return to tallinn

IT WAS A FEW WEEKS LATER that I returned to the capital, taking an evening train to Liiva, so I could spend the night on a friend’s couch before an early morning TV appearance.

The logistics of getting from the provinces, the periphery, to the capital city, are at times challenging. There is no way to be in Tallinn that early other than to drive, and who wants to drive to Tallinn from the South during January blizzard weather, though this is often done?

I barely slept and was afflicted by a profound melancholy all night long, and found myself yearning for elusive feminine comfort, and sort of clutching my pillow, only to have a half dozen horror stories replay in my mind, as if warning me to be careful of what I wished for. I didn’t mention a word of it to my friend as we drank coffee in his kitchen at 7 am. Nõmme is probably a coveted place to live, and expensive, though I haven’t asked about prices, but it’s just like Tähtvere in Tartu or any other place in this country. You look out the window and you see other windows, and maybe other people behind those windows, but you barely know who they are, and you probably never will, and the city mindset is, why would you care to know? 

This is how people think. In 1968, the American soul group Sly & The Family Stone released a song called “Into My Own Thing,” and it seems that everybody here these days is into their own thing everywhere. Especially in neighborhoods like Nõmme, where the houses are separated by plots of fenced-off land and large, view-obscuring trees. This is a quiet suburb, where one can be left alone, mostly, to read his books and drink his coffee alone and be into his own thing. In the morning, I ordered a Bolt to take me to the Postimees House, across from the Sikupilli shopping center. My friend told me that only the criminally insane shop at Sikupilli. He also said that a real writer would walk through the snow and not take a Bolt.

“I guess I am not a real writer yet,” I told him.

 When he asked me what I planned to do in Tallinn, I told him I was going to visit Kopli.

“Why would you even do that to yourself?” he asked.

“Because I feel like it,” I said. “I haven’t been there in 20 years.”

***

AFTER MY INTERVIEW, I headed into town with snow and ice blowing in my face. I had breakfast at Must Puudel, the Black Poodle, right off the Town Hall Square. This café was only recently introduced to me by an old friend. I don’t know these things, you know, where to go to Tallinn, where to eat, who has the best coconut macchiato. I usually go to Reval Café in that big yellow building across from Sõprus, the one that also houses the Vallikraavi Bar and that looks like it should be in a Wes Anderson movie. That might be my favorite building in Tallinn and I aim to study it. I often go there and eavesdrop on conversations, but this time I chose Must Puudel, because I had read an article recently that said that Estonia’s slowburn economic crisis was causing regular Must Puudel patrons to skip cake and just order coffee, so I decided I would patronize the place and help them out. Of course, I was dreaming that I would meet someone interesting or that something interesting would happen. Maybe an archaeologist might need someone to help him find some treasure, or a woman would dump all of her marital problems on me in a bid to get me into bed and to forget about her personal life. 

These things just don’t happen in cafes anymore. Not to me. They happen on Messenger, maybe, and people come into cafes and just sit there behind their computer screens and try to look busy, which is what I was doing. I did manage to befriend a cultural organizer from Rakvere, who said she likes a good day in Tallinn. She doesn’t want to live here, she says, but she enjoys these moments, an early morning’s coffee at Must Puudel, with the snow outside. One of those orange Omniva delivery carts had wheeled up beyond the window and the mailman was out delivering to the nut sellers and karaoke bar owners. Or so I imagined. I do love those Omniva delivery carts. The last time I was in Tallinn, I even took a picture of one.

***

AND THERE I WAS, waiting from Tram No. 1 to take me out to Kopli at last. I usually dodge this tram whenever I go to walk around Kalamaja, but here I was, getting aboard. All I could remember about the old place was the adjacent gray sea, and the burned wood houses, the result of many drunken winter heating mishaps. I used to teach English to a kid who lived out there years ago, whose mother was from Narva, and I used to pass the old burned out Kopli houses and marvel at them. When you are away from Estonia, you forget about this indigent element, living on the margins of the city, warming itself by a wood-heated furnace. You forget about these ghosts of alcoholism, desperation, frostbite. How many souls has this city swallowed up like little tins of salted fish? The troubled father of a friend’s boyfriend was out in the streets during the most recent cold snap and froze to death. It’s strange, but somehow you learn not to look, to obscure your own vision, to forget about the burned houses of Kopli. 

