mr. berger - curious incident...31-53 كلمات الأغنية
31
it was 1:12 a.m. when father arrived at the police station. i did not see him until 1:28 a.m. but i knew he was there because i could hear him
he was shouting, “i want to see my son,” and “why the h-ll is he locked up?” and “of course i’m bl–dy angry.”
then i heard a policeman telling him to calm down. then i heard nothing for a long while
at 1:28 a.m. a policeman opened the door of the cell and told me that there was someone to see me
i stepped outside. father was standing in the corridor. he held up his right hand and spread his fingers out in a fan. i held up my left hand and spread my fingers out in a fan and we made our fingers and thumbs touch each other. we do this because sometimes father wants to give me a hug, but i do not like hugging people so we do this instead, and it means that he loves me
then the policeman told us to follow him down the corridor to another room. in the room was a table and three chairs
he told us to sit down on the far side of the table and he sat down on the other side. there was a tape recorder on the table and i asked whether i was going to be interviewed and he was going to record the interview
he said, “i don’t think there will be any need for that.”
he was an inspector. i could tell because he wasn’t wearing a uniform. he also had a very hairy nose. it looked as if there were two very small mice hiding in his nostrils
he said, “i have spoken to your father and he says that you didn’t mean to hit the policeman.”
i didn’t say anything because this wasn’t a question
he said, “did you mean to hit the policeman?”
i said, “yes.”
he squeezed his face and said, “but you didn’t mean to hurt the policeman?”
i thought about this and said, “no. i didn’t mean to hurt the policeman. i just wanted him to stop touching me.”
then he said, “you know that it is wrong to hit a policeman, don’t you?”
i said, “i do.”
he was quiet for a few seconds, then he asked, “did you k!ll the dog, christopher?”
i said, “i didn’t k!ll the dog.”
he said, “do you know that it is wrong to lie to a policeman and that you can get into a very great deal of trouble if you do?”
i said, “yes.”
he said, “so, do you know who k!lled the dog?”
i said, “no.”
he said, “are you telling the truth?”
i said, “yes. i always tell the truth.”
and he said, “right. i am going to give you a caution.”
i asked, “is that going to be on a piece of paper like a certificate i can keep?”
he replied, “no, a caution means that we are going to keep a record of what you did, that you hit a policeman but that it was an accident and that you didn’t mean to hurt the policeman.”
i said, “but it wasn’t an accident.”
and father said, “christopher, please.”
the policeman closed his mouth and breathed out loudly through his nose and said, “if you get into anymore trouble we will take out this record and see that you have been given a caution and we will take things much more seriously. do you understand what i’m saying?”
i said that i understood
then he said that we could go and he stood up and opened the door and we walked out into the corridor and back to the front desk, where i picked up my swiss army knife and my piece of string and the piece of the wooden puzzle and the 5 pellets of rat food for toby and my £1.47 and the paper clip and my front door key, which were all in a little plastic bag, and we went out to father’s car, which was parked outside, and we drove home
37
i do not tell lies. mother used to say that this was because i was a good person. but it is not because i am a good person. it is because i can’t tell lies
mother was a small person who smelled nice. and she sometimes wore a fleece with a zip down the front which was pink and it had a tiny label which said berghaus on the left bosom
a lie is when you say something happened which didn’t happen. but there is only ever one thing which happened at a particular time and a particular place. and there are an infinite number of things which didn’t happen at that time and that place. and if i think about something which didn’t happen i start thinking about all the other things which didn’t happen
for example, this morning for breakfast i had ready brek and some hot raspberry milk shake. but if i say that i actually had shreddies and a mug of tea i start thinking about coco pops and lemonade and porridge and dr pepper and how i wasn’t eating my breakfast in egypt and there wasn’t a rhinoceros in the room and father wasn’t wearing a diving suit and so on and even writing this makes me feel shaky and scared, like i do when i’m standing on the top of a very tall building and there are thousands of houses and cars and people below me and my head is so full of all these things that i’m afraid that i’m going to forget to stand up straight and hang on to the rail and i’m going to fall over and be k!lled
this is another reason why i don’t like proper novels, because they are lies about things which didn’t happen and they make me feel shaky and scared
and this is why everything i have written here is true
41
there were clouds in the sky on the way home, so i couldn’t see the milky way
i said, “i’m sorry,” because father had had to come to the police station, which was a bad thing
he said, “it’s ok.”
i said, “i didn’t k!ll the dog.”
and he said, “i know.”
then he said, “christopher, you have to stay out of trouble, ok?”
i said, “i didn’t know i was going to get into trouble. i like wellington and i went to say h-llo to him, but i didn’t know that someone had k!lled him.”
father said, “just try and keep your nose out of other people’s business.”
i thought for a little and i said, “i am going to find out who k!lled wellington.”
and father said, “were you listening to what i was saying, christopher?”
