About
butterflies
Maria Antas introduces Birgitta Boucht's novel Mariposa |
An extract from the novel Mariposa (Schildts, 1999)
Roza and Melancholie were sitting in a bar drinking beer. They hadn't
met for a long time because they bored each other. But they were best
friends nonetheless. What do you do when you can't stand meeting your
best friend? You switch on your answerphone and tell lies. Today by
mistake one of them had answered the phone.
Roza was dressed in her brother Armand's
old clothes, a bad habit which irritated people but which she found
hard to break. Her brother had vanished long ago leaving his clothes
behind. They smelled of tobacco and sweat. Roza used them to keep
him alive. She could spend whole evenings going through his wardrobe.
There was a dress shirt, not that you'd have expected it.
The two young women studied each other.
Melancholie noted that Roza had bitten down her cuticles again.
'How's life?' she asked.
'So-so. And you?'
'So-so.'
They ordered two more beers, lifted
their glasses to each other compulsively and stuffed crisps into their
mouths with nervous jerky movements.
'How's Lydia?' said Melancholie.
'What d'you mean? Any reason she shouldn't
be well?'
'Dunno. Any news of Lilya?'
Roza pulled an unhappy face and said
curtly, 'My godmother sleeps where she sleeps. Lilya's been unconscious
for twenty years. If she moves you'll certainly hear of it. Besides,
I think I shall soon be struck down by the same fate.'
Melancholie spun her beer-glass, not
much interested in Roza's identifying herself with her godmother.
She'd heard more than enough on the subject, just as she had on Roza's
equally vague plans to kill herself. She carefully snapped four toothpicks
in two before looking up at her friend.
'Roza,' she said. 'I'm going away. I
don't know when I'll be back. Will you look after my diaries for me?'
Roza gasped.
'You're planning to go without me?'
Melancholie leaned across the table.
'I want you to have my diaries.'
'Stuff your diaries,' shouted Roza.
'I want to go with you. We've always travelled together.'
Roza couldn't sleep. In the bar she'd knocked over a glass of beer,
screamed at Melancholie, wept, blown her nose in her napkin, been
rude to the bouncer and left Melancholie the bill. It wasn't like
her. And it hadn't helped. She needed company. Or she'd never get
to sleep.
Where could Gustav be? He never rang
any more. There'd been a time he used to ring every night and keep
her awake. They'd talked about everything between heaven and earth.
There's nothing you can't talk about so long as you're in love, Roza
used to think. But one night she'd noticed her thoughts were rambling
all over the place and she couldn't be bothered to listen to what
Gustav was saying at the other end of the phone.
'It's over,' she'd said to the room
at large then pressed her lips together.
He understood at once.
'It's been really great,' he said. 'I'll
never forget you.'
'He sounds like an etiquette book,'
she thought, downcast. Always so controlled. As if in another world.
Their area of contact had always been too small. Conversations at
night about birds and butterflies aren't enough. That's not love,
just shared insomnia.
'Bye now,' she'd said, replacing the
phone.
Since then they'd met many times. Like
a brother and sister or old workmates or children from the same crèche.
Knowing all about each other's faults and shortcomings, indulgent
but incurious. And there for one another in difficult times. Now,
in the middle of the night, Roza knew Gustav was the only person she
could phone.
'Did I wake you?'
'Of course not.' Gustav grunted. 'I'm
reading the Kama Sutra in the arms of my beloved.'
She laughed.
'If you're reading it must be a cookbook,
Carl Butler maybe.'
'Of course I was asleep. It's four o'clock
and I have to get up at six. What do you want?'
'Get a taxi and come over. I need company.'
'My dear girl, I'm not a flying ambulance.'
'And I'm not a solarium.'
This was their old jargon. At least
he wasn't angry she'd woken him.
'Melancholie's going away,' Roza said.
'Some job. She told me this evening. Have you heard anything?'
There was a short pause. 'Nothing about
a job. But I know she's going away.'
'And you never told me!'
'I haven't seen you for three months.
If she doesn't want to talk about it you'll just have to stop being
inquisitive.'
Roza sighed as if about to burst into
tears.
'I'm in bed and I can't get to sleep.'
'OK. I'll get a taxi. Be with you in
fifteen minutes. Throw down the keys.'
When Gustav came into the room it was as if he'd never left it.
He took Roza in his arms, looked into
her eyes, stroked her hair and hugged her hard. Then he went into
the kitchen to make coffee.
He grumbled about the sort of coffee
she used, much too light a roast. He searched the cupboards for his
special cup. It was on the bottom shelf right at the back, covered
in dust.
'At least you haven't let anyone else
drink out of it.' His voice was matter-of-fact.
Roza, wrapped in a bathtowel, was perched
on a high kitchen stool. She looked frozen. Her long hair hung down
in front of her eyes. She was vigorously sucking an handful of it.
'Can you tell me why Melancholie's going
away?'
'I said no.'
'If Melancholie goes the town's empty
as far as I'm concerned.'
Roza could hear how wretched she sounded.
She knew this kind of lamentation, she'd often heard it from others
who came to her. Men howling their loneliness into her ear at the
moment of orgasm. Old women imprisoned in their homes. Small children
terrified of ghosts and neighbours. Now she was like them.
'Gustav,' she appealed quietly.
No answer. His long narrow face and
thinning hair roused her tenderness, but she couldn't understand his
silence. Were they friends or weren't they?
Still silent, he unwound the bathtowel
from her. He stroked her skin and lifted her in his arms. She was
slim and slight, hardly any weight at all. As he laid her down on
the bed he saw she was crying. He kissed her eyes, the salt taste
was good. The more she wept the better it tasted. It reminded him
of something he'd eaten when he was a child.
'We shouldn't be in bed together,' said
Roza. 'I don't like you lapping up my tears.'
Gustav lay back and stared at the ceiling.
He noticed a spider's web swaying about. It was descending on them.
A butterfly caught in it had dried out like a leaf.
'Don't be sad, now,' he said. 'Melancholie's
going to Mexico. I'm going with her. Of course it was silly of us
not to have told you earlier. We didn't want to hurt you. Now at least
it's been said, thank God.'
Gustav heaved himself out of Roza's
bed without waiting for an answer. He knew she'd say nothing. She
lay still with the white sheet pulled over her face.
Poor girl, he thought. It's a real shame.
So he rang for a taxi. He would rather
have showered first but he didn't want to use Roza's bathroom.
Translated by Silvester Mazzarella
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