mosque, domed ceiling, and red marble tables, and then, without
need for prior arrangements, we went to bed in the luxurious Hotel
Sacher, where the two of us were staying, since the hotel offered
significant discounts to conference participants. She was still
attractive, though age had begun to leave a few traces on her
extremely white body. She made love and the smile didn't leave her
face, not even when she had an orgasm. I enjoyed it and she enjoyed
it too, but it seemed to me that this healthful way of making love
had more to do with gymnastics than with what the late Salomon
Toledano called, in one of his letters, "the disturbing and lascivious
pleasure of the gonads." The second and last time we went to bed,
the telephone on my night table rang when we had finished our
acrobatics and Astrid was telling me about the accomplishments of
one of her daughters in Copenhagen, who had made the move from
ballet dancer to circus acrobat. I picked up the receiver, said "Hello,"
and heard the affectionate, kittenish voice.
"Are you going to hang up on me again, little pissant?"
I held the receiver for a few seconds while I mentally cursed
UNESCO for giving her my phone number in Vienna, but I hung up
when, after a pause, she began to say: "Well, at least this time..."
"Stories of past love?" guessed Astrid. "Shall I go to the bathroom
so you can talk freely?"
No, no, it was a story over and done with. Since that night I
hadn't had another sexual relationship, and the truth was, it didn't
concern me in the least. At the age of forty-seven, I had verified that
a man could lead a perfectly normal life without making love.
Because my life was fairly normal, though empty. I worked a great
deal and did my job to fill the time and earn a salary, but not
because I was interested—that happened only rarely—and even my
studies of Russian and the almost eternal translation of Ivan
Bunin's stories, which I did over and over again, turned out to be a
mechanical chore that seldom became pleasurable again. Even films,
concerts, books, records were ways to kill time more than activities
that excited me as they once had. Another reason for my still feeling
rancorous toward Kuriko. Because of her, the illusions that make
existence something more than the sum of its routines had been
extinguished for me. At times I felt like an old man.
Perhaps because of this state of mind, the arrival of Elena,
Simon, and Yilal Gravoski in the building on Rue Joseph Granier
was providential. My neighbors' friendship infused a little humanity
and emotion into my dull, flat life. The third call from the bad girl
came to my house in Paris, at least a year after the call to Vienna.
It was early, four or five in the morning, and the loud rings of the
phone pulled me out of sleep and filled me with alarm. It rang so
many times that finally I opened my eyes and fumbled for the
receiver.
"Don't hang up." Pleading and anger mixed in her voice. "I need
to talk to you, Ricardo."
I hung up and, of course, couldn't close my eyes for the rest of
the night. I was distraught, feeling ill, until I saw the streaks of a
mouse-colored dawn in the Paris sky through the skylight in my
bedroom. Why was she calling me periodically? Because I must be
one of the few stable things in her intense life, the faithful idiot in
love who was always there, waiting for the call that would make her
feel she was still what she no doubt was beginning not to be
anymore, what she soon would not be again: young, beautiful, loved,
desirable. Or, perhaps, she needed something from me? It wasn't
impossible. A gap had suddenly appeared in her life that the little
pissant could fill. And with that icy character of hers, she wouldn't
hesitate to look for me, certain there was no pain, no humiliation
that she, with her infinite power over my feelings, couldn't erase
after two minutes of conversation. Knowing her, it was certain she'd
be obstinate; she'd go on insisting, every few months, or years. No,
this time you're wrong. I won't talk to you again on the phone,
Permian girl.
Now she had called for the fourth time. From where? I asked
Elena Gravoski but, to my surprise, she said she hadn't answered
that call or any other during my trip to Brussels.
"Then it was Simon. Hasn't he said anything to you?"
"He doesn't even set foot in your apartment. He comes home
from the institute when Yilal is eating supper."
But then, was it Yilal who spoke to the bad girl?
Elena turned pale.
"Don't ask him," she said, lowering her voice. She was as white as
a sheet. "Don't make the slightest allusion to the message he gave
you."
Was it possible Yilal had spoken to Kuriko? Was it possible the
boy broke his silence when his parents weren't nearby and couldn't
see or hear him?
"Let's not think about that, let's not talk about that," Elena
repeated, making an effort to compose her voice and appear natural.
"What has to happen, will happen. In its own time. If we try to force
it, we'll make everything worse. I've always known it would happen,
that it will happen. Let's change the subject, Ricardo. What's this
about the bad girl? Who is she? Tell me about her."
We were drinking coffee in her house, after supper, and talking
quietly so as not to disturb Simon, who was in the next room, his
study, revising a report he had to present the following day at a
seminar. Yilal had gone to bed a while ago.
"An old story," I replied. "I've never told anybody about it. But
look, I think I'll tell you, Elena. So you'll forget what happened with
Yilal."
And I did tell her. From start to finish, from the distant days of
my childhood, when the arrival of Lucy and Lily, the false Chileans,
disturbed the tranquil streets of Miraflores, to the night of
passionate love in Tokyo—the most beautiful night of love in my
life—abruptly cut off by the sight, in the shadows of the room, of Mr.
Fukuda watching us from behind his dark glasses, his hands moving
inside his fly. I don't know how long I talked. I don't know exactly
when Simon appeared and sat down next to Elena and began to
listen to me, as silent and attentive as she was. I don't know when I
began to cry, and, embarrassed by this emotional outburst, fell
silent. It took me a while to regain my composure. As I stammered
excuses, I saw Simon stand and then come back with glasses and a
bottle of wine.
