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Now, shivering, incredulous, almost frightened, I watched her come running toward me, five years too late, and the person who was excited was the person I was then, revived, not as yet humiliated by surrender, by the excessive price of work and family life, but unfortunately not improved with time either, as bewildered and foolish as ever.

Then I saw it wasn’t she, although the woman kept looking toward me as she came nearer and smiled at me and held her arms open for a hug. She was tall, slender, with curly hair. But she went past me and threw her arms around a man standing behind me. I boarded the train and watched them through the window. The man was carrying a large suitcase, but neither of them looked up when the whistle blew. I watched them grow small in the distance as the train pulled away, arms around each other and alone in the darkness of the platform.

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A DARKENED WORKROOM, abstract as a cell, with white walls, wood floor, and a table of sturdy, rough wood, like the tables you used to see in kitchens, in our kitchen when I was a boy. Places become echoes, transparencies of other places, they rhyme with austere assonance. Walking into the room at this indeterminate hour of the winter afternoon, I am reminded of García Lorca’s room in Huerta de San Vicente, and of the one he had in Madrid, in a student dormitory, and from Madrid and García Lorca and the set of transparencies and assonances of places my thoughts go to Rome, to the room in the Spanish Academy where I slept a few nights in March or April of 1992, where I imagined long industrious days of solitude and reading, monkish days of work and tranquillity of mind, the retreat it seems one carries imprinted in one’s soul, is always dreaming of and looking for, the room with only a few necessities: bed, bare wood table, window, perhaps a bookcase for a few books, not too many, and also one of those portable CD players. I would spend the whole day walking around Rome in a state of intoxication, a trance accentuated by solitude, and at night I fell exhausted onto the narrow bed in my room at the academy, and in my agitated dreams, powerful and dark as the waters of the Tiber, I continued my wanderings through the city, seeing columns and ruins and temples magnified and blurred as if in a delirium. I would wake up exhausted, and in the cold, olive-green light of dawn my newly opened eyes would focus on the cupola of the small temple of Bramante.

Another place rises before me as shadow begins to turn to darkness lighted only by the phosphorescence of the computer and the lamp that illuminates my hands on the keypad. The hand resting beside the mouse isn’t mine any longer. The other hand, the left, distractedly rubs the worn white shell Arturo picked up two summers ago on the Zahara beach, the afternoon before we left, one of those luxuriously long afternoons at the beginning of July when the sun goes down after nine and the sea takes on the blue of cobalt, slowly retreating from the still-golden sand where the footprints of homebound bathers become delicate hollows of shadow.

From the darkness around by the computer screen and the low lamp, from the two hands, from the smooth feel of the mouse and the roughness of the shell and without any premeditation on my part, a figure emerges, a presence that is not entirely invention, or memory either: the doctor alone in the shadows, waiting for a patient, moving the mouse with his right hand, searching for a file in the computer, a medical history opened not many days ago, to which he added several test results just yesterday.

I OFTEN SEE THAT FIGURE, the hands especially, typing in the light of the screen: they are long, bony, sure, with a lot of hair on the back, not as gray as the hair and beard of the doctor, whom I don’t envision standing, although I know he is very tall and so slender that his bathrobe hangs loose from his shoulders. I see him seated, white bathrobe and gray hair and beard, in a room with the curtains drawn, although there is still some time before nightfall. The computer is on one side of the table, and on the other there is nothing but a white, rounded seashell, smaller and more concave than a scallop, stronger, too, as worn and eroded on the outside as the volute of a marble capital eaten by sea air and weather, and on the inside it is soft as mother-of-pearl, a pleasure to brush with fingertips that run over it as if of their own volition as the doctor speaks to the patient who has just arrived, trying to choose his words carefully — or earlier, when he is still alone, reviewing once again the test results lying open on the table. His mind wanders to a different time, luminous days invoked by the feel of the shell, which is a modest shell, not at all flashy, grayish white patterned with ridges opening from its base like the ribs of a fan, each following an exquisite curve, the beginning of a spiral interrupted by the outer edge, which is worn and nicked, presenting the fingertips with the irregularity of a piece of broken pottery.

One image evokes another, as if joined by the slim thread of coincidence: shells on the seashore in Zahara de los Atunes, curved bits of a broken amphora. He must let the thread roll off the spool, or pull lightly lest it break. He is on the verge of a discovery, a sensory memory like a bubble of air from millions of years ago captured inside a blob of amber. The wood floor of the large, dim room where the doctor works is as old as the building, and when someone walks across it, it creaks. He will hear the buzz of the intercom and tell the nurse that the patient can come in now, and footsteps will resonate as they would on the wood deck of a ship.

In the house of one of my grandmother’s sisters there was a room with a wood floor. I liked going there with my grandmother just to enter that room, to feel the floor give a little beneath my feet, and to hear the sound of it. It was like being in another place, another life. I have a similar sensation when I hear a cello. Again time leaps from one thing to another, an almost instantaneous impulse between neurons: Pablo Casals playing Bach’s suites for cello in Barcelona, in the fall of 1938 when the Battle of the Ebro has been lost and Manuel Azaña and Juan Negrín are listening from a box in the Liceo Theater. Behind the table, on a shelf holding a small number of books, most on medicine and history, the doctor has a CD player, which sometimes plays softly as he interviews or examines a patient lying on the cot in a dark corner of the room, in front of a screen. On the cot, the patient becomes more vulnerable, surrenders to the illness, to the doctor’s examination, to what he already sees on the other side of the invisible but definitive line that separates the healthy from the ill, deep in the prison of his fear, pain, and, perhaps worst of all, shame. The healthy flee from the ill, Franz Kafka once wrote Milena Jesenska, but the ill also flee from the healthy.

Before he tells the patient what the tests reveal — there is no way to say it without awakening terror, without feeling a knot in the throat, though it has been said so many times — the doctor will ask him to lie on the cot with his clothes on, all he has to do is lower his trousers a little and pull up his shirt, so the doctor can auscultate the abdomen, palpate the viscera with his long fingers, quickly, smoothly, precisely. The patient suffers the ignominy of lying on his back on a cot, flat and passive, his trousers pulled down to his scrotum, while the intrusive hand seeks what should not be there.

In the background, behind the sounds of breathing, the patient’s and the doctor’s, so close to each other and yet separated by a line, a Bach suite for cello is playing, performed in 1938 by Casals, on a night when the sky over Barcelona may have been pierced by the reports of antiaircraft fire and the flames of exploding bombs may have illuminated the dark city already defeated by hunger and a harsh winter.