ex—guerrilla fighter, the ex-Madame Arnoux was now in
Newmarket? I asked myself this very often, caressing the little
Guerlain toothbrush she left in my apartment on the last day I saw
her and which I always kept with me, like an amulet. Too
improbable, too coincidental, too everything. But I couldn't get the
suspicion—the hope—out of my head. And I began to count the days
until a new contract would return me to the pied-a-terre in Earl's
Court.
"Do you know her?" Juan asked in surprise when I finally
showed him the photograph and asked him about it. "She's Mrs.
Richardson, the wife of that flamboyant man you see there, he's
something of a glutton. She's Mexican, I think. She speaks a very
funny English, you'd die laughing if you heard her. Are you sure you
know her?"
"No, it isn't the person I thought it was."
But I was absolutely certain it was. What he said about her "very
funny English" and her "Mexican" background convinced me. It had
to be her. And though in the four years that had passed since she
disappeared from Paris, I had often told myself it was much better
this way because that little Permian adventurer had already caused
enough disarray in my life, when I was sure she had reappeared in a
new incarnation of her mutable identity only fifty miles from
London, I felt an irresistible, restless need to go to Newmarket and
see her again. Juan was sleeping at Mrs. Stubard's and I spent a
good number of nights wide awake, in a state of anxiety that made
my heart pound as if I were suffering an attack of tachycardia. Could
she possibly have gone there? What adventures, entanglements,
audacities had catapulted her into an enclave of the most exclusive
society in the world? I didn't dare ask Juan Barreto more questions
about Mrs. Richardson. I was afraid that if he confirmed the identity*
of our compatriot, she'd find herself embroiled in an extremely
difficult situation. If she was passing herself off as Mexican in
Newmarket, it had to be for some dark and troubled reason. I
devised a secretive strategy. Indirectly, without mentioning in any
way the lady in the photograph, I would try to have Juan take me to
that Eden of horse racing. During a long night of palpitations and
sleeplessness, not to mention a violent erection, at one point I even
had an attack of jealousy of my friend. I imagined that the equine
portrait painter not only did oil paintings in Newmarket but also
entertained the bored wives of stable owners in his idle moments
and, perhaps, that among his conquests was Mrs. Richardson.
Why didn't Juan have a steady partner, like so many other
hippies? At the parties he took me to he almost always disappeared
with a girl, sometimes with two. But one night I was amazed to see
him caress and kiss on the mouth with a good deal of passion a
redheaded boy, as slim as a reed, whom he crushed in his arms with
amorous frenzy.
"I hope you weren't shocked by what you saw," he said to me
later, somewhat peevishly.
I said that at the age of thirty-five nothing in the world shocked
me, least of all whether human beings made love from the front or
the back.
"I do it both ways and that makes me happy, my friend," he
confessed, proudly. "I think I like girls better than boys, but in any
case I wouldn't fall in love with one or the other. The secret to
happiness, at least to peace of mind, is knowing how to separate sex
from love. And, if possible, eliminating romantic love from your life,
which is the love that makes you suffer. That way, I assure you, you
live with greater tranquility* and enjoy things more."
A philosophy the bad girl would have subscribed to down to the
crossed t's and dotted i's, since she no doubt had always practiced it.
I believe this was the only time we spoke—I should say, that he
spoke—about intimate matters. He led a totally free and
promiscuous life, but at the same time he preserved that widespread
urge among Peruvians to avoid confidences in sexual matters and
always to touch on the subject in a veiled, indirect way. Our
conversations dealt principally with far-off Peru, where the news we
received was increasingly disastrous regarding the sweeping
nationalizations of farms and businesses by the military dictatorship
of General Velasco Alvarado, which, according to my uncle Ataulfo's
letters, were more and more demoralizing and would drive us back
to the Stone Age. On this occasion Juan also confessed that though
in London he pursued every opportunity to satisfy his appetites ("So
I've seen," I joked), in Newmarket he behaved like a chaste
gentleman even though there was no lack of possibilities for
amusement. But he didn't want some bedroom complication to
compromise the work that had provided him with the security and
income he never thought he'd attain. "I'm thirty-five, too, and as
you've seen, here in Earl's Court that counts as old age." It was true:
the physical and mental youth of the inhabitants of this London
neighborhood sometimes made me feel prehistoric.
It cost me a good amount of time and a delicate tangle of
insinuations and apparently innocent questions to keep pushing
Juan Barreto to take me to Newmarket, the celebrated town in
Suffolk that since the middle of the eighteenth century had
incarnated the English passion for thoroughbreds. I asked him
endless questions. What were the people like there, the houses
where they lived, the rituals and traditions that surrounded them,
the relations among owners, jockeys, and trainers. And what
happened at the auctions at Tattersalls, where extraordinary sums
were paid for star horses, and how was it possible to auction a horse
by parts, as if it could be disassembled. In response to what he told
me, I did everything but applaud—"Man, that's interesting"—and put
on an enthusiastic face: "How lucky you are, old friend, to know a
world like that from the inside."
