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Fiction

The Little Brother

By Yordan Slaveykov
Translated from Bulgarian by Yana Ellis
In “The Little Brother,” Bulgarian novelist Yordan Slaveykov follows a young protagonist grappling with loneliness, emotional turmoil, and the heavy burden of unspoken words.

During puberty I was certain I was going to die. During puberty, I wanted to die. I was that frightened. Of everyone and everything. Of other people. I didn’t like crowds. I was certain that whenever I got near them, people were talking about me. I was frightened of the dark. Of the older boys. Of their roughness. Of the fact that they instinctively recognized the victim in me. Of my classmates. They didn’t like that I was top of the class. I only felt safe at home. But this illusion burst too. My father shattered it. Once he tried to hit me. Dad! Fathers don’t beat their children, they are fathers, not strangers, Dad!

They bought me a tracksuit. Blue bottoms. Blue-yellow top. Beautiful. In my few attempts to become close with the boys my age, I played football with them. I got in their way. Soon I got bored, and they stopped passing the ball to me. I left. Forgot my top. The neighbor found it and brought it home. Outside our house there were men, smoking and chatting. They were discussing something with my dad. Next to our house there was a pile of rubble. I was coming down the road, the men noticed me, someone said something to Dad, he smiled, they all smiled. I shivered. Dad called me over. The men were watching. I went closer. He asked me where my top was. I jumped. It wasn’t on me. I was silent. He raised his voice, is that how I looked after my new clothes, I didn’t deserve anything. He lifted his hand to hit me. Aimed. I saw the shadow of his hand. Stepped back. It wasn’t a slap on the cheek. It was more of a graze on the neck. Didn’t hurt a lot. But it was humiliating. He humiliated me in front of strangers. I’m sure he did it for them. To show them who’s the boss at home. Who’s the man. The others smiled approvingly. I looked at them. Went mad. I grabbed a handful of stones and threw them at our windows. A few of them hit. It was quick. The men gasped. Dad stepped forward, I took aim with a stone in my hand and yelled at him that if he hit me now, I’d wait for him to fall asleep and kill him. I was serious. I was crying. My breathing was heavy. My father swore. And relented. I’m not sure if he got scared or simply changed his mind. It doesn’t matter. Two things happened that day: I realized that not even home is a safe place, and I stopped loving my father. I was ten years old.

Fear was my skin, loneliness my only garment. I wanted to die so I’d no longer be scared. And for there to be lots of people at my funeral. So I wouldn’t be lonely. I escaped from loneliness in books. I used to read a lot. Really a lot. Every day. Every night. For hours on end. I loved, and I still do, the smell of paper and ink. This smell calms me. Brings me peace. I turned reading into a ritual. A fetish. I never read a book with dirty hands. I didn’t dog-ear the pages or fold the cover. Never. We had a decent-sized library. I liked rearranging the books. Dad made the bookcase. It was in the pantry. Right next to the bathroom. I have no idea why it was there. It was made from planks lined up one on top of the other, secured with ropes and fixed to the wall. It was difficult to open the pantry door. To get to the bookcase, I had to make an effort. Dad read a lot too. He never refused me money for a book. Never. I read voraciously. Children’s paperbacks. Adults’ hardcovers. Classics. Fairy tales. I read books I understood and books I didn’t. Books about Native Americans and forefathers. Books about crime enthusiasts. Books about freedom and books about slavery. Books about knights and ladies. Books on morality and dishonor. Books with well-concealed eroticism. I lived other lives; I fell asleep and woke up in other people’s beds; wore other people’s clothes; I was loved by other people. I couldn’t wait to get back from school and bury myself in a book. I was becoming a recluse and hardly went out. Sometimes, almost forcefully, Mom and Dad made me play with other children. I would get back home and dive headfirst into a book again. It’s not as if I never spent a whole day with other children outdoors, I did. But I preferred books. That went on for a long time. I remember one summer. Holidays. Lull. Scorching heat. In the village square there is a bus stop, I’m sitting on the bench with a friend, smoking. Boredom. On the square in front of us a shirtless boy, wearing just bright yellow shorts, draws lazy circles with a black bike. He’s barefoot. A stranger. I ask my friend who he is. What do you mean who, he says, don’t you remember when we were in kindergarten, you used to beat him up all the time. I laugh. That’s not true. I can’t tolerate violence, I’ve never been able to. It’s true, my friend insists. He calls the boy by name, he comes over, stops his bike, gets off, puts it on its stand. We’re all silent. He sits with us. Next to me. He puts his arm around my shoulders, as if it’s always been there, and says, You and I will be friends until we die. That’s all. Only those words.

We were inseparable. Together. All day. Every day. Almost twenty-four hours. We developed a special feeling toward each other. Something like telepathy. Once I bought him a T-shirt from the shop in the nearby town. A nice one. Red. For no reason. I went back to the village, beaming while imagining how happy he would be with the surprise. I waited for him to come round, like every other day. I was in my room. He walked in. Alone. A sneaky smile on his face. He held his hands behind his back. I asked him what he was hiding, and he grinned from ear to ear; his smile lit up the room. He said he had a present for me. Hoped I’d like it. A T-shirt. Red. From the same shop. Bought the previous day. We hadn’t talked about it. My big brother was never there, but I could grow up with him instead; we had lots to catch up on. All the years we hadn’t known each other, knowing of each other. We became an entity. Encapsulated. We isolated the world.

We talked a lot and about everything. And we also remained silent for days. I would read aloud to him. He showed me how he rode a horse. We told each other about our childhoods. We compared our families. He became the most interesting novel. A novel with no end. I didn’t protest. There was something wild in him. Something in his eyes. Something I didn’t have. It was a calling. It was hunger. His eyes held a hunger to break with the tamed, the civilized. He loved animals and they loved him back. He was the master of all the village dogs. They would follow him as if they were his knights. He liked eating raw meat every so often. His chestnut brown hair would turn golden in the summer. His body—slim when we first met—became strong. He began training. Learned to fight. So no one could beat him up. We were constantly together. I missed him during the week. He went to school in another town. I counted the days till the weekend when he would return to the village with his family. Then we caught up on all the hours we hadn’t spent together. We fought a lot. We argued a lot.

I needed to be loved all the time and sometimes I would put him to the test. I was already smoking then. Quite a lot. He didn’t smoke. One day I had no cash on me. We were together with other friends at a tiny pub. I was drinking coffee. I had run out of cigarettes. And I wanted one. I asked him to buy me a pack. I would pay him back in a few days. He refused. Categorically. It wasn’t for the money; it was for my health, he said. I told him my health is mine. Not his. He smiled and refused again. I got upset. Picked up my coffee and moved to another table. He came and sat next to me. Tried to hug me. I pushed him back. I told him I didn’t want him around. He realized I was serious. He hadn’t realized how much I liked smoking. He went to the bar. Returned with a pack of fancy cigarettes. Left it on the table and said it was for me. He sat back on his chair. I picked up the pack, threw it at him and shouted an insult. I saw the hurt in his eyes. I liked it. He took the pack. Slowly removed the wrapping. Took out one cigarette. Crushed it in his hand and put it in his mouth. Chewed it. Swallowed it with a sip of water. Everyone went silent. We all looked at each other. He took a second cigarette out. Crushed it and put it in his mouth. He was really angry. Someone tried to take the pack and it fell to the floor. He took a third cigarette out. I got up and went over to him. His eyes swam with tears. He’d always react like this whenever he felt unjustly accused of something. I hugged him. I felt his muscles tensing. His hand clenched into a fist. He didn’t move. I lowered my head to his. Breathed in his scent. And told him that I didn’t want us to argue and that he was right about my health, I just really wanted a cigarette. He spat the chewed tobacco on the floor. Trampled it with his foot. Looked into my eyes. We had made up.

I must’ve loved him from the first day. That sudden love. Hitherto nonexistent. It’s never been in your life. Then it comes and it’s as if it’s always been there. It took me a while to understand this love. And not to be scared of it. It was like a force of nature. It robbed me of all my self-preservation instincts. If someone had told me that for some reason I had to die instead of him, I wouldn’t have asked why but when. He liked giving me books. For me to read them. Then tell him the story. It’s not that he didn’t read. He did. He’d say that when I retold these stories to him, he wouldn’t just hear them, he would see them. He was the first person who believed in my talent as a storyteller. I read a lot. And I recounted a lot for him. We liked scary stories. And adventures. Stories about murderers, vampires. I used to be frightened while reading them and while retelling them. But I didn’t give up. It ignited my imagination too. Imperceptibly from a reader and a storyteller, I became a co-author. I wasn’t really changing the story. I decorated it. Sometimes, I’d invent a new character. Sometimes, I killed someone. Saved another one. I handed out justice and took it away depending on my mood. Or on which character I liked at the time. At other times, just to annoy him, I would kill his favorite character. He would get fired up, say it wasn’t fair, what was this stupid book and how could I possibly like it. When I told him that his favorite character was alive and well, and they’d died only in my story, not in the book, he was puzzled at first. Then he would smile and tell me that I must become a writer. I would smile too and tell him I would like to be a doctor or an actor, not a writer. Years later, I came to understand that my desire to change the truth, to adorn it, to invent a new truth was, in essence, a desire to change my own reality. To invent it anew. To edit it. To direct it. Back then I simply thought it was entertaining. Not that it was a necessity. I liked, after telling yet another scary story, to pick up his bike, turn off its lights and ride it on the dark streets of our village. And to be frightened. Sometimes the streets were lit. I was still frightened. Of the stories I told. I loved riding a bike. His bike. I never had my own bike. Poor child. Poor family. Never enough money at home to buy me a bike. Every other child had bikes. They looked after them. They were jealous. He always gave me his bike whenever I asked. I dreamed of a bike. He of a motorcycle.

