She says: I remember I saw him as he came in. He looked as oriental as I was blond. His face as oval as my body was slender. His appearance as aristocratic as mine was common. His terror as great as mine. I did not despise him for what he was. I despised him for everything he represented. But I thought: better he than another, better this terrified young man than some old dotard. I imagined then that there were many degrees of disgust. I was wrong.
A man to whom you give your body for money is simply a man to whom you give your body for money. Nothing more. It is pointless to deceive yourself. You can look for excuses, there are none. You can try to mitigate the fault, it’s a delusion. In the end, nothing remains but what you’ve done, what you’ve allowed to be done, what you’ve been reduced to doing. Nothing else counts for anything. The filth, the warm flesh, the crudeness, the shame wash over everything, fill every space. Perhaps there are women who succeed in coming to terms with it, who can live with this, who can accept it, but I have never met such a woman, nor was I one.
No doubt there are those who have no moral values. Who knows, perhaps such people are right. In any case, they certainly live well.
I could say to her: I am one such, I have no moral values, I do not understand what such values might be, but my words would be inaudible. I do not understand what offence has been committed, though I can gauge the measure of the pain the offence has caused this woman. But she would not understand. And then, despite the shock I know it will create, I hear myself say this: I have no moral values. The words come though I am not master of them. The words come, though I know the mother cannot understand, though I know that they may destroy the trust she has placed in me. And, in fact, her expression changes sharply. She looks at me, her expression signalling her disappointment, her censure. Her expression signals that she was mistaken to have chosen to confide in me. Her whole being shrivels. I must admit that there is an offence, otherwise her expiation is meaningless. If I am not shocked, I cannot understand this story, this shame, this ordeal she has lived. I feel that the conversation will end here, a landslide has come between us; something has been destroyed which cannot be rebuilt. Therefore, to try to save this last bond before it disappears completely, I say: Arthur loved that in me. That among other things. He loved my indifference to the world, my ability to remain untouched by anything, which is one of the purest forms of freedom. That is what it is: Arthur loved me for my freedom. I can tell at once that what I have said has hit the mark, that speaking of her son, of his love for me, has recreated the bond between us. Suddenly, we remember that what brings us together, what binds us, is this death between us. We can feel the dead man’s presence between us. We are together once more, she and I. And she begins to accept me for what I am, begins to see her life through another’s eyes. She gains some small freedom.