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874 lines
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FICTION-ONLINE
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An Internet Literary Magazine
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Volume 4, Number 6
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November-December, 1997
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EDITOR'S NOTE:
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FICTION-ONLINE is a literary magazine publishing
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electronically through e-mail and the Internet on a bimonthly basis.
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The contents include short stories, play scripts or excerpts, excerpts
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of novels or serialized novels, and poems. Some contributors to the
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magazine are members of the Northwest Fiction Group of
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Washington, DC, a group affiliated with Washington Independent
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Writers. However, the magazine is an independent entity and solicits
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and publishes material from the public.
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To subscribe or unsubscribe or for more information, please e-mail
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a brief request to
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ngwazi@clark.net
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To submit manuscripts for consideration, please e-mail to the
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same address, with the ms in ASCII format, if possible included as
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part of the message itself, rather than as an attachment.
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Back issues of the magazine may be obtained by e-mail from
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the editor or by anonymous ftp (or gopher) from
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ftp.etext.org
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where issues are filed in the directory
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/pub/Zines/ASCII/Fiction_Online. This same directory may also be
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located with your browser at the corresponding website
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http://www.etext.org
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The FICTION-ONLINE home page, courtesy of the Writer's
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Center, Bethesda, Maryland, may be accessed at the following URL:
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http://www.writer.org/folmag/topfollm.htm
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COPYRIGHT NOTICE: The copyright for each piece of
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material published is retained by its author. Each subscriber is
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licensed to possess one electronic copy and to make one hard copy for
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personal reading use only. All other rights, including rights to copy
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or publish in whole or in part in any form or medium, to give readings
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or to stage performances or filmings or video recording, or for any
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other use not explicitly licensed, are reserved.
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William Ramsay, Editor
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=====================================================================
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CONTENTS
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Editor's Note
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Contributors
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"Hovering in Winter," a poem
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Will Hastings
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"Vera's Kiss," a short-short
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E. James Scott
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"Pierre," an excerpt (chapter 5) from
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the novel "Ay, Chucho!"
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William Ramsay
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"The Girl from Verona," part 3 of the play, "Duet"
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Otho Eskin
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====================================================================
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CONTRIBUTORS
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OTHO ESKIN, former diplomat and consultant on international
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affairs, has published short stories and has had numerous plays read
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and produced in Washington, notably "Act of God." His play "Duet"
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has been produced at the Elizabethan Theater at the Folger Library in
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Washington, and is being performed with some regularity in theaters
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in the United States, Europe, and Australia.
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WILL HASTINGS is an attorney and a former government official.
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He now lives in the Berkshires , where he gardens, investigates
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aerodynamics, and writes poetry. His works have been published in
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leading journals.
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WILLIAM RAMSAY is a physicist and consultant on Third World
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energy problems. He is also a writer and the coordinator of the
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Northwest Fiction Group. His play, "Strength," recently received a
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reading at the Writers Center in Bethesda, Maryland.
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E. JAMES SCOTT is an airline pilot and plays the viola da gamba.
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He lives in La Jolla, California and Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, where he
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practices his hobby of photographing and charting the migrations of
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cetaceans.
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===================================================================
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HOVERING IN WINTER
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by Will Hastings
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"There are angels hovering round,"
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she sang, slowly unbuttoning her voice
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as the eyes in the pews lifted, faces tilted up,
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hoping to hear sounds made by wings hovering,
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noises of feathers sweeping dust from air,
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maybe expecting a soft insistence, a
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resonance in their waiting chests,
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some whirring and churning inside.
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Those in the pews stood, still listening,
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and together they found the song,
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following along the path made by music
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cascading in simple harmonies out of
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their white ice-canyon onto
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an open field of lemon-yellow lilies
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where for minutes they also hovered
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perfect in their bodies' laughter.
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================================================
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VERA'S KISS
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by E. James Scott
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I'm trying to remember what the lips felt like. I was only my eyes,
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peering through the bare winter branches of the spirea. The faces of
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the other second-grade kids, teeth, guffaws, giggling -- framed,
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chopped by the network of spindly twigs. Vera's beautiful face blank
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with determination, the large round puffs of her brown hair. In my
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ears, the hollow shrieking from Pete, Ralph, that bully Hank, all of
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them. Vera's hand held my arm, twisting the skin, pulling me up to
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the lips. No, no! I brandished my small cold-reddened fist. No, you
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can't hit a girl! But she grabbed onto the other wrist, not any surer
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than I was what we human cubs were or weren't allowed to do. It was
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play, it was punishment, it was torture. She pulled me powerfully,
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humiliatingly to her breast, her ribs clubbing mine. Her face -- yes, I
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can remember the lips, cold, excited with spittle, hard and soft. She
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let my feet sink to the ground, then pulled me out from behind the
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bush.
