The Girl in the Photograph

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The Girl in the Photograph Page 30

by Lygia Fagundes Telles


  There, the illuminations are starting. I turn my eyes away from Lorena.

  “Rotten chic, eh, Annie? Morocco.”

  “It matches her shoes, poor thing. It’s a shame I don’t have any silver earrings.”

  Did she say earrings? Earrings. She’s going to pretend that Ana is alive. Better yet, we should dress her in a chache-mort of the same genre as the cache-misère Mama gave me, it’s more important to hide death than to dress it up. But young people don’t need to close their coffin lids.

  “I don’t have any cigarettes,” I say, dumping out the contents of the purse that waits for me, open.

  Quickly I spread out the thousands of little items and search. What are these envelopes? Aspirin. There’s everything in Ana’s purse, from wads of dirty cotton to a spool of black thread with a needle stuck in it. There’s even a man’s watch. And a small silver cup with a name engraved on it: Maximiliano. That’s the lover. Isn’t it strange he doesn’t know yet? At this very minute he must be waiting for her in some bar, some nightclub. Or at the apartment where they usually met. I look at the watch: It stopped at midnight. Or at noon, there’s no more time, no more death, he’s just wondering why she’s late, but then she’s often late. I open the zipper of the little plastic makeup kit stuffed with lipsticks, various colored pencils, powder puffs, brushes. A little bottle of green eyeliner pops up like the pit of a peach. Nothing, nothing else. The handbag has returned to its state of innocence, futile, merely futile. Her student card is out-of-date, from the time she did her entrance exam. A little photo of her with long hair, denser eyebrows. The signature in a defiant hand: Ana Clara Conceição. Between the student card and its plastic cover, a photograph of a laughing boy, blond and radiant in a black sweater. Max, the Max of the silver cup, etc. I tear up the picture into little pieces and advise Lorena:

  “Before the police come, get that little address book, that black one, remember? And rip up pictures of any gentlemen you find. I thought I wanted to see that SOB behind bars but now I don’t know.”

  “I won’t leave any clues, dear. I spent my childhood reading detective novels, I know what I’m doing,” she says as she fastens the silver buttons of the dress. “What are you looking for, Lião?”

  “Nothing,” I say grabbing a cigarette. I stare at the comb which more than once I saw Lorena washing in her ammoniasmelling solutions. I cover it with a handkerchief when she approaches:

  “There’s a watch here, and this cup, put them away.”

  “I’ll give the cup to Mother Alix, poor thing. The watch you keep, didn’t you lose yours? Keep it, dear. It’ll be very useful on the trip,” she decides adjusting it on my arm. “It’s a goodquality watch, the police would have gotten it, can you imagine? But isn’t it really strange? Ana Clara doesn’t have a single relative, nobody in this world, nobody! I was thinking about this a while ago, there’s not a single person to notify, not even a friend, she mentioned some names but they were all very vague. Only the nuns. And us. I’m not even going to tell Max, it’s more prudent for him not to show up, poor thing. What about the fiancé?”

  “The fiancè,” I repeat and don’t have the strength to look at Lorena. I prefer to look at Ana Clara in her evening gown, is it a party? I cover the watch with my hand. Out of all this I am gaining a watch.

  “Incredible. That she has nobody in the world.”

  “There are things more incredible still,” I say and look closer as I see her open the plastic case that was in the purse.

  “What are you going to do?”

  But it isn’t necessary to ask; her gestures are clear. Orderly. She takes out the pinkish base cream and begins to put makeup on Ana Clara’s face. She uses only her first and middle fingers for the operation, or to be exact, only the tips of them, spreading the makeup in circular movements as she squeezes it out of the tube. Her hands move quickly, models of efficiency.

  “Many a time I helped Annie when her hand shook too hard. And lately she was so unsteady, she’d turn up here completely out of kilter, sometimes she couldn’t even put the brush back into the eyeliner bottle! Oh Lord. What madness.”

