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Authors: Carlos Ruiz Zafon

BOOK: The Shadow of the Wind
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“Let me introduce you to Julián Carax.”

“The Shadow of the Wind,”
Bea read, stroking the faded letters on the cover.

“Can I take it with me?” she asked.

“You can take any book but this one.”

“But that's not fair. After all the things you've told me, this is precisely the one I want.”

“One day, perhaps. But not today.”

I took it from her hands and put it back in its hiding place.

“I'll come back without you and I'll take it away without you knowing,” she said mockingly.

“You wouldn't find it in a thousand years.”

“That's what you think. I've seen your notches, and I, too, know the story of the Minotaur.”

“Isaac wouldn't let you in.”

“You're wrong. He prefers me to you.”

“And how do you know?”

“I can read people's eyes.”

Despite myself, I believed her and turned mine away.

“Choose any other one. Here, this one looks promising.
The Castilian Hog, That Unknown Beast: In Search of the Roots of Iberian Pork,
by Anselmo Torquemada. I'm sure it sold more copies than any book by Julián Carax. Every part of the pig can be put to good use.”

“I'm more attracted to this other one.”


Tess of the d'Urbervilles.
It's the original. You're bold enough to read Hardy in English?”

She gave me a sidelong glance.

“All yours, then!”

“Don't you see? It feels as if it's been waiting for me. As if it has been hiding here for me since before I was born.”

I looked at her in astonishment. Bea's lips crinkled into a smile. “What have I said?”

Then, without thinking, barely brushing her lips, I kissed her.

 

I
T WAS ALMOST MIDNIGHT WHEN WE REACHED THE FRONT DOOR OF
Bea's house. We had walked most of the way without speaking, not daring to turn our thoughts into words. We walked apart, hiding from each other. Bea walked upright with her
Tess
under her arm, and I followed a step behind, still tasting her lips. The way Isaac had glanced at me when we left the Cemetery of Forgotten Books was still on my mind. It was a look I knew well and had seen a thousand times in my father, a look that asked me whether I had the slightest idea what I was doing. The last hours I'd been lost in another world, a universe of touches and looks I did not understand, that blotted out both reason and shame. Now, back in the reality that always lies in wait among the shadows of the Ensanche quarter, the enchantment was lifting, and all I had left in me was a painful desire and an indescribable restlessness. And yet just looking at Bea was enough for me to realize that my doubts were but a breeze compared to the storm that was raging inside her. We stopped by her door and looked at each other without attempting to pretend. A mellifluous night watchman was walking up to us unhurriedly, humming boleros to the rhythmic jingle of his bunches of keys.

“Perhaps you'd rather we didn't see each other again,” I suggested without much conviction.

“I don't know, Daniel. I don't know anything. Is that what you want?”

“No. Of course not. And you?”

She shrugged her shoulders and smiled faintly. “What do you think?” she asked. “I lied to you earlier, you know. In the cloister.”

“What about?”

“About not wanting to see you today.”

The night porter hung about, smirking at us, obviously indifferent to my first whispered exchange at a front door. To him, experienced in such matters, it must have seemed a string of clichés and banalities.

“Don't worry about me, there's no hurry,” he said. “I'll have a smoke on the corner, and you just let me know.”

I waited for the watchman to walk away.

“When will I see you again?”

“I don't know, Daniel.”

“Tomorrow?”

“Please, Daniel. I don't know.”

I nodded. She stroked my face. “You'd better leave now.”

“You know where to find me, at least?”

She nodded.

“I'll be waiting.”

“Me, too.”

As I moved away, I couldn't take my eyes off her. The night watchman, an expert in these situations, was already walking up to open the door for her.

“You rascal,” he whispered as he went by, not without admiration. “What a looker.”

I waited until Bea had gone into the building and then set off briskly, turning to glance back at every step. Slowly I became possessed by the absurd conviction that everything was possible, and it seemed to me that even those deserted streets and that hostile wind smelled of hope. When I reached Plaza de Cataluña, I noticed that a flock of pigeons had congregated in the center of the square. They covered it all with a blanket of white feathers that swayed silently. I thought of going around them, but at that moment I noticed that the pigeons parted to let me pass, without flying off. I felt my way forward, as the pigeons broke ranks in front of me and re-formed behind me. When I got to the middle of the square, I heard the peal of the cathedral bells ringing out midnight. I paused for a moment, stranded in an ocean of silvery birds, and thought how this had been the strangest and most marvelous day of my life.

