I
When the plane has almost come to rest, he sees an angel. The angel is
sitting right at the back of the small baggage train on its way across the
runway. A young man. Or a woman? Longish hair. His eyes. Frightened?
Happy? Is he raising his hand?
The next time he looks out, the case the angel was sitting on has fallen
off. The baggage train continues on its unsteady journey. The case is
black. Locked. The kind that holds a musical instrument.
The plane follows a course of red and yellow stripes on the runway. Soon
it comes to a complete halt. His heart is beating with renewed vigour. A
moment ago he was in the air, gliding over the sabre-shaped beaches
of Sardinia at 40 degrees below zero. He tuned into a conversation
between two French women a few seats back while staring into his paper
coffee cup and watching the milk spread like clouds in all the black. The
Mediterranean, which was clearly demarcated on the map, though, as
it lay beneath him, blurred in reality. It was as still as sheet metal, ice
cold, with a mute sparkle like glass shards strewn across the floor of a
ballroom. He fell asleep. For a brief moment he was crouching by the carp
pond behind his house in Denmark. He saw the sluggish red fish under
the layer of water lilies and green algae. A frog floating on the surface of
the pond. Frog’s eyes, unnaturally large, swollen. Then he hears Vivian
calling from the house: ‘Where are you? We have to go now!’ He can hear
Vivian’s footsteps on the gravel, coming down the grass. The frog, hearing
her too, dives and with human-like kicks swims in under the edge of the
turf.
His belt is still fastened. He is perspiring under his arms and around his
groin. Soon people near him will start standing up; his heart beats faster.
Outside it is 31 degrees Celsius, the captain informs them. Soon he
will have to get up as well. He is here now. He is frightened. A red light
flashes. He stands up; the blood rushes to his head. Suitcase in hand,
the queue of people through the fuselage, down the steps one at a time,
across the runway to the glass doors. Put one foot in front of the other.
That’s the way. The surge of heat. An ill-defined din around him from all
quarters. He is here. He walks. He tries to locate the case which fell off
the train. The angel. He doesn’t see anyone.
The official stares at him the way you would scrutinise the contents of a
bottle. Then his eyes fall on the passport photo. The stream of travellers
flows anxiously past them; he recognises the occasional face from the
airport in Rome. Why was he waved to the side and why not them? Does
he appear in any way suspicious? Has his face really changed that much
since the passport picture was taken? His mouth? Eyes? Hair? Of course,
his hair.
‘Tourist?’
The customs official stares at a point close to where his cheek becomes
his chin. He can feel the sweat under his arms, the weight of the money
belt around his stomach, imagines the notes being drenched with sweat,
ruined, valueless. He nods vigorously; his long hair bobs up and down.
The official doesn’t seem convinced, however. Instead of giving his
passport back to him he points to a blue door.
Two further officials, one of whom seems annoyed – as if his work
demanded painstaking care and silence and he had been disturbed. The
other one is wearing white rubber gloves. They are shown the passport.
They stare at the photograph, then at him. It is almost synchronised,
as though it were impossible for one man to do anything without the
other following suit. ‘Please open.’ With a pulsating heart, he places his
case on the metal bench. The blood rushes in his ears as it is opened.
The official’s be-gloved hand disappears under the top layer of general
clothing. Shirts, trousers. A small travelling towel, which Vivian had
neatly folded and placed in the case without his knowledge. The hand
rummaging around the bottom of the case. The blouses. The make-up.
The underwear. The official holds a pair of flimsy panties between his
fingers. Immediately afterwards, he pulls out a bra. For a few seconds he
hears everything around him except what is going on in the room. He can
hear the sounds of the airport: the crowds of people, the metallic voice
resounding around the arrivals hall, all the conversations, the murmuring
and the mumbling. The official’s gaze. He is at the bottom of the carp
pond with the red fish gliding above him like large airships before the
sun. The frog’s eyes growing in the dark in front of him. Then he is back.
The bra dangles from the official’s fingers as if it were stinking refuse.
