Thirsty for mirages, human culture accepts any story that goes a little further than “once upon a time.” The predators who arrived in Peru from Spain, centuries ago, tore apart the stones and heart of Potosí. The bleeding remains of a millenary culture were left drying in the sun. There was once a continent that was even shaped like a cornucopia. Its inhabitants thought the looters and executioners were gods. They realized too late that all the psalms, revelations and holy tablets were a farce.
More recently, the lure of gold brought a swarm of men to this area. They built what was now a ghost town, Piedranegra. These useless mineworks were the vestigial reminder of that fever. But the town continued to grow for a while, even after the hope of finding gold had been extinguished. What were they looking for then, if not an acceptance of defeat, of growing old?
I stroked the walls of the cave as if it was the skin of a woman’s body. It was smooth, even warm in places. I was moved rather than afraid: if I was finally going to confront death, this seemed as good a place as any.
For several minutes, I completely forgot I was looking for someone I was hoping to find alive. That no longer mattered. Something was affecting my limited perception of the world around me. Like Jonah, but without a God who had sent me, I wandered through the darkest shadows.
My only guiding light was pain. Touching the cave walls had given me some relief, but as soon as I groped for my rifle on the ground, I could feel a searing pain in my heart once more. I dropped the Kalashnikov, which would not have been much use in the darkness anyway, and put my hands back on the wall. The pain eased again.
Without intending to, I was touching and caressing the insides of a living being, a geological female who had absorbed my pain and was leading me to her center. Lost to myself, I stumbled along thanks to a life that was not mine.
A faint groan stopped me in my tracks.
It could not have come from far away, although the darkness was so complete I could not fathom from where.
The ebb and flow of my pain was my guide. I moved forward when it lessened, stopped whenever it reappeared, as solid, as merciless as ever. With each tiny but firm step I regained control over my body, and the pain withdrew.
All of a sudden, the groaning seemed to come toward me from a tiny glow, a capsule of light at the far end of the gallery. By now the pain had completely gone, and I ran toward the light. I could breathe as easily as if I were in the open air, although the walls of the gallery narrowed sharply, so that for the last few meters I had to stoop down.
“Isabel!” I said.
She was lying at your feet like a slave or a penitent who had reached this furthest corner of the earth, lost in the wilds, a hole punched in the desert by scrabbling hands desperate to reach the veins of riches that only existed in the greed and delirium of extravagant adventurers, irredeemable loners condemned to a journey that ended only in death.
“Isabel,” I said again. But there was only an intense silence, until finally I heard a muffled groan.
I stretched out my arms and brushed her freezing, wet face with my fingertips. I collapsed on top of her, enfolding her in my embrace. I smothered her moans until they went out like a fire, then tore off her gag with trembling hands.
“Oh, my God,” she said, and her feeble cries rose like a tattered flag in the darkness.
We recognized each other through the touch of our hands. We needed to confirm what we were seeing, to prove this was not simply another trick.
As my fingers ran over Isabel’s face, as they had done along the walls of the mineshaft, it was your face I was searching for. I could not accept that it was you lying there, at the end of the gallery, face up on a stone altar, your eyes open, staring into who knew what abyss. A light still gleamed in your eyes, like a guttering candle in an airless room. It was the fullness of life being snuffed out, the stubborn reflection of your need to fight against yourself, to conquer yourself. If, as you boasted, you were death, then perhaps in this defeat you had reached some kind of immortality.
I do not know if you succeeded, Mireya, but this was the end of the game.
You hid Edmundo’s daughter in here like a spider dragging its prey to the corner of its web. Then, without a word, you drove the stiletto into your own heart.
Isabel thought you were going to kill her, and that was no doubt your intention: to pile up one more dead body in order to postpone your own death. This time though, something went wrong. Staring down at your lifeless, ice-cold body, the open mouth and eyes that only a short while earlier had been peering down a gunsight, searching for my misplaced heart to shatter it, I accepted your decision to quit and, since my instinct for self-preservation is even stronger than my desire, I celebrated it.
Although more than half an hour had gone by, the three musketeers were still waiting for me outside the mine. Shielding themselves behind the 4×4, their recycled guns trained on the mouth of the tunnel, they said they were disappointed when they saw us come out alive.
“We were hoping for a good shoot-out,” Ayala confessed. “A serial killer who hands himself in, a lady with a dagger who spares your life when she has the chance to finish you off, and now you two—strolling out of there arm in arm. It’s not fair.”
“We need action,” Rodríguez said in support. “We kill people. We draw up our report, the doctor here writes his, then the three of us head off to Pro Nobis for a few drinks.”
Despite his profession, Burgos behaved like the most human of the three. He came over, took off his jacket, and draped it round Isabel’s shoulders. Still trembling from fear and cold, she found it impossible to speak.
“How do I explain all this, Martelli?” Ayala said, taking me to one side. “What can I tell my bosses when they ask me why we were away from our posts? How will I justify the expenses?”
“Argentina has imploded again,” I said, trying to calm him. “A government has resigned. Everyone has been buying dollars to hide under their mattresses. The people who toppled the president have taken over without the slightest notion of the consequences … And you’re worried about how to justify two days’ absence and expenses that would not cover the bill for a lunch any of those politicians might have had in a swanky Buenos Aires restaurant. Give me a break, Ayala.”
