was a girl. I've done the impossible to forget her, but the truth is it's
useless. I'll always love her. Life wouldn't have meaning for me if
she died."
"What luck that girl has, inspiring love like this," my neighbor
said with a laugh. "Chapeau! I'll ask her for the recipe. Simon's
right: that nickname she gave you fits like a glove."
The next morning I asked permission at UNESCO to go to the
Hopital Cochin during the minor operation. I waited in a frigid
corridor, with very high ceilings, where an icy wind blew and nurses,
doctors, and patients passed by and, occasionally, sick people lying
on cots with oxygen pumps or bottles of plasma suspended over
their heads. There was a "No Smoking" sign that nobody seemed to
pay attention to.
Dr. Pineau spoke to me for a few minutes, in front of Elena, as he
removed his latex gloves and meticulously scrubbed his hands with
lathering soap in a stream of water that emitted steam. He was a
fairly young man, sure of himself, who didn't beat around the bush.
"She'll be perfectly fine. But you already know her condition. Her
vagina is damaged, prone to inflammation and bleeding. Her rectum
is also damaged. You'll have to control yourself, my friend. Make
love very carefully, and not very* often. At least for the next two
months, I recommend restraint. The best thing would be not to
touch her. If that isn't possible, then with extreme delicacy. The
woman has suffered a traumatic experience. It wasn't a simple rape,
but from what I understand, a real massacre."
I was with the bad girl when they brought her from the operating
room to the large ward where they put her in an area isolated by two
screens. It was a spacious, badly lit place with stone walls and dark
concave ceilings that made one think of bats' nests, scrupulously
clean tile floors, and a strong odor of disinfectant and bleach. She
was even paler and more cadaverous, and her eyes were half closed.
When she recognized me, she extended her hand. When I held it in
mine, it seemed as thin and small as Yilal's.
"I'm fine," she said emphatically, before I could ask her how she
felt. "The doctor who operated on me was very nice. And goodlooking."
I kissed her hair, her pretty ears.
"I hope you didn't start flirting with him. You're very capable of
that."
She pressed my hand and fell asleep almost immediately. She
slept the entire morning and didn't wake until early afternoon,
complaining of the pain. On the doctor's instructions, a nurse came
to give her an injection. A short while later Elena appeared, wearing
a white lab coat, to bring her a bed jacket. She put it on over her
nightgown. The bad girl asked about Yilal and smiled when she
heard that the Gravoskis' son asked for her constantly. I was with
her for a good part of the afternoon, and stayed with her as she ate
from a small plastic tray: vegetable soup and a piece of poached
chicken with boiled potatoes. She carried the spoonfuls to her
mouth unwillingly, and only because of my urging.
"Do you know why everybody's so nice to me?" she said.
"Because of Elena. Nurses and doctors adore her. She's the most
popular person in the hospital."
A short while later, visitors had to leave. That night, at the
Gravoskis', Elena had news for me. She had made inquiries and
consulted with Professor Bourrichon. He suggested a small, private
clinic in Petit Clamart, not very far from Paris, where he had sent
other patients who were victims of depression and nervous
disorders due to physical abuse, with good results. The director had
been a classmate of his. If we wanted, he could recommend the bad
girl's case to him.
"You don't know how grateful I am, Elena. It seems like the right
place. Let's proceed, as soon as we can."
Elena and Simon looked at each other. We were having the
inevitable cup of coffee after a supper of an omelet, a little ham, and
salad, with a glass of wine.
"There are two problems," said an uncomfortable Elena. "The
first, as you know, is that it's a private clinic and will be very
expensive."
"I have some savings, and if that's not enough, I'll get a loan.
And, if necessary, I'll sell the apartment. Money isn't a problem, the
important thing is for her to get better. What's the other one?"
"The passport she presented at the Hopital Cochin is false," said
Elena, with an expression and a tone of voice that seemed to be
begging my pardon. "I've had to do a lot of juggling to keep the
administration from denouncing her to the police. But she has to
leave the hospital tomorrow and not set foot there again,
unfortunately. And I don't discount the possibility that as soon as
she leaves, they'll tip off the authorities."
"That lady will never cease to astonish me," exclaimed Simon.
"Do the two of you realize how dull our lives are compared to hers?"
"Can the question of her papers be straightened out?" Elena
asked me. "I imagine it'll be difficult, of course. I don't know, it
might be a huge obstacle at Dr. Zilacxy's clinic in Petit Clamart. They
may not admit her if they find out her situation in France is illegal.
They could even turn her in to the police."
"I don't think the bad girl has ever had her papers in order," I
said. "I'm absolutely certain she has several passports, not just one.
Maybe one of them looks less false than the others. I'll ask her."
"We'll all wind up in jail," said Simon with a laugh. "They'll
prohibit Elena from practicing medicine and throw me out of the
Pasteur Institute, and then we'll finally begin to live real life."
The three of us ended up laughing, and the laughter shared with
my two friends did me good. It was the first night in the past four
that I slept through until the alarm clock rang. The next day, when I
came home from UNESCO, I found the bad girl installed in my bed,
with the bouquet of flowers I had sent her in a vase of water on the
night table. She was feeling better, without any pain. Elena had
brought her from the Hopital Cochin and helped her up to the
apartment, but then she went back to work. Yilal was with her, very
happy about her recent arrival. When the boy left, the bad girl spoke
to me in a low voice, as if the Gravoskis' son could still hear her.
"Tell Simon and Elena to come here for coffee this time. After
they put Yilal to bed. I'll help you prepare it. I want to thank them
for everything Elena has done for me."
