1083 lines
46 KiB
Plaintext
1083 lines
46 KiB
Plaintext
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FICTION-ONLINE
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An Internet Literary Magazine
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Volume 4, Number 5
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September-October, 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. The
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contents include short stories, play scripts or excerpts, excerpts of novels
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or serialized novels, and poems. Some contributors to the magazine are
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members of the Northwest Fiction Group of Washington, DC, a group
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affiliated with Washington Independent Writers. However, the magazine
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is an independent entity and solicits and publishes material from the
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public.
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To subscribe or unsubscribe or for more information, please e-mail a
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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 part of
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the message itself, rather than as an attachment.
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Back issues of the magazine may be obtained by e-mail from the
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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 /pub/Zines/ASCII/Fiction_Online.
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This same directory may also be located with your browser at the
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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 material
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published is retained by its author. Each subscriber is licensed to possess
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one electronic copy and to make one hard copy for personal reading use
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only. All other rights, including rights to copy or publish in whole or in
|
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part in any form or medium, to give readings or to stage performances or
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filmings or video recording, or for any other use not explicitly licensed,
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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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"November Wind Brings Little News," a poem
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Will Hastings
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"Boy on the Water," a short-short
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Alan Vanneman
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"Pepita," an excerpt (chapter 4) from
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the novel "<22>Ay, Chucho!"
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William Ramsay
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"This Life," part 2 of the play, "Duet"
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Otho Eskin
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=================================================
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CONTRIBUTORS
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WILL HASTINGS is an attorney and a former government official. He
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now lives in the Berkshires , where he gardens, investigates aerodynamics,
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and writes poetry. His works have been published in leading journals.
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OTHO ESKIN, former diplomat and consultant on international affairs,
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has published short stories and has had numerous plays read and produced
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in Washington, notably "Act of God." His play "Duet" has been
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produced at the Elizabethan Theater at the Folger Library in Washington,
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and is being performed with some regularity in theaters in the United
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States, Europe, and Australia.
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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 Northwest
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Fiction Group. His play, "Perry's Roots." recently received a reading at
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the Writers Center in Bethesda, Maryland.
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ALAN VANNEMAN is a writer living in Washington. He is a
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professional editor, currently working in educational research. His short
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story, "Living in the Year of Our Lord 1959 A.D.," will shortly appear in
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"Willow Springs."
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=================================================
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NOVEMBER WIND BRINGS LITTLE NEWS
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by Will Hastings
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One beach leaf, translucent,
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flew across the field alone while others
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leapt from ragged clumps of faded goldenrod,
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scattering like little fish consumed by fear.
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Tall grasses bowed south and west,
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waved their tattered seed heads nervously,
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mimicking each other's bobbing dance as
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pines crowding the horizon moved
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in constant worried conversation and
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clouds tumbled across the sky.
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Nylon shrouds slapped the metal masts of
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boats waiting to be pulled from moorings,
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hard, hollow sounds drumming up
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water rising in twisted sheets and
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sending spray fleeing over stumbling waves.
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I went out to drink this November wind and
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leaned into it, listening and thirsty all day.
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====================================
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BOY ON THE WATER
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by Alan Vanneman
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I can see that boy. When I wake up, sometimes, I can't see
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anything. I don't know if it's day or night. I don't know if I'm awake or
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asleep, if I'm alive or dead, even. I'll lie there sometimes, wondering if I
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can even move, wondering if, well, maybe this is it, this is what it's
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like to be dead, because there's nothing. I can't hear nothing and I can't
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see nothing. It's quiet, and it's dark, and it's just me there, and I can't
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even move. And so I'll think, if this is what it is, this is what it is,
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and I'll just drift off, and go back where I came from. But then by and by
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I'll wake up again and I can see light coming out of the window and maybe
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I'll hear somebody moving and I'll think, yeah, I'm still alive. And so I
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can see that boy.
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I hate sleeping so much, but there's not much else I can do. I can
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hardly eat, and hardly drink. It's work for me just to take a drink of
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water. I'll drink when I'm dry, but that's it. I drink a beer, maybe, just
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to drink a beer, but that's it. I can't taste it, can't enjoy it. I just go
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to sleep quicker, but I go to sleep pretty quick anyway, most times, except
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when I'm too tired. I just have to lie there. I'm not awake, and I'm not
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asleep. I'm just in the dark there.
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Food's worse. I never thought I'd live to see the day when I didn't
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want to eat, but I have. Food's just work to me. There's no flavor. You
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practically choke yourself, and for what? So you can get up and shit. A
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pipe is what I am. I eat and drink so I have to get up to shit and piss.
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That's it. That's my life. That's what I do. I don't want to get up, ever. I
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can't have that, and if I could, what would I have? I could just lie here,
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not knowing anything, not knowing if it were dark or light, not knowing if
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I were alive or dead. But when I'm not fussing over getting up or getting
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down, I can still see that boy sometimes, when it's peaceful.
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I can see him whether it's light or dark, just so it's peaceful. I
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used to be that boy. I used to be that boy when the birds were singing,
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when I couldn't get wait to get outside to see that it was spring again, or
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summer, or fall, or winter. I used to be that boy swimming across that
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river. I'd swim it every day in the summer, across and back, a mile each
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way.
