in Tokyo. Until the next chapter!
I didn't tell Elena and Simon about the call or our appointment,
and I spent forty-eight hours in a somnambulistic state, alternating
between spasms of lucidity and a mental fog that lifted occasionally
so I could give myself over to a masochistic session of insults:
imbecile, cretin, you deserve everything that happens to you, has
happened to you, will happen to you.
The day of our appointment was one of those gray, wet, lateautumn
Parisian days when there are almost no leaves on the trees
or light in the sky, people's bad temper increases with the bad
weather, and you see men and women on the street concealed by
coats, scarves, gloves, umbrellas, hurrying along and filled with
hatred for the world. When I left UNESCO I looked for a taxi, but
since it was raining and there was no hope of finding one, I opted for
the Metro. I got off at the Saint-Germain station, and from the door
of La Rhumerie I saw her sitting on the terrace, with a cup of tea and
a bottle of Perrier in front of her. When she saw me she stood and
reached up to my cheeks.
"Can we give each other an accolade, or can't we do that either?"
The place was filled with people typical of the district: tourists,
playboys with chains around their necks and flamboyant vests and
jackets, girls in daring necklines and miniskirts, some of them made
up as if for a gala party. I ordered grog. We were silent, looking at
each other with some discomfort, not knowing what to say.
Kuriko's transformation was notable. She seemed not only to
have lost ten kilos—she had become a skeleton of a woman—but to
have aged ten years since that unforgettable night in Tokyo. She
dressed with a modesty* and neglect I only remembered seeing in her
on that distant morning when I picked her up at Orly Airport at
Paul's request. She wore a threadbare jacket that could have been a
man's, faded flannel trousers, shoes that were worn and unpolished.
Her hair was disheveled, and on her very thin fingers the nails
seemed badly cut, unfiled, as if she bit them. The bones of her
forehead, cheeks, and chin were prominent, stretching her very pale
skin and accentuating its greenish cast. Her eyes had lost their light,
and there was something fearful in them that recalled certain timid
animals. She didn't have on a single adornment or any trace of
makeup.
"How hard it's been for me to see you," she said at last. She
extended her hand, touched my arm, and attempted one of those
flirtatious smiles from the old days, which didn't turn out well this
time. "At least tell me if you're over your anger and hate me a little
less."
"Let's not talk about that," I replied. "Not now, not ever. Why did
you call me so many times?"
"You gave me half an hour, didn't you?" she said, letting go of my
arm and sitting up straight. "We have time. Tell me about yourself.
Are things going well? Do you have a girlfriend? Are you still doing
the same work?"
"A little pissant until death," I said with a reluctant laugh, but
she remained very serious, observing me.
"The years have made you touchy, Ricardo. Once your rancor
wouldn't have lasted so long." The old light twinkled in her eyes for
a second. "Are you still telling women cheap, sentimental things, or
don't you do that anymore?"
"How long have you been in Paris? What are you doing here?
Working for the Japanese gangster?"
She shook her head. I thought she was going to laugh, but
instead her expression hardened and those full lips that were still
prominent on her face trembled, though they too seemed somewhat
faded now, like the rest of her.
"Fukuda dropped me more than a year ago. That's why I came to
Paris."
"Now I understand why you're in this lamentable condition," I
said ironically. "I never imagined I'd see you like this, so broken."
"I was much worse," she acknowledged harshly. "At one point I
thought I was going to die. The last two times I tried to talk to you,
that was the reason. So at least you would be the one to bury me. I
wanted to ask you to have me cremated. The thought of worms
eating my body horrifies me. Well, that's over."
She spoke calmly, though allowing glimpses of a contained fury
in her words. She didn't seem to be putting on a self-pitying act to
impress me, or if she was, it was done with supreme skill. Instead,
she described things objectively, from a distance, like a police officer
or a notary.
"Did you try to kill yourself when the great love of your life left
you?"
She shook her head and shrugged.
"He always said that one day he'd get tired of me and drop me. I
was prepared. He didn't talk to hear his own voice. But he didn't
choose the best moment to do it, or the best reasons."
Her voice trembled and her mouth twisted into a grimace of
hatred. Her eyes filled with sparks. Was all of this just another farce
to make me feel sorry for her?
"If the subject makes you uncomfortable, we'll talk about
something else," I said. "What are you doing in Paris, what are you
living on? Did the gangster at least give you some compensation that
will let you live for a while without difficulties?"
"I was in prison in Lagos, a couple of months that seemed like a
century," she said, as if I suddenly were no longer there. "The most
awful, ugly city, and the most evil people in the world. Never even
think about going to Lagos. When I finally got out of prison, Fukuda
wouldn't let me come back to Tokyo. "You're burned, Kuriko.'
Burned in both senses of the word, he meant. Because now I was on
file with the international police. And burned because the blacks in
Nigeria probably infected me with AIDS. He hung up on me, just like
that, after telling me I shouldn't see him, or write to him, or call him
ever again. That's how he dropped me, as if I were a mangy dog. He
didn't even pay for my ticket to Paris. He's a cold, practical man who
knows what suits him. I no longer suited him. He's the exact
opposite of you. That's why Fukuda is rich and powerful and you are
and always will be a little pissant."
"Thanks. After all you've told me, that's praise."
Was any of it true? Or was it another of those fabulous lies that
marked all the stages of her life? She had regained her self-control.
She held her cup in both hands, sipping and blowing on the tea. It
was painful to see her so ruined, so badly dressed, looking so old.
"Is this great melodrama true? Isn't this another of your stories?
