Authors: Paolo Giordano
“All right. Ciao, Marianna.”
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E
gitto isn't sure how much intelligence lies hidden behind Colonel Ballesio's meditative stance. Not much, he'd guess. What's certain is that the colonel harbors several idiosyncrasies. For example, he's hung a disproportionate number of tree-shaped air fresheners in the tent, which fill the space with the scent of bubble gum.
“Lieutenant Morocco! Come in.”
“Egitto, Colonel, sir.”
Ballesio leans forward to read the name on his jacket. “Oh, well, not much difference, right? At ease, Lieutenant, at ease. Have a seat over there. As you can see, this tent doesn't have many amenities. Caracciolo is a spartan type. Only because he's young, mind you. I, however, am beginning to appreciate comfort.” He caresses his belly indulgently. “By the way, I'd like to get a refrigerator to keep a few beers here. I noticed you have one in your infirmary. Do you really need it?”
“The vaccines are in it. And the adrenaline.”
“The adrenaline, right. That's important. I could keep it here, though. That way I'll have room for some beers. After all, my tent is openâeveryone is welcome at any hour of the day or night. I don't have any secrets to hide. Besides, you're leaving soon, right?”
Egitto lowers his eyes.
“Anyway, think about it. Maybe it's not a good idea. I don't know about you, but I've always liked beer, even warm.” The colonel squeezes his lips between his thumb and forefinger, nodding his head vacantly. “Well, okay, then,” he murmurs. And again: “Okay, then.”
On the desk there's a copy of
The Little Prince
. The two soldiers turn their eyes to the slim little boy drawn on the cover.
“My wife,” Ballesio says, as if to justify himself. “She gave it to me. She says I need to get in touch with our kids. I'm not sure what she means. Have you read it?”
“A long time ago.”
“If you ask me, it's for homos. I fell asleep twice.”
Egitto nods, uncomfortable. He's not sure why he came to the colonel's tent. The Little Prince
seems more out of his element than usual under the greenish light filtering through the canvas.
“Was there something in particular you wanted to tell me, Lieutenant?”
“I'd like to extend my stay, Colonel.” The meaning of the phrase isn't fully clear to him until he's uttered it in its entirety.
Ballesio raises his eyebrows. “Are you serious?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Here in Afghanistan or here in this Gulistan shithole?”
“At the FOB, Colonel.”
“And to think, I'd already like to leave. Ski season starts in three months. Don't you want to go home and ski, Lieutenant? Don't tell me you're one of those southerners who've never put on a pair of skis.”
“No. I ski.”
“Good for you. Of course, I have nothing against southerners. Some of them are good people. But naturally, to call them Alpines is a different story. They're suited to these rotten deserts. They're used to it. Me, on the other hand, I'd give my right arm to go back to the mountains and ski all winter long. Ahhh! I tell myself each time, This year I'm devoting all my time to skiing, but then something always gets in the way. Last year my wife tripped on a curb and I found myself having to be her nurse. A depressing experience. From the windows I gazed at the Tofane Mountains with their white blanket of snow, and I would have climbed them on foot just to be able to ski back down. I would have come down on my ass. This year I won't even see the snow. A waste of time, a waste of life. Especially at your age. Anyway. Are you really sure you want to stay?”
“I'm sure, Colonel.”
“I hope it's not because of some kind of missionary spirit. They told me about that kid you saved, you know. The opium smoker. Congratulations. A touching story.” He mulls it over. “But we aren't missionaries, remember that. We're commandos. We like to play with guns, and preferably use them.”
“It's for the money,” Egitto lies.
The colonel rubs his jaw thoughtfully. “Money is always a good reason.”
The Little Trees fresheners flutter crazily in front of the air conditioner's jet, giving off a cloying aroma. Egitto is beginning to feel nauseated.
Ballesio points to him. “That thing on your face. Will it go away?”
Egitto sits up straighter in his chair. He pictures the pattern of blotches on his face. It changes every day, like an atmospheric disturbance, and he keeps an eye on it as if he were a meteorologist. By now he knows how each area will behave: the cheeks heal quickly, the skin around the lips is painful, the scaly eyebrows disturb people, the ears are a disaster. “Sometimes it improves. A little. With the sun, for instance.”
“It doesn't seem like it. It makes you look like a mess. No offense.”
Egitto grabs onto his belt. All of a sudden he feels very hot.
