My Name Is Revenge: A novella and reflective essay
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About this ebook
My Name Is Revenge is in two parts. There is a novella, and an essay reflecting on the historic events that inspired that novella, and meditating also on how history can inform fiction. In the essay the writer says she hopes everything she writes will ‘arouse curiosity’. Both the novella and the essay do just that, and also
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My Name Is Revenge - Ashley Kalagian-Blunt
MY NAME IS REVENGE
A novella and reflective essay
by
ASHLEY KALAGIAN BLUNT
My Name Is Revenge
Writing Violence, Arousing Curiosity
Bibliography
Dedication
Biography
About This Series
Acknowledgments
Copyright Information
My Name Is Revenge
On 17 December 1980, at 9:47 am, two men shot the Turkish consul-general to Sydney and his bodyguard near the consul’s home in Vaucluse. The assassins aimed, fired and vanished.
Vrezh was home the morning of 17 December, across the harbour at 29 Whiting Street, Lane Cove, that quiet, leafy Lower North Shore suburb. The lab’s holiday shutdown meant he could sleep in, sticky with sweat, a single sheet tangled around his knees. Through the parted curtains, a laser blast of sun reached the edge of his pillow. The ceiling fan beat the thick summer air.
He woke to his mother shouting in Armenian. Pulling on a t-shirt, Vrezh stumbled out of the twin bed where he’d slept since their first night at 29 Whiting Street, down the thickly carpeted stairs, through the dark wood and tufted leather sofas of the lounge, watched by the five sets of eyes of the family oil portrait on the far wall, and into the kitchen.
The assassination was on the radio.
‘What are they saying, Vrezh? Who are they saying is responsible?’ His mother forgot all her English when she got flustered, and now she had one hand thrusting towardszhz the radio, the other clamped to the side of her face. She wore her apron, sleeves rolled up, her hair in rollers. The kitchen smelt of ground lamb and onion. Vrezh’s grandfather Arshag, his father’s father, sat at the table, a tiny cup of coffee in front of him, a blanket around his shoulders.
The baritone newsreader’s voice hit Vrezh like adrenaline.
‘What is it, Vrezh, I cannot understand!’ his mother shouted again.
‘The Justice Commandoes of the Armenian Genocide – a woman called the station, claiming it was them.’ Vrezh focused on translating the announcer’s words, struggling to smother his excitement. ‘The caller said the attack was retaliation for the injustices done to the Armenians.’
His mother removed her glasses and pressed her palms into her eyes. Held them there while the newsreader moved on to other stories.
‘My good Lord. This terrible violence that never ends.’
Then came the metallic brrrrriiiinnnggg of the phone. Vrezh’s father, calling from the jewellery store. Wanting to know if they’d heard.
‘Publicly we must call this a deplorable crime,’ his father said, his voice lowered.
Vrezh nodded, his face blank. Like his father, he had followed the actions of the Justice Commandoes and ASALA, the Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia, since their start five years earlier. Attacks against Turkish diplomats in LA, Athens, Paris, Beirut, Madrid. Today they had finally reached Sydney.
For the first time, Vrezh felt empowered.
From the corridor where the phone hung against a wallpaper of yellow and orange flowers, Vrezh could see into the kitchen. His mother bending over the stovetop, tasting the meat for the kufteh. His grandfather’s shaky hand reaching for his coffee, the cup slipping from his fingers, the brown liquid running in rivulets over the rust-orange plastic tablecloth, dripping onto the floor. And the absence of his brother, Armen, the one person he burned to speak to.
With his forearms wide and heavy on the table, his thick shoulders and full head of coal black waves held back, Vrezh’s father presided over platters piled with roast eggplant, capsicum and lamb skewers.
‘Where is your brother tonight?’
Armen still wasn’t home. Vrezh shrugged, eyes on his plate. ‘Out with Gavik and Vartan. Where else?’
Where else?
His mother leafed through the day’s letters while they ate. Here and there, she read a bit of news aloud, from Vrezh’s aunt in Boston, his uncle in Moscow, his grandmother – his mother’s mother, still in Egypt. Their family, scattered like ashes across the earth. As a child, Vrezh had imagined his family one day reuniting in Armenia. What was this ‘Soviet Union’ that was so powerful it could prevent them from living in their homeland? Now he envied the uncomplicated naivety of childhood.
Alone in his bedroom, Vrezh spread every newspaper article about the assassination across his desk. Holding a magnifying glass over photos from the scene, he analysed where the shooter might have stood, how the motorcyclist likely manoeuvred along the residential streets to escape. He checked weather reports, considered wind resistance, the angle of the sun’s glint on that too-bright morning. He read and re-read the scant police statements.
None of it revealed what he really wanted to know.
Later, Vrezh fell asleep on the burgundy lounge sofa, two tasselled cushions under his head. The lounge was adjacent to his grandfather’s makeshift bedroom. His father had sacrificed his office when the stairs became too difficult for Arshag’s arthritic knees and doddering steps. In recent weeks, Vrezh had been sleeping in the lounge more often, giving his mother a break.
Weak-throated shouts roused him. He ran the few steps