“You remember that Don Achille gave us money instead of the dolls?” she asked.
“Yes.”
“We shouldn’t have taken it.”
“We bought
“We were wrong: ever since that moment I’ve been wrong about everything.”
She wasn’t upset, she was sad. She put her dark glasses back on, she reknotted the scarf. I was pleased about that
“When?”
“This afternoon, tomorrow, every day.”
“Stefano will be annoyed.”
“If he is the master, I am the master’s wife.”
“I don’t know, Lila.”
“I’ll give you a room, I’ll shut you in.”
“What’s the point?”
She shrugged.
“To know that you’re there.”
I didn’t say yes or no. I went off, and wandered through the city as usual. Lila was sure that I would never quit school. She had assigned me the role of the friend with glasses and pimples, always bent over her books, smart in school, and she couldn’t even imagine that I might change. But I didn’t want that role anymore. It seemed to me that, thanks to the humiliation of the unpublished article, I had thoroughly understood my inadequacy. Even though Nino was born and had grown up like Lila and me in that wretched outlying neighborhood, he was able to use school with intelligence, I was not. So stop deluding myself, stop striving. Accept your lot, as Carmela, Ada, Gigliola, and, in her way, Lila herself have long since done. I didn’t go to her house that afternoon or the following ones, and I continued to skip school, tormenting myself.
One morning I went wandering not far from the school, along Via Veterinaria, behind the Botanic Garden. I thought of the conversations I had had recently with Antonio: he was hoping to avoid military service, as the son of a widowed mother and the sole support of the family; he wanted to ask for a raise in the shop, and also save so that he could take over the management of a gas pump along the
The first groups of students appeared. I heard someone calling me, it was Alfonso. He was waiting for Marisa, but she was late.
“Are you going together?” I asked, teasing.
“No, she’s the one who’s got a crush.”
“Liar.”
“You’re the liar, telling me you were sick, and look at you, you’re fine. Professor Galiani is always asking about you, I told her you had a bad fever.”
“I did, in fact.”
“Obviously.”
He was carrying his books, tied up with elastic, under his arm, his face was strained by the tension of the hours of school. Did Alfonso also conceal Don Achille, his father, in his breast, despite his delicate appearance? Is it possible that our parents never die, that every child inevitably conceals them in himself? Would my mother truly emerge from me, with her limping gait, as my destiny?
I asked him, “Did you see what your brother did to Lina?”
Alfonso was embarrassed. “Yes.”
“And you didn’t say anything to him?”
“You have to see what Lina did to him.”
“Would you be able to act the same way with Marisa?”
He laughed timidly. “No.”
“You’re sure?”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
“Because I know you, because we talk, because we go to school together.”
At the moment, I didn’t understand: what did “I know you” mean, what did “we talk” and “we go to school together” mean? I saw Marisa at the end of the street, she was running because she was late.
“Your girlfriend’s coming,” I said.
He didn’t turn, he shrugged, he mumbled, “Come back to school, please.”
“I’m sick,” I repeated, and left.