A few years later I still didn’t have a bike, but he got a motorcycle. A big one. I think it was white, Japanese. New, powerful. He rode it like crazy. He loved riding. I loved to ride it with him. I remember one night we were driving along the international road that passed by the neighboring village. He accelerated. Neither of us was wearing a helmet. The speed kept mounting. When it reached more than sixty miles per hour, he turned toward me and told me not to be frightened. He lifted his hands off the bars and slowly stood up on the footrests. Spread his arms. Started screaming. I was trying not to cling to him so I wouldn’t throw off his balance and we wouldn’t crash. I screamed, too. We were floating in the middle of the road, right along the center. There weren’t many cars, but the drivers of those we passed were honking like crazy. He drove like this for a few miles. Then stopped. Pulled to the side. We got off the bike. I was trembling and needed to pee. I lit a cigarette. We didn’t speak. I embraced him. We stayed like that. I told him not to beckon death. He whispered that I hadn’t understood. He wasn’t beckoning death. He was beckoning life. I answered that life favors the brave but so does death. He said he knew. We got back on the bike. He drove like a normal person. We returned to the village. I couldn’t sleep that night.

We remained friends. We argued often. Then would quickly make up. Our village is small. Like most villages in the country. You could cross it from end to end on foot in about fifteen minutes. He used to pick me up on his motorcycle. To go for a beer. That was the first and last summer I drank beer. Beer was no friend of mine. It wasn’t for me. I got drunk that night. Vomiting. Disgusting taste. Vile. It bloats your stomach; you need to pee all the time. The evening was pleasant, the two of us, friends, music, beer, snooker. At one point I asked him to take me back home. He refused. He wanted to stay longer. I dug in my heels, told him he had promised me. It wasn’t true. We had a scuffle. I took his keys. Dropped them in the beer. He didn’t say a word. Took them out and had a sip. I insisted he drive me home. He refused. I grabbed the keys and threw them on the street. It turned awkward. Someone brought the keys back. He put them away. I called him a liar. He only smiled. I was mental. Hurled insults at him. The owner turned up. Asked if there was a problem. I screamed and told him to clear off. I pushed a glass, threw a bottle on the floor. I had completely lost it. Kept insisting he take me home on his motorcycle. His smile was gone. He bowed his head and clenched his fists. Some friends pushed me outside. My anger is like this. It comes out of nowhere and then it vanishes. That night it wasn’t going anywhere. Outside I carried on shouting, kicking stones, the nearby fence, a bench. I screamed that I didn’t care about him, that I hated him, that his motorcycle was crap, better he killed himself on it . . . then I left.

Halfway along the short road home I met a mutual acquaintance. I asked him for a smoke. We got to chatting. We sat next to each other. Soon our hands found each other. It was quiet. Midnight. We heard a noise. A bike revving. It sped off angrily. Our mutual acquaintance got scared, but I insisted he stay. The bike came around after a minute. He saw us. Slammed the brakes on. I got up and slowly walked to him. He clutched the handlebars with both hands. He was angry. That’s exactly what I wanted. Asked me why I was doing this. The truth was that I craved attention. He understood. I was silent. He took me home. We agreed to meet up and go swimming at the lake by the village.

I waited for him the following day, but he didn’t turn up. I decided he was being late on purpose, just to annoy me. Because of the previous night’s argument. I was impatient. Went out to look for him, hurriedly. Unconsciously. Near the village hall, I saw his mother. She was weeping. She wouldn’t answer my questions about what was going on, what had happened. She kept shaking her head, saying his name. I ran toward the road leading out of the village, toward the lake. I saw the ambulance and a crowd gathered by the bridge. I pushed them aside. He was lying on the road, breathing. Thank you God! I pelted back to the village, spotted a car, I remember the color—blue. I can’t remember the driver. I stood in the middle of the road and flung out my arms. The driver stopped. I managed to say that I needed to get to the hospital in town. The man nodded. The news had gone round. I flew through the emergency room entrance, asked for car crash casualties. I was told where to go. In the corridors, people and the smell of disinfectants. Stuffy air. Urine. I saw his father. Crying. His brother was there too. I saw a stretcher. Someone had to accompany the stretcher from room to room while they did the initial examinations. I asked if I could. I held on to the metal stand with the drip system. They were infusing some fluid into his body. He was brave. He didn’t scream or groan even though his body was shattered. I remember his leg had multiple fractures, his pelvis, hip, knee, ankle . . . I think he was losing consciousness. At least he was breathing. He opened his eyes. Looked at me. Recognized me. Gently nodded. I leaned toward him. I knew what he was going to say. I deserved the question. My ear neared his lips. He opened his mouth. There was blood in it. His lips were swollen. He had hurt his face too. He cleared his throat and said, Are you happy now? Are you happy I’m in this state? Then he closed his eyes. I started crying.

I returned to the village. No one gave me a lift. That same night I discovered that I could pray and howl at the same time. Every day, every God-given day I was in the hospital. At the beginning they didn’t allow visitors. Only his parents. His room was on the ground floor. It had a balcony. And we, his friends, would jump over the railing just to get a glimpse of him. Then we would jump back down, smoke, drink coffee, and talk quietly as if we were frightened to wake him up, then more of his friends would come, and then even more. His mother was already there. She came the day after the accident. She cried almost constantly. But quietly. On the balcony, so he wouldn’t hear her. And she smoked. A lot. Hardly ate. His father’s eyes were red too. And his brother’s. I watched the three of them—how they ate together on the balcony. How they touched each other’s hands while passing around food. How his father lovingly put his hand on his mother’s shoulder. How she tried to smile. How his brother’s body was always slightly angled toward the room. How they took turns going inside while he was sleeping or unconscious to check on him. There was so much love in this family, so much togetherness, so much that I was jealous.

He got better after a while. I was allowed to go to his room and sit beside the bed. There was a wall of tension between his mother and me. Now I regret not finding the energy to stand before her. To talk to her. To tell her that there was nothing disgusting in my love for her son, that I had no one, that I was lonely, that he was the only living person who knew me, understood me and knew how I felt, that he was my only friend. But I was scared. And angry. I felt guilty. For having to explain the unexplainable. To dress it up. To roll it round my mouth as if it were an old dry piece of bread. I felt accused. By everyone. It’s possible I was imagining it. The past sometimes is not what we want it to be. After yet another operation he hardly ate, but he needed nourishment. I was there. In the room. On the balcony. His mom and I tried to share the same space, without it exploding. She tried to feed him; he refused. He told her he wanted me to feed him. I came into the room. He had lost weight and grown a beard. He ate a bit of a banana. A tiny bit. Then fell asleep. He slept peacefully. He’d wake up frequently. Then fall asleep again. During one of his times awake I told him that I really wanted us to be together all our lives and asked him to promise me that he wouldn’t die before me, because the thing I’m living through right now, while watching him, is unbearable. I wouldn’t be able to cope being alive and him being dead.

He didn’t answer. Fell asleep. I stood next to him; watched him sleep. I watched that painfully familiar face, trying to supress my desire to touch it, not knowing how little I knew about my ability to cope with the unbearable.

He woke up after a while, asked for water; I gave him some and then he told me that wasn’t the way it was going to happen. You won’t die before me. You won’t manage on your own. It’s hard. I just checked. I’ll go first. I’ll build a house. I’ll wait for you. I got scared. I asked him what he had dreamed of. He said it wasn’t a dream. I told him to stop talking nonsense. He only smiled and fell asleep again. He got better. Recovered. He was the same as before. He was left with only a slight limp. Back then I didn’t know that this was a postponement. No one knew. When we escape death by a hair’s breadth, we think we’ve defeated it. We celebrate life. We covet the person who’s already looked death in the eyes, held its gaze without blinking. We forgive them for everything. We love them. Sometimes more than they deserve. We make promises. And we don’t keep them. That we’ll be better people. More careful. That we’ll change this or that streak in our personality. And we even believe what we say. Nothing ever changes. Nothing. Ever. We carry on celebrating by inertia. We no longer celebrate life. But the everyday. We celebrate going to bed. Falling asleep. Waking up. Drinking coffee. The morning showers. Having sex. Making love. We deceive ourselves that these are the most necessary little things in life. The truth is, it’s not we who are celebrating—Death is celebrating. She is the biggest winner. The gala is always in her honor. Not ours. She knows how to wait. We tire. She doesn’t. Death loves us. Fact. Her love is unrequited. Death loves only the living. The dead don’t interest her. He and I stopped caring for each other. Not straight away. Not immediately. Not even imperceptibly. You could feel it. I couldn’t stop him. Habit settled between us, unnoticed. It became a third presence. Invisible. Tangible. Our friendship became tired of proving itself. It retreated. We no longer thought in the future tense. He met someone else. I met someone else. We still saw each other. But rarely. Briefly. With awkwardness between us.

I accepted my defeat. Moved somewhere else. To another house. With other books. With a different person. Heavy. Clever. Egocentric. Alcoholic. One who loved me. Who had the biggest library I’ve ever seen in my life. It was entirely at my disposal. I loved his intellect. He loved my intellect. Not the flesh. Erudite. Brilliant mind. Mighty drive for self-destruction. Suspicious. Possessive. Jealous in a particular way. Older than me. He didn’t become my lover. He became my family. A difficult family. Two wayward characters. Forever-hungry egos. Squared. But our intellects were synchronized. Equally unloved. Equally over-loved. To whom I was family. Who was my family. Who recognized my demons. And showed me his.

We lived together for a while. Not too long. It was unbearable. He introduced me to the world of art. Encouraged me to write. Paid for my education. Just like that, without asking for anything in return. He wanted to be part of someone’s life. To be important to someone. To be of significance. And for me, he was. He gave me a new environment, a new circle of friends. I no longer lived in just a town. I lived in a big town. The capital. I traveled abroad for my education. After one of those journeys, I went back to the village. I missed Mom. In some ways Dad, too.

