approached her, observing certain forms, she moved away on the
pretext of wanting to greet someone, or to go to the buffet or the bar,
or to have a private chat with a friend. I couldn't exchange glances
with her either, and though I had no doubt she was perfectly aware
of my constantly following her with my eyes, she never looked at me
but always arranged to show me her back or her profile. What Juan
Barreto had said was true: her English was elementary and at times
incomprehensible, full of mistakes, but she spoke with so much
freshness and conviction, and her Latin American musicality was so
attractive, that the result was charming as well as expressive. To fill
in the gaps she constantly accompanied her words with gestures,
looks, and expressions that were a consummate display of coquetry.
Charles, Mrs. Stubard's nephew, turned out to be a charming
boy. He told me that because of Juan, he had begun to read books by
English travelers to Peru and was planning to spend a vacation in
Cuzco and hike up to Machu Picchu. He wanted to persuade Juan to
go with him. If I wanted to join the adventure, I was welcome.
At about two in the morning, as people were beginning to say
good night to Signor Ariosti, on a sudden impulse that must have
been brought on by the countless glasses of champagne I had
consumed, I moved away from a couple who were asking me about
my experiences as a professional interpreter, avoided my friend
Juan Barreto, who, for the fourth or fifth time that evening, wanted
to pull me into a room to admire the full-length portrait he had
painted of Belicoso, one of the stars of the stables belonging to the
master of the house, and crossed the salon to the group that
included Mrs. Richardson. I grasped her arm with some force,
smiled, and obliged her to move away from the people around her.
She looked at me with a displeasure that twisted her mouth, and I
heard her pronounce the first swear word I had ever heard her use.
"Let go of me, you fucking beast," she whispered through
clenched teeth. "Let go of me, you'll make trouble for me."
"If you don't call me, I'll tell Mr. Richardson you're married in
France and are wanted by the Swiss police for emptying out the
secret bank account of Monsieur Arnoux."
And I put a piece of paper in her hand with the telephone
number of Juan's pied-a-terre in Earl's Court. After a moment of
astonishment and silence—her face frozen in a rictus—she burst into
laughter, opening her eyes wide.
"Oh my God! You're learning, good boy," she exclaimed in a tone
of professional approval, recovering from her surprise.
She turned and went back to the small group I had pulled her
away from.
I was absolutely sure she wouldn't call me. I was a discomfiting
witness to a past she wanted to erase at any cost; if not, she never
would have behaved as she had all evening, avoiding me. But she did
call me at Earl's Court two days later, very early. We could barely
speak because, as always, she did nothing but give orders.
"I'll wait for you tomorrow at three, at the Russell Hotel. Do you
know it? In Russell Square, near the British Museum. English
punctuality, please."
I was there half an hour early. My hands were perspiring and it
was hard for me to breathe. The place couldn't have been better. The
old belle epoque hotel, its facade and long hallways in the Oriental
pompier style, seemed half empty, especially the bar with its high
ceiling, wood-paneled walls, small widely spaced tables, some of
them hidden among screens, and thick carpets that muffled
footsteps and conversation. Behind the bar, a waiter leafed through
the Evening Standard.
She arrived a few minutes late, dressed in a tailored outfit of
mauve suede, shoes and handbag of black crocodile, a single strand
of pearls, and on her hand a flashing solitaire. Over her arm she
carried a gray raincoat and an umbrella of the same color and fabric.
How far Comrade Arlette had come! Without greeting me, or
smiling, or extending her hand, she sat across from me, crossed her
legs, and began to berate me.
"The other night you did something so stupid I can't forgive you.
You shouldn't have said a word to me, you shouldn't have taken my
arm, you shouldn't have spoken to me as if you knew me. You might
have compromised me. Didn't you realize you had to pretend?
Where's your head, Ricardito?"
It was the bad girl, no question about that. We hadn't seen each
other for four years and she didn't think to ask me how I was, what I
had been doing, or even to give me a smile or a pleasant word on our
meeting. She went straight to what concerned her without being
distracted by anything else.
"You look very pretty," I said, speaking with some difficulty
because of my emotions. "Even prettier than four years ago when
your name was Madame Arnoux. I forgive your insults the other
night and your insolent remarks now because of how pretty you
look. Besides, in case you want to know, yes, I'm still in love with
you. In spite of everything. Crazy about you. More than ever. Do you
remember the toothbrush you left me as a memento the last time
we saw each other? Here it is. Since then I carry it everywhere in my
pocket. I've become a fetishist because of you. Thanks for being so
pretty, Chilean girl."
She didn't laugh, but the ironic gleam of past times flashed in her
eyes the color of dark honey. She took the toothbrush, examined it,
and returned it to me, murmuring, "I don't know what you're talking
about." With no discomfort at all she allowed me to look at her as
she observed me, studying me. My eyes looked her over from top to
bottom, from bottom to top, stopping at her knees, her throat, her
ears half covered by locks of her now light-colored hair, her carefully
tended hands and long nails with natural polish, her nose that
seemed to have sharpened. She allowed me to take her hands and
kiss them but with her proverbial indifference, without the slightest
gesture of reciprocity.
"Was that a serious threat you made the other night?" she finally
asked.
"Very serious," I said, kissing each finger, the knuckles, the back
and palm of each hand. "Over the years I've become like you.
Anything to get what you want. Those are your words, bad girl. And
as you know very well, the only thing I really want in this world is
you."
