From Offene Blende (Open Shutter)

IF 0.1 3区 文学 0 LITERARY REVIEWS CHICAGO REVIEW Pub Date : 2002-07-01 DOI:10.2307/25304971
A. Strubel, M. Dembo
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Abstract

Christine has been living in New York ever since she came to the U.S. illegally from East Germany in the mid- 1980s and is working in a small theater. In the mid-1990s, when she runs into Leah, a West German photographer, she pretends to be an American by birth. But Leah finds out who she really is, and after tracking her down manages to break into the theater. -AS In the morning, shortly before seven, when it's still quiet and the cleaning woman is the only one she meets in the hall, Christine goes up to her office to plan her day. The cleaning woman nods with every step she takes, flapping her hands back and forth to dry them off. Every morning the soles of her blue sneakers squeak along the polished floor. Then, firmly holding on to her pail and scrubbing brush, she disappears, and Christine takes the key off the board. In the beginning, she used to sleep in the theater, in a dress that felt rough and heavy on her skin. During the day it hung in the huge closet on the other side of the room, where now only files are kept, files and a few pencil stubs. Jeff sharpens them till they're down to a fraction of a centimeter so he won't have to buy new ones. Jeff, the smell of wood, and the squeaking rubber soles on the linoleum floor: these are more familiar to her than anything else in the world. She feels like an old woman and suddenly realizes why there are never any young people involved in the theater. Stage characters are either children or old people, never young people. One can't afford to wait around. Only children know that, and old people. They live one day at a time. Christine closes the closet door, which had come open during the night. The room is already filled with glaring light that promises a hot day. There was a time when this would have bothered her. The blind is lowered halfway, and she stands there a while, gazing out at the empty street. Somewhere in the house she hears footsteps; the sound is muffled and far away, as though coming through glass. These are not the footsteps of the cleaning woman. They're determined, marked by brief pauses, sometimes barely audible, and then suddenly very loud as though they were right outside her door. It could be one of the actors. But it's too early; rehearsals don't start till eight. Nobody walks around in the house this early. As she always does, Christine had closed the front door behind her and checked to make sure it was locked before taking the key out of the lock. No one could have followed her in. Maybe there's a faucet dripping somewhere. The file binders on her desk are a mess; one is tipped over. Christine picks it up, leafs through some pages, and puts it back, in line with the others. Jeff has not touched them for years. It's the deficits that make him do it now. The increasingly bad runs of the productions. He isn't one to rummage through the files and, as back then, she won't mention it to him, even though this time it's disquieting. She can still hear the footsteps, irregular but persistent. A dull pounding. She listens for a while, can't figure out where they're coming from. They seem to be everywhere; on the stairs, in the hall, and inside her, in the rhythm of her heart, but that sounds the way it always does, even though without coffee it seems to be beating more slowly. The footsteps are outside on the stairs in her head; they run from one side of her head to the other, tapping, clacking against her forehead from within. Steps made by the broad square heels on a woman's shoes. Shoes that don't go with elegant stockings. Christine stands there, motionless. Down on the street someone is fussing around with the garbage cans in front of O'Heave's store. Maybe the footsteps are those of the person on the street, even though the window is closed and only very loud and high-pitched noises can penetrate it. Outside it's midsummer; the heat has shriveled the leaves on the trees; the office hardly cools off overnight. …
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源自Offene Blende(打开快门)
克里斯汀在上世纪80年代中期从东德非法来到美国后一直住在纽约,目前在一家小剧场工作。上世纪90年代中期,当她遇到西德摄影师利亚(Leah)时,她假装自己是美国人。但莉亚发现了她的真实身份,在追踪她之后,她设法闯入了剧院。a:早上,快到七点的时候,还很安静,她在大厅里只遇到一个打扫卫生的女工。清洁女工每走一步都会点头,来回拍打双手,把它们擦干。每天早晨,她那双蓝色运动鞋的鞋底在擦得锃亮的地板上吱吱作响。然后,紧紧抓住她的桶和刷子,她消失了,克里斯汀把钥匙从木板上拿下来。一开始,她常常在剧院里睡觉,穿着一件粗糙而沉重的衣服。白天,它挂在房间另一边的大壁橱里,现在那里只放着文件、文件和一些铅笔头。杰夫把它们磨得只剩几分之一厘米,这样他就不用再买新的了。杰夫,木头的气味,油毡地板上橡胶鞋底发出的吱吱声:这些对她来说比世界上任何其他东西都更熟悉。她觉得自己像个老妇人,突然意识到为什么从来没有年轻人参与到戏剧中来。舞台人物不是小孩就是老人,从来不是年轻人。谁也等不起。只有孩子知道,老人也知道。他们活在当下。克里斯汀关上了壁橱的门,它是在夜里打开的。房间里已经充满了刺眼的光线,预示着今天会很热。曾几何时,这件事会让她感到困扰。窗帘放下一半,她在那里站了一会儿,凝视着外面空荡荡的街道。在房子的某个地方,她听到了脚步声;声音低沉而遥远,仿佛透过玻璃传来。这不是清洁女工的脚印。他们是坚定的,以短暂的停顿为标志,有时几乎听不见,然后突然非常响亮,好像他们就在她的门外。可能是某个演员干的。但现在还太早;排练八点才开始。没人这么早在家里走来走去。像往常一样,克里斯汀关上了她身后的前门,并检查了一下,确保门锁上了,然后才把钥匙从锁里拿出来。不可能有人跟着她进来。也许哪里有水龙头在滴水。她桌上的文件夹乱七八糟;一个被打翻了。克里斯汀把它捡起来,翻了几页,然后放回原处,和其他的放在一起。杰夫已经好几年没碰它们了。是赤字让他现在这么做的。越来越糟糕的演出。他不是那种会翻找文件的人,就像以前一样,她也不会对他提起这件事,尽管这一次这件事令人不安。她仍然能听到脚步声,不规则但持久。沉闷的重击。她听了一会儿,不知道他们是从哪里来的。他们似乎无处不在;在楼梯上,在大厅里,在她体内,在她的心跳声中,但那听起来总是这样,即使没有咖啡,它的跳动似乎更慢了。脚步声在外面的楼梯上萦绕在她的脑海;它们从她头的一边跑到另一边,从里面敲打着她的前额。由女鞋宽阔的方跟踏出的台阶。与优雅的长袜不搭的鞋子。克里斯汀站在那里,一动不动。在街上,有人在奥海夫商店前的垃圾桶旁忙活。也许是街上的人的脚步声,即使窗户是关着的,只有非常响亮和高分贝的噪音才能穿透它。外面是盛夏;炎热使树上的叶子枯萎了;办公室一夜之间很难降温。…
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CHICAGO REVIEW
CHICAGO REVIEW LITERARY REVIEWS-
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期刊介绍: In the back issues room down the hall from Chicago Review’s offices on the third floor of Lillie House sit hundreds of unread magazines, yearning to see the light of day. These historic issues from the Chicago Review archives may now be ordered online with a credit card (via CCNow). Some of them are groundbreaking anthologies, others outstanding general issues.
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