Josip
Novakovich is an immigrant from Croatia and now an American citizen.
His story collection Salvation and Other Disasters won an American Book
Award.
© Graywolf Press
He is also the author of such fictional works as Apricots From Chernobyl,
© Graywolf Press
and Yolk.
© Graywolf Press
White Pine Press recently published a collection of his travel writings, Plum Brandy:
Croatian Journeys.
© White Pine Press
Next year, HarperCollins will publish his new novel and a collection of stories.
He currently teaches at Penn State.
Snow Powder
Josip Novakovich
Large snowflakes floated in the wind like dove
feathers. Mirko leaned his head against the windowpane and gazed up the hill into
the mountains shrouded in the pale clouds and snow, and he grew joyfully dizzy.
He stumbled to the basement, and waited for his eyes
to get used to the dark, with a few streaks of light hitting a sack
of sprouting potatoes. His skis emerged out of the dark and shone seemingly
supplied by an independent source of beige light from within, from the
soul of the old wood. Mirko gingerly touched these smooth ghosts of
former winters and took them up the stairs while they clanked and fenced
with each other. He waxed them with beeswax and shined them with his
woolen socks. He walked to the yard gate, an old rusty squeal-making
contraption on loose hinges.
Where are you going? You have to do homework and get
ready for school!
Mommy, look at all that beautiful snow.
Yes, I understand that.
But you got math to do. I am good at math. You
won't be if you don't keep up. Mirko ran into the
yard and skied between the wood shed and the former goat stall. The town ordinance
no longer allowed keeping goats within town limits. Just two blocks away, one
could keep goats. The moist chill on his cheeks and
the snow behind his shirt collar gave him a delicious shiver. Soon,
Boro, his younger brother, joined him, and they enjoyed a snowball fight until
their fingers turned red and sore. Mirko laughed at Boro because his face had
turned into a semblance of a red and green apple--green chin and lips and red
cheeks and nose. Later, Mirko walked to school, with
his fingers itching even under his fingernails in the gloves. The first class
was his favorite, geography. He knew all the highest peaks on every continent,
the longest rivers, the deepest ocean trenches. The topic was Antarctica and the
global warming effect. The teacher, Medic, an elderly woman with gray hair and
small eyes which gleamed from a reddish darkness of swollen eyelids, kept talking
about how western industrial nations had been trapping heat within the atmosphere.
Does it mean the highest peak will go down? Mirko
asked. Now it's 4987 meters high. That's an interesting
question, she said. We'll have to figure it out. But
it's made of rock, unlike the North Pole. Bravo. So
it won't go down with the melting. Maybe it will,
he said. How many feet that make the top are made of ice or glacier? We'd
have to look it up. And if the ice melts all over
the world, the sea level will rise, and so that'll cut down the space above the
sea level, too, won't it? You are right about that,
she said. Brilliant for a ten year old. I am going to give you an A for this.
She opened the grade book and with her trembling
and swollen hand she wrote a large A in red. But
that did not make Mirko happy--the world was melting away; what was a grade compared
with the world? He gazed through the windows and watched the thickly falling snow.
Tree branches were covered with it, the top half white, the bottom brown--darker
than usual because it was wet--divided like a flag. He wondered whether there
was a flag in that color combination and couldn't think of any. And why wouldn't
there be a flag, half white and half black? What would it symbolize? Peace and
death? Peaceful death? Deadly peace? Surrender and go to church? None of it sounded
appealing. The evergreens, white and green, made
the right color combination for a flag, but not the right shape, with snow-laden
branches bending. The bell rang for the recess. He
hopped down the wooden stairs, which squeaked and thudded and sang, as though
his feet were fingertips bouncing on worn and untuned piano keys. In the schoolyard,
he kneeled and hugged snow into a little heap, which he then squeezed with his
palms and rolled. The wet snow made a quickly growing ball after which the cobbled
pavement was laid bare, in an ever larger trail. Suddenly
an iced snowball hit him on his right ear so that it rang with a brimming pain,
and a high pitch, like that of a struck tuning fork, remained in his ear. He got
up to see who threw the ball, but he couldn't. A boy grabbed him from behind,
and pulled him down to the ground. Another one punched him and shouted, That'll
teach you, you nerd, to show off in class. Is that
what you do, just read books? No wonder you're so weak! He
wiggled to get out from under them. The bell rang
to signal the end of the recess. The boys got up.
