the city he went to visit his fairy godmother and take Esther out for
a walk. When the little dog died, he and Mrs. Stubard buried her in
the garden.
I saw Juan Barreto several times in the course of that year, on all
my visits to London, and I put him up for a few days in my
apartment in Paris during a vacation he took to see a show dedicated
to "Rembrandt's Century" at the Grand Palais. The hippie style had
just come to France, and people would turn around on the street to
look at Juan's clothes. He was an excellent person. Every time I
went to London to work I let him know in advance, and he arranged
to leave Newmarket and give me at least one night of pop music and
London dissipation. Thanks to him I did things I'd never done, spent
blanked-out nights in discotheques or at hippie parties where the
smell of pot filled the air, and where brownies made with hashish
were served that hurled a novice like me into hypersensitive trips,
sometimes amusing and sometimes nightmarish.
The most surprising thing for me—and the most pleasant, why
deny it?—was how easy it was at those parties to caress and make
love to any girl. Only then did I discover how much I had absorbed
the moral framework that my aunt Alberta taught me, which, in a
sense, still regulated my life in Paris. In the world's imagination,
French girls were known for being free, without prejudices, and not
too finicky when it was time to go to bed with a man, but in fact, the
ones who carried that freedom to an unprecedented extreme were
the girls and boys of the London hippie revolution who, at least in
Juan Barreto's circle of acquaintances, would go to bed with the
stranger they had just danced with and come back after a while as if
nothing had happened and go on with the party and taste the same
dish again.
"The life you've lived in Paris is the life of a UNESCO bureaucrat,
Ricardo," Juan said mockingly, "a Miraflores puritan. I assure you
that in many places in Paris the same freedom exists as here."
This was certainly true. My life in Paris—my life in general—had
been fairly sober, even during the times I had no contract, when
instead of kicking up my heels, I would dedicate myself to perfecting
Russian with a private teacher because, though I could interpret it, I
didn't feel as confident with the language of Tolstoy and
Dostoyevsky as I did with English and French. I had taken a liking to
it and read more in Russian than in any other language. Those
occasional weekends in England, taking part in nights of pop music,
pot, and sex in swinging London, marked a modulation in what had
been before (and would go on being afterward) a very austere life.
But on those London weekends, which I gave to myself as a present
after finishing a contract, and thanks to the painter of horse
portraits, I did things that made it hard for me to recognize myself:
dancing barefoot, with disheveled hair, smoking pot or chewing
peyote seeds, and almost always, as the finishing touch to those
agitated nights, making love, often in the most unlikely places,
under tables, in tiny bathrooms, in closets, in gardens, with some
girl, at times very young, with whom I barely exchanged a word and
whose name I wouldn't remember afterward.
Juan insisted, after our first meeting, that whenever I came to
London I stay at his pied-a-terre in Earl's Court. He was almost
never there because he spent most of his time in Newmarket,
transferring real equines to canvas. I'd be doing him a favor if I aired
out his apartment from time to time. If we were in London at the
same time, that wouldn't be a problem either because he could sleep
at Mrs. Stubard's—he still had his room there—and, as a last resort,
he could set up a folding cot in the bedroom of his pied-a-terre. He
was so insistent that finally I agreed. Since he wouldn't allow me to
pay even a penny in rent, I tried to make it up to him by always
bringing from Paris a bottle of good Bordeaux, some Camembert or
Brie, and tins of pate de foie gras, which made his eyes sparkle. Juan
was now a hippie on no special diet, one who didn't believe in
vegetarianism.
I liked Earl's Court very much and fell in love with its fauna. The
district breathed youth, music, lives lived without caution or
calculation, great doses of ingenuousness, the desire to live for the
day, removed from conventional morality and values, a search for
pleasure that rejected the old bourgeois myths of
happiness—money, power, family, position, social success—and
found it in simple, passive forms of existence: music, artificial
paradises, promiscuity, and an absolute lack of interest in the other
problems that were shaking society. With their tranquil, peaceable
hedonism, the hippies harmed no one, and they didn't proselytize,
didn't want to convince or recruit people they had broken with in
order to live their alternative lives: they wanted to be left in peace,
absorbed in their frugal egotism and their psychedelic dream.
I knew I'd never be one of them because, though I thought of
myself as a person fairly free of prejudices, I would never feel
comfortable letting my hair grow down to my shoulders, or dressing
in capes, necklaces, and iridescent shirts, or engaging in group
sexual encounters. But I felt a great fondness for and even a
melancholy envy of those boys and girls, given over without the
slightest apprehension to the confused idealism that guided their
conduct, never imagining the risks all of that was obliging them to
take.
In those years, though not for much longer, the employees of
banks, insurance companies, and financial firms in the City wore the
traditional attire of striped trousers, black jacket, bowler hat, and the
inescapable black umbrella under the arm. But on the backstreets of
Earl's Court, with their two- or three-story houses and little gardens
front and back, you could see people dressed as if they were going to
a masquerade ball, even in rags and often barefoot, but always with
a keen esthetic sense and sly, humorous details, seeking out what
was showy, exotic, distinctive. I was astounded by my neighbor
Marina, a Colombian who had come to London to study dance. She
had a hamster that would constantly escape into Juan's pied-a-terre
and scare me half to death, since it usually climbed into bed and
curled up in the sheets. Marina, though she lived in poverty and
must have had very little clothing, rarely dressed the same way
twice: one day she appeared in huge clown's overalls and a derby on
her head, and the next day in a miniskirt that left practically no
secret of her body to the imagination of passersby. One day I ran
into her in the Earl's Court station mounted on stilts, her face
disfigured by a Union Jack painted from ear to ear.