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I shiver when I think about it now. I couldn't stand to watch it.
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It's hard enough just to think about it, but to watch it, to watch that
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little head just getting smaller and smaller, I couldn't stand it. You'd see
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it disappearing sometimes just because of the waves, because a river that
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big is going to have waves, and finally it's just gone altogether, a little
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spot on the river that just disappeared, and you have to wait all that time,
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while that boy is on the other side, laughing because he's just so happy for
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swimming that river, and you don't even know if he's alive or dead, and
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you have to wait all that time, until you can see a little spot, and you
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don't even know if it's him or not, you have to wait all that time for that
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spot to come back, until you know it's that boy again, and he's safe and
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sound. I couldn't stand it.
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I can see that boy. I wish I could hold him just once. If I could, I
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would hold him safe, and never let him go. Old and weak as I am, I would
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hold him safe, not to go across that river ever again. Not to go anywhere
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ever again, but always to stay safe right here with me. And I would hold
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him safe from all the meanness of the world, and all the coldness, and all
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the hurtfulness. I would.
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==================================================
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PEPITA
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by William Ramsay
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(Note: This is an excerpt, Chapter 4, from the novel "<22>Ay, Chucho!")
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At this time, in the early part of '90, the Salvadoran government,
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under U.S. pressure, was trying to come to some kind of accommodation
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with the FMLN rebels. So making contact with FMLN cadres wasn't as
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tricky as it had been in the mid-'80' s during the heyday of the FMLN
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kidnaping and the government death squad murders. Still, getting
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together with Doctor Sanchez-Schulz wasn't like setting up an ordinary
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business meeting in an ordinary country. So I had to sit there waiting in
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my hotel room for word on the meeting. I drank beer, I did crossword
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puzzles. I read out the local newspapers out loud to myself, practicing
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pronouncing my final "s"'s so as to sound more Salvadoran than Cuban. I
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did some thinking about what I was going to tell this FMLN sympathizer
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about Cuba and what I was going to do once I got there. I decided it
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would be best to keep close to the truth -- why not tell her that I was
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trying to get my father out?
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Of course with me as "Felipe Elizalde," he wouldn't be _my_ father.
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He would just be Dr. Federico Revueltos, a Marxist intellectual of some
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stature in the socialist world. The question of my father's falling out with
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Fidel would require careful handling. If the good doctor resisted
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challenging the "Comandante's" judgment about my old man, I'd have to
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improvise.
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The second night I got a telephone call from the Major. The next
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day I rented a car and went to meet Dr. Sanchez-Schulz, in the very
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unrevolutionary setting of a beach cabin on the shores of Lake
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Coatepeque about 50 kilometers west on the road to Guatemala. Doctor
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Sanchez-Schulz was all cooperation and efficiency, with large but steely
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Germanic eyes, and full of enthusiasm for my "project." She was also
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quite a woman. About 30, big, presumably like the Schulzes, with
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glowing white skin, red hair, a classic nose -- the kind of girl my small
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mother perhaps enviously calls "Junoesque." I described my situation and
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the background on Dr. Revueltos. She listened, took some notes on a
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yellow tablet she held propped up on her khaki trousers, and dropped a
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few comments in a cool, high-pitched voice. I made a few attempts at
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humor -- and when I did, she would look carefully at me as if I were
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speaking Chinese, frown, and smile mechanically.
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"So that's the story," I said.
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"Yes, an interesting case. Deviationism. Hmmm." She gazed out
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across the lake. The large blue eyes glittered.
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Finally she put the tablet down, stretched her shapely but massive
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arms above her head, and yawned.
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"Enough for today, comrade. Time to unwind, I think." She got up,
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and poured sparingly from a coke bottle into two glasses and then slopped
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in a hefty slug of dark rum. We stood at the window, the lake outside
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flashing in the sun. The rum-and-some-coke took on a strong orange cast
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in the glare. "You must have suffered, comrade," she said, turning and
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looking down kindly into my eyes, swirling her drink, the ice cubes
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clinking. For a minute I thought she was referring to the plane ride, then
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I remembered who I was -- a long-term ex-prisoner -- and tried to put on a
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suitably martyred-but-stoic expression, wishing I had a mirror to check up
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on my performance. She chugged her drink, tut-tutted, poured more rum
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into my drink, and made herself another one. As she moved around the
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room in her tee shirt and shorts, her thighs looked to be about the size of
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my torso -- but everything was in the right proportions -- the two massive
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bulges below the neckline of her tee shirt gave a sketch of a body a person
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might develop a taste for.
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Through the picture window I could make out the twin volcanic peaks
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of Santa Ana and Cerro Verde, with Izalco peeping like a large nipple
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over the rim connecting them.
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"Dr. Sanchez-Schulz...." I said.
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"Call me Pepita, Comrade Pepita, everybody does."
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I gathered that Pepita -- what a name for a goddess -- like many of the
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Salvadoran leftists led two lives and was still technically "legal" -- though
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she told me later she always worried about knocks on the door in the
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middle of the night.
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"OB-GYN," she said at one point.
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"What?" I said.
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"Your specialty."
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I remembered the resume. "Oh, yes, yes," I said.
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"A tricky field, isn't it?"
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"Yes."
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"Have another drink." She smiled crookedly. "It's not often I get to
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meet a colleague."