"It's the only thing I have, wine, a very cheap Beaujolais," he said
in apology, patting me on the shoulder. "I imagine in cases like this
a nobler drink would be more appropriate."
"Whiskey, vodka, rum, cognac, of course!" said Elena. "This
house is a disaster. We never have what we ought to have. We're
terrible hosts, Ricardo."
"I've messed up your report for tomorrow with my little
performance, Simon."
"Something much more interesting than my report," he declared.
"Aside from that, the nickname fits you like a glove. Not in the
pejorative but in the literal sense. That's what you are, mon vieux,
though you don't like it: a good boy."
"Do you know, it's a marvelous love story?" exclaimed Elena,
looking at me in surprise. "Because that's what it is, basically. A
marvelous love story. This melancholy Belgian has never loved me
like that. I envy her, chico."
"I'd like to meet this Mata Hari," said Simon.
"Over my dead body," Elena threatened, tugging at his beard. "Do
you have any pictures of her? Will you show them to us?"
"Not even one. As I recall, we never took a picture together,"
"The next time she calls, I beg you to answer that phone," said
Elena. "The story can't end like this, with a phone ringing and
ringing, like something in Hitchcock's worst movie."
"Besides," said Simon, lowering his voice, "you have to ask her if
Yilal talked to her."
"I'm mortified," I said, apologizing for the second time. "I mean,
crying and everything."
"You didn't see it, but Elena shed a few tears too," Simon said. "I
would have joined you two if I weren't Belgian. My Jewish ancestors
inclined me to weeping. But the Walloon prevailed. A Belgian
doesn't fall into the emotionalism of tropical South Americans."
"To the bad girl, to that fantastic woman!" said Elena, raising her
glass. "Holy God, what a boring life I've had."
We drank the entire bottle of wine, and with the laughter and
jokes, I felt better. To prevent my feeling uncomfortable, not once in
the days and weeks that followed did my friends the Gravoskis make
the slightest reference to what I had told them. In the meantime, I
decided that if the Permian girl called again, I would talk to her. So
she could tell me if the last time she called, she had talked with
Yilal. Was that the only reason? Not the only one. Ever since I
confessed my love affair to Elena Gravoski, it was as if sharing the
story with someone had lifted the burden of rancor, jealousy,
humiliation, and susceptibility that trailed behind it, and I began to
wait for her phone call with anticipation, afraid that because of my
rebuffs of the past two years, it might not happen. I assuaged my
feelings of guilt by telling myself this would in no way signify a
relapse. I would talk to her like a distant friend, and my coldness
would be the best proof that I was truly free of her.
As for the rest, the wait had a fairly good effect on my state of
mind. Between contracts at UNESCO or outside Paris, I resumed the
translation of Ivan Bunin's stories, gave them a final revision, and
wrote a short prologue before sending the manuscript to my friend
Mario Muchnik. "It's about time," he replied. "I was afraid
arteriosclerosis or senile dementia would come to me before your
Bunin." If I was at home when Yilal watched his television program,
I would read him stories. He didn't like the ones I had translated
very much, and he listened more out of politeness than interest. But
he adored the novels of Jules Verne. At the rate of a couple of
chapters a day, I read several to him in the course of that autumn.
The one he liked best—the episodes made him jump up and down
with delight—was Around the World in Eighty Days. Though he was
also fascinated by Michael Strogoff: A Courier to the Czar. Just as
Elena had requested, I never asked him about the call only he could
have received, though I was devoured by curiosity. In the weeks and
months that followed the message for me that he had written on his
slate, I never saw the slightest indication that Yilal was capable of
speaking.
The call came two and a half months after the previous one. I
was in the shower, getting ready to go to UNESCO, when I heard the
phone ring and had a premonition: "It's her." I ran to the bedroom
and picked up the receiver, dropping onto the bed even though I was
wet.
"Are you going to hang up on me this time too, good boy?"
"How are you, bad girl?"
There was a brief silence, and finally, a little laugh.
"Well, well, at last you deign to answer me. May I ask to what I
owe this miracle? Did you get over your fit of anger or do you still
hate me?"
I felt like hanging up on her when I heard the lightly mocking
tone and triumphant irony in her words.
"Why are you calling?" I asked. "Why did you call those other
times?"
"I need to talk to you," she said, changing her tone.
"Where are you?"
"I've been here in Paris for a while: Can we see each other for a
moment?"
I was dumbfounded. I had been sure she was still in Tokyo, or in
some distant country, and would never set foot in France again.
Knowing she was here and that I could see her at any time plunged
me into total confusion.
"Just for a little while," she insisted, thinking my silence was
prelude to a refusal. "What I have to tell you is very personal, I
prefer not to do it on the phone. No more than half an hour. Not too
long for an old friend, is it?"
We made a date for two days later, when I left UNESCO at six, in
La Rhumerie on Saint-Germain-des-Pres (the bar had always been
called La Rhumerie Martiniquaise, but recently, for some
mysterious reason, it had lost its nationality). When I hung up, my
heart was pounding in my chest. Before going back to the shower, I
had to sit for a while with my mouth open until my respiration
returned to normal. What was she doing in Paris? Special little jobs
for Fukuda? Opening the European market to exotic aphrodisiacs
made of elephant tusks and rhinoceros horns? Did she need my help
in her smuggling operations, money laundering, or other criminal
business? It had been stupid of me to answer the phone. It would be
the same old story all over again. We'd talk, I'd submit again to the
power she always had over me, we'd have a brief false idyll, I'd have
all kinds of illusions, and when least expected she would disappear
and I'd be left battered and bewildered, licking my wounds as I had