Firefly, Barn Burning and other stories
Three German
Fantasies
Three German Fantasies
by HARUKI Murakami
Translated by Keith Leslie Johnson
1. Pornography vis-a-vis a museum-in-winter.
Sex. Intercourse. Coition. Copulation. There are many other words,
but what I always conjure up in my mind (from the spoken word, the
act, the phenomenon) is a museum-in-winter.
A museum-in-winter
Of course, I realize that there's quite some distance before you
arrive at "museum" from "sex." You must make countless subway
transfers, shuttle beneath office buildings, let the seasons fly by
in a limbo. But as these are irksome only to the utter novice, if
you should complete but once that circuit of consciousness, you
could find your way from "sex" to that museum-in-winter before you
knew it.
I'm not lying. You really could. Perhaps I should explain a little.
When sex becomes urban conversation, when copulative undulations
fill the darkness, as ever, I'm standing in the entrance to the
museum-in-winter. I hang my hat on the hat rack, I hang my coat on
the coat rack, I place my gloves, one atop the other, on the corner
of the reception desk, then, remembering the scarf wrapped around my
neck, I remove it and place it over my coat.
The museum-in-winter is not very large at all. The collection, its
taxonomy, its operating philosophy are by any standard amateurish.
First off, there's no unifying concept. There's a figurine of an
Egyptian dog deity, a protractor used by NapolEon III, a bell found
in the Dead Sea caves. But that's it. There's no way to connect the
display pieces at all. They sit hunched over in their cases, eyes
fixed shut like orphans mortally seized by cold and starvation.
Inside the museum it is extremely quiet. There is a little while yet
before the museum opens. I retrieve from my desk a butterfly-shaped
metal key and wind the grandfather clock near the entrance. Then I
adjust the hands to the right time. I--that is, if I'm not
mistaken--work here at the museum.
As always, the quiet morning light and the even quieter presentiment
of sex fills the museum like almond extract. I make my rounds,
opening curtains, opening radiator valves. Then I neatly arrange our
fifty-pfennig pamphlets and stack them on the reception desk. I
adjust the necessary lighting (which is to say, for example, when I
press button A6 at the mini-Versailles Palace, the king's chamber
lights up, etc.). I also check the watercooler. I maneuver the
stuffed European wolf a little farther back into its display out of
children's reach and restock the liquid soap in the washroom. Even
if I didn't think to remember each of these tasks one by one, my
body of itself would complete them. This, in other words-well, I'm
not sure exactly how to put it--is the me-ness of me.
After all this I go to the little kitchen and brush my teeth, get
some milk out of the fridge and heat it in a saucepan over a little
portable range. The electric range, fridge, and toothbrush are by no
means extraordinary (they were bought at a mom-and-pop electronics
shop and corner convenience store), but inasmuch as they are within
the museum, they appear somehow relic-ish. Even the milk looks like
ancient milk, drawn from an ancient cow. At times it all gets quite
confusing. I mean, as concepts go, is it more precise to say that
the museum erodes the quotidian, or does the quotidian erode the
museum?
Once the milk is warm, I take it and sit down in front of the
reception desk. As I drink I open the mail left in the slot and
read. Mail separates into three categories. First, you've got things
like your water bill, the archeological circle newsletter, notice of
telephone number change from the
Greek consulate, and other kinds of administrative correspondence.
Next are letters written by people who've visited the museum,
chronicling various impressions, grievances, encouragements,
suggestions, etc. I think that people are prone to come up with an
assortment of reactions. I mean, all of this stuff is just so old.
Think how it must irk them to have the late Hun period wine flask
next to the Mesopotamian coffin! But if the museum were to cease
confusing and irking its clientele, where else could they go to be
irked?
Once I've mindlessly filed away the letters into these two
categories, I reach into the desk drawer and grab a few cookies to
finish off my milk. Then I open the last type of letter. This type
is from the owner and, as such, is extremely concise. Written in
black ink on artsy egg-colored paper are my instructions:
1. Pack up urn at display #36; put in storage.
2. To compensate, take sculpture-stand from A52 (minus sculpture)
and display
at Q21.