Yet there they were again, with open windows. Nobody bothers to live in them anymore. At least not officially. The Kopli tram was mostly empty, and the only people I noticed speaking to each other were a girl of maybe 12 years with dark hair and dark eyes, and a boy who was a little older. She was sitting in his lap and talking to him in her purple parka. Maybe they were a couple? When we got to the last stop, they both got out. I was certain they were Russians or Ukrainians, but no, they were speaking Estonian to each other. They looked like they could have been Japanese, or at least the Ainu who live in Hokkaido, Sakhalin, or some other place.

Not all Estonians look like the little blonde girl on those Anneke chocolate bars.

They hung around in the snow for a moment and then dispersed to wherever they came from. This was their Kopli life. It happened every day, and I only got to catch a glimpse of it. For just these moments, our paths had crossed. The tram had the name of a popular Estonian folk group called Curly Strings on it. Their most popular song is probably “Kaugses Külas,” “In a Faraway Village,” the refrain of which is, “to get tan by the second of June.” In Kopli, even on Kopli Beach, in January, that hope is a faint dream. The kids on the Number 1 tram don’t talk about getting tan. I have no idea what they were talking about. Maybe K-Pop or Pokémon. 

***

SO THAT WAS MY DAY, my big Tallinn day, spent walking around, kind of aimlessly. I had a few interviews for some stories I was working on, and walked between the various cafes where they were scheduled. I was supposed to meet Igrayne at the Reval Café on Pärnu maantee, which is the area where the Bronze Soldier riots were most fierce during that tense night 17 years ago. I wonder what happened to those kids who got arrested and spent the night in D-Terminal. They probably all got jobs, or have done something else with their lives. What else is there to do? Loot shops in perpetuity over some war monument? Would the same thing happen these days? Maybe not. Tallinn has just changed, and even the Bronze Soldier is a distant memory. Everything is fading into this new city. It is changing and renewing day by day. I even noticed that the notorious fast food kiosk had disappeared from the corner across from the Tallinn Central Library, and that the place where it stood had been overtaken by Swedbank. 

As long as I had known Tallinn, that fast food kiosk had been there. Even on my first day in town, which was 29 August 2002, it was there. At some point, during the early Ansip years, I think some Swedish tourists tried to pick a fight with me there while I waited for french fries at about 2 am. There had been a second time, many years later, while staying at the Hotel Palace, when I was awakened multiple times in the night by the loud sounds of disagreements, climaxing with the crash of shattered glass and the howl-cry of anguish in the Finnish language, which is the most terrifying language, spiced with words like vittua and perkele. But it was all gone now. Yesterday. People accuse me of living in the past, but I need at times to catch up with the present. It takes time. You can’t just wipe it all away, clean slate. The kiosk used to be here. When I referred to the place in discussions with a friend, she called it the löögi-öögi burgeri koht

This means something like, the hitting-vomiting burger place. Alas, it is no more.

Just a memory.

***

I KEPT WAITING, as I said, for some kind of adventure to present itself in Tallinn, but nothing really happened that day. Later, at Fika, talking to another journalist, I related my frustration. “You know, you get off the train in Bangalore, and already you are accosted by a rickshaw driver who wants to take you somewhere, or you see a dead dog lying in the middle of a street, or a beggar sleeping in a carpet, and things happen. The bus breaks down and you have to walk, but in Tallinn, things just happen predictably.” My friend, who is an Estonian and has lived here for almost 30 years, agreed and nodded. He’s a few years older than me, but has this good-natured boyish quality to him, though he does have a few wrinkles now. He recounted sad stories of programmers who washed up in Tallinn from places like Egypt or Indonesia and couldn’t make any friends. None at all. They suffered through seasons of silence and introversion and gave up. This has been changing though as more expats arrive and befriend each other. Once, I said, I happened to encounter a whole table full of Irish women sitting at a café. There were enough Irish women in Tallinn to fill a whole table. One had come for love. 

“How do people even fall in love in Tallinn?” I asked my friend. My uncle, for example, had met his wife on a train in New York. It seemed like the natural kind of place where people met each other. They sat across from each other and talked and then exchanged numbers in those days. But I can’t recall ever having met anyone on a train in Estonia. It just didn’t happen.

I felt like I was locked outside of everyone else, but maybe that wasn’t Tallinn. Maybe that was all of us, disappearing into our own private digital worlds. It was just compounded by the city’s northern aloofness, which at first can feel soothing and wonderful, but later starts to haunt you, gives you a raw, melancholic feeling. Sometimes too much fresh air can hurt your lungs.

