People I knew told me that the tunnel was wide enough for a VW Golf to pass through it. I never tested the claim: probably because of the disdain I feel for empirical proof
In any other town, a pirates’ escape tunnel would be a tourist attraction. The fact that it was left to become a drain should not be ascribed to a conscious plan of the local authorities, but to their negligence – a unique blend of idleness, impudence and fanaticism – which is interpreted here as consistent non-interference in God’s will and His competencies. When Communism collapsed, the local population rediscovered God and started flocking to the mosques, and it became common to complain about dysfunctional municipal services at the local council and for staff to reply that the heap of rubbish that lay stinking in front of your house was there because God wanted it to be:
“If He wanted us to remove the dead horse from your parking slot, we would already have done it,” an official told me once.
“If who wanted you to?” I asked nervously.
“Out, get out!” he shouted.
As I hurried away down the corridor, fearing that I had involuntarily experienced proof once again that dialogue is the most overrated thing in the world, I heard the fellow banging the drawers of his desk and repeating to himself: “If who? Whaddaya mean If who??”
Searching for a path, the water found the tunnel – it was as simple as that. And then it worked its way out of the tunnel: it breached the fifty-metre tall Cyclopean walls of the Old Town and, true to Kant’s definition of the sublime as beauty we experience as fearful, surged into the sea in a mighty torrent.
It may have been a state of emergency, but there was no lack of alcohol in the shops and the black-market cigarette trade still flourished. In Sulyo’s crummy shop, where everything was twice as expensive as elsewhere, I was the only buyer anyway. When some local informed me that Sulyo’s stocks of Rubin white wine, brandy and Johnny Walker were, if not inexhaustible, then at least sufficient for me to drink for another year of floods, all cause for concern disappeared from my mind. I kept buying my cigarettes via the Tadić delivery system: you call them at any hour of the day or night, and the Tadićs bring you a carton of cigarettes within half an hour. The combined IQ of all the Tadićs did not exceed 200, but they had certainly organized a proper little family business: the father sold cigarettes at the market, while his sons darted about town on rattletrap Vespas, delivering them to bars and houses.
“For every four cartons you got a free Coca-Cola,” the youngest Tadić told me one evening around midnight as he slugged a litre bottle into my hand.
“Listen,” I said to him, “I see you got the idea of the free Cola from pizza delivery services, but if you think about it you would realise how absurd it is. Cola may go with pizza, but with cigarettes you need alcohol or coffee.”
He looked at me bluntly through the streams of sweat running down his face. He was computing inside.
“We can’t give away liquor. That wouldn’t pay off,” he told me after a pause for computation that seemed as long as the Peloponnesian, Hundred Years’, Guatemalan, and all the Punic wars put together.
“Alright, but how about a hundred grams of coffee?”
“Yeah, that would work,” he beamed.
“There you go! Do it like that from now on. But I’ll keep the Cola all the same – it goes with whisky.”
* * *
Now that I was provisioned with everything an honourable man could need, I gladly accepted Maria’s invitation to go to Bojana River for the May-Day holidays. That was typical of her and part of her charm that I found so irresistible: she thought it was perfectly natural and normal to leave a flood-stricken town and go to where there is even more water, just for a change of scene.
She, Goran and Radovan woke me before dawn, bursting into the house like a SWAT unit. Even before I could open my eyes, Maria was rummaging loudly in the kitchen trying to find a vessel to make coffee in, while the other two attacked what was left of last night’s Vecchia.
“Come on, get this into you,” Radovan passed me a glass of alcohol. “You know what they say: you have to fight fire with fire.”
Then Maria arrived with coffee in a Teflon frying pan.
“You don’t have any detergent, and this was the only thing that was clean.”
Goran found glasses beneath the armchair and the bed, and Maria ladled the coffee into them.
“The three-day rule applies here,” he said.
“Which is?” I asked.
“The same as the three-second rule: what’s been on the floor for less than three seconds or longer than three days isn’t dirty and you can eat and drink out of it,” was his reply.
Radovan came from some God-forsaken place in the Krajina borderlands. He claimed he was a close relative of a well-known Bosnian Serb folk-singer. Having a nationalist bard like that in the family opened many doors for him here. That’s the kind of time it was. Montenegrin ethno-fascism was comparable with the German variety in terms of its intensity. Its relative lack of coherence and effectiveness at killing can be put down to Montenegrins’ legendary laziness and incompetence in organization.
Radovan brought his wife, children and mother with him. His daughters were spectacularly ugly – prime specimens of negative natural selection – but they were not nearly as shocking as his wife. Even the budget of an average Hollywood movie would not have been enough to rectify her appearance. Such disfigurement is a rarity, even in the history of literature. At first she reminded me of one of Tolkien’s orcs, but later I realized what ought to have been obvious all along: that God created the woman not in his own likeness, but in that of Dorian Gray.
Radovan claimed to be a talented cook and even to have healing hands. There was no one who believed it and gave him a job, so he just used his hands for lifting bottles of beer, and he was able to fit more amber fluid in his small body than the laws of physics allowed, I can vouch for that. He was a first-rate liar and intelligent enough to know that you can always rely on people’s greed. He found business partners in cafés and bars, where he would booze with them until the small hours. Then, when they were drunk enough, he would ply them with the bizarrest of ‘business plans’ and ardently describe ‘investment opportunities’ until they took the bait and turned their pockets inside out for him. The way Radovan conducted his business did not differ substantially from the functionings of global financial capitalism, which is a euphemism for the Ponzi scheme. The Radovan scheme differed from the Ponzi scheme only in so far as Radovan never paid a single instalment to anyone – not one cent of profit. Since I was interested in psychoanalysis, I understood that Radovan could be said to be part of real-existing financial capitalism. He never paid any dividends as an enticement for further investment, which would mean greater losses in the long-run, and there was no false hope in making gains – as soon as you gave money to