3. Replace light bulb at space 76.
4. Post next month's holiday hours at entrance.
Of course I comply with every instruction: I wrap the urn in canvas
and put it in storage; to compensate, I take the sadistically heavy
sculpture-stand and, near-herniating, put it on solo display; and
standing on a chair, I replace the light bulb at space 76. The urn
at display #36 was a museum-goer's favorite, the sadistically heavy
sculpture-stand looks awful by itself, and the replaced light bulb
was itself quite new. These were not the sort of things which would
have pushed themselves to the forefront of my mind. After doing
exactly as I was told, I tidy up my dishes and put away the cookie
tin. It's nearly opening time.
Before the washroom mirror I comb my hair, fix the knot of my
necktie, and make sure that my penis is properly erect. No problems.
*urn #36, check
*sculpture-stand A52, check
*light bulb, check
*erection, check
Sex crashes against the museum doors like a wave. The hands of the
grandfather clock read a precise 11 in the a.m. The wintry light, as
if slowly drawing its tongue over the floor, extends subduedly into
the room. I cross the floor slowly, undo the latch and open the
door. The very instant I open the door everything changes. The
little lights in Louis XIV's chamber flicker on, the saucepan ceases
to lose its heat, and urn #36 slips into a soft, jellylike slumber.
Overhead a bunch of bustling men echo their footfalls in a circle. I
even quit trying to understand people. I can see someone standing in
the doorway, but I don't care. As far as I'm concerned, they can
keep right on standing there. Whenever I think about sex, I'm always
in the museum-in-winter, and we are all there, hunched over like
orphans, seeking a little warmth. The saucepan is in the kitchen,
the cookie tin is in the drawer, and I am in the museum-in-winter.
2. The Hermann Goering Stronghold, 1983.
What on earth did Hermann Goring envision when he hollowed out that
hill in Berlin and constructed his enormous stronghold? He literally
hollowed out the entire hill and filled it up with concrete. It
stood out strikingly in the diffuse twilight like an ominous termite
mound. Once we'd clambered up the steep slope and stood on top, we
could look down and see into the heart of East Berlin, where the
street lamps had just been turned on. The batteries which faced in
every direction would have afforded a view of the enemy forces
closing in on the capital and could probably have repelled them. No
bomb could have toppled the stronghold's thick walls, and certainly
no tank could have scaled its steep slopes.
The stronghold contained enough supplies--rations of food, water,
and ammunition--to house 2,000 SS officers for a number of months.
Secret underground passages crisscrossed below like a maze, and a
marvelous air conditioner supplied fresh air to the stronghold
interior. Hermann Goring boasted that even if, for example, the
Russians or Allies surrounded the capital, those inside the
stronghold would have no need to fear; they could survive
indefinitely inside his indestructible fortress.
But in the spring of 1945, when the Russian army stormed into Berlin
like the season's last blizzard, the Hermann Goring stronghold was
silent. The Russian army torched its underground passages with
flamethrowers and detonated high explosives in an effort to
eradicate the stronghold's very existence. But the stronghold would
not be eradicated. There were only a few cracks on the concrete
walls.
"You could never bring down Hermann Goring's fortress with Russian
bombs," laughed my young East German guide. "They could barely bring
down Stalin's statue!" For who knew how many hours, he'd been
leading me around the city, showing me the lingering traces of the
Battle of Berlin in 1945. Did he think I had some strange desire to
see the aftermath of Berlin's WWII? I couldn't guess. But I was
surprisingly eager, and since it seemed inappropriate to explain
what I really wanted to see, I followed him around the city until
late into the afternoon. We'd first met that very day in a cafeteria
near Fernsehturm, where I'd gone for lunch.
However odd our union, my guide proved to be very competent and was
frank with me. As I followed him around, visiting the battle scenes
of East Berlin, I slowly began to feel as though the war had ended
but a few short months ago. The whole city was still riddled with
bullet wounds.
"Here, look at this," my guide said. He showed me some bullet holes.
"You can tell right off which bullets were Russian and which German.
These ones so deep they nearly blew the wall in two are German,
these others that practically pop out are Russian. The
craftsmanship's different, you know?"
Of all the East Berliners I met while I was there, his was the most
understandable English. "You speak English very well," I said
praisingly.
