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Authors: Alberto Moravia

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BOOK: The Conformist
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“Excuse me, Orlando,” said Marcello coldly, “but would you care to explain to me just what the mafia’s school of courage consists of?”

The question seemed to disconcert Orlando, not so much because of the almost bureaucratic chill in Marcello’s tone of voice, as much because of the complexity of the subject, which could not begin to be covered by an immediate response.

“Eh, dottore,” he said with a sigh, “you’re asking me a question it’s not easy to answer. In Sicily courage is the primary quality of a man of honor, and the mafia calls itself ‘Honored Society.’ What do you want me to tell you? It’s hard for anyone who hasn’t seen it with their own eyes to understand it. Try to imagine, dottore, some place — a bar, a caffè, an inn, a restaurant — where a group of armed men were gathered, and these men were acting hostile to the mafioso. So what did he do? He didn’t run to the police and complain, he didn’t leave town … Instead, he would walk out of his house every day dressed to the nines, freshly shaved, and go to that locale alone and unarmed. He would speak the two or three words sufficient for courtesy and that was all. Now do you believe me? Everyone there — I mean his group of enemies, his friends,
the whole town — had their eyes on him. He knew it, and he knew that if he showed he was afraid in any way … if his glance wavered or his voice wasn’t calm enough or if his face wasn’t completely cheerful, he was done for. He had to devote himself completely to passing this test: firm glances, tranquil voice, measured gestures, normal coloring … to tell it it sounds easy … but you have to find yourself in that situation to understand how difficult it is … Dottore, this was, just to give you an example, the mafia’s school of courage.”

Orlando, who had been carried away as he talked, now launched a cold, curious glance at Marcello’s face, as if to say, “But if I’m not mistaken, we two didn’t come here to talk about the mafia, did we.”

Marcello caught the look and looked ostentatiously at the watch he wore on his wrist.

“Now let’s get down to our business, Orlando,” he said with authority. “I’m meeting Professor Quadri today. According to the instructions, I need to point out the professor to you so that you can verify his identity … that’s my role, isn’t it?”

“Yes, dottore.”

“All right, I’ll invite Professor Quadri to dinner or to a caffè this evening … I’m not sure where yet … but phone me at the hotel this evening around seven, I’ll know the place by then. As far as Professor Quadri goes, let’s establish how I’m going to point him out right now. For example, let’s say that Professor Quadri will be the first person I shake hands with when I enter the caffè or restaurant … Is that all right with you?”

“Absolutely, dottore.”

“And now I have to go,” said Marcello, glancing at his watch again. He put the money for their coffees on the table, rose, and walked out, followed at a distance by the agent.

On the sidewalk, Orlando took in the dense traffic in the street — two rows of cars moving at a snail’s pace in opposite directions — and said in an emphatic tone: “Paris.”

“This isn’t the first time you’ve been here, is it, Orlando?” asked Marcello, his eyes roving over the cars in search of a free taxi.

“The first time?” said the agent with a kind of mindless pride, “far from it … go ahead and try, dottore, guess a number.”

“Oh, I wouldn’t know.”

“Twelve,” said the agent, “thirteen, this time.”

A taxi driver intercepted Marcello’s glance and came to a halt in front of him.

“Good-bye, Orlando,” said Marcello, climbing in, “I’ll expect your phone call this evening.”

The agent gestured his assent. Marcello climbed in, giving the driver the hotel’s address.

But as the taxi rolled through the streets, the agent’s final words, that twelve and thirteen (twelve times in Paris and this makes thirteen) continued to ring in his ears and arouse ancient echoes in his memory. He was like someone who peers into a cave, shouting, and discovers that his voice is reverberating in unsuspected depths. Then, all at once, reminded by those numbers, he recalled that he would point Quadri out to the agent with a handshake, and he understood why, instead of simply informing Orlando that Quadri was recognizable by his humpback, he had suggested this device of the greeting. His distant, childhood memories of the sacred story were what had made him forget the professor’s deformity, so much more convenient than a handshake as a means of certain recognition. The apostles were twelve; and it was he who was the thirteenth, the one who embraced the Christ to point him out to the guards gathered in the garden to arrest him. Now the traditional figures of the stations of the Passion of Christ, contemplated so many times in various churches, superimposed themselves on the modern scene of a French restaurant, with sumptuously laid-out tables, patrons seated to eat, he himself who rose and walked toward Quadri, offering him his hand, and the agent Orlando, who, sitting to one side, observed them both. Then the figure of Judas, the thirteenth apostle, merged with Marcello’s, wedded itself to his contours, became his own.

