Higher Ground by Anke Stelling (interesting novels to read .TXT) š

- Author: Anke Stelling
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And I: āOr must really like us?ā
And Sven: āFriendship and money donāt mix.ā
And I: āPerhaps thatās exactly what he wants to disprove.ā
After that, we didnāt know what to do. We couldnāt think of anything else to say, and I havenāt got a clue what went through Svenās mind over the next few days, but in mine, the words āfantasticā and ācrazyā alternated: āfantasticā as in āwow, this is the big moment,ā and ācrazyā as in āJesus Christ, thereās something not quite right about this.ā
During our next conversation, Sven said: āI honestly think heās a good bloke,ā and I said: āItās easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God.ā
And Sven said: āRender unto Caesar the things that are Caesarās.ā And I said: āThe wise virgin must always have enough oil in her lamp.ā
But that didnāt get us much further, and so we thought we should definitely go to a notary and seal the matter with a contract. Only to realise that there are other kinds of currencies besides euros and cents.
āI donāt want to be too closely tied to Ingmar and Friederike,ā said Sven in the end, and I said: āOkay then, letās just leave it.ā
Which felt cowardly and petty.
But Ingmar said it was fine.
āI understand,ā he said. āItās a real shame, but I understand.ā
How exactly he didnāt say, which was a real shame too, because if he had, perhaps I would have understood. Instead, I was depressed by my cowardice, and impressed by Ingmarās generosity ā both by his offer and our rejection of it.
He took it in his stride and wasnāt insulted in the least.
And I was tense and only had myself to blame and no project.
Vera and Frank thought it was a shame too.
āThen at least take our flat when we move out,ā Vera said, and I said: āSure, thatād be great,ā as Frank served up his quiche Lorraine that we were all addicted to.
āThen at least weāll all be near each other,ā I said, and Sven said: āAt least not in Marzahn,ā and Frank said: āTo be honest, Iām glad there are still two of us who arenāt directly involved.ā
āItās still a shame,ā said Vera, and prodded the quiche with her fork. āI mean, it was our idea in the first place!ā
And she looked me in the eye and smiled her crooked smile, which Iād already fallen for back at kindergarten: that longing smile, implying something bigger was waiting for us out there, and we hadnāt got to the best part yet.
āThe idea of a commune, yes,ā I said. āWhere we live and work and bring up the children together.ā
Vera sighed, and then Leon called from the bedroom, and she stood up.
āCommune?ā asked Sven when Vera had left, and Frank shook his head. āThatās not what it is,ā and I thought, true, but still ā theyāll all be living together, and when Vera doesnāt come back from the bedroom, which is likely because she always falls asleep next to Leon, then they could all still have breakfast together the next day, which I couldnāt do living five blocks away.
And then I was back to brooding over things.
When I add this to the story about the ski trip, Bea, it all gradually makes sense: I was the one who had a problem. Who couldnāt just loosen up and come around to the idea. Just like in 1989, when I should have gone to the hut with everybody else. It would have been really great, Iām sure. But no, I had to insist on our differences, dig my heels in, and snub those around me who were trying to find a compromise.
The thing about differences is really tricky.
Itās taken me nearly thirty years to tell the story about the ski trip, and even now Iām worried that you or somebody else might think I want to make myself out as the victim. Because thatās quite a common accusation aimed at people who point out differences.
Inequality divides us into those with privileges and those without; and for those who want justice, thatās a problem, no matter which category they fall into. Ingmar might like being rich as little as I like being poor. Why canāt everybody just go skiing, for Christās sake? And if this is how things are, canāt we at least pretend? So that I donāt have to be the loser and Ulf and Ingmar the winners?
Thereās barely any air in my broom cupboard.
I canāt stop smoking, even though itās a pathetic sign of dependence. But I canāt air the room either, because then Iād have to stand up and fetch a jacket.
Beaās in the kitchen, making herself a tea. I can hear her walking around, shuffling her feet, clattering the dishes. I bet she wants to talk: after ten at night, she suddenly opens up, or at least doesnāt feel like going to bed ā she never has.
When she was little, I used to sing to her, one song after the other, because I knew them all by heart. The first survival strategy of a mother with small children: detach your thoughts from whatever is coming out of your mouth. Mum: a pacifying, singing robot.
But thatās all over now. I donāt want to sing or recite anything else by heart. I want to help my children by helping myself, seventeen-year-old Resi: by asking Ulf, for example, whether he still thinks Resi should have just taken something to read and then everything would have been fine. I want to help the uncertain couple, who shrank back from an opportunity, and ask Ingmar what exactly the opportunity was and for whom: being offered to borrow money, honestly? Or being able to dump money on someone to soothe your conscience?
I donāt know where Ingmar got his money from. I havenāt known him since we were children, like I have Ulf; heās never made a vow in front of me. I only know
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