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"Ummm," I said. I realized I didn't know if OB/GYN was her field
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too -- if so my goose was cooked. In hot grease -- splat.
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She got up and walked to the window. Across the lake the lights of
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the Hotel del Lago came on. "Crazies," she said.
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"What?"
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"Psychiatry, that's me. Hard field, and very specialized. But I still
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know how to put on a bandage and set a break -- I help out with the
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wounded when I'm out in the field." She waved a hand, gesturing
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symbolically toward the boondocks of El Salvador and the invisible
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bivouacs of the FMLN guerrillas - - and knocking over her drink with the
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recoil swing. She looked down at the lonesome ice cubes on the floor,
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sighed, made herself another drink and took a big swallow. "Impossible
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field." She had trouble pronouncing "impossible."
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"Right."
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"But politics takes up too much of my time. The Party comes first."
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"Right on, yes, I know what you mean." I took another drink, but only
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because I had a feeling I was going to need it.
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She looked at her drink, took the bottle and poured some more rum
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into it. She eyed the rum bottle, where the meniscus of the liquid inside
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was nearing the bottom, and started in to talk about politics. She talked
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well, considering the C2H5OH level of her blood -- all I had to do was
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grunt and nod my head. Finally she asked me if I would stay to dinner,
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we could go over to the hotel, she said, great fish and a special crab soup.
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I said yes, wondering if she was going to get through dinner without
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ending up under the table. I pictured myself struggling to help her
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transport her lovely Wagnerian body back to the cabin.
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I'm not much for drinking, you must understand, I do it, but I usually
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don't get much charge out of it. I go along to be polite -- especially if it
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involves being polite to a beautiful woman who seems hot to party. The
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hotel dining veranda was all stained wood and bougainvilleas twining
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around the lamp posts, it was a clear night with blue-white stars and
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yellow lights from the cabins across the lake. Atmosphere. So maybe I
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let myself go a little bit and drank more than I was used to. Rum, Chilean
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wine. Pepita had eased off -- but she was working at holding her chin
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high, suppressing a ladylike burp or two, trying to recover herself. By
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now I was talking a mile a minute about life in the States.
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"Yes, I really love Miami."
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She frowned. "When were you in Miami, Felipe?"
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"Oh," I said. "Well. You know Patty Elizalde, my cousin?"
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"No, I don't."
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"Good. I mean, too bad. Well, I was visiting her."
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Pepita still looked as if she had questions. "She's a poet," I added.
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"Ah, a poet,' Pepita said. "I love poetry." She quoted some powerful
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verses against the "Colossus of the North," and I cheered her on.
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Everything was going gangbusters -- until she got up to go to the powder
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room, leaving me alone toying with my cognac glass. At the next table, I
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saw a man and his wife, both gray-haired and conservatively dressed. I
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stared at them a moment, then the alcohol inside me seemed to take over.
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"Hi," I said. "First time here?"
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The man looked at me carefully, then smiled. "No, we come here
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quite often, for the eels."
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"Eels, eh?"
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So we started talking about gourmet treats. I introduced myself. The
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lady raised her eyebrows.
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"Elizalde? From where?" the man said.
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I thought back to the resume and told him I was from Santa Ana, a
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nearby town.
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"An uncommon name. Why, are you related to Cesar Elizalde?"
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God, that was the name of Felipe's father.
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"Well," I said, "no, not exactly, that is..."
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"His son Felipe and our son Pedro went to the _colegio_ together.
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They both went into medicine. Are you related?"
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Just then Pepita returned.
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The woman turned to her. "We've just been talking to your friend, he
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appears to be a close relative of a dear friend of mine."
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Jesus Christ. "We have to go," I said. "Good night."
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Pepita moaned loudly. "I haven't finished my cognac."
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"What precisely is the relationship, _senor_?" said the man.
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"Well, it's complicated..." I started to say, when this guy at the table on
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the other side let out a muffled gasp and stood up, rigid. Suddenly he was
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sitting on the floor, his hands to his throat, his legs kicking wildly, his
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mouth open wide, only a faint rustle coming out.
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Pepita opened her mouth wide, then pulled hard on my arm. "Do
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something, Felipe!"
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"Go ahead, you take it," I said.
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"Help him!" She seemed suddenly sober, but she was wringing one
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hand as if she would snap it off.
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Anything to get away from those people from Santa Ana. Fortunately
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the booze came to my rescue, as I went over and knelt down beside him.
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"I'm a doctor," I said in my best Lew Ayres voice to the gray-haired
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woman kneeling next to him -- who looked terrified. The man's face had
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turned pink with purple splotches. I reached for his wrist as if I were
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taking his pulse, but I had no idea what to do. Now I could see his mouth.
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"Choking," I said, looking at the woman and nodding sagely. I could feel
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Pepita's breath on my neck -- "Heimlich, heimlich," she said. I hadn't ever
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done the maneuver, but I'd read about it. I yanked my arm tight around
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his middle. "Pull upwards," she said. I tightened my grip, his rigid
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abdomen suddenly gave, and out from his throat popped a large chunk of
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meat which landed in a nearby tub of geraniums. The man drew several
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big, gasping breaths. The woman said, "Thank you, thank you, _doctor_,
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and you too, _senora_."
