“A More real city might not have suited me so well . . . but
[this city] was in its death phase; it lay still and let me look at it,
and think about it, and look again. In a living city,
I could never have noticed so much. Living cities don’t hold still.”
— John Irving, The World According to Garp
Jana looked down at the giant four on her chest and found
little comfort in the giant fours on the chests of her entire
tour group. They religiously followed the guide, who got to
carry a likewise-branded paddle-sign, signaling which tour
group she was giving the tour to. Jana had signed up for the
tour to see Arvo Part at the opera house and should have
expected to see the legendary composer on stage for a few
moments and then the back of conductor Paul Hiller’s head
during the rest of that evening’s performance. She reminded
herself to inquire if her mother had a similar experience on
her own pilgrimage to see Astor Piazzolla in the early 80s. After
the musical reflection, she turned her ear back to the guide
who was offering tidbits about the arbitrarily placed clock
along the roadside outside the national museum.
Burton felt disappointment upon entering the museum
that was to be his safe refuge from the rain. The museum,
assuming he interpreted ajaloomuuseum correctly, had only
two galleries which could all too easily be mistaken for one
gallery. The first gallery held a permanent exhibit on the Estonian
Kroon, and with each passing display case, Burton found
it harder to see any resemblance between the artifacts on
display and the coins filling the bottom of his pockets. After
skimming the second brief display of the Estonian History,
Burton headed back into the circular labyrinth of cobblestone
streets heading towards the center of old town Tallinn.
The square was filled with tagged tourists following their
shepherd-guides along the cobblestone streets. Jana imagined
the vision that would greet someone from the café up in the
yellow building at the far edge of the square. She looked
down to see the group had moved down the road and was
now in front of a restaurant named after Italian filmmaker
Federico Fellini. Jana made her way to the group just in time
to see that the group had voted in favor of dining there. She
felt glad and spent the lunch hoping someone would inquire
about the restaurant’s namesake so she could integrate with
the group more and show off that she had actually seen 8 ½.
From the café in the top of the yellow building, Fellini’s
looked like a green island on the other side of a swirling lake
of mixing tour groups, each group resembling a hoard of ants
carrying food back to the nest. Burton looked down and buried
his nose back in the worn paperback he had carried just
about everywhere since leaving Frankfurt airport two weeks
ago.
A couple from one of the cruise ships was eating at the next
table. The woman, who was dressed more appropriately for
her native Florida than the Baltic region, asked “What are you
reading?” then explained her intrusion by adding, “I’m always
looking for books.”
Burton replied, “It’s the screenplay for My Dinner with
Andre.”
“Andre?” she asked.
Burton would have answered, but she quickly returned
with, “OH! Like the seal! Did you ever see that movie? There
was a seal, and a little girl, and the seal’s name was Andre.”
The last few words sped out her mouth sounding like
“andthesealsnamewasAndre!”
“The Andre refers to Andre Gregory, a famous theater
director,” Burton corrected.
The woman, whom despite the appearance of taking many
art classes to pad her GPA back in college, looked at Burton
with puzzlement. The waitress arrived presenting Burton’s
lunch on a brown corkboard of a tray. It wasn’t the quiche or
the atmosphere but the attempt at human conversation that
could have been better.
Nobody inquired about the identity of Fellini. In fact the
waitress’ short, mandatory questions was the only conversation
Jana received during lunch. Upon departure, they were
allowed to wander the various merchant carts in the square
with instructions to meet back in front of Fellini’s in half an
hour. Jana headed to the far corner of the square and entered
the furthest shop she saw. Her spirit sagged when she found
a run-of-the-mill souvenir shop inside filled with mediocre
goods, and tourists buying them. A discussion had started
around one of the display tables discussing the pros and cons
of the various guides. A large woman from the States held
sway over the impromptu proceedings, swearing on her God’s
holy book that her guide, nine as indicated by her badge, was
flirting with each and every woman taking the tour. Her cohorts—
an early retiree from tour seven, a middle-aged homemaker
or business professional dressed as a homemaker from
tour twelve, and a teenager who didn’t have a badge covering
her orange t-shirt with words “Cheap Cleavage” scribbled
across it—nodded in agreement. The could-be homemaker
thought the women who flirted back were the guiltier lot.
Despite knowing better, Jana quipped “Well that’s all cheap
cleavage will get ya.”