  She says what madness so superficially, the words don’t correspond to the order that reigns in this room. In this death. The importance of appearances, Mama underlined. Nausea rises in a gush to my mouth. I go into the bathroom. If I ran my fingers down my throat … but Lorena already warned me, no noise. Music yes, the record is there turning around and around, a little more and the needle will wear through the plastic, but cries and vomiting, no. Why? Who knows, she’s the one who’s taking charge of the evening, she has her reasons. Ideas. She’s been doctor and priest; now she’s the perfect undertaker inspired after the American pattern. Tirelessly, unflinchingly, she prepares the customer as if she had spent her whole life doing nothing else. Her nickname in the Department is Fainting Magnolia.

  “I’d like to get drunk, see. And I can’t.”

  “Come here, Lião, come see how pretty she looks!”

  I wash out my mouth and go to see how pretty she looks. Kneeling at the head of the bed, Lorena is brushing green eyeshadow over Ana Clara’s eyelids. From time to time she moves back a touch to see the effect. She looks satisfied, the brush in her left hand and the eyeshadow box in her right, she’s left-handed. Luminous under the pink makeup, the face now seems more distant to me. Disinterested. Is it only my impression or did the half-moons of her eyes diminish? They’re slightly cloudy, as if the mist of the night had invaded them. I don’t remember ever having seen her so well dressed or so well made-up as she is right now. On the armchair are the silver chains.

  “What about the necklaces?” I ask.

  “The dress already has embroidery, it’ll look better without them,” she breathes, getting the hairbrush. “It’s dry.”

  Her hair. Special attention to her hair. I go to get the bottle of perfume, I insist on bringing the perfume myself.

  “This kind, Lena?” I ask and can’t contain myself any longer. I take a deep breath before I speak: “You’re exaggerating, see. You know you’re exaggerating, don’t you? We’re here like two complete lunatics, pay attention, Lena, they’re going to put her on a stretcher or something and from here she’ll go straight to the autopsy, do you know what an autopsy is? The doctor comes and cuts everything up and then sews it together again. End of story. All this stuff you’re doing will be undone on the marble slab. It’s meaningless, Lena, meaningless!”

  “No, it isn’t. Let go of me, dear, we’re late.”

  “But she isn’t going to any party!”

  She takes the silver-buckled shoes from the floor and delicately slips them onto the dead girl’s feet. The nylon stocking formed a wrinkle at the ankle. Smoothing it, she smiles through her tears:

  “That’s where you’re wrong. No, dear, I’m not crazy, not at all. It’s that idea of mine. While I was praying, remember? I asked God to give me an inspiration and He did. The car keys are in your pocket, aren’t they? I saw them. Excellent. Wait a minute, let me put on my sandals.”

  In two large leaps, Lia went to the window. She threw it open and inhaled through her mouth, smoothing her hair down with her hands. She fumbled for her cap in her pocket, slowly pulling it down over her ears, and regarded the big house. Not a single star. Not a single cat. The fog was so dense that when she stretched out her hand she almost expected to encounter resistance. She shut the window. Lorena had already put on her sandals and was folding up the red bathrobe. Lia touched her shoulder.

  “Lena, pretty soon it will be morning, I have to get out before morning comes, right? But I don’t want to leave you alone, tell me quick what this idea of yours is and I’ll help you, but hurry, hurry because your watch says it’s after three!”

  “Yes, let’s go immediately,” she says entering the bathroom, the red robe tight against her chest.

  She must be remembering her brother with his red shirt, oh, what a night! What a night! thought Lia closing her eyes. She heard Lorena open
and close the dirty-clothes hamper.

  “Just think, I had almost forgotten the Agnus Dei on her blouse, it was pinned on the inside, poor thing. Mother Alix gave it to her, let me pin it on, it will go with her. Please, dear, get the purse. Is the card inside? The student card?”

  “Everything’s here. She’s so thin, I think I could carry her alone but it’s confusing, better for you to get one arm and I’ll take the other. Shall we go?” she said and stopped. Why had Lorena asked her if the car keys were in her pocket? She patted it.

  “Let’s go, Lena, this purse is in the way, you can take it later.”

  “But the purse has to go with her, dear.”

  “To bed?”

  “But she’s not going to bed,” said Lorena. She faced her friend: “Ana Clara is not going to bed.”

  “No?”