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Robby kissed Vera behind the bush!
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No I didn't!
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Robby kissed Vera, Robby kissed Vera!
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You liars!
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They were liars, I kissed not, my kiss was raped from me. I should
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have been masculine, powerful -- instead I was small and weak,
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desperate, my body hot and cold. Thank God I did not cry.
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Walking, trotting, running home, shoe soles slapping where the
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concrete quaked with maple roots, I cursed, proudly grown-up: lousy,
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crappy, stinky girl. Lousy. I hate, I hate, I hate her.
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In my room, hidden among the quilted covers, I feel alone in the
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shrouded half-light from the globe fixture in the upstairs hall. I'll
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always be by myself. I can't go to school tomorrow.
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Everyone will know.
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=================================================
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PIERRE
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by William Ramsay
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(Note: This is an excerpt, Chapter 5, from the novel "<22>Ay, Chucho!")
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Parque Cuscatlan is a cool swatch of green fronting on the
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Alameda Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and across from it on the other
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side of the boulevard stand the ominously white stucco buildings of
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the Hospital Rosales. From my bench near the Alameda, I could see
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two men running sprinklers -- the cool scent of the water was a nice
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change from the dusty atmosphere of the season. I found myself, on
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this sultry, buzzing day, doing a little heavy analysis of what was
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going on in my sex life. I'd been faithful to Amelia for the whole past
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six months -- except for that kind of accidental weekend in New
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Orleans where I'd just bumped into Sandy. And that one night with
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Maria Delia -- but that was only for old times' sake. Hell, I decided
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that I did miss Amelia. But Amelia and I were both single, free to live
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our own lives -- we had agreed on that, though Amelia used to put on
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a funny distracted look when the subject came up. I thought about
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giving Amelia a call -- but how about security?
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Suddenly I remembered that I wasn't even me, I wasn't Jesus
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Revueltos for the time being, but some different person entirely. Why
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not enjoy being that different person? Why not try -- the best I could
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under the circumstances -- to have some fun? Be careless, do crazy
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things. Why not?
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I speculated on whether "Dr. Felipe Elizalde" would dare to cross
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the street, pinch a lab coat, and see what mischief he could get up to
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inside the Hospital Rosales -- nurses galore, I fantasized. -- when I
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heard somebody speak from close by.
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"Dr. Elizalde!" came the voice. Oddly, I remember wondering
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who else was passing as Dr. Elizalde.
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"Dr. Elizalde!" the voice came again. I jerked my head up quickly
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and said "Yes?" with what I hoped was a confident intonation. A
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large man in his forties, a yellow head of hair punctuated by a small
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bald spot in the center, eyes shadowed by tinted wire-rimmed glasses,
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smiled benignly down at me.
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"I'm not mistaken, am I? Dr. Elizalde?"
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My stomach quivered. "Who are you?" I said, trying to get the
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ball back in his court.
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"Pierre Diaz-Ginsburg, at your orders," he said. I heard a
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meowing behind him, and he reached down and picked up a large
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snow-white cat and, cradling it in his arms, began to stroke its back as
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if it had been a naked odalisque.
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I decided to grasp the bull by its balls. "Do I know you? I don't
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think so."
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He peered at me very carefully and said, "Oh, my!" He sounded
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so disappointed. "Oh my, I did think you would remember."
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"I'm sorry." God knows I _was_ feeling sorrier and more nervous
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by the second.
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He stroked the cat very delicately, as if it were made of straw.
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An old man with a malacca cane hobbled over and sat down a few feet
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from me on the bench. Diaz-Ginsburg stared at him and made a wry
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face. "Let's go for a stroll. Do you mind, Doctor? There's a small but
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interesting matter I'd like to take up with you."
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So I got up, knees a little unsteady, and followed along with him
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down the lightly graveled path toward the high walls of the Gimnasio
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Nacional. A svelte young boy in shorts jogged past us, and
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Diaz-Ginsburg slapped at his own cheek with one hand, repeatedly,
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balancing the cat in the other, then tapped his fly with one finger, very
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delicately, and snickered. He looked at my face. God knows what he
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read there, I felt as if my face had gone numb. He licked his lips,
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stared off at the top of the palm trees across the path and said that he
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had gotten my name from Dr. Sanchez-Schulz.
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"Oh," I said, "are you..."
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"Just a casual contact, Doctor, you know. Not..." A policeman
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appeared from a side path a few yards ahead of us, and Diaz-Ginsburg
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made coughing noises, at the same time whispering: "Not a
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you-know-what."
