“What are you doing?†the neighbor’s wife asked when she was here earlier in the evening, coming to pick up something her husband, the neighbor needed.
“What I’m doing is making this place safer for a deaf person,†I said. “Can you see one needs a whole lot of lamps and lights now, that one didn’t before?â€
I’d only done it to the living room thus far, but those windows were all now covered, using dark-colored bed-sheets, double-ply.
“But at least stalking primitives can’t peek inside now.â€
“Don’t you think you’re overdoing it?†she asked.
“No, madam, no. I’m not going to stop until this place until this place is 100% secure against stalking primitives who, being unsportsmanlike in their conduct, might try to take advantage of that I can’t hear they‘re around, and do me grievous harm.â€
“Well, I think you might be overdoing it a little bit.â€
- - - - - - - - - -
She said she’d finally read
Cowboy Among the Reds, although being a woman, she still liked the other one better.
“It’s scary, how you trust people,†she said. “No matter who it is, you trust them.â€
Well, I suppose that’s a problem for the deaf, I said; “after all, hearing people know each other’s life story, know everything there is to know about each other, upon their first encounter, whereas non-hearing people don’t know anything about someone else, at least not until after a very long time.
“It uncomplicates life for us, just simply trusting everybody, and letting the chips fall where they may.â€
“It wasn’t the scariest, but it was one of the scariest parts of
Cowboy Among the Reds, when you had all those problems getting your visa renewed, and you trusted someone
nobody else would dare trust.â€
“But as you already know, it worked out well in the end.â€
- - - - - - - - - -
She was referring to my use of an hostile alien to get the visas renewed. The official renewal fee at the time was $30, good for three months, but the people at that office demanded $500.
They might as well’ve demanded a million bucks; I didn’t have $500, and there was no way I could get it.
I did however have a hundred dollars.
I sought out an Iraqi, widely known as an effective middle-man. I was fully aware of the risks; after all, this was the mid-1990s, and Democrat Bill Clinton was still daily bombing that country north of Baghdad.
Iraq was under a global embargo; they couldn’t buy anything or sell anything.
And at the same time, Ukraine was being sent massive amounts of humanitarian aid--which at the airport in Kiev, mysteriously always got re-routed south to Baghdad.
This middle-man, who was at the time hopping around in the sack with a woman high in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, was involved in all that.
- - - - - - - - - -
There’d been some anxiety about such a person having my valuable U.S. passport in his possession, but I was worried least of anybody. I worried
somewhat, but not enough to lose any sleep over it.
I wasn’t someone representing the United States, nor any other government. I wasn’t an employee of some great big huge multi-national corporation, nor did I work for any of these “non“-profit do-good organizations.
I was just franksolich, a nobody.
My passport other than in my own hands, would be worthless.
- - - - - - - - - -
To make a long story short, the guy didn’t want to have anything to do with me; he hated white Christian dogs, Americans in particular, and besides, to him, a hundred bucks wasn’t even a trifle.
He really hated me, almost as much as the primitives hate franksolich.
Finally, near the time of expiry of my visa, one day I followed him to one of those workers' flats, where he apparently had arranged a tryst with a woman (not the one from the Foreign Ministry).
He knew I’d followed him. I stood outside the building, waiting in the cold and snow and wind for seven hours, after which he came out. To get rid of me, he finally agreed to get me a new visa. I gave him my passport and the hundred dollars, and he told me where and when to meet him, to get it back.
I had to prevail upon his “services,†always for a hundred dollars, three times, and he never let me down.
There was much that happened inbetweentimes, but I don’t want to give away
too many details of what’s in
Cowboy Among the Reds, because already knowing them, nobody’d read the book.
- - - - - - - - - -
“But you know the rest of the story,†I reminded the neighbor’s wife. “The first three months I was over there, I was constantly stopped and money demanded for this thing or another thing, or wasn’t allowed into certain places.
“It took a while for it to dawn on me, but suddenly I had no such problems; nobody demanded money from me, and I was given access to wherever I wanted to go, to see whatever I wanted to see.
“I didn’t bother paying attention to the stamps and signatures of the visas; it was all Greek to me anyway. The dates were in numerals, and I could understand that, but nothing else.
“The night before I left that time and place, and some narcotics policemen were holding a farewell party for me.
“At some point, one of them, curious, asked if he could see my passport. When he looked at the visa’d pages, he let out a long low whistle and passed it around.
“Other than my first visa, of course gotten from the Ukrainian embassy in Washington, D.C., all the rest were from another place.
“The visa renewals were all stamped and signed by different near-the-top-of-the-pyramid officials of the Ukrainian
militsiya, the secret police, names recognized in that country.
“It was no wonder I hadn’t had any problems.
“Anyway, so you see, madam,†I said to the neighbor’s wife, “I’m
truly aware of great risks I take, despite that everybody seems to think I’m not, and because it always comes out well in the end, I take them.â€
to be continued