May Day In Odessa: Naked

For ten glorious minutes, Lev was not the man Katya had left. He was not the ghost in the library. He was a creature of blood and bone, utterly vulnerable, utterly present. He felt the sun, the wind, the solidarity of other fragile bodies. They were all naked. No one was better or worse. They were just Odessa, raw and real.

They ran along the water’s edge, past the rusting hulks of old fishing trawlers. The violinist began to hum a tune—a jaunty, folkloric melody. The accountant stopped covering himself and started to laugh, a real, guttural laugh that echoed off the sea wall.

For Lev, it was the day of the Naked Run. Naked May Day in Odessa

He wasn't a nudist. He was a librarian. A keeper of brittle pages and forgotten lexicons. His body, pale and soft from decades in the dust-scented dark, was the last thing anyone needed to see. But ten months ago, his wife, Katya, had left him for a man who sold used German cars. And in the vacuum of her departure, a strange, reckless thing had taken root.

He ran not from shame, but into a strange, liberating cold. The air licked every inch of him—his soft belly, his thin shins, the nape of his neck. It was as if he had been wearing a lead coat his entire life and had just shrugged it off. The pebbles bit his bare feet, a sharp, honest pain. The salt spray hit his chest. For ten glorious minutes, Lev was not the man Katya had left

When he surfaced, he was twenty meters out. The two militiamen were arguing with the weightlifter. The violinist was already dressed, walking away as if she’d just been admiring the view. The accountant was peeking from behind his rock, still laughing.

“Ready?” called the weightlifter. He didn’t wait for an answer. He just started jogging. He felt the sun, the wind, the solidarity

He looked at the water. It was still grey-green. Still indifferent. But it was also deep.