
In Kiev, you lose the rules.
Rule one: Learn to stare.
Rule two: Learn to smoke.
Where does this fit into the American mind? In Ukraine I was ready to go home. In a dizzying world where nothing makes sense, there are no helping hands and the cheat sheets are 6,000 miles away.
Rule three: Shop underground.
Rule four: Question everyone thing.
The best I could do was lift my groggy head and bite back the impulse to scream. I was already marked an outlier, scrawling strange words in my book, wheezing from the endless clouds of tobacco stink. I was the one throwing the TP in the loo, smiling at strangers a little too openly, the only woman not risking everything between hip and sole.


Rule five: Get it in writing.
Rule six: It’s not a movie.
The countdown ticked away one hryvnia at a time, our hours measured by when we would arrive in the welcome familiarty of Frankfurt am Main. One more street. One more meal. One more con to avoid.
My only defense was the Ukrainian stare, the one that proved effective in warding off one stony look at a time. It got us from the government hotel where we slept beside the gurgle and croon of a thousand horny pigeons. It didn’t save us from the sick industrial fog that bridged the city and the concrete megaplexes that striped the road in cold shadows.
We clung together in this ocean of strange, trying desperately to sync and swim. If these people are as proud of their heritage as they say, it manifests itself in ways not familiar to me.
Heart of stone. Gaze of glass. And everything, everything so far away.









































































