anything else you might want." There was no way to convince her,
she wouldn't accept my enticements, serious or humorous. She
wouldn't go to Peru, not now, not ever. She wouldn't set foot there
even for a couple of hours. And when I wanted to cancel the trip so
she wouldn't be left alone, she insisted I go, claiming the Gravoskis
would be in Paris then, and she could turn to them if she needed
help at any time.
Finding that job had been the best remedy for her state of mind.
It also helped her, I think, when after overcoming a thousand
complications, we married and she became, according to what she
sometimes told me at moments of intimacy, "a woman who, when
she was almost forty-eight years old, had her papers in order for the
first time in her life." I thought that for the restless, freewheeling
person she always had been, working in a company that organized
"social events" would soon bore her, and she would be an employee
so incompetent they would fire her. This didn't happen. On the
contrary, in a short time she earned the confidence of the woman
who hired her. And she took very seriously being busy, doing things,
taking on obligations, even if it was asking prices at hotels and
restaurants, making comparisons and negotiating discounts, finding
out what the businesses, associations, and families really
wanted—what kinds of landscapes, hotels, menus, shows,
orchestras—for their meetings, banquets, anniversaries. She worked
not only at the office but at home as well. In the afternoons and
evenings I heard her, glued to the telephone, discussing the details
of contracts with infinite patience, or reporting to Martine, her
employer, on the arrangements made that day. Sometimes she had
to travel to the provinces—generally to Provence, the Cote d'Azur, or
Biarritz—either with Martine or as her representative. Then she
would call every night and tell me, with a wealth of detail, what she
had done that day. It had been good for her to be occupied, acquire
responsibilities, and earn money. Once again she dressed
flirtatiously, went to hairdressers, masseuses, manicurists,
pedicurists, and constantly surprised me with a change in makeup,
hairdo, or outfit. "Do you do this to be fashionable or to keep your
husband forever in love?" "I do it above all because clients love to
see me looking attractive and elegant. Are you jealous?" Yes, I was. I
still was head over heels in love with her, and I think she was with
me too, because except for small, passing crises, since the night I
almost threw myself into the Seine I had noticed details in our
relationship that would have been unthinkable before. "This twoweek
separation will be a test," she said on the night I left. "We'll see
if you love me even more or leave me for one of those mischievous
Permian girls, good boy." "As far as mischievous Permian girls go, I
have more than enough with you." She had kept her slender
figure—on weekends she always went to the gym on Avenue
Montaigne to exercise and swim—and her face was still fresh and
animated.
Our marriage had been a true bureaucratic adventure. Though it
calmed her to know she now had her situation normalized at last, I
suspected that if one day, for whatever reason, the French
authorities began to dig through her papers, they would discover
that our marriage was invalid because it had so many defects in
form and substance. But I didn't tell her that, least of all now, when
the French government had just granted her citizenship two years
after our marriage, not suspecting that the new Madame Ricardo
Somocurcio had already been made a naturalized French citizen
through an earlier marriage under the name of Madame Robert
Arnoux.
In order for us to marry, we had to create false papers for her,
using a name different from the one she had when she married
Robert Arnoux. We wouldn't have managed without the help of
Uncle Ataulfo. When I described the problem for him, in very broad
strokes, without giving him any explanations except the
indispensable ones and avoiding the scandalous details of the bad
girl's life, he responded immediately, saying he didn't need to know
anything else. Underdevelopment has rapid, though somewhat
complicated, solutions for cases like this. And no sooner said than
done: in a few weeks he sent me birth and baptismal certificates,
issued by the municipality and parish of Huaura, in the name of
Lucy Solorzano Cajahuaringa, and with them, following his
instructions, we appeared before the Permian consul in Brussels,
who was a friend of his. Uncle Ataulfo had told him earlier, in a
letter, that Lucy Solorzano, the fiancee of his nephew Ricardo
Somocurcio, had lost all her papers, including her passport, and
needed a new one. The consul, a human relic wearing a waistcoat,
watch chain, and monocle, received us with cool, prudent good
breeding. He didn't ask a single question, by which I understood that
Uncle Ataulfo had told him more things than he appeared to know.
He was courteous, impersonal, and respectful of all the forms. He
communicated with the Ministry of Foreign Relations, and through
the ministry with the government and police, and sent copies of my
fiancee's birth and baptismal certificates, requesting authorization
to issue a new document. At the end of two months the bad girl had
a new passport and a new identity, with which we could obtain, in
Belgium, a tourist visa for France, endorsed by me, a nationalized
French citizen residing in Paris. We immediately began the
application process at the mayor's office in the fifth arrondissement,
on Place du Pantheon. There we finally were married on an autumn
afternoon in October 1982, accompanied only by the Gravoskis, who
acted as witnesses. There was no wedding banquet or any kind of
celebration, because that same afternoon I left for Rome with a twoweek
contract at the Food and Agriculture Organization.
The bad girl was much better. At times it was difficult for me to
see her leading a life that was so normal, enjoying her work and, it
seemed to me, happy in, or at least resigned to, our petit bourgeois
life, working hard all week, preparing supper at night, going to the
movies, the theater, an art show, or a concert, and eating out on
weekends, almost always by ourselves, or with the Gravoskis when
they were here, for they were still spending several months a year in
Princeton. We saw Yilal only in the summer; for the rest of the year
he was in school in New Jersey. His parents had decided he should
be educated in the United States. There was no trace of his old
problem. He spoke and grew normally, and seemed very well
integrated into the world of the United States. He sent us postcards
or an occasional letter, and the bad girl wrote to him every month
and was always sending him presents.
