again, and she made a great effort to be affectionate toward me. The
truth is, it didn't disturb me very much to know that a romance had
probably sprung up between Marcella and the choreographer from
Alicante. I never had any great illusions about how long our
relationship would last. And now I also knew that my love for her, if
it was love, was a fairly superficial feeling. I didn't feel hurt or
humiliated, only curious to know when I would have to move and
live alone again. And from then on I began asking myself if I would
stay in Madrid or go back to Paris. Two or three weeks later,
Marcella announced that Victor Almeda had been invited to present
Metamorphosis in Frankfurt, at a modern dance festival. It was an
important opportunity for her to have her work better known in
Germany. What did I think?
"Magnificent," I told her. "I'm sure Metamorphosis will be as
successful there as it has been in Madrid."
"Of course you'll come with me," she said quickly. "You can
translate there and..."
But I caressed her and told her not to be silly and not to look so
distressed. I wouldn't go to Germany, we didn't have the money for
that. I'd stay in Madrid working on my translation. I had confidence
in her. She ought to prepare for her trip and forget everything else,
because it could be decisive for her career. She shed some tears
when she embraced me and said into my ear, "I swear that stupidity
won't ever be repeated, caro"
"Of course, of course, bambina" and I kissed her.
On the day Marcella left for Frankfurt by train—I went to see her
off at Atocha Station—Victor Almeda, who was to leave two days
later by plane with the rest of the company, knocked on the door of
the apartment on Calle Ave Maria. He looked very serious, as if he
were consumed by profound questions. I assumed he had come to
give me some explanation of the episode at the Olimpia, and I
suggested we have coffee at the Barbieri.
In reality, he had come to tell me he and Marcella were in love
and he considered it his moral obligation to let me know. Marcella
didn't want to make me suffer and for that reason sacrificed herself
by staying with me even though she loved him. The sacrifice, in
addition to making her miserable, was going to damage her career.
I thanked him for his candor and asked if, by telling me all this,
he hoped I would resolve the problem for them.
"Well"—he hesitated for a moment—"in a way, yes. If you don't
take the initiative, she never will."
"And why would I take the initiative and break up with a girl I'm
so fond of?"
"Out of generosity and altruism," he said immediately, with a
solemnity so theatrical it made me want to laugh. "Because you're a
gentleman. And because now you know she loves me."
At that moment I realized the choreographer had begun to use
formal address with me. On previous occasions we always had used
tu with each other. Was he trying in this way to remind me I was
twenty years older than Marcella?
"You're not being frank with me, Victor," I said. "Tell me all the
truth. Did you and Marcella plan this visit of yours? Did she ask you
to talk to me because she didn't have the courage?"
I saw him shift in his chair and shake his head no. But when he
opened his mouth, he said yes.
"The two of us made the decision," he admitted. "She doesn't
want you to suffer. She feels all kinds of remorse. But I convinced
her that her first loyalty isn't to other people but to her own
feelings."
I was about to tell him that what I had just heard was a cheap,
sentimental thing, and explain the Peruvianism, but I didn't because
I was sick of him and wanted him to go. And so I asked him to leave
me alone to reflect on everything he had said. I'd make my decision
soon. I wished him much success in Frankfurt and shook his hand.
In reality I already had decided to leave Marcella with her dancer
and return to Paris. Then, what had to happen happened.
Two days later, as I was working in the afternoon in my favorite
spot at the back of the Cafe Barbieri, an elegant female form
suddenly sat down at the table, facing me.
"I won't ask if you're still in love with me because I already know
you're not," said the bad girl. "Cradle snatcher."
My surprise was so enormous that I somehow knocked the halffull
bottle of mineral water to the floor, and it broke and spattered a
boy with spiked hair and tattoos at the next table. While the
Andalusian waitress hurried to pick up the pieces of glass, I
examined the lady who, after three years, had abruptly been
resurrected in the most unpredictable way at the most unexpected
time and place in the world: the Cafe Barbieri in Lavapies.
Though it was late May and warm, she wore a light blue midweight
jacket over an open white blouse, and a fine gold chain
encircled her neck. The careful makeup couldn't hide her drawn
face, the prominent cheekbones, the small bags under her eyes. Only
three years had passed, but ten had fallen on her. She was old. While
the Andalusian waitress cleaned the floor, she drummed on the
table with one hand, the nails carefully tended and polished, as if
she had just come from the manicurist. Her fingers seemed longer
and thinner. She looked at me without blinking, without humor,
and—absolutely the final straw!—she called me to account for my
bad behavior:
"I never would have believed you'd live with a kid still wet
behind the ears who could be your daughter," she repeated
indignantly. "And a hippie besides, who surely never bathes. How
low you've fallen, Ricardo Somocurcio."
I wanted to throttle her and laugh out loud. No, it wasn't a joke:
she was making a jealous scene over me! She, over me!
"You're fifty-three or fifty-four now, aren't you?" she went on,
still drumming on the table. "And how old is this Lolita? Twenty?"
"Thirty-three," I said. "She looks younger, it's true. Because she's
a happy girl, and happiness makes people young. But you don't look
very happy."
"Does she ever bathe?" she asked in exasperation. "Or has old
age given you a taste for that, for dirt?"
"I learned from Yakuza Fukuda," I said. "I discovered that filth
also has its charm in bed."
"In case you're interested, at this moment I hate you with all my
heart and wish you were dead," she said in a muffled voice. She
hadn't taken her eyes off me or blinked once.
"Someone who didn't know you might say you're jealous."