The women, especially the teenager, looked at the intruder
with mild disdain. Jana, having reinforced the knowledge
that the words on a person’s t-shirt was not the way to enter
a conversation, grabbed the first item she felt on the table
and walked to the register hoping never to see them or their
respective tour groups again.
Exiting the café, Burton instinctively turned right and
followed the streets as they sloped downwards, keeping at a
speed equal with the water flowing down the gutter. As he
walked, the streets grew more crowded and the buildings became
more modern. The ground leveled out and Burton could
see an automobile covered street a half kilometer or so off.
Before he hit the street he turned into a local bookstore with
a bright blue sign reminiscent of the Daily Planet in early
Superman comics. He wiped his feet off on the mat and then
quickly located the section “English Language Books” nestled
in amongst those in the native tongues.
He liked the feel of these books; the rougher cover and
tight binding made for a fresh contrast with the sleek looseness
of the American product. Beyond the section near a
magazine rack, he saw stairs leading up to more sections and
the required coffee shop. No fan of coffee, he shifted focus
back to the shelf. Among the brightly colored contemporary
British authors and the big fat Russian classics carrying the
Penguin Classics symbol of approval, Burton saw a thin blue
book. Picking it up he found that it was The Little Prince. He
had never been drawn to it as a child nor as a nostalgia-minded
adult. He thought back to his poker-buddy and occasional
co-worker who swore on this book, and he decided to buy it.
Taking it, he wrapped it up in the bag and then walked back
into the steady drizzle.
Jana nervously opened her bag. She had no clue as to her
purchase and was glad just to be rid of the stares of the tour
women. She was disappointed in herself—the item nearest her
had been a bright orange neon colored t-shirt with the familiar
“Welcome to Estonia” logo that identifies merchandise
sanctioned by the national tourism board. She didn’t mind
getting a shirt. If it didn’t fit she could always pass it along to
an unsuspecting friend or sister—gifts from foreign countries
are automatically considered special. What disappointed Jana
was that she had gone into the most cliché spot in the whole
square and inadvertently purchased the one thing in the
whole shop every tourist was sure to get. A quick, visual skim
of the area revealed no fewer than five people who had bought
the shirt and another four who had bought it and were now
wearing it. She glanced at her watch and then at the clock
above the café in the big yellow building. She decided she had
enough time to walk further away from the designated meeting
spot. Jana turned and followed the flow of people, heading
down towards the rim of the old town district.
After a few blocks, Jana turned into a large alleyway and
found a small line of merchants specializing in beautiful wool
sweaters. A step above caves carved into the building side of
the open-air market stretched in front of her. One of the people
minding the stand, an elderly woman, watched her. Jana,
finally free of the number-system umbilical cord—if only for
a half hour- had yet to get used to the way locals distanced
themselves from people. The lack of the automatic ‘hey, how
are you’ routine found in big retail chains made shopping a
lonely activity—even if it was less annoying. Jana eventually
picked a dark brown sweater with dirty white weaved in. It
would be an ugly sweater anywhere else – but here it appealed
to her. Jana bought the sweater, and ditched the shirt at a
bench outside one of the inevitable McDonalds.
The girl in the pink dress caught Burton’s eye and did
nothing with it. She was happy with her issue of Total Film
and content to leave Burton with nothing to show for daring
to enter the coffeehouse as escape from the current downpour;
with one hand she turned the pages as one turns a car during
a leisurely drive, while her other hand held an overpriced
drink that she sipped from a straw. Burton thirsted for conversation
and quickly thought of five conversation starters he
could get off the cover. In the end he decided on the opener:
“It’s nosey, I know—but I have to know what you’re reading.”
The girl in the pink dress took an extra-long sip and held
the magazine up so he could read it for himself. Still feeling
Burton’s presence, she looked up at him, moving only her
eyes. “Total Film,” was her first response. She then followed it
with, “Some article on Truffaut.”
She rolled her eyes back to the article. Burton seized the
moment and quickly professed his love for Shoot the Piano
Player. The girl in pink raised the stakes by using the proper
title, “Oh, you mean Tirez sur le Pianiste.”
“Sorry, but I don’t speak Estonian.”
“Neither do I; that was French.” Then she left.
Burton turned his attention from the exiting girl to the
waitress who asked, “What’d you like to drink?”
“Nothing, thanks.”
