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They offered her a chair. As she sat down, her robe opened over her knees like a petal, and one leg painted titanium white and white lead was revealed halfway up to her thigh. She crossed her hands under her chest and sat there like a patient child. 'Well?' she said.

The men did not sit down. Only one of them spoke. His Spanish was full of errors, but was easily understandable. Clara could not place his accent. 'Are you Clara Reyes?' 'Aha’

The man took something out of a briefcase: it was the resume Clara usually sent out to the most important artists in Europe and America. Her heart beat faster still.

'Twenty-four years old,' the man read out loud, 'one hundred and sixty-five centimetres tall, bust eighty-five, waist fifty-five, hips eighty-eight, blonde hair; light blue eyes tinged with green, depilated, no skin blemishes, firm and well-toned, primed four times

… is that correct?' 'Correct.' The man went on reading.

'Studied HD art and canvas techniques with Cuinet in Barcelona, and adolescent art in Frankfurt with Wedekind. Also in Florence with Ferrucioli. Is that correct?' 'Well, I was only with Ferrucioli for one week.'

She didn't want to hide anything, because that always led to difficult questions later on.

'You've been painted by both Spanish and foreign artists. Do you speak English?' 'Aha. Perfectly.'

'You've done interior works and open-air ones. Which are you better at?'

'Both. I can be an interior work or a seasonal outdoor one, or even be outside permanently, depending on the clothes and the time of year, of course. Although I can pose permanently outside with adequate protec-'

'We've seen other works you've done,' the man interrupted. 'We like you.' 'Thanks. But haven't you been downstairs to see Girl in Front of a Looking Glass? It's a really impressive Bassan, and I'm not just saying that because I'm the work, but-'

'You have also done mobile works of both sorts: performances and reunions,' the man cut in again. 'Were they interactive?' 'Aha. They were sometimes, yes.' 'Were you ever bought?' 'Almost always.'

'Good.' The man smiled and peered down at the sheets of paper as if there was something there that amused him. 'This resume is for promotional purposes. I'd like to hear your private one.' 'What do you mean by that?'

'I mean your whole professional career, and what you can't put in a promotion leaflet. For example: have you ever been an ornament, a mobile, a utensil?' 'I've never been a human artefact,' Clara replied.

It was true, although she had no idea whether the man believed her or not. But her own words sounded rather haughty to her, so she quickly added: 'Human ornaments have not really caught on yet in Spain.' 'Art-shocks?'

She hesitated before replying. She straightened up in her chair – her painted buttocks making a swishing sound – and told herself to stay on her guard. 'I'm sorry, but where are these questions leading?'

'We want to know what demands we can make of you,' the man responded calmly. 'I should warn you, I won't do anything illegal.'

She waited for a reaction that did not come. She hastened to add:

'Well, it would depend on the circumstances. But first of all I want you to tell me what you're going to do, where you're going to do it, and which artist is thinking of contracting me.' 'Your answer first, please.'

She decided there was nothing to lose by telling the truth. She was not a minor; the two art-shocks she had been bought in that year were not the hardest of their kind, and had been put on only in private for an adult audience. But it was also true that on both occasions elements had crept in that perhaps went beyond the limits of what was permitted. For example, in 625 + 50 lines by Adolfo Bermejo, one of the human canvases chopped the head off a live cat and squirted its blood on Clara's back. Was that illegal? She wasn't sure, but the question had been a general one, so she could respond in general terms, too. 'Yes, I've done art-shocks.' 'Porno ones?' 'Never,' she said firmly. 'But you've worked with Gilberto Brentano, I believe.'

‘I did two or three art-shocks with Brentano last year, but none of them was porno.'

'Have you ever belonged to any group providing underage material for works of art?' ‘I worked with The Circle for a few months.' 'How old were you?' 'Sixteen.' 'What did you do there?'

'The usual. They painted my hair red, ‘I had to wear lots of rings, and I took part in a few murals like Redhair Road.' 'Was that your first artistic experience?' 'Aha.'

'As far as I can see,' the man said, 'you like tough, risky art. But you don't seem the tough, risk-taking type. You look quite soft to me.'

For some unknown reason, Clara liked the man's cold disdain. A smile stretched the oil paint on her face. ‘I am soft. It's when I'm painted that I toughen up.' The man showed no sign of taking this as a joke. He said:

'We've come to propose something tough and risky. The toughest and most risky thing you've ever done in your life as a canvas, the most important and the most difficult. We want to be sure you're up to it.'

All of a sudden she realised her mouth was as dry as her paint-covered skin beneath the gown. Her heart was pounding. The man's words excited her. Clara loved extremes, the dark zone the other side of the frontier. If she was told: 'Don't go,' her body stirred and went, just for the simple pleasure of disobeying.

If something frightened her, she might try to keep it at a distance, but she never lost sight of it. She detested the instructions vulgar artists gave her, but if a painter she admired asked her to do something crazy, whatever it might be, she liked to obey without question. And that 'whatever it might be' recognised few limits. She was obsessed with discovering how far she would allow herself to go if the ideal situation occurred. She felt she was still a long way from her ceiling – or her floor, for that matter.

That sounds good,' she said. After a few moments, the man went on: 'Naturally, you'll have to drop everything else for a considerable length of time.' ‘I can drop everything if the offer is worth it.' 'The offer is worth it.' 'And I'm simply supposed to believe that?' 'Neither of us wants to rush into this, do we?' The man put his hand in his inside pocket. A black leather wallet. A turquoise-coloured card. 'Call this number. You have until tomorrow evening, Thursday.'

Before she put the card into her robe pocket, she glanced at it: the only thing on it was a phone number. It might be a mobile.

Gertrude's office was small, with white walls and no windows. Despite this, to Clara it seemed as if it had started to rain outside. There was, at least, a muffled impression of rain. The two men were staring at her, as if waiting for her to say something. So she replied: ‘I don't like accepting offers I know nothing about.'

'You don't need to know anything. You are the work of art. The only one who needs to know is the artist.'

'Well then, at least tell me the name of the artist who wants to paint me.' 'That's something we can't reveal.'

She accepted this refusal without protest. She knew the man was telling the truth. The great painters never revealed their identity to the canvas until their work had started: it was their way of maintaining an element of secrecy about the painting they were going to do. The door opened and Gertrude appeared.

'I'm sorry, but I'm going out to lunch and I need to shut the gallery.'

'Don't worry, we've just finished.' The two men picked up the catalogues and walked out without another word.