·22·

T
HE LIGHT WAS STILL ON IN THE BOOKSHOP WHEN
I
CROSSED THE
street toward the shop window. I thought that perhaps my father had stayed on until late, getting up to date with his correspondence or finding some other excuse to wait up for me and pump me for information about my meeting with Bea. I saw a silhouette making a pile of books and recognized the gaunt, nervous profile of Fermín, lost in concentration. I rapped on the pane with my knuckles. Fermín looked out, pleasantly surprised, and signaled to me to pop in through the back-room door.

“Still working, Fermín? It's terribly late.”

“I'm really just killing time until I go over to poor Don Federico's and watch over him. I'm taking turns with Eloy from the optician's. I don't sleep much anyhow. Two or three hours at the most. Mind you, you can't talk either, Daniel. It's past midnight, from which I infer that your meeting with the young lady was a roaring success.”

I shrugged my shoulders. “The truth is I don't know,” I admitted.

“Did you get to feel her up?”

“No.”

“A good sign. Never trust girls who let themselves be touched right away. But even less those who need a priest for approval. Good sirloin steak—if you'll excuse the comparison—needs to be cooked until it's medium rare. Of course, if the opportunity arises, don't be prudish, and go for the kill. But if what you're looking for is something serious, like this thing with me and Bernarda, remember the golden rule.”

“Is your thing serious?”

“More than serious. Spiritual. And what about you and this pumpkin, Beatriz? You can see a mile off that she's worth a million bucks, but the crux of the matter is this: is she the sort who makes one fall in love or the sort who merely stirs up the lower parts?”

“I haven't the slightest idea,” I pointed out. “Both things, I'd say.”

“Look, Daniel, this is like indigestion. Do you notice something here, in the mouth of the stomach—as if you'd swallowed a brick? Or do you just feel a general feverishness?”

“The brick thing sounds more like it,” I said, although I didn't altogether discard the fever.

“That means it's a serious matter. God help us! Come on, sit down and I'll make you a linden-blossom tea.”

We settled down around the table in the back room, surrounded by books. The city was asleep, and the bookshop felt like a boat adrift in a sea of silence and shadows. Fermín handed me a steaming hot cup and smiled at me a little awkwardly. Something was bothering him.

“May I ask you a personal question, Daniel?”

“Of course.”

“I beg you to answer in all frankness,” he said, and he cleared his throat. “Do you think I could ever be a father?”

He must have seen my puzzled expression, and he quickly added, “I don't mean biologically—I may look a bit rickety, but by good luck Providence has endowed me with the potency and the fury of a fighting bull. I'm referring to the other sort of father. A good father, if you see what I mean.”

“A good father?”

“Yes. Like yours. A man with a head, a heart, and a soul. A man capable of listening, of leading and respecting a child, and not of drowning his own defects in him. Someone whom a child will not only love because he's his father but will also admire for the person he is. Someone he would want to grow up to resemble.”

“Why are you asking me this, Fermín? I thought you didn't believe in marriage and families. The yoke and all that, remember?”

Fermín nodded. “Look, all that's for amateurs. Marriage and family are only what we make of them. Without that they're just a nest of hypocrisy. Garbage and empty words. But if there is real love, of the sort one doesn't go around telling everyone about, the sort that is felt and lived…”

“You're a changed man, Fermín.”

“I am. Bernarda has made me want to be a better man.”

“How's that?”

“So that I can deserve her. You cannot understand such things right now, because you're young. But in good time you'll see that sometimes what matters isn't what one gives but what one gives up. Bernarda and I have been talking. She's quite a mother hen, as you know. She doesn't say so, but I think the one thing in life that would make her truly happy is becoming a mother. And I fancy that woman more than peaches in syrup. Suffice it to say that for her I'm prepared to enter a church after thirty-two years of clerical abstinence and recite the psalms of Saint Seraph or whatever needs to be done.”

“Aren't you getting a bit ahead of yourself, Fermín? You've only just met her….”

“Look, Daniel, at my age either you begin to see things for what they are or you're pretty much done for. Only three or four things are worth living for; the rest is manure. I've already fooled around a lot, and now I know that the only thing I really want is to make Bernarda happy and die one day in her arms. I want to be a respectable man again, see? Not for my sake—as far as I'm concerned, I couldn't give a fly's turd for the respect of this choir of simians we call humanity—but for hers. Because Bernarda believes in such things—in radio soaps, in priests, in respectability and in Our Lady of Lourdes. That's the way she is, and I want her exactly like that. I even like those hairs that grow on her chin. And that's why I want to be someone she can be proud of. I want her to think, my Fermín is one hell of a man, like Cary Grant, Hemingway, or Manolete.”