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I wondered: if he wasn't an FMLN cadre, then who the hell was
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he? Baffled, I asked him straight out. The answer I got was that he
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was a journalist, looking for an entree into Cuba to see his family.
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For reasons of politics -- he said -- it was difficult for him to enter
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by the usual routes. I didn't ask him how he knew I was going to Cuba.
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The thought of all San Salvador getting to know what I was up to
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made things wobble in my belly. It was getting to the hot part of the
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day, and as we walked under the striped shade of the palms along the
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walk, I worked at wiping a giant trickle of sweat off the back of my
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neck. I told myself that it wasn't anything, he was undoubtedly just
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another _gusano_, a right-wing expatriate on Castro's black list who
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had somehow gotten hold of my _nom_ _de_ _guerre_. I tell myself
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now I should have been more curious, though I don't think better
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information would have done me any good at all. Ah, those good old
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days, when I only knew about leftists and rightists -- and not the other
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side of those extremes, where left meets right in a wildassed
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ideological swamp.
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"I'm sorry," I said. "My plans weren't made yet, but I don't see
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how I could help you in any case."
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He smiled and closed his eyes for a moment. Then he opened
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them, large and blue.
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"We'll talk again, Doctor. Undoubtedly we will. I'm _sure_ of
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it." He snuggled the cat against his neck and then kissed it.
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I'm not much for animals -- especially cats.
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"Look, there's no point in your seeing me again because I still
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won't be able to help you.".
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"_Au_ _revoir_, Doctor, _au_ _revoir_." As he left, I hoped that
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_au_ _revoir_ in this case really meant "Good-bye." I stopped at a
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cafe and broke my rule of abstinence and ordered a beer. I suddenly
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wondered why Diaz-Ginsburg had happened upon me in the park.
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Then I realized that he must have been tailing me, and I wondered
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how many other people were on Felipe Elizalde's -- or Jesus
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Revueltos' -- trail. By now I was completely in the shade of the
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striped awning, and the lady with the straw hat eating a chocolate
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sundae at the next table looked cool enough, but I was beginning to
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feel even warmer. The chillness of the rainy season couldn't begin
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soon enough for me.
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I hadn't become any calmer a few days later when I met Dr. Josefa
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Sanchez- Schulz at the lake. So I was relieved when Pepita told me
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that arrangements for my trip to Cuba were taking shape, that I would
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be off within the week. Not that Havana seemed any safer as a
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destination than it had ever been. But waiting in San Salvador was
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beginning to feel like death row -- I thought of Wallace Beery in his
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cell at "The Big House." Miami now seemed like the Earthly
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Paradise -- but only if I could return with the key to my father's
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safety deposit box in hand. Otherwise, forget it!
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"I'll miss you, Comrade Elizalde," said Pepita that night, t
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widdling my earlobe as we lay in her bed. The sloshing of wavelets from
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power boats onto the gravelly shore outside cut distinctly through the
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hum of the air conditioner. The movements of skin and cartilage
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inside my ear added a bass- note noise to the water music. The "s" in
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Pepita's "miss" -- the word "_menos_" in the Spanish idiom -- was
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slurred from half a bottle of rum. I twiddled back, brushing strands
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of red hair up from her neck. She drew a deep breath and let it out
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with a hiss. The dim orange light from the bedside lamp seemed to
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enclose us in a shining tent, cut off from the lake and the world
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outside. Pepita was my love slave, I was thinking, an amazon in
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invisible chains. The suddenly: Whop! My head reeled from her
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open-handed smack. Who was the slave? Here we go again, I
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thought.
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And then the following morning. There she was, blue shirt and
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blue jeans, pouring orange juice as if she were titrating sulfuric acid,
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coolly discussing my possible arrest and imprisonment on landing in
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Cuba -- in case the Cuban party cadres weren't satisfied with her
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guarantees of my revolutionary bona fides.
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"But don't worry," she said, "there's no problem we can't deal
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with."
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I did worry. I could think of lots of problems I couldn't
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deal with. For example: Pierre Diaz-Ginsburg. He materialized
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the next day at the Cafe Ayuleche -- I liked the Ayuleche because it
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was on the shady side of the street in the afternoons and the service
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was good in the old-fashioned stuffy manner. I was sitting at my
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favorite table on the far edge of the sidewalk, staring at the sugar
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bowl, thinking -- or rather wishing for some constructive thoughts to
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pop into my head. Suddenly a white cat appeared, abruptly plunking
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itself down on the table, rattling my coffee cup. Then Pierre himself
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sat down, or rather berthed himself, his fat arms sliding onto the table
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and his behind swamping the chair next to me.
