âDon't play with fire,' Saladina warned.
âYou're ruining my dreams â¦'
âI'm not ruining them for you, Dolores. You forged your own destiny. We did, or rather,
you
did what you had to do, but now you can't just wander off into the wide world like that, let me tell you. You have to be responsible,' Saladina went on distractedly. âWhere did you say they're doing it?'
âDoing what?'
âThe filming â¦'
âIn Tossa.'
âAh yes, Tossa de Mar! When one makes a decision of this calibre, one must commit to the consequences. We spent a whole night making a plan, and I recommended about a thousand times that you shouldn't marry that fisherman. Would it be far?'
âWould what be far?'
âTossa.'
The tears were flowing for Dolores. Round and brilliant, they rolled down her dress.
âSomewhere in Catalonia.'
They gathered up the flour that was left on the worktop and put away the baker's shovel.
Saladina became pensive again. Her blood was boiling like poison.
4
The next day, they went up Bocelo Mountain to take the old lady some of the bread they had made. For a while now, they had been worried by the idea that Tenderlove wouldn't put the remaining teeth in Saladina's mouth until he was paid, and, according to everyone in the village, the old lady had bundles of money, hidden under her mattress.
They found the old lady sitting in her hut, cooking a sausage over the fire. She didn't look like she was a hundred years old. In fact, she looked like she existed outside of time. When she saw them, she let them in and sat them down. She said that she'd never felt better in her life, now that she felt that her time had come.
The Winterlings got right down to it. They'd brought her a few crusts of bread, but in exchange they wanted the money that their grandfather had given her for the alleged purchase of her brain. The old lady cupped her hand behind her ear: Huh? âThe money!' yelled the Winterlings. She considered them with a smile. Then she recounted again what had happened the day Don Reinaldo passed by, staring at her fixedly and telling her that she had a brain like the Santiago Cathedral. She told that story to everyone because that day had been one of the happiest in her life.
The Winterlings responded that they'd heard this all before, and that what they needed was the money.
The old lady sucked in her cheeks with a squelch.
âGirls, they were very bad to your grandfather,' she said as she turned her sausage on the fire.
They'd heard that, the Winterlings replied. But they didn't know why. Their memory of it wasn't quite right â they'd been little girls when everything happened â but what they wanted now was the money that was due to them as the granddaughters of Don Reinaldo.
The old lady pulled her sausage off the stick. She cut off a chunk of bread and made herself a sandwich. She chewed with the few teeth she had, and began to speak with a full mouth.
âDon Manuel, the priest, had plenty of these sausages in his basement. And he had salamis, olives, tinned sardines, haricot beans, preserves, packets of biscuits ⦠that chubby fellow had quite a stash! When they found him out, he was very nervous. It was for the whole town, he argued, he was just
administering
it ⦠And he said his mother was very old and weak, and needed to eat ⦠But his mother was already dead by then, although no one found out for days afterwards!'
The Winterlings said that they remembered how the priest's mother had been sick, and didn't leave the house during the day.
âShe didn't need to go out,' answered the old lady immediately, âshe already had her son to tell her everyone else's private business. Listen, once I went to confess a sin of lust, and the very next day, when I went past the priest's house, his mother hissed at me from the window and beckoned me inside. She told me that what I was doing was very bad and even gave me penitence. From that day on, I never confessed again to the priest â¦'
The old lady from Bocelo scratched her nearly hairless head with a bony finger.
âIn any case, those doctors from Santiago, with their black suits as shiny as beetles, they ended up coming anyway when old lady Resurrección kicked the bucket, no matter how her son tried to hide it. Just like when that maid Esperanza died ⦠Anyway, I was telling you how they didn't believe him, and they were going to punish him, so Don Manuel bought them off by telling them about Don Reinaldo's business. It was him who told them that your grandfather used to gather a group of doctors, poets, and mayors around the hearth and such, and I don't know, that they had organised a Committee for the redistribution of work, crops, and wealth.'
She got up and lifted her mattress. A wad of cash appeared. Saladina gathered it up and quickly put it in her apron pocket. After a while, she pulled out a corner of the wad to inspect it on the sly.
âThe money's yours, my girls, I feel better that way,' said the old lady. âThe priest already told me you handed back his contract, and that he has it tucked away safely. You know the only regret I have? I wish I'd seen the Cathedral of Santiago, you know. They say it's very pretty, and that many people go there to fulfil promises ⦠Now, if you don't mind, let me rest a while. I've got so much sleep to catch up on â¦'
A few days later, the old lady died.
The priest had gone up to the hut in his usual weary, bad mood. He found the old lady sitting up. Waiting for him.
âFather,' she said, with eyes as wide as dinner plates, âI know what's happened. God has forgotten about me.'
âCome on, woman!'
âI'm a hundred and ten years old.' She held up her hand and started counting her fingers. âYou see, I've been counting. During the phylloxera plague of 1880, I was a young lady of about forty. Either God can't count, or he's forgotten about me,' she repeated, totally convinced.
The two of them went into the hut.
âRest a while, woman, and I'll stay here and pray, reminding God just how old you are.'
âYou'll tell him I'm a hundred and ten? It's important to remind him of the exact number.'
âI'll do it right now. You have a little rest, and I'll make sure to tell him, given I've got a direct line.'
The old lady got into bed and covered herself with a disgusting blanket.
âTell him about the phylloxera plague, that ought to remind him.' She was silent for a while, then her mouth started making noises. âYou know what I'd like, Father?'