Though they say only imbeciles are happy, I confess that I felt
happy. Sharing my days and nights with the bad girl filled my life. In
spite of her affection toward me, compared to how icy she had been
in the past, she had, in fact, succeeded in making me live in constant
uneasiness, apprehensive that one day, when least expected, she
would return to her old ways and disappear without saying goodbye.
She always managed to let me know—or, I should say, guess—that
there was more than one secret in her daily life, a dimension of her
existence to which I had no access, one that could give rise at any
moment to an earthquake that would topple our life together. I
hadn't gotten it into my head yet that Lily, the Chilean girl, would
accept the rest of her life being what it was now: the life of a middleclass
Parisian, without surprises or mystery, submerged in strict
routine and devoid of adventure.
We were never so close as in the months following what we
might call our reconciliation on the night the anonymous clochard
emerged from the rain and darkness on the Pont Mirabeau to save
my life. "Wasn't it God himself who grabbed your legs, good boy?"
she asked mockingly. She never fully believed I was on the verge of
killing myself. "When people want to commit suicide, they do it, and
there's no clochard who can stop them, Ricardito," she said more
than once. During this time she still suffered occasionally from
terror attacks. Then, pale as a ghost, with gray lips, ashen skin, and
dark circles under her eyes, she would not move away from me for a
second. She followed me around the house like a lapdog, holding my
hand, clutching at my belt or shirt, because the physical contact gave
her a minimum of security without which, she stammered, "I'd fall
apart." Seeing her suffer like that made me suffer too. And, at times,
the insecurity that possessed her during the crisis was so great that
she couldn't even go to the bathroom alone; overwhelmed by
embarrassment, her teeth chattering, she asked me to go in with her
to the toilet and hold her hand while she did what she needed to do.
I never could get a clear idea of the nature of the fear that would
suddenly invade her, undoubtedly because it had no rational
explanation. Did it consist of vague images, sensations,
presentiments, the foreboding that something terrible was about to
crush and annihilate her? "That and much more." When she
suffered one of the attacks of fear, which generally lasted a few
hours, the bold woman with so much character became as
defenseless and vulnerable as a little girl. I would sit her on my lap
and have her curl up against me. I felt her trembling, sighing,
clinging to me with a desperation that nothing could diminish. After
a while, she would fall into a deep sleep. In one or two hours she
awoke, feeling fine, as if nothing had happened. All my pleas that
she return to the clinic in Petit Clamart were useless. In the end, I
stopped insisting because the mere mention of the subject enraged
her. During those months, in spite of being so close physically, we
hardly ever made love, because not even in the intimacy of bed could
she achieve the minimum of tranquility, the momentary surrender
that would allow her to yield to pleasure.
Work helped her emerge from this difficult period. The crises
didn't disappear all at once, but they did become less frequent and
less intense. Now she seemed much better, almost transformed into
a normal woman. Well, at heart I knew she'd never be a normal
woman. And I didn't want her to be one, because what I loved in her
were the indomitable and unpredictable aspects of her personality.
In the talks we had during his convalescence, Uncle Ataulfo
never asked me questions about my wife's past. He would send her
his regards, he was delighted to have her in the family, he hoped
that one day she would want to come to Lima so he could meet her,
because if not, he would have no choice but to visit us in Paris. He
had framed the photograph taken on the day of our marriage as we
were leaving the mayor's office, with the Pantheon as a backdrop,
and kept it on an end table in the living room.
In these conversations, generally in the afternoon after lunch
and sometimes lasting for hours, we talked a great deal about Peru.
He had been an enthusiastic Belaundista all his life, but now,
sorrowfully, he confessed that Belaunde Terry's second government
had disappointed him. Except for returning the newspapers and
television stations expropriated by the military dictatorship of
Velasco Alvarado, he hadn't dared to correct any of the pseudoreforms
that had impoverished and inflamed Peru even further and
provoked an inflation that would give victory to APRA in the next
elections. And, unlike his nephew Alberto Lamiel, my uncle had no
illusions concerning Alan Garcia. I told myself that in the country of
my birth, from which I was disengaged in an increasingly
irreversible way, there undoubtedly were many men and women like
him, basically decent people who had dreamed all their lives of the
economic, social, cultural, and political progress that would
transform Peru into a modern, prosperous, democratic society with
opportunities open to all, only to find themselves repeatedly
frustrated, and, like Uncle Ataulfo, had reached old age—the very
brink of death—bewildered, asking themselves why we were moving
backward instead of advancing and were worse off now, with more
discrimination, inequality, violence, and insecurity than when they
were starting out.
"How right you were to go to Europe, nephew," was his refrain,
which he repeated as he smoothed the graying beard he had grown.
"Imagine what would have happened to you if you had stayed here
to work, with all these blackouts, bombs, and kidnappings. And the
lack of work for young people."
"I'm not so sure, uncle. Yes, it's true, I have a profession that
allows me to live in a marvelous city. But there I've become a person
without roots, a phantom. I'll never be French, even though I have a