served. When sheâd passed the cups around, she left the tray on the table and flitted back into the inner recesses of the house.
âMay I smoke?â
âYes, of course. Would you like a cigar? I have some excellent Montecristos.â
The Count thought about it: no, he shouldnât, but he dared. âWhat the hell,â he told himself.
âIâd be glad to accept one, to smoke later.â
âYes, of course,â answered his host, and from the lower drawer of the table in the centre of the room he
offered the Count a cedar-wood box where a dozen Montecristos lay in perfect formation, finely scented and pale-hued.
âThanks,â the Count reiterated, and put the cigar in his shirt pocket.
âWell, Lieutenant, what can I do for you?â
Only then did the Count become aware that he had nothing to say or had forgotten what heâd intended to say: heâd been dazzled by so much glitter and couldnât clearly see the route he should follow. He had returned simply to comply with police routines in that perfectly ordered house, with its gleaming guayaberas and bald pates, black maids with wings on their ankles and ashtrays from Granada without a speck of dust, which seemed quite unrelated to the eschatological story of a queer whoâd been strangled with two coins up his backside, after exhibiting himself through the city streets in a theatrical garment which would end up stained by major and minor effluvia â as Alberto Marqués might have said.
âHowâs your wife?â he asked, looking for a way to broach the matter.
Faustino nodded repeatedly.
âIn very bad shape. Yesterday, when we got back from the funeral, Dr Pérez Flores, well, Iâll tell you his name because everybody knows who Jorge is, prescribed sedatives and tension-reducers. Sheâs asleep now. The poor woman canât accept it. But I knew one day that boy would give us a big upset, and now look whatâs happened.â He paused, and the Count decided not to interrupt. âWho knows what business heâd been mixed up in? From adolescence Alexis has been a constant headache. Not only because of his . . . problem, but because of his character. Sometimes, Iâve even thought he hated both me and his mother, and he was
particularly despotic with her. He always blamed us for the fact that we spent so much time outside Cuba and that he had to stay here with MarÃa Antonia and my mother-in-law. He refused to understand that my work forced me down that path. He couldnât come with us, where would he have studied? Six months in London, three in Brussels, a year in New York, then back to Cuba . . . Can you imagine? Iâd have preferred to give him a more stable life, for us to have brought him up here, and I can tell you Iâd have kept him like that, under my thumb, but my work has always assigned me very important duties and my wife and I always made sure he had all he needed: the house, his grandmother, and MarÃa Antonia, who loved him as if she were his real mother, school, the home comforts he wanted . . . everything. If this seems like a punishment . . . Iâll confess something, so you see where Iâm coming from: my son and I never got on. I think I was really to blame, I never made concessions to him, though to begin with I did speak to him and try to help. Now I think mine was the worst approach possible. And look what has happened, how itâs all turned out. I feel guilty, I donât deny that, but he also behaved very badly towards me and his mother, right from adolescence. And afterwards, when he befriended that scoundrel, the Alberto Marqués guy, it was impossible to see eye to eye. That man brainwashed him, injected his head with poison, changed him for ever in every way: it isnât that he started to write or waste paper trying to be a painter. No, it was worse than that. It was his moral, even political behaviour, and I
Ivan Doig
Lincoln Townley
Kathe Koja
Jonathan Stroud
Marilyn Hilton
Donald Barthelme
Melodie Campbell
Gary Russell
JB Brooks
Faith Hunter