nothing against Sardinia, but didnât much relish six weeks of enforced loafing, especially while the publisher at home was waiting for his text.
So I took the train back to Amsterdam and my stuffy third-floor walk-up in De Pijp. It was a hot summer. In the evening, Iâd sit working at my desk in front of the open balcony doors until dusk, not wanting to turn on lights because of the mosquitoes. I was lucky with late-afternoon sunlight: where, according to the architectural logic of the neighbourhood, one would expect a parallel cross-street between the Van Ostadestraat, where I lived, and the houses on Sarphatipark, there was only an expanse of low-rise sheds belonging to an assortment of shops and small businesses. Two doors further along, behind a squatted building, one such shed had been torn down and a sort of wild garden had sprouted up among all the rusty scrap metal and rotting wood. The squatters barbecued there on warm summer evenings. One of them was Hinde, whom I knew because one day she brought me a huge bunch of pink tea-roses as thanks for having let her tap into my water main. I knew she had a younger sister who also hoped to move into the squat, but until then only visited once in a while.
On one of those never-ending summer evenings, Hinde and her housemates organised another barbecue and invited me along. âMy sisterâll be there, too,â she said, but I wasnât sure if it was intended as a fix-up. I politely turned down the invitation. I hadnât come back from Italy to go to parties: shit, if I wanted to party I could have spent the summer with Mara and Ivana and the rest of them on Sardinia. But my work didnât amount to much that evening. The barbecue, a rusty three-legged thing, billowed smoke. My balcony, with its open doors, acted like a fireplace flue, so that I spent most of the evening looking at my papers through watering eyes.
âA rat!â cried one of the fellows. âI just saw a rat. There, by those crates!â
âOnto the barbecue with him.â Hindeâs voice, I recognised it already. Laughter from down below.
âHowâd that rice get into the pasta?â A distant voice that resembled Hindeâs: that had to be the sister.
âFrom the salt shaker,â Hinde called back. âThe cap came unscrewed.â
The wind was apparently blowing my way, so the sausages and drumsticks on the grill made my mouth water, but it was above all the voices cutting clearly through the fading light that made me regret not being down there, too, where it was alive with rats and girls, and where I would have relished spooning up a mouthful of macaroni-and-rice. I sat there, not doing much myself, listening to their talk and laughter, to the tinkle of clinking glasses, until the bats began to circle above the sheds, and it became altogether too dark to put another letter on paper.
It could have been the swerving of the police van that made me feel slightly queasy, but more likely it was the memory of the desires sparked by that summer evening. Later, that desire got itself a future: Miriam and me ⦠me, Miriam, and Tonio ⦠But this, too, was part of that future: us on our way to the hospital to be told just how critical our boyâs condition was. If he stood a chance. If he was still alive.
8
H&NE . In the late summer or early fall of â79, one of the backyard barbecue voices got a face.
The squattersâ pad, Van Ostadestraat 205, was next door to a primary school with a playground at the back and a widened sidewalk out front where mothers waited to pick up their brood. This is where I saw her, kick-coasting her granny bike, manoeuvring between clusters of chatting women, some of whom cast her a disapproving glance while stepping demonstratively off to one side. With her left foot resting on the pedal and propelling the bike along with her right foot, she caused just as much inconvenience as regular cycling, except this
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