Authors: W. T. Tyler
Reddish knew that he had dared all, this man. Whatever psychological taboos had been inflicted by decades of foreign rule, he had violated. Whatever quietism was implicit in his own tribal tradition, he had violated too. He had devastated the social fabric, smashed the polity that held each in place, and torn himself from the peaceful anonymity of a corrupt social order to declare himself its master. Now he had described the consequences. He had triumphed, but the agony of will remained. The nation was still an abstraction; there was no historical, legal, or social authority to which he or his majors might appeal if they failed, just the same barbarism that had awaited the old President. Even as village boys they'd known that one day they would die, but their triumph had made the extinction more absolute, the knowledge more dreadful, and the moment itself more terrifying.
He wondered, as they filed out silently, how well Bondurant had understood that.
Becker was waiting in the ambassador's study with Carol Browning as they entered somberly. Becker looked from the ambassador's ashen face to Lowenthal, who was even paler, and finally to Reddish. Bondurant hadn't uttered a word during the long drive down from the para camp.
“Apart from that, Mrs. Lincoln,” he inquired of Lowenthal, “how was the play?”
“Appalling,” Lowenthal whispered, sinking down in an armchair.
Bondurant ignored them both and moved heavily to the bar cart. Becker followed him with his eyes, puzzled, and looked back at Lowenthal.
“Brutal and primitive. I trust I shall never again have to witness an episode like that. Fear so thick you could cut it with a knife.”
“What did he say, this Colonel N'Sika?”
Encouraged by Bondurant's silence, Lowenthal sat up, like a stand-in thrust center stage. Carol Browning still waited with her stenographer's pad in front of the couch. The ambassador noisily filled his glass from the ice bucket. Watching this drawing-room tableau, Reddish, for the first time that night, was suddenly depressed.
“About the executions?” Lowenthal continued. “He told us in a wholly bizarre, improvisatory way that because of circumstances over which he had little control, moot in any case, I must say, that these draconian measures must continueâ”
“Fix yourself a drink, Simon,” Bondurant interrupted, his back to them.
“Sorry?”
“Fix yourself a drink and sit down. That's not what he said at all.”
Bondurant crossed the room deliberately, drink held to his chest carefully, like a vicar moving to the congregation, chalice in hand, and sank down in his favorite armchair. The whiskey was very strong, the glass filled to the very brim. “Do you have your pad, Miss Browning?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Good. What did N'Sika say? What did he say indeed.” He sipped from the glass and put his head back, gazing off into the middle distance. “He said what Napoleon said when he explained to Metternich at Dresden in 1813 why he couldn't surrender.” He took another swallow, his eyes brightening. “He said quite simply that others' fear was his strength, that he was an orphan of history, which is quite correct, that kings might surrender a dozen times, yet go back to their thrones as royalty still, like diplomats with their pensions or their retirement cottages at Bar Harbor, but not men like him, which is also correct. He could surrender only once, he said, and when he did, he would be killed for it, dead in that absolute way neither bureaucrats nor diplomatic royalty can ever understand.” He turned his gaze to Lowenthal. “How primitive is that?”
“That puts a fine point to it,” Lowenthal said.
“The point was perfectly made.”
“He quoted Napoleon?” Becker asked, astonished.
“I quoted Napoleon, just this minute, but it's not the Schönbrunn Palace atmosphere I'm trying to evoke, Dresden either,” Bondurant replied, his irritation muted. He looked back at Lowenthal. “You frighten me sometimes, Simon, more than N'Sika.” He looked at Reddish. “What do you think?”
“The point was clear.”
“Good. I don't believe he would have managed it in French, do you?”
“Probably not.”
“I thought not. A very impressive man, this N'Sika. Keen, tough, and very intelligent. And a way of projecting himself tooâa bit sly, perhaps, like an actor, but that's a quality such men always have. Molotov had it, so did Spaak and Adenauer. So now we know who the revolution belongs to, don't we?”
