Authors: Georges Perec
days to go till that swan song of his which, sung in Urbino,
would link up, 20 springs on, with Anton Vowl's kidnapping
and Hassan Ibn Abbou's assassination . . .
To transform him into an apparition, into that ghoulish Com-
mandant who,
Uomo di sasso, Uomo bianco
, brings Mozart's
drammagiocoso
to its climax, Karl Bohm actually thought to wrap
Haig in a sculptor's mould with an iron collar, almost causing
him to swoon. A broad slit was cut through this mould, giving
his singing a rich bass intonation without in any way muffling
it. Bohm, happy with such an acoustical idiosyncrasy, told him,
"In fact, it's akin to having a rotting carcass posthumously cursing
us from within his coffin." Bohm was right; alas, nobody could
know just how right. For (and how such a thing could occur,
nobody would say), as a pallid Haig was put into his mould, and
it was shut tight, and laid on thick with stucco, totally confining
him, Bohm, aghast, saw that nobody had put slits in for him to
look through. But Bohm also saw no point in panicking, for it
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was just at that instant that Don Juan commands his flunky to
ask Haig (in his capacity, naturally, as Mozart's Commandant)
to lunch with him.
First, Haig was drawn up on a sling. So far, so good. From
that point on, though, bad luck would dog his path.
All of you know
Don Giovanni's
closing bars of music:
Giovanni sings: ". . .
Grido indiavolato . . ."
And his flunky (who, in this production, was sung by van
Dam): "
Ah sip/nor . . . Uuom di sasso . . . Uuomo bianco . . . Ah
padron . . . Tum-ti-tum . . ."
This was Haig's prompt and van Dam was waiting for him to
walk forward, coming into sight as Bohm had his violinists play
a closing, fading chord; and, advancing again to allow his public
to savour his imposing physical proportions, to launch into his
famous "Dow
Giovanni . . . m'invitasti".
But Haig was to wait an instant too long. On his approaching
Don Juan, van Dam haltingly sang
"Ah Padron . . . Siam tutti
morti
" . . . Haig, looking around him in confusion, as though
slowly going adrift, took fright, turning crazily this way and that,
spinning about as a robot or a mutant might run amok and loudly
crying out
"mi mi mi mi mi
" . . . At which point our basso lost
all control, stubbing his foot on a column, tripping up, swaying
and falling - falling as straight and stiff as a mast, as a baobab
adroidy cut in half. With his fall making a loud thud, its shock
so startling that, as though imitating Humpty Dumpty tumbling
off his wall, Haig's mould split from top to bottom, a cry of
horror shook that auditorium to its foundations, from its balcony
to its stalls, and from its gods to its royal box. A long furrow,
ashy in colour, zigzagging from his foot to his skull, ran through
that mould, that stucco trap in which poor Haig was caught,
Assuring it with tiny sharp cracks, through which, as in a crumb-
ling dam, purplish blood would start to spurt and spout till,
finally, stomach-turningly, gushing forth.
Using a blowtorch, a jack and an automatic drill, unhitching
him as you might pluck a rotting pit, say, from an inhuman fruit,
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Bohm's assistants got Haig out and saw, first of all, on his body,
a grisly, ashy furrow similar to that on his mould, also running
from top to bottom and zigzagging down his torso as a bolt of
lightning from Thor might flash across a lurid Nordic sky. And
though Haig's own doctor would insist on carrying out an
autopsy, nobody could work out any natural grounds for his
dying in this way . . .
Why, nobody could say, but Augustus B. Clifford was also at
Urbino's "Musical May". And, that night, following his son's
tragic mishap, Clifford slunk into a local hospital — in which
Haig's body was laid out - took it away with him by swaddling
it in a shroud and carrying it out by a back door, bought a
Hispano-Suiza sports car and, driving all night, all day and all
night again, as frantically as a madman, as fast and furious as a
champion at Indianapolis or Brands Hatch, got to Azincourt. A
local myth has it that Clifford actually had his son's body burnt;
probably, though, Haig is now lying in his coffin, possibly
in that shady nook of parkland on which, as it's also said,
grass grows in particularly thick clumps and in a particularly
intriguing form, almost as though a topiarist had had a hand in
shaping it: that of a harpoon with 3 prongs or a hand with 3
digits, Satan's diabolical sign such as might initial a Faustian
contract.