At last it produced results. After an end-of-season horse auction,
an Italian breeder married to an Englishwoman, Signor Ariosti, was
giving a dinner in his house to which he had invited Juan. My friend
asked if he could bring along a compatriot, and the host said he'd be
delighted. I recall that for the seventeen days I had to wait until the
moment arrived, I was in a daze and suffered sudden cold sweats, an
adolescent's excitement as I imagined seeing the Permian girl, and a
few sleepless nights during which I did nothing but reproach myself:
I was a hopeless imbecile to still be in love with a madwoman, an
adventurer, an unscrupulous female with whom no man, I least of
all, could maintain a stable relationship without eventually being
stepped on. But in the intervals between these masochistic
soliloquies, others came into play, full of joy and hope: Had she
changed very much? Did she still have the bold manner that
attracted me so much, or had life in the stratified English world of
horses domesticated and nullified it? The day we took the train to
Newmarket—we had to change lines at the Cambridge station—I was
assailed by the notion that all of this was a figment of my
imagination and Mrs. Richardson was in fact nothing more or less
than some ordinary woman of Mexican background. What if you've
been chasing an illusion all this time, Ricardito.
Juan Barreto's house in the country, a few miles from
Newmarket, was a one-story wooden structure surrounded by
willows and hydrangeas that looked more like an artist's studio than
a residence. Crowded with jars of paint, easels, canvases mounted on
stretchers, sketchbooks, and books about art, there were also a good
number of records strewn on the floor around a wonderful sound
system. Juan had a Mini Minor that he never brought to London,
and that afternoon he gave me a ride in his small vehicle around
Newmarket, a mysterious, scattered city with practically no center.
He took me to see the blue-blood Jockey Club and the National
Horseracing Museum. The real city wasn't the handful of houses
around Newmarket High Street where there was a church, a few
shops, some Laundromats, and a couple of restaurants, but the
beautiful residences dispersed over the flat countryside and
surrounded by the stables, outbuildings, and training tracks that
Juan pointed out to me, naming their owners and recounting
anecdotes about them. I barely heard him. All my attention was
focused on the people we passed in the hope that the female form I
was searching for would suddenly appear among them.
She didn't appear, not on that drive, and not in the small Indian
restaurant where Juan took me that night for tandoori curry, and
not the next day, either, during the long, interminable auction of
mares and fillies and racehorses and studhorses held at Tattersalls
under a huge canvas tent. I was stupendously bored. It surprised me
to see the number of Arabs, some in jellabas, who raised the bids at
each sale and sometimes paid astronomical sums that I never
suspected could be paid for a quadruped. None of the many people
Juan introduced me to during the auction, or the rest periods when
attendees drank champagne from paper cups and ate carrots,
cucumbers, and sardines from paper plates, mentioned the name I
was waiting for: Mr. David Richardson.
But that night, as soon as I entered the sumptuous mansion of
Signor Ariosti, I suddenly felt my throat go dry and my finger- and
toenails begin to ache. There she was, less than ten meters away,
sitting on the arm of a sofa, holding a tall glass in her hand. Before I
could say a word or get close enough to her face to kiss her cheek,
she extended an indifferent hand and greeted me in English as if I
were a perfect stranger: "How do you do?" And without giving me
time to reply, she turned her back and resumed her conversation
with the people around her. Soon I heard her recounting, with
absolute confidence and in an approximate but very expressive
English, how, when she was a girl, her father would take her to
Mexico City every week to a concert or the opera. In this way he
instilled in her an early passion for classical music.
She hadn't changed very much in these four years. She had the
same slim, graceful appearance, with a narrow waist, slender
shapely legs, and ankles as fine and delicate as wrists. She seemed
more sure of herself and more confident than before, and she moved
her head at the end of each sentence with studied nonchalance. She
had lightened her hair a little and wore it longer than in Paris, with
waves I didn't recall; her makeup was simpler and more natural
than the heavy application Madame Arnoux was in the habit of
using. She wore a skirt that was fashionably short and showed her
knees, and a low-cut blouse that bared her smooth, silky shoulders
and emphasized her throat, an elegant column encircled by a thin
silver chain from which hung a precious stone, perhaps a sapphire,
that with her movements swayed roguishly over the opening where
arrogant breasts peeked out. I saw the wedding band on the ring
finger of her left hand, in the Protestant manner. Had she converted
to Anglicanism too? Mr. Richardson, to whom Juan introduced me
in the next room, was an exuberant man in his sixties wearing an
electric-yellow shirt and a handkerchief of the same color that
spilled out over his smart blue suit. Drunk and euphoric, he was
telling jokes about his travels in Japan, which greatly amused the
circle of guests around him as he filled their glasses from a bottle of
Dom Perignon that appeared and reappeared in his hands as if by
magic. Juan explained that he was a very rich man who spent part of
the year in Asia on business, but that the guiding star of his life was
the aristocratic passion par excellence: horses.
The hundred or so people, who filled the rooms and the veranda
that opened onto a vast garden with a lighted tiled swimming pool,
corresponded more or less to what Juan Barreto had described: a
very English world that had been joined by some foreign horse
people, like the owner of the house, Signor Ariosti, or my exotic
compatriot disguised as a Mexican, Mrs. Richardson. Everyone had
consumed a fair amount of drink, and they all seemed to know one
another very well and communicate in a coded language whose
recurrent theme was horse racing. Once, when I had managed to sit
in the group around Mrs. Richardson, I learned that several of them,
including the bad girl and her husband, had recently flown to Dubai
in a private plane as the guests of an Arab sheikh for the opening of
a racetrack. They had been treated like royalty. As for Muslims not
drinking alcohol, they said, it might be true for poor Muslims, but
the others, the horse people of Dubai, for instance, drank and served
their guests the most exquisite French wine and champagne.
In spite of my efforts, in the course of the long night I couldn't
exchange a single word with Mrs. Richardson. Each time I