Authors: James McCreath
to Lonnie. He had found something much more important to him now than
rugby. That was just a game. Child’s play. There were far more relevant matters
taking place at the University of Buenos Aires in the spring of 1977.
One of them was the political awakening of many of the upper-middle-
class students to the anarchy of successive dictators and military juntas. Another
was the rape of the Argentine economy in favor of an ever-expanding military.
A third was the escalated suppression of leftist and liberal expressions. But
more than anything else, there was Celeste Lavalle.
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RENALDO
He had met her as his tutorial leader in a course dealing with the Argentine
foreign trade deficit. She was a graduate student from San Miguel de Tucumán,
a beautiful city situated in the northern foothills of the Andes Mountains. She
had completed her preliminary courses at the Tucumán University and had
come to Buenos Aires to research trade factors for her thesis.
Despite her small stature, standing barely five feet tall, she took control of
the tutorial group from the first day. Celeste Lavalle placed her cards squarely
on the table right from her opening address to the tutorial students. Her
passionate speech on the legacy that future Argentines would inherit if the
economy was not shifted away from military largess opened many eyes for the
first time.
“More butter, many less guns!” she had said that first class.
Lonnie listened to her in awe. Whether she spoke the truth or not, just
espousing such views was very risky anywhere in Argentina these days. You
never knew who your fellow students were, and the police had been known
to sneak plainclothes officers into any situation that might become a breeding
ground for dissident opinions. Student informers were frequently paid to provide
information on individuals, groups, or courses that were not sympathetic to the
junta’s right-wing doctrine.
Professors had disappeared from the campus without a trace. Certain vocal
students would suddenly have to drop out for ‘financial’ or ‘family’ reasons.
There was an undercurrent of suppression running throughout every facet of
university life. That made Celeste Lavalle’s opinions even more daring, and
Lonnie was amazed at the passion that those opinions evoked in this fiery, self-
assured woman.
But it was more than words and thoughts that stirred the big athlete. This
señorita had a beauty that Lonnie had seen in few women. Different, hard to
describe. Nothing like the multitude of mindless coeds that he had spent so
much time with over the past two years.
Celeste’s was more a natural beauty. Lonnie would come to say a ‘provincial
beauty,’ unlike the made-up girls of Buenos Aires. Her cropped black hair
and dark complexion were complemented by the saddest brown eyes that he
had ever seen. The student knew at once that those eyes held secrets, deep
mysterious secrets.
Celeste had made much of the fact that she had come from the provinces
and promised to give the Porteños more than just their usual navel gazing view
of the problems facing modern-day Argentina. Lonnie was certain after that
first tutorial that she would endeavor to do so in an outspoken, candid manner
. . . if she were not stopped by the authorities first!
Their relationship had started testily, with Lonnie often defending what
Celeste called the ‘Porteño Bourgeoisie’ attitude toward solving the problems
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JAMES McCREATH
of the Argentine people. It did not take her long to discover that Lonnie De
Seta came from a privileged background, and she often used Lonnie as her pet
example of how the ruling and advantaged classes were responsible for the
current economic and moral bankruptcy of the nation.
At first, the verbal sparing infuriated Lonnie, and had the tutor been a
man, he would have simply throttled him with his fists. After that, he would
either have sought out another course, or waited for a replacement tutor. But
these tactics could not be employed with Celeste Lavalle, and the more Lonnie
was forced to debate and listen, the more his understanding and admiration for
this ‘Tigress from Tucumán’ grew. He had never known any woman to have
such strong feelings about politics, and he would find himself captivated by
her as she spoke in their tutorials, wondering if she carried her passions as far
as the boudoir.
The Porteño would stay after class was over, often engaging in heated
debate, until one or the other of them would storm off in disgust. He was
obsessed by her spirit, and she knew it. Finally, in desperation to take their
relationship to another level, Lonnie asked his tutor if she would accompany
him to an underground lecture by one of the nation’s leading trade union
leaders, a man who happened to have a huge student and left-wing following.
She had refused at first, citing the awkward relationship between teacher
and pupil, but had finally succumbed from a combination of curiosity and sheer
frustration over his relentless pleadings.
The speaker, a thinly disguised Marxist from Rosario named Raphael
Squeo, had to be spirited in and out of Buenos Aires to avert arrest for a
number of outstanding warrants. These related to what the junta referred to
as ‘provocative activities and conspiring to commit insurrection against the
state.’
The lecture was held in the basement of one of the undergraduate
dormitories in University City. Heavily armed security teams were very much
in evidence, but what seemed incredible to Lonnie was the fact that they were
comprised of his fellow students. He knew many of these gun-toting scholars
personally. Had the police or military decided to raid the proceedings, the
outcome could have been a blood bath. He was also shocked at the passionate
response from the audience to the rhetoric of Señor Squeo.
Much of what the man proclaimed to be the only path to an enlightened
Argentina would have meant the downfall of the upper-middle classes. That
would include the family and the fortune of Lonfranco ‘Lonnie’ De Seta. He sat
in silence trying to take the pulse of the gathering. Lonnie knew that he was
not the only Porteño present that came from an established, well-to-do family.
He had seen many others, both young men and young women. The former
rugby player watched their enthusiasm and vocal encouragement peak as Squeo
skillfully built his ninety-minute speech to a crescendo.