The official who initially seemed annoyed says something in Arabic.
Triumphant, disdainful, impossible to decipher. Then they both go into
French. The case is slammed shut. He catches a last glimpse of the
panties and bra as the official stuffs them into his pocket.
Dr George Gordeau, Clinique, Rue Lupebé 24. He places the case on the
bed, opens it, contemplates the chaos incurred by the official’s hand.
For some reason he is breathing with his mouth open, as if he had been
running. It is evening now. He stands by the window. From deep in a
backyard, TV aerials protruding over the rooftops in the last of the sun,
the trembling antennae of huge insects waiting to die. A wall. He studies
the piece of paper once more before carefully folding it and lodging it
between the notes in his wallet. Gordeau. He says the name several
times but its mystery and impenetrability remain. Never been so close
before. Dr Gordeau is somewhere out there, in this town. What is he doing
now? Sleeping? Eating? Reading? What does he actually know about Dr
Gordeau? A military doctor, trained in France. Later a surgeon. And now.
Yes. Now Gordeau is here. In this town. He most probably lives alone.
Yes. Military doctor. Perhaps he was involved in the war? In several wars?
Sewing on severed parts. What hasn’t Gordeau seen! A man like Gordeau
probably lives alone. A man who has seen too much of life to be able to
live with anyone.
He lies on the bed thinking about the angel he saw at the airport. The
case left on the runway. The baggage train wending its way. The angel’s
hair in the wind. This line of thought leads nowhere. Everything churns
around in large circles above his bed. Again he thinks about Dr Gordeau.
He can’t stop wondering about the kind of life he leads. In one of the
white brick houses lining the road from the airport – might Gordeau live
in one of those? Perhaps with a small white dog, a housekeeper and a
chauffeur. But otherwise alone. And his clinic, in a separate part of the
building perhaps? Friendly, bright rooms, with tasteful art on the walls,
windows looking out over the piercing blue sea. All the surgery performed
there.
He rings reception and orders something to drink. After half an hour,
when nothing has happened, he unlocks his door and goes down.
The receptionist looks at him uncomprehendingly. There is a lot of to-
ing and fro-ing until he finally receives a bottle and a cup made of thin
brittle plastic. As he goes up the corridor a small Arab slips out of his
room. A fierce anger wells up inside him. He moves towards him with
determination, but the Arab scuttles past heading for the lift with a white,
evasive smile. ‘Where do you think you’re going? Hey, you!’ But the Arab
is as silent as a ghost. A chair jammed in the lift door is pulled inside in a
flash. The doors close and the Arab descends through the floors.
II
There is a terrible racket. He is standing at the entrance to an oval market
place and is shoved forwards. A donkey’s back brushes against him. The
buzzing of flies, orange stalls, tinsmiths, street shoe cleaners and small
cafés. The bright sun. He has no idea where to go. A shoe cleaner is
immediately on his tail, offering his services. Another one appears from
nowhere shouting into his ear and right through him: ‘You want to see
the sea? You want to see the sea?’ He tries to manoeuvre his way across
the square, but a kind of ground swell forces him in another direction.
A head taller than all the others, it feels as if he is growing all the time,
inch by inch, a white giant. Thousands of black eyes. What do they think
he is? He catches sight of a small, grubby hand groping him just above
his hip and money belt; he slaps the hand and it moves away. Finally, he
collapses at a coffee table and orders a Moroccan beer. He almost downs
the beer in one draught. The market square seems less threatening from
a distance. He orders another beer. Eventually he quietens down and
mentally replays his visit to Dr Gordeau’s clinic:
The taxi stops in Rue Lupebé and he walks with pounding heart until he is
standing outside no. 24. A tall brick building, much as he had imagined.
At the end of the street, the steady stream of traffic flowed down a
boulevard. At the opposite end the blue gleam of the Atlantic Ocean. He
wasn’t sure where he was exactly, perhaps somewhere on the fringes of
the town centre. The taxi had taken a very roundabout way, going through
several alleys which he initially thought to be dead ends, but which later
turned out to be interconnected. He inspected the yellow sign by the bell.