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I smiled as Pepita sat the man down. "Oh, it's nothing," I said,
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gazing at the faces of the people that had gathered around. The manager came
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over, shook my hand, and wanted to know my name. The man from the
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next table said "Elizalde."
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Pepita looked at him, her gaze somewhat confused by alcohol but
|
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interested. "Let's get out of here," I said. I left money for the bill, I
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grabbed Pepita by the hand, and I shook the manager's hand warmly,
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seeing his eyes mist with sentiment. Then I turned and pushed Pepita out
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of the hotel and back to my little rented Chevrolet.
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"Humanity -- always first," she said, her tongue twisting slightly on
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the last word.
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"Umm."
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"I hope you don't mind my butting in." She burped. "I know you
|
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would have handled it better -- but I couldn't help myself."
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"Oh no, that's O.K."
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"We did right. But!" She frowned. "Mustn't compromise the
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Revolution, no public displays. How did they know your name?"
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I didn't know, I told her.
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"Forceful."
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"Me?"
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"Yes, you." I was about to say "How about you?" when she kissed
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me. I could feel specks of saliva on her mouth as it engulfed mine. It was
|
||
like wading in a warm stream -- my face was being swallowed up. I
|
||
could feel the car swerving, and I pushed her away, struggling to keep the
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car's wheels from going off the road. She lay back in the seat, smiling like
|
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Amelia when she has had a successful day in court -- or shopping. I felt
|
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her hand creep into my lap. She managed to get an awkward but
|
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distracting grip on my groin, but by the time we got back to her place, the
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hand had fallen away and she was fast asleep.
|
||
Getting her to bed wasn't half as difficult as I had thought, her legs
|
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functioned even though the rest of her was pretty much out to lunch. But
|
||
I didn't feel right about leaving her alone, and getting to sleep myself on
|
||
the couch wasn't so easy. What a life, "Dr. Elizalde," I said to myself as
|
||
the moon crept slyly into the field of vision of the window, pasting its
|
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reflection over the lake and the volcanoes in the distance. I remember
|
||
appreciating the fact that I had never seen Amelia drunk, and I pictured
|
||
her smooth, cool, plump little legs flopped over mine in the way she had
|
||
of lolling around in bed.
|
||
When I woke up, it was dark, the blinds had been drawn, and my leg
|
||
was being crushed by someone's body. But not by somebody little like
|
||
Amelia -- when this body shifted suddenly, it made me grunt and try to
|
||
wriggle from under. 'Pepita' -- the name was about twenty-two degrees
|
||
too small for her. She squirmed, shifting herself so that my abdomen now
|
||
felt the crush. Perspiration standing out on her forehead and between her
|
||
wide-spreading breasts, she pulled her legs apart, one on either side of
|
||
mine. She moaned and pulled the hair out of her eyes without opening
|
||
them. Her breasts _were_ nice, roly-poly, smooth, fuzzless. My prick
|
||
sprang to attention.
|
||
"No, wait," she said groggily, as I tried to insert myself.
|
||
"What, what?'
|
||
"Hit me."
|
||
"What?"
|
||
She picked up my hand and placed it on her arm and then on her face.
|
||
"Here, and here."
|
||
"Hey, no."
|
||
"Yes."
|
||
"No."
|
||
She slapped my face lightly but sharply. It stung. "Like that."
|
||
"Hey!"
|
||
She smacked me again, this time harder, on the arm. I seized her right
|
||
hand. She struggled to hit me with the left, but didn't connect.
|
||
Meanwhile I forced myself into her.
|
||
"Oh yes!" she said. "Hit me again!"
|
||
Jesus! I thought. I gave her a slap on the cheek. She moaned. Jesus,
|
||
I thought again. Then I got too busy to think much anymore.
|
||
***
|
||
I woke up with the pale morning sunlight reflecting off the lake. I
|
||
was alone on the couch, the bed was made, there was a note from Pepita that
|
||
she had gone for a walk and would meet me at the hotel for breakfast at
|
||
8:30. I looked at myself in the mirror. There was a red mark on my
|
||
cheek, and my arm was sore around the elbow.
|
||
At breakfast she was dressed in a plain white high-necked blouse and
|
||
a navy-blue skirt. Her cheek looked pale and pasty, as if it were covered
|
||
with makeup. She smiled thinly at me, looked back at the menu, and
|
||
asked if I had slept well.
|
||
Me: "Yes."
|
||
Her: "Fine. We have a lot of work to do. Waiter, eggs, scrambled
|
||
easy, with black bean puree."
|
||
Me: "But...."
|
||
Her: "But what?" -- looking at me as though I were on the wrong side
|
||
of the plate glass in an exhibit in the Museum of Natural History.
|
||
Me: "Never mind." I guess if she was going to ignore last night, so
|
||
could I.
|
||
She told me that she would have to try to call Havana and make
|
||
contact with some sympathetic comrades there. Meanwhile, she would
|
||
have some materials on Cuba sent over to my hotel, including a detailed
|
||
analysis of the political views of the Cuban _maximo_ _lider_. A young
|
||
woman walked in wearing a skimpy tight halter. Pepita's face tightened.
|
||
"How bourgeois! Really in bad taste!" she whispered to me loudly.