Mirko ran after them and tripped the slower one, who fell right in front of the
math teacher, a chubby, red-faced man with white hair. The
teacher scrutinized the boys, lit his grainy cigarette with a match, waved the
flame quickly out of its life after which a trail of thin sulpherous smoke remained
and he went on his way to the classroom without a word. The boys followed, inhaling
the incindiary and unfiltered aroma of his anger. Stand
up, you Marich, the teacher called, and blew out thick white smoke, which seemed
to make his white hair expand, while his red face diminished almost to the red
center of an enlivened cigarette tip. Mirko did. Is that the way to behave? The
boy who fell sobbed and wiped his cheeks but there were no tears on them.
Teacher, the two of them attacked me during the recess and I tried to get back
at them. That's a fine way to go. Let me see your
homework. I forgot my notebook at home. But
you did the homework? All right, then you know how to do complex division, expressing
the remainder in decimals. Come to the blackboard and let's see whether you've
learned anything. Mirko stood in front of the blackboard,
trying to ignore the incessant tuning fork pitch in his ear, and perhaps because
of the pitch, he had no stage-fright. He solved the problem accurately. Nerd,
nerd! shouted the boys in the class. Just ignore them,
said the teacher and slid his yellow fingers into Mirko's uncombed curly brown
hair, and he ruffled his hair in this nicotined blessing so much that Mirko felt
static in his scalp, a manifestation of pride, which traveled down his spine and
decayed into revulsion low in his abdomen. Mirko
looked into the rows of kids, and saw his favorite girl, Bojana, smile at him.
He was blissful as he looked into her green eyes framed by black lashes. During the break, he followed Bojana outside. Let's
see who can swoosh a better angel, she said. She fell
backwards in the snow and closed her eyes, and flapped her arms like a bird. Her long lips slightly parted and revealed snow-white
teeth, so it looked as though the snow around her was also in her, especially
when she opened her eyes; the whites of her eyes were purely white. There was
a wonderful iciness bout her. Your turn! she said. Close
your eyes and imagine you are flying to the Lord.
He gladly obeyed, and kept
splashing the snow, when suddenly he felt moist tingling on his lips. He opened
his eyes, and she leaped away. I told you to keep
your eyes closed! she said. She was flushed in her face.
He wiped his lips
and looked at his hands as though there should be blood or honey on them. It would have lasted longer if you had kept your eyes
closed. Did you kiss me? he asked. Yes,
did you like it? I bet you've never kissed before. No.
Have you? Yes, just now. I thought it was high time
that I have the first kiss. After the age of ten, it's almost too late. You'd
have to be embarrassed not to have done it. She shoveled
snow with her open palms onto his face. Now no matter what happens in our lives,
we'll always be the first, you know that? We'll never forget it. Do
you want to do it again?
No, not today. It's too
early for the second kiss. That can wait for a year.
And she ran away, laughing.
* |
Mirko rushed home, skipping steps through flurries, a
richer man than before, with more world around him, and a better and greater world
it was, just as an orange is bigger unpeeled than peeled. It was as though the
world, a peeled orange that had dried and grown bitter, had got back its skin
and freshness, a chance to be juicy again. He savored the crunching sound, and
tried to make a melody out of it, by crunching the snow slowly and quickly, gently
and roughly. He picked a little snow from an evergreen branch, and ate it. He
buried his face in it. Snow, heavenly snow. That evening
his father, Zvonko, arrived from Germany. Business at home had been so bad that
nobody wanted mechanical watches and everybody got cheap quartz ones from China
at street markets, and so he went to Germany once a month for a week, to sell
old watches and clocks at antique fairs. It took
me ages to get here, Father said. So many roads are blocked, Serbs had taken so
much land, that I felt like a fly entering a bottle through a rotten cork. But
you all have been fine? Thank God, said his wife Neda.
People here get along pretty well. We aren't like those madmen in Eastern Bosnia;
we don't care who's who. You think? Zvonko
gave Mirko's brother Boro various coins--several 10 Franc pieces, with yellow
brassy circles and nickel insides, from a fair in Strasbourg; a five German-mark
coin; five Swiss frank coin with a thick cross on a shield, Italian liras . .
