High Tide

High Tide Read Free

Book: High Tide Read Free
Author: Inga Abele
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world strange?—the same old things you need to survive. Even Ieva has been told something like this. Two—no, three—things for survival. The first two are: never sit on stone before you hear thunder, and don’t stand in drafts. Obviously, these have to do with the same damn bundle of nerves. They get damaged by cold and drafts—you’ll start pissing blood if you don’t watch out. You’ll shrivel up like a gnarled branch if you’re not careful.
    But the third thing was explained to her in a roundabout way—through a story. Her Gran, the person who gave her this advice, had worked before World War II as a servant for a rich family in Riga. She’d only worked for them a month to save up enough for a place to live in this new city.
    â€œSweetheart,” she had told Ieva, “I knew full well I’d only work for them a short time, so I put up with everything with dignity and had enough strength and energy for each new day. When I left them after a month they cried and didn’t want me to go because they had never had a servant as good as me.”
    This story meant that everything would eventually pass, even life. Maybe whatever it was would last more than a month, but it would pass. Each view, each landscape, even you. It’s a solution, at least until the moment you’re more sick of life than of death, when all you see on the horizon are black, burnt-out clearings, when you hate life so completely that your body is overcome by agonizing tremors just thinking about it. Thank you, Gran.
    Because, honestly, Ieva doesn’t call herself a girl anymore, and sometimes even says that beautiful word—middle-aged. Yes, right now she’d like to consider herself middle-aged. She’s already experienced middle age physically—the thought came to her on the morning of her thirty-third birthday. On that morning she felt she was standing at the very top of a mountain. And this mighty, craggy mountain ridge extended in both directions, its outline melting into the distant golden sunrise. The ridge was tall and black, but oddly enough there was plenty of oxygen and her blood wasn’t coursing out of control. Instead there was a damp, refreshing easterly wind, up there the stars were twinkling, meshing in the blueness like white knots. Things were very good. Right now things are very good, she’s not thinking about the road here or about the climb down; everything is here and now, everything is halfway. And the only thing that hurts is the awareness that she has climbed up from the direction of the sea, but has to descend into the desert. The knowledge stings a bit, like a once-broken collarbone that aches every time it rains. But you get used to it.
    Then the day comes: her life is halfway over and she’s walking through the woods on a fall morning. The golden asp leaves rustle around her, the earth exhales coolly, and the sky is as blue as her boyfriend’s eyes. And her life is half-over and, now and then, something will happen as time goes on. For example, there have been a lot of births, a few deaths, there will be something that will ache in her over her entire life, something she will never be able to fix, something she will have to dismiss—and so on and so forth. She walks through the woods and feels that she’ll soon reach that critical point when the cup will be full, and when the handle breaks it won’t go unnoticed. The cool glass of the milk bottles from her childhood and the triangular tetrapacks with the word MOLOKO on them—she can’t forget those either. Or the piles of the newly-freed country’s money in suitcases, her first real paycheck—an entire roll of colored paper—frozen kidneys and peed pants, her first time with a boy she would never see again, her first time in an airplane, her first time abroad and seeing strange things. The person you slowly but completely left because he was fading, even

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