Steal You Away (44 page)

Read Steal You Away Online

Authors: Niccolo Ammaniti

BOOK: Steal You Away
12.31Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Flora looked up at the ceiling and called out: ‘Mama! We have a visitor! Pietro’s come to see us.’ She turned her head, as if someone were speaking to her, but no one was. The house was a tomb. ‘No, don’t worry, it’s not the one who came before.’

She’s crazy
, Pietro said to himself.

130


We’re good together, aren’t we?

Flora smiles
.


Well, what do you say? Are we good together or not?’ he persisted
.


Yes. We’re good together
.’

They are locked in an embrace on a sand dune thirty metres
from the shore. In a basket there are sandwiches wrapped in tin
foil and a bottle of red wine. The sea is sad, so grey, ruffled by
the wind. The same colour as the sky. And the air is so clear that
the tall chimneys of Civitavecchia power station seem an arm’s
length away
.

He picks up his guitar and starts playing. One riff is difficult.
He practises it a couple of times. ‘It’s a milonga. I composed it
myself.’ He stops playing and frowns. ‘Ouch! What’s that sticking
into me?’ He puts his hand in his trouser pocket and pulls out a
little blue velvet box. ‘Oh, that’s what it was. Amazing, the things
that get into your pockets
.’


What is it?’ Flora shakes her head
.

She’s twigged
.

He puts the little box in her hand
.


Are you crazy?


Open it
.’


Why?


Because otherwise I’ll have to throw it to the fish. And next
summer some scuba diver’s going to make a lucky find
.’

Flora opens it
.

A ring. White gold and amethyst
.

Flora puts it on her finger. A perfect fit. ‘What is it?


A formal request for your hand in marriage
.’


Are you crazy?


Absolutely. If you don’t like it, you only have to say so, the
jeweller’s a friend of mine, we can change it. There won’t be any
problem
.’


No, it’s lovely, I like it
.’

131

‘Well, what have you come for?’

‘Er …’
To play a practical joke on you, but in view of the
state you’re in I don’t think
… Pietro didn’t know what to say.

‘So it’s true that you break into other people’s houses at night like a burglar? Were you planning to smash my TV? If so, go ahead. Feel free, it’s in the sitting room. I haven’t watched it in ages. This time, though, I don’t think anyone has forced you to break in, have they?’

There’s somebody downstairs who

The door was there. He could get away.

‘Don’t even think it. You’re here now and you’re not leaving till I say you can. We haven’t had many guests to talk to lately.’ Then, addressing the ceiling: ‘Have we, Mama?’ She pointed to
the plastic bag tied to Pietro’s belt. ‘What have you got in there? Something’s moving …’

‘Nothing,’ said Pietro, trying to sound nonchalant. ‘Nothing.’

‘Let me see it.’

He moved closer. The sweat was pouring off him. Even behind his knees. He untied the plastic bag and held it out. ‘There’s a snake.’

‘Did you want it to bite me?’ she asked, interested.

‘No, it’s a grass snake, it won’t bite,’ Pietro tried to justify himself, but without sounding too convincing. It was her, she made him uneasy.

He felt her madness envelop him like a toxic cloud that could drive him crazy too. She no longer had anything of Miss Palmieri, the nice Miss Palmieri he had talked to that winter’s evening in the Co-op. She was a different person and what’s more she was madder than a mad cow.

I want to get out of here
.

The teacher put the cassette recorder on the edge of the bath and took the plastic bag. She opened it and was about to look inside when the snake’s pointed head, followed by the rest of its sinuous body, shot out, and it fell into the bath and began to swim about between her legs. Miss Palmieri kept quite still and it wasn’t clear whether she was frightened, or pleased, or what.

Then the reptile slithered over the edge and flashed out through the bathroom door.

The teacher burst out laughing. Her laughter was forced and unnatural, like that of a second-rate actress. ‘Now it’s free to wander round the flat. I’ve never had a pet. It’s the right one for me.’

‘Can I go now?’ Pietro implored.

