He interrupts. âDavid has had an accident, and we are taking him to a doctor. I am afraid we can give you a ride only as far as Nueva Esperanza.'
âThat's OK.'
âI burned my hand,' says the boy. âWe are going to get medicine.'
âIs it sore?'
âYes.'
âI like your glasses. I wish I had glasses like that.'
âYou can have them.'
After a chilly early-morning ride on the back of a truck carrying timber, their passenger is glad of the warmth and comfort of the car. From his chatter it emerges that he is in the printing trade, and is making his way to Estrellita, where he has friends and where, if rumour is to be believed, there is plenty of work to be had.
At the turn-off to Nueva Esperanza he stops to let the newcomer off.
âAre we at the doctor?' asks the boy.
âNot yet. This is where we part company with our friend. He is going to continue his journey northward.'
âNo! He must stay with us!'
He addresses Juan. âWe can drop you here or else you can come into the town with us. The choice is yours.'
âI'll come with you.'
They find the surgery without difficulty. Dr GarcÃa is out on a house call, the nurse informs them, but they are welcome to wait.
âI'll go and look for breakfast,' says Juan.
âNo, you mustn't go,' says the boy. âYou will get lost.'
âI won't get lost,' says Juan. His hand is on the door knob.
âStay, I command you!' the boy barks out.
âDavid!' he, Simón, reproves the child. âWhat has got into you this morning? You don't speak to a stranger like that!'
âHe is not a stranger. And don't call me David.'
âWhat must I call you then?'
âYou must call me by my real name.'
âAnd what may that be?'
The boy is silent.
He addresses Juan. âFeel free to go exploring. We will meet you here.'
âNo, I think I'll stay,' says Juan.
The doctor makes his appearance, a short, burly man with an energetic air and a mass of silvery hair. He gazes upon them with mock alarm. âWhat is this? And a dog too! What can I do for all of you?'
âI burned my hand,' says the boy. âThe lady put butter on it, but it is still sore.'
âLet me lookâ¦Yes, yesâ¦It must be painful. Come into the surgery and we will see what we can do.'
âDoctor, the hand is not why we are here,' says Inés. âWe had an accident last night with a fire, and now my son can't see properly. Will you examine his eyes?'
âNo!' cries the boy, rising to confront Inés. The dog rouses himself too, pads across the room, and takes his place at the boy's side. âI keep telling you, I can see, only you can't see me because of the magic cloak of invisibility. It makes me invisible.'
âCan I have a look?' says Dr GarcÃa. âWill your guardian let me?'
The boy lays a restraining hand on the dog's collar.
The doctor lifts the dark glasses off the boy's nose. âCan you see me now?' he asks.
âYou are tiny, tiny, like an ant, and you are waving your arms and saying,
Can you see me now?
'
âAha, I get the picture. You are invisible and none of us can see you. But you also have a sore hand, which happens not to be invisible. So shall you and I go into my surgery, and will you let me look at the handâlook at the visible part of you?'
âAll right.'
âShall I come too?' says Inés.
âIn a little while,' says the doctor. âFirst the young man and I must have a private word.'
âBolÃvar must come with me,' says the boy.
âBolÃvar may come with you as long as he behaves himself,' says the doctor.
âWhat actually happened to your son?' asks Juan, when they are alone.
âHis name is David. He was playing with magnesium, and it caught fire and the flash blinded him.'
âHe says his name isn't David.'
âHe says many things. He has a fertile imagination. David is the name he was given in Belstar. If he wants to take on some other name, let him do so.'
âYou came through Belstar? I came through Belstar too.'
âThen you know how the system works. The names we use are the names we were given there, but we might just as well have been given numbers. Numbers, namesâthey are equally arbitrary, equally random, equally unimportant.'
âActually, there are no random numbers,' says Juan. âYou say, âThink of a random number,' and I say, â96513,' because that is the first number that comes into my head, but it isn't really random, it's my Asistencia number or my old telephone number or something like that. There is always a reason behind a number.'
