Authors: Michelle Granas
Tags: #Eastern European, #Literature & Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #World Literature, #literary, #Contemporary Fiction, #women's fiction
She couldn't give in to despair. She had other responsibilities; she went to face them. She would have time to make breakfast and an hour or so to work before she started making phone calls.
On a November night in 1771, King Stanisław August was kidnapped for the second time, his efforts at reform having annoyed a part of the noble class, which rebelled. His abductors, as they fled Warsaw with him, were undone by the dark, the mud, the fall of a horse, and incompetence. The king escaped with the aid of one of his kidnappers, whom he had persuaded to change sides after a long philosophical discussion. He wished to offer an amnesty to all the rebels but was prevented by Russia and Prussia…
Hania typed on, through the unwillingness of the nobles to compromise, to give up their right to rebel, their right of life and death over their peasants, etc., through the failure of reforms, until Russia, Prussia, and Austria, desirous of righting a balance of power among themselves, claimed that chaos prevailed in Poland and, in the first of their successive Partitions, which took more and more territory, divided part of the country between themselves.
….Stanisław August did what he could in the situation. He promoted the arts, sciences, and education (including for girls and including through Europe's first ministry of education). He also co-authored one of the first national constitutions in Europe. The Constitution of May Third was supposed to extend political rights to the bourgeoisie and make Poland more democratic, but instead it led to further rebellion by part of the nobility, another war, and the Second Partition of the country between Russia and Prussia. It is held against Stanisław that he eventually joined the side of the magnates, although he was trying to save what he could of the reforms. He was forced to abdicate and shortly died. He was a humane man, who tried his best for his country. Today he is often vilified.
There, another one who did his best in the face of difficulties, thought Hania, as she finished typing. She liked to read about people who'd made an effort to do what they could. She was trying too. What was that verse?
Do the work that's nearest
Though it's dull at whiles,
Helping when we meet them
Lame dogs over stiles.
She smiled rather wryly to herself. They were all lame dogs: herself, Maks, Kalina, Bartek the least of them. She went to attend to her own duties.
She had insisted that Kalina see a doctor.
"Why?" Kalina had objected. "I don't want to go."
"Yes. But I don't want to be responsible if anything goes wrong." This time she had a point of leverage and Kalina gave in with only token protest.
Hania searched through the phone book and found a private clinic on the outskirts of town. In a private clinic they wouldn't ask to see documents; there wouldn't be any questions about Kalina's parents, etc. So they were going, riding on one bus after another, with Maks, complaining bitterly, in tow because they couldn't leave him alone. Hania tried to concentrate on the views out the window. What a lot of theatres putting on 'Szekspir' and Irish plays; what a lot of movie houses; what a lot of apartment buildings and billboards again. They got off the last bus and began to walk.
Somewhere they were passing a churchyard. Was this the one? She slowed her steps, peering through the fence to see if there was a printing office inside. There didn't seem to be. The fence was sharply spiked, there was a security agency poster on the parish house––obviously the parish priest had never read
Les Miserables
,
thought Hania––and there was a sign on the gate scolding the parishioners for not wearing good enough clothes to Sunday service. Hania stared at the notice in disbelief. Maks and Kalina were leaving her behind. Of course, there were all kinds of priests in the Church: some very good and some––not so good. She hurried to catch up with her charges. "Kalina, is this the church?"
"No. And please don't try to find it, because you won't."
Hania tried to imagine herself going in and speaking to the priest. What would she say? How would she begin? "Do you know, Father, what sort of a man...?" She couldn't even remember how one greeted a Polish priest. It wasn't just "good day." It was… "May He be praised...?" Something like that. But how did one say "goodbye?"
They came to the clinic and went inside. There was marble everywhere, bright cream paint, and fashion-model girls sitting at the reception counter behind new computers. Everyone was very pleasant and there was no waiting. Kalina disappeared into a room. Hania sat in a leather chair and Maks went to look at various medical posters.
