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BAD KARMA
“Fifteen shekels a month can guarantee your daughter one hundred thousand in the event of your death, God forbid. Do you know what a difference one hundred thousand can make to a young orphan? It’s exactly the difference between life in a whitecollar profession and life as a receptionist in a dentist’s office.”
Since the accident, Oshri had been selling policies like hotcakes. It wasn’t clear whether this had to do with his slight limp or with the paralysis in his right arm, but people who’d sit through an appointment with him would lap it all up, and buy everything he had to offer: life insurance, loss of earning power, complementary health insurance, you name it. At first Oshri kept recycling the one about the Yemenite who was run over by an ice-cream truck the very day he bought his policy, on his way to pick up his daughter from kindergarten, or the one about the guy from the suburbs who’d laughed when Oshri offered him health insurance and one month later called in tears, having just received a diagnosis of pancreatic cancer. But very soon he realized that his own personal story did the trick better than any of the others. There he was, Oshri Sivan, insurance agent, in the middle of a meeting with a potential client at a café near the Downtown Shopping Arcade, when all of a sudden, right in the middle of their conversation, a young man who’d decided to end his life jumps out of an eleventh-floor window in the building next to them, and wham! falls right on Oshri’s head. The fall kills the young man, and Oshri, who has just finished telling his Yemenite-and-ice-cream-truck story to another reluctant client, loses consciousness on the spot. He doesn’t come to when they splash water over his face, or in the ambulance, or in the emergency room, and not even in the ICU. He’s in a coma. The doctors say it’s touch and go. His wife sits at his bedside and cries and cries, and so does his little girl. Nothing changes for six weeks, until all of a sudden a miracle occurs: Oshri comes out of his coma, as if nothing had happened. He simply opens his eyes and gets up. And along with this miracle comes a bitter truth: our Oshri didn’t practice what he preached, and since he’d never had any insurance whatsoever himself, he couldn’t keep up with his mortgage and had to sell his apartment and move into a rental. “Look at me,” Oshri would end his sad story, with a lame attempt to move his right arm. “Look at me, sitting here with you at this café, spitting blood to sell you a policy. If only I’d put aside thirty shekels a month—thirty shekels, which is nothing really, barely a matinee ticket without the popcorn—I’d be lying back like a king with two hundred grand in my account. Me, I had my chance and I blew it, but you—aren’t you going to learn from my mistake, Motti? Sign on the dotted line and get it over with. Who knows what could land on your head five minutes from now.” And this Motti or Yigal or Mickey sitting across from him would stare for a minute and then take the pen he held out with his good arm and sign. Every single one of them. No ifs, ands, or buts. And Oshri would wink goodbye, because when your right arm is paralyzed there’s no shaking hands, and on his way out he’d be sure to add something about how they’d made the right move. And so, without much effort, Oshri Sivan’s battered bank account quickly began to recover, and within three months he and his wife had bought a new apartment with a much smaller mortgage than the one they’d had before. And with all the physiotherapy he got at the clinic, even his arm started to get better, though when clients held out their hand to him, he’d still pretend he couldn’t move it at all.
“There’s blue and yellow and white and a soft sweet taste in my mouth. There’s something hovering high above me. Something good, and I’m heading toward it. Heading toward it.”
At night he went on dreaming about it—not about the accident. About the coma. It was strange, but even though a long time had passed since then, he could still remember, down to the last detail, everything he’d felt during those six weeks. He remembered the colors and the taste and the fresh air cooling his face. He remembered the absence of memory, the sense of existing without a name and without a history, in the present. Six whole weeks of present. During which the only thing he felt within him that wasn’t the present was this little hint of a future, in the form of an unaccountable optimism attached to a strange sense of beingness. He didn’t know what his own name was during those six weeks, or that he was married, or that he had a little girl. He didn’t know he’d had an accident or that he was in the hospital now, fighting for his life. He didn’t know anything except that he was alive. And this fact alone filled him with enormous happiness. All in all, the experience of thinking and feeling within that nothingness was more intense than anything that had ever happened to him before, as if all the background noises had disappeared and the only sound left was true and pure and beautiful to the point of tears. He didn’t discuss it with his wife or with anyone else. You’re not supposed to get that much joy out of being close to death. You’re not supposed to get a thrill from your coma while your wife and daughter are crying their hearts out at your bedside. So when they asked whether he remembered anything about it, he said he didn’t, he didn’t remember a thing. When he woke up, his wife asked if, when he’d been in the coma, he’d been able to hear her and Meital, their daughter, talking to him, and he told her that even if he couldn’t remember hearing them he was sure it had helped him. It had given him strength, on the unconscious level, and a desire to live. That was what he told her, but it wasn’t true, because when he was in the coma he really did hear voices on the outside sometimes. Strange, sharp, yet at the same time unclear, like sounds you hear when you’re underwater. And he didn’t like it at all. Those voices sounded menacing to him, they hinted at something beyond the pleasant, colorful now in which he was living.
