Ortega on the bedside locker. ‘Good morning, Mr Kleinzeit,’ she said. ‘How are you today?’

Kleinzeit was glad he was wearing adventurous pyjamas, glad Thucydides and Ortega were there. ‘Very well, thank you,’ he said. ‘How are you?’

‘Fine, thank you,’ said Sister. ‘Kleinzeit, does that mean something in German?’

‘Hero,’ said Kleinzeit.

‘I
thought
it must mean something,’ said Sister. Maybe you, said her eyes.

Good heavens, thought Kleinzeit, and I’m unemployed too.

‘I want some blood,’ said Sister, and sank her hypodermic into his arm. Kleinzeit abandoned himself to sensuality and let it flow.

‘Thank you,’ said Sister.

‘Any time,’ said Kleinzeit.

That’s it, he thought when she walked away with his blood, there’s no going back now. He sat on the edge of his
bed and looked at the monitor beside the next bed. Little blips of light appeared successively from left to right on the screen; blip, blip, blip, blip, continuously they came on at the left, marched off at the right. Do they quickly run round inside the machine and come on again? wondered Kleinzeit.

‘Suspenseful, isn’t it?’ said the young man in the bed. ‘Can they go on? one wonders. Will they stop?’ He was very thin, very pale, looked as if he might flash into flame and be gone in a moment.

‘What have you got?’ said Kleinzeit.

‘Distended spectrum,’ said the imminently combustible. ‘If hendiadys sets in everything could go like …’ Here he did not snap his fingers, but hissed sharply.’… that,’ he said.

Kleinzeit clucked, shook his head.

‘What about you?’ said Flashpoint.

‘Not sick, actually,’ said Kleinzeit. ‘Here for tests, that sort of thing.’

‘You’re sick, all right,’ said Flashpoint. ‘Hypotenutic, you look to me. Touch of diapason, maybe. Do you pee in two streams?’

‘Well, when my underwear’s been twisted up all day, you know…’ said Kleinzeit.

‘Keep telling yourself that,’ said Flashpoint. ‘Never say die. I speak German, you know.’

‘Good for you,’ said Kleinzeit. ‘I don’t.’

Flashpoint hissed again. ‘No hard feelings,’ he said. ‘People are looking different lately, maybe you’ve noticed. The dummies must be changing.’

‘The dummies,’ said Kleinzeit. ‘Oh.’

‘First the dummies in the shop windows change,’ said Flashpoint, ‘then the people.’

‘I didn’t think anybody’d noticed that but me,’ said Kleinzeit. ‘God makes the dummies maybe. Man makes the people.’ He crossed his legs, kicking the flex that led to
Flashpoint’s monitor. The plug came out of the wall, the last blip faded and went down in smoke, the screen went dark.

‘Oh God,’ said Flashpoint. ‘I’m gone.’

Kleinzeit plugged in the machine again. ‘You’re back,’ he said. Together they watched the blips moving across the screen. Terrible, thought Kleinzeit. If I had blips to watch all the time I’d want them to stop after a while. Blip, went his mind. Blip, blip, blip, blip. Stop it, said Kleinzeit. He lay back on his bed, the bed sighed.

Mine, said the bed. How long I’ve waited. You’re not like the others, it was never like this before.

In his mind Kleinzeit saw a corridor in the Underground.

Why? he said.

I’m just showing you, said his mind.

What? said Kleinzeit. No answer from his mind. In his body the distant horn sounded.

Our song, said the bed, and hugged him.

Back at his flat the bathroom mirror looked out and saw no face. Do I exist? said the mirror.

In Kleinzeit’s office on the sheet of yellow paper on his desk the man pushed the barrow full of rocks and felt the Bonzo toothpaste tube in his pocket. What kind of a Sisyphus deal is this? said the man. Why Bonzo?

In a music shop a glockenspiel dreamed of a corridor in the Underground.

The Blood of Kleinzeit

‘Hail Mary, full of grace,’ said Sister.

Dr Krishna took his tongue out of her ear. ‘Are you coming?’ he said.

‘Sorry,’ said Sister. ‘My mind was a million miles away. You come, don’t wait for me.’

‘Has the sick millionaire arrived?’ said Krishna.

‘Not a millionaire,’ said Sister. ‘His name means hero.’

‘What do you mean, his name means hero?’ said Krishna.

‘Kleinzeit, his name is. In German that means hero.’

‘Kleinzeit in German means smalltime,’ said Krishna, thrusting a little.

Sister laughed. ‘Only a hero would say that Kleinzeit means hero,’ she said.

Dr Krishna shrank, withdrew, put his clothes on. Sister lay naked on the bed like a horizontal winged victory. Krishna’s mind heaved with longing. He took his clothes off again, threw himself feebly on her. ‘This is goodbye,’ he said. ‘One for the road.’