My sister was going to be there with her husband and children. My brother, as always, would be absent. The black sheep. There was agreement on the topic of my brother. Mom and I against Dad and my sister. Mom and I thought it was Dad’s fault that my brother became a criminal. Dad and my sister thought this was simply the way he was. There was a brawl—explosive and luminous—on the topic at every family gathering.

After dinner with the family, I went for a walk. I saw familiar faces. Said hello. Smiled. Asked questions. People asked me questions, too. I picked my way to a friend’s house, I wanted to see him. I went quickly through the hushed village. I liked spring evenings there. I loved them. Silence. Noises. Smell from the only bakery, bread baking right then. The small bridge over the small river running through the village. The town hall. The former school. A series of soothing clichés. I was almost at the house when a car pulled up next to me. White. Unknown. The door opened. I remember the light from the streetlamp, the weak glimmer in the car. I couldn’t see clearly who was inside. Then I heard his voice. I got in. Closed the door. And everything ended. Everything began. Nothing had happened in between. As if I had just gone out three minutes ago to throw out the trash and then returned. We greeted dawn in the car. We talked all night long. I didn’t get tired. I didn’t feel sleepy. I found my lost paradise. Then a car wash took him away from me. Savagely. Irretrievably. He had gone to wash his car. A faulty device killed him. The end! The end! The end!

T

H

E

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N

D

!

I learned exactly what the word “never” meant. I’d never see him again. I’d never run my fingers through his hair again, and he’d never be annoyed by it. He would never call me by all the names he came up with specially for me. I’d never have a friend like him again. Never again . . . I had never cried for someone like that before. Part of me will never stop crying for this loss. I didn’t want to watch but I did watch all the same how they closed the lid of his coffin. He was dressed in his favorite black leather jacket. I didn’t want to hear but I heard all the same how the lumps of earth fell onto his coffin. I didn’t want to be there. I didn’t want to leave. I continued to cry. I cried for him. I cried, of course, for myself, too. I bent down. Took a fistful of soil. I straightened up. I began walking. I held the lump in my cupped hand. It was cold. I warmed it in my palm. Put it in my mouth. Chewed it. Swallowed it. It had the taste of what it was. Soil. It had the taste of what he would become. And then I. Soil. I was hurting after his death. Physically. For months on end. His absence was painful. A dull ache under the ribcage. Constant. Sometimes, I would be doing something, and his absence would sweep over me. It would stop my breathing. Literally. I didn’t eat. I didn’t sleep. I didn’t have the courage to commit suicide. I dreamed of him every night. Colorful, meaningful dreams. Full of scents and noises. Full of him. Alive. Warm. Real. Genuine. Present. I would often embrace him in my dreams. That’s when I would wake up. In an embrace with the empty space around me.

I have no idea how I survived. I began writing after his death. I was trying to extract death from me. To spit out the anger. To describe the pain. To give voice to the feeling of hopelessness. I wrote little. And badly. I watched the words that came from my hand and I was disgusted by how ugly they were, how clumsily they described my feelings. I would read aloud. It was worse. I would crumple the sheets of paper and swear never to touch them again. After a day or two, I felt I could cope and would write again. Again badly. Again disgusted. Again, I crumpled the pages.

One afternoon, I fell asleep. I can’t remember my dream. I woke up. It was hot. I was sweating. I grabbed a piece of paper. And the words flowed. A swarm. Meaningful. Beautiful. I read them aloud and I heard them talk with their own voices. I folded the paper carefully. I kissed it. Put it away. The adrenaline was drumming in my ears, pulsating in my throat. I went for a walk. It didn’t help. I returned home. From my hands, from the tips of my fingers, energy was streaming. Piping hot. I can’t explain it any other way. And there was a warmth in place of the pain under my ribcage. That’s what I feel now when my desire to write is unstoppable. I exchanged one reality for another. And described it. And believed it. Categorically. When I got tired of living, I wrote. When I was frightened of living, I wrote. When my memories faded, I wrote. Writing soothed me. It gave me another possible life. I always wrote about myself. I was always the protagonist. I only changed the names. I was also the secondary characters. And the children. And the women. I lived in the books I wrote. Life outside of them interested me less and less. People, faces, and events passed by without rousing interest in me. Months. Years. Beds. Meals. Journeys. Trains. Phone calls. I lived in the real world under duress. My life was like a badly staged performance. Sometimes I forgot to eat. Sometimes I forgot to shower. Sometimes I didn’t know what day it was, what month. What year. I didn’t want to know either. I wrote to live. Every day. I never showed anyone my writing. I didn’t want to. I wrote for myself. I wrote by hand. With a ballpoint pen. With a pencil. With a felt-tip. With a marker. On a computer. On napkins. On notebooks. On loose sheets of paper. In the margins of newspapers. I was writing on the walls at home. I wrote on book covers. I was lonely. People avoided me. I was rude to them. I found them stupid. Ignorant. I lived in a different place. Shared apartments with criminals. Drug addicts. One of them killed someone. They locked him up. I lived with a woman for a while. Then on my own. I severed the past. Killed it. Or at least that’s what I thought back then.

“Братчето,” from Последна Стъпка. Copyright © Yordan Slaveykov. By arrangement with the author. Translation copyright © 2025 by Yana Ellis. All rights reserved.

English Bulgarian (Original)

During puberty I was certain I was going to die. During puberty, I wanted to die. I was that frightened. Of everyone and everything. Of other people. I didn’t like crowds. I was certain that whenever I got near them, people were talking about me. I was frightened of the dark. Of the older boys. Of their roughness. Of the fact that they instinctively recognized the victim in me. Of my classmates. They didn’t like that I was top of the class. I only felt safe at home. But this illusion burst too. My father shattered it. Once he tried to hit me. Dad! Fathers don’t beat their children, they are fathers, not strangers, Dad!

They bought me a tracksuit. Blue bottoms. Blue-yellow top. Beautiful. In my few attempts to become close with the boys my age, I played football with them. I got in their way. Soon I got bored, and they stopped passing the ball to me. I left. Forgot my top. The neighbor found it and brought it home. Outside our house there were men, smoking and chatting. They were discussing something with my dad. Next to our house there was a pile of rubble. I was coming down the road, the men noticed me, someone said something to Dad, he smiled, they all smiled. I shivered. Dad called me over. The men were watching. I went closer. He asked me where my top was. I jumped. It wasn’t on me. I was silent. He raised his voice, is that how I looked after my new clothes, I didn’t deserve anything. He lifted his hand to hit me. Aimed. I saw the shadow of his hand. Stepped back. It wasn’t a slap on the cheek. It was more of a graze on the neck. Didn’t hurt a lot. But it was humiliating. He humiliated me in front of strangers. I’m sure he did it for them. To show them who’s the boss at home. Who’s the man. The others smiled approvingly. I looked at them. Went mad. I grabbed a handful of stones and threw them at our windows. A few of them hit. It was quick. The men gasped. Dad stepped forward, I took aim with a stone in my hand and yelled at him that if he hit me now, I’d wait for him to fall asleep and kill him. I was serious. I was crying. My breathing was heavy. My father swore. And relented. I’m not sure if he got scared or simply changed his mind. It doesn’t matter. Two things happened that day: I realized that not even home is a safe place, and I stopped loving my father. I was ten years old.

Fear was my skin, loneliness my only garment. I wanted to die so I’d no longer be scared. And for there to be lots of people at my funeral. So I wouldn’t be lonely. I escaped from loneliness in books. I used to read a lot. Really a lot. Every day. Every night. For hours on end. I loved, and I still do, the smell of paper and ink. This smell calms me. Brings me peace. I turned reading into a ritual. A fetish. I never read a book with dirty hands. I didn’t dog-ear the pages or fold the cover. Never. We had a decent-sized library. I liked rearranging the books. Dad made the bookcase. It was in the pantry. Right next to the bathroom. I have no idea why it was there. It was made from planks lined up one on top of the other, secured with ropes and fixed to the wall. It was difficult to open the pantry door. To get to the bookcase, I had to make an effort. Dad read a lot too. He never refused me money for a book. Never. I read voraciously. Children’s paperbacks. Adults’ hardcovers. Classics. Fairy tales. I read books I understood and books I didn’t. Books about Native Americans and forefathers. Books about crime enthusiasts. Books about freedom and books about slavery. Books about knights and ladies. Books on morality and dishonor. Books with well-concealed eroticism. I lived other lives; I fell asleep and woke up in other people’s beds; wore other people’s clothes; I was loved by other people. I couldn’t wait to get back from school and bury myself in a book. I was becoming a recluse and hardly went out. Sometimes, almost forcefully, Mom and Dad made me play with other children. I would get back home and dive headfirst into a book again. It’s not as if I never spent a whole day with other children outdoors, I did. But I preferred books. That went on for a long time. I remember one summer. Holidays. Lull. Scorching heat. In the village square there is a bus stop, I’m sitting on the bench with a friend, smoking. Boredom. On the square in front of us a shirtless boy, wearing just bright yellow shorts, draws lazy circles with a black bike. He’s barefoot. A stranger. I ask my friend who he is. What do you mean who, he says, don’t you remember when we were in kindergarten, you used to beat him up all the time. I laugh. That’s not true. I can’t tolerate violence, I’ve never been able to. It’s true, my friend insists. He calls the boy by name, he comes over, stops his bike, gets off, puts it on its stand. We’re all silent. He sits with us. Next to me. He puts his arm around my shoulders, as if it’s always been there, and says, You and I will be friends until we die. That’s all. Only those words.

We were inseparable. Together. All day. Every day. Almost twenty-four hours. We developed a special feeling toward each other. Something like telepathy. Once I bought him a T-shirt from the shop in the nearby town. A nice one. Red. For no reason. I went back to the village, beaming while imagining how happy he would be with the surprise. I waited for him to come round, like every other day. I was in my room. He walked in. Alone. A sneaky smile on his face. He held his hands behind his back. I asked him what he was hiding, and he grinned from ear to ear; his smile lit up the room. He said he had a present for me. Hoped I’d like it. A T-shirt. Red. From the same shop. Bought the previous day. We hadn’t talked about it. My big brother was never there, but I could grow up with him instead; we had lots to catch up on. All the years we hadn’t known each other, knowing of each other. We became an entity. Encapsulated. We isolated the world.

