FRESH
YARN presents:
Places
With You and Places Without You
By Ingrid
Maltrud
In this hemisphere
the winter nights crowd the day and by mid-afternoon the yellow haze of
lamps lights the streets of Budapest. I cross the square and the click,
click, click of my heels echoes off the towering stone soldiers on horseback.
Communist cars sputter and impatient busses squawk at me. My Walkman accompanies
me on my journey, as does Sade's song of love that won't leave, the song
that conjures my longing for you. In my haste I pass the caramelizing
pastry from Gerbaud, the bronzed gaze of Imre Nagy, and finally the imposing
spires of Parliament. So familiar are these sights that they no longer
engage my thought or wonder, but rather they mark my walk home. What was
once foreign is now home for me. After the slam of the phone last night,
I wonder if you are now foreign and no longer home for me?
I am to
see my first real castle today. I crowd off the bus with a dozen of youthful
20-year-olds and our anthropology teacher. My extra ten years of what
they jokingly call "wisdom" only contrasts their eagerness against
my melancholy. We trek up the hill and they shout and laugh while I nurse
my vodka hangover and a tinge of shame over an elevator-to-bedroom incident
with one of my fellow students. I try to distract myself with romantic
Hollywood images of windswept hills, crumbling bastions and dark men.
Rocks grate under my feet and the afternoon sun clears my fog as we come
upon the assertive fortress -- the gaping arch of the entrance, the worn
reddish color of the bricks covered by the dusty damp smell of old places.
We enter into the compound and a stone path leads me to the small chapel.
Cracked panes of stained glass filter a kaleidoscope of light onto Christ's
body, protector of the altar. Dusty particles dance in the air as I count
the small wooden pews and statues of saints that line the walls.
I spot her, instantly drawn to the strain on her face. Mary hides in a
room warmed by the waxy scent of candles, an evil serpent lodged under
her left foot. I turn to explain to you that this life-sized plaster of
Mary wears a red cape around her shoulders (not the usual blue), which
is a symbol of her sacrifice for Christ. My words fall empty into the
silence behind me, and I abruptly leave, the echo of my steps left for
the ears of saints.
When we
first arrived in Budapest for our academic year, one of the young girls
asked me if the man who wished me farewell at the San Francisco airport
was my husband. Surprised by her question, I retorted with an abrupt no.
Then with a light laugh I told her you were my ex-lover. I could
have told her you were the only man I ever loved so passionately, but
that you had wedged a stake of lies into our center. I wanted to call
you and ask you what you would have said, but I wasn't ready to hear your
answer.
I make light
steps down the worn stairs into a dusty room where a large round wooden
wheel rests against the back wall. I pause. Hairs dance on the back of
my neck and my stomach collapses. My breath hides in my chest and then
slowly escapes. Mounds of dirt and piles of bricks are scattered around
the room. The ceiling is low and it smells of iron down here. Some of
the other students begin to tauntingly scream "torture chamber."
Panic races up my legs and into my eyes as I look for a way out, my sense
of direction distorted. My mouth turns to bitter dust and my wrists feel
pinched by metal. I can't place where I am. Madness reverberates off the
walls. I can see them now, dirty men and haggard women, slouched in corners,
scratching at the ground and hanging from the walls. I push their cries
of pain into the empty corner and turn to you for reassurance. My parched
mouth whispers, "did you feel that too?" If you had been there
you would have led me out of the torture chamber.
Last night
you pretended I was just another friend calling to lament about all the
turkey I ate. But I am in Budapest and Thanksgiving was celebrated with
a weak plate of salty mashed potatoes and cheap red wine. Do you remember
that rainy Wednesday before Thanksgiving when we hopped on your old Norton
and buzzed up and down the hills of San Francisco, stopping in at our
favorite pubs? We drank sweet dark beer, smoked European cigarettes and
talked about cranberry sauce, the beauty of our shiny city, and my plans
to return to school. As we stumbled toward the Lucky Thirteen pub, a black
man stepped into our path. Robed in torn red velvet and crowned with a
Burger King hat, he cleared his throat and then offered a sonnet for a
buck or a beer. I requested a sonnet of love. You gave him a five and
he began, his voice shrill with madness.
"Ay,
truly; for the power of beauty will sooner transform honesty from what
it is to a bawd than the force of honesty can translate beauty into his
likeness: this was sometime a paradox, but now the time gives it proof.
I did love you once. You should not have believed me; for virtue cannot
so inoculate our old stock but we shall relish of it: I loved you not."
The black
king then swiftly removed his crown and in a smooth and feminine voice
murmured, "I was the more deceived."
In that
brief murmur of Ophelia's deceitful anguish I felt as if I were standing
stark naked in a fog-chilled forest. You reached for my hand, but I pulled
away and broke the silence with applause. With a bow he wrapped the torn
fabric around his body and pushed his cart up Market Street. You apprehensively
touched my cheek, laughed nervously and put your arm around me as we continued
on to the Lucky Thirteen, joking about love and madness. We kissed for
hours in the corner of the bar and later fell into your bed intoxicated
with the nectar of hops and barley. You told me you loved me that night.