He felt an almost amused desire to reflect on this discovery. “Probably Judas did what he did for the same reasons I’m doing it,” he thought, “and he, too, had to do it even though he didn’t like
to, because it was necessary, after all, that
someone
do it … but why be scared about it? Let’s admit right up front that I’ve chosen the part of Judas … so what?”

He realized that he wasn’t at all frightened, in fact. At the most, he thought, he was pervaded by his usual cold melancholy, which he didn’t really mind. Then he thought — not to justify himself but to deepen the comparison and recognize its limits — that yes, Judas was like him, but only up to a certain point. Up to the handshake; perhaps even (to stretch a point, though he wasn’t one of Quadri’s disciples), up to the betrayal, in a very generic sense. Then everything was different. Judas had hung himself, or at least had felt that he could do no other than hang himself, because those same men who had suggested and paid for the betrayal had not had the courage afterwards to support and justify his action. But Marcello would not kill himself, would not even fall into despair, because behind him … he saw the crowds gathered in the squares, cheering on the man who gave him his orders and implicitly justifying him, Marcello, who obeyed them. And lastly, he thought that he received nothing, in a literal sense, for what he was doing. No thirty gold coins. Only “service,” as agent Orlando said. The analogy faded and dissolved, leaving behind it no more than a trace of pride-tinged irony. If anything, he concluded, what mattered was that the comparison had come to mind, that he had explored it and had, for a moment, found it right.

4

A
FTER BREAKFAST, GIULIA
wanted to return to the hotel to change clothes before going to Quadri’s. But when they had emerged from the elevator, she put an arm around Marcello’s waist and murmured, “I didn’t really want to change … I just wanted to be alone with you for a little while.”

Walking down the long, deserted hallway between two rows of closed doors, his waist encircled by that loving arm, Marcello realized once again that, while for him this trip to Paris was also, and above all, the mission, for Giulia it was simply their honeymoon trip. Which meant, he thought, that he was not allowed to deviate from the role of new groom he had agreed to play when he climbed onto the train with her; even if sometimes, as was now the case, he was in the grip of an anguish very far from the excitement of love. But this was the normality he had so longed for: this arm around his waist, these looks, these caresses; and what he was about to do with Orlando was the blood-price he must pay for it. Meanwhile, they had reached their room and
Giulia, without letting go of his waist, opened the door with her other hand and walked in with him.

Once they were inside she let go of him, turned the key in the lock, and said, “Close the window, will you?”

Marcello went to the window and lowered the blinds. When he turned around he saw that Giulia was standing by the bed, already sliding her dress off over her head, and he thought he understood what she had had in mind when she said, “I just wanted to be alone with you for a little while.” In silence he went to sit on the edge of the bed, on the side farthest from Giulia, who was now dressed only in a slip and stockings. She very carefully draped her dress over a chair near the head of the bed, took off her shoes, and finally, clumsily lifting up first one leg and then the other, stretched out on her back behind him, with one arm folded beneath her neck.

She was silent for a moment and then said, “Marcello.”

“What’s up?”

“Why don’t you lie down here beside me?”

Obediently Marcello took off his shoes and stretched out on the bed beside his wife. Giulia immediately cuddled up to him, pressing her body against his and asking anxiously, “What’s the matter with you?”

“With me? Nothing. Why?”

“I don’t know, you seem so worried.”

“That’s an impression you must have a lot,” he replied. “My usual mood, you know, is hardly carefree … but that doesn’t mean I’m worried.”

She hugged him silently. Then she said, “It wasn’t true that I asked you to come up here so I could get ready … but it wasn’t true, either, that I just wanted to be alone with you … the truth is something else.”

