spreading her legs to make a place for my head as she covered her
eyes with her right arm. I felt her begin to move farther and farther
from me, the Russell Hotel, London, in order to concentrate totally,
with an intensity I'd never seen in any other woman, on the solitary,
personal, egotistical pleasure my lips had learned to give her.
Licking, sucking, kissing, nibbling her small sex, I felt her grow wet
and vibrate. It took her a long time to finish. But how delicious and
exciting it was to feel her purring, moving, rocking, submerged in
the vertigo of desire, until at last a long wail shook her body from
head to toe. "Now, now," she whispered in a choked voice. I entered
her easily and embraced her with so much strength that she came
out of the inertia in which the orgasm had left her. She groaned,
twisting, trying to slip out from under my body, complaining,
"You're crushing me."
With my mouth pressed against hers, I pleaded, "For once in
your life, tell me you love me, bad girl. Even if it isn't true, say it. I
want to know how it sounds, just once."
Afterward, when we had finished making love and were talking,
lying naked on the yellow spread, menaced by the fierce Mongol
warriors, and I was caressing her breasts, her waist, and kissing the
almost invisible scar and playing with her smooth belly, pressing my
ear to her navel and listening to the deep sounds of her body, I asked
her why she hadn't made me happy, saying that small lie into my
ear. Hadn't she said it so many times to so many men?
"That's why," she replied immediately, pitiless. "I've never said 'I
love you, I adore you' and really meant it. Never. I've only said those
things as a lie. Because I've never loved anybody, Ricardito. I've lied
to all of them, always. I think the only man I've never lied to in bed
is you."
"Well, coming from you, that's a declaration of love."
Did she finally have what she had wanted for so long, now that
she was married to a rich and powerful man?
A shadow veiled her eyes, and her voice thickened.
"Yes and no. Because even though I have security now and can
buy whatever I want, I'm obliged to live in Newmarket and spend
my life talking about horses."
She said this with a bitterness that seemed to come from the
bottom of her soul. And then, suddenly, she was sincere with me in
an unexpected way, as if she could no longer keep everything inside.
She despised horses with all her heart, along with her friends and
acquaintances in Newmarket, and the owners, trainers, jockeys,
stableboys, grooms, dogs, cats, and every person who directly or
indirectly had anything to do with equines, damn monsters that
were the only topic of conversation and concern of the horrible
people who surrounded her. Not only at the races, the training
tracks, the stables, but also at dinners, receptions, weddings,
birthday parties, and casual encounters, the people in Newmarket
talked about the diseases, accidents, trial runs, victories, or defeats
of those awful quadrupeds. This life had soured her days, and even
her nights, because recently she'd been having nightmares about the
horses of Newmarket. And even though she didn't say so, it was easy
to guess that her immeasurable hatred for horses and Newmarket
had not skipped over her husband. Mr. David Richardson, moved by
his wife's suffering and depression, had given her permission a few
months ago to come to London—a city that the fauna of Newmarket
detested and where they rarely set foot—and take mini-courses on
art history at Christie's and Sotheby's, classes in flower arranging at
Out of the Bloom in Camden, and even sessions in yoga and
Transcendental Meditation at an ashram in Chelsea that distracted
her a little from the psychological devastation caused in her by
horses.
"Well, well, bad girl," I said mockingly, delighted to hear what
she was telling me. "Have you discovered that money isn't always
happiness? Can I hope, then, that one day you'll say goodbye to Mr.
Richardson and marry me? Paris is more amusing than the horsey
hell of Suffolk, as you know."
But she was in no mood for joking. The repugnance she felt for
Newmarket was even more serious than it seemed on that occasion,
a real trauma. I think that never, not once on all the many
afternoons we saw each other and made love over the next two years
in various rooms of the Russell Hotel—I had the impression she
knew them all by heart—never did the bad girl fail to vent her anger
in a rant against the horses and people of Newmarket, whose life she
thought monotonous, stupid, the emptiest in the world. Why, if she
was so unhappy with the life she led, didn't she put an end to it?
Why was she waiting to leave David Richardson, a man she clearly
had not married for love?
"I don't dare ask him for a divorce," she confessed on one of
those afternoons. "I don't know what would happen to me."
"Nothing would happen to you. You're legally married, aren't
you? Couples here get unmarried without any problem."
"I don't know," she said, going a little further with her
confidences than usual. "We were married in Gibraltar and I'm not
sure if the marriage is valid here. And I don't know how to check
that without David finding out. Good boy, you don't know the rich.
Least of all David. To marry me he worked out a divorce with his
lawyers that almost left his first wife in the street. I don't want the
same thing to happen to me. He has the best lawyers, the best
connections. And in England I'm less than nobody, a poor shit."
I never could learn how she had met him, when and in what way
her romance with David Richardson had blossomed and catapulted
her from Paris to Newmarket. It was clear she had miscalculated
when she thought that with this conquest she would also conquer
the unlimited freedom she associated with a fortune. Not only was
she not happy, but apparently she had been happier as the wife of
the French functionary she had abandoned. When, on another
afternoon, she brought up Robert Arnoux and insisted I recount in
exact detail the conversation we'd had on the night he invited me to
supper at Chez Eux, I did as she asked, omitting nothing, even
telling her how her ex-husband's eyes had filled with tears when he
told me she had fled with all his savings in their joint account in a
Swiss bank.