i said, “yes, i was listening to what you were saying, but when someone gets murdered you have to find out who did it so that they can be punished.”
and he said, “it’s a bl–dy dog, christopher, a bl–dy dog.”
i replied, “i think dogs are important, too.”
he said, “leave it.”
and i said, “i wonder if the police will find out who k!lled him and punish the person.”
then father banged the steering wheel with his fist and the car weaved a little bit across the dotted line in the middle of the road and he shouted, “i said leave it, for god’s sake.”
i could tell that he was angry because he was shouting, and i didn’t want to make him angry so i didn’t say anything else until we got home
when we came in through the front door i went into the kitchen and got a carrot for toby and i went upstairs and i shut the door of my room and i let toby out and gave him the carrot. then i turned my computer on and played 76 games of minesweeper and did the expert version in 102 seconds, which was only 3 seconds off my best time, which was 99 seconds
at 2:07 a.m. i decided that i wanted a drink of orange squash before i brushed my t–th and got into bed, so i went downstairs to the kitchen. father was sitting on the sofa watching snooker on the television and drinking scotch. there were tears coming out of his eyes
i asked, “are you sad about wellington?”
he looked at me for a long time and sucked air in through his nose. then he said, “yes, christopher, you could say that. you could very well say that.” i decided to leave him alone because when i am sad i want to be left alone. so i didn’t say anything else. i just went into the kitchen and made my orange squash and took it back upstairs to my room
43
mother died 2 years ago
i came home from school one day and no one answered the door, so i went and found the secret key that we keep under a flowerpot behind the kitchen door. i let myself into the house and carried on making the airfix sherman tank model i was building
an hour and a half later father came home from work. he runs a business and he does heating maintenance and boiler repair with a man called rhodri who is his employee. he knocked on the door of my room and opened it and asked whether i had seen mother
i said that i hadn’t seen her and he went downstairs and started making some phone calls. i did not hear what he said
then he came up to my room and said he had to go out for a while and he wasn’t sure how long he would be. he said that if i needed anything i should call him on his mobile phone
he was away for 2½ hours. when he came back i went downstairs. he was sitting in the kitchen staring out of the back window down the garden to the pond and the corrugated iron fence and the top of the tower of the church on manstead street which looks like a castle because it is norman
father said, “i’m afraid you won’t be seeing your mother for a while.”
he didn’t look at me when he said this. he kept on looking through the window
usually people look at you when they’re talking to you. i know that they’re working out what i’m thinking, but i can’t tell what they’re thinking. it is like being in a room with a one-way mirror in a spy film. but this was nice, having father speak to me but not look at me
i said, “why not?”
he waited for a very long time, then he said, “your mother has had to go into hospital.”
“can we visit her?” i asked, because i like hospitals. i like the uniforms and the machines
father said, “no.”
i said, “why can’t we?”
and he said, “she needs rest. she needs to be on her own.”
i asked, “is it a psychiatric hospital?”
and father said, “no. it’s an ordinary hospital. she has a problem. . . a problem with her heart.”
i said, “we will need to take food to her,” because i knew that food in hospital was not very good. david from school, he went into hospital to have an operation on his leg to make his calf muscle longer so that he could walk better. and he hated the food, so his mother used to take meals in every day
father waited for a long time again and said, “i’ll take some in to her during the day when you’re at school and i’ll give it to the doctors and they can give it to your mum, ok?”
i said, “but you can’t cook.”
father put his hands over his face and said, “christopher. look. i’ll buy some ready-made stuff from marks and spencer’s and take those in. she likes those.”
