Istanbul Literary Review - September 2011 Edition (#21)
Istanbul Literary Review - September 2011 Edition (#21)
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My Second Death
by
Farida Samerkhanova

Steve was sitting on the bench in the park and did not seem to notice anything around. All suicidal people are like this. Separation with his girlfriend felt like the end of the world. I was sitting beside him. He neither saw nor felt me.

People should not want to die. I died in the fall of 1974 in the Soviet Union . Now they call it Russia . I was a student and lived in the campus. The campus was ten minutes away from the University. I could make it in five minutes if I ran.

In Ukraine he used to be Stepan. His girlfriend has just been deported after her refugee claim failed. First they took her to jail. Then they put her on a plane. They sent her back to Israel after ten years in Canada . He could not stop the removal. No money to hire a lawyer. He would have followed her, but he was not eligible for travel. He was desperate, like only very young people could be.

When I died, I had just finished school. I came to study in a big city from a small remote village. I did not speak Russian. I only knew the language of my fathers. It was so hard for me to study, but I was doing my best.

The sun touched the horizon. Steve headed to the subway station. What was in his mind? The best thing for him was to have a good drink. I had never had alcohol in my life, but I saw in the movies that people drink when they are upset. They say it helps.

The deputy dean was very obsessed with discipline issues. His people searched students' rooms for vodka. We did not have drugs at that time, but students liked wine and vodka.

Steve was a handsome man. His girlfriend was lucky. I had never had a boyfriend. I was seventeen. I never kissed. I thought that maybe I could fall in love with Steve. He stood on the platform looking at the rails. Trains kept coming. He was thinking. I can get human thoughts, but not always.

Only big cities, like Moscow and Leningrad have subways. We had buses and streetcars. There was a streetcar line on my way from home to the University. If I ran, it was two and a half minutes from home to the line and two and a half minutes from the line to the University, or vice versa.

Steve's hands were shaking. He was scared. He was sweating. I knew what he was up to. He was standing at the edge of the platform. The trains emerged from the arch, moving very fast. Streetcars in my city also run very fast.

All of a sudden Steve saw me. I knew he did. His eyes were wide open with surprise. I know I looked funny in my old-fashioned clothes. No one else could see me. Others passed through me, as if I was made of air. He knew I was dead.

The subway trains rattle like streetcars. Metal against metal makes a screaming sound. I was running my two and a half and two and a half minutes' distance. I knew the deputy dean was at the entrance with his notebook, registering those who were late. Afterwards the notes would go to the students' council. If I were late for classed, I would not get my scholarship. The screaming sound was softened with my flesh.

I threw myself between the wheels and the rails. It felt exactly like thirty five years ago. Before I died again I looked at Steve. Now that he saw me disfigured he would not jump.

He would go home and Skype to his girlfriend. They would figure out what to do. When I was alive, we did not have Skype. And computers were as big as a wardrobe.

Istanbul Literary Review - September 2011 Edition (#21)
Farida Samerkhanova
Farida Samerkhanova
Canada
Farida Samerkhanova lives in Toronto, Ontario. She graduated from a University in Bashkortonstan , Russia . Her native language is Tatarian , her second is Russian and English is her third, which has become her passion. Farida Samerkhanova's poems, short stories and essays were published by literary magazines and anthologies in Canada , USA , Turkey , Great Britain and Russia .
Istanbul Literary Review - September 2011 Edition (#21)