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Authors: Juan Gracia Armendáriz

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BOOK: The Plimsoll Line
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“Something is moving,” said the doctor in Spanish.

He considered looking out of the window and, as if declaiming something in front of an audience, adding, “The clouds, the birds, the cars . . . ?” But he kept quiet.

The doctor pointed at his abdomen with his pen.

“Your kidneys, Mr. . . ,” he searched for his name in the report,“. . . Ariz.”

“My kidneys are moving?” he looked at his tie, as if he’d just discovered a stain.

The doctor waved his pen around again.

“On the contrary, they are ceasing to work. They are coming to a halt, they are stopping,” the doctor raised his hand, as if wanting to reassure him at the same time. “That’s what I meant before: something is moving on.”

He felt that he understood everything and nothing, that everything was moving and stopping in a dance representing something he couldn’t fathom but must have some meaning; his body, and other bodies, his classes, J. M. W. Turner, the yellow color of his tie, Polanski, his latest art review, the hydrangeas he had just pruned in the garden . . . all of it swirled around in his head, forming a puzzle of encoded messages he should have interpreted in time to prevent circumstances bringing him to the point he was at now, seated in front of a doctor who was looking at him with strange haughtiness and saying “something is moving on.”

He raised his hands as if to stop a beach ball at chestheight, a gesture that resembled the last line of defense for something to stop or to start moving, he couldn’t be sure.

“Why are they moving? I mean, why aren’t they moving?”

The doctor sat up straight in his chair, and his trimmed beard was no longer reflected in the glass of the table.

“What I mean is your kidneys are not working. That’s the main thing. We’re going to repeat all the tests, but you had better get used to the idea you’re going to need a new kidney.”

He rubbed the small of his back with apprehension.

“I feel fine . . . ,” he said.

The doctor swiveled his chair in the direction of the computer. The
click-clicks
of the mouse made the pause more intense.

“Age?” he asked without looking away from the screen.

“Fifty-two.”

“Profession?”

“University professor.” He hesitated for a moment and added,“And art critic.”

“Married?”

“Divorced.”

“Children?”

“No.”

“Any family history of nephropathy?”

“Not that I’m aware of.”

“Diabetes?”

“No.”

“High blood pressure?”

“Possibly.”

“Smoke?”

“One a day.”

“One cigarette?”

“One pack.”

“Drink?”

“Occasionally.”

The doctor stood up and came around the table.

“Mr. Ariz,” he looked at him calmly,“the likeliest outcome is that you will have to undergo dialysis treatment, I don’t know if you understand what that means . . . You will be put on a waiting list for a kidney transplant. That’s the procedure in these cases. You should know that hundreds of operations like this are performed each year.”

The doctor struck him now as very tall. He glimpsed a pair of striped pants under his lab coat. He felt ridiculous, because fear was presenting itself in the guise of a young man with a trimmed beard who wore sport cologne and who, having assured him there could be no doubt as to the diagnosis and written “End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD), advise immediate dialysis treatment” in his report, would probably go and play a game of padel tennis at the Golf Millennium Club.

He pointed to a gurney.

“Please lie down there.”

He felt cold while taking off his clothes. It smelled of bandages and iodine. A nurse appeared at the door, followed by two doctors. The woman’s voice sounded imperative. “Get undressed.” He felt the blood descending from his head to his toes. He looked at the ceiling. He thought he could see the profile of his figure on the stippled surface, a white stain he must have confused with the doctor’s white coat. He was certain his body was getting lighter on the metal stretcher and could float, if he wanted it to, over the table and the pages of the lab results and fly out of the window, limp and weightless, like a beetle, but this impression only lasted until the moment the doctors gathered around the gurney, and then he was invaded by a sense of vulnerability, especially when various slim fingers without any hair on their phalanges began to press on various parts of his abdomen, and the nurse hooked him up to a blood pressure monitor while other fingers wrapped in latex but no doubt without any hair on their phalanges busied themselves at the intersection of his forearm, searching for a green-colored vein the size of a shoelace.