“I have a problem too,” Ballesio says. He loosens the collar of his uniform. “Here. Look at this. There are spots, right? They itch like hell. Does your stuff itch?”
Egitto goes around the desk to examine the colonel's neck. A slight rash follows the edge of the uniform. Red pustules, tiny as pencil marks. “It's just a rash. I have some calendula cream.”
“Calendula? What the fuck is that? Don't you have any cortisone?”
“You don't need cortisone.”
“It makes me feel better right away. Bring me the cortisone. You should try it up there as well, Lieutenant.”
“Thanks for the advice, Colonel.”
He returns to his seat, puts his hands on his knees. The colonel straightens his jacket.
“So, then, you'll be staying with us,” he says. “If it were me, they'd have to pay me a ton of money to make me hang around here. Anyway. Your business. A real doctor will come in handy for us. Your colleague Anselmo can barely manage with stitches. I'll communicate your decision today, Lieutenant.”
Egitto requests permission to leave.
“One more thing, Doctor.”
“Sir.”
“Is it true what they say about the roses?”
“What's that?”
“That in the spring the valley is filled with roses.”
“I've never seen them, Colonel.”
Ballesio sighs. “I thought so. Of course. Why should roses grow in such a horrible place?”
F
or Ietri everything is new and interesting. He studies the strange terrain from the helicopter, the rocky plains interrupted here and there by emerald green meadows. There's a lone camel standing halfway up a slope, or maybe it's a dromedary, he can never remember the thing about the humps. He didn't think that dromedaries existed in the wild, though: they're zoo animals. He'd like to point it out to Cederna, who is sitting beside him, but his friend doesn't seem to be interested in the landscape. He's staring at some point of the helicopter from behind his dark glasses, or else he's sleeping.
Ietri takes out his earbuds. The distorted, cavernous guitars of the Cradle of Filth are replaced by the very similar noise of the rotor blades. “Will there be a bar at the FOB?” he asks his friend. He's forced to shout.
“No.”
“What about a gym?”
“Not even that.”
“Ping-Pong at least?”
“You still don't get it. Where we're going there's not a goddamn thing.”
He's right. There's nothing at Base Ice, only sand. Yellow, clinging sandâyour boots sink in it up to your ankles. If you brush it off your uniform, it swirls in the air a bit and then comes back and lands in the same spot. The first night in Gulistan, when Ietri blows his nose, he leaves dark streaks on his handkerchief. The next day blood mixed with sand comes out, and so on for a week, then nothing. His body is already used to it; a young body can get used to anything.
The space assigned to the platoon is in the northwest zone, next to a concrete structure, one of the few on the base: it was left behind by the marines. It's a large bare room, plastered only at certain points. There's graffiti on the walls: a flag with stars and stripes, some lewd sketches, and a mean bulldog with a studded collar. The holes, dozens of them, are from bullets fired from within.
“What a lousy wreck,” Simoncelli says when they enter the first time, thereby choosing the name with which to baptize their digs: the Wreck. It becomes their headquarters.
They soon discover that it's infested with cockroaches. They're heaped up in the corners and crevices, but occasionally an explorer crawls out onto the floor. They have shiny brown carapaces, which make a crackling noise when you crush them under your boot and spurt blood half a yard away.
Luckily Passalacqua has brought along some insect repellent and spreads the powder around the outside perimeter and in the corners. “You know how it works?” he asks, tapping the bottom of the can to discharge the last puffs of powder. If it isn't enough, they're fucked: they'll have to kill the critters one by one. “It releases a smell that excites the cockroaches. It's called a pheronome.”
“Phero
m
one, you idiot,” Cederna corrects him.
“Pheromone, whatever. It's the smell of their females in heat. The cockroaches get horny and go looking for them, and instead of the females they find the poison.”
“Fantastic!”
“The ones who end up in the poison drop dead on the spot and give off a different odor that drives the other cockroaches crazy.”
“Crazy?”
“Crazy. They devour each other.”
Ietri imagines a cockroach scurrying out of the Wreck, slipping into the tent, climbing up the leg of the cot, and crawling over his face as he sleeps.
“Just imagine if the Taliban did that,” Cederna says, “if they sprayed the smell of pussy on the base instead of hurling grenades. We'd start killing one another.”
“We already have Zampieri giving off the pheromone,” Rovere says.
“No, she only smells from her armpits.”
They all laugh. Only Ietri is left frowning. “Do you think we're like cockroaches?” he asks.
