Private
and confidential
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CHAPTER
I
UNTITLED contemporary art, following the path of THE GREAT ILLUMINATOR
(LONDON ELECTRICITY BOARD) has decided, after long and deep meditation,
that the great success that we enjoy is not enough - it does not
represent our (global)
ambitions properly and transparently because we want More. If we
want to gain a state of permanent NIRVANA we need
to do More. How to do it? As always, when we need to decide something,
I do a list with two columns. In the first I write
the pros in tiny letters, in the second the cons in enormous letters
- (I hate surprises). “We cannot go back to the PR
company who have done all they possibly can to help us. We need
something different… exciting,” we wrote. The second
column gave us the answer to the question of the first column. Who
advises the adviser? Obviously somebody intelligent
and who could be more intelligent than a member of MI6? They work
24 hours a day at being intelligent. We looked at
each other as if we had seen the light of knowledge knocking at
our door or, I should have said, opening our inner soul to
a new dimension.
“Who knows an agent?”
“I can go to Cambridge and recruit one for our cause.”
“Well, they tend to be here and there. There is no way we
want competitors to know our secrets.”
“I am sure they would do it for the United Kingdom and Untitled
Magazine.”
“ I believe an MI6 agent might be very busy at the moment.”
“That is not a big problem, we’ll get someone working
for MI3.”
“I’m not sure, they are only half as intelligent as
an MI6 member.”
We took the decision. We would get an MI3 agent.
“How?”
“Easy, they meet at the Spaghetti House in Tufnell Park every
Friday.”
On Friday, we all went to the restaurant to see if we could approach
an MI3 agent. Next to our table were sitting two
guys and a girl. We were impressed by their mode of communication.
Not a single words in three hours, their faces
expressionless to the point where I began to worry that they were
dead and simply pretending to drink and eat. This convinced
us that they were perfect. Just what we needed: secretive, unassuming,
a bit scruffy and half intelligent. Somehow
I manage to spill the wine onto one of the men. The other guy jumped
to avoid being stained by the cheap wine - I saw
his fist flying towards my face but he stopped a centimetre from
my nose. He was very lucky not to touch me. After a lot
of apologies, we made friends and we invited the trio to help us.
The girl had what is called a Mata Hari effect, a deep
erotic voice and a bit of an eccentric look. The tall boy was pretentious
and the other a desperate, lonely person. We
explained our needs and they listened in silence. I calculated that
if we considered the fact that one MI3 + MI3 + MI3 =
MI9, then the three of them would produce one MI6 and a half. The
next day they arrived at our office with a magnificent
plan and a few pages with boxes to tick. “Fill them up. We’ll
see you at the Spaghetti House on Friday.” And they disappeared
CHAPTER II
We analyse the pages
in search of some clues. We find out that they use white paper,
A4, 90 grammes, made by Motony. There is only one place in London
selling it in the vicinity of the Holloway Road. Thus we deduce
that the agents are from North London. It has been printed by an
Epson, probably R2000 and the programme that they use is definitely
Word. We know that they live close to the ‘Rancho’ (the
headquarters of Untitled), that they have a PC computer, an Epson
printer...and nothing else. Apologies, they go to the Spaghetti
House on Fridays for a weekly meeting.
“Are we going to give away our inner secrets to three guys,
well two guys and a girl, who we only met once?”
“Not yet.”
On the last page, to our surprise, they sign their names, ‘John,
John and John’.
“She is a he? No way, she is a she and John is just her “nome
de guerre”.”
At that precise moment we feel that perhaps we have made a mistake.
“John is a very discreet name.”
They have kept their real identities to themselves and we need to
do the same. We decide to change our names to something exotic,
somehow challenging, engaging: Darcy, Tarquin, Hecate, Cyril, Octavia.
We settle for a more artistic choice: Tracy, Tracy, Tracy and Tracy.
Right, not left. Oh! My mother always said never talk to strangers
who offer you sweets.
The questions on the paper have a rare quality, from the trivial
to the soul searching. The first is mainly about our education.
At what age did you learn to read and write? Followed by three boxes.
Under the initial question were the words: ‘between 5 and
6 years old’. The next was a bit more imprecise: ‘25
– 50’, and the last one had a big ‘NEVER’.
A he/Tracy confesses at that moment that he can write but not read.
