Target in the Night (32 page)

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Authors: Ricardo Piglia

BOOK: Target in the Night
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The trial was an event. It was actually a hearing, not a trial. Still, everyone in town took it as a decisive event and referred to it as
the lawsuit, the trial, the proceedings
—depending on the point of view of the speaker—to indicate its transcendent nature. Like every transcendent occurrence, it was related—or so everyone thought—to justice and truth, but what was really at play behind these abstractions was the life of a man, the future of the region, and a handful of very specific, practical questions. You couldn't say that there were two equal sides opposing each other, because the two opposing sides were not equal. And yet, one had the impression of attending an actual contest. On the streets of the town that day small groups of people commented time and again on the facts, as if all past history was to be decided in the lawsuit against Luca Belladona, or in the lawsuit that Luca Belladona had initiated against the municipality—depending on the point of view of the speaker. What was being litigated, apparently, was the $100,000 that Luca was seeking to reclaim. But plenty of other things were at stake, too, all of which became evident as soon as Cueto started to speak and the judge nodded along to every one of the Prosecutor's statements.

The judge, the Honorable Gainza, was a justice of the peace;
that is, a municipal functionary assigned to resolve local disputes. He sat on an elevated dais, at the front of the Misdemeanor Court of the Municipality, with a court clerk to his side. The prosecutor Cueto was at a table below, to the left. Sitting next to Cueto was Saldías, the new Chief of Police. At another table, to the right, was Luca Belladona, dressed in his Sunday best, with a gray shirt and a gray tie, very serious, with papers and folders in his hands, occasionally consulting with the ex-seminarian Schultz.

A lot of people were authorized to be present at the hearing. Madariaga was there, as well as Rosa Estévez, several estancia owners and auctioneers from the area, and even Cooke the Englishman, the owner of the horse at the center of the dispute. The Belladona sisters were there, but not their father. Everyone was smoking and talking at the same time, the windows in the room were open, and you could hear the rumble of the voices from those who hadn't been able to get in and were crowded, instead, in the hallways and the neighboring courtrooms. Inspector Croce wasn't there either, although he'd already signed himself out of the asylum and was living now above the Madariaga Store and Tavern in a small room that he was renting there. Croce thought that everything was already fixed, and he didn't want his presence there to legitimize his rival, Cueto, who was certain to win the hand with his shady dealings. There weren't very many women present; the five or six who were there stood out because of their self-assured attitude. One of them, a beautiful woman—Bimba, Lucio's wife—sat impassively, haughty, behind her dark sunglasses.

Renzi walked in late and had to nudge his way into the room. When he finally settled in at a wooden bench near Bravo, his eyes
met Luca's. The Industrialist smiled at him calmly, as if he wanted to transmit his confidence to the few people there to support him. Renzi looked only at him the whole afternoon, because he thought that Luca needed to be supported by the presence of an outsider who truly believed in his words. In the course of the next two or three hours—Renzi didn't know exactly how long he spent in the courtroom, although there was a clock hanging on the wall that rang every half hour, and it rang several times—Luca looked at Renzi every time he was in a difficult position, or when he'd made a good point in his arguments. As if Renzi were the only one who understood him precisely because he wasn't from there.

The justice of the peace, of course, had already taken sides before the so-called reconciliation hearing started, as had most of the people there. Those who speak about reconciliation and dialogue are always the ones already holding the pan by the handle with the whole affair cooked up. That's the truth. Renzi realized right away that there was an air of anticipated victory, and that Luca—with his clear eyes and the slow, calculated movements of someone who feels violence all around him—was lost before he began. The judge pointed at and ceded the floor to him. Luca wavered for a moment before speaking, as if hesitating, as if he couldn't find the words to start. Finally he got up, stretched out his close-to-two-meter frame, and stood sideways to the court, looking directly at Cueto—because it was to Cueto to whom he was really speaking.