|
||
As I walked away, back to my car, I couldn't help wondering if I hadn't
|
||
been dreaming the whole thing about the previous night. Except when I
|
||
touched my sore arm.
|
||
But by the end of the next week I was carrying around plenty of proof
|
||
that it hadn't been a dream -- my forearm hurt when I leaned on it and had
|
||
developed several black-and-blue spots, my cheekbone felt sore and
|
||
looked reddened when I examined it closely in the broken mirror at the
|
||
San Jorge. But as long as I could put up with the bruises, hanging around
|
||
with Dr. Josefa (Pepita) Sanchez-Schulz was a sure way of forgetting for
|
||
a few moments about the Errol Flynn part I was planning to play, to break
|
||
into the castle of Zenda and rescue the imprisoned prince -- not forgetting
|
||
the varlet Pillo, the friend of the friends of good old Uncle Paco.
|
||
The pattern of that day and night at Lake Coatepeque repeated itself.
|
||
Cold-eyed interviews with "Dr. Sanchez," interspersed with
|
||
sadomasochistic-alcoholic orgies with "Pepita." Once I got used to the
|
||
routine, I strove to restrain her enthusiasm and keep myself from getting
|
||
beaten to a pulp.
|
||
"No, Pepita, not there, no, please!"
|
||
"Relax, Felipe dear."
|
||
"No, no, no, please!"
|
||
But I couldn't guard myself from the hangovers, which appeared to
|
||
bother her not at all, but which left me feeling as if my throat were lined
|
||
with fuzzballs and that some elf were tying knots in the nerve fibers in my
|
||
cerebral cortex.
|
||
Let me set the record straight. It wasn't all my doing, situations
|
||
like the one with Pepita. Amelia always says I'm such a Don Juan -- but I
|
||
wasn't the one who more or less raped and battered someone in the
|
||
darkness that night at the lake. I always get bad-mouthed on that. Hell,
|
||
I'm short, I'm no beauty, I have kind of a pugnosed, Irish-looking face. I
|
||
can't help it if women like me anyway. Can I?
|
||
Amelia says it's in my background. She can't possibly mean by that
|
||
my father -- to imagine him with a mistress is like picturing the Pope with
|
||
Michelle Pfeiffer. She just must mean Latin men. Trite, trite, trite, I
|
||
say.
|
||
Anyway, over the next two weeks, in between my encounters with Dr.
|
||
Josefa "Pepita" Sanchez-Schulz:
|
||
I went to lots of movies, new Mexican and American films, and some
|
||
of the classics -- even the old murder mystery "Las Manos de Orlac," with
|
||
Peter Lorre. And "Gunga Din," with you-know-who.
|
||
I didn't drink while I was by myself -- not even a beer.
|
||
Whenever the air conditioner in my window of the room at the San
|
||
Jorge gave up, as it did continually on the hottest days, I went out to sit
|
||
over a _cafecito_ under the blue-and-white awning at the cafe on the
|
||
corner, or on a cast-iron bench under a giant fig tree in Cuscatlan Park. It
|
||
was April and like everyone else I gazed longingly at the puffy gobs of
|
||
clouds that came every afternoon from the east, almost but not quite
|
||
bringing the first cooling rains of "winter" -- as the Salvadorans called the
|
||
rainy season.
|
||
It was in the park that I met Pierre.
|
||
==================================================\
|
||
THIS LIFE
|
||
|
||
by Otho Eskin
|
||
|
||
(Note: This is part 2 of the play "Duet")
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHARACTERS
|
||
SARAH BERNHARDT
|
||
ELEONORA DUSE
|
||
MAN
|
||
SETTING
|
||
Backstage of the Syria Theatre, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
|
||
|
||
TIME
|
||
April 5, 1924 Evening.
|
||
|
||
SCENE (ONTINUED)
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
Eleonora, how did we ever come to such a pass? Two women, old enough
|
||
to know better, pretending to be people we're not. How did we ever end
|
||
up this way?
|
||
|
||
(ELEONORA pauses and
|
||
reflects. After a long
|
||
moment.)
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
I had no choice. I was born to this life. Theater was the family trade.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
I suppose theater was my destiny too. All my life I loved to play let's
|
||
pretend.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
It was never play for me. Acting has always been a struggle. But I was
|
||
brought up in a theater family and acting was all I knew.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
I think I almost envy you.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
How can you say that? You had everything. I had nothing. You were
|
||
brought up in wealth and comfort. I was a member of a poor, itinerant
|
||
theater company. My earliest memory as a child was being hungry and
|
||
cold -- walking from one village to another, holding my mother's skirt in
|
||
my hand.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
I spent my childhood in a convent school. You can't imagine how
|
||
tiresome that was.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
I never went to any school. My father taught me to read.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
I never knew my father. He seems to have vanished about the time I was
|
||
born. I expect my arrival was something of an inconvenience. Some say
|
||
he was a count. Or a statesman. He might just as well have been a sailor
|
||
from Le Havre. My mother never said. I doubt she knew. Or cared. I don't
|
||
think she knew the names of the fathers of any of her children. She was
|
||
careless that way.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
How terrible not to know your own father.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
I never missed him. I had my sisters and my aunts and my dear, dear
|
||
mother.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
At least you had a mother. My mother died when I was young.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
I want to know what happened to your mother, Eleonora.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
Sarah, I don't want to talk to you -- about my mother -- or about
|
||
anything else. Don't you have anything better to do?