We talked a lot and about everything. And we also remained silent for days. I would read aloud to him. He showed me how he rode a horse. We told each other about our childhoods. We compared our families. He became the most interesting novel. A novel with no end. I didn’t protest. There was something wild in him. Something in his eyes. Something I didn’t have. It was a calling. It was hunger. His eyes held a hunger to break with the tamed, the civilized. He loved animals and they loved him back. He was the master of all the village dogs. They would follow him as if they were his knights. He liked eating raw meat every so often. His chestnut brown hair would turn golden in the summer. His body—slim when we first met—became strong. He began training. Learned to fight. So no one could beat him up. We were constantly together. I missed him during the week. He went to school in another town. I counted the days till the weekend when he would return to the village with his family. Then we caught up on all the hours we hadn’t spent together. We fought a lot. We argued a lot.

I needed to be loved all the time and sometimes I would put him to the test. I was already smoking then. Quite a lot. He didn’t smoke. One day I had no cash on me. We were together with other friends at a tiny pub. I was drinking coffee. I had run out of cigarettes. And I wanted one. I asked him to buy me a pack. I would pay him back in a few days. He refused. Categorically. It wasn’t for the money; it was for my health, he said. I told him my health is mine. Not his. He smiled and refused again. I got upset. Picked up my coffee and moved to another table. He came and sat next to me. Tried to hug me. I pushed him back. I told him I didn’t want him around. He realized I was serious. He hadn’t realized how much I liked smoking. He went to the bar. Returned with a pack of fancy cigarettes. Left it on the table and said it was for me. He sat back on his chair. I picked up the pack, threw it at him and shouted an insult. I saw the hurt in his eyes. I liked it. He took the pack. Slowly removed the wrapping. Took out one cigarette. Crushed it in his hand and put it in his mouth. Chewed it. Swallowed it with a sip of water. Everyone went silent. We all looked at each other. He took a second cigarette out. Crushed it and put it in his mouth. He was really angry. Someone tried to take the pack and it fell to the floor. He took a third cigarette out. I got up and went over to him. His eyes swam with tears. He’d always react like this whenever he felt unjustly accused of something. I hugged him. I felt his muscles tensing. His hand clenched into a fist. He didn’t move. I lowered my head to his. Breathed in his scent. And told him that I didn’t want us to argue and that he was right about my health, I just really wanted a cigarette. He spat the chewed tobacco on the floor. Trampled it with his foot. Looked into my eyes. We had made up.

I must’ve loved him from the first day. That sudden love. Hitherto nonexistent. It’s never been in your life. Then it comes and it’s as if it’s always been there. It took me a while to understand this love. And not to be scared of it. It was like a force of nature. It robbed me of all my self-preservation instincts. If someone had told me that for some reason I had to die instead of him, I wouldn’t have asked why but when. He liked giving me books. For me to read them. Then tell him the story. It’s not that he didn’t read. He did. He’d say that when I retold these stories to him, he wouldn’t just hear them, he would see them. He was the first person who believed in my talent as a storyteller. I read a lot. And I recounted a lot for him. We liked scary stories. And adventures. Stories about murderers, vampires. I used to be frightened while reading them and while retelling them. But I didn’t give up. It ignited my imagination too. Imperceptibly from a reader and a storyteller, I became a co-author. I wasn’t really changing the story. I decorated it. Sometimes, I’d invent a new character. Sometimes, I killed someone. Saved another one. I handed out justice and took it away depending on my mood. Or on which character I liked at the time. At other times, just to annoy him, I would kill his favorite character. He would get fired up, say it wasn’t fair, what was this stupid book and how could I possibly like it. When I told him that his favorite character was alive and well, and they’d died only in my story, not in the book, he was puzzled at first. Then he would smile and tell me that I must become a writer. I would smile too and tell him I would like to be a doctor or an actor, not a writer. Years later, I came to understand that my desire to change the truth, to adorn it, to invent a new truth was, in essence, a desire to change my own reality. To invent it anew. To edit it. To direct it. Back then I simply thought it was entertaining. Not that it was a necessity. I liked, after telling yet another scary story, to pick up his bike, turn off its lights and ride it on the dark streets of our village. And to be frightened. Sometimes the streets were lit. I was still frightened. Of the stories I told. I loved riding a bike. His bike. I never had my own bike. Poor child. Poor family. Never enough money at home to buy me a bike. Every other child had bikes. They looked after them. They were jealous. He always gave me his bike whenever I asked. I dreamed of a bike. He of a motorcycle.

A few years later I still didn’t have a bike, but he got a motorcycle. A big one. I think it was white, Japanese. New, powerful. He rode it like crazy. He loved riding. I loved to ride it with him. I remember one night we were driving along the international road that passed by the neighboring village. He accelerated. Neither of us was wearing a helmet. The speed kept mounting. When it reached more than sixty miles per hour, he turned toward me and told me not to be frightened. He lifted his hands off the bars and slowly stood up on the footrests. Spread his arms. Started screaming. I was trying not to cling to him so I wouldn’t throw off his balance and we wouldn’t crash. I screamed, too. We were floating in the middle of the road, right along the center. There weren’t many cars, but the drivers of those we passed were honking like crazy. He drove like this for a few miles. Then stopped. Pulled to the side. We got off the bike. I was trembling and needed to pee. I lit a cigarette. We didn’t speak. I embraced him. We stayed like that. I told him not to beckon death. He whispered that I hadn’t understood. He wasn’t beckoning death. He was beckoning life. I answered that life favors the brave but so does death. He said he knew. We got back on the bike. He drove like a normal person. We returned to the village. I couldn’t sleep that night.

We remained friends. We argued often. Then would quickly make up. Our village is small. Like most villages in the country. You could cross it from end to end on foot in about fifteen minutes. He used to pick me up on his motorcycle. To go for a beer. That was the first and last summer I drank beer. Beer was no friend of mine. It wasn’t for me. I got drunk that night. Vomiting. Disgusting taste. Vile. It bloats your stomach; you need to pee all the time. The evening was pleasant, the two of us, friends, music, beer, snooker. At one point I asked him to take me back home. He refused. He wanted to stay longer. I dug in my heels, told him he had promised me. It wasn’t true. We had a scuffle. I took his keys. Dropped them in the beer. He didn’t say a word. Took them out and had a sip. I insisted he drive me home. He refused. I grabbed the keys and threw them on the street. It turned awkward. Someone brought the keys back. He put them away. I called him a liar. He only smiled. I was mental. Hurled insults at him. The owner turned up. Asked if there was a problem. I screamed and told him to clear off. I pushed a glass, threw a bottle on the floor. I had completely lost it. Kept insisting he take me home on his motorcycle. His smile was gone. He bowed his head and clenched his fists. Some friends pushed me outside. My anger is like this. It comes out of nowhere and then it vanishes. That night it wasn’t going anywhere. Outside I carried on shouting, kicking stones, the nearby fence, a bench. I screamed that I didn’t care about him, that I hated him, that his motorcycle was crap, better he killed himself on it . . . then I left.

Halfway along the short road home I met a mutual acquaintance. I asked him for a smoke. We got to chatting. We sat next to each other. Soon our hands found each other. It was quiet. Midnight. We heard a noise. A bike revving. It sped off angrily. Our mutual acquaintance got scared, but I insisted he stay. The bike came around after a minute. He saw us. Slammed the brakes on. I got up and slowly walked to him. He clutched the handlebars with both hands. He was angry. That’s exactly what I wanted. Asked me why I was doing this. The truth was that I craved attention. He understood. I was silent. He took me home. We agreed to meet up and go swimming at the lake by the village.

I waited for him the following day, but he didn’t turn up. I decided he was being late on purpose, just to annoy me. Because of the previous night’s argument. I was impatient. Went out to look for him, hurriedly. Unconsciously. Near the village hall, I saw his mother. She was weeping. She wouldn’t answer my questions about what was going on, what had happened. She kept shaking her head, saying his name. I ran toward the road leading out of the village, toward the lake. I saw the ambulance and a crowd gathered by the bridge. I pushed them aside. He was lying on the road, breathing. Thank you God! I pelted back to the village, spotted a car, I remember the color—blue. I can’t remember the driver. I stood in the middle of the road and flung out my arms. The driver stopped. I managed to say that I needed to get to the hospital in town. The man nodded. The news had gone round. I flew through the emergency room entrance, asked for car crash casualties. I was told where to go. In the corridors, people and the smell of disinfectants. Stuffy air. Urine. I saw his father. Crying. His brother was there too. I saw a stretcher. Someone had to accompany the stretcher from room to room while they did the initial examinations. I asked if I could. I held on to the metal stand with the drip system. They were infusing some fluid into his body. He was brave. He didn’t scream or groan even though his body was shattered. I remember his leg had multiple fractures, his pelvis, hip, knee, ankle . . . I think he was losing consciousness. At least he was breathing. He opened his eyes. Looked at me. Recognized me. Gently nodded. I leaned toward him. I knew what he was going to say. I deserved the question. My ear neared his lips. He opened his mouth. There was blood in it. His lips were swollen. He had hurt his face too. He cleared his throat and said, Are you happy now? Are you happy I’m in this state? Then he closed his eyes. I started crying.