The city of Tallinn can hurt you in that same way.

“That’s just how it is,” my friend said. People meet at parties, he said. They do meet. 

***

AT NIGHT, I took the Number 3 tram out to the Koidula stop in Kadriorg. Somehow, I had forgotten all about Kadriorg that day. For a lot of people, Tallinn is Kadriorg. It’s Kumu and Nöp. It was here, up a few streets, that I met another friend, who was seated behind a desk, running a dress shop like some character in one of those old Ibsen plays. She had a calculator in front of her, a computer, and a long yellow measuring tape. It was all arrayed before her, and it was very quiet and still snowing. She has three children now, and one of them had left some bits of cookies on her blue dress. She had white-blonde hair, big blue eyes, and looked tired.

After she closed up her shop, we walked to a cafe. One variety of homemade hummus cost €17 per kilo. Some organic meats were more than €40. These high-end goods are for people who think they have the money to afford them, I was later told, but all throughout my day, I had actually sensed the lingering trace of poverty. Even in the Solaris supermarket, I found myself gazing in wonder at a yellow truck full of Navelina oranges and green grapes, and marveling at piles of Costa Rican bananas and Polish and Dutch apples and pears, only because I can recall that 20 years ago in Tallinn, Stockmann had the only supermarket that sold Italian mozzarella, and it felt like luxury. Now you can buy three varieties of mozzarella at any corner shop. Those old post-Soviet poor days were done. These were the days of €17 hummus.

After dinner, we walked through Kadriorg and stared up at the windows of the houses. I liked Kadriorg, with its big houses, its shortcuts between them, it’s slanty roofs. It’s like a big fishing village. One of those windows is where my friend lives with her family, her husband and children. Other friends live behind other windows in houses nestled behind fences or right on the street. Behind one window, the naturalist Fred Jüssi is still living, perhaps drinking hot tea. 

My friend is my age, 44, almost to the month, and we are both experiencing that brief midlife hangover moment. It seems this is the moment in life where you either give up, or you get going. I’ve known Tallinn for a long time now, so long it feels like eternity. So many things have happened here, I can no longer remember them all. But I am not giving up just yet. No, I am merely catching my breath here, taking stock, remembering, processing, and understanding. The only real choice is to keep moving forward. All feelings of hopelessness will be renewed. And just as old broken cities are made new, so too can people reinvent and restore themselves.

i should have brought a blanket

MEETINGS WERE HELD in the house weekly. Or more like lectures or seminars. It was an old wooden house in an older wooden district of the town. I happened to be walking by through the snow when some friends saw me and invited me to come along. The staircase up to the second floor was creaking and crooked, but the seminar room had been renovated. It was full of listeners. I found a spot on one of the long couches. That was when Esmeralda walked in.

Esmeralda looked bored and tired and taciturn. She was not particularly happy to see me, and I wondered if she at all understood how much I liked her. She must have had some idea or hint, because she sat down right next to me in her red sweatshirt. Quietly, silently, taciturnly. If that is even a word. Oh you, and your Baltic Finnic jõnn. What did I even see in this girl? Esmeralda said to me, “I feel a bit cold. I should have brought a blanket.” I left to find one for her at once.

I left the house, walked some ways down the street. Eventually I reached the house of my grandmother, who had just passed away. My father and mother and daughter were inside, sorting through baskets of my grandmother’s possessions. I promised them I would be back soon, and found a yellow blanket from the linen closet downstairs. I went back to the house, this time taking a public transit bus. It was winter still, cold and dark, and snow was falling.

Inside the house, the meeting was still going on, and Esmeralda was sitting there, as taciturn as ever. I came into the room and put the warm blanket on her. She curled up beneath it, sighed and yawned. We sat there for a while, just the two of us, watching some PowerPoint presentation. She said nothing to me. After some time, I said, “If you want, you can lie down next to me.” Esmeralda didn’t answer, but she slowly lowered her head and stretched out on the couch. I didn’t say a word to the beautiful girl. Nothing. My movements were slow and deliberate. I dared to not even look at sleepy Esmeralda. I could only watch her breathe.

don’t mind the blood

AFTER I RETURNED from the lake incident with the oldest of the three brothers, I went to stay in another house on the lake. Here I met a dressmaker whom I had known for some time. She was there with her husband and children, but very much wanted to make love to me. This would-be seduction took place while her family was out on the balcony. I could hear them playing. She was herself dressed up in something blue and billowing. Her yellow hair was all over the place and she had a tear in her eye, but she just could not excite me, no matter how hard she tried. I felt humiliated after that and impotent and went out to walk the streets.