Augustus, whom many local townsfolk thought raving mad,
would go for months and months without quitting his mansion
at Azincourt and would hurl rocks at any infant straying into his
domain, any busybody hawking goods or any tramp asking for
alms at his door. A high wall was built around its grounds, which,
at night, it was said, would turn it into a prison, a sort of Spandau,
with its solitary, voluntary convict, who would now stay indoors
for good. You might, at most, find his maid in town buying a
ham or a pair of fatty lamb chops. But if you sought to chat up
this maid, who, of part-Iroquois origin, was known as "Squaw",
if you said, "So, Squaw, your boss, still off his nut?", Squaw
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would shout back at you, "Sonofabitch!" and "Scumbag!",
two traditional Iroquois oaths.
And, as Squaw was an old judo pro, it wasn't politic to
insist.
Occasionally, too, with an ugly gap-tooth grin, Squaw would
add: "If boss good to Jonah, boss good man."
For it was known that Augustus, conscious of his son's mission,
would approach his pond at noon sharp, murmuring "Jonah,
Jonah!" Though Jonah was grown-up now, it always swam
upwards at his call; and Augustus would throw crumbs at it that
it would gulp down with obvious satisfaction.
It took Olga six springs to track down Augustus, who had only
caught sight of his gracious in-law for an instant. On Olga's initial
arrival at Azincourt, Squaw had instructions not to unlock its
door to this prima donna for whom Augustus's son had had such
a strong passion. But as things would work out, Augustus, taking
pity on Olga and also itching to satisfy a natural curiosity, would
start to thaw and gradually warm to this fascinating woman who
told him about holy matrimony with a man as romantic as his son,
a union brought, alas, to a tragically swift and abrupt conclusion.
Augustus in his turn would talk of Haig in his childhood,
giving scraps to Jonah, climbing acacias and playing blind
man's buff.
Taking a fancy to Azincourt, finding in it a tranquillity missing
in Paris - in which it was work, work, work all day long! - Olga
was soon paying it four visits a month, going for long walks
through its grounds, drinking fruit cocktails in a formal drawing
room from which Augustus had dustcloths vanish in honour of
his charming visitor. Following a light lunch, consisting of cold
cuts, salad and fruit, Olga, slumping on to a ravishing mahogany
sofa (still giving off vibrations from a torrid affair that La Grisi
had had on it with a Boyar and for which a youthful Augustus
had paid a tidy sum at an auction), Olga, I say, would stitch a
dainty rustic motif on a patchwork quilt, whilst Augustus, sitting
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upright at his grand piano, would play a sonata by Albinoni,
Haydn or Auric. Occasionally, too, Olga sang a song by Brahms
or Schumann that would float out into a starry night sky.
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10
Which will, I trust, gratify fanatics of Pindaric lyricism
Whilst, far off, a dog, an Alsatian or an Afghan hound, starts
howling mournfully, Amaury knocks at Olga's front door and
Clifford's maid soon unbolts it.
"Morning, Squaw," says a smiling Amaury, visibly savouring
such an unusual alias.
"Good day to you, Sir Amaury," says Squaw; "and good day
to you too, Sir Savorgnan."
Amaury, caught short, looks squintingly at Savorgnan.
"What's this? Do you also know Squaw?"
"Didn't it occur to you I might?"
"Why . . . no," admits Amaury.
"I told you, didn't I, and not all that long ago, whilst our train
was drawing into Arras, I told you that you'd soon know my
story in its totality. So now you know just how similar my
curricu-
lum
, so to say, is to yours: an unfailing aspiration uniting us
now as it always has and always will. Your information is my
information, your informants my informants, your companions
my companions - so it's not surprising, is it, that our paths should
finally cross as both of us scurry about on this cryptic pursuit of
ours..