I returned to the village. No one gave me a lift. That same night I discovered that I could pray and howl at the same time. Every day, every God-given day I was in the hospital. At the beginning they didn’t allow visitors. Only his parents. His room was on the ground floor. It had a balcony. And we, his friends, would jump over the railing just to get a glimpse of him. Then we would jump back down, smoke, drink coffee, and talk quietly as if we were frightened to wake him up, then more of his friends would come, and then even more. His mother was already there. She came the day after the accident. She cried almost constantly. But quietly. On the balcony, so he wouldn’t hear her. And she smoked. A lot. Hardly ate. His father’s eyes were red too. And his brother’s. I watched the three of them—how they ate together on the balcony. How they touched each other’s hands while passing around food. How his father lovingly put his hand on his mother’s shoulder. How she tried to smile. How his brother’s body was always slightly angled toward the room. How they took turns going inside while he was sleeping or unconscious to check on him. There was so much love in this family, so much togetherness, so much that I was jealous.

He got better after a while. I was allowed to go to his room and sit beside the bed. There was a wall of tension between his mother and me. Now I regret not finding the energy to stand before her. To talk to her. To tell her that there was nothing disgusting in my love for her son, that I had no one, that I was lonely, that he was the only living person who knew me, understood me and knew how I felt, that he was my only friend. But I was scared. And angry. I felt guilty. For having to explain the unexplainable. To dress it up. To roll it round my mouth as if it were an old dry piece of bread. I felt accused. By everyone. It’s possible I was imagining it. The past sometimes is not what we want it to be. After yet another operation he hardly ate, but he needed nourishment. I was there. In the room. On the balcony. His mom and I tried to share the same space, without it exploding. She tried to feed him; he refused. He told her he wanted me to feed him. I came into the room. He had lost weight and grown a beard. He ate a bit of a banana. A tiny bit. Then fell asleep. He slept peacefully. He’d wake up frequently. Then fall asleep again. During one of his times awake I told him that I really wanted us to be together all our lives and asked him to promise me that he wouldn’t die before me, because the thing I’m living through right now, while watching him, is unbearable. I wouldn’t be able to cope being alive and him being dead.

He didn’t answer. Fell asleep. I stood next to him; watched him sleep. I watched that painfully familiar face, trying to supress my desire to touch it, not knowing how little I knew about my ability to cope with the unbearable.

He woke up after a while, asked for water; I gave him some and then he told me that wasn’t the way it was going to happen. You won’t die before me. You won’t manage on your own. It’s hard. I just checked. I’ll go first. I’ll build a house. I’ll wait for you. I got scared. I asked him what he had dreamed of. He said it wasn’t a dream. I told him to stop talking nonsense. He only smiled and fell asleep again. He got better. Recovered. He was the same as before. He was left with only a slight limp. Back then I didn’t know that this was a postponement. No one knew. When we escape death by a hair’s breadth, we think we’ve defeated it. We celebrate life. We covet the person who’s already looked death in the eyes, held its gaze without blinking. We forgive them for everything. We love them. Sometimes more than they deserve. We make promises. And we don’t keep them. That we’ll be better people. More careful. That we’ll change this or that streak in our personality. And we even believe what we say. Nothing ever changes. Nothing. Ever. We carry on celebrating by inertia. We no longer celebrate life. But the everyday. We celebrate going to bed. Falling asleep. Waking up. Drinking coffee. The morning showers. Having sex. Making love. We deceive ourselves that these are the most necessary little things in life. The truth is, it’s not we who are celebrating—Death is celebrating. She is the biggest winner. The gala is always in her honor. Not ours. She knows how to wait. We tire. She doesn’t. Death loves us. Fact. Her love is unrequited. Death loves only the living. The dead don’t interest her. He and I stopped caring for each other. Not straight away. Not immediately. Not even imperceptibly. You could feel it. I couldn’t stop him. Habit settled between us, unnoticed. It became a third presence. Invisible. Tangible. Our friendship became tired of proving itself. It retreated. We no longer thought in the future tense. He met someone else. I met someone else. We still saw each other. But rarely. Briefly. With awkwardness between us.

I accepted my defeat. Moved somewhere else. To another house. With other books. With a different person. Heavy. Clever. Egocentric. Alcoholic. One who loved me. Who had the biggest library I’ve ever seen in my life. It was entirely at my disposal. I loved his intellect. He loved my intellect. Not the flesh. Erudite. Brilliant mind. Mighty drive for self-destruction. Suspicious. Possessive. Jealous in a particular way. Older than me. He didn’t become my lover. He became my family. A difficult family. Two wayward characters. Forever-hungry egos. Squared. But our intellects were synchronized. Equally unloved. Equally over-loved. To whom I was family. Who was my family. Who recognized my demons. And showed me his.

We lived together for a while. Not too long. It was unbearable. He introduced me to the world of art. Encouraged me to write. Paid for my education. Just like that, without asking for anything in return. He wanted to be part of someone’s life. To be important to someone. To be of significance. And for me, he was. He gave me a new environment, a new circle of friends. I no longer lived in just a town. I lived in a big town. The capital. I traveled abroad for my education. After one of those journeys, I went back to the village. I missed Mom. In some ways Dad, too.

My sister was going to be there with her husband and children. My brother, as always, would be absent. The black sheep. There was agreement on the topic of my brother. Mom and I against Dad and my sister. Mom and I thought it was Dad’s fault that my brother became a criminal. Dad and my sister thought this was simply the way he was. There was a brawl—explosive and luminous—on the topic at every family gathering.

After dinner with the family, I went for a walk. I saw familiar faces. Said hello. Smiled. Asked questions. People asked me questions, too. I picked my way to a friend’s house, I wanted to see him. I went quickly through the hushed village. I liked spring evenings there. I loved them. Silence. Noises. Smell from the only bakery, bread baking right then. The small bridge over the small river running through the village. The town hall. The former school. A series of soothing clichés. I was almost at the house when a car pulled up next to me. White. Unknown. The door opened. I remember the light from the streetlamp, the weak glimmer in the car. I couldn’t see clearly who was inside. Then I heard his voice. I got in. Closed the door. And everything ended. Everything began. Nothing had happened in between. As if I had just gone out three minutes ago to throw out the trash and then returned. We greeted dawn in the car. We talked all night long. I didn’t get tired. I didn’t feel sleepy. I found my lost paradise. Then a car wash took him away from me. Savagely. Irretrievably. He had gone to wash his car. A faulty device killed him. The end! The end! The end!

T

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I learned exactly what the word “never” meant. I’d never see him again. I’d never run my fingers through his hair again, and he’d never be annoyed by it. He would never call me by all the names he came up with specially for me. I’d never have a friend like him again. Never again . . . I had never cried for someone like that before. Part of me will never stop crying for this loss. I didn’t want to watch but I did watch all the same how they closed the lid of his coffin. He was dressed in his favorite black leather jacket. I didn’t want to hear but I heard all the same how the lumps of earth fell onto his coffin. I didn’t want to be there. I didn’t want to leave. I continued to cry. I cried for him. I cried, of course, for myself, too. I bent down. Took a fistful of soil. I straightened up. I began walking. I held the lump in my cupped hand. It was cold. I warmed it in my palm. Put it in my mouth. Chewed it. Swallowed it. It had the taste of what it was. Soil. It had the taste of what he would become. And then I. Soil. I was hurting after his death. Physically. For months on end. His absence was painful. A dull ache under the ribcage. Constant. Sometimes, I would be doing something, and his absence would sweep over me. It would stop my breathing. Literally. I didn’t eat. I didn’t sleep. I didn’t have the courage to commit suicide. I dreamed of him every night. Colorful, meaningful dreams. Full of scents and noises. Full of him. Alive. Warm. Real. Genuine. Present. I would often embrace him in my dreams. That’s when I would wake up. In an embrace with the empty space around me.

I have no idea how I survived. I began writing after his death. I was trying to extract death from me. To spit out the anger. To describe the pain. To give voice to the feeling of hopelessness. I wrote little. And badly. I watched the words that came from my hand and I was disgusted by how ugly they were, how clumsily they described my feelings. I would read aloud. It was worse. I would crumple the sheets of paper and swear never to touch them again. After a day or two, I felt I could cope and would write again. Again badly. Again disgusted. Again, I crumpled the pages.

One afternoon, I fell asleep. I can’t remember my dream. I woke up. It was hot. I was sweating. I grabbed a piece of paper. And the words flowed. A swarm. Meaningful. Beautiful. I read them aloud and I heard them talk with their own voices. I folded the paper carefully. I kissed it. Put it away. The adrenaline was drumming in my ears, pulsating in my throat. I went for a walk. It didn’t help. I returned home. From my hands, from the tips of my fingers, energy was streaming. Piping hot. I can’t explain it any other way. And there was a warmth in place of the pain under my ribcage. That’s what I feel now when my desire to write is unstoppable. I exchanged one reality for another. And described it. And believed it. Categorically. When I got tired of living, I wrote. When I was frightened of living, I wrote. When my memories faded, I wrote. Writing soothed me. It gave me another possible life. I always wrote about myself. I was always the protagonist. I only changed the names. I was also the secondary characters. And the children. And the women. I lived in the books I wrote. Life outside of them interested me less and less. People, faces, and events passed by without rousing interest in me. Months. Years. Beds. Meals. Journeys. Trains. Phone calls. I lived in the real world under duress. My life was like a badly staged performance. Sometimes I forgot to eat. Sometimes I forgot to shower. Sometimes I didn’t know what day it was, what month. What year. I didn’t want to know either. I wrote to live. Every day. I never showed anyone my writing. I didn’t want to. I wrote for myself. I wrote by hand. With a ballpoint pen. With a pencil. With a felt-tip. With a marker. On a computer. On napkins. On notebooks. On loose sheets of paper. In the margins of newspapers. I was writing on the walls at home. I wrote on book covers. I was lonely. People avoided me. I was rude to them. I found them stupid. Ignorant. I lived in a different place. Shared apartments with criminals. Drug addicts. One of them killed someone. They locked him up. I lived with a woman for a while. Then on my own. I severed the past. Killed it. Or at least that’s what I thought back then.