The priest shook his head.
âTo see the Cathedral of Santiago. They say many people who have made promises go there.'
âThat's true,' said the priest. âThe pilgrims.'
The old lady's eyes began to droop.
âThank you for reminding our Lord about my age. It's only normal that he forgets the details, there are so many of us!'
Don Manuel began to pray.
âI'd also be thankful if when I die, you could take me down to your house for the wake. I'm scared that someone will do to me what they did to your mother!'
âDear lady!'
But when Don Manuel went to say goodbye, see you tomorrow, like he did every day, the old lady had died.
The priest felt so moved (and he wasn't quite sure why, but so
guilty
) that he decided to fulfil the old lady's last wish and hold the wake in his own house. And so that nothing and no one was missing, he served a funeral banquet, and had the maid prepare dried apricots. He even hired a
choradeira
, or professional mourner, who was a friend of Aunty Esteba.
As you would expect, everyone came to the wake. After they double-checked that the old lady was dead (there were still people who couldn't believe it), and had kept vigil over her for a while, they tucked into the bacon, the cakes, and the salami, and the local wine served in the next room, and got to telling each other tales about hidden treasures, and folks who had come back from far-off lands transformed into chickens.
The Winterlings didn't miss it either. When it was time to go, Dolores wanted to say farewell to the old lady one last time.
She entered the room silently, and, to her surprise, discovered that the old woman was not alone. There was Mr Tenderlove, leaning over her. It looked like he was whispering something to her, or fixing up her collar, or maybe gently placing a necklace on her. She came up a bit closer, from behind. No, he wasn't talking to her. What did Mr Tenderlove have in his hands? Pliers. Everything played out as if in a dream.
Dolores watched as the dental mechanic carefully extracted the three or four teeth that the poor old lady had left.
She ran out of there as quickly as she could.
5
Cameras, lights, false backdrops, fishermen working as extras, gypsies, a bullfighter, Americans in hats everywhere, the light and the heat of the Mediterranean, the houses whitewashed and decorated with flowers ⦠When those foreign men asked her to strip off, she didn't get upset. In the end, that was what why she was there, and her sister had already warned her that she would have to do the nude scenes that nobody else wanted to do. It's not that she enjoyed them seeing her like that, but she also knew that this was her big opportunity. She pulled down her skirt, took off her knickers, and unbuttoned her blouse.
Her breasts burst out, seeking the freedom they had been denied for so many years.
Cupping them delicately in the palms of his hands, one of the men measured and weighed her breasts, as if the whole business hung on the size and weight of them. Dolores closed her eyes. While one hand slid slowly over her arms and armpits, she felt the other one touch her belly button. And then another one on her pelvis. There was too much hand in that area. âRelax, Dolores,' she told herself. âThis will be over soon.'
Dolores opened her eyes. A man with octopus eyes was watching her with a smile. There was laughter, or worse, ridicule, in that look. After a while, the man disappeared, leaving her alone in front of the cameras. But with horror she realised that he had penetrated her chest, and that a cold gelatinous mass was advancing over her breasts. âRelax, we'll be finished soon,' she heard again. âIt's a stroke of luck that you have landed this role, considering how many women showed up for the screen tests. You'll be a part of cinema history.' âYes, I'm up for it,' she replied. She had closed her eyes again, when she heard the waterfall voice of her sister.
âWho are you talking to, Dolores?'
Dolores woke up. She was trembling, her nightdress was in a twist, and she was bathed in sweat. It was nothing more than a dream. But she had been left with a real feeling in her heart: inside the kingdom of remorse lived a slimy octopus.
A few days later, she was assaulted by the very same dream, and she wanted to recount it to her sister, to unburden herself. She called out to her from her bed again and again, but when she received no answer, she lit the lantern. Her sister's bed was empty.
Then she thought that perhaps she might be in the kitchen, absorbed in one of her lists, or eating figs.
But she wasn't in the kitchen.
She wasn't in the orchard, the chicken yard, on the mountain, or in the river.
She wasn't at Mr Tenderlove's clinic either; he explained to her that just the day before, he'd installed the final tooth.
Just when she was beginning to worry, Dolores found a note stuck to the Singer:
I'll be back soon Dólor, don't worry about me.
Your beloved sister, Saladina.
She wasn't worried, but the next day Dolores felt profoundly alone. Alone and bewildered â where could that silly girl have gone? At dawn, she sought comfort in her daily chores. She fed the chickens, milked Greta the cow, and took the animals out to graze. She would have to make curd cheese, and some more fig jam, for when her sister returned. It was Saladina's favourite dessert, although Dolores didn't want to show weakness by making a grand gesture. She gathered a great deal of kindling to fill the woodshed â Saladina was always complaining that there was no point in having one if it was always empty. One of the sheep was pregnant â Saladina would be excited to see that!
But the next day, Saladina still wasn't there.
The third day was the hardest of all. The weight of loneliness was mixed with a sordid sense of relief â wasn't this what she had always wanted? But Dolores could barely get out of bed. She had woken up with the terrible certainty that Saladina was lost somewhere. Finally, she got going: if her sister were to return at that very moment, she wouldn't like seeing her like that, sad and idle.
On the mountain, right in the middle of the day, she felt afraid. Later on, together with some of the villagers, they searched for her until it began to get dark.
Saladina didn't come back at nightfall either.
By the fourth day, she began to suspect that she might never see her sister again. But then, all her things were still there: her clothes, the bottle of anise. What would she do without the Singer? And it had cost her so much!