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He signaled to the waiter with a loud tongue-clucking. "Rum!" he
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yelled. The rum came and he knocked it down in a couple of
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swallows, blinking. He clucked again and ordered another one.
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"Rum, rum, come, rum. Rum, for God's sake, come," he intoned in
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heavily accented English. The second rum went the way of the first.
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He pulled his lips together tightly and winced. "Good!" He stared at
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me and nodded. "Good." He raised his eyebrows at me, asking a
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casual kind of permission as he pulled out the saucer from under my
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cup, poured some of the cream from the little china pitcher into it,
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and set in down in front of the cat. "Kropotkin," he said. "Crazy
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cat."
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I asked him how he had been, looking at the empty rum glasses
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and wondering whether I was going to have another drunk on my
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hands. He put his finger to his cheekbone, tapping it as if trying to
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show me I had a smudge on mine. I automatically felt my face.
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"Ready for Cuba," he said, clapping me on the shoulder just like
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an American would have. I told him hey wait a minute, I hadn't
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promised anything. I was sorry he had problems and so on, but
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really....
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He laughed.
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I raised my hand to order another coffee. "Do you want another
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rum?"
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"More rum? Oh no -- temperance in everything, that's me, good
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old Pierre Diaz-Ginsburg is known for that. Two, one to wake up the
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left brain, and then one to wake up the right" -- he frowned -- "or
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maybe vice versa. But that's my limit, that's as far as I go."
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"Mr. Diaz-Ginsburg," I said.
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"Call me Pierre," he said. He smiled. "What a nice glow the rum
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gives."
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"Pierre." I sighed. "Really, I can't help you."
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"Don't get too used to the name, though. For various reasons" --
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he winked -- "I prefer to enter Cuba on a passport bearing a new
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name, a new set of syllables, a new outlook on life, perhaps, who
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knows? About ready to have one made up now. What do you think
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of Waldemar Perez G., citizen of Mexico?"
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"What's the G. for?"
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"Don't know yet." He grinned at me. "There's part of the fun."
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He giggled. "But 'Waldemar,' it's delicious, what rational person
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would make up an alias like that!"
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Oh Christ, I thought, how do I get to meet these people, and what
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was I going to do with this particular one? Then he asked me whether
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|||
|
I myself had ever traveled under an alias. My skin coloring is a bit
|
|||
|
olive, but if it hadn't been, I'm sure he would have seen the blush. No,
|
|||
|
I mean yes, I started to say. He laughed again.
|
|||
|
"A very jolly fellow, you are, _Felipe_."
|
|||
|
I didn't like the emphasis that he put on the name. "I try,
|
|||
|
Pierre."
|
|||
|
"Waldemar." Giggle, giggle, giggle. His giggle had a Peter Lorre
|
|||
|
quality, not funny so much as menacing. He got up, gave me another
|
|||
|
wink and an _au_ _revoir_, and padded off down the street, his butt
|
|||
|
wagging, Kropotkin's yellow-slitted eyes staring back at me from
|
|||
|
under one of his bulging arms.
|
|||
|
***
|
|||
|
"Pierre Diaz-Ginsburg?" said Pepita. Her small thin lips pressed
|
|||
|
together primly. "He's insane."
|
|||
|
"But what kind of insane?" I said. I had decided that I had to
|
|||
|
find out who this joker was.
|
|||
|
"Why do you want to know?" She took off her reading glasses.
|
|||
|
We were in her small apartment in San Salvador, on 10th Avenida
|
|||
|
Sur, and she was explaining, organization charts in hand, the way she
|
|||
|
thought I should try to handle the Cuban bureaucracy.
|
|||
|
"Have you talked to him about me?" I asked.
|
|||
|
"No. Did he say I did?"
|
|||
|
"He apparently knows you. Or about you."
|
|||
|
"He seems to know everybody. I've barely met him. A
|
|||
|
degenerate." She made a face. "An anarchist, a fanatic, so far left,
|
|||
|
he's right."
|
|||
|
"Is he Cuban?"
|
|||
|
"They say so, but if so he's no friend of the Comandante."
|
|||
|
She filled me in. I gathered Pierre wasn't a friend of the types
|
|||
|
running El Salvador either, even though he had anti-Castro credentials
|
|||
|
from being involved as a boy in the abortive counterrevolutionary
|
|||
|
movements of 1961-3 in the Sierra Escambray. The anti-Castro
|
|||
|
rebels had raided some police stations, power plants and banks in
|
|||
|
Camaguey and Sancti Spiritus, but then Castro had come in hard and
|
|||
|
showed them who was boss. Ever since then, Pierre's name had been
|
|||
|
popping up in police reports in connection with confidence games,
|
|||
|
larceny, and smuggling in Mexico, Central America, and the Antilles.
