The Fifteenth Representative Hilla Dagan (best time to read books .TXT) š
- Author: Hilla Dagan
Book online Ā«The Fifteenth Representative Hilla Dagan (best time to read books .TXT) šĀ». Author Hilla Dagan
āYes,ā I replied and fell back onto the armchair next to the bed. My gaze was drawn to a plastic cent coināsome kind of necklace or bracelet or whatever Noa had around her neck since she was young. She looked a million bucks with it on. A million? No. Billion, more like. One-billion-and-two-million.
Idiot. Idiot! Thatās what you are. Youāre a fucking idiot.
It was already one-thirty AM. I loved the nighttime. But not this night.
Night is when the brain is more active. Itās a proven fact. Probably because, evolutionally speaking, our forefathers had to keep watch and keep themselves safe. Like today. Like now. Thatās the reason people are more alert when itās dark.
After a certain amount of time, you get used to it and youāre not tired anymore. Believe me, everything in life is a question of habits. If you get used to eating something, your body will acclimate and youāll be dependent or addicted to it to a certain degree. Even if itās something healthy.
If you eat a salad every day for years on end, youāll lose it if you donāt have a salad for a few days. Youāll end up at a convenience store at two in the morning, buying three cucumbers and a carrot. I would know. My son has had a salad every day since he was about three, I think. Heās seventeen now, the big lug. And when I say every day, I mean every day. And those are a lot of days. It goes like this: three cucumbers, one tomato, an onionāpreferably a purple one, though if itās not, then never mindāone carrot, beets, and one bell-pepper. My son isnāt picky about the bell-pepperās color though. You know, it can be red, orange, green, light or dark orangeā¦ it doesnāt matter. Anyway, to that he adds lemon juice, and if that isnāt available, then a vinaigrette. I meanāif thereās olive oil, balsamic vinegar, and mustard, the lemon is only there as extra seasoning.
You get the point. I love my son. Heās amazing. He can have his salad, and may he always enjoy it.
I did the math once, during the hundredth if not the thousandth time I made that saladāsometimes with pleasure, sometimes less soāthat while chopping a salad like that, it ends up being comprised of thousands of little pieces. Many thousands.
Think about it. One cucumberāyou cut it four times lengthwise, then another four after giving it a ninety degree twistāyouāve already reached sixteen merely from that. A regular-sized cucumber can be cut length-wise at least twenty timesābecause when I make a salad I cut it into tiny pieces, so that itāll taste good, not like in a kibbutzās lunchroom where itās the size of a die.
So, just that one cucumber is about three-hundred-and-sixty piecesāminimum. And there are three. Weāve already reached one-thousand. Thereabouts.
What am I going to do about Noa?
How do I always get so messed up with her?
Since that day I lay eyes on her when she was nothing but a kid in Sinaiā¦ look whatās become of her. Look at whatās become of meā¦
I was in Nuweiba with Timothy, at the time. There was a fellow with us from the American embassy. He was married and also had someone on the side. Iām not the only one. Half the people on this planet do, too. Itās never someone specific, thoughāitās always the guyās friend. When someone tells you about something someone else does, know heās doing it, too. Anyway, the diplomat and his wife were on one end of the hotel hallway, and his mistress was on the other. Unbelievable. Very believable. I figured it out. So, I dragged Timothy along, and all we needed was one picture for proof. We had need for a gentle persuasion and enough leverage for a certain matter. He was a small-time diplomat, married to someone whose father owned a very large US companyāand big is very big there. Anyway, I pulled it off, and he really did end up helping usāagainst his will, but still. Thatās whatās important in the end. You canāt ask someone to do something, then argue about the how once he winds up succeeding. Itās all in the rules of the game. There will always be that one smart-ass whoāll say āYes, but if you did it this way, then this and that would have happenedā¦ā but they only screw with your head. Did they actually do something for you? Offer anything? Itās all well and good to come up with ideas after the operation is over. Where were they before? If you did it and pulled it off, then everyone should sit down and shut up.
Long story short, I saw her on the beach, wearing a blue bikini. I can remember it as if it were yesterday. I got out the water and there she was, sitting there on a plastic chair on the beach. For a moment I thought our eyes met, but she was nothing but a schoolgirl with her friends, and I was twenty-seven, and married with a kid. Lost in work and life. I also figured I had to have been imaginingāat least part of it.
I went back to the beach bar, where Timothy was sitting with a sweaty face.
A cold Coke was waiting for me.
āThanks,ā Iād said.
āYouāre welcome,ā heād replied. āItās on the Baron. But Iām limiting you to one. Unless youād like to order one for the girl who almost made you swim to Saudi Arabia by accident?ā
āNoticed that, did you, you bastard?ā
āDonāt even think about it.ā
āWhat should I not think about, Timothy?ā
āThe thing youāre thinking about.ā
āAnd how do you know what Iām thinking about?ā Iād asked.
āSince Iāve been controlling your brain for years. Iāve trained you well. Now, sit. Drink your Coke.ā
I sat.
But I got up after finishing. God,
Comments (0)