The telegram to Washington reporting the talk went through two drafts. There may have been an incipient paranoia in the efforts of Becker and Lowenthal to paint the most flattering portrait, that of a beleaguered African nationalist beseeching American support, detectable even in their bureaucratic jargon, which didn't deal with the subconscious. Tired of their tinkering, Bondurant rejected their rewrite and adopted his original draft.
Chapter Thirteen
The midday sun splintered on the azure lozenge of the Houlet swimming pool and the leaves of the lime and avocado trees nearby. Reddish followed the white-jacketed Bakongo houseboy out the french doors and across the shaded courtyard to the pool. Gabrielle lay on a zebra-striped lounge chair, her eyes hidden by sunglasses. Yellow and green finches scolded and thrashed in the shrubbery.
She sat up slowly, surprised. “I was in the neighborhood,” he began, almost apologetically. “I thought I'd see if you were still here.”
She quickly pulled a terrycloth beach robe over her bikini.
“That was very kind of you. Please, do sit down.”
“I can't stay very long.” She'd been swimming and her hair was still damp. “It's my lunch hour.”
“But you'll have something to drink, won't you?” Masked by the sunglasses, her face seemed different to him. She may have been conscious of it. She removed the glasses as she called the houseboy back. Her face was the same as he remembered from the other night, and he sat down. On the metal table were a book and a few travel brochures.
“Planning your next trip?”
“Not really. Houlet suspects I'm not anxious to return to Paris. He brought me those. He thinks a trip to Capetown or Durban might be interesting. I'm told the Capetown beaches are lovely. Have you been to South Africa on holiday? I'm told many diplomats go.”
“No, I've never had time for it.”
“It's not the Africa I wanted to see.”
“I guess not.” They sat in silence for a minute. She didn't seem to know what to say. “I'm sorry about what happened the other night,” he offered.
“Yes.” She nodded, still looking at the travel brochures. “I'm sorry too.”
The houseboy brought Reddish a gin and tonic.
“It is very depressing sometimes,” she began after he'd gone. “I was very upset. I made up my mind to leave as soon as possible. It's only a matter of deciding where to go.” She stood up. “Do you mind if I change into something comfortable. I'll only be a minute.”
She left him alone on the terrace holding the drink on his knee. The pool surface was unbroken, reflecting the drifting cumulus overhead. In the silence his gesture seemed wasted, inconsequential, less important than a wet bathing suit or the prospect of the white sand beaches of the Atlantic. He pulled Masakita's letter from his pocket, received that morning by Nyembo at the embassy, delivered by an anonymous messenger. Now, in light of the events of the past week, it seemed a letter from a stranger. He found the sentences that most troubled him:
The interior is peaceful. I've decided not to seek exile, whatever happens, but to search for a permanent solution to this problem between the government and me. But I will need the help of those powerful enough to convince the N'Sika government to agree. The Americans would benefit from such an accommodation, as would the entire country. Should you wish to contact me, you have simply to come to Benongo
.
“I'm glad you came,” Gabrielle said as she returned wearing a denim skirt and cotton blouse. “After the other night, I wouldn't have expected it.”
“We didn't get the chance to talk,” he answered, folding away the letter. He watched her sit down again. “I was wondering which you were, the romantic or the writer.”
She gave a small laugh. “The writer, I suppose, the journalist,” she added in despair, “but a failed one. A failed romantic as well.”
“Is that why you're here?”
“It is difficult to explain.”
“Like Stendhal?”
“Yes, like that story. I would have explained the other night, but then the Houlets returned and everything was impossibly mixed up.”
“I thought maybe you wanted some help on planning a trip someplace.”
“Yes, that too.” She turned her head away for a minute, looking across the garden, as if trying to find a way to begin. He waited silently. “I haven't been completely truthful with you, either about why I came here or why Houlet wants me to leave. I went to Chad to do a story on the French military offensive against the rebels in the Tibesti, France's African war.” She turned to him.
