Read The Gardener from Ochakov Online
Authors: Andrey Kurkov
âAll right,' he said, and he sensed the photographer's face light up with a smile.
âThank you so much! I'll start work on the prints today, and I'll be in touch again soon. Goodbye!'
Igor slipped his phone back into his jacket pocket and smiled. He turned back towards the old house. The front door had just opened, and Alyona was the first to come out. Like Igor, she looked all around her. He had the impression that her eyes were also drawn to the sky.
Stepan and his daughter stayed at the old house; Olga, Elena Andreevna and Igor went home, after they'd all agreed to hold a housewarming party in a few days' time.
About twenty paces from Igor's front gate, his mobile phone rang again.
âIt's me,' said the photographer, sounding flustered. âI forgot to ask your full name! We need it for the catalogue and the poster.'
Igor stopped and thought about it. His mother, who had gone into the yard ahead of him, turned round and looked at him expectantly. He waved his hand to indicate that she should go on into the house without him.
âAre you there?' the photographer asked impatiently.
âYes, sorry,' said Igor. âI'm just thinking.'
âAre you concerned about using your real name? Would you prefer a pseudonym?'
Igor jumped at the idea. âYes, a pseudonym would be better.'
âShall I call back later? Give you some time to think about it?'
âNo,' Igor said more decisively. âPut Vanya Samokhin.'
âIvan Samokhin?'
âNo, Vanya. Vanya Samokhin.'
âOK, I've made a note of that,' said the photographer. His voice sounded calmer now. âI'll take your promotional portrait from one of the photographs, to use in the poster and the catalogue. There's a good one of you looking straight at the camera.'
âFine,' agreed Igor.
LATER THAT AFTERNOON,
Igor went out for a walk. His initial plan was to walk to the bus station and back, but he changed his mind on the way. He was curious to know exactly how far away Stepan would be living and decided to time the journey to his new house. Before Igor had even reached the familiar turning, Stepan himself appeared. He'd changed out of his suit into a pair of black trousers, a jumper and a red shirt, the collar of which was just visible.
âAre you going to our house?' Igor asked him.
âEventually,' nodded the gardener.
They continued on their separate ways. When Igor reached the corner he glanced over his shoulder to see whether Stepan was watching him, but he had already disappeared.
Igor walked past Stepan's houses and on to the end of the street. On the way back, he slowed down again and scrutinised the gardener's new properties in the gathering twilight. Igor was still having trouble making sense of everything that had happened over the last month. An old man, who was not exactly a tramp but a bit of a vagrant, met a young man who helped him to decipher an old tattoo on his shoulder. This tattoo led them to Ochakov, where they discovered suitcases full of surprises, gifts from the past. Now the man had bought two houses for himself and his daughter, whereas the young man who had helped him was still stuck in a rut, drifting aimlessly through life. All he had to show for it was a knife wound in his side and an unhealthy obsession with the fate of a fish seller from old Ochakov. So what if he knew the path to the past like the back of his hand? Igor's âachievements' did not even come close to Stepan's!
Igor found himself near the brightly lit kiosk at the bus station, although he had no idea how he'd got there. He bought a cup of instant coffee and drank it outside the kiosk.
On the way home he bumped into his mother's friend Olga. She was hurrying towards him in a state of considerable excitement.
âWhat's the matter?' he called out.
She stopped to catch her breath. âI'm just going to the shop,' she said.
Igor could tell by the look on her face that she wanted to say more. She obviously had some news that she was bursting to share.
âGuess what,' she said, pausing for dramatic effect. âStepan has just made me a proposal!'
âLucky you,' smiled Igor.
Unimpressed by his reaction, Olga waved her hand dismissively and went on her way.
When Igor got home, the house was unusually quiet. The atmosphere had changed somehow since Stepan had left. It had been nice having his daughter to stay too, even though it had only been for a couple of days. Now, as he walked down the hallway, Igor couldn't even hear the television.
