The Eyes of Lira Kazan (27 page)

As he climbed back up to his house, he had the feeling that he must now empty his mind. He thought he might go walking the next day, or the next, he would go past the Lac de Pise and climb up to the Col de l'Homme Mort: up there you felt so small and yet so high up, you wondered who the dead man was and why he died, and
then you went down again without ever knowing. A neighbour shouted as he went by: “Hey you're getting a lot of visitors these days.” He didn't reply, he just smiled and thought to himself that it might be a good idea to burn those papers after all.
 
St Petersburg, 12th October
 
My dear Lira,
We all miss you here at the magazine. We've been thinking of you, and of the darkness that surrounds you. How I wish I had never let you go.
The next edition will be out next week. You probably heard from Dmitry that soon after you were attacked our offices were ransacked and all the computers were stolen. The magazine has not appeared for two months. But now everything is back in place. Your office is intact and looks as though you are just about to walk in. But your desk is covered in letters, dozens arrive for you every day, from all over the world, from people you have met and from total strangers. They all express their admiration and sympathy for you. We will publish a selection in every future edition. There won't be a single one in which you are not mentioned. I must also tell you that your salary will go on being paid, 25,000 roubles per month. As long as I am in this chair, you are on my staff.
Dmitry tells me that you hate our country and that you will never set foot here again. I can understand that, but things might change. Everything can change.
Louchsky did not suffer any public humiliation, there was no pen thrown at him in front of the cameras, no pictures of him signing his resignation with a lowered head. Such images would have done nothing for those in power, bribery doesn't shock anyone here – nobody cares if the French government had been bought. We learnt from a communiqué that Louchsky was no longer at the head of the naval company.
He's still got a huge empire, he's very rich but no longer powerful. Here people laugh at him, that never happened before, everybody was too scared. And meanwhile there are incredible stories going round about the dinner at Versailles, some so extraordinary that they can't possibly be true. But it doesn't matter, it does people good. Something fundamental has changed in the way people regard him, both in and out of the Kremlin. Nothing you have done has been in vain, Lira. You ruined his coronation.
All the same I would do anything to turn the clock back, and to see you again marching into the office in a rage, like before, and this time I would say no, a hundred times no, to all your demands.
I was unable to protect you from the rage that devoured you then. I hope some of it is still there, making you as strong as ever, but this time, please, keep it for yourself alone.
I hug you, Lira. And so does everybody here.
Igor
When Nwankwo arrived back in London, the customs officer asked him to follow him into his office. A policeman came in and informed him that his residency permit had been rescinded, as had his post at the university, and that he was under arrest for theft on the premises of the Serious Fraud Office. Nwankwo listened calmly to all this, as though he was just letting himself be carried along, as though finding himself under arrest was the ultimate stage of the journey embarked upon by the ex-head of the Nigerian fraud squad.
Late that afternoon he appeared before a judge who would pronounce on whether he would be extradited, placed in detention or allowed out on bail. The judge asked him to be seated, and gently took his glasses out of their case, almost regretfully, as though extremely reluctant to pass sentence on a hero. He cleared his throat before each question. This man he was supposed to be judging had the looks of a stranger, but none of the fear that usually showed on the face of the hunted men he normally saw, who seemed like children in the dark; he had nothing in him of those miserable men who had thought they could find a better life in another country. There was something quite different about Nwankwo's expression – an incandescent stare that was hard to look back at, as though his exile was already complete and internalized.
Nwankwo replied to the questions. Yes, he admitted having copied the film before leaving the premises of the Serious Fraud Squad; yes, he knew Lira Kazan, but he had heard nothing from her since leaving her in Paris at the Gare du Nord with her husband. Félix? No that name meant nothing to him. The judge showed him the reports from the secret-service team in charge of the Oxford surveillance operation.
Nwankwo acted the fool. “Oh yes, that was a friend of Lira's. He came to see her. I had forgotten his name.” Nwankwo felt no compunction in lying here, as so many had done before him. He was just waiting for one question, one single question. Finally it came. The judge said:
“Does the name Uche mean anything to you?”
And then Nwankwo beamed happily, like someone who knows but won't betray a comrade. Thanks to an @ sign Uche's wanderings were over. He could finally rejoin the world of the spirits who haunted the roads and paths by night.
In the end the judge granted him bail. Nwankwo returned to the Oxford house. Once again there was a policeman outside. Some of Lira's strings were still stretched along the walls. Nwankwo was now just waiting to be deported. He heard about Helen's resignation on the television. She held a press conference, refusing to testify against Nwankwo. She praised his expertise and knowledge of the law, and she gave the name and position of the person who had yelled at her over the telephone on the video which had now been seen by millions on the Internet. He was the Prime Minister's legal adviser, she said.
Nwankwo listened in amazement. He didn't hear Ezima coming in. She had knocked at the door, entered and was looking around this house that she had once thought was hers. He finally turned around, smiled sadly, and got up without approaching her. She had that closed expression that he knew so well; she refused the chair he offered her. She appeared to have rehearsed what she proceeded to say:
“I know Tadjou took something for you. You put your own son in danger. I don't want you coming anywhere near the children.”
“Everything I have ever done has been for their sake,” Nwankwo repeated. It was as though they were just repeating an old conversation.
“Stop it,” Ezima sighed.
He approached. She backed away.
“So are you leaving then?” he asked.
“Yes, we're going home, we should never have followed you. I know I insisted on coming and I was wrong. I hadn't realized what you were capable of.”
“Don't stay in Lagos, or in Abuja. Go across the border to your cousin. Finley will be like a madman.”
“Tell the uncle where you are. He'll know where we are.”
Then she left without waiting for an answer.
 