Many hippies, perhaps the majority, came from the middle or
upper class, and their rebellion was familial, directed against the
well-regulated lives of their parents and what they considered the
hypocrisy of puritanical customs and social facades behind which
they hid their egotism, insular spirit, and lack of imagination. Their
pacifism, naturism, vegetarianism, their eager search for a spiritual
life that would give transcendence to their rejection of a materialist
world corroded by class, social, and sexual prejudices, a world they
wanted nothing to do with—this was sympathetic. But all of it was
anarchic, thoughtless, without a center or direction, even without
ideas, because the hippies—at least the ones I knew and observed up
close—though they claimed to identify with the poetry of the
beatniks (Allen Ginsberg gave a reading of his poems in Trafalgar
Square in which he sang and performed Indian dances, and
thousands of young people attended), in fact read very- little or
nothing at all. Their philosophy wasn't based on thought and reason
but on sentiment, on feeling.
One morning I was in Juan's pied-a-terre, dedicated to the
prosaic task of ironing some shirts and undershorts I had just
washed in the Earl's Court Laundromat, when someone rang the
doorbell. I opened and saw half a dozen boys with shaved heads,
commando boots, short trousers, leather jackets with a military cut,
some wearing crosses and combat medals on their chests. They
asked about the Swag and Tails pub, which was just around the
corner. They were the first skinheads I had seen. After that, these
gangs would appear in the neighborhood from time to time,
sometimes armed with clubs, and the benign hippies who spread
their blankets on the sidewalks to sell handcrafted trinkets had to
run, some with their babies in their arms, because the skinheads
professed an obstinate hatred for them. It wasn't only hatred for the
way they lived but also class hatred, because these hoodlums,
playing at being SS, came from working-class and marginal areas
and embodied their own kind of rebellion. They became the shock
troops of a tiny party, the racist National Front, which demanded the
expulsion of blacks from England. Their idol was Enoch Powell, a
conservative parliamentarian who, in a speech that caused an
uproar, had prophesied in an apocalyptic manner that "rivers of
blood would run in Great Britain" if there wasn't a halt to
immigration. The appearance of the skinheads had created a certain
tension, and there were some acts of violence in the district, but
they were isolated. As far as I was concerned, I really enjoyed all
those short stays in Earl's Court. Even Uncle Ataulfo noticed it. We
wrote to each other with some frequency; I recounted my London
discoveries, and he complained about the economic disasters that
the dictatorship of General Velasco Alvarado was beginning to cause
in Peru. In one of his letters, he said, "I see you're having a very
good time in London and that the city makes you happy."
The neighborhood had filled with small cafes, vegetarian
restaurants, and houses where all the varieties of Indian tea were
offered, staffed by hippie girls and boys who prepared the perfumed
infusions in front of the patron. The hippies' scorn for the industrial
world had led them to revive handicrafts of every kind and to
mythologize manual labor: they WOVE bags and made sandals,
earrings, necklaces, tunics, headscarves, and pendants. I loved to go
to the teahouses and read, as I did in the bistrots of Paris, but how
different the atmosphere was, especially in a garage with four tables
where the waitress was Annette, a French girl with long hair held
back in a braid and very pretty feet; I had long conversations with
her about the differences between asanas and pranayama yoga,
about which she seemed to know everything and I nothing.
Juan's pied-a-terre was tiny, happy, and inviting. It was on the
ground floor of a two-story house, divided and subdivided into small
apartments, and it consisted of a single bedroom, a small bathroom,
and a kitchenette built into a wall. The room was spacious, with two
large windows that assured good ventilation and an excellent view of
Philbeach Gardens, a small street in the shape of a half-moon, and
the interior garden, which lack of care had turned into an overgrown
thicket. At one time there was a Sioux tent in that garden where a
hippie couple lived with two crawling babies. She would come to the
pied-a-terre to heat her children's bottles, and she showed me a way
of breathing that entailed holding the air and passing it through the
entire body, which, she said very seriously, dissolved all the warlike
tendencies' in human nature.
In addition to the bed, the room had a large table full of strange
objects bought by Juan Barreto on Portobello Road and, on the
walls, a multitude of prints, some images of Peru—the inevitable
Machu Picchu in a preferred spot—and photographs of Juan with
different people in a variety of places. And a tall case where he kept
books and magazines. There were also some books on a shelf, but
what abounded in the place were records: he had an excellent
collection of rock-and-roll and pop music, both English and
American, arranged around a first-rate radio and record player.
One day when I was examining Juan's photographs for the third
or fourth time—the most amusing was one taken in the equine
paradise of Newmarket, in which my friend appeared on a superblooking
thoroughbred crowned with a horseshoe of acanthus
flowers, its reins held by a jockey and a splendid gentleman,
undoubtedly the owner, both laughing at the poor rider who seemed
very uncertain on this Pegasus—one of the pictures attracted my
attention. Taken at a party of three or four very* well-dressed
couples, smiling and looking at the camera and holding glasses in
their hands. What? Merely a resemblance. I looked again and
rejected the idea. That day I went back to Paris. For the next two
months, when I didn't return to London, the suspicion haunted me
until it became a fixed idea. Could it be that the ex—Chilean girl, the