excerpt
from No Way to Peace:
On Wednesday,
April 28, he was awakened in the early morning by the sound of the
telephone ringing. As he dragged himself out of bed he checked his
watch and saw that it was a little after three. He went into the family
room, where the phone was located, assuming it was a wrong number.
“Hola?”
he mumbled.
“Stephen?”
said a terrified voice.
“Yes.
Teresa? What’s wrong?”
“They’ve
arrested Mario.”
“What?
When?”
“They
took him away.”
“Where
are you?”
“At
home.”
“I’ll
come right over. Don’t go out, and don’t let anyone in.
Okay?”
“Okay,”
she replied, sounding utterly subdued.
As
he headed back into the bedroom he almost ran into Cathy, who was standing
in the doorway. He told her what had happened.
“Should
I go with you?”
“No.
Stay here. I’m going to bring her home with me.”
“You
don’t want her to stay in their apartment?”
“They
might come back for her.”
“Okay.
I’ll make up a bed.”
He
had to walk over to Santa Fe to get a taxi. He gave the driver the address
in Almagro where Mario and Teresa lived. On the way he thought about
how to get Mario released, and by the time he arrived he at least had
a rough plan.
He
asked the taxi driver to wait, and then he went into the apartment building.
It had no security and no portero, so you could walk right in. He took
the elevator to the fourth floor, and then went down the hall looking
for the number that Teresa had given him. Though he had known Mario
and Teresa for almost five years, he had never been to their apartment
before. It was unusual for people who lived in the city to invite friends
to their homes. It was as if friends were outside the bounds of privacy
that surrounded the home and reserved it for family.
“Who
is it?” Teresa asked after he had rung the bell.
“It’s
me. Stephen.”
As
he entered the apartment she flung herself against him and sobbed: “I’m
so afraid they’re going to hurt him.”
“They won’t,” he said more confidently than he felt.
For a long time he held her in silence, trying to comfort her simply
by being there. Then he told her: “Pack some things. I’m
going to take you home with me.”
Letting
go of him, she said: “I should stay here, shouldn’t I?”
“No.
They might come back.”
“But
what if they let him go? What if he comes home and doesn’t find
me here?”
“Leave
him a note. But don’t tell him where you are,” he added,
thinking that the police might find the note and learn where she was
hiding from them. “Just tell him you’re safe.”
“Okay.”
She packed a small suitcase and then, with a trembling hand, wrote a
note for Mario.
Carrying
the suitcase, he led her out and down to the taxi. Before they got in
he warned her: “Don’t
tell me anything until we get to my apartment. I don’t want the
driver to hear what happened."
As they rode in silence he wondered what the driver was thinking. That
Teresa had left her husband in the middle of the night and was moving
in with her lover? It was a plausible explanation, and it was what a
New York taxi driver might have assumed since there wasn’t a war
going on there.
Cathy
was waiting for them, and she hugged Teresa consolingly.
He
carried her suitcase into the bedroom where Cathy had made up the bed,
and then he went to the dining room where he kept his liquor. He poured
a small glass of anisette and brought it to Teresa.
“Here,”
he said, offering it to her.
She
took it. “Thanks.”
They
sat down in the living room, with Cathy on the sofa next to Teresa,
who started telling them what had happened.
“We
were both asleep when I heard them knocking on the door. I woke Mario,
and he got up and went to the door. I knew who it was. And they came
barging into our apartment.”
“How
many were there?”
“Three,”
she said.
“Were
they in uniforms?”
“No.
They said they were security agents.”
“Did
they show you any identification?”
“One
of them did. It looked like a police badge. But I don’t know.
I never saw a police badge before.”
“What
did they say?”
“They
said – ” Her voice cracked. “They said they were arresting
Mario because he was involved in subversive activities.”
“Did
they say anything specific about these activities?”
“No.
They didn’t. That’s all they said, and they took him away.”
“Did
they tell you where they were taking him?”
“No.”
She started sobbing as if she could imagine what they were doing to
him.
“Well,
I’ll find out where they took him,” he said, again more
confidently than he felt. “But I can’t do anything until
morning.”
“So
why don’t you lie down and rest for a while,” Cathy suggested.
“Okay,”
Teresa said, raising herself from the sofa.
Cathy
led her into the bedroom and stayed there with her for a long time.
Returning,
she said: “She’s resting now.”
“Good.
I’m sure she won’t sleep.”
“I
won’t either. What are you going to do?”
“I’m
going to talk with everyone who might be able to help us. Elena, Carlos,
the embassy guys–”
“Okay,”
she said softly. “And I’m going to pray.”