Speech by the President of the French Republic,
Saint-Nazaire, 22nd October
 
My fellow countrymen,
I have come here to see for myself that work has begun again. It is what I promised you, and therefore it has happened. This contract between our dockyards and the Russian naval-construction company marks the beginning of a new era. Two ships have been commissioned, and others will follow on the order book. I promise you that. The presence at my side of the Russian Vice-President is proof of Russia's long-term commitment to this project. I have always been scrupulous about one thing and that is to fulfil my promises to you. You can examine every commitment I have made. I have never lied to you.
I know that there were doubts and criticisms when I announced that I would not abandon you. And I have heard the rumours. There are documents in circulation, are they genuine or forgeries? It hardly matters, rumour has done its work. A young Russian captain of industry was unjustly blamed after the bankruptcy of an obscure bank. A minister of the Republic was forced to resign in order to defend his honour. There will be a judicial inquiry. It will discover nothing, because there is nothing to discover. In the past plotters would work in the back rooms of bars, now they spread rumours on the Internet. I say no to the rule of anonymous denunciation! Yes to the Republic! Yes to a France of the twenty-first century! What do these agitators know of the six months you have just spent on the dole? If the day comes when there are no dockyards, no factories, how will you live, how will your wives and your children live? You who are the first in line for delocalization? These cowards hiding behind their computers are betting on your death! I am placing my bet on your future, on your irreplaceable skills. I am placing my bet on the industrial future of our nation.
I have always believed in the future of shipbuilding, in your competence and I will never accept its disappearance. Here before you all today I wish to reiterate wholeheartedly the core values of our great nation, inscribed over all the monuments of this republic ever since our great revolution: Liberty, Equality, Fraternity.
I have only your interests at heart. Thank you.
“Madame, I am afraid that there is a profound necrosis and we will have to consider the removal of the eyes. After that you can decide whether to insert glass eyes, or leave the sockets empty and close the eyelids…” Lira fainted. The doctor's voice, and that of the interpreter, and Polina's involuntary cry of horror seemed far away. Lira imagined her eyes rolling out of her head, she saw the empty sockets, she saw herself dead and buried.
When she came round, she was lying in an empty examination room. Polina was talking to her in a gentle voice, stroking her forehead, and she heard a nurse's voice too, interrupting, saying that she needn't worry, that it was a normal reaction. Lira lay there in silence. Only Polina's words could reach her now.
“You had blue eyes, Mum. I need them to be blue again, even if they're glass ones. You should have the operation.”
And so Lira agreed and the operation was fixed for two weeks later. Polina wrote down the date in her student diary. The days passed, each one the same, in their new apartment in a red-brick building south of Paris, near the campus of Polina's university. It was like a countdown to the operation.
Lira kept asking herself, sometimes quietly, sometimes out loud, why the loss of her eyes seemed so unbearable, when she had already lost her sight. It was a question that had no answer, for her, or for others. Tanya rang from St Petersburg; Lira could visualize her apartment, all that mess on the table, and both of them sitting on the floor not so long ago. Her parents rang too, begging her to come home. Never, she said.
Every day Polina came back with a new promise.
“You'll be able to write and look at the Internet, using a computer with a voice synthesizer. I went to a demonstration, it's brilliant. And you'll be able to run, there are people with dogs who will accompany you. You'll even be able to carry on with the karate, I've found a club for blind people—”
“Stop,” Lira would say gently. She was haunted by the thought of the operation, and she couldn't bear any pity or compassion. She was drowning in nostalgia, and she had nightmares too. It was as though a part of her was about to be removed along with her eyes, as though they contained all her memories.
“When I was little they said I looked like a doll, because I was blonde and had blue eyes. Now I really will look like one with my glass ones. But I never liked dolls.”
Félix came to see her on his way to London. He had left the law courts and was going to join Mark, hoping he would get through customs without any trouble. Lira fell into his arms and stayed there a long time, silent and fragile, something she had never wanted to be in the past. She asked him if he had any news of Nwankwo.
“He was deported eight days ago. I don't know where he is. But I'm quite sure he'll get in touch before too long.”
“I'm frightened, Félix.”
“I know.”
“It's like putting my head on the block.”
“No, Lira. You've been through the worst. I've never known anyone as strong as you.”
“Do you really think we'll hear from Nwankwo?”
“I'm positive we will.”
 
The operation went well. They cleaned out and emptied Lira's eye sockets, bandaged them and prepared for the implant of two deep-blue glass eyes.
When Lira, still unconscious, was wheeled out of the operating theatre, all that remained on the chrome table, waiting to be thrown away, were two small spheres, white,
black and bleeding. Perhaps inside them, rolled up like the reel of a film on an old and outdated projector were the last things she had seen: a winding Thames, a bit like the Neva; Nwankwo drawing circles and arrows on a board with his long fine hands, London, with its big wheel next to the bankers' skyscrapers, and all the streets, the pavements, the boutiques in which she and Polina had planned to try on clothes. Lira's eyes had not been able to withstand the cruelty of the world. They were like two minuscule planets whose oceans had disappeared for ever.
BITTER LEMON PRESS
First published in the United Kingdom in 2012 by
Bitter Lemon Press, 37 Arundel Gardens, London W11 2LW
 
 
First published in French as
Les yeux de Lira
by
Éditions des Arènes, Paris, 2011
 
This book is supported by the Institut Français
as part of the Burgess programme
 

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