Read Among Strange Victims Online

Authors: Daniel Saldaña París

Among Strange Victims (29 page)

We sit down and switch on the
TV
. The fabric of the armchair is slightly faded at a certain level, from use. I point this out to my mom, but she doesn't deign to acknowledge my comment, waving it off with her hand. Outside, the heat of the afternoon is giving way to the cold of night, without measurable nuances between the two states.
I interrupt the rapt contemplation of Cecilia and my mother with a new comment, this time about how good it is that there are no mosquitoes in Los Girasoles. The comment is once again ignored, this time without even the gesture.

On the screen is one of those live, trashy talk shows. There are three couples, all around forty; a blonde, slightly vulgar presenter is opening and shutting her pound of lip silicon before them, admonishing them with amazing rudeness. As far as I can tell, the topic of the program is “I cheated on my wife with my own wife.” The three husbands, apparently, all had sex with their respective wives. They even regularly had sex, just like any other couple, but for some reason that was impossible to communicate, during one of these encounters they were overcome by the certainty that they were committing adultery. And the feeling was shared: both the man and his wife were aware, for a moment, while they were high on pleasure, that they were being unfaithful; not with someone else, but right there during that sexual act, as if they knew their spouse simultaneously was and wasn't him or herself. And that led to a surge of jealousy. The woman was suspicious of every one of her partner's activities; the husband spied on his wife and treated her roughly or even violently (in one case, it seems, it even came to blows). For all their promises that it would never happen again, their trust in each other had been irrevocably undermined, and all for screwing each other, but deep down, in some strange way, committing adultery. Little by little, they say, monogamy was restored by means of stubbornly repeating an idiotic routine.

Disconcerted by the direction the program is taking, I get up from the armchair, ready to go to bed while thinking that, in the end, this is perhaps the only way to survive marriage with a degree of dignity. Forget the midlife crises and the sudden preference for youth and motorcycles. Forget the summer affairs and the red-velvet bars to which you go with the dentist's secretary. Forget the prostitution and the unexpected discovery of closet homosexuality. Endogamous adultery: that's what's missing, dammit.

I'm hardly on my feet when the doorbell rings. My mom, not moving from her chair, unsurprised, asks me to answer it, adding, “It must be Marcelo.” I give her a questioning look, but she continues
watching the
TV
as if nothing had happened. I've never heard of Marcelo. Cecilia, in the meantime, has fallen asleep in her armchair, and I know it's not humanly possible to wake her so that she can be with me in this moment of deep uncertainty. Why does it seem so natural to just open the door to him?

Between the house and the gate leading to the street is a minuscule garden with a gravel path. The bulb in the lamppost intended to illuminate the sidewalk outside has blown so that I can only distinguish, beyond the high metal railing, a masculine figure, taller than me, his right hand gripping one of the bars. The light from the other street lamps shines behind him, eclipsing his face.

This, I imagine, is the Marcelo guy. He greets me with a suspicious degree of effusion, speaking my name as if we were old friends. I open the gate wide to him, feeling perplexed, while running through the most obvious possibilities: a neighbor who has only come out about his homosexuality to my mother, who is egging him on to start a civil liberties campaign in Los Girasoles; a psychologist hired by my mom to convince me to return to education or get divorced; and finally—always finally—the most sensible possibility: he's my mom's new boyfriend. His friendly, deferential manner points to the last option, although I find one aspect of the situation disconcerting: he's Spanish. The accent gives him away. And in my mother's bellicose imagination, no one who's Spanish can—short of renouncing his ancestry—attempt to display a benevolent attitude toward a Mexican without it being understood as a disregard for the dignity of that person (it's a relatively historical matter, very difficult to explain). So Marcelo makes an effort to be pleasant from the outset, but the tension caused by his Spanish blood gets in the way of this noble intent, and his amiability ends up being offensive, grating, uncivilized.

Marcelo takes his place in the
TV
soirée with strange spontaneity. Cecilia has woken and, after greeting the stranger with obvious coquetry, has started asking him questions, while on the now-silent screen the programming continues autistically. My mother laughs at Marcelo's ingenious replies, and Cecilia, without fully understanding them (they often include highbrow references), also laughs, but with a hesitancy that gives her away.

Marcelo addresses me, trying to include me in the sudden intimacy of the scene.

“Rodrigo, your mother tells me that you're interested in belles lettres.”