âSo you are another of the number mystics! You and David should set up school together. You can teach the secret causes behind numbers and he can teach people how to get from one number to the next without falling down a volcano. Of course there are no random numbers
under the eye of God
. But we don't live under the eye of God. In the world we live in there are random numbers and random names and random events, like being picked up at random by a car containing a man and a woman and a child named David. And a dog. What was the secret cause behind that event, do you think?'
Before Juan can reply to his rant the door to the surgery is thrown open. âPlease come in,' says Dr GarcÃa.
He and Inés enter. Juan hesitates, but the clear young voice of the boy rises from inside: âHe is my brother, he must come too.'
The boy is sitting on the edge of the doctor's couch, a smile of serene confidence on his lips, the dark glasses perched on top of his head.
âWe had a good, long talk, our young friend and I,' says Dr GarcÃa. âHe explained to me how it comes about that he is invisible to us, and I explained to him why it is that we look to him like insects waving our feelers in the air while he flies high above. I have told him that we would prefer it if he would see us as we really are, not as insects, and in return he has told me that when he returns to visibility he would like us to see him as he really is. Is that a fair account, young man, of our conversation?'
The boy nods.
âOur young friend says furthermore that you'âhe looks meaningfully at him, Simónââare not his real father, and you'âhe turns to Inésââare not his real mother. I do not ask you to defend yourselves. I have a family of my own, I know children can say wild things. Nonetheless, is there anything you would like to tell me?'
âI am his true mother,' says Inés, âand we are saving him from being sent to a reformatory school where he will be turned into a criminal.'
Having said her say, she shuts her lips and glares defiantly.
âAnd his eyes, Doctor?' he, Simón, inquires.
âThere is nothing wrong with his eyes. I have conducted a physical examination and I have tested his vision. As organs of sight his eyes are perfectly normal. As for his hand, I have put on a dressing. The burn is not serious, it will show improvement in a day or two. Now let me ask: Should I be concerned about the story this young man tells me?'
He glances at Inés. âYou should pay due heed to whatever the boy says. If he says he wants to be taken away from us and returned to Novilla, return him to Novilla. He is your patient, in your care.' He turns to the boy. âIs that what you want, David?'
The boy does not reply, but gestures to him to come nearer. Cupping his hand, the boy whispers in his ear.
âDoctor, David informs me that he does not want to return to Novilla, but does want to know if you will come with us.'
âCome where?'
âNorth, to Estrellita.'
âTo the new life,' says the boy.
âAnd what about my patients here in Esperanza who depend on me? Who will look after them if I leave them behind just to look after you?'
âYou don't need to look after me.'
Dr GarcÃa casts him, Simón, a mystified look. He takes a deep breath. âDavid is suggesting that you abandon your practice and come north with us to start a new life. It would be for your own sake, not for his.'
Dr GarcÃa rises. âAh, I understand! It is most generous of you, young man, to include me in your plans. But the life I have here in Esperanza is happy and fulfilling enough. There is nothing I need to be saved from, thank you.'
They are in the car again, heading north. The boy is in ebullient spirits, the sore hand forgotten. He jabbers to Juan, wrestles with BolÃvar in the back seat. Juan joins in too, though he is wary of the dog, who has yet to warm to him.
âDid you like Dr GarcÃa?' he, Simón, inquires.
âHe's OK,' says the boy. âHe has hairs on his fingers like a werewolf.'
âWhy did you want him to come along to Estrellita?'
âBecause.'
âYou can't just invite every stranger you meet to come with us,' says Inés.
âWhy not?'
âBecause there is no room in the car.'
âThere is room. BolÃvar can sit on my lap, can't you, BolÃvar?' A pause. âWhat are we going to do when we get to Estrellita?
âIt's a long way yet to Estrellita. Be patient.'
âBut what are we going to
do
there?'
âWe are going to find the Relocation Centre and we are going to present ourselves at the desk, you and Inés and I, andâ'
âAnd Juan. You didn't say Juan. And BolÃvar.'
âYou and Inés and Juan and BolÃvar and I, and we are going to say,
Good morning, we are new arrivals, and we are looking for somewhere
to stay
.'
âAnd?'
âThat's all.
Looking for somewhere to stay, to start our new life
.'