The Impostor (MacLehose Press Editions Book 9)

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The Impostor (MacLehose Press Editions Book 9) Page 15

by Javier Cercas


  According to most of those who knew him, and those who wrote about him – at least before the scandal broke – our man spent the post-war period as a tenacious opponent of the dictatorship in addition to being a tireless visitor to its prisons, police stations and dungeons; furthermore: for many people, Marco seemed to have embodied the innate rebelliousness of the Spanish (or at least the Catalans) and the passion for freedom that prevented them from meekly submitting to forty years of Franco’s tyranny without a fight. Marco’s own statements on the subject leave little room for doubt: in 1978, he told Pons Prades in The Kommandant’s Pigs that, after his alleged stay in Flossenbürg in the mid-1940s, “I once again joined the clandestine struggle in Spain,” and that what saved his life was “immediately plunging back into the [political] fray” (in case this was not clear enough, he adds that “the underground resistance in the confederate militia [meaning, the anarchists] in Spain in the late 1940s was thrilling”); in 2002, in A Memoir of Hell, he told Jordi Bassa that when he returned to Spain in 1945, he “carried on the clandestine struggle until 1975”; then, in May 2005, just as the Marco scandal was breaking, in an issue of the history magazine L’Avenç devoted to the sixtieth anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi camps, our man published an article recounting his fictional memories of the liberation of Flossenbürg in which he claimed that he left Germany in 1945 to return to Barcelona, “to do the only work [he] knew how to do: to live for life and to do so fighting for freedom”, and if this is still not clear enough, he added that “the thirty years of clandestine struggle that followed were the only way to pick up life where [he] had left off”. Finally, in September 2001, when awarding Marco the Creu de Sant Jordi, its highest civil decoration, the autonomous Catalan government specifically cited among his virtues his years of struggle against the Franco regime.

  The phrases of Marco that I have placed in inverted commas are curious. On the one hand, it is obvious that our man is attempting to evoke a past as a staunch anti-Franco resistant; on the other hand, they are as nebulous and vague as all his references to his political commitment during the dictatorship : Marco uses the word “struggle”, he uses the word “clandestine”, he uses various other abstract terms, but he never mentions what precisely this struggle entailed, which specific organisation, or party or underground movement he belonged to, nor the specific names of those who joined him in the “clandestine struggle”. It is true that the biographical and autobiographical accounts of Marco’s life focused chiefly on his time in the Nazi camps, while his struggle against Francoism was mentioned only in passing, perhaps because that was not the point at issue, or more likely because it was taken for granted, as though it were impossible that a Spaniard like Marco would not have opposed the dictatorship. It is also true that, on occasion, Marco did reference a specific event: in January 2006, for example, he wrote an (unpublished) letter to the editor of La Vanguardia in which he mentions a supposed confrontation, initially verbal and later physical with Luis de Galinsoga, a Franco sympathiser who edited the newspaper during the 1950s, famous for uttering a thoroughly stupid phrase that caused a scandal and eventually cost him his job: “All Catalans are shit”; and in March 1988, in an article published in the newspaper Avui, Marco presented himself as one of the only people who, one morning fourteen years earlier, gathered outside the gates of the prison of Modelo de Barcelona waiting for the remains of Salvador Puig Antich, a young anarchist executed by garrotte during the dying days of the Franco regime by order of a military tribunal. But even in these rare cases (and assuming they can genuinely be considered to be acts of resistance), everything in Marco’s account is vague and insipid, from the way in which he presents the events to the precise role he played in them. This nebulous collection of vague stories has led many of Marco’s friends and acquaintances to see the post-war period as the most shadowy and mysterious part of his life.

  Is this true?

  Absolutely not. Here, as so often within and without Marco’s life, what is mysterious is the desire to see a mystery where there is none. In fact, it is much more difficult to piece together Marco’s life before his return from Germany than afterwards, not least because there are numerous living witnesses to this latter period who are in a position to corroborate or contest, to complement or clarify Marco’s claims, which partly explains his reticence and his evasiveness. There is no mystery, there are no shadows: for more than thirty years, from his return from Germany in 1943 until the death of Franco in 1975, or to be more precise, until the early years of democracy, Marco was not active in any political party or any trade union, he had no dealings with the clandestine struggle, nor did he oppose the Franco regime in any way, he was not a frequent guest of its prisons or police stations, he was never arrested for his political beliefs nor did he encounter any problems with the authorities – or at least no real or remotely serious problems. Before now, Marco had always sided with the majority, and through the years of the Franco regime he continued to side with the vast majority of Spaniards who, willingly or otherwise, meekly accepted the dictatorship and whose deafening silence in no small part explains why it lasted forty years. It is that simple. It is that easy. Once again, this is no reason to reproach Marco; no-one, as I have said before, is obliged to be a hero; or to put it another way, it would be as facile as it would be unjust to reproach Marco for the fact that, like the vast majority of his compatriots, he did not have the courage to defy a dictatorship capable of jailing, torturing and executing dissidents. No: there can be no reproach. None, but for the fact that, many years later, he sought to occupy a place in the past he had not earned, attempting to persuade people that throughout the Franco regime he had belonged to the tiny, valiant minority who said No, rather than to the millions of fanatics, rogues, cowards and indifferent who said Yes.