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RENALDO
At the conclusion, everyone was standing and applauding, stomping their
feet and whistling. It seemed like a football pep rally, with Squeo carried from
the room on the shoulders of his supporters.
He preaches pure anarchy!
Lonnie thought to himself. It seemed to him that
the overall theme of Squeo’s lecture was that ‘Argentina must be ruled by the
will of its common people, with free elections. This must be achieved by any
means possible, even civil disobedience and violence!’
That could not be accomplished without even more retaliatory violence
on the part of generals who currently controlled the military, and therefore, the
country. It was a vicious circle that just seemed to perpetuate itself, recurring
every few years with a different cast of characters.
Lonnie was relieved to find no military police at the university that
evening as they walked to his car. The audience had been asked before the
lecture began to disperse as quickly as possible, so that the location of the event
could remain secret and secure for future use. The crowd seemed to be heeding
those wishes.
Once they were alone in his car, Lonnie finally sought out a reaction from
his learned companion. He was shocked at her diatribe.
“That man knows nothing about what is best for this country! He is a fool
and a coward. He has never killed anyone in the name of his revolution! All he
does is talk and line his pockets. No one asked him how much he is paid by
the unions to stir up unrest, or how much he takes under the table from the
junta to keep things peaceful. He is playing both sides against the middle, and
his bank account is the middle! We have had dealings with him in the past,
and I tell you, the man is a snake!” She sat back forcefully against the seat and
caught her breath. “And what must you think, mon petit bourgeoisie, about a
man that would take away your heritage, your fortune, and your family’s good
name? You can’t have me believe that you want these people running Argentina
the way that they aspire to. They are dreamers, men who do not act except in
speeches. Where I come from, we let our actions do the talking.”
It was true, of course. All of Argentina was aware of the destruction and
havoc that the Perónista guerrilla group, the Montoneros, had wrought, not
only in their home base of Tucumán Province, but also right in the heart of
Buenos Aires itself. Murders, kidnappings, extortions, and outright firefights
with the army had produced a death toll running into the thousands. It all
seemed so distant to Lonnie, unless, of course, a bomb exploded in Buenos
Aires or a local politician or general was abducted and murdered. Then, at best,
it was just a quickly forgotten news headline. But that attitude had changed
from the moment he met Celeste. She had succeeded in filling his head with
doubt. Doubt about his lifestyle, his family, his country, and also about his
prowess with women.
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JAMES McCREATH
He was certainly not used to the cool aloofness with which Celeste
deflected his advances. Other women, they were his for the taking. But not this
one. This one drove Lonnie to distraction!
He found himself laying awake at night thinking of political arguments
that would impress her in the next day’s tutorial. Even his mother had noticed
the change in him, proclaiming at the dinner table one night that “Lonfranco
has lost his appetite because he is in love.”
Following Squeo’s dramatic oration, the student had dropped his tutor
off at her apartment building with a formal handshake and a thank-you. But
something deep inside his being forced him to call out to her impetuously
before she disappeared inside.
“What do you want me to do?”
Celeste remained on the stoop of her building staring at him for several
seconds, then disappeared without saying a word. Lonnie slammed his fist into
the hood of his car.
“Damn, that woman is driving me out of my mind.”
No one could have been more surprised than he was when Celeste asked
him to have coffee with her after their next tutorial. They had sat and talked
for hours in a café near her apartment, and to Lonnie’s delight, she did not want
to talk politics. She wanted to know about his family and his background and
promised to keep the biting comments that she would often make in class out
of their conversation. The señorita seemed truly interested in him for a change,
and the soft night air along with several carafes of wine made for relaxed,
expressive dialogue. When it was time to go, she did not hesitate to ask him
back to her flat so that he could “borrow a copy of a book by her favorite left-
wing author,” as she so coyly put it.
It would be a seduction unlike any Lonnie had ever experienced. Celeste
set the mood and controlled the flow of events. With candles lit and soft guitar
music on the stereo, they smoked a marijuana joint that Lonnie had been
carrying, followed by a bowl of Nepalese hashish. Celeste revealed that the hash
had been a present from a student looking to better his grades.
Lonnie’s skin was on fire with pent-up lust. When Celeste brushed his
arm with her fingers while handing him the hash pipe, he thought that his
body would explode. She sensed his arousal and let her hand fall to his inner
thigh. Slowly she began to trace the outline of his quickly growing manhood
with her fingers.
She leaned forward and kissed his lips. Unbuttoning his shirt, she swiftly
ran her tongue down his chest until she was able place his nipple in her mouth
and bite it. When he did not shy away from the sweet pain, she continued to
playfully explore his hidden secrets.
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RENALDO
She orchestrated their coupling from start to finish, bringing Lonnie
to heights of ecstasy he hadn’t known existed. He was shocked that they fit
together so well, considering their disproportionate size. She seemed to meld to
him like a second skin.
Her passion knew no boundaries, and in this tutorial of the flesh, she
exposed him to new horizons for the first time. When they were spent, she did
not demand that he leave. Instead, she asked if he was hungry, then prepared a
huge feast of ‘vermicelli mixto,’ a pasta dish with pesto and tomato sauce. Fresh
green salad and hot bread were joined by a new bottle of Chianti. Lonnie was