Clinique. A sharp intake of breath and he pressed the button. A tall door.
One room, cool, a plant in one corner, a staircase leading upwards; on
the left the reception desk, a young girl who raised her head and looked
him in the eye. ‘I’d like to talk to Dr Georges Gordeau.’ The girl gave a
tentative smile as if the mention of his name was intended as a joke.
Thereafter her face resumed its dark, shiny chill and she asked him to wait
on an upholstered leather bench by reception. While he was sitting there,
the street door opened and a woman in the final stages of pregnancy
came in with an elderly man. Both uttered a greeting before making their
way up the stairs. Ten minutes passed. A quarter of an hour. Half an hour
later the door opened again and a young woman came in leading a small
boy. They also uttered a greeting and went upstairs. He was wriggling on
the bench and sweating despite the fan in the ceiling. The girl behind the
desk stood writing something by hand. When the scratching of the pen
came to an end he turned round and she promptly lowered her eyes. After
almost an hour she said in a monotone, apparently à propos of nothing:
‘You can go up.’ He hadn’t heard the telephone ring; he hadn’t heard her
talking to anyone else. Bewildered, he stood up. ‘You mean up the stairs?’
He pointed. She nodded and the same mischievous smile cracked her
face.
III
‘Dr Georges Gordeau?’ The man wearing the surgeon’s mask turns, but
doesn’t reply immediately. His eyes are filled with a kind of smoke. He
motions towards the chair. ‘You are Anders Nimb?’ He nods. ‘Yes.’ The
room is hot although the window is open. White curtains, white walls, a
metal bin for medical waste. ‘I’m not Georges Gordeau,’ the doctor says,
slipping the mask over his chin. ‘Just take a seat. I will be examining
you.’ ‘But... I’d have liked to speak to Dr Gordeau personally. He hasn’t
mentioned a price...’ ‘Relax, you can always come to some agreement.
There’s always a solution.’ ‘Are you sure? Do I have to sign any papers
first?’ ‘What papers? Can you see any papers here?’ The doctor pulls
off his disposable gloves and throws them in the bin with a musketeer’s
flourish, finds a new pair, pulls them on and points with a rubber gloved
finger. He thinks about the airport official’s hand. Two dogs break into a
bout of furious barking somewhere outside the window. ‘Hurry up now.
There are more patients apart from you. You can undress behind the
folding screen.’
The intense embarrassment of standing naked in front of a man. ‘Sit down
on that chair. Put your legs on the rests.’ He spreads his legs and closes
his eyes. Feels sudden heat when the doctor directs a lamp close up.
‘When will I meet Dr Gordeau?’ He can feel the doctor’s cautious hands
around his balls. ‘He’s busy right now.’ ‘But Dr Gordeau will perform... the
surgery?’ ‘Yes, of course.’ The hand is holding the whole of his scrotum,
raises it and pulls circumspectly. ‘How long have you been receiving
hormone treatment?’ The door flies open and a nurse comes in with a
folder under her arm. The doctor removes the powerful light. ‘How long
have you wanted to do this?’ ‘How long? I don’t know... I’ve always
wanted to, I think.’ The doctor nods. ‘You can get dressed now. Maria
has the necessary papers. Don’t you?’ Maria turns and smiles, first at the
doctor, then – in a different way – at the patient.
He dresses with alacrity. The doctor and Maria are talking in Arabic on
the other side of the screen. Once dressed, he sees the doctor has gone.
Maria is sitting alone with her dark smile. She resembles the woman in
reception. Perhaps they are sisters. She is bent over a form.
‘Sexchange. Operation.’ ‘Yes...’ As soon as she mentions the word,
he can instantly feel his knees give way. He staggers over to the chair.
Actually he had never thought of it as an operation, more as a surgical
intervention, but he realises now that operation is the correct word. Take it
easy, Gordeau is very able. He’s the best. ‘How much is it, do you know?’