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
As a matter of fact, I don't. Tell me about your mother. It's important.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
We were on tour and my mother became ill. It was in Ancona and she
|
||
could no longer travel. My father put her into the paupers ward but we
|
||
couldn't remain with her. We had no money and we had to act to eat.
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
We'll come back for you in a few days.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
He told my mother.
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
When you're well. You'll be much better soon.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
Then we went on to the next place. We left her to die among strangers.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
You never saw your mother again?
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
A few weeks later, as I was about to go on for a performance -- just like
|
||
tonight -- the stage manager brought me a telegram.
|
||
|
||
(The MAN reads from a
|
||
telegram.)
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
Fifteen, September, 1875. We regret to inform you that your mother,
|
||
Angelica Duse, died at four thirty this morning. She will be given a
|
||
Christian burial in the Communal Grave.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
Did you go on with the performance?
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
You will perform tonight. I must insist.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
Was I wrong to do that?
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
You tell me.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
She was hardly more than a girl. Dying alone.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
No one should die alone. Is that why I am here?
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
I don't want your pity.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
I don't have pity to offer.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
She was just a peasant girl with no education. She could barely read
|
||
or write. But I learned much from her. Everything that counts.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
I too learned much from my mother. Everything that counts. When I was
|
||
very young I didn't see her often. She traveled for months at a time. Then
|
||
she would suddenly appear, an explosion of silks and parasols and sweet
|
||
perfumes. She'd give me a kiss and be off again. I adored her. We had a
|
||
wonderful life my mother and I. A lovely home with fine food and
|
||
beautiful clothes -- and visitors -- almost every night.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
Somehow I cannot imagine you as a child.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
I suppose I was a strange girl anxious and morbid frail and sickly.
|
||
The doctors said I would die young.
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
Madame, your daughter Sarah is seriously ill. You must face the truth
|
||
she will not live to see twenty.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
They said this in front of you?
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
It was a frequent subject of family discussion. Like the weather and the
|
||
latest fashions
|
||
in hats.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
I have always been afraid of death.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
At least my illness made my mother pay attention to me. She was a
|
||
wonderful woman but her instincts were not maternal. Besides, she
|
||
always preferred my younger sister. My mother could never abide things
|
||
which were imperfect. Jeanne was the pretty one. But when I coughed
|
||
blood she had to attend to me. As time passed I became obsessed by death
|
||
particularly my own. When I was quite young I used to visit the Paris
|
||
morgue. There they kept the bodies that had been dragged from the river.
|
||
Murder victims. A man stabbed in a brawl. A woman who had committed
|
||
suicide by eating arsenic. I took comfort being among the dead. At least I
|
||
think I did. Perhaps that's a story I made up. I can no longer tell the
|
||
difference between what happened and what I invented.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
Perhaps there is no difference.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
But the story about the coffin that was true. I'm almost certain. I
|
||
begged my mother to buy me a coffin. She found one made of rosewood
|
||
lined with white satin. I slept in it often -- so that I would be accustomed
|
||
to my final resting place. And later I would sometimes receive my friends
|
||
while lying in my coffin. A nice effect, don't you think, Eleonora?
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
It seems too much.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
There is no such thing as too much. There is never enough.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
You had great practice dying, Sarah. You did it better than anyone I ever
|
||
saw.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
It's true. I was the master of the death scene. (Assuming the persona of
|
||
Marguerite Gautier in La Dame aux camelias, SARAH collapses on a
|
||
couch.) I am dying, and my joy conceals my death. You will speak of me
|
||
sometimes, won't you? Armand, give me your hand. (The MAN kneels at
|
||
her feet and takes her hand.) I assure you it's not difficult to die. I'm not
|
||
suffering any more. It seems as though life were pouring in on me. I feel
|
||
so well. I never felt so well before. I am going to live! Oh, how well I feel.
|
||
|
||
(SARAH collapses and
|
||
lies still for a long
|
||
moment. Then SARAH
|
||
leaps to her feet,
|
||
enormously pleased with
|
||
herself. ELEONORA
|
||
makes no attempt to hide
|
||
her disdain for the
|
||
performance.)
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
Now there! Wasn't that marvelous!? Nobody does it better. People don't
|
||
die with style any more, have you noticed? If you can't die in style, how
|
||
can you expect to live in style? And style is everything, n'est-ce pas?
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
Every opportunity I had I came to the theater to see you die. It was one of
|
||
my greatest pleasures.
|
||
|
||
(SARAH regards
|
||
ELEONORA coldly)
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
I never liked to do death scenes myself. Death should be concealed. It is a
|
||
profanation to show death on stage. Every time I played Marguerite in La
|
||
Dame aux camelias or those other dying ladies, I thought: some day I will
|
||
really die and on that day I will remember that I once acted a parody of
|
||
my death. When the soul remembers, what shall it say?