This time Marcello was caught by surprise and almost felt remorse at having suspected her of simple erotic greed. Lowering his gaze, he saw her eyes looking up at him, full of tears.

Affectionately, although he felt somewhat annoyed, he said, “Now it’s my turn to ask you what’s the matter.”

“You’re right,” she answered. And right away she began to cry, silent sobs that he could feel shaking her body against his own.

Marcello waited a while, hoping that her incomprehsible weeping would cease. But instead it seemed to redouble in intensity. At last he asked, staring up at the ceiling, “Would you please tell me why you’re crying?”

Giulia sobbed a while more and then answered, “No reason … because I’m stupid.” But there was already a hint of consolation in her sorrowful voice.

Marcello looked down at her and insisted, “Come on, why are you crying?”

He saw her gaze at him with those tearful eyes of hers, already shining with a faint hopeful light. She gave him a weak smile and rummaged around for a handkerchief. Then she dried her eyes, blew her nose, put down the handkerchief and murmured, hugging him again, “If I tell you why I was crying, you’ll think I’m crazy.”

“Come on,” he said, caressing her. “Tell me why you were crying.”

“Well,” she said, “during lunch you seemed so distracted, so worried, actually, that I thought you’d already had enough of me and that you were regretting marrying me … maybe because of what I told you in the train, you know, about the lawyer, maybe just because you already knew you’d done something foolish, you, with the future you have in front of you, with your intelligence and your goodness, too, marrying a wretch like me … And so, after I thought about it, I thought I’d do it first … you know, go away without telling you so you wouldn’t have the bother of saying good-bye … I decided that as soon as we came back to the hotel I’d pack my bag and leave … go back to Italy and leave you in Paris.”

“You can’t be serious!” exclaimed Marcello in surprise.

“But I was serious,” she said with a smile, flattered by his astonishment. “Just think, while we were in the hotel lobby and you went off for a minute to buy cigarettes, I went to the porter and asked him to reserve me a place in the sleeping car for Rome, tonight … oh, as you can see, I was serious, all right.”

“But you’re crazy,” said Marcello, raising his voice despite himself.

“I told you,” she replied, “that you’d think I was crazy. But at that moment I was sure, absolutely sure that I’d be doing you a favor by leaving you and going away … yes, I was as sure of it as I’m sure now,” she added, pulling herself up enough to brush his mouth with her lips, “that I’m giving you this kiss.”

“Why were you so sure?” asked Marcello, troubled.

“I don’t know … I just was … the way you’re sure of things … without any reason.”

“And so,” he couldn’t help exclaiming, with the very slightest hint of regret, “why did you change your mind?”

“Why? Who knows? Maybe because in the elevator you looked at me a certain way or at least I got the impression you were looking at me in a certain way … but then I remembered that I had decided to leave and had reserved a place on the sleeping car and then when I thought I couldn’t go back on it, I started to cry.”

Marcello said nothing.

Giulia interpreted this silence in her own way and asked, “Are you annoyed? Tell me, are you annoyed because of the sleeping car? But they’ll cancel it, you know … and we’ll only have to pay the twenty percent.”

“How absurd,” he answered slowly, as if reflecting.

“Or,” she said, and stifled an incredulous laugh still trembling with a trace of fear, “are you annoyed because I didn’t really go?”

“Absurd again,” he answered. But this time he felt he was not being wholly sincere. And as if to suppress any last hesitation or remorse, he added, “If you had gone off, my whole life would have collapsed.”

And this time he felt he was telling the truth, however ambiguously. Wouldn’t it be better if his life — the life he had built up since the fact of Lino — collapsed completely instead of being overloaded with other burdens and duties, like some absurd palace to which an infatuated owner keeps adding terraces and turrets and balconies until its solidity is compromised?

He felt Giulia’s arms wrap around him and her voice whispering, “Are you telling the truth?”

“Yes,” he said, “I’m telling the truth.”

“But what would you have done,” she insisted with pleased, almost vain curiosity, “if I had really left you and gone away? Would you have run after me?”

He hesitated before responding, and once again he seemed to hear that far-off regret echoing in his voice. “No, I don’t think so … haven’t I just told you that my whole life would collapse?”

BOOK: The Conformist
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