Братчето

По време на пубертета бях сигурен, че ще умра. През пубертета исках да умра. Толкова ме беше страх. От всички и всичко. От хората. Не обичах много хора на едно място. Бях сигурен, че когато приближавам, ме обсъждат. От тъмното. От по-големите момчета. От грубостта им. От това, че безпогрешно разпознаваха в мен жертвата. От съучениците ми. Не им харесваше това, че съм отличник. Само у дома се чувствах защитен. Скоро и тази илюзия рухна. Разби я баща ми. Веднъж се опита да ме удари. Татко! Бащите не бият децата си, нали са бащи, а не чужди хора, татко!

Бяха ми купили анцуг. Синьо долнище. Жълто-синьо горнище. Красиво. В един от малкото ми опити да се сближа с момчетата на моята възраст, ритах мач с тях. Пречках им се в краката. Скоро и аз се отегчих и те спряха да ми подават топката. Тръгнах си. Забравих си горнището. Съсед го видял, занесъл го у нас. Пред къщи имаше мъже, пушеха и си говореха. Обсъждаха нещо с баща ми. Имаше стоварена до къщата ни, на тротоара, баластра. Идвах си по пътя, мъжете ме забелязаха, някой каза нещо на татко, той се засмя, засмяха се всички. Потръпнах. Баща ми ме повика. Мъжете гледаха. Приближих. Попита ме къде ми е горнището. Сепнах се. Не беше на мен. Мълчах. Той повиши тон, така ли съм пазел новите си дрехи, нищо не съм заслужавал. Вдигна ръка да ме удари. Замахна. Видях сянката на ръката му. Дръпнах се. Не беше шамар. Беше като плясване зад врата. Не болеше много. Но беше унизяващо. Унизи ме пред случайни хора. Сигурен съм, че го направи заради тях. Да покаже кой командва вкъщи. Кой е мъжът. Мъжете се засмяха одобрително. Погледнах ги. Разгневих се. Грабнах шепа камъни и ги запратих по прозорците на къщата ни. Няколко улучиха. Стана бързо. Мъжете зяпнаха. Татко направи крачка, аз вдигнах ръка с камък в нея и му изкрещях, че ако ме удари сега, ще го изчакам да заспи и ще го убия. Бях сериозен. Плачех. Дишах трудно. Баща ми изпсува и отстъпи. Не знам уплаши ли се тогава, или размисли. Няма значение. В този ден се случиха две неща. Разбрах, че и у нас не е сигурно място. И спрях да обичам баща си. Бях на десет години.

Страхът ми беше кожа, самотата – единствена дреха. Исках да умра, за да не ме е страх повече. И да има много хора на погребението ми. За да не съм самотен. От тази самота се спасявах в книгите. Четях много. Наистина много. Всеки ден. Всяка нощ. Часове наред. Обичах и още обичам мириса на хартия и мастило. Този мирис ме успокоява. Умиротворява ме. Превърнах четенето на книги в ритуал. Във фетиш. Никога не четях книга с мръсни ръце. Не подгъвах страница, не прегъвах корици. Никога. Имахме немалка библиотека. Обичах да я преподреждам. Татко я беше направил. Беше в килера. Точно до банята. Нямам идея защо точно там. Представляваше наредени една над друга дъски, захванати с въжета и закрепени на стената. Вратата на килера се отваряше трудно. За да стигна до книгите, трябваше да полагам усилия. Татко също четеше много. И никога не ми отказваше пари за книга. Никога. Четях лакомо. Книги за деца, с меки корици. Книги за възрастни, с твърди. Класически романи. Приказки. Четях книги, които разбирах, и книги, които не разбирах. Книги за индианци и книги за бледолики. Книги за криминални любовници. Книги за свобода и книги за робство. Книги за рицари и дами. Книги за морал и безчестие. Книги с добре прикрита еротика. Живеех чужди животи, заспивах и се събуждах в чужди легла, носех чужди дрехи, обичаха ме чужди хора. Нямах търпение да се върна от училище и да се заровя в поредната книга. Ставах все понеобщителен. Почти не излизах навън. Понякога, едва ли не насила, майка и татко ме караха да си играя с другите деца. Прибирах се и пак се хвърлях с главата надолу в книгите. Не че не съм имал дни, прекарани само навън с другите деца, имах. Предпочитах обаче книгите. Така мина много време. Помня едно лято. Ваканция. Мъртво време. Жега. В центъра на селото има автобусна спирка, седя с приятел на пейката, пушим. Скука. На площада пред нас голо до кръста момче с яркожълти къси панталони прави лениви кръгове с черен бегач. Бос е. Непознат. Питам кой е това. Как кой, казва приятелят, не помниш ли, като бяхме в детската градина, ти го спукваше от бой. Смея се. Това не е вярно. Не понасям насилието, никога не съм го понасял. Вярно е, настоява приятелят ми. Извиква момчето по име, то приближава, спира велосипеда си, слиза, поставя го на степенка. Мълчим. Сяда до нас. До мен. Поставя ръката си на рамото ми, все едно мястото є винаги е било там, и казва: А с теб ще бъдем приятели, докато не умрем. Само това. Точно това.

Бяхме неразделни. Заедно. По цял ден. Всеки ден. Почти денонощно. Развихме особено чувство един към друг. Нещо като телепатия. От един магазин в близкия град му купих веднъж една тениска. Красива. Червена. Без повод. Прибрах се в селото ухилен, защото си представих как ще се зарадва на изненадата. Чаках го вкъщи да дойде, както всеки ден. Бях в стаята си. Влезе. Сам. С хитра усмивка на лицето си. Държеше ръце зад гърба си. Попитах какво крие, а той се усмихна по-широко, стаята светна от тази усмивка, каза, че ми направил подарък. Дано го харесам. Тениска. Червена. От същия магазин. Купена предишния ден. Без да се наговаряме. Брат ми все липсваше, а с него имах възможността да порасна заедно. Имахме много да наваксваме. Всички години, в които не се бяхме познавали, познавайки се. Станахме едно цяло. Капсулирахме се. Изолирахме света.

 Говорехме много и за всичко. И по цели дни мълчахме. Четях му на глас. Той ми показваше как язди кон. Разказвахме си детствата. Сравнявахме семействата си. Той се превърна в най-интересния роман. В книга, която никога не свършва. Не възразявах. Имаше нещо дивашко в него. Нещо в погледа. Нещо, което аз нямах. Беше повик. Беше глад. В очите му имаше глад за късане с питомното, с цивилизованото. Обичаше животните и те го обичаха. Беше господарят на всички кучета в селото. Вървяха подире му като стража. Обичаше да яде сурово месо понякога. Кестенявата му коса ставаше златиста лете от слънцето. Тялото му – слабо, като се запознахме, – стана здраво. Започна да спортува. Научи се да се бие. За да не го бият. Спечели уважението на по-големите. Бяхме непрекъснато заедно. Липсваше ми през седмицата. Учеше в друг град. Броях дните до уикенда, когато се прибираше със семейството си на село. Тогава наваксвахме всички часове, в които не сме били заедно. Много спорехме. Много се карахме.

Имах нужда да бъда обичан непрекъснато и понякога го подлагах на изпитания. По това време вече пушех. Доста. Той – не. Един ден нямах пари в себе си. Бяхме заедно с други приятели в една малка кръчмица. Пиех кафе. Нямах цигари. Пушеше ми се. Помолих го да ми купи една кутия цигари. Щях да му върна парите след няколко дни. Отказа. Категорично. Не му било заради парите, а заради здравето ми. Казах му, че здравето си е мое. Не е негово. Ухили се и пак отказа. Разсърдих се. Взех си кафето. Преместих се на друга маса. Той дойде и седна до мен. Опита се да ме прегърне. Блъснах го. Казах му, че не искам да е наоколо. Разбра, че съм сериозен. Не знаел, че толкова много ми се пуши. Отиде до бара. Върна се с кутия хубави цигари. Остави я на масата и каза, че е за мен. Седна си на мястото. Взех кутията. Хвърлих я по него и изкрещях някаква обида. Видях обидата в очите му. Хареса ми. Взе цигарите. Бавно махна целофана, отвори ги. Взе една цигара. Смачка я в длан и я лапна. Сдъвка я. Преглътна я с глътка вода. Всички млъкнаха. Гледахме се. Взе втора цигара. Смачка я в длан и я лапна. Беше много ядосан. Някой се опита да вземе кутията и тя падна. Взе трета цигара. Станах и отидох до него. Очите му бяха плувнали в сълзи. Реагираше така, когато се чувстваше несправедливо обвинен за нещо. Прегърнах го. Усетих как мускулите му се сковаха. Ръката му се сви в юмрук. Не мръдна. Наведох глава към главата му. Вдъхнах мириса му. И му казах, че не искам да се караме. И че е прав за здравето, но ми се пуши. Изплю сдъвкания тютюн на пода. Стъпка го с крак. Погледна ме в очите. И вече бяхме сдобрени.