. Now Boro piled them up into little towers and asked how much each was worth
in dinars. You can't do that in dinars, Mirko said.
The dinar is worthless. Do it in German marks. Good
advice, said Zvonko. A German mark is worth 3 francs and one thousand liras. Are Italians the poorest if their money is worth so little?
asked Boro. No, they just like a lot of zeros. In
Italy everybody is a millionaire.
* |
After
supper, the father and his sons went outdoors, and built a snowman. Zvonko used
two old irreparable watches as the snowman's eyes. The
following morning, Mirko was awakened by his father's kiss over his ear. That
kiss triggered his inner tuning fork. The lights were on. Mirko jumped out of
bed to see whether the snow was still there. Don't
worry, the snowman is going nowhere, Zvonko said. The
previous year, Mirko had cried when his snowman melted, and he still kept the
shrunken snowman the size of an Egyptian mummified kitten in a ziplock bag in
the freezer. Death of his snowman had grieved him for days. The fact that snow
everywhere had melted was bad enough, but that his friend, whose soul was made
out of snow, would also melt and vanish, and had, hurt him. But this time, Mirko
was not getting attached to the new snowman, even if his watch-eyes had stalled
the time perhaps from before Mirko's birth, perhaps from before the real global
warming effect, when winters were continuous howling snowstorms, and the world
a pattern of shifting snowdrifts. Oh, how lucky my great-grandparents must have
been, he thought, but then remembered that they had been slaughtered by Serbs
in the Second Balkan War, in the winter. Have you
done your homework? his father asked. We had none. How nice! Is it all right
if I go to school on my skis? But, do you have a
place to hide them? I'll bring them into the classroom
and keep them behind the stove. Mirko put his ski
shoes on and clipped them onto the skis, and with the schoolbag at his back, he
started toward the school, but as he rounded the first corner out of Father's
sight, he went on, up the hill, through the park, over the trails where he had
played Robin Hood during the summer. He found it awkward and painful to go up
the hill waddling like a duck, so he took off the skis and carried them, but they
separated from one another and dangled and resumed their old fencing match. To
handle them better, he got rid of his school bag, which he hid in a bush. He climbed
high into the hill, reaching the dazzling line of daytime, a storm of light of
the rising sun, capping the dark blue below, and he slid down back into the slumbering
morning on his skis. He kept his balance, and rode in terror, delicious terror,
that he would fall, shatter his bones, fly . . . and he did fly over uneven spots.
The cold moist air and granulated snow smarted his face and chilled his ears.
To stop, he deliberately fell into a snowdrift, and he climbed the hill again.
This time he would go to the top, into the mountain, and he'd ski down for more
than a kilometer. He panted as he went up, and ate snow because he was thirsty.
Stoj! a voice shouted. Halt! Mirko
looked around but saw nothing. He rubbed his eyes,
and when he opened them again, he faced several men in camouflage, which visually
merged with the sickly evergreens behind them, with patterns of green and brown,
as though the men too had been eaten by acid rain, or as though the acid-bitten
trees had begun to move and chatter and threaten behaving like mirage soldiers.
What are you doing up here? a soldier said. You got
me so startled I almost shot you! Really? Mirko said.
Why would you do that? Nice skis, where did you get
those? From Germany. My Dad works there. For
those Nazis? Let's make a deal, I'll give you my gun, and you give me your skis
and boots, how is that? No way, said Mirko. What
do you mean, No way? I can take your skis if I like. You are our prisoner, a POW,
don't you know that? Prisoner? That's exciting, Mirko
said. We'll make sure it's exciting. I
don't mind that if you let me ski. But if we let you,
you'll ski all the way down to the village, and you'll tell everybody we are here. No, I won't. All right, we'll
let you go if you come back with a flask of plum brandy. What
if I don't come back? Let me show you something. The
soldier led Mirko to a cannon on wheels and slid a missile-like bomb into the
pipe. See, it even has a telescope so strong that you can see the rings of Saturn
at night if you like. You want to take a look? Show me your house in the valley.