Another
bus trip with our teacher, this time to the edges of Romania where the
Hungarians still clutch to their traditions, including the making of Palinka,
a homemade plum liquor. The worn farmers traditionally enjoy a breakfast
of sharp cheese, dark bread and shots of Palinka. We join our generous
hosts with extra shots and cheers of "opah!" My body warms and
we load onto the bus, off to another village. I turn on the Walkman and
listen to another song of lies and kisses late in the night. The heat
of the moonshine appeases my rising anger as I watch old women pull up
roots from the side of the road.
We arrive
in a village where we will spend the evening celebrating a young Transylvanian
couple's nuptials. After we are introduced to our host families, three
of us decide to walk off the morning drink before the bottles get passed
again. We head towards the hill that protects the small enclave of houses.
A mucky combination of mud, straw and horseshit paves the streets, sticking
to our boots. Strings of red paprika dangle from the roofs. Soon the smell
of manure gives way to thinning trees and fields of dusty grasses. My
legs work hard to warm me against the rising chill of the setting sun.
A drying field of forgotten corn reveals a small knoll that promises a
panorama of the valley and surrounding hills. The stalks of corn whisper
as we pass through. Stepping out onto the knoll, I feel, for the first
time since leaving California, less dislocated, less disconnected. The
beauty of the valley and hills calms me while the chatter of goats and
chickens fills the valley and the strum of wedding songs drifts up to
our ears. A star pierces through the sky and a crescent moon glows orange.
We sit quietly while the darkness seeps into the sky. I long for your
arm around my shoulder. I want to point to the moon, tell you it holds
my love for you.
I was surprised
you were home when I called. It was 4:00 am in Budapest and I assumed
you to be out zooming up and down the streets of San Francisco, but I
had just finished reading your letter from last week and I longed for
your voice, not your lies. I thought you would welcome a tipsy phone call
from me. Your voice revealed otherwise. I could tell she was there
and I slurred into the phone, "You can't talk can you?" You
answered with a flat no. "I'm having a small dinner party,"
you explained, and quickly asked with great insincerity, "How was
your Thanksgiving?" Your chilly voice sobered me and I slammed the
receiver back in its place. The cobwebs hanging from my ceiling begged
to be cleaned, but I lit another cigarette and wondered out loud to the
cold walls what could have possibly happened to your desire to kiss the
soft of my belly as you so vividly described in your letter? I knew the
answer, but I didn't want to hear it so I threw the phone across the room.
Heavy raindrops
came with the rising sun and I watched the cobwebs and I drank cup after
cup of peppermint tea to keep myself from calling you back. I wanted to
reminisce about that time we dodged a deluge under the dripping cypress
trees all the way to the top of Mount Wittenburg to catch a glimpse of
the Pacific. I would have asked, do you remember how magical that was?
You would have agreed. The clouds had cleared by the time we arrived at
the summit and we stood panting under the refreshing blue sky. I bent
over to touch a wild iris and you pushed me onto the ground and kissed
me with your sweaty lips. You declared that my beauty was as perfect as
the dancing sparkle of the ocean. We lay there for some time watching
hawks circle and screech, your head resting on my chest. Clouds moved
into the blue spot of sky and you yelled, "Last one to the bottom
pays for burgers and beers." As you lifted me from the ground I leaned
into you, my lips brushing your ear as I whispered, "I love you."
It wasn't
the fact that she was there when I called. It was the fact that
you denied my existence. But then again, facts were never your strong
point. Remember that night on the beach in Santa Cruz before I left for
Budapest? We stretched out a blanket with bread, cheese, hearty red wine
and the salt of the sea. We talked about our complicated history and our
resolution to remain friends. You told me about your new relationship,
the sound of the waves crashing on my jealousy. I asked if we could do
this, be friends, sometimes lovers. You assured me we could. Like I said,
it wasn't the fact that she was there when I called, it was the
fact that your assurance was a lie. I am a hidden part of your life, another
lie wedged between me and you, not to mention her. That night we
kissed between bites and sips of wine, between our promises to remain
friends as the clouds soaked up the fiery colors of the setting sun. Our
bodies were hungry that night, touching, sucking and piercing our secret
connection. I fell asleep wondering how I would feel living in a new country
without you near me. I dreamed of long, sad goodbyes.
I thought
this was the end of the story, but once again I am some place you are
not -- the crash of the cymbal, the cry of the violins; my knee cold without
your warm hand. I sit in San Francisco's symphony hall, Budapest now a
fading memory. This familiar city, without you, is now a foreign land.
There was a slip of fate. We both know it is for the best, for all of
us. My heart and head battle as I sit in the balcony, watching the arias
shatter upon the floor. Desire swells and I can no longer resist. I imagine
your hand caressing my knee as the music rises, and for a brief moment
I am someplace with you, not without you.
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