The Gods of Tango (42 page)

Read The Gods of Tango Online

Authors: Carolina de Robertis

Tags: #Coming of Age, #Fiction, #Retail, #Romance

“Yes,” Dante said, though she’d never heard it spoken in her life.

“Maybe you’re one of them. But I’m not. Understand?”

Dante didn’t. She took out her own cigarettes and lit one.

They stood smoking together, quiet for a moment. Lust brightened the air between them, it couldn’t be but there it was, an electric pulse that urged them closer together, resist, resist. Carmen would not look at Dante. She took a drag of her cigarette and studied her fingernails with intensity. Dante had never imagined that she’d see this brazen woman in such a state, unsure, at war with herself.

“You, as a woman—I hate you. You, as a man—I need you. I tried to stop thinking of you. Believe me, I tried. But I can’t do it. I don’t know what you are, but if you say that you’re a man, you’ll stay.”

“And if I don’t want to stay?”

“Don’t test me.”

Dante swayed a little, against her own will.

“Don’t worry.” Carmen flicked ash into a small brass tray. “I’ll tire of you one day.” She took a last drag from her cigarette, put it out, and looked up. “Well? Are you a man?”

She should say no, escape while she could, avert disaster. But it was already too late to come out unharmed. She was trapped, a moth before the lamp of this woman, transfixed, drawn in, forgetting all reason in her urge to touch the fire. “Yes.”

“Then come over here,” Carmen purred, “and show me.”

Carmen closed her eyes this time, and did not use her hands; Dante’s clothes stayed on, she stayed intact,
he
stayed intact, the ravenous man, the ravaging man, an animal from the dirty conventillos, words that rang through her mind as she spread Carmen’s thighs, roughly, and for the first time she turned Carmen around and pushed her to her hands and knees and Carmen’s pleasure went savage then, and Dante wondered what it was, this roar in her own body, this aching force, how much of it pleasure and how much of it pain.

Rosa knew without being told, searched Dante’s face for what she wanted to know and then turned away and, for the rest of the night, wouldn’t look at Dante, not in the Lair, not onstage, not when the work was done and it was time for her to leave, which she did without saying goodbye. She shut the door of the Lair behind her and Dante stood staring at it with an empty feeling in her chest.

“Here, Chico.” El Loro handed her a shot glass and filled it with a smile.

The liquor stung on its way down. The air roared around her. Rosa. Before she could think about what to do, Dante was running out
of the great hall and through the kitchen to the service entrance, out into the alley and to the boulevard, where Rosa had almost disappeared into the crowd. There she was, a lone woman with an incongruous briefcase, weaving past revelers on their way home. Dante ran.

“Rosa!”

A wealthy couple at the door of a motorcar turned their gray heads, but Rosa didn’t slow. Even when Dante reached her side, Rosa kept walking, briskly, eyes straight ahead.

“Rosa.”

“What do you want?”

“To walk with you.”

“Why don’t you walk with Carmen?”

The bite of her tone. Dante felt shamed. The truth was that Carmen had not worn her ruby necklace that night, and that, if she had, Dante might well be in the upstairs office by now. “She won’t be seen with me.”

“Then why should I?”

“You’re angry.”

“I’m not, why would I care?”

She fell into step beside Rosa, a familiar rhythm, now tense with words unspoken. Their footsteps were drowned out by the song of the city, the growl of cars, the clop of horseshoes, a fight between three drunks too tired to do more than shout, a whore’s thorny laughter, the last tango sets at cafés loath to end the night, the cries of babies through conventillo windows, which were swinging open one by one, it was a new day, after all. At Rosa’s door, Dante tried to think of something to say, but wasn’t fast enough. Rosa stepped inside and closed the door without a word.

For the entire day that followed, Dante thought about Rosa’s face as she closed the door. It haunted her. She wanted that face to open to her again. She wanted it more than she’d imagined, more than she’d ever
dared admit to herself. But she could not allow these thoughts, could she? They were dangerous. She was not free. She was trapped in the penumbra of Carmen’s power. She went out for a walk alone and the city growled at her, hostile,
who do you think you are?
She was nobody. She had nothing. She’ll never
see
you, Rosa had said. The ruby necklace hovered in front of her eyes, on the street, in the courtyard with her neighbors, in the Lair when she arrived for work: not a necklace but a chain, oversize and garish, a collar for a well-groomed dog. By the time she got onstage and played and saw Carmen in the back, wearing the necklace, she felt repulsed by it. Meanwhile, here was Rosa, the woman who strode in front of Pedro and Santiago, where they sat playing their bandoneóns to hold up her rebel songs. A woman whom the world should never have allowed to be. And if she can be? and I? Too many thoughts to hold inside one skin. Dante’s violin spun them all into a fine thread of sound. Horsehairs burst from her bow and danced around her as she played, they were true to themselves, to the air around them, completely wild, free, broken. She, too, would break. She would not obey the ruby necklace. She would go where she needed to go, whatever the cost.