"Similia similibus cumntur
," a witty Amaury sums up.
"Contmria contmriis cumntur
," a sardonic Savorgnan snaps
back.
Pointing indoors, Squaw buts in. "Lady Olga is waiting for
you."
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Amaury and Savorgnan stroll into a stylish living room: two
nylon rugs of a lilyish purity, oval armchairs, a lamp (from China)
of such formal sophistication that, by comparison, Noguchi's
work would look almost naif, a divan as long as a bar in a
Hawaiian nightclub with big shiny vinyl cushions in Day-Glo
colours and, filling a wall from top to bottom, an Op Art church
window by Sartinuloc.
Olga is dozing in a hammock, a hand trailing daintily
floorwards. Amaury stoops to kiss it, and Savorgnan follows
suit.
"Cari amid"
murmurs Olga with a languorous yawn, "I
know I can always count on you, both of you. Augustus
wants to say a word or two. Sound that gong, Amaury, will
you."
Picking up a small aluminium gong, Amaury whacks it, pro-
ducing a sound which, if a bit "off", has an oddly long-drawn-out
vibration.
Abruptly, as though by magic, Augustus B. Clifford is standing
in his own doorway. Clifford, a frail old fossil, wrinkly of brow,
frosty of hair, and having to cup his hand to catch what is
said to him, plods up to Savorgnan and puts his arms around
him:
"Wilburg, old chap, how do you do?"
"How do you do?" says Savorgnan with typical urbanity.
"How was your trip?"
"Oh, it wasn't too bad."
"No, not bad at all," adds Amaury, who, as usual, has to put
in his two bits' worth.
"Good, good," says Clifford, rubbing his hands. "Now sit
down, sit down, both of you."
Olga hands round a tray of fruit and fruit cocktails and fruit
crystals: fruit, only fruit, which our visitors dutifully swallow
without a word. In fact, nobody says anything at all. Savorgnan
coughs. Olga sighs.
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"What all of you must do now," says Olga at last, "is pool
what you know about this quicksand that risks sucking us in as
though along a giant straw. It's my opinion, and yours too, I
know, that during this past month (which will finish today) just
too much damn bad luck - or, as Augustus would put it, a
disturbingly high ratio of affliction - has struck down two of our
companions. Now, apart from a handful of scraps, you still lack
information on Anton's abduction and Hassan's . . . passing
away." (Prim Olga was always loath to say that basic D-word
that for many in our civilisation is still a major taboo.) "But what
you do know, or think you know, is that at its crux is a con-
undrum worthy of a Sphinx and it is its signification that you
must try to grasp. Which is why, as I say, Augustus and I want
to join up with you by pooling our information and coordinating
our actions!"
"Your proposition is worth its avoirdupois in gold," says
Augustus.
"You can say that again!" says Savorgnan (no doubt in a malici-
ous allusion to Augustus's linguistic pomposity). "Probably you,
Olga, or you, Amaury, know a thing or two that I don't and
probably I know a thing or two that you don't and it's by closing
ranks that our horizons will roll back and a communal intuition
spring forth!"
Arthur Wilburg Savorgnan is a hard act to follow. Amaury
simply shouts, "Bravo!" And Squaw, approaching with a tray of
drinks, caps this with "Hip hip hooray!"
A toast.
Proposing to submit his contribution first, Amaury maintains
that it is,
a priori,
of particular import. This was a slighdy surpris-
ing tack for him to adopt, but it gains him his right to hold forth
first.
Amaury starts straight in without any banal small talk. "I'm
now familiar with most if not all of Anton Vowl's diary, in which
I found 5 or 6 allusions to a book, a work of fiction, which, it
claims, contains a solution to our conundrum. Anyway, I found
9 5
indications in it of why this book was so crucial for him, without
Anton actually giving anything away."
'That's right," says Savorgnan, "you might say our chum had