Three-quarters of an hour later, the bad girl reappeared. She was
pleased by her conversation with Dr. Roullin, who seemed very
sensible and amiable, and by the visit to the clinic. The room she
would occupy was small, comfortable, very pretty, with views of the
park, and all the facilities, the dining room, the gym, the warm-water
pool, the small auditorium where they gave talks and showed
documentaries and feature films, were extremely modern. Without
further discussion, we went to administration. I signed a document
stating that I agreed to be responsible for all expenses and wrote a
check for ten thousand francs as a deposit. The bad girl handed a
French passport to the administrator, a very thin woman who wore
her hair in a bun and had an inquisitorial eye, and she asked for her
identification card instead. Elena and I looked at each other
uneasily, expecting a catastrophe.
"I don't have it yet," said the bad girl with absolute naturalness.
"I've lived abroad for many years and just came back to France. I
know I ought to get one. I'll do that right away."
The administrator wrote the data from the passport into a
notebook and returned it to her.
"You'll check in tomorrow," she said as we were leaving. "Please
get here before noon."
Taking advantage of the beautiful day, a little cold but golden and
with a perfectly clear sky, we took a long walk through the woods of
Petit Clamart, listening to the dead leaves of autumn rustling under
our feet. We had lunch in a little bistrot at the edge of the woods,
where a crackling fireplace warmed the room and reddened the faces
of the patrons. Elena had to go to work, so she left us just outside
Paris, at the first Metro station we came across. During the entire
ride to Ecole Militaire the bad girl was silent, her hand in mine. At
times I felt her shiver. In the house on Joseph Granier, as soon as
we walked in, the bad girl made me sit in the easy chair in the living
room and then she sat on my knees. Her nose and ears were
freezing, and she trembled so much she couldn't articulate a word.
Her teeth were chattering.
"The clinic will do you good," I said, caressing her neck, her
shoulders, warming her icy ears with my breath. "They'll take care of
you, fatten you up, put an end to these attacks of fear. They'll make
you pretty and you can turn back into the devil you've always been.
And, if you don't like the clinic, you'll come back here right away.
Whenever you say. It isn't a prison, but a place to rest."
She held me tight and didn't say anything, but she trembled a
long time before she grew calm. Then I prepared tea with lemon for
the two of us. We talked while she packed her bag for the clinic. I
handed her an envelope in which I had placed a thousand francs in
bills for her to take with her.
"It isn't a gift, it's a loan," I joked. "You'll pay me back when
you're rich. I'll charge you high interest."
"How much is all this going to cost you?" she asked, not looking
at me.
"Less than I thought. About a hundred thousand francs. What do
I care about a hundred thousand francs if I can see you looking
attractive again? I'm doing it out of sheer self-interest, Chilean girl."
She didn't say anything for a long time and kept packing her
suitcase, looking annoyed.
"I've become that ugly?" she said suddenly.
"Awful," I said. "Forgive me, but you've turned into a real horror
of a woman."
"That's a lie," she said, turning and throwing a sandal that landed
on my chest. "I can't be that ugly when yesterday, in bed, your cock
was hard the whole night. You had to put up with wanting to make
love to me, hypocrite."
She burst into laughter and from that moment on was in better
spirits. As soon as she finished packing, she came to sit on my lap
again so I could gently massage her back and arms. She was still
there, sound asleep, when Yilal came in around six to watch his
television program. Since the night of the surprise for his parents,
he would speak to them and to us, but only for a few moments,
because the effort tired him. And then he would go back to the slate,
which he still wore around his neck, along with a couple of pieces of
chalk in a little bag. That night we didn't hear his voice until he said
goodbye, in Spanish: "Good night, friends."
After supper, we went to the Gravoskis' for coffee, and they
promised to visit her at the clinic, and asked her to call if she needed
anything while I was in Finland. When we came back, she didn't let
me pull out the sofa bed.
"Why don't you want to sleep with me?"
I embraced her and pressed her body against mine.
"You know very well why. It's a martyrdom to have you naked
beside me, desiring you as I do, when I can't touch you."
"You're hopeless," she said, as indignant as if I'd insulted her. "If
you were Fukuda, you'd make love to me all night and not give a
damn if I gushed blood or died."
"I'm not Fukuda. Haven't you realized that yet, either?"
"Of course I have," she repeated, throwing her arms around my
neck. "That's why tonight you're going to sleep with me. Because I
don't enjoy anything as much as making you suffer. Haven't you
realized that?"
"ifeZas, yes," I said, kissing her hair. "I realized it all too well
many years ago, and the worst thing is I never learn. I even seem to
like it. We're the perfect pair: the sadist and the masochist."
We slept together, and when she tried to caress me I grasped her
hands and moved them away.
"Until you're completely healed, we're as chaste as two cherubs."
"It's true, you're a vrai con. At least hold me tight so I'm not
afraid."
The next morning we took the train at the Saint Lazare station,
and during the entire trip to Petit Clamart she was silent and
downcast. We said goodbye at the door of the clinic. She held on to
me as if we were never going to see each other again, and she wet
my face with her tears.
"At this rate, any moment now you'll wind up falling in love with
me."
"I'll bet whatever you want that I never will, Ricardito."
