On the Corniche, the cars were crawling along, fender to fender. Diamantis had forgotten—if he had ever really known it—that on summer evenings the people of Marseilles all rush to the beaches. Some went there just to have a drink on a café terrace, others to eat on the shore. Family outings, lovers strolling, friends meeting. From wherever in the city people came, they were bound sooner or later to end up in a jam, either on the Corniche, which runs alongside the harbor, or on Avenue du Prado, which is at a right angle to the beaches.
With his elbow on the open window, he tried to imagine the old road that once ran alongside the sea, served only by a streetcar. Toinou’s wife, Rossana, had told him about it. She remembered it from her happy childhood. She had taken the streetcar only once.
“That was my parents’ honeymoon, taking the streetcar and riding around the Corniche. It wasn’t Venice, but it was just as beautiful. I don’t think they’d ever been as far as that in their lives!”
That was what made Marseilles eternal. All these memories and anecdotes transmitted from father to son, like an inheritance. The history of Marseilles was in its people, not in its stones. Diamantis could imagine himself living here forever. With Mariette in his arms, also telling him her childhood memories, augmented by those of Toinou and Rossana.
“We belonged to the Boating Club of the Canal de la Douane,” Toinou had told him one lunchtime, as they sat eating grilled mullet. “In summer, we’d go out to Les Martigues, each family in its own boat. The first to arrive would reserve places for the others. We’d fish, dive to gather mussels and sea urchins . . . We had everything . . .”
He could have a boat here, too, Diamantis thought. Mikis could come. They would go fishing for tuna off the islands of the Frioul. They both loved fishing. On Psara, they often went all the way to the far eastern end of the island, to a place called the Groupers’ Hole. They’d fish with a big sinker, using small herrings as bait. Sometimes they caught specimens of twenty-eight, thirty pounds.
“Do you fish?” he asked the taxi driver.
“There’s nothing left here,” the man replied, grumpily. “No more fish, no more fishermen. Just fucking cars and motorists.”
And he gave an angry hoot on his horn, because the Fiat in front of him hadn’t moved forward the seven or eight inches that had opened up in front of it. He put his head out the window.
“Hey, are you moving or what? I’m working here!”
Diamantis couldn’t see the face of the Fiat driver. But he heard his reply.
“Yeah, and what’s your sister up to?”
“Fucking jerk!” the taxi driver said.
He gave another blast on his horn, a long one. Everyone started hooting. Ten minutes of unrestrained noise. Then the drivers started cursing all those who, like them, couldn’t wait to get to the sea.
Diamantis let his gaze wander over the surface of the water. He was trying everything he could not to think about his meeting with Amina. He recalled some reflections he’d put down recently in his notebook. About how poor most languages were in naming the sea. Only the Greeks had several words for it. Hals, salt, the sea as matter. Pelagos, the stretch of water, the sea as vision, as spectacle. Pontos, the sea as space and route. Thalassa, the sea as event. Kolpos, the whole of the maritime space, including the shore, the gulfs and bays . . .
What he saw in front of his eyes at the moment, moving more rapidly now, was all these words at the same time. The sea in all its definitions, the Mediterranean in all its names. Always greater than what it revealed of itself. Always older. Always more real. Beyond the myths. Al-bahr al-rum. The Egyptian name came back to him. He recalled that, for the Arabs, this sea was neither blue nor black, but white.
Al-bahr al-abyad.
“This sea is deceptive,” he thought.
“Here you are,” the taxi driver said.
Nedim had been telling Lalla about his voyages. Right now he was recalling an adventure off Singapore, where ships advance in slow motion through the narrows between the Raffles Lighthouse and Buffalo Rock. Both were still in their swimming costumes. Lalla had agreed to have a gin and tonic too. To keep Nedim company.
“It’s like coming up to a tollgate, but the tollgate is manned by pirates.”
“Pirates?” Lalla laughed. Pirates didn’t exist these days.
“Oh, yes. Shit, Lalla, there are lots of them everywhere. In Asia, in South America. Thousands of them.”
She laughed even louder. “Stop, Nedim, you’re cracking me up!”
Lalla’s laugh was contagious. But he was determined to tell her about the pirates. How, that night, they had slipped beneath the ship’s stern in their long boats. At dawn, a member of the crew, Ziem, had gone to turn out the lights and hadn’t come back. They’d found him, and another sailor named Haini, tied to the main mast.
The pirates were already on the ship.
