Missing Soluch

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Authors: Mahmoud Dowlatabadi

BOOK: Missing Soluch
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© 2007 Mahmoud Dowlatabadi
Translation © 2007 Melville House Publishing

Missing Soluch
was first published by Nashr-i Chishmih-yi
Farhang-i Mu’asir as
Ja-yi khali-i Suluch
in 1979.

Melville House Publishing
145 Plymouth Street
Brooklyn, NY 11201

www.mhpbooks.com

First Melville House Printing: May 2007

The Library of Congress has cataloged the paperback edition of this book as follows:

Dawlatabadi, Mahmud.
 [Ja-yi khali-i Suluch. English]
 Missing Soluch / Mahmoud Dowlatabadi; translated by Kamran Rastegar.
      p.cm.
 Novel.
 Translated from Persian.
 eISBN: 978-1-61219-180-5
 I. Rastegar, Kamran. II. Title.
PK6561.D39J313 2007
891′.5533—dc22

2006101686

v3.1

Contents
BOOK 1
1
.

Mergan raised her head from the pillow. Soluch was gone. Her children were still asleep—Abbas, Abrau, and Hajer. Mergan tied the loose curls around her face into a scarf, rose, and stepped through the doorway into the small yard. She walked straight to the bread oven. Soluch was not there. Lately, at night, Soluch had been sleeping outside next to the oven. Mergan didn’t know why. She would just see him sleeping out beside the oven. He had been coming back home late at night, very late. He would go straight to the awning over the oven and curl up beneath it. He had a tiny body. He would fold himself, pull his knees to his belly, and fit his hands between his thighs, which were hardly more than two bones. He would rest his head against the edge of the wall, draw up his donkey-skin blanket—made
from the skin of the same donkey that got sick and died the last spring—and go to sleep. Or, perhaps he wouldn’t sleep. Who knows? Maybe he stayed up until dawn, muttering and mumbling to himself. He’d grown less talkative of late. He’d come and go without a word. In the mornings, Mergan would stand over him, and Soluch would rise in silence. Not looking at his wife, he would sneak out before the children were up, exiting through the opening in the wall. Mergan would only hear her husband’s cough as he walked away down the alleyway. And then Soluch would be gone. Soluch and his cough would be gone. He didn’t even own shoes or slippers for Mergan to hear his footsteps as he left. But where would he go? Mergan could never understand. Where could he go? Where would he lose himself? It wasn’t clear—no one knew. Or, no one would say. People kept to themselves. People were preoccupied with their own lives and hid their faces inside upturned collars. They wouldn’t show their faces. No one would see anyone. It was as if the residents of the village of Zaminej were hidden beneath a dry layer of ice. The boundless, insistent cold would fill the empty and winding alleys of Zaminej. Ragged Soluch would head out and disappear, wearing no shoes and no hat, barely protected by the hide of his old donkey thrown over his shoulders, in a cold that was so cold even a stray dog wouldn’t linger for a moment outside. And Mergan had no idea where her husband had gone. At first, she was curious where, but she eventually lost interest. So he’d go. So let him!

Mergan no longer felt close to her husband. Her attraction to him had faded long ago, and now only habit remained. Lately, even the habit was becoming weaker and weaker … and soon, it seemed, it would be gone altogether. All of the visible
and the hidden things that bind a husband and wife together no longer existed between Mergan and Soluch. They shared neither their work nor their intimate lives. Without work there’s no pleasure, and without pleasure, no love. Without love, there’s no speaking, and without speaking, there is no shouting and arguing, no laughter and joy. Both the heart and the tongue grow old, breath dies on the lips. The face loses life when devoid of light in the eyes. Hands grow idle from boredom, and the shovel and hoe and spade and scythe lie unused in the empty shed, hidden under a heavy layer of dust. What else? Once things are so bad that even the donkey has died, and if the winter’s so dry and cold that the body tries to press up under the animal’s cold, black body, with sorrow overflowing from the very pit of the soul … Under these circumstances, what is left to bind two people together? What is left to feel or to say?

Of late, Soluch had grown confused, silent. He wouldn’t talk, and it was as if he couldn’t hear either. It wasn’t as if Mergan had very much left to say to see if he could hear her or not. Was there anything left, even one small thing, that they still shared to give Mergan an excuse for speaking to him? When everything has been buried in a sickly and silent dust, what good is there in opening one’s lips to speak? Mergan’s lips had been sewn shut by invisible hands. Only her eyes remained open. Her eyes were wide open as if she were in shock. As if even the very walls astonished her. Or the air. Or day and night. As if she were astonished by her very being, her walking, her breathing, her feeling the cold to the very marrow of her bones. As if the fact that she had a mother who had given birth to her, suckled her, and had raised her was astonishing and terrifying. Was it true? Could it be possible? What a strange, incredible world.

