The Other Language(85)



In his early twenties Drew was a skinny guy with a mop of dark hair falling on his face, which he was constantly tucking behind his ear, Mick Jagger lips and skin as white as milk. They had met one night in a club behind Piazza del Fico, where he was playing with a band—a bunch of young Italians who played indie rock. The club was actually just a small, smoky room where people barely paid attention to the live music, busy as they were picking up strangers and exchanging drugs in the bathroom. Elsa’s friends wanted to leave after a only a few minutes—the music was so bad, they said—but she said go, I’ll stay on a bit, because she liked the American singer with the milky skin and the hoarse voice. She waited patiently for the act to finish, determined to talk to him. By then it was past one thirty in the morning and Drew was pretty wasted, so they ended up groping each other in a dark corner without much of a preliminary introduction. They f*cked standing against the wall in the club’s storeroom, among stacks of empty bottles that kept rattling as they bounced. She couldn’t go home with him because at the time she was still living at her parents’—it was her last year in high school—but he wrote her number on a packet of cigarettes and said he’d call her. He didn’t, and for a week she obsessed about him, driving herself crazy with angst. When she finally gave up and decided he was just another *, the phone rang. It was him. And that’s how it all started.



About three or four years after that, when Drew was back in the States and on his way to becoming famous, he decided to use his last name only and morphed into Barker. Like Beyoncé and Sting, like Madonna, Bono and Adele, it seemed that rock stars didn’t need a first and last name like regular people. Understandably so in his case, since Drew wasn’t a name particularly fit for a famous person.

Since then Drew had become universally known as Barker and his face had been scanned, photographed, blown up on posters, banners and magazines all over the world so that everybody had access to every pore of his skin. He was forty-something now and he still looked great in every photograph Elsa saw, his waist small, his ass pretty tight. His handsome face had lost that boyish, fake innocence. The nose was stronger, the cheekbones more prominent, the hair short and still thick. Of course, being a millionaire must have helped as far as preservation goes. Stars like Barker could count on personal trainers, personal chefs, expensive spa treatments, yoga gurus and miraculous ayurvedic, Swedish or Chinese treatments.

She didn’t feel possessive of him in any way: she had too much good sense to claim him as personal property just because she’d slept with him way before he became famous. It was actually kind of weird how Elsa—who felt pretty bland and unglamorous at thirty-nine—couldn’t see in Barker what everyone else saw, but just saw Drew Barker, the kid from Kenosha, Wisconsin, who’d come to live in Rome to escape his provincial destiny and play guitar in a lousy band. During the time they were together Elsa was moved and at the same time embarrassed by the naive image he attempted to project—the Bohemian-artist-living-in-Rome, with the yellowing copies of A Moveable Feast and Allen Ginsberg poetry rolled up in his jeans back pocket. Drew Barker, who swore he’d never set foot in Wisconsin again because there was nothing beautiful or remotely cultural to look at there.

He was sweet and catlike in the way he made love to her, but he could also be mean, in ways so subtle that she often misread him. He would call her up late at night, from his rehearsals with the band, or from a noisy bar, saying, “I’ll be home at midnight. Go over now and wait for me. The key is under the mat.”

“Why don’t I come and pick you up and we’ll go together?” Elsa would ask—she longed to be the girlfriend who showed up at the end of rehearsals and was seen going home with him.

“No,” he’d say. “I want you to go now, just go over to my apartment and warm up my bed.”

She was only nineteen, she didn’t know enough about men and their ways, and took his orders as flattery.



Her new colleagues at the studio shared cool music files, bought tickets for contemporary dance and went to gallery openings all the time. They were busy people, working hard at keeping up with the buzz. Elsa didn’t go out much after work, she listened mostly to classical music these days and didn’t care about contemporary art. She was actually content to spend the evenings after work cuddling her cat while watching movies on her computer. Despite her aloofness people at work respected her—she was a brilliant designer, with a great sense of proportion and composition—though nobody seemed interested in becoming her friend.

It was a mystery how the rumor crept up on her. Elsa had no idea who started it or how it spread. But slowly and surely, spread it did, and she knew it had reached her the minute people gravitated toward her with a particular kind of curiosity.

The first one to show the signs at the office was Marta, the receptionist.

“Can I ask you a personal question?” she asked Elsa one morning with a knowing smile. It was a couple of months after she’d started working at Creative TechDesign.

Elsa blew on her pink polka dot tea mug, in which she had her special tulsi tea, and made a sound with her nose that could mean various things.

“What?”

“I don’t know if this is true,” Marta began. “But I was told that in that Barker song …”

Elsa glanced at the porcelain cleavage emerging from the low cut of the girl’s black T-shirt, at the elaborate Japanese tattoo sneaking up her arm like a sleeve. At her full, plump lips, possibly injected, or simply inherited, it was hard to say. Pretty girl, twenty-something. Then Elsa blew on her tea again and started scrolling through her e-mail. The girl paused, taken aback by her indifference.

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