The Messiah of Stockholm by Cynthia Ozick (beginner reading books for adults TXT) đź“•
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- Author: Cynthia Ozick
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“You see,” she finished, “that’s how it went.” She reached out over the quilt to gather in his father’s strewn and confounded words. He watched her pile up the sheets and pat them and tap them, until she had constructed a neat rectangular stack. It struck Lars that there was an idiocy in this sudden tidying-up: he almost laughed. It was as if the order of the pages didn’t matter to her in the least. The progenitrix of chaos. She stared across at him. “Now do you see how it went? My mother heard about the manuscript—”
“From her lover. The man high up in the Party.”
“—and I got on the bus and rode across Warsaw and found the old man and took away all the papers there were.”
“He let you? The woman’s husband? The widower,” he corrected.
“Well, there he was, running around and collecting whatever he could put his hands on, wherever his wife had stuck them. In the oven, can you imagine? Three sheets in the oven. And six in those shoes. He let me look everywhere. By then there wasn’t any box. The box was gone.”
“But why you?” Lars urged. “Why would he give them to you?”
“He would have given them to anyone. He would have burned them in the trash. I got there in time to save them from the trash. He was afraid.” She sent out a pale little smile, perilously edged. “He thought she’d died from the curse, don’t you see? Because the curse had been dug up. Because when he told her to get rid of the papers she didn’t obey.”
It came to him then that he didn’t believe a word. What an invention! The best inventions are those with the most substantial particulars. A fabricator. Or else a cunning inheritor, a spinner of old fables: buried vessels, spells, incantations, magical instant dyings. Or else simply crazed. Adela! This name of terror lifted straight out of his father’s spectral scenery. I could not tell whether these pictures were implanted in my mind by Adela’s tales or whether I had witnessed them myself…. Perhaps in our treachery there was secret approval of the victorious Adela to whom we dimly ascribed some commission and assignment from forces of a higher order…. Adela, warm from sleep and with unkempt hair, was grinding coffee in a mill which she pressed to her white bosom, imparting her warmth to the broken beans.
Crazed. A grinder of broken beans.
He accused, “You’ve mixed up all the pages.”
“It makes no difference. You can shuffle them however you like. It has the same effect no matter what. You’ll see for yourself when you begin.”
“Begin what? I’m not beginning anything.” He asked, “Why do you call yourself Adela?”
“It’s my name.”
“It’s from Cinnamon Shops. From Sanatorium. Is that why you took it?”
“I didn’t take it. People don’t give themselves their
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