When you look at it, it'll feel like you are right there. That
one, with the green roof, Mirko said. All right,
we'll have to adjust the scope angle. There. So now when you go back down there,
if you tell anybody we are up here, we can blow you up, is that clear? You
tricked me. You are a good boy, I have one at home
just like you. Nothing will happen to you, just remember to bring the brandy.
Mirko took a magnificent glide down the mountain, splashing
snow left and right; the snow clouds that burst up from under him filled with
sunlight, refracting fleeting rainbow fragments. The
following day, it rained, so it was not a good day to ski, but looking up the
mountain, Mirko imagined that it snowed up there. Yes, for every 100 meters, you
lose one degree Celsius. You gain snow. He wanted to go up the mountain, but not
today. He longed to see Bojana, to smell her cheeks. As he walked, he looked over
the minaret and a church dome into the mountain, and for the first time ever,
he felt guilty that he was going to school. That was truly irresponsible of him;
what if the soldiers up there got angry that they had run out of brandy and bombed
the town? They could kill his parents, his brother; their bomb could strike any
moment in the streets, and tear him to pieces. For a moment, he hesitated; of
course, he should rush home, and save the town. It would be terrible if they all
died simply because he wanted to look at Bojana's face. But it would be almost
as terrible not to see her face. At the beginning
of the math class, he was tempted to tell everybody that they were encircled by
a Serb army, that any moment the bombing could start, that they were all in mortal
danger, and that the only way out of it was to collect plum brandy and haul it
up into the mountain. He enjoyed the power of his knowledge. He would not tell
them, just not yet. He gazed blissfully out the window.
Having missed a day, he also missed homework. The math teacher checked homework,
and Mirko tried the old maneuver--he'd forgotten the notebook at home. Awfully
forgetful at your age, that's no good, said the teacher. Now, at my age it would
make sense. All right, prove at the blackboard you did your homework.
He gave
Mirko the assignment, to divide 44.29 into 682.91. Mirko
was hesitant. He'd never done a division like that, and didn't know what to do
with the decimal points. He remembered the buzz in his ears, but there was none.
His knees shook, and to steady them, he tightened his legs and stood up straight
and stiffened. The class laughed. They all seemed to relish the fact that he couldn't
do the math. He looked for sympathy in Bojana, but she'd joined in the mob lynching
by laughter. All right, do it without the decimal
points, the teacher said. You get those out, and the proportion stays the same.
Do it now. Through tears, Mirko couldn't see very
well. The class still jeered. He got so flustered that he forgot which way to
go, from left to right or right to left. Get lost,
said the teacher. Before you fight with boys, just get lost. Go home and do your
homework. No wonder we have wars here, when you all grow up like thugs. Why can't
you boys get together to do math? Or play chess? Just ten years ago, kids played
chess everywhere, and now, I never see a kid with a chessboard. Till
the end of the class, Mirko stared at the low drifting clouds, his face still
brimming and hot. He imagined washing his face in the snow, cooling his cheeks
off. He was sitting close to the tile furnace, in
which coal burned; there was a large weaved basket full of coal in front of it.
The side of his face closer to the stove was hot, and the slight smoke stung his
eyes. The tiles crackled, and he wondered whether the heat did it; he knew that
it made some things expand, and others shrink. He wondered what the heat did to
the rocks, and how global warming would affect the mountains. Would they all grow?
Wasn't it true that the tallest mountains were close to the equator? Or was that
because of the rotation of the globe? Or both? And why was it that Mars, which
was a little smaller and rotated faster than earth, had a mountain twice as high
as Mt. Everest? Was that mountain close to the equator of Mars? He got so absorbed
in his thoughts that he did not notice when the class was over. Look
at our genius, said one of the boys. What do you think goes on in his head now?
He's probably figuring out what two times two equals. Mirko heard that but did not bother to answer the provocations.
During the break, he walked by himself. He looked
around for Bojana, but he couldn't see her in the crowds of kids. What
are you looking for, my friend? Toni, the best soccer player in the class, asked.
Your little girlfriend? Come, I'll show where she is. He
looked where Toni was pointing, to the old chestnut tree. Bojana was leaning against
the tree with her back, and Stevo, the class goalie, was kissing her.
Toni
jeered. So, what is two plus one? Bojana saw him over
Stevo's shoulder, and then closed her eyes and kissed more strongly than before.