I left for Helsinki that same afternoon, and for the two weeks I
was working there I didn't stop speaking Russian, every day,
morning and afternoon. This was a tripartite conference, with
delegates from Europe, the United States, and Russia, to design a
policy of aid and cooperation from the Western powers to what
remained of the ruins of the Soviet Union. There were commissions
dealing with the economy, institutions, social policy, culture, and
sports, and on all of them, the Russian delegates expressed
themselves with a freedom and spontaneity inconceivable just a
short time ago in those monotonous robots, the apparatchiks sent to
international conferences by the governments of Brezhnev and even
Gorbachev. It was evident things were changing there. I wanted to
go back to Moscow and to the rebaptized Saint Petersburg, where I
hadn't been for many years.
We interpreters had a great deal of work and almost no time to
walk around. It was my second trip to Helsinki. The first had been in
spring, when it was possible to walk the streets, and go out to the
countryside and see the forests of fir trees dotted with lakes, and
pretty villages with wooden houses in a country where everything
was beautiful: the architecture, the landscape, the inhabitants, and,
above all, the old people. Now, however, with the snow and a
temperature of twenty degrees below zero, during my free hours I
preferred to stay in the hotel reading or practicing the mysterious
rituals of the sauna, which had a delicious anesthetic effect on me.
After ten days in Helsinki I received a letter from the bad girl.
She was settled into the clinic in Petit Clamart, to which she had
adjusted with no difficulty. She wasn't on a diet, she was overfed,
but since she had to do a good deal of exercise in the gym—and was
also swimming, helped by an instructor because she never had
learned to swim, only to float and paddle in the water like a
puppy—her appetite was good. She'd already had two sessions with
Dr. Roullin, who was quite intelligent, and they got on very well. She
hadn't had occasion to talk to the other patients; she only exchanged
greetings with some of them at meals. The only patient with whom
she had talked two or three times was a German girl who was
anorexic, very shy and timid, but a nice person. All she remembered
of the hypnosis session with Dr. Zilacxy was that when she woke up,
she felt very calm and rested. She also said she missed me, and that
I shouldn't do "a lot of dirty* things in those Finnish saunas, which,
as everyone knows, are great centers of sexual degeneracy."
In two weeks, when I returned to Paris, Senor Charnes's agency
had another five-day contract for me almost immediately, in
Alexandria. I was in France barely a day, so I couldn't visit the bad
girl. But we spoke on the phone, at dusk. I found her in good spirits,
happy above all with Dr. Roullin, who, she said, was doing her "an
enormous amount of good," and amused at the group therapy led by
Dr. Zilacxy, "something like the confessions of priests, but in a
group, and with sermons by the doctor." What did she want me to
bring her from Egypt? "A camel." She added, seriously: "I know
what: one of those dancing outfits with your belly exposed that Arab
dancers wear." Was she planning to please me, when she left the
clinic, with a performance of belly dancing just for me? "When I get
out, I'm going to do some things you don't even know exist, little
saint." When I said I missed her a great deal, she replied, "Me too, I
think." She was getting better, no doubt about it.
That night I had supper at the Gravoskis' and gave Yilal a dozen
toy soldiers I had bought in a store in Helsinki. Elena and Simon
were beside themselves with joy. Though the boy sometimes sank
back into mutism and wouldn't give up his slate, each day he spoke a
little more, not only with them but also at school, where his
classmates, who had called him "the Mute" before, now called him
"the Chatterbox." It was a question of patience; he'd soon be totally
normal. The Gravoskis had gone to visit the bad girl a couple of
times and found her perfectly adjusted to the clinic. Elena spoke
once on the phone with Dr. Zilacxy, and he read her a few lines in
which Dr. Roullin made a very positive report on the patient's
progress. She had gained weight and had more and more control of
her nerves every day.
The next afternoon I left for Cairo, where, after five tedious
hours of flying, I had to take another plane on an Egyptian airline to
Alexandria. I was exhausted when I arrived. As soon as I was in my
little room in a miserable hotel called the Nile—it was my fault, I
chose the cheapest one offered to the interpreters—I didn't feel like
unpacking and fell asleep for almost eight hours, something that
happened to me very* rarely.
The next day, which I had free, I walked around the ancient city
founded by Alexander, visited its museum of Roman antiquities and
the ruins of its amphitheater, and took a long walk on the beautiful
avenue by the coast, with its cafes, restaurants, hotels, shops for
tourists, and talkative, cosmopolitan crowd. Sitting on one of the
terraces that made me think of the poet Kavafis—his house in the
vanished, now Arabified Greek district could not be visited; a sign in
English indicated it was being renovated by the Greek consulate—I
wrote a long letter to the patient, telling her how glad I was to know
she was happy at the clinic in Petit Clamart and offering, if she
behaved herself and left the clinic totally cured, to take her for a
week to some beach in the south of Spain so she could get a tan.
Would she like to have a honeymoon with this little pissant?
I spent the afternoon reviewing all the documentation on the
conference, which began the next day. It had to do with the
economic cooperation and development of all the countries in the
Mediterranean basin: France, Spain, Greece, Italy, Turkey, Cyprus,
Egypt, Lebanon, Algeria, Morocco, Libya, and Syria. Israel had been
excluded. They were five exhausting days, with no time for anything,
immersed in confused and tedious papers and debates which, in
spite of producing mountains of printed paper, seemed to serve no
practical purpose. On the last day, one of the Arabic interpreters at
the conference, a native of Alexandria, helped me find what the bad
girl had asked for: an Arab dancer's outfit, full of veils and sequins. I
imagined her wearing it, swaying like a palm tree on the desert sand,
under the moon, to the rhythm of flageolets, flutes, finger cymbals,
timbrels, mandolins, cymbals, and other Arabic musical
instruments, and I wanted her.
The day after I arrived in Paris, even before I talked with the
Gravoskis, I went to visit her at the clinic in Petit Clamart. It was a