He justifies himself with a post-modern answer:
“I don’t know, it is not for me to understand what I
write, it is for the readers to decode my code to find the significance
of my signs.”
We look at each other in silence. The following question is: ‘remember
the first time your mother/father went mad at you?’
“We are not telling you”, is the unanimous answer.
‘Name ten artists that your magazine has supported and that
have subsequently gone on to become famous amongst other UK based
magazines, museums, public galleries, curators, dealers, artists
Mr and Ms Collector follow your nose???
“Jeremy Deller, Daria Martin, Catherine Sullivan, Pablo Bronstein,
Lali Chetwynd, Gerard Byrne, Klaus Weber, Marjetica Potrc, Seb Patane,
Jim Lambie, Eva Rothschild, Inventory, Ben Langlands &Nikki
Bell, Santiago Sierra, Francis Alys, Jorge Macchi, Pablo Picasso,
Daniel Buren…”
At that moment our friend Clermont arrives. We know he is from some
backward South American country but he pretends to be French. He
looks at us.
“Guai are you so guite”, says Clermont.
At the same time he snatches some of the pages from Tracy’s
hand.
“Oh you inglish never anderstand aniting...” he says
looking at the paper.
“What can we do, ah!” We ask defiantly.
“If you guant to get anyting in life firs you need to try
with LOVE or guell SEX”, he spits at us.
“Oh! James Bond, the Anglo-Saxon style 007 always involves
sex, coca cola and ...and...clever tricks.”
Tracy explains to him what is going on. He is very excited by the
prospect of mysterious characters promoting our dear Untitled Magazine.
“We need to know more about John, John and John”.
“Clermont, you are right, we need to involve sex to get information
about them. You need to seduce John and find out more about the
other Johns.”
“Guot? John is a man. I don’t do men. I am a lesbian”,
he protests.
Tracy convinces him that John is a she. We decide not to answer
any more questions until Clermont investigates the trio. We are
certain that a Latin-Cartesian brain can help.
On Friday we sit in the Spaghetti House with Clermont and our pages.
Waiting for over an hour until a she/John arrives. Her eyes stop
on Clermont, ignoring us, she moves like a cat on heat towards our
table. We can sense the Latin/Gaelic blood of Clermont exploding
with desire. She/John has no time for us. Calling the waiter she
asks for rum and coca cola and some clever tricks. At the same time
she puts a Marlboro cigarette between her lips and asks the South
American French boy for fire. Clermont is chauvinistic about Tobacco
and he refuses to give her fire.
“I give fire only to people who smoke Gitanes or Galouse”,
he says without any grace.
Somehow that stupid answer works wonders in she/John. She was more
inviting. Clermont grows a few centimetres taller, his ego radiant
as he concedes.
“Guell for you, I guill make an exception” he said,
flicking a match under her nose.
I ask for the other Johns AND SHE IGNORES ME, so I ask Again and
Again... until she stops looking at Clermont.
“Where are the pages?”
“There are not finished yet, because we want to ask a few
questions.”
“No questions, we need them for tomorrow morning, 7 o’clock
at Arsenal tube station.”
She disappears leaving CLERMONT hotter than a cat on Monday.
“Who volunteers to wake up that early?” A he/Tracy asks.
“Not me, not me, not me.”
Only Clermont keeps silent. After we have our dinner (Spaghetti
Bolognese with a glass of bubbly Italian wine) Clermont says, “I’ll
do it.”
“You need to change your name.”
“No way I have nothing to hide and everything to show.”
CHAPTER III
Next Morning, Clermont fills the suitcase with empty papers and
a few magazines, goes to the Arsenal Station, where a he/John approaches
him and surreptitiously passes an envelope before evaporating. Inside
the envelope is a page with a simple order: “go to Cockfosters
Station”. The timing is good, everybody else goes from Cockfosters
to central London. Tubes at that time of the day tend to be disturbing,
a mix of last night having a great time people with good morning
I go to work types. Both move with lethargy, the first smell of
alcohol the second of cheap or very expensive perfume.
“Well well welll wellllll wellll”, thinks Clermont with
Latin/Gaelic logic. The wagon is nearly empty, just two girls with
college uniform, two builders with builder’s uniform, two
nuns dressed as nuns, a couple of young people sleeping and two
uniformed police men who are walking up and down the wagon. Each
time Clermont hears their step close to him, guilt eats his heart.