|
|||
|
Police in several countries had taken an interest in him, but he had
|
|||
|
always seemed to move on in time to avoid getting caught at
|
|||
|
whatever he was doing.
|
|||
|
To me it was becoming obvious that Pierre must have friends on
|
|||
|
one side or the other who knew something substantial about me and
|
|||
|
my plans -- and specifically, about "Felipe Elizalde." I wondered
|
|||
|
whether it was good I was leaving El Salvador, where too many
|
|||
|
people seemed to know all about me -- or whether it would be worse
|
|||
|
in Cuba, where God knows who would know what and how long I
|
|||
|
could figure on remaining alive once the authorities got the picture.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Well," said Pepita, putting her books away and fluffing out her
|
|||
|
hair, "enough about him. Let's celebrate getting your trip arranged."
|
|||
|
I was now set to take off for Havana the following Monday. Pepita had
|
|||
|
set me up as a recruiter traveling to Cuba to seek out physicians to
|
|||
|
volunteer to serve in the FMLN. I was to be searching for candidates
|
|||
|
among prisoners and other "antisocial but redeemable" elements. She
|
|||
|
had made appointments for me in Cuba with someone in the central
|
|||
|
Party Office, with the Prosecutor's office in the Ministry of the
|
|||
|
Interior, and had contacted someone on Fidel's staff asking for an
|
|||
|
interview with the _Comandante_.
|
|||
|
She rummaged in the refrigerator freezer compartment for ice
|
|||
|
cubes. She picked up a bottle of rum. I loosened my tie and rolled up
|
|||
|
my shirt sleeves and got ready for more drinking. The much-feared
|
|||
|
trip to Havana would at least be a chance for me to start on a
|
|||
|
much-needed round of detox. I took off my shoes. I might as well, I
|
|||
|
figured: if things went like usual, in a few minutes Comrade Dr.
|
|||
|
Sanchez-Schulz would be taking off the rest of my clothes.
|
|||
|
I was right. "Dear Comrade Elizalde," she said as she sat on my
|
|||
|
lap. My legs felt like they would collapse. Then she leaned into me,
|
|||
|
squashing her breasts against my chest. Oh my. I realized I was
|
|||
|
going to miss at least one or two things about El Salvador.
|
|||
|
She sighed deeply, then took a deep breath. "Hit me!" she cried.
|
|||
|
"Hit me, Felipe, darling!"
|
|||
|
***
|
|||
|
Errol Flynn kissed Olivia de Havilland, getting ready to leave
|
|||
|
India for the Crimea. You knew it was for the last time, that the end
|
|||
|
of their story would be found in the bloody, magnificent, insane
|
|||
|
charge of the light cavalry against the Russian guns on the heights of
|
|||
|
Balaklava. Leading his comrades to their death, gritting his teeth,
|
|||
|
then turning to smile to encourage one of the fainthearted, seeking
|
|||
|
glory in the clouds of dark smoke that billowed like the fires of hell.
|
|||
|
Stupid orders -- but theirs not to reason why.
|
|||
|
As the lights went up in the Cine Colon in San Salvador, Errol
|
|||
|
Flynn's perils faded -- and my own dangers swelled into my
|
|||
|
consciousness again. I wasn't even doing all this for glory -- I was in
|
|||
|
this fix because of my own mistakes -- and through some bad luck
|
|||
|
with those murderous creeps in the Association -- and no one would
|
|||
|
ever write epic poems about my last charge against the Cuban Big
|
|||
|
Guns.
|
|||
|
I was feeling so down that I almost didn't care when Pierre fell
|
|||
|
into step with me as I made my way back along Calle Arce toward the
|
|||
|
Hotel San Jorge. "What do you want to go to Cuba so much for?" I
|
|||
|
said. And what shit are you planning to get into when and if you do
|
|||
|
get there? I thought.
|
|||
|
"Ah, Doctor, who can say? Nietzsche -- a philosopher, Doctor,
|
|||
|
the greatest German of them all -- said it best: 'The path we tread is
|
|||
|
not the path we chose, but the path that has chosen us.'"
|
|||
|
"I know who Nietzsche was." I did, sort of.
|
|||
|
"Ah, more than he himself knew. He never found himself, I think.
|
|||
|
Few of us do." He turned his bright blue eyes, temporarily saddened,
|
|||
|
onto my face, examining my eyes, then my jaw, then the part in my
|
|||
|
hair.
|
|||
|
"Felipe."
|
|||
|
"What?"
|
|||
|
"Felipe, I hear we are off to Havana early next week."
|
|||
|
"Where did you hear that? And what do you mean 'we'?"