"In case you're interested, I am. But above all, I'm disappointed
in you."
I grasped her hand and forced her to move a little closer to ask
her, out of earshot of our spike-haired, tattooed neighbor: "What's
the meaning of this farce? What are you doing here?"
She dug her nails into my hand before answering me. And
lowered her voice, too.
"You don't know how sorry I am that I looked for you all this
time. But now I know this hippie will make you suffer the torments
of the damned, she'll put horns on you and throw you away like a
dirty rag. x\nd you don't know how happy that makes me."
"I have the perfect training for it, bad girl. In matters of horns
and being abandoned, I know all there is to know and even a little
more."
I released her hand, but as I did, she grasped mine again.
"I swore to myself I wouldn't say anything to you about the
hippie," she said, softening her voice and expression. "But when I
saw you, I couldn't control myself. I still feel like scratching you. Be
a little more gallant and order me a cup of tea."
I called over the Andalusian waitress and tried to let go of the
bad girl's hand, but she still clutched at mine.
"Do you love this disgusting hippie?" she asked. "Do you love her
more than you loved me?"
"I don't think I ever loved you," I assured her. "You're for me
what Fukuda was for you: a sickness. Now I'm cured, thanks to
Marcella."
She scrutinized me for a while and, without releasing my hand,
smiled ironically for the first time and said, "If you didn't love me
you wouldn't have turned so pale and your voice wouldn't be
breaking. Aren't you going to cry, Ricardito? Because you're
something of a weeper, if I remember correctly."
"I promise you I won't. You have the damn habit of turning up
suddenly, like a nightmare, at the most unexpected times. It doesn't
amuse me anymore. The truth is, I never expected to see you again.
What is it you want? What are you doing in Madrid?"
When they brought the cup of tea, I could examine her a little as
she put in a lump of sugar, stirred the liquid, and examined the
spoon, saucer, and cup, turning up her nose. She wore a white skirt
and open white shoes that exposed her small feet, the toenails
painted with transparent polish. Once again her ankles were two
stalks of bamboo. Had she been sick? Only during the time of the
clinic in Petit Clamart had I seen her so thin. She wore her hair
pulled back on each side and held by clips at her ears, which, as
always, looked elegant. It occurred to me that without the rinse to
which it probably owed its black color, her hair must be gray by now,
perhaps white, like mine.
"Everything looks dirty here," she said abruptly, looking around
and exaggerating her expression of disgust. "The people, the place,
cobwebs and dust everywhere. Even you look dirty."
"This morning I showered and soaped myself from top to
bottom, word of honor."
"But you're dressed like a beggar," she said, grasping my hand
again.
"And you, like a queen," I said. "Aren't you afraid they'll mug you
and rob you in a place like this filled with starving people?"
"At this new stage in my life, I'm prepared to risk any danger for
you," she said with a laugh. "Besides, you're a gentleman, you'd
defend me to the death, wouldn't you? Or did you stop being a little
Miraflores gentleman when you got together with the hippies?"
Her rage of a moment ago had passed and now, pressing my
hand firmly, she was laughing. In her eyes was a distant
reminiscence of that dark honey, a little gleam that lit her thin, aged
face.
"How did you find me?"
"It was very hard. It took months. A thousand inquiries,
everywhere. And a lot of money. I was scared to death, I even
thought you had committed suicide. This time for real."
"That kind of absurdity you attempt only once, when love for
some woman has made you feebleminded. Happily, that doesn't
apply to me anymore."
"Trying to find you, I fought with the Gravoskis," she said
suddenly, getting angry again. "Elena treated me very badly. She
refused to give me your address or tell me anything about you. And
she began to lecture me. That I made you miserable, that I almost
killed you, that it was my fault you had a stroke, that I've been the
tragedy of your life."
"Elena said the absolute truth. You have been the misfortune of
my life."
"I told her to go to hell. I don't intend to speak to her or see her
ever again. I'm sorry on account of Yilal, because I don't think I'll
see him again either. Who did that idiot think she was to lecture
me? I think she's in love with you herself."
She shifted in her chair, and I thought she suddenly turned pale.
"May I ask why you were looking for me?"
"I wanted to see you and talk to you," she said, smiling again. "I
missed you. And you missed me too, just a little?"
"You always turn up and look for me between lovers," I said,
trying to pull my hand away from hers. This time I succeeded. "Did
Marline's husband throw you out? Did you come for an interlude in
my arms until you catch another old man in your nets?"
"Not anymore," she interrupted, grasping my hand again and
adopting her old, mocking tone. "I've decided to put an end to my
madness. I'm going to spend my final years with my husband. And
be a model wife."
I started to laugh and she laughed too. She scratched my hand
with her fingers and I felt more and more like tearing her eyes out.
"You, you have a husband? May I ask who he is?"
"I'm still your wife and I can prove it, I have the certificate," she
said, becoming serious. "You're my husband. Don't you remember
we got married in the mairie of the fifth arrondissement?"
"It was a farce, to get you papers," I reminded her. "You've never
really been my wife. You've been with me for periods of time, when
you had problems, for as long as you couldn't get anything better.
Are you going to tell me why you were looking for me? This time, if
you're having problems, I couldn't help you even if I wanted to. But
I don't want to. I don't have a cent and I'm living with a girl whom I
love and who loves me."
"A grimy hippie who'll leave you just like that," she said, getting
angry again. "Who doesn't care about you at all, judging by the way
you walk around. But from now on, I'll take care of you. I'll worry
about you twenty-four hours a day. Like a model wife. That's why