I crossed my arms, weighing up the situation. “Have you spoken about all this with her? About having a child together?”

“Goodness no. Who do you take me for? Do you think I go around telling women I want to get them knocked up? And it's not that I don't feel like it, eh? Take that silly Merceditas: I'd put some triplets in her right now and feel on top of the world, but—”

“Have you told Bernarda you'd like to have a family?”

“Those things don't need to be said, Daniel. They show on your face.”

I nodded. “Well, then, for what my opinion is worth, I'm sure you'll be an excellent father and husband. And since you don't believe in those things, you'll never take them for granted.”

His face melted into happiness. “Do you mean it?”

“Of course.”

“You've taken a huge weight off my mind. Because just to remember my own father and to think that I might end up being for someone what he was for me, makes me want to get sterilized.”

“Don't worry, Fermín. Besides, there's probably no treatment capable of crushing your procreative powers.”

“Good point,” he reflected. “Go on, go and get some sleep, I mustn't keep you any longer.”

“You're not keeping me, Fermín. I have a feeling I'm not going to sleep a wink.”

“Take a pain for a pleasure…. By the way, remember you mentioned that PO box?”

“Have you discovered anything?”

“I told you to leave it to me. This lunchtime I went up to the post office and had a word with an old acquaintance of mine who works there. PO Box 2321 is under the name of one José María Requejo, a lawyer with offices on Calle León XIII. I took the liberty of checking out the guy's address and wasn't surprised to discover that it doesn't exist, although I imagine you already know that. Someone has been collecting the letters addressed to that box for years. I know because some of the mail received from a property business comes as registered post and requires a signature on a small receipt and identification.”

“Who is it? An employee of Requejo the lawyer?” I asked.

“I couldn't get that far, but I doubt it. Either I'm very mistaken or this Requejo guy exists on the same plane as Our Lady of Fátima. All I can tell you is the name of the person who collects the mail: Nuria Monfort.”

I felt the blood draining from me.

“Nuria Monfort? Are you sure, Fermín?”

“I myself saw some of those receipts. That name and the number of her identity card were on all of them. I deduce, from that sick look on your face, that this revelation surprises you.”

“Quite a lot.”

“May I ask who this Nuria Monfort is? The clerk I spoke to told me he remembered her clearly because she went there two weeks ago to collect the mail and, in his impartial opinion, she looked hotter than the
Venus de Milo
and with a firmer bust. I trust his assessment, because before the war he was a professor of aesthetics—but he was also a distant cousin of the Socialist leader Largo Caballero, so naturally he now licks one-peseta stamps.”

“I was with that woman today, in her home,” I murmured.

Fermín looked at me in amazement. “With Nuria Monfort? I'm beginning to think I was wrong about you, Daniel. You've become quite a rake.”

“It's not what you're thinking, Fermín.”

“That's your loss, then. At your age I was like El Molino music hall—morning, afternoon, and night shows.”

I gazed at that small, gaunt, and bony man, with his large nose and his yellow skin, and I realized he was becoming my best friend.

“May I tell you something, Fermín? Something that's been on my mind for some time?”

“But of course. Anything. Especially if it's shocking and concerns this yummy maiden.”

For the second time that night I began to tell the story of Julián Carax and the enigma of his death. Fermín listened very attentively, writing things down in a notebook and interrupting me every now and then to ask me some detail whose relevance escaped me. As I listened to myself, it became increasingly clear to me that there were many lacunae in that story. More than once my mind went blank and my thoughts became lost as I tried to work out why Nuria Monfort would have lied to me. What was the significance of all this? Why had she, for years, collected the mail directed to a nonexistent lawyers' office that was supposedly in charge of the Fortuny-Carax apartment on Ronda de San Antonio? I didn't realize I was voicing my doubts out loud.

“We can't yet know why that woman was lying to you,” said Fermín. “But we can speculate that if she did so in this respect, she may have done so, and probably did, in many others.”

I sighed, completely lost. “What do you suggest, Fermín?”

Fermín Romero de Torres sighed and put on his most Socratic expression. “I'll tell you what we can do. This coming Sunday, if you agree, we drop by San Gabriel's School, quite casually, and we make some inquiries concerning the origins of the friendship between this Carax fellow and the other lad, the rich boy….”

“Aldaya.”

“I have a way with priests, you'll see, even if it's just because I look like a roguish monk. I butter them up a little, and I get them eating out of my hand.”

“Are you sure?”

“Positive. I guarantee this lot is going to sing like the Montserrat Boys' Choir.”

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