  *

  And so, during the post-war period, Marco lived a normal life or a semblance of a normal life or what we have mysteriously agreed to call a normal life, but this does not mean that his actual biography is not interesting; quite the reverse, it is much more interesting than the trashy legend of intrepid adventures that he attempted to palm off as his real life.

  On his return from Germany, Marco moved back into his in-laws’ overcrowded house at Sicilia 354 with his wife, his son, his wife’s sisters and a brother-in-law, and, in the eyes of this humble, tight-knit, sprawling family that worked hard during the week and spent weekends at the beach, in the mountains, or in the cooperative on calle Valencia, he once again became the intelligent, cultivated, hardworking, practical, cheerful, entertaining and charming young man who was unfailingly affectionate to his wife, ever ready to help his parents-in-law, to advise and protect his sisters-in-law, to do a favour for anyone who needed it; but now his heightened prestige as a traveller and a man of the world turned him into something akin to the leader or the centre of the clan. He returned to work in Felip Homs’ car repair garage on París near the corner of Viladomat, opposite the Industrial School, and there were only two related problems that troubled the happy and prosperous future his innate optimism sketched out before him. One: he was in Barcelona on leave and was scheduled to return to Kiel when his leave was over, something he had no wish to do. Two: if he arranged not to return to Kiel, he would have to fulfil the military service that he had avoided precisely by going to Kiel.

  He did not go back to Kiel, he stayed in Barcelona and he did not do his military service. How did he do this? How did he manage to shirk both his civil obligations in Germany and his military obligations in Spain? I don’t know. It is true that, in the late summer and autumn of 1943, with the course of the war marching inexorably towards Hitler’s defeat, the Spanish authorities reached the conclusion that sending workers to Germany had been a bad deal and one that should be cancelled as soon as possible, so it is more than likely that they made little fuss if one of the workers did not return to his post. On the other hand, while Marco was in Germany, the Spanish military authorities had written to him, dema
nding that he fulfil his outstanding obligations, but his family replied that he was in Germany as a voluntary worker – a fact confirmed by the Ministry for Foreign Affairs – so the military had no reason to know that Marco was now back in Barcelona and therefore no reason to contact him. This may be what happened: perhaps everyone forgot about Marco, or ceased to care about him; perhaps Marco duped everyone yet again; perhaps it was a fortuitous combination of all three. Whatever the case, our man does not remember, or says that he does not remember. What is certain is that, in the midst of this double or triple misunderstanding, Marco, a master of confusion, eluded the twin swords hanging over him, and the future opened up before him.

  On June 25, 1947, Marco’s first daughter, Ana María, was born. At the time, though he did not know it, he was preparing to embark on a new life. By now he had left Felip Homs’ workshop and, having spent some time working in a furniture factory and later as a mechanic (mostly repairing and overhauling taxis, trucks and cars), he got a job as a travelling salesman with a car parts company called Comercial Anónima Blanch. It was a very different job to any he had done previously; it was also much better, or that, at least, is how he and the family saw things: he would leave home in a suit and tie and, between his salary and his commission, he was earning a lot of money, certainly much more than he had earned in any of his previous jobs. For Marco, this new position did not simply represent a financial gain, but also an advancement in his prestige and a more varied and intense social life. Marco’s circle of friends changed and he began to drink and to go out at night. This was something that he had never done, and his wife quickly noticed he was no longer the affectionate, attentive husband he had been, and began to feel that he was strange and distant. Anita immediately confided her fears to her sister Montserrat, eight years her junior, and one evening, her sister suggested they follow Marco.

  Sixty-four years later, now more than eighty years old, Montserrat Beltrán still clearly remembered what happened that evening, and related the story to me in her apartment in Ciudad Badía, on the outskirts of Barcelona. One day, having decided to find out what was going on, she and Anita posted themselves outside the offices of Comercial Anónima Blanch and saw Marco emerge with two colleagues. They did not approach them directly, but followed the trio at a distance. They followed them for some time but lost sight of them when they came to calle Sepúlveda. Confused, they decided it was best simply to wait, confident that Marco could not have gone far and would reappear sooner or later. So it proved. After a while, Marco emerged from a nearby building. He was not alone, but now he was not accompanied by his co-workers, but walking arm in arm with two women, and the sisters instantly realised that the building Marco was leaving was a brothel and these two women were prostitutes. Montserrat says that, in a flash, before she could do anything to stop her, her sister rushed over to Marco, pushed between him and the women, grabbed his arm and said something. In the years that followed, Montserrat’s sister often told her what she had said to her husband; what she said was: “I can take your arm too, can’t I?”

