Christie's—she made me wait more than two hours without calling
to explain the delay. Finally she showed up, frowning, when I no
longer thought she was coming.
"Couldn't you have called?" I protested. "You've set my nerves—"
I couldn't finish because a slap, delivered with all her strength,
closed my mouth.
"You don't stand me up, little pissant." She quivered with
indignation, and her voice broke. "If you have a date with me—"
I didn't let her finish the sentence because I threw myself at her
and with all the weight of my body pushed her onto the bed. She
defended herself a little at first, but soon she stopped resisting. And
almost immediately I felt her kissing and embracing me, and
helping me take off her clothes. She'd never done anything like it
before. For the first time I felt her body embracing me, entwining
her legs with mine, her lips pressing against mine, her tongue
struggling with mine. Her hands dug into my back, my neck. I asked
her to forgive me, it would never happen again, I thanked her for
making me so happy and showing me for the first time that she
loved me too. Then I heard her sob and saw that her eyes were wet.
"My love, darling, don't cry, it's too silly." And I fondled her,
kissing away her tears. "It won't happen again, I promise. I love you,
I love you."
Afterward, when we dressed, she remained silent, her expression
rancorous, regretting her weakness. I tried to improve her mood by
joking.
"Did you stop loving me so soon?"
She looked at me angrily for a long time, and when she spoke her
voice sounded very hard.
"Make no mistake, Ricardito. Don't think I made that scene
because I'm crazy about you. No man matters very much to me, and
you're no exception. But I have my pride, and nobody stands me up
in a hotel room."
I said she was sorry I had discovered that in spite of all her
boasting, defiance, and insults, she did feel something for me. It was
the second serious error I had committed with the bad girl since the
day when, instead of keeping her in Paris, I encouraged her to go to
Cuba for guerrilla training. She looked at me very gravely, said
nothing for some time, and finally murmured, full of haughtiness
and scorn, "Is that what you think? You'll find out it isn't true, little
pissant."
She left the room without saying goodbye. I thought it was a
passing fit of bad temper, but I didn't hear from her the next week. I
spent Wednesday and Friday waiting for her in vain, accompanied in
my solitude by the belligerent Mongols. The following Wednesday,
when I arrived at the Russell Hotel, the Indian concierge handed me
a note. Very direct, it informed me she was leaving for Japan with
"David." She didn't even say for how long or that she would call me
as soon as she returned to England. I was filled with evil
presentiments and cursed my faux pas. Knowing her, this twosentence
note could be a long and, perhaps, definitive goodbye.
In those two years my friendship with Juan Barreto had grown
closer. I spent a good number of days at his pied-a-terre in Earl's
Court, always hiding from him my meetings with the bad girl, of
course. At about this time, in 1972 or '73, the hippie movement went
into rapid decline and became a bourgeois style. The psychedelic
revolution turned out to be less profound and serious than its
followers believed. Its music, the most creative thing it produced,
was rapidly absorbed by the establishment and transformed into a
part of official culture, making millionaires and multimillionaires
out of old rebels and nonconformists and their representatives and
recording companies, beginning with the Beatles and ending with
the Rolling Stones. Instead of the liberation of the spirit, "the
indefinite expansion of the human mind" promised by the guru of
LSD and former Harvard professor Dr. Timothy Leary, drugs and a
promiscuous, unrestrained life caused a good number of problems
and some personal and familial misfortunes. Nobody lived this
change of circumstances as viscerally as my friend Juan Barreto.
He had always been very healthy but suddenly began to complain
of frequent, debilitating grippes and colds, accompanied by acute
attacks of neuralgia. His doctor in Cambridge advised a vacation in a
warmer climate than England. He spent ten days in Ibiza and came
back to London tanned and happy, full of risque anecdotes about hot
nights in Ibiza, "something I never would have imagined in a
country with Spain's reputation for prudery."
It was at this time that Mrs. Richardson left for Tokyo with her
husband. I didn't see Juan for about a month. I was working in
Geneva and Brussels and when I called him, in London and in
Newmarket, he didn't answer the phone. During those four weeks I
heard nothing from the bad girl either. When I returned to London,
my neighbor in Earl's Court, the Colombian Marina, told me Juan
had been admitted to Westminster Hospital a few days earlier. They
had him in the infectious diseases wing, and he was undergoing all
kinds of tests. He had lost a great deal of weight. I found him
unshaven, under a mountain of blankets, and in distress because
"these quacks can't manage to diagnose my disease." At first they
said he had genital herpes that had developed complications, and
then that it probably was a form of sarcoma. Now they told him
nothing but generalities. His eyes burned when he saw me approach
his bed.
"I feel more abandoned than a dog, brother," he confessed. "You
don't know how happy I am to see you. I've discovered that even
though I know a million gringos, you're the only friend I have. A
friend in a Permian friendship, the kind that goes down to the
marrow of your bones, I mean. The truth is that friendships here are
very superficial. The English don't have time for friendship."
Mrs. Stubard had left her house in St. John's Wood a few months
earlier. Her health was fragile and she had retired to an old-age
home in Suffolk. She came to \isit Juan once, but it was too much of
a trip for her, and she hadn't returned. "The poor thing has a bad
back, and getting here was a real act of heroism for her." Juan was a
different person; illness had made him lose his optimism and
certainty, and filled him with fears.