“What?”
“You said that if the Taliban sprayed the smell of pussy we'd start killing each other. Like the cockroaches.”
Cederna smiles faintly. “Maybe you'd be saved,
verginella
. You don't know that smell yet.”
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T
he first task assigned to the Third Platoon, Charlie Company (since the Sixty-sixth Company set foot on foreign soil, its designation was changed to its battle name), is the construction of a masonry structure to house the washing machines. The sand has already put two of them out of order, and they are now stacked in a corner of the camp along with other discarded materials, receptacles full of empty cans and scrap metal.
Ietri has been working for a couple of hours with Di Salvo and four masons from the village. In actuality, all the soldiers do is watch to see that the Afghans don't bungle it. It's not clear who among them has the most experience with construction. The plan they have to follow is sketchy and the design lacks the lateral dimensions, so they've marked out the perimeter roughly by counting the number of bricks in the drawing. It's just past noon and the sun is beating straight down on their naked shoulders.
“We could use a beer,” Ietri says.
“Yeah, ice cold.”
“With a lemon wedge stuck in the neck.”
“I like to suck the lemon after the beer.”
The wall they're building seems straight, at least to their eye, yet there's something odd about it. They're at the eighth row of bricks; soon they'll need a ladder and Ietri hopes he won't have to escort the Afghans to the storeroom to get it.
All of a sudden the Afghans stop what they're doing, drop their tools on the ground, and spread out some mats that had been piled aside, arranging them in the sole triangle of shade. They kneel down.
“What the fuck are they doing?”
“What do you think?”
“Do they have to pray right now?”
Di Salvo shrugs. “Muslims are always praying. They're fundamentalists.”
Ietri fishes a glop of mortar out of the bucket and throws it on the wall. He flattens it with a trowel. What lunacy, he thinks, then turns to look at the Afghans again. They're doing a kind of gymnastics: they bend down to the ground, straighten up, then hunch over again, all the while intoning a mantra. For a moment he has the urge to imitate them.
“Fuck this,” Di Salvo says.
“Yeah, fuck this,” Ietri echoes him.
They drop their rifles. If the Afghans can take a break, they too can take a little rest. Di Salvo gropes around for the pack of cigarettes in the side pocket of his pants and offers him one. They lean against the wall, where the mortar is still fresh.
“They shipped us over here to build a laundry room,” Ietri says. “Does that seem right?”
“No, not right at all.”
It just doesn't sit well with him. They had promised him American women and there's not a trace of them hereâthey were pulling his leg. He'd gotten a glimpse of them in Herat, of course, during the few days he was there: soldiers with ponytails, firm breasts, and the look of a woman who will eat you alive in the sack, but then they shipped him to Gulistan to build a stupid wall. Or rather, to watch someone else build it. He can't imagine any place on earth farther removed from sexual temptation.
“To think our parents came here to smoke joints,” Di Salvo says.
“Joints?”
“Sure, you know, the seventies. The hippie fuckers.”
“Oh, sure,” Ietri says. He doesn't know, actually. He thinks for a moment. “Anyway, my parents never came here. They never went anywhere.” He's sure about his mother. For all he knows, his father might very well have come here, to Afghanistan; maybe he joined a group of Taliban and buries IEDs in the roads now. He always was an unpredictable type.
“I was just kidding. My parents never went anywhere either. But it was that generation. They did a lot of grass and then everyone fucked everyone, constantly.”
“What a life,” Ietri says.
“Yeah, what a life. Not like today. The girls nowadays are all no-I-don't-drink, no-I-don't-smoke, no-I-don't-put-out.”
Ietri laughs. Di Salvo is right; girls today don't put out.
“You practically have to marry them before they'll go to bed. Although it depends on the location.”
“What do you mean, the location?”
“The ones from the Veneto hop into bed right away, for instance.” Di Salvo snaps his fingers. “Not in Belluno, though. You have to go farther south, where the students are. The students are little sluts. Once I was in Padua, I got three of them in bed in a week.”
Ietri makes a mental note of the number and location.
Padua. Three
. You can be sure he'll go there, once he returns.
“The students shave itâdid you know that?”
“Why?”
Di Salvo spits on the ground, then covers the spit with sand. “It's a fad. Plus it's more hygienic.”
Ietri is dubious. He's never seen a female with shaved pubes, except in certain videos on the Internet, and little girls at the beach, of course. He's not sure he'd feel comfortable.