  “Of course not. She’s not going to be found in her room, she didn’t die here in her room, she died somewhere else.”

  “Where?”

  “In a little park. Why do you think I went through all these preparations? She’ll be found in a little park, I’ve passed by it thousands of times, there’s a bench under a tree, it’s the prettiest park that ever existed She sat down on the park bench after the party, she went to a party and on the way back, sat down there. Or was left there, it doesn’t matter. They’ll find her, call the police, advise Mother Alix, the whole business. Now do you understand why the purse has to go with the student card in it? God made Mama send the car,” murmured Lorena pinning the medallion on the underside of the collar of the dress. “Look how everything is fitting into place: the car, the fog. I’ve never seen a more providential fog, the night was absolutely clear, remember?”

  Lia sat down on the floor, closing her perplexed mouth. She shook her head back and forth repeatedly and sniffed, hands over her face. Then, laughing:

  “Lorena, you’re joking, aren’t you? Do you mean we’re going to take Ana Clara out in the street, or better, leave her sitting in a charming little park and come back? Is that your marvelous idea, Lena? Is it? Is that why you asked me about the keys? About Mama’s car? Huh?”

  “Please, Lião, don’t start getting sarcastic, think a little, Ana Clara cannot die of overdose in Our Lady of Fatima Roominghouse. She cannot. Do you know what that might mean for the nuns? For Mother Alix? She loved Mother Alix so much, she wouldn’t want to involve her in a scandal like that! I’m doing everything as Annie would want it done, God inspired me, I prayed for inspiration and He sent it, after I got this idea I felt a certain peace. I can alter things, dear. Even if death has no remedy, at least I can remedy the circumstances.”

  “What you mean is the appearances.”

  “Lião dear, I understand perfectly that it’s a big risk for you, I’m not asking you to help me, of course. But I’m going to do exactly what I planned, there’s no point in discussing it further,” she said and glanced at her watch again. “I have half an hour to go and come back, can you imagine? Just help me down the stairs and then I’ll do the rest by myself. Give me the key. I’ll leave it on your windowsill when I get back.”

  With decisive steps Lia went over to the dead girl. She secured the strap of the handbag over her wrist and rubbed her eyes and nose hard.

  “I’ve got a goddamn allergy, when I get nervous this itching starts.”

  “I have a decongestant pill, do you want one?”

  “No, what I want is to carry this girl. Let’s go. Have we forgotten anything?”

  Lorena ran to turn off the record player.

  “The light stays on, let them think I spent the night studying with a classmate, they must have heard us moving about. Especially Sister Bula.”

  That’s why the saxophone’s been wailing all night long? She thinks of everything, thought Lia wiping her nose on her sleeve. She grinned, taking Ana Clara in her arms.

  “Never mind,” she said as Lorena went to her aid. “On the steps you help me.”

  Light, yes. I knew she’d be light, I knew it. I open the window so that its light brightens the stairway a little. We divide the weight; Lião goes in front holding her by the legs and I come behind, supporting the trunk of her body. It curves sweetly back like a hammock. I smell her perfume. Good to have given her that bath. Good that this fog gathered.

  “Don’t let her shoes fall,” I say as Ana Clara’s foot brushes against the grillwork.

  I had calculated this too, that the stairway would be the most difficult part, it’s very narrow and we can’t even breathe loudly, Annie is light when transported over a level surface. But down these long cramped steps … I knew too that Lião would be clumsy, she’s strong but she panics, almost falls, if I’m not careful we’ll all three roll down to the bottom. She’s puffing, and to compensate I breathe as silently as possible, oh Lord, help us now, help us because it’s terribly hard. No, Ana, don’t slide, dear, why are you resisting all of a sudden? Help us, don’t throw yourself around that way, the park is beautiful, you’re going to like sitting there on the bench, the tree has birds, isn’t that nice? Later Mother Alix will talk to Max, who knows but what your death will help him. The miracle that didn’t happen with you, right? Help me oh Lord, help me.

  “Careful, Lião! Slower, dear. Shall we stop for a second?”

