gun. The whole way home, all the lights were red. I just kept swerving from lane to lane without bothering to look in the mirror, struggling to get rid of the lump that stuck in my throat. I tried to imagine my motherâs uterus in the middle of a green, dew-covered field, floating in an ocean full of dolphins and tuna.
Breaking the Pig
D ad wouldnât buy me a Bart Simpson doll. Mum actually said yes, but Dad said I was spoiled. âWhy should we, eh?â he said to Mum. âWhy should we buy him one? All it takes is one little squeak from him and you jump to attention.â Dad said I had no respect for money, that if I didnât learn it when I was young when would I? Kids who get Bart Simpson dolls too easily grow up to be louts who steal from kiosks, because theyâre used to getting whatever they want the easy way. So instead of a Bart Simpson doll he bought me an ugly china pig with a flat hole in its back, and now Iâll grow up to be OK, now I wonât be a lout.
Now every morning I have to drink a cup of cocoa, even though I hate it. Cocoa with skin is a shekel, without skin itâs half a shekel and if I throw up right away I donât getanything. I put the coins into the pigâs back, and when you shake it it rattles. When the pig is full and it doesnât rattle when you shake it Iâll get Bart Simpson on a skateboard. Thatâs what Dad says, that way itâs educational.
Actually the pigâs cute, his nose is cold when you touch it and he smiles when you push the shekel inside his back and when you push in half a shekel too, but the nicest thing is that he smiles even when you donât. I gave him a name, I called him Pesachson, after a man who once lived in our mailbox and my Dad couldnât peel off his label. Pesachson isnât like my other toys, heâs much calmer, without lights and springs and batteries that leak inside him. Only you have to watch that he doesnât jump off the table. âPesachson, be careful! Youâre made of china,â I tell him when I catch him bending down a bit and looking at the floor, and he smiles at me and waits patiently for me to take him down by hand. Iâm crazy about him when he smiles, itâs only for him that I drink the cocoa with skin every morning, so that I can push the shekel into his back and see how his smile doesnât change a bit. âI love you, Pesachson,â I say to him afterward. âHonest, I love you more than Mum and Dad. And Iâll always love you, no matter what, even if you break into kiosks. But donât even think of jumping off the table!â
Yesterday Dad came, picked up Pesachson from the table, and began to shake him savagely upside down. âCareful, Dad,â I said to him, âyouâre giving Pesachson a tummyache.â But Dad went on. âItâs not making a noise, you know what that means, Yoavi? Tomorrow youâll get aBart Simpson on a skateboard.â âGreat, Dad,â I said. âBart Simpson on a skateboard, great. Just stop shaking Pesachson, itâs making him feel bad.â Dad put Pesachson back on the table and went to call Mum. He came back after a minute, dragging Mum and holding a hammer. âSee, I was right,â he said to Mum. âNow he knows how to value things. Right, Yoavi?â âSure I know,â I said, âsure, but whatâs the hammer for?â âItâs for you,â said Dad and put the hammer in my hand. âJust be careful.â âSure Iâll be careful,â I said, and I really was careful but after a few minutes Dad got fed up and he said, âGo on, then, break the pig.â âWhat?â I asked, âbreak Pesachson?â âYes, yes, Pesachson,â said Dad. âGo on, break it. You deserve the Bart Simpson, youâve worked hard enough for it.â
Pesachson smiled at me with the sad smile of a china pig who knows that his end has