i said i would make her a get well card, because that is what you do for people when they are in hospital. father said he would take it in the next day
47
in the bus on the way to school next morning we p-ssed 4 red cars in a row, which meant that it was a good day, so i decided not to be sad about wellington
mr. jeavons, the psychologist at the school, once asked me why 4 red cars in a row made it a good day,and 3 red cars in a row made it a quite good day, and 5 red cars in a row made it a super good day, and why 4 yellow cars in a row made it a black day, which is a day when i don’t speak to anyone and sit on my own reading books and don’t eat my lunch and take no risks. he said that i was clearly a very logical person, so he was surprised that i should think like this because it wasn’t very logical
i said that i liked things to be in a nice order. and one way of things being in a nice order was to be logical. especially if those things were numbers or an argument. but there were other ways of putting things in a nice order. and that was why i had good days and black days. and i said that some people who worked in an office came out of their house in the morning and saw that the sun was shining and it made them feel happy, or they saw that it was raining and it made them feel sad, but the only difference was the weather and if they worked in an office the weather didn’t have anything to do with whether they had a good day or a bad day
i said that when father got up in the morning he always put his trousers on before he put his socks on and it wasn’t logical but he always did it that way, because he liked things in a nice order, too. also whenever he went upstairs he went up two at a time, always starting with his right foot
mr. jeavons said that i was a very clever boy
i said that i wasn’t clever. i was just noticing how things were, and that wasn’t clever. that was just being observant. being clever was when you looked at how things were and used the evidence to work out something new. like the universe expanding, or who committed a murder. or if you see someone’s name and you give each letter a value from 1 to 26 (a = 1, b = 2, etc.) and you add the numbers up in your head
and you find that it makes a prime number, like jesus christ (151), or scooby-doo (113), or sherlock holmes (163), or doctor watson (167)
mr. jeavons asked me whether this made me feel safe, having things always in a nice order, and i said it
did
then he asked if i didn’t like things changing. and i said i wouldn’t mind things changing if i became an astronaut, for example, which is one of the biggest changes you can imagine, apart from becoming a girl or dying
he asked whether i wanted to become an astronaut and i said i did
he said that it was very difficult to become an astronaut. i said that i knew. you had to become an officer in the air force and you had to take lots of orders and be prepared to k!ll other human beings, and i couldn’t take orders. also i didn’t have 20/20 vision, which you needed to be a pilot. but i said that you could still want something that is very unlikely to happen
terry, who is the older brother of francis, who is at the school, said i would only ever get a job collecting supermarket trollies or cleaning out donkey sh-t at an animal sanctuary and they didn’t let spazzers drive rockets that cost billions of pounds. when i told this to father he said that terry was jealous of my being cleverer than him. which was a stupid thing to think because we weren’t in a compet-tion. but terry is
stupid, so quod erat demonstrandum, which is latin for which is the thing that was going to be proved, which means thus it is proved
i’m not a spazzer, which means spastic, not like francis, who is a spazzer, and even though i probably won’t become an astronaut, i am going to go to university and study mathematics, or physics, or physics and mathematics (which is a joint honor school), because i like mathematics and physics and i’m very good at them. but terry won’t go to university. father says terry is most likely to end up in prison
terry has a tattoo on his arm of a heart shape with a knife through the middle of it
but this is what is called a digression, and now i am going to go back to the fact that it was a good day
because it was a good day i decided that i would try and find out who k!lled wellington because a good day is a day for projects and planning things
when i said this to siobhan she said, “well, we’re meant to be writing stories today, so why don’t you write about finding wellington and going to the police station.”
and that is when i started writing this
and siobhan said that she would help with the spelling and the grammar and the footnotes
53
mother died two weeks later
i had not been into hospital to see her but father had taken in lots of food from marks and spencer’s. he said that she had been looking ok and seemed to be getting better. she had sent me lots of love and had my get well card on the table beside her bed. father said that she liked it very much
the card had pictures of cars on the front. it looked like this: i did it at school with mrs. peters, who does art, and it was a lino cut, which is when you draw a picture on a piece of lino and mrs. peters cuts round the picture with a stanley knife and then you put ink on the lino and press it onto the paper, which is why all the cars looked the same, because i did one car and pressed it onto the paper 9 times. and it was mrs. peters’s idea to do lots of cars, which i liked. and i colored all the cars in with red paint to make it a super super good day for mother
father said that she died of a heart attack and it wasn’t expected
i said, “what kind of heart attack?” because i was surprised
mother was only 38 years old and heart attacks usually happen to older people, and mother was very active and rode a bicycle and ate food which was healthy and high in fiber and low in saturated fat like chicken and vegetables and muesli
father said that he didn’t know what kind of heart attack she had and now wasn’t the moment to be asking questions like that
i said that it was probably an aneurysm
a heart attack is when some of the muscles in the heart stop getting blood and die. there are two main types of heart attack. the first is an embolism. that is when a blood clot blocks one of the blood vessels taking blood to the muscles in the heart. and you can stop this from happening by taking aspirin and eating fish. which is why eskimos don’t get this sort of heart attack, because they eat fish and fish stops
their blood from clotting, but if they cut themselves badly they can bleed to death
but an aneurysm is when a blood vessel breaks and the blood doesn’t get to the heart muscles because it is leaking. and some people get aneurysms just because there is a weak bit in their blood vessels, like mrs. hardisty, who lived at number 72 in our street, who had a weak bit in the blood vessels in her neck and died just because she turned her head round to reverse her car into a parking sp-ce
on the other hand, it could have been an embolism, because your blood clots much more easily when you are lying down for a long time, like when you are in hospital. father said, “i’m sorry, christopher, i’m really sorry.”
but it wasn’t his fault
then mrs. shears came over and cooked supper for us. and she was wearing sandals and jeans and t-shirt which had the words windsurf and corfu and a picture of a windsurfer on it
and father was sitting down and she stood next to him and held his head against her bosoms and said, “come on ed. we’re going to get through this”
and then she made us spaghetti and tomato sauce
and after dinner she played scrabble with me and i beat her 247 points to 134
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