Everything was strange. For Mergan, everything was strange, and the strangest of all was Soluch’s empty place. But never before had his absence provoked such a reaction in her. This wasn’t fear; this was terror. A new terror, sudden and unfamiliar. Without realizing it, her eyes were wide open, her mouth left gaping. Soluch’s empty place seemed emptier today than ever before. It seemed like a sign to Mergan. Something both visible and hidden, like what the village women called “the spirit,” a sort of myth. It was possible that Soluch had really gone. This was becoming clearer to Mergan. She began to realize that Soluch’s removing himself from everything, his avoiding Mergan and the house, was not just a sign of something else, but rather revealed the heart of the matter. Soluch had separated himself, cast himself off far away. Like the tip of a finger cut off, tossed aside. How many long nights had Soluch passed alone going to Kelenjar? How many heavy days had he spent forlorn and weak in some ruins or a field or in shelters …? What thoughts had he had, what had he imagined? He had—no doubt—painfully torn the children from his heart, one by one, and cast them away. And in the same manner, he had hidden Mergan away in the folds of his memories. Nothing was left for him to leave behind—certainly not his regrets. He’d taken those along with him. Apparently he did. It’s not easy to tear regret from one’s heart and to cast it away. And it’s not easy to leave it in someone else’s care. No, he must have gone with a heavier burden on his heart. He must have gone. So let him go. Let him go!

Let him go?

This seemed easy for Mergan to say to herself. But only to herself. Because she had never before felt as at one with Soluch as she did at this moment. She sensed she had suddenly lost something, and she didn’t know what it was. She knew its
name, which was Soluch, but she didn’t know its essence … It felt like something else. Was it possible to say that Mergan had, in fact, lost part of herself? She didn’t know. It wasn’t her hand or an eye or her heart. No, her spirit, her sensation, her
self
had been lost. It felt as if the ceiling was torn off above her, her walls, brought down. She felt naked. Naked inside, naked and lying on ice. As if her arms were bound behind her. Just as if she had been thrown naked and bound and speechless onto the surface of ice that formed in the gutter beside the public baths. Naked, yet without a shadow. Is it possible for any object to lack a shadow? This was what Mergan felt of herself: exposed, bound, shadowless, cold, threatened. Her heart beat as a lump of burning coal in the cold of midnight. It burned quickly. Something was alight. The old ashes that covered everything in Mergan’s life had suddenly been blown off from her heart. Something lost, voiceless, and forgotten had raised its head inside her chest. Soluch, an ancient love, covered with rust. A kindness mixed with pain, a sudden sensation; she suddenly realized how much she wanted Soluch.

As long as you still have your eyes, everything looks normal. But if somehow suddenly you’re blinded—say, by a hot iron or by a beast’s cold claw—all at once you can no longer see the fire in the fireplace that you had stoked for all your life. For the first time, you realize what you’ve given up, what a dear thing it is you’ve lost: Soluch.

Has Soluch really gone? Where to? What about me? And Hajer? And the boys—Abbas and Abrau? Soluch has gone! Where the hell has he gone to? Who does he think will protect us now?

Mergan was slowly coming to. Her eyes were slowly opening and comprehending what had happened. Once again, the pressure from a wild force was building up within her. Her eyes
became themselves again. They apprehended what was around her clearly. Everything was alive, as if new. In the dry, cold heart of the winter, life was once again boiling up. It was as if everything had come back to life. It felt as if the field of ice that had surrounded and imprisoned Mergan for months was cracking. Mergan could move again. She’d gone from ice to fire. She was burning, and she wanted to burn. Covered in flames, like a cat drenched in gasoline and set alight. She felt the melting of all the ice in the world within herself. She was burning, so much so that she felt she could melt the head of winter itself. Speechless, silent. Silent and unresisting. The heart beating in Mergan’s chest was no heart. It was a furnace. A furnace of anger.

She came to. Despite these feelings, something drew her to keep her eyes on Soluch’s empty place. In Mergan’s eyes, Soluch’s empty spot sank slowly into the ground, deeper and deeper. It was a womb. It had the shape of one. With a place for a head, two legs pressed together, a bent back. Had Soluch really been so small as to fit inside that space?

Mergan turned away. Soluch’s granary was still in the middle of the yard, next to the pit. A granary only half-built. It had stands and the first level was finished; its walls were cracked and dried out. The intensity of the cold had left cracks in it. Soluch had left it there incomplete. He left it there half-built, in disgust. It had been a month that the clay oven had just been sitting there unfinished. No one had asked Soluch to build it. He’d just started building it one day, apparently out of boredom. And then a few days later he abandoned it just as suddenly. Why shouldn’t he have abandoned it? When there are no goods, no grain? What’s the point of a granary? And why build a clay oven? For whom? For which bread, which dough from
what basin? What a waste, all the dirt that Soluch had carried on his back. What a waste, the clay that he used in the structure. What a waste, the sweat on his brow. What a waste, Soluch! He would kneed the clay, kneed it and shape it so much that he’d give it life. No baker could fashion his dough like that. Soluch worked like an alchemist—all the granaries, those full of flour and grains, all the new clay ovens of Zaminej had been shaped by the slim hands and gaunt fingers of Soluch. As long as they needed him, everyone considered Soluch an artisan. They saw him as someone with a different skill in each finger of his hand: Soluch the clay-oven maker, Soluch the pit digger, Soluch the dredger, Soluch the reaper, Soluch the room plasterer, Soluch the porter, Soluch the blacksmith … They even came from surrounding villages to take him to build their clay ovens. In Soluch’s fingers, mud became as pliable as wax.

May those fingers be adorned with flowers
.

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