‘Not yet.’ Flora stuck a wrinkled foot out of the bath. ‘What can we talk about? Well, I can tell you that the last few months haven’t exactly gone well for me …’

132

She has finished cooking. Everything’s ready. The roast is in the
oven. The tagliatelle is covered in sauce and is getting cold on the
table. Where has he got to? He’s usually so punctual. Perhaps the
Milanese interior designer has kept him late. He’ll soon be here.
Flora has bought a video of
Gone with the Wind
at the newsagent’s.
He gave her a video recorder
.

And at last he arrives
.

But he’s in a hurry. He’s evasive. Strange. He barely kisses her.
He tells her he’s had some problems with the jeans shop (what an
ugly name). That he can’t stay to dinner this evening. What problems?
She doesn’t ask him. He says he’ll call her tomorrow morning.
And tomorrow evening they’ll watch the film. He kisses her on
(and not in) the mouth and leaves
.

Flora eats the cold tagliatelle and watches
Gone with the Wind.

133

‘Since that evening with
Gone with the Wind
I’ve never seen him again,’ said the schoolmistress, with a loud laugh. ‘Never seen him. Or even spoken to him.’

What evening? And who? What’s she talking about?
Pietro didn’t understand, but he certainly had no wish to inquire further.

(
Let her talk
.)

‘It’s funny when you think about it now. But at first you’ve no idea how … oh, forget it. The next day, not even a phone call. In the evening not a word, it seemed the day would never end. And I knew. I already knew what had happened. I tried to call him on his mobile but always got his voicemail. I left messages. I waited three days, then rang him at home. And his mother tells me he’s not there. And that she has no messages for me. And then she lets slip that her son has gone away, that’s all she knows. What do you mean, gone away? Gone away where? That’s all she knows, can you believe it? He didn’t even leave me a message.’ The schoolmistress began crying quietly, then splashed some water on her face and smiled. ‘No more crying. I’ve cried too much. And crying doesn’t help. Does it?’

Pietro shook his head.

Why did I come here? What a fool I was … What a fool … If
Gloria could see her, see what a state she’s in. But who did she
fall in love with?

‘He’d left. Gone. Without a word to me, without saying goodbye. I knew he was no good. He was a buffoon, my mother said so from the start. I was well aware of it. That’s what hurts so much. He’d bewitched me with his words, his music, his wonderful plans, the engagement ring. He wouldn’t leave me alone. He tortured me. He made me believe in him. And now I’m going to tell you something – something amusing. You’re the first person I’ve told, young man. You should feel honoured. Our friend left me a little souvenir.’ She grasped the edge of the bath and pulled herself up.

‘I’m pregnant, Pietro. I’m expecting a baby.’

And she burst out laughing again.

134

Flora puts her hand in her coat pocket and squeezes the little
plastic bag which has told her the truth about those attacks of
nausea, about that delay, about that lassitude which she imputed
to her broken heart. She gets in the car and drives to the Biglia
haberdashery. She switches off the engine. Switches it on again.
Switches it off again. She gets out of the car and enters the shop
.

Gina Biglia is standing behind the counter talking to two customers.
When she sees Flora, she opens her mouth and signals
with her eyes. The two women move into a corner, peer into the
button drawer but don’t leave. You bet they don’t! Ears pricked
up like wolves
.


Where’s he gone?’ gasps Flora in a broken voice. ‘I must know.
I’m not leaving till you tell me
.’


I don’t know.’ Gina Biglia fidgets. ‘I’m sorry, I don’t know
.’

Flora sits down on the stool, covers her face with her hands
and starts trembling, sobbing convulsively
.


I’m sorry,’ Mrs Biglia ushers the customers out of the shop,
then locks the door. She comes over to Flora. ‘Don’t take on so
,
please. Don’t cry, for the love of God. Don’t cry!


Where’s he gone?’ Flora seizes her hand and holds it fast
.


All right, I’ll tell you. I’ll tell you all I know. Just stop, please,
stop crying, calm down. He’s gone to Jamaica
.’


To Jamaica? Why?

Gina Biglia lowers her eyes. ‘To get married
.’


I knew it, I knew it, I knew it, I knew …’ Flora repeats, then
takes the pregnancy test from her pocket and holds it out
.