“There were twenty of them. Fuck, our hearts were in our boots, and . . . Shit, Lalla, stop laughing . . .”
“And did they tie you up, too?”
“One of them put an axe to my throat . . . An axe . . .”
He mimed the action, and Lalla had a fit of the giggles. All the customers in the bar were looking at her, wanting to join in the joke.
“It’s true,” Nedim kept saying.
Lalla moved her face closer to Nedim’s and kissed him on the forehead. “I love you,” she said. “You crack me up.”
“Am I disturbing you?” Diamantis asked.
“Oh, you’re here!” Nedim said, so absorbed in his story that he didn’t show any surprise that Diamantis had suddenly appeared. “Tell her it’s true, about the pirates.”
Nedim didn’t even notice the mustard-yellow blotch just under Diamantis’s eye. It wasn’t exactly easy to avoid, even though it was concealed by Mariette’s big sunglasses.
Nedim turned to Lalla. “This is Diamantis, he’ll tell you.”
Diamantis held out his hand to Lalla, who was still laughing. “Hello.”
“I’m Lalla,” she said. “We saw each other yesterday at the Habana.” She didn’t say anything about his eye. Out of politeness.
Diamantis sat down facing them.
“You’re late, man. Gaby couldn’t stay. Shit! What’s that under your eye?”
“I tripped on the stairs,” he joked.
“Don’t piss me around!” Nedim turned to Lalla, conspiratorially. “Something to do with a woman, I bet.” Then he looked at Diamantis again. “I know. You were fucking the wife, and the husband came home earlier than expected. He was a big, strong guy, and he gave you a hammering.”
“Spot on. Only without the wife, and without the husband. But I did get beaten up on the street, on my way back last night.”
Nedim whistled through his teeth. But nothing was lost on him in this kind of story. “And where did you sleep after that?”
Diamantis smiled. “At the pharmacist’s.”
Nedim laughed and winked. “The pharmacist, huh? Was she pretty?”
“So what about Amina?” Diamantis cut in, before Nedim could make any more dubious remarks.
“Amina?” Nedim asked.
“Gaby,” Lalla said. “Gaby’s her work name. I told you at the Habana.”
“Oh, yeah, yeah . . .” Nedim said. “You know, I prefer Amina. It suits her better. It’s prettier. Gaby . . .”
“Amina had to go,” Lalla said to Diamantis. “I’ll tell you about it . . . Do you want a drink?”
“Her treat,” Nedim said. “I haven’t touched my money at all.”
“Yes, I’d like a drink,” Diamantis said to Lalla. “So what are we going to do?”
“Shit, we’re going to have a party!” Nedim put his hand on Lalla’s. “I mean, we’re not going to say goodbye yet, are we? I promised to show her around the boat. She’s never seen one, can you imagine? We’ll buy some things to eat on board. Lots of things. How about it?”
“We’re not working today,” Lalla said to Daimantis. “The club’s closed. So Amina . . . It hadn’t been planned, but . . . She’s going to have dinner with Ricardo. But . . .” She looked at Nedim. “As we’re going to see the boat, she . . . She’ll join us as soon as she can. That’s what she said.”
“Yes, she’ll ask for us at the checkpoint, and you can go and fetch her. Is that O.K.? In the meantime, let’s take it easy and have an aperitif. Live like lords. It’s nice here, isn’t it?” With a sweeping movement of his arm, Nedim gestured out to sea.
The sun was setting over L’Estaque, its last rays lighting up the fortress of the Château d’If. Amina. Diamantis suddenly remembered The Count of Monte Cristo. Amina’s favorite novel. She had taken him to visit the island, the dungeon where Dantès spent fourteen years of his life. She had read him the passage where Dantès is arrested just as he is about to marry the beautiful Mercedes.
“It’s the great novel about injustice,” she had said. “Hatred and contempt, jealousy, cowardice.”
How could he have forgotten that? She had given him the book. To read on the boat. He had devoured it, and loved it as much as she did. It could even be said that he’d learned to read French thanks to Alexandre Dumas. Page after page. Images from the first chapter came back to him. The three-master, the Pharaon, entering the port of Marseilles, on the way from Smyrna, Trieste and Naples.
“I don’t know if Abdul will like it,” Diamantis said.
“Is he your captain?”
“Yes,” Nedim said. “He’s crazy but he’s O.K. He won’t refuse to have a party with us. This life is getting him down, too. Don’t you think so?”
“Yes,” Diamantis replied, lost in thought.