‘Six thousand.’ ‘Dollars?’ ‘Yes, of course.’ ‘I haven’t got that much.’ She
looks up from the papers for a moment. ‘Please, couldn’t I speak to Dr
Gordeau personally.’ ‘I’m afraid not. Dr Gordeau is not available until
tomorrow.’ ‘Where is he now then? On holiday? At home? Do you know
how far I’ve travelled to come here? Do you know how long I’ve lived...
as...?’ He looks down his body and she scrutinises him. Without finding
anything special, it seems. ‘No, sir, I don’t.’ ‘I haven’t got six thousand
dollars... but... I might have... four.’ ‘As I said, Dr Gordeau is here
tomorrow. Come back then.’ ‘But the operation...’ ‘Dr Gordeau can do the
operation but it depends on...’ ‘On what?’ ‘I’m sorry, sir. I don’t have any
more time for you now. We have other patients. If you have the money, Dr
Gordeau will give you the same consideration he gives to everyone.’ The
dogs are biting chunks out of each other in the street. Human-like howls
travel up the front of the house. He hears the piercing scratch of her pen
and now he notices the table fan swivelling from side to side, causing the
papers she is writing on to flutter.
IV
He gets up from the table in the café. It is beginning to gust. The canvas
over the stalls is flapping and banging like the sails on a full-rigger when
the wind has changed direction in open sea. Although he hasn’t realised,
there are now fewer people in the streets. A scrawny dog jogs past him
and disappears down an alleyway. He walks back the same way he came,
past the man who a short while before had held sun-ripened oranges
out to him. Now the man has his back to him as he busily puts the fruit
into large crates. One by one, carefully, as if they were made of glass.
He comes out into the broad avenue. The wind is stronger here. His shirt
ripples over his stomach and is blown up into a balloon on his back. It
has grown dark even though it is barely two o’clock. A kind of haze floats
across the sky, veiling the sun. He begins to walk towards the hotel,
thinking about what happened before leaving the clinic. He had been on
his way out of the surgery when he sensed someone watching him. As he
walked past he glanced to his right, at a bamboo curtain. The silhouette
of a man. Black and unmoving. A cold shudder went through him. The
man was just standing there. The curtain billowed between them. ‘Dr
George Gordeau?’ he asked in a thick voice. The shadow glided to the
side and was gone.
He walks past the houses thinking about Vivian: Vivian lying in bed at
home with drooping eyelids, Vivian behind the steering wheel driving him
to the airport, Vivian walking across the lawn and down to the carp pond
where he was squatting in front of the fish and the frog. Her footsteps,
which cause the bloated eyes to dive and disappear. ‘Are you scared?
Don’t you want to go?’
The sun has vanished in an instant. The sky has turned dark. Directly
above him, it is almost black. His heart beats faster. A sign with an
enormous white arrow on flaps violently in the wind. He begins to suspect
he is walking in the wrong direction. Passes a collapsed building he
cannot recall seeing before. A boy is standing in the ruins and points at
him with a stick. He turns, goes back the same way, walking faster. Cars
fly past, leaving long trails of dust. The entrance to the market square.
He hesitates but enters. The man with the oranges has gone. The bare
skeleton of the stall remains, swaying in the wind. Some women dressed
in black stand in a doorway, but move indoors when they see him. There
is a low roar, like the sound of a bonfire. Something in the air. Sand. He
stares at the palm of his hand. Tiny reddish grains of sand.
Has he been here before? He stops, uncertain. A sign shaped like a
peaked shoe. No. He turns and goes back the same way. The sand
rushes past his ears, gets into his ears, nose and mouth. He breathes
through his shirt. The sky is reddish, almost mauve above the rooftops,
as though a tanker out to sea had gone up in flames. Now he seriously
begins to be frightened. There is no-one outdoors. Everyone must have
known about the sandstorm. Only he hadn’t. The night of sand whirls past
and through him, coats his lungs with fine dust. Every street corner is
identical to the next, the house fronts merge into one another. A door, and
a few minutes later another with precisely the same door handle. At the
end of a narrow street he catches sight of a man’s back. A tourist? Were
there more of them there? He thinks he can hear English being spoken.