Later, I arrived at the home of a friend, a woman a bit older than me, and she too offered that we make love. She was very voluptuous, and it was a joy to pull off her leggings and see her white fleshy legs. She had always been a strong supporter of me and had given me so much comfort in this troubled life, and I was grateful to return that love any way that I could. I gave into the passion, and there was only more of it, the way you might disappear into a swirl of delicious rainbow cotton candy hunger. But things started to feel weird after that, the sun dimmed, and there were clouds in the sky. Everything was gray and shadowy and then blood started to trickle out of her. It worried me, those red ribbon strands of blood. It worried me.

Her auburn hair was pulled up, and she looked down at me with those freckled cheeks and lifted her hips and said, “Don’t mind all the blood, love. Be good and soft and keep loving me.”

three brothers

THREE BROTHERS came to Viljandi. They were all darker haired and darker skinned. I think they were from the Middle East. They took up with local girls, girls I had once loved, and for this nurtured a suspicion or ill feeling toward me. Not that I was a threat, but it was clear that we could never be friends. Then one day, I happened to go fishing at the last minute with the eldest of these three dark brothers. He was the shortest of the three, but also the oldest, and imagined himself as powerful and influential. We paddled out into the lake, but then a storm came up. It was hard to explain, it was almost like a sun storm. There was a shift in celestial energy, a strong gravitational pull. The lake currents started to pull hard toward the south.

“Look at how far along we already are,” I told this oldest brother. “We have to head back!”

We tried paddling, but it was no use. The water was shallow enough though that we could walk our boat to shore, even though we were waist deep. From there, we pulled the boat back to port, using a rope. We walked over stone walls and across lawns. Families were out grilling and there were other springtime festivities. When we got back to the port, we went up the hill. We arrived to the house the brothers were renting and went in.

“Now, don’t you see that I am your friend?” I told the oldest brother. “You’ve nothing to fear.” He looked at me with some suspicion, but things were better between all of us after that.

keep on truckin’ mama

WHEN I GOT HOME Kevin Costner told me I had to clean out my apartment, no ifs, ands, or buts. This was after I had dropped Silvia and her aunt off at the apartment downtown. My apartment was a mess. There were glasses and dishes everywhere. While I was moving a box of them toward the garage they fell on the ground and shattered. Some of these were heirloom glasses. Some of them even contained the souls of dead ancestors. When I looked into one of the frosted glasses I could see my great grandfather the physician with his Victorian Era mustache. This glass was salvageable and had only been slightly damaged. I picked up the shards and put them inside the glass. I was certain I could glue the shards back into place.

At night, I tried to get back to her, but the car just wouldn’t start. I left it in the garage and took my bike instead. Viljandi had changed a lot. It was hillier. It all looked like La Jolla, California. Yet it was unmistakeably Viljandi. The Centrum shopping center was there, it was just now on a hill and been significantly remodeled. All of the streets were in their right places, Tallinn Street was over here, and Posti Street was over there, but all of the buildings had changed. It was summer warm and there was a sticky humidity in the air. I rode my bike toward Centrum and then decided to take that route through the parking lot past Jysk that would eventually bring me back to Silvia’s. There were some Finnish tourists on the bike path.

I told the Finns to get out of the way.

I had on a pair of jeans and my old Hot Tuna t-shirt. Instinctively, I began to whistle their old song, “Keep on truckin’ mama, truck my blues away.” Off 1972’s Burgers. What had ever happened to that shirt? And would I ever see Jorma Kaukonen and Jack Casady play it again? And what was Silvia doing now? She was at her house in the woods down Posti Street. Probably making tea. I could almost see her blonde hair bundled up in a red handkerchief. I could almost see her blue eyes through the woods. I could almost hear the teapot whistle.

betrayal

I HAD KNOWN HER for years, but I didn’t ever think it would come to this. I would suppose that she was an attractive woman. She was older than me, by a decade at least, and had shoulder-length brown hair. I’m sure she was quite the catch back in ’86 or ’88. But it was 2024. I don’t even remember how I even wound up at the house. Her husband was away. Her children were all grown. She was in the bath when I arrived. I told her I could wait but she invited me in, and that’s when I saw those long legs poking out of the water. It was steamy in there. The walls were dripping wet. It sounds sexy, I know, but it wasn’t. It had all the allure and sensuality of old motel wallpaper. But I was weak. At least, that’s what they call a man like me when he does a thing like that. So weak. I was the softest there was. That’s what they said.

