Boualem Sansal - Harraga

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Harraga: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Harraga Lamia is thirty-five years old, a doctor. Having lost most of her family, she is accustomed to living alone, unmarried and contentedly independent when a teenage girl, Chérifa, arrives on her doorstep. Chérifa is pregnant by Lamia's brother in exile — Lamia's first indication since he left that he is alive — and she'll surely be killed if she returns to her parents. Lamia grudgingly offers her hospitality; Chérifa ungratefully accepts it. But she is restless and obstinate, and before long she runs away, out into the hostile streets — leaving Lamia to track her, fearing for the life of the girl she has come, improbably, to love as family.
Boualem Sansal creates, in Lamia, an incredible narrator: cultured, caustic, and compassionate, with an ironic contempt for the government, she is utterly convincing. With his deceptively simple story, Sansal delivers a brave indictment of fundamentalism that is also warm and wonderfully humane.

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‘So, apart from the chocolate and the cats, did he give you a tour of the rest of the museum? Or have you forgotten? And how is it that I’ve never seen this old friend of yours?’

‘His door doesn’t open on to our street, it opens on to the hill on the other side. Anyway, he never goes out.’

‘Oh, so there’s a secret passageway. That’s another mystery solved. It’s amazing how many mysteries get cleared up when you’re around. Before long, we’ll know too much, and that’s dangerous. So, what happened next?’

‘He gave me this necklace — look… It belonged to his daughter, she died a long time ago.’

‘That’s what he said, he could just as easily have cut her throat like he did his six wives.’

‘What are you on about? She was an only child, she was ten years old.’

‘I know what I’m talking about.’

‘…’

This snot-nosed little girl has made herself at home in the neighbourhood a lot faster than I did; after thirty-five years of exhausting comings and goings, I still haven’t really settled. It’s intolerable, she’s going to ruin my retirement. She’ll turn my house into the Cotton Club, people will come and unravel my secrets, torment my ghosts, annoy my aliens.

No, no, no — I won’t stand for it.

While I was about it, I bawled her out good and proper: don’t go out, don’t talk to strangers, look after yourself, be suspicious of everything and everyone, it’s not rocket science, for crying out loud! Then I calmly explained the situation, the strange things that go on in other people’s heads, the deaths by the dozen, by the hundreds, the thousands, the tens of thousands, the hundreds of…

‘You’re completely off your head!’

‘And you’re a gullible little fool! The people who died, they weren’t suspicious either. Don’t you know where you live? There’s a war on and it didn’t start this morning! People here have all but forgotten that it’s possible to die a natural death, but mademoiselle here goes out for a little walk, she chats to people… she drinks hot chocolate!’

Thinking about it, I didn’t use her pregnancy against her, that might have made her toe the line. I could have scared her with talk of complications, acute septicaemia, ovarian cancer, the foetus turning into a crocodile and I don’t know what else. With three months to go before you’re due, you don’t take risks, you put on the brakes, you look after your health, you get ready for when the baby arrives. You talk, you plan, you prepare, you organise. And mostly you worry; for a child, the future is a big deal.

But all Chérifa thinks about is herself, about living in the moment. The girl is so self-centred.

I don’t know what I said to her, I wasn’t thinking straight, I carried on yelling at her, repeating myself, probably. That’s me — a sour-faced, cantankerous bitch; when I get angry, I don’t know when to stop… I… Was it something I said? I think… I’m sure… I don’t know, at some point she froze, her eyes almost popped out of her head, then she turned her back on me and disappeared into the labyrinth. It haunts me still — what was it that I said? What was it that I called her? Knowing me, whatever it was, I probably laced it with my bitterest venom.

The following day, coming home from the Hôpital Parnet after an arduous shift, I knew the house was empty before I even heard the booming silence. I didn’t try to talk myself out of it, I couldn’t bring myself to, I was petrified. Chérifa is gone . A dead voice whispered the words into my ear, whispered them over and over. I didn’t understand, I stared into space, I couldn’t make sense of anything. Then something inside my head exploded, a terrible howl that chilled my blood, and I threw down my bag and I ran. Her bedroom was neat and tidy, but this was no miracle, it was proof: her clothes had disappeared and the baby’s clothes too. And of that scent of troubled little girl, all that remained was the vaguest whiff of inert gas. It was then I truly felt that death was busy digging my grave.

I curled up in a corner and I waited. What else could I do? Like the film The Langoliers , with its plot about how ‘time rips’ affect humans, I watched, dazed and helpless, as piece by piece the world disappeared before my eyes in an apocalyptic silence. Then I reacted. I have this thing I do, something I made up for Louiza when, as girls, we were faced by the unfathomable violence of the world: whenever you’re afraid of something, you squeeze your eyes tight shut and think of the opposite and everything balances out. Chérifa will come back, I know she will. She’ll come back soon. I could cling to life.

I’m fickle, that’s just how I am!

Act II

Memory or Death

Reminiscence is another way

To live one’s life

To the full

To its best

Least painfully.

And loneliness is the way

To safely store in memory

What the clamour of things

Sweeps towards oblivion.

You have to let go one side

To hang on to the other.

From what is reborn from day to day

We fashion a new life

And time drifts by and dreams drift by

We journey only in ourselves .

A warning:

Let not sorrows distract you.

Let not emptiness dazzle you.

It is always by some oversight

That we lose life.

Days, weeks, months have passed and still I expect Chérifa to turn up at any minute. I leave the door unlocked, she has only to push. I have stopped looking for her, I’m too tired, I have turned the city upside down, I’ve searched every place where a few paper lanterns might dazzle a silly little goose, I’ve waded through the vast expanses of poverty where, in the dark dampness of slack days, the hopeless seek out shelter.

I set Mourad to work. He can’t refuse me anything. At heart, the man is like a St Bernard — he knows a thing or two about barrels — and besides he has a car, so he can work more quickly. The poor man has given up his job, he spends his days brooding, phoning, chasing down leads, drinking and paying people for any information they are prepared to give; he wears himself out rushing hither and thither then comes back here, half drunk and wholly sickened by the indifference of people, and cries on my shoulder. We review the situation and we sigh, we squabble, I tell him a few home truths and every time he comes out with the same terrible question: ‘Why the hell are you still looking for her?’ The blockhead reeks of cheap wine, why should I listen to him?

Is it wise to carry on when all is said and done? When the point of no return is passed, we brace ourselves and forge ahead. Chérifa will not come home of her own accord, I know that, I can feel it, and Mourad is too stupid to admit defeat.

But he’s right — why am I still searching for her? What can I say? That’s just the way it is.

I went back to the Association.

I found the building still standing, which might be a good sign or a bad sign, I don’t know, seismic shifts are so common here and the gap between immediate and delayed effect is not always important. Only when your back is to the wall do you find out. But there is a golden rule: hope for the best, prepare for the worst — that way you are ready for anything.

‘Well, well, would you look who it is!’

The way she said it, the spiteful government lackey! Like a sentry who spots a figure on the horizon and trumpets it from the rooftops. If she so much as mentions the word ‘database’, I’ll burn her alive, I thought as I said, ‘Hello, my dear!’ and added, ‘I’m afraid I have another little problem.’ She gave me a savage smile and I played the innocent and let the spiteful bitch walk all over me.

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