He increases speed, but the man walks at least as fast. At the next street
corner, he sees the man’s back pass in front of a window. ‘Hey, you! Wait!’
The man doesn’t hear, just merges deeper into the red mesh of sand.
He gets sand in his mouth as he yells. ‘Wait!’ He runs as fast as he can.
Round a corner. A gateway. An open square. A market place? He holds
his hands over his eyes. Nobody. Empty stalls wherever he turns. Linen
sheets in the wind, like the forgotten military flags of an armada, chased
and scattered to the four winds. So he stands there. Slightly to the right
there is a black outline against a pale wall. No more than five metres
away. He is breathless, but holds his shirt in front of his face so that the
sand doesn’t go into his lungs. ‘Dr George Gordeau? Is that you?’ The
figure does not respond. Instead it takes a step forward, then another. The
sand howls around the corners of houses. He imagines a fine layer of red
dust settling on the furrows of his brain. A head. Long hair. A man? Yes.
Another step closer. How old? ‘Gordeau?’ he repeats, but this time mostly
to himself. An Arab? No, his hair is too fair. Or is the sand deceiving him?
‘I AM LOST!’ he shouts. ‘DO YOU KNOW WHERE WE ARE??’ Another
step. The figure seems at once much taller. ‘DO YOU KNOW...’ A giant.
The he sees the hazy face through the sand.
V
He wakes up lying on a hard floor. Everything is bright white. As if in
heaven or an operating theatre. He gives a start. Then an Arab bends over
him. ‘You okay? You sleep in sand. I found you. No good. No good.’ For
a few seconds he sees double. The dark face dissolves and the identical
almost transparent face moves to the side, only to merge back into the
first. The sounds around him take shape, music. Voices from a television
or a radio. A baby crying. Then everything comes back. Where he is.
Where he was going. The sandstorm. The man he was following. Who
turned back. Whom he recognised. Whom he had seen at the airport
when he landed, sitting at the back of the baggage train.
Outside, it has brightened up. The sand lies in the streets like discoloured
snow. The last flurry of grains in the wind. People are in the streets
again. The crunch of sand under sandals as they walk by. The sun is
warming. Now he has his orientation again. He is standing in the same
market place, only at the other end. Now he can see the café where he
was sitting, the stalls, the man with the oranges and the narrow alleyway
leading to the broad avenue.
Back in the hotel he stands for a couple of seconds outside his room
before abruptly twisting the key and tearing open the door. Nobody. What
had he been expecting? He still has the money in the belt around his
stomach, with his passport and wallet. Nothing missing. He settles down
on the edge of the bed, puts his case over his knees, finds the sheets of
paper he received at hotel reception and begins to write:
Dear Vivian
I’m here now. I can hardly believe it will soon happen. I’ve been to the
clinic and I’ve been examined, but Gordeau won’t come until tomorrow.
I’m scared. I got lost in a terrible sandstorm and fainted. Someone found
me and carried me to a house where I came to. Sometimes I think I’m
seeing things. Was it wrong of me to come here? Will you love me when
I return? As I am? I don’t know any longer what or who I am. People
ogle me. I’ll be happy when this is all over! I hope I can talk to Gordeau
tomorrow. I hope he’ll operate. I hope I get to see Gordeau. All of a
sudden it feels as if he is the only person I can trust. Perhaps everything
will be okay now? With us. With me. I’m so frightened of losing you. I
don’t know what I would do. I pray to God. Do you think he hears me?
Dear Vivian, I love you so much. Say hello to the fish and the frog in the
carp pond! Write or ring! Address: Rue d’Azial 63, Dar el Beida, tel.no.
3074173057001
You’re a
Pitch black. Or is it slightly greyer ahead? He comes closer, or the grey
comes closer. Water grass. Swaying in a strange underwater wind. For
some reason he can breathe. He glides through the weightless murk,
past enormous stalks which extend upwards and downwards without his
ever being able to see their ends. He floats under the water lilies, touches
the surface and plunges down to the black mud floor. Then it is light and
he is still floating. The sun undulates in the water above him. Beneath
the overhanging turf, in the dark, there is a glint of the frog’s black eyes.