|
|||
|
He cocked his head and smiled. I wondered where Kropotkin
|
|||
|
was. "You know, we have met before. You didn't remember."
|
|||
|
"Oh?" Oh indeed.
|
|||
|
"Curious. Before...."
|
|||
|
"Yes?"
|
|||
|
"My friend Felipe Elizalde had such short, stubby fingers, ugly
|
|||
|
clubbed fingertips. Now..." He smiled.
|
|||
|
I looked down at my long graceful fingers.
|
|||
|
"I really appreciate your help, Felipe. It's so awkward for us
|
|||
|
journalists in a country like Cuba, and to be able to travel in the
|
|||
|
company of someone with such impeccable socialist credentials,
|
|||
|
well..."
|
|||
|
I nodded, looking down again at the fingers that didn't belong to
|
|||
|
Felipe Elizalde. I got it. I nodded again. "O.K., O.K." A Revueltos
|
|||
|
knows when he's licked. Maybe my father doesn't. Let's just say
|
|||
|
_this_ Revueltos does.
|
|||
|
"The Mexicana flight Monday, right?" he said. "_Au_ _revoir_,
|
|||
|
_Felipe_."
|
|||
|
I consoled myself with the thought that he evidently just wanted
|
|||
|
my help to insure getting past passport control in Havana -- after that
|
|||
|
I should be rid of him, cat and all.
|
|||
|
***
|
|||
|
Pepita shook hands with me as I got ready to board the Mexicana
|
|||
|
flight to Mexico City, with a connection to Havana. I rose on tiptoes
|
|||
|
to kiss her, but she pulled back and shook her finger slowly, warning
|
|||
|
me. "Not safe," she whispered.
|
|||
|
"All right," I whispered back. "Good-bye, Pepita."
|
|||
|
"Comrade. A good journey," she said aloud. She looked away for
|
|||
|
a moment. "Who could that be?" she said. She pointed at a pudgy,
|
|||
|
mustached middle-aged man in what was obviously a wig. It was not
|
|||
|
so obvious that the mustache was a fake, but I was in a position to
|
|||
|
know. Waldemar G. Perez had made the flight.
|
|||
|
I wondered if Kropotkin, in the animal carrier in Pierre's hand,
|
|||
|
had been renamed and disguised too. "Lenin"? "Rockefeller"?
|
|||
|
"I don't know," I said.
|
|||
|
"He looks like someone out of a bad movie." she said. "Sort of
|
|||
|
dazed-looking but sinister too."
|
|||
|
"I know," I said, "Peter Lorre."
|
|||
|
Suddenly we were surrounded by a large family group. We
|
|||
|
moved behind a pillar to get out of the way.
|
|||
|
"Who's Peter Lorre?" said Pepita, easing her hand down inside my
|
|||
|
trousers and rubbing gently.
|
|||
|
"Who's who?" I said, pulling her close to me, looking up into her
|
|||
|
blue eyes, and wanting in that moment never to leave El Salvador
|
|||
|
again. But, as Amelia had always told me, I'm a big one for
|
|||
|
escaping reality. Or at least for trying to escape.
|
|||
|
As the call for the Mexicana flight came over the loudspeaker, I
|
|||
|
tried not to think of Amelia at all. I had to gear myself up for the big
|
|||
|
plunge -- I said to myself: here I come, Fidel, ready or not!
|
|||
|
Pepita squeezed hard.
|
|||
|
"Ouch!"
|
|||
|
"_Salud_, _companero_!" she said.
|
|||
|
'_Salud_' indeed! As I flashed my passport and boarding pass at
|
|||
|
the security check, I hoped that my cheeks, arms, and prick might get
|
|||
|
_healthier_ treatment in Havana than in El Salvador.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
====================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
THE GIRL FROM VERONA
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
by Otho Eskin
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Note: This is part 3 of the play "Duet")
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CHARACTERS
|
|||
|
(In order of appearance)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA DUSE
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH BERNHARDT
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MAN
|
|||
|
SETTING
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Backstage of the Syria Theatre, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TIME
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
April 5, 1924 Evening.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SCENE
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
Unrivaled in your glamour in your personality. Something I never
|
|||
|
had.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
You had something else. I saw it one night in Paris. You had the gift.