Sister nodded with closed eyes, thought of Kleinzeit’s blood in the phial she had held, warm in her hand. The tests had shown a decibel count of 72, a film speed of 18,000 and a negative polarity of 12 per cent. She didn’t like the polarity, it might go either way, and the decibels were on the dodgy side. But his film speed! She’d never had an 18,000 before. You can see it in those tired eyes of his, she thought as Krishna came.

‘Thank you,’ he said.

‘Thank
you,’
said Sister, standing at the window alone, suddenly aware that Krishna had gone more than an hour ago. It was raining gently. There’s nothing like a gentle rain,
she thought. Her mind showed her a corridor in the Underground. Why that? she said, listening to the echoing footfalls, the hesitating chimes of a melody full of error. It is my opinion, she said to God, that nobody is healthy.

Look at
you,
said God. Who could be healthier?

Oh,
women,
said Sister. I’m talking about men. One way and another they’re all sick.

You really think so? said God. He rained a little harder. What did I do wrong? How have I failed?

I can’t say exactly what I mean, said Sister. It just sounds stupid. What I mean is, it isn’t a matter of finding a well man, it’s a matter of finding one who makes the right use of his sickness.

In Kleinzeit’s office the man pushing the barrow full of rocks on the yellow paper felt himself crumpled up by the Creative Director. It’s dark all of a sudden, he said as he dropped into the wastebasket, still feeling the tube of Bonzo in his pocket.

Corridor in the Underground

Ah! said the walls, listening to the footfalls, it’s the silence that we like, the lovely shapes of silence between the shapes of the footfalls.

There was a clean sheet of yellow paper, A4 size, lying on the floor of the corridor. None of the footsteps had made it dirty yet.

A ragged man came along, lumpily dressed, with a full red beard and bright blue eyes. He had a bedroll slung on his shoulder with a rope and carried two carrier-bags. Probably half a bottle of wine in one of them. He looked at the sheet of paper lying on the floor of the corridor, walked all round it, then picked it up, looked at both sides of it. No writing on either side. He felt it. He took a black Japanese nylon-tip pen out of his pocket. He sat down, leaned against the wall, took a clipboard out of one carrier-bag, put the paper in the clipboard, and wrote on it in a bold black hand:

MAN WITH HARROW FULL OF CROCKS

He took the paper out of the clipboard, laid it on the floor of the corridor and walked away echoing.

Here is the world, said the man on the paper. Here is greatness in me. Why a harrow full of crocks? Will there be music?

Yes, said the music. It was a little way ahead down the corridor. It was mouth-organ music, edgy, wonky, sometimes trotting like a three-legged dog and sometimes striking like a rattlesnake. It was a medley of
Salty Dog, Cripple Creek,
and
The Rose of Ballydoo.
It was put together as if the first tune had run smack into a lamp-post with the other two following close behind it.

When the red-bearded man got to where the music was he played it. He played it on a mouth organ he took out of his pocket. Out of a carrier-bag he took a filthy little peaked cap of corduroy, dropped it on the ground with the greasy lining looking up.

What a sound track, said the man on the paper with the harrow full of crocks.

Plink, said 2p dropping into the cap.

When? said a glockenspiel in a music shop.

Later, said the walls of the corridor.

Arrow in a Box

Night, crepitating slowly, beat by beat. Sister on nights now, glowing in the lamplit binnacle of her office, overlooking the ward as a captain on his bridge, watching the black bow cleave the white wave, watching the compass eye, jewelled in the dark. Thrum of the engines, heave of the sea, silent-roaring, seething and sighing. Dimness of the ward. Groans, gurgles, choking, gasping, splatting in bedpans. Stench. Groans. Curses.

Sister, not writing her report. Not reading a book. Not smoking. Not thinking. Feeling the night rise in the lamplight beat by beat.

Talk to me, said God.

No answer from Sister, tuned to the night, beat by beat ascending.

Kleinzeit awake, watching the blips on Flashpoint’s monitor: blip, blip, blip, blip. Flashpoint asleep. The distant horn sounding in Kleinzeit’s body. Not yet, O God. The stench of bedpans. A sky like brown velvet, the red wink of an aeroplane. So high, so going-away! Gone!

Suddenly the hospital. Suddenly crouching. I am between its paws, thought Kleinzeit. It is gigantic. I had no idea how long its waiting, how heavy its patience. O God.

I can’t be bothered with details, said God. Blip, blip. Blip …

‘Bowls and gold!’ cried Flashpoint, twisting in the dark. ‘Velvet and hangings, youth and folly.’

It’s happened, thought Kleinzeit. Hendiadys.

Sister was there, Dr Krishna, two nurses. The curtains were drawn round Flashpoint’s bed.

