These letters, written to Bea from Montreal, are the origin of Fundamental Considerations on Something, which Foret began to write at that time and continued to compose without interruption until his disappearance in Mexico a year and three months later. A fragment of the Considerations, which also forms part, literally transcribed, of a letter sent to Bea on July 19, 1917, is unusually autobiographical and offers a detailed narrative of the “elusive chapter” of Foret’s life that his researchers generally prefer to ignore. In that fragment, the author tells of a walk through the port area of Montreal, in the shade of the factories, and his meeting with a person he christens Mr. X, who spontaneously sits down next to him on a bench to talk. This person, whom Foret compares to “a sly fox,” immediately says he knows the conflicts that are disturbing Foret’s soul. The latter expresses his incredulity, and Mr. X softly murmurs the name “Beatrice.” Livid, Richard asks if he knows her and if he has been sent to give him some piece of bad news about his lover, but Mr. X calms him, explaining there is nothing to fear, that he is just doing a favor for a mutual friend. On asking the name of this friend, Foret receives only an evasive gesture, so he decides to allow the strange character to say what he has come to say.
And that is where the problems start. According to Richard’s letter and the earliest manuscript of the Considerations, Mr. X tells him a fictional story, clarifying that he only intends, by means of allegory, to share a “moral discovery.” But the “innocent” story—as Foret transcribes it—summarizes in broad brushstrokes the political history of Europe in what remained of the twentieth century (remember that we are in 1917), including the Great War, the Weimar Republic, the rise of Nazism, the Holocaust, the Cold War, the student protests of the sixties, the Berlin Wall and its fall. Of course this is all narrated as fictitious speculation, without names or excessive detail, almost in the manner of a fable, and although Foret is impressed by the man’s strange alienation, he doesn’t believe a word of what he hears, nor extract any moral lesson from it. He merely assigns it to his letter and to the note that will later form part of the Considerations.
With the passage of time, after Foret’s death, Bea will remember this letter, take it from her dark trunk in the iconic year of 1945, and be stupefied to see the absolute correlation with the world at that exact moment. Bea will, quite rightly, fear she would be taken for a lunatic or a fraud if she shows the letter to anyone, so she does not. As for the identical paragraph in the Considerations, there was not much chance of its being read as a timely prophecy: after a first edition in 1920, the book falls into an oblivion, only relieved by the death of Bea toward the end of the sixties, when Foret’s first readers in five decades, believing the false prophecy to be a posthumous addition of the widow or the editors, refuse to credit such an absurdity.
Mr. X does not reappear as a character or reference in the rest of the Considerations or in Foret’s letters to Bea. His prophecies, taken by many as amusing apocrypha (which they may be), leave Foret in a state approaching a trance, and under this influence he writes some of the most celebrated sections of his Considerations, or such is suggested by the chronology of the letters. Bea dies, taking with her to the grave the secret of the authenticity, or otherwise, of Mr. X’s prophesies.
Traditional scholars of Foret’s work, fearful of the consequences, pour fervent scorn on the affair. It’s impossible to know what they think at night, away from their offices, their classrooms, and their university publishers, when doubt or suspicion or irrational vacillation seep through their sleepless eyelids. None of them have written anything on the subject.
A
An intensely white smoke, issuing from some branches burning without any visible flame on the side of the street, rises into the equally white light of Nueva Francia, in the middle of which Adela’s untidy black hair darkens a precise area of the town.
Marcelo Valente walks a little way behind her, responding laconically to the questions about his status and origins.
“From Madrid.”
. . .
“Yes, at the University of Los Girasoles.”
. . .
“A whole year.”
. . .
“I got here about a month ago.”
. . .
“No way. What made you think I was a historian? Do I look like a historian?”
. . .
“Ha, ha. And what are European historians like?”
. . .
“No. I’m in the aesthetics department. In philosophy.”
Adela is a strong woman. While Marcelo is driving his noisy car, alert to the possible military checkpoints, the possible roadblocks organized crime has prescribed for the community, she stares at the semidesert landscape of Nueva Francia, her mouth twisted in an inscrutable expression. She also works at the university, although Marcelo has never seen her there. This is explained by the fact that she has a free term with no classes, only a couple of consultations she can do at home. She lives right in the center of Los Girasoles in, she says, a colonial-style house with an interior patio. In this patio live her adored cacti and the odd aromatic plant.
Her field is not particularly clear: she did an undergraduate degree in law, has a master’s in human rights, or something similar, and a PhD in history, though no one can understand how it was conferred. She gives free legal advice to women harassed by the “patriarchal system of the administration of justice,” which, after a series of prudent but interested questions on Marcelo’s part, turns out to mean she gets women out of prison—women who grow poppies for the drug trade, or the wives of the men who grow poppies for the drug trade, or the wives of the narcos imprisoned for abetting the growing of poppies. (Marcelo isn’t clear about the nuances, but whatever the case, it has to do with deeply real areas of human existence his Madrid theoretical outlook will never manage to comprehend.)
