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What happened at the pizzeria caused a rift in the family that only widened with time. On one side were his aunt Laila, La India, Nula, and his brother, and on the other side his aunt Maria, his uncle Enzo, and their three sons. The more distant family, their friends, and acquaintances fell to one side or the other. Nula, who couldn’t stop thinking about what had happened, and though he wasn’t sure whether or not to approve of his father, possibly because he often felt their resemblance too closely, couldn’t stand it that anyone else, even his father’s own sister, would judge him.

But there were other reasons for his detachment from the town and his family. He’d drawn a low number in the draft, and because of this escaped military service, which gave him a year advantage at school, a stroke of luck that, from some dark, hidden, machinations inside himself, he refused to take advantage of. It took him more than two years to realize that what interested him wasn’t so much the nomenclature of the individual organs, but rather, as he liked to proclaim every so often, the viscera in general. In fact, it had always depressed him to imagine one day running his own practice, his day filled with actual patients while his thoughts wandered always to their causes, though his perplexed indecision and his erratic imagination never bothered to find a way out of the problem. Around this time, he started seeing his life like an mechanics shop where the cars, the engines, the toolboxes were all in disarray and half-assembled, and though the incessant, fugitive process of becoming never for a single second stopped manipulating them, changing their shape and position, they would always be in that same state of incompletion. The world became contingent, uncertain, and the inextricable threads connecting things, which could be untangled only in certain dark places, began to interest him more than things themselves, simulacra sitting there in plain sight as though that’s all there was to it. The way his uncles and cousins criticized his father bothered him less for its moral or political pretension than for its predictable submission to the world of appearances. After several months of hesitation, of conversations over drinks, of reading, he enrolled in the philosophy program. And, after accepting La India’s conditions—Around here, pal, let he who wants fish dig his own worms—he started commuting between Rosario and the city. When he ran out of money, he’d go back to his mother’s house, and two or three times a week he’d take over for the girl who worked the kiosk at the law school, who, because she was a student, had to close up when she had class or an exam to study for. But Nula didn’t just go back to the city when he was broke. Despite the rude and offhand way that La India treated him, often to parody a threat, Nula knew that, whenever she was close by, though he didn’t quite know the reason, he’d always be protected.

On one of these trips, by chance, he saw the girl in red on the street, just as he was coming out of the Siete Colores bar, on the corner of Mendoza and San Martín, occupied for years by the Gran Doria. As we were saying, it was not only necessary, for the meeting to happen, that an unknown combination of pressure and temperature caused an inconceivably dense point of space and time, which are ultimately the same thing, at a given moment, to explode and scatter, violently, in a stampede; that in certain regions it curdled and stabilized — it’s impossible, we know, for Nula to calculate the velocity of the event with absolute certainty — into the thing we call our solar system, for example, and that on one of those cooling igneous orbs a set of chemical reactions made possible the appearance of something that for lack of a better word we call life, it’s not really clear why, with all the incalculable consequences that brought with it. Not only, as we’ve said, did all that have to happen, in addition to the innumerable series of interconnected events that took place thereafter, these difficult to verify as well, but also, and in addition, as he turned toward the door, when he was just reaching the exit, a student sitting at one of the tables near the windows that faced Mendoza had to shout a question about a specific edition of a Public Law textbook, whether they had it at the main bookstore because they didn’t at the law school kiosk, and by answering him Nula was delayed another thirty seconds, because otherwise, if the student hadn’t called out to him, Lucía wouldn’t have reached the sidewalk yet and he wouldn’t have run into her as he walked out, and might have turned down Mendoza to the west to catch a bus at the Plaza del Soldado, or if, instead, he’d decided to walk back to La India’s house for lunch, he might have turned up San Martín, and since he was more or less thirty seconds ahead of her, would’ve probably walked the twelve or thirteen blocks to his house without once noticing she was there.

Thanks to all of these coincidences, he’d bumped into Lucía as he walked out. It was just after noon, when the shops close and their employees dissolve into the crowd that comes and goes along the avenue and its cross streets. The buses fill up with people going home for lunch, with high school students, with bankers, with public servants. After one o’clock there’s almost no one left on the street, but around noon, and later in the afternoon, in the city center, the crowds swarm anew, as they say. That bright September afternoon already anticipated that intimate and possibly organic, but also painful euphoria provoked in the species, most likely from its affinity with all other forms of life milling around the biosphere, and also from our consciousness of it, by the arrival of the spring. The fibers and tissues, flesh and organs, feeling the multiple effects of the weather appropriate for the needless, and, you might say, ad nauseam iterations of the same invariable, demented shapes, tense up in self-regard, in the fullness of the present, but memory, not necessarily in a conscious way, can’t ignore that the fullness is temporary. The girl in red, tall like him, and clearly a few years older, with whom he almost collided as he walked out of the bar, surfacing from some preoccupation, looked hard at him, as though she was about to say something, but without opening her mouth she stepped aside and walked past. Without even taking the time to think about it, Nula started to follow her. They walked in the shade, which, despite the hour and thanks to the two-story houses, still covered a good portion of the sidewalk, and after a few meters, as she stepped into the street — they were on the San Martín promenade — Nula did the same, immediately feeling the warmth of the air and the light on his face and head. At first, less than four or five meters separated them, but Nula could see, in her posture and in a few uncertain movements of her head, that she already sensed that she was being followed by a stranger, and so he slowed down, to increase the distance between them, but even when he’d been following her more closely, despite the fact that her red dress hugged the full, firm shapes of her arms, her back, her buttocks, and her thighs, Nula didn’t notice her body, ensnared rather by the memory of the quick, inquisitive look she gave him as she surfaced, momentarily — only to sink again immediately — from her thoughts. Later, a kind of sexual fury, more painful than pleasurable, actually, a transferred and rarely gratified salaciousness, would periodically entrap him, but in that first meeting and in others that followed it, the question of sex, though the immediate reaction of his senses indicated just the opposite, seemed secondary.