Mirko did not know how to respond. Should he go and
fight Stevo, defend his honor and love, defend her? But she clearly was not reluctant;
she put her arms behind Stevo's neck and pulled him to her. When the bell rang,
Stevo walked ahead of her, not looking at Mirko, clearly not wishing any fight.
She walked behind him, smiling, her lips scarlet, her cheeks and eyes full of
light, viciously beautiful so that even at that moment Mirko marveled at her and
loved her. You know what? she said. We didn't do it
right. We just lip-kissed, which doesn't count. You got to tongue kiss, deep-French
kiss, that counts. You just saw my first real kiss! It's wonderful, so much better
than lip-kissing, you got to try it one day when you grow up. Mirko
did not respond. He did not walk on, but continued standing and staring at the
tree as though he could still see what he should have been doing. He did not go
back to the classroom. He left his books there. On the way home, he was out of
breath although he walked slowly. In the streets,
soldiers drove in regular cars, mostly VWs. That was something new-by the flags
some displayed on their uniforms, it was clear this was the new Bosnian army.
Did they know about his friends in the hills? Would there be fighting? He hoped
there would be.
* |
At home, he stole a bottle of
plum brandy from the pantry, from among the jars of plum jam and pickled peppers.
The bottle clanked against the jars but nothing broke.
His
father caught him outside. You are too little to
be interested in brandy. What do you think you are doing? I
need it. If I hurt myself skiing, I can clean my wound with this. Don't
lie, you little thief. I'll teach you to steal! And
his father, who had not spanked him in years, twisted his arms, nearly breaking
them, and then beat him with his thick western belt, which he had pulled out of
his blue jeans. His blue-jeans fell back to his knees, and he stood in his white
underwear, belting his son's back, sprawled over unsplit firewood beech logs which
smelled of oyster mushrooms and soil, the smells being enhanced in the snow through
Mirko's gasps and steamy breath. Cry, you little bastard. But Mirko would not cry. He ground his teeth; he'd rather
die than surrender. It struck him as immensely unjust that he was being punished
by the man he was about to save. His father could not know that his son was saving
him, but now Mirko would not tell him, out of spite. If Father could not suspect
good intentions, if he needed to talk and accuse, the hell with him. Mirko did
not cry, but tears blurred his vision, and the silvery logs and the snowman with
watchful eyes and the whole sun-struck yard broke apart in shafts of light in
the diamond splendor of his pain. The beauty of it all surprised him, and so he
even welcomed the scorching licks of ox leather on his skin. His
Mother shouted from the house door. Stop it, you old beast! Stop it! She came
down the cement stairs in her wooden shoes and pushed her husband away. She carried
Mirko to his bed, and used the plum brandy to wash the stripes on his back. No, don't do that, Mirko said. I am not bleeding. Yes, but you are all striped, like a little tiger. For a day, he stayed in bed, on his belly because of his
sore back. He imagined his classmates going to school, playing and laughing. The
soldiers probably still walked in the street. Would the artillery men wait for
one more day? He expected a grenade to strike any moment, but he was not afraid. In the morning, before dawn, he was surprised that no
bombing had taken place. But if he undertook nothing, the house would be wiped
out. He took the nearly full bottle of plum brandy and his skis, and walked out
onto the mountain, which in the pre-dawn light looked all blue. Halfway up the
mountain, he stuck his skis into a snow covered bush, leaving only the curved
tips out. Maybe he'd pick them up on the way back if he ever came back. By
the time he reached the Serb bunkers, sun had cast an orange hue layering it over
the blue of the slopes, while the valley still lounged in the hazy indigo. The
soldiers were happy to see him with the bottle, which they passed around, emptying
the contents within a minute. Good timing, boy, said one of the soldiers. We plan
to start blasting your town and we worried about you. It's so great to see you!
said another soldier, and he slapped Mirko on the shoulder. Mirko winced and groaned. What's the matter? You can't take a little bit of patting? I am sore, I fell while skiing last time and scraped myself.
Let's see your back. Mirko
struggled not to take his shirt off, but then thought better of it; let them see,
let them understand that living at home was hell. He took off the flannel shirt
and the sleeveless undershirt, and shivered. My God,
said one of them, that's no skiing injury, that's a regular old-fashioned belting.