When the night’s work was done she ran after Rosa, sooner this time, and caught her at the service door. “Rosa, wait.”

“What do you want?”

“To talk to you.”

“There’s nothing for us to talk about.”

“There is.” Dante took a deep breath. “I owe you a story.”

“You owe me nothing.”

They were out of the alley now, on the boulevard. Dante fell into step beside Rosa, who did not slow her walk, not even to cross the street, not even when a carriage almost hit her and the driver swore and yanked his horse aside.

“I don’t love her,” Dante said, catching up to Rosa.

“It doesn’t matter.”

“I want to tell you about me. Please, stop, let’s smoke a cigarette.”

They stopped at a corner. Rosa took a cigarette from Dante, accepted a light. “Well?”

Dante put her violin case on the ground and lit her own cigarette. Her hands shook so hard that she burned her fingers with the flame. The pain felt good to her, a spike of life. “Carmen knows my secret, that’s her power over me. She found out the night before she left. She’s threatened to destroy me if I don’t do as she says.”

Rosa’s lips were tightly pursed, but she was listening. “Your secret.”

How beautiful she looked in the pale morning light, a creature between worlds. Soon the sun would rise and pour its light over the streets of this city, bright and harsh, revealing what the night had shielded, what Buenos Aires had lost, stolen, perhaps never wanted to see. If she could only freeze time, she would stop it here, right here in this moment, standing with Rosa in the dusty light of dawn just before the telling, the smoke from their cigarettes twining and vanishing with the dark.

“Rosa,” she said, “I’m a woman.”

Rosa stared at her for a long time. Confusion first. Then shock and understanding warred for her face. She took a slow drag of her cigarette. It was her turn, now, for her fingers to shake. “My God.”

Dante tried to speak but had no words or too many words to say. “How long have you been—?”

“Four years. Almost five.”

“And no one else knows?”

“No.”

She studied Dante’s face as if remapping it, as if giving it new form with her gaze. “I’m listening.”

“I have to walk.”

“Let’s walk.”

They began down the block, and Dante told her, slowly, elliptically—as she could tell it no other way—about the ship from Italy, the nervous bride on deck, the cousin-husband whom a bullet made a hero in the eyes of workers; the ache of hands that sewed from dawn to dusk;
the violin that, if her nonno could be believed, and perhaps he could, once belonged to the King of Naples; the blind man in the courtyard who played like a demon and the armoire full of a dead man’s clothes; the transformation of a village girl into a rootless city boy who poured his soul into the tango as if music could save his soul or at least stave off hell with a few hours of joy, and then a few hours more, a few more; the constant possibility of death. Somewhere in the telling they reached their neighborhood of San Telmo, already awake with factory workers on their way to another day’s grind and wives sweeping the bad spirits out along with the grime, the way their grandmothers had done in distant lands now lost to them. Rosa said nothing until Dante’s voice trailed off.

“You’re brave,” she finally said.

Not disgusting, evil, shameful. Dante found it difficult to breathe.

“I’ve never heard of such a thing.”

“Me neither.”

“But you can’t be the first.”

“I don’t know.”

“And … with Carmen …”

“I kept it from her, too, for a long time.”

“Even when—?”

“Yes.”

“I can’t believe it.” They arrived at the corner of Rosa’s street and, by mutual and unspoken agreement, did not turn there, continued on. “And then she found you out.”

“Yes.”

“And she still wants you back?”

“I’m her toy.”

“So why are you telling me?”

Dante stopped and placed her hand on Rosa’s face.

They stared at each other in the broadening light of day. There were passersby, the street was not theirs alone, but perhaps it belonged to them
as much as to anyone. The ornate run-down buildings flanked them like quiet sentinels, keeping watch, it seemed, just for them. The kiss began gently, a brushing of lips, and then, to her shock, grew strong; still no disgust; Rosa leaned in with surprising force. The world tore open along a hidden seam. It was not the same street, not the same San Telmo, but a much larger place, raw, aching, alive with possibility.

