Moving Parts

Moving Parts Read Free

Book: Moving Parts Read Free
Author: Magdelena Tulli
Tags: Fiction, Literary
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jellyfish. The raindrops have already added a spotted design to the plain fabric of the man’s jacket. Let’s say that his overcoat was stolen at the airport. Did he also lose his wallet, tucked into an inside pocket? The wet sidewalk reflected the lights of the hotel, while the semitransparent image of the bronze rider shook slightly in the glass of the revolving door and spun on his horse as if on a merry-go-round when the new character entered the lobby. Across the mirrors drifted the aforementioned jacket, an immaculate white shirt collar and a necktie that is rather ironic, but also rather flashy – of course, within the limits of what’s permissible in places where the only salvation is to reconcile freedom with servitude. Narrators have a fondness for details; they pluck them skillfully and with relish out of the background. The necktie tells them almost everything, while the eyeglasses merely reflect the external world, little more than a fragment of a setting that narrators know like the back of their hand. Different profiles and faces are chosen for jackets than for black sweaters; foreheads can be smoother, gazes milder, and this principle, let it be noted, has been upheld. Despite this, it’s hard not to notice a striking resemblance between the two male figures, especially when the strip of lamps shining coldly over the front desk flashes in the newcomer’s glasses. The reservation is found under the name of a well-known shipping company whose shares have for some time been considered an excellent investment. Having the traveler’s expert knowledge at its disposal, the firm didnot omit to arrange for a roof over his head, forbearingly, with resignation even, accepting the fact that he, too, has a body, as troublesome and demanding as any other. On the hurriedly completed form there briefly appeared a long and illegible name beginning with the letter F. The top-class specialist, whose involvement guarantees success for the company – by now it’s certain that it is him – reaches for his keys. The tan lines on his hand reveal that as recently as July or August he was wearing a wedding band. He could have taken it off a quarter of an hour ago even, slipping it into the same pocket from which the now unnecessary newspaper protrudes. But the smiling desk clerk doesn’t fall for such a trick – neither she nor anyone else. In the meantime the bell of the elevator rings out over the door with its steely gleam, described in the trimmings catalogs as a half-matte easy on the eye. The door opens and closes with a barely audible hiss, easy on the ear, and F. is already exiting on some floor or other; thick carpeting muffles his steps. He opens the room vacated by the other two, which by now has been cleaned so thoroughly that no trace of them is left. F. ought immediately to put in a call to his bank and give them the numbers of his lost credit cards. Instead, he rakes his fingers through his hair and goes up to the window. So it’s possible that his wallet remained safely in the inside pocket of his jacket, though even in this matter there can be no certainty, for there exist states of mind in the face of which the security of one’s bank accounts is of no importance. Mr. F. stares at thedull plasterwork and the gray sky that the narrator was reluctant to observe. He, too, has no wish to look at it; he draws the drapes carefully. He isn’t missing much. Walls and clouds were, in any case, blocking the view. There was no way to see beyond what was in plain sight. F. sits on the sofa, then lies down on it, like a passenger on a ship who has been overcome by the nauseating pitch of the vessel and has retired to his cabin. And thus a maritime metaphor encroaches on a foaming wave between the lines, thwarting the earlier circus metaphor that the narrator had only just finished dealing with. The new complication perplexes him. From the slipshod, woefully incomplete

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