"Like a good Frenchman, the only thing that hurt him was the
money," she said, not at all impressed. "His savings! A few measly
francs that weren't enough for me to live on for a year. He used me
to sneak money out of France. Not only his but his friends' money
too. I could have been arrested if I had been caught. Besides, he was
a miser, the worst thing anybody can be in this life."
"Since you're so cold and perverse, why don't you kill David
Richardson, bad girl? You'll avoid the risks of a divorce and inherit
his fortune."
"Because I wouldn't know how to do it without getting caught,"
she replied, not smiling. "Do you want to do it? I'd give you ten
percent of the inheritance. It's an awful lot of money."
We wTere playing, but wThen I heard her say those outrageous
things to me so openly, I couldn't help shuddering. She wras no
longer the vulnerable girl who had gone through a thousand
difficulties and come out of them thanks to uncommon boldness
and determination; now she was a grown woman, convinced that life
wTas a jungle where only the wTorst triumphed, and ready to do
anything not to be conquered and to keep moving higher. Even
sending her husband to the next world in order to inherit his money,
if she could do it with an absolute guarantee of impunity? "Of
course," she said with that fierce, mocking look. "Do I scare you,
good boy?"
She enjoyed herself only wThen David Richardson took her on his
business trips to Asia. According to what she said, something fairly
vague, her husband was a broker, the middleman for various
commodities that Indonesia, Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, and Japan
exported to Europe, wThich is w7hy he made frequent trips to meet
with the suppliers. She didn't always go with him; wThen she did, she
felt emancipated. Seoul, Bangkok, Tokyo wTere the compensations
that allowed her to endure Newmarket. While he had his dinners
and business meetings, she was a tourist, visiting temples and
museums and buying clothes or decorative objects for her house.
For example, she had a marvelous collection of Japanese kimonos
and a great variety of the articulated marionettes used in Balinese
theater. Sometime when her husband was traveling, would she let
me come to Newmarket and see her house? No, never. I should
never show up there again, even if Juan Barreto invited me. Except,
of course, if I decided to take her homicidal proposition seriously.
Those two years when I spent long periods of time in swinging
London sleeping at Juan Barreto's pied-a-terre in Earl's Court and
seeing the bad girl once or twice a week were the happiest I'd ever
had. I earned less money as an interpreter because, for the sake of
London, I turned down many contracts in Paris and other European
cities, including Moscow, where international conferences and
congresses became more frequent at the end of the sixties and the
beginning of the seventies, but I did accept fairly low-paying jobs
whose only attraction was that they took me to England. But not for
anything in the world would I have traded the joy of arriving at the
Russell Hotel, where I came to know all the staff by name, and
waiting, in a trance, for Mrs. Richardson. She surprised me each
time with a new dress, lingerie, perfume, or shoes. One afternoon, as
I'd asked her to do, she brought several kimonos from her collection
in a bag and put on a show for me, walking and moving around the
room with her feet very close together and wearing the stereotyped
smile of a geisha. I always had noticed an Asian trace in her small
body and the slightly greenish tinge of her skin, the inheritance of
some ancestor she knew nothing about, and that afternoon it
seemed more obvious than ever.
We made love, we talked while we were naked and I toyed with
her hair and body, and on occasion, if time allowed, we took a walk
in a park. If it was raining we went to the movies and watched the
picture holding hands. Or we'd have tea with the scones she liked at
Fortnum and Mason, and once we had the famous, elaborate tea
served at the Hotel Ritz, but we never went back because as we were
leaving she spotted a couple from Newmarket at one of the tables. I
saw her turn pale. In those two years I became convinced that, in my
case at least, it wasn't true that love diminished or disappeared with
use. Mine grew each day. I studied carefully the galleries, museums,
art cinemas, expositions, recommended itineraries—the oldest pubs
in the city, the antiques fairs, the settings for Dickens's novels—so I
could suggest walks that would amuse her, and each time I also
surprised her with some little gift from Paris that would impress her
for its originality, if not its price. At times, when she was happy with
the gift, she would say, "You deserve a kiss," and place her lips on
mine for a second. Resting there quietly, they let themselves be
kissed but didn't respond.
Did she come to love me a little in those two years? She never
said so, of course, that would have been a demonstration of
weakness for which she never could have forgiven herself—or me.
But I think she became accustomed to my devotion, to feeling
flattered by the love I poured over her with both hands, more than
she ever would have confessed, even to herself. She liked my giving
her pleasure with my mouth and then, as soon as she'd had an
orgasm, penetrating and "irrigating" her. And my telling her all the
possible forms and thousand ways I loved her. "What cheap,
sentimental things are you going to tell me today?" was sometimes
her greeting.
"That the most exciting thing in you, after this tiny clitoris of
yours, is your Adam's apple. When it goes up, but principally when it
dances down your throat."
If I managed to make her laugh I felt fulfilled, the way I had
when I was a boy after the daily good deed the brothers at the
Colegio Champagnat in Miraflores recommended we do in order to
sanctify the day. One afternoon we had a curious incident, with
some consequences. I was working at a congress organized by
British Petroleum, in a conference hall at Uxbridge on the outskirts
of London, and I couldn't leave to meet her—I had asked permission
to be away in the afternoon—because the colleague who was
supposed to replace me fell ill. I called her at the Russell Hotel,
giving her all kinds of excuses. Without saying a word she hung up
on me. I called again and she wasn't in the room.
The following Friday—generally we saw each other on
Wednesdays and Fridays, the days of her supposed art classes at