The Afghans stick their foreheads in the sand, as if they want to plant their heads in it. Again Ietri feels the urge to kneel down and join them, see how it feels. Di Salvo arches his back and swivels his neck around, yawning. The sun is roasting them. Ietri has some sunscreen in his backpack, but he doesn't know how to smear it on himself and he doesn't feel right about asking his buddy. A soldier doesn't rub cream on another soldier's back.
“Can you imagine? Coming here when there's no war and roaming around the country, free, with a girl beside you,” Di Salvo muses. “Smoking marijuana leaves just picked off the plant.”
“That would be cool.”
“It would be awesome.”
He moves closer to Ietri. “Do you smoke?”
Ietri, puzzled, looks at the cigarette he's holding between his fingers.
“I'm not talking about those, asshole. Grass.”
Ietri nods. “I've tried it, once or twice.”
Di Salvo puts an arm around Ietri's bare shoulders. His skin is surprisingly cool. “You know Abib?”
“The interpreter?”
“Yeah. He has grass to sell.”
“How do you know?”
“Never mind that. You can come with me if you want. We'll each pay half. For ten euros he gives you a bag this big.” Di Salvo uses his hands to show him.
“Are you nuts? If they catch us we're screwed.”
“Who's going to catch us? Does Captain Masiero sniff your breath or something?”
“No,” Ietri admits.
“This is different from the stuff you find at home. This stuff is natural, it's . . .
wow
!” Di Salvo tightens his grip around his neck and puts his mouth to his ear; his breath is just slightly hotter than the air. “Listen to this. Abib has a small wooden statue in his tent, one of those tribal statues, you know? With a big head and square body and enormous eyes. It's some old carving that his grandfather gave him. He told me the whole story, but I was smoking and I don't remember. Anyhow. The statue stares at you with those huge yellow eyes, and the last time, there I was smoking Abib's grass and looking at the statue while it was looking at me, and at a certain point,
bam!
âI was stoned and I realized that the statue was death. I was looking death right in the face!”
“Death?”
“Yeah, death. But it wasn't death like you imagine it. It wasn't angry. It was a peaceful death, not scary. It was like . . . indifferent. It couldn't care less about me. It looked at me and that's it.”
“How did you know it was death? Did Abib tell you?”
“I just knew it, that's all. Actually, no, I realized it afterward, outside the tent. I was full of energy, an energy unlike any other. It wasn't anything like the usual sensation you get when you've smoked grass and feel wasted. I was extremely lucid, very focused. I had looked death in the face and I felt like a god. Then, listen to this, I pass by the flag, the one on the main tower, you know? It was fluttering because there was a little wind and I . . . I can't explain it. I
felt
the flag fluttering, okay? I don't mean I noticed the wind was making the flag flutter. I'm saying I really felt it. I was the wind, and I was the flag.”
“You were the wind?”
Di Salvo drops his arm. “You think I'm talking like an asshole hippie?”
“No. No, I don't think that,” Ietri says, but he's bewildered.
“Well, anyhow, happiness or sadness had nothing to do with it. I mean, those are . . . just pieces of it. They're incomplete. Whereas I was feeling
everything
, all at once. The flag and the wind, everything.”
“I don't understand what the statue and death have to do with the flag.”
“They're part of it, I'm telling you!” Di Salvo scratches his beard. “You're looking at me like I'm telling you a load of hippie crap.”
“No. Finish the story.”
“I'm done. That was it, get it? Something inside me opened up.”
“A revelation,” Ietri says.
“I don't know if it was a revelation.”
“It was a revelation, I think.”
“I'm telling you I don't know what the fuck it was. It is what it is. I'm just trying to explain to you that the stuff Abib gives you is different. It makes you feel different. It makes you feel things,” he said, suddenly irritable. “So, you want to come?”
Ietri isn't much interested in drugs, but he doesn't want to disappoint his platoon mate. “Maybe.”
Meanwhile, the Afghans have rolled up their mats and gone back to work. They rarely speak and when they do, it sounds to Ietri like they're arguing. He looks at his watch; it's twenty minutes to one. If he hurries, maybe he can beat the line at the mess hall.
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T
hree days later, when it comes time to poke their nose out of the FOB, he doesn't get to go.
“Today we'll go take a look around,” René says in the morning. “I want Cederna, Camporesi, Pecone, and Torsu with me.”