135

‘Now go away. I don’t want you here any more. I’m tired.’ Flora picked up a floating piece of bread and began to mash it to a pulp.

Pietro turned and was about to leave when, without intending to, without wanting to, he said: ‘Why did they fail me?’

‘So that’s why you came. Now I understand, at last.’ She picked up a hairbrush to tidy her hair, but then dropped it in the water. ‘Do you really want to know? Are you sure you want to know?’

Did he want to know? No, he didn’t, but he turned round anyway and asked again: ‘Why did they do it?’

‘It was bound to happen. You don’t understand. You’re stupid.’

(
Don’t listen to her. She’s evil. She’s mad. Go away. Don’t listen
to her
.)

‘But you said I was doing well. You promised me …’

‘You see how stupid you are? Don’t you know that promises are made to be broken?’

She was a witch. With those grey eyes sunken in their purple orbits, that pointed nose, that madwoman’s hair …

You’re the wicked witch
.

‘That’s not true.’

‘It’s true. It’s true,’ said Flora, listlessly throwing a banana skin on the floor.

Pietro shook his head. ‘You say these things because you’re upset. Because someone’s dumped you, that’s the only reason you’re saying these things. You don’t really think them, I know you don’t.’

136

Flora is lying on the bed. She isn’t angry with him any more. If
he comes back she’ll forgive him. Because she just can’t go on like
this. Graziano’s mother said those things to hurt her, because she’s
an evil woman. They’re not true. It’s not true that Graziano has
got married. He’ll come back. Soon. She knows he will. And she’ll
take him back. Because without him she can’t do anything, and
nothing makes sense any more. Waking up in the morning. Working.
Looking after Mama. Sleeping. Living. Nothing makes sense
without him. She calls to him every night. She can make him come
back. She knows she can. With her mind. If she can talk to her
mother, who is banished to another world, with him, who is only
on the other side of the ocean, it will be easy. She tells him to
come back at once. Graziano, come back to me
.

137

Flora opened her mouth over her set of yellow teeth and foamed: ‘Be quiet! Do you know why they passed Pierini? Because the sooner they get rid of him the better. They never want to see him again. They couldn’t have failed him, that boy would be quite capable of taking their precious school apart brick by brick. And I don’t blame him either. They’re scared. Do you know what he did to me? He set fire to my car. A little reward to me for reporting him. Now you want to know why they failed you. Well, I’ll tell you. Because you’re immature and infantile. Let me see now … How did the deputy headmistress put it? A boy with serious personality disturbances and with a problem family and difficulties of integration into the school community. In other words, because you don’t react. You’re shy. You don’t join in. You’re not like the others. Because your father is a violent alcoholic and your mother is a nervous wreck who takes too many medicines and your brother’s a poor idiot who failed his school assessment three years running. You’re going to become like them. And I’ll tell you something, you
can forget about high school, forget about university. The sooner you understand who you are, the sooner you’ll get better. You’ve got no backbone. They failed you because you let other people make you do things you don’t want to do.

(
And it was Gloria who made me come in here
…)

‘You didn’t want to break into the school, how many times did you repeat that phrase in the head’s office? And every time you shot yourself in the foot, showing how weak and immature you were.’ She stopped for breath for a moment, looked at him scornfully, and added: ‘You’re like me. You’re worthless. I can’t save you. I don’t want to save you. Nobody saved me. And they’ll walk all over you because you don’t reac …’

   

A moment.

One dreadful moment.

The moment when the show-off decides to walk along the parapet.

The moment when you heave the rock off the bridge.

The moment when you reach down to get out your cigarettes, sit up again and in front of you, beyond the windscreen, there’s an open-mouthed silhouette frozen on the pedestrian crossing.

The moment that never returns.

The moment that can change your life.

The moment when Pietro reacted, put his foot on the electric wire and tugged and the cassette recorder fell into the water with a simple …

Other books

For a Night of Love by Émile Zola
Of Eternal Life by Micah Persell
Craving Vengeance by Valerie J. Clarizio
Never, Never by Brianna Shrum
You First by Cari Simmons
Perfect Reader by Maggie Pouncey
Chained by Lynne Kelly