by Elena Ferrante
1
My friendship with Lila began
the day we decided to go up the dark stairs that led, step after
step, flight after flight, to the door of Don Achille's apartment.
I remember the violet light of
the courtyard, the smells of a warm spring evening. The mothers
were making dinner, it was time to go home, but we delayed,
challenging each other, without ever saying a word, testing our
courage. For some time, in school and outside of it, that was what
we had been doing. Lila would thrust her hand and then her whole arm
into the black mouth of a manhole, and I, in turn, immediately did
the same, my heart pounding, hoping that the cockroaches wouldn't run
over my skin, that the rats wouldn't bite me. Lila climbed up to
Signora Spagnuolo's ground-floor window, and, hanging from the iron
bar that the clothesline was attached to, swung back and forth, then
lowered herself down to the sidewalk, and I immediately did the same,
although I was afraid of falling and hurting myself. Lila stuck into
her skin the rusted safety pin that she had found on the street
somewhere but kept in her pocket like the gift of a fairy godmother;
I watched the metal point as it dug a whitish tunnel into her palm,
and then, when she pulled it out and handed it to me, I did the same.
At some point she gave me one
of her firm looks, eyes narrowed, and headed toward the building
where Don Achille lived. I was frozen with fear. Don Achille was
the ogre of fairy tales, I was absolutely forbidden to go near him,
speak to him, look at him, spy on him, I was to act as if neither he
nor his family existed. Regarding him there was, in my house but not
only mine, a fear and a hatred whose origin I didn't know. The way
my father talked about him, I imagined a huge man, covered with
purple boils, violent in spite of the “don,” which to me
suggested a calm authority. He was a being created out of some
identifiable material, iron glass, nettles, but alive, alive, the hot
breath streaming from his nose and mouth. I thought that if I merely
saw him from a distance he would drive something sharp and burning
into my eyes. So if I was made enough to approach the door of his
house he would likke me.
I waited to see if Lila would
have second thoughts and turn back. I knew what she wanted to do, I
had hoped that she would forget about it, but in vain. The street
lamps were not yet lighted, nor were the lights on the stairs. From
the apartments came irritable voices. To follow Lila I had to leave
the bluish light of the courtyard and enter the black of the doorway.
When I finally made up my mind, I saw nothing at first, there was
only an odor of old junk and DDT. Then I got used to the darkness
and found Lila sitting on the first step of the first flight of
stairs. She got up and we began to climb.
We kept to the side where the
wall was, she two steps ahead, I two steps behind, torn between
shortening the distance or letting it increase. I can still feel my
shoulder inching along the flaking wall and the idea that the steps
were very high, higher than those in the building where I lived. I
was trembling. Every footfall, every voice was Don Achille creeping
up behind us or coming down toward us with a long knife, the kind
used for slicing open a chicken breast. There was an odor of
sautéing garlic.
Maria, Don Achille's wife, would put me in the pan of boiling oil,
the children would eat me, he would suck my head the way my father
did with mullets.
We stopped often, and each time
I hoped that Lila would decide to turn back. I was all sweaty, I
don't know about her. Every so often she looked up, but I couldn't
tell at what, all that was visible was the gray areas of the big
windows at every landing. Suddenly the lights came on, but they were
faint, dusty, leaving broad zones of shadow, full of dangers. We
waited to see if it was Don Achille who had turned the switch, but we
heard nothing, neither footsteps nor the opening or closing of a
door. Then Lila continued on, and I followed.
She thought that what we were
doing was just and necessary; I had forgotten every good reason, and
certainly was there only because she was. We climbed slowly toward
the greatest of our terrors of that time, we went to expose ourselves
to fear and interrogate it.
At the fourth flight Lila did
something unexpected. She stopped to wait for me, and when I reached
her she gave me her hand. This gesture changed everything between us
forever.
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