"Well, for a while I was a sailor," he said. "I've been to Cuba and
Africa--I even spent some time on the Black Sea. So I picked up some
English along the way. But now I'm an architectural engineer ..."
We descended from Hermann Goring's stronghold and after walking
briefly through the city, we entered an old beer hall on Unter den
Linden. Perhaps because it was Friday night, the hall was stiflingly
packed.
"The chicken here is quite popular," the guide said. So I ordered
chicken and rice with beer. The chicken actually wasn't bad, and the
beer was great. The room was warm and the noise and bustle pleasant.
Our waitress was a drop-dead gorgeous Kim Carnes look-alike. She was
platinum blonde with blue eyes, a small, trim waist, and pretty
smile. She brought our beer steins to the table, holding them
admiringly, the way she would an enormous penis. She reminded me of
a girl I once knew in Tokyo. She didn't look like this girl, nor
resemble her in any way, but somehow they were subtly alike. Perhaps
some aftereffect of Hermann Goring's dark labyrinth was conflating
them in my mind.
We had already drunk plenty of beer. The clock read close to ten. I
had to be at the S Bahn at Friedrichstrasse station by twelve. My
East German traveler's visa expired at midnight, and if I was so
much as one minute late it would be extremely troublesome.
"On the outskirts of the city there is an old battle site that's
still really torn up," the guide said.
I was staring idly at the waitress and didn't hear him.
"Excuse me?' He continued, "Russian and SS tanks attacked each other
head on, right? It was the real climax of the Battle of Berlin. The
wreckage is at an old marshalling yard, but it's remained exactly
how it was back then. All the broken tank parts and stuff, I mean.
We can borrow a friend's car and be there in no time ..."
I looked at my guide's face. It was thin over his gray corduroy
coat. He placed both hands on the table. His fingers were long and
delicate,
unsailorlike.
I shook my head, "I've got to be at the Friedrichstrasse station by
midnight. My visa'll expire."
"How about tomorrow?"
"Tomorrow morning I'm leaving for Nuremberg," I lied.
The youth looked a bit disappointed. A wave of exhaustion rolled
suddenly across his face. "It's just that if we went tomorrow, we
could take my girlfriend and some of her friends along. That's all,"
he said as if in explanation.
"Aw, that's too bad," I said. I felt as though a cold hand was
squeezing all the nerve bundles in my body. But what could I do? I
didn't know. Here I was absolutely lost in this strange
battlescarred city. Eventually though, the cold hand loosened,
retreated like a tide from my body.
"Well ... hey, Hermann Goring's fortress was great, right?" He said
with a smile. "Nobody's been able to bring it down in forty years."
From the intersection of Friedrichstrasse and Unter den Linden you
can see quite clearly in all directions. To the north, S Bahn
station. To the south, Checkpoint Charlie. To the west, Brandenburg
Gate. To the east, Fernsehturm.
"Well, don't worry," said the youth. "Even if you took your time you
could make the station in about fifteen minutes. Got it, okay?"
My wristwatch read 11:10 p.m. Yes, I'm all right, I told myself. We
shook hands.
"It's too bad we couldn't go to the marshalling yard, eh? And then
the women, eh?"
"Yes, regrettable," I said. But to him, what could possibly have
been regrettable about our not going? Walking alone, northbound on
the Friedrichstrasse, I tried to imagine what Hermann Goring had
envisioned that spring of 1945. But really, no one will know what
the Reichsmarshal of the Thousand Year Empire was thinking. Goring's
beloved and elegant Heinkel 117 bomber squadron lay in the Ukrainian
wilderness like hundreds of bleached bones, the corpse of war
itself.
3. Herr W's Midair Garden
The first time I was taken to see Herr W's midair garden was on a
fog-heavy November morning.
"Well, she isn't much," said Herr W.
And he was right. The midair garden just sat there floating in a sea
of fog. It was roughly eight yards long and five wide. Other than
the fact that it was airborne, it differed in no other way from a
regular garden. Well, let me rephrase that: it was a garden
certainly, but by terrestrial standards, it was third-rate. The
grass was dried up in patches, the flowers were eerily
unnatural-looking, the tomato vines were all withered, and it lacked
even a wooden fence. The white garden furniture looked as though it
had come from a pawnshop.