“What is this?” Dante whispered. “Are you sure?”

“Shut up, Dante.”

She shut up. More touch, more kissing, up against the wall, in the doorway of a conventillo whose door could be opened any moment by a disapproving matron ready to sweep them away. Her violin and Rosa’s briefcase had both fallen to the ground to free their hands, which ran along each other’s bodies, each plane and curve a revelation. “Rosa.”

“Mmmmm?”

“Come home with me.”

They were lucky: as they slid into Dante’s room, no one spied them from the courtyard except the French wife, who returned calmly to her sewing, absorbed as she no doubt was in a conversation with her village dead. They kept the shutters closed. Slats of morning light fell across Rosa’s blue dress and across Dante’s hands as she unzipped the dress, slowly, as though unwrapping an infinitely precious work of art. They took their time. There it was, Rosa’s body, rich heavy breasts, delirious curves, thighs fierce enough to sink a thousand ships. So much wonder. So much to rove. And then, finally, after a long sweet time, the hot sublime place that could swallow a lover whole, secret axis of the world. Rosa’s pleasure spiked and crashed and surged again and you, father of five, in your Montevideo room, you did not break her, go rot in the hell of your own nightmare, this woman is flagrantly alive.

She fell against Rosa’s soft belly, catching her breath. They had tried to keep quiet, had they been quiet? The neighbor women’s chatter bled
through her door, on the rise with the day, while, outside her window, a horse cart creaked and clopped. Rosa’s hands were in her hair, tracing delicate paths across her scalp, almost too tender to bear.

Rosa sat up languorously and reached for Dante’s trouser buttons.

“What are you doing?”

“What do you think?”

“I’ve never done that before.”

“Well, here’s your start.”

“I can’t.”

“Of course you can.” The trousers were open now, the shirt unbuttoned to reveal the binding below. “I want to see you. Take them off.”

Dante complied with trembling hands. Rosa watched intently as though memorizing every move, every centimeter of flesh as it unfurled. She touched the sheet binding Dante’s breasts with the gentle curiosity of a child. “Does it hurt?”

“A little. You get used to it.”

Rosa nodded. Dante unwound her binding and sat naked and exposed. They looked at each other in the dim light of the closed room, two women in the wilds without a map or compass. Rosa pushed Dante back on the bed.

“Teach me.”

At first Dante was too stunned to move. Then, slowly, she began.

To open. To surrender. To taste it from the other side.

To speak of it—like that, now here—until you can’t speak anymore, until words melt in the hot crucible of your mind.

To unfurl, to be unfurled. No need for map or compass, the land is new and ancient and we learn it and are lost in it, become it, we break in glittering pieces and need nothing more.

Carmen, you were wrong: forgetting is not joy. Joy is this. A truth with open skies, sweeping all of it up, shadows, music, hunger, beauty, pain.

Afterward they lay together, entwined, breathing air made plush by the day’s heat.

“Rosa?”

“Mmmmmm?”

“Never leave me.”

“Mmmm.”

“I’ll never leave you.”

“No?”

“No.”

“What about her?”

“I’ll free myself.”

“How?”

“I’ll tell her. I’ll just tell her.” In the glow of this moment it seemed that simple.

“And then what?”

“We’ll be together.”

“Where?”

“Here. Or anywhere.”

“And make music.”

“Yes—music.”

“And do this.”

“Lots of this.”

“Forever?”

“Forever.”

“Are you proposing?”

“What do you mean?”

“You know what I mean.”

“Marriage?”

Rosa sat up in the slatted light and her breasts hung close to Dante’s face, manna, heaven. “Yes.”

“I can’t marry you, Rosa.”

“Why not?”

“I’m not a man.” Then, laughing, “Didn’t you notice?”

“You don’t want to be a man?”

“That’s not what I said.”

“Do you want to go back to women’s clothes?”

Other books

True to the Game III by Teri Woods
Einstein's Dreams by Alan Lightman
Vuelo nocturno by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
Circle Nine by Heltzel, Anne
Doctor at Large by Richard Gordon
Little Wolf by R. Cooper
Beauvallet by Georgette Heyer
Margaret & Taylor by Kevin Henkes
The Widower's Two-Step by Rick Riordan
Think of England by KJ Charles