Сигурно съм го обичал още от първия ден на приятелството ни. Онова внезапно заобичване. Няма го. Никога не го е имало в живота ти. После идва и все едно винаги е било там. Отне ми време да разбера тази обич. И да не се плаша от нея. Беше като природно бедствие. Отне ми всички инстинкти за самосъхранение. Ако някой ми беше казал, че трябва поради някаква причина да умра вместо него, нямаше да питам защо, а кога. Обичаше да ми подарява книги. Аз да ги чета. И после да му разказвам. Не че не четеше. Четеше. Казваше, че като му разказвам прочетеното от мен, не просто го чувал, а го виждал. Беше първият човек, повярвал в таланта ми на разказвач. Четях много. И много му разказвах. Обичахме страшни истории. И приключенски. Истории за чудовища, за убийци, за вампири. Страхувах се и докато ги четях. И докато ги разказвах. Но не се отказвах. Така разпалвах и своето въображение. Неусетно от читател и разказвач се превръщах в съавтор. Не че променях историята. Доукрасявах я. Понякога измислях нов персонаж. Понякога убивах някого. Спасявах другиго. Давах справедливост или я отнемах. В зависимост от настроението си. Или от това на кой персонаж симпатизирах в момента. Друг път, за да го дразня, убивах любим негов герой. Той се палеше, че било несправедливо, че каква е тази тъпа книга и как съм могъл да я харесвам. А когато му кажех, че любимият му герой си е жив и здрав и че е умрял само в разказа ми, не в книгата, първо се озадачаваше. После се усмихваше и ми казваше, че непременно трябва да стана писател. Тогава и аз се усмихвах и му отговарях, че искам да съм лекар или актьор, а не писател. Години по-късно проумях, че желанието ми да променям истината, да я украсявам, да измислям нова истина, е в същността си желанието да променя собствената си действителност. Да я измисля наново. Да я редактирам. Да я режисирам. Тогава просто си мислех, че е забавно. Не че е необходимост. Обичах, като разкажа поредната страшна история, да взема бегача му, да изключа фара и да карам колелото по тъмните улици на селото ни. И да се страхувам. Понякога улиците бяха осветени. Пак се страхувах. От историите, които разказвах. Много обичах да карам колело. Неговото. Свое никога не бях имал. Бедно дете. Бедно семейство. Парите у дома никога не стигнаха да ми купят колело. А всички деца имаха. Пазеха си ги. Бяха ревниви. Той ми го даваше винаги, когато поискам. Мечтаех си за колело. Той – за мотор.

Няколко години по-късно той имаше мотор, аз още нямах колело. Голям мотор. Мисля, че бял. Японски. Нов. Мощен. Караше го лудо. Обичаше да кара. Аз обичах да ме вози. Помня една вечер, карахме по международното шосе, което минаваше край съседното село. Натисна газта. Бяхме без каски и двамата. Скоростта се покачваше. Като стана повече от сто километра в час, той се обърна леко назад и ми извика да не се боя. Пусна кормилото, и както караше, полека се изправи върху стъпенките. Разпери ръце. И закрещя. Аз се опитвах да не се вкопчвам в него, за да не разваля баланса и да не се пребием. Крещях и аз. Носехме се в средата на шосето, точно по осевата линия. Нямаше много коли, но шофьорите на тези, с които се разминавахме, натискаха клаксоните като луди. Кара така няколко километра. После спря. Отби встрани. Слязохме от мотора. Аз треперех и ми се пикаеше. Запалих цигара. Не говорихме. Прегърнах го. Стояхме така. Казах му да не предизвиква смъртта. Прошепна ми, че не съм разбрал. Не предизвиквал смъртта. Предизвиквал живота. Отговорих му, че животът обича смелите, но същото важи и за смъртта. Каза, че знаел. Качихме се на мотора. Караше нормално. Прибрахме се в селото. Тази нощ не успях да заспя.

Продължавахме да сме приятели. Често се карахме. Бързо се сдобрявахме. Селото ни е малко. Както повечето селца в страната. Пеша от всяка точка до всяка друга се стига за около петнайсет минути. Идваше да ме вземе с мотора. Да изпием по бира. Това беше първото и последно лято в живота ми, в което пиех бира. Не станахме приятели с нея. Не си паснахме. Напих се същата вечер. Повръщах. Отвратителен вкус. Каруцарски. Подува корема, пикаеш често. Беше приятно. Аз, той, приятели, музика, бира, билярд. По някое време му казах, че искам да си ме закара у нас. Отказа. Каза, че му се оставало още. Заинатих се – казах, че ми е обещал да ме откара. А не беше. Сдърпахме се. Взех ключовете от мотора. Пуснах ги в чашата му с бира. Нищо не каза. Извади ги и отпи от чашата. Настоях да си ме закара. Отказа. Грабнах ключовете и ги хвърлих на улицата. Стана неловко. Някой му ги донесе. Прибра ги. Нарекох го лъжец. Само се усмихна. Аз беснеех. Обиждах го. Дойде собственикът на кръчмата. Попита има ли проблем. Изкрещях му да се маха. Бутнах чаша, хвърлих бутилка на земята. Бях обезумял. Настоявах да ме закара с мотора до вкъщи. Той вече не се усмихваше. Наведе глава и стисна ръце в юмруци. Приятели ме избутаха навън. Гневът ми е такъв. Идва изневиделица. И така си и отива. Тогава не отстъпваше. Вече навън, продължих да крещя, да ритам камъни, близката ограда, една пейка. Извиках, че не ми пука за него, че го мразя, че моторът му е тъп, че е по-добре да се пребие с него… тръгнах си.

В средата на краткия път до дома видях общ наш познат. Поисках му цигара. Заговорихме се. Седнахме един до друг. Скоро ръцете ни се намериха. Беше тихо. Среднощ. Чухме шум. От запалване на мотор. Тръгна с мръсна газ. Общият ни познат се уплаши, но аз настоях да остане. След минута се появи. Видя ни. Рязко заби спирачки. Станах и бавно отидох при него. Стискаше с две ръце кормилото. Беше ядосан. Това и исках. Попита ме защо го правя. Истината беше, че исках внимание. Той разбра. Замълчах. Закара ме до вкъщи. Уговорихме се на другия ден да отидем заедно да се къпем в язовира край селото.

На другия ден го чаках. Той не идваше. Реших, че нарочно се бави, за да ме дразни. Заради снощния ни скандал. Не издържах. Излязох да го потърся, забързах крачка. Несъзнателно. Близо до кметството видях майка ми. Плачеше. На въпросите ми какво става, какво се е случило, не отговаряше. Само клатеше глава и изричаше името му. Вече тичах в посока шосето, което води извън селото, към язовира. Видях хора, събрани на едно място, близо до моста. Разбутах ги. Лежеше на шосето, дишаше. Господи, благодаря ти! Затичах се обратно към селото, видях кола, помня цвета, синя. Не помня шофьора. Застанах в средата на шосето и разперих ръце. Шофьорът спря. Успях да кажа, че трябва да стигна до болницата в града. Човекът кимна. Вече се беше разчуло. Влетях през входа на „Бърза помощ“, попитах за ранени от катастрофа. Упътиха ме. По коридорите – хора и миризма на дезинфектанти. Спарен въздух. Урина. Видях баща му. Плачеше. И брат му беше там. Видях носилка. Някой трябваше да придружава носилката от кабинет в кабинет, докато правят първите изследвания. Помолих да съм аз. Държах в едната си ръка метална стойка, на която беше закрепена система. Вливаха някаква течност в тялото му. Беше силен. Не викаше, не охкаше, макар че беше изпотрошен. Помня – няколко счупвания само на единия крак – таз, тазобедрена кост, подбедрица, глезен… мисля, че губеше съзнание. Но поне дишаше. Отвори очи. Погледна ме. Позна ме. Кимна леко с глава. Наведох се. Знаех какво ще каже. Знаех какво ще попита. Заслужавах този въпрос. Ухото ми доближи устните му. Отвори уста. Имаше кръв в нея. Устните му бяха подути. Беше наранил и лицето си при падането. Прокашля се и каза: Доволен ли си сега? Доволен ли си, че се пребих с мотора? И затвори очи. Аз заплаках.

Прибрах се на село. Някой ме закара с кола. Същата нощ открих, че мога да се моля и да вия едновременно. Всеки ден, всеки божи ден бях в болницата. В началото не пускаха никого при него. Само родителите му. Стаята му беше на първия етаж. Имаше тераса. И ние, приятелите му, прескачахме през нея, за да го зърнем. После слизахме долу, пушехме, пиехме кафета, говорехме приглушено, все едно се страхувахме да не го събудим, после идваха още негови приятели, после още. Майка му беше там. Беше вече там. Пристигна на следващия ден. Плачеше почти непрекъснато. Но тихо. На терасата. Да не я чуе. И пушеше. Много. Почти не се хранеше. Баща му също беше със зачервени очи. И брат му. Гледах ги тримата – как се хранеха заедно на терасата. Как докосваха ръцете си, докато си подават храна. Как баща му с обич поставяше ръка на рамото на майка му. Как тя се опитваше да се усмихне. Как тялото на брат му винаги беше полуизвърнато към стаята. Как се редуваха един подир друг да влизат в стаята и да го наглеждат, докато е в безсъзнание или спи. Толкова много любов имаше в това семейство, толкова много заедност, толкова много, че им завидях.

След време се подобри. Можех да влизам в стаята му и да присядам до леглото му. Имаше стена от напрежение между мен и майка му. Сега съжалявам, че не намерих сили да застана пред нея. И да поговорим. И да є кажа, че в обичта ми към сина є няма нищо гнусно, че си нямам никого, че съм самотен, че той е единственият жив човек, който ме познава, разбира ме и знае как се чувствам, че е единственият ми приятел. Но ме беше страх. И яд. Чувствах се виновен. За това, че ще ми се наложи да обяснявам необяснимото. Да го обговарям. Да го въргалям в устата си като парче стар хляб. Чувствах се обвиняван. Негласно. Може и да си въобразявах. Миналото понякога не е това, което искаме от него да е. След поредна операция почти не ядеше, а му беше необходимо захранване. Бях там. В стаята. На терасата. Опитвахме се с майка му да делим едно пространство, без то да експлодира. Тя се опита да го нахрани. Отказал. Казал є, че иска аз да го храня. Влязох в стаята. Беше отслабнал и брадясал. Хапна малко банан. Много малко. Заспа. Спеше неспокойно. Будеше се често. Пак заспиваше. При едно от събужданията му казах, че много искам да сме цял живот заедно и да ми обещае да не умира преди мен. Защото това, което изживявам сега, докато е гледам, е непоносимо. И няма да понеса да съм жив, а той мъртъв.