"I told you it wasn't much," Herr W repeated as if in apology. He
had been watching my eyes the whole time. But I wasn't particularly
disappointed, I hadn't come to see splendid arbors, fountains,
animal-shaped shrubbery, or Cupidean statues. I just wanted to see
Herr W's midair garden.
"This is better than any of those ostentatious, earthbound gardens,"
I said, and Herr W seemed a little relieved.
"If only I could float a bit higher, then it'd really be a midair
garden. But things being as they are ..." Herr W said. "Would you
take some tea?"
"That would be lovely," I said.
Herr W reached into a canvas something of indiscriminate shape
(daypack? basket?), pulled out a Coleman stove, a yellow-enameled
teapot, and thermos full of water and began preparing the tea.
The air was extremely cold. I was wearing a thick down jacket and a
scarf wrapped around my neck but they didn't seem to be helping. As
I sat there shivering I watched the fog flow southward beneath me.
Floating over the fog, I felt as though we were drifting off into
terra incognita.
When I mentioned this to Herr W over hot jasmine tea, he chuckled
slightly. "Everyone who comes here says the same thing. Especially
on really foggy days. Especially then. Like we'll drift off into the
stratosphere over the North Sea, eh?"
I cleared my throat and pointed out the other possibility, "Or into
East Berlin."
"Ah, yes, yes," said Herr W, stroking a withered tomato vine.
"That's part of the reason why I can't make this a proper midair
garden. If I go too high, East German police start getting nervous.
They keep their spotlight and machine guns trained on it! Obviously
they don't open fire, but it's still not very pleasant."
"No, I suppose not," I said.
"And also, like you said, if it were any higher, there's no
guarantee that we wouldn't get caught by a stiff breeze and wind up
in East Berlin. And then where would we be! We'd probably be
arrested as spies, and even if we survived we'd never make it back
to West Berlin!"
"Hmm," I said.
Herr W's midair garden was tethered to the roof of a claptrap
four-story building near the Berlin Wall. Since Herr W kept it
floating no more than eight inches off the roof, you'd mistake it
for just another rooftop garden if you didn't look closely.
Maintaining a maximum altitude of eight inches on such a marvelous
midair garden is not the sort of feat most people could have
duplicated. Everyone said Herr W managed because he was such a
"quiet, nonconfrontational sort."
"Why don't you move the flying garden to a safer location?" I asked.
"Like Koln or Frankfurt, or even farther into West Berlin? Then you
could go up as high as you like and no one would mind."
"Nonsense!" Herr W shook his head. "Koln! Frankfurt!" He shook his
head again. "I like it here. All my friends live here! In Kreuzberg!
It's just fine here!"
He finished his tea and pulled a Phillips portable record player out
of a container. He placed a record on the turntable and flipped the
switch. Soon the second movement of Handel's Wassermusik flowed
forth. The brisk trumpets sounded clearly through the dull and
overcast Kreuzberg sky. Could there have been another composition
better suited to Herr W's midair garden?
"You really ought to come back this summer," Herr W said. "The
garden is absolutely wonderful then. Last summer we had a party
every day! Once we had twenty-five people and three dogs up here!"
"It's a good thing no one fell off," I said, amazed.
"Actually, two people have fallen off: got drunk," said Herr W,
chuckling. "But no one died: the awnings on the third floor are
quite sturdy."
I laughed at that.
"We've even hauled up an upright piano before. Pollini came and
played Schumann. It was quite splendid. As you know, Pollini is a
bit of a midair garden fanatic. Lorin Maazel wanted to come but I
couldn't fit the whole Vienna Philharmonic up here, you know."
"Of course not," I agreed.
"Come again this summer," Herr W said and shook my hand. "Summer in
Berlin is quite a sight. In summer this place is filled with smells
of Turkish cooking and children laughing and music and beer! That's
Berlin!"
"I very much wish to return," I said.
"Koln! Frankfurt!!" Herr W repeated, shaking his head.
And thus, Herr W's midair garden awaits summer's arrival, hovering
just eight inches over the sky of Kreuzberg.
KEITH JOHNSON holds degrees in English and Japanese and is currently
a
graduate student at Boston University