|
|||
|
Did you always know?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
Not at the beginning. For me, acting was no different from making
|
|||
|
shoes or selling flowers just a way to earn enough to eat.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
When did you first know?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
When I was fourteen our company came to Verona.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
Tell me, Eleonora. Tell me about Verona.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
We were scheduled to perform Romeo and Juliet. The morning of the
|
|||
|
performance the actress who was to play Juliet had an argument with
|
|||
|
one of my uncles and left the company. My father told me I would go
|
|||
|
on as Juliet instead. They put me in long skirts.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MAN
|
|||
|
(As ELEONORA's FATHER)
|
|||
|
Go! Go now. Go out there and act!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
We were performing in the old Roman arena. It is a holiday afternoon
|
|||
|
hot and the arena steps are filled with men in shirt sleeves and
|
|||
|
women with red kerchiefs on their heads. As I wait to make my
|
|||
|
entrance, I think of Juliet here in this very town of Verona also
|
|||
|
fourteen my own age. Then when I go on something happens
|
|||
|
to me. Something even now after all these years I can't explain or
|
|||
|
describe.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Come, gentle night; come, loving black-browed night,
|
|||
|
Give me my Romeo, and when I shall die,
|
|||
|
Take him and cut him out in little stars,
|
|||
|
And he will make the face of heaven so fine
|
|||
|
That all the world will be in love with night
|
|||
|
And pay no worship to the garish sun.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
That afternoon I do not just go through the motions of a fourteen year
|
|||
|
old girl who falls in love do not repeat words written hundreds of
|
|||
|
years ago. I understand who Juliet is. I am Juliet. Her spirit fills me.
|
|||
|
The words before leaving my lips seem to pass through the warmth of
|
|||
|
my blood.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Shall I not then be stifled in the vault,
|
|||
|
To whose foul mouth no healthsome air breathes in,
|
|||
|
And there die strangled ere my Romeo comes?
|
|||
|
Or, if I live, is it not very like
|
|||
|
The horrible conceit of death and night,
|
|||
|
Together with the terror of the place
|
|||
|
As in a vault, an ancient receptacle
|
|||
|
Where for this many hundred years the bones
|
|||
|
Of all my buried ancestors are packed;
|
|||
|
Where bloody Tybalt, yet but green in earth,
|
|||
|
Lies fest'ring in his shroud; where, as they say,
|
|||
|
At some hours in the night spirits resort
|
|||
|
Alack, alack, is it not like that I,
|
|||
|
So early waking, what with loathsome smells,
|
|||
|
And shrieks like mandrakes torn out of the earth,
|
|||
|
That living mortals, hearing them, run mad
|
|||
|
O, if I wake shall I not be distraught,
|
|||
|
Environ<6F>d with all these hideous fears,
|
|||
|
And madly play with my forefathers' joints,
|
|||
|
And pluck the mangled Tybalt from his shroud,
|
|||
|
And, in this rage, with some great kinsman's bone,
|
|||
|
As with a club, dash out my despr'ate brains?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
After the performance I am applauded wildly or so I was told. I
|
|||
|
remember nothing nothing except a feeling of unspeakable
|
|||
|
rapture. I experience a kind of Grace. It is as if God is touching my
|
|||
|
soul. I am for the first time truly alive filled with a torrent of
|
|||
|
love. And my life is changed forever. I understand that acting is more
|
|||
|
than reciting words more than going through rehearsed motions
|
|||
|
more than an imitation of life. The theater can transform me. I know
|
|||
|
absolutely that I will devote the rest of my life to trying to
|
|||
|
experience that Grace again.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
And have you found it?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
Sometimes. It does not come to me easily or often. But when I have
|
|||
|
it complete a suffering of love, dark and deep, consumes me.
|
|||
|
Sometimes when everything is right when the play is right
|
|||
|
when my soul is composed I am consumed by a holy madness. No
|
|||
|
one understands when I speak of it. Sometimes my heart is tired of
|
|||
|
never finding understanding.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
I know.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
And have you felt it too?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
I have felt it but I don't seek it. I distrust ecstasy, Eleonora.
|
|||
|
What I searched for was something different. Not the sublime you have
|
|||
|
known. I had my own kind of Grace.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
I was transported by acting.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
I was transported by the love the audience gave me.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
I remember the first time I saw you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
Of course you can, my dear. Everyone can. It was the great event in
|
|||
|
their lives.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
I was twenty-four and was performing in Turin when you arrived on
|
|||
|
one of your European tours. For weeks in advance no one talked of
|
|||
|
anything but you. When you arrived at the railway station there was a
|
|||
|
great crowd to meet you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
Is that when you first saw me, Eleonora?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
No, I did not go to the station. I hate crowds. They frighten me. But I
|
|||
|
heard about your arrival from my friends. I insisted they tell me
|
|||
|
everything how you looked and dressed, what you said. You
|
|||
|
emerged from your railway carriage with your entourage, your
|
|||
|
admirers, lovers and pets. Bands played. City officials presented you
|
|||
|
with mountains of flowers and made speeches.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
How I hated the speeches.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
You became faint half way through the mayor's welcoming address
|
|||
|
and had to be helped to your carriage. You held a bouquet of roses in
|
|||
|
one arm and a lion cub in the other.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
I called the lion cub Scarpia.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
The students unhitched the horses and drew your carriage through the
|
|||
|
streets, singing songs of love.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
I remember that tour. That was the time King Umberto invited me to
|
|||
|
his palace for an intimate, after-theater supper. We had Veuve
|
|||
|
Cliquot and oysters. I think he gave me a diamond brooch.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
Your troupe took over the theater where I was performing. You used
|
|||
|
my dressing room...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
Perhaps it was Alfonso XII of Spain who gave me the brooch. I had to
|
|||
|
sell it a few years later when I lost all my money.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
The newspapers said you had a python with you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
I think that might have been an exaggeration. I had an alligator once.
