-
Howard Cosell
As
agreed upon last week, we returned today to Mowgli's „zoo“ and
this time the owner of the big estate was already waiting for us on
the beach, accompanied by one of his ligers.
„You
should really try to call, before you visit someone“, Mowgli said
to Mr Tuniak.
„I
would, if I knew myself in advance where I was going to end up“, Mr
Tuniak replied. „And as I remember it, you were a lot more
spontaneous yourself.“
„You
can't use that excuse, if you own a time machine, you know“, Mowgli
said. „And back then I didn't own this park. Or have a family.“
His
remark reminded me of a question I had had since last week, but which
I had forgotten to ask then. Taking this opportunity, I said: “What
is this 'park' exactly? I noticed no one here calls it a zoo or
anything similar.”
“It's
my private garden”, Mowgli told me without hesitation. “And from
time to time I invite people here to show them around. By pure
chance, these people usually donate some money afterwards, so I can
afford to buy food for all the animals, pay for maintenance and so
on.”
“But
why don't you officially call it a zoo?”
“Because
then there would be countless rules and safety standards I'd have to
adhere to”, Mowgli explained. “I probably wouldn't be allowed to
let the animals roam free.” He caressed the liger, who was walking
right by his side, as he said this. “I have several... private
agreements with the government here. I am not allowed to make too
much of a profit and have to take on animals from time to time who
can't find a place anywhere else”- he pointed to a zorse (the
offspring of a male zebra and a female horse) which was feeding on
the border of the forest - “and in return, they don't come here and
do safety checks and similar stuff. Of course... this only works as
long as no accidents are happening here, which so far, they haven't.
I shudder to thin what would happen, if someone gets hurt while
visiting here.” He shook his head as if even thinking about such a
misfortune could cause it to occur. “But you are not here to talk
about the future, you are here because of the past, isn't that
right?”
We
entered the main building and went to the enormous library. We sat
down in big chair, so that we were looking out a tall window. We saw
a part of the park surrounding the villa and the animals going about
their business there.
“So,
what do you want to hear from me?”, Mowgli wanted to know from me.
“Last
week, I told him about my first visit here”, Mr Tuniak informed
him.
Mowgli
leaned back in his chair, closed his eyes and smiled. “Oh yes,
those were the times”, he said and looked at me. “I was in my
thirties back then, closer to forty than thirty actually, and Lex was
a bit older than me. We both had our midlife-crisis then.” He
laughed out loud. “No, we didn't, but you would think so, judging
by all the stupid stuff we did.”
Alexander
fell down backwards and landed in high grass. Mowgli sat carefully
down right next to him. They both felt every fibre of their body and
all of them seemed to hurt.
“Why
did I let you talk me into this?”, Alexander wondered.
“Because
it was fun, wasn't it?”, Mowgli asked. “But I won't be able to
sit down properly for the next week, I'm afraid.”
“How
did you find these people anyway?”, Alexander wanted to know. He
sat up and looked over to the men who were now giving the ostriches
their food.
When
Alexander had come to a visit to his park, Mowgli had immediately
convinced him to join him in a race he was going to participate in.
He hadn't told him, that they wouldn't be sitting on horses, but on
ostriches. Alexander had spent a whole week learning how not to fall
off such a big bird while it was running faster than any human could
ever hope to. His trials had finally ended with the race they had
just finished.
“I'm
actually surprised that you did this”, Alexander said.
“I
need the exposure and the money for my park”, Mowgli explained.
“All the other riders were very influential and very rich business
men. I've managed to get a meeting with three of them next week. The
day therefore was a complete success.”
“You
are only saying that because you won”, Alexander teased him. “Can
you call one of your elephants now to carry me home.”
“Sorry,
the elephant racing is only next week. Don't look so shocked! I was
just kidding.”
“Lex
has probably told you already that it was quite difficult to get this
whole park here up and running”, Mowgli said. “Money was of
course a problem, but it wasn't the biggest one. I had to get into
contact with a lot of people and keep them friendly towards my park.”
“And
the only way to do this was strangely enough by participating in some
crazy races”, Mr Tuniak said. “I'm still not convinced that you
didn't invent at least half of them yourself, just so you could
torture me some more.”
It
was interesting to observe how Mr Tuniak acted and reacted
differently, depending on who else was in the room. With Mowgli he
appeared younger and full of youthful energy. Quite a contrast to the
old man he had been in the underwater station.
“You
could have stopped any time you wanted”, Mowgli reminded him.
“I
needed the distraction”, Mr Tuniak admitted. “I didn't want to
think about what I had been doing in the years before. Every time I
had a quiet minute to myself, my thoughts turned to...”
“When
did I ever let you have a quiet minute?”, Mowgli interrupted him.
Alexander
was lying on a bench in the park and eating the nuts an ape has
brought him as a token of his friendship.
“How
do you feel?”, Mowgli asked.