“May you never know sorrow again.”
Oshri couldn’t make it during the shiva week to pay a condolence call on the family of the guy who’d fallen on his head. He couldn’t make it to the unveiling of the headstone either. But when the first anniversary rolled around, he did go, with flowers and everything. At the cemetery there were only the guy’s parents and his sister and some fat high school friend. They didn’t know who he was. The mother thought he was her son’s boss, whose name was Oshri too. The sister and the fat guy thought he was a friend of the parents. But after everyone had finished placing little stones on the grave and the mother started asking around, he explained that he was the one that Nattie, that was the guy’s name, had landed on when he jumped out the window. As soon as the mother heard this, she started saying how sorry she was, and couldn’t stop crying. The father tried to calm her down, and kept giving Oshri suspicious looks. After five minutes of her hysterical sobbing, the father told Oshri stiffly how sorry he was for everything that had happened to him and that he was sure that Nattie, too, if he were still alive, would be sorry, but that now it would be better for everyone if Oshri left. Oshri agreed at once and quickly added that he was almost fine by now and that when all was said and done it hadn’t been so terrible—certainly not when you compared it with what Nattie’s parents had been through. The father cut him short in mid-sentence: “Are you planning to sue us? Because if you are, you’re wasting your time. Ziva and I haven’t got a penny to our names, you hear me? Not a penny.” The words only made the mother cry harder, and Oshri mumbled something that was supposed to reassure them, about how he had no hard feelings against anyone, and after that, he left. As he was putting the cardboard yarmulke back in the wooden box at the entrance to the cemetery, Nattie’s sister caught up with him and apologized for her father. She didn’t exactly apologize, actually, just said that he was an idiot and that Nattie had always hated him. His father, it turned out, had always been sure everyone was out to get him, and in the end that was what really happened, when his partner ran off with his money. “If Nattie could see how things here turned out, he’d be laughing hysterically,” the sister said, and she introduced herself by name. Her name was Maayan. Out of habit, Oshri didn’t take the hand she held out to him. After a year of pretending with clients that his arm was utterly paralyzed, it had got to the point where even when he was home alone he sometimes forgot he could use it. When Maayan saw that he wasn’t taking her outstretched hand, she shifted the handshake ever so naturally and touched him on the shoulder—which, it turned out, made both of them a little uneasy. “It’s strange having you here,” she said after they had both been silent for a moment. “What is Nattie to you? You didn’t even know him, after all.” “That’s a shame,” Oshri said, not sure how to respond. “That I didn’t know him, I mean. He sounds like somebody who was definitely worth knowing.” Oshri wanted to tell her that his coming there wasn’t strange at all. That he and her brother had some unfinished business between them. There had been so many people at the café that day, and of all the people there, he was the one that Nattie had dropped on top of. And that was why he’d come today, to try to understand why. But even before he had a chance to say it, he realized it would sound stupid, so he asked her instead why Nattie had killed himself—so young and all. Maayan shrugged. He wasn’t the first person to ask her that. Before they went their separate ways, he gave her his business card and said that if she needed any help, no matter what it was, she should call. And she smiled and thanked him but said she was someone who managed very well on her own. After taking another look at the card, she said, “You’re an insurance agent? That’s really strange. Nattie always hated insurance, said it was bad karma. That taking out a policy was like the opposite of believing things would go well.” Oshri got defensive. Lots of young people think that way, he said, but once you have children you look at things differently. And even if you want to believe things will go well, you can never be too careful. “Still, if you need anything,” he told her before she left, “do call. I promise not to try to sell you insurance.” And she smiled and nodded. They both knew she wouldn’t be calling.
While Oshri was on his way home from the cemetery, his wife phoned. She wanted him to pick up Meital from the class she took after school. Oshri agreed right away, and when she asked him where he was, he lied and said he’d had an appointment with a client in Ramat Hasharon. He couldn’t explain to himself why he’d lied. It wasn’t because of the touch he could still feel on his shoulder, and it wasn’t because he’d gone to the memorial service for no good reason. If anything, it was because he was afraid she’d get a sense of how grateful he was to that guy, Nattie, who must have been just as smart, as successful, and as loved as Oshri was, and had still decided to put an end to it all and jump out the window. When he picked up Meital, she proudly showed him a model airplane she’d built, and he admired it and asked her when she was planning to fly it in the sky. “Never,” Meital said, and gave him a derisive look. “It’s just a model.” And Oshri nodded, embarrassed, and said she was such a smart little girl.
Äàòà äîáàâëåíèÿ: 2015-09-27 | Ïðîñìîòðû: 591 | Íàðóøåíèå àâòîðñêèõ ïðàâ
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