“Wait. How did Dummy hide such a thing in her breasts if security was so tight?” I ask Rose.
“They say that the surface of Neptune is full of diamonds,” he responds. “Have you ever heard that?”
“As far as I know, the only thing on the surface of Neptune is the wind,” I respond.
“Well, now you know there are mountains of diamonds.”
“And?”
“Try and get one of those diamonds. See if you can. It’s the same with Dummy’s breasts, which are like a pair of mountains where you can’t find anything. She can hide whatever she wants between those mountains and no one will ever find it.”
According to the report, the medical procedure performed on the inmate, María Paz, that is, had not been completely successful, María Paz, that is, had not been completely successful, and consequently there had been an infection in the reproductive tract. An endometriosis caused by the unclean conditions under which the scraping was performed. The endometriosis had been so severe that María Paz had gone into septic shock. The decrease in blood flow along with lowered blood pressure had led to disrupted circulation, as a result of which the vital organs began to falter, and it was unlikely that the patient would ever be able to get pregnant again.
“But that’s not the worst part. With the report were the results of an X-ray. A dated X-ray. According to the date, it was taken the last time María Paz was at the hospital, a few days before she left. Look,” Dummy said, gesturing to use the pencil Pro Bono had in his hand and drawing something on the surface of the table. “What do you see?”
Rose tried to make out the drawing but couldn’t. Just a doodle, some kind of inverted vessel, with extensions on each side, which reminded him more than anything of the boa constrictor that swallowed a hat as drawn by Saint-Exupéry in The Little Prince, Cleve’s favorite book as a child.
“What do you see there?” Dummy insisted.
“A butterfly?” Rose took a timid guess.
“No, not a butterfly. You, Mr. Attorney, what do you see?”
“A flower?” Pro Bono ventured.
“It’s a uterus, gentlemen,” Dummy said. “Here are the ovaries and here are the Fallopian tubes.”
“These two wouldn’t know the difference between the Fallopian tubes and the Eustachian tubes,” Mandra X said, laughing and startling Pro Bono and Rose, who jumped back in their chairs at the unexpected interruption that had ruptured the silence of the Sibyl, both of them shocked by the surprise because it hadn’t been much of a joke. According to Rose, it was the only thing Mandra X said throughout their entire visit, her only contribution, which had seemed so funny to her. It was when her mouth opened to laugh that Rose saw the bifurcated tongue fluttering in the depths of its cave.
“Can’t you tell?” Dummy continued. “It’s a uterus.”
“A uterus, of course,” Rose said, embarrassed at his obtuseness.
“If that’s a uterus, my grandmother is a bicycle,” Pro Bono said.
“If your grandmother is a bicycle then so is your mother, but what I’ve drawn here is a fucking uterus. The uterus of María Paz. Now look,” Dummy said, drawing a little mark in the center of the alleged uterus. “Look right here. What do you see now?”
“A fetus,” Pro Bono said.
“Not a fucking fetus.”
“A tumor?” asked Rose.
“Shit no, not a tumor. It’s a clamp. Believe it or not. In the X-ray you can see it perfectly. There, the fucking clamp is clear as the light of day. But we had to destroy the X-ray. The bosses don’t like anybody messing with crap from the infirmary. But right there in her uterus. A perfect silhouette, no room for error, a surgical clamp. One of the small types, a little nothing, like this in the shape of a U, a fucking metallic U, small but treasonous, murderous, hidden up her woohoo, sure to fuck her up. That’s why we got in touch with you, Mr. Attorney, so you can let her know. She can’t go on living with that thing inside because that’s what’s making her bleed.”
“How in the hell did it get in there?” Pro Bono asked.
“How in the hell indeed,” Dummy responded. “That is the question. How do you think? You, sir, you tell me,” she said to Rose, “how did that clamp end up in there? We didn’t get it at first either. It took us a while before we put things together, before Mandra X put the whole sequence together.”
According to the course of events as Dummy saw them, María Paz had a miscarriage when she first arrived, and the savages performed a curettage in the most negligent fashion. Hence, all those months of hemorrhaging, which kept getting worse until she went into a coma. Then they took her to the hospital again and sent her back a week later, not really having done much, apart from bombarding her with antibiotics to control the infection for the moment. Because although they didn’t tell her, they took an X-ray in which they found the clamp that they had left in there because of their own incompetence and carelessness. What would have been the right thing to do? Naturally, go into surgery and remove the thing that was going to kill her, the source of the sickness inside her because of their own stupidity. That would have been the logical and proper thing to do. But nothing is logical or proper in Manninpox, or if there is, it’s only so through some perverted means. María Paz was in such terrible shape that they must have figured she could die if she had surgery. How else can one justify what they did?
When they arrested her, they had beat her up so bad, she miscarried. Then they had botched the curettage and left a clamp inside, and then they figured she was going to die on the operating table. They didn’t want to risk such controversy. So what do they do? They fix it so she can go. She was given her freedom. That was their solution to the jam they were in. If she’s going to die, let it be outside where the guilt won’t fall on them.
“That’s why María Paz was set free,” Dummy said. “That’s why these sons of bitches let her go.”
“And here I was thinking it was a miracle from Ismaela’s cross,” Pro Bono said. But no one laughed.
“The miracle was performed by the cross, sir,” Dummy corrected.
“Clearly,” Pro Bono responded. “There’s no other explanation.”
“You have to find her,” Dummy said. “She has to know and get it taken care of right away.”
“That might be difficult.” Pro Bono sighed.
“You have to, sir. There’s not much we can do from in here. Her life is basically in your hands.”
With María Paz’s life in his hands, as Dummy had asserted, that’s the state in which Pro Bone and Rose left Manninpox on that day.
“It’s practically impossible,” Pro Bono said.
But impossible or not, they had no other choice but to get working on it right away, or at least think of how to begin, start discussing possible contacts, places to look. They had to get in touch somehow. But neither of them could think of anything better than contacting Socorro in Staten Island.
“We have no other option, even if the old woman is a pathological liar,” Rose said. “Maybe María Paz went to see her.” His hand still hurt from the crushing handshake with Dummy, and he brought it to his nose, that old habit of his that Edith had hated, smelling his hand after shaking it with someone. There had been no handshake with Mandra X, not even a cordial good-bye from her. Just as she hadn’t spoken but once, she made sure there was no physical contact at any time. When she realized the meeting was over, she got up and walked out of the room in the same fashion she had come in, unapproachable and stinking, like the Queen of Saba.