Quillabamba, in the Cuzcan valley of La Convention, and captured
the Illarec ch'aska (morning star) camp, killing a good number of
guerrillas. Luis de la Puente, Paul Escobar, and a handful of their
followers had managed to escape, but the commandos, after a long
pursuit, surrounded and killed them. The article indicated that
military planes had bombed Mesa Pelada, using napalm. The corpses
had not been returned to their families or shown to the press.
According to the official communique, they had been buried in a
secret location to prevent their graves from becoming destinations
for revolutionary pilgrimages. The army showed reporters the
weapons, uniforms, documents, as well as maps and radio
equipment the guerrillas had stored at Mesa Pelada. In this way the
Pachacutec column, one of the rebel focal points of the Permian
revolution, had been wiped out. The army was hopeful that the
Tupac Amaru column, headed by Guillermo Lobaton and also under
siege, would soon fall.
"I don't know why you're making that face, you knew this would
happen sooner or later," Madame Arnoux said in surprise. "You
yourself told me so many times that this was the only way it could
turn out."
"I said it as a kind of magic charm, so it wouldn't happen."
I had said it and thought it and feared it, of course, but it was
different knowing it had happened and that Paul, the good friend
and companion of my early days in Paris, was now a corpse rotting
in some desolate wasteland in the eastern Andes, perhaps after
being executed—and no doubt tortured if the soldiers had captured
him alive. I overcame my feelings and proposed to the Chilean girl
that we drop the subject and not let the news ruin the gift from the
gods of my having her to myself for an entire weekend. She
managed that with no difficulty; for her, it seemed to me, Peru was
something she had very deliberately expelled from her thoughts like
a mass of bad memories (poverty, racism, discrimination, being
disregarded, multiple frustrations?), and, perhaps, she had made the
decision a long time ago to break forever with her native land. But in
spite of my efforts, I couldn't forget the damn news in Le Monde and
concentrate on the bad girl. Throughout supper at Allard, the ghost
of my friend took away my appetite and my good humor.
"It seems to me you're in no mood to faire la fete" she said with
compassion when we were having dessert. "Do you want to leave it
for another time, Ricardito?"
I insisted I didn't and kissed her hands and swore that in spite of
the awful news, spending a night with her was the most wonderful
thing that had ever happened to me. But when we reached my
apartment on Joseph Granier, and she took a coquettish baby-doll,
her toothbrush, and a change of clothes for the next day out of her
overnight case, and we lay down on the bed—I had bought flowers
for the living room and bedroom—I began to caress her and realized,
to my embarrassment and humiliation, that I was in no condition to
make love to her.
"This is what the French call a fiasco," she said, laughing. "Do
you know this is the first time it's happened to me with a man?"
"How many have you been with? Let me guess. Ten? Twenty?"
"I'm terrible at math," she said in anger. And she took her
revenge with a command: "Make me come with your mouth. I have
no reason to be in mourning. I hardly knew your friend Paul, and
besides, remember it was his fault I had to go to Cuba."
And just like that, as casually as she would have lit a cigarette,
she spread her legs and lay back, her arm across her eyes, in that
total immobility, that deep concentration into which, forgetting
about me and the world around her, she sank to wait for her
pleasure. She always took a long time to become excited and finish,
but that night she took even longer than usual, and two or three
times my tongue cramped and for a few moments I had to stop
kissing and sucking her. Each time her hand admonished me,
pulling my hair or pinching my shoulder. At last I felt her move and
heard the quiet little purr that seemed to move up from her belly to
her mouth, and I felt her limbs contract and heard her long, satisfied
sigh. "Thank you, Ricardito," she murmured. She fell asleep almost
immediately. I was awake for a long time, my throat tight with
anguish. My sleep was restless, and I had nightmares I could barely
recall the next day.
I awoke at about nine. The sun was no longer shining. Through
the skylight I could see the overcast sky, the color of a burro's belly,
the eternal Parisian sky. She slept, her back to me. She seemed very
young and fragile with her girl's body, quiet now, hardly stirred by
her light, slow breathing. No one, seeing her like this, could have
imagined the difficult life she must have had since she was born. I
tried to picture her childhood, being poor in the hell that Peru is for
the poor, and her adolescence, perhaps even worse, the countless
difficulties, defeats, sacrifices, concessions she must have suffered
in Peru, in Cuba, in order to move ahead and reach the place she was
now. And how hard and cold having to defend herself tooth and nail
against misfortune had made her, all the beds she'd had to pass
through to avoid being crushed by a life her experiences had
convinced her was a battlefield. I felt immense tenderness toward
her. I was sure it was my good fortune, and also my misfortune, that
I would always love her. Seeing her and feeling her breathe excited
me. I began to kiss her on the back, very* slowly, her pert little ass,
her neck and shoulders, and, turning her toward me, her breasts and
mouth. She pretended to sleep but was already awake, since she
arranged herself on her back to receive me. She was wet, and for the
first time I could enter her without difficulty, without feeling I was
making love to a virgin. I loved her, I loved her, I couldn't live
without her. I begged her to leave Monsieur Arnoux and come to
me, I'd earn a lot of money, I'd pamper her, I'd satisfy her every
whim, I'd...
"Well, you've redeemed yourself," and she burst into laughter,
"and you even held out longer than usual. I thought you'd become
impotent after last night's fiasco."
I proposed fixing breakfast, but she wanted us to go out, she was
longing for un croissant croustillant. We showered together, she let
me wash and dry- her and, as I sat on the bed, watch her dress, comb
her hair, and put on makeup. I slipped her shoes onto her feet, first
kissing her toes one by one. We walked hand in hand to a bistrot on
Avenue de la Bourdonnais where, in fact, the half-moons crunched
as if they had just come out of the oven.