“Don’t mind her. She never walks out of here with anybody,
never walks in with anybody either. If you saw her
entering and leaving the store alone as often as she does, you’d
think she worked here.”
Burton listened patiently, hoping his lack of comment
would instruct the waitress to inquire as to the thirst of other
patrons. But this waitress was good at her job. “You look like
a smart man,” the waitress said. “I bet you’d answer the trivia
question right.”
Burton spoke, “Trivia question?”
The waitress smiled at having won his interest and explained.
“Every time someone comes in here alone, we offer
the chance for them to earn a free drink—all they have to do
is answer the question up on the blackboard there.”
The waitress nodded across the room at a blackboard with
a nicely chalked question in-between a window and some
form of modern art. Burton read the question to himself:
What was the original title for the film Annie Hall?
“You’re right,” Burton said, “I can answer the question.
The answer is Anhedonia.”
The waitress smiled. “You’re the first person all week to get
it right.”
“If you want a quick replacement question ask them what
it means.”
“I assume you know that as well?”
“It’s the inability to enjoy yourself.”
“Looks like I owe you two coffees.”
“You drink it. I’m going to brave the rain.”
As the drizzle had turned back into downpour, Jana
ducked into a archway halfway back to her tour’s designated
spot. She looked down at her black top and wished she had
worn something else. She looked at her watch and was disappointed
by herself when it took a few moments too long
to realize she had no time to make it back to the tour. She
decided to double check and asked a dancing child in a Pippi
Longstocking-style outfit for the time. Miss Longstocking
looked at her bright green watch and proudly announced
that “The big hand is on the two and the little hand is on the
three.” Jana thanked Miss Longstocking and then quickened
her pace to make up for her tardiness.
Burton left the coffeehouse knowing that starting now,
anybody willing to talk to him would invariably know they
where his second choice. Downpour or not, he headed back
into Old Town. He curved into a covered path and dropped
a kroon in the hat of a violist who played partly recognizable
hymns while his daughter danced in an outfit straight from
Astird Lindgrin’s children’s novels about the redhead.
Jana made all the right turns in the wrong order and ended
up not back in front of Fellini’s but in front of a large medieval-
themed restaurant staffed with disproportioned women
and overweight men. She surrendered to the city and went
to a pay phone. The booth was cut into a building’s side with
a small wooden door to keep amateur eavesdroppers away.
She slid her phone card into the slot and dialed home, to her
mother.
“Hello mom.”
“Jana! You’ve finally called. How’s the pilgrimage.”
“It’s a cruise, mother.”
“If Jesus had a travel agent you bet he’d have traded his
forty nights in the desert for a cruise. Look Jana, before I
forget, your father and I are brushing up on our American
lexicon. We’re traveling there next month and I’m worried
about communicating with the locals.”
“What is it you want to know, Mother?”
“Well, we were wondering if there is a feminine equivalent
to Son of a Bitch.”
“I don’t think so, Mother.”
“Well how do you insult a woman’s parentage?”
“I don’t know, Mother. It seems to take care of itself.”
“Oh. Well, have fun anyway. Do you want to speak to
your father?”
Jana heard her father yell from the other room, “Never
mind dear; he just sends his best. Good-bye, dear—don’t
forget to sit at the higher class table in the dining room.”
Jana hung up first and stayed in the phone booth, looking
out the window.
The covered path abruptly stopped and Burton found
himself on another downhill slope and moved down it. This
path headed deeper into Old Town, and Burton tried to recall
it in his mind. His brain ached from the mental Google on
a dial-up wired brain. He flung his bag around and took out
the train schedule. The rain finished the paper off quickly,
and then died down to nothing as if to mock Burton’s timing.
He threw the paper away and avoided a bum asking him for
his country of origin. Burton walked further down and immediately
knew where he was.
He glanced up at the sign reading Old Hansa, one of the
most popular restaurants in all of Old Town. He then made
his way to the phone booth; he waited for the occupant to
leave and then got in, leaving the door open.
Jana let the next customer into the booth and stepped
outside. She leaned against the wall weighing her options. She
could call the cruise company and have them hail the ship
or she could accept the loss of her parent’s outfits and take
her chances alone. “No, Jana” she thought, “think logically.”
Jana tried to recall the usual departure time from the rest.
The most logical time seemed too right, and too wrong. Jana
glance at her watch, about an hour till five. She’d never find
the cruise ships in time. She hadn’t even found the square.
