Read Among Strange Victims Online

Authors: Daniel Saldaña París

Among Strange Victims (11 page)

Maybe I'm saying this because, during the last few days, a ridiculously dense cloud, a lugubrious mood, has been hanging over me. I'm surprised to find conventionally important events—a wedding—happen to me as if to a second cousin, scarcely affecting me. I get news of my life, but I don't feel it. And it's not that life is, as some would wish, to be found elsewhere, but that it's been reduced to a weak, heterogeneous set of associations: a hen walking around a vacant lot, a lottery ticket with the number 6 printed on it, a collection of used tea bags. Every so often, one of those details of my most intimate cartography is erased without any great fuss and a new one appears, substituting it.

In the end, the only thing that matters to me is conserving enough clarity to be able to articulately criticize what I see; if some illness stopped me from doing this, nothing would have meaning anymore. I'm not worried about physical degeneration, the whitish drool dribbling onto a shabby suit, premature baldness, prostate cancer. I'm not worried about them so long as I can go on complaining about what I see. I don't seek the permission of the Fates to find a soul mate with whom to deploy my melancholy; I can be alone, really alone, but I do ask the god of neural functions to let me retain this faint line of voice that crosses my cranium, allowing me to laugh at the world around me. This is the only grade of intelligence I aspire to, and it makes me immensely happy that it doesn't depend in the least on books or people.

(I say all this at the risk of sounding
maudit
; that is neither my intention nor feeling; otherwise, I would be oozing highly profitable mauditism in the modern salons of pomp and circumstance.)

15

The hen appears in and disappears from the lot at completely unpredictable intervals. Sometimes she's there all night long, and at others there's no sign of her for several days. I've turned the matter over in my mind, but I can't crack the code of the bird's irregular life. The topic is beginning to have pathological importance in relation to my daily routine, and I'm aware of it, which makes it even more disturbing.

Cecilia finally noticed the lot.

“Why did you move to a building next to a piece of waste ground, my love? It must have so many rats, you know.”

The exaggeration of her warning irritates me. I tell her there isn't a single rat in the lot, just a hen. Long silence. I feel I've betrayed an enormous secret. Cecilia looks puzzled and gives a, for me, repulsive laugh: the sort of laugh emitted by teenagers who don't have control over their extremities. She asks how there could be a hen there. Plucking up my courage, I grab her arm, drag her to the window, and point to the mound of earth where the hen is usually found. Nothing.

Cecilia gives me a worried look, and I, in the mood for a leg-pull, insist, “Look, there's the hen. So, believe me now?”

Cecilia extracts herself from my grip—I'm probably hurting her—and goes to the kitchen. I stay here alone, looking at the lot, leaning against what some would call “the sill.” This is our second attempt at an argument after the one when Ceci took up smoking. I wonder what new vice she'll acquire this time. Hopefully it won't be coprophagy or getting her nails painted with whole landscapes—I wouldn't tolerate either.

Then the hen appears from behind some bushes and climbs to the top of the mound with Tibetan calm. I look at her enviously
and don't even contemplate the possibility of calling Cecilia and showing her I'm not out of my mind. Instead, I decide to hatch a plot for discovering every detail of the feathered creature's lifestyle: I'll call in sick, even act out a serious illness so Cecilia won't suspect anything—Would she, at this stage, be capable of reporting me to Ms. Watkins?—and rather than going to the museum, I'll spend the whole day in the vacant lot, following the hen's every movement.

While I'm hatching this dishonest scheme, the bird moves back into the bosky shadows of the lot. I sit on the bed and open the drawer in which I keep the used tea bags. After contemplating them for a while, I decide I need a new project, something as ambitious as that collection, one that completely absorbs my intellectual capacities, that aligns my ideas in a single direction, in just the same way as a magnetized metal bar aligns iron filings.

That's what I need: a Project. The other possible solution to overcoming the lethal sense of dissatisfaction into which I've sunk (for how long?) would be to find something like a Community: a close bond with a group of people who understand my interest in collecting tea bags, for instance, or my irrepressible desire to live next to an empty lot. But I suspect that no such groups exist, and that I have steadily dynamited all the communities I ever belonged to—the drug addicts in the gardens near the house in Coapa, the girlfriend I went to Cozumel with, and even Ms. Watkins, that secretly friendly boss who, despite all, believed in my abilities for a while. Dynamited them to the point where I've ended up more alone than a chili in a maize field, as my grandmother used to say, living with a woman to whom nothing except neutral Newtonian space seems to unite me.

16

It's Monday. The minute I woke, I uttered an exaggerated groan that frightened Cecilia more than I'd expected.

“What's wrong?” she asked in alarm. I invented a complex stomach ailment that would keep me in bed for at least forty-eight hours. Cecilia didn't believe me, but even so she agreed to tell Ms. Watkins I couldn't come in. She's less unpleasant now that she's my wife. If I'd missed a day at the office while we were simple workmates, she would have hurried to Ms. Watkins to vehemently demand my dismissal. Luckily, I never missed a day during those three years.

So, I stayed at home. The first thing I did was leaf through, without seriously reading, a newspaper from last week. The classified ads occupied my attention more than any other section, and within them, most particularly, those relating to sexual encounters. I amused myself in this way until my imagination sparked up, encouraged by the indecent messages of seek and capture, and I slowly masturbated on the bed, unconcerned about the possibility of ejaculating onto Cecilia's pillow, which I did. After that, I watched
TV
for quite a while and once again tried to think up an Important Project that would give meaning to my haphazard existence. Two hours later, resigned to my fate, I resolved to go into the lot to find the bird's secret hiding place, to decipher the reasons behind her actions. That was to some extent an Important Project, even if it wasn't really one. It was to some extent because it related one of my most authentic obsessions, the hen, to the need to understand her mechanisms, her minutiae, her little animal decisions that, without being decisions, made up a strangely fascinating, ordinary existence.

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