She told me she hadn’t been in Zaragoza for long. She said she’d gotten separated a couple of years back and had ever since been looking to make a clean break. She had, quite literally, had a makeover; she’d even chosen a new name. She also said that she’d been hoping to move but was not sure where to or when, she was still at that stage where you dream of impossible houses hugging the sea, with a porch and plants creeping up freshly whitewashed walls. She added that she wasn’t cut out for the single life. As for Jacobo, it was clear that she preferred not to go into too much detail. Truth be told, she didn’t wish to go into too much detail about anything. It was as if she were striving to make everything she said sound banal. The first time they met, Jacobo had insisted that she read The War by Marguerite Duras. They had arranged to meet so that he could lend her his copy then made another date to discuss the book. It puzzled Nadia how anyone could become so obsessed over a story that, as she saw it, was like so many others. “Like so many others,” that’s how she put it. They became lovers. It’s not as if they saw much of one another. Nor did they have a shared future mapped out or plans of any kind. They simply called each other from time to time whenever either of them felt loneliness beginning to bite, a feeling, as anyone will tell you, that tends to wax and wane. They cooked meals for each other, sampled new wines, and then went to bed, usually somewhat tipsy. At this point, Nadia’s gestures take on a coy air that I do not fully buy. There are no observations, no details. She averts her gaze, seeking refuge in a short pause in order to take another sip of her coffee, only her cup is already empty.
All of a sudden, she tells me she’d like to go to Jacobo’s apartment. She asks if I’ve got the keys on me.
“Well, no, I don’t have the keys on me.”
“I do. Here, in my bag.”
“Right, then you can go any time.”
“Not alone.”
“Perhaps you’ve already been.”
“No. I can’t bring myself to go alone, I told you. I’d like you to come with me now. It’ll only take a couple of minutes.”
“Are you sure? You might find it painful.”
“I need that pain. I feel like ice, right now, and I can’t stand it. I just want to be there for a moment, to take a quick look around, to remember the smells. Then tonight, when I go to bed, I’ll try to break down in tears. That’s the idea.”
Once inside the apartment, she began to make her way very slowly from room to room, peering out the window several times. She barely paused in the part of the entryway where the events had taken place, nor did she glance for more than a second or two at the stains of blood encrusted on the stippled wall. Then she lit a cigarette and sat down on one end of the couch. I guess that must have been her spot when they settled in to watch a movie or chat for a while. She wanted a drink. I fixed her a whisky with a couple of ice cubes that smelled a little, it seemed to me, of the hake fillets that had lain next to them in the freezer. Glass in hand, she got up again and headed, very slowly, for the bedroom. There was something robotic in her movements, her gaze did not settle on anything in particular, and yet at the same time it was as if she were scanning everything, before processing it all in the most neutral fashion. She came to a halt, standing before the bed that was now home only to one of the those standard-issue blue mattresses, without a bedspread, that bore, in the form of stains and patches, the traces of all of the apartment’s former tenants over time, circles of saliva, sweat, semen, piss, and blood, all the warmth of human intimacy. There, looking at that deformed, empty mattress, she began to cry softly. The statue came to life in its white dress. “Son of a bitch,” she said. I went to fetch a wad of toilet paper and handed it to her by way of a handkerchief. Then, finger by finger, I prized the glass from her grip to prevent it from shattering under the pressure, before placing it on the bedside table. I was just about to say something about how dreadful the moment was and how beautiful she looked, crying at the foot of that bed, wearing the very sandals she was buckling in the photo, without knowing where to tap the ash from the cigarette she held between her fingers or what to do with that sudden stab of pain or where to direct all the desire that sprang from her, perverse and unwelcome, as she looked at that furniture and that light. I was just about to ruin it all with words, but I held back. I simply walked over to where she stood and embraced her from behind, almost recklessly. I could tell that she was thankful, so I hugged her to me. She titled her head back, feeling for me. She also thrust her ass out, feeling for me yet more and without altogether stopping from crying. Snatches of a tango sung by good old Roberto Goyeneche—qué me importa perderme mil veces la vida—drifted through the inner patio from some distant radio. And we fell onto the unmade bed just as the first rumblings of a storm that threatened to take with it in a matter of seconds the little evening light that remained could be heard on the other side of the window, and everything was strange and bitter and stunningly beautiful, the white dress on the dried-out filth, my tongue amongst her tears, the pleasure, the anguish, the sobs. Afterward, we lay there a good long while, naked and in silence, very still, watching as the darkness took possession of the dead man’s room and listening to the sounds that drifted up from the street, the drip-drip of drainpipes and cornices, the motorcycles driving past, the noise of tires on wet asphalt. And then I think Nadia hit the right note. I will never know how she knew, or what dark magic moved her tongue, but she rested her head on my shoulder, and I’d swear she said what is to become of us? And I knew then that I would die calling out her name, and also that she would not come.
After showering, I dried myself off with a used towel of Jacobo’s that hung forgotten behind the bathroom door and which seemed to me to smell of a mixture of damp and of him. More specifically, of leaks sprung in the walls of patios and of a grinning Jacobo appearing in that patio, sweating a little, his fishing rod over one shoulder.
18 (squeaking bedsprings)
Marguerite Duras began an affair with Dionys Mascolo, with whom she had joined the Resistance. Meanwhile, her husband, and comrade to the two of them in that freedom-fighting movement, had been taken prisoner in the Dachau extermination camp. They had given him up for dead, more or less. When the camps were liberated, they searched for him high and low, they combed every office, they made phone calls to all and sundry, they despaired at the rumors, they listened to the tales told by the first survivors then reaching Paris in dribs and drabs. Antelme and Mascolo were good friends. The three of them were good friends, in fact. The love between Marguerite and Mascolo blossomed against the backdrop of an absence that neither could bear, which managed to turn their desire for each other into the worst of betrayals and an anguished uncertainty that would make them picture their friend almost always at death’s door, a mass of wounds lying on the ground, the final, weary beats of a heart against the mud of some road or other, a fever that shivers alone, its whereabouts unknown, or a shadow coming apart at the seams atop a cot on which the blood soaks through the mattress. The bond that united the new lovers was made from the same barbed wire that had crossed the continent from south to north along the entire length of the Maginot Line, that pointless scar measuring mile after endless mile.