"Maks, come sit beside me," she said, probably just too late.
"Well," he said matter-of-factly, dropping into a chair beside her, "I don't know why you don't want me to watch television. I think that"––he pointed to a poster graphically detailing a bladder operation––"is much worse."
She was inclined to agree, but adjured him to sit still and stop kicking the chair. "Look at that other poster––the one with the magnified dust mites."
She closed her eyes and tried to concentrate on Beethoven's
Sonata in F
. She opened them to find a woman, heavily pregnant, sitting beside her. The woman smiled and gestured toward Hania's midriff. "When's yours due?"
"Er…" The woman was going to be so embarrassed. "October."
"Everything's fine," said the doctor, appearing with Kalina and handing over a schedule of tests to have done. She's speaking to me, thought Hania, as if I'm Kalina's mother. Do I look that old? I'd have to be at least five years older than I am to have been a mother of Kalina's age.
They left the clinic and took the several bus rides home. Kalina seemed undaunted by the experience, thought Hania later, watching her around the apartment, perhaps even rather pleased by the attention. Perhaps that's what she wanted all along?
A postcard came the next day from Ania, tucked among the sheaf of bills that arrived almost daily. It was stamped "Switzerland."
Kochanie, We've just passed a wonderful week in the––
somewhere illegible
. Lots of sun and good talk with friends. We're staying here with the Kueblers. I think we'll be leaving on Saturday. We miss you lots. Hugs and kisses. Mama
Saturday, that would have been nearly a week ago. There was no telling where they might be now. Please don't let them be on their way to Poland, she thought.
One thing, after all, was certain. Whenever they arrived, she was going to be held responsible for what had happened. She didn't for a moment suppose the fact that Kalina had become pregnant before she came to stay would ever prevent Wiktor––and her father too, when Wiktor complained to him––from blaming her. It would certainly be all her fault for not looking after Kalina properly. And it wouldn't be entirely ill will; she didn't suppose either Wiktor or her father had ever considered questions on the order of the length of the human gestation period; they lived in such abstract worlds she doubted if they knew…Considering her own relatives, thought Hania, there was something to be said, in theory, at least, for the 'family values' people. If only the most rabid advocates weren't so likely to be people hiding some emotional disturbance of their own.
So what, she wondered, was she going to do about this editor of Kalina's? Could she just turn her eyes away and let him go on preying on young girls? Or did she have to take some action? And if so, what?
Later that evening Kalina came up behind her while she was searching the phone book for the names of editorial offices. "You can't do that!" she said.
"I wish I didn't know about it," Hania said, "but since I do, I don't think I can just let someone take advantage of young girls and not do anything to try and stop it. How many teenagers do you think this man will use the way he used you? From what you tell me, I don't for a moment suppose you were the first or that Paulina will be the last. I don't want to involve the police, but it seems to me that if I spoke to his superiors, he could be warned to behave himself, or an eye could be kept on him, or…I don't know…I'm not asking you to give me his name––I know you can't."
"No, so don't try." Kalina was being offensive again––and actually, Hania didn't blame her.
"I know this is really difficult for you…but think if other girls ended up in your situation. It isn't right, Kalina."
"What's wrong with my situation?" Kalina asked angrily. "I like my situation. I
want
a baby."
Then a moment later: "Okay"––she was almost shouting at Hania––"It wasn't the way I said, okay? He didn't know I'm fifteen. I told him I'm a university student and Paulina also. He didn't ask us to come into the office, we followed him. He didn't ask me to come back, I just came. There, are you satisfied?" She flung out of the room.
"Oh," said Hania. That put a different complexion on the whole. Adultery might be regrettable but it wasn't any of her business. Then for a moment, she wondered if Kalina was telling her the truth; turning it over in her mind she doubted and believed by turns; finally, she realized she would never know and that she had better drop the subject.