To boost his morale, I went on to suggest that we call a press conference in which he could be the star. He would be the brains behind an operation that had foiled a plot against the constitutional order, and succeeded at the same time in putting a stop to the activities of a serial killer who had turned out to be two different people.
“Who would believe us, Martelli? The serial killer handed himself in, as meek as a lamb, and at this very moment is probably reading the Bible in his cell. That impostor friend of yours did herself in, and the plotters failed—not because democracy triumphed, but because others beat them to it. Fuck your constitutional order.”
Inspector Ayala was right. He was a practical sort, a man who hunted down poor wretches. A policeman.
We buried Toto Lecuona at the entrance to Piedranegra. Protesting all the while, Rodríguez dug the grave with a spade Burgos always carried in the boot of his car.
“For a doctor of the dead, the scalpel and spade are as essential as a stethoscope for a doctor of the living. You don’t always have a refrigerated room to put a corpse in, and they can’t be left out in the open. Buzzards would pick at the evidence,” he said.
“With this simple act, the burial of this unexpected and unsuccessful defender of justice, I declare the cemetery of Piedranegra open,” Ayala said solemnly in his capacity as the most senior officer present. I threw the traditional first handful of earth onto Toto’s face, where surprise still perched like a crepuscular crow.
We drove away in silence. Burgos took Don Quixote and Sancho Panza in his V.W., while Isabel and I left in the 4×4 Toto had rented. Still shivering with fear and cold, she gave me her version of the whole sad story on the way back to Buenos Aires.
9
&nb
sp; “Daddy told me who you are, Gotán, but I couldn’t speak openly with you without betraying him. ‘Men don’t help each other just so they can boast about it afterward, or expect to be repaid,’ he told me. When he realized he was up to his neck in trouble with C.P.F. and was certain that he was finished whatever he did, he came to see me one night when Mummy was at a mass in her church, the one where they provide you with the papers to pass from one world to the next without having to go through customs.
“‘Your mother is half-crazy,’ he told me. ‘Look after her, but make sure you don’t catch it. Here, take this, in case you should need it.’
“He gave me the security code of his account, which was why they kidnapped me. He also deposited a quarter of a million dollars in a Spanish bank for my mother.”
“She thought they were trying to buy her off,” I said.
“She wasn’t wrong. It was too late, but Daddy was in love with her again when he died. But obviously, after all he had made her suffer, he couldn’t tell her.”
“What about Lorena?”
“A fleeting passion, ‘fresh meat,’ as you would say.”
“Who do you mean by ‘you?’”
“Dirty old men. Stupid ’70s idealists who grow old thinking that 21st-century revolutions can be brought about by fooling around with girls the age of their daughters or granddaughters. Pedophiles.”
“‘To each according to his need.’ We’re still loyal to Lenin.”
“You’re old cretins who can’t stand retirement and crawl back for whatever crumbs you can get. But I’m not one to judge.”
“Thank God for that. How did Edmundo get involved with the G.R.O. in the first place?”
“Initials,” Isabel said. “In Argentina four people get together, think up some initials that sound good for the group, and believe they’ve started a new political movement. For C.P.F., the G.R.O. was no more important than any other N.G.O. they support financially. Capitalists are big gamblers. They take over the tables and couldn’t care less what the croupier calls. They always win—they’re the bank. Daddy was playing a double game: he took on the New Man Foundation to siphon off C.P.F. funds, but at the same time they were using the money for arms trafficking. But while he was playing his game, others were playing him.”
“Like the Relusol cat,” I said. I explained what I meant: in an ancient advertisement for scouring powder, there was a picture of a cat staring at itself in a gleaming frying pan, with the reflection of an infinite number of cats also staring at themselves in an infinite row of frying pans.
“I wasn’t born when that ad appeared,” said Isabel.
“Nor was Félix Jesús, but I stuck a copy I rescued from El Hogar above his litter tray, and he seems to like it.”
In the game of mirrors that C.P.F. and state officials play, the cats are being watched when they think they are staring at themselves as they plot mischief or crimes against humanity.
“What did that stupid ’70s idealist tell you about me?”
For a moment, Isabel held her breath, then exhaled deeply. That was how she prepared to tell someone something they did not want to hear, a way of relaxing while she considered whether it was worth saying or not, if the other person would listen without flying off the handle.
But in this case that person was happy to listen. He could have told Isabel everything she found out from her father, but for the moment preferred to hear somebody else describe what he did all those years ago.
“You’ve always had a weakness for shooting people at close range, haven’t you?” Isabel said, quite bravely: it is no easy matter to call someone who has just saved your life a murderer.
“I had not used a weapon since I was thrown out of the National Shame.”
“Then nostalgia got the better of you.”
“I was tempted by the .38 I found in your glove compartment.”
By now, Isabel was driving. The pain in my chest had returned as soon as we left the mine works, though less intense than before. Burgos said I needed to be opened up to find the piece of stiletto still in there. I hoped he would not be the one to do it.
