obtained when she married him. She didn't dare use the French
passport acquired thanks to her earlier husband, because she didn't
know if Monsieur Robert Arnoux had finally decided to denounce
her, had begun a legal proceeding, or accused her of bigamy or
something else to take his revenge. For her trips to Africa, along
with the British one, Fukuda had procured a French passport issued
to Madame Florence Milhoun; in it, the photograph showed her
looking very young, with a hairdo entirely different from the one she
normally wore. She had used this passport to enter France the last
time. I was afraid that if she was found out, they would throw her
out of the country, or worse. In spite of this obstacle, the bad girl
continued making inquiries, answering the want ads in Les Echos
for tourist agencies, public relations offices, art galleries, and
companies that worked with Spain and Latin America and needed
personnel with a knowledge of Spanish. It didn't seem very likely
that, given her precarious legal status, she would find a regular job,
but I didn't want to disillusion her and encouraged her to continue
her search.
A few days before the Gravoskis' departure for the United States,
at a farewell supper we gave them at La Closerie des Lilas, and after
listening to the bad girl recounting how difficult it was to find a job
where they would accept her without papers, Elena had an idea.
"Why don't you two marry?" she said to me. "You have French
nationality, don't you? Well, marry* her and you give your nationality
to your wife. Her legal problems will be over, chico. She'll be a nice,
legal Frenchwoman."
She said it without thinking, as a joke, and Simon picked up the
thread: that wedding would be worth waiting for, he wanted to
attend and be a witness for the groom, and since they wouldn't
return to France for two years, we had to shelve the project until
then. Unless we decided to get married in Princeton, New Jersey, in
which case he'd not only be a witness but the best man too, and so
forth.
Back home, half serious and half in jest, I said to the bad girl as
she was undressing, "Suppose we follow Elena's advice? She's right:
if we marry, your situation is resolved instantly."
She put on her nightgown and turned to look at me, with her
hands on her, hips, a mocking little smile, and the stance of a
fighting cock. She spoke with all the irony she was capable of.
"Are you seriously asking me to marry you?"
"Well, I think so," I said, trying to joke. "If you want to. Just to
solve your legal problems. We don't want them to expel you from
France one day for being illegal."
"I marry only for love," she said, staring daggers at me and
tapping her right foot, which was extended in front of her. "I'd never
marry a clod who made a proposal of marriage as coarse as the one
you've just made to me."
"If you want, I'll get down on my knees, and with my hand over
my heart, I'll beg you to be my adored little wife until the end of
time," I said in confusion, not knowing if she was joking or speaking
seriously.
The short, transparent organdy nightgown showed her breasts,
her navel, and the dark little growth of hair at her pubis. It only
reached down to her knees and left her shoulders and arms bare.
Her hair was loose and her face lit up by the performance she had
initiated. The light from the bedside lamp fell on her back and
formed a golden halo around her figure. She looked very attractive
and audacious, and I desired her.
"Do it," she ordered. "On your knees, with your hands on your
chest. Tell me the best cheap, sentimental things in your repertoire
and let's see if you convince me."
I fell to my knees and begged her to marry me, while I kissed her
feet, her ankles, her knees, caressed her buttocks, and compared her
to the Virgin Mary, the goddesses on Olympus, Semiramis and
Cleopatra, Ulysses' Nausicaa, Quixote's Dulcinea, and told her she
was more beautiful and desirable than Claudia Cardinale, Brigitte
Bardot, and Catherine Deneuve all rolled into one. Finally I grasped
her waist and made her fall onto the bed. As I caressed and made
love to her, I heard her laugh as she said into my ear, "I'm sorry, but
I've received better requests for my hand than yours, little pissant."
Whenever we made love, I had to take great precautions not to
hurt her. And though I pretended to believe her when she said she
was getting better, the passage of time had convinced me it wasn't
true, that the injuries to her vagina would never disappear entirely
and would forever limit our sex life. I often avoided penetration, and
when I didn't, I entered very carefully, withdrawing as soon as I felt
her body contract and saw her face contort into a pained expression.
But even so, this difficult and at times incomplete lovemaking made
me immensely happy. Giving her pleasure with my mouth and
hands, and receiving it from hers, justified my life and made me feel
like the most privileged of mortals. Though she often maintained
that distant attitude she'd always had in bed, she sometimes seemed
to become animated and participate with enthusiasm and ardor, and
I would say to her, "Even though you don't like to admit it, I think
you're beginning to love me." That night, when we were exhausted
and sinking into sleep, I admonished her.
"You haven't given me an answer, guerrilla fighter. This must be
the fifteenth declaration of love I've made to you. Are you going to
marry me or not?"
"I don't know," she replied, very seriously, her arms around me.
"I still have to think about it."
The Gravoskis left for the United States on a sunny spring day
when the first green buds were coming out on the chestnuts,
beeches, and Lombardy poplars of Paris. We saw them off at the
Charles de Gaulle Airport. When she embraced Yilal, the bad girl's
eyes filled with tears. The Gravoskis had left us a key to their
apartment so we could look in once in a while and keep the dust
from invading. They were good friends, the only ones with whom we
had that South American kind of visceral friendship, and for the two
years of their absence we would miss them very much. When I saw
the bad girl so downhearted over Yilal's departure, I suggested that
instead of going home we take a walk or go to a movie. Then I'd take
her to have supper at a small bistrot on the lie Saint-Louis that she
liked very much. She had become so fond of Yilal that as we strolled
around Notre Dame on our way to the restaurant, I said, jokingly,
that if she'd like, once we were married we could adopt a child.