Bored, she took to eavesdropping on the phone’s current
patron. “Chuck, it’s me. My train schedule got ruined. Do
you have one handy? ...that’s right, rain.”
Jana tried to imagine who Chuck was. Best friend? Brother?
Wife’s former lover? His former lover? Jana chuckled and
looked down the street. An average-sized marquee caught her
eye. The sign advertised a Jaques Tati Film Festival the coming
Saturday. “I could stay for that” she thought. “I’ve loved
Tati’s film ever since I first saw Mr. Hulot’s Holiday.” She
stiffened, worried. “How could I have forgotten?” she said
aloud, following with “I need to get to the ship” even louder.
But how? The trains! She looked to the booth and waited
for Chuck’s friend or wife’s lover to finish and rushed towards
him when he exited.
The woman carrying the wool sweater assaulted him, while
knocking into him sending him backwards. Burton had
enough time to flip through all of his worst fears regarding
homicidal tourists before he fell on the sidewalk. The woman
apologized and he got up, seeing she meant no intentional
harm.
“Sorry,” she said. “I couldn’t help overhearing. Did your
friend have the train schedule? Are you alright?”
“I’m fine.”
“I heard you talking about the train schedule. Did you find
out?”
“My schedule was ruined by the rain. My friend didn’t
know.”
The apologetic-turned-worried woman frowned. “Do you
know where the train depot is? I need to get back to the cruise
ships.”
“I know where the depot is, but even better, I know where
the ships are. You want to get on one or something?”
“I’m already on one—I just got really separated.”
Burton pointed at her chest, “Where’s your badge? I
thought they branded you guys.”
“I think I threw it away. I’m Jana.”
Burton introduced himself then offered: “I guess I could
take you down there.”
“I’d appreciate that, thank you.”
Jana thought of what her mother would think in regards
to her current activity: walking down the foreign Estonian
streets with a strange man. No better remedy to that predicament
than to make him less of a stranger. She started in, “I
overheard your call.”
“I remember you saying that.”
“Oh. I probably did. Are you in town visiting a friend?”
“Chuck? Yeah, I guess I’m visiting Chuck.”
“You guess?”
“I’m planning to go into the smaller villages tomorrow.”
“Then you have friends down there.”
Burton looked up thinking about—or stalling—Jana
couldn’t tell. “I do, but they’re not really the reason I’m traveling
down there.”
Realizing she would be asked the same, Jana asked, “Then
what does bring you to Estonia?”
“I came to find out how to build one of the swings.”
“The swings?”
“You haven’t seen them?”
His last inquiry validated Jana’s feelings that she had
wasted much of her trip with the tourist crowd. She followed
by saying, “These swings must be some sort of cultural experience
the cruise liners miss.”
Burton was enjoying the conversation and found something
to like in her having not seen one of the many things
commonly known as “Estonian swings.” He found her
ignorance made for good practice for when he would have to
explain it back home to those who would assist him in the
building of one on his property.
He explained that they were triangular in appearance and
made entirely of wood; the two sides of the swing had ledges
on them and you stood on one side with a friend on the opposite
side. To begin the swinging motion, the riders alternated,
getting into what is best described as a squatting position.
Burton made sure to emphasize that when the side you were
on was higher than the other, you should be squatting; otherwise
you were in danger of being flung from the swing.
Burton saw Jana smile as he finished explaining.
“Sounds dangerous,” Jana said.
“It could be.”
Jana stopped, distracted by a large building she hadn’t
noticed coming in. It was an eclectic mix of medieval themes
and modern times. She was mostly intrigued by the young
man outside dressed as a minstrel playing a much more modern
instrument singing a song. She caught a few of the lyrics:
I think I know what’s making me sad it’s a yearning for my
own backyard...
“What is that place?” she asked.
“That is the Peppersack Restaurant,” Burton replied, “I’m
working on a theory that suggests no person can walk around
Old Town Tallinn without passing it.”
They stopped and looked at it. Jana noticed Burton mouthing
a few of the words along with the modern minstrel and
quickly asked, “Do you know that song?”
“It’s a favorite of mine, actually.”
They continued walking, albeit slower in hopes of catching
more of the song. “What is it? I can remember hearing it back
home, but I can not recall the title.”
Burton chuckled, “I’ve won a free coffee earlier with a
trivia question—didn’t think I’d find myself asking one.”
Jana pleaded, “Do not make this hard.”