But it wasn’t Abdul he was worried about. There were a lot of unanswered questions. Had Amina seen his message or not? Who were the guys who’d beaten him up? Were they connected with this Ricardo? Was Ricardo the guy who’d been eating at Le Mas last night?
“Who’s Ricardo?” he asked Lalla.
“He’s . . . he’s the owner of the Habana. The guy we work for.”
Lalla was embarrassed now. She didn’t know what she could say and what she had to keep quiet about. Amina hadn’t given her any instructions. What the hell, she thought, it didn’t commit her to anything if she talked about Ricardo. She wasn’t obliged to tell this guy that Ricardo paid for everything, and that he fucked Amina when the fancy took him. Maybe that was what he had in mind this evening. No. Amina had told her he’d only invited her to dinner. When he wanted to fuck her, he’d order dinner from a caterer and have it delivered to Amina’s villa. There was always champagne, those nights. Amina had told her about it. The good life, she would think.
“I didn’t know that you knew Gaby . . .” Nedim said. “I mean, Amina.”
“And I didn’t know you’d met her. I didn’t know she worked at the Habana, either. It’s a coincidence. You’re the link.”
Diamantis refrained from mentioning that he’d been looking for Amina in Marseilles. Better not to say anything about that. Or about the fact that he’d been beaten up because of her.
Lalla was looking closely at Diamantis. The guy Amina had known a long time ago. She must really have loved him a lot to have been so shaken when she saw him yesterday. Lalla could understood why she was so eager to see him again. He’d said only a few words, but she could tell he was a good man. “He’s my friend,” Nedim had said. And he’d said it with pride. She tried to imagine Diamantis when he was young. And Amina with him. In her head, they made a fine couple.
Diamantis looked straight at Lalla. His eyes were gentle but determined. “What’s he like, this Ricardo?”
“Ricardo . . .”
The man she described recalled the man he had seen from the back at Le Mas. His face was the way he had imagined it. It was a good description. With just a tinge of hatred to indicate how much she disliked him. A gangster. The man, Diamantis told himself, who’d had him beaten up twice. Beaten up and humiliated. The man who’d forced him and Amina apart. Ricardo.
“Do you know him?” Nedim interrupted.
“Is he her husband?” Diamantis asked.
“Her husband?” Lalla laughed softly. “No, no . . . They . . . they lived together a long time ago. But Ricardo isn’t exactly the faithful kind. Well, it’s a bit different now, he . . .”
“Damn it, what should I tell him?” she wondered. “Why is he asking me all these questions? Why doesn’t he wait for Amina to tell him?” How could she be sure what Amina wanted Diamantis to know?
“He took care of me when I was little. Him and Amina. And Amina’s mother. It was Amina’s mother who brought me up.”
“Didn’t you have parents?” Nedim asked.
Lalla was increasingly at sea. Why did she have to talk about all this? She felt Diamantis’s eyes on her. He wasn’t ogling her. He was looking at her as if he could see into her heart.
“No. Amina said . . .”
Diamantis could sense how uncomfortable Lalla was. “We’re being indiscreet. I’m sorry. We shouldn’t ask these things.”
Nedim looked at Diamantis. He was right. He turned to Lalla, and patted her hand. “Forgive us.”
Nedim wanted to take her in his arms, to console her, cosset her, invent a family for her, lend her his. He wanted to love her, not fuck her, love her tenderly, yes, slowly and tenderly, he wouldn’t even start by sticking his cock inside her, no, he would caress her, cover her in kisses, afterwards, yes, afterwards he would come inside her, when he felt her desire embrace his, when she felt his desire become hers . . . “Shit, Nedim,” he told himself, “You’re in love!”
Nedim and Lalla looked at each other at the same moment, and both smiled. Diamantis caught their complicity and also noticed that Lalla’s leg was up against Nedim’s.
“Do you know, mademoiselle . . .” Diamantis resumed.
“Hey, don’t be so formal,” Nedim cut in. “Haven’t you looked at her? She’s young enough to be your daughter!”
His heat skipped a beat. His head started turning. He felt nauseous, dizzy. Lalla. No, it was impossible, impossible, impossible. Lalla, his daughter . . .
“Hey, are you O.K.?” Nedim asked.
His voice sounded very, very distant.
“It’s my stomach,” he stammered. “Where they hit me . . . I’ll be all right . . .”
“Diamantis!”
Nedim was a long way, away.
“Ne-dim . . .”
Diamantis’s head swayed on his shoulders, from right to left.
He was passing out.
A long way away.