little sparkles.
âBut there are always satellites up there,â Kocha answered finally. âYou can see them very well at night. When Iâm not sleeping I always see them.â
âAnd why arenât you sleeping, old-timer?â
âWell,â Kocha said, every consonant still coming out with a screech, âthe thing is, Iâve got sleeping troubles. Ever since the army, Herman. You know how it goes in the paratroopersâthose drops, the adrenaline . . . it sticks with you, for life.â
âGotcha.â
âSo I bought some sleeping pills. I asked for something that would really knock my socks off. They gave me some kind of weird artificial shit. God knows what theyâre putting in pills these days. Anyway, I started taking it, but it didnât do a thing. I upped the dose and I still couldnât fall asleep. Thing is, though, Iâve started sleeping during the day now. Itâs a real head-scratcher . . .â
âWhat have you been taking?â I asked him. âCan I have a look?â
Kocha rooted through his overall pockets and took out a bottle; the label was a poisonous-looking green. I took the bottle and tried reading it, but I didnât even recognize the characters on it.
âMaybe itâs some sort of cockroach repellent. Who even makes these pills?â
âThey told me the French do.â
âBut look at these hieroglyphsâdoes that look like French to you? Okay, okayâhow about I try one?â
I twisted off the cap, took out a lilac-colored pill, and popped it into my mouth.
âNah, man,â Kocha said, taking back the bottle. âIf you only take one you wonât even feel it. I take at least five.â
Kocha dumped a few pills down his throat, as if to validate this statement.
âGimme that.â I took the bottle back, poured out a few pills, and downed them. Then I just sat there, trying to focus in on my own sensations, waiting for the pills to kick in.
âKocha, it doesnât feel like theyâre doing anything.â
âI told you so.â
âMaybe you need to wash them down.â
âI tried doing that . . . with wine.â
âAnd?â
âNothing. My piss just turned red.â
The twilight thickened, slipping through the tree branches and reaching out into the warm, dusty grass wrapping around us. Flaming orange balls hung in the valley, their sharp citrusy light burning through the fog. The sky was turning black and distant, the constellations showing through like a face appearing on a negative. But the nightâs most salient feature was the fact that I didnât have the slightest desire to sleep. Kocha put on my headphones again and began swaying softly to an inaudible beat.
Then I noticed movement somewhere down below. Someone was coming up from the river, ascending the steep slope. The hillside was buried in fog; I couldnât make anything out, but it sounded as though somebody was herding skittish animals away from the water.
âYou see that?â I asked Kocha warily.
âYep, I sure do,â Kocha replied, nodding happily.
âWhoâs down there?â
âYeah, yeah,â Kocha said, continuing to nod, contemplating the night that had pounced on us so suddenly.
I froze, listening hard to the voices that were becoming more distinct as whoever it was drew nearer in the darkness that clung to everything like some thick, acerbic liquid. Lit by the valley below, the fog now seemed full of motion and shadows. I could see into the space above it, where some bats occasionally whipped by, making circles above our heads then abruptly darting back into the wet haze. The voices got louder, the rustling resolved into individual footsteps, and then, all at once, bodies started swimming out of the fog, gliding quickly across the thick, hot grass toward us. They moved easily up the slopeâthere were more and more of them. I could already see the
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