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
When it became apparent that, despite the miracles of medical science, I
|
||
would not die young, my mother became seriously concerned. (As
|
||
Maman) Sarah, your face is plain. You're too thin. Your hair is
|
||
unmanageable. What is to become of you? (As SARAH) My mother was
|
||
in despair. (As Maman) We must be realistic. You are without prospects.
|
||
(As SARAH) Maman decided her only hope was to marry me off. (To
|
||
Maman) Who would marry me!? Who could love me? (As Maman) If
|
||
you can't be desirable, you must learn to pretend to be desirable. (As
|
||
SARAH) I suppose that is the way it began for me pretending
|
||
pretending to die, pretending to love. My first lessons in acting began in
|
||
my mother's drawing room. There I learned to stage my entrances so that I
|
||
was most entrancing, to produce laughter and tears at will. To make
|
||
people love me. My dear mother taught me everything I know
|
||
everything that is worth knowing.
|
||
|
||
(The MAN, champagne
|
||
glass in hand, regards
|
||
SARAH appreciatively.)
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
(As Maman)
|
||
You must make our guest comfortable. Sit with him. (As SARAH) Cher
|
||
monsieur, cher bon ami. I owe everything to my mother.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
She made you what you are. Just as my father made me what I am. He
|
||
was a journeyman actor who taught me the trade. I've been acting since I
|
||
was a child. I can't remember anything else. I had my theater debut when I
|
||
was four -- as Cosette in Les Miserables. I remember that just before I
|
||
was to make my entrance one of the actors in our company beat my legs
|
||
with a strap to make me cry. Then I was shoved onto the stage, tears
|
||
flowing from my eyes.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
You learned the most important thing there is to know about the theater
|
||
how to make a dramatic entrance.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
I learned that to act is to suffer. We were a wretched little company
|
||
moving from one small town to another, performing melodramas at
|
||
country fairs and run-down provincial theater houses. We were probably
|
||
pretty awful.
|
||
|
||
(Shift in light. ELEONORA as a young
|
||
girl performing in a play, SARAH and the
|
||
MAN are company members. All perform
|
||
in a stilted and mechanical style, with no
|
||
genuine feeling -- "bad operatic" in
|
||
character.)
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
(As FATHER)
|
||
My darling daughter, there is terrible news!
|
||
|
||
(ELEONORA, as
|
||
DAUGHTER, staggers
|
||
back, stricken)
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
(As MOTHER)
|
||
The bank has failed!
|
||
|
||
DAUGHTER/ELEONORA
|
||
The bank?!
|
||
|
||
MOTHER/SARAH
|
||
Your father has lost everything!
|
||
|
||
FATHER/MAN
|
||
We are ruined!
|
||
|
||
(FATHER and MOTHER
|
||
clasp one another in their
|
||
arms and look mournful.)
|
||
|
||
DAUGHTER/ELEONORA
|
||
Ruined!?
|
||
|
||
FATHER and MOTHER
|
||
Ruined!
|
||
|
||
FATHER/MAN
|
||
We will have to sell the house to pay my debts.
|
||
|
||
MOTHER/SARAH
|
||
The vineyard. The peach orchard where you were wont to play as a child.
|
||
|
||
DAUGHTER/ELEONORA
|
||
Not the orchard! Is there nothing we can do?
|
||
|
||
FATHER/MAN
|
||
There is only one hope.
|
||
|
||
MOTHER/SARAH
|
||
You know Marcello, the baker?
|
||
|
||
DAUGHTER/ELEONORA
|
||
The odious old man, fat and bald?
|
||
|
||
MOTHER/SARAH
|
||
That's the one.
|
||
|
||
DAUGHTER/ELEONORA
|
||
What about him?
|
||
|
||
MOTHER/SARAH
|
||
He has sought your hand in marriage.
|
||
|
||
DAUGHTER/ELEONORA
|
||
But it is handsome, young Rudolfo, the son of the farmer, that I love.
|
||
|
||
FATHER/MAN
|
||
Marcello is rich. If you marry him your mother and I will live out our
|
||
lives in comfort.
|
||
|
||
DAUGHTER/ELEONORA
|
||
Of course, dear Papa. Send for Marcello and arrange the wedding day.
|
||
|
||
FATHER/MAN
|
||
You are a good daughter.
|
||
|
||
|
||
MOTHER/SARAH
|
||
Forget handsome, young Rudolfo.
|
||
|
||
DAUGHTER/ELEONORA
|
||
(Clasping her hands to her heart)
|
||
I can never forget my handsome, young Rudolfo. My true -- my only
|
||
love.
|
||
|
||
(Change in lighting, once
|
||
again backstage)
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
That was truly dreadful, Eleonora. I don't think I was ever that bad. Even
|
||
before I began at the Conservatory. Of course, when I was that age it
|
||
never occurred to me become a professional actress. I'd never even been
|
||
inside a theater. At that point all I was concerned with was avoiding my
|
||
mother's plans for me. I hated the idea of marriage. I could not accept life
|
||
as someone's wife. I was in despair. For a while I thought of becoming a
|
||
nun to be the bride of Christ. I felt trapped -- without choice
|
||
without hope. Then something happened.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
Something happened.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
My mother took me one night to the Comedie Francaise. When the
|
||
curtain rose, I thought I would faint. I knew immediately that the theater
|
||
would be my life. Those columns on the stage would be my palace. That
|
||
freeze of painted clouds would be my sky. Large tears rolled down my
|
||
cheeks, tears without sobs, tears I felt would never cease. I must have
|
||
made a spectacle of myself. Maman was exasperated. The audience stared
|
||
at our loge. One of my mother's gentlemen friends was beside himself.
