Iceland review - 2019, Side 124

Iceland review - 2019, Side 124
120 Iceland Review of cigars, like raisins and spice, but also the scent of the perfume he gave her. This coupled fragrance clung to Elenóra’s hair when she wore the necklace and he smelled it every time he bent down to kiss her cheek. “Maybe your mother has it.” “She says that you do.” “Well, unfortunately, I don’t know where it is.” They fall silent and Sólmundur remembers sit- ting with the kids in the living room when they were little and listening to the peals of laughter and chit- chat coming from the kitchen, where Elenóra and Sólveig were making coffee. He’d never really known how to talk to them. The sunlight accentuates the veils of steam rising out of his coffee cup, which he hasn’t picked up once. “Well, I’ve got to get ready to go now,” he says. “I’ve got to go meet my friend.” “Steingrímur Oddi?” asks the girl – almost mock- ingly, he thinks. “Yes, Steingrímur Oddi,” he repeats. “Are you sure? You haven’t had anything. Have you eaten anything today?” “I told you I wasn’t hungry.” “Okay,” she says, getting to her feet quickly. Her brother does the same. “Let me take care of the dishes, at least,” says the girl. “Since you didn’t have anything.” She collects the cups and puts them on the tray with the pastry plate. She didn’t have any Danish either, although her brother had three pieces. Coffee sloshes out of Sólmundur’s untouched, brim-full coffee cup, leaving behind a ring. Sólmundur wipes the coaster clean with the sleeve of his sweater and then puts it away with the others. He and the boy follow his granddaughter into the hall and stand by the door while she disappears further into the apartment with the tea set. They hear her turn on the faucet in the kitchen. The boy crouches down to tie his shoes. When he stands back up, they are eye to eye, the same height. He fishes his jacket out of the pile on the chair. “We can drop you off down at the community centre, if you want,” he says. “No, thanks,” says Sólmundur. “I like to walk.” “Okay, but it’s really cold out. And icy, although you can’t see it. Be careful.” “Of course.” “You should get a mobile phone. That’s what mom says – that it’s absurd you don’t have a phone, in case something happens.” “She says that, does she?” The boy glances quickly at Sólmundur, as though he’s accidentally spilled a secret. “Yeah. She worries about you.” “I’m fine.” His grandson shakes his head and an angry expression flits across his wide, young face. “You’re just like her,” he mutters. At first, Sólmundur thinks the boy’s talking about his sister, since he keeps glancing into the hallway for her, but then he realises that he’s talking about his mother. Things have been cold between her and Sólmundur for a long time – one of those long silences that solidifies in your throat and can’t be softened just like that. The silence between them is probably older, from before Elenóra died. He’d never needed to talk to his daughter that much, although he enjoyed watching her grow up and thrive and become a person. Elenóra had taken care of talking for the both of them. The girl is in the kitchen for quite a long time. The water runs and runs. Finally, she turns off the tap, reappears, and takes her jacket from the chair. She’s wearing high-heeled boots, didn’t take them off like her brother did. “I left the pastry so you can have some later,” she says. “Thank you,” says Sólmundur. “And thanks for the visit.” “We’ll call ahead next time,” says the boy. “But just make sure not to leave the phone off the hook.” He doesn’t dare look in his grandfather’s eyes as he’s chiding him, gazes down at his shoes abashedly and fiddles with the zipper on his jacket. “Have a good time with your friend,” says the girl with a broad smile. “I will,” answers Sólmundur hesitantly, still unsure of whether she’s making fun of him. She leans forward, gives him a hug, and kisses him on the cheek. He smells her hair, the aroma of something just under her cloying perfume that he hadn’t notice before. It’s a familiar scent – spicy and sweet – and calls to mind hazy memories that nearly bring tears to his eyes. He shakes himself out of it, lets her go, and silently curses himself for turning into a weepy old man. “You’ll let me know if you find the necklace, right?” she asks, stepping across the threshold and looking him straight in the eye. Sólmundur nods, but then shakes his head in agitation. “I don’t know where it is.” His grandson says goodbye with a handshake. Sólmundur walks them to the elevator and watches the doors slide closed before going back inside, lock- ing the door, and setting the chain. He closes the window in the living room and then stands hidden behind the curtain, watching them come out and walk in the direction of the little sedan parked all by itself in the furthest corner of the park- ing lot. They’re arguing. The boy is walking behind her and talking a mile a minute, gesticulating wildly.
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