Luca looked like someone with a skin condition suddenly exposed to the sun. After so many months of living in the factory, the large courtroom, with all the people, gave him a kind
of vertigo. Returning to town and appearing there, in front of everyone he hated and held responsible for his ruin, was the first affront he suffered that afternoon. He felt and looked like a fish out of water. Luca raised his hand to ask for silence, even though not even a fly was stirring. Cueto leaned toward Saldías, smiling and relaxed, and said something in a low voice, and the other smiled back. “Good, okay, friends,” Luca said, as if beginning a sermon. “We have come to ask for what is ours.” He didn't speak directly about the money under dispute, but rather about the certainty that the gathering that day was a necessary procedure—an uncomfortable procedure, if one were to judge by his mistrustful attitude—for the factory to remain in the hands of those who'd built it. The money—which Luca didn't talk about, and which belonged to his family, and which his father had decided to cede to him as an advance on his inheritance from his mother—was destined solely to pay off the mortgage that weighed upon his life like the sword of Damocles. They'd been threatened and attacked, they'd been surprised in their previous goodwill by the intruders who'd infiltrated and eventually taken over the company. But they'd resisted, which is why they were there that afternoon. He didn't talk about his rights, he didn't talk about what was at stake, he talked only about what he cared about: his insane project to continue by himself in the factory, building what he called his works, his inventions, and his illusion that they might leave him—“that they might leave us”—alone. He paused and there was a murmur, but it wasn't clear if it was a murmur of approval or condemnation. Luca remained standing for a moment in front of the room, looking back and forth from his sisters to Cueto
and Renzi, the only ones who seemed to understand what was happening. Luca spoke without raising his voice, with confidence and self-assuredness, without ever realizing the trap he was falling into. It was a catastrophic error—he rushed toward his own end without a thought, without seeing anything, blinded by his pride and his credulity. You could tell he was only chasing a dream, that he was chasing one dream after another, never knowing where the adventure would end, always certain it was the only thing he could do: defend his dream, which everyone thought was impossible. He said something along these lines, Luca did, as a conclusion. The Honorable Gainza—a cunning old judge who spent his nights playing dice in the clandestine casino near the coast—smiled at Luca condescendingly, and gave the last word to the Prosecutor.

Luca sat down and remained motionless for the next phase of the hearing, almost as if he weren't there. He may even have closed his eyes—only the back of his head, upper back, and shoulders could be seen as he sat in the front row facing the judge now—and he was so still that, for a while at least, he seemed to be asleep.

There was silence, and then another murmur, and Cueto stood up, always smiling, with an expression of superiority and indifference on his face. He was tall, his skin looked splotchy, and he had a strange air about him, perhaps because his posture was at once arrogant and obsequious. Immediately he focused the attention of the matter on Durán's murder. In order for the money to be reclaimed, the other case, the criminal proceedings, had to be settled. It was known that the murderer was Yoshio Dazai, it had been a classic crime of passion. Yoshio hadn't confessed because when the crime is this obvious the murderer never confesses. They hadn't
found the murder weapon because the knife used to kill Durán was run-of-the-mill and could be found in almost any kitchen in the area. All the witnesses confirmed that they'd seen Yoshio enter the room at the time of the crime. Of course Yoshio knew about the existence of the money and had taken the bag to the storage room in the basement hoping to go back for it when everything calmed down. Cueto stopped and looked around. He had managed to change the topic of the session and refocus everyone's attention by reminding them of the sordid story of the crime. The version of the events, as presented by Croce, was delirious and could be seen as evidence of the ex-Inspector's dementia. That a jockey would dress up as a Japanese night porter and kill an unknown man to buy a horse was ridiculous. Everyone understood that Croce's version was impossible. Even more ridiculous was the idea that a man would kill another man that he didn't know, and that he would take only the money he supposedly needed to buy a horse, and that he would take the trouble to leave the rest of the money in the hotel storage room in the basement, instead of just leaving it in the same room where he'd committed the crime.

“The letter and the suicide might be true,” the prosecutor concluded. “But we've gotten used to reading letters of that kind thanks to the letters that Croce has been writing us in his nighttime deliriums.”