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
God! What an idiot that child is. They'd better stick her into a convent
|
||
and leave her there.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
I knew then that I would be an actress.
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
An actress! How absurd. She'll make a fool of herself. Why can't she be
|
||
like her sister?
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
My destiny was clear. I was determined to be the greatest actress of my
|
||
time. Of all time. And I did it!
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
What you did was not much better than vaudeville.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
It was better than that dreary mopping around the stage you did in the
|
||
name of high art. I learned the acting techniques of the day -- the style of
|
||
rhetorical declamation all actors used -- the rigid movements and
|
||
gestures.
|
||
|
||
(The MAN assumes the affected, highly-mannered style of a theater
|
||
teacher from the ancien regime, holding a long baton in
|
||
one hand with which he beats time.)
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
Now girls, straight backs, heads high, toes pointed.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
We were taught the walk of nonchalance.
|
||
|
||
|
||
(SARAH follows the
|
||
instructions, moving in a
|
||
highly artificial style.)
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
That's lovely. One. Two. Three. Walk.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
We were taught the walk of fury, of terror. How to walk like a saint -- or
|
||
a sinner.
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
Today we learn the art of sitting.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
I learned to sit with dignity, with lassitude, with irony.
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
Body back. Scornful half smile. Lovely! The glint of laughter. An
|
||
imperceptible shrug. Lovely! Lovely!
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
The Conservatory probably ruined you, Sarah. What they taught you was
|
||
nonsense.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
It was my road to success.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
Success came easy to you.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
Like breathing.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
Too easy. Nothing worthwhile should be easy.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
I became a member of the company of the Comedie Francaise and those
|
||
columns became my palace those painted clouds and skies became my
|
||
clouds my sky. I was ecstatic.
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
(As A Newspaper Critic)
|
||
Sarah Bernhardt has become the leading actress of Paris. A succ<63>s fou.
|
||
She has won the hearts of the people of Paris and sweeps all before her. I
|
||
predict that before long she will be the sensation of all Europe
|
||
consecrated the great tragedienne of our time. She is passion. And
|
||
reflection. Innocence and perversity. The feminine enigma. Every man
|
||
who see her falls in love at once. D. H. Lawrence saw her and was
|
||
enchanted.
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
(As D. H. Lawrence)
|
||
Sarah is the incarnation of wild emotion which we share with all live
|
||
things, but which is gathered in us in all complexity and inscrutable fury.
|
||
She represents the primeval passions of woman. I could love such a
|
||
woman myself, love her to madness; all for the pure wild passion of it.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
No one played love scenes better than I.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
Sarah, what you did was a picture of love, not love experienced by real
|
||
men and women. Your acting lacked sincerity.
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
What has sincerity to do with Sarah? One might as well demand sincerity
|
||
of a volcano or a hurricane. They are what they are. So was Sarah.
|
||
|
||
ELEONORA
|
||
You knew no limits.
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
Her personal life, her fortunes, her bankruptcies, her lovers, her appetites
|
||
became the stuff of popular gossip. And she never denied anything.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
I have nothing to hide.
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
She was the greatest showman of her time. Without rival. Without peer.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
There is only one Sarah.
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
A life force.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
All tears and laughter...
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
A comet hurtling through the sky burning with personal ambition -- a
|
||
thirst for glory that would be extinguished only by death the
|
||
demanding perfectionist and the terror of producers and directors.
|
||
|
||
(SARAH stands a script in
|
||
one hand. She assumes a
|
||
pose of irresistible
|
||
poignancy. She looks
|
||
about the stage with
|
||
growing anxiety.)
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
Am I not supposed to be standing in a shaft of moonlight at this point?
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
(As The Director)
|
||
We must have the shaft of moonlight on (DIRECTOR gestures toward
|
||
ELEONORA who assumes the role of a young woman in the play) our
|
||
ing<EFBFBD>nue. The shaft of moonlight must be on her.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
But it will be infinitely more effective if the moonlight is on me.
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
(Firmly)
|
||
There can be only one shaft of moonlight, Madame Sarah, and it must be
|
||
on her.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
(With growing impatience)
|
||
I must have moonlight. I insist.
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
Impossible!
|
||
|
||
(SARAH rushes
|
||
downstage toward The
|
||
DIRECTOR and speaks
|
||
in a growing state of
|
||
indignation and anger.)
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
You have no right to take my moon!
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
I am the Director and I will put the moon where I please.
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
If you take my moon, I will leave the production. You are warned.
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
I will not be intimidated by you. I will not compromise my artistic vision
|
||
in order to satisfy your childish ego, Madame Sarah. And my vision says
|
||
one shaft of moonlight (pointing dramatically) on HER!
|
||
|
||
(SARAH strikes the script
|
||
violently with her finger.)
|
||
|
||
SARAH
|
||
The stage directions read: "Bernhardt advances, pale in the moonlight,
|
||
convulsed with emotion." I am pale. I am convulsed. I want my moon!
|
||
|
||
MAN
|
||
And she got her moon -- just as she got everything she wanted in life.
|
||
=====================================================================
|
||
=====================================================================
|