Read The Erasers Online

Authors: Alain Robbe-Grillet

The Erasers (37 page)

 


How did that riddle
of yours go yesterday? What anim
al


The drunk, delighted, sits down opposite him and searches
h
is memory. What animal

Suddenly his face lights up; he rinks and begins enunciating with an infinitely sly expression:


What animal is black, has six legs, and flies?


No,

Wallas says,

it was something else.

A wipe of the rag. The manager shrugs. Some people actually lave time to waste.

But he mistrusts the friendly manners his lodger puts on so
w
illingly. A man who dresses like that doesn

t take a room and lien spend the whole night out. And why did that man from the
p
olice station want to talk to him last night?


I

m the manager.


Oh, it was you! You

re the one who told an inspector that lonsense about some fictitious son of Professor Dupont?


I didn

t say anything like that. I said that sometimes young people came in here, they

re all ages—some young enough to ^e Dupont

s sons



Did you say he had a son?


I don

t even know whether he had any!


All right, let me speak to the manager.


I

m the manager.


Oh, it was you! You

re the one who told that nonsense
a
bout the fictitious son of Professor Dupont?


I didn

t say anything.


Did you say he had a son?


I don

t even know whether he had any. All I said was that
y
oung people of all ages came in here.


You

re the one who told th
at nonsense, or was it the mana
ger?


I

m the manager.


You

re the one, young people nonsense, professor at the
b
ar?

 


I

m the manager!


All right. Let me certainly have a son, a long time age fictitious young died so strangely….


I

m the manager. I

m the manager. The manager. I

m th
e
manager

the manager

the manager


In the troubled water of the aquarium, furtive shadows pass
.
The manager is motionless at his post. His massive body lean: on his outspread arms; his hands grip the edge of the bar; hi
s
head hangs down, almost threatening, the mouth somewha
t
twisted, the gaze blank. Around him the familiar specters dance their waltz, like moths circling a lampshade and bumping
into
it, like dust in the sun, like little boat
s lost at sea, lulling to the
sea

s rhythm their delicate cargo, the old casks, the dead fish, the rigging and tackle, the buo
ys, the stale bread, the knives
and the men.

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