thing that matters is that you survived and soon you'll be completely
well. And never get involved again in the kinds of entanglements
that have consumed half your life."
On the fourth day, a Thursday, Elena told us that Dr. Zilacxy,
director of the clinic in Petit Clamart, would see us on Monday at
noon. Professor Bourrichon had spoken with him by phone and
given him all the results of the bad girl's medical examination, as
well as his prescriptions and advice. On Friday I went to speak to
Senor Charnes, who had asked the secretary of the translators' and
interpreters' agency he headed to call me. He offered me a well-paid
contract for two weeks in Helsinki. I accepted. When I returned
home, I heard voices and giggles in the bedroom as soon as I opened
the door. I stood still with the door half open, listening. They were
speaking in French, and one of the voices belonged to the bad girl.
The other, thin, high-pitched, a little hesitant, could only be Yilal's.
Suddenly my hands were sweating. I was ecstatic. I couldn't hear
what they were saying, but they were playing something, perhaps
checkers, perhaps JanKenPo, and, to judge by the giggles, having a
very good time. They hadn't heard me come in. I closed the door
slowly and walked toward the bedroom, exclaiming in a loud voice,
in French, "I bet you're playing checkers and the bad girl is
winning."
There was an immediate silence, and when I took another step
and went into the bedroom I saw that they had the checkerboard
open in the middle of the bed and were sitting on either side, both of
them leaning over the pieces. Yilal looked at me, his eyes flashing
with pride. And then, opening his mouth very wide, he said in
French, "Yilal wins!"
"He always wins, it's not fair." The bad girl applauded. "This kid
is a champion."
"Let's see, let's see, I want to referee this match," I said, dropping
onto a corner of the bed and examining the board. I tried to feign
absolute naturalness, as if nothing extraordinary were happening,
but I could hardly breathe.
Leaning over the pieces, Yilal was studying the next move. For an
instant the bad girl's eyes met mine. She smiled and winked.
"He wins again!" Yilal exclaimed, applauding.
"Well, of course, mon vieux, she has no place to move. You won.
Give me five!"
I shook his hand, and the bad girl gave him a kiss.
"I'm not playing checkers with you again, I'm sick of being
beaten," she said.
"I've thought of a game that's even more fun, Yilal," I
improvised. "Why don't we give Elena and Simon the surprise of
their lives? Let's put on a show for them that your parents will
remember for the rest of their days. Would you like to do that?"
The boy's expression had turned wary and he waited, motionless,
for me to continue, not committing himself. As I laid out the plan I
was inventing as I described it to him, he listened, intrigued and
somewhat intimidated, not daring to reject it, attracted and repelled
at the same time by my proposal. When I finished, he was
motionless and silent for a long time, looking first at the bad girl and
then at me.
"What do you think, Yilal?" I insisted, still speaking French.
"Shall we give Simon and Elena a surprise? I promise you they won't
forget it for the rest of their lives."
"All right," said Yilal's thin voice, his head nodding assent. "We'll
give them a surprise."
We did just what I had improvised, caught up in the emotion and
confusion that hearing Yilal had thrown me into. When Elena came
to pick him up, the bad girl and I asked if she, Simon, and the boy
would come back after supper because we had a delicious dessert we
wanted to share with them. Somewhat surprised, Elena said all
right, just for a little while, because otherwise it would be very hard
for Yilal the sleepyhead to wake up the next day. I ran as if the devil
were pursuing me to the corner of Ecole Militaire, to the bakery with
the croissants on the Avenue de la Bourdonnais. Fortunately, it was
open. I bought a cake with a lot of cream and fat, red strawberries on
top. We were so excited we barely tasted the meal of vegetables and
fish I shared with the convalescent.
When Simon, Elena, and Yilal—already in slippers and
robe—arrived, we were waiting for them, the coffee ready and the
cake cut into slices. I saw immediately that Elena suspected
something. Simon, on the other hand, preoccupied with an article by
a dissident Soviet scientist he had read that afternoon, was over the
moon and told us, while the cream from the overly sweet dessert
dirtied his beard, that not long ago the Soviet scientist visited the
Pasteur Institute and all the researchers and scientists had been
struck by his modesty and intellectual accomplishments. Then,
following the nonsensical script I had devised, the bad girl asked in
Spanish, "How many languages do all of you think Yilal speaks?"
I saw that Simon and Elena froze immediately and widened their
eyes slightly, as if asking: "What's going on here?"
"I think two," I declared. "French and Spanish. And you two,
what do you think? How many languages does Yilal speak, Elena?
Simon, how many do you think?"
Yilal's eyes moved from his parents to me, from me to the bad
girl, and back to his parents again. He was very serious.
"He doesn't speak any," Elena stammered, looking at us and not
turning her head toward the boy. "At least, not yet."
"I think...," said Simon, and then fell silent, overwhelmed,
begging us with his eyes to tell him what he should say.
"In reality, it doesn't matter what we think," the bad girl
interjected. "It only matters what Yilal says. What do you say, Yilal?
How many do you speak?"
"He speaks French," said the thin, high-pitched voice. And, after
a very brief pause, changing languages, "Yilal speaks Spanish."
Elena and Simon sat staring at him, struck dumb. The slice of
cake Simon was holding slid off the plate and landed on his trousers.
The boy burst into laughter, raising his hand to his mouth, and
pointing at Simon's leg, he exclaimed in French, "You dirty
trousers."
