The Others Sarah Blau (manga ereader .txt) đ
- Author: Sarah Blau
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âSarah.â
âAnd her mum?â
âBella.â
âAnd her mum?â Dinaâs voice has lost its feigned drowsiness, and I recognize that subtle quality creeping into it.
âSheila!â I call out triumphantly, âYou didnât think Iâd know, did you?â
âHonestly, Iâm surprised you know,â she admits, âbut thatâs only because youâre a narcissist. If you werenât named after her, thereâs no way youâd know your great-grandmotherâs name.â
Ronit is giggling behind me again, but this time I know itâs not because of the butterfly. Dina props herself up on her elbows, the curtains of her dark straight hair parting to reveal her fair skin. She looks like an Inuit with a pair of bulging black spotlights for eyes.
âIâm willing to bet neither of you know the names of your great-grandmothers,â she says to Ronit and Naama. âI actually conducted a little survey here on campus, and almost no one knows, or even cares to know. And yet everyoneâs so worried about leaving something behind, living on in peopleâs memoriesâŠâ
Dina scoffs. Ronit and I join her, and all our snickering soon turns into hysterical giggles. I remember that laughing fit on the grass, and I remember the butterfly, yes, there was a butterfly there, Iâm sure of it now, and the three of us laughed and laughed until our sides hurt.
Itâs a shame that by then Naama wasnât laughing along with us.
The bead eyes of the wax figurines are glimmering in front of me. âYou came back to us,â theyâre saying, âand this time itâs for good.â When Efraim called to ask me to come back to work, I had no idea how happy Iâd be to see them again, and now I realize I missed them a lot more than I missed my colleagues.
And here they are before me, my dear old friends, shiny and polished of dust (maybe I could book the museum cleaners for a one-off emergency gig at my place?). I move slowly from one figurine to the next, until I reach Michalâs.
The crown is perched on her head more crookedly than usual. I straighten it and study her beautiful, sad face. I think Iâm starting to understand the reason for her sadness, and it has nothing to do with her not having kids, and everything to do with the dude she married, because thatâs what happens when a princess marries a shepherd. Especially when her deepest desires â even those she isnât aware of â arenât compatible with his. Compatibility is everything.
Almost despite myself, I think about Micha, Whatâs the matter with you? Whatever you two had it was over before it started, and I also think about Maor, and about how theyâre both twenty-six, theyâre always twenty-six, frozen in time while I keep getting older.
I peer into Michalâs morose eyes and realize that if Iâm not careful, I might end up like a frozen wax figurine, a dried-up old hag coated in epoxy for posterity. Even the lonely, desperate boys wonât want you.
Something inside me snaps. I whip a pen out of my bag and start doodling tefillin straps on Michalâs left arm. Itâs a razor-point Pilot pen and Iâm carving the black lines into her wax skin when one of the security guards decides this is a good time to see whatâs going on at the other end of the pavilion (my end), so I skedaddle before I get to see whether Michalâs eyes are less gloomy now.
Efraim is all smiles when he greets me at the entrance to the auditorium.
When Eli called to say Efraim âabsolutely canât waitâ to have me back at the museum, I found it hard to believe, but there he is, quivering and jubilant as a groom under the chuppah.
âAh, the prodigal daughter!â he trumpets, and Shirley rolls her eyes behind his back. Sometimes I envy Efraim for his oafish tactlessness. Makes life a lot easier.
Shirley looks different, a kind of squished, more haggard version of herself, and I wonder if sheâs made any progress with the sperm bank, or maybe even had the insemination, but I donât smell any traces of hormones or new life.
Before I take a step towards her, Efraim pulls me aside.
âGuess what,â he says, even his beard bouncing with excitement.
âWhat.â
ââBible, Books and Beyondâ! They want you!â
For a fleeting moment, I feel the pinprick of excitement. âBible, Books and Beyondâ is the most prestigious of all national Bible conferences, the holy grail for Bible lecturers â an annual, three-day event packed with lectures, concerts and various âattractions.â I always turned my nose up at the conference for being âcommercialized to the point of charging admission.â Deep down I knew though the real reason was that Iâd never been invited to take part, and Iâd already given up any hope of ever being invited, but here it is, the moment has come.
âWhat do they want me to talk about?â I ask, but mid-question I realize what the answerâs going to be.
âThe childfree women of the Bible, of course,â Efraim informs me with that harmless-uncle tone of his, but behind the thick lenses of his glasses, his eyes narrow, gearing up for war.
âAnd this lecture needs to be ready when exactly?â
âItâs not just a lecture, itâs going to be with live music, a finalist from last seasonâs âIsraeli Idol,â that girl with the short hair!â
âWhen?â I repeat the question.
âNext week.â
âWow, do they always organize their impressive conferences so quickly?â I play dumb, but Efraim is smart enough not to answer, and lets me finish, âOr am I a last-minute substitute for a lecture they actually scheduled long ago?â
I ask that last question so loudly that a few heads turn in our direction. They know.
âWell, of course youâre standing in for someone,â Efraim replies, âand itâs a terrific opportunity for you!â
âAnd for the museum,â I add. âSo who am I standing in for?â
Who do you think?
âDina Kaminer,â he replies plainly, smiling as if thatâs the best thing about the invitation, and then, without missing a beat or batting an eye,
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