When the secretary with the heels and the Byzantine-Egyptian prostitute makeup sees her appear, she trains her triumphant eyes on her, she too playing the defender of the Catholic faith. When in fact for the past two years and two months—if we want to dot our I’s and cross our T’s—she’s been indulging in adulterous afternoon sex on the presidential armchair. That’s a fact that the beanpole would never suss out even in normal conditions, however, and certainly not today.
Back on the street without knowing how and why she got there, she feels like she’s drunk. She’s crying without knowing she’s crying. I must admit that I, too, am somewhat upset. Of course I knew about the security cameras that recorded her stealing the crucifixes, I knew that’s why she’d been called in, and I even knew he’d put the phone down without talking to the law. But it’s one thing to know what’s going to happen, another to witness it happening, as it were, in first person. Feelings can confuse you. I was almost expecting the police to answer the phone and send over a patrol. And right now I almost have a lump in my throat watching her weep like that. Omnipotence: it also means having a lump in your throat without having a throat.
As she parks her bike in front of the old fishmonger’s, she thinks that at least she has a place to live, and that’s something. Recession or no recession, she’ll find a way to make a little money. It was never going to last, that insemination gig; what happened was bound to happen. In short, she tells herself some baseless encouraging lies, the way humans do to boost their spirits.
Poking out of the mailbox is a registered letter plastered with many stamps; it seems the Indian signed for it in her absence (and here I’m putting myself in her shoes; this is merely a hypothesis). She opens it thinking it must be some receipt for tax purposes, and finds that the owner of the fishmonger’s has written to say her lease will not be extended. The place is going to be renovated and she must vacate in two months. She has to read the words three or four times before they penetrate her brain, and it dawns on her that this is an eviction notice. Now she begins to cry again. She sobs sitting on the toilet, and the blind cat on her knees wonders what heaven those salty drops come from and what that metrical braying’s supposed to mean.
I’LL BE MUTE AS A FISH
I wish I could tell her that she can relax. Job, housing, love, leisure time: I’m going to put it all right. I’ll come up with an apartment that’s not very expensive to rent but nice, with a proper, God-given (pardon my word play) bed. And if all goes well (it will!) she’ll be able to pursue that research of hers she’s so thrilled about. No worries, Daphne, I’ll take care of everything, I’d like to tell her. I’m here—you know, God, I’d like to whisper in her ear, tenderly but reassuringly.
But instead I remain mute as a fish, true to my habitual divine reserve. No matter what happens, no matter how bad the mess she’s in. It pains me to see her like this, but I can’t let myself be taken hostage by sentiment or act out of impulse. There’s a time for everything. This evening I’ll limit myself to sending her a proper restorative sleep to enjoy in her dry aquarium. Sleep is important when things go badly, otherwise the nerves (I won’t go into the technical details) become exhausted. I’m also supervising her dreams personally; to cheer her up, some charming Zeffirellian romantic nonsense in pastel colors with Florentine embellishments—and a few baroque Greenaway strokes here and there. Not exactly her style, but it should do the trick.
Of course, atheist that she is, when she sees that her problems have been resolved, she’ll think things worked out all by themselves. She’ll say she was super lucky, after all that bad shit (her terminology) that befell her. I don’t mind. To love means to be concerned with the welfare of the beloved person above all, not with one’s own (and this tale is taking me where it wants to go).
SUPERMARKET CHECKOUT CLERK
She told herself that standing in front of the supermarket register wouldn’t be especially tiring. But in fact, she realized right away that time in that consumer prison was mired in a stomach-turning swamp of baked ham, laundry detergent, pecorino cheese and aftershave. Time had stopped. Her colleagues told her that she’d get used to it, but she’s convinced she’ll die before that moment comes. Every day is an unending torture. She’s so wiped out in the evening that her head feels like it’s made of many tiny pieces badly glued together, pieces that themselves are tagged for sale. And the final blow is that to get home now, she has to take the subway first and then a bus. One morning she’d left the house and found that her beautiful twin-cylinder was gone. Well, there was a piece of the lock, which they’d managed to force. The chain, they made off with.
The first days she glanced at the shoppers’ bodies and faces. It’s incredible how much you can determine about a human being from a lightning glance, she would think, back then when she was still enjoying developing theories, translating this thing into mathematical and IT terms. But then she realized that classifying faces and clothing was just one more effort on top of the effort of having to smile. It was better just to keep her head down and restrict her movements to what was necessary to push the products by and take the cash or card. Now she behaves like the others, she spares herself.
After just a couple of weeks, the clientele now rolls by one after the other like silhouettes of refugees, clots of stress made of flesh and odors, but mostly of a great deal of anxiety, of angst. Nearly all are in a foul humor, or a hurry,[38] and she doesn’t need to look at them to know that, she can feel it in her sternum. At peak hours the queue in front of her register grows longer. Supermarkets aren’t happy places; people leave their happiness outside in hopes they’ll find it later in the things they’ve put in their cart, each with its penitentiary barcode.
If she knew this was just a temporary situation, she’d be taking it better, poor thing. But the unemployment rate has been worsening, and in her deterministic mind that means she’ll be tied to that shitty register (her words) for eternity. I’ve stopped sending her signals of hope; numbskull that she is, she doesn’t pick up on them. I arranged for her to meet a fortune-teller in the subway who predicted she would resume her research on bacteria-fueled energy. She thought the woman had simply guessed her job by chance. I made sure she saw a horoscope announcing splendid times to come for Sagittarians of the Third Decade. She laughed bitterly, that big mouth of hers spreading even wider. She won’t believe it until she can reach out a hand and touch it, the materialist.
As you can imagine, I could find her another job if I really wanted to, never mind the recession. But this is the path I’ve chosen. Many novices think a god reasons like a traffic cop, but with all due respect for traffic cops, a god’s actions are lofty and very complex. Above all, a god has to keep in mind the welfare of millions and millions of believers, billions of believers, foreseeing their infinite interactions and giving priority to those who deserve it, the faithful of the faithful, as is only right. If it was just a question of looking after one person, a monad untouched by gravity, floating in some sterile no-man’s-land, anyone could do it.
38
If there’s any church that reveals how badly off human beings are, now that they’ve rid themselves of Me, it’s the supermarket; I can’t disagree with her.