3

He began to live between parentheses. This was the only way he could explain to himself the distance that seemed, from that moment on, to open up between his body and objects, between words and actions. It was as if Gabriel Ariz were no longer Gabriel Ariz but two different Gabriels, one from before and one from now, who did not complement or attract each other in the least; rather, the two Gabriels, on either side of the parenthesis, repelled each other like two like-charged magnetic poles. In this scission, thought failed to find its corresponding expression, the word to name anything successfully; and yet the world carried on being there, while he, feeling impotent between the two Gabriels—the one from before: autonomous, ironic, prudent; the one from now: dependent, held back by the weight of his body—could do nothing to adapt to its pace. It was like watching life through the window of a train. He stretched out his arm and grasped only air, or that’s what it felt like when, having recovered from the paralysis his diagnosis had sunk him into, he had to take the necessary steps to be granted indefinite leave. He signed the pieces of paper the head of personnel held out to him from the other side of the glass and completed the procedure with a simplicity and lack of involvement that accorded very well with the distance that seemed to have sprung up between himself and his surroundings. “I’m sorry, Professor Ariz,” said the civil servant in a low voice, straightening up in his seat on the other side of the glass, but he smiled, as if these words were not addressed to him but to a body double who had taken over his functions, the Gabriel from now, and the civil servant smiled in turn, feeling sorry for this poor devil signing at the bottom of the form.

He had the false impression he’d attained a certain imperturbability of spirit, a kind of
ataraxia
that never ceased to amaze his acquaintances, though this mask of stoicism was not the product of an ascetic process but of pure anguish. His departmental colleagues received the news with surprise and a measure of commiseration. His daughter’s death, his divorce from Ana, and now his own physical indigence painted a dramatic picture for his colleagues, a picture he disliked intensely, but such judgments made it much less likely it wasn’t him this was happening to but rather that other guy, the Gabriel from now, behind whom he sheltered and masqueraded as if this projection were a decoy whose purpose was to attract the heap of existential absurdities toward itself and keep him, the real Gabriel, safe from everything, sitting up in the balcony, as though he were just another spectator of the whole melodrama.

All of this was
too unfair
, he went so far as to think in a fit of self-pity. Nobody except for him employed this useless judgment, or others like it, which irritated both Gabriels, the one from before and the one from now, his colleagues at the university merely forcing a smile before coming out with somber statements that slid over him like tributes paid to a statue. The dean of the department had added,“Some people will be happy, but we’ll be here for whatever you need, you know that, Gabriel.” It wasn’t necessary to be any more explicit; it was well known that his position in the university hierarchy would be rapidly filled by one of the many lecturers waiting for the chance to occupy a vacant chair. So he left the dean’s office and prepared to gather his things. He was helped in this task by a PhD student he had taken under his wing, who now watched as his protector exited the stage, abandoning him to the stormy waters of departmental hiring politics. He noticed on the young man’s face an expression of sadness and annoyance as he piled books into packing boxes. The days he spent arranging the move and signing bits of paper were a succession of slow-motion images of which he wanted no part, so he decided to avoid ceremonial farewells. The desk attendant helped him put his things inside the trunk of his car. He shook his hand, which was dry and hard, like a chicken’s foot, and drove away from the university campus.

Several days later, he had a telephone conversation with Óscar that was cut off due to interference and an almost nonexistent signal. He heard his own voice repeating, like an echo down the line, the phrase “I’m fucked, Óscar,” and the voice of his brother speaking in gusts from an SUV crossing a massif in the Andes. He managed to catch that he was doing a photo-essay on the origins of the Maoist group Shining Path, and he tried to explain to him that his kidneys weren’t working and he would have to receive dialysis treatment. The conversation was so confused that the words
artificial kidney
,
dialysis
, and
Shining Path
crossed several times, repeated by the echo on the line. “Shining Path?” he asked, just at the moment his brother seemed to have grasped the situation, but then he heard a curse on the other end of the line. Óscar explained that their vehicle had just broken down. The nearest indigenous village was five hours away. He managed to make out something to do with the car’s radiator. “It’s shitty luck, Gabriel, it’s really shitty luck,” he said. There was then a silence that resembled the hollow of a tunnel. “I’ll be back in Spain in November, as soon as I’ve shot three rolls of film.” It was stupid to try to explain any further, and he concealed his apprehension behind a forced joviality that was designed to keep his own fear at a distance. Which is why he said “I’m fucked, Óscar” and, as a way of toning down the selfpity implicit in the previous statement, added,“we should celebrate.” Their roars of laughter could be heard in unison, nervous and strange, until the call was abruptly terminated.

