always saves us from that horrible muteness. (Why canât we sit quietly and look at each other? Why do I get nervous when Alicia says nothing, when I ask her âwhatâs wrongâ and she pauses before responding, ânothing, I just donât want to talkâ?) Music or the newspaper or a book, never just the two of us.
I was sitting in that corridor with some of my cousins, but they werenât actually my cousins, they were old friends from high school; insulting each other jokingly, making fun of the each otherâs foibles and defects for a laughâtheyâre the same even in a dream. We were obviously children, dressed in bathing trunks and playing a game of some kind across the rectangles of the parquet. Marbles, or something. And while, bursting with laughter, we were competing to say the cruelest joke, someone steals the bag of marbles from M, he bites Râs hand, R starts crying, C mimics his cries, M screams âabuseâ in falsetto, I watch poor R earnestly, we all start slapping each other, repeating the worst jokes. I made some suggestion, N insulted me, I was tripped, and I fell down. Everyone jumped on top of me in a little pile, and it would have been futile to use the air that was scarcely reaching my lungs toscream that they were suffocating me, that I was dying, because just as I was starting to feel desperate, the human tower fell to the ground. Then, as we were getting to our feet and M was picking up his marbles, a grownup came over (an adult, I remember someone whispering âsshh, a grownup is coming,â heavy black shoes resounding through the house), and told us, calm down, you little shits. The grownup continued into my uncleâs bedroom, the master bedroom. I left the group of kids and followed him down the long red carpet in that twilight corridor, wine-colored walls barely illuminated by the small dark bulbs of the few hanging lamps. The grownup turned back to me, a finger placed vertically across his lips, commanding my silence. I grew along the way, it was now extremely difficult to see the details of his big shoes, and when he turned and told me to be quiet I saw that he didnât have a face. Terror.
Alone, I went into the bedroom, decorated and furnished in identical fashion to my uncleâs actual bedroom. An enormous television, piles of photos, a table with flowers, pastel curtains tied with olive-colored cloth ties, empty nightstands on each side of the immense master bed. An unnerving piece of furniture with locked drawers (there are secrets here). The warm sun and the fragrance of pollen and fresh cut grass coming in through a window that opened onto the gardenâspring in Rancagua. A young girl was sleeping peacefully.
I wanted to get out of there; I hate disrupting other peopleâs sleep, especially when itâs someone I donât know. But the door was locked. I looked around the room and sat down on the bed, at the girlâs feet. Her back was to me, her body wrapped in the sheets. Softly, I touched her, she didnât wake up. I think I said something.I prodded her, nothing happened. Little by little, I became more forceful, until I found myself with my hands on her shoulders, rolling her towards me, shaking her. She was very pretty, apart from her dead eyes. Dead eyes and cold skin. Her mouth: clenched so tightly that her teeth had ground together before she died. Iâd never seen a corpse, but knew I had one in front of me now. (Her white hairâa noteworthy detailâresembled the nylon wig of a doll.) Repulsed, I let go of her and ran to the door, which was open.
Before leaving the room and waking myself up, I looked at the girl one last time to see if her eyes had recovered their glow, if her pale skin ran with blood again. The angle of her arm lost its rigidity, she became human, and with revived fingers, uncovered herself. She stood, her voice so unexpected said thanks, many thanks, and who might I be, a