  Marco’s wife and her family tried to forget the incident, to put it down to the dubious company he was keeping and the demands of his new job. It proved impossible. At least it was impossible to ignore the fact that Marco had fundamentally changed, he was no longer the perfect husband, son-in-law and brother-in-law he had been. In fact, from this point, things went from bad to worse. In 1949, Marco attempted to emigrate to Argentina with his family, though in the end he abandoned the project, possibly because he could not get the necessary documents to leave the country. Shortly afterwards, the police came to the house looking for him. He was accused of theft, but failing to find him there, the officers took his father-in-law to the police station where he had to make a statement. Marco made a statement that day or perhaps the following day and managed to wriggle out of trouble almost unscathed, with just a promise not to reoffend and to report to the police station once a fortnight. The Beltrán family were shocked, but even so they did not ask Marco for an explanation, or they were satisfied with whatever vague excuses he offered. However, some days or weeks later, Marco was back at the police station, and this time he was not as lucky: he was held for several nights at the Modelo prison and came out with his head shaved, a stigma the Francoist police sometimes used to humiliate common criminals. Some days later, there was the wedding of his wife’s only remaining unmarried sister, Paquita. Marco attended the ceremony, but the following day, without no explanation and no word to anyone, he left, never to return.

  *

  Marco’s disappearance was a complete catastrophe for the Beltrán family; his wife sank into depression. It would be seven years before they had word of Marco again. A friend of his turned up at the Beltráns’ door one day to say that Marco was sorry for what had happened and that he was prepared to help his wife and children, and from that point, our man began to pay some of the family expenses, such as the school fees of his daughter, Ana María; from time to time he would pick her up outside the school gates, and sometimes he would give her a present and or a little money, as he did her brother Toni. This, however, was the extent of his relationship with his first family. Anita and her children were all too aware that Marco had erected an almost impenetrable barrier between them and his new life, about which they knew nothing; his children telephoned him at his new home now and again, but they had to introduce themselves as his godchildren. In the early 1960s, Marco’s wife asked him for money to put a down payment on an apartment in Badalona, and Marco gave it to her. In 1968, he walked his daughter down the aisle. In 1969, he became godfather to his first grandson. In 1974, having just given birth to her third child, Ana María called him at home and he told her that his telephone was being tapped by the police and not to call again. She did not call again. Once again, she and her brother stopped seeing him.

  Almost twenty years passed, during which they heard about Marco only in the newspapers, on the radio and the television. One day, Ana María went to see him at the offices of FaPaC, the confederation of school parents’ associations of which Marco was now vice-chairman. She found him and they had coffee together. This is how she discovered that her father was living in Sant Cugat, that he had remarried and had two daughters, meaning that she had two sisters. In September 1999, Marco’s first child and his only son, Toni, died, but the news of his death did not reach him until much later, when he accidentally bumped into one of his sisters-in-law while strolling along the Rambla. The years that followed saw Marco’s meteoric rise to media stardom, something that the Beltrán family watched with growing unease: his wife, Anita, could not understand why Marco claimed to have been in a concentration camp when she knew that he had never set foot in a concentration camp; Ana María’s children, Marco’s grandchildren, did not understand why he kept his first family a secret; his daughter, Ana María, pretended that she completely understood in order to pacify her mother and her children, but in fact she did not understand at all. And when the scandal broke and the whole world discovered that Marco was an impostor, Ana María felt both pity and shame for her father. It was only at this point that she wanted to meet her sisters. Marco did not object to introducing them, perhaps because he knew that he could not prevent them from meeting sooner or later (or simply because the scandal had broken down his defences), though he did not do so without first telling his wife and daughters the truth. That he had another family. That he had been married in the 1940s. That of that first marriage, he still had a wife, a daughter and several grandchildren. This was how Ana María Marco came to meet Elizabeth and Ona Marco, who were her sisters, though they were young enough to be her daughters, and this was how Marco came to divorce Anita, who in the intervening half-century had not remarried nor had any known partners. Anita died in January 2012. Ana María is still alive. She is a passionate, cheerful, staunchly Catholic woman; her father abandoned her when she was three years old, but it is impossible to get her to say a single word against him.

&nbs
p; 3

  During the many months I spent researching this book that I had been so reluctant to write, quite a few strange things occurred, or quite a few things that seemed strange to me when they occurred.

  I cannot relate them all; I shall recount one of them.

  For most of his life, Marco had earned his living as a mechanic, and from the mid-Fifties until the early 1980s, especially during the period when he was living with his second wife, María Belver, he owned, as part of a cooperative, a number of garages in the Collblanc district of L’Hospitalet, a city just south of Barcelona. The most longstanding of these was called Auto-Taller Cataluña, but when I visited it with my wife, one afternoon in late July 2013, it had changed its name and was now called Taller Viñals.

  I met the owner, David Viñals, in the tiny office at the back of the tiny premises. Sitting in front of an ancient computer, Viñals looked buried under a vast pile of invoices, papers and box files. He remembered the previous mechanic very well, not simply because he remembered buying the repair shop, or negotiating the purchase, but because, much later, he heard talk of the scandal, but, he told me, communications between them had been occasional and practical and, gesturing wearily around him at the humming computer and the chaos of the office, added that, right now he was snowed under but that, come September, he would try to dig out contact details for someone who might have worked with Marco. I thanked him and said I would call him in September. He seemed reluctant to see me go empty-handed, and just as I was leaving he added:

 

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