new cousin perhaps. âBut,â she went on, âhavenât they told you that if Iâm made to remember that person whom I hate, the loathing I feel is so strong that it paralyzes me, that it kills me? No, Iâd already forgotten that person, but when I saw the trunk full of papers, I was overcome with rage. And why not? Iâm going to die on the floor of my house, snarling like a rabid dog!â (And with her eyes she indicated the trunk, a trunk just like one that had belonged to my grandmother, heavy, ancient, and cold because itâs made of metal.) âHis disgusting body is in there. I opened it and found him. I wanted to kill him again, cousin, a hundred times. Before he killed me.â (But what she told me is impossible; a body would never fit in that trunk.) Then my eyes fell upon the trunk and, slowly, it began to expand, transforming into a coffin. (Or was it maybe I who shrank, turned back into child?)
Then I woke up and went to the bathroom. Then to the kitchen, still half asleep, and I realized that someone had slipped a letterunder the door, a letter that got the recipientâs address wrong. The senderâs name is âVioleta Drago.â Do I know her? Of course I know her. Sheâs the friend Alicia has been crying over, locked away in her room all these days. The friend who was apparently murdered in her own apartment, a horrible crime that was never publicized. Just now, I remembered a time when Alicia showed me a video from her graduation, she paused the video to point out her friend Violeta, the albino girl.
            August 12 th
            12:13
I write little because Iâm beginning to value silence. During break Alicia and I discussed the uselessness of writing just a characterâs initials, it no longer drew attention to the connotations of the names, the characters lost immediacy and simply became letters (sheâs reading Kafka). Iâm tortured by hundreds of images and ideas, I canât maintain coherence in my diary. So much to say, but also so much noise: cars, footsteps in the hallway, the telephone . . .
It was Alicia calling. Why does her ability to silently absorb the problems of others attract me this way? Why does being next to her physically paralyze me? Why, over the phone, were we functional (functional? weâre not machines)? Iâm sad and alone in the middle of a sad city. Alicia seems better prepared than I for the constant aggression of Santiagoâs inhabitants; she seems to always be going somewhere. (Once, awkwardly, I asked herâshe was on the verge of tears and I didnât know if I should say something,which is what her friend who died wouldâve doneâwhat she did for fun, and she said, âI never wanted to be here, thatâs why I leave sometimes.â) Alicia, never serious, told me during break that if I wrote a diary or something like that, I should name her A and not Alicia, because readers would invariably associate her with that little girl who went to Wonderland, a situation that was not at all accurate in her case. I am sad, a delicious wind is blowing, the myrrh trees are already in bloom.
Yesterday afternoon T confessed to me that he was starting to scare himself. Every year, at the beginning of spring, he experienced a sensation of overwhelming emotional catastrophe. âLike the driver of a car who discovers that heâs dead a second before crashing,â he said, hearing the birds start to sing, the blue sky, the warmth returning. Then he confessed to me: couples will start making out right in front of my eyes, walking around holding each other, happy, and Iâll be alone. Winter coats and summer orgies wonât do; spring speaks the truth: some come to this world alone and others come in groups. (T asks for advice, I maintain my position and invent experiences to support my words. Then I hate