Were you really in prison?"
"Not only in prison but also raped by the Lagos police," she said,
fixing my eyes with hers, as if I were responsible for her misfortune.
"Some blacks whose English I couldn't understand because they
spoke pidgin. That's what David called my English when he wanted
to insult me: pidgin. But they didn't give me AIDS. Just crabs and
chancre. A horrible word, isn't it? Have you ever heard it? You
probably don't even know what it is, little saint. Chancre, infectious
ulcers. Something disgusting but not serious if you treat it in time
with antibiotics. But in damn Lagos they didn't treat me properly
and the infection almost killed me. I thought I was going to die.
That's why I called you. Now, fortunately, I'm all right."
What she was telling me could be true or false, but the
immeasurable rage that permeated everything she said was no pose.
Though with her, a performance was always possible. A formidable
pantomime? I felt disconcerted, confused. The last thing I expected
from our meeting was a story like this.
"I'm sorry you went through that hell," I said at last, just to say
something, because what can you say in response to this kind of
revelation? "If what you're telling me is true. You see, something
dreadful has happened to me where you're concerned. You've told
me so many stories in my life, it's difficult for me to believe
anything you say."
"It doesn't matter if you don't believe me," she said, grasping my
arm again and making an effort to seem cordial. "I know you're still
offended, that you'll never forgive me for what happened in Tokyo.
It doesn't matter. I don't want you to feel sorry for me. I don't want
money, either. What I want, in fact, is to call you once in a while and
occasionally have a cup of coffee with you, the way we're doing now.
That's all."
"Why don't you tell me the truth? For once in your life. Go on,
tell me the truth."
"The truth is, for the first time I feel uncertain and don't know
what to do. Very alone. It hasn't happened before, even though I've
had extremely difficult moments. If you must know, I'm sick with
fear." She spoke with a proud dryness, with a tone and attitude that
seemed to give the lie to what she was saying. She looked into my
eyes without blinking. "Fear's a sickness too. It paralyzes me, it
nullifies me. I didn't know that and now I do. I know some people
here in Paris, but I don't trust anybody. But I do trust you. That's the
truth, whether you believe me or not. Can I call you from time to
time? Can we see each other occasionally, in a bistrot, the way we're
doing today?"
"That's no problem. Of course we can."
We talked for another hour until it grew dark and the shop
windows and windows of the buildings on Saint-Germain lit up, and
the red and yellow lights of the cars formed a luminescent river that
flowed slowly along the boulevard past the terrace of La Rhumerie.
Then I remembered. Who answered the phone in my house the last
time she called? Did she remember?
She looked at me, intrigued, uncomprehending. But then she
nodded.
"Yes, a young woman. I thought you had a lover, but then I
realized she must have been a maid. Filipina?"
"A child. Did he talk to you? Are you sure?"
"He said you were away on a trip, I think. Nothing, a couple of
words. I left a message, I see he gave it to you. Why are you asking
about that now?"
"He talked to you? Are you sure?"
"A couple of words," she repeated, nodding. "Who's the boy? Did
you adopt him?"
"His name's Yilal. He's nine or ten years old. He's Vietnamese,
the son of neighbors who are friends of mine. Are you sure he spoke
to you? Because the boy is mute. His parents and I have never heard
his voice."
She was bewildered and for a long moment, half closing her eyes,
consulted her memory. She made several affirmative movements
with her head. Yes, yes, she remembered very clearly. They spoke
French. His voice was so delicate it seemed feminine to her. Highpitched
and exotic. They exchanged very few words. Just that I
wasn't there, I was away on a trip. And when she asked him to say
"the bad girl" had called—she said this in Spanish—the thin voice
interrupted: "What? What?" She had to spell "bad girl" in Spanish
for him. She remembered very well. The boy had spoken to her,
there was no doubt about it.
"Then you performed a miracle. Thanks to you, Yilal began to
speak."
"If I have those powers, I'm going to use them. I imagine witches
must make a ton of money in France."
A short while later, when we said goodbye at the entrance to the
Saint-Germain Metro station and I asked for her phone number and
address, she wouldn't give them to me. She would call me.
"You'll never change. Always the same mysteries, the same
stories, the same secrets."
"It's done me a lot of good to see you finally and talk to you." She
silenced me. "You won't hang up on me again, I hope."
"That depends on how you behave."
She stood on tiptoe and I felt her mouth purse in a rapid kiss on
my cheek.
I watched her disappear into the Metro entrance. From the back,
so thin, in flat shoes, she didn't seem to have aged as much as she
did from the front.
Though it was still drizzling and fairly cold, instead of taking the
Metro or a bus, I decided to walk. It was my sole physical activity
now; my visits to the gym had lasted only a few months. Exercises
bored me, and I was even more bored by the kind of people I met
running on the treadmill, chinning themselves, doing aerobics. On
the other hand, I enjoyed walking around this city* filled with secrets
and marvels, and on days when emotions ran high, like this one, a
long walk, even under an umbrella in the rain and wind, would do
me good.
Of all the things the bad girl told me, the only thing undoubtedly
true was that Yilal had exchanged a few words with her. This meant
the Gravoskis' son could speak; perhaps he had done it before, with
people who didn't know him, at school, on the street. It was a small
mystery he would reveal to his parents one day. I imagined the joy
of Simon and Elena when they heard the thin voice, a little highpitched,
that the bad girl had described to me. I was walking along
Boulevard Saint-Germain toward the Seine, when just before the
Juilliard bookstore I discovered a small shop that sold toy soldiers