She slipped one of her hands from mine and passed it over my
head, mussing my hair, in that slightly pitying semi-caress she had
used with me on other occasions.
"No, you're not capable of those things," she said quietly, as if
lamenting a lack in my personality. "But yes, it must be true you're
still in love with me."
She ordered tea with scones for two and said her husband was a
very jealous man and, what was worse, sick with retrospective
jealousy. He sniffed out her past like a predatory wolf. Which was
why she needed to be very careful. If he had suspected the other
night that we knew each other, he would have made a scene. I hadn't
been imprudent enough to tell Juan Barreto who she was, had I?
"I wouldn't have been able to tell him even if I wanted to," I
reassured her. "Because the truth is, I still don't have the slightest
idea who you are."
Finally she laughed. She let me hold her head in both my hands
and bring our lips together. Beneath mine, which kissed her avidly,
tenderly, with all the love I felt for her, hers were unyielding.
"I want you," I murmured, nibbling the edge of her ear. "You're
more beautiful than ever, Permian girl. I love you, I want you with
all my heart, with all my body. In these four years all I've done is
dream about you, and want you, and love you. And curse you too.
Each day, each night, every day."
After a moment she moved me away with her hands.
"You must be the last person on earth who still says those things
to women," she said with a smile, amused, looking at me as if I were
an exotic animal. "What cheap sentimental things you tell me,
Ricardito!"
"The worst thing isn't that I say them. The worst thing is that I
feel them. It's true. You turn me into a character in a soap opera.
I've never said them to anybody but you."
"Nobody can ever see us like this," she said suddenly, changing
her tone, very serious now. "The last thing I want is my pain of a
husband to have a jealous fit. And now I have to go, Ricardito."
"Will I have to wait another four years to see you again?"
"Friday," she specified immediately with a mischievous little
laugh, passing her hand over my hair again. And after a dramatic
pause: "Right here. I'll reserve a room in your name. Don't worry,
little pissant, I'll pay for it. Bring an overnight bag, to make it look
good."
I said that was fine but I'd pay for the room myself. I didn't
intend to trade my honest profession of interpreter for that of kept
man.
She burst out laughing, spontaneously this time.
"Of course!" she exclaimed. "You're a good little Miraflores
gentleman and gentlemen don't take money from women."
For the third time she ran her hand through my hair and this
time I caught her hand and kissed it.
"Did you think I'd go to bed with you in the dump that fag Juan
Barreto lent you in Earl's Court? You haven't realized yet that I'm at
the top now."
A minute later she was gone, after telling me not to leave the
Russell Hotel for another quarter of an hour, because with David
Richardson everything was possible, including his having her
followed every time she came to London by one of those detectives
who specialized in adultery.
I waited fifteen minutes and then, instead of the tube, I took a
long walk under a cloudy sky and intermittent showers. I went to
Trafalgar Square, crossed St. James's Park and Green Park, smelling
the wet grass and watching the branches of fat oaks dripping water,
went down almost all of Brompton Road, and an hour and a half
later reached the half-moon of Philbeach Gardens, tired and happy.
The long walk had calmed me and allowed me to think without the
tumult of chaotic ideas and sensations I had experienced since my
visit to Newmarket. How could seeing her again after so much time
upset you so much, Ricardito? Because everything I told her was
true: I was still crazy about her. It was enough for me to see her to
realize that, despite my knowing that any relationship with the bad
girl was doomed to failure, the only thing I really wanted in life with
the passion others bring to the pursuit of fortune, glory, success,
power, was having her, with all her lies, entanglements, egotism,
and disappearances. A cheap, sentimental thing, no doubt, but also
true that I wouldn't do anything until Friday but curse how slowly
the hours went by until I could see her again.
On Friday, when I arrived at the Russell Hotel with my overnight
bag, the receptionist, an Indian, confirmed that the room had been
reserved for the day in my name. It had already been paid for. He
added that "my secretary" had told them I came in from Paris with
some frequency, and in that case the hotel would find a way to give
me the special price they used for regular clients, "except in high
season." The room overlooked Russell Square, and though it wasn't
small it seemed so because it was crowded with objects: end tables,
lamps, miniature animals, prints, and paintings of Mongol warriors
with popping eyes, twisted beards, and curved scimitars who seemed
to be rushing the bed with very evil intentions.
The bad girl arrived half an hour after me, wrapped in a closefitting
leather coat, a little matching hat, and knee-high boots. In
addition to her handbag she carried a portfolio filled with notebooks
and textbooks for classes on modern art that, she told me later, she
took three times a week at Christie's. Before looking at me she
glanced around the room and nodded briefly in approval. When,
finally, she deigned to look at me, I already had her in my arms and
had begun to undress her.
"Be careful," she instructed. "Don't wrinkle my clothes."
I took them off with all the precaution in the world, studying
each thing she wore as if it were a precious, unique object, kissing
with devotion every centimeter of skin that came into view,
breathing in the soft, lightly perfumed aura that emanated from her
body. Now she had a small, almost invisible scar near her groin
because her appendix had been removed, and her pubis had even
less hair than before. I felt desire, emotion, tenderness as I kissed
her insteps, her fragrant underarms, the suggestion of little bones in
her spine, and her motionless buttocks, as delicate to the touch as
velvet. I kissed her small breasts at length, mad with happiness.
"You haven't forgotten what I like, good boy," she finally
whispered in my ear.
And, without waiting for my reply, she turned on her back,