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Authors: CESAR AIRA

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“Do you remember when you were little, César, and I used to take you for ice
cream?”

“Yes. ”

I was lying. I was lying. I had never eaten ice cream in my life!

I played along with her act, anticipating, waiting … I took politeness to the
clearly absurd extreme of supposing that she had mixed me up with another girl, who had
the same name as me, had been born in Pringles and whose father was in prison …
In which case, she would be so disappointed when she found out the truth … she
might even get angry, because my yeses would turn out to have been lies, excesses of
politeness.

We got off in a distant, unfamiliar neighborhood, and walked a couple of blocks, holding
hands all the way … But her mask was beginning to crack, the madness she had been
laboriously keeping under control was rising to the surface, tinged with violence and
sarcasm. I felt obliged to accentuate my politeness, to guard against an imminent
collapse.

“Mom’s going to be so happy to see you! ”

“Yes, she’ll be thrilled.”

“What a lovely neighborhood!”

“Do you like it, Cesitar?”

“Yes. ”

Her voice had become so sinister! My diagnosis was incontrovertible: this woman was
crazy. You would have to be crazy to give up an imaginary status quo. You would have to
be crazy to prefer brute reality. I tried not to think about being at the mercy of a
crazy woman. Anyway, what could she do to me?

We arrived. She unlocked the front door and shut it again behind us. The house was old
and half derelict. Still holding me by the hand (she turned the key and the door handle
with her left hand, not letting me go for a moment), she led me down a hallway and
through some dark rooms, quickly, without speaking. I was trying to think of something
nice to say, but before I could, we were in a sitting room at the back of the house.
There were no windows, so she switched on the light. We had arrived. She let me go and
took two steps back. She stared at me with fire in her eyes.

She took off the mask and revealed her witch’s face … But there was no need,
I had already unmasked her with my politeness. Having striven so hard, in vain, to
convince me of one thing, now she wanted to convince me of the opposite. After her
superhuman efforts to persuade me that she was good … Now she wanted to persuade
me that she was bad … But the switch wasn’t going to be that easy. My
strategy had blocked the movement of belief in both directions.

“Do you know who I am?”

Affirmative smile.

“Do you know who I am, you little moron?”

Affirmative smile.

“Do you know who I am, you stupid brat? I’m the wife of the ice-cream vendor,
the one your brute of a father killed. His widow!
That’s
who I
am!”

“Ah.” Another affirmative smile. I couldn’t believe my own
stubbornness: I was still trying to keep up the act. But all things considered, it was
the most logical option. If I had come this far, I could keep going indefinitely.

“I’ve been watching you for months, you and your goody-goody mother.
You’re not going to get away with it. Eight years they gave him, that animal,
eight lousy years! And he killed my poor husband; he killed him …”

At this point, without meaning to, I was supremely impolite. I smiled, shrugged my
shoulders and said,“I don’t understand …”

I understood very well what was happening. I understood what vengeance was; I think that
was about all I did understand. But the only way for me to maintain my polite temper was
to feign naivety and ignorance of all those grown-up things beyond my understanding.
Perhaps because I sensed that this was my last chance to make politeness work, I
channeled all my natural acting talent into that shrug and those words. I was perfect.
That was my downfall. I could have saved myself simply by saying something else,
anything. She would have stopped to think; she would have reconsidered the terrible
vendetta that she was about to execute … After all she was a woman, she had a
heart, she could be moved; I was a perfectly innocent six-year old girl, I wasn’t
guilty of anything and deep down she knew it … But my “I don’t
understand” was so perfect that it drove her completely wild, it blinded her. And
my imperturbably polite smile (“Whatever you say, Ma’am”) was the last
straw. It stripped her of tragedy, of explanation, and at that moment explanation was
all she had left.

She said nothing more. The sitting room was cluttered with metal containers and
equipment: what was left of the ice-cream store. She had it all planned. She switched on
a little motor (the wiring was makeshift; this set-up only had to work once) and as well
as its buzzing I could hear the glug-glug of ice cream being mixed. She looked into an
aluminum drum, threw the lid to the floor and switched off the motor … She put in
her hand and scooped up a handful of strawberry ice cream, which came dribbling out
between her fingers …

“Would you like some?”

I was paralyzed, but I could feel my wooden automaton preparing an ultimate
“affirmative smile,” in spite of everything! … And that was the
supreme horror … Luckily she didn’t give me time. She jumped on me, swept
me up like a doll … I didn’t resist, I was rigid … She hadn’t
wiped her hand and I felt a cold tickle in my armpit as the ice cream seeped through my
shirt. She took me to the drum and threw me in head first … The drum was big, I
was tiny, and since the ice cream wasn’t very hard, I managed to right myself and
touch the bottom with my feet. But she put the lid on before I could get my head out,
and screwed it down onto the overflowing contents. I held my breath because I knew I
wouldn’t be able to breathe submerged in ice cream … The cold seeped into
my bones … My little heart beat fit to burst … I knew, I who had never
known anything in reality, that this was death … And my eyes were open; by a
strange miracle I saw the pink that was killing me: luminous, too beautiful to bear
… I must have been seeing it not with my eyes but with my frozen optic nerves: a
strawberry eye scream … My lungs exploded with a rasping pain, my heart
contracted for the last time and stopped … my brain, most loyal of my organs,
kept working for a moment longer, just long enough for me to think that what was
happening to me was death, real death …

 

26th of February 1989

DR. © 2005, Ediciones Era, S.A. de
C.V.
Translation copyright © 2007 by Chris Andrews

Originally published by Beatriz Viterbo
Editora, Argentina, as
Cómo me hice monja
, in 1993; published by
arrangement with the Michael Gaeb Literary Agency, Berlin.

All rights reserved. Except for brief
passages quoted in a newspaper, magazine, radio, television, or website review, no
part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or
mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage and
retrieval system, without permission in writing from the Publisher.

First published as a New Directions
Paperbook Original (NDP1043) in 2006
Published simultaneously in Canada by
Penguin Books Canada Limited.

Library of Congress
Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Aira, César, 1949-

[Cómo me hice monja. English]

How I became a nun / Cesar Aira ; translated from the
Spanish by Chris

Andrews.

p. cm.

eISBN-13:978-0-8112-1982-2

I. Andrews, Chris. II. Title.

PQ7798.1.17C6613 2006
863’.64--dc22

2006030115

New Directions Books are published for James
Laughlin
By New Directions Publishing Corporation,
80 Eighth Avenue, New
York. New York 10011

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