She said, "Listen, this is a person who had that serious injury. So you should be ready that maybe your pair won't exist. Don't look at her as future partner. You are just trying to help her recover as a human being. If she will skate, then we will talk about the future. If she won't and she won't be healthy, then you just help her to become a little bit more alive and then your pair will not exist. Are you ready for it?" Sikharulidze was ready for it. His friend needed his help. He had been looking for a reason to go on skating. Well, here was a reason.
What must Tamara Moskvina have felt, the first time she saw Berezhnaya just gliding, simply putting one skate in front of the other—merely doing that simple motion she does better than anyone in the world, and holding Sikharulidze's hand for safety? Berezhnaya's body was still thin and malnourished. She looked like a cancer patient, with no hair sticking out from under her stocking cap. Her skull still had a place where it was sickeningly soft; if she touched it gently with her fingers, it would hold the impression. Would she become dizzy? Would she faint? If she fell, would her head hit the ice?
Was it still, at this moment, a question "against humanity" to ask if she would skate—or had it become somehow a question of restoring some of her humanity? For as Sikharulidze would say later on, to skate more was to confirm that she was fine, that she would be whole again; to skate less was to say that she was weak, that she would never be well.
"I was responsible for the life of a child," Moskvina says. "She was eighteen, still a child, and she lived far away from her mother, so I was like a little bit of a mother for her. And then I thought: Let's pretend she's my daughter. She had that injury. She had that operation. Will you teach her?" Moskvina pauses. "No."
But Berezhnaya's own mother had already answered that question, so the two friends stepped onto the ice. Later, after only a month of stroking around, Berezhnaya would astonish Moskvina by reeling off a double jump, and soon after, she would nonchalantly land a triple. Not long afterwards she would do her first spin, a maneuver that is enough to make anyone dizzy, and Moskvina would pray, pray that there would be no sudden cry, no abrupt collapse. There was none. Later still they would do "that dreadful element, the side-by-side spin," and Moskvina would race down the ice toward them, yelling at the top of her lungs: "Please! Stay away from each other! Stay far away \" And they would do the side-by-side spins far apart, with an eerie wide space between them.
In the summer, Sikharulidze would start to lift her above his head on the firm ground. When September came they would do lifts on the ice, and he would drop her too often and sometimes dramatically, and curse himself. And when she would fall Moskvina's heart would hurt, and she would demand of someone: "Why she's so unlucky, as if somehow everything which happens is like against her? I know that, for example, I am very lucky person. And she somehow, so unlucky." (Berezhnaya, still far too thin, in a heap on the ice, rubbing a bruise, and Sikharulidze in the corner, berating himself.) Moskvina would skate over and help her up, ask how she felt, force her to take a rest.
"So we teach her," Moskvina says. "No—not teach. We support her, Anton and I. We support her as people. And she recovers, she moves ... she fights, fights the unluck of her life."
(Berezhnaya up on her feet again, shaking the pain out of the bruised leg, and then beginning again, swaying gently to and fro as she builds speed.) "I think she is afraid, but she goes slowly up—tries, falls, does again. This is really the quality that I admire. I admire, but I don't tell her," Moskvina says. "Very deep in her heart, she must be extremely brave."
There came a time when Sikharulidze found himself afraid to say no to Berezhnaya when she wanted to attempt a dangerous element, for skating, which she had once loathed, now meant normal life. After practice, Berezhnaya went to a spee |