Manuel Rivas - All Is Silence

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All Is Silence: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Manuel Rivas delivers a literary masterpiece about three young friends growing up in a community which is bound by a conspiracy of silence. Fins and Brinco are best friends, and they both adore the wild and beautiful Leda. The three young friends spend their days exploring the dunes and picking through the treasures that the sea washes on to the shores of Galicia. One day, as they are playing in the abandoned school on the edge of the village, they come across treasure of another kind: a huge cache of whisky hidden under a sheet. But before they can exploit their discovery a shot rings out, and a man wearing an impeccable white suit and panama hat enters the room. That day they learn the most important lesson of all, that the mouth is for keeping quiet.

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Leda made sure the customs boat had left the port. She lit a cigarette, sat down on the wretched imitation leather sofa, that nightmare of hers, getting stuck and not being able to get up. She tried to distract herself by watching her son play.

Fins decided to wait. Now he was the man in the empty window. Time became eternal when Leda was out of sight. This was an absence he couldn’t manage. For which there was no medicine. Except for something new in the surroundings. Like this. A red Rover. Brinco had one that was the same model. The car parked at an angle to the kerb, next to the docks. Yes, Leda had a visitor. Brinco always walked a couple of feet in front when Chelín was with him. They had two ways of walking that were very different. Brinco in a straight line, striding fast, sometimes jangling the car or house keys. Chelín trying to keep up, glancing from side to side, noticing the occasional detail. A shop window. Some graffiti. Which is why, in almost all the photos Fins took that day, Chelín is more visible. As if he was posing or something.

Leda heard a noise in the lock and started. There was a small hallway which led directly into the sitting room where she was and where she had her lookout position next to the window. Brinco always entered like this. He never rang. Never warned he was coming. He went up to her and gave her a hug.

The first thing Chelín noticed was the patch Santiago was wearing over one eye. ‘Don’t tell me you turned out cross-eyed, Santi?’

Brinco heard the unusual question and turned towards his son. ‘What happened to him?’

‘Nothing happened to him. It’s to make him better. Doctor’s orders.’

Chelín burst out laughing. ‘Blimey, squinty!’

‘It’s called strabismus,’ said Leda. ‘He’s strabismic.’

Brinco bent down and observed the child’s free eye slowly. He then stood up and pointed at Chelín very seriously. ‘It’s not a squint! You heard his mother. It’s…’

‘Extremism,’ said Chelín ironically, managing to suppress his laughter.

‘Strabismus, you fool, strabismus!’

‘It’s nothing serious,’ continued Leda. ‘Fortunately the people at school realised. He has a lazy eye. One sees better than the other. You have to cover the good one so that the other does some work.’

‘That’s the way of the world, lad!’ declared Víctor solemnly. ‘The truth is the patch looks good on you.’

‘It looks great!’

‘Why don’t you take him for a walk?’ said Brinco to Chelín.

‘Sure thing. Come on, you. Let’s go give that lazy eye something to do.’

The inspector watched Chelín leave with Leda’s son. They were messing around. Fins thought he knew the boy well. He realised Chelín sometimes took on the role of general and court jester. They got in the car. He wondered whether to follow them or stay behind. Deep down, though, he already knew what he was going to do.

He looked up at the window and aimed his zoom.

Víctor and Leda were kissing.

Fins couldn’t stop photographing them. His eye and pulse had gone beyond any mission. The couple unconsciously obeyed the camera’s every wish. The way Leda turned towards the window. Brinco embraced her from behind. The way they made love on top of the harbour, bounding over the city’s hills.

He waited before returning to Noitía. He wanted to be alone in the police station, no questions or inquisitive looks when he came out of the darkroom. He certainly wasn’t expecting Mara Doval to still be there. That may have been one of the reasons he held back. But there she was, reading, like one of those students who wait for the lights to go out before leaving the library.

‘How was the session?’

‘OK. He turned up. He finally turned up.’

‘I want to see that couple!’

Before he went into the darkroom, Mara said she had some important news. The phone in Leda’s apartment only received and made calls to a single number. And that number belonged to a public establishment.

‘Which one?’

‘Bellissima, Bellissima!’ she laughed enigmatically.

Fins closed the door behind him. Turned on the red light.

He didn’t know quite where he was, where he’d come from, what he was doing with these carnal prints in his hands, which emitted the groans of a pair of lovers. But Mara Doval hadn’t moved. She looked annoyed. Professional.

‘Next time, inspector, close the door more slowly.’

‘It was a long time ago.’

‘I don’t want to see any more of your paparazzo photos. What I want you to see now are mine. You didn’t let me finish. Apart from Bellissima, Bellissima, I have some other news. If the inspector is interested.’

‘There were two twin cars. Two Alfa Romeos. Nuova Giuliettas. I noticed because I like them. That badge with the serpent and dragon’s head. Yes, you told me the other day, I like the same cars as mafia bosses. I also like Portuguese tiles. Which is why we were there, Berta and I. Berta the painter. Yes, she also likes cats, but I have one whereas she must have a dozen. Her studio’s full of cats, mostly stray ones. No, she doesn’t paint them. She takes inspiration from their eyes, or so she says. It’s wonderful watching how attentive they are while she paints. She only ever uses primary colours. Reds. Both Nuova Giuliettas were red. Hang on, wait a minute. Be patient. So we went to Caminha railway station to see the nineteenth-century murals. You should go and see them, really you should. That’s the only reason my shutter was open. I know they say that if you’re on a case, you should never close your shutter. But yesterday was my day off, and I didn’t want it open. My primary objective was to go and eat cod in Viana do Castelo. No, not à la Margarida da Praça, nor à la Gomes de Sá. In the end what I had, let’s see if I can remember, was “sliced cod with maize bread on a bed of baked potatoes and salted turnip tops”. Mnemosyne never forgets. And then we stopped in Afife, at Cabanas Convent, Homem de Mello’s place. Yes, the one who wrote “Povo que lavas no rio”. Isn’t that the best fado ever? “Chaves da vida”? No, I haven’t heard that one. How strange! Our next stop was Caminha station, the one with the tiles.

‘Which is where our story begins. So just be patient.

‘Berta was driving. I don’t know anything about that. I’m the co-pilot, the one with the maps, leaflets and so on. We were just about to enter the station, through the door, when I looked to my right. A red Nuova Giulietta with a Spanish number plate. Pretty, too. We went to see the tiles in the station. They’re amazing, as I told you. We took some photographs. Went to see a train that was arriving. No problems. We must have been there about an hour. We were just about to leave, coming through the door of the station, when suddenly the Shutter of my Imagination opened. I grabbed Berta. Said to her, “Wait, wait, the car park.” The Nuova Giulietta was on my right. With a group of four people standing beside it. But Mnemosyne knows that the Nuova Giulietta was on the other side, on her right when she came in. So it was. I peeked through the glass door and saw the other Giulietta. They had exactly the same number plate, both of them with a Spanish registration. So I said, “Berta, I’m going to take a portrait of you à la Andy Warhol. Fool around a little.” I love Polaroids. They make a lot of noise, but nothing you can’t disguise by pretending to be tourists. No heavy machinery, mind you. Not like others.’

‘Right. So what happened?’

‘Two youngish-looking men got into one Giulietta and an older couple got into the other. And went their separate ways. One pair towards the border. The other in the direction of Viana de Castelo. What do you think then?’

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