He has written on his face, please do not stop me.
His mind is organising excuses, “when they open my suitcase
and find blank paper, I shall tell them that I’ve just bought
it and I’m going to Cockfosters to see my cousin John. Yes,
he loves new suitcases and it is a family tradition, before you
use a new one you need first to show it to at least three members
of the family and my cousin John is the last. I can use it afterwards...”
Disappointingly they ignore him. When the tube arrives at Cockfosters
Station, the other he/John is waiting for him on the platform. He
has a nervous twitch. He is looking over his shoulder in a manic
way, first the right one then the left... With the arrogance of
the public school boy he says, “Follow me...”
Clermont starts walking towards the station when he feels a hand
pressing his arms, “Not that way.”
Still nervous about the policemen Clermont is a bit jumpy. Only
when he looks at the wagon and sees the two of them going up and
down, the doors shutting and the tube moving, does he relax. They
start walking in the opposite direction from the station, towards
the rails. At first slowly then suddenly both are running.
At about 300 metres from the station he sees two abandoned trains
covered in grafitti, “By Basquiat”, he thinks???.
“Basquiat graffiti”, says Clermont.
“What?” asks John.
Clermont feels that he has just discovered the posthumous work of
Basquiat. He starts toying with the idea of selling it, “I
need to know if Basquiat was wearing an Armani suit when he did
that beautiful work of art? If that is the case I can add another
£100000 and, boy, no attic can hold this piece of work, so
sod my grandchildren.”
He wants to be back in London, more precisely in Christies or Sotheby
meeting some collectors and selling for £2000000. When they
arrive at the train John says, “John is waiting for you inside...”
“She or he?” Clermont asks.
“It”, is the answer.
CHAPTER IV
Inside the train wagon Clermont finds himself in the dark. Everything
is broken and the glass windows are deprived of their function and
now lie in menacing bits on the floor. It is a pity that they are
not plastic, he thinks. He can easily recognise Tony Cragg’s
hand, his shadow follows him persistently. The seats are in a state
of gross disrepair showing the springs as twisted phallic symbols
exploding between the cracks of the material. Suddenly he sees a
few cigarettes stabbed into the seats: Sarah Lucas he shouts, shit
there are more art works here than in the entire Tate Modern.
By now his imagination is spiralling towards the job in hand. Walking
over all the dirt and chaos, created by the passing of time and
the relentless energy of kids, each step needs careful consideration
as his mission has become a tad dangerous.
After succesfully walking through the first cabin, he is confused.
His expectations of wild sex and confessions suffer a violent shock.
He discovers his nose and worse, he discovers the function of it
when a deep smell of rotten eggs permeates his five senses.
For a split second he dithers with the idea of going away. The smell
is repulsive, he cannot see himself getting into the next cabin.
He has a tremendous desire to vomit because the smell is unbearable.
At this point he forgets why he is there.
“Hurry up, get in.”, a she/John shouts.
Her erotic voice accelerates Clermont’s feet. Once in he cannot
believe his eyes. The cabin is an immaculate science fiction, high
tech room with computers all over the place and a sofa in the middle
of the passage. Soon he finds out the origin of the smell: a she
/ John is sitting on a chair with her skirt hoisted up and her beautiful
legs streched and rigid, covered by a 4mm coat of an extrordinary
cream.
IMAAC IMAAC IMAAC. Three pots loiter on the floor.
“Guau, clever, cool, guot a hideout.”
“Sorry I need to be like this for 10 more minutes.”
“Can I open the window?”
“No, they are fake.”
They look at each other with the Knowledge.
“Guich is the fastest guay to the Tate Modern from Hoxton
Square?, asks Clermont.
She looks puzzled but her training allows her to decontextualize
and deconstruct any questions and in this way she is able to nullify
the sexual tension of the words and obtain a clear picture of his
intentions. Futhermore, she is using the other side of her brain.
She scratches her leg with one finger nail, the line she draws exacerbating
the smell. Looking at him she asks
“Are you a poet?”
“No I am not.”
“are you a poet?”
“No.”
“admit it, you are poet.”
“No.” he protests.
“Yes you are. You write sonnets.”
“No, no, no.”
Clermont tries to understand what is going on. She is pretending
but what?.
She insists . “Are you a poet?”
Perhaps it is the Anglo-Saxon sense of humour he concludes, deciding
to follow the game.