The frog is bigger than him, but he is not afraid. He swims, keeping a
distance, and watches the frog rise to the surface with two lethargic
strokes. Then a face at the top. Beside the sun. Hair billowing, melting
and merging like milk in water. Floating quite still in the shade of a water
lily leaf, he peers up. A long time passes. The face flutters like a flag in the
wind. Then he suddenly understands.
VI
The room is light. The street is teeming with noises. His first thought:
George Gordeau. He gets up, goes to the miserable bathroom, undresses,
looks down and thinks: this is the last time. He fills the bath full. The water
is a red, rusty colour and it isn’t properly warm. He sinks into it. At the
bottom he can feel why: fine sand.
The taxi through the streets. At a crossing he can see a long stretch of
ocean and, above it, as far as the eye can see, a grey mist. His heart is
hammering as he passes the houses in Rue Lupebé. His hair is still wet at
the tips. The white brick building, the blackened windows at the top of the
wall. There.
This time he doesn’t have to wait. The girl behind the desk points to
the stairs. She doesn’t smile. Now everything moves fast. Up the stairs.
What did he actually write to Vivian? Did he remember the address? The
telephone number, was it correct? But the telephone number here, of the
clinic? Neither of them had it. Down the corridor. If he... what if she tried
to contact him and couldn’t get hold of him? What if...? He recognised
the door from the previous visit. The brass plate: Dr Gordeau. The door
opens before he can knock. Maria is standing there. He is happy and
relieved to see her again. Behind her, by the curtain, is the doctor who
examined him. The disappointment is like a stab in the chest. ‘Where’s
Dr Gordeau?’ ‘He’s coming,’ Maria replies. The doctor dematerialises
like a ghost through the rustling bamboo curtain. ‘So he’s not here
today then? Of course, he isn’t!’ He detects an unforeseen resistance
in himself to meeting Dr Gordeau. ‘Perhaps it would be best to delay
the appointment?’ ‘Delay?’ Maria stops in mid-movement and looks at
him with surprise. ‘That’s too late now.’ ‘Too late? What do you mean?’
‘Dr Gordeau has arrived. For you.’ ‘Does that mean he has accepted
a lower price?’ ‘Let’s see how much money you have.’ He unties his
money belt and puts all the notes on the table. She counts them while he
listens to voices on the other side of the curtain. ‘That’s sufficient,’ she
announces. ‘Sufficient? Does that mean...?’ ‘Yes, Dr Gordeau is ready.’
‘Now?’ ‘Please take a seat on the chair.’ The table fan swivels from side
to side making the dollar notes flutter like withered leaves. ‘But... I had
no idea it would be so quick. Shouldn’t I meet him first?’ ‘Dr Gordeau
does not meet patients until afterwards.’ ‘Afterwards?’ ‘Please take off
your clothes.’ He puts on a green shirt. ‘You will be given a sedative
first.’ Before he knows what is going on, she has injected the syringe. A
fountain of pain spreads through his thigh and then it becomes numb.
‘That’s it. We go through there.’ She leads him by the hand and parts
the curtain. A small operating theatre. White walls, a round clock above
a trolley of instruments. A metal bench in the middle of the floor like an
altar. He has to blink several times, but the mist in front of his eyes does
not clear. A haze in front of the lamps. Maria, Maria. He can hear himself
speaking as she leads him unsteadily across the floor. As if they have
been dancing all night and can barely walk now. Then he lies on the
bench. He senses a powerful light without seeing it. ‘You’ll soon be asleep
now.’ ‘Dr Gordeau,’ he hears a voice say. He tries to open his eyes and
soon realises they are already open. ‘Is that you? Are you here? Are you
here? Answer me!’ He shouts. Or whispers. He breathes. That is all. Then
the face above him merges into the water like milk.