"I'm dying and they don't know from what," he said in a
cavernous voice the second or third time I went to see him. "I don't
think they're hiding it from me so as not to frighten me, English
doctors always tell you the truth no matter how awful it is. The fact
is they don't know what's happening to me."
The tests showed nothing conclusive, and the doctors suddenly
began to talk about an elusive, unidentified \irus that attacked the
immune system, making Juan susceptible to all kinds of infections.
He was exceedingly weak, with sunken eyes, bluish skin, protruding
bones. He kept passing his hands over his face as if to prove he was
still there. I was with him during all the hours \isitors were
authorized. I saw him being consumed more and more each day as
he sank into despair. One day he asked me to find him a Catholic
priest because he wanted to confess. It wasn't easy. The priest at the
Brompton Oratory with whom I spoke said it was impossible for him
to \isit hospitals. But he gave me the phone number of a Dominican
convent that offered this service. I had to go in person to arrange the
matter. A red-faced, good-natured Irish priest came to see Juan, and
my friend had a long conversation with him. The Dominican came
back two or three times to see him. Those dialogues calmed him for
a few days. And as a result he made a transcendental decision: he
would write to his family, with whom he'd had no contact for more
than ten years.
He was too weak to write, and so he dictated a long, deeply felt
letter to me in which he told his parents about his career as a painter
in Newmarket, with humorous details. He said that though he often
wanted to write and make peace with them, he always had been held
back by a stupid streak of pride, which he regretted. Because he
loved and missed them very much. In a postscript he added
something that would make them happy, he was sure: after being
estranged from the Church for many years, God had allowed him to
return to the faith he had been brought up in, which now brought
peace to his life. He didn't say a word about his illness.
Without telling Juan, I requested an appointment with the head
of the Department of Infectious Diseases at Westminster Hospital.
Dr. Rotkof was an older, fairly dry man with a graying beard and
tuberous nose, who before answering my questions wanted to know
my relationship to the patient.
"We're friends, Doctor. He has no family here in England. I'd like
to be able to write to his parents in Peru and tell them the truth
about Juan's condition."
"I can't tell you very much, except that it's extremely serious," he
said abruptly, with no preambles. "He can die at any moment. His
organism lacks defenses and a cold could kill him."
It was a new disease, and a fair number of cases had been
detected in the United States and the United Kingdom. It attacked
with special virulence homosexual communities, people addicted to
heroin and all intravenous drugs, and hemophiliacs. Except for the
fact that sperm and blood were the principal means of transmitting
the "syndrome"—nobody was talking about AIDS yet—very little was
known about its origin and nature. It devastated the immune system
and exposed the patient to every sort of disease. A constant was the
kind of lesion on the legs and abdomen that was tormenting my
friend. Stunned by what I'd just heard, I asked Dr. Rotkof to advise
me what to do. Should I tell Juan? He shrugged and pouted. That
depended entirely on me. Maybe yes, maybe no. Though perhaps
yes, if my friend had to make any arrangements with regard to his
passing.
I was so affected by my conversation with Dr. Rotkof that I didn't
have the courage to return to Juan's room, certain he would see
everything in my face. I felt terribly sorry for him. What I wouldn't
have given to see Mrs. Richardson that afternoon and feel her, if
only for a few hours, at my side. Juan Barreto had told me a
profound truth: though I also knew hundreds of people here in
Europe, the only friend I had "in the Permian style" was about to
die. And the woman I loved was on the other side of the world with
her husband, and true to form, had given no sign of life for more
than a month. She had carried out her threat, showing the insolent
little pissant that she absolutely was not in love and could dispose of
him like a useless trinket. For days I had been tormented by the
suspicion that she would disappear again without leaving a trace. Is
this why you dreamed about escaping from Peru and living in
Europe since the time you were a boy, Ricardo Somocurcio? During
those days in London I felt as lonely and sad as a stray dog.
Without saying anything to Juan, I wrote a letter to his parents,
explaining that he was in very delicate condition, the \ictim of an
unknown disease, and telling them what Dr. Rotkof had told me: he
could meet a fatal end at any moment. I said that though I lived in
Paris, I would stay in London as long as necessary to be with Juan. I
gave them the phone number and address of the pied-a-terre in
Earl's Court and asked for their instructions.
They called as soon as they received my letter, which arrived at
the same time as the one Juan had dictated to me. His father was
devastated by the news, but, at the same time, happy to have
recovered his prodigal son. They made arrangements to come to
London. They asked me to reserve a room at a modest hotel, since
they didn't have much money at their disposal. I reassured them;
they would stay at Juan's pied-a-terre, where they could cook,
making their stay in London less expensive. We agreed that I would
prepare Juan for their imminent arrival.
Two weeks later the engineer Climaco Barreto and his wife,
Eufrasia, were installed in Earl's Court and I had moved to a bedand-
breakfast in Bayswater. The arrival of his parents had an
immensely positive effect on Juan. He recovered his hope and
humor, and seemed to improve. He even managed to keep down
some of the food the nurse brought him morning and evening,
though before that everything he put in his mouth nauseated him.
The Barretos were fairly young—he had worked all his life at the
Paramonga ranch, until the government of General Velasco Alvarado
expropriated it, and then he resigned and found a job as a professor
of mathematics at one of the new universities springing up in Lima
like mushrooms—or else they were very well preserved, since they
barely looked in their fifties. He was tall and had the athletic look of
someone who has spent his life in the countryside, and she was a