Cueto shifted the question at hand and articulated the actual dilemma with extreme judicial clarity. If Luca, in his role as plaintiff, would accept that Yoshio Dazai had killed Durán, the criminal proceedings could move forward, the murder case could be closed, and the money could be returned to its legitimate owner, Mister
Belladona. If Luca didn't sign on to this agreement and continued instead with his own suit, then the criminal case would remain open and the money would remain confiscated for years, since they would be unable to close the criminal case and the evidence couldn't be removed from the court's power while it remained open. It was perfect. Luca's claim sealed the murder case because it presupposed that Durán had come to Argentina to bring him the money.

It took Luca a minute to understand. When he did, he looked stunned. He lowered his head and sat like that for a moment while the silence spread through the courtroom like a shadow. He'd thought that everything was going to be simple, but he realized that he'd fallen into a trap. He seemed crushed. Whatever decision he made, he was crushed. If he wanted to get the money, he'd have to help send an innocent man to jail, but if he told the truth, he'd lose the factory. He turned around and looked at his sisters, as if they were the only ones who could help him. Then, as if lost, he looked at Renzi—but Renzi looked away, because he thought that he wouldn't have wanted to be in his place and that if he were in his place he wouldn't have accepted the deal, he wouldn't have agreed to lie and send an innocent man to jail for the rest of his life. But Renzi wasn't him. Never had he seen anyone look as pale, never had he seen anyone take as long to speak, to say just one word: Okay. Once again a murmur ran through the room, but this one was different, as of confirmation or revenge. Luca's left eye was twitching slightly and he fidgeted with his necktie as if it were the rope from which he was about to hang. But Yoshio was the one about to be condemned for a crime he hadn't committed.

There was a big commotion when the session ended, an explosion of happiness. Cueto's friends all got up to speak to each other. Ada joined the group, too, and Cueto took her by the arm and whispered something in her ear. The only one who approached Luca was Sofía, she stood in front of him and tried to cheer him up. The factory was saved. They hugged, she held him in her arms and spoke softly to him, as if she were trying to calm him down, and she went with him to the other room, where the judge was waiting for him to sign the papers.

Renzi stayed in his seat while everyone got up. Outside the courtroom, he saw Luca shuffling down the hallway, like a boxer who's accepted winning the title in a fixed match. Not the boxer who's forced to take a dive because he needs the money. Not—as usual—the humiliated, offended party who knows that he didn't really lose even though someone has beaten him. No. Luca was like a boxer who's retained his title as champion thanks to a racket—which only he and his rival know is a racket—and all he has now is the illusion that his dreams have finally come true, but at an unbearable cost. Luca moved as if he were extremely tired and could barely move. Sofía was the only one with him, walking next to him, without touching him. When they crossed the main hallway she said goodbye and left out a side door. Luca continued by himself to the door of the other room.

He'd been subjected to a trial like a tragic character without a choice. Anything he chose would have been his downfall, not for him but for his idea of justice. In the end, it was justice that had put him to the test, an abstract entity—with its rhetorical apparatuses and its imaginary constructions—which he'd had
to confront that afternoon in April, until he capitulated. That is, until he accepted one of the two options he was offered. Luca Belladona, who'd always boasted of making clear decisions, unhindered by any doubts, supported by his self-assuredness and his fixed idea. He chose his work, we might say, over his life, and he paid a very high price, but his illusion remained intact to the end. He remained true to his precept, he'd been sunk, but he hadn't defected. He was so proud and stubborn that it took him a while to realize that he'd fallen into a trap with no way out. By the time he realized what was happening, it was too late.

The townspeople watched him walk down the hallway in silence. They'd known him forever and were now at peace, they seemed magnanimous, because by doing what he'd done—after years and years of his impossible battle, held up by his demoniacal pride—the town had succeeded in getting him to capitulate. Now it could be said that Luca was like everyone else, or that everyone else was like him: now that Luca had revealed a weakness that he'd never revealed before. Renzi hurried to try to talk to him, but was unable to catch up and could only follow behind as they walked down the stairs leading outside. Then an incredible thing happened. When he came out onto the sidewalk, Croce's mutt appeared, walking crookedly as always, but this time when he saw Luca walk out into the daylight, the dog rushed and started barking at him, baring his teeth as if to bite, with hatred, his yellow fur on end, his body tense. That barking was the only thing that Luca got that day.

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