“I won’t. Did you ever see or hear of the film Walkabout?”
The look on her face suggested she had and the tone of
her voice confirmed it, “Do you mean that overtly erotic film
about the outback with Jenny Agutta?”
“It suffers that reputation,” Burton said before explaining
it, “It is Gasoline Alley by Rod Stewart. It’s on the soundtrack
shortly before the dad tries to kill them.”
“Sounds like the feel good movie that year.”
“It was. So, why are you here?”
Jana grimaced “I told you. I’m here on a cruise.”
“You never told me why you were on the cruise. You
certainly never told me why you were on a cruise through the
Baltics.”
Jana continued her grimace.
Burton filled the quiet, “I told you.”
Jana broke, “I’m on the cruise to please my mother.”
“And the Baltic?”
“I chose to see Arvo Part at the opera house last night.
That’s the only reason I chose to visit here.”
“Now you’re off with no reason to continue the journey.”
Jana muttered an agreement.
Burton looked up and saw they had hit a dead end.
Jana worriedly smirked, “I thought you knew it here.”
“I do, we forgot to turn.”
They turned around and headed back towards the Peppersack.
Burton was frustrated. It was a moderately well-off conversation
after all the run-ins he’d had today, and he topped it all
off by getting lost. He turned the attention back to Jana: “So,
pleasing your mother, uh?”
“She thought it would be good for me to get out of the
house.”
“I agree. Everybody should get out of the house.”
They walked in silence for a moment.
“You know,” Burton said, “you’re the first tourist I’ve met
today that’s not half bad. You have a worthwhile reason for
coming, a desire to see the city on your own and the only
pain you’ve caused me was accidental.”
Jana’s face shined with recognition. “You had trouble meeting
non-idiot tourists today too?” Burton nodded yes.
Jana continued, “I wouldn’t have gone back but... This is
going to sound stupid.” Burton egged her on and she continued,
“Well, I had a copy of a Jacques Tati film in my room
and didn’t want to lose it.”
“You’re wrong - that doesn’t sound stupid. Jacques Tati
films are worth keeping.”
Jana stopped as they neared the restaurant, “Is this where
we made the wrong turn?”
“Yeah, I’m pretty sure of it now.”
They walked down the other path leading from the Peppersack.
A while down the path they saw the shipyard. “You
recognize any of those?” Burton asked.
“The big white one with the flags.” Jana’s chuckle was
quickly suppressed when she looked down from the ship and
saw the group coming up the path. They were from a cruise
ship—Jana’s cruise ship. Burton saw the group and inquired,
“You recognize them too, uh?”
“Yeah.”
Jana’s face cringed with recognition as she saw the group
leader see her and wave. The leader shouted, “YEAHNA! Oh
Yeahna! I’m so glad I found you!”
Jana weakly waved. The group leader had stepped up her
speed and was now up close to them. “That’s okay, I found
my way back.”
The leader spotted Burton, “Who is this? A friendly local
showed you the way didn’t he? They are so friendly down
here. I found this lovely little shop that sold the cutest bright
orange neon t-shirts. Can you believe it?”
“Only a little” Jana replied, wanting it to end.
“We’re heading up to the Peppersack restaurant up the
hill for dinner. You should join us. Don’t forget to tip your
friend.” The group leader continued her walk up to the restaurant.
Burton spoke first, “It’s a tradition here that in order to
show respect you finish all the food given to you. It doesn’t
extend to restaurants, but an Estonian chief always notices an
un-empty plate.”
“I’ll show them up for you,” she said.
Afterwards, as he walked the streets along the bay of Tallinn,
he passed a young tourist couple on there way to their
ship. He heard the girl speaking, “I swear she just left this
shirt on a bench. She was carrying some ugly sweater thing.
UGH! Remember when we’re married I have a rule about
souvenirs: An impractical souvenir lacks the location’s name
printed on it.”
Burton shook his head and then continued on his way.
Jana’s dinner provided more conversation than her lunch
did. Instead of being asked nothing, she was asked once to
pass the rolls. She did listen to one of the men describing a
café he was at earlier where they had a trivia question you
could answer to get a free coffee. She missed the question but
found out the question meant the inability to enjoy yourself.
The man laughed, saying he had never heard of anything so
stupid.
“I don’t know” Jana thought. “I mean it takes most of your
day just to find someone worth talking to.”
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