Authors: Elena Poniatowska
22
SANTANDER
B
ACK AT THE RITZ
, Dr. MartÃnez Alonso administers quantities of bromides sufficient for a soldier in the barracks, and begs her â when she summons a waiter to supply room service â not to open the door if she happens to be naked.
âDoctor, you have to listen to me. I know how to bring this war to an end. You need to obtain an interview with Franco for me. We have to get rid of Hitler and Mussolini who, in addition to having transformed us into spectres, go around handing out pieces of misery as if they were sugared almonds.'
The other hotel guests complain of the scandals she causes.
âYou are all Hitler's slaves!' Leonora opens the door to her room and bawls down the corridor. She yells at all hours of the day or night. The owner himself comes upstairs to try and calm her down. Leonora defends every one of her political opinions passionately.
âHitler has hypnotised us. If we don't do something, he will annihilate us.'
âI am very much afraid that Miss Carrington cannot remain at the Ritz,' warns the manager, Braulio Peralta.
Rather than take the lift, Leonora goes up and down the stairs, running out into the street and then rushing back in again a few minutes later.
âI run faster than my body can keep up,' she says.
She parts the way ahead of her with her arms, her movements are disjointed. The kindly porter restrains her.
âI will not permit them to take me away. I am in a nightmare; my appearance is as you see me, but inside I am a night mare. That's how I was born. Death to Nazism!'
Dr. MartÃnez Alonso throws in the towel, leaving her in the care of a young doctor with green eyes called Alberto.
âAlberto, you are my brother Gerard, and you have come to free me, you will help me accomplish my mission.'
Leonora throws herself into his arms, losing no time in the attempt to seduce him.
âI've had no opportunity to enjoy love ever since Max was taken away, and I now need it urgently. I believe Alberto finds me attractive, and is interested in me; he is also very interested in Papa's many millions, for Carrington is a name known in Madrid, thanks to Imperial Chemical Industries.'
What a beautiful girl and what strength in her arms when she embraces him! What light in the sparkle of her eyes, and what strength of will! Her brio excites Alberto every time he enters her room. How to dominate this mare with her black mane, who whinnies and paws her hooves, and here, in such a smart hotel? He intuits that deep inside her lies an important truth: the hysteria she bears inside her body is a reaction to fascism. He, too, is repelled by Germany's belligerent stance. Within a few days, Alberto rescues her from her room, inviting her to dine out with him. It is a treat to watch her walking along the streets of Madrid. Her gestures, her movements, are as lovely as she is. She knows perfectly how to move, to run, to laugh and to hold his attention; what a fabulous sense of humour! Leonora enjoys and makes the most of her freedom.
Thanks to Alberto, Leonora turns up daily from Monday to Friday to protest at the office of the Madrid manager of Imperial Chemical, then transfers her attentions to the consul of the British Empire. Alberto awaits her outside. To begin with, officials listen to her, stupefied by her beauty, but she begins to weary them with a garbled, endless and peremptory list of her political demands.
âYou have to support the French Resistance, only the Maquis can do away with the Nazis, and bring the collaborators to justice: Pétain, Laval, the whole Vichy lot of them.' Her eyes flash lightning.
âHere she comes again,' the porters give notice.
âI think she must be a maniac,' ventures the consul.
âShe is suffering from a massive depression, but I don't blame her. The worst part is that every day she repeats the same things, and every day she becomes more enraged,' the first secretary Elvira Lindo, the best there is at the Embassy, sympathises.
Noting that even after a week she has obtained no reaction, Leonora accuses them all â along with Harold Carrington and Van Ghent â of petty-mindedness and a failure of courage.
Each time she fails to find the Madrid manager of Imperial Chemical in his office, she ferrets him out of his home, and roundly insults him in front of his wife, his children, his chauffeur, his maids, and whoever else happens to be around. The director agrees with the British consul and calls for Dr. Pardo.
âWe would like to seek your opinion.'
When given her head, Leonora can be eloquent, and could mobilise the whole of Spain, this country now steeped in wreckage. The young doctor Alberto has already been neutralised by her. Utterly seduced, he does everything she wishes.
In the opinion of Dr. Pardo: âThis woman must be hospitalised', and the Embassy representative concludes: âShe has now crossed every line, and we have to do something. Mr. Carrington has given us
carte blanche.
'
âI know of a clinic run by some nuns,' ventures Dr. Pardo.
In the sanatorium run by nuns in which Leonora is confined, âthe madwoman' unlocks doors and windows and steps out onto the roof. âHere is my natural home,' she proclaims. Seeing the everyday life of Madrid from high above gives her a sense of euphoria. On a cornice over the convent she can observe pedestrians coming and going. âThat's what we are, ants, beetles, every kind of insect.' The nuns call the Fire Brigade to bring her down.
One of them comments: âThis woman is a wildfire.'
The entire convent is in a state of agitation and the Mother Superior declares herself unable to control the Englishwoman:
âMay God keep her in his holy sanctuary, for our community can do nothing more for her.'
âMiss Carrington represents a major fortune; it is therefore out of the question to give up on her,' insists the director of the Madrid branch of Imperial Chemical.
âIf the nuns' convent didn't work, the sole option left to us is the place run in Santander by Dr. Morales. His is one of the very few institutions I would be willing to recommend,' Dr. Pardo once again ventures. âHer Majesty Queen Victoria Eugenia visited it in 1912. She even dined and attended a charity bazaar there. The clinic is among the most established in Spain. The patients are drawn from the aristocracy and the high bourgeoisie. They are refined persons, hence the prestige and high regard in which the institution is held. Morales is an expert, and also a good Catholic, and pays personal attention to each one of his clients. I believe they number no more than forty, because the clinic is so extremely expensive. England is the country that produces the greatest number of lunatics. In addition, the sanatorium is a former mansion house set in grounds of a hundred and seventy thousand square metres, an orchard, and large green meadows where on Sundays the best families in Santander gather to take their horses for a gentle ride.'