When her husband Kalle arrived back home, we were already drinking tea in the kitchen. He had been on a business trip to the UK. I marveled at his English-language proficiency. He didn’t seem to think anything was amiss. He told us about his various business meetings as he removed his tie and set his briefcase on the table. I wasn’t sure how I felt. Not every feeling has a name. After Kalle left, she went upstairs and drew the bathwater, disrobed and climbed in. She asked me to join. There is something comforting about being told what to do, especially after shouldering so many responsibilities, but I couldn’t shake that ugly gray betrayal feeling.

Poor Kalle. What a dope! Was I really responsible for this? “Come and get in the bath,” she said.

tokumaru

I MOVED INTO an apartment that happened to be located inside a Tokumaru Japanese restaurant in Helsinki. The interior design was white and spotless. I didn’t mind sharing my living quarters with the clientele nor the smell of gyoza being served in ceramic bowls. Then one day, Jonas came to find me so he could threaten me about talking to his girlfriend Margot. He stood outside the Helsinki Tokumaru with his face against the glass. I wasn’t sure how he had even found me. I had moved out of my last apartment for the same reason. There he was. His white, angry face was pressed against the window, and his teeth were clenched. I could see the steam of fury in his dark-rimmed glasses. His hair was combed neatly. Margot stood nearby, staring into space. Her eyes were black with mascara and shame-terror. “How dare you, how dare you write to my girlfriend!” he stormed. The Finnish owner offered Jonas some black coffee and tried to soothe his jilted nerves. I was unaware that Tokumaru served coffee.

Supposedly, the Tokumaru coffee was very good.

While Jonas was distracted, I fled out the back door. I wanted to take the ship back to Tallinn to get away, but there had been a major storm. The waters of the Baltic Sea had flooded the city, and there, at the foot of Korkeavuorenkatu, I looked up, only to see an enormous Tallink cruise ship come crashing down the street, crushing every building in its way. I looked the other way, and saw another Eckerö Line ship floating on its side. There was nowhere to run and the waters rushed into the Helsinki Tokumaru, washing away everyone with them. Jonas, Margot, the Finnish-Japanese owner. They were all drowned in the sea. I grabbed onto a floating navigation buoy that had washed in from the archipelago and survived. Later, the storm calmed and the sun came out and the waves died down. I could even hear birds singing.

rapla-bound train

THAT CREAKING, rocking, squeaking, Elron (Hubbard?) Train, lurching south, all the way through Saku, Rapla, Türi. At Tallinn-Väike, the girl got on. But who was she? Me, overtired, my hands still stained with dirt from when the wind blew my hat into a city gutter in the morning, and from pulling it from all of that avenue street mud, and eating something starchy and disgusting from the Baltic Station, and blowing my nose in the meantime, and just nothing that could ever be cleaned up and made presentable. A werewolf. Even if bathed, my soul is dirty.

Her, blonde, clean, tidy, and well-organized, with pink full lips, typing away on a laptop with some homespun manicure. But look how she types, and how absorbed she is in her deep work. Why, she just seems like the most pragmatic, industrious chick there is! I briefly ask her if she can hear me, because I think she might have headphones on, or ear pods or whatever they are called nowadays, and she says that she can, but that’s all that she says. Her look at me is as blank as school wallpaper. There’s nothing coquettish here. This girl is from Rapla. She is a shock worker. Her hair is so light. She should be out marketing muesli with creamy yellow curls like those. She has a head like soup noodles. A golden yumminess like warm sun rays.

A day later in the deep tech lounge of the conference, I am dodging robots and weaving in between the Swedbank People in their orange shirts. People from the past drift through my mind. I think of Linnéa and accept her death from my life. I’ve turned passive. I’ve stopped trying. I’ve stopped caring. Nothing. And all of these startup investment people are boring as fuck. But who was the girl on the train who disembarked at Rapla? Does she always ride the last train? If I keep riding the trains south to Rapla, will our paths cross again? Will she once again sit across from me, oblivious, tapping away? Is it even romantic to think such thoughts, or somehow against the rules? That’s how his lifetime obsession started, riding the Rapla-bound train. Waiting for the tubli girl with the laptop and no-nonsense demeanor. The lonesome bachelor, scribbling mad in his notebook. That was how the whole affair started.

but desperation can crystallize

“BUT DESPERATION CAN CRYSTALLIZE. It’s like amber or obsidian, like those obsidian arrowheads from the Yucatan. It hardens and somehow becomes more bearable, natural.”