|
|||
|
Had to shoot it, though. When it ate my poodle.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
You opened with La Dame aux camelias. I saw every performance.
|
|||
|
My pulse beat feverishly each night before the curtain rose. There
|
|||
|
was sense of peril in the air. Watching you was like watching a wild
|
|||
|
animal in a cage. I wept when you spoke to Armand at the end of Act
|
|||
|
I.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
(As Marguerite Gautier acting in an extravagant, highly theatrical
|
|||
|
manner, but not a parody)
|
|||
|
"There are days when I am weary of the life I lead and imagine
|
|||
|
another, because in the midst of my turbulent existence, though my
|
|||
|
reason, my pride, my senses are alive, my heart is so tired of never
|
|||
|
finding understanding. We appear happy and are envied. We have
|
|||
|
lovers. Little do they care what we do, so long as they can be seen in
|
|||
|
our boxes at the theater or in our carriages. "
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
I remember during the first act one of the stage hands tore a hole in
|
|||
|
the door used for entrances and exits.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
The people I had to work with were imbeciles.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
When you made your exit you thrust your hand into the hole and tore
|
|||
|
the door apart with a savage gesture.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
The only thing more important than a grand entrance is a grand exit.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
The theater went wild. You were a tigress. The public loved you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
And you, Eleonora? Did you love me?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Pause)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
I was set free.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
That is what theater is for -- setting people free if only for an
|
|||
|
hour.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
It was then that I first understood -- one woman could do this. One
|
|||
|
woman could electrify a city -- a nation. If you could do that then
|
|||
|
I could, too. I would do what you did. But I would do it in my own
|
|||
|
way. (Assuming the role of Marguerite Gautier.) "There are days
|
|||
|
when I am weary of the life I lead and imagine another, because in
|
|||
|
the midst of my turbulent existence, though my reason, my pride, my
|
|||
|
senses are alive, my heart is so tired of never finding understanding.
|
|||
|
We appear happy and are envied. We have lovers. Little do they care
|
|||
|
what we do, so long as they can be seen in our boxes at the theater or
|
|||
|
in our carriages. And so it is that everything which surrounds us is
|
|||
|
ruin, shame, lies -- that is why I dreamed of meeting a man who
|
|||
|
would accept me unquestioningly. Then I met you young, ardent,
|
|||
|
happy. In one instant, like a mad woman, I built a whole future upon
|
|||
|
your love, I dreamed of the country, of peace; I even thought of my
|
|||
|
childhood -- I was dreaming of the impossible; you have proved that
|
|||
|
to me."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MAN
|
|||
|
The theater of Europe is changing. A new name is heard.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
One name.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MAN
|
|||
|
One name. One name mentioned.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
Spoken of in the same breath as the Divine Sarah.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MAN
|
|||
|
A young Italian actress.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
There is only one Sarah.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
Of course. And yet.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MAN
|
|||
|
And yet.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
An Italian actress with no conservatory training is being mentioned.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MAN
|
|||
|
Eleonora Duse.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
Never heard of her.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MAN
|
|||
|
Eleonora Duse.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
An uneducated girl from the country. A peasant.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
People begin to compare me with you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
There can be only one moon -- and it shines on me.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
I would not dream of challenging Madame Sarah.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
This woman appears in my plays. She seems to invite comparison.
|
|||
|
Nay she demands it.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MAN
|
|||
|
The rivalry between Sarah Bernhardt and Eleonora Duse dominated
|
|||
|
the European theatrical scene.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
We crisscrossed the theatrical world.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
I performed in Vienna
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
St. Petersburg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
Berlin.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
The United States.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
Rome.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
Madrid.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
Stockholm.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
Rio.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
Prague.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH
|
|||
|
Budapest.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEONORA
|
|||
|
Until at last we appeared at the same time in the same place.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SARAH and ELEONORA
|
|||
|
London.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
=============================================================
|
|||
|
=============================================================
|