Нищо не каза. Заспа. Аз стоях до него. Гледах го как спи. Гледах това до болка познато лице, опитвах се да си наложа да не го докосна и не знаех колко малко знам за способностите си да понасям непоносимото.

След някакво време се събуди, поиска вода, дадох му, и тогава ми каза, че няма да стане точно така. Не разбрах. Попитах кое няма да стане точно така. Няма да умреш преди мен. Ти няма да се справиш там. Няма да се справиш там сам. Трудно е. Сега проверих. Аз ще отида пръв. Ще построя къща. Ще те чакам. Уплаших се. Питах го какво е сънувал. Отговори, че не е сън. Казах му да не говори глупости. Само се усмихна и пак заспа. Оздравя. Оправи се. Беше си същият както преди. Остана му само леко накуцване. Тогава не знаех, че това е отсрочка. Никой не знаеше. Когато на косъм се разминем със смъртта, си мислим, че сме я победили. Празнуваме живота. Държим се добре с този, който я е погледнал в очите, издържал е погледа є и не е мигнал. Прощаваме му всичко. Обичаме го. Понякога повече, отколкото заслужава. Даваме обещания. И не ги спазваме. Че ще сме вече по-добри. По-внимателни. Че ще променим това в себе си. Или онова. И дори си вярваме. Никога нищо не се променя. Никога. Нищо. Продължаваме да празнуваме по инерция. Вече не празнуваме живота. А бита. Празнуваме лягането. Заспиването. Събуждането. Пиенето на кафе. Сутрешния душ. Правенето на секс. Правенето на любов. Лъжем се, че това са така необходимите ни малки неща от живота. Истината е, че не празнуваме ние. Празнува смъртта. Голямата победителка в празнуването е тя. Финалното парти винаги е в нейна чест. Не в наша. Знае да чака. Ние се уморяваме. Тя – не. Смъртта ни обича. Факт. Нейната обич е несподелена. Смъртта обича само живите. Мъртвите не я интересуват. Ние спряхме да се интересуваме един от друг. Не веднага. Не рязко. Даже не неусетно. Усещаше се. Не можех да го спра. Навикът се настани неусетно между нас. Стана третият постоянно присъстващ. Невидим. Осезаем. Приятелството ни се измори да се доказва. Оттегли се. Вече не мислехме в бъдеще време. Той срещна някого другиго. Аз срещнах някого другиго. Пак се виждахме. Но рядко. За кратко. С неловкост помежду ни.

Приех поражението си. Заживях на друго място. В друг дом. С други книги. С друг характер. Тежък. Умен. Егоцентричен. Алкохолизиран. Обичащ ме. Попаднах на най-голямата библиотека, която бях виждал в живота си. И тя цялата беше на мое разположение. Обичах ума му. Обичаше ума ми. Не телата. Ерудит. Бляскав ум. Огромна воля за самоунищожение. Мнителен. С чувство за притежание. По особен начин ревнив. По-възрастен от мен. Не ми стана любовник. Стана ми семейство. Трудно семейство. Два чепати характера. Вечно гладно его. На квадрат. Но умовете ни работеха в синхрон. Еднакво необичани. Еднакво преобичани. За когото бях семейство. Който ми беше семейство. Който позна демоните ми. И ми показа своите.

Живяхме известно време заедно. Не много. Беше нетърпимо. Показа ми света на изкуството. Насърчи ме да пиша. Плати обучението ми. Ето така. Без да иска нищо в замяна. Искаше да е съпричастен към нечий живот. Да е важен за някого. Да е от значение. И за мен беше. Даде ми нова среда, нови приятели. Вече не живеех просто в града. Живеех в големия град. В столицата. Пътувах извън страната във връзка с висшето ми образование. След едно такова пътуване се прибрах в село. Беше ми мъчно за майка. И за татко някак си.

А и сестра ми щеше да бъде там, с мъжа си и с децата. Брат ми както винаги беше големият отсъстващ. Черната овца. Имаше паритет у дома по тази тема. По темата батко. Аз и майка срещу баща ми и сестра ми. За мен и за майка татко беше виновен за това, че батко беше станал престъпник. Според сестра ми и баща ми той просто си е бил такъв. На всеки празник имахме скандал на тази тема. Кратък и ярък.

След вечеря със семейството излязох да се поразходя. Мярках познати лица. Казвах здравей. Усмихвах се. Задавах въпроси. Задаваха на мен. Запътих се към дома на един приятел, исках да го видя. Минах бързо през утихналото село. Обичам пролетните вечери там. Обичах ги. Тишина. Шумове. Мирис от единствената фурна за хляб, който се пече сега. Малкото мостче над малката рекичка, която минава през селото. Сградата на кметството. Бившето училище. Поредица успокояващи клишета. Наближавах къщата, когато до мен спря кола. Бяла. Непозната. Вратата се отвори. Помня светлината на уличната лампа, слабата светлинка в купето на колата. Не виждах добре кой е вътре. После чух гласа му. Влязох. Затворих вратата. И всичко свърши. Всичко започна. Нищо не се беше случвало междувременно. Все едно бях излязъл само преди три минути, за да изхвърля боклука, и се бях върнал. Осъмнахме в колата. Цяла нощ не спряхме да си говорим. Не се уморих. Не ми се доспа. Намерих изгубения си рай. После една автомивка ми го отне. Грубо. Безвъзвратно. Отишъл да си измие колата. И неизправен уред го убил. Край! Край! Край!

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Научих какво значи точно думата никога. Никога повече нямаше да го видя. Никога повече нямаше да прокарам пръсти в косата му, а той да се дразни. Никога повече нямаше да ме нарича с имената, които измисляше специално за мен. Никога повече нямаше да имам такъв приятел. Никога повече… Никога не бях плакал така за никого другиго. Една част от мен никога няма да спре да плаче за тази загуба. Не исках да гледам, но гледах как затварят капака на ковчега му. Беше облечен в любимото си черно кожено яке. Не исках да чувам, но чувах как тежко падат буците пръст по ковчега. Не исках да съм там. И не исках да тръгвам от там. Продължавах да плача. Плачех за него. Плачех, разбира се, и за себе си. Наведох се. Взех малка бучка пръст. Станах. Тръгнах. Държах я в шепа. Беше студена. Затоплих я в дланта си. Лапнах я. Сдъвках я и я глътнах. Имаше вкус на това, което беше. На пръст. Имаше и вкуса на това, в което щеше да се превърне той. После и аз. На пръст. След смъртта му ме болеше. Физически. Месеци наред. Липсата му ме болеше. Тъпа болка зад гръдната кост. Неотминаваща. Понякога, както си вършех нещо, липсата му се стоварваше върху мен. Спираше въздуха ми. Буквално. Не се хранех. Не спях. Нямах смелост да се самоубия. Сънувах го всяка нощ. Цветни плътни сънища. Пълни с аромати и звуци. И пълни с него. Жив. Топъл. Реален. Истински. Присъстващ. Често го прегръщах в сънищата си. И тогава винаги се събуждах. Прегърнал празното пространство до себе си.

Не знам как оцелях. Започнах да пиша след смъртта му. Опитвах да изкарам от себе си смъртта. Да изплюя гнева. Да опиша колко много ме боли. Да дам гласност на чувството за безнадеждност. Пишех малко. И лошо. Гледах думите, излезли изпод ръката ми, и се отвращавах от тях. От това колко тромаво и грозно описват чувствата ми. Четях ги на глас. Ставаше по-зле. Смачквах листовете хартия и се заричах никога повече да не посегна към тях. След ден-два не издържах и почвах да пиша пак. Пак лошо. Пак се отвращавах. Пак мачках листове.

Един следобед задрямах. Не помня какво сънувах. Събудих се. Беше жега. Бях потен. Грабнах лист хартия. И думите се изляха. Рояк думи. Смислени. Красиви. Четях ги на глас и ги чувах как говорят със собствени гласове. Сгънах листа внимателно. Целунах го. Прибрах го. Адреналинът блъскаше в ушите ми и пулсираше в гърлото ми. Излязох на разходка. Не помогна. Прибрах се вкъщи. От ръцете ми, от върховете на пръстите ми изтичаше навън енергия. Гореща. Няма как да го обясня по друг начин. И топлина на мястото на болката зад гръдната ми кост. Това чувствам и сега, когато желанието ми да пиша стана неудържимо. Смених едната реалност с друга. И я описах. И ѝ повярвах. Категорично. Когато се уморявах да живея, започвах да пиша. Когато се страхувах да живея – пак пишех. Когато спомените ми избледняваха – пишех. Писането ме успокояваше. Даваше ми друг възможен мой живот. Винаги пишех за себе си. Винаги главният герой бях аз. Само сменях имената. Бях също така и второстепенните герои. И децата. И жените. Живеех в книгите, които пишех. Животът извън тях все по-малко ме интересуваше. Хора, лица и събития минаваха покрай мен, без да са ми интересни. Месеци. Години. Легла. Храна. Пътуания. Влакове. Телефони. Живеех в реалния свят по принуда. Животът ми беше като зле режисирано представление. Понякога забравях да ям. Понякога забравях да се къпя. Понякога не знаех кой ден е, кой месец. Коя година. И не се интересувах. Пишех, за да живея. Всеки ден. Не показах на друг човек нищо от написаното. Нямах желание. Пишех за себе си. Пишех на ръка. С химикалка. С молив. С флумастер. С маркер. Пишех на компютър. Пишех на салфетки. В тетрадки. На хвърчащи листове. В празното поле на вестници. Пишех на стените у дома. Пишех върху книги. Бях самотен. Хората ме отбягваха. Бях груб с тях. Намирах ги за глупави. За посредствени. За ограничени. Живеех на различни места, делях квартири с престъпници. С наркомани. Един уби човек. Затвориха го. Живях с една жена известно време. После сам. Скъсах с миналото. Убих го. Или поне така си мислех тогава.

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