Adela also asks questions and learns things about Marcelo Valente’s life. That he was born in Madrid, that he lived in the center of that city and then, later, somewhere on the outskirts, that he studied philosophy in the first years of a democratic Spain. The post-Franco opening up arrived at the peak of his twenty-something fervor, but he was one of the few members of his group of friends to free himself from the irreversible rigors of heroin, punk, and other similar temptations that abounded at that time.
Marcelo speaks quickly, tripping over his words in his haste, as if nervous about the idea of having a new friend—someone more visually pleasing than chubby Professor Velásquez—with whom he can surely have good times during his stay in Los Girasoles.
When they reach the town, Adela gives Marcelo directions to the door of her house. The professor’s car stops in the shade of a jacaranda tree, and Adela, before getting out, hands him a slip of paper on which she has scribbled a number (hers). They make their farewells with a kiss on the cheek that lasts a little longer than necessary.
Marcelo doesn’t think of her as a potentially great lover until that night in his own bed, when he lingers over the details of Adela’s figure outlined against the bar in Los Insurgentes, in the horrific Nueva Francia. According to her story, she had driven to that small town in her own car, but it had broken down and she had decided to have a drink in the cool of the cantina before sorting out her means of transport. She would come back the next day, in the pickup belonging to her trusted mechanic, to rescue her vehicle from possible Nueva Francian shoot-outs.
B
Mexico City was, for Foret, an ideal place, at least at first. No one knew him there, and he could indulge his excesses sheltered by the general brouhaha of a revolution he didn’t completely understand. Foret’s Spanish was rudimentary, sprinkled with French expressions he pronounced with what he thought to be a Mexican accent. Nevertheless, he felt comfortable in the language. French seemed to him a decadent tongue, and English too laconic; in contrast, Spanish was made to the measure of suffering. Only in Spanish could he miss Bea before she came to Mexico, and feel his words, full of open vowels, m
atched his emotions.
Of course, the students at the boxing school couldn’t make head or tail of their eccentric teacher’s babbling, but they sensed a vague authenticity in Foret’s enthusiasm and allowed themselves to be guided by him, copying the ridiculous movements of his feet. The owner of the gym very quickly realized Foret was a complete imposter, but he left him alone since he thought the teacher’s foreign name added a touch of elegance to his business. What’s more, Richard had lost a celebrated battle, two years before, against the world champion, which at least gave assurance of his bravery and the efficacy of his contacts in international boxing.
Bea arrived, as has been said, in January 1918, and they were able to resume their love affair as if they had only been separated for a few hours. They didn’t even mention the heartbroken letters Richard had sent her with religious punctuality during those months, flirting at times with suicide as a form of emotional blackmail to draw her into his arms.
Mexican legislation was chaotic, not to say inoperative, and no one bothered to investigate Bea’s earlier love life—as she had never divorced her first husband, she couldn’t legally marry Richard. But they did marry, without really taking matrimony seriously, without any pretense that its official status substantially altered their life together.
They had, perhaps, too many plans, and Foret had acquired the bad habit of dreaming of a perfect city and projecting his hyperbolic desires onto an enthusiastic Bea. Buenos Aires continued to pulse within his cravings with a mystic resonance, the justification for which was unclear to anyone.
They lived in the center of Mexico City, in a hotel a few blocks from the boxing academy. Bea would spend the mornings working on a long poem, which she prudently lost at a later date so as not to be tormented by the memory of the joy that had been wrested from her. Richard went out early; he would pass the first hours of the day at the gym or in the Bosque de Chapultepec, doing the regular physical training that helped him calm down and temporarily expelled the darkest shadows from his head. Afterwards, three times a week, he trained the young athletes in the Tacuba school, and in the afternoon returned to the hotel, where he existed on a diet of maize, rice, and beans; Bea’s inheritance, administered by her late father’s attorney and normally sent to her every three months, ran the risk of disappearing in a country like Mexico, and they had yet to find a means of receiving the money without putting their lives at risk. Fortunately the owner of the hotel had allowed them to take up residence on indefinite credit until they resolved their problems, placing more confidence in Bea’s manners than in her husband’s menacing physique and imperfect Spanish.
They were, as the cliché goes, poor but happy. But behind Foret’s happiness was a constant threat, a cord stretched to the breaking point, an overinflated balloon that could burst at any moment. His joy was always incomplete, like a sort of addiction that in seeking satisfaction, constantly required greater stimulus. Although, for the first time in years, his life seemed to have become a little more settled, there was an elemental haste inside him, a desire to reach the next state, even if this might signify the collapse of his present tranquility. Bea accepted this haste and dissatisfaction as fundamental traits of her new husband’s nature, although she was always aware of their problematic side. If she’d had her way, they would have either stayed in Mexico until their economic difficulties were resolved or awaited the end of the war there before going together to London, Paris, or wherever. But at the time, Richard had not correctly diagnosed his thirst for mutation, his propensity for change, and the tyranny of his own will: he believed that behind every plan was a concrete reality, and that Buenos Aires would really be the place where they could finally form a family. And he wasn’t willing to put anything off.
