The Ushuaia rabbit turned and looked at me. Contrary to my
expectations, however, it did not flee, but kept still, with the
sole exception of the silver tuft of feathers that shook as if to
challenge me.
I took off my shirt and waited, stock still and bare-skinned.
"Easy, easy, easy . . ." I kept saying.
When I got close I slowly deployed the shirt as if it were a net,
and suddenly, in one quick swoop, I had it over the rabbit,
wrapping it up in a neat package. Using the sleeves and the
shirttail, I tied a strong knot, allowing me to hold the bundle in
my right hand and use my left to negotiate the fence once more and
return to the sidewalk.
I could not, of course, show up at the bank shirtless, much less
with the Ushuaia rabbit. Thus I headed home. I have an eighth-floor
apartment on Nicaragua Street, between Carranza and Bonpland. At a
hardware store I picked up a birdcage of considerable size.
The doorkeeper was washing the sidewalk in front of our building.
Seeing me bare-chested, with a cage in my left hand and a restless
white bundle in my right, he looked at me with more astonishment
than disapproval.
As bad luck would have it, a neighbor followed me in from the
street and into the elevator. With her was her little dog, an ugly,
disgusting animal. Upon picking up the smell –unnoticed by human
beings – of the Ushuaia rabbit, it erupted in earsplitting barks.
On the eighth floor I was able to rid myself of that woman and her
stentorious nightmare.
I locked the door with my key, prepared the cage, and with infinite
care began unwrapping the shirt, trying not to upset, or worse, to
hurt the Ushuaia rabbit. However, being shut in had angered it, and
when I opened the cage door I couldn't stop the rabbit from hitting
my arm with a stinger. I had sufficient presence of mind not to let
the pain induce me to let go, and I finally managed to maneuver it
safely back into the cage.
In the bathroom I washed the wound with soap and water, and, right
away, with medicinal alcohol. It then occurred to me that I ought
to head to the pharmacy for a tetanus shot, which I did without
wasting any time.
From the pharmacy I went straight to the bank to conclude the
cursed business that had been postponed because of the Ushuaia
rabbit. On the way back I picked up supplies.
Since it lacks a masticatory apparatus during the day, the most
practical thing was to cut up the lights into little pieces and mix
in some milk and chickpeas; I then stirred it all together with a
wooden spoon. After sniffing the concoction, the Ushuaia rabbit
absorbed it with no problem, just very slowly.
Its process of expansion begins at sunset. I therefore transferred
the few pieces of living room furniture – two modest armchairs, a
loveseat, and an end table – to the dining room, pushing them up
against the dining table and chairs.
Before it was too big to get past the door, I made sure it left the
cage. Now free and comfortable, it was able to grow as needed. In
this new state, it completely lost its aggressivity, and now became
apathetic and lazy. When I saw its violet scales pop out – a sign
of sleepiness – I headed for the bedroom, went to bed, and called
it a day.
The next morning the Ushuaia rabbit had returned to the cage. In
view of this docility, I felt it was unnecessary to shut the door.
Let it decide when to be inside or out of its prison.
The instincts of the Ushuaia rabbit are infallible. Every evening
it would leave the cage and expand like a fairly thick pudding on
the living room floor.
As is well known, its feces are produced at midnight on odd days.
If one collects (in the spirit of play, naturally) these little
green metallic polyhedrons in a sack and shakes them, they make a
lovely sound, with a rather Caribbean rhythm.
To tell the truth, I have little in common with Vanesa Gonçalves,
my girlfriend. She is considerably different from me. Instead of
admiring the many positive qualities of the Ushuaia rabbit, she
thought best to skin it in order to have a fur coat made for
herself. This can be done at night when the animal is elongated and
the surface of its skin is broad enough that the cartilaginous
ridges are displaced to the edges and don't get in the way of the
incision and cutting. I did not want to help her do this operation.
Armed with only dressmaking scissors, Vanesa relieved the Ushuaia
rabbit of all the skin on its back. In the bathtub, with detergent
and running water, a brush and bleach, she washed off any amber or
bile that remained on the skin. Then she dried it with a towel,
folded it, put it in a plastic bag, and very happily took it off to
her house.
It only takes eight to ten hours for the skin to completely
regenerate. Vanesa had visions of a great scheme: each night she
could skin the Ushuaia rabbit and sell its fur. I would not allow
it. I did not want to convert a scientific discovery of such
importance into a vulgar commercial enterprise.
However, an ecological society reported the deed, and a paid
announcement came out in the papers accusing "Valeria González" –
and, by association, me – of cruelty to animals.
As I knew would happen, the onset of autumn restored the rabbit's
telepathic language, and although its cultural milieu is limited,
we were able to have agreeable conversations and even to establish
a kind of, how shall I say, code of coexistence.
The rabbit let me know that it was not partial to Vanesa, and I had
no trouble understanding why. I asked my girlfriend not to come to
the house any more.
Perhaps in gratitude, the Ushuaia rabbit perfected a way of
expanding less at night, so that I was able to bring all the
furniture back to the living room. It sleeps on the loveseat and
deposits its metallic polyhedrons on the rug. It never eats to
excess, and in this as in everything else, its conduct is measured
and worthy of praise and respect.
The rabbit's delicacy and efficiency reached the extreme of asking
me what would be, for me, its ideal daytime size. I said I would
have preferred the size of a cockroach, but I realized that such a
small size put the Ushuaia rabbit in danger of being stepped on
(though not of being killed).
After several attempts, we decided that at night the Ushuaia rabbit
would continue to expand to the size of a very large dog or even a
leopard. During the day, the ideal would be that of a medium-sized
cat.
This allows me, when I am watching television, for example, to have
the Ushuaia rabbit on my lap where I can stroke it absentmindedly.
We have formed a solid friendship, and sometimes we need only look
at each other for mutual understanding. Nevertheless, these
telepathic faculties that function during the winter months
disappear with the first warm spells.
We are now in the last month of winter. The Ushuaia rabbit is aware
that for the next six months it will not be able to ask me
questions or make suggestions or receive advice or congratulations
from me.
Lately it's fallen into a kind of repetitive mania. It tells me, as
if I didn't know, that it is the only surviving Ushuaia rabbit in
the world. It knows it has no way of reproducing, but – though I
have asked many times – the rabbit has never said whether it is
bothered by this or not.
Moreover, the rabbit continuously asks me – every day and several
times a day – whether there is any use for it to go on living like
this, alone in the world, with me yes, but without other creatures
of its own kind. There is no way it can kill itself, and there is
no way I could – and even if there were, I would never do it – kill
such a sweet, affectionate animal.
And so, as long as we experience the last cold spells of the year,
I continue to converse with the Ushuaia rabbit, stroking it
absentmindedly. When warm weather returns, I shall only be able to
stroke it.