I walked outside and frisked my pockets. I felt the passport in one of them.
Now I am allowed to fly, I thought. So I flew over Paris, watching the citizens’ hats bobbing like moving targets, the dogs sniffing one another’s wet tails, headlights going in circles and chasing one another like the dogs. And the higher I flew, the smaller the people became, smaller and smaller, minuscule and insignificant, and the more the streets and houses were arranged in circles, cut and shaped like tables around which brooding artists puffed their cigarettes and contributed to the evolution of the thick Parisian fog that concealed their deep thoughts from flying humans and sniffing dogs.
When I landed, I passed the Senegalese concierge at the hotel desk, forgot to greet him, and ran straight up to my room. I opened my passport: A Canadian visa was stamped in it.
20
THE NEXT MORNING, I WOKE UP EARLY, RUSHED TO RHEA’S apartment building, and rang her bell. Her sleepy voice came through the intercom.
I have the visa, I said.
Tu veux du café? she asked.
Oui, I answered.
She buzzed me up, and I found her walking slowly around her kitchen. Her nightgown was thin, white, transparent. She must have felt my eyes penetrating her short robe because she looked back at me and caught me staring. She quietly went to her room, changed into regular clothes, then came back and sat facing me. What are you doing these days? she asked.
I am reading and walking, I said.
She nodded. What are you reading?
A story about someone who kills an Arab in Algeria.
L’Étranger? she asked.
Oui, c’est ça.
She smiled. Come, let’s sit on the balcony, she said. It will be a few days before we get the air ticket. I will check today with Monique, the travel agent. Are you going to keep out of trouble until then? I do not appreciate being stalked.
I finished my cigarette.
I would like to sleep with you again, I said.
Maybe, just before you leave, Rhea said. Not today or tomorrow, but maybe the night before your departure. There is a party tonight over at the house of some of my friends. You can come if you promise to behave and ask for what you need politely.
THAT EVENING, I went again to Rhea’s place. Together we took a taxi and went to a party in a long loft containing a few red hallway lights and fuzzy purple sofas. The entranceway was filled with a blasé crowd, the kind that intently ignores your passage, like houseplants in permanent poses. Painted-hair owners and tight-leather-pant fillers danced in a corner, using moonwalk moves. Rhea disappeared, and I stood against a wall holding a bottle of beer in my hand. I watched the purses, the high, thin heels, the black lace stockings, and the flamboyant hairstyles of the women.
After a while, I spotted Rhea talking to a man, and then he followed her up a set of stairs. She led, and the man walked behind her, swaying to the loud music.
A man with black lipstick on his lips and wild hair approached me. Hey, t’es l’ami de Rhea?
Yes, I answered.
I am her coiffeur, he said.
And her mother’s, I presume?
Bien oui, je connais la connasse, he laughed, rocking his thin, silky body back and forth.
What is upstairs? I asked.
Ah, this is the place to go up, up, he answered and looked at the ceiling.
I finished my beer and walked farther inside the loft. Everyone here affected a nonchalant air of importance, a kind of modern pseudo-aristocratic persona. If only I had my gun, I thought sadly, I would shoot them on the steps of their palaces.
Half an hour later, I was bored with the collective act of coolness, the languid conversations, the statuesque poses. I grabbed hold of the coiffeur and said to him, Listen, could you go up and tell Rhea that I am leaving?
And what do I get if I do this? he smiled and put his hands on his hips.
Nothing, absolutely nothing. You get to do me a favour only, I said, and I might not spear your head when the revolution arrives.
I will do it for your accent, and your wide eyes, and long, long lashes, the coiffeur replied and swiftly turned and climbed the stairs gracefully, like a lama.
I could not find her, he said when he returned. Jinni said that she must have left.
I went downstairs and into the street, and there I saw Rhea talking to the same man she had been with inside. There was tension between them; Rhea looked agitated, and the man looked angry. I waited and observed from afar. Suddenly, the man grabbed Rhea’s arm and dragged her toward a car.
I ran over and pushed him away from her.
Rhea started to cry. The man pulled a knife from his pocket and brandished it at me. Rhea ran to him and begged, Non, Moshe. Arrête! C’est un ami à moi.
Go away, Bassam! she shouted at me. Why are you following me?
I stood still.
Rhea held the man’s arm. Va t’en! she kept screaming at me. Then she opened the car door and said to the man, Bien voilà, I will come with you.
The man shoved her in the car and walked to the driver’s side. I will take care of you later, he said, pointing his finger at me. He drove away.
I memorized the car’s plate number and went back to the party, reciting the number like a mantra. I sought out the coiffeur, snatched his bag, pulled out his kohl pencil, and quickly wrote the number on the wall. Then I asked him if he would find me some paper. He disappeared and came back with an empty box of cigarettes. I tore it up and wrote the number on it.
As I left for good, the coiffeur asked me if I would not write down his number as well.
Putain de macho! he shouted after me, and his words echoed down the spiral stairs.
On the way back to my hotel, the idea of calling Roland came to me. Perhaps he could help Rhea. I called him from my room and woke him up. I told him the story.
It is better not to interfere, Roland said and hung up on me.
BY NOON THE NEXT DAY, I was still in bed. I had called Rhea in the morning, but no one had answered.
Finally, in the afternoon, I went to the desk downstairs. Hakim, I said, you are my friend, no?
Hakim laughed and said, What do you need?
Just a small question. Could you find out the address and name of someone from their car’s licence plate?
Leave me the number. It might cost you something, he said.
How much?
Later, he smiled. I will see what I can do for the brother.
I CALLED RHEA AGAIN, and this time she answered.
I am coming to see you, I said.
No! she shouted.
I am coming to see you, I repeated.
No, she said. I will not open the door.
I walked to her building and buzzed the intercom. She answered, Go away!
I held my finger on the buzzer.
Then, through the glass of the thick door, I saw an old lady with two tiny sausagelike dogs coming toward me from the elevator. I walked to the door, and when she opened it, I said with utmost politeness, Laisse-moi vous aider, madame.
I held the door for the old lady and entered the building.
I took the elevator up, and ran to Rhea’s door, and knocked.
She opened her door, but when she saw it was me, she tried to close it. I forced my foot inside and pushed the door wide open.
Get out! she said and ran to the kitchen. Get out, she shouted. Out!