âA mansion house?'
âIndeed. It's a smallish but imposing residential palace â¦'
Harold Carrington issues the order to have his daughter confined and, once restored to health, to be returned to Hazelwood.
After three days in the convent, the local director of Imperial Chemical in Madrid visits her, together with Dr. Pardo and Dr. MartÃnez Alonso, who invite her to Santander. âThe many roofs afford an incomparable view and await your visit.' Trustingly, she lets them take her by the arm and guide her to a car which pulls up at high speed. The Santander clinic is a long way from Madrid. After half-an-hour, she becomes restless and asks where they are taking her. When she tries to open the car door, Dr. Pardo injects her with Luminal, a sedative so strong that she is rendered unconscious and is handed over, still in a deep faint, at the door to the asylum run by Dr. Mariano Morales.
The Psychiatric Hospital has several pavilions. Leonora is taken on a stretcher to Villa Covadonga, the one where the dangerously insane are held. The date is 23rd August 1940.
She wakes up in a tiny room without windows. On her right-hand side she can see a bedside table, with a space below for a chamber pot. Beside the bed stands a wardrobe, and in front of it a glass door leading into a corridor and another door she studies avidly, as she intuits it must lead to the sun. No doubt she has had a car accident and has been brought to hospital. She then notices her hands and feet are bound with straps.
In English, she asks the nurse: âWhy am I here? How long have I been unconscious?'
The nurse, Frau Asegurado, replies harshly, and in English: âFor several days. You behaved like an animal, leapt like a monkey on top of the cupboard, and then kicked and bit.'
âWho has tied me up like this?'
âThe hospital director. On the afternoon when you arrived, an attempt was made to give you food, but you scratched him so hard it was decided to bind you.'
âI don't remember a thing about any of that. Please can you untie me?' asks Leonora with consummate politeness.
âAre you going to behave?'
She is offended by the question, since she behaves well with everyone. She knows the secret formula to stop the war and, rather than listen to her, they gag her. She still finds it impossible to remember her fits of violence.
âWhere are my doctors?'
âThey returned to Madrid.'
âAre we far from Madrid?'
âVery far indeed.'
âMay I get dressed and go for a walk outside?' Leonora's powers of seduction soften the nurse, and she unties her.
Despite the trembling in her legs and the torpor of her movements, she finds herself in a different room with iron bars at the window. These are bound to pose no problem, since she will convince them to part and set her free. At the very moment she leaps up and hangs like a bat in order to force the bars open, someone jumps on her and she falls on her feet, pulled down by some idiot who lives in the asylum. Leonora hurls herself on top of him, scratches him ferociously, and he flees, covered in blood.
âNow look what you have done!' Frau Asegurado is horrified. âHe is the guard at the Villa Covadonga, who lives here thanks to the charity of Dr. Morales.'
âWhat's all this about Villa Covadonga?'
âIt's the name of this pavilion. Covadonga was Don Mariano's daughter and sister to Don Luis and, since she is now dead, it is named in her honour.'
As soon as she has recovered a little strength, Leonora obtains permission to go out into the apple orchard in front of the Covadonga pavilion. From the dry leaves crackling under her feet, she gathers that the summer is now over.
The residents whose paths she crosses make indecipherable gestures, some muttering to themselves, others throwing themselves down on the lawn, to be lifted up by their carers. An old woman removes her clothes; another, wrapped in an old coat, blows on her hands to warm them. Her agony distorts her facial features, and twists her every movement. All they are left with are their feelings, and they cannot find the means to express them. They seek to draw the nurses' attention, attempting to convince them of the importance of what they are trying to communicate. They have lost the use of words. Two of the women appear to be dead, nothing rouses them from their bench, nor does the absurd behaviour of the rest prompt them to look up. Who is punishing them? Who is stopping them from moving? Perhaps they are Jews? If so, she would have to rush to save them.
âSit down please. Here is a seat.'
âWhat's happening to everyone?' asks Leonora. âWhat's the matter with these people? Are they Jewish?'
âThey have lost their reason, but here we are teaching them how to live in society,' replies Frau Asegurado.
âSo this is what it means to live in society?'
The nurse tries to keep her on her side:
âSit down, like a good girl, you have taken too much exercise today, and you're very tired.'
âIf I sit down I'll die!' howls Leonora.
âDon't shout, don't shout.'
The whole world must understand what has happened and register who is the cause of its happening. If she suffers in silence, the silence will bring about her death.
âIt's unjust and I cannot remain here. Why are they all locked up?'
Leonora's brain is issuing orders but her tongue refuses to obey. Nobody understands her. Her arms and hands refuse to respond. Inside of herself, a spirit of evil intent is striving to drag her into disaster. If she pauses an instant before trying again, she may have a chance of succeeding in saying what she thinks.
She again feels as if she is shipwrecked, drowning in her own rage. Nobody understands her. Who is making her run such a risk? Who is humiliating and maltreating her like this? Why isn't her mother coming to her rescue? She gets up so abruptly she knocks over her bench, and runs zigzags across the lawn to interrogate the trees, the grass, the pavilion doors. The carer is going red in the face with the effort of keeping up with her.
âHey, hey â you aren't a little girl any more. Fancy running about like that!'