“When you were sacked you left a lot of bodies behind.”
“Killing is part of the job; that wasn’t why they sacked me.”
“No, they were suspicious because you never caught any guerrilleros.”
“True—somehow they all managed to escape. That was my job, too: to cover the backs of idealists like your old man, people who still believed it was Silvio Rodríguez and Pablo Milanes who made the Cuban Revolution. Why did you have a .38 in your glove box? For self-defense?”
“It was Daddy’s. He gave it to me with the account number, when he realized he was trapped. Lecuona had suggested you join the G.R.O., and Daddy liked the idea. It meant you could be together again in something that was worth the effort, like thirty years ago. But the G.R.O. high command, and La Negra in particular, had other ideas.”
“Debora is her name. It’s about time we stopped all this noms de guerre nonsense. We’re nothing more than killers.”
The speedometer climbed to 150 kilometers per hour. In a few seconds, Burgos’ V.W. was a distant blue speck in the rearview mirror. I asked Isabel to take her foot off the accelerator.
“Listen to me, then. If I can’t talk, I accelerate. I’m fed up with silence, Gotán. I grew up with it.”
There was not much more for me to listen to, but I did not like what I heard. Isabel Cárcano, a magnificent 23-year-old, told me all you had kept quiet about, Mireya.
She told me you recruited Toto Lecuona. You sold him the lie that it could all begin again. He left his Canary Island paradise hoping to construct another in his home country. Before that you sold the same lie to Edmundo, who was as dazzled by the idea of returning to his revolutionary youth as he was by Lorena the blond.
“It’s true that I loved Debora too. But I have no idea who she really is.”
“Who she was,” Isabel said.
“She appeared in my life one night, at one of those sordid tango dance halls I used to go to when loneliness became too much for me. I never told her I had been a policeman.”
“So you really thought she fell in love at first sight with a toilet salesman?”
Isabel laughed out loud and slowed down until Burgos caught us up. She flicked the indicator in response to his flashing headlights. I did not reply, but sat staring out at the empty countryside, the vast, sandy plain. We were still traveling at 120, but it felt as though we were stationary.
I lit a cigarette. Isabel took another that I passed to her, “Even though I’ve given up smoking,” she said. I told her the doctor’s theory: that two or three a day help prevent cancer. She agreed, we can’t give everything up. The world’s gone crazy, nowadays nobody smokes, nobody eats fat, people care more about whales and penguins than they do about street kids, homeless and dying of cold. They want to ban the bomb, but they dream of somebody wiping out the entire Arab world.
“Debora left me when she found out I had been in the National Shame during the dictatorship.”
“That wasn’t why she left you. You’d already been hoodwinked.”
“You call falling in love being hoodwinked?”
“While I was her prisoner, she told me one of your exploits had been to shoot an army officer, a brigade commander.”
“That’s true, although there’s no report about it, so I don’t know how Debora could have known. After the ’76 coup the guy organized death squads in Morón, just outside Buenos Aires. They hunted people down, looted their homes—nothing remarkable in those days. The guerrilleros in the area began to drop one by one. I didn’t ask anybody’s permission. I knew him, and I knew where he lived, so one day I went to his place. He showed me in: “What a surprise, Martelli,” the bastard greeted me. “We haven’t seen each other since Caracas.” We had been together at a congress for the military and police in Venezuela, organized by the Yankee intelligence services. We came back with diplomas and everyt
hing, we looked like university professors. I still have the pictures in a trunk somewhere.”
“I heard he was pleased to see you. You shot him in the back of the head while he was pouring you coffee.”
“What was I supposed to do, read him his rights? Who told you all this anyway? He lived alone, he died alone.”
“No, he didn’t live or die alone. He was separated from his wife and had a young daughter. Over time she grew up and learned to dance the tango.”
10
Burgos flashed his lights and signaled for us to stop at a service-station café.
“I’m asleep at the wheel,” he said, staring into his mug of black coffee. “I can tell because what I’m dreaming about has nothing to do with the road in front. All of a sudden I find myself on a Caribbean island, stretched out on the beach, surrounded by dead bodies. I don’t have to do the autopsies because in a couple of hours the sun splits them open like the sharpest scalpel. That’s the life!”
Ayala and Rodríguez were fast asleep in the back of the V.W. Isabel told Burgos that perhaps he should have a rest too.
“No, I prefer to nod off on the straights,” the doctor replied. “You stay close behind me, and sound your horn if I start doing zigzags.”
So we set off again. It was still three hundred kilometers to Bahía Blanca, and night was falling. We did not try to stop the doctor driving. We trusted to fate. “Nothing will happen that is not already written,” Isabel said, although she confessed she was worried, not about Burgos and his companions, but about me.
“I thought I knew you, Gotán. Daddy had such a romantic view of you.”
“He kept the truth from you. Nobody is proud of having a policeman for a friend. We’re the hidden face, the Mr. Hydes for all those Dr. Jekylls with secretaries and the latest mobiles. And worse still, even if the revolution we were fighting for had triumphed, we would have gone on being policemen. At least capitalism gave me the opportunity to sell toilets.”
No One Loves a Policeman Page 26