That's how my father used to beat me, and see what good effect that had on me.
Poor thing. The soldiers gathered and examined the
swollen welts. What did he beat you for? Plum
brandy. He thought I was drinking it myself. When
you go down there again, just buy brandy in a store, all right? You don't need
to irritate your Dad. Here, I'll give you 30 marks, and you buy me coffee and
plum brandy. I am not going back there any more. I
am joining you. You want to fight against your town? Yes, I have declared war on them already. They don't know
it yet, but they will.
Well, run away from home for two-three days, just
to make them nervous so they'd love you again, but don't overdo it.
The
artillery man, who was chewing a strip of bacon, sat him down on his knee and
showed him his town through the scope. At the sight
of the school, Mirko gasped. Let's shoot, he said. What
if there are children there, you'd like to kill them? I'd
like to destroy the building. It's Saturday, nobody is there now. How
do you know? Maybe the cleaning women are washing the stairway or something. .
. I doubt it. The stairway hasn't been cleaned in
ages; they just don't do that.
Do you want to wait for Monday? That could
work better-you could get them all! No. Let's just
smash that ugly school right away. Maybe you'll have
your way. The captain has selected a few targets, the metal factory, the railway
station, and yes, the school. The school, he thinks, could already be full of
soldiers because of the thick walls. We can aim for the windows, blast inside.
The artillery man called his assistant over, to adjust
the projectiles. The captain came by, and nodded. Yes, that's a good idea. We've
waited long enough. Go ahead! Now, my boy, the artillery
man said, I've already taught you how to aim the scope-so do it. Mirko
adjusted the scope to the black tall window in the middle of the yellow building,
on the second floor. As soon as he saw the window, he recalled all the humiliation
he'd endured: the math teacher, the boys who attacked him, the girl who played
love games, which were actually, he was sure, hate games. Now he would show her,
him, them. They would never gather in that room again, he'd make sure of that.
The stove, the blackboard, everything must go. The creeps can gather for school
in the basements, below taverns, and enjoy the restroom smells. The
artillery man right next to him breathed heavily, and coughed; his breath smelled
of garlic, so Mirko breathed shallow, at least tried to, but couldn't because
his heart pounded and he panted from the excitement, desire and trepidation. He
trembled, and did not know whether from fear or the cold. His teeth chattered,
the ear buzzed, the tuning fork resurrected itself in his ear and chimed a high
C, which darkened the yellow valley. Here, have the
earphones, said the man to Mirko. No, I'd like to
enjoy the full blast. Your eardrums would rupture.
Put it on, be a good boy. Do you want music piped in? You could watch your school
blow up with your favorite piece of music in the background. What's your favorite
music? Maybe we got it? We got Jimi Hendrix, "Machine Gun." I loved
that stuff when I was your age. Explosions, that's
my favorite music. OK, you got it. You know, we've
all been waiting for this moment, and it's just a lucky synchronicity. What's
synchronicity? You'll find out in due time. A
few seconds later, a powerful blast shook Mirko. The cannon recoiled, emitted
fire and smoke, and ten seconds later, there was another blast, a smaller one,
at the school. The sound from there came shortly afterward, as a small echo. Again! he shouted. And that was the loveliest morning
he had ever spent. His bones had been shaken, even his teeth, in such a way that
his bones felt happy, hale, for a moment at least, until a dread descended onto
him. He tasted the dread as smoke and diesel in the back of his nose, thickly
descending into his throat and stinging. He looked down into the valley, into
the smoke, which grew higher and wider. What if a class had gathered for an extracurricular
activity, such as acting or dancing or singing? Did Bojana go to those clubs?
What if he had just turned her beautiful red lips into blood? He no longer hated
her, no longer wanted revenge. What if he'd just become a mass murderer? Could
he go back and live in the town again? Could he walk in the town as though nothing
had happened, and worry about decimal point divisions, the quality of snow, and
the shine on his skis? Would he walk around wrapped up in a cloud of gun smoke
which would never leave him?
No, he would not go back to study at school torture
chambers to become a scientist or an engineer in many years. He could
become a soldier right away, going from mountain top to mountain top,
blasting away. He had found the best job in the world for a boy.
© Josip Novakovich
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