“Older
than I actually am”, Alexander answered. “One month spent with
you and already I'm feeling as if I was sixty. And I still have
another twenty years before I really get there.”
The
way Mowgli looked at him made it clear that he doubted the accuracy
of that claim.
“All
right, maybe only fifteen years”, Alexander corrected himself.
“What new craziness has your brain thought up now?”
“Another
race”, Mowgli said. “And I have good news and bad news regarding
it. The good news is that we will be using a car this time. The bad
news is that the... race track is over twenty-five thousand
kilometres long.”
“What?”,
Alexander cried out in surprise. “Where did you find such a long
street?”
“In
America”, Mowgli told him. “It's a road that gets you from the
most northern point of North America to the most southern point in
South America. It's the longest continuous road in the world.”
“It
will take us at least two weeks to make that trip”, Alexander said.
“Why do you want me to join you there? Why don't you ask your
fiancée?”
“Because
one of us has to stay here and take care of the animals”, Mowgli
explained. “And... didn't you know that she was pregnant?”
Alexander
shook his head. “I'll happily come with you, but I have to tell you
know that I have never driven a car before.”
“Never?”
“Nope.
I've never needed it until now”, Alexander said. “For most of
history one rides on horses. You have to remember that cars were only
invented about a hundred years ago.”
“Yes,
of course”, Mowgli said. “Well, you have about a month to learn
it.”
“He
had of course more time than that, since he owned a time machine”,
Mowgli. “He travelled a hundred years into the past and learned how
to drive with the first auto mobiles ever invented.”
“And
you declared me insane for doing this”, Mr Tuniak remembered. “But
afterwards you had to admit that it was a good thing.”
“Yes,
it definitely was”, Mowgli admitted. Turning to me, he explained:
“We had several accidents and... misfortunes along the road, which
you were able to fix. The Panamerica road is not a road in the
conventional sense of the word. There are hundreds of kilometres
where it is nothing more than a dirt path right through the jungle.
And while we were in South America I remember two days were it rained
and rained as if a second flood was coming. We were no longer driving
but basically swimming on the road which the motor of our car really
didn't like.” He stood up and went to one of the shelves containing
an endless number of books. “There were also disadvantages, of
course.”
“So,
how is it going?”, Mowgli inquired. “Are you ready for the
longest race you'll ever do?”
“Yes,
and I also know everything there is to know about cars”, Alexander
said. “Did you know, for instance, that the first electric cars
where invented in 1881 and that...”
“Do
you also have practical knowledge or only theoretical stuff?”,
Mowgli interrupted him impatiently. “Show me your driving license.”
“My
driving license?”, Alexander repeated. “I don't have one.”
“But
you do have a pass port, don't you?”, Mowgli asked.
Alexander
shook his head. “Not, since I was a child”, he said.
“And
how do you think will you get over the borders along the road?”,
Mowgli wanted to know. “And that's ignoring the fact that no one
will let you drive a car without a driver's licence.” He walking up
and down. “You may have lived through the whole of history, but you
have no idea about everyday life.”
“Calm
down. When do we have to be in Prudhoe Bay?”, Alexander asked.
“Next
week.”
“More
than enough time. I'll call Philip.”
“Philip,
as usual, was our saviour”, Mr Tuniak said. “With his help I
managed to get the documents I needed. Well, I say get... we faked
all of them. For several of those fakes I had to travel a few years
into the past, because it was easier then.”
“Ah,
here it is”, Mowgli announced and took a photo album from one of
the shelves. “All the pictures we have taken during the race.”
The
photos they showed me were impressive in the variety of landscapes
they showed. They started with the frozen seas and snowed in valleys
of Alaska, but every time I turned a page, the climate grew visible
warmer. I saw more and more plant life, first only small bushes, but
then solitary trees, which became forests. They had passed over
mountains and under them, along lakes and through cities. Parts of
the road were built right through the dry desert. A starker contrast
to the first pictures taken can not be imagined. They had passed
through the deepest jungles of South America, along its coast lines
and climbed the passes of the Andes.
“I
remember that stop very well”, Mowgli told me, as we were looking
at a photo that showed snow capped mountain tops. “It was the first
time since we were children that we ate ice from a glacier.”
“Yes”,
Mr Tuniak. “We stayed there for so long, it cost us not only the
lead, but also the second place, but it was absolutely worth it.”
“Definitely.
But winning was never the most important thing anyway.”
“But
why did you join the race then?”, I asked. “Just to meet new
people, who might support your... park?”
“That
too, but I have to admit I could have managed this through other
means as well”, Mowgli said. “But you are mistaken, if you think
that you should only do a sport, if you want to win. If you thought
like that, you would go home very disappointed most of the time,
because only one person can win and all the others loose.”
“So
why do you do sports then?”
“To
have fun, of course.”
NEXT
WEEK
Das
Bergsteigen wird durch die Existenz von Bergen sehr erschwert.
Keine Kommentare:
Kommentar veröffentlichen