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 | Saša Radonjić | |
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detail from: KRK Art dizajn
Tea with Kublai Khan
I begin with the conductor on tram line number two. A face I see every day, yet one that fiercely resists any attempt at description. So, I’ll simply say this – The conductor had the face of a jellyfish.The previous evening, while the rows of letters in the book I was reading lost their geometric order, twisting and stretching like a tram composition in motion, he suddenly rose from the endless whiteness of the pages and charged me a ticket for a night without dreams. And he said – he – the conductor with the face of an owl – the following:“Not only will you dream nothing, but your entire next day will be empty, objectless, stripped bare, and, in fact, unnecessary.”Opening my eyes in the morning after a night without sleep, I said aloud: “And why should it be any different?”Then I washed my face, brushed my teeth, dressed elegantly – befitting such an objectless day – went to work, returned home after eight hours, and while hanging my favorite brown tweed jacket on the hanger, I found, curled up and fast asleep at the bottom of the wardrobe, none other than – KUBLAI KHAN himself.But how was that possible – the conductor said nothing would happen, and he never makes mistakes. Yet, however much I trusted the conductor with the face of a fireplace, I trusted my own eyes more, fixed on Kublai Khan, who, peacefully and deeply inhaling the stale air of our apartment, slept hidden in the lee of a particleboard wardrobe veneered in a color that – on closer inspection – was actually the color of the steppe.I gently laid my jacket on the armchair, closed the wardrobe door so that the grandson of Genghis Khan and conqueror of China would not have light fall directly on his face, then tiptoed to the radiator and turned up the heat, for his shimmering imperial robes were silk, and therefore unsuited to the climate of our apartment.Satisfied that all was in order, I undressed, intending to nap myself after a long day of work. But just as I lay down on the couch, a gigantic blowfly appeared from nowhere, circled the chandelier several times, and dive‑bombed straight onto the tip of Kublai Khan’s nose.I leapt up immediately and with a swift motion of the hand shooed it away, but it soon returned to the same spot. It was likely drawn to Khan’s skin – in both color and texture resembling lemon peel.I found myself in a terribly delicate situation – faced with the possibility that the conqueror of China might awaken in a wardrobe with a fly, a miniature demon, perched on his nose. I had to think quickly and eliminate the intruder – quietly, precisely, silently. I simply could not allow Khan to wake before I borrowed from the neighbor a porcelain tea set and prepared the drink in the traditional manner to which my esteemed guest was accustomed.But to kill a fly silently – I don’t know that anyone has ever succeeded in that. Still, time was passing, my wife’s return from work approached, and before that, I absolutely had to drink tea with Kublai Khan.“And why?” the conductor with the face of – picking his nose with a finger as long as an egg – would ask. God, I didn’t mean to say “egg,” I meant something else, but I don’t know what. Fine, let it be – he picked his nose with a finger as long as an egg.But the fly – what about it? Ah yes, exactly that: I could smear the tip of my nose, long as a finger, with the yolk of an egg and lure this airborne nuisance into a sticky trap of eternal life. For an egg symbolizes something like that – I think – eternal life.So I did, and we finally rid ourselves of the fly.Now quickly to the neighbor for the porcelain tea set. Then I’ll lower the blinds, lock both locks from the inside so my wife cannot enter, and also plug that tiny gap between the blinds and the window frame to prevent her from peeking in during the tea ceremony. I must also check whether I have that excellent Lipton Earl Grey in leaf form – though leaves are not quite appropriate. I’ll have to grind them into fine powder; I believe Kublai Khan is accustomed to tea prepared that way.Then adjust the lighting, change the tablecloth, remove the TV and the icon of the Holy Trinity. Only then, completely at peace, will I surrender to the enchanting ritual of preparing tea.But first – the neighbor’s tea set.…And why am I not going? Why am I frozen, completely paralyzed, like one of those wax figures? Why am I dressed in silk and sitting curled up at the bottom of the wardrobe with Mongol‑slanted pupils? And why am I no longer horrified by the idea of visiting the neighbor who is, in fact, the conductor with the face of a dolphin, a sorcerer ready to transform me – KUBLAI KHAN – with a single kiss into a petal of a Mongolian orchid or a peaceful clerk in an oil company?
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