13
Let us plant roses, friend,
Long yet, the world is sure
To whir with snowy storms,
Let's plant them for the future!
– Seweryn Goszczyński,
'Planting Roses,' 1831
Everything was dreary, she thought with discouragement, typing away at the history. I am coming to a point in Poland's history where it becomes harder and harder to see events simply as something in the distant past, errors that modern progress will eliminate.
Tadeusz Kościuszko, friend of Thomas Jefferson and participant in America's war for independence, has a bridge named after him in New York and a mountain in Australia, and is considered by many to be a hero. He was born in Mereszowszczyzna––
an unpronounceable place even by Polish standards, thought Hania
––of rather poor parents, who owned only one village of serfs. He really wanted to be a soldier, but as no one––and he offered himself to various German courts––would have him, he had to wait for the American Revolution. After taking part in this conflict, he used the money he received for his services to emancipate some American slaves; back home he contented himself with freeing his female serfs and reducing the men's labor…Then, in 1794, he headed a rebellion against the Russian occupation. Although he tried to encourage the peasantry to join by promising them some civil liberties, it was still a far cry from 'all men are created equal.' And the insurrection was a disaster. When the Russian forces reached Warsaw, they massacred ten to twenty thousand of the inhabitants (in revenge, perhaps, for the population's earlier attack on the Russian garrison, when two to four thousand soldiers were killed). The final outcome was the Third Partition, after which Poland had to wait another 123 years to regain its independence.
Respected Sir,
Hania wrote,
Given the divisions––social, linguistic, denominational––of all the peoples existing within Poland's shifting borders, the idea that a small group of people should take to the idea of dying, and worse yet, of killing, for the sake of 'Polish independence' seems unreal...The immediate results always so out of proportion with any possible benefits...not that I think killing is justified for any benefit...
She considered, her finger over the send button: Should she send this? Perhaps he was getting tired of all her questioning. 'Delete,' she pressed.
Kościuszko had been captured by the Russians, but was pardoned by Tsar Paul I, along with 20,000 other political prisoners.
Serfdom was abolished in the Prussian partition in 1823, in the Austrian partition in 1848, and in the Russian partition in 1864.
Maks came to interrupt her. She looked up from her typing. "You never pay attention to me any more," he complained.
"I thought you were the boy who wanted to make me miserable." She wasn't in the mood for Maks's tantrums, but she regretted the words once spoken. Actually, he hadn't been making her life miserable lately and he'd even seemed fairly cooperative.
"But you're going to stay and take care of Bartek and Kalina, aren't you? So that's okay." He adjusted his glasses. "I don't have to make your life miserable."
She stared at him. Had she given that impression?
"Maks, I can't stay." His face began to take on an ominous darkness, but she couldn't deceive him. "I'd really like to help you, but I can't. I have to go back to New York in two weeks. But your parents will come back, and you'll be glad to see them, won't you? And school will start and you'll see your friends again…"
The phone rang. Maks was muttering something, but she didn't know whether it was "stupid, fat turnip," or "stupid, fat cabbage-head…" and she was glad for a reason to ignore him.
"Hello?"
"Haniu,
kochanie
."
"Tato?" Her father.
"Hania, how are you?"
"I'm…"
He cut her off. "Hania, listen, Gerhardt just called and he says––"
"Tato, I don't know any Gerhardt."
Her father and Wiktor moved almost entirely in emigré circles of academics, writers, musicians, and scientists of vaguely Polish antecedents, who, although they seldom went near Poland themselves, had no interest in anyone who lacked a connection with the place.
"Kuebler. You know, Wiktor's friend in Berlin. Or Bern? So listen to me. Wiktor asked him to ask me to call you to ask if you wouldn't mind staying another two weeks?"
Why, thought Hania, did Polish people never do anything directly? Why was it always by involving as many intermediaries as possible? And then she thought––two weeks more; a reprieve of two more weeks. And then, but my job?