‘You’re sick, you know that?’
‘Sick because I cut off all of Bodo’s fingers? Without doubt, it was a sick thing to do. Even through the tape around his mouth I could hear his screams. But I was very systematic. Every finger on his right hand. A short pause. Every finger on his left hand. Then I started on his eyes. The police were wrong, by the way. I didn’t gouge them out. I simply sliced across them. You remember that Bunuel exercise in surrealism:
‘Don’t try to justify it.
‘I’m trying to justify nothing, Harry. I am simply relating to you what happened.’
‘Did it settle the score? Did doing that to Bodo in any way make you feel better about your father’s death?’
‘At the time, all I could think was,
‘Then I left and took the
‘I said, “But I am the woman from the Party’s senior services. I have come with a special present for you. You must let me deliver it.”
‘Once I had talked myself inside his apartment and revealed who I was and brought out the gun, he began to scream. I told him to shut up, but he kept screaming. That’s when I slammed him on the head with the gun. It knocked him out cold. I taped him down, I gagged him as I had done with Bodo. But just as I started working on him, there was a banging at the door. It was some neighbor who’d evidently heard his screaming, as she kept shouting, “
‘You wanted to get caught—’
‘I don’t know what I wanted at the time. When you’re deranged you don’t think logically. You just tell yourself,
‘Jesus …’
She smiled and lit up a cigarette.
‘It gets worse. The police arrived. They pounded on the door, demanding to be let in. I worked super-fast, making certain all his fingers were severed. By this time, their pounding was replaced with the boom-boom sound of a battering ram they were using against the door. As it began to give, I grabbed Lovas by the hair. As soon as the door burst open and the cops fell in, I cut his jugular. Then, as they watched in complete horror, I drew the razor across my own throat.’
‘And then?’
‘And then … I escaped arrest, detention, trial and probable execution by a regime I loathed.’
‘By dying?’
‘Yes. I died.’
Silence. She continued to puff on her cigarette.
‘And then?’ I asked.
‘Death is death.’
‘Which means?’
‘I no longer existed in a temporal form.’
‘But what happened after you died?’
Another smile. Another deep lungful of smoke.
‘That I cannot say.’
‘Why not?’
‘Because … I can’t.’
‘The cops showed me your death certificate. And you yourself have confirmed that you slit your throat and you died. So why …
‘Because I am.’
‘But that doesn’t make sense. How can I believe you when I know what you’re telling me is impossible?’
‘Since when has death ever made sense, Harry?’
‘But you’ve been there. You
Another smile.
‘True — and I’m saying nothing.’
‘You have to tell me—’
‘No, I don’t. And no … I won’t. Any more than I have to explain my work on your behalf.’
‘Your
‘Think what you like, my sweet. But consider this: every person who has recently done harm to you has, in turn, been punished.’
‘You ran over Brasseur outside the hotel?’
‘Yes.’
‘How?’
‘How else do you run a man down? I got into a car that I borrowed on the street. A Mercedes C-Class — not the best Mercedes, but still a car with considerable kick. I waited for him to emerge from Le Select. When he stepped off the pavement, I hit the accelerator and ran right into him.’
‘He said he couldn’t see the driver, but he thought it was a woman.’
Another smile.
‘And you cornered Omar when he was on the toilet?’ I asked.
‘You were right about him. His shit truly stank. And I’ll let you in on a small revolting secret: when he wiped himself he only used a minimal amount of paper, so the shit was everywhere on his hands. A disgusting bastard. And I’d seen how he had treated you, how he left that communal toilet in such a grim state—’
‘You
She stubbed out a cigarette and lit another.
‘Do you know what I like best about being dead? You can smoke without guilt.’
‘But even in death you still age, just like the rest of us.’
‘Yes, that is rather ironic, don’t you think? But that’s how it works … for me, at least.’
‘And the others?’
A shrug.
‘So you didn’t go to heaven after you—?’
‘Killed myself ? Hardly.’
‘To hell then?’
‘I went … nowhere. And then, somehow, I was back here. I was ten years older, but the apartment was here …’
‘Who paid the bills?’