*

“And Eisenhower hated Fitzgerald. And the hatred was mutual. Cold cold bright days again. Work week, work, work. But, yes, I’ll do it. For the money.”

*

“And waving to [name omitted] at night. It’s like clutching to debris from the sinking Titanic. You just cling to it and cling to it. It provides you with a feeling of safety. Sort of.”

*

“I just sort of glued myself to her after that. She was tired though and left wearing a little black Bolt helmet. She went home to sleep. Mine ja maga uinakut, I told her. Go and take a nap. And I hugged her and it was nice.”

*

“Then I willed myself out into the countryside. I was thinking of her, all silver and blue, a girl who swims through life like a tropical fish. At least it is an honest feeling, a true feeling. At least I know that honesty and truth still exist, just as she exists. And if I could tell her anything, I would say, I would choose you and only you, and even if you are really so short, for me you are just right, paras.”

*

“And in that dream I was waiting for a train to Philadelphia beside [name omitted] who kept telling me that I was annoying her. Then I was in a wooden ruin, which turned into a sinking ship. I was talking about 21 Jump Street with Johnny Depp and Richard Grieco and Peter Deluise. Then I took the subway into the office in New York, arriving at noon. My editor scolded me for being late. [Name omitted] was there, but was preparing to leave work, but she asked me to collect her things. There was a kind of gauze or white sheet, and I folded everything up for her.”

*

“I ran to the theatre, diving for cover. Horrors of Mariupol, murder. I looked out into the distance and could see the billowing red Oppenheimer clouds. Orange with abundant death. I ran to the theatre, taking shelter. Some buildings had been hit. There were glass windows, and blue leaking water. There were anti-aircraft gunners but it was no use. People, blues, ballooning, drifting. Groceries blown all over the streets. Run to the theatre, get in the theatre!”

*

“[Name omitted] was then elected president of Finland, succeeding Sauli Niinistö. She went to Tallinn to accompany an art exhibition or installation, but was protected by her bodyguards. I wanted to see her, but was nervous. We would meet at Kumu. I agreed we could talk about her new flower book. Along the way, several people stopped me to ask for directions around Tallinn. But Tallinn had changed. It was like Stockholm. It was set out on islands, with bridges everywhere …”

Excerpts from my journal, written April 2023 – February 2024

the airport and kermit’s birthday

WE WERE SOMEWHERE in the Far East. At least it felt that way because I knew that the flight home was going to be a long one. Getting to the airport was an ordeal. You had to go down to the port and take a ship across the harbor. It was easier to land planes on that side, between the mountains. These were large ferries that made the voyage every 20 minutes. Much of the transport time involved checking and loading passengers. We were late though because on our way to the port, our little dinghy got stuck in the swamps. It was me, two of my daughters, and Kermit Haas, the world famous Estonian cubist painter. When we got to the port, my eldest made it aboard the ship and proceeded to the plane, but the youngest and I stayed behind, in part because I got to talking to Gunna and one of her girlfriends there. They were dressed as if they were about to go out to some nightclub. We agreed to meet again.

If there would ever be an again.

But we missed the next ferry to the airport, and decided not to proceed on our journey. Instead, Kermit drove us around the harbor to his house, where there had been planned for him a surprise birthday party. Somehow this part of the area looked quite like the opposite shore of Viljandi Lake, and there was even snow on the ground. Some farmers were out tending to rusty old machines in their snowy farmers’ fields. The house was full of people. I was surprised to see Linnéa was there. She was a friend of Kermit’s as I understood it. She was dressed in a white blouse and her blonde hair hung about her shoulders. She was filming the entire event with her phone, broadcasting it live via multiple Instagram accounts. As usual, she ignored me. I kept looking in her direction, hoping she might make eye contact, but there was just blackness in those eyes. It was not only that she was ignoring me. It was as if I didn’t exist.

Toward the end of the party, an African fellow who worked at Wolt showed up. He was dressed in his delivery clothes. He went over to Linnéa and put his arm around her, and I realized they were together. The Wolt delivery man and Linnéa left the party together, but at the last moment, she looked in my direction. This time I could see it in her eyes that she recognized me, albeit faintly. The two of them left. The rest of the guests were hoisting Kermit Haas in the air.

There were balloons floating up everywhere.