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It’s a shame, but they seem different. He is envious of the ritual his two compatriots have conserved, but also he feels compassion, a deep, endless compassion. And he regrets it greatly: a generation he envies, but also pities; he doesn’t want this to be his generation.

He sees them up there at the start of La Rambla, just as he saw them forty years ago, exactly the same as then, getting ready to converse, think, initiating the ritual of the walk. Even back then, seeing them there, so educated and so majestic, preparing for the descent, the time they had was enviable.

Time does not pass for them. They were going to conquer the world and now all they do is comment on it, if that’s what they do, confined as they are to their limited ability to think. Yet, it also seems true that time does not pass for them and they’re not yet at the gateway to their future of drooping jaws and hopeless dribbling. That will be the end of a generation that might have been his. But it’s not, and yet it is, only in a very remote way. Why should “belonging to his generation” be more important than being compassionate or not compassionate, for example? If someone told him he’s compassionate he’d know more about his identity than if he were told he’s from Barcelona or that he belongs to his generation.

Goodbye to this city, this country, goodbye to all that.

Two old professionals over there at the start of the stately, commercial avenue. They don’t seem aware that all life is a process of demolition and that the hardest blows await them. He thinks about all this from a spot where he can’t be seen by them. Without them knowing it, he’s a traitor, he represents one more blow of the many that will hit them. Here he is now, saying goodbye in his own way to Barcelona, in his shadowy corner, crouching down as he waits for absolute darkness. It will be much better if, at the end of everything, sorrow disappears and silence returns. He’ll carry on as he always has done. Alone, without a generation, and without even a modicum of pity.

Time: Just past eleven in the morning.

Day: June 15, 2008, Sunday.

Style: Linear. Everything can be understood, displaying an air similar to that of the sixth chapter of Ulysses, in which we find a lucid and logical Joyce, who introduces the occasional thought from Bloom that the reader can easily follow.

Place: Dublin Airport.

Characters: Javier, Ricardo, Nietzky, and Riba.

Action: Javier, Ricardo, and Nietzky, who have already spent a day in Dublin, meet Riba at the airport. The idea is to hold the funeral ceremony for the Gutenberg galaxy at dusk tomorrow before visiting the Martello tower. Where? Riba delegated this decision to Nietzky days ago now, and he, with good judgement, thinks that the Catholic cemetery of Glasnevin — formerly Prospect Cemetery, where Paddy Dignam is buried in Ulysses — might be a suitable place. But Ricardo and Javier still know nothing of the funeral. And because they don’t know, they don’t know it’s been included in the informal itinerary Riba and Nietzky have been putting together.

Meanwhile, Riba’s friends, the three writers, are already, unbeknownst to them, living replicas of the three characters — Simon Dedalus, Martin Cunningham, and John Power — who accompany Bloom in the funeral procession in the sixth chapter of Ulysses. To Riba’s secret satisfaction.

Themes: The usual ones. The now unalterable past, the fleeting present, the nonexistent future.

First, the past. This suffering relates to what Riba might have done and what he didn’t do and left buried like a mass of roses under many spadefuls of earth, and his need to not look back, to attend to his heroic urges and take the English leap, to direct his gaze forward, toward the insatiable quality of his present.

Then, the present, fleeting, but in some way graspable in the shape of a great need to feel alive in a now that is giving him the gift of feeling joyously free at last, without being criminally hindered by publishing fiction, a task that in the long run became a torment, with the sinister competition of books filled with gothic stories and Holy Grails, holy shrouds, and all the paraphernalia of illiterate modern publishers.

And finally, the question of the future, of course. Dark. You have no future, as the transsexual from the patisserie downstairs would say. The famous future is the main theme, which turns out to be not exactly a unique one: Riba and his destiny. Riba and the destiny of the Gutenberg galaxy. Riba and the heroic urge. Riba and his suspicion a few hours ago that he was being watched by someone who maybe wants to do some sort of experiment on him. Riba and the decline of literary publishing. Riba and the grand old whore of literature, already now out in the rain on the last pier. Riba and the angel of originality. Riba and the croutons. Riba and whatever you like. As you like it, as Shakespeare, Dr. Johnson, his friend Boswell, and so many others said.

“Where shall we celebrate?” asks Riba, as soon as he arrives at the terminal and meets up with his friends.

He’s referring to the funeral for the Gutenberg world, for the world he knew and idolized and which has worn him out. But he’s caused a misunderstanding. As Javier and Ricardo still haven’t been informed of the requiem, they think Riba is talking about celebrating the fact that the four of them have just met up in Dublin and is suggesting they go for a few drinks, that is, they assume he’s decided to start drinking again. It’s odd, but they’re excessively thrilled by the idea of their former publisher supposedly having fallen off the wagon. And so they laugh happily.

“In Glasnevin Cemetery itself,” Nietzky interrupts tersely.

“Is there a bar in the cemetery?” Javier asks, surprised.

State of the sky: It’s not raining like in Barcelona. But a cloud is starting to cover the sun and plunges the land around the airport into a darker shade of green. Riba’s memories melt into the dark, refreshing waters of the shadows.

They get into the Chrysler that Walter, a friend of Nietzky’s from Dublin, has lent them. Ricardo drives, since he’s an expert in driving on the left and the only one of them, moreover, who is dressed as an Irishman, although an Irishman who is, if anything, straight out of the John Ford film Donovan’s Reef, that is, in a flowery shirt with Polynesian designs, hidden, however, under a very long, old-fashioned raincoat that recalls those used by Sergio Leone in his spaghetti westerns. In comparison, Javier is dressed in a very sober, almost British way. Depending how one looks at it, they make an unwittingly comic pair.

They head for Morgans hotel, the quartet’s headquarters. A strange place, as Javier explains to Riba, a place full of solitary executives, individuals in suits and ties whom they’ve decided to call “Morgans.” It’s a place on the road leading from the airport to the city of Dublin and that belongs to the same chain as the sophisticated Morgans hotel in New York, on Madison Avenue. The bar of the Morgan Museum, next to Morgans hotel in New York, was precisely where Nietzky and Riba set out from a few months ago to visit the Austers’ house.

“Oh, have you two been to the Austers’ house?” asks Javier mockingly, as he’s heard Riba tell this story a thousand times.

Ricardo found this Dublin highway hotel on the internet and booked the rooms because of its proximity to the airport, never imagining it would be so hip, especially since it looked like a motel on the website. They all protest, because Ricardo seems to have had no qualms about putting them up in a motel like that.

Riba tells them his wife had been on the verge of coming with him, but luckily she couldn’t make it. While Celia’s intentions were good, her presence on the trip would have made the unfortunate scene he’d witnessed in his dreams far too likely to come true, a terrible sequence resulting from cold, hard alcoholism on the way out of the Coxwold pub. Perhaps a pub with this name doesn’t exist in Dublin, but he believes that, if his wife had come with him, the terrifying, prophetic vision from his dream might have come true: Celia, appalled when she discovers the undesirable fact that he’s fallen off the wagon, embracing him emotionally, the two of them crying in the end, sitting on the curb of a Dublin side street.