By June, before they had even been married for six months, the situation had become unsustainable. Richard talked without respite of the marvels awaiting them in Buenos Aires, but he had also begun to propose parallel or, according to his humor, mutually exclusive plans that left Bea in a whirl. If it were raining, he would enthusiastically argue in favor of London. He would enter the country under a false name and shoot himself in the leg to avoid recruitment. Bea would be able to take charge of her inheritance and even bring her two children to live with them. Practical considerations (the impossibility of living together without Matthew, Bea’s first husband, bringing a lawsuit, for example) were set aside with childish arguments or even more complex, makeshift plans to fill the gaps: they would both live in anonymity, or he would have Bea’s first husband killed, and if he did so, they could then settle in Australia.
Bea was overtaken by a sense of unreality and absolute fragility. She imagined Richard’s constant references to other lives to be expressions of subconscious regrets: perhaps he would prefer to be somewhere else, to return to his nomadic existence and the braggart bachelor status some—she had been warned of this in New York, when they tried to dissuade her—considered his dominant trait.
Caught up as he was in a whirlwind of confused and unachievable futures, Richard didn’t notice the deterioration of his present. Not only was Bea’s anxiety growing, but he himself had neglected his work. In the gym, it was as if he were somewhere else, or he would tell his students labyrinthine stories about his past or future life, sometimes in languages the young pugilists had never heard before. One day Señor Ortueta, the owner, called Richard into his tidy office and said he couldn’t go on paying him. As any good Mexican in those years, he laid the blame for everything on the revolution, and he fired Foret, with the only consolation being that he could continue to use the splintered club facilities for his personal training. Foret naturally refused this offer and challenged him to a duel. Luckily his bravado didn’t bear fruit.
For Bea, Richard’s working life debacle was the end of an era. It was not that her instincts were telling her to put distance between them until he calmed down, but that from a financial viewpoint, she found herself forced to do so. She, therefore, suggested a two-stage plan: she would go immediately to Buenos Aires, where she could pick up the money that had been accumulating in London and find a decent place for them to live while he stayed in Mexico for a few months longer, until he could make enough money to cover their debts and buy a passage to Buenos Aires. It might also be simpler to get money to Richard from Argentina than from London.
Bea, who was much more practical than her husband, discovered it was possible to travel from Veracruz to Cuba and, from there, to Buenos Aires, and had made inquiries about the dates: she would sail in two weeks. The news hit Richard like the blade of a guillotine. He went around for several days with a corpse-like face, tramping along Calle Tacuba until the traders became suspicious. Bea tried to calm him, to explain the practical advantages of the plan she had outlined, but it was all in vain: the very idea of being separated from her again weighed down on Foret’s tattooed shoulders like a cedar wardrobe. At the same time, he was, at heart, conscious that the decision had already been taken. He knew Bea was a determined woman, and he also knew financial problems worried her in a way he would never understand. For her, it was important to establish herself in Buenos Aires and have a home, not a pokey hotel room in a city full of bandits (a situation that was more tolerable for him).
The day Bea set off for Veracruz, Foret cried like a baby. He clung to her with occlusive force until the driver of the car that was to take her to the railway station completely lost his patience. Bea’s arrangements were quite clear: she would solve the problem and be responsible for ensuring that Richard arrived in Buenos Aires as soon as possible. There, they would live happily among other European immigrants until the war was over, and they would have hordes of children and both write unbearably beautiful poetry. This was the mantra Richard repeated to himself, even though he was convinced it would be the last time he touched Bea.
Maybe if he had not been so moved, so immersed in his own feelings, Richard would have noticed, during that final embrace, Bea Langley’s slightly swollen belly.
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On the day following his wife’s departure, in despair at being suddenly alone, Foret repented having given in to Bea’s pressure, having allowed her to leave, and abandoning all his possessions, he boarded a goods train at nightfall, hoping to arrive in Veracruz in time to stop his beloved from sailing.
A
Marcelo Valente lies very uncomfortably on the bed, looking at the ceiling of his small house in the Puerta del Aire residential estate. Beside him, recently abandoned on the rumpled sheets, lies the book Fundamental Considerations on Something by the admirable Richard Foret. He has been reading the whole day, snacking on grated carrots and turnip (a simple culinary discovery he is addicted to), and later he will go down to Adela’s house in the center of Los Girasoles to have dinner with her.
He looks over the sections he has highlighted in fluorescent yellow in the Foretian Considerations and thinks they are an impossible collection of incoherent, hallucinatory axioms:
“The person who talks to himself knows the First Person does not exist.”
“I warn you, my scant readers, that I have perceived a blossoming of my social concerns. At least once a week, I get the impulse to go out and plant bombs.”
“When you begin to judge days according to the consistency of your excrement, you know you have done something bad in your life.”
Among Strange Victims Page 12