Elena rose to her feet and now, standing beside the boy, looking
at him ecstatically, she caressed his hair with one hand and passed
the other along his lips, over and over again, the way a pious old
woman caresses the image of her patron saint. But, of the two, the
more moved was Simon. Incapable of saying anything, he looked at
his son, at his wife, at us, stupefied, as if asking us not to wake him
but to let him go on dreaming.
Yilal said nothing else that night. His parents took him home a
short while later, and the bad girl, acting as mistress of the house,
wrapped up the rest of the cake and insisted the Gravoskis take it. I
shook Yilal's hand when we said good night.
"It turned out very well, didn't it, Yilal? I owe you a present
because of how well you did. Another six toy soldiers for your
collection?"
He made affirmative movements with his head. When we closed
the door behind them, the bad girl exclaimed, "Right now they're the
happiest couple on earth."
Much later, when I was beginning to fall asleep, I saw a
silhouette slip into the living room and silently approach the sofa
bed. She took me by the hand.
"Come, come with me," she ordered.
"I can't, I mustn't," I said, getting up and following her. "Dr.
Pineau has forbidden it. For two months at least I can't even touch
you, let alone make love to you. And I won't touch you, or make love
to you, until you're well again. Understood?"
We got into bed, she curled up against me and leaned her head
on my shoulder. I felt her body, nothing but skin and bone, and her
small, icy feet rubbing against my legs, and a shudder ran from my
head down to my heels.
"I don't want you to make love to me," she whispered, kissing me
on the neck. "I want you to hold me, keep me warm, take away my
fear, I'm dying of terror."
Her body, a form full of angles, trembled like a leaf. I embraced
her, rubbed her back, her arms, her waist, and for a long time
whispered sweet things in her ear. I would never let anybody hurt
her again, she had to do everything she could to get better soon and
get back her strength, her desire to live and be happy. So she could
be attractive again. She listened in silence, clinging to me, attacked
at intervals by terrors that made her moan and writhe. Much later, I
sensed she was sleeping. But throughout the night, as I dozed, I felt
her shudder and groan, seized by recurrent attacks of panic. When I
saw her like this, so helpless, images of what had happened in Lagos
came into my mind, and I felt sadness, rage, and a fierce desire for
vengeance against her torturers.
The visit to the Petit Clamart clinic of Dr. Andre Zilacxy, a
Frenchman of Hungarian descent, turned out to be a country
excursion. A brilliant sun that day made the tall poplars and plane
trees in the woods shine. The clinic was at the far end of a park that
had chipped statues and a pond with swans. We arrived at midday,
and Dr. Zilacxy had us come into his office immediately. The old
building was a nineteenth-century, two-story seigneurial house that
had a marble staircase and balconies with grillwork but was
modernized in the interior. A new pavilion that had large floor-toceiling
windows had been added—perhaps it was a solarium or a
gym with a swimming pool. Through the windows in Dr. Zilacxy's
office, people could be seen in the distance moving about under the
trees, among them the white coats of nurses or doctors. Zilacxy also
seemed to come from the nineteenth century, with his square-cut
beard framing a thin face and a gleaming bald head. He wore black,
with a gray vest, a stiff collar that looked false, and instead of a tie, a
four-in-hand held by a vermilion pin. He had a pocket watch with a
gold chain.
"I've spoken with my colleague Bourrichon, and read the report
from the Hopital Cochin," he said, coming to the point right away, as
if he couldn't allow himself to waste time in banalities. "You're
fortunate, the clinic is always full and there are people who wait a
long time to be admitted. But, as the lady is a special case because
she comes recommended by an old friend, we can make a place for
her."
He had a very well-modulated voice, and an elegant, somewhat
theatrical way of moving and displaying his hands. He said the
"patient" would follow a special diet planned by a dietician so she
could regain the weight she had lost, and a personal trainer would
monitor her physical exercise. Her head physician would be Dr.
Roullin, a specialist in traumas of the kind the lady had suffered.
She could have visitors twice a week, between five and seven in the
evening. In addition to her treatment with Dr. Roullin, she would
take part in group therapy sessions that he led. Unless there was
some objection on her part, hypnosis might be used in her
treatment, under his direction. And—here he paused so we would
know an important statement was coming—if the patient at any
point in her treatment felt "disappointed," she could stop
immediately.
"It never has happened to us," he added, clicking his tongue. "But
the possibility is there in case it ever does."
He said that after talking to Professor Bourrichon, they both had
agreed in principle that the patient should remain at the clinic a
minimum of four weeks. Then they would see if it was advisable for
her to prolong her stay or if she could continue her convalescence at
home.
He responded to all of Elena's questions and mine—the bad girl
didn't open her mouth, she did no more than listen as if the matter
had nothing to do with her—regarding the functioning of the clinic,
his colleagues, and after a joke about Lacan and his fantastic
combinations of structuralism and Freud, which, he pointed out
with a smile in order to set our minds at ease, "we don't offer on our
menu," he had a nurse take the bad girl to the office of Dr. Roullin,
who was waiting to talk to her and show her around the
establishment.
When we were alone with Dr. Zilacxy, Elena cautiously brought
up the delicate matter of how much the month of treatment would
cost. And she quickly indicated that "the lady" had no insurance or
personal funds and the friend who was here now would assume the
cost of her cure.
"One hundred thousand francs, approximately, not counting the
medicines that—well, it is difficult to know ahead of time—probably
would amount to twenty or thirty percent more, in the worst-case
scenario." He paused for a moment and coughed before he added:
"This is a special price, since the lady comes recommended by
Professor Bourrichon."
He looked at his watch, rose to his feet, and said that if we had
decided, we should stop by administration to fill out forms.