The impression of unreality slowly waned, to be replaced by the certainty of guilt and an imperious need for physical investigation. He had read somewhere, though he couldn’t remember where,“During illness, unknown lands come to light.” At the time, the sentence had struck him as a lyrical imposture, unless the lands in question were those of his own corporeal geography. Beyond that, there was nothing of interest. He adopted the habits of a retiree. He would trim the hedge in the garden, crumble half a loaf of bread to feed the birds, and then wrap up warm to watch the decline of evening, lying on the chaise longue on the porch. He would observe the slightly oblique autumn sun slowly losing height and stretching its shadow across the crumb-strewn lawn. At such moments, he thought he heard a breath being held somewhere on the other side of the fence, at the forest’s edge, but as soon as he seemed to abandon himself to this contemplation and the sky acquired a mint-colored lividness, those “unknown lands” revealed their true dimension, something so close it forced him to stretch on his deck chair and uncross his legs, which were swollen from retaining water. He closed his eyes and concentrated on his body, but glimpsed nothing more than a black box, a dark, rather lightweight volume that appeared to have been deprived of its weight. This initial impression forced him to make an effort at restraint, as if he had to take a step back in order to locate a much earlier point in the geological layers of his own anatomy. “There they are,” he thought then. The hollow pieces, the volume and disposition of his internal organs, that map spread out below like an inner city. He could locate the half circumferences of his lungs, two dark segments that offered greater optical possibilities when seen from up close—two arborescent areas harboring unlikely passages through the forest of alveoli. Some were impregnated with tar, like tiny coal veins, delicate bellows mistreated by his tobacco habit. Who knows, he thought, if they would collapse on being touched by a gentle deflagration of carbon monoxide, shrinking away like embers. Further down was the stomach—slow, resentful, ruminant, a bag vulgar brown in color, a long-suffering abdominal cavity, a forever remembering entrail. He could sense his intestinal circumvolutions, a labyrinth growing narrower and wider through a long network of galleries, a tubular heap where poisonous, fetid gases installed themselves from time to time, rising to his chest in the middle of the afternoon with the alarm of pectoral flatulence. “My stomach is sad,” he started saying, because he felt it doubling over with a heavy weight toward the waterline of his navel. He didn’t like his stomach, let alone his intestines, perhaps because of their resemblance to worms, which at the time were plaguing the garden. During such morbid investigations, he preferred to stop at the liver, so weighty, so autonomous, brilliant, colored crimson red, like a bottle of wine brightened by the light, perfect as a precision instrument, standing firm despite the functional imbalance caused by his kidneys having gone on indefinite strike, despite having filtered a large number and variety of drinks over the past thirty years—poisonous anise liqueurs, merry ciders, earthy pomace brandies, civic beers, unpretentious reds, sugary potions in suspicious hues, mint and strawberry liqueurs, sloe-flavored anisettes, village-brewed spirits with euphoric effects, fulminating demijohns of gin, which he phased out as he began to sit at long tables of refined cutlery at the homes of Ana’s friends and relatives and his backside molded itself to the Chair of Aesthetics and Art Theory. The exhibition and gallery openings, book launches, invitations to conferences, and cocktail parties offered him a new alcoholic menu he grew used to as quickly as he dismissed the bitter taste of strong wine—champagnes, cavas, cocktails, vodkas tasting of iced lemon, cognacs aged in fine oak barrels, armagnacs, whiskies tasting of pitch . . .
My liver? Fine, thanks
, he thought, longing for those liqueurs that were now as forbidden to him as Bezoya bottled water. He then moved up to the heart and its percussion of blood, the heart, serious stuff, the size of a bird enclosed in a fist, throbbing between the bars of the ribcage, to the left of the sternum. He descended through the artery, moved through the left ventricle to the center of the muscle where the pulsing started, the beating that on occasion and for no apparent reason would turn into stuttering heartbeats, off beat, a drum roll that grew and pushed against his thoracic cavity, or further up, even, against his frontal sinuses and eyeballs. They were murmurs, arrhythmias, worrying signs that, taken together with cigarettes, a sedentary lifestyle, cholesterol, and his renal deficiency, could, as the doctor had informed him, bring about a collapse. During such afternoons of morbid contemplation, he learned to familiarize himself with these warning signs, going so far as to dream up scenes in which everything began with a feeling of stiffness in his left arm, a pain that spread to his chest and the base of his neck. In the scene, he was watering the hydrangeas, lifting his eyes to the sky, as if seeing it for the first time, with primitive amazement, and suddenly the hose leaped out of his hands and onto the lawn, like a snake, spraying water everywhere, and he staggered and fell to the ground. He could feel the wet grass under his chest and a few droplets on his forehead as he dragged himself in the direction of the phone to call for help, in the presence of Polanski, who gazed at him impassively from the other side of the window. And so he realized he only had time to lie down on his back and observe that strange, beautiful firmament. But these were mere tricks of the imagination, strategies of anxious free time. After a while, he learned to listen to his body and pressed his ear against his skin, filled with a comfortable sense of moral insensitivity.