“Me, interested in letters? Really? You could say that I take an interest in some words, or parts of words. Lately I've been feeling a particular predilection for vowels,” I reply, attempting to avoid my tone being interpreted as droll.

The conversation quickly veers toward politics, guided by the iron will of my mother's opinions. Marcelo is ambiguous: he concedes that the left in general has merits, but he despises the Manichaean sense of history. In the face of such an incredibly abstract affirmation, Cecilia takes her leave, alleging drowsiness, and goes to bed.

“Are you coming, Rodrigo?”

“No, my love, I'll catch you later.” When she hears my reply, Cecilia shoots me a reproachful glance, giving me to understand that she was trying to leave Marcelo alone with my mother. The conversation about politics continues its sinuous course. Marcelo has taken a cold beer from the fridge, and I finally understand what all those bottles are doing there: he's a regular visitor to this house. It seems, in short, a fairly new but stable relationship.

Well, I think, maybe this Marcelo isn't as much of a cretin as he seems. He's said a couple of things that are not, to my mind, completely misguided: that talking across the table after dinner seems to him a revolting habit, that amusement parks have more revolutionary potential than rhyming jingles, that he had only been in Mexico City for a few hours but had been able to “perceive its close liaison with the Devil.”

In the living room light—one of those so-called energy-saving bulbs—Marcelo appears less attractive than I'd first imagined. There are clear traces of acne beneath his straggly beard, pockmarks that extend down to his collar, and into which he sinks his thumbnail when absorbed in what he's saying. He's fair enough to appear European, but not that fair. My mother, who's never been able to completely rid herself of her Marxist discourse, and these days uses it only out of sentiment, must think he's a class enemy—his Italian shoes, his obvious preoccupation with style. Yes, she must think
he's a real stiff-necked Spaniard, that he knows nothing about the real world, just a rose-tinted version of it. She must get a kick out of thinking, “He's a class enemy and I'm fucking him; class struggle is here, in my sweaty, proletariat bed.”

My mother, of course, is not a member of the proletariat, although in her desire to be one, she took a course in indexable lathe tooling when she was young. She's never been able to explain what an indexable lathe is.

8

Four days and their associated nights have passed, and Marcelo is still here, as if it were the most natural thing in the world. One morning, he disappeared and came back half an hour later with a bundle of clothes and four orange juices that he shared among us. I asked him about his house. It seems that he was conned via the internet in relation to the price and space, the description and photos of the place. He can't bear the house he's rented; he says it's infernally hot and that the residential estate is full of dubious people. But he can't leave: he paid who knows how many months in advance, and there are various penalty clauses for early departure in the contract. To my mind, it had become for him a matter of principle. Marcelo seems to be the sort of person who invokes principles at the drop of a hat. He hopes to raise controversy every time he says—and he says it very frequently—that he's a vegetarian; he must be disappointed by my absolute indifference to such provocations. As far as I'm concerned, he could be a coprophage. It's all the same to me.

Marcelo is a couple of years younger than my mother. (“Just like Ceci and me,” I think.) But at that age, as at the beginning of adolescence, the difference between a man and a woman is obvious. Or maybe it's just that Marcelo leads a healthy life, including gyms and visits to the homeopath and “a glass of wine in the evenings.” No doubt, a lot of olive oil. And I'm certain he's never worked in an open-plan office. You notice these things immediately. When
someone has worked in an office, a film of boredom spreads over his face and stays there for the rest of his life. His skin, for all that the sun and exercise might try hide it, loses its glow, becomes thin. His vertebral posture is never the same. There's a classic curvature around the lumbar vertebrae that no ex-office worker can correct, not even with yoga or Arab dancing. The clothing of an office worker is also an irreversible aspect of his demeanor. If he's lived in this nine-to-five routine, it's impossible to regain a dignified, presentable style. It makes no difference if he consults Italian men's formalwear magazines: the starched collar and the mediocrity of his shoes will be permanent shackles.

Marcelo seems like a stranger to this world of weighed-up sacrifices. He's the sort of person you'd expect to have a healthy hobby: five-a-side soccer on the weekends, energy drinks, massage parlors where they call the prostitutes “helpmates.” He looks young, so young that instead of two, there are five years between him and my mother. And it's not that my mom is really showing her age. She makes superhuman efforts to keep herself in shape. Almost suicidal diets, expensive depilatory treatments for her hairy body, cowboy boots she buys in the most expensive store in Los Girasoles, and the discreet but ever-present foundation makeup.

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