He found his mother in the kitchen. She was sitting quietly at the table with a glass of home-made wine, looking pensive but calm.
âCan I join you?' asked Igor.
âIf you like,' nodded Elena Andreevna. âSitting here by myself isn't helping . . . It's just going round and round in my head.'
âWhat is?' asked Igor, pouring himself a glass of wine.
âStepan proposed to me,' she said, looking closely at her son.
Igor's mouth fell open.
âIt took me by surprise too,' admitted Elena Andreevna. âOf course, he's a respectable man â'
âYou think so?' asked Igor, glancing at the scales on the windowsill. âHe proposed to your friend Olga too, you know. I've just seen her on the way to the grocery shop, quite beside herself with joy!'
He regretted his words as soon as he saw the effect they had on his mother. Her face fell, she turned pale and her hands started shaking. She stood up and went into the hallway, and Igor heard her putting her coat on. The front door slammed behind her.
It's all going to kick off now! he thought, imagining his mother storming round to Olga's and the two of them having an almighty row.
Igor picked up his glass of wine and took a sip. He didn't particularly feel like sitting there waiting for his mother to get back, so he took Iosip's book from the windowsill and went to his own room. He moved the reading lamp to his bedside table and settled down on his bed with the book. He was soon absorbed in the eccentric ramblings of Iosip Sadovnikov, avowed enemy of Soviet canteen food. Igor found himself noting with regularity how easily the handwritten text overcame his scepticism, making him look at certain culinary issues in a new, more serious way.
He found the chapter about salt and sugar completely fascinating, for example â so much so that he didn't even hear his mother come back. He didn't hear her throw her coat angrily at the coat stand, or the way the coat slipped off and fell to the floor.
His mother glanced into the kitchen, then opened the door to Igor's bedroom. She marched over to his bed and raised her hand as though she were about to slap his face, but she managed to restrain herself. Only her eyes, aflame with anger, fell on her son's face.
âYou stupid fool!' she exclaimed. âYou almost gave me a heart attack!'
âI didn't do anything!' protested Igor. âI only told you what I'd heard!'
âWhat did you hear, exactly?' cried his mother. âHe didn't “propose” to her, he “made her a proposal”. Don't you get it?'
âWhat's the difference?' asked Igor, recalling that Olga had indeed told him that Stepan had âmade her a proposal'.
âWhen you “make someone a proposal”, it means a business proposal. He asked her to be the manager of his cafe. But he proposed to me in the other sense of the word . . . He asked me to marry him!'
âI wonder if he'd consider making me a proposal too,' remarked Igor, his lips curling into a smile.
His mother turned round and left without another word, slamming the door. Igor moved the reading lamp to the edge of his bedside table and opened the manuscript again at page 48, which bore the heading âMan and Food'.
People can be divided into two categories, according to the way they naturally relate to the world around them: gardeners and foresters. Gardeners essentially see the world as a garden, in which it is their responsibility to behave appropriately, to fix whatever is broken, to decorate whatever is built and to keep order. Foresters, on the other hand, prefer an uncultivated environment. They are more inclined to break things and live in disorder than to build, renovate or repair. Foresters are more ruthless, but they are also physically stronger and more robust. They believe that it is impossible to change the world, whereas gardeners are always trying to improve it. Most men are foresters, and most women are gardeners. Male gardeners are able-bodied but often lack tenacity in their undertakings and the courage of their convictions. Foresters and gardeners differ also in their approach to food. This does not mean that foresters prefer simple food, merely that they tend to lose their natural ability to distinguish and evaluate refined tastes. They are more interested in the size of their portion â when everyone at the table is served an identical meal, the first thing they do is check to see who has been given the most. Gardeners do not usually lose their ability to distinguish refined tastes. In fact, sometimes their perception of taste is developed to such an extent that they are capable of detecting nuances that are not really there.
Igor looked up from the manuscript, deep in thought. The words he had just read made perfect sense. He automatically thought about Stepan. Was he a gardener or a forester? A gardener, it would appear. Igor thought about himself, about his own culinary preferences and, if truth be told, about his growing indifference to food and to the world around him.