  We stop. I support Annie’s head on my knees and thrust my hands inside her sleeves to hold her arms better. I feel her underarms beneath my fingers; just the other day I loaned her my razor, it’s still in her room. A brand-new blade. And I remember the afternoon (when was it?) when the three of us were in my room: I was shaving my legs, Annie was tweezing her eyebrows with my tweezers and Lião was cutting something out of a newspaper. When she raised her arm (she was wearing a sleeveless T-shirt) I got up and gave her the razor, for the love of God, Lião, shave those underarms! She obeyed, making her distinctions: “Underarms is when they’re shaved, see. Armpits is when they aren’t.” Now here I am recalling a nonsensical thing like that. With the same desire to laugh as I laughed then.

  “Let’s go, Lena. Are you rested?”

  “Yes, let’s go. Let’s go.”

  Why have I never before noticed how long this stairway is? It’s enormous.

  “Didn’t somebody turn on a light?” asked Lião. “Isn’t that a light?”

  “It doesn’t matter, they can’t see us,” I whisper, more into Ana Clara’s ear than into Lião’s. “We’re almost at the bottom, just a little farther.”

  We almost run when we reach the driveway. A cat begins to meow furiously, excellent, let its meowing cover our steps that seem to grind up the gravel, another thing I’d never noticed, how indiscreet these stones are.

  “The noise they make! Don’t kick them that way, dear.”

  “But who’s kicking? Close your mouth, Lena!”

  I don’t close it, I want to talk, talk without stopping now that we’re almost to the gate, the first part is over, hallelujah! We look up and down. The street is deserted, at least as far as we can see; beyond is only a wall of fog. The Corcel is opaque, without contours. I hold Ana Clara’s body up against the gate as Lião opens the car door, ah, God bless Mama and her generosity, blessed be the night and the houses with their sleeping eyes.

  “Now you go,” I say. “From here on I can manage by myself, the most complicated part is over.”

  She helps me arrange Ana Clara on the front seat. Then she gets in. She sits on the other side, puts her arm around Ana and slams the car door.

  “I’ll hold her, you drive,” she says without looking at me. “Let’s get going.”

  I dry my eyes and turn on the headlights.

  “Oh, Lião.”

  She’s smiling with her teeth gritted.

  “You’re demented but I’m not going to leave you alone in this. It’ll be lots of fun if they catch us transporting a cadaver, oh, what fun,” she said shaking her head, laughing out loud. “Transporting a cadaver in the middle of the night, me with my passport in hand. Isn’t it original?”


  I begin to giggle too when I look in the mirror and see her black cap stuck over her eyebrows. Leaning against the seatback, Ana Clara’s head seems to recline so naturally (I can’t see Lião’s arm locking her body against the seat) that we look exactly as I had planned, two friends driving home a third who drank too much and passed out.

  “They’re not going to catch us, dear.”

  “A cadaver whose cause of death is extremely suspect,” she continues opening the window a crack. “Don’t you study law? You must know we’re slightly illegal, don’t you? You think of everything, think of an answer to give the policeman.”

  I drive slowly, with my face almost plastered to the glass, oh Lord, the friendly-enemy fog is even thicker, I have the impression that I’m driving through a nebula, the headlights are so powerless. Don’t let a car come now, not now! I plead and continue talking, Lião is in a good mood, we need to maintain our good humor.

  “I’ll say that Ana got home in terrible shape, we decided to take her to an emergency clinic and got lost in the fog, who wouldn’t get lost on a night like this?”

  “You’re imaginative, Lena. A very privileged little head, yours. But there’s a thing called autopsy, the lawyer will say she was dead longer than you affirmed. Or not?”

  I had almost forgotten that word: autopsy. The end as sharp as a stiletto. The marble. The rigor of the professional hand cutting so professionally, still the scent of perfumed soap, still the talc. But in any case, she’s so pretty, isn’t she, Doctor? So well made-up, so clean. I know you execute your duty dispassionately but this time you’re going to do your work with a different spirit, beauty still arouses the emotions.

  “Do you think I’m crazy, Lião?”

  “Crazy enough. But I am too, see. And this one here beside us. I dunno, don’t worry. Is it far? This park, we’ve been driving for hours! Quick, Lena, step on the gas pedal, we’re slow as turtles!”

 

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