GingeOrCringe
Junior
- Apr 5, 2020
- 625
Despite all the scars of the past century—poisoned water, unmarked mass graves, Chernobyl—the land had a sense of familiarity, like a relative she hadn’t seen in ages.
“My father should be buried here,” said Olena. The bristly evergreens stood like an honor guard as the train cut through the Carpathians.
“He could have been,” Pavlo mumbled between gulps of gin. He had already drained two glasses that evening and was three fingers through the third. Olena tried not to look at him. His heavy eyelids and the blunt angles of his jaw were cut no differently from his grandfather’s stoic face. Somehow, it made him even more of a disappointment.
Olena had never expected to return home. For forty years, give or take a decade, she’d maintained her devout disinterest in succession. It was Pavlo who had wanted... this. When he was still a child, he often pointed up at the moon and stars and insisted they visit one day. This present journey seemed no more practical than those boyish notions.
The ice made a clinking noise against the glass as he swirled the contents of his drink. “We’ll be to Lviv soon.”
“Yes,” nodded Galina. She was draped across a recamier, one hand absentmindedly playing with the pearls on her necklace, the other holding a dwindling cigarette. Her parents had been refugees as well. They had left her heirloom linguistic knowledge of Surzhyk, as well as a dusty bank account—an inheritance about as useful as she was. “Navolska will be there to greet us, won’t he darling?” Her voice was airy and trance-like in a way only Xanax and alcohol can produce.
Olena shook her head. “He can wait until tomorrow to talk with me. I would like to leave for the hotel as soon as we arrive.”
“It’s only 4 o’clock,” said Pavlo. “He is the one who paid for all of this, remember.” He motioned around at the private car.
Sometimes speaking with her son felt more like shouting into the wind.
“It will be maybe an hour, an hour and a half. That’s all he wants.”
Olena felt her granddaughter take her soft but wrinkled hand in her own. She cupped it as gently as she would a little prayer book. The young woman was normally such a chatterbox but hadn’t said anything since they’d crossed the border. The last rays of sunshine seemed to form a nimbus around her as she marveled at the land from which the Skoropadsky family had originally sprung. The awe written across her face was no different from that of any Christian kneeling before icons in veneration.
Pavlo and Galina prattled on, but Olena decided to tune them out. “Are you enjoying yourself, Vasylyna?”
“It’s so beautiful, Babusia. Like when you first took me to the ocean.”
The elderly woman nodded, a sliver of a smile crossed her lips. “More than beautiful, my dear. Mountains, forests, it’s all very useful to those who live here—and very hindersome to those who don’t. There’s a reason it took so much blood for the Soviets to wrench independence from Galicia.”
Vasylyna frowned. She was quiet for a reflective moment as the train rumbled on. Olena had been sure to educate her on the upheaval and violence that had occurred in young Ukraine. “It’s hard to imagine anything bad ever happening here.”
“Well, for now it’s at peace. Let’s hope that with the end of the USSR and some stability from the Yushchenko administration it’s allowed to remain that way.” She gave her granddaughter’s hand a squeeze. “I haven’t seen you use your camera since we crossed the border, dearie, are you out of film already?”
Vasylyna glanced down at the graduation gift resting in her lap, she’d kept it close all summer. “We’re moving too fast, I don’t think the photos would turn out well.”
Olena nodded in understanding. They’d always been able to interpret what the other really meant. It seemed almost sacrilegious to attempt to jam the vast landscape onto film.
The train continued to coast through the mountains. For the last miles of the journey the elderly woman found herself softly humming songs which her father’s men had once bellowed proudly off key at parties. Melodies Danylo used to strum on the bandura in the shade of their garden. It wouldn't be long now.
“My father should be buried here,” said Olena. The bristly evergreens stood like an honor guard as the train cut through the Carpathians.
“He could have been,” Pavlo mumbled between gulps of gin. He had already drained two glasses that evening and was three fingers through the third. Olena tried not to look at him. His heavy eyelids and the blunt angles of his jaw were cut no differently from his grandfather’s stoic face. Somehow, it made him even more of a disappointment.
Olena had never expected to return home. For forty years, give or take a decade, she’d maintained her devout disinterest in succession. It was Pavlo who had wanted... this. When he was still a child, he often pointed up at the moon and stars and insisted they visit one day. This present journey seemed no more practical than those boyish notions.
The ice made a clinking noise against the glass as he swirled the contents of his drink. “We’ll be to Lviv soon.”
“Yes,” nodded Galina. She was draped across a recamier, one hand absentmindedly playing with the pearls on her necklace, the other holding a dwindling cigarette. Her parents had been refugees as well. They had left her heirloom linguistic knowledge of Surzhyk, as well as a dusty bank account—an inheritance about as useful as she was. “Navolska will be there to greet us, won’t he darling?” Her voice was airy and trance-like in a way only Xanax and alcohol can produce.
Olena shook her head. “He can wait until tomorrow to talk with me. I would like to leave for the hotel as soon as we arrive.”
“It’s only 4 o’clock,” said Pavlo. “He is the one who paid for all of this, remember.” He motioned around at the private car.
Sometimes speaking with her son felt more like shouting into the wind.
“It will be maybe an hour, an hour and a half. That’s all he wants.”
Olena felt her granddaughter take her soft but wrinkled hand in her own. She cupped it as gently as she would a little prayer book. The young woman was normally such a chatterbox but hadn’t said anything since they’d crossed the border. The last rays of sunshine seemed to form a nimbus around her as she marveled at the land from which the Skoropadsky family had originally sprung. The awe written across her face was no different from that of any Christian kneeling before icons in veneration.
Pavlo and Galina prattled on, but Olena decided to tune them out. “Are you enjoying yourself, Vasylyna?”
“It’s so beautiful, Babusia. Like when you first took me to the ocean.”
The elderly woman nodded, a sliver of a smile crossed her lips. “More than beautiful, my dear. Mountains, forests, it’s all very useful to those who live here—and very hindersome to those who don’t. There’s a reason it took so much blood for the Soviets to wrench independence from Galicia.”
Vasylyna frowned. She was quiet for a reflective moment as the train rumbled on. Olena had been sure to educate her on the upheaval and violence that had occurred in young Ukraine. “It’s hard to imagine anything bad ever happening here.”
“Well, for now it’s at peace. Let’s hope that with the end of the USSR and some stability from the Yushchenko administration it’s allowed to remain that way.” She gave her granddaughter’s hand a squeeze. “I haven’t seen you use your camera since we crossed the border, dearie, are you out of film already?”
Vasylyna glanced down at the graduation gift resting in her lap, she’d kept it close all summer. “We’re moving too fast, I don’t think the photos would turn out well.”
Olena nodded in understanding. They’d always been able to interpret what the other really meant. It seemed almost sacrilegious to attempt to jam the vast landscape onto film.
The train continued to coast through the mountains. For the last miles of the journey the elderly woman found herself softly humming songs which her father’s men had once bellowed proudly off key at parties. Melodies Danylo used to strum on the bandura in the shade of their garden. It wouldn't be long now.