“Yes I am a poet.” and opening his suitcase he takes
out an AZ of London.
“And this is my latest book of poems, I will read you a poem
I wrote for my ex girl friend but I was thinking of you. It is called
Page 154. I must confess it is a bit long but I shall read the first
15 lines only.”
“Air street.W 1 –7G 61(1 M 145)
Airthrie Rd Ilf – 2B 52.”
“Stop, I hate concrete poems, they put forward a structuralist
framework with postmodern innuendos and are closer to the construction
of a bridge than any emotional ...”
“Sorgry, but you are wrong. They are Knowledge poems , this
is the way my ex girl friend learnt how to be a taxi driver.”
Ignoring him she gets a plastic spatula from her bag and, streching
herself to her ankle scrapes it away forming a mass of hair and
cream.
Visually and tactilely repulsive, Clermont’s fantasies evaporate
and he becomes more business-like.
“How are you going to help us?”
“I don’t know. We only can provide Intelligence and
help you analyse it.”
“About?”
“About your readers, the tactics and strategies of the artists
to play the game of promoting themselves, about your competitors
“axes of devils,” Frieze and Art Monthly. For example,
Frieze uses Weapons of Mass Advertising and in 45 minutes they organise
a wonderful Art Fair. Can you match that?”
“I doubt it.”
“Can you compete with the original, exquisite design?”
“Nope, because our’s is better, you can read our articles.”
“And their highly well written texts?”
“Guat texts?”
She starts cleaning her legs with loo paper.
He is feeling that he is wasting time on all accounts. No sex, no
help, no nothing.
“The two Davids for example.”
“Guot Davids?”
“Wojnarowicz and Lamelas.”
“That was very interesting 4 years ago when we had one of
them on the cover and the other I cannot remember when we wrote
an article. We know the genesis of both articles.”
“And guot about Art Monthly?”
“They are really dangerous. They are investigating ways of
writing able to produce the same effect as sleeping gas and they
are very close to achieving it. Can you match that?”
“Impossible..........but not a bad sales tactic”
Chapter V
‘I like you’
she thinks, whilst moving the left finger of her right hand over
a piece of yellow paper for about
45 minutes. Well perhaps Clermont exaggerated a bit when he told
us what happened. He’s probably telling
lies, which is not very Anglo-Saxon, as we keeping telling him.
“In 45 minutes a lot of things can happen… buuuu.”
“Oh yes, you can wait for a bus for 45 minutes, in 45 minutes
you can send a nuclear bomb from one continent
to another and you can see half of a match played by the most brilliant
team ever: Arsenal...”
“Ok, I can see you don’t have a clue, Untitled needs
a hook in order to hold the attention of the readers”,
she said. “Frieze is great, because the people who buy it
never read it. They have no time to waste, so they
flick through reading the ads in order to find out about their investments.
‘Oh! X has an exhibition in Y,
that’s great. Oh no, look at this idiot T who is showing in
B that is bad bad bad... He is going down and I
have a few pieces by him.’ On the other hand, Art Monthly
is great because it is full of serious impossibilities.
Their readership has a lot of time on their hands, so they relax
by reading shouting matches. They go
like this: ‘You said that I said something which I never said.
So, because you start from the wrong end of
what I said, your conclusion of what I said is not valid, mainly
because I never said that. I am the most
intelligent human being, even if I am, and my judgment about ART
is the only sustainable position after 40
years of deep study and concentration, only comparable to Sherlock
Holmes’s avid curiosity for solving
crime.’ Can you see how the mental structure of the text colludes
with a labyrinthine mind, creating a
strong sense of fascination and attachment similar to that given
to Play Station games? It demands 100%
attention.”
Depressed, Clermont said, “Let’s hope that they will
eventually become deliciously poetic.”
“Untitled is simply brilliant but it needs to focus on personalities
and more controversy. This is the English
way of seeing things, like, let me think… like the Sun Newspaper…
Fantasy Art” she mumbles, “You need
to invent an exhibition that never happened, a romance between two
or three artists who are discovered
naked inside a barrel of cocaine. And so on and on...”
“Guot? You are insane. Imagine a Suntitled cover. The romance
of the famous artist having sex with his
canvas, the man who lost his right hand in a war and today paints
with the left hand… all in four colours. I
know an artist who, when he was walking from Andalucia to hell,
which apparently is not far away only 30
km or was it 45 km, had a dog bark at him.”