Her voice was different, even her eyes. He didn't know how to answer her so he said nothing.
“I've learned since I came here,” she continued, “not to be too direct, at least among diplomats, like Houlet, who concede to you only what they concede to their wives, their secretaries, or their mistresses. If they give you only that advantage, that of being a woman, it's best to use it, and not to be too ambitious with your own ideas.”
“Fair enough,” Reddish said. “I think I know the problem. What happened in Chad?”
She'd gone to Chad with a photographer and an anthropologist she'd met at the African studies center in Paris; the latter had worked among the nomads of southern Algeria and Libya and spoke Arabic. The French Ambassador at Fort Lamy was suspicious, and the French military commander denied them permission to travel to the north in the Tibesti region, where the unpublicized French military action was under way. They were restricted to Fort Lamy.
“There was no water at the hotel, no electricity some nights. It was beastly hot. My two companions began to lose their appetites for the trip. The advance we'd gotten hadn't fully covered our expenses, and I made up the difference. I had a furious argument with the French Ambassador one night, and then with them. They were both worried about keeping on the best of terms with the French authorities. The anthropologist had been doing some work among the remote villagers of Tunisia, funded in part by the French government. The photographer was simply a coward. They proposed doing an article on the fishermen of Lake Chad instead, the African fisherman, and I refused. At the French Embassy the next day, the two made their amends with the authorities and prepared for the Lake Chad excursion. I refused and my visa was revoked by the Chadians, who put me on the next plane. To Entebbe, as it turned out. For three days, nothing but rain. It was a complete disaster, all of it.”
“So you came here.”
“I thought Houlet could help me with the Quai and have my visa reissued, but he wouldn't even try. I'd researched the Chad background for five months and was totally unprepared for anything else. So I was bitter about that. The political situation here bored meâI'm sorry to say that, knowing how you feel about this countryâbut it did. It was so predictable, so corrupt, so unoriginal. But then the coup came. The more I saw and heard, the less I understood. The situation in Malunga seemed to me quite different from what Houlet and others were claiming, but I didn't fully understand why. I tried to do a little investigation of my own, but without success. I knew so little, no one was prepared to help, the foreign ministry is in chaos, like the universityâ”
“How did Houlet react to that?”
“I didn't tell him, but he probably suspected. Why should I take Houlet or Armand seriously? Then that night at dinner I quite lost my temper. I told them what I'd seen, how brutal it was, how totally absurd the idea that a radio station was operating out of the party compound, or that the blacks in Malunga were preparing to smash the governmentâ”
She stopped, her bitterness gone suddenly. “I'm sorry. I didn't mean to say all of this.”
“No, I think I understand.”
“Do you?” She turned toward the sunlit garden again, leaning back in the deck chair. “You're quite lucky,” she continued after a minute. “You have a profession you can claim, something that claims you. That's important not to forget. You don't have to justify yourself every minute, every hour, every day.”
“Why should you feel that?”
“But how else can I feel? Ten years doing nothing. What resources do I have except my own? You see?” she said after he didn't answer. “Why should you understand? You've never had to recover your life from someone or something, to take it back from nothing, to begin again.”
“So that makes you ambitious.”
“No, not ambitious. Just to know yourself again, is that ambition?” She gave a dry, bitter laugh. “You don't understand at all, do you?”
“Maybe not. What does your former husband do?”
“He's a lawyer. Yes, a very successful lawyer. Too successful, I suppose. In his success he didn't understand why his brilliance shouldn't suffice for everyone else. He had no interest in family talent not his own. He didn't understand what was happening to him. After so much success, his career had become a substitute for life, his cleverness a substitute for thought. He was bored with what he had become, and he met a young woman who made him feel he could live again. But it wasn't his fault, not completely. I helped too. It's a very simple formula and that's why it happens. But you're divorced too. Was that the price of your success or did others pay it?”
“I wasn't successful and others paid it,” Reddish said. “All of us.”
“Your mistake or hers?”
“Mine.”