I wouldn't let her get up to help me. I prepared the coffee and a
short while later the Gravoskis knocked on the door. I carried the
bad girl—she didn't weigh anything, barely as much as Yilal—to sit
with us in the living room, and I covered her with a blanket. Then,
without even greeting them, with radiant eyes she came out with the
news.
"Please don't faint from the shock. This afternoon, after Elena
left us alone, Yilal put his arms around me and said very clearly in
Spanish: 'He loves you very much, bad girl.' He said 'he loves,' not 'I
love.'"
And, so there wouldn't be the slightest doubt she was telling the
truth, she did something I hadn't seen since my days as a student at
the Colegio Champagnat in Miraflores: she raised two fingers in the
shape of a cross to her mouth and kissed them as she said, "I swear
to you, that's just what he said, down to the last letter."
Elena began to cry, and as she shed those tears she laughed, her
arms around the bad girl. Had Yilal said anything else? No. When
she tried to initiate a conversation with him, the boy returned to his
mutism and to answering in French on his slate. But that sentence,
spoken in the same thin little thread of a voice she remembered
from the phone, proved once and for all that Yilal wasn't mute. For a
long time we didn't talk about anything else. We drank coffee, and
Simon, Elena, and I had a glass of malt whiskey that I'd had in my
sideboard since time immemorial. The Gravoskis decided on the
strategy to follow. None of us should let on that we knew. Since the
boy had spoken to the bad girl on his own initiative, she, in the most
natural way, without any pressure on him at all, should try to
establish a dialogue, asking him questions, speaking without looking
at him, distractedly, avoiding at all costs any possibility* that Yilal
might feel watched over or subjected to a test.
Then Elena spoke to the bad girl about Dr. Zilacxy's clinic in Petit
Clamart. It was rather small, in a well-tended park filled with trees,
and the director, a friend and classmate of Professor Bourrichon,
was a prestigious psychologist and psychiatrist who specialized in
the treatment of patients suffering from depression and nervous
disorders resulting from accidents, various kinds of abuse and
trauma, as well as anorexia, alcoholism, and drug addiction. The
conclusions of the examination were categorical. The bad girl
needed to withdraw for a time to the right kind of place for absolute
rest, where, as she followed a regimen of diet and exercise to recover
her strength, she would receive psychological support that would
help her wipe out the reverberations in her mind of that awful
experience.
"Does this mean I'm crazy?" she asked.
"You always were," I said. "But now you're also anemic and
depressed, and they can cure that at the clinic. You'll be hopelessly
mad until the end of your days, if that's what's worrying you."
She didn't laugh but yielded rather reluctantly to my arguments
and agreed to Elena requesting an appointment with the director of
the clinic in Petit Clamart. Our neighbor would go with us. When
the Gravoskis left, the bad girl looked at me reproachfully, filled
with anxiety.
"And who's going to pay for this clinic when you know very well I
don't have a pot to piss in?"
"Who but the usual imbecile?" I said, adjusting her pillows.
"You're my praying mantis, didn't you know? The female insect
devours the male while he's making love to her. He dies happy,
apparently. My case exactly. Don't worry* about the money. Don't
you know I'm rich?"
She grasped one of my arms with both her hands.
"You're not rich, you're a poor little pissant," she said in a fury.
"If you weren't, I wouldn't have gone to Cuba, or London, or Japan. I
would have stayed with you after that time when you showed me
around Paris and took me to those horrible restaurants for beggars.
I've always left you for rich men who turned out to be trash. And
this is how I've ended up, a ruin. Are you happy that I acknowledge
it? Do you like to hear it? Are you doing all this to show me how
superior you are to all of them, and what I lost in you? Why are you
doing this, may I ask?"
"Why do you think, bad girl? Maybe I want to earn indulgences
and go to heaven. And it could also be that I'm still in love with you.
And now, enough riddles. It's time to sleep. Professor Bourrichon
says that until you're completely recovered, you should try to sleep
at least eight hours a night."
Two days later my seasonal contract with UNESCO ended and I
could devote the entire day to caring for her. At the Hopital Cochin
they had prescribed a diet for her based on vegetables, poached fish
and meat, fruit, and stews, and had prohibited alcohol, including
wine, as well as coffee and all spicy condiments. She was to exercise
and walk at least an hour a day. In the morning, after breakfast—I
bought croissants fresh from the oven at a bakery on Ecole
Militaire—we would take a walk, arm in arm, to the foot of the Eiffel
Tower, along the Champs de Mars, and sometimes, weather
permitting, and if she was in the mood, we would go along the quays
of the Seine to Place de la Concorde. I let her lead the conversation,
but I did try to keep her from talking about Fukuda or the episode in
Lagos. It wasn't always possible. Then, if she insisted on bringing up
the subject, I listened to what she wanted to tell me and asked no
questions. From things occasionally hinted at in those semimonologues,
I deduced that her capture in Nigeria took place on the
day she was leaving the country. But her threadbare story always
occurred in a kind of fog. She had already passed through customs at
the airport and was in the line of passengers making their way
toward the plane. A couple of policemen took her out of line, very
courteously; their attitude changed completely as soon as they put
her in a van with windows painted black, and especially when they
took her into a foul-smelling building with barred cells and a stink
of excrement and urine.
, :I believe I wasn't found out, those police weren't capable of
finding anything out," she'd say occasionally. "I was turned in. But
who did it? Who? Sometimes I think it was Fukuda himself. But
why would he have done that? It doesn't make any sense, does it?"
"It doesn't matter now. It's over. Forget about it, bury it. It's not
good for you to torture yourself with those memories. The only