Suddenly a she /John became very agitated, looking inside her bag
for a mobile phone
“Do you have a mobile phone?”
“Of course not.”
“Shit, shit , shit. What century do you live in?” He
was disconcerted by her aggressive stand. Ignoring it, he
pretended to be worried.
“Sogry, but shit, shit, shit doesn’t rhyme with live
in.”
“Yes it does. Catch”, she said throwing her mobile phone
with one hand and holding another mobile phone
in the other. Clermont of all men was perplexed.
“Guat am I doing here?”
“Lets have phone sex”, she said.
“Guat? Untitled needs your help.”
“You too.”
Clermont lost his nerve “No I am holy f ...s... do not need
anything.”
Private and confidential V
Any resemblance to real people or places is entirely intentional.
“Come on call me, my phone number is 0789327487.”
“Can we be morrr primitive?”
“Call me or go to hell.”
“Sogry but I’m not prepared for high tech sex, we don’t
have sexual education at school in my countgry.”
She lost her patience and told him to get out. He turned his head
towards a she/ John, looked into her deep
honey eyes and walked up and down the wagon. He said goodbye with
tears in his eyes. Outside the sky was
Charlton grey. Kicking the earth, he forgot about Basquiat, about
Untitled...
On his way home he decides to lie.
Chapter
VI
Sorrry this chapter Vanish from the computer.
Chapter VII
CHAPTER 77777777777777777777
Next day at the Rancho, three Tracies were waiting for Clermont,
anxious to know what had happened.
A she/Tracy asked the others:
“Do we need to believe what ever Clermont says?”
“Well, no he is sexually paranoid, deluded, so sometimes he
confuses hello with I love you.”
“He is very handsome, I am sure some girls say hello to him
meaning I love you.”
“Bueh, these Latino garlic eaters believe their own propaganda.”
“Onion eater you mean.”
“Hey garlic, onion and frog eaters.”
They were discussing with certain venom the virtues of Clermont
when he appeared framed by the door. On seeing him they started
to clap and all at once shouted:
“What happened? Tell us what happened.”
“Nothing,” said Clermont with an exquisite sense of
coolness, stroking his lips with a finger a la Jean Paul Belmondo.
“Don’t be a bore.”
“I am not going to go into any details. I proclaim that my
first visit to Cockfosters guas a Delicious experience.”
They laughed with pleasure and complicity until they realized that
he was prepared to say nothing at all.
A mysterious silence crossed the room for about 45 minutes until
this magic moment was broken by Clermont’s voice
“Ere gue are.”
“So?”
“I said ere gue are.”
“And?”
“And what?”
“What did the Johns recommend ?”
“Ah that, not much, they are a bunch of out of work people.”
“Why?”
“Because ?>of the integnet boys.”
“What about them?”
“Before, intelligence guas a guey of knowing little things
and producing great results, like what was the rgeal coloug of Cleopatra’s
gair. At first glance one can see it as infogmation of minimal consequence,
a bit stupid yet in rgeality she lost ger kingdom because of that.
Now you open the web, copy the vagaries of some American student
and that is enough to stargt an invasion to steal oil. Who needs
them?”
“What is the Cleopatra story according to you?”
“One morning, she was looking at erself in a brass mirror
and discoveged one white air. She ated it, ad a fit and scrgeamed
at one of er generals to go to the next village to get some special
henna only available in Harrods, a little shop owned by an Anglo-Saxon
Egyptian.
The rgequest was geard by the boyfriend of the general, an intelligent
boy who was a double agent for Rome. He organised the destrguction
by fire of the shop, stock and other things argound. When the soldiers
arrrived with a little note she had written, they could not find
the shop, the indications on the map leading them instead to a pile
of ash on the floor.
They came back empty anded, she was furious shouted orrible things
to everybody because she found three more white airs. At that moment
the bloody Octavio attacked Egypt and when another of er generals
asked for an audience to explain to er a plan to destroy the Roman
army, she refused to meet him because of the three white airs and
in desperation committed suicide not because the Romans were able
to defeat the Egyptian argmy but out of pure vanity.
So now you can see how useful an agent was in other times although
with cyberspace at our finger tips they arge unemployable.”
“Crap tell us what they recommend or get out.”