"If instead of sending me to Cuba that time you had let me stay
with you here in Paris, how long would we have lasted, Ricardito?"
"All our lives. I'd have made you so happy you never would have
left me."
She stopped joking and looked at me, very serious, and
somewhat contemptuous.
"How naive you are, what a dreamer." She enunciated each
syllable, defying me with her eyes. "You don't know me. I'd only stay
forever with a man who was very, very rich and powerful, which
you'll never be, unfortunately."
"And what if money wasn't happiness, bad girl?"
"Happiness, I don't know and I don't care what it is, Ricardito.
What I am sure about is that it isn't the romantic, vulgar thing it is
for you. Money gives you security, it protects you, it lets you enjoy
life thoroughly and not worry* about tomorrow. It's the only
happiness you can touch."
She sat looking at me, wearing the cold expression that
intensified sometimes in a strange way and seemed to freeze the life
around her.
"You're very nice but you have a terrible defect: lack of ambition.
You're satisfied with what you have, aren't you? But it isn't
anything, good boy. That's why I couldn't be your wife. I'll never be
satisfied with what I have. I'll always want more."
I didn't know how to respond, because though it hurt me, she
had said something that was true. For me, happiness was having her
and living in Paris. Did that mean you were unredeemable* mediocre,
Ricardito? Yes, probably. Before we went back to the apartment,
Madame Robert Arnoux went to make a phone call. She came back
with a worried face.
"I'm sorry, but I have to go, good boy. Things have become
difficult."
She offered no explanations and wouldn't let me take her to her
house or wherever she had to go. We went up for her overnight bag
and I accompanied her to the taxi stand next to the Ecole Militaire
Metro station.
"In spite of everything it was a nice weekend," she said, brushing
my lips. "Ciao, mon amour"
When I returned home, surprised at her abrupt departure, I
discovered she had left her toothbrush in the bathroom. A beautiful
little brush that had the name of the manufacturer stamped on the
handle: Guerlain. Forgotten? Probably not. Probably a deliberate
oversight in order to leave me a memento of the sad night and happy
waking.
That week I couldn't see or talk to her, and the following week,
without being able to say goodbye—she didn't answer the phone no
matter what time I called—I left for Vienna to work for two weeks at
the International Atomic Energy Agency. I loved that baroque,
elegant, prosperous city, but a temp's work during those periods
when international organizations have congresses, general sessions,
or annual conferences—which is when they need extra translators
and interpreters—is so intense it didn't leave me time for museums,
concerts, or the Opera, except one afternoon when I made a fast visit
to the Albertina. At night I was exhausted and barely had the energy
to go into one of the old cafes, the Central, the Landtmann, the
Hawelka, the Frauenhuber, with their belleepoque decor, to have a
wiener schnitzel, the Austrian version of the breaded steak my aunt
Alberta used to make, and a glass of foaming beer. I was groggy
when I got into bed. I called the bad girl several times but nobody
answered, or the phone was busy. I didn't dare call Robert Arnoux at
UNESCO, afraid I'd arouse his suspicions. At the end of the two
weeks, Senor Charnes telegraphed me proposing a ten-day contract
in Rome for a seminar followed by a conference at the Food and
Agriculture Organization, so that I traveled to Italy without passing
through Paris. I couldn't reach her from Rome, either. I called her as
soon as I was back in France. Without success, of course. What was
going on? I began to have anguished thoughts of an accident, an
illness, a domestic tragedy.
My nerves were so on edge because I couldn't communicate with
Madame Arnoux that I had to read the most recent letter from Uncle
Ataulfo twice; I found it waiting for me in Paris. I couldn't
concentrate or get the Chilean girl out of my mind. Uncle Ataulfo
gave me long interpretations of the political situation in Peru. The
Tupac Amaru column of the MIR, led by Lobaton, hadn't been
captured yet, though army communiques reported constant clashes
in which the guerrillas always suffered losses. According to the
press, Lobaton and his people had gone deep into the forest and
made alliances among the Amazonian tribes, principally the
Ashaninka, dispersed throughout the region bounded by the Ene,
Perene, Satipo, and Anapati rivers. There were rumors that the
Ashaninka communities, seduced by Lobaton's personality,
identified him with a mythical hero, Itomi Pava, the atavistic
dispenser of justice who, according to legend, would come back one
day to restore the power of their nation. Military planes had bombed
forest villages on the suspicion they were hiding Miristas.
After more fruitless attempts to speak with Madame Arnoux, I
decided to go to UNESCO and see her husband, using the pretext of
inviting them to supper. I went first to say hello to Senor Charnes
and my colleagues in the Spanish office. Then I went up to the sixth
floor, the sanctum sanctorum, where the head offices were located.
From the door I could see Monsieur Arnoux's ravaged face and
brush mustache. He gave a strange start when he saw me and
seemed gruffer than ever, as if my presence displeased him. Was he
ill? He seemed to have aged ten years in the few weeks I hadn't seen
him. He extended a reluctant hand without saying a word and waited
for me to speak, giving me a penetrating stare with his rodent eyes.
"I've been working away from Paris this past month, in Vienna
and Rome. I'd like to invite the two of you to have supper one night
when you're free."
He kept looking at me, not answering. He was very pale now, his
expression desolate, and he pursed his lips as if it were difficult for
him to speak. My hands began to tremble. Was he going to tell me
that his wife had died?
"Then you haven't heard," he murmured drily. "Or are you