"I've discovered a maternal vocation in you. I always thought you
didn't want children."
"When I was in Cuba, with Comandante Chacon, I had my tubes
tied because he wanted a child and the idea horrified me," she
replied, drily. "Now I'm sorry."
"Let's adopt one," I encouraged her. "Isn't it the same thing?
Haven't you seen the relationship Yilal has with his parents?"
"I don't know if it's the same," she murmured, and I heard her
voice become hostile. "Besides, I don't even know if I'll marry you.
Let's change the subject, please."
She was in a very- bad mood, and I understood that, without
meaning to, I had touched a wounded place deep inside her. I tried
to distract her and took her to look at the cathedral, a sight that
never failed to overwhelm me even after all the years I had been in
Paris. And that night more than other times. A faint light, with a
slightly pink aura, bathed the stones of Notre Dame. The large mass
seemed light because of the perfect symmetry of its parts, delicately
balanced and sustained so that nothing was disordered or
disarranged. History and the sifted light charged the facade with
allusions and resonances, images and references. There were many
tourists taking pictures. Was this same cathedral the setting for so
many centuries of French history, the inspiration for the novel by
Victor Hugo that excited me so when I read it as a boy, in Miraflores,
in my aunt Alberta's house? It was the same one and a different one
that had accrued more recent mythologies and events.
Extraordinarily beautiful, it transmitted an impression of stability
and permanence, of having escaped the usury of time. The bad girl,
lost in her own thoughts, heard me praise Notre Dame as if she were
hearing the rain. During supper she was dejected, peevish, and
hardly ate a bite. And that night she fell asleep without saying good
night, as if I were responsible for Yilal's departure. Two days later, I
went to London with a contract for a week's work. When I said
goodbye, very early in the morning, I said, "It doesn't matter if we
don't get married if you don't want to, bad girl. It isn't necessary. I
have to tell you something before I leave. In my forty-seven years
I've never been as happy as in these months we've been together. I
don't know how to repay the happiness you've given me."
"Hurry, you'll miss the plane, you tiresome man," she said,
pushing me toward the door.
She was still in a bad mood, withdrawn day and night. Since the
departure of the Gravoskis, I almost hadn't been able to talk to her.
Did Yilal's leaving affect her so much?
My work in London was more interesting than at other
conferences and congresses. The meeting had one of those
innocuous titles, tirelessly repeated with different topics: "Africa: An
Impetus to Development." It was sponsored by the Commonwealth,
the United Nations, the Organization of African Unity, and several
independent institutes. But unlike other debates, there were very
serious testimonies by political, business, and academic leaders
from African countries regarding the calamitous state in which the
former French and British colonies had been left when they
achieved independence, and the obstacles they were confronting
now in their efforts to order society, stabilize institutions, eliminate
militarism and local strongmen, integrate into harmonious unity the
distinct ethnicities in each country, and move forward economically.
The situation in almost all the represented nations was critical, yet
the sincerity and lucidity with which the Africans, most of them very
young, described their reality had something vibrant that injected a
hopeful energy into their tragic condition. Though I was also using
Spanish, for the most part I had to interpret from French to English
or the reverse. And I did it with interest, curiosity, and a desire to
take a vacation one day in Africa. I couldn't forget, however, that the
bad girl had made her trips to that continent in the service of
Fukuda.
Whenever I left Paris for a job, we spoke every other day. She
called me since it was cheaper; hotels and pensions charged a
fortune for international calls. But even though I left her the
telephone number at the Hotel Shoreham, in Bayswater, the bad girl
didn't call on my first two days in London. On the third, I called her,
early, before I left for the Commonwealth Institute where the
conference was being held.
She seemed very strange. Laconic, evasive, irritated. I was
frightened, thinking the old panic attacks had returned. She assured
me that they hadn't, that she felt fine. Then did she miss Yilal? Of
course she missed him. And did she miss me a little too?
"Let's see, let me think," she said, but her tone wasn't that of a
woman who's joking. "No, frankly, I don't miss you very much yet."
I had a bad taste in my mouth when I hung up. Well, everybody
had periods of neurasthenia, when they chose to seem hateful in
order to establish their disgust with the world. It would pass. Since
she still hadn't called two days later, I called her again, very early
this time too. She didn't answer. She couldn't possibly have gone out
at seven in the morning: she never did that. The only explanation
was that she was still in a bad mood—but over what?—and didn't
want to answer, since she knew very well I was the one calling. I
called again at night and she still didn't pick up the phone. I called
four or five times in the course of a sleepless night: total silence.
The intermittent screech of the phone pursued me for the next
twenty-four hours until, as soon as the last session ended, I hurried
to Heathrow Airport to catch my plane to Paris. All kinds of gloomy
thoughts made the flight, followed by the cab ride from Charles de
Gaulle to Rue Joseph Granier, seem infinite.
It was a little after two in the morning when, under a persistent
drizzle, I opened the door to my apartment. It was dark, empty, and
on the bed was a note written in pencil on the lined yellow paper we
kept in the kitchen to jot down daily reminders. It was a model of
laconic iciness: "I'm tired of playing the petit bourgeois housewife
you'd like me to be. That's not what I am or what I'll ever be. I'm
very grateful for everything you've done for me. I'm sorry. Take care