âI don't seem to be either a gardener or a forester,' he concluded sadly. âNeither fish nor fowl . . . But I used to build such beautiful sandcastles on the beach in Yevpatoriya when I was little! So, I could have become a gardener.'
Igor smiled at his memories, then shook his head.
I'm taking it all far too seriously, he decided. It's not a psychology textbook, it was written by an ordinary man of the people . . . He might not even have finished school!
But Igor wasn't convinced by his attempts to dismiss the book's significance. It sounded unnatural and insincere, like a second-rate actor whose gestures do not correspond to the spirit and sentiment of his lines. He turned his attention back to the page he had been reading.
The world has so far been spared from devastation because foresters and gardeners frequently enter into marriage, thereby creating unnatural but stable unions. When a male forester marries a female gardener, the husband enjoys the complaisance and timidity of his wife. But when a male gardener takes a female forester for his wife, then her spontaneity will curb his idealism and restrict his endeavours.
âThat's like Valya and me!' Igor was struck by the revelation. âSo I must be a gardener after all! At least, more of a gardener than a forester.'
Igor was too nervous to read the rest of the page. As he flicked forward through the manuscript he saw a chapter entitled âReducing Natural Products â Dish of Buckwheat and Barley Flour'. He cleared his throat and flicked forward another couple of pages. Then turned back â page 72 featured two recipes: âForesters' Stew' and âGardeners' Stew'.
Igor carefully closed the manuscript and placed it on the stool by his bed. He switched off the reading lamp and lay there for another half an hour, looking at the ceiling and thinking about gardeners and foresters.
He spent the whole of the following morning with his nose buried in
The Book of Food
. When he got to page 150, he realised he was hungry. He went into the kitchen and prepared himself a bowl of buckwheat. While he was eating it and marvelling at his new-found enjoyment of such a simple dish, his mother looked into the kitchen.
âWhat are you doing?' she asked, surprised. âI was going to make borshch.'
âGood idea,' said Igor, looking up at her. âBorshch is a natural dish. Don't put too much salt in, but be generous with the pepper. I'm sorry about yesterday, by the way.'
âDon't worry about it,' she said with a shrug. âSo, what shall I tell him?'
âIt's up to you,' said Igor. âGardeners are basically good people . . . You just need to control them.'
âIn what way?' His mother was surprised again. âHe doesn't drink or play cards!'
âI meant in general. It doesn't matter.'
Elena Andreevna gave a deep sigh and went out.
Igor finished reading Iosip's handwritten book at about 6 p.m. and took it straight back to Stepan. Returning the book was a perfectly valid reason to visit, but Igor was also hoping to see Alyona. He wanted to see if he could work out whether she was a âgardener' or a âforester'.
Igor rang the doorbell of the old house first, but there was no answer. Turning towards the new house, Igor noticed that the lights were on in the ground-floor windows and the front door was wide open. There were big plastic sacks full of rubble and other building debris piled up outside.
âHey, Stepan, are you there?' Igor called into the house.
âHang on!' answered Stepan's voice. âDon't come in, it's really dusty!'
A dust mask hung around Stepan's neck, and his old tracksuit bottoms and striped sailor's undershirt had turned an unappealing shade of grey. As he came outside, he brushed his vest down vigorously and a dusty cloud rose up around him in the evening air. He brushed his tracksuit bottoms with equal vigour, and they were soon restored to their original dark blue.
âHere you go, I've finished it,' said Igor, holding the book out to Stepan. âI thought it was really interesting. Especially the bit about gardeners and foresters.'
Igor felt that Stepan was now looking at him with greater respect.
âHow's the wound?' asked the gardener.
âI can hardly feel it.'
âAre you still having trouble remembering who stabbed you?' There was the trace of a smile on Stepan's lips.
âNo, I've remembered,' Igor said quietly. âIt was a “forester”. You promised to show me the right way to stab someone. Can you show me now?'