Through its eyelids, the cat watches the man knead his blackened arm. It can hear the blood flowing under his skin with an electric hum. And the animal is aware, before it happens, that he will push back the chair and stand to face the window that looks out onto the forest. Though parallel, the gazes of the man and of the anonymous observer converge at a particular point on the other side of the garden fence, perhaps at the foot of the yew that grows at the edge of the forest and at nightfall seems to become more somber than usual. The man’s gaze remains at the foot of the tree, and the anonymous observer appears to lean against the back of the chair. Beneath his chin, the man’s head glistens, his forehead bulging slightly in the shadows, the space between his eyebrows illuminated by the flame of a lighter he has just flicked on to light a cigarette. The man keeps his eyes on the yew, because he has a certain sense of sympathy for this tree, which forms a natural border between the house, the surroundings of the garden, and the forest, that other territory he imagines as being crisscrossed by moles, inhabited by nocturnal birds, though he’s never gone inside it, perhaps because he feels a primitive, superstitious respect for the oak forest, so leafy and dark on winter nights. So the yew is the point of division, the marker. The cat’s green pupils dilate at the same time as the man extinguishes the flame on the lighter, and the shadow’s silhouette seems to protect him, leaning toward him over the crown of his head and the hood of his frayed bathrobe, but the man moves over to the window, opens it, and squints at the triangle formed by the top of the tree and the ground covered in undergrowth, at the shadow that is cast by the yew, or that seems to break away from it and spread with gaseous suavity, leaving the forest, approaching over the lawn, weightless between the orange spotlights. He remains standing at the window, his arms hanging at his sides, in a gesture of incredulity at
that
which seems to fill the light and the branches of the oaks, and he senses an impulse of laughter or mourning rising from his stomach, a gentle convulsion, because, in front of him, there is an undulation of breath. The cat narrows its eyes when it sees the man lean against the window frame, overcome by a fit of sobbing that has nothing to do with sadness, or sorrow, but with an internal crumbling, like the collapse of a wave breaking on the shore of his skin and sweeping away his memory. Leaning against the window frame, his chin resting on his chest, he notices how everything that surrounds him is strange, he perceives the breath of each leaf that has yet to grow on the bare branches, and the breeze that has sprung up, bringing with it the scent of moist earth. There is amazement in his eyes when he observes his hands, and the displaced chair, alone in the semidarkness of the kitchen with the almost metaphysical quietude of an abandoned object, and Polanski purring on top of the fridge. He reaches the chair and falls into it. The cat discerns a line of shadow from which emanates something akin to a smile, and it closes its eyes again, because
drip
,
drip
,
drip
, the bathroom faucet is dripping into the bathtub, each drop crashing onto the ceramic surface, just as the drops of rain,
drip
,
drip
,
drip
, crashed against the floor of the porch on the night the woman thought she saw Laura in the hallway.

BOOK: The Plimsoll Line
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