Clermont explained.
“There are two strategies. The first attempt must be to drop
in to some institution rgelated to argt and ask them to organise
a workshop on ‘How to rgun a magazine and get a millon readers.’”
One of the he/Tracies started to laugh. At first it sounded like
little burps then, with the tone in crescendo until it reached the
pitch of hysterical cries, he held his stomach with his hands and
his shoulders fell over his knees. For an instant Clermont thought
that he/Tracy was going to vomit or have an epileptic fit.
He/Tracy had tears in his eyes, he tried to talk but the emotions
surfaced all at once until he recovered his composure and drying
his tears said
“Imagine a well-dressed woman in her forties, exuding the
confidence of knowing where the tail of a horse is, holding a long
stick in her right hand.”
“Waait a minute what do you mean by well-dressed?”
“Expensive clothes” he goes on “The lights get
dimmer, the room is full of fools in waiting.
The well-dressed woman signals with a movement of her lips to the
girl behind the projector “lets start.”
The guy next to me is biting his nails, the experience developing
in front of his eyes is too much for him. After a flood of lights
appears on the screen, we can read Good Evening in glowing colours
on a black background.
Stretching her arm to point the stick towards the G on the screen,
she repeats ‘Good Evening’ with a perfect posh accent
as if she is going to give us a bit of the light that she radiates
following with – Please look at the first sentence in the
little book we gave you at the entrance.
I look at the photocopy and guess what it said? Good Evening! which
made me extremely happy, close to an orgasm of pleasure, three Good
Evenings in 3 seconds, these experiences had never happened to me
before. Great!!!!…
Unfortunately after that everything that followed was multiplied
by three, even the Good Bye: first on the screen, then said and
lastly read in the book.”
“ Please Clermont tell us the second?”
“ Helloooooo, let me finish.” The he/Tracy said.
“ I’ve listened to enough of that.”
“ Sorrgy but I do not like to be pressurised by anyone. I
think you need to try this and if it doesn’t work, I’ll
suggest a new Idea and I cannot tell you about this new idea because
it is very new so its difficult to know about until it’s become
old.”
At that point a she /Tracy came to rescue Clermont. She wanted sugar
for the coffee and some deodorant for, well you know for what.
“Please lets go together,” she said thinking perhaps
he’d feel less intimidated and tell her a better story.
They went to one of the most chic shops in the area, ‘Dreams
Come True’ was the name of it.
They looked at each other thinking lets find out about the dreams.
She picked up a packet of sugar and some well -known deodorant and
was at the till ready to pay when suddenly the she /Tracy said:
“Scuse me, where is the man?”
The man on the till raised his head in slow motion.
“A man?”
“Yes, the man in the TV ad for this deodorant who says take
me with you. I want to do that.”
“Sorry madam but the man went with another client and it is
never clear how long it’ll take for him to be back,”
he said with the satisfaction of a man who has read Freud and knows
how to deal with crazy people.
I bet he sees more mad people in a week than Freud saw in his entire
life.
“Can I have a chair? I’ll wait for him to come back.”
“I do not recommend that madam.”
“Ok, if you cannot provide us with the man, at least you can
sell it at a discount.”
The man was losing his patience and shouted
“ Madam.”
“I am not a Madam.”
“What ever you are take it or leave it.”
“Excuse me, this place is called ‘Dream Come True’
and my dream is to take the man in the ad to my house and put him
in my bathroom cabinet and every morning elevate first my right
arm exposing my armpit while he sprays the deodorant and the same
with my left arm. If you cannot do this then change your bloody
name to something like ‘We Are Liars.’”
The customers were becoming restless and a boy in the queue shouted
“Hurry up you woman.”
A woman behind him pressed her middle finger on his shoulder.
“Young man nobody told you to respect a woman.”
The young man had the face of a rottweiler and for a fraction of
a second a she/Tracy thought he was going to bite her, probably
on her neck, when she realized that she had a plastic collar around
it so it was going to be difficult for the dog to bite, well the
boy to bite.
Clermont was fascinated by the scene.
The tension increased until the man on the till started crying.
The boy, probably of Italian origin, bit his own hand while the
lady behind walked away without paying and Clermont and she/Tracy
left the sugar and the deodorant and walked back to the Rancho empty
handed like the generals who pushed Cleopatra to commit suicide.
.....................
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