There was a terrible rushing tumbling gurgling sound ‘Burst spectrum.’ said Dr Krishna.

‘Arrow in a box.’ said Flashpoint quietly.

Nurses wheeled in a starting gate. The bellows heaved and sighed.

‘Nothing,’ said Krishna behind the curtain. ‘That’s it’

Kleinzeit closed his eyes, heard wheels, footsteps, opened his eyes. The curtains were pushed back, Flashpoint’s bed

was empty, the screen dark. Nobody.

NOW, said Hospital. HERE I AM. FEEL ME AROUND YOU. I HAVE BEEN HERE ALWAYS, WAITING. NOW. THIS. YOU.

Aaahh! groaned the bed, holding Kleinzeit tight as it came.

No, said Kleinzeit, cowering in the dark. Not a star to be seen in the brown velvet. Not an aeroplane.

What? said Kleinzeit.

Be dark, said the dark. Don’t show. Be dark.

No One in the Underground

In the middle of the night WAY OUT led to iron gates that were locked. The escalators did not go up and down, they were only steps. No one walked up them, down them. No one looked at the girls in their underwear, perpetual on the posters, THIS EXPLOITS WOMEN, said round stickers stuck on crotches, breasts. No one read the stickers.

KILL WOG SHIT, said a wall. KILL IRISH SHIT. KILL JEW SHIT. SHIT KILL. PEE KILL. FART KILL. SWEAT KILL. THINK KILL. BE KILL. LIVE KILL. KILL LIVES.

On a LEARN KARATE poster one man flung another to the mat, said in handwriting, Go on, let me fuck you.

On an
Evening Standard
poster a cartoon man rode an escalator on which everyone but him looked at the posters of girls in underwear. My job is stultifying, he said in handwriting.

The chill, the damp, the night rose from the black tunnels, from the concrete platforms, from the steel rails through the darkness. No one read the posters.

GRACE & BOB, said a wall. IRMA & GERRY. SPURS. ARSENAL.

ODEON, said a film poster. NOW SHOWING : ‘KILL COMES AGAIN’.
They were all dying to come with him!
On the poster a man in tight-fitting clothes aimed a double-barrelled shotgun from between his legs. Behind him naked girls lay stacked like cordwood. Around him ships at sea exploded, trains strafed by helicopters ran off rails, castles blew up, motorcyclists rode off cliffs, there was underwater gunplay between frogmen. Starring PRONG STUDMAN, MAXIMUS JOCK, IMMEANSA PUDENDA, MONICA BEDWARD. Also starring GLORIA FRONTAL as ‘Jiggles’.
Directed by DIMITRI ITHYPHALLIC. Screenplay by Ariadne Bullish based on the novel
Kill for a Living
by Harry Solvent. Additional dialogue by Gertrude Anal. Music composed and conducted by Lubricato Silkbottom. Theme, ‘Suck My Lolly’, composed and arranged by Frank Dildo, performed by THE PUBIC HARES by permission of Sucktone Recording Inc. Executive Producers Harold Sodom, Jr. and Sol Spermsky. Produced by Morton Anal, Jr. Photographed in Spermo Vision, a Division of Napalm Industries. Recorded by Sucktone, a Division of Sodom Chemicals, in association with Napalm Industries, a Division of Anal Petroleum Jelly. A Napalm-Anal Release. Certified ‘X’ For Mature Audiences Only.

No one read the film poster.

Listen, said Underground.

No one listened. The chill rose up from the black tunnels.

Are you there? said Underground. Will you answer? No one answered.

Are you Orpheus? said Underground.

No answer.

Music

Kleinzeit sneaked out with no trouble at all: he went to the bathroom carrying his clothes under his robe, came out wearing his robe over his clothes, went down the fire stairs, left his robe by the door.

The moon was full like a moon in old mezzotints, Japanese prints. Delicate, dramatic. Scudding clouds, special effects. When the moon looked down it saw Kleinzeit sitting in a square before dawn. Opposite the square a music shop: YARROW,
Fullest Stock.

Kleinzeit looked up at the moon. I’m waiting, he said.

The moon nodded.

It’s easy for you to nod, said Kleinzeit. You’re not the one who’s got to be a hero. Why did I tell her that was what my name meant? I’m not a hero, I’m afraid of too many things. Prong Studman, Maximus Jock, chaps like that in the films, that have that peculiarly intrepid look around the eyes and don’t smoke, you can see they’re never afraid of anything. They’re very dangerous when they’re angry too, no one takes liberties with them. That’s why they get to be film heroes, because people can see just by looking at them that they really are the way they are. Women are wild about them, schoolgirls hang up posters of them. Prong Studman is forty-seven years old, too. Two years older than I am. Maximus Jock is fifty-two. Incredible, And I’m sure he never gets sleepy in the afternoon.

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